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Ethiopia's salt trails
For centuries merchants have traveled to Ethiopia to collect salt from the surface of the vast desert basin. Slideshow
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CORRECTED: Florida governor wins voting rights for ex-felons
(Deletes erroneous reference to gun ownership in paragraph 7)
TALLAHASSEE, Florida (Reuters)- Florida officials on Thursday voted to end the practice of stripping ex-criminal offenders of their civil rights, including the right to vote.
Florida is one of just three U.S. states, all in the Deep South, that have maintained long-standing constitutional barriers to restoring civil rights to those that have committed serious crimes, rights groups say.
Meeting in a special session, the Florida Clemency Board agreed by a 3-1 vote to allow some 950,000 ex-felons to automatically have their civil rights restored, removing a barrier that goes back 140 years.
The changed rules still require the state's most serious offenders -- murderers and sexual offenders -- to undergo a formal review by the four-member panel led by Republican Gov. Charlie Crist.
"We must provide a system to allow these people to become productive members of society," said Crist, invoking Passover and the Easter holidays as a time of forgiveness.
The vote pitted Crist against Attorney General Bill McCollum, also a Republican and the sole dissenter in the ruling, and is just one of a raft of ways in which Crist is distinguishing himself from his predecessor as governor, Jeb Bush, the president's younger brother.
McCollum chided his Republican colleague for submitting a proposal that does away with a mandatory five-year waiting period before ex-offenders can apply for the restoration of their rights. In addition to voting, the rights include sitting on a jury, holding public office and applying for some professional trade licenses.
"It is a very grave mistake to do that," McCollum said.
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