Showing posts with label Breaking News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breaking News. Show all posts

Friday, August 21, 2015

Past 4 years have been demanding but meaningful, fulfilling: Heng Swee Keat

TODAY reports: Education Minister Heng Swee Keat said the past four years have been a “very inspiring” time, having met people from all walks of life, such as volunteers who give their time to the community and pioneer educators who care deeply about the education system.



SINGAPORE: The past four years in politics have been “very demanding” but also “meaningful and fulfilling”, said Education Minister Heng Swee Keat, who entered politics in 2011 after spending almost three decades in the Civil Service.

Apart from being a Member of Parliament (MP) and Cabinet minister, Mr Heng also headed the Our Singapore Conversation (OSC) project, and chaired the SG50 Steering Committee.

In an interview with TODAY earlier this week, he noted that the education portfolio itself requires “fairly intense thought” before making any policy changes.

“It requires one to think of the many issues long term, and appreciate and understand what is happening on the ground,” said Mr Heng who, along with Social and Family Development Minister Tan Chuan-Jin, NTUC chief Chan Chun Sing and Culture, Community and Youth Minister Lawrence Wong, has been touted as key members of the fourth-generation leadership.

Pointing to his other “major assignments” - getting Singaporeans to air their views in the OSC and overseeing the Jubilee celebrations - Mr Heng noted that there are “no textbook answers” to them.

“In a sense, all these assignments are new to me, and they are challenging because I wanted to do it in a way that is innovative, and has an impact and is meaningful,” he said.

His duties as an MP for Tampines GRC also requires him to spend time getting to know the residents and understanding their issues. All these different responsibilities “will take up a lot of time and none of it can (be done) with very little effort”, said the former managing director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

Mr Heng has also had to grapple with the challenge of becoming the Education Ministry’s public face, which he admitted to being difficult in some ways as he is a “very private” person. However, he added that he recognises that this is necessary when the situation calls for it.

Despite the challenges, Mr Heng said it has been a “very inspiring” time so far, having met people from all walks of life, such as volunteers who give their time to the community and pioneer educators who care deeply about the education system.

“I’ve been very energised by many people I’ve met,” he said, adding that he is also heartened to see Singaporeans being involved in ground-up initiatives.

Asked about his achievements in the MOE over the past four years, Mr Heng stressed that they are the product of a collective effort.

He said his team has “been working hard” to broaden the definition of success, including providing different pathways for students at the post-secondary level.

More attention is also being paid to neighbourhood schools, he noted. “Teachers from neighbourhood schools have said ‘thank you for shining a light on what we do’, and indeed they worked very hard to create opportunities for everyone.”

On his future plans - and whether the hot seat at the Transport Ministry might be a consideration - Mr Heng would only say that it is up to the Prime Minister to decide what his next post will be.

Mr Heng also dismissed talk that ministers operate on their own in deciding policy matters. “It is a principle of collective responsibility … we debate many (issues) very seriously (and) all important decisions are taken by the Cabinet,” he said.

Truck Driver Who Allegedly Helped Pak Terrorist Naveed Arrested by National Investigation Agency

Truck Driver Who Allegedly Helped Pak Terrorist Naveed Arrested by National Investigation Agency

SRINAGAR:  The National Investigation Agency (NIA) has arrested a truck driver who allegedly ferried Pakistani terrorist Mohammed Naveed to Jammu a day before he attacked a Border Security Force convoy on a national highway near Udhampur.

Naveed,a Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist, was captured after the attack on August 4; his accomplice was killed in an exchange of fire with the BSF. Two BSF soldiers were killed in the terror attack.

The truck driver arrested today has been identified as Khursheed Ahmed alias 'Surya', 35, allegedly an overground operative of the Lashkar-e-Taiba, which is a Pakistan based terror group. Ahmed lives in Awantipura in the Pulwama district of Kashmir.

Officials said Khursheed has served a two-and-a-half year prison term for allegedly smuggling drugs.

Naveed, who told his interrogators about Khursheed, was taken to Gulmarg in Jammu and Kashmir today. Yesterday, he was taken to Pulwama, where he reportedly identified the places that he hid in for over a month after he infiltrated into India on June 7 this year.

The NIA is reconstructing the sequence of events that led to Udhampur attack and is taking him to places that he has mentioned during interrogation.

Investigators are also working on getting the exact details of routes used by Naveed, the people who helped him in India and proof of him being in regular touch with his Pakistani handlers across the border.

The elite anti-terror agency is focusing on building a water-tight case to prove that Naveed is a Pakistani national. While the terrorist has told interrogators that  he is from Faislabad in Pakistan and has even allegedly located his home on Google maps, Islamabad has rejected that claim and wants "scientific evidence."

NIA chief Sharad Kumar was in the Valley yesterday and supervised the case.

Naveed was brought to Delhi on August 13, and has undergone a polygraph or lie detector test this week.

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Robbery in Guangzhou, China

During a robbery in Guangzhou, China, the bank robber shouted to everyone in the bank: "Don't move. The money belongs to the State. Your life belongs to you."

Everyone in the bank laid down quietly. This is called "Mind Changing Concept” Changing the conventional way of thinking.

When a lady lay on the table provocatively, the robber shouted at her: "Please be civilized! This is a robbery and not a rape!"

This is called "Being Professional” Focus only on what you are trained to do!

When the bank robbers returned home, the younger robber (MBA-trained) told the older robber (who has only completed Year 6 in primary school): "Big brother, let's count how much we got."

