Apple reports $20 bn profit in record-setting quarter
Google parent Alphabet reports $3 bn loss on tax provision
Trump to approve release of explosive memo: White House
US not ruling out military strikes after new chemical attacks in Syria: official
Maldives court orders release of political prisoners
Man found guilty of fatal London mosque terror attack
950 miners trapped in S.Africa after power outage: company
Briton to face trial for 1996 murder of Frenchwoman in Ireland: lawyer
Kenya's High Court suspends media shutdown
Alibaba net profit soars 35% to $3.7 billion in Q3
Turkey court rules local Amnesty chief to remain in jail: rights group
Myanmar court denies bail to Reuters journalists held under secrecy law
Daimler books record net profit in 2017 of 10.9 bn euros
Unilever posts rising 2017 profits of 6.5 bn euros
Shell says annual profit almost triples to $13 bn
Petrol bomb thrown at Suu Kyi's lakeside villa: Myanmar govt
Polish senate passes Holocaust bill slammed by Israel
Facebook profit up 20 percent to $4.26 bn
US Fed keeps rates unchanged; says inflation will 'move up' this year
One dead as train carrying Republicans hits truck, lawmakers safe
US terror designation for Haniya won't deter 'resistance': Hamas
US puts Hamas chief Haniya on terror blacklist
Boeing 4Q earnings jump 92% to $3.1 bn, topping estimates
Turkey court orders conditional release of local Amnesty chief
Rape-accused Islam scholar Tariq Ramadan held in Paris: legal source
Brazil unemployment falls under 12 percent in 2017: government
Italy asks EU court to quash medicines agency move to Amsterdam
Macron warns Turkey against 'invasion' of Syria
Hong Kong bans ivory sales in landmark vote
Eurozone unemployment holds at nine-year low
6.1 magnitude quake rattles northern Afghanistan: USGS
Nintendo raises net profit forecast on Switch console and yen
Fujifilm says to slash 10,000 jobs at Fuji Xerox subsidiary
Trump says North Korea could 'very soon' threaten US soil
Trump says stands with Iranians' 'courageous struggle'
Trump vows to keep Guantanamo Bay prison open
Trump warns China, Russia challenge American values
Trump: 'open borders' promote guns, gangs and cost lives
Trump calls for $1.5 trillion infrastructure plan
Trump urges US parties set aside differences
Samsung Electronics reports 73% jump in Q4 net profit
'Much more work' remains in anti-IS fight: Trump
Trump to tout nation's future as 'one American family'
Dow posts biggest drop since May 2017 as US stocks tumble
Colombia rebels call for new ceasefire, resumed peace talks
US to impose sanctions on Russia 'in the near future': Treasury Secretary
Israeli soldiers kill Palestinian in West Bank: ministry
VW suspends chief lobbyist over emission tests on monkeys
Putin jokes he's 'offended' not to be on US 'Kremlin list'
Kenyan opposition leader Odinga sworn in as 'president'
EU 'shocked' by German carmakers' monkey experiments
UNRWA chief slams 'political dimension' of US aid cut to Palestinians
Saudis still holding 56 graft suspects: attorney general
Eurozone economy grows by 2.5% in 2017, highest in decade: Eurostat
Kremlin says will analyse US 'Putin list' without 'giving into emotions'
Catalan parliament speaker delays Puigdemont leadership debate
Yemen separatists surround Aden presidential palace: military source
Spain PM warns of legal consequences if Puigdemont vote allowed
Ryanair says signs first trade union recognition deal
US releases 'Putin list' of Russians eligible for sanctions: Treasury
Turkey detains 8 members of medical association over Syria criticism: state media
Philips posts 2017 profits up to 1.87 bln euros
Ireland to hold abortion referendum at end of May: PM
Apple reports $20 bn profit in record-setting quarter
Google parent Alphabet reports $3 bn loss on tax provision
Trump to approve release of explosive memo: White House
US not ruling out military strikes after new chemical attacks in Syria: official
Maldives court orders release of political prisoners
Man found guilty of fatal London mosque terror attack
950 miners trapped in S.Africa after power outage: company
Briton to face trial for 1996 murder of Frenchwoman in Ireland: lawyer
Kenya's High Court suspends media shutdown
Alibaba net profit soars 35% to $3.7 billion in Q3
Turkey court rules local Amnesty chief to remain in jail: rights group
Myanmar court denies bail to Reuters journalists held under secrecy law
Daimler books record net profit in 2017 of 10.9 bn euros
Unilever posts rising 2017 profits of 6.5 bn euros
