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Ukraine Desperation As Vital Supplies Run Dry

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 07 Februari 2015 | 23.17

In Luhansk, one of the areas to suffer most in the conflict, there is a growing humanitarian crisis as food and medical shortages render the population powerless.

The streets of central Luhansk are punctuated by shell damage. Shop after shop has closed down.

There has been periodic fighting nearby, but people have been living like this for eight months now.

Beyond the immediate conflict, is a growing humanitarian crisis.

Pensions here haven't been paid since September, so many people are now dependent on public canteens.

In one centre we visited staff were giving out a daily meal of soup, fruit juice, and two pieces of bread, but increasingly they find they are having to turn people away.

Social worker Igor Chaika said: "There are really a lot of people coming here, but we can only make 100 litres, which is 300 portions.

"We can't make more, some people are obviously upset by that - there is not enough for everyone."

Some of those left homeless by the conflict are living in university dorms.

We met a mother who had fled the shelling with her six-year-old son last summer. She said he still wakes up in fear at night.

Anna Kuznetsova told us: "He wakes up crying, and dresses himself up. He got used to doing that.

"A psychologist comes into the kindergarten, but he is afraid - as soon as it's loud he is afraid."

The water is off for most of the day, when it comes back on there's a long queue to fill up containers, and the water pressure is weak.

On the floor above, 77-year-old Nina Nikolayevna showed us where she is living.

She had her own flat this time last year, but now she's sharing a room with two other elderly ladies.

She said Doctors Without Borders had given them blankets and sheets, but they had seen no other humanitarian aid.

"We go to the social canteen, it starts at 11 and they feed us once, but you know what kind of food it is there," Ms Nikolayevna explained.

"They don't give us anything on Sunday, there's nothing."

One of her roommates, 64-year-old Nina Shershen, added: "No one helps us, we are people as well.

"It's not we who created this war, it is them who came here and destroyed everything - how can we live like this?"

At the city's cancer hospital, the head doctor, Dr Alexander Torba, showed us where their buildings had been shelled.

As a result, one of their nurses was killed last year.

Staff are now working without salaries and they have no running water, but their biggest concern is chemotherapy drugs.

Dr Torba says they have around one week's supply left: "The big problem is with the anti-tumour medicines. There is not enough in the pharmacies and it's expensive. People don't have money to buy it."

Irina Timachuk, 54, has stage one ovarian cancer and needs to start her next chemotherapy cycle in 20 days.

She said: "We need treatment and we want to live. We are not old yet; my life is not over yet. I want to live, that's it. If I don't receive treatment it's over."

Valentina Gukosen, 51, who has stage three ovarian cancer, added: "I want to ask for help. I want to live. I'm not that old, but what shall I do?"


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Jihadi Preacher Condemns IS Pilot Burning

Jihadi Preacher Condemns IS Pilot Burning

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A prominent jihadi preacher has hit out at Islamic State (IS) militants after Jordanian pilot Mu'ath al Kassasbeh was burnt to death.

Abu Mohammed al Maqdesi made the criticism as Jordan carried out a series of air raids against IS positions in Syria and Iraq.

He told Jordanian TV station Roya that Lt al Kassasbeh's gruesome murder was "not acceptable by any religion and by anyone".

It comes after the European Union announced it was pledging an extra billion euros (£750m) to help the fight against IS militants in both countries.

Jordan's military said "dozens of jet fighters" struck IS targets on Thursday, hitting militant training camps as well as weapons and ammunition depots.

On their return they flew over the Jordanian capital Amman and Lt al Kassasbeh's home town of Karak.

Jordan's Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh told Sky News: "This is a fight we have to see through until the end of the day.

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  1. Gallery: Jordan Reacts To Murder Of Pilot

    Jordan's Queen Rania (C) offers her condolences to the family of Jordanian pilot Muath al Kasaesbeh, at their family home of Muath in the city of Karak

King Abdullah (L) offers his condolences to Safi al Kasaesbeh, the father of Jordanian pilot Muath al Kasaesbeh, at the headquarters of the family's clan in the city of Karak

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A Royal Jordanian Air Force plane takes off from an air base on a mission to target Islamic State in the Syrian city of Raqqa

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Consecutive airstrikes were launched to demolish strongholds held by the terror organisation Daesh. The aircraft attacked positions that include training centres and ammunition warehouses

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A bomb with Koranic verses is pictured on a Royal Jordanian Air Force plane at an air base

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Jihadi Preacher Condemns IS Pilot Burning

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

A prominent jihadi preacher has hit out at Islamic State (IS) militants after Jordanian pilot Mu'ath al Kassasbeh was burnt to death.

