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Sprint readies Nexus S 4G update with improved WiMAX performance, we go hands-on (video)

How would you feel about a little Android 2.3.5 (!) action on that Nexus S 4G of yours? What about some WiMAX performance improvements? You should be getting all that plus WiFi connectivity and speakerphone quality tweaks, along with TTY support on Monday July 25th, which is when Sprint is expected to begin rolling out an OTA update for Samsung’s pure Gingerbread handset. We were given an exclusive first look at the new software, and while it’s still being finalized, we tested it side-by-side with the original, and our results show a welcome increase in 4G speeds across the board. As you may remember, we observed repeatable WiMAX performance issues with the old software, so this update is excellent news indeed. The amount of improvement will likely depend on your locale, but even in signal-challenged San Francisco and New York we noticed the difference right away — so kudos to Google, Samsung, and Sprint for addressing this. We also experienced performance in-line with our Epic 4G — the benchmark device used for our initial testing with the previous firmware version. Take a look at our gallery below, and peek at our hands-on video after the break. Gallery: Sprint Nexus S 4G update Zach Honig contributed to this report. Continue reading Sprint readies Nexus S 4G update with improved WiMAX performance, we go hands-on (video) Sprint readies Nexus S 4G update with improved WiMAX performance, we go hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jul 2011 13:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Scramble to save whales stranded in Scottish Highlands

Pilot whales, thought to be of same pod which became stranded in Outer Hebrides in May, find themselves stuck in sea loch A rescue operation has been launched to save around 60 pilot whales which have become stranded in a sea loch in the Highlands. The Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, which has sent a team to the area near the Kyle of Durness, said there is a chance that the pod is the same one that became stranded in the Outer Hebrides in May, leaving two whales dead. The coastguard was alerted late on Friday morning to say that a pod of whales appeared to be in difficulty on the remote coastline. Aberdeen coastguard said it had two teams on site, with a third on its way. A spokesman said: “We got a call at about 11.45am from a member of one of our coastguard teams up there. At first it was thought there were 40 minke whales but now it is thought there is up to 60 long-finned pilot whales. They are stuck in rock-pools and the tide is receding.” British Divers Marine Life Rescue is also en route to the scene. The BDMLR said it had received reports of 15 pilot whales trapped in rock pools. “We are scrambling as many people there as possible,” a spokesman said. Danny Groves of the conservation society said the pod could be the same one involved in a stranding near South Uist in May. In that incident, 60 of the mammals swam into a narrow and rocky sea loch on the island’s coast prompting fears that dozens could be killed in a mass beaching. Two were found dead as the pod eventually left Loch Carnan, on the north-east corner of South Uist. At the time, officials in Ireland were warned to watch out for a mass stranding on their shores. Last year, 35 pilot whales that appeared to be in danger of beaching in Loch Carnan left South Uist intact but less than a week later, 33 of the pod were found dead on a deserted island off County Donegal. “It could well be (the same pod),” said Groves. “That’s the group mentality. The last time, back in May, we thought one or two may have been injured. They operate in a very social group. Rather than leave, the others would come in and follow the injured.” Groves said other possible reasons for stranding behaviour could be noise pollution from sonar or drilling. Until a whale died and a post-mortem was carried out, it was difficult to say what the cause might be. Whales Marine life Conservation Scotland Kirsty Scott guardian.co.uk