Image result for robbery
The older robber rebutted and said: "You are very stupid. There is so much money it will take us a long time to count. Tonight, the TV news will tell us how much we robbed from the bank!" 

This is called "Experience.” Nowadays, experience is more important than paper qualifications!

After the robbers had left, the bank manager told the bank supervisor to call the police quickly. But the supervisor said to him: "Wait! Let us take out $10 million from the bank for ourselves and add it to the $70 million that we have previously embezzled from the bank”.

This is called "Swim with the tide.” Converting an unfavorable situation to your advantage!

The supervisor says: "It will be good if there is a robbery every month."

This is called "Killing Boredom.” Personal Happiness is more important than your job. 

The next day, the TV news reported that $100 million was taken from the bank. The robbers counted and counted and counted, but they could only count $20 million. The robbers were very angry and complained: "We risked our lives and only took $20 million. The bank manager took $80 million with a snap of his fingers. It looks like it is better to be educated than to be a thief!"

This is called "Knowledge is worth as much as gold!"

The bank manager was smiling and happy because his losses in the share market are now covered by this robbery.

This is called "Seizing the opportunity.” Daring to take risks!

So who are the real robbers here?

It Took A Massacre To Turn The World’s Focus Back To Syria

While U.S. coalition forces are busy fighting Islamic State terrorists, Bashar al-Assad is allegedly killing thousands of people in Syria.
Syrian government warplanes attacked a market in the rebel-held town of Douma on Sunday, killing at least 82 people and wounding hundreds, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and aid groups.

Syria

A graphic video purportedly showing the aftermath of the attack was posted online on Sunday:


It Took A Massacre To Turn The World’s Focus Back To Syria editors While U.S. coalition forces are busy fighting Islamic State terrorists, Bashar al-Assad is allegedly killing thousands of people in Syria. Syrian government warplanes attacked a market in the rebel-held town of Douma on Sunday, killing at least 82 people and wounding hundreds, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and aid groups. A graphic video purportedly showing the aftermath of the attack was posted online on Sunday: The tragic incident, which is now being called an “official massacre,” has finally shifted the world’s focus from Islamic State terrorists towards Syria where a four-year-old civil war has resulted in the deaths of almost quarter of a million people, including nearly 12,000 children.

Syria

People attempt to identify bodies after the attack – Reuters
Ever since the ISIS established a self-proclaimed caliphate in the Middle East last June, questions were raised as to how the United States and coalition forces would deal with the new problem in the embattled region – especially when Syria’s biggest war criminal, its President Bashar al-Assad, was still at large.
With the West busy in fighting off ISIS terrorists in Iraq over the past year, it turns out Assad had allegedly been killing thousands of people in his country.
As of June 30, the conflict in Syria had killed nearly 11,100 people this year,according to USAID figures, with most of the deaths caused by attacks carried out by the Syrian Arab Republic Government (SARG) and pro-SARG forces – nearly 7,000 civilians.
Moreover, as per Syrian Revolution Network, an online network of activists, around 50 markets have been bombed by the Assad regime since January and the market in Douma was bombed twice in four days. (Note: These figures have not been independently verified.)
Syria
Reuters

The Syrian civil war has turned into the worst humanitarian crisis in modern times and even more horrifying is the fact that the world community has not been able to do much to put an end to the miseries of the affected people.
The massacre of Douma is a stark reminder of how the West should not turn a blind eye to Assad’s atrocities while battling ISIS in the region.
Apart from the loss of life, the conflict in Syria has displaced more than 11 million people, including 7.6 million people internally and more than 3.9 million people to neighboring countries.

Monday, August 17, 2015

Real-Life Batman Dies After Crash In Batmobile


A local hero who visited sick children in hospitals dressed as Batman was killed on Sunday night when his Batmobile broke down on a highway.


A local hero who visited sick children in hospitals dressed as Batman was killed on Sunday night when his Batmobile broke down on a highway.

Lenny B. Robinson had pulled his car over on Interstate 71 in Maryland and got out to check his engine. As he did a Toyota Camary struck his car propelling the Batmobile into Robinson and killing him.

The Capped Crusader had donned the costume and visited children since 2001. The idea started after he dressed up as Batman for his son, but then noticed how other children reacted to the get-up.

“These visits provide an immediate boost for these kids," Jeffrey Dome, the oncology division chief at Children’s National Medical Center in Northwest Washington, told the Washington Post in 2012. "Some of these children have to stay for weeks or months at a time. ... A visit from a superhero is sort of like a fantasy in the middle of all this hard-core therapy."

Robison became Internet famous after cops pulled him over in 2012 on Route 29 for having his license plates adorned with Batman symbols. Video of the police encounter made him an instant online hit.

The Dark Knight believed that children were drawn to the character because of Batman’s easy relatability.

“Batman is the only super hero that doesn’t have super powers,” he said. “He’s naturally a super hero. Kids can relate to me a lot better.”

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

A lady from HK, drowned after having a fight with her lifeguard boyfriend!

A lady from Hong Kong, drowned while swimming, after having a fight with her boyfriend -- which is a lifeguard!

A 22-year-old lady from Hong Kong was found floating into the sea, two days after celebrating her birthday. The lady named Nicole has the ambition of becoming a nail beautician. She was living together with her family at Big Wave Village, which in there she loves swimming.
Nicole and her boyfriend known each other for four years which is a lifeguard. It was recently they decided to have a house at Shek-O and live together.
That Sunday, Nicole invited some of her friends at Shek-O. Her boyfriend joined the get together party but after which the have a fight and made Nicole to leave.
After not getting home late at night, her boyfriend called Nicole parents to be aware of what happened to them earlier, about the fight and the stow away of Nicole that made her not getting home that night and ask some assistance in locating Nicole. After that morning still Nicole was not yet able to get home. But the family did not made a move to report it to the police that Nicole was missing for two days thinking that Nicole was just sulky to her boyfriend.
Hikers found a floating body over the sea, 11:00 AM the next day, so they called the lifeguard boyfriend of Nicole.
Rescuer team made CPR for Nicole, before they brought her to the hospital. But she was not already breathing and her body was already in a rigid condition. Blood exits into her mouth, and was confirmed dead at the hospital. Police investigator says, maybe Nicole swam into the sea to release her anger and displeasure... but police authority will still make an autopsy of Nicole's body to have the official cause of her death.

STUDENTS ARE ABDUCTED BY MEN AND GANG RAPED INSIDE THE VAN

STUDENTS ARE ABDUCTED BY MEN AND GANG RAPED INSIDE THE VAN


MANILA - A 21-year-old student was allegedly abducted by four men on a van along EDSA-Magallanes and raped by the suspects inside the vehicle.

Speaking to ABS-CBN, "Maricel" (not her real name) said she was on her way home from school at around 6:30 p.m. last September 30 when she noticed a van following her.

When the van was beside her, she said the men inside suddenly grabbed her and forced her inside the vehicle.

"Bigla po nilang hinablot yung bag ko. Akala ko po holdap kasi yung bag ko po yung kinuha. Nagulat po ako pati yung braso ko hinatak rin po nila," she said.

There were four men inside the van, including the driver, she said.

"Sinasampal po nila ako, sabi manahimik ako, ganun. Ang huli ko na lang po nakita naglalagay po sila ng condom."


She said the suspects covered her nose with a handkerchief soaked in a chemical, causing her to lose consciousness.

She said it was already around 3 a.m. the next day when she woke up in a grassy area in Malolos, Bulacan.

She was naked from the waist down and her whole body ached, she said.

A woman and her daughter helped Maricel, knowing she was raped, gave her clothes and food, and accompanied her to Monumento.

On Monday, a 14-year-old girl was also abducted by men on board a van along Kalayaan Avenue in Makati while she was on her way to school. She was also raped by the suspects.

Fortunately, she was able to escape from her abductors after the suspects stopped at a gasoline station.

According to the women and children's desk of the Makati police, they are still investigating if the same people are behind the two cases.

Police advised parents to escort their children to and from school especially if they are minors.

Police also advised commuters to use a "buddy system" especially at night.

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Breaking News: ISIS terrorists are in the UK and ready to launch a deadly attack at any moment

ISIS terrorists are in the UK and ready to launch a deadly attack at any moment, it was claimed yesterday.

A jihadist fighting for the terror group has claimed one potential target is this Saturday’s VJ commemorations involving the Queen.

It is believed to be part of a new strategy with the terror group urging British jihadis to carry out attacks at home rather than travelling to Iraq or Syria.


Worryingly, it is believed up to seven Islamic State-linked jihadis are now in the UK and ready to launch an attack.

The shock claims were uncovered by an exclusive online sting by Sky News using fake social media accounts to unmask Islamic State recruiters.

An undercover investigator spoke to a terrorist responsible for training some of those believed to be in Britain.

He claimed they had received training to help launch an attack.

He said: "Yes, yes, yes everything, all of this - using the Kalashnikov, the pistol, the bomb, grenades and other things.

"They have lessons after training that last an hour then they leave.

"We don't see too much, we are there for their protection; seeing what they are actually doing or what they are talking about is impossible, it is forbidden."

The IS chiefs - a married British couple called Junaid and Umm Hussain - told undercover reporters that a girl in Glasgow was poised to murder and maim using an improvised explosive device (IED).

Over a four-month period, Sky News invented and developed characters and employed a freelance investigative reporter to “run” the characters - one male and one female.


Stuart Ramsay, Sky News chief correspondent, said: “Using these personas, we made contact with Islamic State recruiters initially using Twitter - then using anonymous online messaging services.

“It led us to a married couple - Junaid, or Abu, Hussain, and Sally Jones, known as Umm Hussain. They’re both from Britain and living in Raqqa. Hussain, 21, is from Birmingham and is in charge of IS recruitment.

“He is also a former computer hacker and has the dubious honour of being in the top five of IS operatives most likely to be killed by an American drone.

“During the course of our initial contacts he realised he was talking to a female and suggested she talk to his wife. Jones - originally from Chatham in Kent - recruits women and girls from Britain.

“She sent a bomb-making manual to our female character via a secure-sharing site, telling us that she had another girl in Glasgow ready to attack.

“Specifically, she mentioned the Royal Family and the date of August 15 - the day of the VJ commemorations in London.”



The news comes after a newspaper claimed that British jihadis plotted to blow up the Queen next weekend at an event to mark the anniversary of the end of the Second World War.

Police and MI5 were involved in a frantic race against time to thwart the assassination plot being orchestrated from Syria by Islamic State commanders.

The extremists aimed to strike on Saturday by exploding a deadly pressure cooker bomb during events in Central London to mark the 70th anniversary of VJ Day – Victory in Japan, according to the Mail on Sunday.

On Saturday, the Queen, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh – a veteran of the war in the Pacific – will first attend a service at St Martin-in-the-Fields in Trafalgar Square.

From there dignitaries will move to Horse Guards Parade for a traditional military ‘drumhead’ service, a flypast and a wreath-laying ceremony before the set-piece VJ Day parade of veterans and current troops down Whitehall to Westminster Abbey.


The Metropolitan Police's Specialist Operations unit issued a statement saying: "The police have for some time recognised, and spoken about, the fact that the fight against terrorism has a number of challenges; the real threat from people returning as trained terrorists from Syria and Iraq; the equal threat of those who have not travelled being encouraged and incited to commit attacks in the UK and the young and vulnerable being enticed out to Syria through internet based grooming.

"The police, together with our security partners, remain alert to terrorist threats that may manifest here or where individuals overseas may seek to direct or inspire others to commit attacks in and against the UK.

It is always helpful when journalists share with us information, as Sky did in this case, that could indicate terrorist or criminal activity and we will investigate and take action where appropriate.

"The UK threat level from international terrorism remains severe. We would like to reassure the public that we constantly review security plans for public events, taking into account specific intelligence and the wider threat.

"Our priority is the safety and security for all those attending or involved, the public are encouraged to continue with their plans to attend or take part in events as normal.

"We would also like to reiterate our long-standing advice to remain vigilant and alert. As ever we would urge the public to get in touch to report anything suspicious by calling the confidential anti-terrorist hotline on 0800 789 321 or in an emergency by calling 999."

ISIS recently released a sickening video showing their latest appalling execution technique - forcing men to kneel on explosives and then blowing them up.


The footage shows gleeful and proud militants digging up the ground and planting explosives on the dirt.

A group of 10 men are then led by the black-clad terrorists to the site and forced onto their knees.

The killers then flee the site and detonate the explosives, killing the victims in a huge blast.

Before dying, each of the prisoners were forced to admit their offences before being brutally murdered.

It was reportedly filmed in Nangarhar in Afghanistan, where ISIS is trying to increase its power base.



Terrifying moment a wall of fire stunt goes wrong

Watch the moment a stuntman goes through a wall of fire on the bonnet of an SUV


While performing a stunt known as the "Human Battering Ram" this stuntman was thrown under the car he was riding on moments after going head first through a wall of fire.
The dramatic video, captured in Easley, South Carolina, shows the car become engulfed in flames as the stuntman's head breaks the wall of fire, only for him to fall from the bonnet of the SUV and proceed to be run over.



Somehow the daredevil jogs away from the scene seemingly unscathed whilst putting out parts of his suit that were in flames.


Moments later he collapses but once again manages to get back to his feet with the help of his crew, much to the relief of the audience who applaud the him.
The stuntman is thought to have escaped with only minor injuries.






Monday, August 10, 2015

Breaking News: Lion hunting quotas in Zimbabwe


Lion hunting quotas in Zimbabwe, where Cecil was killed, are unsustainable but across Africa hunting helps prevent habitat loss that is a main driver in the animals’ decline, say conservationists


Lion numbers are in steep decline across Africa, but trophy hunting is only partly responsible for the long-term losses, say conservationists.

According to UK-based charity Lion Aid, trophy hunters in Zimbabwe killed around 800 lions in the 10 years to 2009, out of a population in the country of up to 1,680.

This compares with a total of 990 lions killed for sport in Botswana, Zambia, Namibia and Mozambique combined over the same period.

South Africa, where hunters legally kill around 260 a year, is the world centre of lion hunting but nearly all those killed for sport are bred in captivity, in a practice known as canned hunting. In central and west Africa there is less hunting because lion populations are nearly all in steep decline or extinct.

“Lions are grossly over-hunted in Zimbabwe concessions, lured out of national parks and there is corruption. Quotas are exceeded. It is highly unsustainable,” said a spokesman for Lion Aid, following the illegal killing of a 12-year-old lion known as Cecil who was lured out of Hwange national park by an American hunter.


Cecil the lion's cubs most likely killed by rival lion, say conservationists
 Read more
But many conservationists say that without trophy hunting there would be no lions at all.

“The land would be used for farming and this would accelerate the loss of wildlife. We don’t like trophy hunting but it slows the rapid decline of populations. It is a necessary evil,” said Guy Balme, director of the leopard programme in Africa for US-based conservation group Panthera.

Governments encourage hunting because most of the land used for hunting is not suitable for tourism. “The problem is we don’t have the alternatives to hunting. In many areas where lion hunting takes place there is no other wildlife-based industry. I don’t condone it. The shooting industry uses the excuse that hunting is better than the alternatives, but it can only be a short-term solution,” said Balme.

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Data on lion numbers is not reliable, said Peter Lindsey, a lion conservation specialist at Zimbabwe university and author of a survey of trophy hunting in Africa. He has argued in academic papers that hunting could be a positive force because it provides an economic motive for maintaining wildlife habitats.

“But in countries like Tanzania, which holds 30-50% of all Africa’s wild lions, trophy hunting appears to be the primary driver of lion population declines outside protected areas,” said Lindsey.

The hunting industry is believed to contribute over $200m (£130m) a year to African governments, through permits, taxes and quotas. The money is in theory used to support national parks and wildlife conservation.

South African organisation Hunting Legends this week quoted $35,000 to kill a male lion in his prime, $13,000 for a buffalo, $8,500 for a crocodile and $60,000 for a large elephant. A Vervet monkey can be shot for $170, said its website.

