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  • Fast Moving Snails Spread Deadly Dog Disease

    {{Despite their lethargic reputations, snails can travel at a relatively speedy one metre per hour, say researchers.}}

    By attaching multicoloured LED lights, the scientists were able to track their movements over a 24-hour period.

    The gastropods were fast enough to explore the length of an average UK garden in a single night.

    But scientists are worried that the fast-moving snails are spreading a parasite that is deadly for dogs.

    Over the past few years the wet summers enjoyed across the UK have proved the ideal breeding grounds for snails.

    According to the Royal Horticultural Society, their numbers increased by 50% last year.

    As well as being a pest for gardeners, snails can also spread a parasite called Angiostrongylus vasorum.

    This lungworm is a particular threat to dogs, which can become infected by accidentally eating slugs or snails which they come across in the garden or on dog toys.

    {{Painted snails}}

    Researchers at the University of Exeter were commissioned to look into the scale of the threat by the Be Lungworm Aware campaign, which was set up and funded by Bayer Animal Health.

    The scientists attempted to track the movements of snails in garden situations.

    To do this they attached tiny, multicoloured LED lights to the backs of about 450 snails and used UV paint to track their movements.

    The researchers found that the snails could cover distances up to 25m in a 24-hour period.

    “They are so slow that people don’t even think about them moving, but it turns out they do, and they can go a long way in a night,” said Dr Dave Hodgson, who led this study and was also involved in a BBC amateur science experiment in 2010 that sought to discover if snails had a homing instinct.

    The researchers say their new work indicates that snails pose a growing threat to pets.

    “They are not just lettuce munchers, they are carriers of parasites that can kill your dogs,” said Dr Hodgson,

    A recent survey of veterinary surgeons indicated that the lungworm parasite was now endemic across the UK, where once it was mainly found in the south.

    “It is becoming a real problem not just in the south of England, it is moving north to Scotland,” said Dr Hodgson.

    “It is a national problem and we all have to pay attention to the interactions between dogs and snails,” he said.

    {{Happy trails}}

    In the new work, the scientists were surprised to see so many snails followed the slimy trails laid by others. Dr Hodgson says it is all about conserving energy.

    “We know that snails use about 40% of their energy budget producing slime.

    “Given a chance, a snail will prefer to follow a trail that has been laid by another, it is a form of cheating like slipstreaming,” he said.

    As to what pet owners should do, the scientists suggested they should regularly check the nooks and crannies in their gardens for snails and try to reduce exposure to the species.

    “I wouldn’t be too happy suggesting that there should be a snail apocalypse and everyone should get rid of them,” said Dr Hodgson.

    “I think awareness is a better idea, people need to understand the wildlife in their gardens and that no organism is totally harmless.”

    source:BBC

  • 2 Pakistani Soldiers Killed in Kashmir Gun Fire

    {{Two Pakistani soldiers have been killed and three others wounded after exchange of fire at two different places across the de-facto border with India in the disputed region of Kashmir, the Pakistani military says.}}

    The first incident occurred in the Rakhchakri sector, near Rawalakot, on Thursday in which a soldier was killed and another wounded.

    The Pakistani military said that the Indian shelling was “unprovoked”, and took place in an area about 130km away from the capital, Islamabad.

    Another Pakistani soldier was killed and two others injured in Indian firing at Tata Pani area, or the Hot Springs, along the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir. Pakistani troops said they responded to the firing with its own guns.

    A day earlier, Pakistan said an army officer was killed and a soldier wounded due to unprovoked Indian shelling at Shakma sector near Skardu in Gigit Baltistan province on the LoC.

    According to Al Jazeera’s Kamal Hyder, the first firing incident happened as the Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was chairing a high-level meeting to discuss the escalation in ceasefire violations across the LoC.

    A series of clashes that began this month has undermined a push by Pakistan’s new civilian government to improve ties with India.

    The violence came two weeks after the killing of five Indian soldiers along the LoC that separates the two sides in the Himalayan region.

    India said they were killed by Pakistani forces, but Pakistan denied involvement.

    The nuclear-armed rivals have fought three wars since 1947, two of them over Kashmir. Both control a part of the Muslim-majority region but claim it in full.

    A truce along their Kashmir border has held for nearly a decade, even though it has been broken every now and then by tit-for-tat artillery fire and an occasional cross-border ambush.

    India has faced an insurgency in its part of Kashmir since 1989 and has long accused Pakistan of supporting the gunmen fighting Indian rule.

    Pakistan denies arming the fighters, saying it only offers moral support to the Muslim people of Kashmir, who are living under what Pakistan characterises as harsh Indian rule.