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Ministers send prosecutors new guidelines against families who send young girls abroad to undergo the brutal procedure New guidelines to target families that take young girls abroad to undergo female genital mutilation are being sent to prosecutors by the government. Ministers want to encourage more action against those who inflict the brutal procedure on their children and relatives amid concerns that the current approach serves as little deterrent. Female genital mutilation is an illegal procedure in the UK with those convicted risking 14 years’ imprisonment. The Female Genital Mutilation Act of 2003 also allows for the prosecution of British citizens who breach the provisions of the act and perform the procedure abroad. But while the law seems strict on paper, it seems to have limited effect in practice. Campaigners say 22,000 girls are at risk each year. However, MPs were this week told that there has yet to be a single conviction, despite 100 investigations being carried out over two years by the Met. By contrast the French authorities have successfully prosecuted in 100 cases. Fears are currently acute because the long school summer holidays are when many girls are flown to Africa, the Middle East and parts of the far east, oblivious to what has been planned for them. Outlining the new approach to the House of Commons, the Home Office minister Jeremy Wright said: “There are a number of things we can do. We should look not only to punish those who are responsible for committing these offences but to improve the guidance available to prosecutors so that they can prosecute more often. If there are difficulties with prosecuting, they might be to do with the types of information and understanding that crown prosecutors need to have and later this summer the CPS will therefore be issued with new guidelines to assist.” Advice compiled by the Home Office, Foreign Office, the education department and the health department will also be sent to teachers and GPs, the minister said. “We need to broaden awareness more generally and have sent out some 40,000 leaflets and 40,000 posters to schools, health services, charities and community groups, because wider society needs to understand what is happening,” he added. “We also need to assist victims, which we are doing with 15 specialist NHS clinics offering a range of services, including so-called reversal surgery. Women can go to those centres direct and do not need to be referred.” The minister was responding to Jane Ellison, the Tory MP for Battersea, who made an impassioned plea for the issue to be taken more seriously. She described genital mutilation as “a brutal crime perpetrated against those who are least able to protect themselves: little girls and young women. In every case, the health of the girl or woman is damaged, often irreparably. What is most shocking of all is that a great many of these criminal acts are perpetrated against girls aged 10 and under, right down to infants.” Ellison quoted figures from the Foundation for Women’s Health, Research and Development (Forward), which suggest that around 66,000 women and girls in England and Wales have already been subject to genital mutilation and well over 22,000 should be considered as “at risk”. “In some areas of London, about 5% of women giving birth present with signs of mutilation,” she told the house. “Headteachers have described to me happy and outgoing young girls who have returned from their summer holidays withdrawn and distressed. I struggle to understand why the systematic and brutal wounding of young girls is not considered a national scandal. I know that right honourable and honourable members would not tolerate a situation in which little British girls were taken abroad and returned missing their fingers. Likewise, we should not tolerate female genital mutilation.” Two weeks ago the Met and the charity Kids Taskforce launched a teaching aid for schools: a short documentary made by pupils in south London with assistance from journalists from ITN and one of the producers of Come Dine With Me. Sharon Doughty, the founder of Kids Taskforce, said they hope to raise awareness among teachers but also pupils themselves. “Any move towards a prosecution would be a fantastic development. We need a prosecution. It would send an important message.” Video: Watch Guardian Films’ investigation into the issue Women Human rights Children Crime Gender Middle East Africa Hugh Muir guardian.co.uk

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MSNBC’s Thomas Roberts: A GOP President Would ‘Extinguish’ Gays

Following the media's relentless coverage of the Bachmann clinic and their semi-humorous insinuations that Marcus Bachmann might be gay, MSNBC's Thomas Roberts, who is himself openly gay , told viewers today the Republican presidential contender would try to wipe out gays and lesbians. ” But you will replace [Obama] with a person who would extinguish you ,” Roberts protested Friday morning to Jimmy LaSalvia, executive director of GOProud, a gay conservative organization opposing Obama's reelection. [VIDEO BELOW THE FOLD. MP3 audio here .] Roberts's outburst came in response to

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Selena Gomez Birthday

Happy 19th Birthday Selena Marie Gomez Happy Birthday, Selena Gomez!!!!* {did it hurt when you fell from heaven?} MajsanBrandt says: Today it´s selena gomez birthday so I just want to say #happybirthdayselena

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Iran public execution outrages human rights groups

