Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq end at records as US tax cut plan advances
Austrian conservatives, far-right announce coalition deal
6.5 quake rocks southern Indonesia: USGS
Unilever selling magarines for 6.8 bn euros to US giant KKR
Palestinian dies of wounds after attacking Israelis: health ministry
Third Palestinian shot dead in clashes northeast of Jerusalem: health ministry
Dutch police open fire on man with knife at Schiphol airport
Tillerson says US will keep channels open with N.Korea
Flights between Russia and Egypt to resume in February: Moscow
Second Palestinian shot dead by Israeli forces in Gaza clashes: health ministry
Palestinian shot dead by Israeli forces in Gaza clashes: health ministry
Belgian trial delayed for Paris attacks suspect Abdeslam: court
Dutch-Ethiopian man gets life for 'Red Terror' war crimes
France, Germany want joint eurozone reform plan by March: Merkel
EU to start 'exploratory contacts' with UK on post-Brexit ties: Tusk
Prince Harry, Meghan Markle to marry on May 19: palace
Crisis boosted confidence in Lebanese economy: central bank
May hails 'important step' after EU leaders unlock Brexit talks
EU leaders approve start of next phase of Brexit talks: Tusk
Ryanair pilots suspend strike in Italy: union
Russia ex-economy minister gets 8 years in penal colony over bribe
Child soldiers awarded $10 mn damages from Congolese warlord
Luxembourg appeals EU order to recoup 250 mn euro Amazon tax bill
French school bus crash toll rises to 6: police source
Russian ex-economy minister guilty of taking bribe: court
Ryanair says may recognise unions amid strike threat
Japanese business confidence hits 11-year high: survey
Putin, Trump discussed North Korea in phone call: Kremlin
EU leaders say position on Jerusalem 'unchanged': Tusk
Polish PM expects EU to impose rare punishment over rule of law
EU leaders agree to roll over Russia sanctions: Tusk
'Golden opportunity missed' at Syria peace talks: UN mediator
US regulator orders rollback of 'net neutrality' rules
Iran says US evidence on Yemen missiles is 'fabricated'
Huthi missile fired at Saudi was 'made in Iran': Haley
UN mediator on Syria 'undermined' by his Putin appeal: Damascus
Three dead as school bus, train collide in France: police source
May 'disappointed' by UK vote but 'on course to deliver Brexit'
ECB expects inflation to hit 1.7% in 2020, still below goal
ECB ups eurozone growth forecasts for 2017-2019
Delta orders 100 Airbus planes in blow to Boeing
ECB leaves key interest rates unchanged
Putin says Russians do not want Ukraine-style 'coup'
Israel drug giant Teva announces 14,000 job cuts over two years
Disney says to buy parts of 21st Century Fox for $52.4 bn
Bank of England holds interest rate steady at 0.5%
EU's Tusk says next stage of Brexit talks is 'real test of our unity'
38 executed for 'terrorism' in southern Iraq
Putin says Trump opponents 'made up' Russia vote interference
At least 13 police killed by Somalia's Shabaab in academy bombing: officer
S. Korea prosecutors seek 25 years for ex-president's friend
6,700 Rohingya killed in first month of Myanmar violence: MSF
Casualties as bomber attacks Somalia police academy: officer
Ecuador's VP handed 6 years in prison in Odebrecht graft case
Dow ends at record on tax bill progress, Fed outlook
US-led air strikes kill 23 civilians in Syria: monitor
Fed's Yellen says no risks to stability 'flashing red' as markets boom
May loses key Brexit vote in British parliament
US Fed raises key interest rate amid strong labor market
Austrian airline Niki says to stop flying Thursday
Netanyahu 'not impressed' by Muslim leaders' Jerusalem statements
Paris suspect Abdeslam's lawyer asks for Belgian trial to be postponed: source
Erdogan accuses Trump of 'Zionist mentality' over Jerusalem recognition
S.Arabia, UAE pledge $130 mn for Sahel anti-terror force
Energy costs push US consumer inflation above Fed target to 2.2%
Muslim leaders urge recognition of East Jerusalem as Palestine capital: statement
EU Parliament backs opening next round of Brexit talks: president
Palestinians have right to east Jerusalem as capital: Saudi king
Kremlin welcomes 'constructive' US position on N. Korea talks
Abbas warns 'no peace or stability' without Jerusalem as Palestinian capital
Erdogan urges world to recognise East Jerusalem as 'capital of Palestine'
Strikes kill 12 in rebel-run Yemen prison camp: rebel TV
Israel a state of 'occupation' and 'terror', Erdogan tells Islamic leaders
Alabama Democrat Jones projected to win US Senate race
Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq end at records as US tax cut plan advances
Austrian conservatives, far-right announce coalition deal
6.5 quake rocks southern Indonesia: USGS
