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Colombia Farc rebels ask for 'more time

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Colombia's left-wing Farc rebels have rejected criticism that efforts to end almost fifty years of conflict are moving too slowly.
 
Farc lead negotiator Ivan Marquez said achieving lasting peace in Colombia would take "more time".
 
He spoke as the rebels and the Colombian government marked six months since peace talks began.
 
President Juan Manuel Santos has said he hopes a deal can be reached within months rather than years.
 
Peace negotiations began in Cuba in November.
 
Mr Marquez told reporters in the capital, Havana, on Sunday that he did not understand why the pace of talks was being described as slow.
 
"You have been watching the Giro d'Italia (cycle race). Some people want us to go at this pace, but if we go at this pace, we will fail."
 
"We have to approach these issues with serenity, with depth if we really want to form the solid basis to build a stable and long-lasting peace," he said.
 
Talks remain stalled over the issue of land redistribution in Colombia, the first of a five-point agenda.
 
The Colombian government has promised to return millions of hectares of stolen land to displaced peasants, one of the rebels' main demands.
 
But Bogota insists that the rebels must first put down their guns and cease hostilities.
 
'Intensification of violence'
Jorge Restrepo, director of Colombia's Conflict Analysis Resource Centre, a private and independent research group, told Efe news agency that "no big changes have happened" in Colombia since the talks began.
 
"We have seen an intensification of violence that violates the human rights of indigenous and Afro-Colombian communities and human rights defenders."
 
Mr Restrepo argued that the Farc could be trying to gain time "to retrain... and to gather strength".
 
Colombia's internal conflict began in the 1960s.
 
It has already claimed the lives of tens of thousands people and left millions more displaced from their land.

Yahoo's board has approved a deal to buy New York-based blogging service Tumblr for $1.1bn (£725m), US media reports say.

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Yahoo's board has approved a deal to buy New York-based blogging service Tumblr for $1.1bn (£725m), US media reports say.
 
The acquisition is expected to be announced as early as Monday.
 
The deal was a "foregone conclusion" and was a unanimous vote by the board, tech blog AllThingsD reported, citing sources close to the matter.
 
If confirmed, it will be CEO Marissa Mayer's largest deal since taking the helm of Yahoo in July 2012.
 
Analysts say that by acquiring Tumblr, Yahoo would gain a larger social media presence and enhance its ability to attract younger audiences. It will also help Tumblr generate more revenue from advertisements.
 
On its home page, Tumblr says it hosts 108 million blogs, with 50.7 billion posts between them.
 
Under the terms of the acquisition, Tumblr would continue to operate as an independent business, the Wall Street Journal said, citing unnamed sources familiar with the situation.
 
About 700 million web surfers visit Yahoo's website every month, ranking it among the top in the global industry.
 
However, it shed more than 1,000 jobs during 2012 and has long been divided over whether it should focus on media content or on tools and technologies.
 
Chief executive Marissa Mayer was brought in last July from Google to turn the company round, and has been focusing on building better mobile and social networking services.

US police offer $10,000 reward for parade shooters

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New Orleans police have offered a $10,000 reward and blurry surveillance camera images in hopes of both leading to arrests in a Mother's Day shooting that wounded 19 and showed again how far the city has to go to shake a persistent culture of violence that belies the city's festive image.

Video released early on Monday shows a crowd gathered for a boisterous second-line parade suddenly scattering in all directions, with some falling to the ground.

They appear to be running from a man in a white T-shirt and dark pants who turns and runs out of the picture. The image is not clear, but police say they hope someone will recognise him and notify investigators.

Police said there may have been as many as three armed men.

The suspects escaped despite the presence of officers who were interspersed through the crowd as part of routine precautions for such an event.

Jarrat Pytell, medical student, said he was walking with friends near the parade route when the crowd suddenly began to break up.

"I saw the guy on the corner, his arm extended, firing into the crowd," Pytell said Monday.

"He was obviously pointing in a specific direction he wasn't swinging the gun wildly."

Pytell said he tended to one woman with a severe arm fracture - he was not sure if it was from a bullet or a fall - and to others including an apparent shooting victim who was bleeding badly.

Three victims remain in critical condition, though their wounds weren't believed to be life-threatening. Most of the wounded had been discharged from the hospital.

It is not the first time gunfire has shattered a festive mood in the city this year.

Five people were wounded in a drive-by shooting in January after a Martin Luther King Jr Day parade, and four were wounded in a shooting after an argument in the French Quarter in the days leading up to Mardi Gras.

