Author: admin

  • Mexico storm death toll rises to 110

    Mexico storm death toll rises to 110

    {{The number of people confirmed to have died as a result of Tropical Storms Manuel and Ingrid in Mexico now stands at 110, the interior minister says.}}

    Another 68 are still missing, believed dead, after a landslide destroyed the village of La Pintada in western Guerrero state.

    President Enrique Pena Nieto asked Congress to increase the federal budget in light of the emergency.

    Officials are still trying to evaluate the total extent of the damage.

    {{‘Historic rainfall’}}

    “We are confronting rainfall that has practically been the most extensive in the history of the entire national territory,” President Enrique Pena Nieto said on Sunday.

    “Today we can already anticipate that due to the damages that we have seen, our [emergency] funds are insufficient.”

    Interior Minister Miguel Angel Osorio Chong said work was under way to establish which areas were worst hit by Tropical Storm Manuel which hit Mexico’s western coast, and Ingrid, which made landfall on its eastern coast last week.

    Twenty-four out of Mexico’s 31 states have been affected by the twin storms.

    “There’s no point in the government offering us kind words and nothing else,” Alicia Sanchez told the Associated Press news agency.

    “They’ve made us promises but I don’t think they’ll keep them,” the Acapulco resident said.

    Acapulco’s international airport re-opened for commercial flights on Sunday, a week after it had to close due to power cuts and flooding.

    Some 20,000 people are still living in shelters in the surrounding state of Guerrero.

    Rescue workers continue to search the rubble and mud for bodies of those buried in a landslide in La Pintada, where some 40 homes were swept away by mud from a hillside.

    {agencies}

  • Venezuela Arrests Soldiers Over Air France Cocaine Haul

    Venezuela Arrests Soldiers Over Air France Cocaine Haul

    {{Three members of Venezuela’s security forces were arrested in connection with the 1.3 tonnes of cocaine French police found aboard an Air France flight that originated in Caracas, a top cabinet minister said Sunday.}}

    Intelligence agents “have detained a first lieutenant from the anti-drug unit of the Bolivarian National Guard” along with two National Guard sergeants, Justice and Interior Minister Miguel Rodriguez told state network VTV. He said that further arrests were expected.

    French officials had announced on Saturday the discovery of the narcotics, hidden in 30 suitcases on an Air France flight from Venezuela’s capital Caracas to Paris. The flight had arrived in Paris on September 10.

    Police and legal sources said that the cocaine had a street value of some 200 million euros ($270 million).

    {{Accomplices}}

    According to Rodriguez, it was “almost obvious” that there were accomplices working with the airline.

    “How can the cocaine shipment reach France and it gets taken out without going through the normal controls?” he asked.

    The suitcases carrying the cocaine were registered under false names that did not correspond to passengers on the flight to Paris’s Charles de Gaulle airport, police said.

    Air France said it was still trying to find out how the drugs were smuggled on board.

    “Pending the results of these investigations, immediate measures have been taken to enhance our checks of baggage and goods on departure from certain sensitive destinations,” the airline said in a statement.

    Over the coming days, agents will scrutinise footage taken from security cameras at the Simon Bolivar International Airport and interrogate personnel that work in the airport luggage area, he said.

    Rodriguez said that he has assigned a special team of prosecutors to the probe.

    {{Record haul}}

    French Interior Minister Manuel Valls, who announced the haul on Saturday as “the biggest seizure of cocaine ever made in mainland France”, told reporters that “several members of a criminal organisation” had been arrested on Monday.

    Police said that at least six people of several European nationalities were being held in relation to the case.

    The seizure was the result of cooperation between security forces in France, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK, Valls said.

    Cocaine comes from coca leaves grown in countries like Colombia, Peru and Bolivia. Venezuela does not produce cocaine, according to United Nations monitors, but has become a major transit point for US -and European-destined cocaine in recent years, with Washington accusing several senior Venezuelan military officials of involvement.

    wirestory

  • 81 Killed in Pakistan Church Attack

    81 Killed in Pakistan Church Attack

    Angry Pakistani Christians on Monday denounced the deadliest attack ever in this country against members of their faith as the death toll from the church bombings climbed overnight to 81.

