Showing posts with label World. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Brother kills sister for voting in Pakistan


An angry brother shot his elder sister dead because she voted in Pakistani local elections after he had forbidden her to do so, police said Wednesday.  The murder occurred in the town of Taxila 25 kilometres (15 miles) west of Islamabad on Tuesday, according to officials.


Danish Ali, 20, was furious because his sister Asifa Noreen, a 32-year old schoolteacher, had defied his instructions and cast her vote, local police official Naeem Abbas told AFP. “According to a report filed by the deceased’s father, Ali shot Noreen with his pistol and she died on the spot at their home,” Abbas said.


Police were still hunting for Ali, who is on the run. Women’s turnout is usually weak in the most conservative rural parts of Pakistan because of male perceptions that their place is in the home.


But incidents of women being killed for voting are rare, although hundreds of Pakistani women are murdered each year in cases of domestic violence or on the grounds of defending family “honour”.


The Aurat Foundation, a campaign group that works to improve the lives of women in Pakistan’s conservative and patriarchal society, says more than 3,000 women have been killed in such attacks since 2008.



Brother kills sister for voting in Pakistan

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Al Jazeera Journalists speak out against flotilla ordeal at hands of Israel

Two Al Jazeera journalists have spoken out after Israeli navy forces assaulted and abducted them while covering the ‘Freedom Flotilla III’ heading to Gaza.


Mohamed El Bakkali, Al Jazeera’s reporter accompanying the flotilla, said that the attack on the ship occurred in international waters, which is an act of piracy and a violation of international law.


El Bakkali said, “We were 100 km deep in international waters when the Israeli Navy intercepted us and demanded the ship to be stopped and handed over. Upon the captain’s rejection, the soldiers stormed the ship and assaulted some of whom were in the cockpit. After that, they led the ship to Ashdod where we were inspected and investigated, all of our belongings (mobiles, laptops and cards) were confiscated, and then we were jailed pending deportation.”


Ammar Hamdan, the Al Jazeera cameraman who documented the trip, said that the Israeli army abducted and detained them under the sun in the middle of the sea for nearly 12 hours. Hamdan also said that the Israeli authorities “lost their minds” after Al Jazeera’s footage reached the world from the vessel, especially the images of Israeli soldiers storming the ship. Hamdan added: “All of their attempts to make me reveal  the whereabouts of the footage failed, which prompted them to blackmail and search me more than five times. They reached a level of ugliness and depravity to photograph me naked. In the end, one of the officers lost his mind and shouted at his men claiming that I swallowed the camera memory cards, and I will get it out of my stomach after I get released”.


El Bakkali said that Israeli forces accused the journalists during the investigation of breaking the law. He also added that the Israeli authorities did not respect their right to call a lawyer during investigation, and refused his request to contact Al Jazeera’s bureau chief in Jerusalem.


Al Jazeera’s acting director general Mostefa Souag said:


“Israel has violated many international laws by hijacking and arresting journalists doing their job on a peaceful and unarmed flotilla while in international waters and heading to Gaza for humanitarian purposes. We call on the international community to work together to protect journalists who are doing their profession of covering stories. The release of our colleagues without returning all of their personal possessions and technical equipment is not enough. We together  must do whatever it takes to expose violations of journalists’ rights”.


This is not the first incident where Israel has boarded and taken over ships and captured journalists. In previous flotillas, and among other activists and journalists, Al Jazeera’s Othman Battiri, Jamal Elshayyal, Mohamed Vall, Ali Sabri, Andre Khalil, Wasimah bin Saleh and Abbas Nasser were all taken into custody by Israeli forces and then later released.


In this context, El Bakkali commented: “What happened to us is a violation of press freedom and an attempt to commit a crime without witnesses. However, this will not deter us from continuing our mission of reporting the truth with impartiality and integrity, regardless the sacrifices”. Hamdan commented on that saying: “Even if the price is what happened to me when they sentenced me in absentia prohibiting me from entering Occupied Palestine for ten years.”



Al Jazeera Journalists speak out against flotilla ordeal at hands of Israel

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Alleged spying: WikiLeaks calls for legal action against US

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange told French television Wednesday that the time had come for legal action over US snooping after leaked documents revealing Washington had spied on three French presidents sparked fresh outrage.


Speaking on TF1, the anti-secrecy campaigner urged France to go further than Germany: by launching a “parliamentary inquiry” into the foreign surveillance activities and refering “the matter to the prosecutor-general for prosecution”.


German prosecutors had carried out a probe into alleged tapping on Chancellor Angela Merkel’s phone, but later dropped the investigation due to a lack of hard evidence.


Assange also said other important revelations were coming.


“I think from a policy perspective what is to come is much more significant than what we have published so far,” he said.


“But now the question really for (President François) Hollande and the French leadership is what are the opportunities in their response to address this situation.”


France expressed anger earlier Wednesday after leaked documents labelled “top secret” appeared to reveal US spying on Hollande and his two predecessors, Nicolas Sarkozy and Jacques Chirac, between 2006 and 2012. The disclosures were published by WikiLeaks along with French newspaper Liberation and the Mediapart website.


France’s foreign minister summoned the US ambassador for a formal explanation in response, while Hollande spoke by phone by with US President Barack Obama, who gave fresh assurances that spying on European leaders had ended.


