Home » Archives by category » News » World News (Page 660)

Newsweek ‘s Michele Bachmann story this week came with a highly unflattering cover photo, drawing criticism even from some of the GOP hopeful’s foes. Jon Stewart also slammed the magazine for the choice of photo, accusing Newsweek of adding weight to conservative claims of liberal media bias. “One thing you…

Continue reading …

Global stocks were up early today following an uptick on Wall Street in the wake of the Fed’s pledge to keep interest rates low. But it wasn’t clear if the rebound would hold. Asia rates climbed and modest hikes marked Britain’s FTSE 100 index (up .2%) and Germany’s DAX (up…

Continue reading …
Taliban who shot down Chinook helicopter killed in US air strike

General John Allen says F-16 strike killed those responsible for deaths of 38 US navy Seals and colleagues in crash A US air strike has killed the Taliban militants believed to be responsible for shooting down a Chinook helicopter, killing 38 US and Afghan troops, the top commander in Afghanistan said. Marine Corps General John Allen told a Pentagon news conference that forces learned where the insurgents had fled to and killed them in an early morning F-16 air strike on Monday. A separate statement from Afghanistan said the strike killed Taliban leader Mullah Mohibullah and the insurgent who fired the rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) that downed the Chinook helicopter. It said the two men were attempting to flee the country. Thirty US troops – most of them elite navy Seals – were killed in the crash, the single deadliest incident for American troops in the Afghan war. Eight Afghans were also killed. President Barack Obama flew to Dover Air Force Base on Tuesday to watch the arrival of the remains of those killed. The military has launched an investigation into the incident. The Chinook was shot down while attempting to come to the aid of a team of soldiers engaged in a firefight. They were on a mission to capture a senior Taliban leader in the Tangi valley responsible for a series of attacks, including the planting of roadside bombs. Allen acknowledged that the main Taliban leader sought in the operation was still at large. The general defended the decision to send in the elite team, saying it was deemed necessary at the time to go after “elements that were escaping” from an ongoing operation to target the Taliban leader. “We committed a force to contain that element from getting out. And, of course, in the process of that, the aircraft was struck by an RPG and crashed,” Allen told Pentagon reporters via video-conference from Kabul. “We’ve run more than a couple of thousand of these night operations over the last year, and this is the only occasion where this has occurred,” he said. “The fact that we lost this aircraft is not … a decision point as to whether we’ll use this aircraft in the future.” While officials believe the helicopter was shot down by an RPG, Allen said the military’s investigation into the crash will also review whether small-arms fire or other causes contributed to the crash. Allen said the subsequent F-16 air strike killed the insurgents believed to be behind the attack – an assertion the Taliban immediately challenged. In Afghanistan Zabihullah Mujahid, a spokesman for the Taliban, said: “The person who shot down the helicopter is alive and he is in another province operating against [foreign forces],” he told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location. Afghanistan Taliban US military United States Nato guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

A dad who created a blog called “Psycho Ex Wife” to document his bitter divorce and custody battle is balking at a court order to take down the site or risk losing joint custody of his two sons. Anthony Morelli—whose descriptions of his ex-wife on the blog include “Jabba…

Continue reading …

Big Bird could be best man. That’s the image if an online push is successful to join Bert and Ernie in gay matrimony. “We are not asking that Sesame Street do anything crude or disrespectful,” reads the merger petition at change.org . “It can be done in a tasteful way….

Continue reading …

Artillery fire has once again been exchanged around the disputed maritime border between North and South Korea. The South Korean military says it fired three artillery rounds into North Korea waters after three shells from the North landed close to the border, Bloomberg reports. The military says it wasn’t aware…

Continue reading …
Red Cross brands assaults on medics in conflict zones a ‘humanitarian tragedy’

