Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Putin Assails Transit Officials for Response to Ice Storm at Airports


MOSCOW — Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin of Russia chastised senior transportation officials on Wednesday for failing to respond adequately to widespread cancellations and delays at Moscow’s two major airports in the wake of an ice storm last weekend. He ordered the officials to call off their plans for the traditional 10-day New Year’s holiday — Russia’s most important — to prevent similar problems in the coming weeks.

Power failures and other weather-related troubles all but shut the airports earlier this week, leaving thousands of passengers stranded. Many were angered by a lack of information, and there were reports of disturbances and even attacks on airport workers. State television showed scenes of passengers mounting protests and chanting slogans against the management of the two airports, Domodedovo and Sheremetyevo.

On Tuesday, President Dmitri A. Medvedev told prosecutors to examine whether the authorities had mishandled the response to the ice storm, which occurred when an unusual warming melted snow and caused rain. That was followed by freezing temperatures that left a thick coat of ice everywhere and took down electrical lines.

Mr. Putin seemed eager to signal his concern about what had happened. “Of course, the situation is complicated, and not everything is our fault,” Mr. Putin said at a meeting with transportation officials. “But we shouldn’t moan about it. Everyone needs to get to work.”

He criticized the airports for communicating poorly with passengers. “Domodedovo because of accidents had its electricity cut off, and people continued to arrive at the airport,” he said. “What warnings were there? Zero! And more than 8,000 people massed there. What kind of operations are that?”

Over the summer, the Moscow region suffered a record heat wave and was blanketed by smoke from forest fires in the suburbs. City officials were condemned for being unprepared.

Read More

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/30/world/europe/30moscow.html

World's first organ donor dies aged 79


A man who donated a kidney to his dying twin brother 56 years ago in the world's first successful organ transplant has died in the United States.

Ronald Lee Herrick died, aged 79, on Monday in the Augusta Rehabilitation Centre, a hospital in Maine, New England, following complications from heart surgery in October, his widow, Cynthia, said.

Herrick donated a kidney to his identical twin, Richard, in a pioneering operation on 23 December 1954.

The successful surgery kept Herrick's brother alive for eight years and was the first successful organ transplant, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing. Lead surgeon Dr Joseph Murray went on to win the Nobel prize.

The operation proved that transplants were possible and led to thousands of other successful kidney transplants, and later the transplant of other organs.

Doctors around the world had tried a few transplants before the breakthrough operation, without success, said Murray, who went on to perform another 18 transplants between identical twins.

"This operation rejuvenated the whole field of transplantation," said Murray, 91, who lives in Wellesley, Massachusetts.

"There were other people studying transplants in four or five different countries, but the fact that it worked so well with the identical twins was a tremendous stimulus."

Herrick grew up on a farm in Rutland, Massachusetts, and later served in the US army.

He was 23 when he donated a kidney to his brother, who was dying from chronic nephritis, an inflammation of the kidneys. Murray thought the odds of a transplanted organ being accepted would be enhanced since they were identical twins.

Before the operation, many opposed the idea of transplanting an organ, equating it with desecration of a body. Others argued it was unethical to operate on healthy humans, and editors of medical journals wrote that it was contrary to the Hippocratic oath to never do harm to anyone, Murray said.

But Herrick was not dissuaded from the operation. "He was the only one in the world who could save his brother's life, so he was going to do it," said Cynthia Herrick. "There was no question about it."


Which organs can be transplanted?

Organs that can be transplanted include the heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas, thymus, ovaries, penis and uterus. Tissues that can be transplanted include bones, tendons, cornea, skin, heart valves, and veins. Recent developments include hand and full face transplants.

How many are on UK waiting list for a transplant?

As of 17 December 2010 17, 7,927; most of them, 6,779, were waiting for a kidney

Read More

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2010/dec/30/first-organ-donor-dies-79

Ivory Coast UN ambassador warns of genocide risk


Ivory Coast's newly appointed ambassador to the UN has warned the country is "on the brink of genocide".

In a TV interview, Youssoufou Bamba said there had been large scale violation of human rights as a result of the ongoing political unrest.

Laurent Gbagbo is refusing to step down despite his rival, Alassane Ouattara, being internationally accepted as the presidential election winner.

The UN has accused state media of inciting hatred against it.

Mr Gbagbo has said Mr Ouattara's victory in November was illegitimate. Both men have been sworn in as president.

Mr Bamba, who was appointed by Mr Ouattara, was formally welcomed at the UN's New York headquarters on Wednesday, solidifying UN support for Mr Ouattara.

At a press conference, Mr Bamba said Mr Ouattara had been elected in a "free, fair, transparent, democratic election".

"To me the debate is over, now you are talking about how and when Mr Gbagbo will leave office," he said.

Read More

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12091738

US withdraws Venezuela envoy's visa


The US has revoked the visa for Venezuela's ambassador to Washington in what it called a "reciprocal" action for Caracas turning down the US choice for its own representative in the Venezuelan capital.

Mark Toner, a US state department spokesman, confirmed on Wednesday that the visa of ambassador Bernardo Alvarez Herrera, who is reportedly not currently in the US, had been revoked.

Toner said: "We said there would be consequences when the Venezuelan government rescinded agreement regarding our nominee, Larry Palmer.

"We have taken appropriate, proportional and reciprocal action".

Speaking on state television on Tuesday, Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan preisdent, had dared the US to cut off diplomatic relations.

"If the [US] government wants to expel our ambassador there, let them! If they cut off diplomatic relations, let them," he said.

Chavez had announced in August that he would not accept Palmer's appointment to be the next US ambassador to Venezuela because of comments Palmer made during his confirmation hearing in the senate.

Palmer said that he believed Venezuela was allowing leftists FARC fighters to find safe haven in the country and that Venezuela's military was under Cuban influence and suffering from low morale.

Relations between Washington and Caracas have been rocky since Chavez came to power in 1999.

Both sides withdrew their ambassadors between September 2008 and June 2009 after a spat over US military bases in Colombia.

Despite their political differences, the US continues to buy around one million barrels of crude oil from Venezuela every day.

Read More

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2010/12/2010123023228116789.html

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Canadians view more YouTube videos and more Wikipedia pages than anyone else


NEWS1130 reports that Canadians spend more time online than any other users in the world, according to data from comScore.com.

Canadians also view more YouTube videos and more Wikipedia pages than anyone else, NEWS1130 said.

About 68 per cent of the Canadian population is online and the average user spends about 42 hours a month surfing the web. Users in Israel were next in line at about 39 hours per user per month.

YouTube says Canadians are the biggest users of the site per capita, and watch an average of 147 videos a month. That's about 50 per cent more than the average American.

Canadians also read 16 Wikipediapages every month, though Germans are not far behind us at 15 pages per month.

Read More

http://communities.canada.com/vancouversun/blogs/smallbusiness/archive/2010/12/28/canadians-biggest-youtube-wikipedia-users-in-the-world.aspx

Churches unite to help thousands of stranded passengers in Moscow's airports


Religious organizations in Russia have begun efforts to help the thousands of passengers stranded for days in Moscow airports.

Thousands of passengers remain stranded at the Moscow major airports of Sheremetyevo and Domodedovo following an ice storm that hit the entire territory of Central Russia over the weekend. Hundreds of flights have been canceled and delayed as severe freezing rain caused serious power outages. Some 20,000 passengers have been affected by the weather.

