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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/19/2014 11:06:03 AM

Police, protesters collide again in Ferguson

Associated Press


FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — The National Guard arrived in Ferguson but kept its distance from the streets where protesters clashed again with police, as clouds of tear gas and smoke hung over the St. Louis suburb where Michael Brown was fatally shot by a police officer.

Protesters filled the streets after nightfall Monday, and officers trying to enforce tighter restrictions at times used bullhorns to order them to disperse. Police deployed noisemakers and armored vehicles to push demonstrators back. Officers fired tear gas and flash grenades.

Capt. Ron Johnson of the Missouri Highway Patrol, who is in charge of security in Ferguson, said bottles and Molotov cocktails were thrown from the crowd and that some officers had come under heavy gunfire. At least two people were shot and 31 were arrested, he said. He did not have condition updates on those who were shot. Johnson said four officers were injured by rocks or bottles.

Demonstrators no longer faced the neighborhood's midnight-to-5 a.m. curfew, but police told protesters that they could not assemble in a single spot and had to keep moving. After the streets had been mostly cleared, authorities ordered reporters to leave as well, citing the risk from gunfire that had been reported.

A photographer for the Getty photo agency was arrested while covering the demonstrations and later released. Two German reporters were arrested and detained for three hours. Conservative German daily Die Welt said correspondent Ansgar Graw and reporter Frank Herrmann, who writes for German regional papers, were arrested after allegedly failing to follow police instructions to vacate an empty street. They said they followed police orders.

Johnson said members of the media had to be asked repeatedly to return to the sidewalks and that it was a matter of safety. He said in some cases it was not immediately clear who was a reporter but that once it was established, police acted properly.

Citing "a dangerous dynamic in the night," Johnson also urged protesters with peaceful intent to demonstrate during the daytime hours.

The latest clashes came after a day in which a pathologist hired by the Brown family said the unarmed black 18-year-old suffered a bullet wound to his right arm that may indicate his hands were up or his back was turned. But the pathologist said the team that examined Brown cannot be sure yet exactly how the wounds were inflicted until they have more information.

Witnesses have said Brown's hands were above his head when he was repeatedly shot by an officer Aug. 9.

The independent autopsy determined that Brown was shot at least six times, including twice in the head, the family's lawyers and hired pathologists said.

The St. Louis County medical examiner's autopsy found that Brown was shot six to eight times in the head and chest, office administrator Suzanne McCune said Monday. But she declined to comment further, saying the full findings were not expected for about two weeks.

A grand jury could begin hearing evidence Wednesday to determine whether the officer, Darren Wilson, should be charged in Brown's death, said Ed Magee, spokesman for St. Louis County's prosecuting attorney.

A third and final autopsy was performed Monday for the Justice Department by one of the military's most experienced medical examiners, Attorney General Eric Holder said.

Holder was scheduled to travel to Ferguson later this week to meet with FBI and other officials carrying out an independent federal investigation into Brown's death.

The Justice Department has mounted an unusually swift and aggressive response to Brown's death, from the independent autopsy to dozens of FBI agents combing Ferguson for witnesses to the shooting.

In Washington, President Barack Obama said the vast majority of protesters in Ferguson were peaceful, but warned that a small minority was undermining justice. Obama said overcoming the mistrust endemic between many communities and their local police would require Americans to "listen and not just shout."

Obama said he also spoke to Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon about his deployment of the National Guard in Ferguson and urged the governor to ensure the Guard was used in a limited way.

Brown family attorney Benjamin Crump said Brown's parents wanted the additional autopsy because they feared results of the county's examination could be biased. Crump declined to release copies of the report.

"They could not trust what was going to be put in the reports about the tragic execution of their child," he said during Monday's news conference with Parcells and Baden, who has testified in several high-profile cases, including the O.J. Simpson murder trial.

The second autopsy, Crump said, "verifies that the witness accounts were true: that he was shot multiple times."

Forensic pathologist Shawn Parcells, who assisted former New York City chief medical examiner Dr. Michael Baden during the private autopsy, said a bullet grazed Brown's right arm. He said the wound indicates Brown may have had his back to the shooter, or he could have been facing the shooter with his hands above his head or in a defensive position across his chest or face.

