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Seriously ill boy taken from UK hospital found in Spain: Police

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 31 Agustus 2014 | 17.35

MADRID: A seriously ill child taken from a British hospital earlier this week by his parents, whose disappearance caused a major hunt amid fears his life could be at risk, was found in the south of Spain on Saturday, British and Spanish police said.

Five-year-old Ashya King — who is suffering from a brain tumour — and his parents were located in a hotel near the city of Malaga, Spanish police said in a statement on Twitter, adding that he had been transferred to hospital and his parents had been arrested.

The boy was removed from Southampton General Hospital in southern England by his mother, Naghemeh, and father, Brett, on Thursday afternoon, sparking a wide appeal across several countries to find the child as fears grew he would not receive the medical treatment he needed.

The family, including Ashya King and his six siblings, had been seen arriving by a ferry in Cherbourg in France. Interpol had issued a global alert to find the missing child.

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Death of US teen: Hundreds protest in Ferguson, urge others to join

FERGUSON: More than 1,000 protesters marched Saturday in the town of Ferguson, Missouri, peacefully reprising recent demonstrations over the shooting this month of an unarmed black teenager by a white police officer, US media reported.

The New York Times wrote that some protesters called for more demonstrations on Monday, urging motorists to tie up traffic on the Labor Day national holiday.

The newspaper wrote that Saturday's march and rally were organized by a coalition of black activists, Missouri state legislators, civil rights organizers and other groups.

The August 9 killing of Michael Brown, 18, and the subsequent crackdown on demonstrators in the St Louis suburb of Ferguson revived a debate about race in the United States, and sparked condemnation of the militarization of the nation's police forces.

Ferguson was hit with several days of at times violent protests and clashes in the wake of Brown's shooting by white police officer Darren Wilson.

A grand jury is hearing evidence to determine whether Wilson, 28, used excessive force in fatally shooting Brown, found in autopsies to have been shot six times.

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Australia to join multinational weapons drop into Iraq

PERTH: Australia will drop military equipment and aid to Kurdish forces fighting Islamic State militants in northern Iraq in response to a request from the United States, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said on Sunday.

Australia will join Canada, Italy, France, Britain and the United States in providing arms and humanitarian relief as part of a multinational effort to be coordinated by Iraq and other countries in the region, Abbott said.

"The situation in Iraq represents a humanitarian catastrophe," Abbott said in a statement. He said Australia would continue to work with international partners to "address the security threat" posed by the militants.

The United States is intensifying its push to build an international campaign against Islamic State fighters who have seized a third each of Iraq and Syria, declared open war against the West and want to establish a hub of jihadism in the heart of the Arab world.

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Ten pilgrims killed in bus-truck collision in Rajasthan

JODHPUR: Ten pilgrims were killed and 34 others injured, 16 of them seriously, when a bus carrying them collided head-on with a truck in Pali district on Sunday.

The bus carrying pilgrims from different villages of Udaipur was returning from the shrine of Baba Ramdeo near Pokhran when the mishap took place, district magistrate (Pali) Rohit Gupta said.

"When the bus was passing through Manida village on the Pali-Udaipur bypass at about 6am, it collided with a truck coming from the opposite direction", said Gupta.

The accident took place apparently as the driver of one of the vehicles dozed off at the wheel, an official said,

While six passengers died on the spot, four others died on way to the hospital.

"We have rushed 16 passengers, who were seriously injured, to Jodhpur and others have been admitted to the Bangar Hospital in Pali itself," Gupta said.

The Pali administration has announced an ex-gratia relief of Rs 50,000 each for the next of the kin of the deceased from the chief minister's Relief Fund.

The bus was carrying about 45 passengers. While the driver of the truck was missing after the accident, the bus driver was killed in the accident.

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Five killed as gas cylinder explodes in bus in Tamil Nadu

RAMANATHAPURAM: Five people were charred to death and six injured when an overloaded bus from West Bengal, carrying 80 pilgrims, caught fire after a gas cylinder exploded on board at Tiruppullani near here, police said.

The bus was gutted in the mishap that occurred late on Saturday night when the pilgrims were en route to Kanyakumari after visiting Tirupati and Rameswaram.

Police said the driver of the bus had noticed a spark at the back of the bus through the rear view mirror and had immediately stopped the bus, and asked the passengers to get down. Suddenly one of the two LPG cylinders on board exploded and the fire spread fast helped by strong winds blowing through the coastal area.

The driver of the bus and a tourist guide Srinivasan from Tirukallukundram helped several passengers to get down but 11 persons were trapped by smoke and fire at the rear.

Police said five of them — Viswanath Dass (68) Viswanath Mandal (78), Gopal (70), Durga Sinide (50) and Malathi Nayaki (60) were killed, while six others who were injured had been admitted to the government hospital where the condition of two persons is stated to be serious.

Officials said the bus was overloaded and the 80 passengers, hailing from districts like Hooghly and Midnapore districts, had left West Bengal on August 22.

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Migrant boat carrying 100 capsizes off Libya

TRIPOLI, Libya: A Libyan coast guard official said a boat carrying more than 100 migrants capsized off the coast near the capital.

Abdel-Latif Mohammed said that the coast guard found the damaged rubber boat early Sunday off the shores of al-Qarbouli, 50 kilometers (30 miles) east of Tripoli. The coast guard has not yet confirmed the number of deaths but estimated the boat carried at least 100 people.

Last week at least 100 African migrants, including five children, drowned in the same area.

Libya has grown increasingly lawless since the 2011 overthrow of dictator Moammar Gadhafi, making it a migration hub for sub-Saharan Africans seeking a better life. Scores are killed every year on the dangerous journey to Europe.

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US authorities investigate suspected threat against Obama: Reports

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 30 Agustus 2014 | 17.35

Authorities in Connecticut on Friday were investigating a possible threat against President Barack Obama, local media reported.
The US Secret Service, which is responsible for presidential security, issued a statement saying, "Information has been received by law enforcement regarding a potentially suspicious person and vehicle. We are working with our local law enforcement partners to determine the validity of the information provided."
The Hartford Courant said state police were searching for a man who allegedly had made a threat against Obama and was driving a silver Volkswagen Jetta.
Obama was scheduled to be in Rhode Island on Friday night for a Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee fundraiser.
No further details were immediately available.

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China warns against foreign meddling in Hong Kong

BEIJING: China warned against foreign meddling in Hong Kong's politics on Saturday ahead of an expected announcement to recommend highly contentious restrictions on the first direct elections for the leader of the Chinese-controlled financial hub.

An article in the ruling Communist Party's flagship newspaper People's Daily said that some in the former British colony were colluding with outside forces to interfere in Hong Kong's governance.

"Not only are they undermining Hong Kong's stability and development, but they're also attempting to turn Hong Kong into a bridgehead for subverting and infiltrating the Chinese mainland," said the article.

"This can absolutely not be permitted," it said, citing an unidentified official in the foreign ministry's department for Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan affairs.

The article said that as a special administrative region of China, Hong Kong's affairs are entirely a Chinese internal matter. China will refute and make "solemn representations" in response to statements and actions by foreign forces and demand that they "cease meddling in Hong Kong's affairs and Chinese internal political matters by any means," it said.

The article did not identify any individuals or groups, although Britain and the US have both been vocal about their hopes for genuine democratic reform in Hong Kong.

The warning appeared as China's legislature was expected to announce Sunday that an elite pro-Beijing body must vet candidates for the territory's leader starting from 2017 — setting up a showdown with pro-democracy groups who want the public to be able to nominate people freely.

Hong Kong newspapers have reported that the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress in Beijing will recommend that voters choose from up to three candidates named by a similar nominating body while the public gets no say.

That would resemble the current system under which a 1,200-member panel stacked with mostly pro-Beijing elites gets to pick the leader.

Democracy activists are threatening to respond with a mass sit-in paralyzing the financial district that is the symbolic heart of the city. Student leaders are also considering a walkout of university classes next month.

Since being handed back from Britain in 1997, Hong Kong has retained a high degree of legal, economic and political autonomy. But there are growing concerns among many of the territory's 7 million people that Beijing wishes to insert itself more strongly into Hong Kong's affairs, particularly in ensuring that its leadership remain beholden to the Communist Party.

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Family, sect members mourn South Korea ferry owner at funeral

SEOUL: Family and church members mourned at a private funeral on Saturday a South Korean businessman linked to a ferry that sank in April killing hundreds of children, though his death remained shrouded in mystery.

Yoo Byung-un, 73, was found dead in a plum orchard in June, but his body was not identified for more than a month, despite him being wanted in connection with the sinking of the Sewol ferry, with 476 passengers and crew on board.

Around 300 people drowned in South Korea's worst maritime accident in decades, while 172 survived.

Most of the victims were children on a school trip. The tragedy caused an outpouring of nationwide grief, and the government of President Park Geun-hye was heavily criticised for the ineffective response to the disaster.

Yoo was the head of the family that owned the ferry operator's holding company. He was accused of a range of questionable activities that included embezzlement and negligence that prosecutors believe led to the ferry disaster.

The coffin holding his body was brought to a sprawling rural compound of the Evangelical Baptist Church about 80 kilometers south of Seoul, as church members streamed in to attend the two-day funeral service.

The service was closed to outsiders and the news media. The interment will take place on Sunday.

"He will be buried on a mountain inside the complex, which will be 5-10 minute walk from his father-in-law's grave," said Lee Tae-jong, a church official. Yoo had co-founded the church, along with his later father-in-law.

"Yoo was our mentor who taught about the Bible and loved nature and our country. I feel so sad to see him becoming feed for maggots," a church member said, requesting anonymity.

"There will be a judgement by God some day."

ARRESTS, HOMICIDE TRIAL

The Sewol ferry capsized and sank after trying to make a sharp turn while on a routine journey from Incheon on the mainland to the southern holiday island near the southwestern coast. It was later found to be structurally defective and overloaded.

On trial for homicide along with three crew members, the ferry's 68-year-old captain Lee Joon-seok took the stand for the first time this week. He told the court he was just following established practice in not making safety checks before the vessel set off, Yonhap news agency reported.