The Jewish Community Federation of Russia on Tuesday sent a truck loaded with 1,500 bottles of water and children's wafers to Domodedovo International Airport.

Most of the aid sent to the capital's airports are for families with small children.

"We understand that our help today to those at Domodedovo Airport is a minor contribution to what they need right now, but we nonetheless hope that even this will help the people," the Jewish Community's president, Alexander Boroda, said.

When asked if the religious organizations' activities could be coordinated into one single organization, Andrei Glotser, a member of the Jewish community, said that unfortunately there are no inter-confessional groups to handle crisis situations in Russia as of yet, but the creation of such a group was discussed earlier in December.

"Today, 500 bottles of water, around 200 packs of moist towels, and approximately 1,000 disposable diapers will be delivered to Domodedovo," the Russian Orthodox Church's Social Activity and Charity Department's press secretary, Vasily Rulinsky, said.

The Islamic Russia Muftis Council will on Wednesday hand out traditional pastries to the passengers stranded at Domodedovo, Moscow's head imam, Ildar Alyautdinov, told RIA Novosti.

"We are happy to take part in the charity work initiated by the Jewish Community Federation of Russia and the Orthodox Church. On Wednesday we will deliver more than 1,000 echmochmak pastries to the airports of the Russian capital, where thousands of passengers are in need of help," Alyautdinov said.

The charity members of the churches said that the situation is not as acute at the Sheremetyevo or Vnukovo airports, but said they would help if that need arises.

Russia's head doctor, Gennady Onishchenko, who visited Domodedovo International Airport earlier on Tuesday, said that the airport is extremely overcrowed as it was designed to hold some 3,000 people; however, the number of people has risen to approximately 10,000. "I'm glad the toilets are still working," he said.

Read More

http://en.rian.ru/russia/20101228/161973595.html

England complete victory in fourth test, retain Ashes


England have retained the Ashes in Australia for the first time in 24 years, after defeating Australia with a margin of an innings and 157 runs on the fourth day morning at the MCG.

It took England less than an hour and a half to wrap up the Aussie tail leaving Haddin unbeaten on 55 who was waging a battle. England were on top from the moment the coin was tossed and went on to dismiss Australia cheaply for 98 in the first innings.

Bresnan was the star performer for England in the fourth innings as he scalped in-form Hussey for a duck and finished with 4 for 50. He was mobbed by his team-mates as he dismissed Hilfenhaus the last wicket to fall, and the England fans at the MCG burst into celebration.

There was some fight from Brad Haddin and Peter Siddle in the 4th day morning as they put together an 86-run partnership after the early loss of Mitchell Johnson, but it was only ever a matter of time for England.

The victory gave England a 2-1 lead in the ashes series, which will be completed with the fifth and final test in Sydney next week

Read More

http://www.sify.com/sports/england-retain-ashes-after-24-years-news-cricket-km3h9Nccceg.html



Scam hits Citibank India; fraud worth 400 crore


This was just what India wanted to hear, the perfect year-end gift. Yes, its yet another scam. This time it has come from the American banking giant Citibank. A case of possible fraud was reported at DLF-II branch, Gurgaon and is reportedly estimated at Rs 300-350 crore.


The scam was engineered by none other than an employee Shiv Raj Puri who was working as a Relationship Manager for the past 7-8 years. The fraud came to light when the bank's Assistant Vice President Binu Soman noticed suspicious transactions in certain accounts at the Gurgaon branch.


After a police complaint was filed, which stated that Puri had opened a joint account in the names of Prem Nath, Sehna Prem Nath, and Deeksha Puri in September 2009; initial investigations reveal that the joint account (no 5011666247) had transacted a huge sum of money.

Moreover, there were reports of customers revealing that the bank was running some scheme that promised a very high interest rate. There was no such schemes running which led to an internal inquiry, according to the senior investigating officer.

Puri has also been charged with producing forged circulars from the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) to con people into investing in
a non-existent scheme and making people believe that the scheme was only available in that particular branch. The Gurgaon police who is investigating the case said that major clients were conned and the fact that Sebi had not released any form of this sort was found.

Police reports say that Puri managed to get large deposits and made fake bank slips and statements for the customers. Puri siphoned off the money to invest in the stock market. Citibank has intimated the Reserve Bank of India and Sebi about the fraud.

In a statement given out by the bank, "Identified suspicious transactions have been isolated and we are providing full assistance to the authorities in their investigations. This issue does not impact other accounts, transactions or customers of the bank. Subsequent to our complaint naming the involved employee and other external individuals who appear to be perpetrators in these suspicious transactions, Gurgaon police have registered an FIR."

The police officer investigating the case said that 18 accounts have been identified and seized that was operated in the name of the four accused and carrying deposits worth Rs 3.85 crore. The accused Puri is absconding. The ACP (east), Rao Dalbir Singh, has issued a look-out circular (LOC) for Puri so that he can remain in the country.

Read More

http://news.oneindia.in/2010/12/29/citibank-gurgaon-branch-fraud-shiv-raj-puri.html

In New York, heaviest snow in decades


New York: Hundreds of airline passengers were stranded for up to 10 hours on the tarmac at John F Kennedy Airport in New York on Tuesday, as ambulances struggled to get patients through unploughed streets and city buses sat abandoned in the snow.

Officials warned it could take until the New Year to rebook all passengers and straighten out the transport mess created by the bad weather, which shut down all three of New York's major airports for 24 hours and caused a ripple effect across the United States.

The storm, which dumped 20 inches (50.8 centimetres) of snow on Central Park and ground the city's airports to a standstill, was New York City's sixth-worst since record-keeping began in 1869, according to a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.

A 2006 storm dropped 26.9 inches (68.3 centimetres) of snow on Central Park, breaking the previous record, set in 1947, by half-an-inch (12.7 centimetres).

Read More

http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/in-new-york-heaviest-snow-in-decades-75532

Study highlights insomnia in young


More than a third of young people in Scotland suffer from insomnia, a charity has claimed.

The Prince's Trust said young Scots are also facing increased mental health problems such as panic attacks, self-loathing and depression.

The charity's third annual Youth Index, which measures children and teenagers' happiness suggested 35% had sleep disorders.

Around one in five of the 128 people who took part in the survey - 22% - said they felt depressed "all" or "most" of the time, and one in six - 18% - had self-harmed.

Over a quarter - 26% - said they felt insecure all or most of the time, while 24% said they felt isolated.

Geraldine Gammell, director of The Prince's Trust Scotland said the findings could be due to unemployment, which she said was a "very real and frightening" experience for young people.

Across the UK, almost half of unemployed respondents - 48% - said not having a job caused anxiety and depression and led them to self-harm.

Ms Gammell said: "Unemployment presents a very real and frightening mental health problem for young people in Scotland - and the longer they are out of work, the greater the risk.

"The Prince's Trust can help vulnerable young people back on their feet and into work, building motivation and self-esteem."

Read More

http://www.warwickcourier.co.uk/news/study_highlights_insomnia_in_young_1_2214501

Monday, December 27, 2010

Assange signs book deals worth more than £1m


Julian Assange has signed book deals worth more than £1m in the US and UK, to allow the WikiLeaks founder to cover his legal fees and maintain the whistleblowing site.

