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BBC在线收听下载:巴西举行大规模抗议活动

2016-03-15来源:BBC

巴西举行大规模抗议活动

BBC news 2016-03-15

President Erdoğan of Turkey has promised a relentless fight against terrorism after a car bomb killed at least 34 people in the center of Ankara. It’s the third such attack in the capital in recent months. Mr. Erdoğan said terror groups were targeting civilians because they were losing the battle against the Turkish security forces. Mark Lowen is our correspondent in Turkey. “The blast tore through the heart of the Turkish capital. A car packed with explosives had been detonated close to a busy transport hub. It comes just two days after the US embassy in Ankara warned of a possible terror attack. No group has yet said it was behind this blast, but government sources are pointing to the Kurdish guerrillas the PKK or an offshoot. As Turkey has joined the coalition against IS, this once stable corner of the Middle East now faces twin threats. Tonight in Turkey there is grief, but also fear about when this wave of attacks might end.”

The President of Ivory Coast Alassane Ouattara says 14civilians and two soldiers have been killed in a gun attack at a beach resort near Abidjan. Speaking at the scene, he said six attackers also died. Images also show media have shown bodies lying in blood. Here’s our Africa security correspondent Tomi Oladipo. “The Ivorian government recently beefed up security along its northern borders with Mali and Burkina Faso to keep outIslamist militants, but that was not enough to prevent Sunday’s killings. The attack was in the Grand-Bassam all the way in the south on the Atlantic coast. This means the militants might have already blended in the environment.Al-Qaeda in the Maghreb says it carried out the attack just like it did in two deadly sieges on hotels in the capitals of Mali and Burkina Faso a few months ago.”

Partial results in German regional elections suggest an anti-immigration party has made a breakthrough due to rising discontent with Chancellor Merkel’s refugee policy. More than a million asylum seekers arrived in Germany last year. The alternative for Germany right wing party the AFD has captured seats in three regional parliaments. Its leader said Mrs. Merkel’s catastrophic policies on refugees had opened people’s eyes.

Huge crowds have taken part in protest across Brazil to demand the resignation of President Dilma Rousseff. The opposition blames President Rousseff for Brazil's deep recession as well as the corruption scandal engulfing the state oil firm Petro bras. In São Paulo alone, police said well over a million people were on the streets. Johns Park explained why he was demonstrating. “Our country's worst problem is corruption and this here is a demonstration that the population cannot bear anymore corruption. We believe justice must be done. No one is beyond the law. Everything must be taken forward and everyone must be judged and punished accordingly.” World news from the BBC.

The constitution court in the West African state of Benin has confirmed there will be a presidential run-off vote next weekend between the Prime Minister Lionel Zinsou and the businessman Patrice Talon. Despite an initial delay, the election is being praised as a model of democratic practice. The outgoing President Thomas Boni Yayi stepped down after the maximum two five-year terms.

Tens of thousands of Islamists in Pakistan have held a rally in Karachi to protest the execution last month of a bodyguard who killed a provincial governor five years ago. The head of the Jamaat-e-Islami party Nizami MotiurRahman described the execution of Mumtaz Qadri as judicial murder. Mr. Qadrishot the governor of Punjab province because he backed the liberalization ofPakistan's strict blasphemy law. Mr. Rehman said Mr Qadri's death would notsilence the Islamists. “We're out here because a small liberal lobby at the behest of the America and the west along with our rulers wants to put an end to Islamic laws in Pakistan. They want to finish Islam and they want to make this country secular and liberal. We will not let this happen at any cost.”

The Egyptian Justice Minister has been fired over comments that were criticized as blasphemous. Ahmed Al-Zind has said in a television interview when asked whether he would imprison journalists that he would jail a prophet if he broke the law. Mr. Al-Zind apologized for the comments immediately after he made them on Friday and issued a fuller apology the following day.

A Palestinian teacher has won a prestigious educational award worth a million dollars described as the Nobel Prize for her profession. The Varkey Foundation Global Teacher Prize which is now in its second year was awarded in Dubai to Hanan Al Hroub who works at a school in al-Bireh near Ramallah on the occupied West Bank. She has developed a unique approach to teaching which uses cooperative play to counter violent behavior. BBC news.