#UK Human remains found, believed to be missing Arkansas boy

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LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Police believe human remains found in a rural Arkansas field are those of a boy who disappeared from his father’s home more than a year ago, authorities said Wednesday, just hours after announcing the boy’s father had been arrested on a capital murder charge.

The remains have been sent to the Arkansas State Crime Lab for final identification, but police believe they found the body of Malik Drummond, who was 2-years-old when he went missing in November 2014, said Searcy police Sgt. Steve Hernandez. The boy’s father, Jeffery Clifton, was arrested Tuesday night on suspicion of capital murder and abuse of a corpse.

Hernandez said he couldn’t release details about how investigators knew to search the rural area in Jackson County, northeast of where the boy lived in Searcy, a city about 50 miles northeast of Little Rock. Hernandez would only say that more arrests were possible in the “very active” investigation, and that Clifton’s arrest marked “a bittersweet ending” for the boy’s family.

“We’ve been working for Malik over the last year. It’s a good feeling to get some closure, but we’re still without a 2 ½-year-old child,” Hernandez said.

Clifton was denied bond during a hearing Wednesday. Case documents, including probable cause affidavits that may contain details about the investigation, have been sealed, according to White County Circuit Court officials. It wasn’t clear if Clifton had an attorney.

Clifton’s father, John Clifton, said the family had no immediate comment when contacted by The Associated Press, and a call to a phone number believed to belong to Malik’s mother rang unanswered.

Hernandez said the original 911 call came from a neighbor who spoke to Clifton and his then-girlfriend as they were searching for the child on Nov. 23, 2014.

Clifton’s girlfriend told police the toddler wandered away from their home that evening, while Clifton was sleeping. She said the child was gone when she exited the bathroom, and when she asked where Malik was, another child pointed at the screen door.

Dozens of volunteers and law enforcement officers spent weeks scouring the family’s neighborhood in Searcy, a city about 50 miles northeast of Little Rock.

Last month, the FBI offered $20,000 for information about the case. The agency said Wednesday that it received several phone calls about the case after billboards went up announcing the reward.

Clifton said last month that he was still searching for his son, “looking at cars that pass, in parks.” Authorities said at the time that Clifton and his then-girlfriend had been cooperative.

Clifton told The Daily Citizen newspaper earlier this year that his oldest son died in 2005 after he was hit by a car getting off a school bus, and that he’d been hoping for the best in the search for Malik. He said he was “still kind of numb” about Malik’s disappearance.

“It’s tough around here, especially on the holidays. I hope he’s found safe and that wherever he is or whoever has him makes sure (Malik) is taken care of first and foremost. Then I want him back, with his sister, with his family. Either this is going to end good or bad or never end,” he told the newspaper.

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#UK Senate GOP health law repeal delivers wins to party’s wings

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In this Dec. 1, 2015, photo, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., joined by Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn of Texas, tells reporters that he’s confident he will have enough support on an effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act this week during a news conference following a GOP policy meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington. Senate Republican leaders seem to have accomplished a balancing act in their drive to dismantle President Barack Obama’s health care law and block Planned Parenthood’s funding. They’re poised to push a measure through the Senate stuffed with victories for conservatives and concessions for more moderate GOP senators facing competitive 2016 re-election races.  (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans ignored a White House promise of a veto Wednesday and pushed toward Senate passage of legislation demolishing President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul and blocking Planned Parenthood’s federal funds.

After weeks of strategizing, GOP leaders began rolling out a measure they said would attract the votes needed for approval by week’s end. To achieve that, they balanced victories for some of the most conservative GOP senators with concessions for more moderate Republicans facing competitive 2016 re-elections.

The White House accused Republicans of “refighting old political battles,” a reference to unanimous GOP opposition to the measure ever since Obama began pushing it through Congress and dozens of votes lawmakers have staged to undo the statute.

Repeal would “roll back coverage gains and would cost millions of hard-working families the security of affordable health coverage they deserve,” the White House wrote in its letter pledging a veto.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., tauntingly suggested that Democrats reconsider their defense of the health care law.

“This is their chance, and President Obama’s chance, to begin to make amends for the pain and hurt they’ve caused” by the statute, which Republicans blame for rising health care costs.

On Wednesday, a Department of Health and Human Services report said that health care spending grew last year at 5.3 percent, in part because over his law’s coverage expansion and the steepest climb since Obama took office.

The GOP said a veto would only help its presidential and congressional candidates by underscoring that Republican control of the White House and Congress could spell the end of the law they derisively label “Obamacare” and of Planned Parenthood’s federal dollars.