Authorities have arrested or questioned Yoo's family members and associates of the Christian sect, but have failed to unlock the circumstances surrounding his death.

Investigators looking to capture him continued on with the country's largest manhunt with a reward of 500 million won, the highest allowed under criminal law, unaware his body was near a cabin they had searched, next to a cover of a book he had written and empty bottles of alcohol.

Yoo's wife, brothers and oldest son have been arrested on charges including embezzlement but were granted temporary release from detention so that they could attend the funeral.

But, his younger son, Yoo Hyuck-ki, remains at large and is believed to be overseas.

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Schoolgirl found dead under mysterious circumstances in Hisar

CHANDIGARH:A schoolgirl in Hisar was found dead under mysterious circumstances, after being allegedly stalked by some youths, police said on Saturday.

The 15-year-old girl, a class 9 student, was allegedly stalked by some youths when she had gone to meet a friend of her, they said.

The gang of four youths passed lewd remarks and later on some villagers intervened to help the girl to let her go.

After the incident, she feared that the entire village had come to know about it and apparently developed a sense of guilt. On Thursday, the girl was found dead in her village in Hisar, police said.

"The girl had a friendship with a boy of the village. She was spotted with the boy by some youths who teased her and passed some objectionable remarks. The boy was beaten up by them," Hisar's SP, Vikas Dhankar, said.

He said a case has been registered against the youths and further investigations were in progress.

The incident comes close on the heels of a stalking case in Rohtak earlier this week, in which two teenaged girls had allegedly consumed poison at their coaching centre, after they were allegedly stalked and harassed by some youths.

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Violence during Ganesha procession in Vadodara

VADODARA: Tension gripped the Fatehpura locality when a group of people allegedly pelted stones at a Ganesha procession, police said on Saturday.

The incident took place last night when some unidentified people argeted a procession taken out on Ganesh Chaturthi.

Police fired 15 tear gas shells to disperse the stone pelters, Vadodara city Joint Police Commissioner D J Patel.

A team of police personnel along with senior City Police Commissioner E Radhakrishnan rushed to the spot and brought the situation under control, he said.

No arrests have been made so far and further investigations are on, Patel said, adding, police vigil has been stepped up in the city in view of the 10-day Ganesha festival.

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Ukrainian cargo plane with 7 on board crashes in Algeria: Official

ALGIERS: A Ukrainian cargo plane with seven people on board crashed in Algeria's far south on Saturday, an Algerian transport ministry official said.

The Antonov-12 cargo plane en route to Equatorial Guinea crashed at 0240 local time after taking off from Tamanrasset airport, the official said, adding that three burned bodies were found at the crash site.

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Philippine man sentenced to death in Vietnam

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 29 Agustus 2014 | 17.34

HANOI, Vietnam: State media say a court in Hanoi has sentenced a Philippine man to death for cocaine trafficking.

The Law and Society newspaper says that Emmanuel Sillo Camacho, 39, was convicted of trafficking 3.4 kilograms (7.5 pounds) of cocaine from Brazil to Vietnam at a one-day trial on Thursday.

Camacho was arrested in December last year when officials at Hanoi's Noi Bai international airport found the drugs in his luggage.

The newspaper quoted Camacho as telling the court that he transported the drug for a Philippine woman living in Brazil after she promised to find him a job with monthly salary of up to $1,500 in the South American country.

Vietnam has some of the world's toughest drug laws, where trafficking 100 grams (3.5 ounces) of heroin is punishable by death.

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Japan economy stalls as incomes, spending languish

TOKYO: Japan's vital signs remained weak in July as wages fell further and household spending dropped, signaling continued weakness in the world's third-largest economy.

Data released Friday showed the inflation rate was unchanged from the previous month. The core price consumer index that excludes volatile fresh food prices rose 3.3% in July, the same as a month earlier. Much of the increase stems from a 2%age point increase in Japan's sales tax in April, which has since sapped much of the steam from the country's economic recovery.

Under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the government and central bank have sought to spur inflation on the premise that it would goad businesses and consumers into spending more instead of saving money in anticipation the Japan's deflationary spiral will guarantee lower prices in the future.

That strategy, dubbed "Abenomics," has made some headway in ending the long spell of deflation that slowed growth for much of the past two decades. But headline inflation remains below the official target of 2%, excluding the boost from the tax hike, and so far there are only scant signs of the desired "virtuous cycle" of higher corporate spending to sustain growth in the long term.

Real incomes fell 6.2% in July from a year earlier and the unemployment rate edged higher to 3.8% from 3.7% in June. Softness in the labor market would counter any moves toward higher wages that might help spur more consumer demand.

The economy contracted by 6.8% in the April-June quarter, following a surge early in the year as businesses and families stepped up buying ahead of the tax hike, which raised the consumption tax to 8% from 5%. The government plans extra stimulus spending to counter the tax hike's lingering effects.

Industrial production rose slightly in July, by 0.2% from June, but was down 0.9% from a year earlier in seasonally adjusted terms, the ministry of trade and industry reported.

"Today's data on industrial production and retail sales show that the economy continued to stagnate at the start of the third quarter," economist Marcel Thieliant of Capital Economics said in a commentary.

Although a survey showed companies expect output to increase in August and gain further momentum in September, "these forecasts have tended to overestimate the future pace of expansion in the past," he said.

Bank of Japan Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda told fellow central bank chiefs earlier this month that the BOJ plans to continue its "extremely accommodative monetary stance" until inflation has risen to the bank's 2% target. He said the bank's support could be expanded if necessary.

With inflation "running out of steam," growth is likely to moderate even after the recovery resumes as expected in coming months, Credit Agricole said in a research note.

It said that rising inventories "will weigh on the recovery of production into months ahead."

Kuroda and other experts have urged Abe's government to push ahead on structural reforms needed to help Japanese industries regain their competitiveness and counter the stagnating effects of the rapid aging and shrinking of Japan's population.

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Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott to visit India next month

MELBOURNE: Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott is all set to make his first official visit to India next week to further strengthen the strategic partnership and promote trade and investment between the two sides.

"I will travel to India and Malaysia from September 4 to 6. On my first visit to India as Prime Minister, I will visit New Delhi and India's financial capital, Mumbai, to strengthen the strategic partnership between our two countries," he said.

Noting that the two nations have strong and growing economic and trade ties, he said India is Australia's fifth largest export market with total exports of $11.4 billion.

"There is potential for further cooperation in resources, science, technology and education," Abbott said, adding "My visit will be an opportunity to engage with Prime Minister Narendra Modi early in the term of his government to increase bilateral cooperation to advance our mutual interests".

Abbott is also expected to meet other senior political leaders, including President Pranab Mukherjee.

The visit is also an opportunity to promote trade and investment and promote our G20 objectives ahead of the Brisbane summit in November, he said.

"I will be accompanied on my visit to India by a group of senior business leaders. The delegation reflects the breadth of Australian commercial interests in India and showcases opportunities for further business partnerships," he said.

Speculations are high that Abbott's visit to India would see the two nations sign the much-awaited uranium deal.

From India, the Prime Minister would travel to Malaysia for talks with his counterpart Najib Razak.

"Australia's defence ties with Malaysia are amongst our closest in South East Asia and we feel a deep connection to Malaysia given shared experiences arising from the MH370 and MH17 disasters," he said.

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4 killed as bus falls into gorge in Meghalaya

SHILLONG: Four persons were killed and 30 others injured after a bus they were travelling in fell into a deep gorge in Meghalaya's West Garo Hills district, police said on Friday.

The Shillong-bound bus left the district headquarters Tura on Thursday evening and the accident occurred at around 11pm at Dollonggre village, about 50km away from Tura, the district headquarters.

"At least four persons have died. Five critically injured persons were shifted to a Guwahati hospital," inspector general of police (western range) H Nongpluh said.

Other injured were taken to the Tura Civil Hospital, he said.

The bus had to be cut open to retrieve the bodies and rescue the passengers.

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Iceland volcano alert at red after small eruption, no volcanic ash detected

STOCKHOLM: A small eruption has occurred north of Iceland's Bardarbunga volcano after nearly two weeks of earthquakes in the region but no volcanic ash has been detected, authorities said on Friday.

The estimated 1-km fissure eruption in the Holuhraun area prompted the Icelandic Met Office to raise the warning code for aviation to red, the highest level.

The rumblings at Iceland's largest volcano system, which is covered by a several hundred meters thick glacier, have raised worries of an eruption that could spell trouble for air travel. In 2010, an ash cloud from the Eyjafjallajokull volcano closed much of Europe's airspace for six days.

The eruption just after 0000 GMT took place in a lava field not covered by ice. The risk of an ash cloud is highest in case of a sub-glacial eruption.

"The Icelandic Met Office has raised the aviation colorcode over the eruption site to red and the Icelandic Air Traffic Control has closed down the airspace from the earth up to 18000 feet," Iceland's National Crisis Coordination Centre said.

"No volcanic ash has been detected with the radar system at the moment....Seismic eruption tremor is low indicating effusive eruption without significant explosive activity."

Icelandic Met Office spokeswoman Kristin Gudmundsdottir said activity at the fissure seemed to be unchanged in the morning hours after decreasing two hours after the eruption started.

The red warning code indicates that an eruption is imminent or underway, with a risk of ash.

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Ruckus in J&K assembly over land grab allegations against PDP leaders

SRINAGAR: Jammu and Kashmir assembly was on Friday adjourned for a brief period following pandemonium over alleged involvement of PDP leaders including deputy speaker Sartaj Madni in a land grabbing case.

Speaker Mubarak Gul adjourned the house for ten minutes as opposition members including those from PDP and BJP created noisy scenes in the house and disrupted the Question Hour.

As soon as the house assembled on Friday morning, Madni raised the issue of land grabbing allegations levelled by ruling National Conference legislator Bashir Ahmad Veeri in the Legislative Council on Thursday, which were published in local newspapers.

"I will quit politics if it is proved that I have purchased any land, even one marla (272 square feet), since I started my political career," Madni said.