    A pair of suicide bombers blew themselves up amid hundreds of worshippers outside a historic church in northwestern Pakistan.

    The attack on the All Saints Church in the city of Peshawar, which also wounded over 140 people, occurred as worshippers were leaving after services to get a free meal of rice offered on the front lawn.

    A wing of the Pakistani Taliban quickly claimed responsibility for the bombing, saying they would continue to target non-Muslims until the U.S. stops drone attacks in the remote tribal region of Pakistan.

    The bombings also raised new questions about the Pakistani government’s push to strike a peace deal with the militants to end a decade-long insurgency that has killed thousands of people.

    “What dialogue are we talking about? Peace with those who are killing innocent people,” asked the head of the All Pakistan Minorities Alliance, Paul Bhatti, whose brother, a federal minister, was gunned down by an Islamic extremist in 2011.

    “They don’t want dialogue,” said Bhatti. “They don’t want peace.”

    The death toll on Monday climbed to 81, after three more of the wounded in Peshawar died overnight, according to police official Noor Khan.

    “Our state and our intelligence agencies are so weak that anybody can kill anyone anytime. It is a shame,” said Bhatti.

    Angry Christians blocked roads around the country to protest the bombings. On one of the main roads coming into the capital of Islamabad, demonstrators burned tires and demanded government protection for the members of the Christian minority.

    Missionary schools around the country would be closed for three days, said Christian leader Nasir Gill.

    Churches and other places important to the Christian community in Peshawar have been given extra security, said Khan, the police official.

    But this has not been sufficient to appease angry Christians in Pakistan, who want the government to take even stronger steps to protect them.

    Many churches, as well as mosques and other religious institutions, already receive some type of police protection although many Christians say that is too little. A police officer who was supposed to be protecting the church where the suicide bombers attacked Sunday was killed in the incident.

    france24

  • Typhoon Usagi Kills at Least 25 people in China

    Typhoon Usagi Kills at Least 25 people in China

    {{Typhoon Usagi has killed at least 25 people in Guangdong province of south China, the government has said.}}

    Winds of up to 180 km/h (110 mph) were recorded in some areas, toppling trees and blowing cars off roads. Its victims drowned or were hit by debris.

    The storm has affected 3.5 million people on the Chinese mainland.

    Trains from Guangzhou to Beijing have been suspended and hundreds of flights from Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Hong Kong have been cancelled.

    However, Hong Kong has escaped the worst of the storm.

    Weather officials say that the ferocity of the storm has abated as it progressed into southern China, but financial markets in Hong Kong were closed for part of Monday morning.

    More than 80,000 people were moved to safety in Fujian province and the authorities have deployed at least 50,000 relief workers, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported. Power supplies in many parts of the province and in Guangdong have been cut off.

    The typhoon caused 7,100 homes to collapse and led to direct economic losses of 3.24 bn yuan ($526m; £329m), Xinhua added.

    “It is the strongest typhoon I have ever encountered,” Xinhua quoted Luo Hailing, a petrol station attendant in Shanwei – in the eastern part of Guangdong province – as saying. “[It was] so terrible, lucky we made preparations.”

    wirestory

  • Merkel Romps to Victory but Faces Tough Coalition Choices

    Merkel Romps to Victory but Faces Tough Coalition Choices

    {{Angela Merkel won a landslide personal victory in Germany’s general election on Sunday, but her conservatives appeared just short of the votes needed to rule on their own and may have to convince leftist rivals to join a coalition government.}}

    Partial results put support for Merkel’s conservative bloc on 42 percent, their strongest score since 1990, the year of German unification, and a ringing endorsement of her steady leadership during the euro zone crisis.

    The outcome left the centre-right chancellor tantalizingly close to an absolute majority in the Bundestag lower house of parliament, a feat achieved only once in 1957 by Konrad Adenauer, the father of the West German federal republic.

    “This is a super result,” Merkel told cheering supporters. “Together, we will do all we can to make the next four years successful ones for Germany.”

    If she were to rule alone, which looks unlikely, she would have to do so with a tiny majority, leaving her vulnerable to rebel euroskeptics in her Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and its sister party, the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU).