"We don't know," Parcells said. "We still have to look at the other (elements) of this investigation before we start piecing things together."

Baden said one of the bullets entered the top of Brown's skull, suggesting his head was bent forward when he suffered that fatal injury. The hired pathologists said Brown, who also was shot four times in the right arm, could have survived the other bullet wounds.

Baden also said there was no gunpowder residue on Brown's body, indicating he was not shot at close range. However, Baden said he did not have access to Brown's clothing, and that it was possible the residue could be on the clothing.

Crump also said that Brown had abrasions on his face from where he fell to the ground, but there was "otherwise no evidence of a struggle."

___

Associated Press writers Alan Scher Zagier in Ferguson, Jim Salter in St. Louis and David A. Lieb in Jefferson City contributed to this report.








Police say Molotov cocktails were thrown from the crowd and some officers came under heavy gunfire.
Tear gas fired at protesters



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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/19/2014 11:16:34 AM
What a pile of rubbish this article is. The true underlying issue is the decay of the American family with a father and mother figure both in the home. Plus the fact there are no qualified black police applicants and they keep electing the same batch of race baiters and idgits. Allowing Sharpeton, Gregory and jackson to have influence in this continuing issue. These guys need to fade away quickly.

Quote:
Poverty moves to suburbs

Ferguson Unrest Shows Poverty Grows Fastest in Suburbs

Bloomberg

People protest Sunday, Aug. 17, 2014, for Michael Brown, who was killed by a police officer last Saturday in Ferguson, Mo. As night fell Sunday in Ferguson, another peaceful protest quickly deteriorated after marchers pushed toward one end of a street. Police attempted to push them back by firing tear gas and shouting over a bullhorn that the protest was no longer peaceful. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)


(Corrects poverty figure in 11th paragraph of story published Aug. 16.)

A week of violence and protests in a town outside St. Louis is highlighting how poverty is growing most quickly on the outskirts of America's cities, as suburbs have become home to a majority of the nation's poor.

More from Bloomberg.com: Part-Time Workers a Full-Time Headache on Yellen Radar: Economy

In Ferguson, Missouri, a community of 21,000 where the poverty rate doubled since 2000, the dynamic has bred animosity over racial segregation and economic inequality. Protests over the police killing of an unarmed black teenager on Aug. 9 have drawn international attention to the St. Louis suburb's growing underclass.

Justice Department to Conduct Own Autopsy of Brown

Such challenges aren't unique to Ferguson, according to a Brookings Institution report July 31 that found the poor population growing twice as fast in U.S. suburbs as in city centers. From Miami to Denver, resurgent downtowns have blossomed even as their recession-weary outskirts struggle with soaring poverty in what amounts to a paradigm shift.

More from Bloomberg.com: Iceland Tells Airlines Volcano Under Glacier May Erupt

"We've passed this tipping point and there are now more poor people in the suburbs than the cities," said Elizabeth Kneebone, author of the report and a fellow at the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program in Washington. "In those communities, we see things like poorer health outcomes, failing schools and higher crime rates."

In predominantly black Ferguson, residents protesting the shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown also complain about the lack of jobs and a city government that doesn't reflect the community's diversity. Inhabitants of the city -- which has lost more than 40 percent of its white population since 2000 -- said they've long felt disenfranchised by a mostly white city council and police force.

More from Bloomberg.com: Ferguson Unrest Shows Poverty Grows Fastest in Suburbs

Most Segregated

Missouri Governor Jay Nixon, a 58-year-old Democrat who traveled to Ferguson Aug. 14, told reporters that Brown's death was like "an old wound that had been hit again," exposing underlying challenges. The St. Louis metropolitan area ranked as one of the most segregated in the U.S. in a 2011 study by Brown University.

Ferguson, once a majority white community that's now about two-thirds black, highlights that dynamic. Coinciding with the decline in white population is a rapid rise in poverty since 2000, a period that includes the 18-month recession that ended in June 2009.

