Tag: InternationalNews

  • Israel Commando Assassinated PLO Number 2

    {{Israel’s military censor has cleared for publication an interview with a commando who killed the deputy of the then Palestinian chief Yasser Arafat.}}

    It has been widely believed that Abu Jihad was killed by Israeli agents in Tunis in 1988 but Israel has never officially acknowledged it.

    However, the censor has allowed Yediot Ahronot newspaper to publish the interview with Nahum Lev.

    Mr Lev died in 2000 and his account has not been made public until now.

    Abu Jihad – whose real name was Khalil al-Wazir – founded the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) with Yasser Arafat and was blamed for a string of deadly attacks on Israelis.

    He was shot dead on 16 April 1988 in a raid on the PLO headquarters in the Tunisian capital.

    The censors have now given way rather than fight the newspaper in the supreme court.

    “Israel killed the number two man in the PLO, Abu Jihad, in Tunis in 1988, it can now be reported,” the newspaper said.

    “The intelligence part of the assassination was overseen by the Mossad [Israeli intelligence], and the operational side was carried out by Sayeret Matkal [elite commando unit].”

    {{How The Assassination was Conducted}}

    In his account of the operation, Nahum Lev said: “I had read every page of the file on him. Abu Jihad was connected to horrific acts against civilians. He was marked for death. I shot him with no hesitation.”

    He said the Israeli squad arrived by sea and then he and another commando – disguised as a woman – approached the house as if they were a couple enjoying an evening stroll.

    Mr Lev said he first shot a bodyguard in the head with a gun concealed in a box of chocolates.

    Yediot Ahronot said masked commandos then rushed inside the villa and one of the agents ran upstairs with Mr Lev behind him.

    “He shot Abu Jihad first,” Mr Lev said in his account.

    “It looked like he was holding a gun. Then I shot him, a long burst, careful not to hurt his wife who showed up. He died. Other combatants confirmed the kill.”

    The newspaper said a second bodyguard and a gardener who was sleeping in the basement were also killed.

    Mr Lev said: “It was too bad about the gardener. But in operations like this, you have to ensure that all potential resistance is neutralised.”

    Israel’s military has so far not commented on the article.

    The manner of Yasser Arafat’s own death has been the subject of controversy.

    He died a military hospital in Paris in 2004 reportedly following a stroke resulting from a blood disorder.

    However, French prosecutors have launched a murder inquiry after his family claimed he was poisoned with polonium-210, a radioactive element.

  • IOC to Investigate Armstrong

    {{The International Olympic Committee (IOC) will investigate Lance Armstrong’s 2000 Olympics bronze medal after the American was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles in the biggest doping scandal to hit the sport.}}

    “The IOC will now immediately start the process concerning the involvement of Lance Armstrong, other riders and particularly their entourages with respect to the Olympic Games and their future involvement with the Games,” an IOC official said Thursday.

    Armstrong, who won a time trial medal at the Sydney Games, was stripped of his 1999-2005 Tour victories last month when the International Cycling Union (UCI) ratified a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) decision to erase his results from August, 1998.

    A USADA report that included testimony from several former team mates against him and themselves, called it the “most sophisticated, professionalized and successful doping program that sport has ever seen”.

    Apart from stripping Armstrong’s titles, the UCI also said it was setting up an independent commission to investigate allegations made against the UCI over the Armstrong affair.

    “The IOC has taken note of the UCI’s decision and welcomes all measures that will shed light on the full extent of this episode and allow the sport to reform and to move forward,” the IOC official said.

  • China Buys UK’s Heathrow Airport

    {{China Investment Corporation (CIC), China’s sovereign wealth fund, announced on Thursday that its subsidiary has purchased a 10-percent stake in Heathrow Airport Holdings.}}

    The British company, previously known as BAA Ltd, manages London’s Heathrow International Airport and other British air hubs.

    The deal marks CIC’s second investment in British infrastructure, as the company also holds an 8.68-percent stake in Thames Water, the largest water supply and waste water treatment company in the UK.

    CIC posted a one-sentence statement on its website about the deal without providing any financial details.

