Sunday, January 11, 2015

Hundreds of bodies still missing as Boko Haram uses child in new attack

INTRO:  Hundreds of bodies of people believed to have been killed in a brutal attack in north eastern Nigeria by the extremist Islamic group Boko Haram, may still be lying in the open veld. Amnesty International earlier reported up to 2000 people may have been killed when terrorists ransacked the town of Baga and mowed down people indiscriminately. In another incident, a bomb attached to a child killed at least 16 people at a market in Maiduguri. Gary Alfonso reports ... 

IN: The bodies of hundreds ...
OUT: Alfonso, Abuja. 
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White House To Host Global Security Summit

U.S. President Barack Obama will invite allies to the White House next month for a security summit focused on preventing violent extremism. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced the invitation, after meeting his European counterparts for similar meetings in Paris on Sunday. The gathering came just days after jihadist gunmen killed 17 people in the worst terrorist attack on France's soil in decades.

Holder said the White House summit will be an opportunity to boost cooperation among nations in an effort to identify threats to international security. Speaking to America's CNN, the attorney general said the U.S. is actively working to identify potential threats.

IN: "We are constantly..."
OUT: "...this week."
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While France's Prime Minister Manuel Valls declared his country is at war with "radical Islam" following the attacks, Holder said the U.S. is at war with all terrorists.

IN: "We are at war..."
OUT: "...actions."
DUR: 11 sec

Paris terror attack changes US politics

The prospect that the U.S. Congress might remove funding for the Department of Homeland Security has vanished with the recent terror attacks in Paris.

Washington observers note, the tragedy has made any political discussion of shutting down the agency untenable.

Our U.S. correspondent Priscilla Huff reports:

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Unity Rally to take place Paris

 A unity rally is taking place in the French capital today, following three days of terror attacks which left 17 people dead.


Security is being increased for the event which is expected to last for a number of hours and it's thought one million people will be marching.


And the guest list is thought to include many heads of state as our Correspondent in Paris, Natalie Powell, reports


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IN: We know that 40 world leaders…

OUT: here in Paris

DUR: 34 seconds




ALT:  Our Correspondent in Paris, Natalie Powell, describes the atmosphere in the capital ahead of the march..


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IN: A very sombre mood

OUT: for decades

DUR: 41 seconds

Golden Gate Bridge takes first ever weekend off

Saturday, January 10, 2015

French police search for accomplices of terror attacks

17 people have been killed in two days by gunmen with links to al-Qaeda.


French ministers are meeting in the capital, amid fresh threats of further attacks


Our  Correspondent Natalie Powell reports from Paris…


IN:Police are still

OUT: further threats

DUR: 31


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Friday, January 9, 2015

Mitt Romney Considering 2016 Presidential Run


Barack Obama's former opponent in the 2012 US Presidential race has said he's considering running for the White House again in 2016.

It would be the third time Mitt Romney has put himself forward as a candidate. Lorna Shaddick reports from Washington.

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DUR: 41 seconds


Kouachi brothers trained overseas

French authorities are confirming, the two lead suspects in the terror attack on Charlie Hebdo magazine in Paris trained in Syria and Yemen.

The Kouachi brothers were killed by police in raids following the attack, but an accomplice, a female, may have gotten away.

The militant group al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula has claimed responsbility for the terror attacks in Paris, issuing a statement to the Associated Press which read "the leadership of AQAP directed the operations and they have chosen their target carefully." 

Francois Mollins is the prosecutor of Paris and speaks through a translator.

IN: "That the...
OUT: ...and Yemen."
DUR: 11


***

WHO: Promising Ebola vaccines to undergo trails in West Africa


[SUGGESTED INTRO]


Two promising Ebola vaccines could be tested in the West African countries hardest-hit by the viral epidemic, as soon the end of January, according to the World Health Organization.


The vaccines are developed from viruses that affect animals, and are said to have -- quote -- an acceptable safety profile." 


From the United Nations in New York, Liling Tan reports.


IN: "The two vaccines…"

OUT: "… Liling Tan, New York."

DUR: 50 seconds


Showdown looms in US over oil pipeline decision

Supporters of the highly controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline project in the United States have moved a couple of steps closer to a showdown with President Obama. 

Lawmakers in the US House of Representatives have now voted for project, which would carry Canadian oil south to refineries in the US.

The issue has also gained momentum, following a court ruling in the state of Nebraska, which had been seen as a major hurdle. 

But, as Malcolm Brown reports, backers still appear to lack the muscle to overcome President Obama's opposition.

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Terrorists have nothing to offer - Pres. Obama

U.S. President Barack Obama says terrorists have nothing to offer, vowing to stand by America's oldest ally, and all those who support the universal values of democracy, human rights and freedom of speech.

Washington offered Paris whatever help it needed in capturing, and eventually killing the two men behind the 12 deaths at the editorial officers of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.

Our Washington correspondent Priscilla Huff has the reaction:

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***

Immediate French threat over - US Pres. Obama

U.S. President Barack Obama is hopefully, the immediate threat of terrorist attacks in France is over, but he again offered any and all American help.

Some hostages were killed when French SWAT teams stormed a kosher grocery and separately, at a printing plant, and the original perpetrators of the attack on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo were also killed.