While Ferguson's median income in 2000 was on par with that of Missouri that year, it has since fallen behind. The median income of $37,500 trailed the state at $47,300 in 2012, according to U.S. Census Bureau figures.

‘Rapid Change'

"Looking at the neighborhood poverty rates, it's striking how much has changed over a decade," Kneebone said. "In Ferguson in 2000, none of the neighborhoods had hit that 20 percent poverty rate. By the end of the 2000s, almost every census tract met or exceeded that poverty rate. That's a really rapid change in a really short time."

The poverty rate in Ferguson was 22 percent in 2012, the most recent available, up from 10.2 percent in 2000, according to Census data.

Suburban locales from the outskirts of Atlanta to Colorado Springs have seen similar trends. The number of poor people living in impoverished U.S. suburbs has more than doubled since 2000, comparing to a 50 percent rise in cities. More than one-third of the 46 million Americans in poverty now live in suburbs, Kneebone said.

"The median income is so low in Ferguson that people are really struggling, living from check to check, and they're even behind checks," state Senator Maria Chappelle-Nadal, a Democrat who represents the district that includes Ferguson, said in a telephone interview.

Urban Gentrification

Rising suburban poverty has been greater in the Midwest, said Lincoln Quillian, professor of sociology at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. The housing crisis spurred the upward trend, while urban gentrification displaced poor people to the suburban fringe, he said.

There's "more risk" of unrest like the protests that shook Ferguson because of the suburban poverty increase, said Quillian, chairman of the Institute for Policy Research's program on urban policy and community development at Northwestern.

"In the U.S., poor black communities definitely are more likely to have something like that happen because of images that the police and other people have about poor people and black people, but also because these places on average tend to have higher crime rates," Quillian said in a telephone interview.

‘Chain of Policies'

Colin Gordon, a professor at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, said "a chain of policies" fueled segregation in St. Louis that helped concentrate the black population on the north side of the city, where Ferguson is located.

"For much of the latter half of the 20th century, it was a pattern of segregation by race, and that's been displaced somewhat by a segregation by income, which is growing starker and starker in cities like St. Louis," Gordon said in an interview on Bloomberg Television's Bloomberg Surveillance withTom Keene and Adam Johnson.

Race has been a central theme this week as protests over Brown's death turned violent. Police officers in riot gear drove black armored vehicles through the city and fired tear gas at protesters. The demonstrations began after Brown was shot dead by police near his grandmother's home in Ferguson.

Police say Brown attacked officer Darren Wilson and reached for his gun before he was shot. Residents said Brown was shot after raising his hands in surrender.

To contact the reporters on this story: Toluse Olorunnipa in Ferguson, Missouri attolorunnipa@bloomberg.net; Elizabeth Campbell in Chicago at ecampbell14@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Stephen Merelman at smerelman@bloomberg.netJeffrey Taylor, Pete Young






Poverty is now growing most quickly on the outskirts of America's cities, instead of inside them, a recent report says.
'Tipping point'



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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/19/2014 5:21:41 PM

Afghan Sikhs in airless container for 18 hours: translator

AFP


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Man dies after 35 Afghan Sikhs found in container



The Sikh families found in a shipping container in Britain were fleeing persecution in Afghanistan and had been trapped in darkness without fresh air for 18 hours, their translator said.

The group, discovered at Tilbury Docks, east of London, feared they would have all died had they remained inside for a further 20 minutes, Kamaljit Singh Mataharu, a Punjabi-speaking local man called in by the police to translate, said on Monday.

One 40-year-old man did die and his children, aged nine and 12, were in the container with him, said Mataharu.

Thirty-four people, all suffering severe dehydration and hypothermia, had been found alive on Saturday after they were heard banging and screaming. The container had crossed the North Sea on a ferry from Zeebrugge in Belgium.

"It was pitch black, without any air. It soon became extremely uncomfortable," Mataharu told ITV television.

"Horrendous, horrendous, horrendous. They suffered a lot."

He said there were 15 families inside, all from Kabul, who had made it to Europe in a truck.