But Assange accused the US of playing “word games”, as it did after revelations of US eavedropping on Merkel.


“What does it matter if they say that they’re not going to spy on Hollande personally if they’re spying on everyone he talks to?” Assange asked.


“Every single one of these intercepted phone calls that we have published is Hollande talking to someone else, Sarkozy talking to someone else, one of the members of the French government. What does it matter if they say that they’re not going to spy on Hollande personally if they’re spying on everyone he talks to?”



Alleged spying: WikiLeaks calls for legal action against US

Sunday, June 14, 2015

South Africa bans Sudan president from leaving over arrest warrant

A South African court on Sunday issued a temporary ban on Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir leaving the country after the International Criminal Court called for him to be arrested at a summit in Johannesburg.


Bashir, who is wanted over alleged war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide in the Darfur conflict, mostly travels to countries that have not joined the ICC, but South Africa is a signatory of the court’s statutes.


The Pretoria High Court said in a statement it was “compelling respondents to prevent President Omar Al-Bashir from leaving the country until an order is made in this court”.


The hearing is set to take place later Sunday, the opening day of the African Union summit.


The ruling came after the Southern African Litigation Centre, a legal rights group, launched an urgent court application to force the authorities to arrest Bashir.


Bashir joined a group photograph of leaders at the summit despite the calls for his arrest.


Wearing a blue suit, he stood in the front row for the photograph along with South African host President Jacob Zuma and Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe, who is the chair of the 54-member group.


Mugabe has previously urged African leaders to pull out of the ICC, which critics accuse of targeting Africa.


The ICC said in a statement from its headquarters in The Hague that it “calls on South Africa… to spare no effort in ensuring the execution of the arrest warrants” against Bashir.


It said South Africa diplomats had been pressed last month to arrest Bashir if he attended the summit, but that they replied they faced “competing obligations” over the issue.


Bashir, 71, seized power in Sudan in an Islamist-backed coup in 1989.


“South Africa has an obligation to arrest him,” Johannesburg-based rights lawyer Gabriel Shumba told AFP.


“Failure to do so puts them in the same bracket as other African regimes who have no respect for human rights. It’s actually a test for South Africa.”


Darfur erupted into conflict in 2003 when insurgents mounted a campaign against Bashir’s government, complaining their region was politically and economically marginalised.


– ‘Grave crimes’ –


More than 300,000 people have been killed in the conflict and fighting has forced some 2.5 million people to flee their homes, the United Nations says.


Khartoum, however, disputes the figures, estimating the death toll at no more than 10,000.


“Allowing President al-Bashir into South Africa without arresting him would be a major stain on South Africa’s reputation for promoting justice for grave crimes,” said Elise Keppler of Human Rights Watch.


“South Africa’s legal obligations as an ICC member mean cooperating in al-Bashir’s arrest, not in his travel plans.”


The two days of discussions among the member states had been set to focus on the political unrest in Burundi and the migration crisis across the continent.


 



South Africa bans Sudan president from leaving over arrest warrant

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Kofi Annan supports Chancellor Merkel and G7 leaders’ statement on cutting fossil fuels and promoting renewable investments in Africa

GENEVA, Switzerland, June 9 – The Africa Progress Panel welcomes the commitment made by the G7 to make deep cuts in emissions and to phase out of fossil fuels by the end of the century.


In this year’s Africa Progress Report, “Power, People, Planet: Seizing Africa’s Energy and Climate Opportunities”, the Panel calls on the countries that emit the most to raise their level of ambition and implement their promises at the December climate summit in Paris. With its 2015 summit communique, the G7 has signalled its collective intention to do just that.


Governments in the major emitting countries must now place a stringent price on emissions of greenhouse gases by taxing them, instead of continuing effectively to subsidise them, for example by spending billions on subsidies for fossil-fuel exploration. The G7’s reaffirmation of its pledge to work for the elimination of inefficient fossil fuel subsidies is thus notable.


Africa is well positioned to play a leading role in the global low-carbon transition, and will be able to do so fast, if significant investments are made now. Much of this financing will need to come from rich nations. International climate financing is chronically underfunded and uncoordinated and must improve.


At the Financing Development Summit in Addis Ababa next month, G7 countries can set a clear timetable for the previously agreed US$100 billion in annual climate finance each year. At the G7 summit, leaders reaffirmed their strong commitment to mobilizing this financing. This should be used to generate clean power. Germany as the leader in clean energy globally, and current Chair of the G7, can spearhead this process. In that context, the Panel also warmly welcomes the G7 commitment to assist in the acceleration of access to renewal energy in Africa.


Kofi Annan, Chair of the Africa Progress Panel, said this after the release of the G7 communique:


“I applaud Chancellor Merkel’s leadership in steering the G7 to a firm agreement to decarbonise the global economy over the course of this century. The communique’s recommitment to phasing out fossil fuel subsidies is encouraging and an essential first step to ensuring that agreement is honoured. The G7 has also heard the call from Africa and Africans to massively scale up investment in renewable energy across our continent. The G7 pledge to mobilise resources to accelerate the creation of a low carbon energy system in the region could be “a game changer”; helping Africa grow and leapfrog to a sustainable low carbon future. This is good for Africa and the global fight against climate change.”