    The alternative could be to revive a ‘grand coalition’ with the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD), who came a distant second with 25.5 percent, their second worst result in the post-war era. Former finance minister Peer Steinbrueck’s gaffe-prone campaign never gained traction against the popular Merkel.

    Polls show that the consensus-driven German public would welcome a right-left partnership, as would Berlin’s European partners, who hope the SPD might soften Merkel’s austerity-focused approach to struggling euro zone members.

    But after alienating millions of their own supporters when they partnered Merkel in her first term between 2005 and 2009, the Social Democrats are wary of a sequel.

    “We won’t automatically go into a grand coalition,” said SPD Chairman Sigmar Gabriel. “What is important are the policies.”

    agencies

  • Five Arrested Over Drug Abuse

    Five Arrested Over Drug Abuse

    {{Police in Gatsibo district, on Saturday, arrested a gang of five men after they were found with sixty kilogrammes of cannabis.}}

    The suspects are held at Kiramurizi Police station.They are identified as Daniel
    Mbarushimana 34, Djuma Habanabakize, 25, Jean Baptiste Nsabimana, 23, Théogène Mutsindashyaka, 32, and Napoléon Nsengiyumva, 30.

    They were arrested at about 5:00 p.m, in Rubona cell at the residence of one Bizimana alias Kazungu, who is still at large.

    One of the suspects – Mbarushimana alias Ndongo – confessed to the crime.
    He told police that he bought the illegal drug from Tanzania and trafficked it into Rwanda.

    The suspects were arrested following a tip off from area residents.

    The Eastern Region Police Spokesperson, Superintendent Emmanuel Karuranga thanked the public for its incessant cooperation in providing timely information that helps to combat the vice of drug abuse.

    “This is a noble cause; we urge citizens to support the police in ensuring a
    crime free society”,Supt. Karuranga said.

    If found guilty, the suspects will face a one to three years imprisonment
    and a fine of Rwf50, 000 to Rwf500, 000 under article 594 of the penal code.

    source: RNP

  • U.S. Embassy Kigali Hosts Inaugural U.S. Embassy College Fair for Rwandan Students

    U.S. Embassy Kigali Hosts Inaugural U.S. Embassy College Fair for Rwandan Students

    {{Friday, the U.S. Embassy hosted its first-ever college fair for Rwandan students who want to study at U.S. institutions of higher learning at the embassy compound in Kacyiru. More than 200 Rwandan students, educators and education officials attended the event.}}

    Featured Friday were representatives from five U.S. partner institutions of The MasterCard Foundation Scholars Program. Representatives from Duke University, Michigan State University, Stanford University, the University of California at Berkeley, and Wellesley College all gave presentations on their respective institutions and answered questions from Rwandan students eager to learn more about studying in the United States.

    The MasterCard Foundation Scholars Program is a $500 million, 10-year program to educate and prepare young people – especially those from Africa —to attend partner universities in the United States and to return to make positive changes in their home communities.

    U.S. Embassy Kigali Deputy Chief of Mission Jessica Lapenn told the students who gathered for the event that “At its core, the Embassy role is to facilitate and build connections between the United States and Rwanda.”

    She added that one of the best ways these connections are built and mutual understanding is fostered is through education exchange. “For us, that is what this college fair is about.”

    The U.S. Embassy in Kigali provides myriad resources for Rwandan students hoping to study in the United States. The embassy’s EducationUSA advisor, Richard Kaburente, conducts regular advising sessions for interested Rwandan students.

    He details the steps students who hope to study in the U.S. should take and connects them with scholarship opportunities. For more information about student advising at the U.S. Embassy, visit this website:

    http://rwanda.usembassy.gov/education_usa.html

    The U.S. Embassy’s Information Resource Center also contains many books on how to apply for university in the U.S., how to find scholarships and practice books for the TOEFL, SAT, GMAT and other standardized tests.

  • German Group Claims to have Hacked Apple iPhone Fingerprint Scanner

    German Group Claims to have Hacked Apple iPhone Fingerprint Scanner

    {{A group of German hackers claimed to have cracked the iPhone fingerprint scanner on Sunday, just two days after Apple Inc launched the technology that it promises will better protect devices from criminals and snoopers seeking access.}}

    If the claim is verified, it will be embarrassing for Apple which is betting on the scanner to set its smartphone apart from new models of Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and others running the Android operating system of Google Inc.