He will be racing a disgruntled former colleague to release an autobiography telling his side of the WikiLeaks story. Both books are to be published by divisions of Random House next year.


Mr Assange is fighting allegations of sexual assault in Sweden while trying to continue the gradual release of thousands of US diplomatic cables through WikiLeaks.

Released on bail by the British high court in mid-December, he spent Christmas wearing a tracking tag, confined to a friend’s mansion home in East Anglia.

The US administration, which has been angered and embarrassed by successive leaks of its foreign-policy secrets through WikiLeaks, is believed to be exploring ways to prosecute Mr Assange.

The controversy did not dissuade readers of Time magazine voting Mr Assange their “person of the year” for his campaign for freedom of information and radical transparency from governments.

He has agreed an $800,000 (£520,000) contract with Knopf, a US imprint of Random House, the Bertelsmann-owned publisher, and another £325,000 deal for the UK with Canongate, an independent publishing house based in Edinburgh.

But although the deals are expected to net Mr Assange more than £1.1m ($1.7m) after the book is sold in other countries and serialised in newspapers around the world, Mr Assange said he had agreed to write his autobiography only reluctantly.

“I don’t want to write this book, but I have to,” he told the Sunday Times. “I have already spent £200,000 for legal costs and I need to defend myself and to keep WikiLeaks afloat.”

Mr Assange did not describe how he would divide the proceeds from his autobiography between his own personal legal costs and the operational funds required by WikiLeaks, which he has described as a large and distributed organisation that is not solely reliant on him.

WikiLeaks’ operational costs have more than tripled since it drew up budgeting plans at the beginning of the year, due to the increased scope of information it has reviewed and published. Before “cablegate”, it released huge amounts of files about the Iraqi and Afghan wars.

The whistleblowing site relies largely on donations from individuals, but had its fund-raising channels curtailed after several US financial services firms stopped processing payments to its account.

Bank of America, MasterCard, Visa and PayPal have all stopped directing funds to WikiLeaks in recent weeks. They deny Mr Assange’s accusations that the actions were politically motivated. Mr Assange’s Swiss bank has also frozen his account.

Last week, Daniel Domscheit-Berg, a former WikiLeaks spokesman, announced he would publish a tell-all book next year about his time with the site.

Crown Publishing, another division of Random House, will release “Inside Wikileaks: My Time with Julian Assange at the World’s Most Dangerous Website” in 14 countries in February.

The author, who called himself Daniel Schmitt when he worked at WikiLeaks, fell out with Mr Assange over the running and strategic priorities of the site.

He has said that the allegations of Mr Assange’s sexual misconduct would be better handled privately and have become a burden to WikiLeaks.

Read More

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e0d0e164-1142-11e0-a26b-00144feabdc0,dwp_uuid=9a36c1aa-3016-11da-ba9f-00000e2511c8.html

Official says 3 men arrested with bombs in Nigeria


Three men were arrested with bombs in their possession one day after blasts ripped through the Nigerian city of Jos on Christmas Eve, a government official said Monday.

"They were heading to bomb a church when they were arrested," said Gyang Choji, a special advisor to the governor of Nigeria's Plateau state. He said one of the suspects is a citizen of the Republic of Chad, while the other two are Nigerian.

Choji did not say the men, who were arrested in the area of Dogon Dutse, were suspects in the Christmas Eve attacks, which killed at least 31 people and wounded 74. He had previously said it was unclear who set off the blasts or whether they were related.

"The security persons are carrying out the investigations," Choji said.

Jos lies on a faith-based fault line between Muslim-dominated northern Nigeria and the mainly Christian south.

Following the blasts, angry residents and young men took to the streets where they clashed with the military.

"On the 25th, as a result of the bombing on Christmas Eve, the angry youth in Angwan Rukuba were shouting and came out on the streets and demanded that the soldiers be removed from the streets," said Choji.

Two young men were killed by gunshots fired by soldiers and 25 people were wounded, he said.

Residents of Angwan Rukuba held a press conference Sunday, condemning the soldiers responsible for the shooting. Community members are also petitioning the government to request that those responsible be brought to justice, Choji said.

In recent weeks, the governor's office had received letters purported to be from some Muslim organizations threatening attacks against Christians, Choji had said previously.

"The security officials didn't take the threat letters seriously. They were thought of as gimmicks, and at the end of the day, they became reality," he said.

The government had increased security and checkpoints throughout the past week, including additional patrols in various areas of Jos, Choji had said.

In Nigeria -- Africa's most populous nation -- more than 13,500 people have died in religious or ethnic clashes since the end of military rule in 1999, the Human Rights Watch said in a report earlier this year.

There have been other deadly sectarian clashes in Nigeria over the years, including one outbreak in Jos in September 2001 that left about 1,000 dead, the Human Rights Watch said.

Call to 'tag' bottles of alcohol in Scotland


Scottish Labour have called on local licensing boards to enforce the "tagging" of bottles of alcohol to help reduce under-age drinking.

Under the scheme, off licences are given a unique code to mark bottles so they can be traced to a specific store.

If under-age drinkers are found with a tagged bottle, officers can check the shop's CCTV to see who bought the alcohol.

The Scottish government said tagging was an "operational matter" for police.

A tagging scheme is currently in place in parts of Dundee after being introduced by Tayside Police, working with Dundee City Council and local off licences.

Scottish Labour said it was urging licensing boards to use bottle tagging in other "hot spot" areas where under-age drinking and antisocial behaviour have been found to be a problem.

Antisocial behaviour

Labour's Community Safety spokesman James Kelly said: "Under-age drinking can all too often be a direct cause of antisocial behaviour in communities across Scotland.

"This innovative but simple approach will hopefully help bring to justice those peddling booze to young people."

Mr Kelly said those who supplied alcohol to young people needed to realise that they were often "fuelling antisocial behaviour" as well as breaking the law.

He added: "The SNP may be happy to turn a blind eye to antisocial behaviour, but Labour is not. I urge licensing boards to adopt this new approach to hammer home the message that supplying under-agers with alcohol is never acceptable and will not be tolerated."

The Scottish government said it had always encouraged police to make use of bottle tagging in the fight against under-age drinking.

A spokesman said: "As an intelligence-led tool, it can help forces crack down on the problem by proving that certain shops are selling alcohol to under-18s.

"Bottle-tagging remains an operational matter for police, often deployed during targeted exercises against under-age drinking. However, we would caution against the blanket deployment of this measure, to ensure it remains effective."

The Scottish Conservative party said it had "reservations" about the practicality of the bottle tagging scheme and that it should be made more difficult for people to buy alcohol for under-age drinkers in the first place.

Read More

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-12083695

Nine terrorism suspects appear in London court

The men, most of them of Bangladeshi origin, are charged with preparing bombing attacks against several targets in London and testing incendiary devices.



Mohammed Moksudur Rahman Chowdhury, 20, one of nine men charged with planning a terrorism attack, leaves Westminster Magistrates Court in London.

Reporting from London —

Nine men accused of terrorism and conspiracy to blow up high-profile targets that reportedly included the U.S. Embassy and the London Stock Exchange in a Christmas bombing campaign made their first appearance in a central London court Monday.

