Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump campaigns at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines, US, August 12, 2023. REUTERS/Scott Morgan/File Photo |
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- Former US President Donald Trump was hit with a fourth set of criminal charges when a Georgia grand jury issued a sweeping indictment accusing him of trying to overturn his 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden. What you need to know about the legal troubles of Donald Trump.
- A fire at a gas station in the southern Russian region of Dagestan killed at least 27 people including three children, Interfax news agency reported citing regional emergency medics.
- Russia launched a large-scale air attack on Ukraine's western region of Lviv and the northwestern region of Volyn, killing at least three people and wounding scores of others, officials said.
- Search teams with cadaver dogs have combed through 25% of the Lahaina disaster zone from the Maui wildfires, discovering the remains of a 99th victim, but perhaps hundreds more people were unaccounted for nearly a week after the disaster.
- Three suspected spies for Russia in Britain have been arrested and charged in a major national security investigation, the BBC reported.
- Paraguay's new president Santiago Pena takes office, a clean-cut economist for the conservative Colorado party who will need to juggle ties with Taiwan, pressure from farmers, rising crime and a US probe into his political mentor.
- Nearly 900 flights in Japan were cancelled and 240,000 people were ordered to move to safety as a slow-moving typhoon made landfall, cutting off power to tens of thousands of homes.
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Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally in Windham, New Hampshire, US, August 8, 2023. REUTERS/Reba Saldanha/File Photo |
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Donald Trump is likely to claim that his right to free speech and genuine concerns about voter fraud protect him from charges that he pressured Georgia officials to change the results of the 2020 election in his favor. But legal experts say the case appears to be a straightforward fraud prosecution that will turn on whether Trump knowingly broke the law, regardless of whether he believed his actions were justified. | |
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A woman looks through a telescope during the annual Perseid meteor shower on the island of Lastovo, Croatia August 12. REUTERS/Antonio Bronic |
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