More than 40 red pandas have moved into their new home in the Pu’er National Park in southwest China’s Yunnan Province, making the park the largest red panda breeding center in China. (June 2)
Continue reading …Yemen death toll rises as explosion hits Libyan rebel-held city of Benghazi 2.40pm: Russia is advising its citizens in Yemen to leave . A foreign ministry spokesman said: “The situation is escalating every hour, the tensions are not easing.” 2.35pm: Reports now from al-Jazeera that Sana’a aiport is closed and flights are being diverted to Aden. CNN correspondent Mohammed Jamjoom tweets that Yemen State TV is quoting official sources denying that there are any changes or delays. 1.50pm: Reuters now report that the airport in Sana’a has re-opened. Thousands of other people are also fleeing fighting in the Yemen capital by car, it said: “It felt as if the artillery shells were flying next to my head… My wife, my daughter were screaming. It was horrible,” resident Sadeq al-Lahbe said before leaving. “There is no electricity, no water and violent strikes shaking the house. Is this life?” 1.32pm: Yemen : The AFP news agency quotes medical staff as saying at least 15 people died overnight in the Al-Hasaba area of Sana’a, Sadiq al-Ahmar’s stronghold, among them a seven-year-old girl struck by a stray bullet. 12.49pm: According to rights campaigners in Syria , quoted by Reuters, security forces have killed 11 people today in the under-siege central town of Rastan. As ever, there is no way to independently verify this. 12.18pm: A brief return to Bahrain : I’ve been passed an email from the rights group Avaaz urging F1 teams to boycott the emirate’s Grand Prix if it is rescheduled following a meeting tomorrow . The race had been due to begin the 2011 season in March, but it was called off amid the quashing of pro-democracy protests. Azaaz said: F1 mustn’t give credibility to a pariah regime that is as brutal as Iran and Zimbabwe. If F1 decides to race in Bahrain, it will be on a par with the sporting tours that chose to play in apartheid South Africa in the 1980s. 12.06pm: Francis Matthew of the Gulf News highlights the role of Hamid al-Ahmar , the prominent Yemeni businessman and politician – and brother of Sadeq al-Ahmar, the tribal leader at the centre of the conflict – who turned against Saleh this week. (Our correspondent Tom Finn wrote about the family last week . The political initiative was seized this week by Hamid al-Ahmar, when he rebelled against Saleh. A businessman and politician, Ahmar holds an important position in the major Hashid confederation. His elder brother Sadiq al-Ahmar is the paramount chief of the Hashid confederation, and they are the sons of the late Shaikh Abdullah al-Ahmar, who was a major figure in Yemeni politics till his death in 2007, backed by substantial Saudi influence. A third brother, Hussain, commanded the Saudi-backed Hashid militia in the recent fighting in Sa’ada. Hamid al-Ahmar’s challenge will be viewed favourably by Saudi Arabia, which has had a close relationship with his family for decades. The Saudi leadership is the most concerned of all the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council) states that Yemen does not slip into chaos, and it will naturally back an alternative to Saleh based on northern leaders. And if Ahmar is dismissed as being just a businessman rather than a politician, his relative, General Ali Mohsin al-Ahmar is an effective military commander who has already rebelled against Saleh. But Matthew says the intervention of the Ahmar family is not necessarily a win for the pro-democracy opposition, who have rejected the idea of supporting a leadership bid from another member of the power elite They have promised to hold out for a peaceful transfer to a civilian authority. The activists are slowly developing their own management structure and deciding on mechanisms to nominate their leaders, but this was not sufficiently advanced to enable them to send observers to the GCC transition talks. But others who are not yet part of the action are the leaders from the south. When Yemen united in 1990, the president of South Yemen, Ali Salim al-Beidh, became vice-president of the united country. He despaired that Saleh would not listen to his concerns, and resigned to lead a breakaway movement when he declared the Democratic Republic of Yemen, which only lasted in the south from May to June 1994. Beidh is the leader of Al Harak, a party dedicated to a southern breakaway. The GCC sees Yemen as too important and too close to be allowed to fail. In the 1980s and 1990s, the Saudis ran massive grant programmes which they allowed to wither away after the border settlement in 2000. Now they are leading GCC efforts to find a political solution. They have reopened their links with northern political leaders like al-Ahmar to try and find a way forward. But in the end, any long-term solution in Yemen will also need to take into account southern ambitions, as well as the new demands of the young people on the streets, who have time and demographics on their side, even if they have failed to find a leader to articulate their demands and take part in the talks this time round. 12.02pm: Reuters are reporting a Yemen detail I’d so far missed: Barack Obama’s chief counter-terrorism adviser, John Brennan, has arrived in Saudi Arabia en route for he United Arab Emirates, and is seeking help from both countries to pressure Saleh into stepping down. 11.34am: My colleague Brian Whitaker has the following useful context for the situation in Yemen : Fighting in and around Yemen’s capital seems to be intensifying, and this morning there are reports that Sana’a airport has been closed. Is this the end for President Saleh? Certainly many people are hoping so. With many erstwhile supporters – both civil and military – abandoning him, it’s clear that Saleh can never regain the authority he once had. But there’s still the question of how, exactly, he can be ousted from office. One thing to keep in mind is that armed conflict in Yemen is not unusual; in fact it’s almost routine. The regime has fought an on-off war with Houthi rebels in the north for years, as well as a separatist insurrection in the south which sprang up more recently. Tribal militias have also fought the army often in the past, and sometimes got the better of it. Saleh’s regime, therefore, is well