Pleasing conservatives, the measure would all but kill the 2010 Affordable Care Act, effectively ending its requirements that individuals obtain health insurance and that large companies offer coverage to workers by erasing the financial penalties enforcing those obligations.

The bill would repeal the law’s expanded Medicaid coverage for lower-income people and its federal subsidies for those buying policies in insurance marketplaces. It would also annul a slew of tax increases the law imposed to cover its costs, including levies on medical devices, costly insurance policies, investment income of higher-earning people and indoor tanning salons, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press.

For GOP senators facing tough re-election fights, the measure offers some relief: a two-year delay in its repeal of the exchange subsidies and the Medicaid expansion. That would allow Republicans to argue that the bill creates a two-year bridge until the next president takes office and can offer a replacement health care plan. In the five years since the health statute became law, the GOP hasn’t coalesced behind a replacement proposal.

That two-year delay also keeps the impact of those provisions from being felt immediately. That could help GOP senators facing strong re-election challenges in Illinois, New Hampshire, Ohio and Pennsylvania, which are among 30 states that have expanded Medicaid to thousands of voters.

Also included is $1.5 billion over two years for mental health and drug abuse programs. Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, who could face a tough race next year, said that money is “important to me, especially with a heroin epidemic in Ohio.”

Republicans brought the bill to the Senate floor 11 months before an election in which Democrats have a solid chance of retaking the majority of a chamber the GOP controls by 54-46.

Republicans avoided needing 60 votes to overcome Democratic efforts to kill the measure by using a streamlined procedure available for deficit-cutting legislation. But that process has strict rules, including a bar against raising federal deficits, which repealing the entire health law would do because of higher taxes and reduced payments to health care providers the statute imposed.

Yet even getting to 51 votes has been tricky for the GOP, and they have no chance of rallying the two-thirds majority they would need to override a veto.

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, and presidential candidates Marco Rubio of Florida and Ted Cruz of Texas, had warned that a House-approved version of the bill was too weak. Lee said Thursday he supports the measure, saying the bill came as close to repealing the health law as Senate rules allow and “lays the groundwork for Obamacare to be erased from the books altogether.”

On the other end of the party spectrum, moderates including Sens. Mark Kirk of Illinois, who faces re-election in 2016, and Susan Collins of Maine, were concerned about the bill’s Planned Parenthood cuts. The organization has faced Republican attacks this year for providing fetal tissue to researchers.

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#UK 2 police officers, 1 bystander killed in Biafra protest

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WARRI, Nigeria (AP) — Ten people including two police officers died in the latest protests Wednesday over renewed demands for a Biafran state to secede from Nigeria’s southeast, police and a protest leader said.

Such protests were banned last month by southern governors concerned by the increasing violence around new demands for a Biafran state, a cause that prompted a 1960s civil war that killed 1 million people.

It comes as Nigeria’s president of five months, Muhammadu Buhari, is preoccupied with containing a 6-year-old northeastern Islamic uprising by Boko Haram that has spread across Nigeria’s borders and killed an estimated 20,000 people.

Police Deputy Superintendent Ali Okechukwu said he has reports that at least two officers were killed when protesters opened fire Wednesday in Onitsha city of Anambra state.

A leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, Ugochukwu Chinweuba, gave a contradictory account, saying police opened fire indiscriminately, killing at least eight people including bystanders. Chinweuba said dozens of protesters have been wounded, some critically.

He said a peaceful protest was disrupted by agitators who set businesses, homes and trucks ablaze. Markets and shops closed, fearing looting.

The violence erupted a day after Nigeria’s chief of police, Inspector General Solomon Arase, warned protesters to desist or face “the full weight of the law.”

Arase said police already are holding 134 activists from recent protests.

The protests began after the director of banned Radio Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu, was arrested in October. His lawyer, Vincent Egechukwu, told The Associated Press that Kanu is being investigated for terrorism. He already has been charged with criminal conspiracy and is accused of “hate speech” after he broadcast a call to arms to fight for a Biafran state.

Such a state would include Nigeria’s richest and devastatingly polluted oil-producing areas, already riven by violent demands for a more equitable share of wealth from Africa’s biggest petroleum producer.

Faul reported from Lagos, Nigeria.

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#UK Australia says new analysis backs search area for Flight 370

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CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Australian authorities say new analysis confirms they’ve likely been searching in the right place for a missing Malaysian airliner.

