A 44-year-old British man may become the first in the world to be
cured of HIV by using a pioneering new therapy designed to destroy the
virus even where it hides in the body.
He is the first of 50 people to complete a trial of the ambitious
treatment, which uses a vaccine and the drug Vorinostat, which activates
dormant T-cells.
British officials plan to invite President-elect Donald Trump and his wife, Melania, to meet Queen Elizabeth II next summer in an attempt to cozy up him. The courtesy is being used as a “secret weapon” by the British government to coax Trump into securing a free-trade deal with them and to influence his thinking on NATO, Syria and foreign affairs, an insider told The Sunday Times of London. Trump told Brexit backers last weekend that he’s “looking forward to it” because his mother always loved the queen, a government source said.
Donald Trump came up with a new insult for Hillary Clinton on Friday, calling her a “thief” and charging that she sucks up to President Obama so he will keep her out of jail over her email scandal. “Hillary hates Obama. She’s hated him for years. Bill Clinton really hates Obama. I know that as a fact,” he said at an outdoor rally in Redding, Calif., where the temperature hit 104 degrees. Trump tore into Clinton’s use of a private email server as secretary of state. “What a mess she’s in. Who would be so stupid to do what she did with her emails?” the presumptive GOP nominee said. “But I get why she did it — because she’s a thief. That’s why she did it,” he roared, adding a nickname to his usual favorite, “Crooked Hillary.” “Hillary Clinton should be in jail for what she did to our national security. She could have used a government server.” He claimed Clinton agrees with Obama’s policies only because she fears prosecution. “They are protecting her from going to ja...
Activists stage mock executions outside Saudi Arabia's embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, on April 1, 2010, after a Lebanese man was allegedly beheaded in Saudi Arabia for performing witchcraft. Photo: AP DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Saudi Arabia carried out at least 157 executions in 2015, with beheadings reaching their highest level in the kingdom in two decades, according to several advocacy groups that monitor the death penalty worldwide. Coinciding with the rise in executions is the number of people executed for non-lethal offenses that judges have wide discretion to rule on, particularly for drug-related crimes. Rights group Amnesty International said in November that at least 63 people had been executed since the start of the year for drug-related offenses. That figure made for at least 40 percent of the total number of executions in 2015, compared to less than 4 percent for drug-related executions in 2010. Amnesty said Saudi Arabia had exceeded its hig...
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