accustomed to sitting-out periods of turmoil, and even military setbacks, without feeling that its survival is challenged to the core. The difference this time is that a lot of the fighting is concentrated in the capital rather than more remote areas where it would be only scantily reported, and that its objective this time is the removal of Saleh himself. The situation now is beginning to resemble that in Ivory Coast earlier this year when Laurent Gbagbo was holed up in his presidential compound and refusing to budge. Saleh has his own well-protected compound and in theory could stay there for ages while the country falls apart all around him. In fact, even if he were to resign, he would technically still be president unless the Yemeni parliament – where his party holds an overwhelming majority – agreed to accept it. 11.03am: We’re going to try and speak to a couple of Yemen experts to see where things might be heading for President Saleh and his country. In the meantime, here’s AP’s latest summary of events: Street battles raged Thursday between the army and opposition tribesmen in Sana’a and dozens of people on both sides were killed and wounded. Elsewhere a thousands-strong force of tribal fighters fought to break through government lines on the northern outskirts of the city. Sana’a airport was closed Wednesday night and remains shut for fear that planes could be hit in the heavy shelling around the city. The Defence Ministry issue a statement claiming the army stopped the tribesmen from entering Sana’a, but an army officer who defected from President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s military, said the fighting continues. The officer, who spoke on condition he not be named in accordance with opposition force custom, said the fighting was within 10 miles of the northern outskirts of Sana’a. He said the tribesmen had captured but later released 30 soldiers from the elite Republican Guard. Heavy casualties were reported inside the city’s Hassaba neighborhood where resident Talal Hazza said government troops were shelling opposition forces for a second day running. The army is trying to dislodge fighters loyal to pro-opposition Sheik Sadeq al-Amar. The Defence Ministry acknowledge fighting in Hassaba for the first time Thursday. Opposition fighters have taken control of some government buildings in the region. In the southern city of Taiz, three protesters were wounded in the fighting with the army, security men and plain-clothes government enforcers, said activist Mohammed al-Darfi. He said security forces stormed the house of Taiz opposition lawmaker Sultan al-Samie Wednesday night and confiscated his computer and documents. 10.55am: Al-Jazeera has some spectacular footage of the burning car bomb outside Benghazi’s Tibesti Hotel, and of the anti-Gaddafi protests which followed. 10.47am: Yet another update from Yemen , where Reuters is reporting that flights have been suspended at Sana’a airport as fighting approaches the area. No news yet on how permanent this could be. The airport closed last week, but only briefly. 10.29am: Some more on Yemen , where the situation does appear to be deteriorating. This from Reuters: Yemeni soldiers have fired at protesters in the southern city of Taiz who are calling for the end of President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s 33-year-rule over the impoverished Arab state, witnesses said on Thursday. There have been no immediate reports of injuries or deaths. The U.N. human rights envoy said earlier this week her office was investigating reports that Yemeni soldiers have killed at least 50 protesters in Taiz since Sunday. 10.13am: There has been more overnight violence in Yemen , with “dozens” hurt, according to reports. AP writes: A Yemeni army officer who defected from President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s camp says government forces and armed tribesmen who sided with the opposition have fought new street battles overnight in the capital Sanaa, leaving dozens killed and injured. The officer also says that thousands of armed tribesmen have fought the Yemeni army about 10 miles from the city in an effort to push toward Sana’a… A Sana’a resident, Talal Hazza, says government forces continued shelling positions of pro-opposition Sheik Sadeq al-Ahmar’s tribesmen in the capital’s Hassaba neighborhood on Thursday. 10.03am: In connection with the above video, Richard Norton-Taylor writes: Spectacular explosions followed the bombing by RAF Tornado and Typhoon jets of ten ammunition storage bunkers and a vehicle at a site near Waddan, in central Libya. The Ministry of Defence has released the video of the bombing on Tuesday of the targets with weapons equipped with satellite and laser guidance systems. Secondary explosions, which can be seen in the video, show that a significant quantity of ammo was stored at the site, the MoD said. Major General John Lorimer, the ministry’s chief military spokesman, said Gaddafi forces had become increasing dependent on Waddan for ammunition. 9.44am: Unicef , the UN children’s organisation, has sent us this blog from one of its staff members in Libya . Rebecca Fordham recounts the impact the conflict has had on two children in particular. It’s worth quoting at some length: June 1st 2011: I witnessed the graphic impact of conflict on children when I boarded a boat coming into Benghazi from Misrata. Two young boys, who had been severely injured by explosive remnants of war (ERW) lay on beds inside the on board field hospital, provided by LibAid, with their fathers standing patiently beside them. Both boys stared out, Ayman, 14, his wrists heavily bandaged and, Mamud, 9, lying quietly in the bed next to him. The boys had been playing close to the Medical Technical College in Misrata, Ayman’s father told me, when his son picked up what he thought was shrapnel from an exploded bomb to take home and show his family. It exploded when he touched it. His father knew there were “cluster bombs” that had been dropped close by, and that they could explode when someone tried to move them but, he didn’t know the exact location and what they looked like. Children are particularly at risk, because their natural curiosity means that they often pick up items that adults are more cautious to touch. In Libya, where some children have been living under extremely challenging and stressful conditions for over three months, they need to understand the dangers of unexploded ordinance and also have safe spaces to play. … The ERW threat in Misrata is particularly grave. Limited surveys of Misrata confirm the use of cluster munitions and anti-personnel mines amongst a litany of ERW across the city. It has been reported that 30 ammunition storage areas have been destroyed by air strikes, spreading even more ERW. According to ICRC [Red Cross], in the past six weeks there have been 13 reported casualties from ERW in Misrata. … Both Ayman and Mamud were taken to a Misrata hospital where Ayman had to have both his hands amputated. They are now receiving medical treatment in Benghazi. I have visited the hospital and hope to again soon. 9.38am: Al-Jazeera’s English service has this good round-up of yesterday’s post-martial law clashes in Bahrain, including security forces seemingly aiming live fire at protesters. 