Most of the nine, ages 17 to 28, are of Bangladeshi origin. They were among 12 men arrested a week ago in three cities across Britain. Three were released without charge.

They were charged late Sunday after a weeklong interrogation by counter-terrorism police at a London police station. They appeared at the city's Westminster Magistrates' Court on Monday in three groups.

Anti-terrorism prosecutor Sue Hemming said the nine men were charged with preparing to commit terrorist acts or assisting in them.

The men were also accused of igniting and testing incendiary materials and downloading material for the preparation of acts of terrorism, Reuters news agency reported, and five of them were charged with possession of documents and records of potential use to terrorists. They will reappear in London's central criminal court, the Old Bailey, on Jan. 14.

The Guardian newspaper identified the nine as Nazam Hussain, 25, Usman Khan, 19, Mohibur Rahman, 26, and Abul Bosher Mohammed Shahjahan, 26, from Stoke-on-Trent in the Midlands area of England; Gurukanth Desai, 28, Omar Sharif Latif, 26, and Abdul Malik Miah, 24, who were detained in Cardiff, South Wales; and Mohammed Moksudur Rahman Chowdhury, 20, and Shah Mohammed Lutfar Rahman, 28, from London.

Though few details were revealed about the targets, the BBC reported that the men were accused of carrying out reconnaissance of high-profile targets, including the American Embassy and the London Stock Exchange.

Their arrest and charges come amid concerns about terrorism activity in Europe. On Dec. 11 a suicide bomber killed himself in an attack in Stockholm.

He was an Iraqi-born Swedish citizen known to have studied in Luton, England, home to three of the suicide bombers who detonated bombs in attacks on London's transport system on July 7, 2005.

Dutch authorities arrested 12 Somalis in Rotterdam over the weekend. Five of them have been released without charge.

Last week Italian anarchists said they were responsible for letter bombs that injured two people in embassies in Rome. Another device was found and defused at the Greek Embassy in Rome on Monday.

Read More

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-britain-terror-20101228,0,2645731.story

Sunday, December 26, 2010

2 Kassams hit South after IDF kills 2 Gazans planting bombs


Two Kassam rockets fired from the Gaza Strip struck southern Israel on Sunday, hours after the IDF fired on several Palestinians suspected of planting explosives along the security fence, killing two Islamic Jihad terrorists.

A combined force of IAF helicopters and armored troops reported direct hits on the suspects. Islamic Jihad’s military wing said in a statement that two of its fighters had been killed in the incident east of Khan Yunis. Israeli military sources confirmed the two deaths.

An IDF statement noted that a number of bombs had been detonated near IDF patrols along the border in the past month.

“The presence of Palestinian civilians in the area adjacent to the security fence is used by terrorist organizations as a cover for their activities, including the planting of explosive devices, planning terrorist attacks and attempting to kidnap IDF soldiers,” the statement said. “For this reason, the IDF will not allow anyone to be present in this area.”

Speaking on the second anniversary of the start of Operation Cast Lead, Deputy Prime Minister Silvan Shalom expressed the hope that there would not be an escalation of violence with Gaza.

“I hope there is not need for another operation such as Cast Lead,” Shalom told Israel Radio.

“But if this situation continues, if rockets keep being smuggled in and they continue shooting at Israel in an attempt to hit innocent civilians, then obviously we will have to respond, and respond forcefully.”

Read More

http://www.jpost.com/Defense/Article.aspx?id=200984

UN condemns 'deplorable' Nigeria violence


UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has condemned the "deplorable acts of violence" that left 38 people dead in Nigeria over Christmas.

Mr Ban conveyed condolences to the families of the victims and backed the government's vow to bring the perpetrators to justice.

The victims died in bomb blasts and an attack on churches in central Nigeria.

The area is a flashpoint between the mainly Muslim north and largely Christian south.

'Drastic measures'

Mr Ban said he was appalled by the acts of violence, especially as they happened at "a time when millions of Nigerians are celebrating religious holidays".

He said he "supported efforts by the Nigerian authorities to bring those responsible to justice".

Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan said: "I assure Nigerians that government will go to the root of this. We must unearth what caused it and those behind it must be brought to book."

Nigerian State Information Commissioner Gregory Yenlong said that "enemies of the state were at work" in the violence.

He appealed for people to remain calm, adding: "We expect drastic measures to be put in place - you can see how charged the atmosphere is."

African Union Commission chairman, Jean Ping, also expressed shock and sadness at the violence.

The main attacks were near the city of Jos and in the town of Maiduguri.

The unrest was triggered by explosions on Christmas Eve in villages near Jos.

The bomb attacks killed 32 people and left about 70 injured.

Reports said two bombs exploded near a large market. A third hit a mainly Christian area while the fourth was near a road leading to a mosque. No group has said it carried out the attacks.

About 30 attackers raided a church in Maiduguri, killing the pastor and others, and setting the building on fire.

Another church in the town was also attacked and a security guard killed, reports said.

Further violence between armed groups broke out in Jos on Sunday.

Witnesses said buildings were set alight and people were seen running for cover as police and soldiers arrived.

Jos has been blighted by religious violence over the past decade with deadly riots in 2001 and 2008.

The tensions stem from decades of resentment between indigenous groups and settlers from the north.

Correspondents say that although clashes are often blamed on sectarianism, poverty and access to land and other resources are often the root causes.

Read More

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12081785

SKorea vows retaliation if North attacks again


SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea's president vowed a relentless retaliation against North Korea if provoked again, saying Monday he is not afraid of a war with the communist North.

The two Koreas have ramped up their rhetoric since North Korea shelled front-line Yeonpyeong Island near the tense western sea border last month, killing four South Koreans. Both sides accuse each other of provoking first.

On Monday, President Lee Myung-bak used much of his regular address to vow to get tougher with any new provocation by North Korea.

"We have now been awakened to the realization that war can be prevented and peace assured only when such provocations are met with a strong response," Lee said. "Fear of war is never helpful in preventing war."

He said South Korea's military "must respond relentlessly when they come under attack."

South Korea has staged a series of military drills — including one on Yeonpyeong Island on Dec. 20 — in a show of force against the North. The South was to begin routine naval firing exercises starting Monday but not on Yeonpyeong and other border islands, according to the Defense Ministry.

North Korea, for its part, has also kept up rhetoric around last Friday's 19th anniversary of leader Kim Jong Il's appointment as the North's supreme military commander. Kim's military chief threatened last week to launch a "sacred" nuclear war against the South.

On Friday, North Korean soldiers appeared on a state TV program and bragged of participating in the artillery barrage on Yeonpyeong — the country's first attacks on a civilian area since the 1950-53 Korean War.

The two Koreas are still technically at war because their 1950s conflict ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty. In recent years, several bloody naval skirmishes occurred near their disputed western sea border — drawn by the U.N. at the close of the Korean War.

Read More

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/7354786.html

Freezing rain shuts Moscow's airport and cuts power


Freezing rain has badly disrupted air traffic at Moscow's airports and left more than 400,000 people in and around Russia's capital without electricity.

Rain that immediately turned into ice on the ground caused power failures, shutting Domodedovo airport for hours and stranding thousands of people. The power was later restored.

Dozens of flights to and from other Moscow airports were cancelled.

