Thứ Ba, 27 tháng 3, 2018

Waching daily Mar 27 2018

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welcome to USA breaking news today please subscribe and click notification

box to get all breaking news alert breaking news today you don't think

we're leaving BBC host jumps on Tony Blair's latest anti breeks at bid Tony

Blair was put on the spot by BBC Newsnight host Emily Maitlis who quizzed

the former Prime Minister over his anti breeks at attempts mr. Blair has

repeatedly called for the UK to have another vote on the decision to leave

the European Union the volkl remainder claimed that he understands and knows

why people voted to leave the brussels club but still demanded a fresh breeks

at vote BBC host mate lee's then Quist mr. Blair about whether he thought the

UK would eventually leave the EU she said you said if we got through with

briques it dot in your heart you don't think it's going to happen the former

Prime Minister Tony Blair replied I don't know I always say to people the

likelihood is that it happens but I think there is a significant possibility

that it doesn't if Parliament makes sure that the government can't fudge the

terms of the new relationship before we leave the former Labour Party Prime

Minister outlined why he thought Britons should have another say on breeks at dot

Mr Blair said one version of briques it keeps us close to europe and the other

is a clean break from europe once the government resolves the central dilemma

in this negotiation and plumps for one of those two options then that's the

point at which you can really compare the future relationship we will have

with Europe with the relationship we have now because I think it's going to

be difficult for the government to resolve this dilemma because there is no

easy answer to it as Northern Ireland shows the risk is that we end up prior

to March 2019 with a kind of fudge dot where the government says we can have

our cake and eat it we can stay close to Europe and have access to the European

market but still make our own rules because of the risk of that fudge it is

really important that MPs who are the last bastion of ensuring that the people

do know do let the people know very clearly before we do leave what it is

we're leaving to before March 2019 we have some real leverage because Europe

doesn't want a chaotic withdrawal they want to try to manage

this is best they can without going through with it if we fudge this before

March 2019 then leave and then start the real negotiations we've got no leverage

in that negotiation at all thanks for watch please share like comment this

video and subscribe channel for latest news

For more infomation >> Breaking News Today_You don't think we're leaving' BBC host jumps on Tony Blair's latest anti Brexit - Duration: 2:33.

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Ironsight News: Ironsight partnership program now Live - Duration: 1:59.

welcome everybody to another series of iron sights games so in this episode a

a bit of announcement You can read by the title already it is yes yes I'm excited about it.

Ironsight partnership program is officially live yes guys it's it is

officially live so you can go to their website link in the description go to

the website apply for the partnership and the

they'll be in contact I'm not sure how long they will take to contact you they will contact you so

take part in it guys you can get a lot of benefits from it I applied already

I hope I'm hoping that I get choose to be a part of to be a partner with them I

love the game I love the game so much one other reason

why I want to be a partner with the iron sights is just because of their news if

you're a partner I will get information as well before the public gets

information about the game I'd like to get that sort of information so I can

tell you guys about it and just informed me about again I see the game has a lot

of potential and the game can go a long way so yes guys iron sights Partnership

Program is no life check it out link in the description if you have any

questions if you have any comments please feel free to leave a comment down

in the comment section and I'll answer them as best as possible so thanks for

watching guys and I'll see you on the next

For more infomation >> Ironsight News: Ironsight partnership program now Live - Duration: 1:59.

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Malaysian Government Proposes Fake News Bill - Duration: 0:58.

For more infomation >> Malaysian Government Proposes Fake News Bill - Duration: 0:58.

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( US News ) Danish Inventor Peter Madsen Charged With Murdering Reporter On His Submarine - Duration: 3:32.

Danish Inventor Peter Madsen Charged With Murdering Reporter On His Submarine

Danish inventor Peter Madsen has been charged with murdering Swedish journalist Kim Wall on his private submarine and dismembering her body, according to prosecutors.

Danish prosecutor Jakob Buch-Jepsen described the case as "very unusual and extremely disturbing" and said Madsen either cut Wall's throat or strangled her, according to The Associated Press.

