World News Thread & Breaking News!!

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kliu0

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Re: World News Thread

At least 150 killed in Italian earthquake, officials say

L'AQUILA, Italy (CNN) -- Rescuers worked into the early morning hours Tuesday in hopes of finding survivors of a powerful earthquake that ripped through Italy's mountainous Abruzzo region, killing scores of people and leaving tens of thousands homeless.

Tearful survivors, many of them clad in pajamas and blankets, watched as bodies were pulled from the rubble in the medieval city of L'Aquila, about 120 km (75 miles) northeast of Rome. The quake killed more than 150 people, L'Aquila's fire department said late Monday.

Nearly 24 hours after the quake hit, authorities were still unsure how many people remained trapped in the wreckage.

"We think maybe 70 to 100," said Francesco Rocca, a spokesman for the Italian Red Cross. "We still don't know the exact number. This is why we are still working very, very hard at the moment."

Another body was found in the rubble of a student dormitory early Tuesday morning, and at least five other students were believed inside. But aftershocks hindered rescuers early Tuesday, and they have asked for additional equipment and expertise from Rome, authorities at the scene told CNN.

Italy's Civil Protection agency reported at least 1,500 injured and 50,000 without shelter.

"I can say there's hardly a building which was left without some sign of what has happened in the historical center of L'Aquila," Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said during a visit to the stricken region. "All the public buildings have been affected."

Berlusconi said 4,000 people were working on the rescue effort. Civil defense officials said they are prepared to house up to 30,000 people, but many of those displaced have gone to hotels.

Of the 150 dead, about 100 bodies have been identified, the officials said.

Monday's earthquake was about 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) deep, the USGS said.

About 10:20 p.m. (8:20 p.m. GMT) Sunday, a 4.6-magnitude earthquake hit northern Italy, about 55 km (35 miles) southeast of Bologna, the agency said. That earthquake's depth was 6.4 km (4 miles).

The quake is the deadliest to strike Italy in decades, and the first major temblor to strike the country in almost seven years. Joshua Brothers, an American missionary, told CNN that the quake "sounded as if a 747 (jet) was actually coming in to land."

"That was the first thing that was on my mind," he said.

The quake left stone buildings in heaps, with rubble spilling over parked cars and into alleyways. Frightened residents rushed into the streets, many of them bringing luggage with them, Brothers said. Photo See images of the destruction »

"If you look along the way, there are many palazzi that are cracked, walls have fallen in on some of them," he said. Video Watch Brothers describe devastation »

L'Aquila's hospital was damaged as well, forcing doctors to evacuate the most seriously hurt. Agostino Miozzo, the director-general of Italy's Civil Protection agency, called it "a disaster on a huge scale." iReport.com: 'The house shook for such a long time'

The magnitude 6.3 earthquake struck at 3:32 a.m. (1:32 p.m. GMT Sunday), Italy's . Berlusconi declared a state of emergency and canceled a trip to Russia to oversee the rescue efforts. Three significant aftershocks -- ranging from magnitude 4.3 to 4.8 -- shook the area within six hours of the quake, unnerving residents further.

The earthquake followed less than six hours after another quake hit the northern part of the country, the U.S. Geological Survey reported. Seismic activity is not uncommon in Italy, which is sandwiched between the European and African tectonic plates, and USGS geophysicist Amy Vaughan called the region geographically "complex." Learn more about how earthquakes are measured »

In 1997, an earthquake killed 10 people in the Umbria region, left tens of thousands homeless and seriously damaged monuments and artwork, including the town of Assisi's famed Basilica of St. Francis.
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About 17 years before the Umbria quake, a 6.5-magnitude temblor in southern Italy killed 3,000 people, according to the USGS.

Pope Benedict XVI was praying for the "victims, especially the children," killed in Monday's quake, the Vatican said, according to Italian news agency ANSA
 

Scratch

Captain
Re: World News Thread

Thailand can't return to stability. It's getting back and forth with these protests.
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Thailand Cancels Asean After Thai Protesters Storm Summit Venue

April 11 (Bloomberg) -- Thailand canceled a regional leaders’ summit for a second time in five months after thousands of Thai anti-government protesters stormed the meeting venue in the resort town of Pattaya.

Leaders from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations were scheduled to meet with heads of states from China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia and Japan today and tomorrow. Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva declared a state of emergency in the city to ensure the leaders could depart safely. They were evacuated by helicopter, Agence France-Presse reported.

The summit’s collapse deals a heavy blow to Abhisit, who touted his ability to host the meeting as a sign he had restored normalcy to the country after protesters closed Bangkok’s airports last year. The summit had been previously delayed from December because of political turmoil in Thailand, which holds Asean’s rotating chairmanship.

