Showing posts with label world. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world. Show all posts

03 March 2015

Ferocious waterspout slams beach in Brazil

Ferocious waterspout slams beach in Brazil
Beachgoers scramble for cover; video screen grab
Beachgoers scurry for cover as a waterspout comes ashore at Grande Recife, tossing chairs and umbrellas; 'Even a child was thrown by the strong wind'
People enjoying an idyllic day at Brazil’s Candeias Beach were sent scurrying for cover Sunday as a ferocious waterspout spun ashore and raged across the sand.

Raw footage of the event in Guararapes, Grande Recife, shows palm trees bending, and umbrellas and chairs hurtling across the beach as terrified beachgoers scrambled to find safer ground. (The first video shows the waterspout as it’s hitting the beach, and the chaos; the second shows the funnel cloud’s approach.)

Though some reports implied that people also were tossed by powerful gusts, it remained unclear at the time of this post whether the brief storm caused serious injuries.
“It was scary,” Vanessa Quechua, a local resident, is quoted as saying by NE 10. “It picked up chairs, umbrellas… even a small child was thrown by the strong wind. Many people came running and screaming for help.”

The waterspout–the marine version of a tornado, complete with funnel cloud–developed as two complex storms approached the region.
Talitha Sampaio, another local, described the phenomenon as a “small tornado at sea” to News 9 Australia. “I was in Jaboatao, looking toward Recife, and there was a dark cloud. Suddenly, the clouds cleared and came here… and looked like a whirlwind into the sea from the sky.”
Waterspout approaches; video screen grab
Meteorologist Edvania Santos, of the Pernambuco Water and Climate Agency, said of the two storms: “The two bring more humidity and dense colds. This may have contributed to the occurrence of the phenomenon, because they generate strong winds. From the videos I’ve seen, this is a waterspout.”
To be sure, it was a day at the beach these people will not soon forget.

Original post found here: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/trending-now/skydiving-instructor-rescues-student-having-seizure-at-9-000-feet-191646686.html

Nemtsov's shaken girlfriend says she didn't see killer

People hold flags and posters during a march to commemorate Kremlin critic Boris Nemtsov, who was shot …
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Boris Nemtsov's girlfriend has broken her public silence on the murder of the Russian opposition activist, saying she did not see the killer who gunned him down as they strolled across a bridge near the Kremlin.

Speaking largely without emotion in deadened monosyllables, Ukrainian fashion model Anna Duritskaya said she had little recollection of what happened in the moments after Nemtsov was shot dead on Friday night.

She told online news channel Dozhd that she had not noticed anything suspicious as the couple dined at a restaurant overlooking Red Square. It had not occurred to her that someone might be following them as they headed across the river towards Nemtsov's apartment.

"I don't want to answer questions about what happened on the bridge. I don't want to talk about this," she said.

"I am in a very difficult psychological condition and I cannot talk about this any more now. I feel bad ... I saw no one. I don't know where he came from, he was behind my back," she said of the killer or killers.

In this photo taken on Aug. 28, 2012, Anna Duritskaya poses for a photo for a modeling portfolio in …
Nemtsov, 55, was shot several times and killed instantly, becoming the most prominent opposition figure to be murdered during President Vladimir Putin's 15-year rule. Tens of thousands of Russians marched through Moscow on Sunday to honor the former deputy prime minister and anti-corruption fighter.

Duritskaya, who is 23 or 24, said she had been under constant guard since the murder and would probably be unable to attend Nemtsov's funeral on Tuesday. All she wanted to do was to go home to her mother in Ukraine.

"I have every right to leave the territory of the Russian Federation. I am not a suspect. I am a witness who gave full testimony and did everything possible to assist the investigation," she said.

"They are physically not allowing me to go anywhere without them," Duritskaya said, referring to law enforcement officials. "They have explained to me that this is for security reasons."

QUESTIONED WITHOUT LAWYER

Flowers and a portrait of Boris Nemtsov, a charismatic Russian opposition leader and sharp critic of …
Nemtsov, an opposition politician whose murder has deepened a divide between liberals and Putin supporters, will be buried on Tuesday at the Troekurovskoye cemetery in western Moscow, far from where Russia's top politicians are usually buried.

"I cannot go out. Most likely I will not go," Duritskaya said when asked if she would attend. She said she was now staying at a friend's apartment in Moscow.

Investigators had questioned her several times, gone through her belongings and taken data from her mobile phones. She said she was initially questioned for several hours without a lawyer or representative from the Ukrainian embassy.

Nemtsov had criticized Putin's annexation of Crimea and his support for pro-Russian separatists in the east of Ukraine. He and Duritskaya had been dating for three years, she said.

The investigators say they are following several lines of inquiry and have come up with a number of possible motives. One is that Nemtsov may have been the victim of a jealous former lover, a version Duritskaya ruled out.

"I don't think anything. I cannot think at the moment. I don't know who did it," she said.

Original post found here: http://news.yahoo.com/nemtsovs-shaken-girlfriend-says-she-didnt-see-killer-150301641.html

Car Thief Throws a Brick, Mercedes Throws it Back




They say that people who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones. We’ll extend that warning to anyone within the vicinity of a Mercedes-Benz, thanks to this face-palmy closed circuit TV footage taken from outside an Irish pub.

