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 victims. Show all posts
Showing posts with label victims. Show all posts

Monday, May 6, 2013

A message to victims Haruki Murakami Boston

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Haruki Murakami (wikipedia)

Some wounds will heal over time, but the passage of time can also cause this type of injury. You should be able to understand, accept and deal with it. You have to build a new life on top of the injuries
Tokyo (AFP)-Japan Writer Haruki Murakami had sent "personal messages" to the victims of the bombing of the Boston Marathon by stating he felt the wound as a result of the attack in his favorite running race.

"So, although from a distance, I could imagine how devastated and powerless feeling of the citizens of Boston about the disaster that befell the annual ' race ' it," Murakami is published in the New Yorker titled "Boston, than a citizen of the world who called himself a runner".

"Something that is supposed to be pure is polluted, and I--as well as a citizen of the world who call themselves sprinters--were hurt."

Murakami said had lived in suburban Boston for three years, including two years as guest students at Tufts University and a year at Harvard as well as follow the Boston Marathon six times.

"I've participated in marathons around the world, but each was asked where the most I liked, I never hesitate to answer: the Boston Marathon," he writes in the language of Japan have been translated, as reported to AFP.

Murakami compares the recovery process of scars caused by the attack with the pass through of climbing the Hill at the end of the marathon in the race.

"The real Pain felt when successfully conquered Heartbreak Hill ' and ' ran down, then reaching a flat ... city street," he said.

"Emotional scars may be the same. The real cuts will occur after the pass, after we overcome the shock and everything started well established. "

"Just as when climbing slopes and appears to the base we would feel just how miserable we are that long. Boston bomb might leave the inner wounds for a long period of time, "said Murakami in his writing in the New Yorker.

Two brothers from the ethnic Chechen, Tamerlan Tsarnaev (26), who then was killed by police gunfire and his brother Dzhokhar (19), accused of blasting which led to three people dead and 260 injured victims at a prestigious sporting events.

Murakami recalled when he was an interview families of the victims died and penyintas nerve gas attack against subway riders in Tokyo in 1995.

Translator: Maria D. Andriana



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Saturday, March 2, 2013

Japan tsunami victims have received packages of gold bullion

Jakarta (Reuters)-residents of an area in Japan last year exposed yan tsunami received the shipment contained gold bars from an unknown sender.

Gold bullion Pack appeared in Ishinomaki, Miyagi, pefektur about 10 days ago.

Kunio Suno, President of Ishinomaki Fish Market co. Ltd., the company that manages the port and fishing village, said she received a package containing two gold bars weighing 1 kilogram, respectively.

"Because of his ' merchandise ', I go," said Suno told AFP.

Suno was surprised to find the 24-karat gold amounted to two rods.

"One wrapped in brown paper, another with newsprint, both located in the bundle are bloated," said Suno, Reuters reported.

No message or address stated on the package, though the package was thought to derive from the city of Nagano.

Suno said he will use that money to rebuild the Ishinomaki fish market.

Yoshie Kaneko of Ishinomaki Revival Support Network, who also received two gold bullion said "We appreciate donors. We will not menyia-nyiakannya. "

On March 11, 2011, 9 Richter scale magnitude earthquake and huge tsunami hit Japan. That disaster killed an estimated 19,000 people and triggered a nuclear leak.

Ishinomaki is located 350 kilometres to the northeast of Tokyo. 3,000 people were killed as a result of the disaster and 40,000 buildings destroyed.

(nta)



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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Nevada air race crash victims mourned in Reno

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By Stephen Ward

RENO, Nev | Sun Sep 25, 2011 11:26pm EDT

RENO, Nev (Reuters) - Hundreds of mourners filled an outdoor arboretum at sunset on Sunday for a candlelight memorial tribute to 11 people killed in the crash of a vintage World War Two plane at a Nevada air show over a week ago.

Reno Mayor Bob Cashell presided over the somber, 40-minute service, held on a grassy hill of Idlewild Park near downtown, about 20 miles from the site of the September 16 tragedy, following a symbolic planting of an oak tree in memory of the victims.

"Thank you all for joining us as this community begins its healing process," Cashell told the gathering.

Taking the podium for his own remarks, Governor Brian Sandoval said, "We come together as the Nevada family to grieve our loss."

He was followed by three clergy members who recited brief prayers.

A city spokeswoman, Barbara Dicianno, put the number of attendees at about 500.

The mourners, each given small white candles as they entered the park, huddled on the hill, most of them standing, to form a circle around the speakers and a string quartet that played bits of soft music.

A lone singer performed the national anthem a cappella around the start of the event.

The service climaxed at sunset as a guitarist accompanied another vocalist in a rendition of "Amazing Grace" while the mourners all silently lit their candles, which flickered in a gentle breeze that rustled the surrounding trees.

Displayed beside the podium was a framed artist's rendering of the single-engine plane that crashed, a modified P-51 Mustang, depicted flying through a cloud-blotched sky, with the words, "In memory of Jimmy Leeward" -- in tribute to the pilot who died.

