Society's Child
The body of the woman, 31, said to be from Nigeria, was found on Saturday at a refugee facility in the town of Regensburg. Police say officers who arrived to investigate the death and ambulance workers who responded to the call were attacked and abused by furious migrants.
As the situation grew tense, migrants began to throw stones and bottles at police. Some barricaded themselves inside the building trying to prevent the body from being removed.
A British research team claims to have discovered unexpected radioactive hotspots near the Chernobyl ground zero, three decades after the worst nuclear accident in history.
The hotspots were identified by a suite of drones capable of detecting radioactive gamma particles and neutrons, the University of Bristol announced.
The drones carried out surveys within the Chernobyl exclusion zone, a largely inhabited area within a 30km radius of the failed reactor.
The team flew 50 missions over the area over 10 days, mapping the so-called Red Forest, the ghostly 10-square-kilometre woodland around the plant considered to be one of the most contaminated places on the planet.
New Orleans woman charged with child desertion for hiring ride-sharing service to take 5yo to school
Reiona Oliver, 27, is a bounce artist known as "GameOva Reedy," according to a report by WWL-TV.
Oliver was arrested Tuesday (April 23), after a driver for a transportation service brought Oliver's 5-year-old son to a St. Bernard Parish Sheriff's Office substation in Arabi, officials said.
The driver told deputies that a woman, later identified as Oliver, had summoned a ride to a Chalmette home Tuesday morning. When the driver arrived, Oliver placed her son into the car and instructed the driver to take the boy to a school in New Orleans.
State Attorney General Gerardo Octavio Solis said Saturday that two of the bodies have already been identified, and that excavations continue.
In four raids, officials found stolen vehicles as well as tactical equipment. At one location, forensic teams can only work at most 30 minutes at a time due to caustic substances, Solis said.
The state is home to Jalisco New Generation Cartel, one of the most powerful and brazen criminal groups in Mexico. The cartel once shot down a Mexican military helicopter with a rocket launcher.
Some 40,000 people have gone missing since the start of Mexico's drug war in 2006, and clandestine mass graves dot the countryside.

The pilot flew past the airport twice so that air traffic controllers could check if the landing gear was down.
A Myanmar pilot safely landed a passenger jet without its front wheels on Sunday, after landing gear on the Myanmar National Airlines plane failed to deploy, the airline and an official said.
It was the second aviation incident in Myanmar this week, after a Biman Bangladesh Airlines plane skidded off the runway during strong wind in Yangon on Wednesday, injuring at least 17 of those on board.
The San Diego-based company revealed the amount of bonuses in an SEC filing on Friday. The document says that CEO Steve Mollenkopf was awarded 40,794 shares, which is about 60 percent more than Qualcomm President Cristiano Amon got for his "outstanding efforts" in achieving the license agreement and chipset supply deal with Apple.
The other members of the executive management team, Executive Vice Presidents Donald Rosenberg and James Thompson, as well as Interim Chief Financial Officer David Wise, got some 19,264, 14,165 and 2,958 in shares respectively.
The total awards to the team amount to nearly $8.8 million, given that Qualcomm's shares were trading at $85.84 as of Friday.
Comment: Last month, Qualcomm and Apple agreed to settle their ongoing lawsuits - the two tech giants have been fighting over Qualcomm's patent licensing practices for the last two years. A potential catalyst for the settlement: Intel said it won't make wireless modems capable of connecting to the coming generation of 5G networks, thus Apple needs Qualcomm as other smartphone makers have announced 5G-capable phones based on Qualcomm's wireless chips.

Opposition protestors toss petrol bombs at the Prime Minister Edi Rama's office in Tirana, Albania.
There were at least 1,500 officers guarding the government's office in the capital Tirana, the entrance to which had been reinforced with steel plates. The police initially tried to ignore provocations, but when the crowd employed incendiary bottles and smoke bombs a violent response couldn't be avoided.
The protesters began tossing Molotovs at the building as opposition leader Lulzim Basha was delivering a speech to his supporters. Thousands gathered for peaceful demonstrations in the city center.
Comment: NATO bases, EU membership and US & EU backing is likely to give any seasoned observer reason for suspicions of the legitimacy of the Albanian elections:
- Prime Minister Rama: NATO to Build 1st Air Base in Western Balkans in Albania
- Thousands of Albanian protesters demand PM Edi Rama's resignation
- Chaotic scenes in Albania as opposition attempts to storm PM's residence over accusations of corruption
"I will not be cowed or bullied by these people, but you can't escape the fact that those close to me are worried," Sadiq Khan told The Times.
He explained further: "It can't be right that one of the consequences of me being the mayor of London and a Muslim in public life is that I have police protection."
The latest person to fall victim to this trend is Sergey Dorenko, who suddenly died on Thursday while out on a motorcycle ride.
"Anti-Putin journalist dies in mysterious motorbike accident days after criticizing Russian authorities over fatal plane crash," the Daily Mail chose to headline its report on Dorenko's death.
The usual Russiagaters were quick to chip in with anger and disbelief. Bill Browder, the internationally famous anti-Putin crusader, called Dorenko "one of Russia's most outspoken independent journalists and critics of the Putin regime."
Comment: If the usual suspects really cared for the safety of journalists it'd be the assassinations and injustices in Ukraine that they'd be drawing attention to:
- Western media silent on illegal detention of Russian journalist Kirill Vyshinsky, imprisoned without fair trial in Ukraine
- Veteran Austrian journalist reporting on corruption in Ukraine fears for his life
- Another Russian journalist has been murdered in Ukraine
What's more, the survey found that students going into college as freshmen felt more prepared for a career than graduating seniors leaving with a degree.
The LendEDU-College Pulse survey found that 36 percent of seniors don't feel prepared for their career, compared to 20 percent of freshmen, noting as students "move through college and get closer to graduating, they lose confidence in their career outlook."
The survey, conducted between December and mid-March, asked 7,749 college students: "Do you think that college is sufficiently preparing you for your future career?"













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