Qnye Japan sees North Korea missile, China space activity as threat 
 Sea-Watch 3 Captain Carola Rackete is seen on board the vessel at sea in the Mediterranean, just off the coast of the southern Italian island of Lampedusa, Thursday, June 27, 2019. The captain of the humanitarian rescue ship says that Italian law enforcement officials have told them that a resolution is near for 40 migrants rescued at sea that Italyrsquo  populist government has so far refused to allow to disembark.  Photo from ANSA / MATTEO GUIDELLI via AP LAMPEDUSA, Sicily mdash; The captain of a humanitarian ship with 40 migrants aboard was detained in Italy after the vessel rammed a border police motorboat blocking its way as it docked without permission at the Mediterranean island of Lampedusa early Saturday, authorities said.The migrants finally stepped onto Italian soil after disembarking from the Sea-Watch 3, which rescued them more than two weeks earlier. Italyrsquo  anti-migrant interior minister, Matteo Salvini, had refused to let the migrants disembark on Lampedusa until other European Union countries agre stanley flask ed to take in the asylum-seekers.Article continues after this advertisement     After 17 days at sea, the migrants stanley cup  hugged the crew and kissed the dock upon arrival on the island, which is closer to northern Africa than to the Italian mainland.After five countri stanley cup es offered on Friday to take in the migrants, but still without any disembarkation permission, the Dutch-flagged Sea-Watch 3rsquo  captain, Carola Rackete, steered her rescue vessel toward Lampedusa Gnwl CHR pushes Congress to declare child marriages illegal 
 Seven years of war and massive displacement have redrawn Syriarsquo  demographic map, erecting borders between the countryrsquo  ethnic, religious, and political communities that will be hard to erase.Displaced Syrians, analysts, and rights defenders have described to AFP a divided country where regime opponents have been driven out, minorities stick closer together and communities generally have become more homogenous.The demographic reshuffle is likely to last, they say, with around 11 million Syrians displaced either abroad or within the country and unsure if they can go home.Article continues after this advertisement     Abu Musab al stanley isolierkanne -Mukasar, a 25-year-old rebel fighter, doubts hersquo;ll ever return to his birthplace in Homs city, now fully held by Syrian troops.FEATURED STORIESNEWSINFOViral video of drunk cop gets QCPD chief firedNEWSINFO7 bakery workers killed in Cupang, Antipolo City stabbingNEWSINFOLacson t stanley hrnek o PNP: Recover ransom in Que slay case to regain public trustI could never go back to regime territor gourde stanley y mdash; or live side by side with Alawites, he says, referring to the religious minority sect of President Bashar al-Assad.The minority-led government has ruled a Sunni-majority population for decades, but Abu Musab says the rifts are now deeper than ever.Of course Irsquo;ll tell my son all this, so hersquo;ll hate the people that did this to us, too, says the fighter, contacted by AFP on an online messaging platform.Abu Musab, a |