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New report: user data protection in U.S. internet companies

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When you use the Internet, you entrust your conversations, thoughts, experiences, locations, photos, and more to companies like Google, AT&T and Facebook. But what do these companies do when the government demands your private information? Do they stand with you? Do they let you know what's going on? 

Free speech NGO threatened

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ARTICLE 19's Mexico office has this morning received an anonymous letter containing a direct threat of reprisal for the work that the staff undertake to protect journalists from violence. 

Libel bill passes in the U.K.

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Today, [24 April] saw history made. The UK parliament has passed a new Defamation Bill, which will now go on to Royal Assent.

More than 36 dead in Nigeria Violence

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Army insists battle with Boko Haram in Borno state left no more than 36 dead, not hundreds as claimed by rights groups.

In the violence's aftermath, the number of people killed during the April 16 clash between Nigerian security forces and the armed group Boko Haram was subject to wildly conflicting reports.

Boko Haram is an armed, radical group fighting against Western influence in the predominantly Muslim north of Nigeria.

It wants to introduce Islamic law in the areas in which it has influence.

The Nigerian army is standing by its claim that no more than 36 people died during the fight in Baga, a town in Borno state, and that the vast majority of victims were members of Boko Haram.

Local politicians and residents say as many as 200 people, largely civilians, died in the violence, a claim supported by aid organisations.

Survivor's account

The army maintains that it was protecting the town's people from the fighters.

Al Jazeera's Yvonne Ndege is one of the only television journalists to have gained access to the area and spoke to soldiers and the people of Baga about the clash.

Fatima Ahmad, a grandmother who lost three relatives during the violence, described fleeing for her life after the battle started.

"We were all asleep when a group of men set fire to our house," she said.

"Me, my children and grandchildren ran out for our lives. We have lost everything."

More than two weeks after the fighting between Boko Haram and the military, Baga is still overrun with soldiers and, until now, media access has been prevented.

Some residents our correspondent spoke to said the violence started when Boko Haram fighters attacked villagers and killed a soldier, prompting the military to fight back.

Claims by Human Rights Watch, the US-based watchdog group, that 2,000 homes were burnt down have been vehemently denied by the army, which maintains that only 30 homes were destroyed, none by the armed forces.

Al Jazeera's Ndege also gained access to the site where fighters killed in the clash were apparently buried.

Death toll disputed

There are about 20 graves at the site, and the army denies the existence of a mass grave.

“So there are no 200 graves?" Lieutenant-Colonel Sagir Musa said, referring to the death toll cited by local politicians and residents.

"Look at whole of the cemetery here, are there up to 200? Look at it.  And the mass grave people are talking about?

"Where is the mass grave? Is there anything that looks like a mass grave.

"A mass grave is usually bigger. This is one man. So where is it?"

Back in the main town some people are trying to go back to their normal way of life.

Many other residents are on edge because the military says the Boko Haram fighters that fled the battle could return at any moment and attack the town.

Bolivian President Evo Morales expels USAID

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Bolivian President Evo Morales has said he will expel the US Agency for International Development (USAID).

Bangladesh 'slave labour' condemned by Pope

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Pope Francis has denounced as "slave labour" the conditions of workers caught in a deadly building collapse in Bangladesh last week.

Google recalled to Parliament over claims it has been 'economical with the truth' about its low tax bill in the UK

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Google bosses have been called back to Parliament to explain why they pay so little tax in the UK.

Buenos Aires Police fire on journalists, city official plays down incident

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The Buenos Aires metropolitan police used excessive violence against journalists covering a demonstration by hospital employees on 26 April.

UN extends mission in Western Sahara

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The UN Security Council adopted a resolution on 25 April reaffirming its commitment to working towards the achievement of a just, lasting and mutually acceptable political solution in Western Sahara that provides for the self-determination of the people of the Western Sahara.

US morning-after pill approved for 15-year-olds

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The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the "morning-after" pill without a prescription for women aged 15 and over.

Venezuela MPs in punch-up over disputed election

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Fistfights have broken out in Venezuela's parliament over the recent disputed presidential election.

British explorer freezes to death in a storm during Arctic trek

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A British explorer has frozen to death after being caught in a bitter storm in Greenland. 

