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World Affairs
'Plan B' could mean speedier rescue of Chilean miners
Mining engineers in Chile say they have come up with a "Plan B" that could halve the time it will take to rescue the 33 miners trapped inside a mine since August 5.

Walter Herrera, quality control and risk manager for Chilean mining company GeoTe

 
Drug traffickers, Mexican police trade shots across from U.S. border
A "major gunbattle" between drug traffickers and Mexican federal police broke out Saturday evening in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, just 30 yards from the U.S. border at El Paso, Texas, causing U.S. authorities to cordone off a section of the city, according to a U.S. Border Patrol spokesman.

Three po

 
U.S. to send imam in ground zero debate to Middle East
Some lawmakers have urged the State Department to rethink plans to sponsor the imam behind a controversial mosque on a trip to the Middle East.

Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf is at the center of efforts to build a mosque near the site of the September 11, 2001, attacks in New York. He is going to the M

 
Group warns of 'a new tide of terror'
Al-Shabaab, the Somali militant group allied to al Qaeda which claimed responsibility for Sunday's deadly bombings in Uganda, has promised to "unleash a new tide of terror."

"This is only the beginning," the group said in a statement on the internet Thursday.

Al-Shabaab, meaning "the youth" in

 
Alleged drug kingpin arrested in Jamaica
Alleged druglord Christopher "Dudus" Coke was arrested Tuesday outside Kingston, Jamaica, police said.

The arrest occurred just outside the capital city at about 4 p.m. (5 p.m. ET), said Commissioner Owen Ellington.

He told reporters that police acting on intelligence picked up Coke, 41, and t

 
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