Thursday, July 31, 2014

US supplies Israel with bombs amid Gaza blitz - Middle East - Al Jazeera English

US supplies Israel with bombs amid Gaza blitz - Middle East - Al Jazeera English


50% of Syrian rebels are jihadis: Study shows nearly half anti-Assad for...

Benghazi - Syria - Sources Tell Fox News That CIA Will Run Arms Program...

Who are the Syrian Rebels, Really?

Benghazi 'falls to al-Qaeda-linked rebels' - Middle East - Al Jazeera English

Benghazi 'falls to al-Qaeda-linked rebels' - Middle East - Al Jazeera English


Imam of Grand Kashgar Mosque Murdered in Xinjiang Violence

Imam of Grand Kashgar Mosque Murdered in Xinjiang Violence


Kerry says US excited about India’s new Prime Minister Modi - Khaleej Times

Kerry says US excited about India’s new Prime Minister Modi - Khaleej Times


Pacific leaders say climate will claim entire nations - Khaleej Times

Pacific leaders say climate will claim entire nations - Khaleej Times


Japan women world’s longest-lived, male tops 80 - Khaleej Times

Japan women world’s longest-lived, male tops 80 - Khaleej Times


Under fire and out of cash, UN stunned by Gaza crisis - Khaleej Times

Under fire and out of cash, UN stunned by Gaza crisis - Khaleej Times


19 swimmers drown off Pakistan beaches - Khaleej Times

19 swimmers drown off Pakistan beaches - Khaleej Times


Israel vows to crush Gaza tunnels, snubs United Nations - Khaleej Times

Israel vows to crush Gaza tunnels, snubs United Nations - Khaleej Times


Hamas Urges Human Sacrifice, New Campaign Reveals | United with Israel

Hamas Urges Human Sacrifice, New Campaign Reveals | United with Israel


Putin still welcome to G20 leaders summit: Australian PM


As reported in 'Peoples Daily Online': Putin still welcome to G20 leaders summit: Australian PM (Xinhua) 11:15, July 31, 2014 (Editor:Kong Defang、Yan Meng) SYDNEY, July 31 -- Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said on Thursday he would like Russian President Vladimir Putin to attend the upcoming G20 leaders summit in Australia despite the constant hampering of international investigators trying to reach the MH17 crash site. The suspected shooting down of the Malaysia Airlines plane by pro-Russian rebels has triggered calls for Putin to be banned from the Brisbane meeting in November. But Abbott believes it would be better Russia that attended the important international event. "I would like to be in a position for him to continue to attend, " he told local radio. "There will no doubt be a lot of water flow under the bridge between now and November." Australian Opposition Leader Bill Shorten said recently that Putin should be uninvited from the Brisbane G20 meeting because of his government's "reckless and stupid" actions leading up to the MH17 disaster. "For an outside nation to have supplied these Ukrainian rebels with this weaponry of war and murder is a very, very reckless and stupid act," he told reporters. Shorten said the Australian government should consider barring Putin from the G20 if the country did not support the MH17 investigation. "If the Russian Federation will not co-operate to help resolve and get to the heart of what has happened here, I don't think Australians would welcome them coming to the G20," he said.

French photographer‘s work ‘China 2050’ goes popular on Internet


Few of the Photo by French photographer Benoit Cezard as published in 'Peoples Daily Online' on the subject theme : French photographer‘s work ‘China 2050’ goes popular on Internet (People's Daily Online) 11:02, July 28, 2014 (Editor:Wang Xin、Yao Chun) Benoit Cezard, a French freelance photographer, came to China in 2006 and married a Chinese woman. Since then, he has been living in Wuhan, central China’s Hubei province. His conceptual photography work “China 2050” has become popular on Internet recently. This group of photos created in 2013 featured the contrast of China’s reality, as foreigners will become part of China’s labor forces in 2050, working as housekeeper, sanitation worker, carter, waiter, peddler, gardener and in other blue-collar jobs. Cezard’s inspiration came from the viewpoint that foreign people will swarm into the fast developing China and replace its migrant workers.

