Tag: InternationalNews

  • Breast cancer drugs ‘could treat lung cancer’

    {{Experimental drugs already used to treat breast cancer may also fight lung cancer, research reveals}}.

    Non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), the commonest type of lung cancer, is the leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide. Few drug treatments exist.

    Scientists at the Institute of Cancer Research in London discovered breast cancer drugs called PARP inhibitors worked in up to half of NSCLC tumours.

    In the lab, the drugs killed cancerous cells and left healthy ones intact.

    Experts say more studies and clinical trials are needed, but they were excited by this early work, which will be published soon in the journal Oncogene.

    Study author Dr Chris Lord said: “This study suggests that PARP inhibitors, treatments already in clinical trials to treat breast and ovarian cancer, could also be a promising treatment for patients with certain forms of lung cancer.

    “Lung cancer is hard to treat and unfortunately has very poor survival, so there’s an urgent need to find new treatments.

    {{‘Save more lives’}}

    “Our research opens up an exciting new route, by showing how we could repurpose drugs originally designed for use against other forms of cancer.”

    Dr Harpal Kumar, of Cancer Research UK, which funded the work, said: “Lung cancer is the UK’s biggest cancer killer but it’s proven to be one of the hardest cancers to study and survival rates remain poor.

    “We’re making substantial investments in lung cancer research to discover better ways to diagnose and treat the disease. Our hope is that studies like this will lead to more effective treatments for lung cancer patients and ultimately save more lives.”

    Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer death in the UK, accounting for more than a fifth of all cancer deaths.

    {wirestory}

  • Qatar World Cup: Bernstein wants rebid not reschedule

    {{Former Football Association chairman David Bernstein says there should be a “rebidding process” for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar rather than the summer tournament being moved to winter.}}

    There are concerns over the heat in Qatar during the summer, when temperatures can reach 50C.

    “My end view is either that it should be left where it is or there should be a rebidding process,” said Bernstein.

    “It was a strange award in the first place, we all know that.”

    Qatar beat South Korea, Japan, Australia and the United States to host the 2022 competition and its World Cup organising committee says it is ready to host the tournament in the summer.

    Bernstein’s successor at the FA, Greg Dyke, said last week it would be “impossible” to stage the World Cup in Qatar in the summer.

    He suggested that Fifa could either change when the tournament is played or change the location, adding “‘that the former is more likely than the latter”.

    However, Bernstein – similarly to the Premier League – opposes a change of dates.
    “It’s a huge issue,” he told Radio 5 live’s Sportsweek.

    “My personal view on this is unchanged. In 2010 Fifa awarded two World Cups at the same time. It was a controversial thing to do and I believe that Fifa regret doing it now.
    “Bidding for a World Cup is a serious business. There is a lot of money and national prestige involved.

    “The bid that Qatar submitted was a summer bid. It was accepted by Fifa as a summer bid so I don’t believe that it is impossible to hold the competition in the summer.

    “It may be undesirable, with fans coming out of cool stadia into boiling heat clearly an issue.

    “But I think the idea of just arbitrarily changing from summer to winter smacks of what I would call a false prospectus.”

    He added: “It’s not just the Premier League, I think all the European leagues and maybe leagues and competitions outside of Europe will feel the same about this.

    “It is a massive thing. It will not affect just one season but, I believe, three seasons – those either side of 2022. It’s a very big thing to do.

    “I just think to fundamentally bid on one basis for something as massive as this and then just to change it afterwards cannot be right.”

  • The olinguito, Latest Mammal Discovery

    {{A lap-sized critter that looks like a mix between a cat and a teddy bear was unveiled Thursday as the first new carnivore identified in the Western Hemisphere in 35 years.}}

    Scientists say the olinguito has actually been around for ages, in zoos, museums and in the forests of Ecuador and Colombia, but was mistaken for its larger cousin, the olingo.

    A big clue that this tree-crawling animal was something unusual was that it never wanted to breed with the olingo, experts said.

    The new species, named Bassaricyon neblina, is now understood to be the smallest member of the same family as raccoons, kinkajous and olingos.

    With wide, round eyes and tiny claws that help it cling to branches, the olinguito can jump between trees. It feasts mainly on fruit but also eats insects and nectar.

    Its discovery, which took a decade of research, is described in the August 15 edition of the open-access journal ZooKeys.

    As part of the journey, scientists realized that museum specimens of the olinguito had been collected from a higher elevations — 5,000 to 9,000 feet (1,500-2,700 meters) above sea level — in the Andes Mountains than olingos were known to inhabit.

