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sad," the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad. 

You can find more on these and other late breaking and developing stories, from around the world, around the clock, at voanews.com. and on the VOA news mobile app. From the world headquarters of the Voice of America in Washington, I'm Jonathan Jones, VOA news. 

That's the latest world news from VOA.

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🆔 @voanewscaststext

From Washington, this is VOA news. I'm Jonathan Jones reporting. 

North Korea is willing to talk to the United States about denuclearization. That words Sunday from a senior but unnamed American official. 

It's the first tangible sign that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is still willing to meet with President Trump since the North first proposed the summit last month. 

Trump has said he wants to meet with Kim before the end of May. Details on the talks are still unclear, including the exact agenda and place. But American officials have said there have been secret contacts between the United States and North Korea. 

On Twitter Sunday, President Trump predicted there would be a resolution of the U.S.-China standoff on tariffs. Those tariffs have been proposed by each side on hundreds of billions of dollars of goods that the world's two biggest economies are threatening to impose on each other. 

Trump wrote "China will take down its Trade Barriers because it is the right thing to do." He said "taxes will become Reciprocal & a deal will be made on Intellectual Property. Great future for both countries!" 

Trump said he and President Xi Jinping "will always be friends, no matter what happens with our dispute on trade." 

German officials said six people have been detained Sunday in connection with a plan to carry out an alleged extremist attack on Berlin's half-marathon. 

In a joint statement, prosecutors and police said, "There were isolated indications that those arrested, aged between 18 and 21 years, were participating in the preparation of a crime in connection with this event." 

Berlin police tweeted that six people had been arrested. 

This is VOA news. 

🆔 @voanewscaststextd Sunday they still do not know why a 48-year-old German man drove a van into a crowd of people in the western city of Münster, killing two and injuring 20 others. 

The man then shot himself in the van. Officials said six of those injured are in critical condition. 

Myanmar is not ready for the [reparation] repatriation, that is, of Rohingya refugees. according to the senior most United Nations official to visit the country this year. 

Ursula Mueller is the assistant secretary-general for Humanitarian Affairs. She met the ministers of defense and border affairs on a recent six-day visit to Myanmar. 

"I asked them to end the violence. I reiterated what the secretary-general of the United Nations called for, end the violence, and that the return of the refugees from Cox's Bazar is to be on a voluntary, dignified way, when solutions are durable. From what I've seen and heard from people - no access to health services, concerns about protection, continued displacements - conditions are not conducive to return." 

A parliamentary inquiry in Australia is investigating whether the domestic and legal trade in ivory is contributing to the deaths of thousands of African elephants each year. 

From Sydney, correspondent Phil Mercer reports. 

Members of parliament are investigating if lax regulations are allowing recently poached ivory to be passed off as antiques in Australia. It's illegal to import ivory into Australia, but there are concerns black market ivory is being smuggled into the country. 

Campaigners argue there is clear evidence poachers have been using Australia to offload elephant tusks from the illicit trade in ivory into the legitimate art market. 

In the past decade, more than 320 imported and 79 exported items made of ivory have been confiscated by Australian authorities. 

It's estimated that 55 African elephants are killed by poachers each day for their tusks.

Phil Mercer, for VOA news, Sydney. 

President Trump on Sunday blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin and Iran for what he called on Twitter a "mindless chemical attack" in Syria that killed at least 40 people on Saturday. The president vowed there would be a "big price to pay." 

In a rare direct condemnation of the Russian leader, Trump declared, "President Putin, Russia and Iran are responsible" for their support of "Animal As

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Apr 09
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rom the rest of the Christian community. 

Coptic Christians comprise roughly ten percent of Egypt's population. 

We have much more on all these stories on voanews.com. I'm Liz Parker reporting from Washington. 

That's the latest world news from VOA.

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🆔 @voanewscaststext

From Washington, this is VOA news. I'm Liz Parker reporting. 

Three people were killed and numerous others injured when a vehicle was driven into a crowd Saturday in the northwestern German city of Münster. Police said a fourth fatality happened when the driver shot himself inside the vehicle. 

Reuters' Lucy Fielder has more. 

A van drove into a group of people in the western German city of Münster on Saturday, killing several of them. The suspect then took his own life, police said adding that they want looking for anyone else. 

Police cordoned off the scene while helicopters circled above. 

That was Lucy Fielder reporting. 

And German authorities have for now ruled out a connection to Islamist terrorism. 