Gen Dalbir Singh Suhag takes over as new Army Chief

Beautiful models at Xinjiang Intl Automobile Exhibition


Few of the photographs as published in the 'Peoples Daily Online' on the event : Beautiful models at Xinjiang Intl Automobile Exhibition (People's Daily Online) 10:45, July 31, 2014 (Editor:Huang Jin、Zhang Qian) Photo taken on July 30 shows the beautiful model at Xinjiang International Automobile Exhibition in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. (Photo/CNS)

Eyewitnesses recount Pune landslide horror

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

16 die as soldiers rescue Cameroon’s Vice PM’s wife

16 die as soldiers rescue Cameroon’s Vice PM’s wife


US House to vote to sue President Obama

US House to vote to sue President Obama


Suicide bombers: Why females?

Suicide bombers: Why females?


INVESTIGATORS TURN BACK FROM MH17 SITE


As reported in 'The St. Petersburg Times' : INVESTIGATORS TURN BACK FROM MH17 SITE The Associated Press Published: July 30, 2014 (Issue # 1822) Self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic policemen guard a convoy carrying international forensic experts Monday.
Heavy fighting raged Monday around the Malaysia Airlines debris field, once again preventing an international police team charged with securing the site from even getting there. Government troops have stepped up their push to win back territory from pro-Russian separatists in fighting that the United Nations said Monday has killed more than 1,100 people in four months. The international delegation of Australian and Dutch police and forensic experts stopped Monday in Shakhtarsk, a town about 30 kilometers from the fields where the Boeing 777 was brought down. Sounds of regular shelling could be heard from Shakhtarsk and residents were seen fleeing town in cars. The mandate of the police team is to secure the currently rebel-controlled area so that comprehensive investigations can begin and any remaining bodies can be recovered. The second canceled site visit over two days has strained tempers among the observation team. “There’s a job to be done,” said Alexander Hug, the deputy head of a monitoring team from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. “We are sick and tired of being interrupted by gunfights, despite the fact that we have agreed that there should be a cease-fire.” The Defense Ministry says Ukrainian troops have entered Shakhtarsk, although checkpoints blocking the western entrance into town remain under rebel control. It also said fighting was taking place in Snizhne, which lies directly south of the crash site, and in other towns in the east. The self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic said on its official Twitter that fighting was ongoing in the village of Rozsypne, where some of the wreckage still lays strewn and uncollected. The head of the rebel’s military headquarters, Igor Ivanov, told Russian state news agency RIA-Novosti that the village had fallen into government hands, but that information could not immediately be confirmed. Ukraine has accused rebels of tampering with evidence at the plane crash site and trying to cover up their alleged role in bringing the Malaysia Airlines jet down with an anti-aircraft missile. Separatist officials have staunchly denied responsibility for shooting down the airliner and killing all 298 people onboard. A Ukrainian security spokesman said Monday that data from the recovered flight recorders shows Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 crashed due to a massive, explosive loss of pressure after being punctured multiple times by shrapnel. Andrei Lysenko said the plane suffered “massive explosive decompression” after it was hit by fragments he said came from a missile. The data recorders were sent to experts in Britain for examination. In their campaign to wrest control over more territory from separatist forces, Ukraine’s army has deployed a growing amount of heavy weaponry. Rebels have also been able to secure large quantities of powerful weapons, much of which the U.S. and Ukraine maintain is being supplied by Russia. Moscow dismisses those charges. While Russia and Ukraine trade accusations, the death toll has been mounting swiftly. At least eight civilians were killed by fighting and shelling in two cities held by separatist militants overnight Sunday, officials in the rebellion-wracked region said. Authorities in Luhansk said that five people were killed and 15 injured by overnight artillery strikes. Three were killed in Donetsk as a result of clashes, the city’s government said. Rebels accuse government troops of deploying artillery against residential areas. Authorities deny that charge, but also complain of insurgents using apartment blocks as firing positions. Meanwhile, a government-supported volunteer battalion said in a statement Monday that it lost 23 soldiers during fighting in a town called Lutuhyne, which is just south of Luhansk. The UN said in its report that rebel groups continue to “abduct, detain, torture and execute people kept as hostages in order to intimidate” the population in the east. It said rule of law had collapsed in the rebel-held areas and that 812 people have been abducted in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions since mid-April. It also reported heavy damage to electrical, water and sewage plants and estimated the costs of rebuilding at $750 million — money the government would have to find by cutting social programs. The U.S. State Department on Sunday released satellite images that it says back up its claims that rockets have been fired from Russia into eastern Ukraine and heavy artillery for separatists has also crossed the border. Russia’s Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov on Monday dismissed the images as fake. He said in a statement carried by the Russian news agencies that the satellite images released by the U.S. State Department cannot serve as proof because they lack precise locations and their resolution is too low. A four-page document released by the State Department appears to show blast marks from where rockets were launched and craters where they landed. Officials said the images, sourced from the U.S. Director of National Intelligence, show heavy weapons fired between July 21 and 26 — after the July 17 downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17. The images could not be independently verified.