Violence against medical personnel in areas of unrest costing millions of lives, according to ICRC report Attacks on doctors and healthcare workers in conflicts from Somalia to Afghanistan have a drastic knock-on effect by jeopardising the health of millions, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said in a report on Wednesday. “Violence that prevents the delivery of healthcare is currently one of the most urgent, yet overlooked, humanitarian tragedies,” Yves Daccord, ICRC director-general, said in a statement. “Hospitals in Sri Lanka and Somalia have been shelled, ambulances in Libya shot at, paramedics in Colombia killed, and wounded people in Afghanistan forced to languish for hours in vehicles held up in checkpoint queues. The issue has been staring us in the face for years. It must end.” According to Dr Robin Coupland, who led research carried out in 16 countries, millions could be spared if the delivery of healthcare were more widely respected. “The most shocking finding is that people die in large numbers not because they are direct victims of a roadside bomb or a shooting,” he said. “They die because the ambulance does not get there in time, because healthcare personnel are prevented from doing their work, because hospitals are themselves targets of attacks or simply because the environment is too dangerous for effective healthcare to be delivered.” In one case cited by the report, Health Care in Danger, Israeli forces prevented ambulance teams from reaching a house in the Zaytun neighbourhood that had been shelled during an offensive in Gaza in 2009. When the teams finally reached the house after disobeying soldiers’ orders to turn back, they found four young children who had been crouching by the bodies of their mothers for four days. The report cited several egregious attacks on healthcare workers. In 2009, a suicide bomber killed more than 20 people, most of whom had just graduated from medical school in Mogadishu, Somalia. The attack, the report said, not only prematurely ended the lives of young doctors – only the second batch of medical graduates in the past 20 years – but also destroyed any chance that tens of thousands of people might have had of receiving medical attention in the future. A month later, the Puthukkudiyiruppu hospital in the Vanni region of northern Sri Lanka was shelled, suffering two direct hits, killing and wounding many of the 500 patients. Last April, Taliban insurgents in the southern city of Kandahar used an ambulance packed with explosives to kill 12 people at a police training base, the ICRC said. Such incidents represent the tip of the iceberg, according to the ICRC, as attacks on healthcare facilities and personnel have become common in conflicts and upheavals around the world. Libya, for instance, has been affected by an exodus of healthcare professionals since unrest broke out early this year. Similarly, Iraq has reported that 18,000 to 34,000 doctors fled the country between 2003 and 2006. The ICRC expressed particular concern at the long-term effects of attacks on medical personnel. The fight to eradicate polio has faced setbacks in countries such as Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the safety of vaccination teams is difficult to assure. “These disruptions to healthcare caused by violence are less visible and more difficult to measure than overt attacks against healthcare personnel and facilities,” the report said. “But they are just as deadly for all the wounded and sick who never manage to reach the help they require.” The ICRC said the healthcare community alone cannot address the challenge. “It is imperative that states, their armed forces but also others exercising authority recognise that violence that disrupts the delivery of healthcare is one of the most serious and widespread humanitarian challenges,” it said. Daccord called on parliaments and courts to ensure domestic legislation recognises the criminality of those who violate international humanitarian law and hold the perpetrators of violations accountable. “Violence against healthcare facilities and personnel represents one of the most serious yet neglected humanitarian issues of today,” he said. “Not only is it morally reprehensible, it is illegal under international law.” Conflict and development Mark Tran guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

An outbreak of rioting and looting just as officials from almost 200 Olympic committees were visiting London has left organizers scrambling to reassure the world that security won’t be an issue at the 2012 London Games. Officials say they are confident that local authorities will be able to handle security,…

Continue reading …
Care home providers at the centre of abuse scandal close a second property