“The government is completely humiliated,” said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, director of the Institute for Strategic and International Studies at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok. “It’s a debilitating setback for Thailand because a lot of people gave us the benefit of the doubt that last year was just a one-off. This will leave a lasting impression on the international community.”

Meant to Follow G20

This meeting was also scheduled to be the first for the Asia Pacific regional leaders since the G-20 summit in London earlier this month. Among planned attendees in the Thai city were International Monetary Fund Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn, World Bank President Robert Zoellick and United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

More than 1,000 so-called Red Shirts, who want Abhisit to resign, converged on Pattaya “to show the world that we don’t want this government,” Arismun Pongruenrong, a former pop singer who led a protest group, said yesterday.

The demonstrators today shattered glass doors at the meeting’s conference center and stormed the venue with clappers and whistles while shouting slogans for Abhisit to step down.

Abhisit took power in December after protesters who supported him shut down the country’s airports for eight days and a court dissolved the ruling party for vote buying. He wooed a faction of lawmakers that previously backed former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra to join his coalition, and consolidated his parliamentary majority in a March 21 confidence vote.

Arismun, the protester, said they breached an army barricade at the summit venue after a one of them was shot dead and some were injured by gunfire. Arismun said they were attacked by pro-government demonstrators, who Arismun claimed were backed by the government. His claim wasn’t independently verified.

‘Abhisit Must Resign’

“This is our first step to get rid of our prime minister and reform our democracy,” Arismun said. “Abhisit must resign” after the three-day Thai New Year holiday starting April 13.

Leaders were scheduled to discuss ways to battle the region’s worst slowdown in more than a decade. Asia’s export- dependent nations are reeling from the global recession, which has slashed demand for the region’s computer chips, cars and commodities.

“The summit will be postponed to a later date,” Thai Foreign Ministry spokesman Tharit Charungvat said in phone interview after the protesters stormed the building. “All the leaders expressed their total understanding.”

A separate meeting between the leaders of Japan, China and South Korea may go forward at a separate venue in Pattaya, where they are expected to discuss North Korea’s April 5 missile test, according to Japanese Foreign Ministry spokesman Kazuo Kodama.
 

Scratch

Captain
Re: World News Thread

A possibly real dangerous situation developing here. Radical fighters / Taliban expanding their influence and even controll beyond the tribal areas in Pakistan. As long as they don't feel strong resistance, they'll carry on, since they got the feeling of superiority. The point where they have to be confronted harshly is close already. Unfortunately, Pakistan is still more worried about rival India then the clear and present threat from the inside.

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Petraeus Sees Rising Threat From Radicals In Pakistan

By Ann Scott Tyson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, April 25, 2009


Gen. David H. Petraeus warned yesterday that al-Qaeda and Taliban extremists in Pakistan are posing "an ever more serious threat to Pakistan's very existence," and he said that Pakistan's leaders must act to counter the challenge with a well-trained military counterinsurgency force.

Petraeus requested congressional support for the Pakistani Counterinsurgency Capabilities Fund, a new, more-flexible spending stream that would permit more rapid and targeted U.S. training and provide more equipment to Pakistani forces that combat insurgents inside the country's lawless tribal regions.

"The Pakistani military has stepped up operations in parts of the tribal areas. Everyone recognizes, however, that much further work is required, and the events of recent days underscore that point," Petraeus testified before a panel of the House Appropriations Committee.
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Specifically, Petraeus said, Pakistan must reconfigure its military forces to deal with counterinsurgency operations rather than to continue its conventional focus on traditional rival India.

The fund Petraeus seeks, with a budget of $400 million for the rest of fiscal 2009, would be channeled directly through U.S. Central Command, which he oversees. This arrangement would give Central Command greater control over how the money is spent, and the military could withhold equipment from Pakistani forces until they complete required training, according to an outline of the program.

The fund would be similar to those used to train and equip Iraqi and Afghan soldiers and police, Petraeus said, and would be tailored to Pakistani forces engaged in counterinsurgency.

Such U.S. military training is underway for small numbers of Pakistani forces that operate in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and North-West Frontier Province, he said. About 300 to 350 Frontier Corps forces moved into the district of Buner after the Taliban expanded into the area from the Swat Valley.

The Taliban "supposedly have now withdrawn with the arrival of the Frontier Corps forces" in Buner, Petraeus said. "So this capability will help us enormously."