The latest G7 communique is a clear statement of ambition and leadership from the world’s richest countries, which the Africa Progress Panel fully supports. Future generations, however, will judge this generation of leaders not solely by the principles they set out in communiqués, but by their actions. The Panel looks forward to the timely honouring of these pledges.



Kofi Annan supports Chancellor Merkel and G7 leaders’ statement on cutting fossil fuels and promoting renewable investments in Africa

Sunday, May 31, 2015

John Kerry Breaks Leg While Riding Bicycle

The U.S. Secretary of State, John Kerry, was on Sunday in Geneva flown to a hospital with a broken leg following a bicycle accident in the French Alps.


The spokesperson at the U.S. mission in Geneva disclosed that the secretary had broken his leg.


Kerry’s Spokesperson, John Kirby, also confirmed that 71-year-old Mr. Kerry was taken by helicopter to Geneva University Hospital, where he was conscious and in stable condition with a leg injury.


He said the accident occurred in Scionzier, a town near the border with Switzerland, around 9.40 a.m.

Mr. Kirby said the secretary was attended to by a physician and paramedics travelling in his motorcade.


Mr. Kerry had conducted talks on Saturday in Geneva with Iranian Foreign Minister, Mohammad Zarif, as part of ongoing efforts to forge a comprehensive agreement about Tehran’s disputed nuclear programme ahead of a June 30 deadline.


He had been due to fly to Madrid later on Sunday to meet with Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and King Felipe VI. on Tuesday.


Mr. Kerry was also scheduled to travel to Paris to hold talks with counterparts from the countries participating in the military coalition targeting the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.


(dpa/NAN)



John Kerry Breaks Leg While Riding Bicycle

Monday, May 25, 2015

#freeajstaff campaign scoops major PR award

The campaign to secure the release of Peter Greste, Baher Mohamed, Mohamed Fahmy and Abdullah Elshamy has won a major PR Award. The SABRE Awards EMEA, organized by leading PR publication The Holmes Report, gave the #FreeAJStaff campaign a Gold Award for issues management at their annual ceremony in London.


There were 2,000 entries in this year’s competition, which “recognises Superior Achievement in Branding, Reputation and Engagement.” The campaigns were evaluated by a jury of more than 40 industry leaders.


The win comes shortly after the PRWeek Global Awards gave Al Jazeera ‘Highly Commended’ recognition in their Crisis & Issues category for the same campaign.



Al Jazeera journalist in Egyptian prison

Al Jazeera journalist in Prison


Both judging panels looked at how the situation went from being a story about journalists arrested in Egypt, to being the biggest press freedom campaign in the history of the news media. The campaign was also nominated by the Middle East PR Association earlier this year.



Mostefa Souag, acting director general of Al Jazeera Media Network, expressed his gratitude. “This recognition from the PR industry is extremely humbling. We were faced with a grave situation and this campaign rose to the challenge. This campaign has had everything: the cultivation of a hashtag that went viral; scores of events in all the continents of the world; extremely nimble and effective crisis communications; the gathering together of the entire news industry; and support from world leaders. All of this was in the noble cause of supporting press freedom.”


Abdulla AlNajjar, executive director of Global Brand and Communications, thanked everyone involved in the campaign. “Congratulations are due to the hundreds of thousands of people who have been involved in #FreeAJStaff from right around the world. What’s kept us going is the vision of securing freedom for our guys who sacrificed much for the sake of journalism and fulfilling the public’s right to know. A lot of stamina has been needed to keep this going. We will not stop until the right verdict has been reached and justice has also been served for those convicted in absentia.”


Elshamy was arrested by Egyptian forces in August 2013. He was released in June 2014 after he went on hunger strike to protest his imprisonment without charge.


Greste, Mohamed and Fahmy were arrested on 29 December 2013 and were incarcerated for more than 400 days. They were convicted in June 2014 after a trial that prompted outrage across the world. The verdict was thrown out on appeal, with Mohamed and Fahmy released on bail in February 2015 before a retrial which is ongoing. Greste was deported that same month on presidential order. The campaign for their release prompted Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to say he wished that the whole thing had not happened, and he promised to release the journalists if the courts didn’t.


#freeajstaff campaign scoops major PR award

Saturday, May 16, 2015

Egypt sentences Ex-President Mohamed Morsi to death

An Egypt court has sentenced former President Mohamed Morsi to death for a mass prison break in 2011.


The court ruled on Saturday that the sentencing of Morsi and 105 others will be referred to the Grand Mufti, the highest religious authority in Egypt, for confirmation.


Many of those sentenced were tried in absentia, including Yusuf al-Qaradawi, an influential Islamic scholar based in Qatar.


The court will pronounce its final decision on June 2.


Morsi, who was overthrown by the army in 2013 amid mass protests against his government, was spared the death sentence in the first of two trials that concluded on Thursday, in which the court advised death sentences for 16 defendants on espionage charges.



Egypt sentences Ex-President Mohamed Morsi to death

Boston bomber, Tsarnaev sentenced to death

A  US jury has decided Dzhokhar Tsarnaev should die for his role in the Boston marathon bombing in April 2013.


The sentence on Friday came after 14 hours of deliberations on whether Tsarnaev, who was a teenager when he carried out the attacks with his elder brother Tamerlan, should be imprisoned for the rest of his life or be executed.