Unilever selling magarines for 6.8 bn euros to US giant KKR
Palestinian dies of wounds after attacking Israelis: health ministry
Third Palestinian shot dead in clashes northeast of Jerusalem: health ministry
Dutch police open fire on man with knife at Schiphol airport
Tillerson says US will keep channels open with N.Korea
Flights between Russia and Egypt to resume in February: Moscow
Second Palestinian shot dead by Israeli forces in Gaza clashes: health ministry
Palestinian shot dead by Israeli forces in Gaza clashes: health ministry
Belgian trial delayed for Paris attacks suspect Abdeslam: court
Dutch-Ethiopian man gets life for 'Red Terror' war crimes
France, Germany want joint eurozone reform plan by March: Merkel
EU to start 'exploratory contacts' with UK on post-Brexit ties: Tusk
Prince Harry, Meghan Markle to marry on May 19: palace
Crisis boosted confidence in Lebanese economy: central bank
May hails 'important step' after EU leaders unlock Brexit talks
EU leaders approve start of next phase of Brexit talks: Tusk
Ryanair pilots suspend strike in Italy: union
Russia ex-economy minister gets 8 years in penal colony over bribe
Child soldiers awarded $10 mn damages from Congolese warlord
Luxembourg appeals EU order to recoup 250 mn euro Amazon tax bill
French school bus crash toll rises to 6: police source
Russian ex-economy minister guilty of taking bribe: court
Ryanair says may recognise unions amid strike threat
Japanese business confidence hits 11-year high: survey
Putin, Trump discussed North Korea in phone call: Kremlin
EU leaders say position on Jerusalem 'unchanged': Tusk
Polish PM expects EU to impose rare punishment over rule of law
EU leaders agree to roll over Russia sanctions: Tusk
'Golden opportunity missed' at Syria peace talks: UN mediator
US regulator orders rollback of 'net neutrality' rules
Iran says US evidence on Yemen missiles is 'fabricated'
Huthi missile fired at Saudi was 'made in Iran': Haley
UN mediator on Syria 'undermined' by his Putin appeal: Damascus
Three dead as school bus, train collide in France: police source
May 'disappointed' by UK vote but 'on course to deliver Brexit'
ECB expects inflation to hit 1.7% in 2020, still below goal
ECB ups eurozone growth forecasts for 2017-2019
Delta orders 100 Airbus planes in blow to Boeing
ECB leaves key interest rates unchanged
Putin says Russians do not want Ukraine-style 'coup'
Israel drug giant Teva announces 14,000 job cuts over two years
Disney says to buy parts of 21st Century Fox for $52.4 bn
Bank of England holds interest rate steady at 0.5%
EU's Tusk says next stage of Brexit talks is 'real test of our unity'
38 executed for 'terrorism' in southern Iraq
Putin says Trump opponents 'made up' Russia vote interference
At least 13 police killed by Somalia's Shabaab in academy bombing: officer
S. Korea prosecutors seek 25 years for ex-president's friend
6,700 Rohingya killed in first month of Myanmar violence: MSF
Casualties as bomber attacks Somalia police academy: officer
Ecuador's VP handed 6 years in prison in Odebrecht graft case
Dow ends at record on tax bill progress, Fed outlook
US-led air strikes kill 23 civilians in Syria: monitor
Fed's Yellen says no risks to stability 'flashing red' as markets boom
May loses key Brexit vote in British parliament
US Fed raises key interest rate amid strong labor market
Austrian airline Niki says to stop flying Thursday
Netanyahu 'not impressed' by Muslim leaders' Jerusalem statements
Paris suspect Abdeslam's lawyer asks for Belgian trial to be postponed: source
Erdogan accuses Trump of 'Zionist mentality' over Jerusalem recognition
S.Arabia, UAE pledge $130 mn for Sahel anti-terror force
Energy costs push US consumer inflation above Fed target to 2.2%
Muslim leaders urge recognition of East Jerusalem as Palestine capital: statement
EU Parliament backs opening next round of Brexit talks: president
Palestinians have right to east Jerusalem as capital: Saudi king
Kremlin welcomes 'constructive' US position on N. Korea talks
Abbas warns 'no peace or stability' without Jerusalem as Palestinian capital
Erdogan urges world to recognise East Jerusalem as 'capital of Palestine'
Strikes kill 12 in rebel-run Yemen prison camp: rebel TV
Israel a state of 'occupation' and 'terror', Erdogan tells Islamic leaders
Alabama Democrat Jones projected to win US Senate race
Four Palestinians were killed and hundreds wounded Friday in clashes with Israeli forces as tens of thousands demonstrated against Washington's recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
President Donald Trump's December 6 announcement that he would break with decades of US policy and move the embassy to Jerusalem has stirred global condemnation, as well as demonstrations across Arab and Muslim countries.