Congress is likely to support the new fund for the Pakistani military at least in the current supplemental spending bill that covers military contingencies for 2009. However, there may be a debate over the program for 2010, with some lawmakers seeking to channel the counterinsurgency funds through the State Department rather than the U.S. military, according to congressional staff members.
 

pla101prc

Senior Member
Re: World News Thread

A possibly real dangerous situation developing here. Radical fighters / Taliban expanding their influence and even controll beyond the tribal areas in Pakistan. As long as they don't feel strong resistance, they'll carry on, since they got the feeling of superiority. The point where they have to be confronted harshly is close already. Unfortunately, Pakistan is still more worried about rival India then the clear and present threat from the inside.

==========================================================

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Petraeus Sees Rising Threat From Radicals In Pakistan

By Ann Scott Tyson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, April 25, 2009


Gen. David H. Petraeus warned yesterday that al-Qaeda and Taliban extremists in Pakistan are posing "an ever more serious threat to Pakistan's very existence," and he said that Pakistan's leaders must act to counter the challenge with a well-trained military counterinsurgency force.

Petraeus requested congressional support for the Pakistani Counterinsurgency Capabilities Fund, a new, more-flexible spending stream that would permit more rapid and targeted U.S. training and provide more equipment to Pakistani forces that combat insurgents inside the country's lawless tribal regions.

"The Pakistani military has stepped up operations in parts of the tribal areas. Everyone recognizes, however, that much further work is required, and the events of recent days underscore that point," Petraeus testified before a panel of the House Appropriations Committee.
ad_icon

Specifically, Petraeus said, Pakistan must reconfigure its military forces to deal with counterinsurgency operations rather than to continue its conventional focus on traditional rival India.

The fund Petraeus seeks, with a budget of $400 million for the rest of fiscal 2009, would be channeled directly through U.S. Central Command, which he oversees. This arrangement would give Central Command greater control over how the money is spent, and the military could withhold equipment from Pakistani forces until they complete required training, according to an outline of the program.

The fund would be similar to those used to train and equip Iraqi and Afghan soldiers and police, Petraeus said, and would be tailored to Pakistani forces engaged in counterinsurgency.

Such U.S. military training is underway for small numbers of Pakistani forces that operate in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and North-West Frontier Province, he said. About 300 to 350 Frontier Corps forces moved into the district of Buner after the Taliban expanded into the area from the Swat Valley.

The Taliban "supposedly have now withdrawn with the arrival of the Frontier Corps forces" in Buner, Petraeus said. "So this capability will help us enormously."

Congress is likely to support the new fund for the Pakistani military at least in the current supplemental spending bill that covers military contingencies for 2009. However, there may be a debate over the program for 2010, with some lawmakers seeking to channel the counterinsurgency funds through the State Department rather than the U.S. military, according to congressional staff members.

obama should be laughin at this one. he's been trying to get pakistan to play a more active role for a while. but if the current adminsitration in pakistan does not handle this well, musharaf can make a pretty slick come back in the future. they also must be aware of the possibility of American special operation forces crossing borders into pakistan "in pursuit of fleeing insurgents"
 

Mr T

Senior Member
Re: World News Thread

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Concerns are growing in Mexico and the United States after officials in both countries took emergency steps to contain a new multi-strain swine flu that has killed up to 60 in Mexico and infected eight in the United States.

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A new flu virus suspected of killing up to 60 people in Mexico has the potential to become a pandemic, the World Health Organization's chief says.

Margaret Chan said the outbreak was a "serious situation" which needed to be followed closely. Ms Chan cut short a visit to the US and returned to Geneva for urgent talks.

Health experts say tests so far seem to link the illnesses in Mexico with a new swine flu virus that sickened eight people in the southern US.

The WHO's new emergency committee is now meeting - though health officials say it may be premature to advise against travel to Mexico. The committee will be discussing whether to declare a public health emergency, and whether to raise the global pandemic alert level.

The WHO says it does not know the full risk yet. It is advising all member states to be vigilant for seasonally unusual flu or pneumonia-like symptoms among their populations - particularly among young healthy adults, who seem to be the most affected in Mexico.

This is going to be very, very bad news unless everyone gets organised fast.
 

kliu0

Junior Member
Re: World News Thread

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(CNN) -- Governments and health officials around the world continued to take steps Wednesday against the outbreak of swine flu that has killed scores of people in Mexico and spread to the U.S., Europe and possibly Asia.
Five-year-old Edgar Hernandez, known as "patient zero" survived the earliest documented case of swine flu.

Mexican health officials suspect that the swine flu outbreak has caused more than 159 deaths and roughly 2,500 illnesses.