9.25am: Behind its paywall the FT has an interesting article about yesterday’s meeting in Turkey during which Syrian opposition activists sought to agree a united front. It’s not an easy task, as the report says: Some activists have questioned what the meeting in Antalya can achieve, given the difficulty of representing an inchoate and still-evolving protest movement inside Syria. There are no high-profile leaders, and the movement is apparently driven by young, non-affiliated people – different from the traditional opposition made up of the Muslim Brotherhood, leftwingers and Kurdish nationalists… Some also voiced distrust of the motives of those outside Syria campaigning for change. “Some are looking to capitalise on the intifada inside the country – this is not acceptable,” one said, arguing that trust was key in a movement where many were putting their lives at risk. A statement released on behalf of some activists within Syria said they had “reservations about the rush to hold such a conference without any pre-consultation with the inside”. 9.19am: Here’s a photo of the debris following last night’s car explosion in Benghazi. Al-Jazeera have their own, slightly more dramatic photos . 9.11am: A Libya update from late last night, via AP : A United Nations panel has said that Libyan government forces have committed crimes against humanity and war crimes in a conflict it estimates has killed between 10,000-15,000 people. The UN investigators found evidence that opposition forces also committed “some acts which would constitute war crimes,” the global body said. “The commission is not of the view that the violations committed by the opposition armed forces were part of any ‘widespread or systematic attack’ against a civilian population such as to amount to crimes against humanity,” it added. Their 92-page report was commissioned in February by the UN Human Rights Council, which has now power itself to launch proceedings. 8.54am: A couple of interesting items from today’s Independent: • A 20-year-old female student in Bahrain , who was arrested two months ago for reading a poem at a pro-democracy meeting , is to go on trial, according to her mother. Some earlier reports said Ayat al-Gormezi was bekiueved to have been killed. • On a parallel note, an Amnesty International campaigner for women’s rights argues that self-confident young women are worrying established male authorities in the Middle East. 8.35am: Good morning. Welcome to today’s live updates from the Middle East unrest. Here’s a brief rundown of the latest news: • The crisis in Yemen is escalating , with at least 41 people killed yesterday during clashes between President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s troops and forces loyal to Sadeq al-Ahmar, the influential tribal leader. Hillary Clinton last night increased US pressure on Saleh to step down , telling reporters that he and his regime should “move out of the way to permit the opposition and civil society to begin a transition to political and economic reform”. • A car has exploded in Benghazi , the de facto capital city for Libya’s rebels. It’s believed a grenade was thrown into the car outside the Tibesti Hotel, where most foreign diplomats and journalists stay in the city, late yesterday. Rebels called it a “cowardly act” carried out by supporters of Muammar Gaddafi. Earlier, it emerged that Gaddafi’s oil minister, Shukri Ghanem, has defected and now backs the rebels. • Bahrain remains tense after yesterday’s renewed clashes between demonstrators and security forces after martial law was lifted. Plus a couple more things from today’s paper and website: • The daughter of a veteran Iranian dissident has died during clashes between mourners and security forces at her father’s funeral in Tehran. • Hosni Mubarak will face trial for alleged corruption and killing protesters from 3 August, an Egyptian court official has said. His two sons will also be tried for corruption . Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Yemen Syria Libya Bashar Al-Assad Bahrain Muammar Gaddafi Peter Walker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Yemen death toll rises as explosion hits Libyan rebel-held city of Benghazi 2.40pm: Russia is advising its citizens in Yemen to leave . A foreign ministry spokesman said: “The situation is escalating every hour, the tensions are not easing.” 2.35pm: Reports now from al-Jazeera that Sana’a aiport is closed and flights are being diverted to Aden. CNN correspondent Mohammed Jamjoom tweets that Yemen State TV is quoting official sources denying that there are any changes or delays. 1.50pm: Reuters now report that the airport in Sana’a has re-opened. Thousands of other people are also fleeing fighting in the Yemen capital by car, it said: “It felt as if the artillery shells were flying next to my head… My wife, my daughter were screaming. It was horrible,” resident Sadeq al-Lahbe said before leaving. “There is no electricity, no water and violent strikes shaking the house. Is this life?” 1.32pm: Yemen : The AFP news agency quotes medical staff as saying at least 15 people died overnight in the Al-Hasaba area of Sana’a, Sadiq al-Ahmar’s stronghold, among them a seven-year-old girl struck by a stray bullet. 