The survivors were nine men and eight women aged between 18 and 72, and 13 children aged between one and 12.

"They were in a bad state. According to a little boy they'd been in the container for roughly 18 hours," said Mataharu.

The container had arrived on a truck at Zeebrugge 12 hours before the people inside were discovered at Tilbury.

"They'd been banging on the container. . . they'd tried for hours and hours for somebody to hear their voices," Mataharu said.

"They are thanking God they are alive. Another 20 minutes... all would've been dead in there."

Footage obtained by ITV from shortly after the container was opened showed survivors sitting on the ground outside, and the sound of wailing could be heard.

All 34 survivors are in the process of claiming asylum in Britain, according to the Home Office interior ministry.

"This tragic incident is a reminder of the devastating human consequences of illegal migration and we will do all we can to help bring those responsible to justice," a spokesman said.

"We are providing accommodation and support to those who require it while their (asylum) cases are considered."

- 'What made them come here?' -

A homicide investigation has been opened into the one man's death -- none of the survivors are under suspicion -- but police said Monday that a post-mortem on his body had proved inconclusive.

"The family have been released. The deceased had a brother here and the children knew the phone number so we managed to get in touch with him and get him to the docks," Mataharu said.

"The little boy said to me he tried to wake his dad and then they found out he was dead.

"I had tears in my eyes. Looking at those kids and how desperate they would've been to put their lives in that state. Imagine what conditions they must be living in Afghanistan.

"What made them come here?"

Mataharu said the migrants told him they were fleeing persecution in Kabul. The women said they could not go out due to harassment, while the men said Afghan locals would pull off their turbans.

"They said they'd rather die than live a life like that. They'd rather be dead," he said.

The chair of the Sikh Federation UK said the case showed the plight of followers of the religion in Afghanistan had been overlooked.

"It is a disgrace the persecution of the tiny minority of Sikhs from Afghanistan has largely been ignored and it takes an incident like this to remind us all that they are also being exploited by human traffickers," Bhai Amrik Singh said.

Detectives have finished interviewing survivors, who are now in the care of officials from the Home Office.

Two adults and two children remain in a local hospital but were expected to leave later Monday.

"These people were found in an awful situation and our main priority is to look after them and ensure they are now safe following what would have been a horrendous ordeal," said superintendent Trevor Roe of the local Essex Police force.

The local Sikh community has been helping look after the survivors, bringing them clothes and soft toys for the children.








Fleeing persecution at home, 34 people arrive in London suffering severe dehydration and hypothermia.

'Horrendous, horrendous'



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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/19/2014 5:32:57 PM

Israeli leader recalls team from cease-fire talks

Associated Press

Smoke is seen after what witnesses said was an Israeli air strike in Gaza City August 19, 2014. Israel launched attacks in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday and recalled its negotiators from truce talks in Cairo after saying three Palestinian rockets had hit southern Israel, hours before a ceasefire was due to expire. A Reuters correspondent saw an Israeli plane fire a missile east of Gaza City. The Israeli military said it was attacking "terror targets" across the territory. (REUTERS/Suhaib Salem)


CAIRO (AP) — An Egyptian effort to broker an end to a monthlong war between Israel and Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip appeared to collapse Tuesday after Israel walked out on the talks in response to a barrage of Palestinian rocket fire.

The Israeli walkout occurred just hours before a midnight deadline, leaving the fate of the negotiations in question and raising the possibility of a resumption of heavy fighting.

"The Cairo talks were based on an agreed premise of a total cessation of hostilities," Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev said. "When Hamas breaks the cease-fire, they also break the premise for the Cairo talks. Accordingly, the Israeli team has been called back as a result of today's rocket fire."

He would not say whether the team would return to Cairo, or whether Israel would resume cease-fire talks. There was no immediate Egyptian comment, but a Hamas official declared the talks over.

The breakdown dealt a harsh blow to nearly a week of Egyptian-led diplomacy meant to end weeks of fighting that has killed more than 2,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to Palestinian and U.N. officials. Sixty-seven Israelis, including three Israelis, have also been killed. It has been the heaviest fighting between Israel and Hamas since the Islamic militant group seized control of Gaza in 2007.