Commenting ahead of a college education event in Tennessee, U.S. President Barack Obama offered help to France to continue to address the threat of terrorism.

IN: "The moment....
OUT: ...is fluid."
DUR: 31


U.S. President Barack Obama reminded his Tenessee audience that America stands with its oldest ally, France.

IN: "France is our....
OUT: ...as allies."
DUR: 28


***

Calls for solidarity from French President Hollande

French President Hollande is thanking law enforcement, the military and allies alike for helping end the hostage dramas following the attack on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.

French officials confirmed the two Kouachi brothers and another suspect were killed in raids at two different locations.

However, there were concerns about a possible hostage situation in Montpellier, where a gunman was holding two shopkeepers.

Via a translator, French President Francois Hollande expressed his condolences to the families of the victims and thanked the police for their bravery.

IN: "They carried...
OUT: ...had killed."
DUR: 15


Via a translator, French President Francois Hollande said, as the nation mourns the victims of these terror attacks, all must stand together.

IN: "I express...
OUT: ...up to it."
DUR: 17


Via a translator, French President Francois Hollande noted that additional attacks in the future are possible.

IN: "France has not...
OUT: ...and mobilization."
DUR: 12


***

Cuba frees prisoners ahead of visit by US official

Cuba says it's freed more than two dozen political prisoners.

The move is believed to be part of an agreement reached in December with the US to normalize relations between the two countries.

US Assistant Secretary of State Roberta Jacobson is expected to meet with Cuban officials later this month to discuss the reestablishment of diplomatic ties.

Steve Mort reports.

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RADICAL CLERIC ABU HAMZA GETS LIFE IN PRISON

Radical Muslim cleric Abu Hamza has been sentenced to life in prison for terrorism charges by a federal court in New York.

Hamza previously spent eight years in jail in Britain before his extradition to the US in 2012. 

Nick Harper reports from New York.

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DUR: 36 seconds 

US Malaria Vaccine Trial Begins


The first trial of a revolutionary potential malaria vaccine has just begun in the United States.

 

Malaria kills half a million people every year, affects hundreds of millions of others and costs affected countries billions of dollars in lost productivity and healthcare services.

 

Tim Exton reports from Seattle.


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Ohio stops use of controversial execution drugs

The U.S. state of Ohio has said it will stop using a two-drug combination for lethal injections, this after a troubling execution in which an inmate gasped and snorted for 26 minutes.

Ohio officials also said an execution scheduled for February will be delayed as the state looks into where an alternative drug can be obtained.

Gov'ts, societies failing to address militant Islam - analysts

One of the central messages in the wake of the tragic violence in Paris is that governments and societies need to do more to counter the messages of militant Islam.

French and American authorities were aware that the Kouachi brothers were radicalized, but had no advance warning that they would attack the editorial offices of French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.

Farah Pandith, the first American Special Representative To Muslim Communities and now a Senior Fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations says, she's seen how little the West is doing to counter the messages of extremist Muslim ideology.

IN: "What we have...
OUT: ...the missing piece."
DUR: 27


The Council on Foreign Relations' Farah Pandith says, the young people who are searching for their place in society and their own identity are the most important to reach.

IN: "It is ... 
OUT: ...to them."
DUR: 18


The Council on Foreign Relations' Farah Pandith says, if governments want to stop this level of violence carried out by Muslim extremists, they have to address who the groups like the Islamic State organization are trying to recruit and how they hear those message.

IN: "When you...
OUT: ...over forty!"
DUR: 26


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PARIS HOSTAGE SITUATIONS END WITH DEATHS

Police in Paris have brought two separate hostage standoffs to an end, reportedly killing the two brothers who were accused of the shooting massacre earlier this week at the offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.

The Kouachi brothers were held up in a print works to the north of Paris, and were holding a hostage when police stormed the building.

The authorities also moved to rescue hostages who were being held in a kosher supermarket by an alleged sympathizer of the Kouachis….that gunmen and at least 4 hostages died in the operation.

Our reporter Jack Parrock is at the scene in Dammartin-en-Goele where the two Kouachis were killed.

IN:  "This standoff....
OUT:  ...neutralised.
DUR:  32 seconds


ALT:

Our reporter Jack Parrock is at the scene in Dammartin-en-Goele where the two Kouachis were killed.

IN:  "This manhunt....
OUT:  ...killed."
DUR:  17 seconds


Twin sieges in France end, 3 gunmen, 4 hostages dead

Police in Paris have brought two separate hostage standoffs to an end, reportedly killing the two brothers who were accused of the shooting massacre earlier this week at the offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.

The Kouachi brothers were held up in a print works to the north of Paris, and were holding a hostage when police stormed the building.

The authorities also moved to rescue hostages who were being held in a kosher supermarket by an alleged sympathizer of the Kouchis….that gunmen and at least 4 hostages died in the operation.

Reporter Simon Conway witnessed the end of the siege in Dammartin-en-Goele where the Koachi brothers were holed up.

IN:  "The siege here...."
OUT:  "...Charlie Hebdo on Wednesday".
DUR:  30 seconds


(MORE)

Benedicte Paviot, a reporter with France 24 television, says there was also drama in Paris as police moved in to the kosher supermarket where hostages were held for several hours.

IN:  "We've heard...."
OUT:  "....we've got him, we've got him"
DUR:  17 seconds





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