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US: Audience Boo As Clintons Arrive At Capital One Arena For Presidential Parade

Booing was heard in the audience as former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton took their seats at Capital One Arena, where an indoor presidential parade was held after Donald Trump's inauguration as the 47th U.S. President on Monday, January 20.

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Australia: Mass Stranding Of Pilot Whales At Toby’s Inlet Near Dunsborough 8

More than a hundred pilot whales were stranded at Toby's Inlet near Dunsborough, Western Australia on Thursday, April 25. Beachgoers helped pour water on the whales on shore as they were being directed back to the sea. Among the 4 pods of about 160 whales that were stranded, 28 died.

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Australia: Mass Stranding Of Pilot Whales At Toby’s Inlet Near Dunsborough

More than a hundred pilot whales were stranded at Toby's Inlet near Dunsborough, Western Australia on Thursday, April 25. Beachgoers helped pour water on the whales on shore as they were being directed back to the sea. Among the 4 pods of about 160 whales that were stranded, 28 died.

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Australia: Mass Stranding Of Pilot Whales At Toby’s Inlet Near Dunsborough 2

More than a hundred pilot whales were stranded at Toby's Inlet near Dunsborough, Western Australia on Thursday, April 25. Beachgoers helped pour water on the whales on shore as they were being directed back to the sea. Among the 4 pods of about 160 whales that were stranded, 28 died.

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Australia: Mass Stranding Of Pilot Whales At Toby’s Inlet Near Dunsborough 3

More than a hundred pilot whales were stranded at Toby's Inlet near Dunsborough, Western Australia on Thursday, April 25. Beachgoers helped pour water on the whales on shore as they were being directed back to the sea. Among the 4 pods of about 160 whales that were stranded, 28 died.

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Australia: Mass Stranding Of Pilot Whales At Toby’s Inlet Near Dunsborough 4

More than a hundred pilot whales were stranded at Toby's Inlet near Dunsborough, Western Australia on Thursday, April 25. Beachgoers helped pour water on the whales on shore as they were being directed back to the sea. Among the 4 pods of about 160 whales that were stranded, 28 died.

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Australia: Mass Stranding Of Pilot Whales At Toby’s Inlet Near Dunsborough 5

More than a hundred pilot whales were stranded at Toby's Inlet near Dunsborough, Western Australia on Thursday, April 25. Beachgoers helped pour water on the whales on shore as they were being directed back to the sea. Among the 4 pods of about 160 whales that were stranded, 28 died.

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Australia: Mass Stranding Of Pilot Whales At Toby’s Inlet Near Dunsborough 6

More than a hundred pilot whales were stranded at Toby's Inlet near Dunsborough, Western Australia on Thursday, April 25. Beachgoers helped pour water on the whales on shore as they were being directed back to the sea. Among the 4 pods of about 160 whales that were stranded, 28 died.

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Australia: Mass Stranding Of Pilot Whales At Toby’s Inlet Near Dunsborough 7

More than a hundred pilot whales were stranded at Toby's Inlet near Dunsborough, Western Australia on Thursday, April 25. Beachgoers helped pour water on the whales on shore as they were being directed back to the sea. Among the 4 pods of about 160 whales that were stranded, 28 died.

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Area where N. Korean agent enters specified

Area where N. Korean agent enters specified

MATSUE, Japan - Kazuhiro Araki (front), head of the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to N. Korea, investigates a coastal area in Toda town of Masuda, Shimane Prefecture, on Aug. 26, 2014. Araki said the same day that the location where a North Korean agent is said to have entered Japan in 1980, based on the information provided by a former agent, was specified.

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Meeting on alleged abduction of Japanese by N. Korea

Meeting on alleged abduction of Japanese by N. Korea

OMU, Japan - Yuko Kitakoshi (R), whose father and three brothers may have been abducted by North Korean agents in the 1960s, and Teruaki Masumoto (2nd from L), secretary general of the Association of the Families of Victims Kidnapped by North Korea, are among participants in a meeting held in the town of Omu, Hokkaido, on June 4, 2014, by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to N. Korea.