    The sovereign wealth fund was founded in September 2007 with a registered capital of $200 billion amid hopes of making better use of China’s huge foreign exchange reserves.

    According to the company’s 2011 business report, its total assets stood at $482 billion at the end of that year.

    Thirty-one percent of its overseas investment portfolio was in long-term investments; 25 percent in diversified public equities; 21 percent in fixed-income securities; 12 percent in absolute return investments; and 11 percent in cash funds and other types of investments.

  • Criminalization of Sex Work Increases Vulnerability to HIV

    {{A new UN survey conducted in Asia and the Pacific says Criminalization of sex work increases vulnerability to HIV by fuelling stigma and discrimination, limits access to sexual health services and condoms.}}

    The report clearly distinguishes between adult consensual sex work and human trafficking for sexual exploitation.

    It says that removing legal penalties for sex work allows HIV prevention and treatment programmes to reach sex workers and their clients more effectively.

    “Following on the report on the Global Commission on HIV & the Law, this report illustrates the importance of having the right policies and laws in place so that sex workers’ rights are protected, and they are not discriminated against in HIV and health services,” says Rathin Roy, UNDP Asia-Pacific Regional Centre Manager.

    The report was issued by the UN Development Programme (UNDP), the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).

  • Prehistoric town Discovered in Bulgaria

    {{Archaeologists in Bulgaria say that have uncovered the oldest prehistoric town found to date in Europe.}}

    The walled fortified settlement, near the modern town of Provadia, is thought to have been an important centre for salt production.

    Its discovery in north-east Bulgaria may explain the huge gold hoard found nearby 40 years ago.

    Archaeologists believe that the town was home to some 350 people and dates back to between 4700 and 4200 BC.

    That is about 1,500 years before the start of ancient Greek civilisation.

    The residents boiled water from a local spring and used it to create salt bricks, which were traded and used to preserve meat.

    Salt was a hugely valuable commodity at the time, which experts say could help to explain the huge defensive stone walls which ringed the town.

    {BBC}

  • US Vice President Wants White House 2016

    {{US Vice President Joe Biden is joking about running for president in 2016.

    During a visit to a Sarasota, Fla., restaurant on Wednesday, Biden took a customer’s cellphone and engaged the man on the other end — apparently the customer’s brother — in a lengthy discussion of the health care overhaul law.}}

    After a while, Biden told the man, who seemed to be a Republican, that he wasn’t going to argue with him to get his vote. Then Biden said: “After it’s all over, when your insurance rates go down, then you’ll vote for me in 2016.”

    Biden’s campaign declined to comment on his remark or clarify his plans for 2016.

    The exchange followed a political rally in which Biden slammed a GOP ad on the auto industry as “flagrantly dishonest.”

  • Syria Claims It Engineered Superstom that Hit USA

    {{When it comes to natural disasters, the divide between assumption and reality can be stark. Or downright absurd.}}

    Hours after Superstorm Sandy howled its way through the East Coast this week, unleashing a fatal trail of destruction, global reactions included outpouring of sympathy and support.

    But not in Syria, where some pro-government supporters welcomed the superstorm when it hit Monday, claiming the natural disaster is the result of high-tech secret engineering.

    The superstorm killed dozens across the U.S. East Coast as it ravaged the region with heavy rains, snow and flooding. Millions remain without power as it swirls north.

    Sources confirmed to us that Hurricane Sandy that is slamming the U.S. was set off by highly advanced technologies developed by the heroic Iranian regime that supports the resistance, with coordination of our resistive Syrian regime,” pro-government group News Network of the Syrian Armed Forces said in a Facebook posting.

    “This is the punishment for whoever dares to attack Syria’s (Bashar) al-Assad and threaten peace and stability.”

    Various factions of pro-government and anti-government groups regularly use social media to spread their message.

    Comments accompanying the post — which had more than 300 likes — ranged from derision to support.

    “This is complete baloney by the regime and its thugs,” one said on the comment section of the post. “There is nothing worse than this nonsense. If you have such technologies, why doesn’t your great sophisticated regime get the temperature to be a bit higher in Russia and make the skies rain in the dry lands in Syria?”