The matter pertains to conversion of 200 hectares of wetland into agriculture land at Marhama in Bijbehara constituency of Anantnag district alleged by a PDP leader.

Veeri alleged that names of PDP patron Mufti Mohammad Sayeed and Madni had also surfaced in the case.

The Legislative Council has already directed the chief secretary to ascertain the documents regarding the land in question and submit a report.

Higher education minister Mohammad Akbar Lone suggested that the speaker constitute a house committee to probe the allegations so that responsibility for the wrongdoing is fixed and punishment meted out to those involved.

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Gadkari urges farmers to go for crop diversification to fight poverty

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 28 Agustus 2014 | 17.34

NEW DELHI: Expressing concern over the poor plight of farmers, rural development minister Nitin Gadkari on Wednesday urged them to grow crops other than wheat and rice to come out of poverty.

Farmers can earn more if they have diversification in crops that can be used for manufacturing ethanol, electricity, bio-gas among other products, he said.

"Today, farmers' situation is very bad. We cannot get our farmers out of poverty if they continue to grow only wheat and rice. They have to go for diversification in agriculture," Gadkari said at an agri-award function organised by agro-chemical firm Crystal Crop Protection Ltd.

Highlighting benefits of ethanol, a byproduct of sugarcane, the minister said that ethanol can be used as an alternative fuel for transpiration purpose and reduce the country's import bill on crude oil.

Uttar Pradesh, the country's largest sugarcane producing state, can produce ethanol sufficient to fuel farm and public utility vehicles like tractors and buses, he said, adding that an air-conditioned bus running on ethanol is plying in Nagpur.

Agriculture minister Radha Mohan Singh said the government is focusing on improving soil health, ensuring irrigation in farm field besides bringing poor into the banking system in order to achieve second Green Revolution.

Soil health cards will be issued under a scheme to all farmers in next three years, while irrigation to farm field will be provided under the proposed 'Pradhan Mantri Gram Sinchai Yojana' in next five years, he said.

A new scheme 'Rashtriya Paramparic Krishi Vikas Yojana' to promote organic farming has also been planned, while efforts are also being made to develop and conserve indigenous cow breeds to raise milk production in the country, he added.

The minister also said that poor farmers will be benefitted from 'Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana' to be launched on Thursday.

Awards were given away to 12 progressive farmers for using innovative practices, six scientists for outstanding contribution to agri research, two special jury awards and one NGO which has been working innovatively among farming communities.

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Nigerian woman under Ebola observation in Madurai hospital

MADURAI: A 34-year-old Nigerian woman has been kept under observation in a special separate ward, set up as a precautionary measure for monitoring suspected Ebola cases, at the Government Rajaji Hospital here.

Stating this today, Hospital officials, however, ruled out the possibility of the woman being infected with the deadly Ebola virus and said she would be discharged after prescribed days of observation.

The woman was an HIV patient and had complained of throat pain and headache. She was tested at the Anti-Retroviral Therapy unit of the hospital and admitted to the separate ward, they said.

Central government has recently started risk categorisation of passengers from Ebola-affected countries at Indian airports as high, medium and low and said the Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP) is tracking all passengers carrying any amount of risk.

It had also stated that a total of 353 passengers are being tracked and most of them are in the states of Maharashtra, Kerala and Tamil Nadu.

The Ebola outbreak in West Africa has killed more than 1,200 people since it began in December 2013.

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Karunanidhi's son Alagiri booked in temple land grabbing case

MADURAI: Former union minister and expelled DMK leader M K Alagiri has been booked for alleged grabbing of land belonging to a local temple, an official said.

Madurai Rural Land grabbing prevention wing police have registered a complaint that Alagiri, son of DMK chief M Karunanidhi, had allegedly grabbed land belonging to a Goddess Mariamman temple for the Dhya Engineering College at Shivarakottai near here, run by a trust headed by him.

The complaint about the alleged land grabbing had been lodged by the Assistant Commissioner of Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments (HR and CE) Board Karunanidhi, according to the Joint Commissioner of the Board Muthuvijayan.

The official said the complaint had been given to the Police and they had registered it.

Police said they had received the complaint and refused to give any further detail.

The college was set up by the Alagiri Educational Trust in 2011 but it became operational only this year following a prolonged legal battle for securing affiliation by Anna University.

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Mother of US reporter in Syria begs for his life

BEIRUT: The mother of a hostage American journalist pleaded for his release Wednesday in a video directed at the Islamic State group, while new images emerged of mass killings, including masked militants shooting kneeling men after the capture of a strategic air base in Syria.

Shirley Sotloff's plea came as a UN commission accused the group, which dominates a broad swath of territory spanning the Syria-Iraq border, of committing crimes against humanity and President Barack Obama weighs options for targeting the extremists' stronghold in Syria.

The Islamic State militants have threatened to kill 31-year-old Steven Sotloff unless the US halts its airstrikes against it.

Sotloff, who freelanced for Time and Foreign Policy magazines, had last been seen in Syria in August 2013 until he appeared in a video released online last week by the Islamic State group showing the beheading of fellow American journalist, James Foley. Dressed in an orange jumpsuit against the backdrop of an arid Syrian landscape, Sotloff was threatened with death unless the US stopped airstrikes on the group in Iraq.

Addressing the leader of the Islamic State group by name, Shirley Sotloff said her son was "an innocent journalist'' who shouldn't pay for US government actions in the Middle East over which he has no control.

Appealing directly to Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who describes himself as a caliph, or Islamic leader intending to lead the Muslim world, she implored him to show mercy and follow the example of the prophet Muhammad.

"You, the caliph, can grant amnesty. I ask you, please, to release my child. I ask you to use your authority to spare his life," Shirley Sotloff said on the video, which was first aired on the Al-Arabiya television network. It was widely retweeted by Islamic State supporters later Wednesday with her face blurred because their ultra-conservative interpretation of Islam prohibits showing a woman's face.

At the White House, spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters he did not know whether Obama had seen Shirley Sotloff's video appeal, but he said the administration was "deeply engaged" in trying to gain release of all Americans held hostage in the Middle East.

"She obviously, as is evident from the video, feels desperate about the safety and well-being of her son, and understandably so, and that is why our thoughts and prayers are with Mr. Sotloff's family at this very difficult and trying time," Earnest said.

Meanwhile, new images emerged of the extremists' bloody takeover of an air base in northeastern Syria.

In one photo posted on the militant group's website, masked gunmen were seen shooting seven men kneeling on the ground, some dressed in what appeared to be Syrian military uniforms, after the seizure of the Tabqa air base in the province of Raqqa earlier this week.

The photos underscored how the group uses violence, and images of violence to terrorize its opponents, as it sweeps further into Syria and Iraq, where it has imposed an Islamic state, or caliphate, governed by its harsh interpretation of Islamic law.

Some photos showed captured Syrian soldiers, many with bloodied and swollen faces. In one, a masked Islamic State fighter stood behind a group of soldiers brandishing a knife of the type the militants have used is the past to behead victims, including Foley. In another, a militant grinned as he pressed a double-edged sword against the neck of a captured soldier inside a jeep.

One photograph showed a headless corpse, while another showed 10 slain men, sprawled in a pool of blood on a dirt road. It wasn't clear if they were killed during the clashes or after being captured.

Videos uploaded to social media networks also showed the aftermath of the battle, including footage of the charred bodies of Syrian soldiers. One video showed about 200 captured soldiers being marched through the desert in their underwear to an unknown fate as militants made the sounds of shepherds herding goats or sheep.

The 36 photos and video images corresponded to reporting by The Associated Press of the Islamic State militants' seizure Sunday of the air base, which had been the last government-held outpost in Raqqa, a province now dominated by the jihadi group. Militants also captured the bases' weaponry, including artillery and mounted machine guns.

The images emerged as a UN commission accused the group of committing crimes against humanity in Syria. The UN had earlier accused the group of similar crimes in Iraq.

"This is a continuation — and a geographic expansion — of the widespread and systematic attack on the civilian population" by the Islamic State group, said the four-member commission chaired by Brazilian diplomat Paulo Sergio Pinheiro.

Pinheiro told reporters one of the most disturbing findings was the existence of large training camps where boys, some as young as 14, are recruited and trained to fight alongside adult Islamic State fighters.

The report, based on 480 interviews and documentary material, cited dozens of public executions in Aleppo and Raqqa during the bloody Syrian civil war that activists say has killed more than 190,000 people since 2011.

The report cited how the group's fighters have beheaded or shot civilians, mostly adult men, accused of violating their harsh interpretation of religious law, as crowds of people, including children, have looked on. The purpose, according to the commission, is "to instill terror among the population, ensuring submission to its authority."

On Monday, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said Islamic State fighters had likely killed up to 670 prisoners in Mosul. Pillay described other crimes that she said amounted to "grave, horrific human rights violations."

In its push to seize parts of northern Iraq, Islamic State fighters most recently caused the expulsion of tens of thousands of civilians who scrambled for safety on a desolate mountain top, where some died of exposure and thirst. The civilians, who belong to Iraq's ancient Yazidi minority, also reported that dozens of women were seized by the fighters and were being kept in schools in Islamic State strongholds. Their fate is unknown.

The UN commission report, which is investigating potential war crimes in Syria, also said Wednesday that the Syrian government of President Bashar Assad likely used chlorine gas to attack civilians.

It was the first time the UN assigned blame for the use of the chemical agent.

The report cited victims and medical workers who described symptoms caused by exposure to chemicals, and witnesses who reported chlorine-like smells immediately after government helicopters dropped explosive-filled canisters from helicopters in the provinces of Idlib and Hama eight times from April 11-29.

Chlorine is not banned under the chemical weapons convention, but the use of any toxic material as a weapon is illegal under international law.

"In Syria, it is total impunity," said commission member Carla del Ponte, a Swiss former war crimes prosecutor. "Crimes are committed each day, from all parties, and nobody's dealing with the criminal responsibility for those crimes."

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Syrian planes bomb border post near Israel captured by rebels

AMMAN: Syrian jets shelled rebel positions near a border crossing close to the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights that was seized by rebels in some of the heaviest clashes in the strategic area this year, rebels and residents said on Thursday.