Madsen, who admitted in October to dismembering Wall's body, also was charged with indecent handling of a corpse, as well as sexual assault without intercourse of a particularly dangerous nature.

Madsen, 46, could face life imprisonment if convicted.

The trial was scheduled to start on March 8. A defense lawyer for Madsen told HuffPost she planned to meet with her client later in the day, but had no immediate comment.

Wall, a 30-year-old freelance journalist from Sweden, was working on a profile about the amateur rocket builder and entrepreneur last summer when she was reported missing.

She was last seen aboard Madsen's 56-foot submarine as it left Copenhagen on Aug.

The next day, Madsen was rescued from his vessel, which police believe he deliberately sank, and Wall was reported missing.

AFP Swedish journalist Kim Wall was researching a story on Danish inventor Peter Madsen when she went missing in August.

Madsen initially told police he had dropped Wall off on shore before his submarine sank.

But 10 days after she went missing, bags containing Wall's torso and legs were found floating in the sea near Copenhagen.

Madsen then changed his story, telling police that a heavy submarine hatch had accidentally fallen onto her head and killed her.

Wall's head was found in early October.

Madsen later admitted he dismembered Wall and threw parts of her body into the sea, but maintained he didn't kill her.

He claimed she died of carbon monoxide poisoning aboard the submarine.

A police examination of Madsen's computer uncovered video of women being tortured and decapitated, according to The Guardian. He has told prosecutors that he was interested in sadomasochism.

   .

For more infomation >> ( US News ) Danish Inventor Peter Madsen Charged With Murdering Reporter On His Submarine - Duration: 3:32.

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Breaking News Today⚠️World War 3 Russia SHOCK warning – expulsion of diplomats could lead to WAR - Duration: 2:51.

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welcome to USA breaking news today please subscribe and click notification

box to get all breaking news alert breaking news today World War three

Russia's shock warning expulsion of diplomats could lead to war World War

three could be sparked between the west and Russia following the expulsion of

over 100 Russian diplomats after the country was blamed for the poisoning of

former Russian spy Sergei scribal and his daughter Yulia think tank boss

andrey korsunov warned andrey korsunov director-general of the russian

international affairs council established by the kremlin insisted that

cutting off communications between Russia and the West could have

devastating consequences speaking on the Today programme mr. Corchado said by

cutting these channel of communication we increase risks of miscalculation

maybe not clear interpretation of intentions of the other side and

basically here it increases the dangers of inadvertent escalation or even a war

so again in my personal opinion the expulsion of diplomats is not the best

way to deal with the crisis because if we don't talk to each other how can we

handle the crisis the world unified against Russia on Monday and stood by

Britain as 23 countries expelled over 100 Russian diplomats in response to the

poisoning of the Russians by using a nerve agent 60 Russian diplomats were

ordered out of the u.s. by President Donald Trump in the first move of an

international wave of disciplinary action against Vladimir Putin Theresa

May welcomed a great solidarity from our friends and standing up to president

Putin's regime the Prime Minister said together we have sent a message that we

will not tolerate Russia's continued attempts to flout international law and

undermine our values but former US ambassador to Russia professor Michael

McFaul warned there are new elements to Russia's actions which make it even more

dangerous than a cold war the former US Ambassador listed Russia's tremendous

capabilities including its cyber and even economic powers in its military but

he warned that Vladimir Putin is even less constrained than his predecessors

mr. McFaul said there is also an ideological dimension between the

standoff between putinism and his autocratic ways in the Democratic West

third and I think most disturbingly Putin seems less constrained by some

informal rules of the game that kind of did constrain behavior between the

Soviet Union and the West during the Cold War . he seems willing to use this

power in ways that I don't think Soviet leaders in the past were willing to do

so I think that makes our situation very dangerous thanks for watch please share

like comment this video and subscribe channel for latest news

For more infomation >> Breaking News Today⚠️World War 3 Russia SHOCK warning – expulsion of diplomats could lead to WAR - Duration: 2:51.

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Céline Dion bientôt opérée : Sa soeur donne de ses nouvelles -AZ NEWS - Duration: 3:00.

For more infomation >> Céline Dion bientôt opérée : Sa soeur donne de ses nouvelles -AZ NEWS - Duration: 3:00.