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Abduction inquiry group to air messages on radio reaching N. Korea

Abduction inquiry group to air messages on radio reaching N. Korea

OSAKA, Japan - Akihiro Arimoto, who had his daughter Keiko abducted by North Korea, speaks as his wife Kayoko listens at a meeting of the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea held in Hirakata, Osaka Prefecture, on Oct. 22. Kazuhiro Araki, who heads the group, told the meeting it will air messages on shortwave radio, which reaches North Korea, at the end of October in an effort to collect more information about missing Japanese.

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3 more, including 4-yr-old boy, listed as suspected abductees

3 more, including 4-yr-old boy, listed as suspected abductees

TOKYO, Japan - Three more people have been added to the list of those who may have been kidnapped by North Korean agents, a private organization investigating the abduction issue said June 27. The photo released by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea shows Shinya Matsuoka, who was only 4 years old when he went missing in March 1989 in Tokushima Prefecture.

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3 more, including 4-yr-old boy, listed as suspected abductees

3 more, including 4-yr-old boy, listed as suspected abductees

TOKYO, Japan - Three more people have been added to the list of those who may have been kidnapped by North Korean agents, a private organization investigating the abduction issue said June 27. The photo released by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea shows Hiroshi Sasaki, who disappeared from Kanagawa Prefecture in April 1981 when he was 21.

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3 more, including 4-yr-old boy, listed as suspected abductees

3 more, including 4-yr-old boy, listed as suspected abductees

TOKYO, Japan - Three more people have been added to the list of those who may have been kidnapped by North Korean agents, a private organization investigating the abduction issue said June 27. The photo released by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea shows Toshiko Sekiya, from Chiba Prefecture, who went missing in July 1974 at age 17.

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(2)Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as victim of abduction

(2)Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as victim of abduction

TOKYO, Japan - A citizens group investigating possible cases of North Korea having abducted Japanese nationals said Aug. 2 that Susumu Fujita, who has been missing from Saitama Prefecture since 1976, is probably an abduction victim. The Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea said it obtained what is believed to be Fujita's photo from a North Korean defector.

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Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as kidnap victim

Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as kidnap victim

TOKYO, Japan - Takashi Fujita holds up two photos during a press conference in Tokyo on Aug. 3. The photo on the right shows Fujita's elder brother Susumu, who went missing in 1976 at the age of 19 while the photo on the left was brought over from North Korea about six months ago by a man who escaped the North and went to China. The Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea said it believes Susumu Fujita was abducted by North Korea because of the resemblance in the two photos.

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(3)Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as victim of abduction

(3)Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as victim of abduction

TOKYO, Japan - A file photo released Aug. 2 shows Susumu Fujita, a a man missing from Saitama Prefecture since 1976. The Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea, a citizens group investigating possible cases of North Korea having abducted Japanese nationals, said Fujita, then 19 years old, is probably an abduction victim.

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(2) Group adds two more to list of would-be abductees

(2) Group adds two more to list of would-be abductees

TOKYO, Japan - Photos released March 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN) show Koichi Kawashima (L), who went missing from Yokohama in 1982 at age 23, and Masateru Maegami (R), who disappeared from Hokkaido in 1977 at age 20 -- who have been added to the COMJAN list of those it believes highly likely to have been abducted by North Korea.

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(1)Group adds two more to list of would-be abductees

(1)Group adds two more to list of would-be abductees

TOKYO, Japan - Kazuhiro Araki, who heads the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), speaks to reporters in Tokyo on March 10. The group added two people -- Koichi Kawashima, who went missing from Yokohama in 1982 at age 23, and Masateru Maegami, who disappeared from Hokkaido in 1977 at age 20 -- to its list of those it believes highly likely to have been abducted by North Korea.

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Group urges gov't to review 16 possible abduction cases

Group urges gov't to review 16 possible abduction cases

TOKYO, Japan - Family members hold photos of their 16 missing relatives in a meeting of the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea in Tokyo on Nov. 27. The commission asked the government to look into their claims that the 16 were abducted.