According to the Irish Examiner, pub owner Gerry Brady and his business partner left work late one night to find a man passed out in the road next to his partner’s Mercedes E-Class Coupe. When he came to, the man was adamant that neither of the two call the police or an ambulance. Noticing the various damage to his partner’s car, Brady called the cops and reviewed his security footage to see what happened. Take a look.

After pelting the Mercedes’ windows with a few smaller stones, the thief then graduates to a large brick, but it’s quite obvious this Mercedes just isn’t giving up without a fight. The hurled brick bounces off the Mercedes and collides with the would-be crook’s face – knocking him out cold. His new nickname a la the Internet? ‘The Thick with a Brick.’

Now that’s what you call ‘karma’…or maybe it’s ‘car-ma’. Looking to reduce car thievery in your area? We have a simple solution. Take away all the rocks and pebbles in your neighborhood. Or better yet, just buy a Mercedes.

Original post found here: http://news.boldride.com/2015/02/car-thief-throws-a-brick-mercedes-throws-it-back/71464/

Netanyahu takes fight against Obama's Iran plan to Congress

Netanyahu takes fight against Obama's Iran plan to Congress

Washington (AFP) - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu goes to Capitol Hill on Tuesday for another round in an increasingly heated battle with the White House over Iran's nuclear ambitions.

In a landmark speech to Congress, Netanyahu will seek to mobilise lawmakers to oppose an emerging deal with Tehran which is backed by President Barack Obama.

Obama on Monday lashed out at his nemesis, pointing to Netanyahu's attacks on a previous interim US-Iran deal that paved the way for this week's ongoing talks in Switzerland.

"Netanyahu made all sorts of claims," he told Reuters.

"This was going to be a terrible deal," he went on. "This was going to result in Iran getting $50 billion worth of relief. Iran would not abide by the agreement. None of that has come true."

Netanyahu aides say that in his address he will present information proving that the shape of the deal being discussed in Switzerland this week presents grave danger.


A man holds a sign outside the Washington Convention Center where Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Ne …

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf warned Monday that if the details came from US briefings to Israel, revealing them could mean there would be no more.

"We've continuously provided detailed classified briefings to Israeli officials to keep them updated and to provide context," she said.

"Any release of any kind of information like that would, of course, betray that trust."

"We want to keep talking in these settings, of course, but that would be a problem."

Netanyahu believes that in the talks with Iran the so-called P5+1 group is verging on striking a deal that will ease international sanctions without the ironclad safeguards the Jewish state says are essential to deny Tehran a nuclear bomb.


An Anti-Zionist ultra-orthodox Jew of the Naturei Kartra movement holds a Palestinian and American f …

The US administration says that is just not true.

"This president has made clear that he's not going to sign a bad deal," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said on Monday.

- Power: No nuclear arms for Iran -

Samantha Power, Washington's ambassador to the United Nations, weighed into the fight on Monday when she addressed 16,000 pro-Israel activists in the US capital.

"The United States of America will not allow Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon, period," she said. Taking the podium shortly after Power, Netanyahu remained unswerving in his opposition to Obama's policy.


US President Barack Obama makes a statement to the press after a meeting in the Roosevelt Room of th …

"The purpose of my address to Congress tomorrow is to speak up about a potential deal with Iran that could threaten the survival of Israel," he said.

"My speech is not intended to show any disrespect to President Obama," he told the lobby group AIPAC's annual conference.

"Israel and the United States agree that Iran shouldn't have nuclear weapons. But we disagree on the best way to prevent them from developing those weapons."

The row is not only about the core issues but also about the way Netanyahu and US Republicans are waging the battle.

He was invited by Speaker of the House John Boehner, a Republican, and he accepted with neither party informing the White House.


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the American Israel Public Affairs Committee in …

Netanyahu himself is running for a third consecutive term -- which would be a fourth overall -- in an Israeli election on March 17.

"Our commitments to our partnership with Israel are bedrock commitments rooted in shared fundamental values cemented through decades of bipartisan reinforcement," Power said.

"This partnership should never be politicised."

The Israeli leader's lobbying expedition to Washington came as US Secretary of State John Kerry was in Switzerland for talks with his Iranian counterpart on what would be an historic deal.

But Netanyahu denied that his action had harmed the traditionally close US-Israeli alliance.

"Reports of the demise of the Israeli-US relations are not only premature, they're just wrong."

Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif met in a lakeside hotel for a series of sessions which are scheduled to stretch into Wednesday afternoon.

The pace of the negotiations meant to rein in Iran's suspected nuclear arms program in exchange for sanctions relief has gathered pace as a March 31 deadline nears.

Mark Heller, a political analyst at Israel's Institute for National Security Studies says that after years of warning about the danger of a nuclear-armed Iran, it is hard to imagine what new angle Netanyahu will pursue on Tuesday.

"He's been over this ground before many times and expectations have been built up to the point where if he doesn't come up with something truly explosive, it's going to be a big let down," he told AFP.

"I think he's going to have to pull some kind of rabbit out of the hat and reveal some information that's not out there in the public domain; otherwise he'll just be preaching to the converted."

Original post found here: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-pm-netanyahu-takes-off-historic-us-mission-132110917.html

02 March 2015

Spacewalking astronauts finish extensive, tricky cable job

Spacewalking astronauts finish extensive

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Spacewalking astronauts successfully completed a three-day cable job outside the International Space Station on Sunday, routing several-hundred feet of power and data lines for new crew capsules commissioned by NASA.