Investigators are still trying to determine what caused Leeward, 74, to lose control of the aircraft while competing at the 48th Annual National Air Championship Races.

The plane plowed into a box-seating area in front of the grandstand, leaving a 3-foot-deep crater in the tarmac. Besides Leeward, 10 people on the ground were killed, and another 66 seriously injured.

Leeward, a Florida-based real estate developer well-known in air racing circles, had flown as a stunt pilot in movies.

Federal safety regulators have said they are examining evidence that a piece of the aircraft broke loose shortly before the plane plunged to the ground. A photograph snapped seconds before the crash appears to show a plane component falling off.

The accident took place a day before another vintage plane crashed in a fireball during an aerobatic demonstration at a West Virginia air show, killing the pilot.

The two incidents have raised new questions about the safety of such events.

A total of 30 people have been killed in the Reno Air Races since they began in 1964, though city officials say this year marked the first spectator deaths.

(Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Jerry Norton)



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Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Texas crews make progress, but the victims of forest fires still can't return home

After nearly a week to ask if his house was destroyed in massive wildfires sweeping across Central Texas, George Gaydos has obtained the new Saturday: his house was burned in the blaze.

But still, Gaydos - who lives in a hotel with his wife, two children and his father since fuyant fire nearly a week ago – cannot return to his neighbourhood to see what remains of his home.

Fire crews, made progress Saturday fight against forest fires, but still slow hot spots concerns have kept thousands of residents, including Gaydos, to return home.

Tensions flared at a press conference Saturday as some residents shouted questions to the official County, demanding to know when they could return to their homes - or what is left of them - in the area of Bastrop, located about 30 miles to East of Austin.

Bastrop County Judge Ronnie McDonald said officials hope to return other residents as soon as possible, but he did not know how long that would take.

"This is the seventh day, tensions are high," McDonald said.

Texas is in the midst of one of its worst outbreaks of wildfires in the history of the State. A dangerous mixture of warm temperatures, strong winds and a historic drought caused fire Bastrop-area, the largest fire near 190, said the forest service broke out this week, killing four people, destroying more than 1,700 houses and forcing thousands to evacuate.

A blaze of 22,000 acres straddling three rural counties, 40 km northwest of Houston has burned for several days, destroying approximately 60 houses and forcing some people to evacuate. The forest service said about half of the fire was behind the containment lines and no towns or cities were threatened. Most of the houses in the region are scattered in the forest, the ranch and in clusters of small subdivision.

In Bastrop, officials said Saturday that the fire was about 50% of content after almost a week of combustion. Although residents were eager to make their neighbourhoods, Bastrop County Sheriff Terry Pickering said the authorities must be certain that they are safe before residents would be allowed to. Residents of an area of 700 acres which includes twenty houses were allowed to return home Saturday, but other areas remained evacuated: crews worked to extinguish the potentially dangerous hot spots.

"Everybody hang in there and we're going to you at home as soon as possible", said Pickering.

Fire crews continued battling points hot Saturday, but not the major through the night wind gusts expected.

But the authorities also warned that the number of victims of the fire could worsen. McDonald said that expected the number of houses destroyed by the fire to increase the tally 1,400 current that many evaluations are completed. A spokesman for the State team, local and federal agencies also said that the number should increase.

"We have even hit our most difficult region," McDonald said Saturday afternoon, adding that the teams did not have the opportunity to go and "counting these houses or obtain a score due to the amount of heat that is in the area."

In the meantime, residents are staying around where they can - and makeshift shelters in churches, the homes of friends and parents, even cars parked nearby.

"There are some of those who are in fact pick apartments," said Sean McGahan, pastor of the Church of New Beginnings in Bastrop. "If you do not already started it, you are probably behind the curve of.".

Next week, Gaydos and his family will move in a trailer in Bastrop while they decide whether to rebuild. To find out Saturday on a Web site of fire as his house had been destroyed, Gaydos spent much of the last week so worried by his house that he could not sleep.

"You wake up in the middle of the night and you cannot go back to sleep," said Gaydos. "I was will work soon because I am already up.".

Office of the Governor Rick Perry said families whose houses have been destroyed will receive vouchers from the hotel for seven days of a non-profit organization as well as assistance of the State.

The exhibits were relief for Russell Horn, who said the hotel bill nightly $ 104 for him, his wife and two boys had become too expensive. The electrician for 32 years, said their house was destroyed by fire and he had only been able to out door an undershirt and short films.

"There are not too many places, you can go just for that,"Horn said."".

Friday, officials of the White House announced that President Barack Obama has signed a federal claim to Texas. The move allows federal funding to be made available to people in Bastrop County. Assistance can include grants for temporary housing and repairs, low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses and other programs.

Perry unexpectedly cancelled plans Saturday to visit areas affected by the Bastrop fire and a Conference of press because of "logistical issues" with him arriving in time, but it was in Austin and keep regular contact with officials on forest fires, his spokesman said.



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Friday, September 9, 2011

The names of victims released in fatal shooting at Nevada IHOP Rampage

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Authorities are trying to piece together what led a Nevada man armed with an AK-47 to open fire on an IHOP restaurant Tuesday, killing five people - including himself and three Army National Guard soldiers - and wounding seven others.