Bad weather also turned many streets in the city into ice rinks.

Domodedovo airport remained shut for more than 10 hours on Sunday, after the power supply was cut off, officials said.

The outage was caused by tree branches touching power lines loaded down with ice.

The power was only restored late in the evening.

More than 60 flights were also cancelled at other Moscow airports because of bad weather.

In the city itself, freezing rain damaged power supplies to trams and trolley buses and caused huge traffic jams.

Health officials urged residents not to risk walking on the icy streets and stay indoors.

At an emergency meeting, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin ordered ministers to rectify the situation as soon as possible.


Read More

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-12081651

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Assange says 'high chance' he would be killed in US jail


WikiLeaks chief Julian Assange said in an interview published Thursday there was a "high chance" he would be killed in a US jail if he were to be extradited from Britain on espionage charges.

The Australian is on bail in Britain fighting a bid by Sweden to extradite him over sex assault claims, but Washington is believed to be considering how to indict him over the leaking of thousands of US diplomatic cables.

Assange told The Guardian it would be "politically impossible" for Britain to send him across the Atlantic, adding that the government of Prime Minister David Cameron would want to show it had not been "co-opted" by Washington.

"Legally the UK has the right to not extradite for political crimes. Espionage is the classic case of political crimes. It is at the discretion of the UK government as to whether to apply to that exception," he said.

He said US authorities were "trying to strike a plea deal" with Bradley Manning, the US army soldier suspected of providing WikiLeaks with the cables.

Assange added that if the United States succeeded in getting him extradited from Britain or Sweden, then there was a "high chance" of him being killed "Jack Ruby-style" in an American prison.

Ruby, a nightclub owner, shot dead Lee Harvey Oswald at a police station in Dallas, Texas days after Oswald was arrested for the assassination of US President John F. Kennedy in 1963.

Ruby's alleged links to organised crime sparked conspiracy theories about his involvement in an overall plot surrounding the assassination of Kennedy.

Assange has previously said that he and other WikiLeaks staff have received death threats since the website began to release a cache of around 250,000 secret US State Department cable in November.

The 39-year-old has been staying at a friend's country mansion in eastern England since his release from jail last week on strict bail conditions that include reporting to police daily and wearing an electronic tag.

A court in London is due to hold a full hearing on the Swedish extradition request starting February 7.

Read More

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5g3aIipRuLxgHxrr-q2Vsh8Q0ISxw?docId=CNG.d082576fa7a8aae22f83a4e5f6909993.d61

Record Gas Prices Hit Drivers This Christmas


It's the season of giving, but gas prices are demanding more money than ever from holiday travelers.

"Here [in Wisconsin] we've never seen prices this high before at this time of year," Pam Moen, spokeswoman for AAA Wisconsin, said.

Wisconsin's average gas price is currently $3.03 per gallon. The national average gas price will also be more than $3 per gallon for the first time this Christmas.

"Psychologically, it is a downer for people when you see that first number as a '3,'" Moen said.

She said crude oil is driving the price increase, thanks in part to the weakening U.S. dollar.

Ronald O'Brien was filling up his tank in Sun Prairie Thursday before his annual holiday road trip. He and his daughter Lura will spend the next 12 hours driving to his mother's house in South Dakota.

"It hurts my wallet, but it's still the family. … You still got to see the family. It's a special time of the year," O'Brien said.

He said even small jumps in the gas price have an impact in his Christmas budget.

"It goes into everything. Everything else gets cut back because you have to pay these bills," O'Brien said.

Marc Crosby was stopped at the same gas station, halfway through his ride from Illinois to Minnesota. He also said he has looked for ways to save this holiday.

"You buy more generic things; you don't go out. Everyone makes sacrifices," Crosby said.

Still, there are some things these travelers aren't willing to sacrifice.

"Family is more important. I mean, the holiday season is about family. You get to see family; the rest of the time you get to complain about it," Crosby said.

Moen said most families look at the rising pump pricing as annoyances, not gas grinches stealing everyone's Christmas.

"You don't cancel Christmas because gas is at $3 a gallon," Moen said.

But if you're a holiday traveler, you may be asking Santa Claus for a gas gift card next year.

Read More

http://www.channel3000.com/news/26263373/detail.html

Skype Technologies Says It will Offer Refunds to Customers After Outages


Skype Technologies SA, the largest provider of international calls, will offer refunds to paying customers who haven’t been able to use its service because of an outage that lasted more than 30 hours.

About 20 million users, representing 90 percent of the traffic the company would normally expect, are now able to make calls, Chief Executive Officer Tony Bates said today in a blog posting, after an outage yesterday rendered the service unavailable to almost all global users.

Year-end holidays are Skype’s heaviest traffic period, Bates said in an interview this week. The disruption adds to challenges facing Skype as it tries to persuade companies to pay for calling and establish premium services, such as group video conversations, in the run-up to an initial public offering.

“We now know what caused a number of clients to actually crash,” Bates said in a video on the company’s blog. “We’ve been able to mitigate that crash risk and isolate that.”

He didn’t say what caused the crash and said the company had ruled out a malicious attack.

Skype will give pre-pay and pay-as-you-go users 30 minutes of free calling, and active subscribers will get a week’s extra subscription, the company said.

Skype has more than 560 million users. Of those, only 1.4 percent pay for the service, according to a regulatory filing. The Luxembourg-based company started as a way for consumers to chat for free.

What’s Working

Audio and video calls as well as instant-messaging capabilities are now working, the company said. Some features, such as group video calling, are still unavailable.

Rival service OoVoo LLC said it received 100,000 new registrations yesterday, double its previous record for peak usage. The New York-based company attributed the peak to defecting Skype users, Matt Houser, a spokesman for the company, said in an e-mail.

Skype said it will do a full post-mortem of the cause of the outage. It is using servers that normally support offline instant messaging and multiparty video calls to get its main products online, Bates said.

The company accounts for about 12 percent of international calling, according to the Washington-based research firm Telegeography.

EBay Inc., which bought Skype in 2005, sold most of its stake last year for about $2 billion to a group led by Menlo Park, California-based private-equity firm Silver Lake.

Read More

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-12-23/skype-to-give-refunds-to-paying-customers-after-service-outage.html

US attacks North Korea 'sacred war' threats


The US has denounced North Korea for threatening a "sacred war" against the South, whose military has been holding live-fire drills near the border.

The state department's Philip Crowley told the BBC there was no justification for Pyongyang's "belligerent words".

In a day of rising tension, Seoul and Pyongyang traded strong rhetoric, with the South warning of a "powerful response" to any attack from the North.

A month ago, the North fired on a Southern island, killing four people.

Thursday's speech by Armed Forces Minister Kim Yong-chun marks the strongest statement from Pyongyang since the attack on Yeonpyeong island.

Analysts believe the hard-line stance might be timed to coincide with the 19th anniversary of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il taking control of the armed forces, which will be marked on Friday.
'Nuclear' threat

"We've heard this language before," said Mr Crowley in an interview with BBC's Newshour.

"Unfortunately sometimes that kind of language is followed by irresponsible actions, whether it's a missile test, a nuclear test or the shelling of South Korea, as occurred last month."

He added that the North would get no reward for its "provocative actions".