Al-Qaida's Syria wing Nusra alongside moderate rebel groups who had launched the attack early on Wednesday on the border post were "holding ground" despite the heavy bombardment, according to a source in the Islamist Beit al Maqdis brigade, whose fighters were involved in the fighting.

Abu Iyas al Horani, a spokesman for another rebel group operating in the area, said at least six rebels were killed in the latest spillover of violence in the area that lies almost 20 kilometres west of the town of Quneitra, the main urban centre, which is under state control.

The crossing is monitored by the United Nations, which oversees traffic between the two enemy countries, but the distance between the two warring adversaries' posts is some 200 metres (yards).

During the fighting, two Israelis were wounded by stray bullets, a soldier and a civilian, both in the Golan Heights. Israel responded with artillery fire at two Syrian army positions, the Israeli military said on Wednesday.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 20 Syrian soldiers and 14 rebel fighters were killed in the clashes. The organisation gathers information from all sides in the Syrian war.

A U.N. spokeswoman earlier said the organisation's peacekeepers could not confirm whether the rebels had seized the crossing, "as fighting is ongoing" at one of its gates.

Rebels, who included Al-Qaida inspired militants hostile to the Jewish state, last year briefly took the Quneitra border crossing with Israel and now control many villages in the area.

Hundreds of Nusra fighters who fled from the eastern Deir al-Zor province after being driven out by their hardline rival, the Islamic State, earlier this year have regrouped in southern Syria, boosting a growing rebel presence in that area, activists say.

Earlier this year, Nusra and its allies seized several army bases near the town of Nawa, one of the biggest rebel gains in the south during the three years of Syria's war.

The advances in the south were important not just because they expand rebel control close to the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights and the Jordanian border, but because Assad's power base in Damascus lies just 40 miles (65 km) to the north.

Rebels say a stretched Syrian army fighting on several fronts that has already lost control of large parts of the countryside in southern Syria wants to ensure it does not lose control of the towns of Nawa and Quneitra in the Golan foothills and the city of Deraa, along the border with Jordan.

The southern front's potential as a launchpad for an offensive against the capital means it could ultimately pose the main challenge to Assad.

Rebels have repeatedly launched several offensives aimed at ultimately advancing towards the capital Damascus but they complain lack of sufficient support by Assad's Western and Gulf enemies has prevented them from making real progress.

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Union minister Ravi Shankar Prasad calls on Jayalalithaa

CHENNAI: Union minister and senior BJP leader Ravi Shankar Prasad on Thursday called on Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa at the state secretariat. Their meeting signalled the growing bond between the ruling NDA government at the Centre and the state government.

Prasad received a rousing reception at Chennai airport from party cadres on his maiden visit to the city after becoming minister for law and justice. Union minister of state for heavy industries Pon Radhakrishnan, state BJP chief Tamilisai Soundararajan, national secretary H Raja and state party vice-president M Chakravarty were among those who welcomed him.

The minister, who also holds the communications and IT portfolio, arrived in Chennai for launching the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana. Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana, which is being launched across the country on Thursday, is a financial inclusion plan for proving housing to all with facility of basic bank accounts with debit cards linked to accident insurance.

Talking to reporters, Prasad said he had invited the chief minister for the launch function. He said the chief minister had called on him during his visit to Delhi and he had reciprocated.

Prasad said there was a discussion on some development projects specific to Tamil Nadu as well as wireless connectivity for select panchayats planned in various states.

He would address party cadres this evening.

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Shivraj Singh Chouhan inducted into BJP Parliametary Board

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 27 Agustus 2014 | 17.34

BHOPAL: What BJP veteran LK Advani recommended in March last year, has been implemented by party national president Amit Shah on Tuesday. Chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan has been appointed as one of the 12 members of the BJP Parliamentary Board - the highest decision making elite body of the party. In addition he has also inducted into the 15-member national election committee.

On March 31 last year Prime Minister Narendra Modi was inducted into the Parliamentary Board because he would be given a major role to play in the 2014 elections.

At that time LK Advani, who was opposing Narendra Modi as probable PM candidate stature, had recommended that Shivraj Singh Chouhan was an equally efficient administrator and should be given a place in the Parliamentary Board. But Advani's recommendation was ignored and Narendra Modi became the only chief minister to be inducted into the top decision making body.

One year and five months later, it is none other than Prime Minister Modi's trusted man Amit Shah who willingly and without any dispute made place for Chouhan (again, as the only chief minister) in the Parliamentary Board. Though it was always said that Chhattisgarh chief minister Raman Singh is much closer to the Prime Minister than Chouhan, he was not inducted. Neither was Rajasthan chief minister Vasundhara Raje or her Gujarat counterpart Anandiben Patel.

The message, therefore, is clear: Chief minister Chouhan is being prepared for a bigger role for the party at the national level. Speaking to reporters at the state secretariat, the chief minister said, "I will work relentlessly and implement the responsibility given to me by the party."

While Chouhan has been elevated to the party's elite 12-member body, Madhya Pradesh minister for urban administration and housing Kailash Vijayavargiya has been appointed election in-charge for the upcoming assembly elections in Haryana. He is the only minister for Madhya Pradesh who has been given such a big responsibility. During Lok Sabha polls in April-May, Vijayavargiya was again the only minister from Madhya Pradesh who was asked to manage the elections in Varanasi, the Prime Minister's constituency. The minister for urban administration is known to be close to the Prime Minister and might soon be elevated to a position of greater accountability.

Union minister for social justice Thavar Chand Gehlot also from the state has been retained as a member of the Parliamentary Board headed by Amit Shah. Gehlot, is important as he is Dalit leader and extremely amiable.

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Air India tickets for Rs 100 as airline celebrates merger

NEW DELHI: Air India will sell tickets for Rs 100 (taxes extra) for five days from Wednesday — which it will celebrate as Air India Day to commemorate the merger of erstwhile Indian Airlines and Air India on this day in 2007.

"On this occasion Air India is launching the Air India Offer for its travellers. Under the scheme tickets will be offered for Rs 100 apart from all applicable taxes. The sale of these tickets will be made only through the Air India website for five days from August 27 to 31 2014 for travel between August 27 and September 30, 2014, only," an AI statement said.

This is the first time that the airline will be celebrating the Air India Day. A function will be held to celebrate the day and also to award the meritorious employees of Air India.



(AFP photo)

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Train derails on Canada border, prompts evacuation

WILLISTON (NORTH DAKOTA): A train carrying unscented propane derailed near Canada's border with Minnesota and North Dakota early on Tuesday, prompting the evacuation of about 40 people who live near the site, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said.

Manitoba RCMP media relations officer Tara Seel said the RCMP responded to a train derailment in the town of Emerson at about 7:30am on Tuesday. She added that no leaks were detected and no injuries were reported.

Seel said the Burlington Northern Santa Fe train was carrying unscented propane.

BNSF spokeswoman Amy McBeth said the train was traveling from Grand Forks, North Dakota, toward Winnipeg, Manitoba, when three of its cars derailed at Emerson. She said two of the cars that derailed were carrying liquid propane gas and the third car was empty.

McBeth said the cause of the accident is still being investigated.

Andrew Kirking, the emergency manager of Pembina County on the North Dakota side of the border, said the train derailed about 100 (meters) yards into Canada and did not affect the nearby North Dakota town of Pembina.

The border crossing between Pembina and Emerson is North Dakota's busiest crossing with Canada.

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Train derails on Canada border, prompts evacuation

WILLISTON (NORTH DAKOTA): A train carrying unscented propane derailed near Canada's border with Minnesota and North Dakota early on Tuesday, prompting the evacuation of about 40 people who live near the site, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said.

Manitoba RCMP media relations officer Tara Seel said the RCMP responded to a train derailment in the town of Emerson at about 7:30am on Tuesday. She added that no leaks were detected and no injuries were reported.

Seel said the Burlington Northern Santa Fe train was carrying unscented propane.

BNSF spokeswoman Amy McBeth said the train was traveling from Grand Forks, North Dakota, toward Winnipeg, Manitoba, when three of its cars derailed at Emerson. She said two of the cars that derailed were carrying liquid propane gas and the third car was empty.

McBeth said the cause of the accident is still being investigated.

Andrew Kirking, the emergency manager of Pembina County on the North Dakota side of the border, said the train derailed about 100 (meters) yards into Canada and did not affect the nearby North Dakota town of Pembina.

The border crossing between Pembina and Emerson is North Dakota's busiest crossing with Canada.

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Hurricane Cristobal kills four, churns towards Bermuda

MIAMI: Strengthening Hurricane Cristobal killed at least four people in the Caribbean and then trained its deadly sights on Tuesday on the holiday paradise of Bermuda, officials and meteorologists said.

The storm dumped torrential rain on the Bahamas, Turks and Caicos Islands and Dominican Republic, triggering flooding and killing four people, authorities there said.

Cristobal was packing maximum sustained winds of 75 miles (120 kilometers) per hour, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center (NHC) said in its latest forecast, at 2100 GMT.

It was moving north towards Bermuda at 10 miles per hour, the NHC said, warning its impact was also being felt in the United States.

"The center of Cristobal is expected to pass northwest of Bermuda on Wednesday and Wednesday night," the NHC said.

It added: "Swells generated by Cristobal are affecting portions of the United States coast from central Florida northward to North Carolina and will spread northwards later this week."

A tropical storm watch was already in effect for Bermuda, forecasters said, meaning inclement conditions were possible in the next 24 hours.

Cristobal, a category one hurricane, is the third hurricane of the Atlantic storm season.

It comes hot on the heels of Hurricane Marie, which briefly reached the highest possible category five destructive power but was weakening in the Pacific off Mexico.

Marie's crashing waves over the weekend caused a fishing vessel to capsize, with three of its occupants still missing and presumed dead.

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Pakistan continues to be a safe heaven for terrorists: US

WASHINGTON: The Pentagon has said Pakistan continues to be a safe heaven for terrorists while lauding the efforts of the country's military to eliminate extremism, which it described as a "common threat" for both the countries.