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( US News ) Myanmar And Bangladesh Establish 2-Year Timeframe For Rohingya Repatriation - Duration: 10:26.

Myanmar And Bangladesh Establish 2-Year Timeframe For Rohingya Repatriation

DHAKA/YANGON (Reuters) - Bangladesh and Myanmar agreed on Tuesday to complete within two years the return of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims who fled an army crackdown last year in Myanmar.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and the U.N.

Refugee Agency (UNHCR), responding to the plan, said they were concerned about forcibly repatriating over 650,000 Rohingya who fled to neighboring Bangladesh after a conflict erupted in western Rakhine state in August.

Statements from the Myanmar and Bangladesh foreign ministries said Bangladesh would set up five transit camps on its side of the border.

Those camps would send Rohingyas to two reception centers in Myanmar.

The repatriation process would start next Tuesday, the statements said.

Myanmar said it would build a transit camp that can house 30,000 returnees.

The Bangladesh statement said "Myanmar has reiterated its commitment to stop (the) outflow of Myanmar residents to Bangladesh".

Guterres said the UNHCR had not been involved directly in the agreement and that "it will be very important to have UNHCR fully involved in the operation to guarantee that the operations abide by international standards." "A huge effort of reconciliation is needed to allow it to take place properly," Guterres told reporters.

"The worst would be to move these people from camps in Bangladesh to camps in Myanmar, keeping an artificial situation for a long time and not allowing for them to regain their normal lives." Myanmar stressed the need for both sides to take preventive measures against possible Rohingya attacks and said it gave Dhaka a list with the names of 1,000 alleged militants.

The crisis erupted after Rohingya insurgent attacks on security posts on Aug.

25 in Rakhine triggered a fierce military response that the United Nations denounced as ethnic cleansing.

Some 650,000 people fled the violence.

The military denies ethnic cleansing, saying its security forces mounted legitimate counter-insurgency clearance operations.

The Bangladesh statement called for repatriating orphans and "children born out of unwarranted incidence", a reference to cases of rape resulting in pregnancy, said a Bangladesh foreign ministry official who declined to be identified.

The rape of Rohingya women by Myanmar's security forces was widespread, according to interviews with women conducted at displacement camps by U.N.

medics and activists.

The military denies it was involved in any sexual assaults.

Kevin Frayer via Getty Images COXS BAZAR, BANGLADESH - OCTOBER 01: A Rohingya refugee man carries a baby after arriving by boat to Bangladesh side of the Naf River at Shah Porir Dwip after fleeing her village in Myanmar, on October 1, 2017 in Coxs Bazar, Bangladesh. (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images) VERIFICATION PROCESS A UNHCR spokesman said on Tuesday the Rohingya should return voluntarily only when they feel it is safe to do so.

"Major challenges have to be overcome," UNHCR spokesman Andrej Mahecic told a news briefing in Geneva.

"These include ensuring they are told about the situation in their areas of origin.

and are consulted on their wishes, that their safety is ensured." Myanmar government spokesman Zaw Htay told Reuters last week the returnees could apply for citizenship "after they pass the verification process".

Myint Kyaing, permanent secretary at Myanmar's Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population, told Reuters this month Myanmar would begin processing at least 150 people a day through each of the two camps by Jan.

The meeting that concluded on Tuesday in Myanmar's capital Naypyitaw was the first for a joint working group set up to hammer out the details of a November repatriation agreement.

Left out of the talks were the fears and concerns of the refugees themselves, "as if they are an inert mass of people who will go where and when they are told," Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, told Reuters in an email.

"Where are considerations for protection of the Rohingya from Myanmar security forces who months ago were raping and killing them? How come the discussions ignore the deprivation of rights of people held in indefinite detention, which is what these so-called "temporary" accommodations may become?," Robertson asked.

Allison Joyce via Getty Images  COXS BAZAR, BANGLADESH - JANUARY 14: Rohingya refugees are seen in Balukhali camp on January 14, 2018 in Coxs Bazar (Photo by Allison Joyce/Getty Images)  'LIVING LIKE PRISONERS' A group of refugees at the Kutupalong Rohingya camp near Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh expressed doubt about the camps Myanmar has agreed to establish on its side of the border.

