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See photos of newborn tortoises, baby tigers and other wild things.
Authorities in New York's Staten Island evacuated a block after a large amount of potassium nitrate was found. Authorities say a man was selling the chemical on the internet. (June 29)
Many people went back to their burned down homes for the first time since the flames broke out. Things got pretty emotional as families saw the destruction first hand.
Many people went back to their burned down homes for the first time since the flames broke out. Things got pretty emotional as families saw the destruction first hand.
A hacker claimed he stole the ending of the final Harry Potter book. Christina McLarty reports.
Los Angeles County's most famous inmate is set to be released next week. Suraya Fadel reports.
Gilbert Gasice, 49, is accused of taking advantaged of some very well meaning children and their families, after he tricked them into believing he was a Hurricane Katrina victim. A federal judge believes Gascie is now truly getting what he deserves-- prison.
A few girls were tubing down the Kern River in Bakersfield when one fell out of her tube. Glen Walker reports.
The FBI and Santa Monica Police Department are offering a $20,000 reward to capture Paul Edmond Carpenter in connection with the murder of Horst Fietze. Jennifer Sabih reports.
The imprisoned Hmong-American leader at the center of an alleged plot to overthrow the communist government of Laos has been hospitalized with an irregular heart beat.
After fighting it with garden hoses, a local family is now cleaning up the damage from the fire.
A powder is popping up for the first time that is a deadly dangerous version of the original. Colored candy flavored cocaine is something so new, most cops haven't heard about it.
The Utah Blaze football team will wear a special decal on their helmets in honor of Justin Scaggs, who died last week of brain cancer.
Think walking to work would be tiresome? Try walking from Nevada to Washington, D.C. A man passed through Salt Lake City on Friday hoping that his long journey will help needy children. Brian Martin reports.
Authorities chased a motor home through the streets of northern Utah on Friday evening, which was driven by a suspect who even rammed a police car, dragged an officer -- and nearly crashed into a family's home. Fields Moseley reports.
We're kicking off a fun, summer project. It's called 'CCO Rewind. It's a chance for you to learn a little more about us and how we got here. Don Shelby takes a look at Paul Douglas (4:31).
The city of Charleston, South Carolina buried nine of its firefighters today. Don Shelby says, whenever a firefighter dies in the line of duty, a part of his heart breaks (1:07).
The Norwalk meeting discussed how to teach restaurants and consumers to cook with trans fat free oils. Glen Walker reports.
Authorities chased a motor home through streets in Ogden Friday evening, apparently because the suspect had stolen a puppy.
Good Question: When we leave for work do we leave the AC on? Or do we turn it off, and then crank it up when we get home? Ben Tracy reports (2:15).
He was just a week away from turning 20, but now a young soldier won't get to celebrate his birthday. Tony Hebert died fighting in Iraq, James Schugel reports (2:19).
Minneapolis Police are cracking down on criminals, within their own ranks,Jason DeRusha reports (2:07).
Police are searching for the baby-sitter who dropped off a missing baby this evening in Wilkinsburg; KDKA's David Highfield reports
A Chicago area woman says airport security rules should be changed after she was kept off a plane for what she says was an acceptable amount of breast milk. CBS 2's Dana Kozlov reports.
A Middletown teen is blind in one eye after being shot by a BB gun. Investigators seem to think she may not have been the intended target. Andrew Kirtzman reports.
Officials closed the Pitt Fall ride for a time today to conduct a special inspection, after an accident involving a similar ride in Louisville; KDKA's Paul Martino reports
CBS 42's Gadget Guy Fred Cantu shows how appliances can use power even when they are off.
Police are searching for a 9-month-old baby boy and his babysitter after he was reported missing this afternoon; KDKA's David Highfield reports
Two Chicago men jailed following a central Illinois crime spree have been tied to a bizarre killing on the South Side with Satanic overtones. CBS 2's Jay Levine reports.
14 units were lost in an apartment fire in Euless, but no residents were injured.
The former San Marcos doctor was honored twice by the Texas House of Representatives is a registered sex offender.
Sylvia Henry Is Taking To The Streets, hoping to find someone who knows how her daughter Stepha disappeared during hip-hop weekend over Memorial Day
The caged fighting match between Kimbo Slice and Ray Mercer will be held in Atlantic City this weekend, Mary Stoker Smith reports.
Parishioners say they will rebuild after fire badly damages the 19th century East End Baptist Church in Brooklyn. Brendan Keefe reports.
