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Thursday, 17 December 2015

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IS victim Foley's family protests French far right tweets

PARIS (AP) — French far right leader Marine Le Pen on Thursday took down a tweet showing the execution of American reporter James Foley after his family protested — but left up two other gruesome images of violence by Islamic State extremists.
Far Right National Front party leader Marine Le Pen leaves after the results of the second round of the regional elections in Henin-Beaumont, northern France. A French court on Tuesday Dec.15, 2015 acquitted Marine Le Pen of incitement to hatred, a charge leveled after she compared Muslim street prayers to a foreign occupation
French authorities are investigating the tweets, which Le Pen posted in response to a journalist who made an analogy between her anti-immigration National Front party and the Islamic State group. Le Pen was trying to show the difference between the two but the effort backfired, drawing widespread condemnation, and the interior minister accused her of fomenting Islamic State propaganda.
Foley's mother Diane said on French radio RTL on Thursday that the tweets "add to the family's pain." The family issued a statement saying, "We are deeply disturbed by the unsolicited use of Jim for Le Pen's political gain" and want the photos taken down "immediately."
Soon afterward, Le Pen's tweet disappeared. However, two other tweets with images of IS executions remained visible on her Twitter account. Party spokesman Alain Vizier would not comment on why Le Pen took down the Foley photo.
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The Latest: EU summit to look at new border agency plan

BRUSSELS (AP) — The latest news on the mass movement of asylum-seekers and migrants to Europe, including developments from an EU summit where leaders are discussing the issue. All times local.
A family disembarks from a boat of Frontex, European Border Protection Agency, at the port town of Petra, on the Greek island of Lesbos, on Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2015. Greek authorities say two people have drowned and 83 others have been rescued after a wooden boat crammed with refugees sank in the Aegean Sea off the eastern Greek island of Lesbos.
11:35 a.m. European Union leaders are converging on Brussels for an end-of-year summit focused on tackling Europe's migrant crisis and other issues. On the first day of their two-day summit starting Thursday, EU leaders will examine a controversial plan from the European Commission to set up a new border and coast guard agency with powers to unilaterally deploy guards to countries in trouble.
The plan appears likely to face opposition by southern European nations hardest hit by the arrival of hundreds of thousands of migrants to Europe this year, including Greece and Italy.

PHOTOS: Top pictures in 2015 from Europe and Africa


LONDON (AP) — Europe in 2015 witnessed the greatest movement of people since World War II, as desperate refugees fleeing Middle East violence arrived by the hundreds of thousands on its shores. The continent also suffered extremist attacks that exposed the vulnerability of its civilians and challenged its way of life.

Models display creations by designer Anya Hindmarch during the Autumn/Winter 2015 show at London Fashion Week in London
Africa suffered devastating attacks as well but also welcomed Pope Francis with joy. As the tumultuous year draws to a close, The Associated Press is looking back on 12 months of upheaval in Europe and Africa by presenting the most memorable images by AP photographers. These stories highlight how interconnected the world has become, with Europe facing grave challenges stemming in large part from unrest in the Middle East.
Deadly attacks on Paris touched a global nerve — in January with the slaughter at the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, and in November with coordinated attacks in Paris that claimed 130 lives and wounded hundreds. But there were major extremist attacks elsewhere as well — in Nigeria, Tunisia, Turkey and other countries.
Memorable —and often painful — images came from other tragedies, including a plane crash in the French Alps, a deadly fire in a Romanian nightclub and a political assassination in Moscow. The migration crisis produced some of the most iconic images of the year along the hazardous journey toward northern Europe. Some refugees exulted in their survival, raising their arms in joy and relief when their flimsy rafts made landfall in Europe. Others drowned in the sea, including 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi, whose lifeless body was photographed after washing up on a Turkish beach and galvanized the world's horror at the unfolding crisis.
These photographs show a Europe that is both less isolated and more vulnerable, its borders elastic, its control mechanisms threatened, its capitals both defiant and fearful.
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Seoul court acquits Japanese reporter of defamation


SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — A Seoul court on Thursday acquitted a Japanese reporter of defaming South Korea's president by reporting that she was spending time with a man during a deadly ferry disaster last year.