Shell says annual profit almost triples to $13 bn
Petrol bomb thrown at Suu Kyi's lakeside villa: Myanmar govt
Polish senate passes Holocaust bill slammed by Israel
Facebook profit up 20 percent to $4.26 bn
US Fed keeps rates unchanged; says inflation will 'move up' this year
One dead as train carrying Republicans hits truck, lawmakers safe
US terror designation for Haniya won't deter 'resistance': Hamas
US puts Hamas chief Haniya on terror blacklist
Boeing 4Q earnings jump 92% to $3.1 bn, topping estimates
Turkey court orders conditional release of local Amnesty chief
Rape-accused Islam scholar Tariq Ramadan held in Paris: legal source
Brazil unemployment falls under 12 percent in 2017: government
Italy asks EU court to quash medicines agency move to Amsterdam
Macron warns Turkey against 'invasion' of Syria
Hong Kong bans ivory sales in landmark vote
Eurozone unemployment holds at nine-year low
6.1 magnitude quake rattles northern Afghanistan: USGS
Nintendo raises net profit forecast on Switch console and yen
Fujifilm says to slash 10,000 jobs at Fuji Xerox subsidiary
Trump says North Korea could 'very soon' threaten US soil
Trump says stands with Iranians' 'courageous struggle'
Trump vows to keep Guantanamo Bay prison open
Trump warns China, Russia challenge American values
Trump: 'open borders' promote guns, gangs and cost lives
Trump calls for $1.5 trillion infrastructure plan
Trump urges US parties set aside differences
Samsung Electronics reports 73% jump in Q4 net profit
'Much more work' remains in anti-IS fight: Trump
Trump to tout nation's future as 'one American family'
Dow posts biggest drop since May 2017 as US stocks tumble
Colombia rebels call for new ceasefire, resumed peace talks
US to impose sanctions on Russia 'in the near future': Treasury Secretary
Israeli soldiers kill Palestinian in West Bank: ministry
VW suspends chief lobbyist over emission tests on monkeys
Putin jokes he's 'offended' not to be on US 'Kremlin list'
Kenyan opposition leader Odinga sworn in as 'president'
EU 'shocked' by German carmakers' monkey experiments
UNRWA chief slams 'political dimension' of US aid cut to Palestinians
Saudis still holding 56 graft suspects: attorney general
Eurozone economy grows by 2.5% in 2017, highest in decade: Eurostat
Kremlin says will analyse US 'Putin list' without 'giving into emotions'
Catalan parliament speaker delays Puigdemont leadership debate
Yemen separatists surround Aden presidential palace: military source
Spain PM warns of legal consequences if Puigdemont vote allowed
Ryanair says signs first trade union recognition deal
US releases 'Putin list' of Russians eligible for sanctions: Treasury
Turkey detains 8 members of medical association over Syria criticism: state media
Philips posts 2017 profits up to 1.87 bln euros
Ireland to hold abortion referendum at end of May: PM
A Myanmar court on Thursday denied bail to two Reuters journalists charged under a secrecy act that could see them face up to 14 years in jail, in a case that has sparked outcry over shrinking media freedom.
Myanmar nationals Wa Lone, 31, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 27, are accused of possessing classified documents thought to relate to the violent military crackdown on the Rohingya Muslim minority.
The campaign in northern Rakhine state has forced nearly 700,000 Rohingya Muslims over the border into Bangladesh since August, many carrying allegations of rape, mass murder and arson at the hands of Myanmar's army.
"The court has decided not to give them bail," judge Ye Lwin told the Yangon court of charges under the colonial-era Official Secrets Act.
The journalists, who have been in custody since December, say they were given the papers by two policemen who had invited them to dinner in the outskirts of Yangon.
As they left the restaurant, they say they were arrested before they even had a chance to look at the documents -- a timeline that observers allege points to a set-up police operation.
The court had discretion to grant bail if it deemed that their detention had been unlawful.
- Calls for release -
Human rights groups and a cast of diplomats and international grandees, including former US president Bill Clinton, have called for their release.
The bail decision was crucial as pre-trial hearings are expected to drag on for several months before the court officially decides whether to take on the case or not.
The pair are now expected to remain in jail throughout that period.
"I hoped to get it," Wa Lone's wife Pan Ei Mon said, crying at the ruling.