According to a 2007 paper by Lindsey, lions generate up to 17% of Africa’s hunting income and attract the highest prices from hunters. “[But] Trophy hunting also lowered the population density of lions and affected the behavior of lions in Hwange national park [where Cecil the lion lived] in Zimbabwe,” he said.

The theory is that when hunting is well managed, the jobs and money generated give local people an incentive to suppress poaching and keep animals alive. “Unfortunately the benefits do not always go to people on the ground,” said Balme.

According to Lindsey, sports hunters are some of the biggest tourist spenders, paying much more per head than wildlife tourists. In 2006, 18,500 hunters paid over $200m to hunt lions, leopards, elephants, buffalo and impala in Africa.

In addition, said Lindsey in the same 2007 paper, private hunting operations protect large areas of poor farmland that is not suitable for wildlife watching. The 23 countries that allow trophy hunting in Africa together control more than 540,000 sq miles (1.4m sq km) of land, over 20% more than is protected by national parks.

More serious for lion conservation than trophy hunting, say conservationists, is habitat fragmentation, conflict with pastoralists over livestock, and the loss of range land.

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Breaking News: Five children and three adults found dead in Texas home



Five children and three adults have been found dead in a Texas home following the arrest of a man 

who exchanged gunfire with police.

Local media say the gunfire broke out when police officers, who had been called to a home in 

Houston late on Saturday, spotted the body of a child and tried to enter.

A man surrendered about an hour later, after talks with police negotiators.

The relationship between the suspect and the victims is not known.

It is not clear how the victims died.

Breaking News: Typhoon Soudelor Hits Taiwan Leaving Four Dead, Dozens Injured


Typhoon Soudelor lashed Taiwan on Saturday, downing trees, traffic lights and power lines, and leaving at least four dead, four missing and dozens injured.

The typhoon brought strong winds and heavy rainfall as it made landfall early Saturday and was expected to move into the Taiwan Strait and onto mainland China later in the day.

A total of 64 people have been injured and almost 2 million households were without electricity as the powerful storm left streets strewn with fallen trees, the government's Central News Agency reported.

An 8-year-girl and her mother died when they were swept out to sea Thursday from a beach on the east coast, the agency said. The girl's twin sister remains missing.

Other casualties included a firefighter who was killed and another injured after being hit by a drunken driver as they attempted to move a fallen tree in the island's south, the news agency said.

The center of the storm made landfall in eastern Taiwan at 4:40 a.m. local time Saturday.



Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau said that by mid-morning Saturday, it was packing maximum sustained winds of 100 miles per hour and was moving at a speed of 12 mph in a northwesterly direction in Yunlin county on the west coast. It warned that mountain areas should be on alert for landslides and low-lying areas for flooding.

Authorities in southeast China ordered the evacuation of about 158,000 people and ships back to port ahead of the typhoon, which was expected to hit Fujian province on Saturday night.

On Friday afternoon, marine police rescued 55 university students and teachers trapped on a small island where they had been attending a summer camp, after strong gales stopped ferry services, China's official Xinhua News Agency reported.

World's greatest freediver Natalia Molchanova feared dead



The world's best freediver is feared dead after going missing during a recreational dive off the coast of Spain.

Natalia Molchanova, the most decorated freediver in the world with 41 world records and 23 world champion titles, was diving in the Balearic Sea, near to the Spanish island of Formentera on Sunday when she failed to surface.

Freediving is a form of underwater diving in which divers hold their breath instead of using a breathing apparatus such as scuba gear.

An August 4 joint statement from Molchanova's family and AIDA International, the worldwide federation for breath-hold diving said: "Natalia Molchanova was recreationally freediving off the coast of Spain on August 2, 2015 when she was separated from her peers. She was diving without fins to around 30 to 40 meters (98 to 132 feet) and (supposedly) got into (a) strong underwater current.

"Search efforts have been ongoing during daylight hours and the next day since she was reported missing by three peers. She disappeared while diving approximately two miles (3.2 km) northwest of the port of La Savina at Poniente de es Freus."

Opinion: For freedivers, the ocean can be unforgiving

Presumed dead

Molchanova's family and peers appear to have accepted that she is presumed dead. Her son, 28-year-old Alexey Molchanov, also a champion freediver with a total of 4 world records, told the New York Times: "It seems she'll stay in the sea. I think she would like that."

William Trubridge, another world champion freediver also seemed to doubt her chances of survival.

Breaking News: Huge storm heads towards China



Typhoon Soudelor pounded Taiwan with fierce winds and torrential rain Saturday, killing five people before barreling on to China as a tropical storm.

About 185 people were injured and five others remain missing, according to Taiwan's National Fire Agency.

Those killed included a mother and her 8-year-old daughter swept out to sea, the nation's Central News Agency reported, adding that the girl's twin sister is unaccounted for.

It's now China's turn to take a pummeling, with Soudelor making landfall Saturday night in Putian city, in the nation's southern Fujian province.

Soudelor weakened as it moved inland toward the northwest. It has maximum sustained winds of 85 kilometers per hour (52 mph) and gusts of up to 100 kph (62 mph), according to the U.S. Joint Typhoon Warning Center.

Soudelor made landfall in Taiwan early Saturday north of the city of Hualien. Many areas across the island received a heavy downpour, with meteorologists saying 40 inches of rain fell in Taipingshan over two days.

Flights canceled
Taiwanese airlines announced flight adjustments, canceling a number of domestic and international flights for Saturday, according to Taiwan's Central News Agency. Railways also suspended high speed and regular train services, the agency said.

The Central Weather Bureau warned 16 cities and counties that they were likely to experience intense rain and powerful winds.

Soudelor became the strongest storm on the planet so far this year, with peak winds at 180 mph (290 kph), according to the Joint Typhoon Warning Center.

Storm chaser James Reynolds told CNN from southeastern Taiwan that ferocious winds and blinding rain hit as the storm made landfall, as well as huge waves battering the coastline.

The result, he said, "was a lot of flying debris, a lot of tree damage and along the coastal areas, the waves had inundated the low-lying areas, damaging the roads in places as well as some vulnerable properties which were right by the coast."

Video footage showed rescue workers struggling to make their way through surging, thigh-high waters, as many communities suffered mudslides and flooding.

More than 725,000 homes were still without electricity Saturday night, with emergency crews working to restore supply, according to state power provider Taiwan Power Co.

Power outages have affected more than 4 million homes across the island, the company said, the biggest power outage seen on the island.

Storm bears down on China
In China, nearly 185,000 people have been moved to safer areas in Fujian province, which is expected to take a direct hit from the typhoon, state-run news agency Xinhua reported.

Torrential rains over the next couple of days are likely to be a greater problem there than high winds. Heavy downpours in the course of the rainy season have already saturated the ground in some places.

Soudelor has already wreaked havoc in Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands, passing through this week, and disrupting water and electricity services.

The West Pacific Basin has seen 10 typhoons so far this year.

Of those, five have reached super-typhoon strength, meaning sustained winds of at least 150 mph (240 kph). That total is higher than the average of four for an entire year.

CNN iReporter in U.S. commonwealth witnesses widespread destruction

Friday, August 7, 2015

Breaking News: Groom sues new wife after he didn't recognise her with no make-up on morning after wedding

Groom sues new wife after he didn't recognise her with no make-up on morning after wedding


A GROOM who mistook his wife for a thief the morning after their wedding because she had no make-up on is trying to sue her for deceiving him.

The Algerian man took his bride to court just a day after getting married after claiming he was shocked when he woke up in the morning and found his wife looked so different he could not recognise her.

He is demanding £12,900 in damages for his "psychological suffering" by "cheating" him with her make-up.

An Algiers court source said: "The groom told the judge that he could not recognise his wife after she washed the make-up off her face.

"He said he was deceived by her as she used to fill up her face with make up before their marriage.

"He said she looked very beautiful and attractive before marriage, but when he woke up in the morning and found that she had washed the make-up off her face, he was frightened as he thought she was a thief.

"The groom told the court that he is demanding $20,000 damages for his psychological suffering."

Breaking News: Horror as radio presenter is SHOT live on air after gunmen burst into studio during show

A RADIO presenter has been killed live on air in Brazil.


Gleydson Carvalho was slain by two gunmen who burst into his studio during his regular midday slot.

They overpowered a receptionist before forcing their way into Carvalho’s recording studio and ordering his sound engineer to take cover under a table.

They then shot the radio presenter, known as a staunch critic of government corruption, three times - once in the head and twice in the chest.

The horrific murder occurred around 12.40pm local time yesterday at Radio Liberdade FM in Camocim, a beach resort in the north-eastern state of Ceara.

The killers escaped on a white motorbike while their victim was rushed to hospital. He died on route.

It is understood the attack happened during a musical interlude during the radio programme.

Another radio employee announced the programme presenter had been shot and was receiving medical attention before it continued with music.

Carvalho was known locally for his attacks on local government corruption.

Friend Autran Santos said he would often receive threats live on air. 

He said: “He spoke to me constantly about the threats but said he wasn’t afraid.

“The most serious threats he received were to do with politics. He said he had enemies because of the accusations he made.”

Carvalho’s lawyer Marcos Coelho added: “I never imagined something like this could happen in our city.

“This is a crime that deserves the most rigorous investigation possible by the authorities.”


Breaking News: Baseball tragedy as boy, nine, is killed as player swings bat during warm-up


A NINE-year-old boy was killed after he was struck on the head with a baseball bat by a player who was warming up.

Kaiser Carlile was running to retrieve a bat when he was hit by a player from his favorite team the Liberal Bee Jays from Kansas.

The youngster was acting as a bat boy during the National Baseball Congress World Series match, picking up and organizing equipment for the teams.

He was dressed in his beloved team's red, white and blue outfit and was wearing a helmet during the match against San Diego Waves in Wichita.

Play was suspended as players rushed to Kaiser's aid after he was knocked unconscious.

Paramedics treated Kaiser at the scene before he was rushed to hospital where he underwent emergency treatment.

The youngster died later from his injuries after the incident on Sunday.

His grief-stricken father Chad said he did not blame the player or the team for his son's death.

Fighting back tears he said: "I just want everyone to know there is no kind of remorse or anger towards what happened.

"This is something that was a tragedy. I've got my loss with my son, but it's just as hard for them. Kaiser was one to bring a smile to everyone's face."

The grieving family even attended a Bee Jays game on Sunday night but chose not to tell the team that Kaiser had died until play had finished.

Mr Carlile said: "I was able to see their eyes and the love they had for my son, it was no different than a father's love."

The National Baseball Congress World Series consists of teams from 15 amateur and semi-professional leagues in the US and Canada.

