Yahoo – AFP,
October 30, 2016
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| US Secretary of State John Kerry said it would be up to the US Department of Justice and the FBI to respond to further questions about the Clinton email probe (AFP Photo/Nicholas Kamm) |
Tipperary
(Ireland) (AFP) - US Secretary of State John Kerry said Sunday that neither he
or his department had been contacted by the FBI over its renewed investigation
into his predecessor Hillary Clinton's emails.
"No, I
haven't been notified of anything, no, I haven't been requested of anything,
no, I'm not aware of the department being requested," he said during a
visit to Tipperary in southern Ireland.
Kerry said
it would be up to the US Department of Justice and the FBI to respond to
further questions about the probe, which has rocked the race for the White
House in its final stretch.
"By
the way, obviously as an American citizen -- not to mention as a former nominee
of the party -- there's a lot I'd love to say about what has been going on. But
I can't and I'm just going to remain out of this," he said.
Throughout
her campaign, Clinton has been battling allegations she put US secrets at risk
by using a private server based in her home for all email correspondence while
she was secretary of state.
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| FBI Director James Comey called the former secretary of state's handling of classified information "extremely careless," but did not recommend that charges be brought. |
It was
thought that an FBI enquiry was ended in July but director James Comey
announced on Friday, less than a fortnight before polling day on November 8,
that his agents were investigating a newly discovered trove of emails.
Kerry was
in Ireland to accept the Tipperary International Peace Award for his efforts to
end conflicts around the world, and met with Irish Foreign Minister Charlie
Flanagan.
At a joint
press conference, he said was engaged "on a daily basis" with trying
to end the humanitarian "disaster" in the war-ravaged Syrian city of
Aleppo.
Kerry also
expressed his commitment to negotiations over the ambitious Transatlantic Trade
and Investment Partnership (TTIP) trade deal between the United States and the
EU.
"We
are still in negotiations on this and depending on who is elected president of
the United States, I don't see those negotiations ending," Kerry said.
Republican
candidate Donald Trump has condemned the deal as a job-killer and Clinton has
said she would not pursue it if it was found to undermine the jobs of American
workers.
Kerry is
due in London on Monday to collect two other awards, including the Chatham
House diplomatic prize jointly awarded with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad
Javad Zarif for their part in the Iranian nuclear deal.
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