"I even cleaned his room last night to prepare for him getting bail."
Kyaw Soe Oo, in handcuffs, was briefly able to hold his two-year-old daughter outside the courtroom before being led away by police.
Reuters said it was "disappointed" by the court decision but said it believed the "proceedings will demonstrate their innocence".
The news agency has refused to comment on the exact details of what its correspondents were reporting on at the time of their arrest.
But it is widely thought they were investigating a massacre of Rohingya in the village of Inn Din in northern Rakhine.
The military later acknowledged members of the security forces took part in extrajudicial killings of Rohingya suspected 'terrorists' at the village, saying it would hold those responsible to account.
- 'Ethnic cleansing' -
Myanmar's military says its campaign in Rakhine was a justified response to root out Rohingya militants behind a series of attacks in August that left a dozen border police dead.
Since then northern Rakhine has largely been cut off to aid groups, media and diplomats, except on officially sanctioned and chaperoned trips.
The plight of the Rohingya - labelled as "ethnic cleansing" by the UN and US - garners little sympathy among the majority-Buddhist population, many of whom regard them as illegal "Bengali" immigrants.
UN special rapporteur to Myanmar Yanghee Lee added her voice in support of the journalists from a press conference in Seoul, calling the pair "brave" and "fearless" while decrying the "culture of fear, silence and self-censorship" threatening the country.
She has been banned from Myanmar by authorities who say she is working with a bias against Myanmar.
"I remain deeply perplexed and concerned that they remain in detention despite the military having admitted responsibility for the killings at Inn Din," she added.
The next pre-trial hearing for the two journalists is due on February 6.
A deal has been cut to send back 1,500 Rohingya refugees a week from overcrowded camps in Bangladesh to Rakhine State.
But repatriation is yet to begin.
Many refugees do not feel safe returning to a state scored by communal violence and where mysterious murders, disappearances and arson attacks on Rohingya homes were reported as recently as last week.
A Myanmar court on Thursday denied bail to two Reuters journalists charged under a secrecy act that could see them face up to 14 years in jail, in a case that has sparked outcry over shrinking media freedom.
Myanmar nationals Wa Lone, 31, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 27, are accused of possessing classified documents thought to relate to the violent military crackdown on the Rohingya Muslim minority.
The campaign in northern Rakhine state has forced nearly 700,000 Rohingya Muslims over the border into Bangladesh since August, many carrying allegations of rape, mass murder and arson at the hands of Myanmar's army.
"The court has decided not to give them bail," judge Ye Lwin told the Yangon court of charges under the colonial-era Official Secrets Act.
The journalists, who have been in custody since December, say they were given the papers by two policemen who had invited them to dinner in the outskirts of Yangon.
As they left the restaurant, they say they were arrested before they even had a chance to look at the documents -- a timeline that observers allege points to a set-up police operation.
The court had discretion to grant bail if it deemed that their detention had been unlawful.
- Calls for release -
Human rights groups and a cast of diplomats and international grandees, including former US president Bill Clinton, have called for their release.
The bail decision was crucial as pre-trial hearings are expected to drag on for several months before the court officially decides whether to take on the case or not.
The pair are now expected to remain in jail throughout that period.
"I hoped to get it," Wa Lone's wife Pan Ei Mon said, crying at the ruling.
"I even cleaned his room last night to prepare for him getting bail."
Kyaw Soe Oo, in handcuffs, was briefly able to hold his two-year-old daughter outside the courtroom before being led away by police.
Reuters said it was "disappointed" by the court decision but said it believed the "proceedings will demonstrate their innocence".
The news agency has refused to comment on the exact details of what its correspondents were reporting on at the time of their arrest.
But it is widely thought they were investigating a massacre of Rohingya in the village of Inn Din in northern Rakhine.
The military later acknowledged members of the security forces took part in extrajudicial killings of Rohingya suspected 'terrorists' at the village, saying it would hold those responsible to account.
- 'Ethnic cleansing' -
Myanmar's military says its campaign in Rakhine was a justified response to root out Rohingya militants behind a series of attacks in August that left a dozen border police dead.
Since then northern Rakhine has largely been cut off to aid groups, media and diplomats, except on officially sanctioned and chaperoned trips.
The plight of the Rohingya - labelled as "ethnic cleansing" by the UN and US - garners little sympathy among the majority-Buddhist population, many of whom regard them as illegal "Bengali" immigrants.