Footage shows ‘disturbing normality’ of public executions with convicts hanged from bridge in front of crowds, including children A disturbing video of the public execution of three men in Iran has sparked anger among human rights activists. The graphic video, released by Amnesty International on Thursday , showed guards standing on top of buses draping ropes around necks of three convicts sentenced to death by hanging after being convicted of rape. The men were later hanged from an overhead bridge after the vehicles drove away. The executions, which took place on 19 July in the western city of Kermanshah, home to Iran’s Kurd minority, attracted significant crowds, including children. Some of the crowds appear to be filming hangings by mobile phones. The video, which was supplied to Amnesty by an Iranian human rights activist, Fazel Hawramy from kurdishblogger.com , highlights the use of public executions, in which officials publicly hang convicts from a large crane or a high place in front of crowds. “What is so alarming about this video is the apparent normality of the event. Thousands of people are watching as if it were a football match. People are shouting and cheering. But what is most shocking is the participation of children in this barbaric ‘spectacle’,” Hawramy said. The release of the video follows human rights groups’ alarm alarm over the sharp escalation in capital punishment in Iran . Activists said two weeks ago that Iran has executed an average of almost two people a day in the first six months of this year. Iran insists the executions are related to serious crimes such as drug-trafficking although at least two political activists have been identified among those hanged in the first half of 2011. Amnesty said Iranian authorities have acknowledged public executions of at least 28 people so far this year. Speaking to the Guardian by phone from Kermanshah, the Iranian who filmed Amnesty’s video said: “I was there, the executions took place at the centre of the city in Azadi Square at 10 in the morning when people were busy with their businesses or shopping. “Authorities didn’t have any consideration for innocent children who were accompanying their parents and suddenly watched an execution which I would guess would be carved in their mind forever.” Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Amnesty International Middle East and North Africa deputy director, said: “Not only those executed, but all those who watch public executions, including, children, are brutalised and degraded by the experience. These public displays of killing perpetuate a culture of acceptance of violence and bloodlust, rather than a belief in justice.” She added: “It is deeply disturbing that despite a moratorium on public executions ordered in 2008, the Iranian authorities are once again resorting to this inhuman practice.” Amnesty said Kermanshah’s executions follow “several widely publicised gang rapes of women this year in Iran. In some cases, officials blamed the victims for failing to adhere to the official code on dress or gender segregation.” In criticism to Iran’s use of capital punishment as a solution to the country’s rape issue, Hadj Sahraoui said: “Executions after speedy, unfair trials are no solution to the extremely serious problem of rape in Iran, which feeds on the acceptance of violence against women at all levels of society. “The Iranian authorities should be aiming to combat this culture of violence rather than perpetuate it through these public displays of brutality.” Rebin Rahmani of HRANA, a human rights website, said 450 people in Kermanshah prison, convicted of charges such as rape or drug-trafficking, have been handed down death sentence and are currently awaiting execution. Iran Middle East Capital punishment Amnesty International Protest Human rights Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk

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At Least 1 Dead in Fiery NY Crash

A truck driver is dead and at least 20 people were hurt after a tractor-trailer collided with a tour bus heading from Canada to New York City. The crash in Waterloo, New York happened in the eastbound lanes of I-90. (July 22)

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Boehner: ‘there Is No Deal’

The leader of the House of Representatives, Speaker John Boehner, declared Friday that the House has “done its job” toward resolving the impasse over raising the US government’s debt limit and said it was time for the Senate to act. (July 22)

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The state of Georgia put to death a man named Andrew DeYoung last night in what is believed to be the first videotaped US execution since 1992—and the first ever taped execution involving lethal injection. DeYoung, 37, consented to the filming, which was ordered by a judge in connection…

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Syria, Libya and Middle East unrest – Friday 22 July 2011