Searchers have been combing a 120,000-square-kilometer (46,000-square-mile) part of the Indian Ocean since last year but have yet to turn up any trace of Flight 370, although a wing flap was found in July washed up on remote Reunion Island.

The new analysis by an agency of the Defence Department confirms “the highest probability” the final resting place for the plane is within the current search area, the government said in a statement.

Details of the report by the Defence Science and Technology Group will be released later Thursday by Australia’s Deputy Prime Minister Warren Truss and Assistant Defense Minister Darren Chester.

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#UK Texas sues feds to block resettlement of 6 Syrian refugees

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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas on Wednesday sued the U.S. government in an effort to block six Syrian refugees from resettling in Dallas this week.

The lawsuit comes after the nonprofit International Rescue Committee said it would place Syrian refugees in Texas over the objections of Republican Gov. Greg Abbott.

Texas, citing security concerns, is seeking to delay the arrival of the refugees for at least a week, until a federal judge can hear the challenge.

The Obama administration has said states don’t have the authority to block refugees. The IRC, which was also named in the lawsuit, has repeatedly noted that Syrian refugees are the most security-vetted group of people who come into the U.S. The Obama administration says that vetting is thorough and can take up to two years.

Abbott is among more than two dozen governors, mostly Republicans, who have vowed to keep new Syrian refugees from resettling in their states. Nevertheless, more than 170 Syrians have settled in the U.S. since the Paris attacks, including in states whose governors resisted, according to the U.S. State Department figures.

Abbott earlier Wednesday said the State Department offered “absolutely no guarantees” about safety ahead of the arrival.

“It is irresponsible for the refugee resettlement operations to put aside any type of security interest and continue to press on about this,” Abbott said while speaking to reporters over conference call in Cuba.

Texas had threatened the New York-based IIRC with legal action last week. The group responded Monday that it would continue to help all refugees in accordance with its obligations under federal guidelines. Texas responded Tuesday with demands for a moratorium on resettlements until the state received “all information” on Syrians scheduled to arrive in Texas during the next 90 days. Texas also sent a letter to the State Department seeking information on the expected refugees to “satisfy our concerns with the effectiveness of the screening procedures.”

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#UK Browns pick Austin Davis over Johnny Manziel to face Bengals

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Cleveland Browns quarterback Austin Davis (7) passes in the second half of an NFL football game against the Baltimore Ravens, Monday, Nov. 30, 2015, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/David Richard)

BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Austin Davis has scaled the Browns depth chart over the past few weeks. It’s an annual tradition this time of year for Cleveland quarterbacks.

After weeks as a third-stringer, Davis is the new starter — No. 24 for the club since 1999.

“I’ve heard that number tossed around,” Davis said when asked about a number that perhaps best underscores this franchise’s continued woes.

The merry-go-round took another spin Wednesday as coach Mike Pettine picked Davis over Johnny Manziel to start Sunday against the Cincinnati Bengals. The switch was necessary because Josh McCown, who spent most of the season absorbing body blows like a boxer’s sparring partner, broke his right collarbone Monday night against Baltimore and will miss the final five games.

Pettine said his decision to play Davis and not Manziel — recently demoted for breaking a promise to Cleveland’s coaches to behave during the bye week — had nothing to do with punishing one player but rewarding another.

“He deserves this opportunity,” Pettine said of Davis, who replaced an injured McCown in the fourth quarter.

Pettine is only committing to Davis, who went 3-5 in eight starts for St. Louis last season, as his starter for this week.

“We’ll revisit this,” Pettine said. “These are two players that we both want to see play is the bottom line. I don’t want to declare, ‘Hey, this is what it’s going to be from here on out.’ These are two young quarterbacks that have upside and we want to see what that upside is. Austin’s the guy for this week.”

Pettine said the Browns are not dissatisfied with Manziel. The 22-year-old 2012 Heisman Trophy winner has given no indication he wants out of Cleveland.

Davis now gets to show the Browns what he can do with more time to prepare.

Rushed into action for McCown, the 26-year-old Davis threw a tying touchdown pass and moved the Browns into position for a winning field goal. But Travis Coons’ 51-yard attempt was blocked by the Ravens and returned 64 yards for a TD as time expired, sending the Browns (2-9) to their sixth straight loss — a defeat as crushing as any in recent memory for Cleveland.

Davis completed 7 of 10 passes — he went for 6 for 6 on the scoring drive — for 77 yards. And he did it after hearing some Browns fans chant “John-ny, John-ny,” hoping Pettine would free Manziel from his doghouse.