"Extremists and the safe haven pose a challenge and the sanctuary that they continue to enjoy in Pakistan, but the Pakistani military has taken action against some of those extremist threats inside their own country. They've conducted operations not too long ago, just this summer," Pentagon press secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby said.

He said the US wanted to continue to work with Pakistan "to deal with what we believe is a common challenge and a common threat faced by both our countries and by Afghanistan, as well," he said.

"It is important to remind everybody that they, too, have taken casualties in that fight, so it's a common threat. We don't always see eye-to-eye on how to address it. That remains to be the case today.

"But what's different today is that we have better vehicles for dialogue and cooperation with the Pakistani military that we continue to enjoy and want to and continue to improve," he said.

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US soldier dies after shooting herself in Virginia

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 26 Agustus 2014 | 17.35

FORT LEE, Virginia: An enraged US soldier with a gun died Monday after barricading herself in an office inside a major command's headquarters, throwing objects and then shooting herself in the head as law enforcement officials tried to negotiate with her, the Army said.

Officials at Fort Lee said the solider was pronounced dead Monday after being taken to Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center. No other injuries were reported in the morning shooting.

The heavily-trafficked Fort Lee base went on lockdown while she was barricaded on the third floor of the four-story building that houses the Army's Combined Arms Support Command. About 1,100 people were inside, but no one else was hurt, officials at Fort Lee said.

"This situation could've been worse," Maj. Gen. Stephen R. Lyons, who took over as commanding general of CASC on Friday, said earlier Monday.

The Army did not identify the soldier.

The soldier was a sergeant 1st class who has been in the Army for 14 years and at Fort Lee for three, Lyons said. Her gun was not a service weapon, he said.

"We are sad for our soldier in arms that she faced those kinds of challenges she had to resort to those kinds of actions," Lyons said.

He said officials did not know whether she was being treated for any mental health issues and could not speculate whether drugs or alcohol might have been a factor. Lyons described the soldier as upset and enraged during the incident but said he couldn't say whether that was consistent with her personality.

Fort Lee reopened and normal operations resumed within an hour of the incident, Lyons said, with trucks and cars entering and exiting the base. The main gate — closest to the scene — continued to control traffic, but other gates were operating as normal.

The daily population at Fort Lee — 130 miles (200 miles) from Washington — is about 34,000, with members from all branches, their families, civilians and contractors. Fort Lee's website says the installation has seen enormous growth and renovations over the past decade as a result of realignment and closures of bases across the U.S.

Army officials initially labeled Monday's incident an ``active shooter'' situation. The department of homeland security uses the term to describe someone actively trying to kill people, usually in populated areas, with no pattern of choosing victims.

The shooting is the fourth violent act at a Virginia military installation this year. In March, a civilian truck driver shot and killed a sailor aboard a Navy destroyer at Naval Station Norfolk before he was shot and killed by Navy security.

In June, authorities said a sailor repeatedly stabbed another near Naval Medical Center Portsmouth. The same installation was placed on lockdown in April when a sailor shot and killed himself inside a barracks there.

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170 bodies of African migrants found from Libya shipwreck

GUARABOULI (Libya): Libyan rescuers have recovered the bodies of around 170 people after a boat carrying illegal migrants from sub-Saharan Africa sank at sea last week, a coast guard official said.

"We freed about 100 bodies trapped in the hold of the 16-metre (50-foot) wooden boat which foundered not far from the coast," Abdellatif Mohammed Ibrahim told AFP.

Another 70 bodies were washed up by the tide, including five young children, he said.

"It looks like the boat overturned suddenly, leaving the passengers no chance," he said as Red Cross rescuers pulled bodies from the water.

Ibrahim said no leaks were found in the hull of the vessel, shipwrecked off the coast of Guarabouli district, 60 kilometres (40 miles) east of Tripoli.

In the absence of documentation, rescue workers have been unable to make a list of victims or establish their nationalities.

But the few papers recovered showed the victims included migrants from Ethiopia and Eritrea.

On Friday, the coast guard said it had saved 16 people and recovered 15 bodies.

He said today that recovery of the remaining bodies was slow because the coast guard service has "a major shortage of resources."

Libya, mired in unrest and political chaos, has been a launchpad for illegal migrants seeking a better life in Europe but who turn to people smugglers to cross the Mediterranean.

Since the end of July, dozens of people who have set off on rickety boats from the Libyan coast have died at sea, and dozens more have gone missing, presumed drowned.

Around 150 Syrians were arrested yesterday in Algeria, where they were preparing to enter Libya illegally in the hope of crossing to Europe, an Algerian newspaper reported. (AFP)

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US, Chinese officials to meet at Pentagon after jet intercept

WASHINGTON: US and Chinese military officials will hold talks on rules of behavior at the Pentagon on Wednesday and Thursday, a US official said, days after the United States denounced a "dangerous" Chinese jet intercept of a US Navy patrol plane.

Last Tuesday, a Chinese fighter pilot flew acrobatic maneuvers around the US Navy's P-8 Poseidon anti-submarine and reconnaissance plane, crossing over and under it in international airspace over the South China Sea, the Pentagon said.

At one point, the jet flew wingtip-to-wingtip about 10 yards (9 meters) from the Poseidon, then performed a barrel roll over the top of it. The US defense official said other close intercepts occurred in March, April and May.

While this week's discussions at the Pentagon were planned long before the recent incidents, they touch on issues at the core of the US concerns about Chinese military behavior: that a Chinese provocation could spiral into a broader crisis sparked by a military miscalculation in the disputed territory.

China's sovereignty claims over the strategic stretch of mineral-rich water off its southern coast and to the east of mainland Southeast Asia set it directly against US allies Vietnam and the Philippines, while Brunei, Taiwan and Malaysia also lay claim to parts of the disputed areas.

The meetings involve a working group to discuss existing multilateral standards of behavior for air and maritime activities, the defense official told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Rear Admiral James Foggo, assistant deputy chief of US Naval Operations, is among the US military officials attending, the official said. It was not immediately clear which Chinese officials would participate.

The US and Chinese militaries have boosted their contacts in recent years amid recognition that, as China's economic interests continue to expand it will play a bigger security role in the world and have more interactions with the US military.

Still, the recent intercepts show that those increased contacts have not eliminated friction between the two.

In April 2001, a similar aggressive intercept of a US EP-3E spy plane by a Chinese F-8 fighter in the same area resulted in a collision that killed the Chinese pilot and forced the American plane to make an emergency landing at a base on China's Hainan island.

The 24 US air crew members were held for 11 days until Washington apologized for the incident. That encounter soured US-Chinese relations in the early days of President George W. Bush's first administration.

China has denied wrongdoing in the latest incident and blamed the United States, citing "large-scale and highly frequent close-in reconnaisssance."

State department spokeswoman Jen Psaki responded by saying the United States operated "in a transparent manner."

"We make other countries, including China, aware of our plans," Psaki said.

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US prepares military options in Syria against Islamic State

WASHINGTON: The United States is preparing military options, including surveillance flights, to pressure Islamic State in Syria, US officials said on Monday, but they cautioned no decision had been made to expand US action beyond the limited airstrikes under way in Iraq.

President Barack Obama has so far sought a limited military campaign in Iraq focused on protecting American diplomats and civilians under direct threat. Still, officials have not ruled out escalating military action against the Islamic State militant group, which has increased its overt threats against the United States.

General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said last week that Islamic State would eventually need to be addressed on "both sides of what is essentially at this point a non-existent border" between Syria and Iraq.

Dempsey's spokesman confirmed on Monday that options against Islamic State were under review and stressed the need to form "a coalition of capable regional and European partners."

"With Central Command, (Dempsey) is preparing options to address ISIS both in Iraq and Syria with a variety of military tools including airstrikes," Colonel Ed Thomas said, using a different name for the Sunni Muslim group that has seized large areas of Iraq and Syria.

"The bottom line is that our forces are well postured to partner with regional allies against ISIS."

A US official said Washington was also preparing to launch intelligence and surveillance flights, including drones, over Syria.

Two other US officials also acknowledged the preparation of strike options against Islamic State in Syria, with one saying planning had been under way for weeks.

Still, neither official suggested US military action there was imminent.

"We're just not there yet," said a senior US defense official, speaking on condition of the anonymity.

Republicans called on Sunday for more aggressive US action to defeat Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq, accusing President Barack Obama of policies that have failed to thwart potential new threats on US soil.

At the White House, spokesman Josh Earnest said Obama would consult Congress on whatever he decided on Syria, but would not necessarily seek congressional approval. He said Obama had not made any decisions on whether to use airstrikes against Islamic State militants in Syria.

Earnest said the Islamic State threat was a different situation from a year ago when Obama said he wanted Congress to approve the use of airstrikes to stop Syrian President Bashir al-Assad from using chemical weapons on his own people.

Obama sat down for talks on Monday with defense secretary Chuck Hagel.

Dempsey, Thomas said, believed that Islamic State needed to be pressured in Iraq and Syria and that defeating the group would require a sustained effort over an extended period of time "and much more than military action."

Although the US air campaign launched this month has caused some setbacks for Islamic State, they do not address the deeper problem of sectarian warfare that the group has fueled with its attacks on Shi'ites.

In retaliation for the airstrikes, Islamic State released a video showing one of its black-clad fighters beheading US journalist James Foley.

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Obama authorizes use of surveillance drones over Syria

WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama has authorized surveillance flights over Syria, a senior administration official said late on Monday, a move that could pave the way for US air strikes against Islamic State militant targets.

While the White House said Obama has not approved military action inside Syria, additional intelligence on the militants would likely be necessary before he could take that step. Pentagon officials have been drafting potential options for the president, including air strikes.

The US began launching strikes against the Islamic State inside Iraq earlier this month, with Obama citing the threat to American personnel in the country and a humanitarian crisis in the north as his rationale. Top Pentagon officials have said the only way the threat from the militants can be fully eliminated is to go after the group inside neighboring Syria as well.

