Monday, March 28, 2016

Monday's Headlines: How Hillary Clinton’s email scandal took root

Why some Republicans are feeling shame; Death toll in Pakistan Easter suicide attack climbs past 70; In Belgium, prisons are breeding extremism; The mass migration of refugees from Turkey to Greece has stalled;
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
How Hillary Clinton's email scandal took root
Hillary Clinton's email problems began in her first days as secretary of state. Frustrated that she wasn't allowed to take her personal BlackBerry into her own office, she and her aides pushed for a solution that would enable her to use the device in the secure area.
Why some Republicans are feeling shame
At a moment when the party had hoped to turn its attention to a general-election matchup, Republicans are now dealing with allegations of adultery and jabs at the physical appearances of the wives of Donald Trump and Ted Cruz.
 
Death toll in Pakistan Easter suicide attack climbs past 70
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif arrived in Lahore to visit people wounded in the Easter Sunday bombing and vowed to track down the militants who claimed responsibility for the attack on Christians celebrating the holiday in a park.
 
In Belgium, prisons are breeding extremism
The country's Justice Ministry has a plan to isolate the most radical inmates to prevent "contamination" of other detainees. At least one former inmate said the plan won't work.
 
The mass migration of refugees from Turkey to Greece has stalled
More than 60 percent of those arriving in the Greek islands are women and children. Dreaming of making it to Europe, some wonder: "Can they really just send us back?"
 
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Why Sanders was right to run as a Democrat
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With Hong Kong booksellers silenced, China now goes after exiled dissidents
Chinese dissidents in Germany and New York say close relatives were detained as a manhunt widened for the authors of a letter calling for Xi Jinping to resign.
Mother Angelica, founder of Catholic TV and radio empire, dies at 92
The nun who drew audiences of millions worldwide was known for her outgoing personality.
Does Tammy Duckworth really want to accept 200,000 refugees from Syria?
Mark Kirk, one of the most endangered Republicans in the Senate, has repeatedly slammed Duckworth for saying she wants to bring 200,000 refugees from Syria. Is that what she said?
De Niro accused of censorship after yanking anti-vaccine movie from film festival
The Tribeca Film Festival co-founder reversed course a day after defending the decision to screen the controversial documentary and calling for autism to be “openly discussed.”
'Batman v Superman' broke records at the box office. But that doesn't justify its existence.
Zack Snyder's film confirms that the superhero genre is exhausted.
 
     
 
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