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US: M4.6 Earthquake Strikes Near Malibu, Southern California 2

A magnitude 4.6 earthquake struck near Malibu on Friday, February 9, and was felt throughout much of the greater Los Angeles area. There was no tsunami advisory. According to the USGS, the epicenter of the quake was located about 9 miles southwest of Thousand Oaks and measured at a depth of 7.5 miles. The LAFD said that no injuries were reported.

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US: Atmospheric River – Mudslides Cause Significant Damage In Los Angeles 2

A powerful atmospheric river storm continued to hit California on Monday, February 5, causing widespread damage. The storm caused destructive mudslides, knocked down trees and power lines. A mandatory evacuation order was issued as several homes were damaged in a debris flow in Los Angeles. This video shows the aftermath of the mudslide in Baldwin Hills.

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US: Atmospheric River – Mudslides Cause Significant Damage In Los Angeles 3

A powerful atmospheric river storm continued to hit California on Monday, February 5, causing widespread damage. The storm caused destructive mudslides, knocked down trees and power lines. A mandatory evacuation order was issued as several homes were damaged in a debris flow in Los Angeles. This video shows the aftermath of the mudslide in Baldwin Hills.

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African development conference in Japan

African development conference in Japan

YOKOHAMA, Japan - U.N. Development Program chief Helen Clark speaks before the closing of the fifth Tokyo International Conference on African Development in Yokohama on June 3, 2013. (Pool photo)

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African development conference in Japan

African development conference in Japan

YOKOHAMA, Japan - (from L) Japanese singer Misia, World Bank chief Jim Yong Kim, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn and U.N. Development Program chief Helen Clark take part in a reception at a hotel in Yokohama near Tokyo on May 31, 2013, a day before the three-day Tokyo International Conference on African Development begins. (Pool photo)

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UNDP to expand support for Myanmar

UNDP to expand support for Myanmar

TOKYO, Japan - Helen Clark, administrator of the U.N. Development Program, speaks in an interview with Kyodo News in Tokyo on Dec. 2, 2011. The UNDP will offer more support to Myanmar as significant political changes have taken place in the country, she said.

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Hatoyama, UNDP head pledge close cooperation in aiding Afghanistan

Hatoyama, UNDP head pledge close cooperation in aiding Afghanistan

TOKYO, Japan - Visiting U.N. Development Program Administrator Helen Clark speaks during an interview with Kyodo News on Nov. 24, 2009, in Tokyo. Clark met with Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama the same day and the two confirmed that they will continue to work closely together on assisting Afghan police forces and helping in the country's elections.

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Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

TOKYO, Japan - Visiting New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L) and Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda shake hands at the prime minister's office in Tokyo on May 14 prior to their talks.

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Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

TOKYO, Japan - Visiting New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L) and Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda hold a joint news conference at the prime minister's office in Tokyo on May 14 after their talks.

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Japan, N.Z. sign customs arrangement for safe, smooth trade

Japan, N.Z. sign customs arrangement for safe, smooth trade

TOKYO, Japan - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L) and Japanese Finance Minister Fukushiro Nukaga (R) observe the signing of an arrangement between the two countries' customs authorities to ensure safe, smooth trade, at the Japanese Finance Ministry in Tokyo on May 14.

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Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

TOKYO, Japan - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L) talks with Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda (R) at the prime minister's office in Tokyo on May 14.

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New Zealand PM Clark visits China

New Zealand PM Clark visits China

BEIJING, China - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (R), accompanied by Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (L), reviews a Chinese guard of honor during a welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on April 7.

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New Zealand PM Clark visits China

New Zealand PM Clark visits China

BEIJING, China - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L), accompanied by Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (R), attends a welcoming ceremony for her visit to China at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on April 7.

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New Zealand PM Clark visits China

New Zealand PM Clark visits China

BEIJING, China - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (front on R side) and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (2nd from front on L side) hold talks at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on April 7. China and New Zealand concluded a comprehensive free trade agreement, the first such pact to be negotiated between China and a developed country.

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Edmund Hillary, first man to scale Mt. Everest, dies at 88

Edmund Hillary, first man to scale Mt. Everest, dies at 88

SYDNEY, Australia - Edmund Hillary, the first man to climb the world's highest mountain, Mt. Everest, has died, New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark announced Jan. 11. He was 88. Hillary died at Auckland City Hospital. Photo shows Hillary (L), a New Zealander, shaking hands with then Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto at the premier's office in Tokyo in August 1997.

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APEC leaders urge 'concrete steps' by N. Korea to scrap nuke

APEC leaders urge 'concrete steps' by N. Korea to scrap nuke

HANOI, Vietnam - Leaders from the 21 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum members, wearing traditional Vietnamese clothes ''ao dai,'' pose for a family photo outside the National Convention Center in Hanoi on Nov. 19. (From L to R in front row) Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark, (back row) Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, Mexican Economy Minister Sergio Alejandro Garca de Alba Zepeda and Papua New Guinean Prime Minister Michael Thomas Somare. (Pool photo)

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Koizumi, Clark meet in Tokyo

Koizumi, Clark meet in Tokyo

TOKYO, Japan - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (R) welcomes New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark at his office in Tokyo on June 2.

