Since September 11, 2001, 45 NYPD officers have died of cancer. It may not seem like a huge number, until you consider that it’s nearly twice as many as the 23 who died in the 9/11 terror attacks—and that hundreds of other cops also have the disease. But even…
Continue reading …Gaza militants agreed to a cease-fire with Israel to stop spiking violence, a Hamas official said today, after a deadly attack across the Egyptian border on Israeli vehicles set off a three-day round of rapidly escalating Israeli airstrikes and rocket barrages from Gaza. The sudden flareup also threatened Israel-Egypt relations,…
Continue reading …National Transitional Council confirms capture of ruler’s son and rebel convoy enters Green Square, the capital’s symbolic heart Hundreds of rebel fighters pushed into the centre of the Libyan capital, Tripoli, late on Sunday as their battle to overthrow the 42-year rule of Muammar Gaddafi moved closer to ending in victory. Rebels waved opposition flags and fired guns into the air in jubilation after reaching Tripoli’s central Green Square, the symbolic heart of the city, in the early hours of Monday morning. Delighted residents were seen pouring into the streets to celebrate and greet the rebel fighters as they advanced through the suburbs towards the centre. The prosecutor of the international criminal court said one of Gaddafi’s sons, Saif al-Islam, who has been indicted along with his father on crimes against humanity charges had been detained. The head of the rebel National Transitional Council, Mustafa Abd el-Jalil said that his fighters who had detained Saif al-Islam had been given instructions to “treat him well”. There were also reports that Gaddafi’s eldest son, Mohammed, and the presidential guard had surrendered but Gaddafi’s Bab al-Aziziya compound was still under the control of the regime. As crowds gathered in Tripoli and the rebel-held city of Misrata, Gaddafi staged a dramatic late-night appeal for help. Speaking on state television via audiolink, for the second time on Sunday, the dictator sounded more measured than in previous, emotionally charged speeches. He said to the Libyan people: “There are criminals, they are coming to destroy Tripoli. They are coming to steal our oil. “Now it [Tripoli] is in ruins. They are coming, they are destroying it. Come out of your houses and fight these betrayers. Hurry up, hurry up, families and tribes, go to Tripoli. Call the tribes to go to Tripoli.” Libyan information ministry spokesman Moussa Ibrahim also insisted that Gaddafi forces would stand and fight. He said: “We are still very strong. We have thousands and thousands of fighters who have nowhere to go but to fight. “Nato has intensified its attacks on and around Tripoli, giving immediate and direct support for the rebels’ forces to advance into a peaceful capital of this great nation and the death toll is beyond imagination.” In an attempt to try to avoid a heavy battle in the city centre, Abd el-Jalil said the rebel fighters would halt their offensive if Gaddafi announced his departure, adding that they would give Gaddafi and his sons safe passage out of the country. Nato said on Sunday the situation was “very fluid”. “We can see that the regime is crumbling, and the sooner Gaddafi realises he cannot win this war against his own people, the better,” Nato spokeswoman Oana Lungescu said. “He’s the one who’s responsible for starting the conflict and he should spare his people further bloodshed,” she added. Britain called on Gaddafi to stand down to save his people from further suffering. Downing Street said it was clear that the “end is near” for the Libyan leader. “It is clear from the scenes we are witnessing in Tripoli that the end is near for Gaddafi,” No 10 said. “He has committed appalling crimes against the people of Libya and he must go now to avoid any further suffering for his own people.” Earlier Muammar Gaddafi called for supporters from across Libya to help him defend the capital, with rebel forces then already in control of parts and massing
Continue reading …National Transitional Council confirms capture of ruler’s son and rebel convoy enters Green Square, the capital’s symbolic heart Hundreds of rebel fighters pushed into the centre of the Libyan capital, Tripoli, late on Sunday as their battle to overthrow the 42-year rule of Muammar Gaddafi moved closer to ending in victory. Rebels waved opposition flags and fired guns into the air in jubilation after reaching Tripoli’s central Green Square, the symbolic heart of the city, in the early hours of Monday morning. Delighted residents were seen pouring into the streets to celebrate and greet the rebel fighters as they advanced through the suburbs towards the centre. The prosecutor of the international criminal court said one of Gaddafi’s sons, Saif al-Islam, who has been indicted along with his father on crimes against humanity charges had been detained. The head of the rebel National Transitional Council, Mustafa Abd el-Jalil said that his fighters who had detained Saif al-Islam had been given instructions to “treat him well”. There were also reports that Gaddafi’s eldest son, Mohammed, and the presidential guard had surrendered but Gaddafi’s Bab al-Aziziya compound was still under the control of the regime. As crowds gathered in Tripoli and the rebel-held city of Misrata, Gaddafi staged a dramatic late-night appeal for help. Speaking on state television via audiolink, for the second time on Sunday, the dictator sounded more measured than in previous, emotionally charged speeches. He said to the Libyan people: “There are criminals, they are coming to destroy Tripoli. They are coming to steal our oil. “Now it [Tripoli] is in ruins. They are coming, they are destroying it. Come out of your houses and fight these betrayers. Hurry up, hurry up, families and tribes, go to Tripoli. Call the