Farmer jailed in Hong Kong for burning flag

A man has been jailed in Hong Kong for burning the national flag, in the first sentence of its kind.

S Korea suspends savings banks citing weak finances

South Korea has suspended seven local savings banks citing the weak state of their finances.

Japan urges mass evacuation ahead of Typhoon Roke

More than a million people in central and western Japan have been urged to leave their homes as a powerful typhoon approaches.

Burma begins swap scheme for cars over 40 years old

Owners of some of Burma's most antiquated cars have been queuing in Rangoon to exchange their old vehicles for permits to import newer models.

Polio strain spreads to China from Pakistan

Polio has spread to China for the first time since 1999 after being imported from Pakistan, the World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed.

Showing posts with label deadly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deadly. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Deadly stampede at India festival

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8 November 2011 Last updated at 10:10 GMT Injured woman in Haridwar, 8 November There are fears the number of casualties could rise At least 16 people have been killed in a stampede in the northern Indian holy town of Haridwar, officials say.

About 50 others were injured as devotees gathered to mark the 100th anniversary of the birth of the founder of a Hindu sect.

Thousands have been attending the ceremony for Sri Ram Sharma, who founded the Gayatri Parivar sect.

Reports said the number of casualties could rise. Television footage showed injured people being taken to hospital.

"More worshippers turned up than the place could accommodate and so the stampede occurred," a senior local official, D Santhel Pandiyan, told the AFP news agency.

Many women and children are reported to be among the dead and injured.

Hemant Sahu, who works for the event organisers, told AFP: "When the big ritual was going on, too many people rushed forward to make their offerings to the holy fire and the crowd got out of control."

Map

Reports said a number of people fell but other pilgrims continued to push.

Haridwar, 173km (107 miles) north of Delhi, is a temple-filled town where the Ganges emerges from the Himalayan mountains and is considered sacred by Hindus.

The huge numbers attending religious festivals in India make stampedes a frequent risk.

A stampede at a festival in the southern state of Kerala in January killed more than 100 people.

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Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Deadly fighting erupts in Syria

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30 September 2011 Last updated at 15:34 GMT Anti-government protest in Homs - 28 September Homs province has been one of the focal points of anti-government demonstrations Heavy clashes have broken out between the Syrian army and opposition activists in central Homs province, as anti-government protests continue.

In Rastan, seven soldiers and police were reportedly killed fighting troops who had defected to the opposition.

Activists said at least one civilian was killed by security forces in Hama.

Thousands of people took to the streets after Friday prayers across Syria, in a fresh wave of dissent against President Bashar al-Assad.

Correspondents say the demonstrations, which began peacefully six months ago, are becoming increasingly violent as protesters grow frustrated at the lack of any tangible reform.

Earlier, the US condemned an attack on US ambassador Robert Ford, who was pelted with stones and tomatoes by a mob in the capital, Damascus, on Thursday, ahead of a meeting with an opposition figure.

US officials said the mob was violent and seriously damaged embassy vehicles, but that Mr Ford was unharmed. There are no plans to withdraw the ambassador, officials said.

'Restoring security' Syria map

State news agency Sana quoted a military spokesman as saying that seven soldiers and members of law-enforcement agencies had been killed in Rastan, among them two officers, while 32 others were wounded.

"In a specific operation, the army units have successfully fulfilled their duties, arresting a number of the armed groups' members, seizing their weapons, explosives and different ammunitions," he said.

"The army members are pursuing the terrorist groups to restore security and stability to Rastan and its citizens," he said.

Reports from Rastan, a town of 40,000, indicate that army defectors have been fighting government forces to protect the protesters.

Correspondents say Syrian security forces have mostly remained loyal to President Assad, but deserters have formed their own units around Rastan, 180km (120 miles) north of Damascus, regarded as a recruiting ground for Sunni Muslim conscripts for the army.

The military is dominated by officers from the minority Alawite sect, of whom the Assad family are members, but most troops are Sunnis.

Continue reading the main story image of Lyse Doucet Lyse Doucet BBC News, Damascus

The mood outside the mosque in Barzeh after Friday prayers was tense as people milled around us. The first man to speak up, spoke loudly, insisting 'Syrians should be given a chance to talk together, not fight!"

Others whispered to us that he wasn't from this neighbourhood. "He's from intelligence," some said. Several men brushed past, speaking in hushed tones: "Sorry, we can't talk."

Another passed us a crumpled bit of paper with the words "thank you but no one can meet you because the army is in the street, and all people are afraid of them."

Soldiers stood guard nearby. Men wearing shirts of their favourite football teams then moved in, telling people to leave.

With a smile towards us, they shouted in Arabic "Bashar Ou Bas" (Bashar Only) referring to their president.

The government gave us permission today to visit a few mosques in Damascus including the grand Umayyad where the mood was peaceful.