Abu Mohammed al Maqdesi made the criticism as Jordan carried out a series of air raids against IS positions in Syria and Iraq.

He told Jordanian TV station Roya that Lt al Kassasbeh's gruesome murder was "not acceptable by any religion and by anyone".

It comes after the European Union announced it was pledging an extra billion euros (£750m) to help the fight against IS militants in both countries.

Jordan's military said "dozens of jet fighters" struck IS targets on Thursday, hitting militant training camps as well as weapons and ammunition depots.

On their return they flew over the Jordanian capital Amman and Lt al Kassasbeh's home town of Karak.

Jordan's Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh told Sky News: "This is a fight we have to see through until the end of the day.

1/12

  1. Gallery: Jordan Reacts To Murder Of Pilot

    Jordan's Queen Rania (C) offers her condolences to the family of Jordanian pilot Muath al Kasaesbeh, at their family home of Muath in the city of Karak

King Abdullah (L) offers his condolences to Safi al Kasaesbeh, the father of Jordanian pilot Muath al Kasaesbeh, at the headquarters of the family's clan in the city of Karak

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A Royal Jordanian Air Force plane takes off from an air base on a mission to target Islamic State in the Syrian city of Raqqa

]]>

Consecutive airstrikes were launched to demolish strongholds held by the terror organisation Daesh. The aircraft attacked positions that include training centres and ammunition warehouses

]]>

A bomb with Koranic verses is pictured on a Royal Jordanian Air Force plane at an air base

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23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Strauss-Kahn 'Unaware Girls Were Prostitutes'

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the disgraced former IMF chief, did not know he was with prostitutes when he took part in orgies, a businessman has said.

David Roquet is accused of organising sex parties with prostitutes for people including the man who was once a French presidential hopeful.

However, Roquet said, Strauss-Kahn was not aware of what was going on.

In an interview with French TV station BFM ahead of his appearance in court, Roquet revealed how he discreetly paid the women after the parties and Strauss-Kahn was not aware of the situation.

"The girls who accompanied us were elegant, cultivated. It's not like being parked up in a car in the pouring rain," he said.

Roquet said he enjoyed spending "an afternoon with a man who was the second most-important person in the world and a future president of the Republic".

He added: "That was my goal, professionally. It was to organise a lunch with Mr Strauss-Kahn and heads of business."

Strauss-Kahn is the most high-profile figure in a trial of 14 people accused of "aggravated pimping" for their part in organising prostitutes for the sex parties in luxury hotel rooms.

The accused include businessmen and police officers.

Roquet was due to give evidence in court in Lille, northern France.

Friday's proceedings began with Emmanuel Riglaire, a lawyer accused of introducing a prostitute to the head of public relations of the Carlton Hotel in Lille, where several of the orgies are alleged to have taken place.

Riglaire condemned officials for bringing the case, saying it had put his family through hell.

"There is nothing but damaged people in this room," he said, apparently close to tears.

"I will never forgive those who have dragged us before this court and ensured the publicity of the case."


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Kayla Mueller: What We Know About IS Hostage

Islamic State claims US hostage Kayla Mueller has been killed in an airstrike by Jordanian jets, but what do we know about her?

The 26-year-old is an aid worker from Prescott in Arizona, a small town 100 miles north of Phoenix and from a young age had a single-minded determination to help others.

She was taken prisoner in Aleppo, Syria on 4 August 2013 after leaving a Spanish Doctors Without Borders hospital.

Ms Mueller is thought to be Islamic State's last remaining American hostage.

Other aid workers kidnapped at the same time are thought to have been released, but according to a CBS report last year, IS was demanding a $6.6m (£4.3m) ransom to set her free.

Ms Mueller had been helping Syrian refugees on the Turkish border since December 2012, working with aid agencies including Support to Life and the Danish Refugee Council.

In 2013, she described the desperate situation in a refugee camp, including how she helped reunite a six-year-old with his relative after the camp was bombed.

"For as long as I live, I will not let this suffering be normal," she told Prescott's Daily Courier.

"(I will not let this be) something we just accept."

"This story is not rare in Syria," she added. "This is the reality for Syrians two and a half years on.

"When Syrians hear I'm an American, they ask, 'Where is the world?' All I can do is cry with them, because I don't know."