12.49pm: According to rights campaigners in Syria , quoted by Reuters, security forces have killed 11 people today in the under-siege central town of Rastan. As ever, there is no way to independently verify this. 12.18pm: A brief return to Bahrain : I’ve been passed an email from the rights group Avaaz urging F1 teams to boycott the emirate’s Grand Prix if it is rescheduled following a meeting tomorrow . The race had been due to begin the 2011 season in March, but it was called off amid the quashing of pro-democracy protests. Azaaz said: F1 mustn’t give credibility to a pariah regime that is as brutal as Iran and Zimbabwe. If F1 decides to race in Bahrain, it will be on a par with the sporting tours that chose to play in apartheid South Africa in the 1980s. 12.06pm: Francis Matthew of the Gulf News highlights the role of Hamid al-Ahmar , the prominent Yemeni businessman and politician – and brother of Sadeq al-Ahmar, the tribal leader at the centre of the conflict – who turned against Saleh this week. (Our correspondent Tom Finn wrote about the family last week . The political initiative was seized this week by Hamid al-Ahmar, when he rebelled against Saleh. A businessman and politician, Ahmar holds an important position in the major Hashid confederation. His elder brother Sadiq al-Ahmar is the paramount chief of the Hashid confederation, and they are the sons of the late Shaikh Abdullah al-Ahmar, who was a major figure in Yemeni politics till his death in 2007, backed by substantial Saudi influence. A third brother, Hussain, commanded the Saudi-backed Hashid militia in the recent fighting in Sa’ada. Hamid al-Ahmar’s challenge will be viewed favourably by Saudi Arabia, which has had a close relationship with his family for decades. The Saudi leadership is the most concerned of all the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council) states that Yemen does not slip into chaos, and it will naturally back an alternative to Saleh based on northern leaders. And if Ahmar is dismissed as being just a businessman rather than a politician, his relative, General Ali Mohsin al-Ahmar is an effective military commander who has already rebelled against Saleh. But Matthew says the intervention of the Ahmar family is not necessarily a win for the pro-democracy opposition, who have rejected the idea of supporting a leadership bid from another member of the power elite They have promised to hold out for a peaceful transfer to a civilian authority. The activists are slowly developing their own management structure and deciding on mechanisms to nominate their leaders, but this was not sufficiently advanced to enable them to send observers to the GCC transition talks. But others who are not yet part of the action are the leaders from the south. When Yemen united in 1990, the president of South Yemen, Ali Salim al-Beidh, became vice-president of the united country. He despaired that Saleh would not listen to his concerns, and resigned to lead a breakaway movement when he declared the Democratic Republic of Yemen, which only lasted in the south from May to June 1994. Beidh is the leader of Al Harak, a party dedicated to a southern breakaway. The GCC sees Yemen as too important and too close to be allowed to fail. In the 1980s and 1990s, the Saudis ran massive grant programmes which they allowed to wither away after the border settlement in 2000. Now they are leading GCC efforts to find a political solution. They have reopened their links with northern political leaders like al-Ahmar to try and find a way forward. But in the end, any long-term solution in Yemen will also need to take into account southern ambitions, as well as the new demands of the young people on the streets, who have time and demographics on their side, even if they have failed to find a leader to articulate their demands and take part in the talks this time round. 12.02pm: Reuters are reporting a Yemen detail I’d so far missed: Barack Obama’s chief counter-terrorism adviser, John Brennan, has arrived in Saudi Arabia en route for he United Arab Emirates, and is seeking help from both countries to pressure Saleh into stepping down. 11.34am: My colleague Brian Whitaker has the following useful context for the situation in Yemen : Fighting in and around Yemen’s capital seems to be intensifying, and this morning there are reports that Sana’a airport has been closed. Is this the end for President Saleh? Certainly many people are hoping so. With many erstwhile supporters – both civil and military – abandoning him, it’s clear that Saleh can never regain the authority he once had. But there’s still the question of how, exactly, he can be ousted from office. One thing to keep in mind is that armed conflict in Yemen is not unusual; in fact it’s almost routine. The regime has fought an on-off war with Houthi rebels in the north for years, as well as a separatist insurrection in the south which sprang up more recently. Tribal militias have also fought the army often in the past, and sometimes got the better of it. Saleh’s regime, therefore, is well accustomed to sitting-out periods of turmoil, and even military setbacks, without feeling that its survival is challenged to the core. The difference this time is that a lot of the fighting is concentrated in the capital rather than more remote areas where it would be only scantily reported, and that its objective this time is the removal of Saleh himself. The situation now is beginning to resemble that in Ivory Coast earlier this year when Laurent Gbagbo was holed up in his presidential compound and refusing to budge. Saleh has his own well-protected compound and in theory could stay there for ages while the country falls apart all around him. In fact, even if he were to resign, he would technically still be president unless the Yemeni parliament – where his party holds an overwhelming majority – agreed to accept it. 11.03am: We’re going to try and speak to a couple of Yemen experts to see where things might be heading for President Saleh and his country. In the meantime, here’s AP’s latest summary of events: Street battles raged Thursday between the army and opposition tribesmen in Sana’a and dozens of people on both sides were killed and wounded. Elsewhere a thousands-strong force of tribal fighters fought to break through government lines on the northern outskirts of the city. Sana’a airport was closed Wednesday night and remains shut for fear that planes could be hit in the heavy shelling around the city. The Defence Ministry issue a statement claiming the army stopped the tribesmen from entering Sana’a, but an army officer who