Tag: InternationalNews

  • US to Blast into Space Powerful New Earth-Watching Satellite

    {{US space agency NASA is gearing up for the Monday (Feb. 11) launch of an Earth-observation satellite that will continue a celebrated 40-year project to monitor our planet’s surface from space}}.

    The Landsat Data Continuity Mission is slated to blast off Monday at 1:02 p.m. EST (1802 GMT/10:02 a.m. PST) from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

    The LDCM satellite is the eighth overall in the Landsat program, which has been scrutinizing Earth from orbit continuously since Landsat 1 launched in 1972.

    Mission team members call LDCM the most advanced and capable Landsat spacecraft ever built. It should help the United States and other nations around the world monitor environmental change and better manage their natural resources, they say.

    “LDCM will continue to describe the human impact on Earth and the impact of Earth on humanity, which is vital for accommodating seven billion people on our planet,” LDCM project manager Ken Schwer, of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., told reporters today (Feb. 8) during a prelaunch press briefing. [Photos: The Next Landsat Earth-Observing Spacecraft]

    The $855 million LDCM mission is a collaboration between NASA and the United States Geological Survey, which will take over operations after the spacecraft’s launch and initial checkouts. At that point, the satellite will be renamed Landsat 8.

    Landsat 8 will zip around the Earth at an altitude of 438 miles (705 kilometers), using two sensors to study the planet’s surface in the visible and infrared portions of the electromagnetic spectrum.

    The SUV-size satellite will achieve full Earth coverage every 16 days, though its work will lower this to once per eight days for the program overall.

    That’s because Landsat 8 will fly eight days behind Landsat 7, which launched in 1999 and recently became the only currently operational Landsat spacecraft. (Landsat 5 retired recently after 29 years of service).

    Landsat 8’s observations will have a broad range of applications, from illuminating the impacts of climate change to monitoring agricultural output to helping authorities respond to natural disasters, scientists said.

    “Landsat data is a global resource, empowering nations to individually monitor and report,” said Mike Wulder of the Canadian Forest Service in Victoria, British Columbia. “Further, Landsat data allows us to see what the world looks like, and how it has changed over time.”

    The weather should be good at Vandenberg during Monday’s launch window, officials said, but it hasn’t been cooperating today. The mission team wanted to perform some ordnance connections on LDCM’s launch vehicle, a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket, earlier today but were unable to do so because of the threat of lightning.

    “We’ve got to be able to get that work done,” said NASA launch director Omar Baez. “If we don’t, then we’ll have to reassess the schedule. But it’s too early to tell.”

    {Agencies}

  • Hacker Gains Access into ex-US President Bush Email

    {{US media has reported that a computer hacker has stolen personal emails and photographs belonging to former US President George H W Bush and his family.}}

    One photograph posted on the internet showed the 88-year-old Republican politician in bed in hospital, where he was recently treated for bronchitis.

    The stolen emails are reported to include addresses and personal details of several members of the Bush family.

    A spokesman for Mr Bush confirmed that an investigation was under way.

    “We do not comment on matters under criminal investigation,” Jim McGrath told the Houston Chronicle.

    The hacker broke into email accounts of several members of the Bush family, news website the Smoking Gun reported.

    The hacked emails are reported to include messages expressing serious concern about the health of the former president, including a personal note sent by President Barack Obama through an aide.

    Agencies

  • Study Shows Stroke Survivors Think About Suicide

    {{One in 12 stroke survivors thought about suicide or that they would be better off dead, a troubling federal survey reveals. }}

    That’s more than those with other health problems such as heart attacks or cancer, and it suggests that depression after stroke is more serious than many had realized.

    “It was surprising” and shows a need for more treatment, said the study’s leader, Dr. Amytis Towfighi of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

    “When patients have their depression treated they’re more motivated to take their medication, do therapy and live a full life.”

    The study was discussed Thursday at an American Stroke Association conference in Honolulu.

    More than 6 million Americans have had a stroke; about 800,000 occur each year in the U.S. Studies suggest that up to a third of stroke survivors develop depression, but few have looked at suicidal thoughts — one sign of how serious it is.

    “It’s not necessarily active suicidal thoughts with a plan, but perhaps wishing you hadn’t survived the event,” Towfighi explained.

    She used the National Health and Nutrition Surveys, a government project that gives checkups and questionnaires to a representative sample of adults. More than 17,000 people were surveyed from 2005 through 2010.

    They included 678 who had suffered a stroke; 758 who had had a heart attack; 1,242 with cancer, and 1,991 with diabetes. Researchers don’t know how long ago these problems occurred of if people were still being treated for them.

    They were asked a question that many studies use to gauge suicidal thinking: “Over the last two weeks, how often have you been bothered by thoughts that you would be better off dead, or of hurting yourself?”

    About 8% of stroke survivors reported such thoughts, compared to 6 percent of heart attack survivors, 5% of those with diabetes and 4% with cancer.

    Suicidal thoughts were more likely in people who scored high on depression tests, were younger, overweight, less educated, poor, female or unmarried.