Pettine praised Davis’ mental approach and work ethic, saying he is “as prepared as any quarterback that I’ve been around.”

Davis said the fear of failure drives him.

“I hate feeling unprepared for anything, especially being quarterback on an NFL football team. I feel like there are so many people that are counting on you and looking at you to play well,” he said. “The fact of letting people down just bothers me. That’s where just the hard work and prep comes from. It’s a big responsibility.”

While it’s a new beginning for Davis, McCown’s first season in Cleveland ended in disappointment and his right arm in a sling. McCown divulged for the first time that he played several games with broken ribs.

In typical fashion, McCown, 36, downplayed the physical toll taken on his body. For him, the bigger suffering is in not finishing with his teammates.

“I’m not the only guy that is fighting through stuff,” he said. “What’s the hardest thing for me to deal with in this situation is you just want to be available for your teammates and be there for your guys and so when you can’t be, it hurts. It hurts more than any of the physical things.”

NOTES: WR Terrelle Pryor signed and practiced for the first time since the former Oakland QB was released in August. Pettine said Pryor was brought back exclusively as a receiver but gives the team an “insurance policy” at quarterback. … TE Gary Barnidge was named the team’s Walter Payton Man of the Year winner for community service and on-field excellence. Barnidge is eligible for free agency, but said he “would love to be back.”

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Online: AP NFL website: http://www.pro32.ap.org and http://www.twitter.com/AP_NFL

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#UK One politician’s powerful speech on Syria moved British lawmakers to tears and applause

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hilary bennBritish lawmakers on Wednesday voted 397-223 to join the US and other nations in a bombing campaign against ISIS (also known as the Islamic State) in Syria.

The vote came directly after Hilary Benn, the UK Labour Party’s shadow foreign secretary, Conservative Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond called “one of the greatest speeches” in the British House of Commons’ history.

In the speech, Benn broke with his party’s leader, Jeremy Corbyn, and called for the UK to extend its airstrikes to Syria.

“We have a moral and practical duty to extend to Syria the acts we are now taking in Iraq,” Benn told the Commons, addressing his party directly.

“We are here faced by fascists,” he said of ISIS. “Not just their calculated brutality but their belief that they are superior to every single one of us in this Chamber tonight and all of the people that we represent. They hold us in contempt. They hold our values in contempt. They hold our belief in tolerance and decency in contempt.”

“And what we know about fascists is that they need to be defeated and it is why, as we have heard tonight, socialists and trade unionists were just one part of the international brigade in the 1930s to fight against Franco,” Benn continued. 

hilary benn

“It’s why this entire House stood up against Hitler and Mussolini. It’s why our party has always stood up against the denial of human rights and for justice and my view, Mr. Speaker, is that we must now confront this evil. It is now time for us to do our bit in Syria, and that is why I ask my colleagues to vote in favor of this motion tonight.”

Mutliple members of parliament (MPs) said that Benn’s speech had swayed them in the final hour of a more-than 10-hour debate on whether the UK should extend its airstrikes to Syria. The UK has been bombing ISIS targets in Iraq as part of the US-led anti-ISIS coalition since last year.

Prime Minister David Cameron had urged lawmakers to back extending the air strikes to Syria.

One MP, Stella Creasey, wrote on Twitter that “Hilary Benn’s speech has persuaded me that fascism must be defeated. I will hold public meeting on Sunday to discuss.” 

“Hilary Benn’s wind up speech in Syria debate one of the very best I have heard in the last 32 years really powerful heard in total silence,” Conservative MP Nicholas Soames, tweeted.

“Very, very powerful & moral speech from @hilarybennmp – MPs from all sides & with different views on join in clapping as he finishes,” wrote Labour party MP Yvette Cooper.

Another MP, Angela Smith, described the speech as “moving” and “immensely powerful,” and said Labour MPs were moved to tears by the speech,  the Daily Mirror reported.

British political analyst Andrew Sparrow noted in the Guardian how rare it is for MPs to applaud following a speech in the Commons: “It is very, very rare for MPs to applaud in the Commons but they applauded Benn because they recognised that this was something special (just as they applauded Robin Cook when he spoke against the Iraq war in 2003).”

Listen to the full speech below, or read the full text here.