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(6)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(6)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. Mitsuo Hidaka (L) and Mariko Tanabe (R).

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(1)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(1)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. (From L to R, top) are Shinichi Mizushima, Katsumi Nakamura, Masuichi Sato, Hajime Sonoda, (from L to R, bottom) Shigeo Hirayama, Shuichi Nakajima, Yoshimasa Tsukagoshi and Yoshikazu Saida.

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(5)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(5)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. (From L to R, top) Kumiko Kato, Toshiko Sonoda, Sachiko Hatano, Toshiaki Tamai, (from L to R, bottom) Toshiyuki Adachi, Junko Imazu, Yoshinori Kimoto and Koji Wada.

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(3)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(3)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. (From L to R, top) Seiko Inoue, Teruko Kase, Yoko Mori, Susumu Nagaga, (from L to R, bottom) Yoshiaki Maruyama, Yukie Yoshida, Nobuo Hidaka and Hideaki Sakamoto.

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(2)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(2)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. (From L to R, top) Haruo Yamashita, Kiyofumi Takano, Takashi Makishi, Kiyomitsu Tajima, (from L to R, bottom) Takashi Gima, Noriyuki Fuse, Kenji Yamada and Koichi Kawashima.

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(5)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(5)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. (From L to R, top) Kumiko Kato, Toshiko Sonoda, Sachiko Hatano, Toshiaki Tamai, (from L to R, bottom) Toshiyuki Adachi, Junko Imazu, Yoshinori Kimoto and Koji Wada. (Kyodo)

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(2)Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as victim of abduction

(2)Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as victim of abduction

TOKYO, Japan - A citizens group investigating possible cases of North Korea having abducted Japanese nationals said Aug. 2 that Susumu Fujita, who has been missing from Saitama Prefecture since 1976, is probably an abduction victim. The Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea said it obtained what is believed to be Fujita's photo from a North Korean defector. (Kyodo)

  •  
3 more, including 4-yr-old boy, listed as suspected abductees

3 more, including 4-yr-old boy, listed as suspected abductees

TOKYO, Japan - Three more people have been added to the list of those who may have been kidnapped by North Korean agents, a private organization investigating the abduction issue said June 27. The photo released by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea shows Shinya Matsuoka, who was only 4 years old when he went missing in March 1989 in Tokushima Prefecture. (Kyodo)

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Abduction inquiry group to air messages on radio reaching N. Kor

Abduction inquiry group to air messages on radio reaching N. Kor

OSAKA, Japan - Akihiro Arimoto, who had his daughter Keiko abducted by North Korea, speaks as his wife Kayoko listens at a meeting of the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea held in Hirakata, Osaka Prefecture, on Oct. 22. Kazuhiro Araki, who heads the group, told the meeting it will air messages on shortwave radio, which reaches North Korea, at the end of October in an effort to collect more information about missing Japanese. (Kyodo)

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(1)Japan may ask N. Korea about missing Japan woman in Nov. talk

(1)Japan may ask N. Korea about missing Japan woman in Nov. talk

TOKYO, Japan - Photo released on Oct. 16 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea, a private group supporting Japanese abductees, shows a woman believed to be Teruko Kase, a Japanese who disappeared in Chiba Prefecture at the age of 17 in 1962. Chief Cabinet Secretary Hiroyuki Hosoda said Japan may bring up her case at its next talks with North Korea if it confirms that two photos smuggled out of the country are of the woman. (Kyodo)

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(2)Japan may ask N. Korea about missing Japan woman in Nov. talk

(2)Japan may ask N. Korea about missing Japan woman in Nov. talk

TOKYO, Japan - Photo released on Oct. 16 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea, a private group supporting Japanese abductees, shows a woman believed to be Teruko Kase, a Japanese who disappeared in Chiba Prefecture at the age of 17 in 1962. It is one of two photos smuggled out of North Korea by a man who fled North Korean. (Kyodo)

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Area where N. Korean agent enters specified