Two teens were arrested in connection with the MLK shootings; three men were arrested and charged in the Mardi Gras shootings.

The shootings are bloody reminders of the persistence of violence in the city, despite some recent progress.

Last week, law enforcement officials touted the indictment of 15 people in gang-related crimes, including the death of a 5-year-old girl killed by stray gunfire at a birthday party a year ago.

The city's 193 homicides in 2012 are seven fewer than the previous year, while the first three months of 2013 represented an even slower pace of killing.

Guatemalans hail historic genocide verdict

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Guatemala City, Guatemala - For the first time in history, a former head of state has been found guilty of genocide for crimes committed in the country itself, marking the biggest successful prosecution in Latin America.

When Efrain Rios Montt seized control of the country in a March 1982 coup, it gave way to the bloodiest period of Guatemala's 36-year-civil war.

The violence left 200,000 people dead and more than 45,000 disappeared, mostly people of the indigenous Ixil Maya ethnic group, according to the UN.

On Friday, a three-judge panel convicted the former military leader of genocide and crimes against humanity, sentencing him to a total of 80 years in prison.

"Genocide not only happened to the Ixil people. It happened to all of Guatemala because it ruined the country's social fabric," Judge Yasmin Barrios said during her ruling.

"This is why this sentence proclaims that such crimes can never happen again."

The courtroom erupted into cheers, tears and song as the sentence was read for more than two hours.

Many held hands while others pressed their hands onto their headsets to listen in to simultaneous translation in the Ixil language.

Presiding Judge Barrios sentenced the retired general to 50 years for genocide and an additional 30 years for crimes against humanity.

It is the first time the state has acknowledged genocide occurred during the country's brutal 1960-1996 civil war.

Mauricio Rodriguez Sanchez, a former intelligence chief under Rios Montt, was acquitted of all charges.

'Taught the world a lesson'

"I am truly moved," said Helen Mack, human rights advocate and executive director of the Myrna Mack Foundation as tears rolled down her face. "It is no longer one person's testimony. The state has now upheld the truth."

Barrios also set a hearing for May 13 to determine the amount of reparations survivors would be entitled to by the state.

"Guatemala has now set the bar and taught the world a lesson," said 1992 Nobel Peace Prize winner Rigoberta Menchu.

Within minutes, international outpouring of support hailed the conviction as a victory for Guatemala, a country that has been overrun by political corruption and impunity for decades.

"This was a firm step for the exercise of justice and state of law in my country," attorney general Claudia Paz told Al Jazeera in a telephone interview. "Our democracy has grown."

Anita Isaacs, political science professor who writes about postwar justice in Guatemala, considered it the most important day since the signing of the peace accords in December 1996.

"The trial confronted Guatemalans with a history they had never wanted to face," Isaacs said.

"The road ahead is uncertain but Guatemalans are being given a chance to acknowledge their past and find a way of finally building a collective and inclusive democratic future."

The genocide trial became a trending topic on Twitter and reactions spread like wildfire on other social media sites.

"Rios Montt trial and verdict remarkable developments in country where impunity for past atrocities has long been norm," tweeted renowned US human rights lawyer and spokesperson for Human Rights Watch, Reed Brody.

Earlier on Friday, thousands of Indigenous Mayans and everyday citizens had packed the Supreme Court room and waited for hours without exiting along with international observers and press. Judge Barrios had announced she would be reading her sentence later in the afternoon.

Silence broken

In many ways, the trial marked the first time Guatemalan society had revisited past crimes as the public ministry attempted to establish the state's intention of exterminating indigenous Mayan populations.

For years, the 86-year-old Rios Montt avoided prosecution while serving in the Guatemalan congress. A national law grants immunity to public officials. The general stepped down in January 2012 and was charged.

The attorney general's office said that it found evidence of 1,771 killings of indigenous Mayans, including women and children. Prosecutors say more than 200 women were raped and an estimated 29,000 people were displaced.

Nearly 100 witnesses, including the survivors of mass killings, testified about forced displacement, rape, torture and forced assimilation.

Judges, prosecutors, and defence lawyers logged well over 200 court hours since the trial began on March 19.

Forensic anthropologists and experts testified to how state policies contributed to the extermination of five percent of the Ixil population.

Judicial interference

For two months the trial polarized Guatemalan society. Proceedings were stalled in several instances in April due to legal injunctions presented by the defence and varying appeals courts to thwart prosecution efforts.

In an unprecedented turn of events, a pre-trial judge reinstated to the case even attempted to annul proceedings entirely.

