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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> BISSAU, Guinea-Bissau A military tribunal in Guinea-Bissau has convicted
an army captain of leading a failed coup last year.Pansau Ntchama was
sentenced on Thursday to serve five years in prison after being found
guilty of treason and using illegal weapons.Ntchama was the ex-bodyguard
of Guinea-Bissau's former army chief of staff.Authorities say he led gunmen
who attacked a military base near the airport in Bissau in October
2012. The army fought back and the coup failed.Troubled Guinea-Bissau has
had so many coups and countercoups that no elected leader has been
able to complete his term in the nearly four decades since the
country won its independence from Portugal.The most recent coup occurred
in April 2012, just weeks before the presidential runoff election.
Frustrated at being left out of an immigration overhaul, gay rights groups
are pushing to adjust a bipartisan Senate bill to include gay couples.
But Democrats are treading carefully, wary of adding another divisive issue
that could lose Republican support and jeopardize the entire bill.Both parties
want the bill to succeed. Merely getting to agreement on the basic
framework for the immigration overhaul, which would create a long and costly
path to citizenship for the estimated 11 million people in the U.S.
illegally, was no small feat for senators. And getting it through a
divided Congress is still far from a done deal.Even so, gay rights
groups, their lobbyists and grass-roots supporters are insisting the deal
shouldn't exclude bi-national, same-sex couples -- about 28,500 of them,
according to a 2011 study from the Williams Institute at UCLA Law.
They're ramping up a campaign to change the bill to allow gay
Americans to sponsor their partners for green cards, the same way straight
Americans can. Supporters trekked to the Capitol to make their case at
senators' offices on Wednesday."Opponents will be proposing amendments that,
if passed, could collapse this very fragile coalition that we've been able
to achieve," Sen. John McCain, an Arizona Republican, said last week at
the unveiling of the bill. He said the eight senators from both
parties who crafted the legislation are committed to voting against changes
that could kill it.For Dem
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