Obama has long resisted taking military action in Syria, a step that would plunge the US into a country ravaged by an intractable civil war. However, the president's calculus appears to have shifted since the Islamic State announced last week that it had murdered American journalist James Foley, who was held hostage in Syria. The group is also threatening to kill other US citizens being held by the extremists in Syria.


File photo of James Foley in Libya

White House spokesman Josh Earnest, on Monday, said that Obama has demonstrated his willingness to order military action when necessary to protect American citizens.

"That is true without regard to international boundaries," he said.

The White House would not comment on Obama's decision to authorize surveillance flights over Syria.

"We're not going to comment on intelligence or operational issues, but as we've been saying, we'll use all the tools at our disposal," said Caitlin Hayden, spokeswoman for the White House National Security Council.

The official who confirmed the decision was not authorized to discuss Obama's decision publicly by name, and insisted on anonymity.

The US had already stepped up its air surveillance of the Islamic State inside Iraq earlier this year as Obama began considering the prospect of air strikes there. And the administration has run some surveillance missions over Syria, including ahead of an attempted mission to rescue Foley and other US hostages earlier this summer.


Bashar al-Assad

The US special forces who were sent into Syria to carry out the rescue mission did not find the hostages at the location where the military thought they were being held. Officials who confirmed the failed rescue last week said the US was continuing to seek out intelligence on the other hostages' whereabouts.

Administration officials have said a concern for Obama in seeking to take out the Islamic State inside Syria is the prospect that such a move could unintentionally help embattled Syrian President Bashar Assad. The Islamic State is among the group's seeking Assad's ouster, along with rebel forces aided by the US.

The White House on Monday tried to tamp down the notion that action against the Islamic State could bolster the Assad regime, with Earnest saying, "We're not interested in trying to help the Assad regime." However, he acknowledged that "there are a lot of cross pressures here."

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Egypt bus accident kills 19 in ancient city of Luxor

CAIRO: Egypt's state news agency said19 people were killed when two microbuses collided and plunged into a canal in the ancient city of Luxor in the country's south.

MENA said the victims were travelling to a wedding party when the accident happened late on Monday night.

The report said the two microbuses were speeding and racing one another, which caused the collision. It said darkness hampered rescue efforts.

Abu al-Naga al-Haggagi, the chief of the local emergency services, has been quoted as saying that six people were still missing after the crash and that rescuers were trying to find them.

Traffic accidents are common in this Mideast country due to badly maintained roads and disregard of traffic laws.

Road accidents killed about 13,000 people in Egypt last year.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Egypt bus accident,ancient city of Luxor


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With Kerala heading for prohibition, Mahe awaits visitors with dread

Written By Unknown on Senin, 25 Agustus 2014 | 17.34

MAHE: A rum bottle resembling the image of Virgin Mary. That too in a wine shop and bar adjacent to the Mahe Church, the shrine of St Theresa. "Spirit of a different kind," says a passerby as we curiously watch the bottle.

It is this 'spirit' that differentiates the tiny town of Mahe, an erstwhile French colony now part of Puducherry, from other places. Liquor is considerably cheaper here compared to Kerala.

The town, spread over nine sq km with a population of less than 42,000, has 64 wine shops and bars, giving an impression that the place, pet-named the eyebrow of Arabian sea, survives on spirit rather than anything else.

"This is exactly the problem of Mahe today, and this negative image will become worse further in parallel to Kerala's journey towards prohibition," says Palliyan Pramod, a councilor of the now defunct Mahe municipal council.

"The liquor inflow here will increase in the coming days with the Kerala government deciding to close down the bars and reduce the number of wine shops," he warns, hinting at the possible threat of spurious liquor and other social evils if the Puducherry government fails to bring in some regulation.

There is no significant rise in sales now as all beverages corporation outlets in Kerala are open, says A Jayan, a counter salesman in a bar. "However, there is an increase in number of customers during Sundays; it will definitely go up considerably if Kerala declares dry day on Sundays," he says, adding that the majority customers are from neighbouring Kannur and Kozhikode districts.

The residents also share the anxiety. "Mahe has already got the notoriety as a haven of liquor and the image is that all Mahe residents are alcoholics though the reality is different. Most of the consumers are from Kerala," says P V Chandradas, a social activist.

"We will ask the Puducherry government to take some measures to restrict the flow of liquor to Mahe, which is estimated at around 100 loads/ month." It is true that the historic tradition of the place is lost in the flash flood of the spirit.

Another passerby says bus crews are hesitant to stop near the church and take passengers in the evening, fearing that drunken people could get in.

"In the coming days, more buses might drop passengers here but they could get stranded here in the evenings even if the holy spirits wish against it," he says as he heads towards the church.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=rum bottle,Mahe residents,liquor ban in Kerala,Kerala government


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British deputy PM Nick Clegg to meet Narendra Modi in trade trip

LONDON: Britain's deputy prime minister Nick Clegg begins a trade mission to India on Monday, where he will meet the country's prime minister Narendra Modi in a bid to strengthen economic ties.

The three-day visit by a 40-strong delegation is the latest in a series of similar trips by David Cameron's government, which is keen to foster closer links with the world's largest democracy.

Clegg's office said the trip will "take advantage of the opportunities presented by the new Indian government's focus on economic growth" since Modi swept to a landslide victory on a platform of economic reform in May.

British retail, aerospace and education businesses are expected to sign deals and explore opportunities with Indian counterparts during the trip.

Clegg will meet with Modi and finance minister Arun Jaitley on Monday, while energy and climate change secretary Ed Davey will look for opportunities for companies and ways to collaborate on energy.

"Prime Minister Modi has been very clear that his absolute priority is to get the wheels of the Indian economy moving, to create more jobs, boost trade and pursue greater prosperity," Clegg said in a statement.

"In addition, there are the historic cultural links. The rich tapestry of British community, business, cultural and sporting life is hugely enriched by our links with India...I look forward to seeing how we can forge even deeper and stronger bonds between our people."


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British nurse with Ebola arrives in London from Sierra Leone

LONDON: A British nurse who contracted the Ebola virus in Sierra Leone has arrived in London by military plane, BBC news reported.

The patient, who is not "seriously unwell" according to the department of health, is to be treated at an isolation unit at a London hospital.

A spokesman for Sierra Leone's ministry of health, Yahya Tunis, yesterday said the man was a volunteer nurse working in Kenema in eastern Sierra Leone, one of the areas hardest hit by Ebola which has now been quarantined.

"His colleagues are very sad over the development as he is considered as a valued member," Tunis said, adding that he was involved in "surveillance, contact tracing and the burial of Ebola victims".

The Briton is the first person from the country to have contracted the virus in an outbreak that has killed at least 1,427 people in West Africa since March.

The department of health said the victim was evacuated in a specially equipped C17 Royal Air Force military plane to RAF Northolt outside London.

The victim was to be taken in a special military ambulance to Britain's only specialist Ebola isolation unit at the Royal Free Hospital in London.

England's deputy chief medical officer Professor John Watson insisted that the risk of the virus being spread in Britain remained "very low".

"UK hospitals have a proven record of dealing with imported infectious diseases and this patient will be isolated and will receive the best care possible," he added.

Ebola spreads through direct contact with the blood or bodily fluids of an infected person.

The Ebola epidemic has spread through Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, while Nigeria has also been affected. It is the worst-ever outbreak of the killer virus.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned it could take several months to bring the epidemic under control. (AFP)


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US journalist James Foley family celebrates his life, prays for hostages

ROCHESTER (US): The family of murdered US journalist James Foley prayed for the safety of his fellow hostages as hundreds had gathered for a mass to celebrate his life as a witness on the front line.

Foley was kidnapped in late 2012 in northern Syria by the jihadist group that now dubs itself the Islamic State and which this week released a video showing him being beheaded.

The footage ended any remaining hopes that the 40-year-old freelancer, who contributed to the GlobalPost, Agence France-Presse and other outlets, would be released alive after his ordeal.

But his parents said the death should serve as a challenge to others to match the courage and humanity Foley had shown reporting on the fate of beleaguered civilian populations in Libya and Syria.

As the mass was under way yesterday at the church of Our Lady of the Rosary in Rochester, New Hampshire overseen by the Bishop of Manchester Peter Libasci — who read a message from Pope Francis — another American reporter was released.

Peter Theo Curtis, 45, was released after two years held by a different Syrian group, but other hostages remain in the country, including Foley's former cellmate Steven Sotloff, who was threatened with death in the video released last week.

"Jim stood for love and hope," his mother Diane told AFP in the family home as James' four surviving siblings and their partners and children gathered before the "healing mass."

"I want to celebrate a life of bearing witness," she said. "So many people are suffering in the Middle East right now, and there are many hostages being held captive, so this is a mass for all of those who are hoping for peace, and also in Jim's memory."

Diane's husband John said: "We pray for the surviving hostages and in particular Steven Sotloff. We're just hopeful that something can be done to avoid Jim's end."

The couple were given a prolonged standing ovation by several hundred well-wishers after the service, many clearly moved by their dignified response after the cruel end to a long ordeal.

"His brutal death might be an awakening for the world," his mother told AFP.

"The community of love needs to unite to protect these fearless journalists going out to these very dangerous places where we need to protect the people suffering in conflict."

Both Bishop Libasci and Foley's parents spoke of how his Catholic faith had been important to him, and that former hostages who spent time with him during his imprisonment said prayer had kept him strong and that he in turn had supported them.

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1 dead, 10 injured in Chembur cylinder explosion

MUMBAI: One person is killed and 10 others have suffered burns in a cooking gas cylinder explosion that occurred at Sandeep Colony in Chembur on Monday morning. Prima facie the incident occurred when the gas leaked from one of the house from the locality and someone tried to light the cooking stove, said the police.

At present the Chembur police have registered a case of accident. Among 11 victims, three belonged to same family in which the male member died while his wife and mother are serious.

The burn injured victims has been rushed to the Sion Hospital and given medical assistance. "According to the people from the locality the incident occurred due to gas leakage from one of the mezzanine houses situated in a chawl in Chembur. It seems someone tried to light the gas stove when the incident occurred," said deputy commissioner of police (Zone Vl) Sangramsinh Nishandar.

