Thousands protest against Niger's president

Demonstrators in one of the world's poorest countries chanted "Down with the regime!" and "No to dictatorship" on Saturday in the country's first major rally against President Mahamadou Issoufou's rule since his 2011 election win.

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Police said about 20,000 people took part in Saturday's rally, while organisers put the figure at 30,000.

Prizes for Teams?

I didn't realize the Nobel committee had been so exclusionary, apparently unwilling to deal with the increasing complexity of scientific inquiry in Physics.

Some of the most important studies include hundreds (even thousands) of researchers, coming and going throughout a project's life (including the originators; what if the people who start some experiment leave it after the first few years?), which could last decades before enough data is captured.

When Does Technology Change Enough That the Law Should Too?

In the past 10 days, two separate courts have handed down "diametrically opposed" rulings on the legality of the NSA's bulk telephony metadata collection programs. One, decided by a federal trial judge in Washington, found that the program was "likely unconstitutional"; the other, decided today by a federal trial judge in New York, found that the exact same program to be A-okay under our nation's statutory and constitutional law.

SUU KYI'S PARTY TO CONTEST 2015 MYANMAR ELECTIONS

It was the first time the National League for Democracy party announced it would take part in the polls, which Suu Kyi had said cannot be fair unless the constitution is changed.

"I want to say that the NLD will contest the 2015 elections," National League for Democracy spokesman Nyan Win said at a news conference.

How al-Qaeda Changed the Syrian War

Talk to any Syrian you meet on the Syrian-Turkish border these days, and in less than five minutes the conversation is likely to turn to Da’ash—the Arabic acronym for the rebel organization known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria, or ISIS.

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Since its appearance last April, ISIS has changed the course of the Syrian war. It has forced the mainstream Syrian opposition to fight on two fronts. It has obstructed aid getting into Syria, and news getting out. And by gaining power, it has forced the US government and its European allies to rethink their strategy of intermittent support to the moderate opposition and rhetoric calling for the ouster of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad...

More Than Half of the World's Terrorists Attacks Happen in Just Three Countries

While the total number of terrorist attacks around the world has been steadily rising, it is also an increasingly concentrated phenomenon. New data released today by the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism based at the University of Maryland shows that just three countries for the year 2012—Pakistan, Iraq and Afghanistan—accounted for 54 percent of attacks and 58 percent of fatalities that year. India, Nigeria, Somalia, Yemen, and Thailand were the next five most frequently targeted.