It was the third spacewalk in just over a week for Americans Terry Virts and Butch Wilmore, and the quickest succession of spacewalks since NASA's former shuttle days.
The advance work was needed for the manned spacecraft under development by Boeing and SpaceX. A pair of docking ports will fly up later this year, followed by the capsules themselves, with astronauts aboard, in 2017.
Once safely back inside, Virts reported a bit of water in his helmet again for the second time in as many spacewalks. He stressed it was "not a big deal" and said there was no need to hurry out of his suit.
Virts and Wilmore installed two sets of antennas Sunday, as well as 400 feet of cable for this new communication system. They unreeled 364 feet of cable on Feb. 21 and last Wednesday.
It was complicated, hand-intensive work, yet the astronauts managed to wrap up more than an hour early Sunday, for a 5 ½-hour spacewalk. Their three outings spanned 19 hours.
"You guys have done an outstanding job," Mission Control radioed, "even for two shuttle pilots."
Sunday's 260-mile-high action unfolded 50 years to the month of the world's first spacewalk.
Soviet Alexei Leonov floated out into the vacuum of space on March 18, 1965, beating America's first spacewalker, Gemini 4's Edward White II, by just 2 1/2 months. Leonov is now 80; White died in the Apollo 1 fire on the launch pad in 1967.
"It's amazing ... to see how far we've come from the very first steps outside," Virts said.
On Sunday — just like Wednesday — a little water got into Virts' helmet once he was back in the air lock and the chamber was being repressurized.
Virts said it seemed to be about the same amount of water, maybe slightly more, but dried quickly. He didn't need any towels this time when his helmet came off.
"I couldn't feel it on my skin. I could just see the thin film on the visor," he told Mission Control.
Engineers concluded last week it was the result of condensation during the repressurization of the air lock, and a safe and well understood circumstance that had occurred several times before with the same spacesuit.
Virts was never in danger either day, according to NASA, and no water leaked into his helmet while he was outdoors.
Wilmore's much newer suit functioned perfectly during the first two spacewalks, but on Sunday morning, a pressure sensor briefly malfunctioned before he floated out. A mechanical gauge, however, was operating fine. Mission Control instructed Wilmore to pay extra attention to how his suit was feeling.
To save money and stop being so reliant on the Russian Space Agency, NASA has hired Boeing and SpaceX to develop spacecraft capable of transporting astronauts to the space station. The two contracts are worth nearly $7 billion. SpaceX already is delivering cargo under a separate agreement with NASA.
NASA expects to buy Russian Soyuz seats for its astronauts through 2018 in case the two companies miss their promised 2017 launch deadline.
As many as four more U.S. spacewalks will be conducted this year — beginning this summer — to make way for the Boeing and SpaceX capsules.

Ice age emperor penguins hit hard by the cold : study

Ice age emperor penguins hit hard by the cold

Sydney (AFP) - Antarctica's Ross Sea has been a rare safe haven for emperor penguins for thousands of years, even when temperatures were too harsh for their liking, a study released Monday suggests.
Researchers looking at how climatic changes have affected the highly cold-adapted penguin -- the tallest and heaviest of all penguin species -- over the last 30,000 years suggest that only three populations survived the last ice age.
Conditions were so severe that the number of emperor penguins on the frozen continent were seven-times less than they are today and in many fewer locations, said joint lead researcher Jane Younger.
"We hadn't really thought about the fact that it would be too cold for them in the past," Younger, a PhD student at the University of Tasmania, told AFP.
"They live through life in minus 30 degrees Celsius (-22 Fahrenheit) now so they are pretty cold adapted."
By examining the genetic diversity of modern and ancient penguin populations, scientists from the universities of Tasmania, Southampton and Oxford in Britain, and the Australian Antarctic Division were able to estimate their numbers over time.
They found that numbers began increasing over the last 12,000 years when temperatures rose by an average of about 15 degrees Celsius and as the amount of sea ice around Antarctica began to reduce.
Younger said the warmer temperatures likely gave penguin chicks a better chance of surviving the winter -- when temperatures would have dropped to minus 45 degrees Celsius.
A reduction in sea ice would have allowed them easier access to the open ocean to feed.
"We were actually really surprised by this. What we had thought was that the ice age, because there was so much more sea ice which they need (to breed) and because they are so cold-adapted, that this would probably be a good thing for them," she said.
The researchers believe a population survived in the Ross Sea region because an area of ocean was always kept free of sea ice by wind and currents, according to the study published in Global Change Biology.
"The Ross Sea is probably really important," said Younger of the area on the Pacific Ocean side of Antarctica which is considered the world's most intact marine ecosystem.
"They have survived there for at least the last 30,000 years and even when the environment has been really unsuitable in a lot of other places the Ross Sea has been kind of a safe haven for them.
"The Ross Sea seems to come up time and time again as a really important part of the Antarctic ecosystem."

North Korea fires missiles in anger at South-US military drills


Seoul (AFP) - North Korea fired two missiles into the sea on Monday and vowed "merciless" retaliation as the US and South Korea kicked off joint military drills denounced by Pyongyang as recklessly confrontational.