A New Hampshire man and his wife are in a standoff with police. Edward Brown and his wife have been convicted of tax evasion, and residents of their community wonder if it might end up like Ruby Ridge in 1992. (June 22)
Authorities have said that they will not discipline an off-duty Philadelphia police officer who lost a gun at an Ocean City amusement
Madeleine McCann must be found
Madeleine McCann News
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Two held in Madeleine case
Shilpa has signed up to star in a West End musical that's a 'Bollywood version of Moulin Rouge'.
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Grand Theft Auto exclusive
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Chartered flight Bin Laden may have arranged for his family's U.S. exit after Sept. 11.
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Madeleine McCann's parents have vowed not to lose
hope as Missing Children's Day is marked around the world.
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Three-year-old, who vanished from her bed
in a popular resort in southern Portugal
Vow on Missing Children's Day
Press Assoc. - Friday, May 25 06:24 am
The parents of missing Madeleine McCann have vowed not to lose hope as International Missing Children's Day is marked around the world. Madeleine, four, will be the focus of many international events more than three weeks after she was snatched from her parents' holiday apartment in Praia Da Luz on the Algarve, Portugal. In a message carried in the Portuguese press, Gerry and Kate McCann identified with parents of missing children in all countries. "We, like parents of missing children around the world, will not lose hope," they said. In Britain, Mr McCann's brother John will visit the London head office of the National Missing Persons Helpline to highlight its work. Last night Madeleine's image was projected on Marble Arch in London as part of the appeal for information on her whereabouts.
Today she will be the focus of events across Europe, including in Portugal, where her mother Kate is expected to attend a private lunch with a children's charity. International Missing Children's Day originates from the disappearance on May 25, 1979, of six-year-old Etan Patz in New York. Over subsequent years his case was kept in the public eye by various organisations and in 1983 US President Ronald Reagan declared May 25 "Missing Children's Day" in America. The tradition spread to Canada three years later and has since been adopted around the world including the European Union.
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By RAVI NESSMAN, Associated Press Writer
BAGHDAD - Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr appeared in public for the first time in months on Friday, delivering a fiery anti-American sermon to thousands of followers and demanding U.S. troops leave The U.S. military also announced that six U.S. soldiers were killed in a series of attacks across Iraq in recent days. The deaths put May on pace to be one of the deadliest months for U.S. forces here in years. Military officials have warned that U.S. casualties were likely to rise as more troops deployed to Iraq and the military pushed ahead with its Baghdad security crackdown. "As we are conducting more operations, we are going into areas we haven't gone into in force before. We have more people on the ground, this leads to an opportunity for more contact, more conflict, more clashes," said Lt. Col. Christopher Garver, a U.S. military spokesman. "This is a tough fight. We are in a war." In Washington, the Democratic-controlled Congress grudgingly approved fresh billions for the Iraq war, minus the troop withdrawal timeline that drew President Bush's earlier veto. Bush warned that August could prove to be a bloody month for U.S. troops and said: "The Iraqi government needs to show real progress in return for America's continued support and sacrifice." Al-Sadr had gone into hiding inIranfour months ago at the start of the U.S.-led Baghdad security crackdown. It was not immediately clear why he chose to return now to his base in the Shiite holy city of Najaf. However, he could be trying to take advantage of the absence of a major rival, Supreme Islamic Council of Iraq leader Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, who was recently diagnosed with lung cancer and went to Iran for treatment. Al-Sadr traveled in a long motorcade from Najaf to the adjacent holy city of Kufa on Friday morning to deliver his sermon before 6,000 worshippers. "No, no for Satan. No, no for America. No, no for the occupation. No, no for Israel," he chanted in a call and response with the audience at the start of his speech. He repeated his long-standing call for U.S. forces to leave Iraq. "We demand the withdrawal of the occupation forces, or the creation of a timetable for such a withdrawal," he said. "I call upon the Iraqi government not to extend the occupation even for a single day."He also condemned fighting between his Mahdi Army militia and Iraqi security forces, saying it "served the interests of the occupiers." Instead, he said the militia should turn to peaceful protests, such as demonstrations and sit-ins, he said. As part of his effort to recast himself as a nationalist — instead of a radical with a narrow Shiite agenda — the 33-year-old leader called on Sunnis to join with him in the fight against the U.S. troop presence here. He also criticized the government's inability to provide reliable services to the people. Al-Sadr is believed to be honing plans to consolidate political gains and foster ties with Iran. His Mahdi Army fought U.S. troops to a virtual standstill in 2004, but to avoid renewed confrontation he ordered his militants off the streets when the U.S. began its security crackdown in the Baghdad area. His associates say his strategy is based partly on a belief that Washington soon will start reducing troop strength, leaving behind a hole in Iraq's security and political power structure that he can fill.
Al-Sadr also believes that Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government may soon collapse under its failure to improve security, services and the economy, al-Sadr's aides say. A political reshuffle would give the Sadrist movement, with its 30 seats in the 275-member parliament, an opportunity to become a major player. In a move that could hasten the collapse, al-Sadr pulled his supporters out of al-Maliki's government last month over the prime minister's refusal to call for a timetable for a U.S. withdrawal. The legislation approved by Congress on Thursday includes nearly $95 billion to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistanthrough Sept. 30. Democrats also abandoned their attempts to require the Pentigonto adhere to troop training, readiness and rest requirements unless Bush waived them. The bill establishes a series of goals for the Iraqi government to meet as it strives to build a democratic country able to defend its own borders. Continued U.S. reconstruction aid would be conditioned on progress toward the so-called benchmarks, although Bush retains the authority to order that the funds be spent regardless of how the Baghdad government performs. Meanwhile, three U.S. soldiers were killed in roadside bombings in the capital and the surrounding areas, the military said Friday. Two others were killed in explosions north of Baghdad, and a sixth soldier was hit by gunfire in the volatile Diyala province, the military said. The killings raised the American death toll for the month to at least 88. Last month, 104 U.S. troops were killed in Iraq. Iraq
BAGHDAD - Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr appeared in public for the first time in months on Friday, delivering a fiery anti-American sermon to thousands of followers and demanding U.S. troops leave Iraq.
AP - 1 hour, 3 minutes ago
SEOUL, South Korea - North Korea fired several short-range guided missiles Friday into the sea that separates it from Japan in an apparent test launch, South Korean officials and media reports said.
LAGOS, Nigeria - Gunmen kidnapped a group of foreign oil workers on Friday, including three Americans and four Britons, in Nigeria's unruly southern petroleum-producing region, officials said.
LAGOS, Nigeria - Gunmen kidnapped a group of foreign oil workers on Friday, including three Americans and four Britons, in Nigeria's unruly southern petroleum-producing region, officials said.
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John Prescott has described leaked video footage of Saddam Hussein just before he was executed as "deplorable". Speaking on the Today programme, the deputy prime minister said whoever carried it out should be "condemned".
Iraq investigates Saddam footage
Saddam Hussein was taunted and insulted in his last moments which was shown world wide on mobile phone footage...
The Iraqi government has launched an inquiry into unofficial mobile phone footage showing the execution of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. The mobile phone footage showed he exchanged taunts and insults with witnesses at his hanging on Saturday. The grainy video showed the former leader being told to "go to hell" by someone attending the hanging. UK Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott said the circumstances of the execution were "deplorable". Do you consider this bravery? Saddam Hussein, on new video.
The Iraqi authorities fear the footage, released on the internet hours after the execution, could contribute to a dramatic rise in sectarian tensions between Iraq's Sunni and Shia communities. "There were a few guards who shouted slogans that were inappropriate and that's now the subject of a government investigation," an adviser to Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, Sami al-Askari, told Reuters news agency.
Chants and insults
Saddam Hussein, a Sunni Muslim, was sentenced to death by an Iraqi court on 5 November over the killings of 148 Shias from the town of Dujail in the 1980s. He was executed before dawn on Saturday in Baghdad and buried near his hometown of Tikrit a day later.
I think whoever was involved and responsible for it should be ashamed of themselves John Prescott
Death scenes 'deplorable'
The Iraq authorities released official footage of the execution, to prove to the public that Saddam Hussein was dead. But that film did not include any sound and did not show the actual moment of death. The grainy mobile phone footage that emerged hours later was shot from below the gallows.
"I lived through the bloody war that Saddam started with Iran. But still I am not happy with Saddam's execution "Alireza Pahlavani, Tehran
As Saddam Hussein is led towards the trapdoor, one of the unseen observers shouts "go to hell". Others can be heard chanting the name of Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr and of Muhammad Sadiq Sadr, his father who was murdered by Saddam Hussein's agents. In response Saddam Hussein is sarcastic, asking "do you consider this bravery?"
'Unacceptable'
In a BBC interview, John Prescott called it "deplorable" and "totally unacceptable" that video clips of the execution had surfaced on the internet. Mr Prescott is in charge while Prime Minister Tony Blair is on holiday. "I think the manner was quite deplorable really," he said. "I don't think one can endorse in any way that, whatever your views about capital punishment. "Frankly, to get the kind of recorded messages coming out is totally unacceptable, and I think whoever was involved and responsible for it should be ashamed of themselves."
Former Head Of Star Wars Program Says Cheney Main 9/11 Suspect




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