Judge Carol Patricia Flores ruled the legal process be set back to November 2011, before the general had been charged. The move heightened tensions and caused outcry in the contentious trial.

In addition, a political push had come from conservative sectors of Guatemalan society, who denied genocide took place in the Central American nation.

Among those who lobbied against the trial is President Otto Perez Molina, who was personally implicated in the case after a military witness accused him of participating in the massacres.

Perez has also lobbied for ending a US ban on military aid imposed halfway through the civil war.

The US has insisted that bringing those responsible for war crimes to justice is key to ending the long-standing weapons embargo.

'Acknowledgement of wrongs committed'

"This is an illegal sentence. It was written with a left hand not with the right," said litigator Francisco Garcia Gudiel, insinuating the conviction was a political lynching by former left-wing fighters.

Gudiel said he would be appealing the historic sentence.

For Jo-Marie Burt, senior fellow at the Washington Office on Latin America and political science professor at George Mason University in Virginia, the sentence has already transformed the makeup of the country.

"A juridical truth establishes that there was genocide. This is the official acknowledgement of the wrongs committed against the Ixil people," Burt explains.

"It establishes that there is no longer impunity for those crimes of the past regardless of who you are."

John Kerry, the US secretary of state, has said Syrian President Bashar al-Assad will have to step down as part of any political solution in Syria.

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John Kerry, the US secretary of state, has said Syrian President Bashar al-Assad will have to step down as part of any political solution in Syria.
 
Kerry made the comments on Thursday in Rome while meeting his Jordanian counterpart, Nasser Judeh, during the third day of talks on the two-year conflict.
 
He said all sides were working to "effect a transition government by mutual consent of both sides, which clearly means that in our judgement President Assad will not be a component of that transitional government".
 
Kerry also officially unveiled $100m in additional US humanitarian aid for Syrian refugees, almost half of which will go to help Jordan struggling to cope with a tide of people fleeing the war.
About 2,000 people are flooding across the border into Jordan every day, and the country now hosts nearly 525,000 refugees, Judeh said at the start of the talks in Rome.
 
"We have 10 percent of our population today, in the form of Syrian refugees. It is expected to rise to about 20 to 25 percent given the current rates by the end of this year, and possibly to about 40 percent by the middle of 2014," he said.
 
"No country can cope with the numbers as huge as the numbers I've just described," he said, adding Jordan was very grateful for the help of the international community.
 
International conference
Plans for an international conference to try to find a solution to the crisis were also continuing, Kerry said, after he agreed in talks in Moscow that he and Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, would work in tandem on the issue.
 
He had spoken with most of the foreign ministers from the countries involved and there is a "very positive response and a very strong desire to move to this conference and to try to find, at least exhaust the possibilities of finding, a political way forward".
 
Ban Ki-moon, the UN chief, had also been in touch, so "we are going to forge ahead very, very directly to work with all of the parties to bring that conference together," Kerry added.
 
No venue has yet been identified, but Geneva could host the talks that are likely to be held by the end of May.
The US secretary of state said the US ambassador to Syria, Robert Ford, also met the Syrian opposition in the Turkish city of Istanbul on Wednesday to discuss the way forward.
 
Since the war erupted to oust Assad, more than 1.5 million Syrians have fled the country into neighbouring countries, including Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon, vastly straining their resources.
 
Up to four million more could be displaced within the country as they seek to flee the fierce fighting, which has already claimed more than 70,000 lives, according to the UN.
 

Ohio prosecutors have said they plan to seek aggravated murder charges that could carry the death penalty

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altOhio prosecutors have said they plan to seek aggravated murder charges that could carry the death penalty, against the man suspected of imprisoning three women for about a decade.
 
The charges relate to alleged forced miscarriages suffered by one victim.
 
Ariel Castro, 52, was arraigned in court earlier for the kidnap and rape of Amanda Berry, 27, Gina DeJesus, 23 and Michelle Knight, 32.
 
Ms Berry escaped on Monday and was able to raise the alarm.
 
Cuyahoga County prosecutor Tim McGinty said the murder charges were based on evidence from one of the women held captive in Mr Castro's house that he had impregnated her, then physically abused and starved her in order to induce miscarriages.
 
'Private prison'
"I fully intend to seek charges for each and every act of sexual violence, rape, each day of kidnapping, every felonious assault, all his attempted murders, and each act of aggravated murder he committed by terminating pregnancies that the offender perpetuated against the hostages during this decade-long ordeal," Mr McGinty told a news conference
"My office will also engage in a formal process in which we evaluate to seek charges eligible for the death penalty.
 