Palestinians in the Gaza Strip attended funerals Saturday for a well-known Palestinian journalist and others who were killed in the latest wave of border clashes. 

Nine Palestinians died Friday after being shot by Israeli troops during border clashes, the Health Ministry in the Hamas-run Gaza strip said on Saturday. 

Former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is in police custody after a tense showdown with supporters who tried to block him leaving a union building. 

Earlier in the day, supporters chanted "Lula, don't turn yourself in." 

Da Silva left an exit of a metalworkers union surrounded by several bodyguards who pushed back supporters trying to keep him from leaving. He was being taken to a police station. 

Earlier Saturday, supporters didn't let him leave. They blocked the gate. 

Da Silva has been convicted with corruption and sentenced to 12 years and one month. 

This is VOA news. 

🆔 @voanewscaststext dead in a crash involving a Canadian junior hockey team. 

Reuters' Colette Luke has more. 

"We are heartbroken and completely devastated." 

At least 14 people were killed when a bus carrying a Canadian junior hockey team, the Humboldt Broncos, collided with a truck in the province of Saskatchewan Friday evening. 

There were 29 people on the bus. 

"... and we will never forget the members of our Broncos family who were taken from us and who were injured." 

The hockey team was heading to Nipawin to play the Nipawin Hawks in the semifinals of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League playoffs when the accident happened. 

And that was Reuters' Colette Luke reporting. 

The driver of the tractor trailer was not injured, according to police. 

The cause of the accident is under investigation. 

The Trump administration is moving forward with new sanctions against both Russian companies and individuals. 

Here is VOA's Cindy Saine. 

They are targeting 38 Russian individuals and companies and government officials. And these sanctions will mean that the people targeted cannot do business in the U.S. banking system, which basically means they can't do business in U.S. dollars, and the experts that I have been talking to say that is what will likely make them painful and effective to some people who are close to Russian President Vladimir Putin. 

China and the United States have filed complaints against the other with the World Trade Organization. There, more talks are possible. Trade war surfacing after U.S. President Trump said he is considering an additional $100 billion in tariffs on Chinese imports. 

Mary Lovely is a senior researcher at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. 

"You know that show of force may be getting the Trump administration what they want. Unfortunately, it does have the effect of, I think, politicizing the commercial relations to an unprecedented degree." 

China says unilateral actions by the United States violate the WTO international trade law. And Beijing has vowed to request for consultations under the WTO dispute framework. 

The spiritual leader of Egypt's Coptic Orthodox Church celebrated forthcoming Easter Sunday in a midnight mass on Saturday night. 

Orthodox Christians use a different calendar from Roman Catholics and protestants so their celebration of Easter usually falls on a different date f

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Apr 08
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From Washington, this is VOA news. I'm Liz Parker reporting. 

The Trump administration on Friday announced wide-ranging sanctions against 38 Russian individuals and companies. Senior administration officials billing the sanctions as a response to Russia's pattern of Malign activities around the world. 

Nikolai Patrushev, Russia's Federation Security Council Secretary, is one of the officials sanctioned. 

He said Friday, "I have been in the U.S.A. many times. Regarding the fact that they have introduced sanctions, it doesn't mean we will not communicate with them. There are other countries where it is possible to communicate and work to resolve these questions." 

U.S. officials say the sanctions are not in response to any single event or issue. 

The move comes after Britain, the U.S. and other NATO countries expelled more than 150 Russian diplomats over the poisoning of a former Russian spy and his daughter who were attacked with a nerve agent in Britain. 

Dr. Christine Blanshard of Salisbury District Hospital gave an update on Sergei Skripal and his daughter's condition Friday. Here is Jill Craig. 

Blanshard reiterated that that Yulia Skripal's condition had improved to stable and she continues to get better. 

She also announced that Sergei Skripal is responding well to treatment, improving rapidly and is no longer in a critical condition. 

Jill Craig, VOA news. 

China's government says it will counterattack if President Donald Trump goes ahead with plans to raise U.S. tariffs on an additional $100 billion worth of Chinese goods. 

Ministry of Commerce spokesman Gao Feng called the United States behavior utterly unreasonable and that Washington seriously misjudged the situation and made a big mistake. 

This is VOA news. 

🆔 @voanewscaststextay seven Palestinian protesters were killed Friday and hundreds of others injured. This as thousands of Palestinians held a mass protest on the Gaza border where they were confronted by Israeli troops. 

Robert Berger reports for VOA from Jerusalem. 

