Another day, another failed substance abuse test for Lindsay Lohan: Yes, she’s headed to court again this morning, after testing positive for alcohol last week. Sources tell TMZ LiLo was tested twice, including once after she threw a rooftop barbecue, and tested positive one of the times. They add that…
Continue reading …A never-before-seen indigenous tribe living in the Amazon rainforest has been revealed by aerial photographs, the latest such tribe to be discovered in the wilds of Brazil. The group, believed to contain about 200 people, has never had any contact with the outside world, the Telegraph reports. The settlement, which…
Continue reading …Paris-based International Energy Agency sanctions 60ml barrels to counter shortages but Opec condemns ‘political’ intervention The west has fired a warning shot across the bows of Opec by releasing 60m barrels of “emergency” oil supplies on to the market in an attempt to halt soaring petrol and other energy costs damaging the global economy. Crude prices slumped by $6 a barrel after the International Energy Agency, whose 28 members include Britain and America, unveiled plans to release 2m barrels a day for a month from its emergency reserves to counter shortages created by the conflict in Libya. Delegates from Opec countries immediately accused the Paris-based IEA of “unjustified interference” in global energy markets and said the organisation was “playing politics” with oil. The move, plus new signs of weakness in the world economy, saw early success, with the cost of Brent crude spinning down to $108 compared with a high of $127 in April. Stock markets in London and New York, also fell sharply, with the FTSE 100 down 1.6% at 5683. The gloom was increased by signs that the American economic recovery is slowing amid continued uncertainty over the Greek debt crisis. Paul Watters, a spokesman for the AA, which has campaigned for lower petrol prices as the cost of a litre has risen close to £1.50, said: “Although a dramatic fall in the price of oil throws a lifeline to drivers barely able to afford current pump prices, past experience makes it unlikely that they will see an equally dramatic drop in the price of fuel in the short-term.” It is only the third time in the 37-year history of the IEA that oil has been released in this way and follows repeated calls on Opec to turn on the taps and bring down the price of oil. The agency also acted after swings following the first Gulf war in 1990-91 and Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The US has pledged to provide half the 60m barrels, reflecting frustration in western governments over high petrol and heating bills pushing up inflation and undermining global economic recovery. Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of the IEA, who pleaded last weekend with Russia and Opec to act to curb prices , said that using the strategic reserves was meant to complement promises made by Saudi Arabia and other oil producing countries to meet shortages caused by the war in Libya. “I expect this action will contribute to well-supplied markets and to ensuring a soft landing for the world economy.”Opec producers this month failed to reach agreement on increasing output, although Saudi Arabia, the single biggest exporter, later pledged to help out. Saudi Arabia, a US ally, was expecting to win an increase in production quotas at the Opec summit in Vienna but faced combined opposition from tradional hawks such as Iran and Venezuela, along with new ones such as Iraq. some Opec delegates from Iran and two Gulf states said the IEA’s release of emergency stocks was wrong. “I don’t know how to justify this interference in the market,” a delegate from Iran, which currently holds the Opec presidency, told the Reuters new agency on condition of anonymity. Opec delegates from Gulf which had backed the Saudi proposal for higher output, also took issue with the IEA’s action. states said”The oil price hasn’t shot up to $150. There is no reason to do this. The market is not short of supply. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia have been raising production, but there have not been many buyers. The IEA is just playing politics with the US,” added one Gulf delegate. Opec member Libya had been exporting about 1.2m barrels a day before the civil war brought the oil industry to a standstill, causing price increases in a market already heated due to higher than expected demand. Total oil stocks in IEA member countries amount to over 4.1bn barrels. Nearly 1.6bn barrels of this are public stocks held exclusively for emergency purposes. The IEA was established in the wake of the 1973 oil price crisis to represent the interests of oil consuming nations. But it has increasingly tried to forge closer links with producing nations and last weekend asked Russia to consider joining its ranks. But while motorists in Britain have been facing record pump prices and household heating costs have risen because gas prices are tied to oil, Carl Larry at the Blue Ocean commodity brokerage in New York said crude values might not fall much further. “This is an economic stimulus … in oil dollars,” he said. “On the other hand I think we have confirmed the bottom of the oil market here at $109 for Brent.” Oil Petrol prices Oil and gas companies Energy industry Terry Macalister guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …One fairly obvious way to lessen your chances of dying in a car crash: Don’t take drugs before getting behind the wheel. Researchers found that a full 25% of drivers who died in single-vehicle accidents between 1999 and 2009 tested positive for drugs, USA Today reports. Of those studied, 22%…