Gun vote stirs passion at Ayotte town hall meeting

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WARREN, N.H. -- The daughter of a Newtown victim confronted Sen. Kelly Ayotte during her first town hall meeting since she voted against expanded background checks on all commercial gun sales.
The confrontation erupted in a small meeting building filled with more than 100 people who came to condemn or support the senator's vote. It was Ayotte's first town hall meeting since she opposed a compromise negotiated by Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Pat Toomey, R-Pa., nearly two weeks ago.
Erica Lafferty, daughter of Sandy Hook Elementary shooting victim Dawn Hochsprung, confronts Sen. Kelly Ayotte at a town hall Tuesday.
"You had mentioned that day the burden on owners of gun stores that the expanded background checks would harm. I am just wondering why the burden of my mother being gunned down in the halls of her elementary school isn't more important than that," asked a visibly angry Erica Lafferty, the daughter of slain Sandy Hook Elementary principal Dawn Hochsprung. Lafferty had first met with Ayotte in Washington following that failed vote.
Ayotte responded: "Erica, I, certainly let me just say - I'm obviously so sorry."
"And, um, I think that ultimately when we look at what happened in Sandy Hook, I understand that's what drove this whole discussion -- all of us want to make sure that doesn't happen again," Ayotte said.
Ayotte defended her vote at the top of her remarks, pointing to her background as a prosecutor. “Where we are right now, my focus has been on wanting to improve our current background check system,” she said. “Frankly, we have fallen down on actually prosecuting gun crimes and violations of our current background check system.”
She said that addressing mental health and keeping guns out of the hands of the mentally ill were important going forward.
Ayotte and a handful of other senators are at the center of a nationwide push from gun control groups to maintain pressure for new gun laws in the wake of the Newtown shootings.
Groups on both sides — from the National Rifle Association to the gun control group backed by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg — have focused on her and others in swing states where polls show background checks are popular.
In New Hampshire, the NRA is airing ads thanking Ayotte for her vote. The Bloomberg group has ads running against her. Both sides are mobilizing like it's a political campaign — Bloomberg's group circulated printed signs reading "#ShameOnYou" at the town meeting, while Ayotte supporters held the kind of mass-hand-drawn signs often spotted at presidential events.
In a nearby yard, a local resident had placed a large, staked lawn sign with the handwritten message, "Thank You Senator Ayotte." Atop one corner was the Tea Party's preferred flag, the yellow snake with the words "Don't Tread On Me."
The charged atmosphere was a change from Ayotte's meetings - generally staid affairs that begin with a PowerPoint presentation on the budget. (She does a lot of them, as she's pledged to hold a town hall in each New Hampshire county.) At Tuesday's meeting, she stuck with the PowerPoint, but this time, the opening slides had statistics defending her gun vote.
Normally, attendees said, a few dozen residents might attend a meeting this far from the state's population centers of Manchester and Nashua, further south in the state. Warren has a population of about 900 people and town administrator Andrew Dorsett describes it as a "pro-gun" place.
At the meetings, Ayotte typically takes questions that had been pre-submitted and written down on notecards. A selected moderator chooses and reads them.
This time, though, that caused a stir. Right before Erica Lafferty spoke, Eric Knuffke, of Wentworth, N.H., stood and demanded to be allowed a question.
"You can't deny people the right to speak because they haven't filled out a card. I have a question," Knuffke shouted. Supporters of Ayotte shouted back at him.
"I do every single town meeting this way, and we have a process," Ayotte responded, though her voice - thin and high-pitched from a cold - was drowned out by the noise.
"You want to regulate that but you don't want to regulate guns," Knuffke yelled back.
"Sit down and shut up!" a member of the crowd shouted back at him, with others joining in.
As Knuffke yelled, Lafferty was sitting in the front row with her hand raised.
"Let Erica speak," said one attendee. "There's a Sandy Hook survivor here," said another.
She had submitted a question in the pile, and Ayotte made sure to let her speak. Lafferty thanked Ayotte for meeting with her the day after senators took the vote on the Manchin-Toomey before challenging her for her vote.
After her exchange with Ayotte, Lafferty stood and stormed out of the town hall.
Asked afterward why she had done so, Lafferty said: "I had had enough."Â