Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Midsection of plane recovered in Laos

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 22 Oktober 2013 | 23.59

INVESTIGATORS in Laos say they have retrieved the midsection of a Lao Airlines passenger plane that crashed into the Mekong River a week ago, killing all 49 people on board, including six Australians.

The turboprop plane crashed last Wednesday during a heavy storm as it approached Pakse Airport in southern Laos.

Lao aviation official Yakua Lopangkao said on Tuesday that searchers used a crane to lift the middle of the fuselage from the river but believe the flight recorder is still underwater.

He said the body of another victim was also recovered on Tuesday.

Officials say 44 bodies have been found.

Strong currents and deep, muddy water have hampered the search.


23.59 | 0 komentar | Read More

Girl taken from gypsy family in Ireland

Alleged arsonist, thieves sickening

Alleged arsonist, thieves sickening

AFTER a night in custody, the boy accused of lighting fires made his feelings known, while the hunt goes on for looters.

Child's eye view of a paedophile

Child's eye view of a paedophile

THIS creepy drawing of a convicted child sex abuser was shown to Royal Commission by the mum of a child who never trusted him.

Mundine slams 'sooky American'

Mundine-Mosley

ANTHONY Mundine slammed Sugar Shane Mosley as a "sooky American" before saying he could fly to LA to resurrect their cancelled fight.

Rex snaps into action

Rex snaps into action

EXCITEMENT was high at Wild Life Sydney Zoo, Darling Harbour this morning as Rex the 700kg Saltwater Crocodile had his first meal of the season.

How the Coreys were preyed upon

The Two Coreys

Haim and Feldman were child stars but also exposed to the very worst perversions of the film industry, the latter reveals in a new book Coreyography.


23.59 | 0 komentar | Read More

US employers add 148,000 jobs

THE US economy added just 148,000 jobs in September, suggesting that employers held back on hiring before a 16-day partial government shutdown began October 1.

News+

Oops! Please register or log in to continue. (It's quick, easy and free.) Continue


23.59 | 0 komentar | Read More

12 Months for bomb hoax bridegroom

A PANICKED English groom who staged a bomb hoax on his wedding day so his bride would not find out he bungled the booking has been jailed in Liverpool for 12 months.

Neil McArdle had forgotten to fill in the forms to marry the "love of his life" Amy Williams, but could not face telling her that the big day "that was all she talked about" was not going to happen.

Instead of saying "we need to talk" the 36-year-old tried to "weasel" out of his predicament, Liverpool Crown Court heard.

As his bride got ready for her wedding he slipped out of their house in Kirkby, Merseyside, went to a phone box, disguised his voice and rang Liverpool Register Office, claiming: "This is not a hoax call. There's a bomb in St George's Hall and it will go off in 45 minutes."

The call, 11 days after the Boston Marathon bombing, provoked "terror" at the office inside the neo-classical edifice of St George's Hall in the centre of Liverpool, which was immediately evacuated and emergency services called.

The would-be bride was left standing outside in her wedding dress with her mother and the rest of the wedding party as the area swarmed with police racing to the scene.

But McArdle's would-be in-laws were already suspicious, the court heard, and a row broke out with Williams's sister telling a "flustered" McArdle: "You probably done the bomb scare yourself."

Police quickly traced the call and the defendant was arrested the same day and admitted to his "embarrassment and shame" that he panicked over bungling the forms and staged the bomb scare.

Williams has stood by the defendant, the court heard, and they are still together.

A tearful McArdle, who pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to a single charge of communicating false information with intent on April 26, was jailed for 12 months by Judge Norman Wright.


23.59 | 0 komentar | Read More

Aung San Suu Kyi collects rights prize

FREEDOM of thought is yet to become the birthright of every Myanmar citizen, opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has said as she collected a European Union democracy prize awarded 23 years ago when she was under house arrest.

The Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought, named after Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov, has been handed out annually by the European Parliament since 1988.