China, the North's only major ally, also issued a statement asking both parties on the peninsula to remain calm.

Pyongyang is frequently accused of sabre-rattling in order to strengthen its hand in negotiations with other countries over its nuclear ambitions.

But the North insists that it is the victim, and repeatedly accuses the South of preparing for war by holding military drills on the border.

Kim Yong-chun, quoted by state news agency KCNA, said the North was "getting fully prepared to launch a sacred war of justice", and also threatened to use a "nuclear deterrent".

Despite possessing enough plutonium to create a bomb, the North is not thought to have succeeded in building a nuclear weapon.

International talks over Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions halted in April 2009, when the North walked out and expelled UN nuclear inspectors.

The US has refused to resume the talks until North Korea recommits to its past promises to give up its nuclear-weapons programme.

Read More

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12072334

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Skype outage hits users worldwide


Millions can't make calls, or are dropped in mid-conversation, because of a network connection failure — the second major disruption in service this year.

Millions of Skype Internet phone users worldwide couldn't make calls — or were dropped in mid-conversation — because of a network connection failure that began about 9 a.m. Wednesday PST.

It marked the second time this year that the popular, low-cost calling service was hit with a major outage, and this one was more widespread than the two-day disruption in 2007.

"For a communications system this large to go down, it's almost unheard of," said Charles S. Golvin, a Forrester Research analyst. "Usually when phone lines are disrupted, the blackout is confined to a specific geographical area. This is worldwide."

Indeed. In the past, there have been network outages to auction site EBay and social networks Facebook and Twitter, but the impact wasn't as great, Golvin said.

"With those sort of disruptions, people have alternatives or they can wait it out," he said. "But with something like this — and you need to communicate with someone — it's far more significant."

Skype tried to reach its customers through its official blog and messages on the micro-blogging service Twitter.

"Some of you may have problems signing in to Skype — we're investigating, and we're sorry for the disruption to your conversations," Skype said on its Twitter account. "Our engineers and site operations team are working non-stop to get things back to normal — thanks for your continued patience."

In a blog post, Skype said it first noticed a problem when the number of people on the website dropped off. It "wasn't typical or expected, so we began to investigate," it said.

"Skype isn't a network like a conventional phone or IM network — instead, it relies on millions of individual connections between computers and phones to keep things up and running," the post said. "Unfortunately, today, many of them were taken offline."

The Luxembourg company said that engineers were working to get the system running and that it "may take a few hours."

But the outage in many areas lasted into the night.

Skype apologized, and said some features, such as group video calling, "may take longer to return to normal."

Read More

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-skype-20101223,0,2778742.story

Heathrow passengers land in Edmonton


Amanda Young, left, hands her daughter to her grandmother, Diane Hill, after arriving in Edmonton from London's Heathrow Airport on Wednesday afternoon.

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/edmonton/story/2010/12/22/edmonton-heathrow-edmonton-flight-lands.html#ixzz18uHB0Vz1
Relieved passengers landed Wednesday afternoon on the first Edmonton-bound Air Canada flight to arrive from London's Heathrow Airport since snow stranded thousands of passengers on the weekend.

"I was stuck at Heathrow Airport from the 20th and then I had to take a four-hour train back to where I was from and then I finally got out today," said Rupaly Toor, who travelled home to Edmonton for her Christmas break from school.

"So yeah, it's horrible there ... it's exactly how it is on TV. There's tents outside and just people camping and it's not good."

Weather delays forced Air Canada to cancel many of its flights to and from London. The airline was able to resume its full schedule Tuesday but officials warned it might take more than a week to lear the passenger backlog.

Two incoming flights, and two outgoing flights from the Edmonton International Airport were cancelled because of the snow in London.

"It took them three days without snow to get a runway cleared. It's just ridiculous," said Howard Singleton, who flew to Edmonton to visit his brother.

Singleton was supposed to fly out of Heathrow on Monday but his flight was cancelled after the plane wasn't allowed to land.

All the worries and delays were forgotten when Diane Hill's daughter and son-in-law walked through the arrivals gate with their new baby girl.

"It feels fabulous. Christmas will be Christmas," Hill said.


Read more:
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/edmonton/story/2010/12/22/edmonton-heathrow-edmonton-flight-lands.html#ixzz18uFpcdIq

Arab Nations to Seek UN Pressure on Israel to Stop Settlement Construction


A Palestinian man is seen through a water pipe as he gestures while removing rubble after an Israeli air strike in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip December 21, 2010. Israel carried out a series of air strikes in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, Palestinian officials and witnesses said, after militants from the Hamas-ruled territory fired rockets into southern Israel.
Arab nations and the Palestinian Authority are set to ask the United Nations Security Council to demand that Israel halt settlement construction in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

A draft resolution demanding that Israel “immediately and completely ceases all settlement activities” was to be given to the Security Council’s 15 member governments late yesterday or today, Egyptian Ambassador Maged Abdelaziz said in an interview.

The Palestinian envoy to the UN, Riyad Mansour, said that U.S. diplomats told him that the Obama administration opposes having the Security Council take up a resolution on the settlements issue. The U.S. mission to the UN didn’t respond to a request for a public comment on the draft resolution.

“The only road to peace between Israel and the Palestinians is through direct negotiations,” Israel’s Ambassador Meron Reuben said yesterday in an e-mail. “Palestinian attempts to bypass this road only move us further away from returning to the negotiation table. We hope that the international community won’t allow these moves to divert both sides from reaching the real goal: peace and stability in our region.”

The Security Council move stems from Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’s instructions last month to Mansour to begin talks in New York on a draft resolution.

Mansour said in an interview that the text was being distributed now so that Security Council members could study it over the next 10 days before formal talks are held in January. He said about 35 nations have agreed to co-sponsor the draft, which also condemns the continuation of settlement activity as illegal and a “major obstacle” to peace.

‘No Movement’

“We have to move on this track because there is no movement on any front,” Abdelaziz said. “We have a crisis situation. The Israelis have rejected the American proposal for a settlement freeze and they continue every day with settlement activity.”

The U.S. decided early this month to stop pressuring Israel to renew a moratorium on West Bank settlement construction. Palestinians refused to return to talks without an extension of the freeze, which expired in September.

The Arabs may have up to 14 votes for the draft resolution in the 15-member Security Council, and recognize that the measure would probably be defeated by a U.S. veto, said Ibrahim Dabbashi, Libya’s deputy ambassador to the UN.

“If it gets 14 votes, they will put it to a vote,” Dabbashi said. “We know finally it will not pass.”

Libya introduced a similar draft resolution when it had a seat on the Security Council two years ago, but didn’t put the text to a vote.

“The situation is different now,” Dabbashi said. “Now there is practically no peace process. It is at a standstill. At the time, there was not an overwhelming majority to put it to a vote. It was not only the U.S. This time we feel it should have 14 votes.”

New Members

Abdelaziz said the entry of India and South Africa onto the Security Council as non-permanent members on Jan. 1 will create a body that will be “much in favor of movement” on the draft. The U.S., he said, might abstain rather than veto.

“Are the Americans even a little bit offended that the Israelis are brushing them aside all the time?” Abdelaziz said. “We will ask them to abstain.”

He said the Arabs haven’t received any signal from the Obama administration that abstention was a possibility.