The 21-year-old did not react when the sentence was read out, the Associated Press news agency reported.


Tsarnaev was convicted last month of all 30 federal charges against him, 17 of which carried the possibility of the death penalty.


Three people were killed and more than 260 were injured when two pressure-cooker bombs packed with shrapnel exploded near the marathon finish line on April 15, 2013. Dzhokar and Tamerlan also killed a Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer days later.


Tsarnaev’s lawyer, Judy Clarke, admitted from the beginning that he participated in the bombings, bluntly telling jurors in her opening statement: “It was him.”


But the defence sought to show that most of the blame for the attack fell on his older brother, who wanted to punish the US for its actions in Muslim countries. They said Dzhokhar was an impressionable 19-year-old who fell under the influence of a brother he admired.


Prosecutors portrayed Tsarnaev as an equal partner in the attack, saying he was so heartless he put a bomb behind a group of children, killing an 8-year-old boy.


Carmen Ortiz, prosecutor for Massachusetts, commended the jurors, saying the verdict was “fair and just.”


Boston Police Commissioner William Evans said that he hoped “the verdict will bring with it a significant level of comfort and solace to all hurt.”


“Regardless of how you feel about the death penalty, today was also about sending a message. And, the message sent is one that says terrorism in our city will not be tolerated,” Evans added.


“Our thoughts and prayers remain with families of (victims) Martin Richard, Krystle Campbell, Lingzi Lu and MIT Police Officer Sean Collier.”



Boston bomber, Tsarnaev sentenced to death

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Again 7.3 Earthquake Magnitude Hits Nepal (Video)

A deadly magnitude 7.3 earthquake has struck Nepal, two weeks after a devastating quake killed more than 8,000 people in the Himalayan nation, the USGS has reported.


Police said at least 13 people had been killed in the new quake, which the USGS initially reported as magnitude 7.1, before later upgrading it to magnitude 7.3.


The quake, which struck 18km southeast of Kodari, near the base camp for Mt Everest, was measured at a shallow depth of about 18km. A series of aftershocks – including one 6.3 magnitude tremor – later hit in the same area, the USGS reported.


A spokesman for the International Organization for Migration said four people were killed in Chautara, Nepal, after the earthquake destroyed several buildings there.


“The situation in Chautara is that several buildings in the town have collapsed,” spokesman Paul Dillon told the Reuters news agency by telephone from Kathmandu. “There are four fatalities.”


Emergency officials told Al Jazeera that three people had been killed in Kathmandu, three had been killed in Sindhupalchowk district, five were killed in Dolakha district and one person died in both Sarlahi and Dhanausha districts.


At least 300 people injured in the Kathmandu Valley, police said, and at least four buildings are believed to have collapsed in the east of Kathmandu.


Police issued a public warning, calling for people to stay in open areas and to send text messages instead of making calls, to prevent the network from becoming jammed.


‘Utter panic’


Al Jazeera’s Annette Ekin, reporting from Kathmandu, said that there was “utter panic” in the capital following the quake.


“The earth just started rolling. Everyone ran out onto the streets and all of the shops are now shuttered,” she said, adding that the quake seemed to last about 30 seconds.


A woman who works for a finance company in Thamel, in Kathmandu, told Al Jazeera that she had clung on to a pillar inside her building when the quake struck.


“I was screaming. It felt like the house was falling,” she said.


Al Jazeera’s Andrew Simmons, also reporting from Kathmandu, said the quake was so powerful that it made the building he was in “feel like jelly”.




Details later…



Again 7.3 Earthquake Magnitude Hits Nepal (Video)

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Indonesia executes four Nigerians, others for drug offences despite International pleas

Indonesian authorities on Tuesday executed four Nigerians and four others for drug-related offences despite pleas by the United Nations, the European Union, Amnesty International and the Federal Government.


Nigerians executed in Indonesia

Nigerians executed in Indonesia


The Nigerians were identified as Martin Anderson, 50; Silvester Nwolise, 47; Okwudili Oyatanze, 41, and Jamiu Abashin, 50.


The convicts were reportedly taken to the Nusakambangan Island where they were executed by firing squad on Tuesday evening.


According to a report by the UK Guardian, Abashin was said to be homeless in Bangkok when a new “friend” offered him $400 to take some clothes to Indonesia.


He was nabbed in Surabaya with 5.5kilogrammes of heroin and sentenced to death in 1999.


Abashin was said to have appealed for presidential clemency, claiming he never knew he was carrying the drugs. His plea was rejected.


Nwolise was sentenced to death in 2002 for smuggling a kilogramme of heroin into Indonesia.


Oyatanze was sentenced to death in 2002, after being found guilty of attempting to bring 2.5kg of heroin through Jakarta in capsules inside his stomach.


The United Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, had on Monday personally appealed to Indonesia to stop their execution.


The European Union had also berated Indonesia’s plans to execute the convicts.


The EU had noted that the death penalty was not a solution to the rise in drug-related crimes in the country.


The only woman among the convicted, Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso,   a Filipino, was spared in the last minute because a woman who reportedly tricked her into carrying drugs turned herself in.


The remains of the convicted would be taken to Jakarta, the Indonesia capital, on Tuesday according to reports.