"Freedom of thought is essential to human progress," Suu Kyi said on Tuesday during a ceremony at the legislature's plenary in the French city of Strasbourg.

"Our people are just beginning to learn that freedom of thought is possible."

"We need still to make a lot more progress before we can say we are where Professor Sakharov would have wished us to be ... a place where freedom of thought was the birthright of every single citizen of our country," she added.

Suu Kyi got caught up in Myanmar's 1988 pro-democracy protests when she returned to care for her ailing mother after years of living and studying abroad.

She became a leader of the pro-democracy movement and spent a total of 15 years under house arrest between 1989 and 2010, while the country was ruled by a military junta.

"I made a choice, I made it out of my own free will, this is why I've never thought of it as a hardship or a sacrifice," Suu Kyi told journalists after the European Parliament ceremony.

"It's certainly been worth it, because I think our movement gave our people hope," she added. "Of course hope is not enough, ... but the very fact that we have been able to make our people understand that they can improve their own lives has been worth it."

Today, Suu Kyi is a member of parliament after the 2010 elections brought to power reform-minded President Thein Sein. She has expressed hopes of becoming Myanmar's next president, although this would require constitutional changes ahead of the 2015 elections.

The Nobel laureate is a "great symbol of freedom and democracy," European Parliament President Martin Schulz said before handing Suu Kyi the 1990 Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought.

Suu Kyi is on a two-week tour of Europe that will also include stops in Britain and Italy.

Her main message is about the need for the EU to push more strongly for changes to the Myanmar constitution, which she says is hampering a full democratisation of the country.


23.59 | 0 komentar | Read More

China defends record at UN rights inquiry

CHINA has defended its human rights record to the UN, insisting it has undertaken sweeping reforms as Tibetan activists say more must be done to hold Beijing to account.

China's special envoy Wu Hailong told the UN Human Rights Council on Tuesday that his country had lived up to a pledge made in 2009 when China was last under scrutiny by the watchdog.

"The Chinese government made a solemn commitment when China undergoes the next review, the world will see a China with a more prosperous economy, improved democracy and the rule of law, a more harmonious society and people living in greater happiness," Wu said.

In 2009, the council had urged China to make more efforts in areas including poverty reduction, judicial reforms and ethnic minority rights.

"Four years have passed, and I want to tell you that the above recommendations either have been implemented or are being carried out, and our commitment has been basically fulfilled," Wu said.

All 193 UN member states are meant to undergo reviews of their rights record every four years.

In the run-up to Tuesday's review, human rights campaigners raised the alarm about the disappearance of Chinese activist Cao Shunli, who had been due to attend the session.

In a statement Monday, the European Union's top diplomat Catherine Ashton had urged Beijing to clarify what had happened to Cao, and to do nothing to hamper the participation of campaigners at the UN Human Rights Council.

Human Rights Watch, meanwhile, said China must demonstrate its commitment by ending a crackdown on human rights activists, including harassment, arbitrary arrest and torture, as well as stop muzzling the media and halt abuses against its Tibetan and Uighur minorities.

About 120 people have set themselves on fire in Tibet and neighbouring areas since 2009, most of them dying.

"China is good about signing human rights treaties but terrible about putting them into practice," said Sophie Richardson, China director at Human Rights Watch.

"The Human Rights Council review provides UN members the occasion to look at whether those commitments are being implemented - or instead violated."

At the review, diplomats from dozens of countries quizzed Wu and members of his delegation about the steps Beijing had taken.

While acknowledging China's efforts, Western delegations in particular urged Beijing to further reduce the number of crimes that carry the death penalty and at least to introduce a moratorium on capital punishment.

Before Tuesday's session, Tibetan activists hammered their message home.

At dawn, four protesters from the groups Students for a Free Tibet and the Tibetan Youth Association in Europe climbed scaffolding on the UN building in Geneva, currently under renovation, before jumping down to the middle of the facade using climbing ropes.

They unfurled a massive banner reading: "China Fails Human Rights, UN stand up for Tibet", and shouted: "Free Tibet!"