So far, the World Health Organization (WHO) says at least 105 cases have been confirmed worldwide -- 64 in the United States; 26 in Mexico (including seven deaths); six in Canada; three in New Zealand; and two each in Spain, the United Kingdom and Israel.

The WHO list does not include 11 additional cases reported by New Zealand health officials, or one each confirmed by Costa Rica's health ministry and authorities in the German state of Bavaria.

In the United States, California, Indiana and Texas were also reporting additional cases not confirmed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Meanwhile, Mexican authorities are focusing on a young boy being referred to as "patient zero" by his doctors -- 5-year-old Edgar Hernandez, who survived the earliest documented case of the swine flu outbreak.

His family lives in the village of La Gloria in the state of Veracruz, where a flu outbreak was reported on April 2.

Lab tests confirmed that he was the only patient in Veracruz to test positive for the swine flu virus; the others had contracted a common flu. Health officials had returned to Edgar's sample only after cases of the new flu strain were spotted around the country. He has recovered from his symptoms.

The World Health Organization on Monday raised its alert level from three to four on its six-level scale.

The move means the U.N. agency has determined that the virus is capable of significant human-to-human transmission -- a major step toward a pandemic, but not necessarily inevitable, Dr. Keiji Fukuda said.

"In this age of global travel, where people move around in airplanes so quickly, there is no region to which this virus could not spread," said Fukuda, assistant director-general of the WHO.

Governments around the world scrambled to prevent further outbreak.

Some, like China and Russia, banned pork imports from the United States and Mexico. Several others, such as Japan and Indonesia, used thermographic devices to test the temperature of passengers arriving from Mexico.

WHO ALERT LEVELS
In Phase 1 no viruses among animals reported to have caused infections in humans.

In Phase 2 animal flu virus is known to have caused infection in humans and is potential pandemic threat.

In Phase 3, animal or human-animal flu virus has caused small number of cases in people, but not sufficient for community-level outbreaks.

Phase 4 is characterized by verified human-to-human transmission of animal or human-animal flu virus, indicating greater but not inevitable risk of pandemic.

Phase 5 means human-to-human spread of virus is confirmed in two countries in one WHO region and pandemic is feared imminent.

Phase 6 characterized by community-level outbreaks in at least one other country in second WHO region. This phase indicates global pandemic is under way.

The Philippines' health department urged people to avoid kissing and hugging in public.

Argentina announced a five-day ban on flights from Mexico. Four cruise lines -- Holland America, Royal Caribbean, Norwegian and Princess -- canceled upcoming calls to Mexican ports.

U.S. President Barack Obama said the outbreak was a cause for concern, not for alarm. The government urged travelers to avoid non-essential travel to Mexico.

About 35,000 public venues in Mexico City were shut down or told to serve only take-out meals Tuesday, as officials try to contain the outbreak.

In addition to ordering restaurants to serve only take-out food, authorities ordered the closing of bars, clubs, movie theaters, pool halls, theaters, gyms, sport centers and convention halls until May 6, said Juan Jose Garcia Ochoa, one of the city government's top officials.

Armed police officers are also guarding hospitals in Mexico City while roads and schools in the city of 20 million people are deserted. Officials also have talked about shutting down the bus and subway systems.

Blue masks shield the faces of mothers and babies from a virus that doctors are still trying to understand, let alone bring under control.

"I'm pretty nervous of this whole virus thing," Berta Hernandez said as she touched up her eyeliner inside a packed and humid subway car. She did not dare lift her surgical mask to put on lip gloss.

"I'm nervous of the people who aren't wearing masks. Maybe they will suddenly sneeze or cough," she said.

Some health experts fear the disease could become a pandemic, partly because it has killed young, healthy adults in Mexico.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued emergency authorization for the use of two of the most common anti-viral drugs, Tamiflu and Relenza. The authorization allows the distribution of the drugs by a broader range of health care workers and loosens age limits for their use. The median age of all the U.S. cases is 16 years.

In Mexico City, however, there is a shortage of such medication. And the government ran out of surgical masks after handing them out to one out of every five residents.

Panicked citizens continue to flood in night and day at hospitals, only to be turned away by armed guards.

"I was looking for a mask at my local pharmacy, but they sold out," supermarket worker Rafael Martinez said as he rode the subway. "I know it's a risk, but I can't find one.'

Swine flu is a contagious respiratory disease that usually affects pigs. It is caused by a type-A influenza virus. The current strain is a new variation of an H1N1 virus, which is a mix of human and animal versions. iReport.com: Do you think we should be worried about swine flu?