• Gaddafi rules out talks with Libyan rebels in latest address • Amnesty: Saudi Arabia uses terror law to stifle dissent • Up to eight die as hundreds of thousands protest in Syria • Read the latest summary 8.30am: Welcome to Middle East Live. Both Syria and Libya appear locked in bloody stalemates, but they remain the places to watch. Syria • Around 10 people were killed in Homs on Thursday in continuing army siege, according to the Local Co-ordination Committees of Syria . Gunfire was most intense in the Bab al-Sibaa district of the city, the LCCS claimed in an email. It said there were around “10 martyrs” but their names could not be confirmed because communication to the city has been cut off. • Video from activists continues to document the violence. One of the latest unverified clips shows a burning shop in the Bab al-Sibaa district, which activists claim was shelled by an army tank. _ • The Syrian government claimed a police captain and civilian were killed in the Bab al-Sibaa district of the city.  The state news agency, Sana, also said two soldiers were killed when a military bus, travelling between Aleppo and Homs, was ambushed. It blamed the deaths on “armed terrorists”. • The pro-regime al-Watan newspaper says 13 security personnel were killed and another 100 were injured on Thursday in clashes with armed groups in Homs. Libya A UN envoy to Libya is drawing up “sequencing” proposals for Muammar Gaddafi to stand down , as the US and France have signalled that he could stay in Libya if he agreed. Ian Black, The Guardian’s Middle East editor writes: The idea that Gaddafi could remain in Libya after stepping down reflects a growing consensus that it would be hard to remove him from Tripoli without large-scale bloodshed – and impatience to conclude the Nato military action. • In his latest audio address Gaddafi ruled out talks with the rebels . Al-Jazeera quoted him saying: There will be no talks between me and them until Judgment Day. They need to talk with the Libyan people … and they will respond to them. • Libyan rebels claimed to have made significant advances with the capture of a general near Zlitan and the killing of Gaddafi’s intelligence chief. The apparent breakthroughs prompted them to boast that they could be in Tripoli within days. But the Libyan government disputes the claims and says it still controls the oil town of Brega. • The US is considering sending more predator drones to Libya and has reopened a debate over whether to arm the rebels , the LA Times reports. Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia is trying to stifle dissent through a new anti-terrorist law , Amnesty International warns. Leaked draft legislation proposes broadening the definition of terrorism to “harming the reputation of the state”. Amnesty tells the BBC that the law seeks to entrench some of the most repressive practices it has ever documented. Bahrain The US has denied reports that it is planning to withdraw its fifth fleet from Bahrain . A State Department Official told the Huffington Post: We are aware of these reports, which do not reflect the views of either the departments of State or Defence. Diplomatically, we regard Bahrain as an important partner, while the US Navy has a long-standing relationship of more than 60 years with Bahrain, which is a vital member of our combined maritime forces, supporting regional maritime security and stability. 9.21am: The Syrian opposition is so keen to play down reports of sectarian violence, that it has named today’s planned protests the Friday of National Unity, Lebanon’s Daily Star repots. Opposition dissident Ammar Abdulhamid underlines the point, in his latest blogpost, by claiming that Alawites and Sunnis have been brought closer together by the army crackdown in Homs. His report is difficult to verify. Is it wishful thinking or a truer picture of what’s happening Homs? Hundreds of stores belonging to Sunni and Christian merchants were looted by Shabbiha gangs as security forces looked on and did nothing to stop them. But security forces were quick to prevent an initial meeting of Sunni and Alawite religious figures meant to underline the strong ties that exist between the two communities in Homs. Still, leaders from both communities did get together and issued a statement condemning crackdown by security forces and the Shabbiha. If anything, then, the current crackdown seems to be driving the communities closer, and there is now more anger among local Alawites towards the Assads and their loyalists. Fissures within the Alawties communities are growing, and more are joining the revolution. Still the city is virtually in a “state of war,” as some local activists put it, but the fight is between the locals and the security forces, not but between different confessional groups. The situation is having an impact on the army, with dozens of offices reportedly defecting to join the revolution. 9.58am: Yemen claims to have to killed another top al-Qaida commander, Ayed Al Shabwani, in Abyan , but analyst are sceptical. Foreign Policy magazine says there are “serious doubts” about the claim . After all, this wouldn’t be the first time the Yemen government has claimed they got him. Some opposition groups and analysts have said the announcement was just an attempt by the government to show it had the upper hand in the fighting – when in reality it didn’t. They say the timing of the announcement – so soon after the air raid – was suspicious. 