On Friday three men were killed in clashes between Israeli troops and stone-throwing Palestinians.
Two died along the border of Israel and the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian health ministry said, after the Hamas Islamist group that rules the enclave had called for another "day of rage".
A third Palestinian was killed in clashes north of Jerusalem after being shot dead in the chest by the Israeli army, the ministry said.
The fourth stabbed an Israeli border police officer near a checkpoint on the outskirts of the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, before being shot, police said.
The assailant, who later died of his wounds, wore what appeared to be a suicide vest, though it was unclear if it was operational.
The violence comes days before US Vice President Mike Pence is due to visit Israel, though he will no longer see Palestinian officials after they cancelled meetings in protest at the embassy move.
"We understand that the Palestinians may need a bit of a cooling off period, that's fine," a senior White House official said Friday. "We will be ready when the Palestinians are ready to re-engage."
Pence is expected to try to push the Israeli-Palestinian peace process forward after he lands in Jerusalem on Wednesday, US administration officials have said.
"Obviously the last couple of weeks in the region have been a reaction to the Jerusalem decision," said a second senior administration official.
Protests erupted across the West Bank after Friday weekly prayers, often a catalyst for clashes between young Palestinians and Israeli soldiers.
- 'Bomb' thrown at Mideast -
In Gaza, tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets and a few thousand clashed with Israeli forces along different parts of the border.
The Palestinian health ministry said 164 people were injured in Gaza, with five in serious condition, and more than 100 were hospitalised in the West Bank.
Israel's army said around 2,500 people were involved in "riots" in the West Bank and about 3,500 in Gaza.
Friday's deaths brought to eight the number of Palestinians killed in violence or air strikes since Trump's Jerusalem move.
Four men were killed in Gaza last week, two in protests. Two Hamas militants were killed in an Israeli air strike.
In Jordan, thousands of people also demonstrated on Friday in the latest round of protests called by the Muslim Brotherhood, burning Israeli and American flags.
The diplomatic fallout continued, with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan calling Trump's decision a "bomb" thrown at the entire Middle East.
He called Israel a "terror state" and said: "Trying to make Jerusalem capital of a terror state is not a situation that can be accepted by Muslims."
The status of Jerusalem is one of the most controversial issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Israel seized control of the eastern part of the city in the 1967 Middle East war and sees the whole of Jerusalem as its undivided capital. The Palestinians view the east as the capital of their future state.
- Support for uprising -
For decades global powers have avoided taking an opinion, keeping their embassies in Tel Aviv instead.
Trump declared, however, that he would move the embassy and has recognised the city as Israel's capital.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas will not meet Pence next week and has warned that Washington no longer had a role to play in the peace process.
A poll conducted after Trump's announcement by the respected Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research found 45 percent of Palestinians supported a violent popular uprising, up from 35 percent three months previously.
Khalil Shikaki, the centre's director, said the "only possible explanation" for the increase was Trump's decision.
He said, however, the effectiveness of the Israeli forces and the Palestinian security forces' ongoing cooperation with them had ensured the protests in the West Bank remained relatively minor.
While angered by Trump's declaration, Abbas has not instructed his party Fatah or security forces to cut ties with Israel.
"Hamas is too weak in the West Bank to carry out any serious attacks (and) Fatah does not want to engage in violence," Shikaki said.
"This is not likely to change any time soon."
In Gaza, hermetically sealed off by Israel and Egypt, at least 12 rockets or mortar rounds have been fired from the territory since Trump's announcement, with Israel hitting at least 10 sites in response.
Four Palestinians were killed and hundreds wounded Friday in clashes with Israeli forces as tens of thousands demonstrated against Washington's recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
President Donald Trump's December 6 announcement that he would break with decades of US policy and move the embassy to Jerusalem has stirred global condemnation, as well as demonstrations across Arab and Muslim countries.
On Friday three men were killed in clashes between Israeli troops and stone-throwing Palestinians.
Two died along the border of Israel and the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian health ministry said, after the Hamas Islamist group that rules the enclave had called for another "day of rage".
A third Palestinian was killed in clashes north of Jerusalem after being shot dead in the chest by the Israeli army, the ministry said.
The fourth stabbed an Israeli border police officer near a checkpoint on the outskirts of the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, before being shot, police said.
The assailant, who later died of his wounds, wore what appeared to be a suicide vest, though it was unclear if it was operational.
The violence comes days before US Vice President Mike Pence is due to visit Israel, though he will no longer see Palestinian officials after they cancelled meetings in protest at the embassy move.
"We understand that the Palestinians may need a bit of a cooling off period, that's fine," a senior White House official said Friday. "We will be ready when the Palestinians are ready to re-engage."
Pence is expected to try to push the Israeli-Palestinian peace process forward after he lands in Jerusalem on Wednesday, US administration officials have said.
"Obviously the last couple of weeks in the region have been a reaction to the Jerusalem decision," said a second senior administration official.
Protests erupted across the West Bank after Friday weekly prayers, often a catalyst for clashes between young Palestinians and Israeli soldiers.
- 'Bomb' thrown at Mideast -
In Gaza, tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets and a few thousand clashed with Israeli forces along different parts of the border.
The Palestinian health ministry said 164 people were injured in Gaza, with five in serious condition, and more than 100 were hospitalised in the West Bank.
Israel's army said around 2,500 people were involved in "riots" in the West Bank and about 3,500 in Gaza.
Friday's deaths brought to eight the number of Palestinians killed in violence or air strikes since Trump's Jerusalem move.
Four men were killed in Gaza last week, two in protests. Two Hamas militants were killed in an Israeli air strike.
In Jordan, thousands of people also demonstrated on Friday in the latest round of protests called by the Muslim Brotherhood, burning Israeli and American flags.
The diplomatic fallout continued, with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan calling Trump's decision a "bomb" thrown at the entire Middle East.
He called Israel a "terror state" and said: "Trying to make Jerusalem capital of a terror state is not a situation that can be accepted by Muslims."
The status of Jerusalem is one of the most controversial issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Israel seized control of the eastern part of the city in the 1967 Middle East war and sees the whole of Jerusalem as its undivided capital. The Palestinians view the east as the capital of their future state.
- Support for uprising -
For decades global powers have avoided taking an opinion, keeping their embassies in Tel Aviv instead.
Trump declared, however, that he would move the embassy and has recognised the city as Israel's capital.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas will not meet Pence next week and has warned that Washington no longer had a role to play in the peace process.
A poll conducted after Trump's announcement by the respected Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research found 45 percent of Palestinians supported a violent popular uprising, up from 35 percent three months previously.
Khalil Shikaki, the centre's director, said the "only possible explanation" for the increase was Trump's decision.
He said, however, the effectiveness of the Israeli forces and the Palestinian security forces' ongoing cooperation with them had ensured the protests in the West Bank remained relatively minor.
While angered by Trump's declaration, Abbas has not instructed his party Fatah or security forces to cut ties with Israel.
"Hamas is too weak in the West Bank to carry out any serious attacks (and) Fatah does not want to engage in violence," Shikaki said.
"This is not likely to change any time soon."
In Gaza, hermetically sealed off by Israel and Egypt, at least 12 rockets or mortar rounds have been fired from the territory since Trump's announcement, with Israel hitting at least 10 sites in response.
Four Palestinians were killed and hundreds wounded Friday in clashes with Israeli forces as tens of thousands demonstrated against Washington's recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
President Donald Trump's December 6 announcement that he would break with decades of US policy and move the embassy to Jerusalem has stirred global condemnation, as well as demonstrations across Arab and Muslim countries.
The violence comes days before US Vice President Mike Pence is due to visit Israel, though he will no longer see Palestinian officials after they cancelled meetings in protest at the embassy move.
"We understand that the Palestinians may need a bit of a cooling off period, that's fine," a senior White House official said Friday. "We will be ready when the Palestinians are ready to re-engage."
Friday's deaths brought to eight the number of Palestinians killed in violence or air strikes since Trump's Jerusalem move.
Four men were killed in Gaza last week, two in protests. Two Hamas militants were killed in an Israeli air strike.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas will not meet Pence next week and has warned that Washington no longer had a role to play in the peace process.
A poll conducted after Trump's announcement by the respected Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research found 45 percent of Palestinians supported a violent popular uprising, up from 35 percent three months previously.
15 Dec 2017The global network of Agence France Presse covers 151 countries
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