Soldiers fired tear gas, rubber bullets and live ammunition to prevent a breach of the border fence. 

The protesters burned tires near the fence as thick black smoke rose into the air. 

Demonstrator Muhammad al-Tramsi said that by burning tires, Palestinians hoped to blind Israeli snipers. He said he is not afraid to die. 

Israel has warned that any attempt to breach the fence and bring a flood of Palestinians across the border is a red line that will not be tolerated. 

Robert Berger, for VOA news, Jerusalem. 

The deaths spring the number of Palestinians killed by Israeli fire since last week to at least 27. 

Former South African President Jacob Zuma came out fighting on Friday after appearing in court. He is facing corruption charges over a suspected multibillion-dollar arms deal in the 1990s. 

Zuma addressed about 1,000 cheering supporters after the case was adjourned. 

He told the crowd this case has been brought back by politics. There are no real politics in opposition parties. He also said "I am innocent until proven guilty. But there are people who want to treat me like I am guilty." 

Zuma will be back in court on June 8. 

Brazil's top appeals court on Friday rejected former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's latest plea that he stay out of prison until he has exhausted all appeals to his corruption conviction, according to a court document. 

Now his legal team is negotiating his surrender. 

Lula remained holed up inside the metal workers union headquarters in São Paulo with aides and allies ignoring the federal judge's deadline of 5 p.m. to turn himself into authorities. 

That's when he was supposed to begin serving a 12-year sentence for accepting bribes from an engineering firm in return for help landing contracts with Brazil's state-run oil company. 

A few dozen anti-Lula protesters gathered in front of the federal police headquarters in Curitiba as a deadline approached. However, hundreds of demonstrators supported Lula. 

I'm Liz Parker reporting from Wash

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VOA news 2018
Apr 07
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at voanews.com. From the world headquarters of the Voice of America in Washington, I'm Jonathan Jones, VOA news. 

That's the latest world news from VOA.

🆔 @voanewscaststext

🆔 @voanewscaststext

From Washington, this is VOA news. I'm Jonathan Jones reporting. 

White House officials on Wednesday detailed plans to send National Guard troops to the southern border with Mexico. It's part of President Trump's efforts to confront what he says is a growing problem with illegal immigrants. 

The decision to deploy the [U.S. National Guard], or the States' National Guard, that is, to the border represents a major new aspect of Trump's wide-ranging immigration crackdown. But major parts of the move are unclear, including how many troops will be sent, when they will deploy, or what exactly they will do. 

China hit back on Wednesday at the U.S. government's plan to slap tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese goods, retaliating with a list of similar duties on key U.S. imports and adding to fears that the world's two largest economies are heading towards a trade war. 

Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters the door to dialogue is open but the United States has missed opportunities to resolve the issue through dialogue multiple times. 

President Trump tweeted on Wednesday "We are not in a trade war with China, that war was lost many years ago by the foolish, or incompetent, people who represented the U.S." 

The U.N. humanitarian adviser for Syria, Jan Egeland, said on Wednesday he wants access to the eastern Ghouta town of Douma. 

"Why can we not deliver to the people of Douma today for example even though we are on the eve of a deal for Douma, they are really, really on their knees in terms of needs." 

Egeland said 80,000 to 150,000 civilians in Douma need to be cared for. 

This is VOA news. 

🆔 @voanewscaststexttes involvement in Syria is "coming to a rapid end." But the White House in a statement is refusing to say when that end will come despite repeated public calls by President Trump for American forces there to come home. 

In a statement on Wednesday, the White House said, "The military mission to eradicate ISIS in Syria is coming to a rapid end, with ISIS being almost completely destroyed." 

Authorities in Cameroon have freed 18 people, including 12 European tourists who had been kidnapped by armed separatists fighting for the independence of the country's English-speaking regions. But dozens of hostages are still in captivity.

As correspondent Moki Edwin Kindzeka reports from the capital Yaoundé. 

Twelve of the 18 former hostages looked tired, hungry and unkempt as they arrived in Yaoundé Tuesday. They refused to grant interviews. 

Communications Minister Issa Tchiroma says the seven Swiss nationals and five Italians were freed from the bushes of Manyu, an administrative unit on Cameroon's southwestern border with Nigeria, after a battle between Cameroon government troops and armed separatists. 

Tchiroma says local residents told the military where the hostages had been taken to. 

He says the 12 tourists regained their freedom thanks to the collaboration between the population, self-defense groups and forces of law and order. 