    DNA analysis was also done to differentiate the olinguitos from their cousins.

    The olinguito was smaller, with a differently shaped head and teeth. Its orange-brown coat was also longer and denser.

    And when researchers took to the South American forests to see if the creatures were still around in the wild, they were not disappointed.

    They found olinguitos in the cloud forests of the western Andes, and noted that the creatures are active at night.

    The two-pound (one-kilogram) animals also appear to prefer staying in the trees and have one baby at a time instead of several.

    “The cloud forests of the Andes are a world unto themselves, filled with many species found nowhere else, many of them threatened or endangered,” said Kristofer Helgen, curator of mammals at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History.

    “We hope that the olinguito can serve as an ambassador species for the cloud forests of Ecuador and Colombia, to bring the world’s attention to these critical habitats.”

    Helgen and his fellow researchers on the project estimate that 42 percent of historic olinguito habitat has already been converted to agriculture or urban areas.

    There are four sub-species of the olinguito, and is not being classified as endangered. Experts believe there must be many thousands of them, possibly even in Venezuela and Peru.

    At least one olinguito from Colombia was exhibited in several zoos in the United States during the 1960s and 1970s, researchers said.

    Back in the 1920s, a zoologist in New York was said to have found the olinguito so unusual that he thought it might be a new species, but he did not publish any research to document the discovery.

    “Proving that a species exists and giving it a name is where everything starts,” said Helgen.

    “This is a beautiful animal, but we know so little about it. How many countries does it live in? What else can we learn about its behavior? What do we need to do to ensure its conservation?”

    {AFP}

  • Hezbollah chief Blames Radicals for Beirut Blast

    {{The leader of Lebanon’s militant Hezbollah on Friday blamed Sunni extremists for a string of attacks targeting the group’s strongholds over the past few months, including a car bombing that killed 22 people and wounded more than 300 a day earlier.}}

    Sheik Hassan Nasrallah said all preliminary investigations showed Takfiri groups – a term for Sunni radicals – were likely behind the bombing in a predominantly Shiite southern suburb of Beirut, as well as other recent attacks.

    He also pledged to double the number of Hezbollah fighters in neighboring Syria, who have travelled there to support the regime of President Bashar Assad.

    “If you think that by killing our women and children … and destroying our neighborhoods, villages and cities we will retreat or back away from our position, you are wrong,” he said in a speech to supporters marking the end of the 2006 monthlong war with Israel.

    “If the battle with these terrorist Takfiris requires for me personally and all of Hezbollah to go to Syria, we will go to Syria,” he said, drawing thunderous applause from thousands of supporters gathered in a village in south Lebanon bordering Israel. The crowd watched him speak on a large screen via satellite link.

    Thursday’s car bomb struck a crowded street in the Rweiss district in Beirut’s southern suburbs, an overwhelmingly Shiite area and stronghold of Hezbollah. The explosion sent a massive plume of black smoke billowing into the sky, set several cars and buildings ablaze and trapped dozens of residents in their homes for hours.

    The bombing was the second in just more than a month to hit one of the Shiite group’s bastions of support, and the deadliest since 1985 when a blast in the area killed 80 people. Many in Lebanon see the attacks as retaliation for Hezbollah’s armed support for Assad in Syria’s civil war.

    wirestory

  • French ‘Devil’s advocate’ Jacques Vergès dies

    Provocative French Barrister Jacques Vergès, nicknamed the “Devil’s Advocate” for defending some of the 20th century’s most notorious monsters, died Thursday in Paris aged 88.

    Vergès made a name for himself by taking on clients such as Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie, Venezuelan revolutionary Carlos the Jackal, former Iraqi deputy prime minister Tariq Aziz and ex-Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic.

    He caused a storm when he told German newspaper Der Spiegel in 2008 that he would have defended Hitler.

    Vergès died of a heart attack around 8:00pm Paris time in the house where 18th century enlightenment philosopher Voltaire once lived

    “It was the ideal place for the last theatrical act that was the death of this born actor who, like Voltaire, cultivated the art of permanent revolt and volte-face,” his publisher said in a statement.

    Algerian independence, Cambodian war crimes

    Born in Thailand in 1925 to a father from French territory Reunion and a Vietnamese mother, Vergès was a communist as a student and later supported the Algerian National Liberation Front in its fight for independence from France.

    After securing the release of Algerian anti-colonialist militant Djamila Bouhired, he married her.

    One of his last high-profile cases was the 2011 defence of his long-time friend, Cambodia’s former communist head of state Khieu Samphan, who faced charges of crimes against humanity for his role in the 1975-1979 Khmer Rouge regime.

    Then aged 86, the short, bespectacled Vergès delivered a pithy riposte to prosecutors who had spent two days detailing the horror the country suffered under the Khmer Rouge, during which up to two million people died through starvation, torture and execution.

    The ‘dark side’

    Vergès’s life story reads like a novel, but there is one chapter that he preferred to leave unopened: from 1970 until 1978, when he left his wife and children and disappeared.

    He has referred to this period as “the dark side” of his life, leading to much speculation about these missing years.

    Among the more persistent theories are suggestions that he fostered ties with Palestinian militants, that he passed through Congo – or that he lived in Khmer Rouge Cambodia.

    Vergès himself said he “passed through to the other side of the mirror.”

    “It’s highly amusing that no one, in our modern police state, can figure out where I was for almost 10 years,” he told German newsweekly Spiegel in a 2008 interview.

    FRANCE 24’s Bangkok correspondent Cyril Payen, who met Vergès on a number of occasions, said the lawyer was “a very complex person”.

    “There is a wide gulf between the public man, the provocative and often aggressive barrister, and the private man, who was actually quite humble,” Payen said.

    Maximum publicity

    On his return to his legal activities, Vergès became the champion of extremists from both left and right.

    He was an advocate of Palestinian violence against the “imperialism” of Israel but he also defended neo-Nazi bombers and leapt at the chance to expose what he saw as establishment hypocrisy in the Barbie trial.

    Most of his clients lost their cases but Vergès’ flair was in courtroom provocation, attacking the prosecution and maximising the publicity of his defendants’ cause.

    Once asked by France Soir in 2004 how he could defend Saddam Hussein, after he said he was prepared to represent the Iraqi dictator, Vergès replied: “Defending Saddam is not a lost cause. It’s defending (then US president George W.) Bush that is the lost cause.”

    Vergès, a lover of thick Robusto cigars and author of some 20 books, had his colourful life portrayed in the 2007 Cannes Film Festival documentary “Terror’s Advocate” and starred in his own play in France, called “Serial Defender.”

    Source:{France24 & wires}

  • EU Urges Members to Consider Response to Egypt Violence

    {{The European Union asked its members on Friday to consider “appropriate measures” it could take in reaction to violence in Egypt, while European leaders stressed the importance of a united response.}}

    Around 50 people were killed in Cairo alone on Friday, a “Day of Rage” called by Muslim Brotherhood followers of ousted President Mohamed Mursi to denounce a police crackdown on the Islamists in which hundreds have died this week.

    “I have been in constant touch with European Union foreign ministers, and I have asked member state representatives to debate and coordinate appropriate measures to be taken,” EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said in a statement.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who spoke with French President Francois Hollande by phone, said Germany would review its relations with Egypt and the EU should do the same.

    Both called for EU foreign ministers to gather next week to discuss the bloc’s ties with Cairo.

    Senior EU diplomats will meet in Brussels on Monday to assess the situation and any EU action. They will also prepare the ground for a possible extraordinary meeting of foreign ministers.

    Hollande also spoke with Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta. The two men called for an end to violence in Egypt and a return to national dialogue and elections, a statement from Hollande’s office read.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron called European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso to express his concern.

    “They agreed on the need for the EU to send a strong and united message that the violence must end and that there should be transition to a genuine democracy, which would require compromise from all sides,” Cameron’s office said.

    {reuters}

  • U.S. spy Agency Defends Surveillance Programs as Lawful

    {{Under increasing pressure to justify electronic surveillance programs that at times capture communications of American citizens, the U.S. National Security Agency went to unusual lengths on Friday to insist its activities are lawful and any mistakes largely unintentional.}}

    In a sign of how much heat it has taken since former NSA contractor Edward Snowden started disclosing details of highly classified U.S. surveillance programs, the ultra-secretive intelligence agency held a rare conference call with reporters to counter public perceptions that NSA transgressions were willful violations of rules against eavesdropping on Americans.

    The NSA’s presentation was an attempt to calm the latest firestorm over documents disclosed by Snowden. The Washington Post late Thursday reported that the NSA had broken privacy rules or overstepped its legal authority thousands of times each year since 2008, citing an internal agency audit and other top secret documents.