The annual exercises always trigger a surge in military tensions and warlike rhetoric on the divided peninsula, and analysts saw the North's missile tests as a prelude to a concerted campaign of sabre rattling.
"If there is a particularly sharp escalation, we could see the North orchestrating some kind of clash on the maritime border," said Jeung Young-Tae, an analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification in Seoul.
The missile launches came with a stern warning from the nuclear-armed North Korean People's Army (KPA) that this year's military drills would bring the peninsula "towards the brink of war".
The South Korean defence ministry said the two Scud missiles were fired from the western port city of Nampo and fell into the sea off the east coast -- a distance of nearly 500 kilometres (310 miles).
UN resolutions prohibit any ballistic missile test by North Korea, and ministry spokesman Kim Min-Seok said Pyongyang appeared intent on triggering a "security crisis".
"We will respond sternly and strongly to any provocation," Kim told reporters.
The Japanese government said it had issued a strong protest to the North given the danger such missile launches posed to aviation and shipping.
Missile tests have long been a preferred North Korean method of expressing anger and displeasure with what it views as confrontational behaviour by the South and its allies.
- 'Brink of war' -
"The situation on the Korean peninsula is again inching close to the brink of a war," a spokesman for the KPA General Staff was quoted as saying Monday by the North's official KCNA news agency.
"The only means to cope with the aggression and war by the US imperialists and their followers is neither dialogue nor peace. They should be dealt with only by merciless strikes."
North Korea has threatened attacks, including nuclear strikes, on the US before, although it has never demonstrated a missile capability that would encompass the US mainland.
The largest element of the two South Korea-US drills that began Monday is Foal Eagle, an eight-week exercise involving air, ground and naval field training, with around 200,000 Korean and 3,700 US troops.
The other is a week-long, largely computer-simulated joint drill called Key Resolve.
Seoul and Washington insist the exercises are defence-based in nature, but they are regularly condemned by Pyongyang as provocative rehearsals for invasion.
In a statement later Monday, the North Korean Foreign Ministry labelled the start of the drills an act of "intolerable aggression" and said the North was ready to wage "any form of war" that the US chooses.
- Test moratorium offer -
North Korea has carried out three nuclear tests -- in 2006, 2009 and 2013.
In January, the North offered a moratorium on further tests if this year's joint drills were cancelled -- a proposal rejected by Washington as an "implicit threat" to carry out a fourth atomic detonation.
Analyst Jeung said Pyongyang was unlikely to conduct a fourth test just to protest against the exercises.
"Nuclear tests carry more significance than that," he said, noting that the North's testing schedule was primarily driven by technical development.
"On the other hand, there is the chance of a mid- or long-range missile test," Jeung told AFP.
"I would say that a demonstration that it could deliver a nuclear warhead would be more threatening to the world than an actual nuclear test," he added.
A new research report by US experts published last week estimated that North Korea could be on track to have an arsenal of 100 nuclear weapons by 2020.
In a further sign of rising tensions, the North Korean state-run website, Uriminzokkiri, warned Monday of a fierce response to any attempt by South Korean activists to float anti-Pyongyang leaflets across the border by balloon.
"The response might not just be a few shots of gunfire but cannons or missiles," the website said.

27 February 2015

Edge of space' tourism company World View just flew a balloon two times higher than we ever have before

Edge of space' tourism company World View just flew a balloon two times higher than we ever have before

World View World View will have Voyagers gliding peacefully along the edge of space for a two hour sailing like experience (rendering) If you've always wanted to glimpse Earth from near-space, there's hope!
A private space tourism company called World View wants to gently float people almost 20 miles above Earth's surface in balloon-toted capsules, and they recently made an important stride to reaching that goal.
On February 20, the company operated a parafoil — a massive, rectangular parachute — more than 19 miles above Earth's surface, twice the previous record, World View chief engineer Sebastian Padilla told Venture Beat.
World View plans on carrying passengers to such great heights by the end of 2016 — at a price of $75,000 per person.
Each trip will involve a 90 to 120-minute ascent, a few hours at maximum altitude with access to a bar and internet connection, and a descent of 30 minutes.
The passenger-carrying capsule is lifted by a massive helium balloon.
In order to return to the ground, the capsule is detached from the balloon and guided down by the parafoil alone.
The balloon itself also falls to Earth, where it is recovered by a World View ground team.



.World View space tourism process balloon
World View The record-breaking event on February 20 proved an important point in this last process of safely bringing passengers back from such great heights, Padilla explained to Venture Beat. During the test, the capsule ferried a scientific payload from Montana State University and the University of North Florida.
"Before yesterday, there was a question of whether you could even fly a parafoil from these altitudes," Padilla said, because of challenges posed by the low air pressure and cold temperatures at that altitude.
Taber MacCallum, the company's CTO, said in a press release: "The successful flight of the parafoil at this altitude brings us closer to flying private citizens safely to the edge of space."

25 February 2015

Amnesty urges halting arms to Israel, others guilty of 'mass atrocities'


An explosion and smoke are seen after Israeli strikes in Gaza City. (photo credit:REUTERS)
An explosion and smoke are seen after Israeli strikes in Gaza City. (photo credit:REUTERS)
Amnesty International called on the global community to stop war crimes by halting arms shipments to countries such as Iraq, Syria and Israel that could use them to commit “mass atrocities.”