Mohammad Farouk, 20, who arrived in Bangladesh following the Aug.

25 attacks, said exchanging one camp for another made little difference - except "the camps in Myanmar will be far worse, because we will be confined there and there will be a risk to our lives." Another resident of the Kutupalong camp compared the new transit camps to ones set up near the Rakhine state capital of Sittwe following bouts of violence in previous years "where people are living like prisoners".

"First, ask the military to give those Rohingya their homes and property back, then talk to us about returning," said the Rohingya refugee who did not want to be identified.

Some said the kind of violence they witnessed toward their community in Myanmar made it hard for them to trust the military.

"Even if I don't get food or anything else here, at least there is safety.

I won't feel safe if I go back to Myanmar," said Rashid Ahmed, 33.

Noor Alam, 37, who came to Kutupalong five months ago, wondered if he could ever get a job in Myanmar.

"They don't even call us Rohingya.

Until they consider us citizens we won't go back." Some young men in the camp worried they might be arrested on accusations of terrorism if they returned to Myanmar.

Camp conditions in Bangladesh are dire enough, but more than 520,000 Rohingya children are at even greater risk ahead of the cyclone season that generally begins in April, the United Nations Children's Fund said on Tuesday.

"Hundreds of thousands of children are already living in horrific conditions, and they will face an even greater risk of disease, flooding, landslides and further displacement," said Edouard Beigbeder, UNICEF Representative in Bangladesh.

Nearly 1 million Rohingya live in Bangladesh, including those who came after previous displacements dating back to the 1990s.

  (Reporting by Ruma Paul and Yi-mou Lee; Additional reporting by Zeba Siddiqui in Cox's Bazar, Shoon Naing, and Serajul Quadir in Dhaka, Michelle Nichols at the United Nations; Editing by Bill Tarrant and Frances Kerry)    .

For more infomation >> ( US News ) Myanmar And Bangladesh Establish 2-Year Timeframe For Rohingya Repatriation - Duration: 10:26.

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( US News ) North And South Korea To Form Unified Ice Hockey Team, March Together In Winter Olympics - Duration: 10:03.

North And South Korea To Form Unified Ice Hockey Team, March Together In Winter Olympics

5k   25.

SEOUL, Jan 17 (Reuters) - The two Koreas will field a combined women's ice hockey team and march together under one flag at next month's Winter Olympics in the South, Seoul said on Wednesday, after a new round of talks amid a thaw in cross-border ties.

North and South Korea have been talking since last week - for the first time in more than two years - about the Olympics, offering a respite from a months-long standoff over Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programs, although Japan urged caution over the North's "charm offensive." The two Koreas will compete as a unified team in the Olympics for the first time, though they have joined forces at other international sports events before.

North Korea will send a delegation of more than 400, including 230 cheerleaders, 140 artists and 30 Taekwondo players for a demonstration, a joint press statement released by Seoul's Unification Ministry said, adding the precise number of athletes will be hammered out after discussions with the IOC scheduled for later this week.

Prior to the Games, the sides will carry out joint training for skiers at the North's Masik Pass resort and a cultural event at the Mount Kumgang resort, for which Seoul officials plan to visit the sites next week.

"Under the circumstances where inter-Korean (relations) are extremely strained, in fact just some 20 days ago we weren't expecting North Korea would participate in the Olympics," said Chun Hae-sung, the South's chief negotiator and vice unification minister.

"It would have a significant meaning if the South and North show reconciliation and unity, for example through a joint march." The North Korean delegation will begin arriving in South Korea on Jan.

25, according to the joint statement.

The North will separately send a 150-strong delegation to the Paralympics, Chun said.

Kim Hong-Ji / Reuters South Korean President Moon Jae-In delivers a speech during his New Year news conference at the Presidential Blue House in Seoul, South Korea on January 10, 2018.

'IT'S NOT THE TIME' Twenty nations meeting in the Canadian city of Vancouver agreed on Tuesday to consider tougher sanctions to press North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons and U.S.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson warned the North it could trigger a military response if it did not choose dialog.

Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono said the world should not be naive about North Korea's "charm offensive" over the Olympics.

"It is not the time to ease pressure, or to reward North Korea," Kono said.

"The fact that North Korea is engaging in dialog could be interpreted as proof that the sanctions are working." North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has refused to give up development of nuclear missiles capable of hitting the United States in spite of increasingly severe U.N.

sanctions, raising fears of a new war on the Korean peninsula.

The North has fired test-fired missiles over Japan.

Earlier on Wednesday, state media warned the U.S.

of "meddling" in inter-Korean issues at a time when it had to "mind its own destiny rushing headlong into self-destruction." "The U.S.

is miscalculating," the North's Rodong Sinmun newspaper said in a commentary.

"Although the U.S.

makes desperate efforts to disturb peace while wielding a nuclear stick, it can not provoke us as long as we have the strong nuclear deterrent." KCNA KCNA / Reuters North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visits the newly-remodeled Pyongyang Teacher Training College, in this photo released by North Koreas Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang on January 17, 2018.

ICY RECEPTION Seoul has proposed a joint ice hockey team, which triggered an angry response from athletes in the South suddenly being told they may have to play alongside total strangers.

"I don't know if it will happen, but a joint team will be a good opportunity for ice hockey to shed its sorrow as a less-preferred sport as many Koreans will take interest," South Korean President Moon Jae-in told players during a visit to a training center.

The number of petitions to the presidential Blue House's website opposing a unified team shot up to more than 100 this week, with the most popular one garnering more than 17,000 votes.

"This isn't the same as gluing a broken plate together," said one of the signers.

The prospect of a combined team had long been unsettling for the South Korean players.

As in most other winter sports, the South is much stronger than the North.

"Our players were really nervous," Sarah Murray, South Korean women's hockey head coach, told Reuters last month during the team's training swing through the United States.

"We can only take 23 players to the Olympics, and they thought these North Koreans are going to come in and take our spots," Murray said.

Chun, the South's lead delegate, said the decision on a united ice hockey team is not yet finalized, as it requires the consent of the IOC and related international body.

"We're well aware of the people's concerns and interests about this," he told a news conference.

"But I would like you to see the other side that it could make a positive contribution to peace of the Korean Peninsula and improving inter-Korean relations." On Tuesday, the North said a 140-person orchestra would perform in South Korea during the Games.

Pyongyang is also planning to send a large delegation in addition to the athletes and orchestra.

Paik Hak-soon, the director of the Centre for North Korean studies at Sejong Institute in South Korea, said North Korea was using the cheering squad to draw attention to its apparent cooperative spirit.

"Seeing good results in competitions thanks to the cheering squad would enable the North Koreans to say they contributed to a successful Olympics and the South Korean government would likely agree," said Paik.

"In the end, they are using this old tactic to get to Washington through Seoul." Reclusive North Korea and the rich, democratic South are technically still at war because their 1950-53 conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty.

The North regularly threatens to destroy the South, Japan and their major ally, the United States.

China, which did not attend the Vancouver meeting, said on Wednesday the gathering showed a Cold War mentality and would only undermine a settlement of the North Korea problem.

  (Reporting by Hyonhee Shin and Christine Kim; Additional reporting by Dan Burns in NEW YORK; Editing by Nick Macfie and Hugh Lawson)    .

For more infomation >> ( US News ) North And South Korea To Form Unified Ice Hockey Team, March Together In Winter Olympics - Duration: 10:03.

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"Weekly Idol" Announces Third MC(News) - Duration: 1:19.

"Weekly Idol" Announces Third MC

Weekly Idol has announced its third MC alongside Yoo Se Yoon and Kim Shin Young!.

On March 27, a source from MBC Every1 revealed that Lee Sang Min has been chosen as the third MC. Yoo Se Yoon, Kim Shin Young, and Lee Sang Min have not started filming yet.

The show will begin anew after going through a readjustment period, said the source. Soompi. Display. News. English. 300x250. Mobile. English. 300x250. ATF.