10.16am: A British airman involved in the Libya campaign died in a traffic accident in Italy , the Ministry of Defence has announced. The airman, who has not been named, was part of a logistics team resupplying UK forces involved in the Libyan bombing campaign. Associated Press is reporting the death as the first British casualty related to the Libya campaign . 10.42am: Claims that Alawite members of the Syrian security forces are defecting from the regime, appear to be backed up by new video clips. Video, which activists say originates from Homs, purports to shows three members of the notorious Shabbiha forces declaring allegiance to the opposition. My colleague Layth Qattan has been going through the clips. The first defector in this footage urges all Alawites to leave the “barbaric regime” of President al-Assad and join hands with the Syrian people. Another man in the clip, who presents his identity card to camera, describes seeing Syrian army troops fighting alongside Iranian annd Hizbollah fighters at a recent protest. He claims his superiors ordered security personnel to shoot protester, or be shot themselves. “Anyone, no matter who you are, must kill or be killed,” he says. A third apparent defector can be seen in this clip . _ 11.24am: Mahmoud Jibril, the Libyan rebels’ diplomatic chief, claims Gaddafi’s forces have boobytrapped oil fields , according to an AP story on USA Today. “Unfortunately, Brega is a big minefield right now,” Jibril told reporters after meeting with Spanish Foreign Minister Trinidad Jimenez. “We discovered that they planted mines all over the place. Even some oil establishments, some oil fields, have been full of bombs, explosives.” Brega was again targeted in the latest round of air strikes, according Nato’s most recent update [pdf] on the campaign. The latest targets hit have been added to the Guardian’s interactive on the Libya bombing campaign. _ 11.53am: There are reports of Friday protests across Syria backed up by a steady flow of YouTube clips, and for the first time a live stream of a huge demonstration in Kesweh, a suburb of Damascus. _ 12.33pm: Today’s protests in Syria are among some of the largest since the uprising began in March, activist claim. For the first time video of the demonstrations is live stream to the satellite channels al-Jazeera Arabic and al-Arabiya. My colleague, Layth Qattan, has been updating this Google map with the latest videos which purport to show today’s protests. Click on the icons to watch the clips. The map will be updated throughout the day. _ Peter Bouckaert, emergencies director of Human Rights Watch, is monitoring the situation in Syria, from Geneva. He emails this round-up. The protests are just starting. There has been some gunfire already in Deraa to disperse the crowds, and lots of security personnel are deployed across the country. There were extensive night rallies across Syria in support of Homs and many new mosques have joined the call to protest. It seems that the situation will be quite tense in the coming hours. It appears that both the crowds and the security presence is even greater than in the past weeks, so the momentum is continuing to grow. 1.50pm: Is this protest in Hama today the biggest demonstration yet in the Syrian uprising? _ 1.55pm: France has condemned the Syrian government for launching a reign of terror against the city of Homs, AP reports. The French foreign ministry said in a statement that it condemns “repression by the Syrian authorities, who continue … to arrest and kill their own population daily.” The ministry singled out the central city of Homs, saying dozens have been killed there in recent days. It says “terror reigns in Homs, surrounded by the Syrian army.” The ministry says “the army and other security forces will have to account for their actions.” 2.05pm: Al-Jazeera’s Rula Amin, reporting from Lebanon, says the Syrian authorities appear to have given up trying to stop the protests in some cities, while cracking down on unrest in others. In both the central city of Hama and Deir Ezzor, in the east, protesters have come out in huge numbers and there’s no sign of the security forces. More than 400,000 people gathered in Deir Ezzor, according to Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. In Hama, more footage has emerged of today’s vast demonstration. Another clip shows the scene from a similar angle , at the end of the footage the camera focuses on the Ba’ath party headquarters in the city, according to the commentary. In other cities there have been more grim videos of the violent crackdown. Footage from Aleppo showed a man drenched in blood being carried away by protesters. And in Qamishli on the border with Turkey, teargas was fired to break up a protest, activists claim. There has also been clashes between stone-throwing protesters and the police, according to this footage which features in EA World View’s video round-up . _ Reuters reports: Hundreds of police and militiamen loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad used batons to attack thousands of pro-democracy protesters in the country’s mainly Kurdish city of Qamishli on Friday, witnesses said. Police fired teargas to disperse protesters, injuring several people, witnesses added, in first major crackdown on Kurdish demonstrators reported since the start of the four-month uprising against Assad’s rule. The protesters shouted slogans demanding political freedoms, an end to discrimination against Syria’s Kurdish minority, witnesses told Reuters. 