    {agencies}

  • Mexico City Mass Grave Bodies Identified

    {{Thirteen bodies have been recovered from a mass grave near Mexico City, five of which are remains of young people kidnapped in the capital in May, officials said.}}

    “The remains of 13 people were recovered,” federal prosecutor Renato Sales told reporters on Friday, adding that forensics tests revealed the identities of five of the victims.

    Officials said DNA tests would continue to identify the eight other “badly decomposed” bodies.

    The grave was discovered on Thursday on a rural ranch in Tlalmanalco, east of the capital.

    The five are among 12 young people who were kidnapped from a downtown bar three months ago in a case that has shocked the capital and marred its image as an oasis from drug cartel violence.

    There was no immediate explanation about how the 13th body was related to the kidnapped youths.

    Officials had earlier reported the discovery of seven bodies on a ranch adjacent to a park 30km southeast of Mexico City.

    aljazeera

  • Microsoft chief Steve Ballmer to retire within 12 months

    Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer is to retire from the technology giant within the next 12 months.

    Shares in Microsoft, criticised for its slow response to the booming market for mobile devices, leapt 9% on the news.

    Mr Ballmer, who last month unveiled a restructuring to address the criticism, said in a statement: “There is never a perfect time for this type of transition, but now is the right time.

    “We need a CEO who will be here longer term for this new direction.”

    The world’s biggest software company has created a special committee to find a replacement. This committee includes Microsoft founder Bill Gates.

    Mr Ballmer, 57, succeeded Mr Gates in 2000. The two men met in 1973 while studying at Harvard University, and Mr Ballmer joined the company in 1980.

    Microsoft emerged as the undisputed leader in the technology sector, and became the world’s largest company by market value.

    But the company had been criticised by investors recently for not reacting quickly enough to the way Apple and Google have led the way in mobile devices.

    Microsoft struggled as consumers began to shun desktops and laptops in favour of tablets and mobile devices.

    While its Windows software is used on the vast majority of PCs, Microsoft made little impact in the fast-growing tablet and smartphone segments.

    Microsoft’s transformation plan, announced last month, is trying to address that.

    In a memo to staff last month, Mr Ballmer said that the changes meant the company was “rallying behind a single strategy as one company – not a collection of divisional strategies”.

    The aim, he said, was to react faster to changes in the market.

    Andrew Bartels, analyst at Forrester Research, said Mr Ballmer has been rightly criticised for being “caught flatfooted by the shift to tablets”.

    But he added that he should get big credit for successful products such as the Xbox and Bing.

    BBC

  • U.N. Appeals to Sudan to Continue Transporting South’s oil

    {{The U.N. Security Council on Friday urged Sudan not to shut down oil pipelines that are the sole conduit for crude exports from South Sudan, which relies heavily on oil revenues for its economy.}}

    Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir announced in May that the pipeline would be closed unless the government in Juba stopped supporting rebels active in Sudan. Juba has repeatedly denied providing any support.

    “The Security Council urges the governments of Sudan and South Sudan to maintain dialogue to ensure continued transportation of oil from South Sudan, and the government of Sudan to suspend any actions to halt the transportation of oil from South Sudan,” the 15-nation council said in a statement.

    Sudan announced earlier this month that it had delayed the shutdown until September 6 to allow an African Union team to continue investigating the complaints.

    South Sudan seceded from Sudan in 2011. A shutdown of the oil pipelines from the South could have serious economic and political implications for Africa’s youngest country.

    No official date has been set for a new round of talks between the two countries.

  • U.S. Repositions Naval Forces, no Decision on Syria Strike

    {{The United States on Friday was repositioning naval forces in the Mediterranean to give President Barack Obama the option for an armed strike on Syria, although officials cautioned that Obama had made no decision on military action.}}

    A defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the U.S. Navy would expand its presence in the Mediterranean to four destroyers from three.

    Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel, en route to Asia, said Obama had asked the Pentagon for options on Syria, where an apparent chemical weapons attack that killed as many as 1,000 civilians has upped pressure on Washington to respond.

    “The Defense Department has responsibility to provide the president with options for all contingencies,” Hagel said. “And that requires positioning our forces, positioning our assets, to be able to carry out different options – whatever options the president might choose.” He did not elaborate.

    The defense official, who was not authorized to speak publicly, said the USS Mahan, a destroyer armed with cruise missiles, had finished its deployment and was due to head back to its home base in Norfolk, Virginia. But the commander of the U.S. Sixth Fleet has decided to keep the ship in the region, the defense official said.

    The official stressed the Navy had received no orders to prepare for any military operations regarding Syria.

    Obama’s senior national security advisers will convene at the White House this weekend to discuss U.S. options, including possible military action, against the Syrian government, another U.S. official said on Friday.

    A senior State Department official said no final decisions were expected from the meeting, pending a further review of intelligence on the attack. Secretary of State John Kerry planned to attend via videoconference. The meeting was expected to take place on Saturday.

