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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Andrew Brunson: US pastor on trial in Turkey on terror charges Evangelical Christian pastor Andrew Brunson ran a church in the Turkish city of Izmir. He faces two separate terms of 15 and 20 years in prison if convicted. A Turkish court on Monday decided to keep a US pastor in prison pending trial on terror-related charges. Andrew Brunson went on trail over alleged involvement with both the movement of Fethullah Gulen — a Muslim preacher who lives in self-imposed exile in the US who Ankara says masterminded a failed 2016 coup in Turkey — and the Kurdistan Workersʼ Party (PKK). The trial further increases tensions between Turkey and the US — two NATO allies. In the Syria conflict, the United States has backed fighters from the Kurdish Peopleʼs Protection Units (YPG); a group Turkey considers a terrorist organization, and Washington refuses to extradite Gulen, despite repeated demands by Ankara.

Russian investigative reporter dies after balcony fall Authorities have said that Maksim Borodinʼs death was likely a suicide. But both his editor and friends disagree that Borodin, who wrote about crime and corruption, was suicidial. Thirty-two-year-old Russian investigative journalist Maksim Borodin died suddenly over the weekend, his employer Novy Den confirmed on Monday. Authorities have described his death as a probable suicide, a narrative contested both by friends and Novy Den. Borodin was found underneath the balconies of his building in the city of Yekaterinburg on April 12 and died three days later without having recovered consciousness. According to the US government-funded Radio Free Europe, a policeman spokesman from Sverdlovsk Oblast said it was "unlikely that this story is of a criminal nature."

91/2018 • 23 APRIL, 2018

Afghanistan: Kabul suicide bomb kills dozens The blast could delay parliamentary elections scheduled for later this year

Egyptʼs Nadeem Center for torture victims persists against odds Amnesty has recognized the Nadeem Centerʼs work in treating victims of torture and documenting abuse by the security forces with its 2018 human rights award. DWʼs Ruth Michaelson spoke with one of the founders. "According to the constitution, torture is a crime — but it is practiced every day," said Dr Aida Seif el Dawla (pictured above, second from left), as she sat on the sofa of her cozy Cairo apartment. "There is a total negligence of the law — ignoring the law, ignoring the constitution." Seif el Dawla is one of the founders of the Nadeem Center for Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence and Torture. She can immediately recall the number of people the center has helped with physical and psychological therapy: "4,968."

Gunmen kidnap German in Nigeria At least 57 people have been killed in a blast in Afghanistanʼs capital after several weeks of relative calm. At least 57 people were killed and around 100 were injured in a suicide bomb attack at a voter registration center in Afghanistanʼs capital on Sunday. The attack, claimed by "Islamic State" (IS), highlights security concerns ahead of legislative elections scheduled for October 20. A suicide bomber targeted people who had gathered to receive national identification cards.The blast shattered windows several miles away and destroyed several nearby vehicles.Police blocked public traffic on all roads to the blast site.IS claimed responsibility through its Aamaq news agency, saying it had targeted Shiite "apostates." The blast happened in Dasht-e-Barchi, a Shiite Hazara minority area, which has been repeatedly hit by attacks claimed by IS. "There were women, children. Everyone had come to get their identity cards,"

witness Bashir Ahmad told the Reuters news agency. Interior Ministry spokesman Najib Danesh said the bomber approached the center on foot. Relative calm: The blast occurred after several weeks of relative calm in the city and could set back plans to hold elections soon. President Ashraf Ghani is under international pressure to host long-delayed parliamentary elections this year. Upcoming elections: Legislative elections scheduled for October have been seen as a test-run for next yearʼs presidential election. Both the Taliban and IS oppose democratic elections, preferring to install a harsh form of Islamic rule in Afghanistan. Over the next two months, authorities hope to register as many as 14 million people at more than 7,000 polling centers, which are being protected by Afghan police and troops.

The German national was working at a construction site in northern Nigeria. Kidnapping for ransom is common in Nigeria. Five armed men kidnapped a German national and killed a policeman in northern Nigeria, police said on Monday. Gunmen on motorcycles opened fire on a vehicle carrying workers to a construction site run by construction company Dantata & Sawoe in Kano city, abducting the German national working for the firm and killing a police escort, said police spokesman Magaji Musa Majia.

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