    Depression may develop partly because strokes damage the very thing that controls mood — the brain, said a neurologist with no role in the study, Dr. Brian Silver of Brown University and Rhode Island Hospital.

    “It’s not necessarily the reaction to the disease … it’s also the disease itself that is causing the depression,” by releasing harmful chemicals that can trigger it, he said.

    Suicidal thinking is a well-known problem, but this study “puts a number on it” and shows the need to watch for and treat it, Silver said.

    Associated Press

  • Messi Barcelona Contract Extended

    {{Lionel Messi has signed a two-year contract extension with Barcelona, which will tie him to the Spanish club until June 2018.}}

    The Argentina international, 25, enjoyed a record-breaking year for club and country, scoring 91 goals in 2012.

    Messi signed a new deal on Thursday afternoon and follows Carles Puyol and Xavi, who both signed their extensions last month. Defender Puyol and midfielder Xavi agreed new deals until 2016.

    A statement on the Barcelona website said, “this afternoon Leo Messi extended his contract with FC Barcelona through June 30 of 2018.

    “The signing ceremony was attended by the player, President, Sandro Rosell, Vice-President, Josep Maria Bartomeu and the Director of Football, Andoni Zubizarreta.

    “Messi added two additional years to his existing contract, which was set to expire in June of 2016.

    “The player, who joined the club when he was 13 years old and made his first-team debut three years later, will be 31 when his contract expires.”

    Barcelona is top of La Liga with a nine-point cushion over nearest rivals Atletico Madrid. They are away to AC Milan in the last 16 of the Champions League on 20 February.

    Messi has been in the best goal-scoring form of his career and surpassed Gerd Mueller’s 40-year-old record of 85 goals scored in a calendar year with a brace in a 2-1 win over Real Betis on 9 December.

    Messi had agreed the contract at the end of last year but has only just signed it.

    He has scored eight times in Barcelona’s first five La Liga matches of the calendar year, including four against Osasuna in a 5-1 win on 27 January.

    Last month he was awarded the Ballon d’Or for a fourth year running ahead of Barcelona teammate, Andres Iniesta and Cristiano Ronaldo of Real Madrid.

  • Suspected Witch Burnt Alive in Papua New Guinea

    {{A mob stripped, tortured and bound a woman accused of witchcraft, then burned her alive in front of hundreds of horrified witnesses in a Papua New Guinea town, police said Friday.}}

    It was the latest sorcery-related killing in this South Pacific island nation.

    Bystanders, including many children, watched and some took photographs of Wednesday’s brutal slaying.

    Grisly pictures were published on the front pages of the country’s two largest newspapers, The National and the Post-Courier, while the prime minister, police and diplomats condemned the killing.

    In rural Papua New Guinea, witchcraft is often blamed for unexplained misfortunes. Sorcery has traditionally been countered by sorcery, but responses to allegations of witchcraft have become increasingly violent in recent years.

    Kepari Leniata, a 20-year-old mother, had been accused of sorcery by relatives of a 6-year-old boy who died in a hospital on Tuesday.

    She was tortured with a hot iron rod, bound, doused in gasoline, and then set alight on a pile of car tires and trash in the Western Highlands provincial capital of Mount Hagen, national police spokesman Dominic Kakas said.

    Agencies

  • Malaysia Seeks More Tests for Dead Pygmy Elephants

    {{An initial chemical analysis on 14 Borneo pygmy elephants that died mysteriously could not conclusively determine if they were poisoned, and more tests will be conducted abroad, an official said Friday.}}

    The endangered elephants were found dead last month in a protected forest in Sabah state on Borneo. Sabah is home to most of the remaining 1,200 Borneo pygmy elephants that exist worldwide.

    The elephants are feared to have been poisoned because they encroached on Malaysian plantations.

    Sabah Environment Minister Masidi Manjun said the state’s wildlife department would send samples to forensic testing facilities in Thailand and Australia for more comprehensive tests to determine the cause of the elephants’ deaths.

    “To ensure greater transparency of the entire issue, my ministry will be seeking a second opinion from other laboratories,” he said in a statement.

    Samples will be sent immediately to the Ramathibodi Poison Center at Thailand’s Mahidol University and the chemistry lab of the Queensland Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry in Australia, he said.

    Masidi said he had also directed the state’s chemistry department to expand its scope of tests on more possible chemical contaminants.

    Department veterinarians have said the elephants suffered severe bleeding and gastrointestinal ulcers.

    read more…………http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/malaysia-seeks-tests-dead-pygmy-elephants-18437196

  • Russian Fighter Jets Sneak into Japan

    Two Russian fighter jets have violated Japanese airspace, prompting Tokyo to scramble its own aircraft, reports say.

    Japan lodged a protest after the planes were detected off the northern island of Hokkaido for just over a minute.

    The incident happened after Japanese PM Shinzo Abe said he was seeking a solution to a territorial dispute with Russia over a Pacific island chain.

    Russia’s military denied the incursion, saying the jets were making routine flights near the disputed islands.

    Mr Abe was speaking on the anniversary of an 1855 treaty which Japan says supports its claims to the islands.