    Supporters of the pro-government group slammed those doubting the claim.

    “Why are you surprised by such a heroic act that our special forces carried out with the help of the Iranian experts?,” one posted. ” Yes this is the great work of the brave lions of Syria in retaliation to the evil conspiracy against our great nation. We will have our victory even if it will take some time.”

    Battles between anti-government fighters and Syrian forces have left scenes of destruction nationwide since the uprising against al-Assad started in March 2011.

    An internationally sanctioned truce has failed to take hold.

    International envoy to Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, pushed for government forces and rebels to stop fighting during Eid al-Adha, a major Muslim holiday that started Friday and ended Monday.

    But the violence continued almost unabated.

  • Japan Misspends Tsunami Money

    {{Japan has spent funds intended for reconstruction after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami on unrelated projects, a government audit has found.}}

    Projects financed by the $150bn (£93bn) fund include roads in Okinawa, an ad campaign for Japan’s tallest building and support for whaling research.

    Some 325,000 people remain displaced 18 months on from the disaster.

    In some areas little reconstruction work has been carried out, reports say.

    Some 19,000 people were killed or remain missing following the tsunami and earthquake that struck north-east Japan in March 2011.

    The government has passed a number of supplementary budgets to fund reconstruction efforts in affected areas.

    But a government audit showed money had been used for unrelated projects reportedly included on the basis that they could boost national economic revival.

    The findings come at a time when questions are being asked about the speed of Japan’s reconstruction effort.

    Takashi Kubota, deputy mayor of Rikuzentakata, a fishing port where nearly half of the houses were destroyed, told the Associated Press news agency that “not one single new building yet” had been built in the destroyed downtown area.

    “In 19 months, there have basically been no major changes,” he said.

    Speaking in parliament on Monday, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda promised that problems would be addressed.

    “There have been various criticisms made regarding how the budget for reconstruction has been spent,” he said.

    “We must listen sincerely to the voices calling for the utmost priority to be accorded to disaster area reconstruction. We will properly provide allowances for budget items that are truly needed by the disaster-affected areas and strictly narrow down other items.”

  • Superstorm Sandy Kills More in US

    {{Millions of American people from Maine to the Carolinas waited wearily for the power to come back on Tuesday, and New Yorkers found themselves all but cut off from the modern world as the U.S. death toll from Superstorm Sandy climbed to 40, many of the victims killed by falling trees.}}

    The extent of the damage in New Jersey, where the storm roared ashore Monday night with hurricane-force winds of 80 mph, began coming into focus: homes knocked off their foundations, boardwalks wrecked and amusement pier rides cast into the sea.

    “We are in the midst of urban search and rescue. Our teams are moving as fast as they can,” Gov. Chris Christie said.

    “The devastation on the Jersey Shore is some of the worst we’ve ever seen. The cost of the storm is incalculable at this point.”

    As the storm steamed inland, still delivering punishing wind and rain, more than 8.2 million people across the East were without power.

    Airlines canceled more than 15,000 flights around the world, and it could be days before the mess is untangled and passengers can get where they’re going.

    The storm also disrupted the presidential campaign with just a week to go before Election Day.

    President Barack Obama canceled a third straight day of campaigning, scratching events scheduled for Wednesday in swing state Ohio.

    Republican Mitt Romney resumed his campaign, but with plans to turn a political rally in Ohio into a “storm relief event.”

  • Syrian Rebels Kill Air Force General

    {{A Syrian air force general has been assassinated in northern Damascus, state television said on Tuesday, blaming the killing on “terrorist groups.”}}

    “As part of their campaign to target national personalities and scientists, armed terrorist groups assassinated Air Force General Abdullah Mahmud al-Khalidi in the Damascus district of Rukn al-Din,” the broadcaster said, without providing further details.

    The general was a member of the Syrian Air Force command, a security source in Damascus told AFP on condition of anonymity.

    He was shot dead on Monday evening as he left a friend’s home, the source added.

    The regime of President Bashar al-Assad routinely refers to rebels fighting to overthrow it as terrorists.

    Since late July, air force fighter jets and helicopters have played a key role in the war against rebels.