Ms Mueller had also campaigned on behalf of genocide victims and volunteered for three years with the Save Darfur Coalition in her late teens.

A 2007 interview for the Daily Courier describes how she called and wrote to members of the US Congress, and took part in silent walks to raise awareness.

"I love cultures and language and learning about people's cultures," she told the paper as she prepared to start university in Flagstaff.

After graduating in 2009, she spent around a year living and working with humanitarian aid groups in northern India, Israel and Palestine.

Heading back to Arizona in 2011, she worked at an AIDS clinic and volunteered at a women's shelter at night.

The US government and Ms Mueller's family had kept her name secret until IS claimed she had been killed, fearing any publicity would put her in more danger.

Her parents, Carl and Marsha Mueller, said in a statement on Friday: "Kayla found this (aid) work heart-breaking but compelling; she is extremely devoted to the people of Syria.

"When asked what kept her going in her mission, she said, 'I find God in the suffering eyes reflected in mine, if this is how you are revealed to me, this is how I will forever seek you.'"

If her death is confirmed she would be the fourth American to die while being held by IS.

The others, journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, and aid worker Peter Kassig were beheaded by the group.


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Owner To Be Charged After Boys Killed By Python

The owner of a python which killed two young boys in Canada is to be charged over their deaths, his lawyer has said.

Jean-Claude Savoie is facing two charges of criminal negligence causing death.

Four-year-old Noah Barthe and his six-year-old brother Connor were found dead on 5 August 2013 after the African rock python escaped from its enclosure in an exotic pet store owned by Mr Savoie in Campbellton, New Brunswick.

According to police, the 45kg (100lb) snake escaped through a vent and slithered through a ventilation pipe.

Its weight caused the pipe to collapse and it fell into the living room where the boys were staying for a sleepover with Mr Savoie's son. 

Post-mortem results showed they died from asphyxiation.

Although African rock pythons are dangerous and can kill large prey, they do not usually attack humans.

Nevertheless ownership of African rock pythons without a permit has been banned in New Brunswick since 1992. 

Permits are only given to accredited zoos. 

Mr Savoie has been released from custody following his arrest on Thursday. 

He will appear in court to faces the charges on 27 April.


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Ireland Introduces Tougher Anti-Terror Laws

By David Blevins, Ireland Correspondent

Ireland is preparing to introduce the toughest anti-terror measures in its modern history to combat any threat from foreign fighters returning home.

Ireland and Finland top the table of European countries from which the largest proportion of the Muslim population has travelled to Syria.

Housam Najjar, from Dublin, fought alongside Syrian rebels and describes himself as a "soldier of summer," but acknowledges the risk of radicalisation.

He said: "Basically, when a young man arrives and he feels very vulnerable at the checkpoint, he's going into what would basically look like a horror movie of ruins and gunfire.

"So these radical elements would approach them, offer them a weapon, offer them a kind of brotherhood and this unsuspecting person, in his vulnerable state, would probably accept that offer." 

Houdaifa Elsayed, 22, from Drogheda, was shot dead when he went to the aid of a wounded comrade on the Syrian border.

His father Abdel Basset Elsayed explained: "At that time (there) was this regime of Bashar (al Assad) and the people want to have the freedom and democracy and were looking for the support of the world to help them in asking for their rights.

"But now, it's completely different. In what way? Like Islamic State and all that is really not the way we can send our children there. We will be much more worried, so I don't think the situation is the same now."

One in 1,500 Irish Muslims travelled to Syria, compared to only one in 5,000 in the UK, but few are thought to present any danger back home.

Prominent members of the community doubt the existence of violent jihadists in Ireland, but concede there is potential for extremists to recruit.

Hussein Buhidma, from the Irish Association of Muslims, said: "You cannot predict what your kids or grandchildren will think tomorrow.

"So I cannot say that they will or they will not, but we shouldn't look at the end of the story.

"We should start at the beginning, because why do we have these problems? Because there is dictatorship in the Middle East."

The new anti-terror measures, already passed by Dublin's upper house, will introduce 10-year jail sentences for recruiting, training and promoting terrorism.

Justice Minister Frances Fitzgerald TD explained: "We've seen what's happened in France recently and in Belgium and in other European countries.

"There are thousands of young men and some women who are going to become foreign fighters and obviously there's a huge risk when they return of being radicalised and posing a danger."