About 500,000 Jews have moved to the West Bank and Jerusalem since Israel captured the territories in the 1967 Middle East war. The UN says the settlements are illegal, and the International Committee of the Red Cross says they breach the Fourth Geneva Convention governing actions on occupied territory.

Israel says the settlements don’t fall under the convention because the territory wasn’t recognized as belonging to any country before the 1967 war, in which Israel prevailed, and therefore isn’t occupied.

Read More

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-12-22/arabs-to-seek-un-demand-for-end-to-israeli-settlement-building.html

SKorea holds massive new drills after North attack


South Korea mobilized troops, tanks, helicopters and fighter jets for its largest-ever wintertime military drills Thursday, a show of force that comes a month after North Korea's deadly shelling of a front-line island.

The drills, set to begin Thursday afternoon at training grounds in mountainous Pocheon near the Koreas' heavily fortified border, signaled South Korea's determination to demonstrate and hone its military strength at the risk of further escalation with North Korea.

Jeeps wove their way up a winding road to the military base, passing armed soldiers and a ski resort where skiers and snowboarders were enjoying fresh snowfall. A thick fog hung over the area.

Exactly one month ago, routine South Korean live-fire drills from Yeonpyeong Island in the Yellow Sea triggered a shower of North Korean artillery that killed two marines and two construction workers. It was the first military attack on a civilian area since the 1950-53 Korean War ended in a truce.

North Korea, which claims the waters around the South Korean-held island lying just 7 miles (11 kilometers) from its shores as its territory, accused the South of sparking the exchange by ignoring Pyongyang's warnings against staging the live-fire drills near their disputed maritime border.

Amid international concerns of all-out war on the tense Korean peninsula, South Korea has pushed ahead with military exercises over the past several weeks, including live-fire drills from Yeonpyeong Island and Monday's land-based exercises.

Thursday's drills will be the biggest-ever wintertime firing exercises staged by South Korea's army and air force, a military army statement said.

Forty-seven similar exercises have taken place this year but Thursday's maneuvers were scheduled in response to the North Korean attack, an army officer said on condition of anonymity, citing department rules.

"We will thoroughly punish the enemy if it provokes us again as with the shelling of Yeonpyeong Island," Brig. Gen. Ju Eun-sik, chief of the South Korean army's 1st Armored Brigade, said in a statement Wednesday.

There was no immediate response from North Korea, which has shown restraint in recent days.

The two Koreas remain technically at war because their 1950s conflict ended in a cease-fire, not a peace treaty.

The military tension over the past month has been the worst in more than a decade, and comes on the heels of the March sinking of a South Korean warship that Seoul blames on Pyongyang, but which North Korea denies attacking. Forty-six sailors died in that incident.

Thursday's air force and army drills will involve 800 troops, F-15K and KF-16 jet fighters, K-1 tanks, AH-1S attack helicopters and K-9 self-propelled guns at military training grounds in Pocheon, about 30 miles (45 kilometers) north of Seoul and about 20 miles (30 kilometers) from the North Korean border.

The White House dismissed concerns that the new drills would escalate tensions.

"I think exercises that have been announced well in advance, that are transparent, that are defensive in nature, should in no way engender a response from the North Koreans," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs told reporters Wednesday in Washington.

South Korea's navy also was conducting annual firing and anti-submarine exercises off the east coast.

Read More

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iiDdykPyKhU5zSKxMvUCI2-cq-pw?docId=6674da62fe97464786555474637d4276

Man drives muscle car onto Bush's lawn


DALLAS — A suspect accused of driving a muscle car erratically onto the lawn at former President George W. Bush's north Dallas home Wednesday night was detained by the Secret Service.

The former president and former first lady Laura Bush were in the Preston Hollow neighborhood home at the time but were unharmed and never in danger, officials told NBC station KXAS.

The male suspect had not made any threats, KXAS said, and officials do not believe he intended to harm the former first couple.

Officials told KXAS that the suspect went to a friend's house in Bush's gated neighborhood to show off his Plymouth Barracuda.

The man told investigators he ran onto the Bushes' yard when his gas pedal became stuck.

No one was injured, KXAS reported.

“President and Mrs. Bush are OK," Bush spokesman David Sherzer said in a prepared statement. "They appreciate the work of the United States Secret Service and Dallas Police Department in responding to the incident.”

The Bushes live on Daria Place, a public street but gated and protected by the Secret Service detail assigned to the former president.

Read More

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40789092/ns/us_news-security/

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Air Canada resumes full schedule to snowy U.K.


An Air Canada spokesperson said the airline has resumed its full array of flights to London's Heathrow airport Tuesday evening.

This will mean a return to the regular schedule of nine flights going to London and nine returning to Canada on Wednesday, Peter Fitzpatrick told CTV News.

"We think it's good news, but at the same time, there's quite a backlog of passengers," he said. "We're not sure how long it's going to take to move all the people affected by cancelled flights, but it may well take a week or more."

It's difficult to put a number on how many people are affected, he said. Only about one-third of Air Canada's scheduled flights to Heathrow have been able to occur since the airport received about 13 centimetres of snow Saturday.

Holiday-season flights are almost always heavily booked, "but this is certainly going to alleviate the pressure," Fitzpatrick said.

Some British Airways flights also began to get back on track Tuesday, but the company warned it could take until Thursday for planes to begin taking off regularly.

In the meantime, U.K.-bound passengers at Pearson International Airport can only grit their teeth and wait.

Dennis Leslie is one of those feeling the frustration. The father of three from Brandon, Man., is spending his fourth day waiting for a flight to London to join his wife and children.

"You can put your name down on standby but, it's already overbooked," he said Tuesday.

"Every time you don't get your name called, you've got to go stand back in line. You get your name put to the bottom of their priority list, so then you wait again. They only take 10 people … flight get cancelled, back in line, put your name on a list."

Sarah Newberry said she was supposed to be on priority standby "because I'm running out of my medication, and there's no communication between staff, and I'm left again."

One woman said she knows she won't return to Britain in time for Christmas, with her flight booked for Dec. 29.

Another British citizen said if he could just get home for Christmas, all the hassles would be worthwhile.

One flight departed Pearson on Tuesday for Heathrow at 8:30 a.m.

Flights taking off from Pearson Tuesday night:

* AC848
* AC856
* AC868

People should check their flight's status before heading to the airport, Fitzpatrick said. Stranded passengers should either rebook online or through a call centre, but there are long delays through the call centre, he said.

British Prime Minister David Cameron had offered the services of the army to get Heathrow fully operational as soon as possible, but the airport declined.

For much of Tuesday, only one runway was available, with more than half of Heathrow's flights being cancelled. But a second runway has since re-opened. Nine flights are set to land in Canada from Heathrow Wednesday morning.

Europe's top transport official has threatened tougher regulation for airports for not being able to handle the winter weather.

Read More

http://swo.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20101221/pearson-air-travel-britain-delays-101221/20101221/?hub=SWOHome

Gaza Rocket Hits Near Kindergarten, Israeli Strikes Wound Six


Israel’s air force struck at least eight different targets in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, wounding six people, and Palestinians fired a rocket into Israel that hit near a kindergarten, injuring two.