Japanese reporter Tatsuya Kato of Sankei Shimbun newspaper arrives at the Seoul Central District Court in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday, Dec. 17, 2015. The Seoul court acquitted Kato on Thursday of defaming South Korea's president by reporting that she was spending time with a man during a deadly ferry disaster last year
The ruling by the Seoul Central District Court comes as President Park Geun-hye faces criticism that she has clamped down on journalists. The case has been seen as a test of free speech as opponents say government attacks on personal and political liberties are growing.
Prosecutors last year indicted Tatsuya Kato of Japan's conservative Sankei Shimbun newspaper over an article that listed rumors that Park was absent for seven hours during the disaster that killed more than 300 people, mostly teenagers. Prosecutors, who previously requested an 18-month prison term, have one week to appeal the ruling.
In a press conference, Kato described the acquittal as a "due verdict" and said he hopes prosecutors will not appeal. He said his story on Park's whereabouts during the ferry disaster serves the public interest.
South Korea's Foreign Ministry said earlier Thursday that it had asked the Justice Ministry to consider Japan's request for leniency on Kato. Despite the acquittal, South Korea's criminal defamation law should be repealed because it "stifles a free press, has a chilling effect on freedom of expression and works against the public interest by gagging critics and whistle blowers," Phil Robertson of Human Rights Watch said in a statement.
Park's government came under massive public criticism for its botched rescue operation during the ferry disaster. South Korean media have also questioned whether Park was unaccounted for on the day of the sinking in April 2014.
The headline of Kato's report, which cited financial industry rumors, parliamentary debates and the leading conservative South Korean newspaper Chosun Ilbo, said: "President Park Geun-hye was missing on the day the passenger ship sank. Who was she meeting?" The article repeated rumors in South Korean media and the financial industry "about a relationship between the president and a man" said to be married at the time.
Park's office has said she wasn't with the man in question, a former adviser. Kato's case was watched by many in South Korea and Japan as the Asian neighbors struggle to mend ties frayed over historical and territorial issues.
Many South Koreans still resent Japan's harsh colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula from 1910 to 1945. Ties between the countries have worsened since the 2012 inauguration of hawkish Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who many South Koreans see as trying to whitewash Japan's colonial and wartime abuses.
Kato's paper, the Sankei Shimbun, is reviled by some South Koreans for its right-leaning editorial stance. More generally, there is growing dissatisfaction with Park in South Korea, although she still has a strong base of loyal, conservative supporters. Hundreds plan to march Saturday in Seoul against her, the latest in a series of mass protests against the government in recent months. .......sell on vconnect click here:
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IS victim Foley's family protests French far right tweets

PARIS (AP) — French far right leader Marine Le Pen on Thursday took down a tweet showing the execution of American reporter James Foley after his family protested — but left up two other gruesome images of violence by Islamic State extremists.
Far Right National Front party leader Marine Le Pen leaves after the results of the second round of the regional elections in Henin-Beaumont, northern France. A French court on Tuesday Dec.15, 2015 acquitted Marine Le Pen of incitement to hatred, a charge leveled after she compared Muslim street prayers to a foreign occupation.
French authorities are investigating the tweets, which Le Pen posted in response to a journalist who made an analogy between her anti-immigration National Front party and the Islamic State group. Le Pen was trying to show the difference between the two but the effort backfired, drawing widespread condemnation, and the interior minister accused her of fomenting Islamic State propaganda.
Foley's mother Diane said on French radio RTL on Thursday that the tweets "add to the family's pain." The family issued a statement saying, "We are deeply disturbed by the unsolicited use of Jim for Le Pen's political gain" and want the photos taken down "immediately."
Soon afterward, Le Pen's tweet disappeared. However, two other tweets with images of IS executions remained visible on her Twitter account. Party spokesman Alain Vizier would not comment on why Le Pen took down the Foley photo.

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