PUTIN URGES DEFENSE MINISTRY TO WEAN ITSELF OFF FOREIGN SUPPLIERS


As reported in 'The St. Petersburg Times' : PUTIN URGES DEFENSE MINISTRY TO WEAN ITSELF OFF FOREIGN SUPPLIERS By Matthew Bodner The St. Petersburg Times Published: July 29, 2014 (Issue # 1821) Vladimir Putin at Monday’s meeting of the Commission for Military Technology Cooperation with Foreign States. Photo: Presidential Press Service / Kremlin.ru
Faced with impending EU sanctions on Russia's defense industry, President Vladimir Putin on Monday urged the Defense Ministry to redouble its efforts to wean the defense sector off foreign suppliers, Interfax reported. Russian firms currently make their own versions of just 58 of the 206 types of defense products that the country imports, but state development programs should add another 40 to their repertoire by 2020, said Alexander Shilov, deputy head of the Federal Space Agency, or Roscosmos. The remaining gap should be eliminated as soon as possible regardless of the cost, Putin said at a meeting of the Commission for Military Technology Cooperation with Foreign States. Putin added that the government had to focus on protecting the defense industry from the risk of foreign partners defaulting on contracts to supply Russia with equipment for political reasons, Putin added. The European Union on Friday reached an initial deal to impose economic sanctions on Russia over its alleged involvement in the Ukrainian conflict, one of the key measures being an embargo on arms sales to Moscow. The defense industry has already been waylaid by Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko's June decision to prohibit military-industrial cooperation with Russia amid the escalating crisis in Ukraine, blocking Russia from importing the Ukrainian equipment that its defense industry sorely needs. Roscosmos, which operates several spacecraft that rely on Ukrainian components, last week estimated that Russia needs to spend about $940 million through 2018 to offset losses from the cutting of Ukrainian ties, with most of the cash to be drawn from federal investment programs in the space and defense industries. Putin said Monday that this requirement will not be a burden on the federal budget, but rather a boon, as it is "fundamentally important" for Russia to exercise independence in the defense sphere. The issue of military-industrial cooperation has been a key feature of the standoff between Moscow and Kiev, as eastern Ukraine is littered with factories that export 70 percent of their products to Russia. However, Poroshenko's ban does not touch imports of dual-use products such as helicopter engines and rocket parts, which can be used for both civilian and military ends. Shortly after Poroshenko announced the ban, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin, who oversees Russia's space and defense sectors, said it would take about two years for the country to fully switch to domestic production.

India jails school staff over 94 fire deaths - Central & South Asia - Al Jazeera English

India jails school staff over 94 fire deaths - Central & South Asia - Al Jazeera English


Rival Libyan fighters agree to ceasefire - Middle East - Al Jazeera English

Rival Libyan fighters agree to ceasefire - Middle East - Al Jazeera English


Female suicide bomber kills six in Nigeria - Africa - Al Jazeera English

Female suicide bomber kills six in Nigeria - Africa - Al Jazeera English


Israeli fire kills refugees in Gaza UN school - Middle East - Al Jazeera English

Israeli fire kills refugees in Gaza UN school - Middle East - Al Jazeera English


10 killed, 150 trapped as hillock crashes on Maharashtra village - Khaleej Times

10 killed, 150 trapped as hillock crashes on Maharashtra village - Khaleej Times


Kerry arrives in India to reboot ties with Modi - Khaleej Times

Kerry arrives in India to reboot ties with Modi - Khaleej Times


Haryana Congress leader meets BJP chief Amit Shah

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Tibetan’s gene adapted to highlands


