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  • JUDY WOODRUFF: In the day's other news: Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives challenged

  • President Trump on another front, the southern border.

  • They voted to end the national emergency declaration that allows military funds be diverted from

  • the military to building a border wall.

  • The Republican-controlled Senate already approved the resolution, but the president is expected

  • to veto it.

  • Congress wasn't able to override a similar veto last March.

  • A federal judge in Los Angeles today blocked the Trump administration's new rules that

  • could prevent indefinite detentions of migrant children.

  • The judge said that the rules violate the standards set by the 1997 so-called Flores

  • Settlement agreement.

  • It barred indefinite detention.

  • The administration is expected to appeal.

  • Iran's President Hassan Rouhani says that the United States offered to lift all sanctions

  • in exchange for renegotiating the 2015 nuclear deal.

  • Rouhani returned to Tehran today after attending the U.N. General Assembly in New York.

  • He said European leaders there brought him a message.

  • HASSAN ROUHANI, Iranian President (through translator): They said America was saying

  • it would lift the sanctions.

  • Another issue under discussion was which sanctions would be lifted.

  • The Americans had clearly stated that we would lift the entire sanctions.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: Hours later, President Trump claimed that Iran asked for sanctions relief

  • in return for a meeting, but he tweeted -- quote -- "I said, of course, no."

  • Meanwhile, Iran today released a British-flagged tanker that it had detained in July.

  • Iranian state TV showed the ship leaving port.

  • It sailed to Dubai so that the crew could disembark and undergo medical checks.

  • The vessel was seized after British authorities in Gibraltar stopped an Iranian oil tanker

  • suspected of violating European sanctions.

  • The British released that ship last month.

  • In Afghanistan, millions of people are preparing for tomorrow's presidential election, despite

  • Taliban threats of violence.

  • In Kabul today, armed police were preemptively deployed to polling stations.

  • but potential voters were divided on whether to risk the Taliban's wrath.

  • MALANG SHAH, Kabul (through translator): If, like previous elections, fingers would be

  • chopped off, no security, I personally will not go to vote.

  • ABDULLAH RAMAZANI, Kabul (through translator): At any cost, we will go to vote and elect

  • our leader.

  • We support the Afghan security forces ensuring our security.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: President Ashraf Ghani is seeking reelection to a second term.

  • His chief executive, Abdullah Abdullah, is his main rival.

  • Security forces in Egypt moved today to prevent new mass protests against President Abdel

  • Fattah El-Sisi.

  • Popular demonstrations in recent days targeted poor living conditions and corruption.

  • Police vehicles took up positions all over central Cairo today.

  • There were still scattered protests, but El-Sisi dismissed them and the claims of corruption.

  • ABDEL FATTAH EL-SISI, Egyptian President (through translator): This is an image being painted

  • as was done before, comprised of lies and defamation, and some media working to present

  • an image that isn't true.

  • We're really strong.

  • The country is really strong, so don't worry about anything.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: Egyptian authorities have carried out mass arrests in recent days.

  • Human rights monitors say that at least 1, 900 people have been detained.

  • Hundreds of thousands of young people marched in cities worldwide today in a second wave

  • of worldwide climate protests.

  • The rallies began in New Zealand, where demonstrators crowded filled streets outside the Parliament

  • in Auckland.

  • Elsewhere, there were about 180 protests in Italy alone, with more than 10,000 people

  • marching in Rome.

  • Back in this country, federal immigration judges accused the U.S. Justice Department

  • of unfair labor practices.

  • A union representing the more than 400 judges alleged that a racist, anti-immigration blog

  • post appeared in a briefing.

  • The union also said judges are sinking under huge caseloads and that the department is

  • challenging their right to have a union.

  • President Trump tonight has signed a spending bill to keep the federal government open.

  • It will fund federal agencies through November 21.

  • It gives lawmakers more time to negotiate money for points of disagreement, like funds

  • for Mr. Trump's border wall.

  • And on Wall Street, stocks finished the week on a down note.

  • The Dow Jones industrial average lost 70 points to close at 26820.

  • The Nasdaq fell 91 points, and the S&P 500 was down 15.

  • Still to come on the "NewsHour": building the future -- Chinese construction and the

  • global balance of power; 2020 Democratic hopefuls vie for the crucial support of black voters

  • in South Carolina; Mark Shields and David Brooks break down a week that may be destined

  • for the history books; and Judy Garland back on screen -- a new film depicts the last year

  • in the life of the Hollywood legend.

JUDY WOODRUFF: In the day's other news: Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives challenged

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新聞綜述眾議院就邊境國家緊急狀態挑戰特朗普 (News Wrap: House challenges Trump on border national emergency)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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