"The reality is we still have brutal criminals in our midst who have no respect for the rule of law or human life. The law of Ohio calls for the death penalty for those most depraved criminals who commit aggravated murder during the course of a kidnapping."
 
"This child kidnapper operated a torture chamber and private prison in the heart of our city," he added.
 
Earlier on Thursday, Mr Castro appeared in court in Cleveland, handcuffed and dressed in blue overalls. He did not enter a plea.
 
He is charged with four counts of kidnapping, covering the three initial abduction victims and Jocelyn, Ms Berry's six-year-old daughter, who was apparently conceived and born in captivity.
 
The former school bus driver also faces three counts of rape, one against each woman.
 
'Disappointed, embarrassed'
Bail was set at $8m (£5.1m), meaning he will remain in custody.
He has been placed on suicide watch and will be kept in isolation, his court-appointed lawyer Kathleen DeMetz told reporters.
 
According to CBS News, Mr Castro confessed to his crimes in a long, hand-written letter, apparently a suicide note that was found in the house.
 
In the letter he said he had been raped as a child by a relative, a law enforcement source told the US network.
 
Ariel Castro's two brothers, Pedro and Onil, also appeared in court on unrelated charges. They had been arrested, but police found no evidence linking them to the crime.
 
Pedro Castro was fined $100 for public drinking, while two minor counts against Onil Castro were dropped.
 
On Thursday, Mr Castro's daughter, Arlene, who was one of the last people to see Gina DeJesus before she disappeared in 2004 aged 14, wept during a TV interview.
 
Describing herself as "disappointed, embarrassed, mainly devastated", as she apologised to Ms DeJesus.
The three women were all abducted after accepting rides from Mr Castro, according to a leaked police report.
 
They told officials they could only remember being outside twice during their time in captivity.
 
Cleveland City Councilman Brian Cummins said the women had told police they had only gone as far as a garage on the property, disguised in wigs and hats.
 
Mr Cummins, citing police information, said the victims had been kept apart inside the house until their captor felt he had enough control to allow them to mingle.
 
Ms Berry, whose disappearance in 2003 the day before her 17th birthday was widely publicised in the local media, returned to her sister's home on Wednesday.
 
A few hours later, Gina DeJesus, who went missing in 2004 at the age of 14, was also brought home.

A painting by Fernand Leger owned by Madonna has been sold for $7.2 million (£4.7m) in New York.

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altA painting by Fernand Leger owned by Madonna has been sold for $7.2 million (£4.7m) in New York.
 
The singer bought the 1921 Cubist work, Three Women at the Red Table, in 1990 for $3.4m (£2.2m).
 
According to Sotheby's, proceeds from the sale "will benefit Madonna's Ray of Light Foundation, supporting girls' education projects in the Middle East and South Asia".
 
"Thanks to everyone who helped make it happen!" said the pop star on Facebook.
 
Before Tuesday's sale, Madonna said she wanted "to trade something valuable for something invaluable - educating girls.The sale formed part of a Sotheby's sale of Impressionist and modern art that took more than $230m (£148.6m).
 
Les Pommes, a still life from by French artist Paul Cezanne, fetched the highest price, selling for $41.6m (£26.9m).
 
L'Amazone, a portrait of French socialite Baroness Marguerite de Hasse de Villers by Amedeo Modigliani, went for $25.9m (£16.7m).
 
A Pablo Picasso sculpture of his young muse Sylvette, meanwhile, sold for $13.6m (£8.8m).
 
Overall the auction failed to live up to last year's event, which saw a version of Edvard Munch's The Scream sell for a world record $119.9m (£77.4m).
 

Cleveland police set to interview women's 'kidnappers'

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altPolice investigating the abduction of three women for about a decade in Cleveland, Ohio, are due to carry out in-depth interviews of three male suspects.
 
A judge granted them an extra 12 hours to file charges, and they now have until Wednesday evening local time.
 
Correspondents say police have been put on the defensive by questions over their handling of the case.
 
All three women are said to be in good health and have left hospital.
 
Amanda Berry, who disappeared in 2003 aged 16, escaped with a neighbour's help on Monday while her alleged captor was away.
 
Gina DeJesus, who went missing aged 14 a year later, and Michelle Knight, who vanished in 2002 aged about 19, were also rescued from the property.
 
A school bus driver, Ariel Castro, and his two brothers - Pedro, 54, and Onil, 50 - have been arrested.
 