“Huge arms shipments were delivered to Iraq, Israel, Russia, South Sudan and Syria in 2014 despite the very high likelihood that these weapons would be used against civilian populations trapped in conflict,” said Anna Neistat, Senior Director for Research at Amnesty International.

“When ISIS took control of large parts of Iraq, it found large arsenals, ripe for the picking. The irresponsible flow of weapons to human rights abusers must stop now,” said Anna Neistat.

Amnesty issued this call in its annual report, “the State of the World’s Human Rights,” which examined human rights abuses in 160 countries.

According to the 414-page report, Israel was one of 18 countries along with Syria, Iraq and Libya where war crimes were committed by the government or armed groups, said researcher Marek Marczynski of Amnesty International.

Armed groups committed abuses in at least 35 countries in 2014, more than 1 in 5 of the countries that Amnesty International investigated, the report said.

“2014 was a catastrophic year for millions caught up in violence. The global response to conflict and abuses by states and armed groups has been shameful and ineffective. As people suffered an escalation in barbarous attacks and repression, the international community has been found wanting,” said Salil Shetty, Secretary General of Amnesty International.

“The United Nations was established 70 years ago to ensure that we would never again see the horrors witnessed in the Second World War. We are now seeing violence on a mass scale and an enormous refugee crisis caused by that violence. There has been a singular failure to find workable solutions to the most pressing needs of our time,” Shetty said.

Amnesty had harsh words for the Syrian crisis, which in 2014, it said, “surpassed other such crises to become the world’s worst in terms of refugee flows and internally displaced people.

In the past four years, according to Amnesty, more than 200,000 people have died in Syria. Many of them were civilians who were killed by government forces. Around 4 million people from Syria are refugees in other countries More than 7.6 million are displaced inside Syria, Amnesty said.

The group also condemned ISIS, whose fighters “committed widespread war crimes, including ethnic cleansing of religious and ethnic minorities.”

Between January and October of last year, ISIS related violence caused the death of some 10,000 civilians and forcibly displaced almost 2 million people, Amnesty said.

The report gave the impression that Israel’s actions were akin to the other atrocities that occurred in the Middle East, by listing it with countries such as Syria and Iraq.

Amnesty mentioned briefly that Hamas had committed war crimes for indiscriminately firing rockets at Israel. But in its five page section on Israel and the territories it rarely referenced the actions of Hamas or the Palestinian Authority. It focused almost exclusively on Israeli actions particularly during the conflict with Hamas in the summer of 2014.

“The July assault on Gaza by Israeli forces caused the loss of 2,000 Palestinian lives. The great majority of those, 1,500 were civilians,” Amnesty said.

It added that Israel’s policy during that conflict was “marked by callous indifference and involved war crimes.“

The international community can and should do more to prevent war crimes, Amnesty said. It urged states to ratify and adhering to the Arms Trade Treaty, which prohibits the sale of arms to those who would use them for mass atrocities.

The London based organization also called on the five members of the UN Security Council - the US, China, Russia, Franc and the United Kingdom - to renounce their veto power to block resolutions against countries that have committed war crimes.

“This could be a game changer for the international community and the tools it has at its disposal to help protect civilian lives,” Shetty said.

“By renouncing their veto rights the five permanent members of the Security Council would give the UN more scope to take action to protect civilians when lives are at grave risk and send a powerful signal to perpetrators that the world will not sit idly by while mass atrocities take place,” said Shetty.

The Foreign Ministry had no comment on the report. But the group, NGO Monitor, charged that Amnesty call to halt arms sales and shipment to Israel denied the right of the Jewish State to self-defense.

The report did not mention the munitions that were brought to Israel to save the lives of its citizens such the Iron Dome anti-missile system, NGO Monitor said.

Nor did Amnesty condemn Hamas for its illegal and systematic placement of weapons in hospitals, mosques, and homes in Gaza, NGO Monitor charged.

“Unfortunately, many Amnesty officials and "researchers" are so deeply involved in promoting the narrative of Palestinian victimhood and Israeli guilt, and remain blind to the requirements of universal human rights,” NGO Monitor said.

Amnesty International called on the global community to stop war crimes by halting arms shipments to countries such as Iraq, Syria and Israel that could use them to commit “mass atrocities.”

“Huge arms shipments were delivered to Iraq, Israel, Russia, South Sudan and Syria in 2014 despite the very high likelihood that these weapons would be used against civilian populations trapped in conflict,” said Anna Neistat, Senior Director for Research at Amnesty International.

“When ISIS took control of large parts of Iraq, it found large arsenals, ripe for the picking. The irresponsible flow of weapons to human rights abusers must stop now,” said Anna Neistat.

Amnesty issued this call in its annual report, “the State of the World’s Human Rights,” which examined human rights abuses in 160 countries.

According to the 414-page report, Israel was one of 18 countries along with Syria, Iraq and Libya where war crimes were committed by the government or armed groups, said researcher Marek Marczynski of Amnesty International.

Armed groups committed abuses in at least 35 countries in 2014, more than 1 in 5 of the countries that Amnesty International investigated, the report said.

“2014 was a catastrophic year for millions caught up in violence. The global response to conflict and abuses by states and armed groups has been shameful and ineffective. As people suffered an escalation in barbarous attacks and repression, the international community has been found wanting,” said Salil Shetty, Secretary General of Amnesty International.