When the flu spreads person-to-person, instead of from animals to humans, it can continue to mutate, making it harder to treat or fight off because people have no natural immunity.

The symptoms are similar to common flu. They include fever, lethargy, lack of appetite, coughing, runny nose, sore throat, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.

The virus spreads when an infected person coughs or sneezes around another person. People can become infected by touching something with the flu virus on it and then touching their mouth, nose or eyes.

In 1968, a "Hong Kong" flu pandemic killed about 1 million people worldwide. And in 1918, a "Spanish" flu pandemic killed as many as 100 million people. Putting those figures into perspective about 36,000 people die from flu-related symptoms each year in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Researchers do not know how the virus is jumping relatively easily from person to person, or why it is affecting society's healthiest demographic.

"When you think about the flu, the seasonal flu, the flu that we're accustomed to, it typically tends to have the worse ramifications in people that don't have developed immune systems -- the elderly and the very young. They can't fight it off," said Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN's chief medical correspondent.

"What's counterintuitive with this particular virus, it's in the people who have robust immune systems. As their body starts to respond, to try and fight off that virus, they produce tons of inflammatory cells. Those inflammatory cells can sort of flood the lungs.
 

Scratch

Captain
Re: World News Thread

The pakistany offensive continiues, and seems to be rather effective at the moment. Even though the local Taleban captured some police stations. It remains to be seen, however, how far the pakistani army will press. If they stop after clearing Buner and Dir, or if they'll even enter Swat.

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Pakistan wrests control of town from Taliban

But militants have taken over a police station and dozens of officers are hostage. The military actions are an effort to push the Taliban back into its base in the Swat Valley.

By Mubashir Zaidi and Mark Magnier
11:58 AM PDT, April 29, 2009


Reporting from Islamabad, Pakistan, and Lahore, Pakistan -- Pakistani commandos dropped from helicopters today into an area behind Taliban lines some 80 miles from Islamabad, the capital, and regained control of a key town, the army said. But authorities faced a fresh challenge after militants seized a police station, holding dozens of officers hostage.

Helicopters dropped troops before 8 a.m. near Daggar, the main town in the Buner district, the army said. The area has seen fighting between the military and Taliban forces for several days.

The army said it has killed at least 50 militants in Buner during the last two days of fighting but estimates that 500 fighters remain. The offensive may last another week, the military added, given that troops are running into stiff resistance in mountainous areas.

"We assure the nation that armed forces have the capability to ward off any kind of threat," military spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas told reporters at a briefing in the city of Rawalpindi.

In other developments today, officials here say a suspected U.S. missile strike killed five people in Pakistani territory along the Afghan border. The unmanned U.S. missile strikes, or drones, are extremely unpopular in Pakistan, drawing criticism that the nation's sovereignty is being violated.

...
 

pla101prc

Senior Member
Re: World News Thread

The pakistany offensive continiues, and seems to be rather effective at the moment. Even though the local Taleban captured some police stations. It remains to be seen, however, how far the pakistani army will press. If they stop after clearing Buner and Dir, or if they'll even enter Swat.

=================================================================

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Pakistan wrests control of town from Taliban

But militants have taken over a police station and dozens of officers are hostage. The military actions are an effort to push the Taliban back into its base in the Swat Valley.

By Mubashir Zaidi and Mark Magnier
11:58 AM PDT, April 29, 2009


Reporting from Islamabad, Pakistan, and Lahore, Pakistan -- Pakistani commandos dropped from helicopters today into an area behind Taliban lines some 80 miles from Islamabad, the capital, and regained control of a key town, the army said. But authorities faced a fresh challenge after militants seized a police station, holding dozens of officers hostage.

Helicopters dropped troops before 8 a.m. near Daggar, the main town in the Buner district, the army said. The area has seen fighting between the military and Taliban forces for several days.

The army said it has killed at least 50 militants in Buner during the last two days of fighting but estimates that 500 fighters remain. The offensive may last another week, the military added, given that troops are running into stiff resistance in mountainous areas.

"We assure the nation that armed forces have the capability to ward off any kind of threat," military spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas told reporters at a briefing in the city of Rawalpindi.

In other developments today, officials here say a suspected U.S. missile strike killed five people in Pakistani territory along the Afghan border. The unmanned U.S. missile strikes, or drones, are extremely unpopular in Pakistan, drawing criticism that the nation's sovereignty is being violated.

...

i doubt zardari wants to just eliminate the talibans in Pakistan. that'll prolly infuriate a lot of ppl in Pakistan and be viewed as sucking up to obama. zardari will get hurt from being either too tough or too weak, the best way is prolly hit them and then negotiate a deal.
 
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