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Mexican City Pleads for UN Peacekeepers

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Ciudad Juarez
AFP/Getty
The citizens of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, are pleading for U.N. peacekeeping troops to combat drug-related violence. The Mexican government has already sent 5,000 soldiers to the area, but Ciudad Juarez still has one of the highest homicide rates in the world -- about seven killings per day, in a city of 1.5 million.
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Rare Iceberg Spotted South of Australia

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Iceberg south of Australia
Australian Antarctic Division / AP
A large iceberg is spotted off an island about halfway between Antarctica and Australia. It's a rare sight in waters so far north. Scientists think the iceberg, which is about 160 feet high and 1,640 feet long, is probably one of several large icebergs that broke off Antarctic's Ross Ice Shelf between 2000 and 2002.
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Missing Military Dog Found After a Year

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Sabi the bomb-sniffing dog on Nov. 11, 2009
AP
Sabi, a bomb-sniffing black Lab, vanished 14 months ago amid a fierce battle between Australian troops and militants in Afghanistan. But she's back with her unit now, thanks to a U.S. soldier who found her at an isolated patrol base. Officials didn't explain how exactly she was found, but she's said to be in good shape.
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Japan Drops Charges Against US Dad

Prosecutors officially drop all charges against Christopher Savoie, an American dad who allegedly tried to snatch his children away from his Japanese wife. Noriko Savoie was granted custody of the children and agreed to remain in the U.S., while her ex-husband had visitation rights. But she took the kids to Japan -- and stayed.
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Officials: Obama Rejects Afghan Options

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President Barack Obama
AP
Top officials say President Barack Obama, unhappy with all the Afghanistan war options he's been given, won't accept any of them unless changes are made. The news comes as Karl Eikenberry, the American ambassador there, recently expressed big concerns that a troop buildup would make the already weak government more reliant on the United States.
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UN: 200 Million Kids Are Malnourished

Nearly 200 million children are malnourished and have stunted growth as a result, according to a United Nations report. Most of them live in Africa and Asia. Without sufficient food, the kids are unable to fight off disease and many die before they reach the age of 5.
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Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who last week said he didn't want to run for re-election, may get to stay in office without a single ballot being cast. Read More

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The Australian government on Thursday approved the extradition of an alleged Nazi collaborator accused by Hungary of a World War II killing. Read More

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A female Palestinian student who says she was handcuffed, blindfolded and hauled off to the Gaza Strip by the Israeli army in the middle of the night late last month asked Israel's supreme court Thursday to let her return to her studies in the West Bank. Read More

Iran's recently revealed uranium enrichment hall is a highly fortified underground space that appears too small to house a civilian nuclear program, but large enough to serve for military activities, diplomats told The Associated Press on Thursday. Read More

North Korea threatened to punish South Korea following their brief-but-bloody naval firefight, though analysts said Thursday that chances of retaliation appeared slim ahead of planned talks between the U.S. and Pyongyang. Read More

Pretrial hearings in the case of a Serb accused of beating a fellow student into a coma in the United States will begin in December, a Serbian court said Thursday. Read More

Italy's top security official said Thursday that authorities have smashed an international terror cell with the arrest in Italy and elsewhere in Europe of 17 Algerians who were raising money to finance terrorism. Read More

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