    The U.S. president has been hesitant to intervene in Syria’s 2 1/2-year-old civil war, sentiments he repeated earlier on Friday.

    But, in a development that could increase the pressure on Obama, American and European security sources said that U.S. and allied intelligence agencies had made a preliminary assessment that chemical weapons were used by Syrian forces in the attack near Damascus this week.

    reuters

  • President Kagame Inaugurates Seed Plant

    {{President Paul Kagame on Friday inaugurated a newly constructed Rwanda Seed Plant and Modern Storage Facilities at the Kigali Special Economic Zone (SEZ) at Nyandungu.

    The facilities are part of a broader national strategy to enhance food security and boost agricultural activity in Rwanda.}}

  • DRC Army Fires More 4 Rockets into Rwanda

    {{The DRC army has fired again more four rockets into Rwandan territory, IGIHE has reliably learnt.

    Reports indicate that the rockets fired at about 3PM Friday, hit into Gacurabwenge cell, Kageshi cell and Rusura cells in Rubavu district. No casualities have been reported.}}

    An eye witness told IGIHE that one of the rockets hit at Bukumu village in Rusuru cell.

    The Spokesperson of the Rwanda Defence Forces and the Ministry of Defence, Brig. Gen. Joseph Nzabamwita promised to give more information later.

    {more to follow}

  • Minister James Musoni Visits Rhineland-Palatinate in Germany

    {{On Thursday, August 22, 2013 the Minister of Local Government, Hon. James Musoni, arrived in Germany for a three day duty visit in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate.

    Rwanda’s Ambassador to Germany, H.E. Christine Nkulikiyinka, is also a member of the Minister’s delegation. }}

    On his visit Minister Musoni is accompanied by the Mayor of Nyabihu, Executive Secretary of the National Youth Council as well as a Rwandan youth delegation that is participating in exchange activities with other youths.

    From Thursday until Friday the youths joined a youth workshop in Limburg, where they engaged in fruitful debates.

    The Minister of Local Government is meeting different stakeholders in the sector of renewable energies, a field that shall also be further promoted in the bilateral cooperation.

    On Thursday after his arrival he was received by Mrs Evelin Lemke, Vice Minister President and Minister of Economic Affairs, Climate Protection, Energy and Regional Planning. Talks and presentations focused on recycling economy. The Minister further visited a bio waste fermentation and composting plant in the city of Essenheim.

    On Friday morning Minister Musoni’s delegation paid a visit to the KSB plant in Frankenthal, a globally leading manufacturer of pumps and valves, where he was introduced into the company’s use of renewable energies.

    He took the opportunity to speak with the leadership of KSB about a pilot project in Rwanda for the production of electricity through hydropower. In cooperation with Rwandan students KSB is working on the building of a small hydroelectric power station.

    Minister Musoni was later received by Minister President Malu Dreyer together with the Minister of Interior and Sports, Roger Lewentz, in the state chancellery.

    Minister President Dreyer and Minister Musoni stressed their commitment to further strengthening the partnership and the good existing relations between Rwanda and Rhineland-Palatine, and Germany as a whole.

    On Saturday Minister James Musoni will participate in the annual Rwanda Day in the city of Holzheim organised by the state of Rhineland-Palatinate and the partnership association Rhineland-Palatinate/Rwanda.

    There, he will meet with different partnership associations engaged in Rwanda. Furthermore, the members of the youth delegation will present with their German counterparts the results of their workshop.

  • Willian: Chelsea set to sign Tottenham target for £30m

    {{Chelsea have agreed a £30m deal to sign attacking midfielder Willian from Russian club Anzhi Makhachkala, subject to a work permit hearing.}}

    The 25-year-old Brazilian was close to joining Tottenham after having a medical on Wednesday.

    But it is understood Chelsea made their move at around 18:00 BST on Thursday, with a fee and personal terms agreed within 24 hours.

    Willian will have a medical before his work permit hearing next week.

    The transfer was made possible after Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich, whose fellow Russian oligarch Suleyman Kerimov owns Anzhi, intervened.

    Willian expected to join Tottenham, but when the Blues stepped in, he felt the chance to play Champions League football was too good to reject.

    Sources close to the player said Chelsea have made enquiries or offers for his services in every transfer window since 2011.

    Willian will become the Stamford Bridge club’s third major summer acquisition following the arrivals of Germany forward Andre Schurrle and Netherlands midfielder Marco van Ginkel.

    Earlier on Friday, Blues manager Jose Mourinho indicated that Willian would choose Chelsea over Tottenham.

    When asked whether the Brazilian had chosen to join his club, Mourinho nodded.
    The Portuguese added: “I know what the player wants, so in this moment we cannot hide.”

    BBC