Ariel Castro reportedly fled the neighbourhood after neighbours kicked in the door of his house to help the women escape.
 
He was arrested at a nearby McDonald's restaurant, according to local media.
 
It is unclear when Castro's brothers were arrested.
 
The reappearance of the women astounded residents of the neighbourhood in which they had been held, but some have claimed police failed to act on their tip-offs.Police have confirmed a six-year-old girl, Jocelyn, who was discovered along with the women is Amanda Berry's daughter.
 
Properties searched
Police say they are planning to conduct in-depth interviews with the suspects on Wednesday, and charges are expected to be filed by Wednesday evening - 48 hours after the men were arrested.
 
"This is just the tip of the iceberg. This investigation will take a very long time," Cleveland police spokeswoman Jennifer Ciaccia told CNN.
 
Police are carrying out an inch-by-inch inspection of the house at 2207 Seymour Ave and say they are also searching other properties.Monday's rescue unfolded with a frenzied call to the emergency services by Ms Berry, now 27, who escaped with the help of a neighbour who heard her screaming while her alleged captor was out of the house.
Rescuer Charles Ramsey said he had helped kick in a metal door so that Ms Berry could climb outside, with her daughter, and phone police.
 
In a recording of Monday's emergency call, she says: "I've been kidnapped, and I've been missing for 10 years. And I'm here. I'm free now."
 
She begged for police to come soon, "before he gets back".
 
Police then arrived to find the two other abductees.
 
The women were taken to hospital and reunited with their families.
 
Medical officials said they appeared to be in good health and were discharged from hospital shortly
 
Jocelyn was smiling and eating ice lollies, police said, adding that she had been surreptitiously home-schooled by her mother in the house.FBI Special Agent Stephen Anthony said: "The nightmare is over. These three young ladies have provided us with the ultimate definition of survival and perseverance. The healing can now begin."
 
Jaycee Dugard, who was 11 years old when she was kidnapped and held captive for 18 years before being rescued in 2009, released a statement saying: "As simple as it sounds, these women need the opportunity to have the privacy to heal and reconnect
"I know individuals are strong in spirit and can be resilient in crisis. I wish them the best in their journey."
 
Startling details about the close connections between the alleged abductors and the families of the abducted have emerged.
 
Tito DeJesus, an uncle of Georgina (or Gina) DeJesus, played in bands with Ariel Castro and had even visited the house while the women were being held there.
 
Ariel Castro's son - also called Ariel, although he goes by his middle name Anthony - wrote an article about the disappearance of Gina DeJesus for his local newspaper in 2004.
 
He has been quoted as saying that it was "unspeakable" to discover the suspected perpetrators were in the family.
 
'Only two calls'
Neighbours told news organisations they had made multiple calls to police regarding suspicious activity at the house, including sightings of women crying for help and of Ariel Castro allegedly taking a small girl for early-morning walks.
 
Another neighbour claimed to have alerted police to the sound of pounding on the doors.
 
In a statement, Cleveland police insisted they had not been alerted to reports also emerging from neighbours concerning sightings of "naked women and women in chains" at the property.
 
"Upon researching our call intake system extensively, only two calls for service from police are shown at that address."One call was from the resident, Ariel Castro, reporting a fight in the street. The second call was in relation to an incident regarding Ariel Castro and his duties as a bus driver. Police investigated the possibility that Castro had left a child unattended on a school bus.
 
"The investigation included an interview with Castro; however, officers did not enter the home. No charges were filed in that incident."
 
But one resident, Lupe Collins, described as close to relatives of the women said the police had failed the women.
 
"Everyone in the neighbourhood did what they had to do. The police didn't do their job."
 
Cleveland police were heavily criticised in 2009 after officers discovered a home in a poor district in which Anthony Sowell had killed 11 women.
 
Victims' families allege police did not take neighbours' reported suspicions seriously enough.

Functional 3D printer gun

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The world's first gun made with 3D printer technology has been successfully fired in the US.

Venezuela: Assassination plot

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Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has accused former Colombian leader Alvaro Uribe of plotting to assassinate him.

US unemployment down to 7.5%

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The United States economy created an estimated 165,000 jobs in April, averting fears of a sharp slowdown and pushing the unemployment rate to its lowest level since December 2008.

Boston bomb suspects to have planned 4th of July attack

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The Boston Marathon bombing suspects initially planned to attack the city's 4 July Independence Day celebrations, US media have reported.

US middle age suicides

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The suicide rate among middle-aged Americans rose 28% in a decade, a new report from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has found.