Indonesia executes four Nigerians, others for drug offences despite International pleas

Xenophobic Violence: Why are the citizens not in their countries? – Zuma comes out from closet

President Jacob Zuma on Monday hit out at other African countries after South Africa faced a backlash over the wave of anti-foreigner attacks in the country.


While Zuma condemned the violence, saying immigrants contributed to the South African economy, he also questioned why so many had flocked to South Africa.


“As much as we can have a problem alleged to be xenophobic, our brother countries contributed to this,” he said.


“Why are the citizens not in their countries?”


Earlier in April, mobs in Johannesburg and in the port city of Durban targeted migrants, ransacking their homes and burning shops.


Seven people died and thousands were displaced.


South Africa faced a backlash over the attacks and regional relations have been strained, with Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique organising for some of their fearful citizens to return home.


Nigeria has also recalled its ambassador in Pretoria over the attacks while there have been widespread calls for South African products to be boycotted.


But Zuma went on a counter-offensive Monday, saying his government would strengthen measures to tackle illegal immigration.


“Some of them (immigrants) had very serious allegations against their own countries to explain why they are in South Africa,” Zuma said, speaking on Freedom Day that marks the country’s first democratic elections in 1994.


“In fact, some of them warned us that there is almost certainly another wave of refugees coming given the developments in their own countries.


“We have to address the underlying causes of the violence and tensions, which is the legacy of poverty, unemployment and inequality in our country and our continent and the competition for limited resources,” Zuma said.


Many South Africans have blamed the attacks on poverty and a severe jobs shortage in Africa’s second biggest economy. Undocumented immigrants are often accused of accepting work for less pay.


The spate of attacks has revived memories of xenophobic bloodshed in 2008, when 62 people were killed, tarnishing South Africa’s post-apartheid image as a “rainbow nation” of different groups living in harmony.


The South African army was deployed in some of the worst hit areas last week in a bid to crack down on the violence against immigrants.


 



Xenophobic Violence: Why are the citizens not in their countries? – Zuma comes out from closet

Sunday, April 26, 2015

Death toll from Nepal quake passes 2,200

Powerful aftershocks continued to convulse Nepal on Sunday, sending residents of Katmandu screaming into the streets again and again a day after a devastating quake killed more than 2,200 people and injured about 5,800.


Nepal Earthquake survivors

Death toll from Nepal quake passes 2,200


According to The New York Times,streets in parts of this city of about 1.2 million were impassable not so much from quake damage but because tens of thousands of people have taken up residence there. It was a strategy endorsed by a government entirely overwhelmed by the enormity of the challenge facing the country.


As the country’s prime minister, Sushil Koirala, rushed back to Katmandu from an official trip to Southeast Asia it became clear that the Nepalese authorities were ill-equipped to rescue those trapped and would have trouble maintaining adequate supplies of water, electricity and food.


“In my neighborhood, the police are conspicuous by their absence,” said Sridhar Khatri of the South Asia Center for Policy Studies in Katmandu. “There is not even a show of force to deter vandalism, which some reports say is on the rise.”


A deadly earthquake shook Nepal on Saturday near its capital, Katmandu, and set off avalanches around Mount Everest.


On Sunday, the government began setting up 16 relief stations across Katmandu and the rest of the country while rescue operations continued. The relief stations are expected to ease distribution of water, food and medicine, said Laxmi Prasad Dhakal, a Ministry of Home Affairs spokesman.


The Home Ministry said Sunday that 2,263 had been confirmed dead and 5,800 injured.


Thousands of Katmandu’s residents squatted on streets throughout the city either because their homes were destroyed or continued aftershocks, including one of magnitude 6.7, left them too afraid to go back inside. Other residents were camping out in schools, school playgrounds and government offices.


The government announced that schools would remain closed for at least five days and it pleaded with government workers to help in local rescue efforts in place of their usual jobs.


Stephen Groves, a Katmandu resident, said he was inspecting a building for cracks shortly after noon on Sunday when the biggest of many aftershocks hit, leading to terrified screams from those nearby.


“The whole time I was thinking if the building next to me was going to come down on top of me,” Mr. Groves said in an email. “People here are in a panic, and every aftershock contributes to that. They are not going indoors, they are staying in the roads and in open areas. Many are searching for family members.”


Groves said he went to a hospital in the capital on Saturday, where hordes of people were lying on the ground outside the structure, many with intravenous drips hooked up to their arms and shocked looks on their faces.


The city was awash with rumors that the worst aftershocks were yet to come and with fears of greater destruction in the countryside, large swaths of which remained unreachable by phone.


Subhash Ghimire, editor in chief of the Nepalese newspaper República, said he managed to reach his father in his hometown village of 3,000 near the epicenter in the district of Gorkha. “He said not a single house is left in our village, including our own house,” Mr. Ghimire said.


“We are hoping to find survivors in the rubble,” Colonel Lorado told reporters before leaving Israel. “The main mission is to save lives,” he added. About 600 Israelis are believed to be in Nepal, a popular destination for young backpackers after their compulsory army service.


The United States State Department said Sunday that three American citizens had died in the quake, as reported by Reuters.