Hamas is seeking an end to a seven-year Israeli-Egypt blockade that has ravaged Gaza's economy, while Israel wants guarantees that Hamas will disarm.

In nearly a week of indirect talks, Egypt appears to have made little headway in resolving the differences. Late Monday, it secured a 24-hour extension in a temporary truce to allow more time for a last-ditch attempt to reach a longer term deal.

An Egyptian compromise proposal calls for easing the blockade, but not lifting it altogether and opening the territory's air and seaports as Hamas has demanded.

While the plan does not require Hamas to give up its weapons, it would give Western-backed President Mahmoud Abbas, whose forces were ousted by Hamas in 2007, a foothold back in Gaza, running border crossings and overseeing internationally-backed reconstruction. Abbas' presence would minimize friction with Israel and allow large amounts of international aid to flow into Gaza for reconstruction.

But hours before Tuesday night's deadline, Palestinian militants fired three rockets into Israel. The military said the rockets landed in open areas near the southern Israeli city of Beersheba. Later, Israel said it intercepted two more rockets over southern Israel.

Hamas police officials in Gaza said there were at least 25 airstrikes across Gaza. Medical officials said seven people were wounded, including two children.

In Cairo, the head of the Palestinian delegation, which is comprised of various factions, said no progress had been made in Tuesday's talks, but expressed hope they could still succeed.

"We gave the Egyptians our final position. We are waiting for them to come back with a response," said Azzam al-Ahmed, a close aide to Abbas.

But a Hamas official said the talks had collapsed. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the negotiations with journalists.

___

Federman reported from Jerusalem.

___

Associated Press writer Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, contributed to this report.







Israel carries out airstrikes after Palestinian militants fire three rockets into its territory.

'Renewed aggression'



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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/19/2014 5:45:38 PM

Ukrainian troops inch closer to rebel city Donetsk

Associated Press





DONETSK, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian government troops were fighting pro-Russian rebels in the streets of Luhansk on Tuesday and captured most of a town near the eastern city of Donetsk, tightening the noose around that key rebel-held stronghold, Ukrainian officials said.

As the fighting raged, the Kremlin announced that Russian President Vladimir Putin would meet his Ukrainian counterpart Petro Poroshenko on Aug. 26 in Minsk, Belarus. The two leaders have not met since early June, despite a rapidly climbing death toll in east Ukraine.

One soldier was killed and four wounded Tuesday when a volunteer battalion came under mortar fire before entering the town of Ilovaysk, 18 kilometers (11 miles) east of Donetsk, Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said on Facebook.

Among the wounded was the commander of the Donbass battalion, Semyon Semenchenko, who said government soldiers had destroyed three rebel checkpoints and four firing positions and that fighting continued.

Government efforts to quell the pro-Russian separatists have focused on encircling Donetsk, the largest rebel-controlled city in eastern Ukraine. Fighting began in mid-April after Russia annexed the southern Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea but in the last few weeks, the government has recaptured significant amounts of rebel territory.

Ukrainian troops were also advancing in the separatist region of Luhansk, capturing one neighborhood in the city of Luhansk as they battled the rebels Tuesday on city streets, Col. Andriy Lysenko, a spokesman for Ukraine's National Security Council, told reporters.

The fighting in eastern Ukraine has forced nearly 344,000 people to flee their homes, according to the United Nations — a number that has grown in recent weeks as living conditions in rebel-held cities deteriorates rapidly.

With the rebels losing more and more ground, the Kremlin announced the meeting in Minsk, which would also include officials from the European Commission and the Eurasian Customs Union, which is comprised of Russia, Kazakhstan, and Belarus.

Poroshenko, who confirmed the meeting, said "stabilizing the situation" in eastern Ukraine would be a key topic of discussion. Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Russian leader wanted to talk about the deteriorating humanitarian situation there.

Valery Chaly, deputy head of the Ukrainian presidential administration, said in a televised briefing that the government is seeing a "clear diplomatic roadmap" ahead of them and expressed hope that they will be able to come up with new approaches to end the war.