As reported in 'The Japan News' : Tibetan’s gene adapted to highlands 4:00 am, July 29, 2014 The Associated Press Chinese Tibetan ethnic herdsmen try to catch a yak for sale in Dengsheng in China’s southwest Sichuan Province. Tibetans can thank an extinct human relative for providing a gene that helps them adapt to the high altitude.
The Associated Press NEW YORK (AP)—Tibetans living on the “roof of the world” can thank an extinct human relative for providing a gene that helps them adapt to the high altitude, a study suggests. Past research has concluded that a particular gene helps people live in the thin air of the Tibetan plateau. Now scientists report that the Tibetan version of that gene is found in DNA from Denisovans, a poorly understood human relative more closely related to Neanderthals than modern people. Denisovans are known only from fossils in a Siberian cave that are dated to at least about 50,000 years ago. Some of their DNA has also been found in other modern populations, indicating they interbred with ancient members of today’s human race long ago. But the version of the high-altitude gene shared by Denisovans and Tibetans is found in virtually no other population today, researchers report in an article released by the journal Nature. That suggests that Denisovans or close relatives of theirs introduced the gene variant into the modern human species, but that it remained rare until some people started moving into the Tibetan plateau, said study main author Rasmus Nielsen of the University of California, Berkeley. At that point, it conferred a survival advantage and so spread through the Tibetan population, he said in an email. It’s not clear whether the Denisovans were also adapted to high altitudes, he said. The results show that as early members of today’s human species expanded outside of Africa and encountered new environments, they could call on their genetic legacies from other species, he said. That’s easier than waiting for a helpful genetic mutation to arise, he said. The Tibetan plateau rises above 4,000 meters in elevation. The genetic variant helps survival there by affecting the amount of oxygen the blood can carry when a person is in thin air. Apart from Tibetans, it is found very rarely in Han Chinese and also exists in Mongolians and Sherpas, who are also related to Tibetans and may have picked it up relatively recently, Nielsen said. The researchers found no trace of it outside East Asia. Todd Disotell, an anthropology professor at New York University who didn’t participate in the study, called the new work “one of the coolest scientific results I have seen in a while....This is a slam-dunk case.” David Reich, an expert on ancient DNA at Harvard Medical School, called the paper “important and exciting” in showing the gene came from an ancient human relative. But he said that relative could have been Neanderthals, who are also known to have contributed DNA to modern people. Nielsen said the Tibetan gene variant doesn’t match any known Neanderthal DNA, but Reich said maybe scientists just haven’t yet found DNA from a Neanderthal who carried it.

Militants destroy historic Iraq mosque


As reported in 'The Japan News' Militants destroy historic Iraq mosque 11:11 pm, July 28, 2014 The Associated Press People inspect the destroyed old Mosque of The Prophet Jirjis in central Mosul, Iraq, on Sunday.
The Associated Press BAGHDAD (AP)—Militants from the Islamic State group blew up a mosque and shrine dating back to the 14th century in Mosul on Sunday, local residents said, the latest casualty in a week that has seen a half dozen of the Iraqi city’s most revered holy places destroyed. Mosul residents said the Prophet Jirjis Mosque and Shrine was bombed and destroyed by the radical jihadist group. The complex was built over the Quraysh cemetery in Mosul in the late 14th century, and included a small shrine dedicated to Nabi Jerjis, the Prophet George. The Al-Qaida breakaway Islamic State group captured large swaths of land in western and northern Iraq, including Mosul.