defected from President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s military, said the fighting continues. The officer, who spoke on condition he not be named in accordance with opposition force custom, said the fighting was within 10 miles of the northern outskirts of Sana’a. He said the tribesmen had captured but later released 30 soldiers from the elite Republican Guard. Heavy casualties were reported inside the city’s Hassaba neighborhood where resident Talal Hazza said government troops were shelling opposition forces for a second day running. The army is trying to dislodge fighters loyal to pro-opposition Sheik Sadeq al-Amar. The Defence Ministry acknowledge fighting in Hassaba for the first time Thursday. Opposition fighters have taken control of some government buildings in the region. In the southern city of Taiz, three protesters were wounded in the fighting with the army, security men and plain-clothes government enforcers, said activist Mohammed al-Darfi. He said security forces stormed the house of Taiz opposition lawmaker Sultan al-Samie Wednesday night and confiscated his computer and documents. 10.55am: Al-Jazeera has some spectacular footage of the burning car bomb outside Benghazi’s Tibesti Hotel, and of the anti-Gaddafi protests which followed. 10.47am: Yet another update from Yemen , where Reuters is reporting that flights have been suspended at Sana’a airport as fighting approaches the area. No news yet on how permanent this could be. The airport closed last week, but only briefly. 10.29am: Some more on Yemen , where the situation does appear to be deteriorating. This from Reuters: Yemeni soldiers have fired at protesters in the southern city of Taiz who are calling for the end of President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s 33-year-rule over the impoverished Arab state, witnesses said on Thursday. There have been no immediate reports of injuries or deaths. The U.N. human rights envoy said earlier this week her office was investigating reports that Yemeni soldiers have killed at least 50 protesters in Taiz since Sunday. 10.13am: There has been more overnight violence in Yemen , with “dozens” hurt, according to reports. AP writes: A Yemeni army officer who defected from President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s camp says government forces and armed tribesmen who sided with the opposition have fought new street battles overnight in the capital Sanaa, leaving dozens killed and injured. The officer also says that thousands of armed tribesmen have fought the Yemeni army about 10 miles from the city in an effort to push toward Sana’a… A Sana’a resident, Talal Hazza, says government forces continued shelling positions of pro-opposition Sheik Sadeq al-Ahmar’s tribesmen in the capital’s Hassaba neighborhood on Thursday. 10.03am: In connection with the above video, Richard Norton-Taylor writes: Spectacular explosions followed the bombing by RAF Tornado and Typhoon jets of ten ammunition storage bunkers and a vehicle at a site near Waddan, in central Libya. The Ministry of Defence has released the video of the bombing on Tuesday of the targets with weapons equipped with satellite and laser guidance systems. Secondary explosions, which can be seen in the video, show that a significant quantity of ammo was stored at the site, the MoD said. Major General John Lorimer, the ministry’s chief military spokesman, said Gaddafi forces had become increasing dependent on Waddan for ammunition. 9.44am: Unicef , the UN children’s organisation, has sent us this blog from one of its staff members in Libya . Rebecca Fordham recounts the impact the conflict has had on two children in particular. It’s worth quoting at some length: June 1st 2011: I witnessed the graphic impact of conflict on children when I boarded a boat coming into Benghazi from Misrata. Two young boys, who had been severely injured by explosive remnants of war (ERW) lay on beds inside the on board field hospital, provided by LibAid, with their fathers standing patiently beside them. Both boys stared out, Ayman, 14, his wrists heavily bandaged and, Mamud, 9, lying quietly in the bed next to him. The boys had been playing close to the Medical Technical College in Misrata, Ayman’s father told me, when his son picked up what he thought was shrapnel from an exploded bomb to take home and show his family. It exploded when he touched it. His father knew there were “cluster bombs” that had been dropped close by, and that they could explode when someone tried to move them but, he didn’t know the exact location and what they looked like. Children are particularly at risk, because their natural curiosity means that they often pick up items that adults are more cautious to touch. In Libya, where some children have been living under extremely challenging and stressful conditions for over three months, they need to understand the dangers of unexploded ordinance and also have safe spaces to play. … The ERW threat in Misrata is particularly grave. Limited surveys of Misrata confirm the use of cluster munitions and anti-personnel mines amongst a litany of ERW across the city. It has been reported that 30 ammunition storage areas have been destroyed by air strikes, spreading even more ERW. According to ICRC [Red Cross], in the past six weeks there have been 13 reported casualties from ERW in Misrata. … Both Ayman and Mamud were taken to a Misrata hospital where Ayman had to have both his hands amputated. They are now receiving medical treatment in Benghazi. I have visited the hospital and hope to again soon. 9.38am: Al-Jazeera’s English service has this good round-up of yesterday’s post-martial law clashes in Bahrain, including security forces seemingly aiming live fire at protesters. 9.25am: Behind its paywall the FT has an interesting article about yesterday’s meeting in Turkey during which Syrian opposition activists sought to agree a united front. It’s not an easy task, as the report says: Some activists have questioned what the meeting in Antalya can achieve, given the difficulty of representing an inchoate and still-evolving protest movement inside Syria. There are no high-profile leaders, and the movement is apparently driven by young, non-affiliated people – different from the traditional opposition made up of the Muslim Brotherhood, leftwingers and Kurdish nationalists… Some also voiced distrust of the motives of those outside Syria campaigning for change. “Some are looking to capitalise on the intifada inside the country – this is not acceptable,” one said, arguing that trust was key in a movement where many were putting their lives at risk. A statement released on behalf of some activists within Syria said they had “reservations about the rush to hold such a conference without any pre-consultation with the inside”. 