UN security acted swiftly to cut down the banner and arrest the protesters, but also to grab journalists' press accreditation and usher them away from the scene.

"The protest went really great," Pema Yoko, deputy director of Students for a Free Tibet, told AFP.

It was important to draw attention to Tibet's plight, she insisted, stressing that "we expect China to blatantly lie about their rights record in Tibet."


23.59 | 0 komentar | Read More

US employers add 148,000 jobs

THE US economy added just 148,000 jobs in September, suggesting that employers held back on hiring before a 16-day partial government shutdown began October 1.

Still, hiring was strong enough to lower the unemployment rate.

The Labor Department said on Tuesday that the rate fell to 7.2 per cent, down from 7.3 per cent in August and nearly a five-year low.

The economy has added an average of 143,000 jobs a month from July through September, down from 182,000 from April through June.

Revisions to the previous two months were mixed. Employers added 193,000 jobs in August, better than the initial estimate of 169,000. But they added just 89,000 in July, the fewest in more than a year and below the previously reported 104,000.

Stock futures rose after the report was released. The weaker job figures make it more likely that the Federal Reserve will maintain its level of bond purchases when it meets next month. The bond purchases are intended to lower long-term interest rates and boost borrowing and spending.

The jobs report was delayed because of the shutdown, which may have further depressed economic growth and hiring. Temporary layoffs of federal workers and private government contractors will probably lower October's job gains. But that's likely a temporary decline.

Many economists say they won't have a clear read on hiring and unemployment until the November jobs report is released, in early December.

High unemployment has discouraged many Americans from looking for work. The percentage of Americans working or looking for work remained at a 35-year low in September.

There were some positive aspects in the latest jobs report. Several higher-paying industries added jobs at a healthy pace. Construction firms gained 20,000 positions. Government boosted payrolls by 22,000. Transportation and warehousing gained 23,400 jobs.

And average hourly pay ticked up three cents to $US24.09. In the past year, hourly pay has increased 2.1 per cent, ahead of the 1.5 per cent inflation rate.

The deceleration in job growth was a key reason the Fed decided in September to hold off on slowing its $US85-billion-a-month ($A88-billion-a-month) in bond purchases. The lack of clean data could lead the Fed to push off any decision on the bond purchases until 2014.


23.59 | 0 komentar | Read More

Blue Mountains brace for dangerous day

RESIDENTS in the Blue Mountains who have not prepared for a day of extreme fire danger have been urged to leave the area as early as possible.

The stern warning comes as firefighters brace for the worst fire conditions since the NSW bushfire crisis unfolded last week.

Temperatures in the mid-30s teamed with wind gusts between 80-100km/h and low humidity are forecast for the Greater Hunter, Southern Highlands, Blue Mountains and Greater Sydney on Wednesday.

Fifty-five blazes are burning across the state, including 17 that are uncontained.

The most concerning fires are those around towns in the Blue Mountains, including Lithgow, Springwood and Mount Victoria.

The Rural Fire Service (RFS) says Wednesday's conditions are as bad as it gets and has advised residents to leave the area if they have no important reason to be there.

"If you are not prepared, I don't know what it takes to get a message out there that you should be prepared if you live in a bushfire-prone area or at risk area," RFS Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons said.

"If you have not prepared, if you are not comfortable about being in a high-risk area like the conditions we are expecting, then leaving early is clearly your safest option."

All schools in the Blue Mountains and TAFE campuses in Katoomba and Wentworth Falls will be closed.

Mr Fitzsimmons reinforced it was not a day off for students to hang at the skate park.

"Know where your children are, keep the family together so you can make decisions and act together as a family in the event you are threatened by fire," he said.

NSW Police has advised heavy vehicles to delay travel around the Blue Mountains with all long and wide-load escort permits revoked.

An additional 1400 firefighters are on hand to assist with base camps established at Penrith and Sydney Olympic Park.

A total fire ban is also in place.


23.59 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger