Los Angeles on arson attack alert
Sunday, January 1st, 2012Hundreds of extra firefighters are on the streets in Los Angeles after a spate of arson attacks in the Hollywood area and elsewhere.

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Los Angeles on arson attack alert
Hundreds of extra firefighters are on the streets in Los Angeles after a spate of arson attacks in the Hollywood area and elsewhere.

Excerpt from:
Los Angeles on arson attack alert
The Syrian government pulled tanks from the streets of Homs on Tuesday as Arab League observers arrived to monitor government pledges to withdraw forces.
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Embattled City in Syria Simmers as Monitors Enter
BEIRUT — After days of punishing assaults, Syria’s army began withdrawing tanks from the restive city of Homs on Tuesday just as a team of Arab League observers was on its way to the central city, according to activists and an Arab official. Opposition activist Mohammed Saleh said the heavy bombardment of Homs stopped Tuesday morning and tanks were seen pulling out of the streets. Another Homs-based activist said he saw armored vehicles leaving early Tuesday on a highway leading to the city of Palmyra to the east. He asked that his name not be made public for fear of retribution. Read full article > >
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After days of attacks, Syria pulls tanks from streets of restive city as Arab monitors arrive
Thousands of Yemenis take to the streets of Sanaa, to protest against the killing of demonstrators and demand their country’s acting leader resign.
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Yemenis denounce protester deaths
The reality of life on the streets of London’s Square Mile
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Sleeping rough in the Square Mile
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin made few concessions Thursday to the protesters who have rocked his country in recent weeks, saying that they reflected a pluralistic society but also claiming that they had been paid to turn out into the streets. Putin was taking questions in a carefully orchestrated, nationally televised session that has become an annual ritual during his 12-year-rule over the country. This year, it took place 11 days after a parliamentary election in which Putin’s United Russia party was dealt a major blow, even amid allegations that ballot-stuffing offset even greater losses. Read full article > >
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Putin says protesters were paid by rivals
NOWSHERA, Pakistan — A few hundred men took to the streets in a suburb of this city early this month, furiously chanting for the expulsion of neighbors they described as interlopers. The objects of their ire were Afghan refugees, millions of whom reside here in Pakistan. They are hardly newcomers — many fled war, Russian occupation or Taliban rule years or even decades ago. Many were born in Pakistan. Read full article > >
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Spotlight on Afghan refugees in Pakistan
BEIRUT — Syria continued to defy mounting international pressure to halt attacks on civilian protesters Friday as Turkey and France suggested they are not ruling out the possibility of military intervention if the violence continues to escalate. Human rights groups and activists said Syrian security forces killed at least 17 protesters across the country after tens of thousands of people poured into the streets yet again after Friday prayers to demand the ouster of President Bashar al-Assad. Read full article > >
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Defiant Syria kills more civilian protesters
T he tents are gone from Zuccotti Park , though tents, and their attendant grunge, were hardly what Occupy Wall Street was about. The pathologies of the streets that came with urban encampment have been, if not dispelled, at least dispersed. The pathologies of the suites — the day-to-day conduct in America’s boardrooms and largest banks — remain. Read full article > >
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Where Occupy Wall Street must go from here
T he Occupy Wall Street movement slogan “We are the 99 percent” is ironic to many of those who are serving, or have served, in Afghanistan or Iraq. Our servicemen and women are not the 1 percent of Americans whom OWS has taken to the streets to condemn. Rather, this 1 percent goes ignored by the self-proclaimed 99 percent in Zuccotti Park, as well as by those looking down on the protesters from their offices at Goldman Sachs or Citibank. And it is not lost on those fighting in Afghanistan that it was bank accounts, not an interest in or concern for those patrolling Kandahar, that motivated the protesters to take to the streets in cities across America. Read full article > >
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U.S. soldiers at war: The forgotten 1 percent
Ambulance workers treat 170 people, with 22 being taken to hospital, as more than 60,000 people take to the streets of Lewes for bonfire night.

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Dozens hurt in firework accidents
OAKLAND, Calif. — Thousands of Wall Street protesters marched in the streets of Oakland on Wednesday as they geared up with labor unions to picket banks, take over foreclosed homes and vacant buildings and disrupt operations at the nation’s fifth-busiest port. The protests marked an escalation from previous demonstrations as they went beyond boisterous rallies at park encampments and took aim at a major hub of commerce — the Port of Oakland. Organizers say they want to halt “the flow of capital” at the port. Read full article > >
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Occupy protesters target downtown Oakland banks; branches close for the day
Southeast Washington resident Nikki Peele says seeing police walk around her neighborhood makes her feel safe. So she likes D.C. Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier’s All Hands on Deck program, which floods the streets with police during select weekends each year. Across the Anacostia River in Northwest, Martin Moulton says his neighborhood near the Walter E. Washington Convention Center struggles with public urination, loitering and other quality-of-life issues. Seeing police around is fine, Moulton says, but he doesn’t think it impresses or intimidates criminals. Read full article > >
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All Hands on Deck police effort gets mixed reviews
Two-time Marine Corps Marathon champion Darrell General is running the event Sunday for the first time in six years, not to find out what his 45-year-old body can accomplish but what his burdened mind can unload as he travels 26.2 miles through the streets of his home town. General’s goal is to come to grips with difficult times: the deaths in recent years of his brother, James, from kidney failure and his sister-in-law, JoAnne Jones, from leukemia. Those tragedies sidetracked the former Washington area distance-running star, one of only four male marathon runners to compete in five U.S. Olympics trials. Read full article > >
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Darrell General, former Marine Corps Marathon winner, runs for his late brother
LIMA, Peru — A magnitude-6.9 earthquake centered off Peru’s central coast sent people running panicked into the streets Friday in cities badly damaged by a killer quake four years earlier. There were no reports of damage or injuries. People who had lost loved ones and homes in the earlier quake were badly shaken and some broke into tears. Read full article > >
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Magnitude-6.9 earthquake shakes Peru capital; near city hit by 2007 quake