    Two prominent iPhone security experts told Reuters that they believed the German group, known as the Chaos Computing Club, or CCC, had succeeded in defeating Apple’s Touch ID, though they had not personally replicated the work.

    One of them, Charlie Miller, co-author of the iOS Hacker’s Handbook, described the work as “a complete break” of Touch ID security. “It certainly opens up a new possibility for attackers.”

    Apple representatives did not respond to requests for comment.

    CCC, one the world’s largest and most respected hacking groups, posted a video on its website that appeared to show somebody accessing an iPhone 5S with a fabricated print. The site described how members of its biometrics team had cracked the new fingerprint reader, one of the few major high-tech features added to the latest version of the iPhone.

    The group said they targeted Touch ID to knock down reports about its “marvels,” which suggested it would be difficult to crack.

    “Fingerprints should not be used to secure anything. You leave them everywhere, and it is far too easy to make fake fingers out of lifted prints,” a hacker named Starbug was quoted as saying on the CCC’s site.

    The group said it defeated Touch ID by photographing the fingerprint of an iPhone’s user, then printing it on to a transparent sheet, which it used to create a mold for a “fake finger.”

    CCC said similar processes have been used to crack “the vast majority” of fingerprint sensors on the market.

    “I think it’s legit,” said Dino Dai Zovi,” another co-author of the iOS Hacker’s Handbook. “The CCC doesn’t fool around or over-hype, especially when they are trying to make a political point.”

    Touch ID, which was only introduced on the top-of-the-line iPhone 5S, lets users unlock their devices or make purchases on iTunes by simply pressing their finger on the home button. It uses a sapphire crystal sensor embedded in the button.

    Data used for verification is encrypted and stored in a secure enclave of the phone’s A7 processor chip.

  • Church in Burera Collapses Killing Six

    Church in Burera Collapses Killing Six

    {{Six People have reportedly died inside an ADEPR Pentecostal Church this afternoon after the church collapsed succumbing to heavy storm.}}

    The incidence happened at about 1PM Sunday in Butare cell in Cyeru sector of Burera district.

    Witnesses confirmed to IGIHE that six people died instantly and more than 20 were injured.

    It was not yet clear how many people were inside the church at the time of accident.

    After Prayers some people remained at the church for special session of prayers when the church collapsed on them due to heavy rain and strong winds.

    more to come

  • Rwandan Peacekeepers Celebrate International Day of Peace in Juba

    Rwandan Peacekeepers Celebrate International Day of Peace in Juba

    {{Rwandan peacekeepers under the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) joined the rest of the world to celebrate the International Day of Peace celebrated on 21 September every year.}}

    {{On 21 September 2013, the Peacekeepers together with their colleagues serving under the UNMISS, SPLA (South Sudanese Army), Sudanese youth especially students, with banners and flags, marched a three kilometer long distance in Juba town to celebrate the day under this year international theme “Education for Peace”.}}

    The UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon in his message of the Day said “On this International Day of Peace, let us pledge to teach our children the value of tolerance and mutual respect”.

    Celebrating the Day in Rwanda, Hon.Bernard Makuza, the vice-president of Rwandan Senate noted “As we celebrate this day, let’s think of how we can sustain peace as a country which has known what lacking peace looks like during the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsis,”.

    He stressed that valuing human rights or citizens’ rights is what makes Rwanda a peaceful country. “No one can teach us what peace is more than we ourselves. What we have been through left us worried about what will be our country’s future, but here we are, celebrating to have succeeded in creating a peaceful Rwanda. We have even been able to share our peace through peacekeeping missions by our security forces,” Makuza said.

    Rwanda is the sixth country in the world when it comes to providing soldiers for peacekeeping mission, and the first in formed-up units in providing police officers for the same cause.

    The celebrations of International Day of Peace in Juba started at Malikia (Juba town) and ended at NYAKURON conference hall in the afternoon.

    source: MOD