    “These are not willful violations, they are not malicious, these are not people trying to break the law,” John DeLong, NSA director of compliance, told reporters.

    NSA employees know their actions are recorded and the agency’s culture is to report any mistakes, he said, repeatedly stressing that “no one at NSA thinks a mistake is OK.”

    Snowden, who was granted temporary asylum in Russia this month, gave information about secret NSA programs that collect phone, email and other communications to several media organizations, which published stories about them starting in June.

    His disclosures provoked an intense debate over privacy rights versus national security needs in the United States and several other countries, including Great Britain, Germany and Brazil.

    The uproar led to a series of rare public comments by normally publicity-shy NSA officials, who have written opinion pieces in the media and repeatedly said transparency was a positive development.

    “We’re working on the release of more documents soon,” DeLong said, without elaborating.

  • No action on BBC payouts, British Police Say

    {{Police have said no further action will be taken over allegations linked to payouts to senior BBC managers.}}

    The Metropolitan Police said an assessment of material found “insufficient evidence of dishonesty or criminal misconduct”.

    The force received allegations of misconduct and fraud over £25m paid to 150 outgoing executives.

    A National Audit Office (NAO) report found executives were not always entitled to the money.

    Conservative MP Rob Wilson called for a police investigation to examine whether any criminal offences took place at the BBC in the light of a damning report into the corporation’s £60m redundancy payouts to senior executives over the past eight years.

    In its report, published in July, the NAO found that the BBC spent £25m on severance payments for 150 senior staff in a three-year period up to December 2012 and £60m since 2005.

    The NAO found no evidence of criminal wrongdoing but criticised the BBC, saying the scale of the payments risked public trust.

    The NAO noted that former BBC director general George Entwistle was paid £475,000 after he announced his resignation in November 2012. This included three weeks’ salary worth £25,000 that was not part of his severance package of £450,000.

    In September 2012, the former chief operating officer, Caroline Thomson, left the BBC with a pay-off of £670,000, while the deputy director general Mark Byford received £949,000 when he departed in 2011.

    In a statement, the Met Police said: “These allegations have been carefully assessed by officers from the Fraud Squad, Specialist, Organised and Economic Crime Command.

    “The assessment, of available material, has concluded there is insufficient evidence of dishonesty or criminal misconduct to begin a criminal investigation, and the MPS will not be taking any further action.”

    {BBC}

  • US formally seeks extradition over child abuse images

    {{The US has formally requested the extradition of an Irish man described by the FBI as the “largest facilitator of child porn on the planet”.}}

    Eric Eoin Marques, 28, of Mountjoy Square in Dublin, is wanted on four charges linked to website images.

    He appeared before the High Court in Dublin on Thursday.

    The court heard a formal request for extradition has been received from the US and a certificate granted by Irish Justice Minister Alan Shatter.

    Patrick McGrath, senior counsel for the Irish attorney general, said the accused – who has Irish and US citizenship – was wanted in connection with the advertising, distribution and conspiracy to advertise and distribute child pornography.

    The charges date from July 24, 2008 to July 29, 2013. He was arrested in Dublin on 31 July.

    He is accused of being the sole administrator of a hosting server where multiple websites were held and where it is alleged pornographic images were shared

    If convicted in the US he faces sentences of up to 30 years in prison.

    Mr Marques was arrested two weeks ago in the Irish capital on a provisional warrant and refused bail amid fears he was a flight risk and would interfere with evidence.

    Mr Justice Nicholas Kearns, president of the High Court in Ireland, adjourned the case until 11 September and remanded Mr Marques in custody.

    Defence barrister Remy Farrell told the court he would apply for bail at the hearing.

    {agencies}

  • Ecuador Approves Yasuni Park Oil Drilling in Amazon Rainforest

    {{Ecuador has abandoned a conservation plan that would have paid the country not to drill for oil in previously untouched parts of Yasuni National Park in the Amazon rainforest.}}

    President Rafael Correa said rich nations had failed to back the initiative, leaving Ecuador with no choice but go ahead with drilling.

    The park is one of the most biodiverse areas in the world.

    Hundreds of people gathered in Quito to protest against Mr Correa’s decision.

    Oil exploitation has been taking place in parts of the Yasuni National Park, which covers nearly 10,000 sq km (3,860 sq miles), since the 1970s.

    Oil is Ecuador’s main export. Exploitation of the new area is expected to start in the coming weeks.

    {wirestory}