“The United Nations was established 70 years ago to ensure that we would never again see the horrors witnessed in the Second World War. We are now seeing violence on a mass scale and an enormous refugee crisis caused by that violence. There has been a singular failure to find workable solutions to the most pressing needs of our time,” Shetty said.

Amnesty had harsh words for the Syrian crisis, which in 2014, it said, “surpassed other such crises to become the world’s worst in terms of refugee flows and internally displaced people.

In the past four years, according to Amnesty, more than 200,000 people have died in Syria. Many of them were civilians who were killed by government forces. Around 4 million people from Syria are refugees in other countries More than 7.6 million are displaced inside Syria, Amnesty said.

The group also condemned ISIS, whose fighters “committed widespread war crimes, including ethnic cleansing of religious and ethnic minorities.”

Between January and October of last year, ISIS related violence caused the death of some 10,000 civilians and forcibly displaced almost 2 million people, Amnesty said.

The report gave the impression that Israel’s actions were akin to the other atrocities that occurred in the Middle East, by listing it with countries such as Syria and Iraq.

Amnesty mentioned briefly that Hamas had committed war crimes for indiscriminately firing rockets at Israel. But in its five page section on Israel and the territories it rarely referenced the actions of Hamas or the Palestinian Authority. It focused almost exclusively on Israeli actions particularly during the conflict with Hamas in the summer of 2014.

“The July assault on Gaza by Israeli forces caused the loss of 2,000 Palestinian lives. The great majority of those, 1,500 were civilians,” Amnesty said.

It added that Israel’s policy during that conflict was “marked by callous indifference and involved war crimes.“

The international community can and should do more to prevent war crimes, Amnesty said. It urged states to ratify and adhering to the Arms Trade Treaty, which prohibits the sale of arms to those who would use them for mass atrocities.

The London based organization also called on the five members of the UN Security Council - the US, China, Russia, Franc and the United Kingdom - to renounce their veto power to block resolutions against countries that have committed war crimes.

“This could be a game changer for the international community and the tools it has at its disposal to help protect civilian lives,” Shetty said.

“By renouncing their veto rights the five permanent members of the Security Council would give the UN more scope to take action to protect civilians when lives are at grave risk and send a powerful signal to perpetrators that the world will not sit idly by while mass atrocities take place,” said Shetty.

The Foreign Ministry had no comment on the report. But the group, NGO Monitor, charged that Amnesty call to halt arms sales and shipment to Israel denied the right of the Jewish State to self-defense.

The report did not mention the munitions that were brought to Israel to save the lives of its citizens such the Iron Dome anti-missile system, NGO Monitor said.

Nor did Amnesty condemn Hamas for its illegal and systematic placement of weapons in hospitals, mosques, and homes in Gaza, NGO Monitor charged.

“Unfortunately, many Amnesty officials and "researchers" are so deeply involved in promoting the narrative of Palestinian victimhood and Israeli guilt, and remain blind to the requirements of universal human rights,” NGO Monitor said.

Original post found here:http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Politics-And-Diplomacy/Amnesty-urges-halting-arms-sales-to-Israel-and-other-countries-that-commit-mass-atrocities-392137

France says Russia would face more sanctions if Mariupol attacked

 A woman walks past a burnt-out a store at a residential sector affected by shelling in Mariupol, a city on the Sea of Azov, eastern Ukraine February 3, 2015.

A woman walks past a burnt-out a store at a residential sector affected by shelling in Mariupol, a city on the Sea of Azov, eastern Ukraine February 3, 2015.

Moscow would face more EU sanctions if pro-Russia separatists attacked Ukraine's government-held port of Mariupol, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Wednesday.

"The problem today is particularly around Mariupol. We've told the Russians clearly that if there was a separatist attack in the direction of Mariupol things would be drastically altered, including in terms of sanctions," Fabius told France Info radio.

"At a European level the question of sanctions would be asked again," said Fabius, who hosted on Tuesday a meeting with his Russian, Ukrainian and German counterparts in which they renewed calls for an oft-breached ceasefire agreement to be respected.

Kiev fears Mariupol, with its 500,000 people, could be the next major rebel target, its foreign minister Pavlo Klimkin said after the Paris talks.

Its capture could open a corridor to the south, including the already annexed Crimean peninsula.

Rebel commander Eduard Basurin said on Tuesday that the rebels still aimed to gain control of the entire territory of east Ukraine's two rebellious provinces, including Mariupol, but would seek this through "negotiations with the Ukrainian side".

Basurin denied Kiev's assertions that there were serious clashes in villages near Mariupol, saying there had been provocations from the Ukrainian side but no major incidents. 
 

15 February 2015

ISIS spreading outside its base: NYT

isis

Washington- The Islamic State is expanding beyond its base in Syria and Iraq to establish militant affiliates in Afghanistan, Algeria, Egypt and Libya, American intelligence officials assert, raising the prospect of a new global war on terror, the New York Times reported Sunday.

Intelligence officials estimate that the group’s fighters number 20,000 to 31,500 in Syria and Iraq. There are less formal pledges of support from “probably at least a couple hundred extremists” in countries such as Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Yemen, according to an American counterterrorism official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss confidential information about the group.

Lt. Gen. Vincent R. Stewart, the director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, said in an assessment this month that the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, was “beginning to assemble a growing international footprint.” Nicholas Rasmussen, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center, echoed General Stewart’s analysis in testimony before Congress last week.