Islamic Front Leader Calls ISIS Caliphate a Narcissistic Dream

Islamic Front Leader Calls ISIS Caliphate a Narcissistic Dream


Sunday, July 27, 2014

The last of Jordan's Ramadan singers - Middle East - Al Jazeera English

The last of Jordan's Ramadan singers - Middle East - Al Jazeera English


Ukraine fighting prevents crash site visit despite international deal - Khaleej Times

Ukraine fighting prevents crash site visit despite international deal - Khaleej Times


Boko Haram kidnaps wife of Cameroon’s vice-PM, kills at least three - Khaleej Times

Boko Haram kidnaps wife of Cameroon’s vice-PM, kills at least three - Khaleej Times


38 dead as Libyan army, rebels clash in Benghazi: Medics - Khaleej Times

38 dead as Libyan army, rebels clash in Benghazi: Medics - Khaleej Times


Miss Grand Myanmar Htar Htet Htet


Few beautiful photos of Miss Grand Myanmar Htar Htet Htet showcausing with Beautiful Evening Gowns these photos are from November 14, 2013 courtesy Myanmar Articles Links

Ebola virus can spread by air travel


As published in 'The Japan News' : Ebola virus can spread by air travel 7:17 pm, July 27, 2014 The Associated Press A man reads a local newspaper with the headline Ebola Virus kills Liberian in Lagos, in Lagos, Nigeria, on Saturday.
The Associated Press ABUJA (AP)—Nigerian health authorities raced to stop the spread of Ebola on Saturday after a man sick with one of the world’s deadliest diseases brought it by plane to Lagos, Africa’s largest city with 21 million people. The fact that the traveler from Liberia could board an international flight also raised new fears that other passengers could take the disease beyond Africa due to weak inspection of passengers and the fact that Ebola’s symptoms are similar to other diseases. Officials in the country of Togo, where the sick man’s flight had a stopover, also went on high alert after learning that Ebola could possibly have spread to a fifth country. Screening people as they enter the country may help slow the spread of the disease, but it is no guarantee Ebola won’t travel by airplane, according to Dr. Lance Plyler, who heads Ebola medical efforts in Liberia for aid organization Samaritan’s Purse. “Unfortunately the initial signs of Ebola imitate other diseases, like malaria or typhoid,” he said. The aid organization on Saturday said a U.S. doctor working with Ebola patients in Liberia had tested positive for the deadly virus. A Samaritan’s Purse news release said Dr. Kent Brantly was being treated at a hospital in Monrovia, the capital. Ebola already had caused some 672 deaths across a wide swath of West Africa before the Nigeria case was announced. It is the deadliest outbreak on record for Ebola, and now it threatens Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation. An outbreak in Lagos, Africa’s megacity where many live in cramped conditions, could be a major diisaster. “Lagos is completely different from other cities because we’re talking about millions of people,” said Plan International’s Disaster Response and Preparedness Head, Dr. Unni Krishnan. Nigerian newspapers describe the effort as a “scramble” to contain the threat after the Liberian arrived in Lagos and then died Friday.

U.N. envoy worried over Muslims in Myanmar camps


As reported in 'The Japan Times' : U.N. envoy worried over Muslims in Myanmar camps 9:02 pm, July 27, 2014 The Associated Press YANGON (AP)—The new U.N. human rights envoy for Myanmar expressed serious concern about the conditions in camps for more than 100,000 mostly minority Muslims displaced by violence led by Buddhist extremists, and warned that the country’s human rights situation may be deteriorating. Yanghee Lee spoke Saturday at the end of a 10-day fact-finding mission to Myanmar, her first in the capacity of U.N. rapporteur. She said Myanmar should be applauded for having come a long way since installing an elected government in 2011 after almost five decades of repressive military rule. “Yet, there are worrying signs of possible backtracking, which if unchecked could undermine Myanmar’s efforts to become a responsible member of the international community that respects and protects human rights,” she said. In recent months, the government has failed to make much progress in ending religious conflicts and ethnic tensions, and journalists have been coming under legal assault after an initial period of goodwill that saw the lifting of censorship. Facing growing international criticism, Myanmar announced this week it was allowing international aid organizations to return to a western region they were expelled from earlier this year after Buddhist mobs disrupted their work helping displaced Rohingya Muslims.