UN special rapporteur to Myanmar Yanghee Lee added her voice in support of the journalists from a press conference in Seoul, calling the pair "brave" and "fearless" while decrying the "culture of fear, silence and self-censorship" threatening the country.
She has been banned from Myanmar by authorities who say she is working with a bias against Myanmar.
"I remain deeply perplexed and concerned that they remain in detention despite the military having admitted responsibility for the killings at Inn Din," she added.
The next pre-trial hearing for the two journalists is due on February 6.
A deal has been cut to send back 1,500 Rohingya refugees a week from overcrowded camps in Bangladesh to Rakhine State.
But repatriation is yet to begin.
Many refugees do not feel safe returning to a state scored by communal violence and where mysterious murders, disappearances and arson attacks on Rohingya homes were reported as recently as last week.
A Myanmar court on Thursday denied bail to two Reuters journalists charged under a secrecy act that could see them face up to 14 years in jail, in a case that has sparked outcry over shrinking media freedom.
Myanmar nationals Wa Lone, 31, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 27, are accused of possessing classified documents thought to relate to the violent military crackdown on the Rohingya Muslim minority.
"I hoped to get it," Wa Lone's wife Pan Ei Mon said, crying at the ruling.
"I even cleaned his room last night to prepare for him getting bail."
The plight of the Rohingya - labelled as "ethnic cleansing" by the UN and US - garners little sympathy among the majority-Buddhist population, many of whom regard them as illegal "Bengali" immigrants.
UN special rapporteur to Myanmar Yanghee Lee added her voice in support of the journalists from a press conference in Seoul, calling the pair "brave" and "fearless" while decrying the "culture of fear, silence and self-censorship" threatening the country.
1 Feb 2018Apple reports $20 bn profit in record-setting quarter
Google parent Alphabet reports $3 bn loss on tax provision
Trump to approve release of explosive memo: White House
US not ruling out military strikes after new chemical attacks in Syria: official
Maldives court orders release of political prisoners
Man found guilty of fatal London mosque terror attack
950 miners trapped in S.Africa after power outage: company
Briton to face trial for 1996 murder of Frenchwoman in Ireland: lawyer
Kenya's High Court suspends media shutdown
Alibaba net profit soars 35% to $3.7 billion in Q3
Turkey court rules local Amnesty chief to remain in jail: rights group
Myanmar court denies bail to Reuters journalists held under secrecy law
Daimler books record net profit in 2017 of 10.9 bn euros
Unilever posts rising 2017 profits of 6.5 bn euros
Shell says annual profit almost triples to $13 bn
Petrol bomb thrown at Suu Kyi's lakeside villa: Myanmar govt
Polish senate passes Holocaust bill slammed by Israel
Facebook profit up 20 percent to $4.26 bn
US Fed keeps rates unchanged; says inflation will 'move up' this year
One dead as train carrying Republicans hits truck, lawmakers safe
US terror designation for Haniya won't deter 'resistance': Hamas
US puts Hamas chief Haniya on terror blacklist
Boeing 4Q earnings jump 92% to $3.1 bn, topping estimates
Turkey court orders conditional release of local Amnesty chief
Rape-accused Islam scholar Tariq Ramadan held in Paris: legal source
Brazil unemployment falls under 12 percent in 2017: government
Italy asks EU court to quash medicines agency move to Amsterdam
Macron warns Turkey against 'invasion' of Syria
Hong Kong bans ivory sales in landmark vote
Eurozone unemployment holds at nine-year low
6.1 magnitude quake rattles northern Afghanistan: USGS
Nintendo raises net profit forecast on Switch console and yen
Fujifilm says to slash 10,000 jobs at Fuji Xerox subsidiary
Trump says North Korea could 'very soon' threaten US soil
Trump says stands with Iranians' 'courageous struggle'
Trump vows to keep Guantanamo Bay prison open
Trump warns China, Russia challenge American values
Trump: 'open borders' promote guns, gangs and cost lives
Trump calls for $1.5 trillion infrastructure plan
Trump urges US parties set aside differences
Samsung Electronics reports 73% jump in Q4 net profit
'Much more work' remains in anti-IS fight: Trump
Trump to tout nation's future as 'one American family'
Dow posts biggest drop since May 2017 as US stocks tumble
Colombia rebels call for new ceasefire, resumed peace talks
US to impose sanctions on Russia 'in the near future': Treasury Secretary
Israeli soldiers kill Palestinian in West Bank: ministry
VW suspends chief lobbyist over emission tests on monkeys
Putin jokes he's 'offended' not to be on US 'Kremlin list'
Kenyan opposition leader Odinga sworn in as 'president'
EU 'shocked' by German carmakers' monkey experiments
UNRWA chief slams 'political dimension' of US aid cut to Palestinians
Saudis still holding 56 graft suspects: attorney general
Eurozone economy grows by 2.5% in 2017, highest in decade: Eurostat
Kremlin says will analyse US 'Putin list' without 'giving into emotions'
Catalan parliament speaker delays Puigdemont leadership debate
Yemen separatists surround Aden presidential palace: military source
Spain PM warns of legal consequences if Puigdemont vote allowed
Ryanair says signs first trade union recognition deal
US releases 'Putin list' of Russians eligible for sanctions: Treasury
Turkey detains 8 members of medical association over Syria criticism: state media
Philips posts 2017 profits up to 1.87 bln euros
Ireland to hold abortion referendum at end of May: PM
A Myanmar court on Thursday denied bail to two Reuters journalists charged under a secrecy act that could see them face up to 14 years in jail, in a case that has sparked outcry over shrinking media freedom.