 

 

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NOW WATCH: Here’s why Obama won’t send troops into Syria to destroy ISIS

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#UK UK Parliament to vote on expanded attacks on Islamic State

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The results of the vote is returned in the debating chamber at the House of Commons in London, after a debate on launching airstrikes against Islamic State extremists inside Syria, Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2015. British lawmakers have voted to join the international campaign of airstrikes against the Islamic State militant group in Syria. (Parliamentary Recording Unit via AP Video) TV OUT - NO ARCHIVE

LONDON (AP) — British lawmakers voted by a wide margin Wednesday to join the international campaign of airstrikes against the Islamic State group in Syria, after Prime Minister David Cameron asserted that bombing the “medieval monsters” in their heartland would make Britain safer.

The 397-223 vote in the House of Commons means Royal Air Force fighter jets — already operating against IS in Iraq from a base in Cyprus — could be flying over Syria within hours. Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond told Channel 4 news that the strikes would begin “very quickly … probably not tonight but it could be tomorrow night.”

Anti-war protesters outside Parliament booed as they learned the result of the vote. The decision came after an emotional 10 1/2-hour debate in which Cameron said that Britain must strike the militants in their heartland and not “sit back and wait for them to attack us.”

Opponents argued that Britain’s entry into Syria’s crowded airspace would make little difference, and said Cameron’s military plan was based on wishful thinking that overlooked the messy reality of the Syrian civil war.

Cameron has long wanted to target IS in Syria, but had been unsure of getting majority support in the House of Commons until now. He suffered an embarrassing defeat in 2013 when lawmakers rejected a motion backing attacks on the forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

The mood has changed following the Nov. 13 Paris attacks, claimed by IS, that killed 130 people. Both France and the U.S. have urged Britain to join their air campaign in Syria, and Cameron said Britain should not let its allies down.

He said Britain was already a top target for IS attacks, and airstrikes would reduce the group’s ability to plan more Paris-style carnage.

“Do we work with our allies to degrade and destroy this threat and do we go after these terrorists in their heartlands, from where they are plotting to kill British people?” he said. “Or do we sit back and wait for them to attack us?”

He said that attacking IS was not anti-Muslim but “a defense of Islam” against “women-raping, Muslim-murdering, medieval monsters.”

Cameron was backed by most members of his governing Conservative Party — which holds 330 of the 650 Commons seats — as well as members of the smaller Liberal Democrat party and others.

Labour, the main opposition, was divided. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn — who represents the left wing of the party — spoke against what he called a “reckless and half-baked intervention.” But more than 60 Labour lawmakers, including senior party figures, voted in support of airstrikes, a move likely to make fissures between the right and the left of the party even worse.

Labour foreign affairs spokesman Hilary Benn said Britain could not “walk by on the other side of the road” when international allies were asking for help against IS “fascists.”

Britain already conducts airstrikes against IS targets in Iraq, and in August launched a drone strike that killed two British IS militants in Syria.

British officials say Royal Air Force Typhoon and Tornado fighter jets, armed with Brimstone missiles capable of hitting moving targets, would bring the campaign highly accurate firepower and help minimize civilian casualties.

Critics claim British airstrikes will make little practical difference, and that ground forces will be needed to root out IS. Britain has ruled out sending troops, and critics of the government have responded with skepticism to Cameron’s claim that there are 70,000 moderate Syrian rebels on the ground.

Cameron stood by that claim Wednesday, though he conceded, “I’m not saying that the 70,000 are our ideal partners.”

Karin von Hippel, who was chief of staff to U.S. Gen. John Allen when he was the United States’ anti-ISIS envoy, said force alone would not defeat the militants — but neither would diplomacy by itself.

“The Brits have expertise and capabilities,” she said. Their involvement “brings moral authority and legitimacy to the fight.”

The British debate comes as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said NATO members were ready to step up military efforts against the Islamic State group — and held out hope of improved cooperation between the West and Russia to end Syria’s four-year civil war.

A day after U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said the United States would deploy a new special operations force to Iraq to step up the fight against the militants, Kerry said other countries could provide assistance that did not involve combat. He said the effort to expand operations would require more medical facilities, intelligence-gathering, military support structure, refueling operations, aerial defenses and other action.

The German Cabinet has approved plans to commit up to 1,200 soldiers to support the anti-IS coalition in Syria, though not in a combat role.

Despite talk of increased international cooperation, tension has soared between Russia and Turkey after the shooting down of a Russian military jet by Turkish forces last week.

On Wednesday, Russia’s deputy defense minister, Anatoly Antonov, accused Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his family of benefiting from illegal oil trade with Islamic State militants.

Erdogan called the claim “slander” and said Turkey would not “buy oil from a terror organization.”

Russia and the United States also disagree about tactics in Syria, with Moscow backing Assad and Washington saying he must go.