Castlebeck, the company that owned Winterbourne View care home in Bristol whose staff were filmed by undercover journalists abusing residents, is to close a second residence A second care home owned by the company at the centre of allegations of abuse of vulnerable patients is to close, it was announced on Wednesday. Castlebeck, which owned the Winterbourne View care home in Bristol where abuse was filmed by an undercover BBC journalist for Panorama, has said it will close Rose Villa, also in Bristol. Four members of Rose Villa’s staff were suspended last month following an inspection by regulator the Care Quality Commission (CQC) while allegations of misconduct were investigated. But Castlebeck today said it was closing the rehabilitation centre for adults with learning disabilities, which has five patients and 30 staff, for “operational reasons”. Winterbourne View, which saw 13 staff members suspended over allegations of abuse, closed in June. Castlebeck’s chief executive, Lee Reed, the company was closing the site “with regret”. “The service is being closed purely for operational reasons,” he said. “Whilst we recognise the concerns raised in the recent CQC inspection report, our decision has resulted from the fact that in reviewing operational practicalities, Rose Villa would be left on its own in the South West – some distance from the support that could be provided by our services in the West Midlands. “The decision is purely voluntary and not at the instigation of CQC. “We very much appreciate the support given to Rose Villa by commissioners since the service opened. However, we also understand the scrutiny they are under in terms of continuing to commission from a service where CQC have identified concerns, albeit that these could, in our opinion, be relatively easily addressed.” The CQC carried out an inspection of Rose Villa on 1 July, and two members of staff were suspended after concerns were raised about safeguarding. According to the BBC, another member of staff was suspended in June after a whistleblower went public, and the fourth worker is accused of mishandling a patient. The CQC, in a report released at the end of July, said Castlebeck must make “root and branch improvements” to its homes. In addition to Rose Villa, the CQC said it had serious concerns about three other Castlebeck services, while another seven did not fully comply with essential standards of quality and safety. Castlebeck has 23 sites – 11 independent mental health hospitals and 12 adult social care centres. The four which the CQC said raised serious concerns are: Arden Vale in Solihull, Cedar Vale in Nottingham, Croxton Lodge in Melton Mowbray, and Rose Villa. The seven non-compliant sites are: Acrefield House in Wirral, Briar Court Nursing Home in Hartlepool, Chesterholme in Hexham, The East Midlands Centre for Neurobehavioural Rehabilitation in Melton Mowbray, Hollyhurst in Darlington, Oaklands in Hexham and Willow House in Edgbaston. Staff at Rose Villa, which opened in the Brislington area of the city in December 2009, were told of the decision to close it this morning, the company said. It said it was looking to transfer patients to other facilities with minimal disruption. All staff, it said, “will be able to apply for alternative employment within Castlebeck as appropriate”. Winterbourne View, in the Bristol suburb of Hambrook, was closed in June after horrifying allegations of abuse were made. The Panorama footage appeared to show vulnerable residents with learning disabilities being pinned down, slapped, doused in cold water and repeatedly taunted and teased. Learning disability Disability Social care Long-term care Bristol Healthcare industry guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Phone hacking: 61-year-old man arrested

Man arrested by Scotland Yard reported to be former News of the World newsdesk executive Greg Miskiw The Metropolitan police on Wednesday arrested a 61-year-old man, understood to be former News of the World newsdesk executive Greg Miskiw, as part of its investigation into phone hacking at the paper. Officers from Operation Weeting, Scotland Yard’s investigation into phone hacking at the now-defunct News International tabloid, made the arrest by appointment at a London police station at about midday. The man arrested is Miskiw, according to sources. The man was arrested on suspicion of unlawful interception of communications and conspiring to intercept communications, both contrary to section 1(1) of the Criminal Law Act 1977. Miskiw is the 12th person to be arrested by officers investigating phone hacking at the News of the World. He was the title’s news editor, based at its offices in Wapping, London. He moved to Manchester to head up an office for the title soon after former royal editor Clive Goodman was jailed for phone hacking in January 2007. Miskiw went on to found a news agency in Manchester but then moved to Delray Beach in Florida, where he is thought to have worked for supermarket tabloid the National Enquirer and for another title called the Globe. He said in July that he had been talking to police “for some time” and he was preparing to return to the UK to answer police questions about phone hacking. His former partner Terenia Taras, 39, who is also the mother of his son, was arrested in Leeds in June. Taras, a freelance, has had bylined stories in the News of the World. She was released on bail. Miskiw worked under the former News of the World editor, Andy Coulson, who resigned in January 2007, and his predecessor Rebekah Brooks, who went on to become editor of the Sun and then chief executive of News International, which owns Rupert Murdoch’s UK titles. Brooks resigned last month in the wake of revelations the News of the World had hacked into a mobile phone belonging to Milly Dowler, the teenager who was murdered in 2002. She was subsequently arrested and bailed on 17 July by officers working on Operation Weeting and Operation Elveden, the Met investigation into alleged illegal payments by the News of the World to police officers. Brooks’ lawyer, Stephen Parkinson, said police “put no allegations to Brooks and showed her no documents connecting her with any crime”. •

Continue reading …