Residents in Rastan told Reuters news agency at least 1,000 army deserters and other armed men were fighting the government forces.

UK-based opposition group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said one person has been killed in the central city of Hama in Friday's violence, adding to six killed on Thursday, activists said.

"People seriously wounded in Rastan were unable to receive medical care because of the continuing military operations," the group said.

Resolution watered down

Thousands of protesters came out onto the streets after prayers on Friday in several cities including the capital, Damascus.

"Oh God, give victory to Syria and Yemen, Oh God... let [Yemeni President Ali Abdullah] Saleh and Bashar fall," they chanted as they emerged from mosques in Damascus.

In the northern province of Idlib, a sign proclaimed "Rastan is the bastion of free men, despite you, Bashar", Reuters reports.

The BBC's Owen Bennett-Jones on the Syrian-Lebanese border says that when the protest movement began in Syria, opposition activists stressed that theirs was a peaceful protest movement determined to use non-violent methods to overthrow the government of President Assad.

But, he says, after six months the tactic has produced only promises of reform from the government.

That has led some in the opposition to argue that to achieve change they need to use more force, our correspondent says.

Speaking on Friday, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the attack on Ambassador Ford was "unwarranted" and praised Mr Ford's "admirable courage" as a "vital advocate for the legitimate aspirations" of the Syrian people.

Mr Ford was targeted outside the office of opposition figure Hassan Abdul Azim, who heads the outlawed Arab Socialist Democratic Union party.

Meanwhile, diplomats in New York watered down a UN resolution condemning the violence in Syria, removing a reference to a recommendation made by UN Human Rights chief Navi Pillay that the council should consider referring Syrian authorities to the International Criminal Court.

Russia has however said it will not back the latest version, Reuters reports.

The UN estimates that more than 2,700 people have been killed across Syria since the crackdown began.



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Peliculas Online

Friday, September 23, 2011

Deadly gun attack on Pakistan bus

  The Shia community has in recent years been subjected to numerous attacks At least 26 Shia Muslim pilgrims have been killed by a group of gunmen who opened fire on a bus in western Pakistan, officials said.
The pilgrims had been travelling through Mastung in Balochistan province on their way to the Iranian border when the attack happened.
Several other people were injured, some critically, Pakistani media reported.
No group has admitted carrying out the attack but police say they believe the motive was sectarian.
Sunni and Shia extremists have frequently clashed and launched attacks on each other over the past 20 years.
Deadliest attack
Bus driver Khushal Khan said his vehicle was stopped by eight to 10 men driving in two jeeps that came from the opposite direction.
Mr Khan said the men ordered everybody out of the bus and made them stand in a line before spraying them with AK-47 rifle bursts. Women and children were among the 45 passengers.
He said some managed to run away but others were shot. Six passengers who were injured were taken away for treatment.
Police said the bus had come from the provincial capital Quetta and was heading for the border town of Taftan.

It was the deadliest attack against Shias in Pakistan since a suicide bomber killed at least 57 people at a Shia rally in Quetta in September 2010.
Shia Muslims are a minority in Pakistan. They are mostly ethnic Hazaras and say that nearly 600 of their community have been killed in sectarian attacks since 2002.
At least 13 people were killed when a suicide bomber struck in the car park of a Shia mosque in Quetta - capital of Balochistan province - during the Eid festival at the end of last month.
The BBC's M Ilyas Khan in Islamabad says that responsibility for most attacks has been claimed by the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LJ) sectarian outfit, a predominantly Punjabi group with links to al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
Police in Balochistan have over the years arrested a number of LJ activists in connection with these attacks. Some of them have been sentenced to death or imprisonment by the courts.
Our correspondent says both police and the Shia community believe the mastermind behind most of the recent attacks was an LJ commander, Osman Saifullah, who was arrested in 2006 but escaped from a maximum security anti-terrorism prison in the cantonment area of Quetta in 2008.
Buses leave Quetta every day to carry pilgrims to the Shia holy sites in western Iran and parts of southern Iraq.
They have been a target for many attacks by sectarian militants in recent years.


Thursday, September 8, 2011

2. The Grizzlies more captured after deadly attack of Yellowstone

Published September 07, 2011| Associated Press

BILLINGS, Montana - A Park National de Yellowstone spokesman said that two grizzly bears more were captured in an investigation into the death of mauling of the month last a Michigan man.

Park spokesman Al Nash said Wednesday that the adult male bears were captured Sunday in the Hayden Valley region, where 59-year-old John Wallace of Chassell, Michigan, was killed August 25 hiking alone in the hinterland of the Park.

Nash, said hair samples were collected by the animals for DNA testing. The bears were monitoring radio-collared and released.

Park officials have said they will kill the bear that mauled Wallace if they can confirm its role through DNA analysis. Another bear captured last week is also out after having been fitted with a radio transmitter.



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Peliculas Online