9.19am: Here’s a photo of the debris following last night’s car explosion in Benghazi. Al-Jazeera have their own, slightly more dramatic photos . 9.11am: A Libya update from late last night, via AP : A United Nations panel has said that Libyan government forces have committed crimes against humanity and war crimes in a conflict it estimates has killed between 10,000-15,000 people. The UN investigators found evidence that opposition forces also committed “some acts which would constitute war crimes,” the global body said. “The commission is not of the view that the violations committed by the opposition armed forces were part of any ‘widespread or systematic attack’ against a civilian population such as to amount to crimes against humanity,” it added. Their 92-page report was commissioned in February by the UN Human Rights Council, which has now power itself to launch proceedings. 8.54am: A couple of interesting items from today’s Independent: • A 20-year-old female student in Bahrain , who was arrested two months ago for reading a poem at a pro-democracy meeting , is to go on trial, according to her mother. Some earlier reports said Ayat al-Gormezi was bekiueved to have been killed. • On a parallel note, an Amnesty International campaigner for women’s rights argues that self-confident young women are worrying established male authorities in the Middle East. 8.35am: Good morning. Welcome to today’s live updates from the Middle East unrest. Here’s a brief rundown of the latest news: • The crisis in Yemen is escalating , with at least 41 people killed yesterday during clashes between President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s troops and forces loyal to Sadeq al-Ahmar, the influential tribal leader. Hillary Clinton last night increased US pressure on Saleh to step down , telling reporters that he and his regime should “move out of the way to permit the opposition and civil society to begin a transition to political and economic reform”. • A car has exploded in Benghazi , the de facto capital city for Libya’s rebels. It’s believed a grenade was thrown into the car outside the Tibesti Hotel, where most foreign diplomats and journalists stay in the city, late yesterday. Rebels called it a “cowardly act” carried out by supporters of Muammar Gaddafi. Earlier, it emerged that Gaddafi’s oil minister, Shukri Ghanem, has defected and now backs the rebels. • Bahrain remains tense after yesterday’s renewed clashes between demonstrators and security forces after martial law was lifted. Plus a couple more things from today’s paper and website: • The daughter of a veteran Iranian dissident has died during clashes between mourners and security forces at her father’s funeral in Tehran. • Hosni Mubarak will face trial for alleged corruption and killing protesters from 3 August, an Egyptian court official has said. His two sons will also be tried for corruption . Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Yemen Syria Libya Bashar Al-Assad Bahrain Muammar Gaddafi Peter Walker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The official Herman Cain Train Video, released by The Herman Cain: I’m on board. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : All American Blogger Discovery Date : 31/05/2011 22:43 Number of articles : 5
Continue reading …Former Clinton adviser turned CNN political analyst Paul Begala Wednesday evening gave Anderson Cooper the predictable Party line about Weinergate being no big deal. Without skipping a beat, the host of “Anderson Cooper 360″ replied, “But, Paul, if this was a conservative Republican, would you be saying the same thing?” (video follows with transcript and commentary): ANDERSON COOPER, HOST: Paul, what do you think of all this? Should the congressman continue talking about this or should he just — can he now move on that he did all these interviews? PAUL BEGALA, CNN POLITICAL ANALYST: [Yawns] Yes, I — wake me when we have a real sex scandal, Anderson. You know, this is — please. (LAUGHTER) (CROSSTALK) COOPER: But, Paul, if this was a conservative Republican, would you be saying the same thing? BEGALA: Yes, who allegedly had a picture of him taken in his underwear and then someone hacked his account and sent it out? I do think the apparent hacking of a congressman's account maybe is more of a story. And this is the Democrat. BORGER: Right. BEGALA: But it is a right-wing blogger who was pushing this, and a pretty unreliable one at that, which mama always said, consider the source. So, I think he did a very good job. I think Wolf is right. I think he gave Wolf a very good interview, answered every question the best that he could, could not or would not answer, yes, that's me. But, you know, OK, so what? Who cares? He clearly — I mean, I think he's credible when he says, I didn't send it. And plenty of liberal bloggers have replicated this hacking today. They have been in there saying, look, this is plausible. I'm no techie. I have no idea. I don't tweet. So is beyond my ken. But I just think, you know, when the Dow drops 279 points in a day, the career-ending scandal could be the governor of New Jersey, who is taking a state helicopter apparently yesterday to go to see his kid's baseball game. I mean, that's the kind of thing that voters get furious about, spending $2,500 an hour of state money to take a helicopter to your kid's baseball game. What Anthony Weiner is even accused of doing, even if true, is just nothing. You got that? Even if Weiner is 100 percent guilty of sending that tweet to a 21-year-old college student, it's nothing. Why isn't that at all surprising coming from someone that used to advise Bill Clinton? Isn't it also telling that Weiner's offense – assuming he did it – is nothing, but Gov. Christie's helicopter excursion is possibly “career-ending?” Exactly why does CNN have contributors that are so obviously biased? (H/T Stephen Gutowski)