Area where N. Korean agent enters specified

MATSUE, Japan - Kazuhiro Araki (front), head of the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to N. Korea, investigates a coastal area in Toda town of Masuda, Shimane Prefecture, on Aug. 26, 2014. Araki said the same day that the location where a North Korean agent is said to have entered Japan in 1980, based on the information provided by a former agent, was specified. (Kyodo)

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(1)Group adds two more to list of would-be abductees

(1)Group adds two more to list of would-be abductees

TOKYO, Japan - Kazuhiro Araki, who heads the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), speaks to reporters in Tokyo on March 10. The group added two people -- Koichi Kawashima, who went missing from Yokohama in 1982 at age 23, and Masateru Maegami, who disappeared from Hokkaido in 1977 at age 20 -- to its list of those it believes highly likely to have been abducted by North Korea. (Kyodo)

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Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as kidnap victim

Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as kidnap victim

TOKYO, Japan - Takashi Fujita holds up two photos during a press conference in Tokyo on Aug. 3. The photo on the right shows Fujita's elder brother Susumu, who went missing in 1976 at the age of 19 while the photo on the left was brought over from North Korea about six months ago by a man who escaped the North and went to China. The Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea said it believes Susumu Fujita was abducted by North Korea because of the resemblance in the two photos. (Kyodo)

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(3)Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as victim of abduction

(3)Abduction probe group adds Saitama man as victim of abduction

TOKYO, Japan - A file photo released Aug. 2 shows Susumu Fujita, a a man missing from Saitama Prefecture since 1976. The Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea, a citizens group investigating possible cases of North Korea having abducted Japanese nationals, said Fujita, then 19 years old, is probably an abduction victim. (Kyodo)

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(2) Group adds two more to list of would-be abductees

(2) Group adds two more to list of would-be abductees

TOKYO, Japan - Photos released March 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN) show Koichi Kawashima (L), who went missing from Yokohama in 1982 at age 23, and Masateru Maegami (R), who disappeared from Hokkaido in 1977 at age 20 -- who have been added to the COMJAN list of those it believes highly likely to have been abducted by North Korea. (Kyodo)

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Group urges gov't to review 16 possible abduction cases

Group urges gov't to review 16 possible abduction cases

TOKYO, Japan - Family members hold photos of their 16 missing relatives in a meeting of the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea in Tokyo on Nov. 27. The commission asked the government to look into their claims that the 16 were abducted.

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(6)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(6)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. Mitsuo Hidaka (L) and Mariko Tanabe (R). (Kyodo)

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(4)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(4)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. (From L to R, top) Katsumi Yajima, Keiko Shimizu, Chukichi Nakamasu, Yoshimi Kato, (from L to R, bottom) Miyoko Iwamoto, Masahiro Anzai and Kazuya Miyauchi. (Kyodo)

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(3)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(3)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. (From L to R, top) Seiko Inoue, Teruko Kase, Yoko Mori, Susumu Nagaga, (from L to R, bottom) Yoshiaki Maruyama, Yukie Yoshida, Nobuo Hidaka and Hideaki Sakamoto. (Kyodo)

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(2)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(2)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. (From L to R, top) Haruo Yamashita, Kiyofumi Takano, Takashi Makishi, Kiyomitsu Tajima, (from L to R, bottom) Takashi Gima, Noriyuki Fuse, Kenji Yamada and Koichi Kawashima. (Kyodo)

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(1)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

(1)Abduction investigation group releases list of 44 people

TOKYO, Japan - Photos of some of the 44 missing people disclosed Feb. 10 by the Investigation Commission on Missing Japanese Probably Related to North Korea (COMJAN), a group formed to look into cases of possible abductions of Japanese by North Korea. (From L to R, top) are Shinichi Mizushima, Katsumi Nakamura, Masuichi Sato, Hajime Sonoda, (from L to R, bottom) Shigeo Hirayama, Shuichi Nakajima, Yoshimasa Tsukagoshi and Yoshikazu Saida. (Kyodo)

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