2.49pm: In the Jordanian capital Amman around 300 people staged an anti-government demonstration at which the US flag was burned, an AP story carried by the Washington Post reports. They demanded democratic reform and denounced US interference in the region , it said. About 300 protesters chanted, “America is the head of the snake,” as the flag burned at the protest in the capital, Amman. Most of the activists were from leftist and nationalist parties. They also demanded prime minister Marouf al-Bakhit step down and called for press freedom in response to police attacks on journalists and activists during a protest last week. Jordan’s King Abdullah II is a staunch US ally. 3.09pm: Al-Arabiya has a very back-of-an-envelope calculation about the numbers involved in today’s protests in Syria . 1.2 million Syrians protest in Deir Alzour and Hama : activists #Alarabiya Such numbers are impossible to verify, but there is a growing consensus that today’s protests have been the biggest so far in the uprising. 3.18pm: The Syrian government has dismissed reports of army defections. The state news agency Sana, quoted an information ministry source, as saying: This is a desperate attempt to undermine the reputation of our armed forces and their noble national message of defending the homeland and its stability and protecting the citizens’ security and safety. Sana has made no mention yet of today’s huge protests. As it out put the statement about defections, video emerged purporting to show military cadets marching with the protesters in Allepo. “The Syrian people are one,” they chant in this video clip. 3.29pm: Four activists were killed in today’s demonstrations and a fifth died of injuries from earlier unrest, activists claimed. The names of those of who died are provided in the following updates: •  Hama: Khaled Ali 29 years old martyred due to his injury on 07-05 His wife is pregnant. The funeral procession will start after a short while •  Aleppo suburbs: Falling of martyr Basel Farouq Mara’anazy due to random gun fire at a demonstration in A’azaz •  Idlib: Falling of martyr Mohammad Hussain Hameed, 35 years old , his brother got shot in a demonstration in Kafroomeh #syria •  Damascus suburbs: Falling of martyr Husam Harastani after shooting at a demonstration in Mleeha • Homs: Hussam Ratb Shaar from Khaldieh was martyred when security forces open heavy gunfire towards the protesters My colleague, Layth Qattan, has been tracking videos which purport to show violence at today’s protests. Click on the icons to see the clips. _ 3.51pm: Here’s a better video of those cadets marching with anti-government protesters in Aleppo , Syria’s second city. “We want the overthrow of the regime,” the trainee troops chant. _ 3.56pm: The death toll in Syria today has increased to eight , according to AFP. It quotes Abdel Karim Rihawi of the Syrian League for the Defence of Human Rights, as saying: “Two demonstrators were stabbed to death in front of the Amneh mosque in Aleppo by pro-regime militiamen who entered the compound and attacked” Footage from the mosque purports to show the moment when the security forces raided the Amneh mosque. _ 4.06pm: Protests are continuing in Egypt against the military government, Reuters reports. • Hundreds of people have refused to leave Cairo’s Tahrir Square since the sit-in began on July 8. “We are continuing the sit-in because the families of the martyrs have demands that have not been met yet,” said Shadi Ghazali Harb from the Youth Coalition. • In Alexandria, hundreds of demonstrators chanted “Oh Tantawi, make a decision, either you are with us or you will also be tried,” in reference to the head of the army Mohamad Hussain Tantawi. • But About 300 people held a separate rally in another part of Cairo in support of the military council, calling for “stability” and an end to protests in Egypt. • And Islamist groups, including the once-banned Muslim Brotherhood and Salafist groups who advocate adherence to early Islamic teachings, plan to hold a rally in Cairo on July 29 to press for a return to stability in Egypt. 4.14pm: Here’s a summary of today’s events. • Syria has witnessed what looked like the biggest demonstrations since the uprising began more than four months ago. The largest individual rallies took place in the central city of Hama and the eastern city of Deir Ezzor, where the security forces appear to have given up trying to suppress the unrest. Video footage appeared to show hundreds of thousands of people demonstrating in both cities, as footage of demonstrations across Syria continued to emerge. • In other Syrian cities, notably Aleppo, Idlib and the suburbs of Damascus, the brutal crackdown continued. Up to eight people died in today’s protests, activists claim. The French government accused the regime of Bashar al-Assad of unleashing a reign of terror on the city of Homs, where around 50 people were killed this week. • The Syrian government denied reports of army defections, as more video emerged claiming to show members of the security forces who defected in Homs. Army cadets marching against the government were also filmed in Aleppo today. • Demonstrations took place today in Egypt and Jordan . In Cairo protesters are refusing to end their sit-in of Tahrir square and continue to express frustration at the slow pace of reform from the military goverment. In Amman pro-democracy campaigners burned a US flag in protest at US interference. •  In his latest audio address, the Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi ruled out talks with the rebels. “There will be no talks between me and them until Judgment Day,” he said. Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Syria Bashar Al-Assad Libya Muammar Gaddafi Bahrain Saudi Arabia Nato Yemen Jordan Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk

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