Living standards appear to be particularly dire in Luhansk, near the Russian border, which has been left without electricity, running water or phone connections for 17 days.

Luhansk city hall said the city center came under fierce shelling overnight, which killed and wounded an unspecified number of civilians. Residents are standing in lines to buy bread as food supplies are running out, it said. Authorities also raised the alarm about a potential outbreak of infectious diseases since household garbage has not been taken away for more than two weeks.

In Donetsk, artillery fire was heard across town, the city hall said in a statement. But the city's suburbs seem to be the most hard-hit.

A resident of Olenivka, a village south of Donetsk, told the Associated Press by telephone that Ukrainian government troops were firing artillery from fields near her house.

Tatyana, who asked for her surname not to be printed for fear of reprisal from Ukrainian troops, said that houses in her village had been hit by return fire in previous days. Loud blasts could be heard in the background as she spoke.

The shelling appeared to be aimed at Donetsk's Petrovsky district, which has come under sustained rocket attack over the past week, she said.

Several residents in the Petrovsky district have told the Associated Press that rebels have positioned and fired Grad multiple missile launchers in their neighborhood, which appears to have drawn the incoming fire.

The eyewitness accounts appear to fly in the face of claims by the Kiev government that the armed forces have refrained from aiming rockets at residential areas.

The government, meanwhile, has accused the rebels of killing dozens of civilians in a shelling attack Monday on a convoy of refugees fleeing Luhansk. The rebels denied that any attack took place, while the U.S. confirmed the shelling of the convoy but said it did not know who was responsible.

There have been no eyewitness accounts of what happened and the war-torn area is largely off limits for journalists, making independent verification impossible.

The Ukrainian defense ministry released a video Tuesday that reportedly showed people who survived that attack at the nearby village of Novosvitlovka. The video showed a young man lying on a hospital bed sobbing. A woman who was not pictured said the man's mother was killed in the attack. The video could not be independently verified.

Journalists still have not seen any video or photos of the scene of Monday's shelling attack on the road from Luhansk to Russia.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel will travel to Kiev for the first time since the crisis erupted Saturday to meet with top officials.

Ukraine and the West have voiced concerns about Russia's military activity near the Ukrainian border. Moscow has said it can do what it wants on its territory but invited a mission from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe to observe two border crossings in a bid to counter claims that Russia is supplying the rebels with weapons.

Paul Picard, head of that OSCE mission, told reporters in a Russian border town on Tuesday that observers had seen a marked increase of military activity around the border points over the past week, including Russian helicopter activity. But he said no helicopters were observed crossing the border.

Picard also said the observers had seen "groups of young men and women wearing military-style dress" moving back and forth across the border. No weapons or military vehicles were observed.

Tensions have been high over the past week since Russia said it plans to send a massive aid convoy of over 200 trucks to help people in eastern Ukraine. The International Committee of the Red Cross, which is expected to take responsibility for the convoy when it enters eastern Ukraine, was still waiting for security guarantees from all sides Tuesday.

The Russian Foreign Ministry said Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and ICRC President Peter Maurer agreed to take steps "in the next several hours" to clear the way for the convoy to proceed to Ukraine.

The Russian foreign ministry said both Moscow and the rebels have provided security guarantees for the convoy, but not Kiev. Ukraine's foreign ministry spokesman Evhen Perebiynis, said Tuesday that Kiev cannot guarantee the safety of the convoy on rebel territory, since it does not control that area.

Russia chose to drive the convoy close to a rebel-held border post against Ukraine's wishes.

Also on Tuesday, Malaysian Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said the first remains of Malaysians who were killed when a jetliner was shot down over Ukraine will be flown home this week.

All 298 people on board died when Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was shot down on July 17 over an area controlled by pro-Russia separatists.

___

Laura Mills in Moscow, Nataliya Vasilyeva in Kiev, Ukraine, and Jim Heintz in Moscow contributed to this report.








Kiev forces take most of a town near Donetsk, tightening the noose around the key rebel-held city.
Putin meeting announced




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