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Woah Baby! Newborn Weighs 14.1 Pounds

A woman in the US has given birth to a baby weighing 14.1 pounds (6.4kg) - and he is already eating double the amount of an average-sized newborn.

Maxxzandra Ford's son Avery is the heaviest ever baby to be born at St Joseph's Women's Hospital in Tampa, Florida.

Avery, who was delivered in a natural birth lasting 18 hours, is one of the largest-ever born in the state.

Ms Ford did not know she was pregnant until about 35 weeks in, according to media reports in the US.

She told television stations WFLA and WFTS that after she rapidly gained weight last autumn, doctors confirmed she was pregnant.

Ms Ford said she thought she was having twins at first.

Debbie Moore, a registered nurse at the hospital, said they would "definitely not" have recommended a natural birth if they had known how much Avery weighed, the Tampa Bay Times reported.

Avery's father, Allen Denton, told the newspaper: "I got a linebacker now instead of a fullback."

Avery remains in neonatal intensive care after his 29 January birth, but he is expected to go home soon.

Ms Ford, who already has a one-year-old son and a five-year-old daughter, said she "just melted" when she finally held Avery.


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Family Of IS Hostage Hopeful She Is Still Alive

The family of US hostage Kayla Jean Mueller say they are hopeful she is still alive, despite Islamic State claims that she was killed in a Jordanian airstrike.

In a statement released by a family representative, Ms Mueller's parents Marsha and Carl Mueller made a personal appeal to IS.    

"You told us that you treated Kayla as your guest, as your guest her safety and well-being remains your responsibility," they said, addressing "those in positions of responsibility for holding Kayla".

The statement asked IS to contact the family privately.

According to the Site Intelligence Group, which monitors extremists, IS said the 26-year-old aid worker died on Friday after Jordanian warplanes struck the building where she was being held.

The terrorist group said no IS fighters died in the raids in their de facto capital of Raqqa, Syria.

It released images showing a damaged building it said had been targeted in airstrikes, but no photos to back their claims Ms Mueller had been killed.

The White House, State Department and Pentagon have said they can't confirm the unsubstantiated report.

"We are obviously deeply concerned by these reports," said Bernadette Meehan, spokeswoman for the White House National Security Council, in a statement.

"We have not at this time seen any evidence that corroborates ISIL's claim."

Jordan has also dismissed the IS claim as "criminal propaganda" and an "old and sick trick", but said its jets did carry out a second consecutive day of strikes on IS sites on Friday.

It has stepped up its operations against IS since the militants burned to death a captured Jordanian pilot.

On Saturday, Jordan carried out a third straight day of airstrikes on IS targets.

"Sorties of air force fighters today bombed bases of the Daesh terror gang," state television said, using a derogatory Arabic name for the group.

It said some of the targets were in Raqqa, but gave no other details.

Ms Mueller, of Prescott, Arizona, disappeared in August 2013 in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo.

A media blackout on her abduction was recently broken by President Barack Obama, when he confirmed IS still had at least one US hostage.

He said the US was "deploying all the assets that we can" to find Ms Mueller.

Her name had not been made public due to fears for her safety.

The group has already executed three American hostages: James Foley, Peter Kassig and Steven Sotloff.

Two British hostages, David Haines and Alan Henning, and two Japanese hostages, Kenjo Goto and Haruna Yukawa, have also been killed.

British reporter John Cantlie is still being held captive. 


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Extra Tests For Pilots After Taiwan Crash

All TransAsia Airways pilots who fly ATR propeller jets are taking proficiency tests after one of the carrier's planes crashed in Taiwan, killing at least 39 people.

The airline said it had cancelled 90 flights over the next three days to accommodate the tests, which have been ordered by Taiwan's Civil Aeronautics Administration.

A total of 71 TransAsia pilots are involved in the programme.

Investigators believe the two pilots of the ATR-72 that went down in Taipei on Wednesday switched off a running engine after the other one went idle.

Experts say this was not part of the accepted procedure under such circumstances.

"It's a mistake," said John Cox, a former US Airways pilot and now head of a safety-consulting company.

"There are procedures that pilots go through - safeguards - when you're going to shut down an engine, particularly close to the ground. Why that didn't occur here, I don't know."

Local prosecutors have said they will be looking into the possibility of "professional error".

Moments before the plane banked sharply and hurtled into the Keelung River, one of the pilots reportedly told air traffic controllers: "Mayday, mayday, engine flameout."

