The New Zealand Herald

North America

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Chelsea Clinton, the only child of former US President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, announced that she is expecting her second child the next northern summer. “Charlotte is going to be a big sister! Feeling very blessed & grateful this holiday season,” Chelsea Clinton wrote on Twitter. Chelsea Clinton, 35, and her father have largely stayed off the campaign trail since Hillary Clinton launched her Democratic bid for the presidency in April. Both have said they plan to intensify their public political roles after the New Year in an effort to boost Clinton’s campaign just six weeks before the first round of primary voting. Chelsea Clinton is married to hedge fund manager Marc Mezvinsky. A poll shows Donald Trump would win a hypothetic­al head-to-head contest against either of his two closest Republican US presidenti­al rivals, Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio, if the US election were held today. But the Reuters/Ipsos poll shows Trump would fall 11 points short of beating Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton. the Abbot Point coal port in northern Queensland in 2013, but the process has been repeatedly delayed amid protests by conservati­on groups. They argue the expansion will hurt the reef’s fragile ecosystem. The expansion requires a massive dredging operation to make way for ships entering and exiting the port, which is located around 20km from the nearest coral reef. The original plan called for more than 3 million cu m of dredged seabed mud to be dumped on the reef. An officially sponsored trip to India by actor Orlando Bloom to encourage tourism was stalled when he was denied entry at New Delhi airport. Bloom had been invited to visit the Taj Mahal in Agra by the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh state. He was told to get on a flight back to London, three hours after arriving because his e-visa had not been cleared. Officials refused to provide Bloom with a 72-hour temporary permit. While the Lord of the Rings star waited on his return at Heathrow, the Indian Foreign Minister, Sushma Swaraj, got the Indian High Commission in London to open its visa section to give him the document. Bloom finally went to Agra on a 45-minute tour. 58-year-old man — a passenger on the flight — into custody on his return to France, while his wife was also being questioned as a witness, a day after their flight from Mauritius to Paris was diverted to Mombasa. A passenger alerted crew members to the device found inside a toilet cubicle on board the Boeing 777, which was carrying 459 passengers and 14 crew. The object, made up of cardboard, paper and a kitchen timer, was found to pose no danger to the aircraft or its passengers, Air France said. The Daily Telegraph has been fined up to £30,000 after sending thousands of people an email urging them to vote Conservati­ve on the day of British election. The letter making the plea was attached to the paper’s regular news summary on May 7. Sent from editor Chris Evans, it described the poll as the “most important since 1979”, adding: “The Daily Telegraph urges its readers to vote Conservati­ve”. The Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office found that subscriber­s to the e-bulletin had not specifical­ly consented to receive such marketing, as required under the Privacy and Electronic Communicat­ions Regulation­s. Aymara indigenous women descend the Huayna Potosi mountain with their husbands, who work as guides, at El Alto, Bolivia. Eleven women made the two-day climb last week. All work as porters and cooks at the base camp, but some want to become guides. state, but refrained from making any fiery threats during a speech addressing the assassinat­ion. Hizbollah said Samir Kantar, who spent 30 years in an Israeli prison after being convicted of the 1979 murders of an Israeli policeman and a father and his 4-year-old daughter, was killed with eight others in the airstrike on a residentia­l building in Jaramana. Hizbollah officials had pledged to avenge his killing. Hizbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said the group will exact revenge but did not make any specific threats. A group of Muslims travelling on a bus in the north east of Kenya took a brave stand against gun-wielding Islamists, refusing to point out who on their bus were Christian, despite the terrorists threatenin­g to kill them all. The Somali gunmen sprayed the bus in Mandera with bullets, killing two people. Ten al-Shabaab militants then boarded the bus and ordered the Muslim passengers to split away from the Christians. But a passenger said he and fellow Muslims defied demands from the attackers to help identify Christians travelling with them. “We even gave some nonMuslims our religious attire to wear in the bus so that they would not be identified easily. We stuck together tightly,” said Abdi Mohamud Abdi. “The militants threatened to shoot us but we still refused and protected our brothers and sisters. Finally they gave up and left but warned that they would be back.” Julius Otieno, the deputy county commission­er, confirmed the account.

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