Lee Sang Min and Kim Shin Young are currently hosting the show Gourmet Road 4, so they will be working together again for Weekly Idol.

The last episode of Weekly Idol with Jung Hyung Don and Defconn will air on March 28, and the show will reorganize and return sometime in April with the three new MCs.

For more infomation >> "Weekly Idol" Announces Third MC(News) - Duration: 1:19.

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( US News ) Pope Pleads For Forgiveness In Chile For Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal - Duration: 7:53.

Pope Pleads For Forgiveness In Chile For Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal

SANTIAGO (Reuters) - Pope Francis expressed "pain and shame" on Tuesday over a sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church in Chile, seeking forgiveness for a crisis that has scarred its credibility and left many faithful skeptical of reform.

Francis spoke as the number of Catholic churches that have been attacked in the country in the past week rose to eight, both in the capital and in southern regions that are home to indigenous people.  PABLO PORCIUNCULA BRUNE via Getty Images Pope Francis waves at the crowd from the popemobile as he arrives at OHiggins Park in Santiago on January 16, 2018 to give an open-air mass.

Police in riot gear dispersed some 200 demonstrators trying to make their way to a park where the pope said Mass for some 400,000 people after making his remarks about abuse.

"Here I feel bound to express my pain and shame at the irreparable damage caused to children by some ministers of the Church," he said in the presidential palace, drawing sustained applause, including from President Michelle Bachelet and diplomats.

"I am one with my brother bishops, for it is right to ask for forgiveness and make every effort to support the victims, even as we commit ourselves to ensuring that such things do not happen again," he said.

CHRISTIAN MIRANDA via Getty Images Riot police officers struggle with a protester during a demonstration against the visit of Pope Francis to Chile.

Catholics have been upset with Francis' appointment in 2015 of Bishop Juan Barros to head the small diocese of Osorno in south-central Chile.

Barros, who attended Tuesday's Mass, has been accused of protecting his former mentor, Father Fernando Karadima, who was found guilty in a Vatican investigation in 2011 of abusing teenage boys over many years.

Karadima has denied the allegations and Barros said he was unaware of any wrongdoing.

But the scandal has gripped Chile, and, along with growing secularization, has hurt the standing of a Church that defended human rights during the 1973-1990 dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.

A poll by Santiago-based think tank Latinobarometro this month showed that the number of Chileans calling themselves Catholics fell to 45 percent last year, from 74 percent in 1995.

A group opposed to the pope's visit posted on Twitter: "No more abuse, no more cover-ups, no more hypocrisy." At least eight Catholic churches have been attacked in Chile over the past week, including one with a homemade bomb where vandals left a pamphlet reading: "Pope Francis, the next bomb will be in your robe." EITAN ABRAMOVICH via Getty Images People demonstrate against the visit of Pope Francis to Chile.

ANTI-POPE GRAFFITI Hours after the pope arrived in Chile on Monday, two small wooden churches were burned to the ground near Temuco, where Francis is due to visit on Wednesday.

The indigenous Mapuche in the area accuse the state and private companies of taking their ancestral lands.

The Mapuche say the pope's ceremony will be held on seized land.

A church in the capital was attacked during the night, causing minor damage.

Vandals burned Chilean and Vatican flags at the site and tossed pamphlets with threats against the pope.

Graffiti on one Santiago church read "Burn pope and "pope accomplice." About 10 blocks from Tuesday's Mass, riot police clashed with some 200 people protesting against the sexual abuse scandal and the $17 million cost of the papal visit.

"Complicit Pedophiles," read one of the banners.

JAVIER TORRES via Getty Images Aerial picture taken during the open-air mass officiated by Pope Francis at OHiggins Park in Santiago on January 16, 2018.  But the welcome most Chileans have given the first Latin American pope has been warm, with tens of thousands lining the streets.

Francis read the speech in the Moneda palace, which Pinochet's forces bombed from the air and with ground artillery on Sept.

11, 1973 while democratically elected President Salvatore Allende was inside.

The Argentine pope referred to that dark period, saying the country had "faced moments of turmoil, at times painful." He praised the consolidation of democracy but said more had to be done to help the unemployed and native people.