    The four islands – which Russia calls the Southern Kurils and Japan calls the Northern Territories – are the subject of a 60-year-old dispute.

    Because of the dispute, the two nations have not yet signed a peace treaty to end World War II.

    “Today, around 03:00 (06:00 GMT), military fighters belonging to Russian Federation breached our nation’s airspace above territorial waters off Rishiri island in Hokkaido,” the foreign ministry said.

    Hours earlier, Mr Abe told former inhabitants of the disputed islands and their descendents: “In the telephone talks, I told [Russian] President [Vladimir] Putin I would make efforts to find a mutually acceptable solution so as to ultimately solve the issue of the Northern Territories.”

    In December, Mr Abe and Mr Putin agreed to restart talks on signing a peace treaty.

    BBC

  • Closest ‘Alien Earth’ May be in Our Backyard

    {{Earth-like worlds may be closer and more plentiful than anyone imagined.

    Astronomers reported Wednesday that the nearest Earth-like planet may be just 13 light-years away — or some 77 trillion miles. }}

    That planet hasn’t been found yet, but should be there based on the team’s study of red dwarf stars.

    Galactically speaking, that’s right next door.

    If our Milky Way galaxy were shrunk to the size of the United States, the distance between Earth and its closest Earth-like neighbor would be the span of New York’s Central Park, said Harvard University graduate student Courtney Dressing, the study’s lead author.

    “The nearest Earth-like planet is simply a stroll across the park away,” she said at a news conference in Cambridge, Mass.

    Small, cool red dwarfs are the most common stars in our galaxy, numbering at least 75 billion.

    The Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics team estimates 6 percent of red dwarf stars have Earth-like planets.

    To qualify, the planet must be roughly the size of Earth and get as much light from its star, as Earth does from the sun.

    This high rate of occurrence should simplify the search for extraterrestrial life.

    As the report’s co-author, David Charbonneau, noted, he’s an astronomer, but hopes to become a biologist if that search succeeds.

    These planetary candidates are quite different than Earth because of the differences between their red dwarf stars and the sun, Charbonneau told reporters.

    Because the red dwarfs are so much smaller, potentially habitable planets would need to orbit much closer than the Earth does to the sun.

    They likely would be rocky, the astronomers said, but different types of atmospheres could lead to different types of life.

    Red dwarf stars also can be old — far older than our sun — which means their planets could be much older than Earth and their potential life forms much more evolved.

    Our solar system is 4.5 billion years old, for instance, while some red dwarf stars are 12 billion years old. One of these target planets could be 12 billion years old as well, the scientists said.

    Future spacecraft should be able to locate these planets and provide environmental clues.

    California Institute of Technology astronomer John Johnson, who was not involved in the study, called the proximity of the nearest Earth-like planet “extraordinarily exciting.”

    “It’s right within reach,” Johnson said, and future efforts will put scientists “hot on the trail of finding life elsewhere in the galaxy.”

    These newest findings are based on data from NASA’s Kepler space telescope, launched in 2009. They will be published in “The Astrophysical Journal.”

    Agencies

  • Insurance Firm to sue Armstrong for millions in Bonus Prizes

    {{The US sports insurance company that paid Lance Armstrong more than $10 million in bonuses plans to file a lawsuit to recover its money, an attorney for SCA Promotions told CNN on Wednesday.}}

    Jeffrey Tillotson said SCA has already asked the disgraced former cycling champ for the money back.

    An attorney for Armstrong said the claim has no merit.

    “We made our demand for the return of the money we paid him for winning the Tour de France races where the titles were stripped,” Tillotson told CNN’s Ashleigh Banfield.

    “Mr. Armstrong and his legal team have not complied with that demand.”

    Tillotson said the suit, which has not been filed yet, will ask for the return of $12 million in bonus money paid for wins from 2002 to 2005 and for millions in legal costs and interest.

    {wirestory}

  • India Accused of Failing to curb Child Sex Abuse

    {{India’s government has failed to curb rampant sexual abuse of children, especially in schools and state-run child care facilities, a rights group said Thursday.}}

    The report from Human Rights Watch comes in the wake of the fatal gang-rape of a young woman on a New Delhi bus in December, an attack that shook the conscience of the nation and forced people to recognize the problem of sexual violence.

    The report said child sexual abuse is disturbingly common and government responses fall short in protecting children and treating victims.

    It also said the inspections of state-run child facilities were inadequate, with many not even registered with the government as required by the law.

    “Shockingly, the very institutions that should protect vulnerable children can place them at risk of horrific child sexual abuse,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director of Human Rights Watch.

    The group called for strict implementation of laws on sexual violence and better monitoring of child-care facilities.

    It also demanded more sensitive treatment by police, including an end to internal medical exams that it says are traumatic and pointless.

    There are no clear statistics on the number of child abuse cases in India, primarily because of the low reporting of such crimes.

    As a result, Human Rights Watch based its reports on hundreds of detailed case studies with victims and their relatives, child protection officials, independent experts, police, doctors and social workers.

    India’s 430 million children form a third of its 1.2 billion people and around one-fifth of the global child population.