The sudden proliferation of Islamic State affiliates and loyalist fighters motivated the White House’s push to give Mr. Obama and his successor new authority to pursue the group wherever its followers emerge — just as he and President George W. Bush hunted Qaeda franchises outside the group’s headquarters, first in Afghanistan and then in Pakistan, for the past decade.

“Factions which were at one time part of Al Qaeda and its affiliates, as well as groups loyal to it or in some ways working in tandem with it, have moved on to what they see as more of a winning group,” said Steven Stalinsky, executive director of the Middle East Media Research Institute in Washington, which monitors Arabic-language news media and websites.

In Afghanistan last week, an American drone strike killed a former Taliban commander, Mullah Abdul Rauf Khadim, who had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State and had recently begun recruiting fighters. But that pledge seemed to indicate less a major expansion of the Islamic State than a deepening of internal divisions in the Taliban.

There is no indication that the Islamic State controls territory in Afghanistan, but it has signaled its interest in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and has reportedly sent envoys there to recruit. Western officials, especially in southern Europe, fear that the three Libyan “provinces” could evolve into bases for Islamic State fighters traveling across the Mediterranean, into Egypt or elsewhere in North Africa. Eastern Libya has already become a training ground for jihadists going to Syria or Iraq and a haven for Egyptian fighters staging attacks in the neighboring desert.

Kurds regain Syrian villages from Islamic State

BEIRUT


BEIRUT: Kurdish forces backed by US-led air strikes have regained control of at least 163 villages around the Syrian town of Kobani after driving back Islamic State militants in the past three weeks, a group monitoring the conflict said on Saturday.


The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that although the Kurds had recaptured many villages since winning back Kobani in late January, their progress had been slowed by renewed clashes to the west and southwest of the town, where Islamic State had redirected its fighters.


The battle for the predominately Kurdish town, known as Ayn al-Arab in Arabic, became a focal point for the US-led air campaign against the al Qaeda offshoot in Syria.


Islamic State controls large areas of northern and eastern Syria, including a strip of territory across the northern Aleppo countryside and a corridor stretching southeast from Raqqa province to the frontier with Iraq.

14 February 2015

Egypt says fate of Copts held in Libya unknown

Egypt
A family member of one of Egyptian Coptic Christian workers who have been kidnapped in the Libyan city of Sirte, sits crying in front of a banner with pictures of the workers, in Cairo, Feb. 13, 2015. (Reuters)


Egyptian Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab said on Friday that the fate of 21 Coptic Christians held hostage in neighboring Libya by militants affiliated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria group remains unknown.

Websites affiliated with ISIS on Thursday released photos allegedly for Egyptians hostages wearing orange jumpsuits. The group claimed the men had been captured to avenge what they say is the kidnapping of Muslim women by the Egyptian Coptic Church.

Mahlab said the Egyptian authorities are closely following up on the situation as per the instructions of President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, the semi-official Ahram Online website reported.

"Egyptian blood is precious to all of us," Mahlab told a press conference.

The premier also met with the families of the kidnaped to reassure them and update them with the latest developments.

The release of the undated pictures sparked fury among the families of the detainees, who traveled to Cairo from Egypt’s governorate of Minya to protest what they said was the government’s inaction.

“We want our kidnapped children back,” they shouted at a demonstration they held outside the Egyptian Journalists’ Syndicate, privately-owned Youm7 newspaper reported.

Mahlab pledged a monthly allowance to the families and a place to stay in until the issue is resolved, Ahram Online said.

A statement from the president’s office on Thursday said a special committee was “following the matter minute-by-minute.”

Calling the abducted men “Coptic crusaders,” the report says that Egyptian Christian women who converted to Islam were “tortured and murdered” by the Coptic Orthodox Church.

There are spats between some Coptic Christians and Muslims in Egypt over the allegations that the Orthodox Church in the country is not allowing Christian women to convert to Islam. However, the allegations were never made on an official level.

Venezuela to announce change in fuel policy 'soon'

Venezuela

Venezuela will announce a change of policy soon on gasoline, the finance minister said in an interview broadcast on Friday, signaling the OPEC nation is moving ahead with along-awaited hike in the world's cheapest fuel.

Gasoline is so heavily subsidized in Venezuela that one U.S. cent buys about 5 gallons, costing the government as much as $12 billion annually and spurring a lucrative business in smuggling fuel across the border to neighboring Colombia.

President Nicolas Maduro has suggested a fuel price hike as a means of improving state finances amid a tumble in crude prices, but has repeatedly balked at doing so because many Venezuelans view cheap fuel as a birthright.

"Soon there will be important announcements on the issue of gasoline," Marco said in an interview with regional television network Telesur. "A piece of candy cannot cost more than a litre of gasoline."

The announcement, slammed by opposition sympathisers via social media, came on the eve of the carnival holiday during which Venezuelans are often on vacation.

It also followed a 70 percent currency devaluation launched on Thursday.

Venezuela has for decades subsidised gasoline and diesel for local consumption. A gasoline price hike in 1989 helped trigger three days of rioting that left hundreds and perhaps thousands dead after.

Fuel prices were raised in 1997 without any violent protests, but late socialist leader Hugo Chavez kept prices low throughout a decade-long oil boom.