Moki Edwin Kindzeka, for VOA news, Yaoundé. 

Facebook revealed Wednesday that tens of millions more people might have been exposed in the Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal than previously thought and said it will restrict the user data that outsiders can access. 

Those developments came as congressional officials said Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg will testify next week. 

Facebook is facing its worst privacy scandal in years. 

And the U.S. Justice Department on Wednesday filed denaturalization papers against two Bosnian Muslims convicted of carrying out an execution-style massacre of Croatian villagers during the Balkan wars. 

The men are both alleged former members of an elite Bosnian military unit responsible for carrying out the 1993 attack that killed 22 civilians. They are accused of hiding their crimes on their applications for refugee, permanent residency and U.S. citizenship status. 

You can find more on these and other late breaking and developing stories, from around the world, around the clock,

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Apr 05
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They wanted $10,000. They felt the 6,000 wasn't enough. 

You can find more on these and other late breaking and developing stories, from around the world, around the clock, at voanews.com and on the VOA news mobile app. From the world headquarters of the Voice of America in Washington, I'm Jonathan Jones, VOA news. 

That's the latest world news from VOA.

🆔 @voanewscaststext

🆔 @voanewscaststext

From Washington, this is VOA news. I'm Jonathan Jones reporting. 

A woman suspected of opening fire on the campus headquarters of the YouTube social media website apparently shot and killed herself at the scene. 

San Bruno, California, police chief Ed Barberini says police found a woman dead with a self-inflicted gunshot wound. 

Barberini says four people were wounded. A hospital spokesman in nearby San Francisco says the facility is treating three of the victims - two women and a man. The man is in critical condition. 

A London-based Dutch attorney was given a 30-day prison sentence and fined $20,000 Tuesday for lying to American investigators looking into Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. 

The lawyer is Alex van der Zwaan. He pleaded guilty in February to lying to the FBI. He said to the court, "What I did was wrong. I apologize to the court for my conduct. I apologize to my wife and to my family for the pain I have caused." 

American troops are to be dispatched to the border with Mexico to thwart further illegal immigration. President Trump spoke to reporters about the issue on Tuesday. 

"... we are going to be doing some things, I've been speaking with General Mattis, we're going to be doing things militarily. Until we can have a wall and proper security, we're going to be guarding our border with the military." 

Trump said a meeting was to be held "in a little while" with Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and others to discuss the plan." He said, "I think that it's something that we have to do." 

The Pentagon responded to Trump's plan to use the military to guard the borders, saying "We are still consulting with the White House," according to a senior defense official. 

This is VOA news. 

🆔 @voanewscaststext on Tuesday said he hoped the U.S. could "get along" with Russia as he met at the White House with the leaders of the Baltic states. 

He said, "I think I could have a very good relationship with President Putin. There is also a great possibility that that won't happen. Who knows?" 

The U.N. says it's investigating "disturbing reports of serious harm" to civilians during Monday's military airstrikes on a Taliban-controlled district in northern Kunduz province in Afghanistan. 

Local media reported more than 50 people have been in the strikes. 

The fate of thousands of African migrants in Israel is uncertain after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was canceling an agreement with the U.N. refugee agency to relocate thousands of African migrants to Western countries. 

Correspondent Robert Berger reports. 

Opposition leader Isaac Herzog accused Netanyahu of caving in to hardliners and described the prime minister's about-face as a "theater of the absurd." 

Herzog warned the government not to go back to its original plan of the forced expulsion of most of the African migrants in Israel. He said sending them back to Africa is a violation of international law because it would endanger their lives. 

The Africans entered Israel illegally over the past decade, most of them coming from war-torn Eritrea and Sudan. They survive by doing menial jobs, mostly in restaurants and hotels. 

Robert Berger, for VOA news, Jerusalem. 

French railway workers went on strike Tuesday in the first of a series of planned work stoppages in protest of the government's plans to institute reforms to the system. 

Only a fraction of trains were running across the country, leaving platforms packed with people and roads clogged with commuters who normally rely on rail travel. 

The French president, Emmanuel Macron, wants to strip away job guarantees and other benefits for new hires for the railway system. 

Hundreds of schools in Oklahoma and Kentucky were closed Tuesday as teachers continued a strike for better wages and better education funding. Teachers in Arizona are also reportedly planning a strike for better pay. 

Hundreds of educators in Oklahoma walked out Friday after the governor signed legislation giving the teachers raises of about $6,000.

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Apr 04
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