Continue reading …SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) — Tornadoes roared through Massachusetts on Wednesday, as violent winds caused damage in about two dozen communities, ripping off roofs, uprooting trees, scattering debris and leaving at least four dead throughout the state. The governor said the death toll was preliminary. The storm pulverized or sheared off the tops of roofs on Main Street in Springfield, a city of more than 150,000 about 90 miles west of Boston. A mounted video camera captured dramatic footage of a debris-filled funnel as it swept into downtown from the west, then crossed the Connecticut River. Gov. Deval Patrick declared a state of emergency and called up 1,000 National Guardsmen after the storms, which brought scenes of devastation recently wreaked in the South and Midwest to a part of the country where such violent weather isn’t a way of life. The Rev. Bob Marrone of The First Church of Monson said the storm cleared a view he’s never seen across the valley where the town sits. WATCH (Video Of Springfield Tornado): “I can see the plywood of roofs, and see houses where most of the house is gone,” said Marrone, whose church’s steeple was knocked down. “The road that runs up in front of my house … There’s so many trees down, it’s completely impassable.” Thomas Walsh, a spokesman for Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno, told The Associated Press he was looking out his City Hall window around 4:30 p.m. when he saw the funnel. “I could see this massive cloud of debris floating around in a circular, cylindrical fashion,” he said. At least four people were killed from the storms, Patrick said. Sarno said more than 40 people have been admitted to hospitals in Springfield. “It looked like birds were flying out of the trees and it was rubble,” said Martha Vachon of Photography by Duval of Palmer, who was photographing the Minnechaug Regional High School prom in downtown Springfield, which went on as planned. Around 55,000 customers National Grid, Western Mass. Electric and Unitil were reportedly without power. One of the tornadoes struck downtown Springfield, the state’s third-largest city, in the afternoon, frightening workers and residents. Margaret Alexander, 40, of Springfield, said she found sanctuary in a closet in her apartment during the tornado. After the storm passed she went outside and headed to the Mass Mutual Center on the advice of neighbors. She and 15 family members – a sister, daughter, two grand-daughters and the family dog Sasha in a crate — were at the cavernous makeshift emergency shelter. “I’m just happy to be with my family and that everyone is safe,” Alexander said. Jane Albert, spokeswoman Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, said the hospital was treating 10 seriously injured patients in its trauma unit and an unknown but significant number of less seriously hurt people. “There is search and rescue going on throughout the region now, so we expect more patients,” she said. Among the injured in Springfield was a retired priest, according to a spokesman for the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Springfield. The priest was living at St. Michael’s Retired Priest Residence, which was damaged by the apparent tornado. The storm hit as workers were beginning to leave for the evening commute home. A tractor-trailer overturned during the storm on the Memorial Bridge leading to West Springfield. State police said in addition to Springfield they have reports of tornadoes in the communities of Agawam, Charlton, Monson, Oxford, West Springfield, Westfield, Wilbraham and Sturbridge. Since 1950, Massachusetts has had about two tornadoes per year, and there had been none since 2008, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said. The last deadly tornado in the state occurred on May 29, 1995, when three people were killed, NOAA said. The state police Special Emergency Response Team was activated and its members were searching some damaged structures to make sure there are no people trapped inside. Police closed some highway ramps leading into Springfield. Upstairs at the Mass Mutual Center in downtown Springfield high school seniors graduating Minnechaug Regional High School in Wilbraham this Friday were arriving for their prom. Jola Wnuk said she almost didn’t come because of the weather. But her mother persuaded her to go. “She said it’s once in a lifetime,” Wnuk said. Photographers setting up tables at the Mass Mutual Center said they had a frightening view of the tornado just outside the center’s ceiling-to-floor windows. The storm hit Springfield after a tornado watch was issued for much of the East Coast, including Philadelphia, New York and Boston. State police said there was heavy damage in spots and troopers were prepared to do house-to-house searches if needed. Bob Pashko, of West Springfield, said he was coming from his doctor’s office when the storm started and he went to a downtown bar in Springfield to wait for a ride. “The next thing you know the TV says a tornado hit the railroad bridge in West Springfield,” said Pashko, 50. “It’s the baddest I’ve seen.” At the bar, Pashko said, the owner told people to get away from the window as patrons saw the storm on TV. “To see it live on TV when I’m five football fields away is better than being outside,” Pashko said. In Sturbridge, in central Massachusetts, a half-mile section of Main Street was shut down after a tornado apparently touched down, damaging homes and felling trees, according to town administrator Shaun Suhoski. Suhoski said some people suffered “cuts, scrapes, bruises,” though no serious injuries were immediately reported. But he said emergency crews were cleaning up after the storm blew trees into houses and severely damaged telephone poles and rooftops. A shelter has been set up in town at Tantasqua Senior Regional High School. “It was a pretty heavy assault from the storm system and we’re trying to dig out and assess it right now,” Suhoski said. Sen. John Kerry, D-Massachusetts, joined join Patrick in a tour of tornado damage. “Our immediate priority is the safety of families in every area affected or still threatened by this horrific disaster,” said Kerry in a statement. Patrick said there was extensive damage in Hampden County, especially to homes and other structures. He said there were a number of live wires down. The state has opened shelters for those whose homes were damaged or who