Bee Jays player Gavin Wehby, who held Kaiser in his arms after he was struck, said: "I only knew the little guy for two months but he became a little brother to many of us in a short few weeks.

"He always had a smile on his face and he was just a little ball of energy. He was the best bat boy in baseball, and he always will be."

Pitcher Kadon Simmons said: "It hurts to see someone so young and with so much heart pass like you did, but you are now in God's hands, and being the bat boy for the angels up above.

"It's amazing how much someone can touch your life in such a short time and how big of an influence someone can make."

Kaiser's death hit a nerve across the US and prompted the NBC to suspend the use of bat boys and bat girls for the rest of its World Series competition.

Breaking News: HOLIDAY WARNING: Alert for British tourists over KILLER heatwave across Europe


BRITISH holidaymakers are being warned about a KILLER heatwave sweeping through the Mediterranean, with temperatures soaring to an astonishing 63C.
The heat has been so extreme that car steering wheels in Cyprus are melting - forcing locals to use oven gloves in order to drive - and residents are being forced to put their mobile phones in the fridge to keep them working.

Tourists are being reminded to drink plenty of water and never to leave children or pets unattended in a car.

Saturday is predicted to be the warmest day of the year in many European holiday destinations - prompting health warnings for British tourists unused to the searing heat.
The weather warning comes as the death of Cilla Black was linked to scorching temperatures on the Costa del Sol.

The former singer and Blind Date host sufferd a stroke in her Spanish villa but the post-mortem found heat was a contributing factor.

This week, one car thermometer in Cyprus recorded temperatures of 63C, while street thermometers reached 57C, and the official forecast said the mercury would rise to 37C in the coming days.
The holiday island's Department of Meteorology issued an orange warning, which means dangerous weather.

Officials in the Turkish north of Cyprus have also banned public employees from working between midday and 4pm in a bid to save lives.

And public health workers are urging the elderly, children, and individuals who suffer from asthma, diabetes and heart illnesses to avoid going outside between 10am and 4pm.

Record temperatures in Italy left 140 pensioners dead in just the first ten days of July this year, and experts are drawing parallels with the 2003 heatwave that killed around 20,000 people.
A spokesperson for the ABTA Travel Association told the Daily Mirror: "These are the temperatures you usually associate with places like Iraq.

"We would advise people to avoid the beaches at midday when the sun is at it hottest. Watch what the locals do and spend lunchtime in the shade."

Forecasters say the sweltering heat will affect holiday hotspots from Spain to Poland.

They blame a slow-moving storm over the UK and high pressure over eastern Europe, which has combined to push winds from northern Africa across the continent.

"Cities such as Milan, Florence, Budapest and Prague will all experience several days of extreme heat," said Eric Leister, Meteorologist for AccuWeather.com.

"A reinforcing shot of heat will surge northeastward from Spain through much of Europe again next week leading to additional days of extreme heat for areas from France to Poland and Italy into the Balkans."
The warning comes as hundreds of passengers were stranded in Cyprus after a Thomas Cook plane bound for London had to return an hour into the flight after the air conditioning failed.

Flight TCX1017 took off from Larnaca Airport at 11.30pm local time but was forced to turn back and landed in Cyprus at 2am local time.

A spokesperson for Thomas Cook Airlines said customers felt the cabin become much warmer "as a result of the body heat of that many people in an enclosed space."
Last week, parts of the Middle East suffered unbearable heat with close to record-breaking temperatures.

In Iraq and Iran, highs of more than 50C were experienced while some thermometers recorded temperatures of 72C.

A 'heat dome' over the region meant it was only a few degrees cooler than the highest ever recorded heat index, which was 81C in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia on July 8, 2003.
While temperatures in the UK will not match those in southern Europe, much of the country can look forward to warm weather and sunshine this weekend.

Highs of 27C are being forecast for the south east of England although rain will move in on Sunday.

The Foreign Office has not issued any travel warnings in relation to the latest extreme weather but urged travellers to monitor the Government's travel advice pages.
While temperatures in the UK will not match those in southern Europe, much of the country can look forward to warm weather and sunshine this weekend.

Highs of 27C are being forecast for the south east of England although rain will move in on Sunday.

The Foreign Office has not issued any travel warnings in relation to the latest extreme weather but urged travellers to monitor the Government's travel advice pages.

Breaking News: French question Malaysia claims that more possible MH370 debris washed up on island


 

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia –  Malaysia's assertion that more debris potentially linked to missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 had washed up on an Indian Ocean island prompted puzzlement from French officials, adding to criticisms that the international response to one of the most famous aviation mysteries of all time is suffering from an exasperating lack of cohesion.

Ever since the Boeing 777 vanished on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014, Malaysian officials have been accused of jumping the gun, giving inaccurate statements and withholding information from families and other countries involved in the investigation.

On Thursday, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak's statement that a wing fragment found on a French island had been definitively linked to Flight 370 prompted cautious responses from French, U.S. and Australian officials involved in the probe, who would say only that it was likely or probable the part came from the missing plane.

Malaysian Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai added to the confusion later Thursday, saying a Malaysian team had found more debris on Reunion Island, including a window and some aluminum foil, and had sent the material to local authorities for French investigators to examine.

"I can only ascertain that it's plane debris," Liow said. "I cannot confirm that it's from MH370."