Years of double-digit inflation have steadily chipped away at price to the point that drivers routinely leave more in tips to gas station workers than they pay for fuel. (Reporting by Deisy Buitrago and Brian Ellsworth; Editing by Kim Coghill)

11 February 2015

Australian anti-terror police say imminent IS-linked attack thwarted

Australian anti-terror police

(Reuters) - Australian counter-terrorism police said on Wednesday they had thwarted an imminent attack linked to Islamic State after arresting two men in Sydney and seizing knives, a video and a flag associated with the militant group.
Australia, a staunch ally of the United States and its action against the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq, has been on heightened alert for attacks by home-grown Islamist radicals since last year.
It raised its national terror threat level to "high" for the first time in September, when hundreds of police conducted raids after receiving information that IS supporters planned to conduct a public beheading.
Police said the men, aged 24 and 25, were arrested after a raid on a home in a western Sydney suburb on Tuesday and had been charged with planning a terrorist act.
"When we did the search of the premises, a number of items were located, including a machete, a hunting knife, a home-made flag representing the proscribed terrorist organization IS, and also a video which depicted a man talking about carrying out an attack," New South Wales Deputy Police Commissioner Catherine Burn told reporters.
"We will allege that both of these men were preparing to do this act yesterday," she said.
The men were not known to police, Burn said.
"This is indicative of the threat that we now have to live with and which we are now having to deal with," she said.
Australia believes at least 70 of its citizens are fighting with the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq, backed by about 100 Australia-based "facilitators".
The government of Prime Minister Tony Abbott last year committed Australian aircraft and special forces to assist in the battle against IS in Iraq, introduced tough new laws on foreign fighters and gave security forces enhanced powers at home.
"Regrettably there are those out there, some living in our midst, who would do us harm but your government, at every level, will do whatever we humanly can to keep you safe," Abbott told reporters in rural New South Wales.
In December, two hostages were killed when policed stormed a central Sydney cafe to end a 17-hour siege. The gunman, Man Haron Monis, a self-styled sheik who harbored deep grievances against the Australian government and sought to align himself with the Islamic State group, was also killed.
(Editing by Dean Yates and Paul Tait)

Original post found here: http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/02/11/us-australia-security-police-idUSKBN0LE2V520150211

Obama and Xi discuss cyber issues, prepare for U.S. visit

 U.S. President Barack Obama speaks
U.S. President Barack Obama speaks about his plan for free community college education and middle class economics during a visit Ivy Tech Community College in Indianapolis, Indiana, February 6, 2015.
Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque
(Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama called for "swift work" by Beijing to narrow differences on cyber issues, the White House said, as the two sides started planning for Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit to Washington in September.
The world's two biggest economies have been trying to ease tensions amid mutual accusations of hacking and Internet theft.
In a phone call with Xi, Obama said he looked forward to welcoming him to Washington for a state visit later this year, the White House said in a statement on Tuesday.
Chinese state news agency Xinhua said on Wednesday that Xi would visit in September.
"During the conversation, both sides agreed to make full preparations to ensure the success of the trip," the report said.
The White House added: "The two leaders reaffirmed their commitment to coordinate closely on security challenges, including by jointly encouraging Iran to seize the historic opportunity presented by P5+1 negotiations."
The nuclear talks with the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France are aimed at clinching an accord that would ease Western concerns that Tehran could pursue a convert nuclear weapons program, in return for the lifting of sanctions that have ravaged the Iranian economy.
Negotiators have set a June 30 final deadline for an accord, and Western officials have said they aim to agree on the substance of that deal by March.
Xinhua also cited Xi as saying he "hopes the U.S. side can pay attention to China's concerns on the Taiwan and Tibet issues, and prevent China-U.S. relations from suffering unnecessary interference".
China has been angered in the past by U.S. weapons sales to Taiwan, which has been ruled separately since defeated Nationalist forces fled to the island at the end of a civil war in 1949.
Beijing also regularly warns against foreign support of exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, who it sees as a "splittist" seeking to establish an independent Tibet.
(Reporting by Peter Cooney in Washington, and Ben Blanchard and Michael Martina in BEIJING; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

Original news found here: http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/02/11/us-usa-china-idUSKBN0LF05X20150211

Britain withdraws embassy staff from Yemen over security concerns


Anti-Houthi protesters
Anti-Houthi protesters shout slogans against the dissolution of Yemen's parliament and the takeover by the armed Shi'ite Muslim Houthi group, during a rally in the southwestern city of Taiz, February 10, 2015.
Credit: Reuters/Mohamed al-Sayaghi

(Reuters) - Britain has withdrawn staff from its embassy in Yemen and temporarily suspended operations there over security concerns, the Foreign Office said on Wednesday, a day after the United States shut its embassy.
"The security situation in Yemen has continued to deteriorate over recent days," Minister for the Middle East Tobias Ellwood said in a statement.
State authority in Yemen has unraveled since a Shi'ite Muslim militia formally seized power last week and the Sunni al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) group has sworn to destroy it, stoking fears of sectarian civil war.
"Our Ambassador and diplomatic staff have left Yemen this morning and will return to the UK," Ellwood said. 
(Reporting by Andrew Osborn; editing by John Stonestreet)

Original news found here: http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/02/11/us-yemen-security-britain-idUSKBN0LF0FW20150211