Chile, with a population of about 17.4 million, is the world's top copper producer, the fifth-largest economy in Latin America and one of the region's most stable countries.

VINCENZO PINTO via Getty Images Chileans wait for Pope Francis to arrive at an open-air mass at OHiggins Park in Santiago on January 16, 2018.

Angelina Soto, 67, of San Francisco de Mostazal, south of Santiago, said she and her family arrived before sunrise for the Mass in the park.

"We are very committed Catholics, we've been singing all morning," she said.

"I think (the visit) will change Chile, it will make us more generous, and help to close the gap between rich and poor." Additional reporting by Felipe Iturrieta; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Frances Kerry    .

  PHOTO GALLERY Pope Francis Best Quotes  .

For more infomation >> ( US News ) Pope Pleads For Forgiveness In Chile For Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal - Duration: 7:53.

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( US News ) This Aussie Dad Hired A Helicopter To Save His Son After A Car Crash - Duration: 5:40.

This Aussie Dad Hired A Helicopter To Save His Son After A Car Crash

Sunrise/Channel 7.

When police told Tony Lethbridge to go home and wait for news about his missing son, Samuel, the Australian father took matters into his own hands and put his trust in a helicopter pilot.

Tony's intuition and dogged determination almost certainly saved Samuel's life, leading to his rescue from a car wreck after 30 hours of lying stranded and hidden in thick bushland north of Sydney.

Samuel, 17, had set off from the Central Coast region of New South Wales on Sunday, planning to drive the short distance to meet his girlfriend in a town called Blacksmiths.

He never made it.  Nobody had heard from him in 24 hours, calls to his phone were going unanswered and his family had begun to worry.

Samuel's parents, Tony and Lee Lethbridge, reported his disappearance to police, but they were told to go home and wait.

"They told us that he might have ran away, he could have done this or he could have done that, and we just said, 'It's out of character; it's not him,'" Tony Lethbridge told Fairfax Media.

"They put all the things in motion, and we waited and waited.

They just told us to go home and wait."    Lethbridge had it in his head that Samuel had crashed his car somewhere in the bush along the Pacific Highway.

He recalled a similar incident several years earlier, when a driver had crashed his car into the scrub and had died by the time his car was found several days later.

"I just thought, bugger this, I'm not going to sit around and wait," Lethbridge told Fairfax.

"His mates were telling us he was a bit tired when he dropped his mate off on the Central Coast, so it was the only thing we could really think of." "With the way the bush is there, if a car goes in you're not going to see it.

The only way you'll see it is from the air.

And that's what we did." He went into the nearest airport just hours after reporting Samuel's disappearance to police.

With $1,000 in hand, he begged for help from the first helicopter pilot he found.

A local aviation company accepted the job and soon took to the skies searching for Samuel's car along the highway.  Within minutes, they'd spotted a car crashed deep into the scrub, about 50 meters (160 feet) off the road, only a short drive from Samuel's family home.

The family rushed to the scene and raced into the bush, searching for the car.

The helicopter hovered overhead to guide them. Lethbridge's brother Michael found Samuel first ― alive but dehydrated after nearly 30 hours in the wreckage of his car and suffering serious injuries.  Crangan Bay: 17-year-old Samuel Lethbridge saved after his dad hired a helicopter to look for him.

He lifted his head up, and said Id kill for a drink - Tony Lethbridge - Father.

We would like to thank the @skylineavgroup helicopter pilot Lee Mitchell. #7News pic.twitter.com/m3l24tWRP7 — 7 News Sydney (@7NewsSydney) January 16, 2018 "You wouldn't have seen him if it wasn't for the helicopter, because I couldn't see him from the road," Michael Lethbridge said.

"If the helicopter wasn't hovering above, I would have never had found him." Emergency services were called and cut Samuel out of the wrecked car.

He was rushed to a hospital with an ankle injury, a fractured forearm and a compound fracture to his femur, according to an ambulance spokesperson.  "I grabbed him and I said: 'Mate, Dad's got you,'" Tony Lethbridge said.

Samuel's reply to his dad was "I'd love a drink."    .

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