At around 7.30am, people from the locality started checking their and theirs neighbours house after gas leak emanated in the locality. Before could react the explosion occurred. Fire brigade and the police reach the spot on receiving alert at their control rooms. The situation is brought under control in an hour.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=gas cylinder explosion,Chembyr gas explosion


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Khushwant Singh’s ‘mourning cover’ issued by Odisha philatelist

KOLKATA: Don't know what a 'mourning cover' is? Don't fret. Neither did Khushwant Singh till he read of the unique collection held by Anil Dhir. "What a morbid yet fascinating hobby you have," Singh wrote to this philatelist and war historian based in Bhubaneswar. He also made Dhir promise that he would issue a 'mourning cover' on him after his death. Dhir has now come up with one.

Dhir holds the distinction of possessing the largest number of mourning covers and stamps (mourning) in the world. The collection showcases a wide variety of letters about death, ranging from pre-stamp covers of 1790 to recent ones. These include personal letters, postcards, official notices, funeral notices, death telegrams; church memorial services letters, embalmers bills and receipts, elegiac letters and gravestone and coffin receipts.

"The oldest cover in my collection is a 1798 pre-stamp mourning cover. I have mourning covers with the world's first stamp, the Penny Black. I also have a rare cover with a strip of four Penny Reds. The Penny Red is the world's second stamp. My collection of nearly 5,000 letters bears the news of death for the recipient and was commonly edged in black to warn the bearer of sorrow. To me, this collection is very personal. I can feel the pain and hurt in these letters and I feel that I am with those receiving the news. These dire dispatches of the 19th and 20th centuries usually included a black border around the envelope's edge or around the stamp. Some had black wax seals on them," Dhir said.

According to him, it was Queen Victoria who reinforced the fashion of mourning covers. After the death of her husband Prince Albert in 1861, she went into mourning that lasted till her death in 1901. She wore black and used black-bordered stationery for her letters all throughout though the normal practice was to have a mourning period of one year.

"Philatelists look out for challenges. Collecting mourning letters was a big challenge as such correspondence is not preserved in many societies, including India. Death messages are normally torn up after being read as preserving them is considered inauspicious. This makes things very difficult for people like me. Today, I have letters from nearly 170 countries. It took me nearly 20 years to build up this collection that includes letters mourning the deaths of Queen Victoria, King George V, George VI, the Popes, Adolf Hitler, US Presidents, Mahatma Gandhi, Princess Diana and even Saddam Hussein," Dhir added.

His collection also includes several covers of military mail of the both World Wars where letters couldn't be delivered due to the deaths of addressees in the battlefield. These were returned to the sender after being bordered black.

"They are extremely tragic and each one has a story to tell. The 'Missing in Action' covers are heartbreaking. The military post would put black markings on these letters and return them to the senders with the missive 'Missing in Action: Presumed Dead'. I try to put myself in the place of the loved ones who got these letters back. I also have letters from Nazi concentration camps at Auschwitz, Dachau and Berger Belsen. I also have the world's first black-bordered mourning stamp issued after Abraham Lincoln's death in 1866," the philatelist said.

Dhir has nearly 4,900 mourning covers and admits that he sometimes feels like a voyeur when he reads the death messages. "Most of the covers I have had the original letters inside them. One set of about 40 covers were posted by the same person to the same address and has 40 letters written over two years. The letters reveal how a woman copes with the loss of her husband and how she gradually reconciled to the grim reality," he said.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=mourning cover,Khushwant Singh,Anil Dhir


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Barack Obama orders review of police use of military hardware

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 24 Agustus 2014 | 17.34

EDGARTOWN Mass: US President Barack Obama has ordered a review of the distribution of military hardware to state and local police out of concern at how such equipment has been used during racial unrest in Ferguson, Missouri.

A senior Obama administration official said on Saturday the president has ordered a review of federal programs and funding that enable state and local law enforcement to purchase military equipment.

Images of police wielding military-style guns and armor have alarmed many Americans following violence that was triggered by the fatal shooting of an African-American teenager, Michael Brown, by a white police officer in Ferguson.

Obama wants to know whether the programs, begun after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, are appropriate and whether state and local law enforcement are given proper training, the official said.

The review will be led by White House staff including the Domestic Policy Council, the National Security Council, the Office of Management and Budget, and relevant U.S. agencies including the Departments of Defense, Homeland Security, Justice and Treasury, and it will be carried out in coordination with Congress.

Obama signaled that he would review the programs on Monday at a White House news conference when he said he wanted to make sure police were purchasing equipment that they actually need because there is "a big difference between our military and our local law enforcement and we don't want those lines blurred."

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Magnitude 6.6 earthquake hits central Chile, no damage reported

SANTIAGO: (Reuters) A magnitude 6.6 quake hit central Chile on Saturday afternoon, shaking buildings in the capital, Santiago, but with no immediate reports of damage.

The epicenter was 31 miles (50 km) north-northeast of the port city of Valparaiso, the US Geological Service said.

The quake, which the USGS originally reported at magnitude 6.3, hit at a depth of 20 miles (32 km).


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UN vows central role in fighting 'exceptional' Ebola epidemic

MONROVIA: The United Nations vowed on Saturday to play a "strong role" in helping Liberia and its neighbours fight a deadly outbreak of Ebola in west Africa, which it said could take months to bring it under control.

Liberia has been particularly hard hit by the epidemic that has swept relentlessly across the region since March, accounting for almost half of the 1,427 deaths.

In recognition of the deteriorating situation, neighbouring Ivory Coast announced it had closed its borders with Liberia and Guinea in a bid to protect its citizens.

"Ebola in Liberia must be addressed to ensure a stable economy, future and society," said Karin Landgren, UN secretary general Ban Ki-Moon's special representative for the country.

"The magnitude of this outbreak requires a higher level of coordination than previous responses and the UN mission in Liberia will play a strong role in this effort."

Her comments were echoed by David Nabarro, the UN's new pointman on Ebola, who arrived in the region on Thursday to tour the Ebola-hit countries of Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea and Nigeria.

Nabarro, a British physician tasked with coordinating the global response to the worst-ever outbreak of the deadly virus, said the UN would "ensure that adequate resources are given to sectors that need it most".

A day earlier, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned it could take "several months" to bring the epidemic under control.

"This is not something to turn around overnight, it is not going to be easy; we expect several months of hard work," said the UN agency's assistant director general Keiji Fukuda, who is accompanying Nabarro on his tour.

Their visit has coincided with a surge in new cases of Ebola in the region, as affected countries struggle to contain the spread of the killer virus.

The WHO said Friday that the death toll had risen to 1,427 out of more than 2,600 cases — with 77 succumbing to the disease between August 18 and 20.

A British national who lives in Sierra Leone has tested positive for Ebola, the first British citizen to have contracted the disease, according to officials.

Britain's Mail on Sunday newspaper reported that the infected man was a medic working for a charity in Sierra Leone.

He was reportedly set to be flown back to Britain for treatment in the next couple of days. The department of health did not immediately respond to a request to confirm the report.

Nigeria, which has seen progress in battling the outbreak, has suffered five deaths to date. Officials said Friday that two more people had tested positive for Ebola.

Liberia remains the worst-affected country with 624 deaths. Guinea has seen 406 people die while in Sierra Leone, 392 have succumbed to the haemorrhagic fever.

Aid workers said crematoriums in the Liberian capital Monrovia were struggling to deal with dozens of bodies arriving every day, and earlier this week, violence erupted in an Ebola quarantine zone in the capital after soldiers opened fire on protesting crowds.

The failure of West African countries to bring the epidemic under control has worried its neighbours and nations further afield.

Many flights to the region have been cancelled, and authorities around the world have adopted measures to screen travellers arriving from affected nations.

A Canadian hospital said it had placed a patient who recently returned from Guinea in isolation as it awaits whether the individual tests positive for Ebola.

The patient was quarantined after experiencing a high fever, according to Montreal's Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital.

And in Bolivia, authorities said they were investigating a first potential case of Ebola after a patient, who is being treated for a fever, diarrhoea and vomiting, had made stopovers in several African cities.

The Ivory Coast closed its borders with Guinea and Liberia just days after Senegal did the same with Guinea, where the outbreak is thought to have begun.

It came in the wake of the first reported Ebola deaths in the southeast of Liberia, which borders the Ivory Coast.

Meanwhile, an official said Cameroon has suspended imports of meat and animals "sensitive" to the Ebola virus.

The extreme measures taken against affected countries, especially by their neighbours, have caused friction in the region.

Ibrahim Ben Kargbo, the chairman of Sierra Leone's presidential task force on Ebola, said he was "surprised" by the lack of solidarity among African countries.

It "gives the impression that we are pariah states," Kargo said on state television, in reference to a South African ban on non-citizens travelling from Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia.

"The epidemic is not manmade but a natural phenomenon, we did not create it," said Kargbo, who is a presidential advisor and former information minister.

"Once we get over the epidemic, we will begin to look at ourselves to know who our friends are."

No cure or vaccine is currently available for the deadly virus, which is spread by close contact with body fluids, meaning patients must be isolated.

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Barack Obama sends White House aides to Ferguson funeral

EDGARTOWN, Massachusetts: President Barack Obama is sending three White House officials to the funeral service of the 18-year-old whose death in a police shooting in Ferguson, Missouri, sparked days of racial unrest.

Leading the group for Monday's service will be the chairman of the My Brother's Keeper Task Force, Broderick Johnson. My Brother's Keeper is an Obama initiative that aims to empower young minorities. Johnson is also the secretary for the Cabinet.

Also attending will be the deputy director of the White House Office of Public Engagement, Marlon Marshall, and an adviser for the office, Heather Foster.

The White House says Marshall is a St. Louis native and attended school with Brown's mother.

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Seven wagons of Konkan Railway train derail

MUMBAI: Passenger services on the Konkan Railway were disrupted after seven wagons of a goods train derailed at Karanjadi Railway station on Sunday morning.

