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Jordan is prepared to release longtime prisoner Sajida al-Rishawi if ISIS allows a Jordanian military pilot to return home, the country's state-run TV says.
CNN: Jordan says it would swap terrorist for ISIS captive
Illegal migrants from Sudan, Somalia, and Syria nap and pray during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan while living in an abandoned factory in Patras, Greece. Patras is a city full of migrants desperate to leave Greece; they make almost daily attempts to get to Italy on one of the boats out of the port. Some have only recently arrived, and realize there is nothing for them there; some have been in Greece for many years, and realize there is no longer a place for them and little opportunity to succeed.
Photo by Lynsey Addario, from Europe’s Migrants
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Paris Terror Attack: NATO Member Accuses US and Israel of Involvement
Paris Terror Attack: NATO Member Accuses US and Israel of Involvement http://bit.ly/1B47PUR Submitted January 24, 2015 at 09:58PM by adrenaxus via reddit http://bit.ly/1CC3jBr
No Hate Speech Movement official Campaign video
No Hate Speech Movement
No Hate Speech Movement Campaign - the trailer
Bjorn Harsanyi, Calgary Immigration Lawyer, Discusses the New Refugee Sy...
Paris attacks: Cherif Kouachi buried amid tight security
Said Kouachi (left) and Cherif Kouachi killed 12 people in their attack on the Charlie Hebdo offices
Cherif Kouachi, one of the gunmen who launched a deadly attack on French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, has been buried in an unmarked grave.
Kouachi was buried overnight in his hometown, Paris suburb Gennevilliers, amid tight security, an official said.
His brother Said Kouachi was buried on Friday in the eastern city of Reims.
The brothers killed 12 people in the 7 January attack in Paris. They were killed by police two days later during a standoff north of Paris.
They had claimed the attack - supported by al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula - was in response to Charlie Hebdo's publication of cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.
The magazine's first edition after the attack features a new cartoon in which the Prophet is shown weeping, holding an "I am Charlie" sign - the message of support for the magazine - and saying "All is Forgiven".
There have been protests in several countries against the weekly magazine, which has issued a print run of seven million copies in view of extraordinary demand. Before the attack it distributed 60,000 issues.
A week after millions took to the streets of France to voice support for free speech, a new poll commissioned by Le Journal du Dimanche(in French) suggested 42% of French people thought Prophet Muhammad cartoons should not be published, 57% believed they should and 1% had no view.
Fear of pilgrimage site
Both Kouachi brothers have been buried in unmarked graves to prevent them from becoming shrines for Islamists.
There has been no announcement on plans for burying Amedy Coulibaly, who killed four people at a Jewish supermarket in Paris on 9 January and is suspected of killing a policewoman in the French capital a day earlier.
An official from the Gennevilliers mayor's office told AFP that no relatives had attended Cherif Kouachi's burial. The grave was unmarked amid concerns it could become "a pilgrimage site" for jihadists, the official said.
Earlier in the week, Reims mayor Arnaud Robinet said he would "categorically refuse" a family request for Said Kouachi to be buried in the city.
However on Saturday he said he had been forced by the government to accept the burial. The burial was conducted "in the most discreet, anonymous way possible," he told French TV.
French law gives residents of a town the right to a burial there.
A lawyer for Said Kouachi's widow said she had not attended the burial for fear that journalists would follow her and the location of the grave would be discovered.
Extra soldiers and police officers have been deployed to protect vulnerable sites in France
Almost 15,000 extra police and troops have been mobilised to boost security across France since the attacks.
Soldiers have also been sent onto the streets in neighbouring Belgium, where officials said they had foiled a possible attack against the police when they shot dead two suspects on Thursday in the eastern city of Verviers.
Some 150 soldiers were deployed in Brussels and Antwerp on Saturday, a number that is expected to double over the coming week.
Meanwhile, there have been protests in several countries against a cartoon in this week's edition of Charlie Hebdo depicting the Prophet Muhammad.
There have been protests in Niger over the latest edition of Charlie Hebdo
In Niger, at least 10 people have been killed in violent protests against the magazine.
Churches were set on fire in the capital, Niamey, and in the city of Zinder.
Germany 'anti-Islamisation' Pegida rally cancelled
Pegida protesters have been rallying each Monday for weeks
A planned rally by Germany's "anti-Islamisation" Pegida group has been called off after police received a threat against one of the organisers.
Pegida announced the measure shortly before police said the threat was "concrete" and no demonstrations would be allowed in Dresden on Monday.
Pegida has been rallying each Monday for weeks, attracting record numbers in Dresden last week.
Rival protests have sprung up and have been condemned by German leaders.
Writing on its Facebook page, Pegida said it had no choice but to cancel the rally to ensure protesters' safety.
It urged supporters to hang flags out of their windows and light candles instead.
Meanwhile in the western city of Essen about 50 demonstrators from the far-right Hooligans Against Salafists group (Hogesa) were outnumbered by more than 2,000 counter-protesters on Sunday.
The Hogesa demonstration was banned by police and those attending were detained.
Thousands have joined rival rallies against Pegida
German magazine Der Spiegel reported on Friday that intelligence agencies had intercepted messages from known jihadists planning strikes against the group.
Pegida last week defied calls from German leaders to stay at home, following the deadly attacks by Islamists in France.
Justice Minister Heiko Maas urged organisers not to "misuse" the attacks.
However the rally went ahead, with a record 25,000 people attending in Dresden.
Anti-Pegida rallies drew tens of thousands in Dresden, Leipzig, Munich and Hanover.
EU court blocks gay asylum tests
Homosexual acts are illegal in many African countries, including Uganda
The EU's top court has ruled that refugees who claim asylum on the grounds that they are homosexual should not have to undergo tests to prove it.
Three men, including a Ugandan and one from a Muslim country, failed in their bids for asylum when a Dutch court said they had not proved their sexuality.
EU states including the UK have been criticised for their handling of gay asylum requests.
The European Court of Justice (ECJ) says they must respect human dignity.
Its rulings apply to all EU member states.
The case is significant across the EU because of a surge in the numbers of sub-Saharan Africans seeking asylum in Europe this year. Most African countries treat homosexuality as a crime.
The Czech authorities were criticised by the UN, EU and human rights activists in 2011 for using an erection or "phallometric" test - a practice dating back to communist times - to determine whether certain asylum seekers were gay.
Respecting dignity
In its latest ruling, the Luxembourg-based court said that determining a refugee's sexuality had to be consistent with EU law and respect their private and family life.
In particular, it said that evidence of homosexual acts submitted from tests or on film infringed human dignity, even if it was proposed by the asylum applicant. Allowing such evidence could result in it becoming a requirement, the court said.
While authorities could interview an asylum seeker to find out about their sexual orientation, questions could not be asked about their sexual practices.
The Luxembourg-based court said questioning had to respect a refugee's private and family life
An asylum seeker's failure to answer questions about their personal circumstances was not sufficient reason to reject their credibility. Nor was an applicant's failure to declare his homosexuality from the start, the judges said.
Treatment of gay, lesbian or bisexual refugees has become a key issue in the UK in recent months, after revelations that one asylum seeker was asked what one lawyer described as "shockingly degrading" questions.
A report by the UK independent chief inspector of borders and immigration in October found that more than one in 10 interviews involved questions of an "unsatisfactory nature".
The ECJ ruled last year that gay asylum seekers who had a genuine fear of imprisonment in African countries could claim refugee status, in response to another Dutch case.
Melissa Etheridge - Refugee