need a place to stay. Patrick repeated his call for superintendents in the 19 affected communities to cancel school Thursday. He said non-essential state employees are not required to report to work, saying this would help keep people off the roads to give cleanup crews a chance to work. The governor also said he had preliminary reports of some looting in downtown Springfield. He said that looting tapered off as heavy rains set in. The State Police is securing the area. No looting arrests were reported. Patrick said the damage has hit home for him and Lt. Gov. Timothy Murray. Murray is the former mayor of Worcester and Patrick owns a home in western Massachusetts. “These are my neighbors and my friends, too; the lieutenant governor’s as well,” Patrick said. “We’re worried about our friends and neighbors, our fellow citizens in western Massachusetts who have been affected by this terrible tragedy.” Massachusetts hasn’t experienced a tornado since 2008, according to the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla. The last deadly tornado in the state was on May 29, 1995. Three people were killed by the storm in the town of Great Barrington, Mass., along the New York state border. On June 9, 1953, the deadliest recorded tornado in Massachusetts history cut a swath of destruction through the central part of the state, including the city of Worcester, killing 94 people and injuring hundreds. ___ Associated Press writers Russell Contreras, Bob Salsberg, Jay Lindsay, Sylvia Wingfield, Rodrique Ngowi and Steve LeBlanc in Boston, and Kristi Eaton in Oklahoma City contributed to this report.
Continue reading …Former Clinton adviser turned CNN political analyst Paul Begala Wednesday evening gave Anderson Cooper the predictable Party line about Weinergate being no big deal. Without skipping a beat, the host of “Anderson Cooper 360″ replied, “But, Paul, if this was a conservative Republican, would you be saying the same thing?” (video follows with transcript and commentary): ANDERSON COOPER, HOST: Paul, what do you think of all this? Should the congressman continue talking about this or should he just — can he now move on that he did all these interviews? PAUL BEGALA, CNN POLITICAL ANALYST: [Yawns] Yes, I — wake me when we have a real sex scandal, Anderson. You know, this is — please. (LAUGHTER) (CROSSTALK) COOPER: But, Paul, if this was a conservative Republican, would you be saying the same thing? BEGALA: Yes, who allegedly had a picture of him taken in his underwear and then someone hacked his account and sent it out? I do think the apparent hacking of a congressman's account maybe is more of a story. And this is the Democrat. BORGER: Right. BEGALA: But it is a right-wing blogger who was pushing this, and a pretty unreliable one at that, which mama always said, consider the source. So, I think he did a very good job. I think Wolf is right. I think he gave Wolf a very good interview, answered every question the best that he could, could not or would not answer, yes, that's me. But, you know, OK, so what? Who cares? He clearly — I mean, I think he's credible when he says, I didn't send it. And plenty of liberal bloggers have replicated this hacking today. They have been in there saying, look, this is plausible. I'm no techie. I have no idea. I don't tweet. So is beyond my ken. But I just think, you know, when the Dow drops 279 points in a day, the career-ending scandal could be the governor of New Jersey, who is taking a state helicopter apparently yesterday to go to see his kid's baseball game. I mean, that's the kind of thing that voters get furious about, spending $2,500 an hour of state money to take a helicopter to your kid's baseball game. What Anthony Weiner is even accused of doing, even if true, is just nothing. You got that? Even if Weiner is 100 percent guilty of sending that tweet to a 21-year-old college student, it's nothing. Why isn't that at all surprising coming from someone that used to advise Bill Clinton? Isn't it also telling that Weiner's offense – assuming he did it – is nothing, but Gov. Christie's helicopter excursion is possibly “career-ending?” Exactly why does CNN have contributors that are so obviously biased? (H/T Stephen Gutowski)
Continue reading …So now we know: Donny Deutsch would advise Dems caught in a sex scandal . . . to fabricate a false story. On today's Morning Joe, ad man Deutsch stated that, when caught with his pants down, Anthony Weiner should have been “very honest” and claimed that he had sent the picture to his wife. And of course, by “very honest,” Deutsch means “very dishonest” since no one, starting with Weiner himself, suggests that the congressman meant to send the shot to his wife but that somehow it went out to a 21-year old college student in Seattle. Hat tip reader Texndoc. View video after the jump. I'll be back with the transcript, but in the meantime, consider Deutsch's media strategy for Dems: when under pressure. . . prevaricate. Note: theories of what really happened of course abound.
Continue reading …Are you seeing what we’re seeing? That yellow starburst touting a “starting 6/24″ promotion date is neatly affixed to the HTC EVO View 4G (aka, Flyer ). If the grab above, nabbed from Sprint’s internal Rewards Me site is to be believed, then we’ve got 7-inches of WiMax-loving Android tablet headed our way in three weeks time. Smack in the middle of the promised summer ship date . It also a good bet that we’ll be seeing the EVO 3D at about this time too. Anyone taking odds? HTC EVO View 4G (Flyer) headed to Sprint on June 24th originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Jun 2011 06:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Are you seeing what we’re seeing? That yellow starburst touting a “starting 6/24″ promotion date is neatly affixed to the HTC EVO View 4G (aka, Flyer ). If the grab above, nabbed from Sprint’s internal Rewards Me site is to be believed, then we’ve got 7-inches of WiMax-loving Android tablet headed our way in three weeks time. Smack in the middle of the promised summer ship date . It also a good bet that we’ll be seeing the EVO 3D at about this time too. Anyone taking odds? HTC EVO View 4G (Flyer) headed to Sprint on June 24th originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Jun 2011 06:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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