The situation is “fragile and explosive,” Lieutenant General Gabi Ashkenazi, the Israeli military’s chief of staff, told a parliamentary committee yesterday, according to the army website. Israel has stepped up operations in Gaza in response to “terrorists’ decision to intensify their activity,” Ashkenazi said.

About 15 mortar shells and rockets have hit Israel since Monday, the army said. The upturn in violence came as Israeli- Palestinian peace negotiations remained stalled and reconciliation talks between the Islamic Hamas movement that controls the Gaza Strip and the Palestinian Authority that runs the West Bank are frozen.

Hamas “is saying we are still here,” said Gerald Steinberg, a political scientist at Bar Ilan University outside Tel Aviv, adding that he expected “low-level escalation over the next few weeks” and nothing more than that.

Hamas, considered a terrorist organization by Israel, the U.S. and the European Union, refuses to recognize or negotiate with Israel. The Islamic movement seized control of Gaza in 2007 after winning parliamentary elections a year earlier, ending a partnership government with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah party.

Mortar Attacks

Since the beginning of 2010, more than 200 rockets and mortar shells have been fired into Israeli territory from the Gaza Strip.

The attack in southern Israel came after warplanes struck seven targets in Gaza early yesterday, the army said in a text message to journalists. Israel launched another strike in the afternoon, hitting what it said was a “Hamas terror activity center.”

In Gaza, Adham Abu Silmeya, spokesman for the Hamas-run Health Ministry’s emergency service, said two Palestinian militants and four civilians were wounded in Israeli air strikes.

Ronit Gil, a preschool teacher in Kibbutz Zikim, the collective community where the rocket fell, said she was getting out of her car and walking to the kindergarten when the air siren went off.

“I heard the boom,” Gil said on Army Radio. “Things are very tense here.”

A teenager and an adult were injured in the attack, the army said.

Read More

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-12-21/gaza-rocket-strikes-near-israeli-kindergarten-as-violence-grows.html


Vatican Adds Nuance to Pope’s Condom Remarks


ROME — The Vatican on Tuesday issued its most authoritative clarification on Pope Benedict XVI’s recent remarks that condoms could sometimes be used for disease prevention, saying that the pope in no way justified their use to prevent pregnancy.

The statement appeared to be a sign of the lingering confusion — and, perhaps, Vatican infighting — over the remarks. Approved by Benedict himself, it said his words had been “repeatedly manipulated” and did not “signify a change in Catholic moral teaching.”

In a book published last month, Benedict said that although condoms were not “a real or moral solution,” in some cases, they might be used as “a first step in the direction of a moralization, a first assumption of responsibility.” He cited as an example a male prostitute who might use a condom so as not to spread disease.

AIDS activists, especially in Africa, where H.I.V. is rampant, welcomed the pope’s comments, as did some moral theologians. But some conservative Catholics, especially in the United States, feared that it would be misinterpreted as a move to condone condom use.

Tuesday’s statement did not go beyond or contradict two previous clarifications by the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, on the same issue. But it came directly from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the most powerful Vatican office, in what experts said could be a sign of internal Vatican tensions — or a response to criticism.

“I have never seen a communiqué from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith that explains the words of the pope after the fact,” said Paolo Rodari, a Vatican expert at Il Foglio, an Italian daily newspaper. “I think it’s unique. And it demonstrates how many complaints and serious criticism the Vatican has received.”

By publishing “Light of the World,” a book of interviews conducted by a German journalist, Peter Seewald, Benedict effectively did an end run around the Vatican’s communications structures — and also around the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which oversees all doctrine.

The Vatican’s new statement said that Benedict’s comments had been misinterpreted and manipulated by those who effectively saw them as permission for more widespread use of condoms, which like all birth control goes against church teaching.

In the book’s German and English editions, the text cites the example of a male prostitute, implying homosexual sex, in which a condom would not be a form of contraception. But the Italian edition uses the feminine form of prostitute.

Last month, Father Lombardi said that the Italian translation was an error, but added that the pope had specifically told him that the issue was not procreation but rather disease prevention — regardless of gender.

In Tuesday’s statement, the Vatican did not touch the gender question. But it said, “The idea that anyone could deduce from the words of Benedict XVI that it is somehow legitimate, in certain situations, to use condoms to avoid an unwanted pregnancy is completely arbitrary and is in no way justified either by his words or in his thought.”

Mr. Rodari said the prefect of the congregation, Cardinal William J. Levada, the highest-ranking American at the Vatican, had most likely not been shown the book before it was published since it consisted of interviews, not official church doctrine.

Father Lombardi said that he could not comment on whether Cardinal Levada had seen the book before publication, but that it “went without saying” that Benedict had approved Tuesday’s statement.

Issued in six languages, Tuesday’s statement, “Note of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on the Trivialization of Sexuality Regarding Certain Interpretations of ‘Light of the World,’ ” was a masterpiece of Vatican nuance. It used technical theological language, while the pope had used a conversational tone in his book.

It said that condom use by a prostitute for disease prevention could not be considered a “lesser evil” because prostitution is “gravely immoral,” and that “an action which is objectively evil, even if a lesser evil, can never be licitly willed.”

Yet it added that “those involved in prostitution who are H.I.V. positive and who seek to diminish the risk of contagion by the use of a condom may be taking the first step in respecting the life of another even if the evil of prostitution remains in all its gravity.”

Read More

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/22/world/europe/22pope.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Tsunami warning for Japan after 7.4 quake


A strong earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 7.4 has struck in the Pacific Ocean, triggering a tsunami warning off the southern coast of Japan.

Japan's Meteorological Agency said the quake occurred about 80 miles off the southern coast of Chichi Island in the Pacific Ocean. The offshore quake struck at around 2:20 a.m. local time.

The U.S. Geological Survey also put the quake's magnitude at 7.4.

The Japanese agency issued a tsunami alert of up to 6 feet for nearby islands and warnings of milder tsunami for the southern coasts on the main Japanese island.

A minor swelling of waves of about 1 foot was observed on the island's shorelines about 40 minutes after the quake, the agency said. The island is about 600 miles south of Tokyo.

The agency later downgraded the tsunami alert on the island to a warning and said only smaller waves of up to 1.5 feet were predicted. But the agency's seismology official Hirofumi Yokoyama said island residents should use caution for "several more hours'' given the size of the quake's magnitude.

There was no immediate report of any damage or injuries.

"It shook quite violently. I'm sure everyone was scared,'' said Kenji Komura, principal at a high school on the island. He rushed to school, where about 20 students gathered to take refuge. Despite the shaking, nothing fell on the floor or got damaged at school, Komura said.

About 170 people evacuated to several community centers and school buildings on the Chichi and nearby Haha islands, public broadcaster NHK said. Tomoo Yamawaki, a fisheries cooperative official on the Chichi island, said he has observed no significant swelling of the waves so far.

"We've taken all fishing boats on the island off coast to protect them from the tsunami,'' said Yamawaki, who is in charge of community tsunami broadcast, told NHK. "We haven't observed any significant change in the waves, but we urge all residents to immediately evacuate to a safer place.''

Japan is one of the world's most earthquake-prone countries. In 1995, a magnitude-7.2 quake in the western port city of Kobe killed 6,400 people.

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http://www.npr.org/2010/12/21/132242941/strong-earthquake-near-japan-triggers-tsunami-warning