Myanmar nationals Wa Lone, 31, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 27, are accused of possessing classified documents thought to relate to the violent military crackdown on the Rohingya Muslim minority.
The campaign in northern Rakhine state has forced nearly 700,000 Rohingya Muslims over the border into Bangladesh since August, many carrying allegations of rape, mass murder and arson at the hands of Myanmar's army.
"The court has decided not to give them bail," judge Ye Lwin told the Yangon court of charges under the colonial-era Official Secrets Act.
The journalists, who have been in custody since December, say they were given the papers by two policemen who had invited them to dinner in the outskirts of Yangon.
As they left the restaurant, they say they were arrested before they even had a chance to look at the documents -- a timeline that observers allege points to a set-up police operation.
The court had discretion to grant bail if it deemed that their detention had been unlawful.
- Calls for release -
Human rights groups and a cast of diplomats and international grandees, including former US president Bill Clinton, have called for their release.
The bail decision was crucial as pre-trial hearings are expected to drag on for several months before the court officially decides whether to take on the case or not.
The pair are now expected to remain in jail throughout that period.
"I hoped to get it," Wa Lone's wife Pan Ei Mon said, crying at the ruling.
"I even cleaned his room last night to prepare for him getting bail."
Kyaw Soe Oo, in handcuffs, was briefly able to hold his two-year-old daughter outside the courtroom before being led away by police.
Reuters said it was "disappointed" by the court decision but said it believed the "proceedings will demonstrate their innocence".
The news agency has refused to comment on the exact details of what its correspondents were reporting on at the time of their arrest.
But it is widely thought they were investigating a massacre of Rohingya in the village of Inn Din in northern Rakhine.
The military later acknowledged members of the security forces took part in extrajudicial killings of Rohingya suspected 'terrorists' at the village, saying it would hold those responsible to account.
- 'Ethnic cleansing' -
Myanmar's military says its campaign in Rakhine was a justified response to root out Rohingya militants behind a series of attacks in August that left a dozen border police dead.
Since then northern Rakhine has largely been cut off to aid groups, media and diplomats, except on officially sanctioned and chaperoned trips.
The plight of the Rohingya - labelled as "ethnic cleansing" by the UN and US - garners little sympathy among the majority-Buddhist population, many of whom regard them as illegal "Bengali" immigrants.
UN special rapporteur to Myanmar Yanghee Lee added her voice in support of the journalists from a press conference in Seoul, calling the pair "brave" and "fearless" while decrying the "culture of fear, silence and self-censorship" threatening the country.
She has been banned from Myanmar by authorities who say she is working with a bias against Myanmar.
"I remain deeply perplexed and concerned that they remain in detention despite the military having admitted responsibility for the killings at Inn Din," she added.
The next pre-trial hearing for the two journalists is due on February 6.
A deal has been cut to send back 1,500 Rohingya refugees a week from overcrowded camps in Bangladesh to Rakhine State.
But repatriation is yet to begin.
Many refugees do not feel safe returning to a state scored by communal violence and where mysterious murders, disappearances and arson attacks on Rohingya homes were reported as recently as last week.
The global network of Agence France Presse covers 151 countries
Find out moreIf you have news to share or a question, comment or suggestion, contact us via...
If you have news to share or a question, comment or suggestion, contact us via...