Continue reading …Tim Pawlenty is paying peanuts—or nothing at all—to several top members of his team. His top two strategists as well as at least three advisers are working for just zero to $1,000 per month, plus expense reimbursements, an anonymous aide tells the Washington Post . But “this isn’t…
Continue reading …An Amish man’s attempt to embrace new technology—and a 12-year-old girl—has landed him in court on charges of child solicitation, police in Indiana say. Willard Yoder, 26, was arrested after turning up in a horse and buggy to meet a girl whose phone he had sent hundreds of…
Continue reading …Political leaders in Afghanistan are concerned that President Obama’s decision to start withdrawing US forces could lead to a repeat of the US withdrawal in 1989, when Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence was allowed to gain major influence. “We don’t want to go back 20 years when [ISI was] making the decisions…
Continue reading …Containing drug trafficking proving effective but global rise in illicit use of synthetic drugs for ‘legal highs’ cause concern Global opium production fell by 38% in 2010 and cocaine cultivation continued to decline, according to the annual UN report on the world drug market. The report said that while the global markets for cocaine, heroin and cannabis had declined or remained stable, the production and illicit use of prescription opioid drugs and new synthetics known as legal highs, which mimic the effects of traditional drugs, had increased sharply. The UN estimates that 210 million people, about 5% of the world’s population, used some kind of illicit drug last year at least once. The most popular drug remains cannabis, with 170 million users. An estimated 39 million “problem drug users” use heroin, cocaine and other class A substances. Sandeep Chawla, director of policy of the UN office of drugs and crime, said the rise of new synthetic drugs reflected their lack of dependence on plant cultivation. Instead they could be produced from readily available industrial chemicals close to potential consumers without the need to set up global trafficking chains. The sharp decline in opium production to 4,860 tonnes was due to a blight that wiped out most of the opium harvest in Afghanistan last year, the report said, although experts expect it to recover this year. A 20% increase in opium production in Burma did little to compensate. The UN said it was more encouraged by the continuing decline in the area under coca cultivation, which has shrunk by 18% since 2007 to 149,000 hectares. The last decade has seen coca cultivation in Colombia more than halve from 163, 300 hectares in 2000 to 62,000 last year. The UN experts say this decline has not been offset by small increases to 61,200 hectares in Peru, which on one measure has replaced Colombia as the largest producer of coca in the world, and in Bolivia. The UN’s policy director also pointed to successes in containing the emergence of West Africa as a major transhipment point into Europe for cocaine over the past decade. It is estimated that about 21 tonnes of cocaine were trafficked via West Africa to Europe in 2009 – down from 47 tonnes two years earlier. Chawla also cited the fact that the majority of seizures now took place in South America rather than US or western Europe as further evidence of progress. The UN report describes the fall in Colombian coca cultivation, which declined a further 15% last year, as remarkable but sounds a cautious note about the actual impact on production. Chawla said increased yields and changes in the way the leaves are processed meant the jury was still out on whether the decline was reflected in falling cocaine production levels. However, Chawla did say that increased counter-narcotics operations, including fumigation and eradication programmes, and the withdrawal of Farc rebels from parts of the country, contributed to the sharp decline in cultivation. It has taken a decade of US support and more than $5bn (£3bn) in aid through Plan Colombia. In 2009 and 2010, Colombian authorities seized at least 10 times more cocaine than their Peruvian counterparts – and half of it was caught before it even crossed the border. Coca’s traditional home in Peru is in the central jungle valleys on the eastern slopes of Andes cordillera. Around half of Peru’s cocaine comes from one in particular, the Ene-Apurimac river valley. Conditions are perfect for growing coffee and coca but most of the 350,000 population – nearly half of whom live in dire poverty – choose to grow coca. For many families it is their caja chica – a “small box” from which they can get ready cash for school uniforms, extra supplies or just keep something for a rainy day. Drugs trade United Nations Drugs Health Alan Travis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Recep Tayyip Erdogan asks president to sack brother and military mastermind as more refugees cross the border Tension between Turkey and Syria is worsening as thousands of refugees from repression by president Bashar al-Assad flee across the border Officials in Ankara were watching closely as Syrian forces deployed in a village close to the border, Khirbet al-Jouz, after Turkey had flatly rejected an appeal from Damascus to moderate its increasingly angry public comments about the crisis. Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey’s prime minister, has attacked the repression as “savagery” and urged Assad to sack its military mastermind, his brother Maher, and implement genuine reforms in the spirit of the “Arab spring”. But Erdogan has so far failed to demand that the Syrian president stand down – as he did with Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak and Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi. Still, officials, diplomats and analysts say that a bilateral relationship that has flourished politically and economically in recent years is now badly, perhaps irreparably, damaged. “The rapprochement between Erdogan and Assad has pretty much broken down,” said Fadi Hakura of the Chatham House thinktank in London. “Turkey is becoming ever more strident and direct, and this is causing deep unease in Damascus.” On Wednesday the Syrian foreign minister, Walid al-Moallem, publicly urged Turkey to reconsider its hostile stand, but the Turkish ambassador immediately dismissed the call. “The relationship has become very frosty,” said Hugh Pope, Istanbul director for the International Crisis Group. Erdogan had been urging Assad to make domestic changes since before the uprising began in March. Ahead of Assad’s speech on Monday, Ersat Hurmuzlu, an adviser to president Abdullah Gul, said Assad had a week in which to act – but Turkish officials were left disappointed by Assad’s lacklustre performance. “We had high expectations that the Syrian president would deliver,” said a senior Turkish official. “But we were disappointed.” The Turkish-Syrian honeymoon began when Erdogan came to power in 2003, and cooled Turkey’s once close relations with Israel while making overtures to the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas. Following his re-election this month he vowed to reach out to the Middle East and beyond to promote “justice, the rule of law … freedom and democracy”, distancing himself from the traditional stabile friendships with Arab dictators. “When Turkey has to make a choice between regimes and people,” the senior offiical said, “it will always be on the side of the people.” British officials describe a “meeting of minds” when David Cameron spoke to Erdogan last week. The US and Britain say that they hope a policy rethink in Ankara will also include a distancing from Iran and its alleged nuclear ambitions. “The Turks are increasingly unhappy with what is happening in Syria,” said a western diplomat. Another consequence has been a renewed warming of relations with Israel after the row over the Gaza aid flotilla last year, when a Turkish ship was boarded on the open seas by Israeli commandos and nine activists killed. Syria was furious last month when Turkey hosted a high-profile conference of Syrian opposition activists in Antalya. Turkish officials deny any plan to create a “security zone” on the border – a sensitive step given memories of Ottoman days (and the Turkish border province of Hatay, which Syria continues to claim as unjustly ceded in a plebiscite), and especially without an international mandate. Turks recognise the change that has taken place. “Turkey’s close rapport with the US regarding … Syrian politics shows Turkey has completely parted company with Assad,” commented Nihat Ali Özcan in the Hurriyet daily. “Erdogan doesn’t want another diplomatic crisis in the context of Syria, like the one instigated by the nuclear issue with Iran. We can say that he is ideologically much closer to the Muslim Brotherhood than Assad.” The US has praised Turkey for its “big heart” in helping refugees. “But clearly, Turkish patience appears to be wearing thin, and we share all of their humanitarian and political concerns,” said a US state department spokesman. “Erdogan is in a very challenging position,” Hakura added. “He is trying to react to facts on the ground in Syria, but at the same time he hasn’t called on Assad to step down. The more violence escalates, the more difficult his position will be.” Syria Bashar Al-Assad Turkey Middle East Ian Black guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …And the plot thickens: Ballistic evidence indicates that the man arrested at Arlington National Cemetery last week may also be the man who fired shots at the Pentagon , the National Museum of the Marine Corps and a Marine recruiting office in October, authorities said today. The suspect, Yonathan Melaku, is…
Continue reading …