Fifteen people survived the accident, which happened shortly after take-off and was captured on video by a passing motorist's dashboard camera.

Four more bodies were recovered on Saturday morning as grieving relatives looked on, taking the number of dead to 39.

Four of the 58 people on board the flight, bound for the island of Kinmen, are still missing.

The dead include the pilots, whose actions suggest they followed the line of the river to avoid high-rise buildings and banked sharply to bring the plane down in the water rather than crash on land.

Both have been hailed as heroes.


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Merkel 'Uncertain' About Ukraine Peace Bid

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said a bid to resolve the Ukrainian conflict is "uncertain but worth trying", as the French President warned it was "one of the last chances" for peace.

Speaking at a security conference in Munich, Mrs Merkel also said Russia "needs to do its bit" to resolve the crisis.

She accused Moscow of showing "territorial disrespect" for its neighbour, and said international law had been violated.

Mrs Merkel told the summit: "We want to shape security on Europe together with Russia not against Russia.

"Russia needs to do its bit in the Ukrainian crisis as well.

"This crisis cannot be resolved by military means."

Her comments come after she and the French President Francois Hollande met Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Moscow, in what was widely seen as a last-ditch attempt to thrash out a deal to end fighting which has claimed the lives of more than 5,300 people.

Mr Hollande said the agreement could include a demilitarised zone and greater autonomy for the separatist eastern region.

Mrs Merkel said of the peace efforts: "It is uncertain whether it will lead to success, but from my point of view and that of the French President (Francois Hollande) it is definitely worth trying.

"I believe we owe that much to those who are affected in Ukraine."

Mr Hollande told reporters: "I think this is one of the last chances, that's why we took this initiative.

"If we don't manage to find not just a compromise but a lasting peace agreement, we know perfectly well what the scenario will be. It has a name, it's called war."

Asked at the Munich talks whether he thought the peace proposal could work, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko replied: "Yes."

Mr Putin said Russia does not want war, but was scathing of Western sanctions over Ukraine.

He told trade union members in Moscow: "There's no war, thank God.

"But there is definitely an attempt to curb our development."

He added: "But we don't plan to fight a war with anyone, we plan to cooperate with everyone."

But US Vice President Joe Biden called on Mr Biden to demonstrate this by his actions.

"Given Russia's recent history we need to judge its deeds not its words. Don't tell us, show us, President Putin," Mr Biden told the conference.

Mr Biden backed the latest Franco-German diplomatic push, but also insisted Ukraine had the right to defend itself.

He said: "Too many times President Putin has promised peace and delivered tanks, troops and weapons.

"So we will continue to provide Ukraine with security assistance, not to encourage war but to allow Ukraine to defend itself."

Addressing the conference, Mr Poroshenko brandished several passports taken from Russian soldiers in what he claimed was proof of Moscow's "presence" in his country.

"This is the best evidence for the aggression and for the presence of Russian troops," he said.

Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who attended the Munich talks, said: "We believe that there are good grounds for optimism to issue recommendations for conflict resolution.

"It is important for everybody to realise the scale of the problem. The world is at a turning point."

Following a meeting with his US and German counterparts at the conference, British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said: "It is clear that the escalation in fighting in the east of Ukraine cannot be allowed to continue and a political solution is imperative.

"Britain led the way in placing strict EU sanctions on Russia, and will continue to consider any diplomatic proposal on its merit, in pursuit of a long-lasting political outcome."

But he said any peace deal would not recognise military gains made by the rebels.

Amid a debate in Washington over whether to send weapons to help the Kiev government fight pro-Russian rebels, the German Chancellor argued this would not help end the crisis.

"There is already a large number of weapons in the region and I don't see that this has made a military solution more likely," she said.

Her comments echo those of the British Defence Secretary Michael Fallon, who warned providing additional weapons could escalate the conflict.

But NATO's top military commander has said this should not be ruled out.

US Air Force General Philip Breedlove told reporters at the Munich conference: "I don't think we should preclude out of hand the possibility of the military option."

"The situation is worsening and we need to address the worsening situation.

"It is important that we use all the tools in the toolbox to address this."

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  1. Gallery: Civilians Flee Besieged Ukrainian Town

    A member of the Ukrainian armed forces assists local residents onto a bus to flee fighting in Debaltseve, eastern Ukraine

Two dozen buses escorted civilians out of the town after separatist rebels and government forces agreed a brief truce to allow civilians to be evacuated. Click through for more images ...

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