On Mount Everest, helicopter rescue operations began Sunday morning to bring wounded climbers down off the mountain, where at least 18 climbers were killed and another 41 injured, making the earthquake the deadliest event in the mountain’s history. Aftershocks and small avalanches throughout the day Sunday continued to plague the nearly 800 people staying at the mountain base camp and at higher elevation camps.


After posting on Twitter that he was “fairly safe but stuck” at the base camp, a climber, Jim Davidson, then provided a more alarming update from Camp 1, which is above the base camp. “Just had our biggest aftershock yet here at C1 on Everest. Smaller than original quake but glacier shook & avalanches,” he said.


Nick Talbot, 39, was attempting to be the first person with cystic fibrosis to climb Mount Everest when a 100- to 200-yard wall of ice and snow came barreling toward him.


An earthquake with an estimated magnitude of 7.8 shook Nepal on Saturday near its capital, Katmandu, flattening sections of the city’s historic center.


“I ran away,” he said. “I thought, ‘There is no chance I can get away.’ I just had my socks on. It knocked me into the rocks. I got up and it knocked me over again.” he said. He was evacuated by helicopter Sunday afternoon. He returned without anything but the clothes he was wearing. All of his belongings, including his money, were buried by the avalanche.


“I’m sure there will have been many fatalities just because the scale of it,” he said.


Tulasi Prasad Gautam, director general of Nepal’s Tourism Department, said he feared that continued aftershocks had trapped more climbers. In addition to the dead and injured, nearly 25 climbers who had been en route Saturday to Camp 2 from Camp 1 are missing.


“Actually, the tents are still there for some 20 to 25 climbers who were heading towards Camp 2 in the course of climbing practice, but they are not in contact,” Gautam said.


In a blog post Sunday, Eric Simonson of International Mountain Guides said the news from the Everest base camp “was quite bleak,” and that the company’s encampment “has been turned into a triage center, and our big dining tents are now being used as hospital tents.”


“The tons and tons of falling ice going this vertical distance created a huge aerosol avalanche and accompanying air blast,” he wrote. “It is worth noting that over many expeditions we have never seen an avalanche from this area that was even remotely of this scale.”


Nepal’s existing political discord is likely to hamper rescue and rebuilding efforts. The government has been barely functional for more than a decade, with politicians of just about every stripe fighting over the scraps of the increasingly desperate economy.



Death toll from Nepal quake passes 2,200

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Ex-Egyptian President, Morsi jailed 20 years

An Egyptian court sentenced former president Mohammed Morsi to 20 years in prison on Tuesday in connection with the deaths of protesters during demonstrations against his rule in 2012. Morsi also faces charges in two other trials.


Morsi supporters attacked opposition protesters outside the presidential palace in December 2012, sparking clashes that killed at least 10 people.


Judge Ahmed Youssef dropped the murder charges against Morsi and said the sentence was instead linked to the “show of force” against protesters and unlawful detentions.


The Cairo Criminal Court issued the verdict as Morsi and other defendants in the case – mostly other Muslim Brotherhood leaders – stood in a soundproof glass cage in a makeshift courtroom at Egypt’s national police academy.


The country’s first freely elected president, Morsi took power after the 2011 overthrow of Hosni Mubarak. Morsi himself was ousted by the army in 2013 and put on trial as the new regime of Abdel Fattah al-Sisi launched a relentless crackdown on the moderate Islamist Muslim Brotherhood.


Hundreds of Brotherhood members have since been sentenced to death and thousands more jailed.


The Muslim Brotherhood issued a statement ahead of the verdict on Tuesday denouncing the judiciary – calling it a tool of repression – and calling for protests.


“The coup commander (Sisi) is exploiting the judiciary as a weapon in the battle against popular will and the democratic and revolutionary legitimacy represented by President Mohamed Morsi,” the statement said.


The Brotherhood called for “non-stop revolutionary marches and demonstrations” starting Tuesday in support of Morsi and demanding his reinstatement.


The Muslim Brotherhood, now blacklisted by Egypt as a “terrorist organisation”, has previously failed to mobilise large numbers for its rallies because of persistent fears amid a continuing crackdown.


Morsi also faces the possible death penalty in connection with two other trials, including one in which he is accused of leaking state secrets to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards. He is also accused of escaping from prison during the widespread protests that eventually ousted Mubarak.


Separate verdicts in those two cases are due on May 16.



Ex-Egyptian President, Morsi jailed 20 years

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Bloodbath of the leaders at UK general election?

The knives are already being sharpened for the leaders of Britain’s political parties, several of whom could see their careers brought to a brutal end if they fail to deliver at the May 7 election.


Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron, his Liberal Democrat deputy Nick Clegg, leader of the main opposition Labour party Ed Miliband, Nigel Farage of the anti-EU UK Independence Party — all run the risk of being kicked out.


“All four are fighting for their political life,” said Steven Fielding, professor of political history at Nottingham University.


In an unusually fragmented political landscape, it is no longer enough simply to win the most seats.


After years of dominance by the Conservatives and Labour, Westminster these days is more complicated than that.


David Cameron


He arguably has the most to lose. He became prime minister in 2010 after 13 years of Labour government but the Conservatives failed to win enough House of Commons seats to govern alone.


The result: a coalition government with the Liberal Democrats which was deeply unpopular with his party.