French officials involved with the investigation in both Paris and Reunion were baffled by Liow's announcement; none were aware of any discovery or material in French custody. The Paris prosecutor's office, which is spearheading a French legal inquiry into the crash, later denied there was any new debris, before French officials -- notoriously cautious when it comes to air accident investigations -- again retreated into silence.

A spokesman for Australian Transport Minister Warren Truss said in a statement Friday that while a great deal of additional material has been handed to police in Reunion, none appears to have come from the plane.

Meanwhile, Liow sparked further questions when he said that a maintenance seal and the color tone of the paint on the wing part, known as a flaperon, matches the airline's records. On Friday, an Australian government official said that the paint is not a unique identifier for Flight 370; rather, it comes from a batch that Boeing used on all its planes when the missing plane was manufactured. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment publicly.

Liow said Thursday that differences with other countries amounted to "a choice of words." But the dissonant comments prompted frustration from families of those on board the plane, who have waited more than 500 days for solid clues into the fate of their loved ones. Some questioned why the various countries involved couldn't get on the same page before speaking publicly.

French government officials have not addressed the conflicting information coming from Malaysia either publicly or privately. French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian defended the government's relative silence saying instead. "We have above all mobilized our means" since the plane disappeared. Since the wing fragment washed up on Reunion, he added, the government has added its investigators directly to the case.

"I hope that all of this can be verified, but we have to take it to its end," Le Drian told RTL radio.

Some criticism came from within Malaysia itself. Opposition lawmaker Liew Chin Tong said in a statement that Liow must explain "the haste and hurry" to declare the wreckage came from Flight 370.

"A quick conclusion will not do justice to the next of kin of the victims," he said.

Until the wing flap washed ashore last week, investigators had not found a single physical clue linked to the disappearance of Flight 370, despite a massive air and sea search. Officials believe it crashed in the southern Indian Ocean, killing all 239 people aboard, but the wreckage and the reason why remain elusive.

The discovery of the wing flap refocused the world's attention on the investigation, which many hope will finally yield clues into the plane's fate. But information from the French, in particular, has been scant. The BEA, as the French agency that investigates air crashes is known, rarely comments publicly, instead eventually releasing the information via its detailed reports. In the case of Air France Flight 447, which crashed in the south Atlantic in June 2009, the final report was published in July 2012. The legal investigation was concluded only in July 2014, and the case still has not gone to trial.

That cautious approach was recently derailed in the aftermath of the crash of a Germanwings plane into the Alps that was ultimately blamed on a suicidal co-pilot. In that case, the BEA refused to comment until an account was leaked to The New York Times and the Marseille prosecutor circumvented the usual secrecy rules.

French aviation investigators have tended to be guarded in their conclusions until they gather solid proof. Xavier Tytelman, an air crash expert based in France, said although most experts believe the wing flap is probably from Flight 370, France requires a definitive clue, such a serial number, before it would make that conclusion.

"Malaysian officials -- every time there's a clue or some new information that's not been confirmed -- announce it as fact," Tytelman said. "They make mistakes. It's happened all the way through. I don't know why they don't have as many precautions, but they've definitely lost credibility."

Tytelman also said Australia had developed trust issues by changing the search area of the plane "without explaining why."

Ghislain Wattrelos, who lost his wife and two of his children when Flight 370 disappeared, said he was baffled by the comments by Malaysian authorities.

"We are delighted that the debris ended up in France," Wattrelos told BFM television in France on Thursday. "I have a lot more confidence in my country than in Malaysia and Australia, who have lied to us since the beginning."

Australia's credibility as search leader suffered a battering thanks to a series of false leads that were oversold by its government, which was eager to boast success after the hunt shifted to its search and rescue zone in the southern Indian Ocean after the plane disappeared.

Two apparent large objects spotted in satellite imagery off the west Australian coast in March 2014 were declared the "best lead" yet, before they turned out to be unrelated. The next month, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said officials were confident that a series of underwater signals search crews had detected were coming from the plane's coveted black box data recorders. That was also wrong.

The failure to find a single piece of Flight 370-related debris in a surface search covering  4.6 million square kilometers (1.8 million square miles) over six weeks raised serious questions about whether they were looking in the right place. And the search area has been altered many times.

Australian Transport Safety Bureau chief commissioner Martin Dolan denied his agency, which is leading the search, had misled anyone or withheld information. And though the search area was changed several times as officials revised the scant data available, it has been the same since October, he said.

"As soon as new or changed information comes to light, we make it available," Dolan told The Associated Press on Friday.

The ATSB has also faced criticism for making a mistake in its original drift modeling, which initially predicted debris would wash ashore in Indonesia, rather than the area east of Africa where the flaperon turned up. The bureau issued a statement this week saying a revised analysis showed that, in fact, debris could be carried by currents to the area near Reunion Island.

Dolan said the ATSB didn't withhold that error, and instead had been working with Australia's national science agency, CSIRO, to recalculate the drift area after noticing flaws in the model in November.

"We had to work with CSIRO to check the facts and as soon as we had something that was checked, we published it," Dolan said. "We were in the process with CSIRO of publishing that revised drift modeling when the flaperon turned up at Reunion."

France said it is deploying a search plane, helicopters and boats around Reunion in hopes of spotting more debris that might be from the missing jet.

It is not known why Flight 370 -- less than an hour into its journey -- turned back from its original flight path and headed in an opposite direction before turning again and flying south over the Indian Ocean for hours.

Malaysian officials have said the plane's movements were consistent with deliberate actions by someone on the plane.