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Koizumi speaks at dinner

Koizumi speaks at dinner

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) speaks at a dinner hosted by New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark in Wellington on May 2.

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Antiwhaling campaign greets Koizumi

Antiwhaling campaign greets Koizumi

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Members of the Greenpeace put up antiwhaling banners and placards outside the prime minister's office in Wellington on May 2 as Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi hold talks with his New Zealand counterpart Helen Clark.

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Koizumi inspects N.Z. postal services

Koizumi inspects N.Z. postal services

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, an advocate of the privatization of postal services in his country, inspects New Zealand's privatized postal services, guided by New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (R) in Wellington on May 2.

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Koizumi, Clark give joint press conference

Koizumi, Clark give joint press conference

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) and New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark give a joint news conference at the end of their talks at the prime minister's office in Wellington on May 2.

  •  
(1)Koizumi talks with N.Z. Premier Clark

(1)Koizumi talks with N.Z. Premier Clark

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) and New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark head for their summit venue at Clark's office in Wellington on May 2.

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(2)Koizumi talks with N.Z. Premier Clark

(2)Koizumi talks with N.Z. Premier Clark

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) shakes hands with New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark prior to their talks at Clark's office in Wellington on May 2.

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N.Z. premier calls for further exchanges with Osaka school

N.Z. premier calls for further exchanges with Osaka school

OSAKA, Japan - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (R foreground) and her husband Davis are welcomed by students at the Osaka Kun-ei Girls' High School in Settsu, Osaka Prefecture, on April 16. The school sends about 170 students every year to 67 sister schools in New Zealand, where they study for one year. The prime minister called for more youth exchanges between her country and Japan.

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New Zealand's Premier Clark visits Hiroshima

New Zealand's Premier Clark visits Hiroshima

HIROSHIMA, Japan - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark puts her name in the visitors' book after touring the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum on April 15. Clark said she was moved by the items placed there to convey the trauma that civilians suffered during and after the Aug. 6, 1945 U.S. atomic bombing of the western Japan city.

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N.Z. Prime Minister Clark sips tea in Fukuoka

N.Z. Prime Minister Clark sips tea in Fukuoka

FUKUOKA, Japan - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (R) takes a stroll in a park in Fukuoka, the sister city of Auckland, where she viewed azaleas and had a taste of traditional Japanese green tea on April 14. Clark is in Japan for a six-day visit that started April 11 to exchange views with Japanese political and business leaders.

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Mori, Clark agree to expand trade, differ on whaling, tuna

Mori, Clark agree to expand trade, differ on whaling, tuna

TOKYO, Japan - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L) shakes hands with Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori at the latter's official residence in Tokyo on April 13 prior to holding talks. The two leaders agreed to expand bilateral trade relations beyond the agricultural area to new fields such as education and forestry. But they did not agree on the issues of whaling and tuna fishing -- subjects of continued dispute between the two countries

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N.Z. asks for loan of artifacts from Japanese museum

N.Z. asks for loan of artifacts from Japanese museum

TOKYO, Japan - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L) talks with Japanese Foreign Minister Yohei Kono at the Iikura state guesthouse in Tokyo on April 12. Clark asked Kono to promote more cultural exchanges between the two countries, including exhibiting in New Zealand some artifacts from a Japanese museum.

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Koizumi, Clark meet in Tokyo

Koizumi, Clark meet in Tokyo

TOKYO, Japan - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (R) welcomes New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark at his office in Tokyo on June 2. (Kyodo)

  •  
APEC leaders urge 'concrete steps' by N. Korea to scrap nuke

APEC leaders urge 'concrete steps' by N. Korea to scrap nuke

HANOI, Vietnam - Leaders from the 21 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum members, wearing traditional Vietnamese clothes ''ao dai,'' pose for a family photo outside the National Convention Center in Hanoi on Nov. 19. (From L to R in front row) Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark, (back row) Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, Mexican Economy Minister Sergio Alejandro Garca de Alba Zepeda and Papua New Guinean Prime Minister Michael Thomas Somare. (Pool photo) (Kyodo)

  •  
Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

TOKYO, Japan - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L) talks with Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda (R) at the prime minister's office in Tokyo on May 14. (Kyodo)

  •  
Japan, N.Z. sign customs arrangement for safe, smooth trade

Japan, N.Z. sign customs arrangement for safe, smooth trade

TOKYO, Japan - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L) and Japanese Finance Minister Fukushiro Nukaga (R) observe the signing of an arrangement between the two countries' customs authorities to ensure safe, smooth trade, at the Japanese Finance Ministry in Tokyo on May 14. (Kyodo)

  •  
Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

TOKYO, Japan - Visiting New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L) and Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda hold a joint news conference at the prime minister's office in Tokyo on May 14 after their talks. (Kyodo)

  •  
Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

Fukuda, New Zealand's Clark voice concern over high food prices

TOKYO, Japan - Visiting New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L) and Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda shake hands at the prime minister's office in Tokyo on May 14 prior to their talks. (Kyodo)

