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Saturday’s massacre in El Paso has landed the mostly peaceful and heavily Hispanic city of about 684,000 at the intersection of two of the nation’s most politically volatile issues: immigration and gun violence. U.S. authorities investigating what drove a young man from the Dallas area to kill 20 people at a Walmart store hundreds of miles away in the border city of El Paso said they are treating it as a case of domestic terrorism. Mexico’s attorney general is considering litigation alleging that the mass shooting in El Paso, in which seven Mexicans were among the 20 people killed, was terrorism, the country’s foreign minister said. | |
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India revoked the special status of Kashmir in a bid to fully integrate its only Muslim-majority region with the rest of the country, the most far-reaching political move on the troubled Himalayan territory in nearly seven decades. Pakistan said it “strongly condemns” India’s decision to revoke the special status for its portion of the Kashmir region claimed by both countries. The scenic mountain region is divided between India, which rules the populous Kashmir Valley and the Hindu-dominated region around Jammu city, Pakistan, which controls a wedge of territory in the west, and China, which holds a thinly populated high-altitude area in the north. Here are some facts about the region and the constitutional change. | |
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Scottish voters would back independence and they want another referendum in the next two years, a poll showed, indicating that the UK could be wrenched apart shortly after it leaves the EU. Asked how they would vote in an independence referendum, 46% of the 1,019 surveyed Scottish voters said they would vote for independence and 43% said they would vote against, according to a poll by Michael Ashcroft, a Conservative who opposed Boris Johnson’s successful bid to be prime minister. | |
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Israeli army in no rush to go fully robotic. Israel, a world leader in hi-tech, is around 30 years away from its ambition of deploying robot forces, and for now will chose between three prototypes of semi-automated armored vehicles to cocoon its troops in battle, defense officials said. Israel has long eyed a future robot army as a means of reducing the use of soldiers on its combustible fronts with Gaza, Lebanon and Syria, just as its air force has increasingly relied on pilotless drones. | |
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'Battle Mode' Huawei sees China smartphone sales surge. When 23-year-old Chinese student Aaron Huang started his hunt for an Android replacement for his Apple iPhone in April this year, it was clear which brand was trying hardest to win him over. Promotional campaigns by Huawei and from local retailers supporting the brand were everywhere, said Huang, adding he was influenced by domestic media coverage that portrayed the United States as unfairly targeting the Chinese tech giant in its trade war. “I felt like I should choose Huawei,” he said. | |
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There’s a sense of panic within Japan Inc and the government - the world’s No. 3 economy doesn’t have enough experts in artificial intelligence and it’s time to do something about it. SoftBank Group CEO Masayoshi Son last month bemoaned the state of play, calling Japan a ‘developing country’ in the most important current tech revolution. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in June unveiled a plan to train 250,000 people in AI skills annually by 2025, albeit one criticized as unrealistic due to a shortage of teachers. Tech heavyweights like Sony are hiking pay for the right hires and boosting recruitment of foreign engineers. | |
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