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One teenager dead, 3 injured in New York stabbings

Published: 28 Sep 2014 - 11:44 pm | Last Updated: 20 Jan 2022 - 03:36 pm

New York: A 14-year-old boy died from a wound to the chest and three other teenagers were injured early yesterday in stabbings in New York City’s Bronx borough, police said.
Two 18-year-old men also were stabbed in the chest and a 17-year-old boy in the shoulder, police said. They were in stable condition at a local hospital yesterday morning.
Identities of the victims were not released. No arrests have been made and the investigation was continuing, police said.
The attacks occurred at an apartment complex and WCBS 880 Radio in New York reported that a party was going on there at the time.
Brazil split a week ahead of presidential poll

RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazil’s electorate is split a week ahead of presidential elections, with polls showing leftist incumbent Dilma Rousseff locked in a dead heat with main rival Marina Silva, who preaches the need for a “new politics.”
A total of 142.8 million voters will cast ballots next Sunday to decide the next leader of the continent-sized nation, the world’s seventh-biggest economy.
Voters will also choose 27 state governors, 513 congressmen, 1,069 regional assembly lawmakers and a third of the senate.
Rousseff, handpicked by charismatic predecessor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, had been expected to win a second mandate until former Workers Party (PT) colleague Marina Silva crashed the party.
Silva became Socialist Party candidate only after the August death in an air crash of Eduardo Campos, her former running mate. Earlier polling had put Rousseff well clear of both Campos and Social Democratic Party candidate Aecio Neves.
That all changed with the arrival of Silva, 56, who served as Lula’s environment minister before switching to the Green Party, and whose 2010 presidential bid netted her 20 million votes, for third place.
This time around, Silva enjoyed a month of polls suggesting a narrow run-off vote victory before the Rousseff camp began a vigorous fight back, with the latest surveys giving Rousseff the lead ahead of a likely second round on October 26.
Yet despite her current upsurge, the scenario is less rosy for Rousseff than four years ago.
The 66-year-old daughter of a Bulgarian entrepreneur donned the presidential sash following eight largely euphoric years under Lula that saw an economic boom help fund a vast range of welfare programs that lifted tens of millions of Brazilians out of poverty.
Agencies