tribes to go to Tripoli.” Libyan information ministry spokesman Moussa Ibrahim also insisted that Gaddafi forces would stand and fight. He said: “We are still very strong. We have thousands and thousands of fighters who have nowhere to go but to fight. “Nato has intensified its attacks on and around Tripoli, giving immediate and direct support for the rebels’ forces to advance into a peaceful capital of this great nation and the death toll is beyond imagination.” In an attempt to try to avoid a heavy battle in the city centre, Abd el-Jalil said the rebel fighters would halt their offensive if Gaddafi announced his departure, adding that they would give Gaddafi and his sons safe passage out of the country. Nato said on Sunday the situation was “very fluid”. “We can see that the regime is crumbling, and the sooner Gaddafi realises he cannot win this war against his own people, the better,” Nato spokeswoman Oana Lungescu said. “He’s the one who’s responsible for starting the conflict and he should spare his people further bloodshed,” she added. Britain called on Gaddafi to stand down to save his people from further suffering. Downing Street said it was clear that the “end is near” for the Libyan leader. “It is clear from the scenes we are witnessing in Tripoli that the end is near for Gaddafi,” No 10 said. “He has committed appalling crimes against the people of Libya and he must go now to avoid any further suffering for his own people.” Earlier Muammar Gaddafi called for supporters from across Libya to help him defend the capital, with rebel forces then already in control of parts and massing
Continue reading …She probably didn’t make $17.9 million doing it, but country crooner Chely Wright has gotten married to girlfriend Lauren Blitzer a year after coming out on the cover of People magazine . The pair wed yesterday in Connecticut, and Wright’s Twitter account was abuzz with photos of the two women…
Continue reading …Moammar Gadhafi’s gig is up, according to John McCain , who today told Face the Nation that Libyan rebels’ victory is “a matter of hours, if not days.” “I believe that it’s nearing the end,” McCain said, who cautioned about the difficulties in transitioning to democracy, but said ultimately, “we will…
Continue reading …Wearing a “F*** the 49ers” T-shirt to a 49ers game wasn’t the brightest idea, but it could prove deadly for a man shot two to four times in the stomach last night following a preseason game against the Oakland Raiders. The 24-year-old is in critical condition, reports the San Francisco…
Continue reading …Strauss-Kahn’s accuser summoned to meeting with prosecutors, in sign that at least some of the charges will be dropped Prosecutors are expected to drop sexual assault and other charges against Dominique Strauss-Kahn at a court hearing on Tuesday. Lawyers representing Strauss-Kahn’s accuser, Nafissatou Diallo, say she has been summoned to a meeting with prosecutors in New York on Monday, which they believe to be a sign that at least some of the charges, including the most serious, will be abandoned. Diallo alleged that Strauss-Kahn attempted to rape her after she went to clean his hotel suite. Strauss-Kahn, the former head of the IMF, has said the sexual encounter with Diallo was consensual and accused her of trying to extort money. Diallo’s lawyers believe that the Manhattan district attorney’s office will ask the court to drop the charges because her credibility as a witness was damaged when it was revealed she lied on an application for asylum in the US about being raped by soldiers in her native Guinea. “My interpretation of that letter is that they’re going to announce that they’re dismissing the case entirely, or some of the charges,” Diallo’s lawyer, Kenneth Thompson, told the New York Times . “If they were not going to dismiss the charges there would be no need to meet with her. They would just go to court the next day to say ‘we’re going to proceed with the case’.” Thompson criticised the decision. “The tone of the letter is consistent with the unfair way the Manhattan district attorney’s office has treated Ms Diallo throughout this process. It’s as if she is the defendant and Dominique Strauss-Kahn is the victim.” Another of Diallo’s lawyers, Douglas Wigdor, told the French newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche that the decision to abandon the prosecution was “incomprehensible”. It is not clear whether all of the charges will be dropped. Strauss-Kahn’s lawyers in New York have rejected any possibility of a plea deal in which he would plead guilty to a relatively minor offence, such as simple assault, and receive a non-custodial sentence. If the charges are dismissed Strauss-Kahn will be free to return to France, three months after he was removed from an Air France flight in New York. He is still facing a civil suit filed by Diallo a fortnight ago seeking damages for a “violent and sadistic” attack. Strauss-Kahn is also under investigation in France after a writer, Tristane Banon, alleged that he tried to rape her in 2002. The case against Strauss-Kahn began to collapse when it was disclosed in June that Diallo had lied on her asylum application and to investigators about other aspects of her background and personal life. Her credibility was also damaged by the revelation that shortly after the alleged rape she called a friend being held at an immigration detention centre in Arizona and spoke of claiming money from Strauss-Kahn. Some public figures and women’s groups have urged the district attorney, Cyrus Vance, not to drop the prosecution after Diallo gave up her right to anonymity and went public with details of the alleged attack after her credibility came into question. Dominique Strauss-Kahn United States France IMF Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
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