“If Cameron is not prime minister, he will go,” said Simon Hix of the London School of Economics (LSE).


He could even be pushed out if he has a chance of remaining prime minister but would have to form a new coalition or minority government to do so.


“Cameron, I think, is unpopular — and of course, he hasn’t won an election,” said Stephen Ingle, emeritus professor of politics at Stirling University.


“The Conservative party is always, always about winning. He had everything for him in 2010 and he didn’t win. So I don’t think he’s secure.”


Tony Travers of the LSE added: “The Conservatives are more ruthless than Labour in getting rid of their leaders.”


Cameron has already raised the prospect of his own departure in a few years, saying he would not seek a third term in office and naming three possible successors, including charismatic London Mayor Boris Johnson.


BoJo, as Johnson is nicknamed, “is willing to do anything to be the leader of the Conservative party and to be PM”, said Fielding.


The mayor, though, insists he has more chance of being “reincarnated as an olive”.


Ed Miliband


He became Labour leader in 2010 under circumstances which could be straight out of a Greek tragedy.


Miliband unexpectedly beat older brother David to the job — or “stabbed his own brother in the back”, in the words of Defence Secretary Michael Fallon this month.


But he has struggled to persuade the country and some in his own party that he is prime minister material.


“If he doesn’t win a majority and Labour is still not the largest party, many backbenchers will want to get rid of Ed Miliband. They will say he should have won this election after five years of austerity,” Hix said.


Ingle added: “I think the great majority of MPs would prefer his brother and they would have preferred his brother at the last leadership election.”


Nick Clegg


It all looked so promising for Clegg in 2010 — he led the Liberal Democrats into government for the first time and became Cameron’s deputy prime minister.


But “Cleggmania” did not last and the party’s support plummeted as it was forced into a series of awkward compromises in power.


He is at serious risk of losing his own House of Commons seat in Sheffield, northern England, which would effectively put him out of a job.


Even if he keeps that seat, “I would have thought that if the party does badly then he is almost certain to go,” said Ingle.


Whatever happens to Clegg, the Liberal Democrats could still end up propping up a minority Conservative or Labour government — or even forming a new coalition.


Nigel Farage


The beer and tobacco-loving eurosceptic has been clearer than any of the other leaders about his future.


If he fails to win the seat he is fighting in southeast England, Farage has promised to step down.


“Was I supposed to brief UKIP policy from the Westminster Arms (a pub near Parliament)? No — if I fail to win South Thanet, it is curtains for me,” he wrote in a book this year.


dh-kah/ar/hmn


 



Bloodbath of the leaders at UK general election?

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Police: Muslims threw 15 Nigerian, Ghanaian Christians overboard during Med voyage

Italy’s migration crisis took on a deadly new twist Thursday as police in Sicily reported that Muslim migrants had thrown 12 Christians overboard during a recent crossing from Libya, and aid groups said another 41 were feared drowned in a separate incident.


Palermo police said they had detained 15 people suspected in the high seas assault, which they learned of while interviewing tearful survivors from Nigeria and Ghana who had arrived in Palermo Wednesday morning after being rescued at sea.


The 15 were accused of multiple homicide aggravated by religious hatred, police said in a statement.


The survivors said they had boarded a rubber boat April 14 on the Libyan coast with 105 passengers aboard, part of the wave of migrants taking advantage of calm seas and warm weather to make the risky crossing from Libya, where most smuggling operations originate.


During the crossing, the migrants from Nigeria and Ghana — believed to be Christians — were threatened with being abandoned at sea by some 15 other passengers from the Ivory Coast, Senegal, Mali and Guinea Bissau.


The statement said the motive was that the victims “professed the Christian faith while the aggressors were Muslim.”


Earlier Thursday, the International Organization of Migration said four migrants who were picked up in recent days by the Italian Navy reported a shipwreck to aid workers after arriving in the Italian port of Trapani Thursday. They were among 580 migrants brought to the port on Thursday and said 41 others were believed to have died.


The IOM said the migrants — two Nigerians, a Ghanaian and one Nigerien — were found floating in the sea by a helicopter and were rescued by the Italian Naval ship Foscari. They had left Tripoli in Libya on Saturday and stayed adrift for four days. The location of the rescue was not immediately known.


The new tragedies come just days after aid agencies reported 400 presumed dead in the sinking of another ship near the Libyan coast. The deaths have raised calls for a more robust search and rescue of the seas between Libya and Europe amid a surge in migration between the Middle East and Africa toward Italy.


 


Culled from AP



Police: Muslims threw 15 Nigerian, Ghanaian Christians overboard during Med voyage

Friday, April 3, 2015

Romania’s richest man jailed for illegal financing presidential campaign

Romania’s richest main, Ioan Niculae, the billionaire head of an agro-industrial conglomerate, was sentenced Thursday to two and a half years in prison for his involvement in illegal financing of the 2009 presidential campaign.


Ioan NiculaeThe Bucharest appeal court also condemned a former official of the ruling Social Democrats as well as two businessmen, the Mediafax agency reported.


Gheorghe Bunea Stancu, former head of a Social Democrat affiliate in Braila, eastern Romania, was found to have used his influence to obtain a million euros ($1.09 million) from Niculae for illegal financing of an electoral campaign.