A Central railway spokesperson said, "Of the seven wagon derailed, four had capsized. The incident happened about 205 km from Mumbai on Konkan Railway at 6.28am.Passenger carrying trains are likely to be regulated / diverted / cancelled or trans-shipment would be arranged."

A Konkan railway spokesperson said, "Accident Relief Trains (ART) and Accident Relief Medical Van (ARMV) have left for the site. Konkan Railway officials have also rushed to the site for an early clearance of the line."

The train was carrying food grains from Kota to Calicut.


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UPSC preliminary exam underway

NEW DELHI: The Civil Services preliminary examination, which were mired in controversy after students held widespread protests demanding a change in its pattern, is being held on Sunday at various centres across the country.

The preliminary examination consist of two papers (Paper I and Paper II) of two hours duration each. The first paper began at 9.30am and there were no report of any protest outside any examination centre.

About nine lakh students have applied for the examination which is being held at various centres across the country.

A controversy had recently erupted over the pattern of examination as students demanding change in the pattern of Civil Services Aptitude Test (CSAT) or Paper II, had taken to the streets waging a violent agitation.

In the wake of the protests, minister of state for personnel, public grievances and pensions Jitendra Singh had on August 4 said in Parliament that marks of the English section questions, asked in Paper II, will not be included for gradation or merit in civil services exam.

The Paper II carries questions on comprehension, interpersonal skills including communication skills, logical reasoning and analytical ability, decision-making and problem- solving, general mental ability, basic numeracy and English language comprehension skills (of Class X level).

However, a group of students said they will continue with the protest.

"We are against the pattern of Civil Services examination. We want a change in its pattern," said Sampoornanda, who is part of a students movement 'Nagrik Adhikaar Manch' for the cause.

Another aspirant, who had enrolled for the exam but did not take it, said, "We will not disturb the examination and those taking it. But we will continue with our demands of scrapping Paper II of the preliminary examination unless government's bring in necessary changes in it".

The prestigious Civil Services examination is conducted in three stages — preliminary, main and interview — by the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) to select IAS, IFS and IPS officers among others.

Hearing an eleventh-hour petition filed by a group of protesting students, the Supreme Court had on Saturday declined to postpone Sunday's preliminary examination.


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Washington Post strikes 'Redskins' from editorials

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 23 Agustus 2014 | 17.34

WASHINGTON: The Washington Post says it will stop calling Washington's football team the "Redskins" on its editorial page.

The paper's editorial board announced Friday that it will refrain from using the term that it says "unquestionably offends not only many Native Americans but many other Americans, too."

The board operates independently of the paper's newsgathering operation. The Post will continue to use "Redskins" in the news and sports sections.

The board noted that it has been speaking out against the Redskins name since 1992.

Several major newspapers have stopped using the name altogether. CBS lead analyst Phil Simms said this week he will likely avoid the name when he announces a Washington game this season.

Redskins owner Dan Snyder has vowed never to change the name, saying it honors Native Americans.

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US says Russia must pull convoy from Ukraine or face more sanctions

KIEV/DONETSK-IZVARINO BORDER CROSSING, Russia: The United States demanded Moscow remove an aid convoy it sent into rebel-held eastern Ukraine without permission on Friday, accusing Russia of a flagrant violation of the sovereignty of its former Soviet neighbour and threatening more sanctions.

Moscow, which has thousands of troops close to the Russian side of the border, warned against any attempt to "disrupt" the convoy, which it said was purely humanitarian. It did not say what action it might take if the Ukrainian military intervened.

Nato's top military commander said the movement of trucks looked like a disguised attempt to reinforce separatist forces.

The western defence alliance said Russian troops had been firing artillery across the border and within Ukraine in a major escalation of military support for pro-Moscow rebels since mid-August, a defacto charge that Russia was already waging war.

White House deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes said Washington planned to discuss the situation with the UN security council on Friday and that if the convoy was not pulled out, the Russians would face "additional costs".

"We have seen the use of Russian artillery in Ukraine in the past days," he said, when asked about the Nato statement.

Moscow denies backing the rebels militarily but the United States and European Union have imposed sanctions and the Kremlin has retaliated, renewing some of the chill of the cold war. Nato has deployed extra troops in member states bordering Russia, including former Soviet Baltic states and ex-communist Poland.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko described the entry of the trucks without Kiev's permission as a "flagrant violation of international law". But a senior security chief said Ukrainian forces would let them pass to avoid "provocations".

Kiev called on international allies to unite in "a decisive condemnation of illegal and aggressive actions" by Russia.

Nato also said Russia risked further international isolation. It has ruled out intervening militarily on behalf of Ukraine, which is not a member, and Europe has been reluctant to step up sanctions due to trade ties and its need for Russian gas.

Russia said it was not breaching international law and that Russian President Vladimir Putin had told German Chancellor Angela Merkel in a telephone call Moscow had been unable to wait any longer for Kiev's green light to help people in distress.

Merkel, who also spoke to Poroshenko, expressed her great concern, praising the Ukrainians for a "prudent" reaction and calling for a speedy ceasefire and shoring up of the frontier.

Mystery contents

Poroshenko said more than 100 trucks had crossed the border, and only some had been checked earlier by Ukrainian officials inside Russian territory. Other Ukrainian officials said only 34 or 35 of them had been properly checked.

Repeating earlier suspicions by Kiev that the aid cargo could be used to support the separatists, the foreign ministry said: "Neither the Ukrainian side nor the International Committee of the Red Cross knows the content of the trucks. This arouses special concern."

A Reuters witness said the white-painted trucks had crossed onto Ukrainian soil and headed towards the rebel stronghold of Luhansk escorted by a small number of separatist fighters.

The presence of the Russian trucks could force Ukrainian troops encircling Luhansk to rein in their offensive against the rebels there, because if they hit one of the Russian vehicles, that could give Moscow justification for a full-scale invasion.

Any lull in fighting that resulted would give a badly-needed respite to the rebels in Luhansk, who have been facing defeat, and allow them to regroup.

The news that the convoy had finally crossed into Ukraine dominated Russian TV news and was certain to have further boosted Putin's standing at home.

But it equally cast a shadow over a meeting next Tuesday with Poroshenko and the European Union in the Belarusian capital of Minsk which has held out prospects of a breakthrough to end the confrontation.

Mikhail Denikin, chairman of the village council in Izvaryne, on the Ukrainian side of the border, stood by the road waving a large Russian flag as the trucks drove past.

"Big thanks to Russia. Our brothers did not forget us. We are brothers. That is the most important thing. We are Slavs, we are together," Denikin told Reuters Television.

A traffic police officer on the Russian side of the border, who had been escorting the aid convoy within Russian territory, said the entire convoy of about 260 trucks had passed into Ukraine. He said it was possible they would cross back into Russia on Friday evening after delivering their cargo.

"We consider this a direct invasion by Russia of Ukraine," Ukrainian state security chief Valentyn Nalivaychenko said in a statement to journalists. Asked whether Ukraine would use air strikes against the convoy, Nalivaychenko said: "Against them, no."

But Ukrainian authorities said the convoy would pass through an area where the rebels were firing so its security could not be guaranteed. Interfax news agency said later that the first trucks had reached rebel-held Luhansk.

Intense fighting

The largely Russian-speaking Donetsk and Luhansk regions both declared independence after a plebiscite deemed illegal by Kiev. The regions have seen intense fighting in recent weeks as rebels have been driven back into pockets.

Moscow, at odds with Ukraine since pro-Western protests overthrew a pro-Russian president in February, had earlier expressed impatience with delays with the convoy, which left the

Moscow region around Aug. 13.

"We warn against any attempts to disrupt this purely humanitarian mission," the Russian foreign ministry said. "Responsibility for any possible consequences of provocations ... will lie, completely and entirely, with those who are prepared to further sacrifice human lives for the sake of their ambitions and geo-political ploys."

The International Committee of the Red Cross, which both Moscow and Kiev had agreed should supervise the convoy, said it was not escorting it "due to the volatile security situation".

The entry of the trucks ran counter to the arrangement agreed with the ICRC and was a clear violation of the border, said Sebastien Brabant, spokesman for the European Union's foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton.

Nato went a step further. "These developments are even more worrying as they coincide with a major escalation in Russian military involvement in eastern Ukraine since mid-August, including the use of Russian forces," Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said.

Nato military commander General Philip Breedlove compared the convoy to Russian humanitarian and peacekeeping moves in Georgia, Moldova and Crimea. "We have seen how they proved to be deceptions," he said.

Kiev has been using troops, artillery and air power to try to quell a separatist rebellion that broke out soon after Russia annexed the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine in March.

The last few weeks have seen a string of rebel defeats in a conflict that has killed more than 2,000 people.

A Reuters cameraman said it had been possible to see inside some of the vehicles on Friday. The cargoes visible consisted of cardboard boxes with tinned food, pallets of bottled water, generators and other supplies.

Poroshenko said on Thursday he would call on Putin to rein in pro-Russian separatists when the two meet next week and told the Kremlin chief he had "a strong country, a strong army".

Merkel is scheduled to visit Kiev on Saturday to show her support for Poroshenko - but diplomats say she is also bearing a message that he should consider calling a ceasefire so as not to incur a backlash from Putin.

In Donetsk, pro-Russia separatist Denis Pushilin, guarded by men who identified themselves as Chechens, handed out aid -sugar, tea, canned beef and rice - and envelopes of money to three families in a state building in the city centre. The aid, collected in Russia by Russian citizens, was not connected to the aid crossing the border on Friday, Pushilin said.

"Hopefully soon we'll be able to start handing out aid to hundreds if not thousands of more families in need."

Rebels brought two destroyed Ukrainian armoured personnel carriers to Donetsk's central Lenin Square to display on Sunday, when rebels plan on parading prisoners of war through the streets of the city as a counterpoint to festivities planned in Kiev as part of Ukraine's Independence Day.

After four months of fighting in the industrial, Russian-speaking east of Ukraine, the area faces a humanitarian crisis, lacking supplies of food, medicine and clean water.


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