  •  
UNDP chief calls for pre-emptive spending to reduce disaster risks

UNDP chief calls for pre-emptive spending to reduce disaster risks

U.N. Development Program Administrator Helen Clark is interviewed by Kyodo News on March 15, 2015 in Sendai, northeastern Japan, where a five-day U.N. world conference on disaster risk reduction is taking place. Clark said the international community needs to invest more in pre-emptive measures to reduce risks from natural disasters, rather than spending a lot after they happen. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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UNDP head Clark backs Security Council expansion

UNDP head Clark backs Security Council expansion

U.N. Development Program administrator Helen Clark gives an interview to Kyodo News at the U.N. headquarters in New York on July 11, 2016. The former prime minister of New Zealand and one of the candidates for the post of U.N. secretary general indicated she believes restructuring the 15-member Security Council will "almost inevitably" involve adding more members. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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UNDP head Clark speaks in Tokyo

UNDP head Clark speaks in Tokyo

United Nations Development Programme Administrator Helen Clark speaks at a press conference at the Japan National Press Club in Tokyo on June 16, 2016. The former prime minister of New Zealand is eyeing the post of U.N. secretary general. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

  •  
Ex-N.Z. PM Helen Clark declares candidacy for U.N. chief post

Ex-N.Z. PM Helen Clark declares candidacy for U.N. chief post

U.N. Development Program Administrator Helen Clark attends a news conference in New York on April 4, 2016, to declare her candidacy to become the next U.N. secretary general, replacing Ban Ki Moon. Along with the former New Zealand prime minister, seven other candidates, including three women, are currently in the running for the position, amid growing expectations that a woman will take over the post for the first time since the United Nations' inception in 1945. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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UNDP chief says disaster risks should be considered in development

UNDP chief says disaster risks should be considered in development

United Nations Development Programme Administrator Helen Clark tells Kyodo News in Sendai in March 2015 that development should be carried out by taking into account disaster risks as a priority, referring to the recent cyclone disaster that hit the South Pacific island country of Vanuatu. She was in the northeastern Japanese city to attend the five-day U.N. World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction that ended on March 18. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

  •  
New Zealand PM Clark visits China

New Zealand PM Clark visits China

BEIJING, China - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (R), accompanied by Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (L), reviews a Chinese guard of honor during a welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on April 7. (Kyodo)

  •  
New Zealand PM Clark visits China

New Zealand PM Clark visits China

BEIJING, China - New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (L), accompanied by Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (R), attends a welcoming ceremony for her visit to China at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on April 7. (Kyodo)

  •  
Edmund Hillary, first man to scale Mt. Everest, dies at 88

Edmund Hillary, first man to scale Mt. Everest, dies at 88

SYDNEY, Australia - Edmund Hillary, the first man to climb the world's highest mountain, Mt. Everest, has died, New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark announced Jan. 11. He was 88. Hillary died at Auckland City Hospital. Photo shows Hillary (L), a New Zealander, shaking hands with then Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto at the premier's office in Tokyo in August 1997. (Kyodo)

  •  
UNDP to expand support for Myanmar

UNDP to expand support for Myanmar

TOKYO, Japan - Helen Clark, administrator of the U.N. Development Program, speaks in an interview with Kyodo News in Tokyo on Dec. 2, 2011. The UNDP will offer more support to Myanmar as significant political changes have taken place in the country, she said. (Kyodo)

  •  
(2)Koizumi talks with N.Z. Premier Clark

(2)Koizumi talks with N.Z. Premier Clark

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) shakes hands with New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark prior to their talks at Clark's office in Wellington on May 2.

  •  
(1)Koizumi talks with N.Z. Premier Clark

(1)Koizumi talks with N.Z. Premier Clark

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) and New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark head for their summit venue at Clark's office in Wellington on May 2.

  •  
Hatoyama, UNDP head pledge close cooperation in aiding Afghanista

Hatoyama, UNDP head pledge close cooperation in aiding Afghanista

TOKYO, Japan - Visiting U.N. Development Program Administrator Helen Clark speaks during an interview with Kyodo News on Nov. 24, 2009, in Tokyo. Clark met with Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama the same day and the two confirmed that they will continue to work closely together on assisting Afghan police forces and helping in the country's elections. (Kyodo)

  •  
Koizumi, Clark give joint press conference

Koizumi, Clark give joint press conference

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) and New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark give a joint news conference at the end of their talks at the prime minister's office in Wellington on May 2.

  •  
Koizumi speaks at dinner

Koizumi speaks at dinner

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) speaks at a dinner hosted by New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark in Wellington on May 2.

  •  
Koizumi inspects N.Z. postal services

Koizumi inspects N.Z. postal services

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, an advocate of the privatization of postal services in his country, inspects New Zealand's privatized postal services, guided by New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (R) in Wellington on May 2.

  •  
Antiwhaling campaign greets Koizumi

Antiwhaling campaign greets Koizumi

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Members of the Greenpeace put up antiwhaling banners and placards outside the prime minister's office in Wellington on May 2 as Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi hold talks with his New Zealand counterpart Helen Clark.

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