Niculae, owner of agrotech company Interagro asked in return for people to be appointed in the economy ministry who would support his business goals, in the event of an election win by Social Democrat candidate Mircea Geoana.


Geoana lost that presidential campaign to conservative Traian Basescu.


60-year-old Niculae, a keen hunter, is also at the centre of a scandal over low price public gas deliveries to private companies.


 



Romania’s richest man jailed for illegal financing presidential campaign

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Death Penalty 2014 in figures - Amnesty International

The renowned French thinker, Albert Camus once wrote, “Capital punishment is the most premeditated of murders” – words that are as significant today as when he originally penned them, nearly 60 years ago.


Over the last year, 2,466 death sentences were recorded in 55 countries around the world according to new figures from Amnesty International’s Death Sentences and Executions report – up 28% from 2013.


Military sentencing in Nigeria following Boko Haram attacks, and unfair mass trials in Egypt have been identified as significant contributors to these increases


Some of the worst offending countries aren’t even publishing accurate figures: of the 289 executions that Iran admitted to last year, a further 454 are believed to have taken place. China’s figures are a state secret, yet it’s estimated to have sentenced and executed more than all other countries combined.


But the tireless campaigning by Amnesty International and others is making a difference. Just 22 countries carried out executions in 2014 (compared to 41 two decades ago), and the total number of executions is down from 778 in 2013 to 607 last year



Death Penalty 2014 in figures - Amnesty International

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Co-pilot deliberately crashed Germanwings plane – French prosecutor

The co-pilot of a Germanwings flight that slammed into an Alpine mountainside “intentionally” sent the plane into its doomed descent, a French prosecutor has said.


Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin said on Thursday that the commander left the cockpit, presumably to go to the lavatory, and then was unable to regain access.


In the meantime, he said, co-pilot Andreas Lubitz manually and “intentionally” set the plane on the descent that drove it into the mountainside in the southern French Alps.


It was the co-pilot’s “intention to destroy this plane,” Robin said.


The information was pulled from the black box cockpit voice recorder, but Robin said the co-pilot did not say a word after the commanding pilot left the cockpit.


“It was absolute silence in the cockpit,” he said.


During the final minutes of the flight’s descent, pounding could be heard on the door as alarms sounded, he said.


Meanwhile, German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said that current information suggested that the co-pilot had no links to terrorism.


“According to the current state of knowledge and after comparing information that we have, he does not have a terrorist background,” he said.


In the German town of Montabaur, acquaintances said Lubitz was in his late twenties and showed no signs of depression when they saw him last fall as he renewed his glider pilot’s license.


“He was happy he had the job with Germanwings and he was doing well,” said a member of the glider club, Peter Ruecker, who watched him learn to fly. “He gave off a good feeling.”


Lubitz had obtained his glider pilot’s license as a teenager, and was accepted as a Lufthansa pilot trainee after finishing a tough German college preparatory school, Ruecker said. He described Lubitz as a “rather quiet” but friendly young man.



Co-pilot deliberately crashed Germanwings plane – French prosecutor

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

150 Killed as Germanwings Airliner Crashes

An Airbus A320 airliner has crashed in the French Alps between Barcelonnette and Digne, killing approximately 150 people on board, French aviation officials and police said.


According to BBC, the jet belongs to the German airline Germanwings, a subsidiary of Lufthansa. The plane, flight 4U 9525, had been en route from Barcelona to Duesseldorf with 144 passengers and six crew.


No one is expected to have survived, French President Francois Hollande said. He and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have spoken of their shock. “This is the hour in which we all feel deep sorrow,” Ms Merkel told reporters, adding that she was planning to travel to the crash site.


Speaking earlier, Hollande said the “conditions of the accident, which have not yet been clarified, lead us to think there are no survivors”. He described the crash as a tragedy, adding that it had taken place in an area that was hard to access.


Several German newspapers are reporting that the passengers included a German school class on its way back from an exchange trip. Sandrine Boisse, a tourism official from the ski resort of Pra Loup, told the BBC that she had heard a strange noise in the mountains at around 11:00 (10:00 GMT).


“At first we thought it was on the ski slopes, an avalanche, but it wasn’t the same noise,” she said. “I think it was the noise of when a plane goes very quickly down.” Spain’s King Felipe, on a state visit to France, thanked the French government for its help and said he was cancelling the rest of his visit.


Earlier reports, quoting the French interior ministry, said the plane had issued a distress call – but this has been contradicted by an aviation official quoted by the AFP news agency. Search-and-rescue teams are headed to the crash site at Meolans-Revels, said regional council head Eric Ciotti.


French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said he had sent Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve to the scene and a ministerial crisis cell had been set up to co-ordinate the incident.


The interior ministry said debris had been located at an altitude of 2,000m (6,500ft).


Spokesman Pierre-Henry Brandet told BFM TV that it would be “an extremely long and extremely difficult” search-and-rescue operation because of the remote location.


Lufthansa chief executive Carsten Spohr


tweeted: “We do not yet know what has happened to flight 4U 9525. My deepest sympathy goes to the families and friends of our passengers and crew. “If our fears are confirmed, this is a dark day for Lufthansa. We hope to find survivors.” The Airbus A320 is a single-aisle passenger jet popular for short and medium-haul flights.



150 Killed as Germanwings Airliner Crashes