But Kerry, speaking after NATO meetings in Brussels, said that if Russia’s focus on fighting IS was “genuine,” it could have a constructive role in bringing peace. He didn’t say whether the U.S. might be willing to bring Russia into its military effort against the group, as some members such as France have proposed.

The top NATO commander in Europe, U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, said the bulk of Russia’s air operations in Syria are still directed against moderate anti-Assad opposition forces, not Islamic State positions.

U.S. officials had hoped Russia would change its bombing focus after the Oct. 31 attack on a Russian airliner over Egypt, which killed 224 people.

Asserting that the “vast majority” of Russian sorties targeted moderate groups, Breedlove said coalition forces were “not working with or cooperating with Russia in Syria” but had devised safety routines to make it easier for both groups.

The British debate was sometimes bad-tempered as opposition lawmakers demanded Cameron apologize for remarks, reportedly made at a closed-door meeting, in which he branded opponents a “bunch of terrorist sympathizers.”

Cameron did not retract the comments but said “there’s honor in voting for, there’s honor in voting against” the motion to back airstrikes.

From the passionate speeches in the House to the anti-war protesters outside Parliament, the debate recalled Britain’s divisive 2003 decision to join the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq on what turned out to be false claims about Saddam Hussein’s alleged weapons of mass destruction. Many lawmakers came to regret supporting the war and ensuing chaos, and blamed then-Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair for lacking a plan for post-war reconstruction.

Labour leader Corbyn said that “to oppose another reckless and half-baked intervention isn’t pacifism. It’s hard-headed common sense.”

Labour’s Shabana Mahmood — one of the few Muslim lawmakers in Parliament — called IS “Nazi-esque totalitarians who are outlaws from Islam,” but said she opposed the strikes because “we cannot simply bomb the ground, we have to have a strategy to hold it as well.”

But Cameron said doing nothing was a worse option.

“The risks of inaction are greater than the risks of what I propose,” he said.

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Associated Press writers Gregory Katz in London, Suzan Frazer in Ankara, Deb Riechmann in Washington, Jamey Keaten in Brussels and Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad contributed to this report.

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#UK Police say Juneau mayor didn’t die of gunshot

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A police vehicle idles outside the home of the late Juneau Mayor Stephen

JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — An autopsy was being conducted Wednesday on the body of Juneau’s recently elected mayor, who was found dead in his home earlier this week.

Dawnell Smith, a spokeswoman for the state health department, said preliminary results of the autopsy will be shared with Juneau police Wednesday. Police planned to hold a briefing Wednesday afternoon to provide an update on the case, spokeswoman Erann Kalwara said by email.

Smith said the medical examiner’s office only shares results with the family and public officials, which in this case is the Juneau police department.

Smith said a final report will not be issued until toxicology testing is complete. She said that can take two to eight weeks.

Police have been awaiting autopsy results to announce a possible cause of death for 70-year-old Stephen “Greg” Fisk. There was no sign of forced entry into Fisk’s home above Juneau’s downtown, where he was found Monday. Police have tentatively ruled out gunshots, drugs or suicide in the death.

In a statement Monday night, police acknowledged rumors of an assault but called those rumors “speculation.” The department has fielded media inquiries from around the country, Kalwara said Tuesday. Sometimes, it’s obvious at the scene that a person died of natural causes. “In this case, we just can’t confirm that yet or rule anything out,” she said Tuesday afternoon.

Fisk had scheduled appointments Monday and when he missed them, his adult son, Ian, went to his father’s home and spotted the body. Fisk lived alone.

Fisk, a fisheries consultant, won the mayoral election in October, ousting the incumbent. He was sworn in Oct. 20, city clerk Laurie Sica said. Deputy Mayor Mary Becker was named acting mayor.

Ian Fisk said in an email that his family is grieving privately.

“We sincerely appreciate the support of the community and we recognize that, as would be the case with any public figure, his death brings a lot of attention,” Ian Fisk said. “At this time we have no reason to speculate as to the cause of his death and are awaiting the results of his autopsy. Meanwhile I will not be responding to any further media requests of any kind, and ask for your understanding.”

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Dan Joling contributed to this report from Anchorage, Alaska.

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#UK Beijing underwent this insane transformation in only 24 hours

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These photos were taken in the exact same locations in Beijing within 24 hours of each other. 

On Tuesday, smog blanketed the city and hit 25 times what is considered safe. However, the pollution lifted overnight, resulting in a dramatic day-to-day transformation.

Story by Tony Manfred and editing by Stephen Parkhurst

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