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Pakistani Student and Teacher Accused of Blasphemy

A Pakistani teenager and his religious teacher have been accused of blasphemy, police told AFP Friday, after the student was allegedly caught burning pages of the Koran.

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Israel Suspends Cooperation with UNESCO after Jerusalem Vote

Israel suspended cooperation with UNESCO on Friday after the UN cultural organisation adopted two resolutions on annexed east Jerusalem ahead of a final vote next week.

In a letter sent to UNESCO Director General Irina Bokova, Education Minister Naftali Bennett accused the body of ignoring "thousands of years of Jewish ties to Jerusalem" and aiding "Islamist terror."

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Bob Dylan Still Silent on Nobel Win

More than 24 hours after awarding Bob Dylan the Nobel prize for literature, the Swedish Academy said Friday they had still not managed to speak to the reclusive U.S. singer.

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Nazi Jargon Revival Causes Alarm in Germany

Long-banished German words and phrases linked to the country's Nazi past have been revived by far-right politicians railing against the migrant influx, sparking comparisons to the 1930s.

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Black-Clad Pilgrims Pack Iraq's Karbala for Ashura

Huge crowds of black-clad Shiite Muslim pilgrims thronged the Iraqi shrine city of Karbala on Wednesday, weeping and beating their chests in mourning for the seventh century killing of the prophet's grandson.

Shiites in Iraq have come under frequent attack by Sunni extremists of the Islamic State group who regard them as heretics, and some 30,000 security personnel were out on the streets to guard the pilgrims, although attacks in Karbala are rare.

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Erdogan Files Appeal in Germany over Satire Probe

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has filed an appeal to contest a decision by German authorities to drop a probe into a TV comic who satirized him, local officials said Monday.

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Yazidi Activist Nadia Murad Wins Vaclav Havel Rights Prize

The Council of Europe on Monday awarded its Vaclav Havel Human Rights Prize to Iraqi activist Nadia Murad, who was an IS sex slave before becoming the face of a campaign to protect her Yazidi people.

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Most Post-WWII German Justice Officials Were ex-Nazis

Germany's post-World War II justice ministry was infested with ex-Nazis hellbent on protecting their former comrades, according to a new official study released Monday.

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Transgender Indonesians Bear Brunt of Rising Intolerance

A handful of Muslim transgender women wash their faces, put on white robes and begin to pray, an act of quiet defiance after their study center in Indonesia was shut by hardliners.

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Ban on 'Immoral' Nigerian Star Highlights North/South Split

It was just for a split second that a male singer cuddled northern Nigerian actress Rahama Sadau in a video, but for the local film industry it was a second too much.

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