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Ten Terror Suspects Arrested In European Raids

Ten more suspects have been arrested in three European countries as police step up efforts to prevent further attacks after the Brussels bombings.

Seven were detained in Brussels, two reportedly in Germany and one in Paris. An investigation is continuing into Tuesday’s bomb attacks, which killed 31 people in Brussels and have been linked to November’s Paris attacks.

Explosions have been reported in the Schaerbeek suburb of Brussels as a police operation continues. Schaerbeek is one of the districts where arrests were carried out on Thursday. US Secretary of State John Kerry, visiting Brussels, said that so-called Islamic State (IS) would be destroyed. Standing alongside Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel, he expressed condolences for the victims and solidarity with Belgium, declaring “Je suis Bruxellois”.

The Western alliance would continue its fight to destroy IS, Mr Kerry said. “We will not be intimidated. We will not be deterred.”

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Karadzic Convicted Of Genocide And War Crimes

Former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic has been convicted of genocide and war crimes over the 1992-95 war, and sentenced to 40 years in jail.

UN judges in The Hague found him guilty of 10 of 11 charges, including genocide over the 1995 Srebrenica massacre.

Karadzic, 70, is the most senior political figure to face judgement over the violent collapse of Yugoslavia. His case is being seen as one of the most important war crimes trials since World War Two. He had denied the charges, saying that any atrocities committed were the actions of rogue individuals, not the forces under his command. The trial, in which he represented himself, lasted eight years.

Karadzic faced two counts of genocide. He was found not guilty of the first, relating to killing in several Bosnian municipalities. But he was found guilty of the second count relating to Srebrenica, where Bosnian Serb forces massacred more than 7,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys. “Karadzic was in agreement with the plan of the killings,” Judge O-Gon Kwon said.

He was also found guilty of crimes against humanity relating to a campaign of terror in the city of Sarajevo which left nearly 12,000 people dead. At least 100,000 people in total died during fighting in the the Bosnian war. The conflict lasted nearly four years before a US-brokered peace deal brought it to an end in 1995. Gen Ratko Mladic, who commanded Bosnian Serb forces, is also awaiting his verdict at The Hague.

US: Iranians Charged With Cyber Hacking

The US has charged seven Iranians for allegedly hacking nearly 50 financial companies and a New York dam.

The attacks, occurring from 2011 to 2013, are believed to have been co-ordinated from Iranian companies. The US Department of Justice revealed an indictment against the seven Iranians believed to be working for their government.

The indictment calls them “experienced computer hackers” and officials said the attacks were a “wake-up call”. The attacks “threatened our economic well-being and our ability to compete fairly in the global marketplace – both of which are directly linked to our national security,” said US Attorney General Loretta Lynch. “And we believe that they were conducted with the sole purpose of undermining the targeted companies and damaging the online operation of America’s free market.”

Mrs Lynch said the attacks cost the victims tens of millions of dollars. The seven defendants face a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison for conspiracy to commit and aid and abet computer hacking.

Syrian Forces Enter Ancient Town Of Palmyra

Syrian government forces have entered the ancient town of Palmyra seized by Islamic State (IS) militants last year, state TV has said.

However, observers have said the main fighting is still outside the city, a Unesco World Heritage site.

Officials launched an offensive to retake the city earlier this month, backed by Russian air strikes. The city is situated in a strategically important area between Damascus and the contested eastern city of Deir al-Zour. IS seized the ruins of Palmyra and the adjoining modern town in May. It subsequently destroyed two 2,000-year-old temples, an arch and funerary towers, provoking global outrage.

The jihadist group, which has also demolished several world-renowned pre-Islamic sites in neighbouring Iraq, believes that such structures are idolatrous.
Unesco, the UN’s cultural agency, has condemned the destruction as a war crime. State media showed warplanes flying overhead, helicopters firing missiles, and soldiers and armoured vehicles approaching Palmyra. It said government fighters had taken over a hotel in the west of the city. There has been no independent confirmation of the reports.

The UK-based monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said civilians began fleeing after IS warned them via loudspeakers to leave the city centre as fighting was drawing closer, Reuters news agency reported.

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David Cameron Chairs Cobra Meeting In Response To Brussels Attacks

David Cameron has chaired an emergency Cobra meeting to determine the UK’s response to the Brussels attacks.

The prime minister said UK security had been stepped up in the wake of “a very real terror threat” across Europe. Two Britons were injured in the blasts at the city’s airport and metro on Tuesday which left 34 people dead.

There are also concerns for David Dixon, an IT programmer from Nottingham, whose family said he had not been seen since the attacks. Home Secretary Theresa May will make a statement to the Commons on the UK response at about 12:30 GMT, following Prime Minister’s Questions.

Mr Dixon had lived in Brussels for 10 years with his partner and their young son, and travelled to work every day on the city’s metro. according to friends. He has not answered his phone or made contact since the explosions, and his partner Charlotte Sutcliffe has been driving from hospital to hospital in Brussels trying to find him. Her sister Marie Sutcliffe told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that Charlotte had struggled to get information because phone networks were disrupted and much of the city locked down following the attacks. “Understandably, she is very, very distressed. Not everybody has been identified yet of the injured so it’s just waiting for that process to happen,” she said. “It’s just waiting, which is heartbreaking and very worrying.”

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