Police on Wednesday released the names of the Army National Guard soldiers who died in the rampage at an IHOP restaurant in Carson City, Nev., and called the shooting "the most devastating attack" in the city's history.

Carson City Sheriff Kenny Furlong said the National Guard members killed were 38-year-old Sgt. 1st Class Christian Riege of Carson City, 31-year-old Sgt. 1st Class Miranda McElhiney of Reno and 35-year-old Major Heath Kelly of Reno. Also killed was 67-year-old Florence Donovan-Gunderson of South Lake Tahoe.

"Yesterday our town was shocked to the core," Furlong said during a news conference Wednesday.

Authorities identified the shooter as 32-year-old Eduardo Sencion, of Carson City, Nev., who they say opened fire before shooting himself in the head. He later died at a nearby hospital from what appeared to be self-inflicted wounds, Furlong said.

The shooter's motive remains unclear, but family members said he had mental issues. He had never been in the military and had no known affiliation with anyone inside the restaurant.

Police have confirmed that he had a previous run in with the law involving his mental health.

South Lake Tahoe Police Lt. David Stevenson says the department took Sencion into protective custody during a mental health commitment in April 2000.

He said Sencion fought with officers during the incident but wasn't charged.

Stevenson tells the Associated Press No. court order or weapons were involved. He says officers have the authority under state law to individuals take into protective custody if they determined the person poses a danger to themselves or others.

He declined to release further details, citing the ongoing investigation of Tuesday's attack.

Witnesses and authorities described a frantic scene in the bustling business district, where the shooter drove a blue minivan with a yellow "Support Our Troops" sticker. He drove near the complex of retail stores and shops just before 9 a.m., when he left his vehicle and immediately shot a a woman near a motorcycle, a witness said.

Ralph Swagler said he grabbed his own weapon, but said it was too late to stop the shooter, who charged into the IHOP through the front doors.

"I wish I had shot at him when he was going in the IHOP," said Swagler, who owns Locals BBQ & Grill. "But when he came at me, when somebody is pointing an automatic weapon at you - you can't believe the firepower, the kind of rounds coming out of that weapon."

The gunman went all the way to the back of the restaurant to the back area and opened fire, Carson City Sheriff Kenny Furlong said.

When he left the restaurant, he stood in the parking lot and shot into the nearby businesses, shattering the windows of a barbecue restaurant and an H & R Block and a casino across the street.

Officers arrived minutes later and found the suspect and the person who was by the motorcycle wounded and lying in the parking lot. The names of the victims, including the three Guard members who were killed were not immediately released.

Sencion left two more guns in the van - a rifle and a pistol, authorities said.

As the attack unfolded, Nevada officials worried about the violence being more widespread. They locked down the state Capitol and Supreme Court buildings for about 40 minutes, and put extra security in place at state and military buildings in northern Nevada.

"There were concerns at the onset, so we took some steps to ensure we had the capability to embrace an even larger circumstance," Furlong said. "At this point in time it appears to be isolated to this parking lot."

Reno-based FBI Special Agent Michael West said there was no indication of any terrorist plot.

As police interviewed dozens of witnesses after the shooting and kept the gathering crowd of media at bay, a body lay on the ground, covered with a white sheet except for the feet, clad in tan boots.

Sencion was born in Mexico City and had a valid U.S. passport. In interviews with investigators after the shooting, his family raised concerns about his mental health, Furlong said. Sencion worked at his family's business in South Lake Tahoe and had no criminal history. The minivan he drove to the shooting was registered to his brother.

The shooting shocked some who knew him, including Joe Laub, his lawyer in a 2009 bankruptcy filing, who called it an "aberration of his character."

"He's a gentle, kind man who was very helpful to friends and family," Laub told The Associated Press. "I couldn't venture to guess what would cause him to do something as horrible as this."

In the bankruptcy filing, Sencion listed more than $42,000 in outstanding debts for a car, several credit cards and some medical expenses. At the time, Sencion reported having $200 spread over three bank accounts and $923 in disability income, mostly from Social Security.

At a Reno hospital, service members gathered, waiting for word on those killed and hurt. A hospital spokesman said four shooting victims were being treated there, but wouldn't can't discuss their conditions or provide any other information.

Authorities provided few details about the five other injured people, except to say one was a woman who was found near a motorcycle. Three of those wounded have minor wounds. the others were shot in critical areas of the body, Furlong said.

"You go a whole tour in Afghanistan and no one is shot." "And you go to IHOP and several are shot," said 31-year-old Sgt. 1st Class Cameron Anderson of Reno, a Nevada Army National Guard soldier. "It's a shock." "I came to work today and had no idea I d be driving the chaplain here [to the hospital]."

Another Guard soldier, 33-year-old Spc. Lee Amato, said he didn't 't know the victims' names purpose expected they were people he knew.

"It's hard to believe something like this would happen to really good people," Amato said. "It's like a hole, something taken away." "It's mind-boggling and hard to comprehend."

The IHOP is about four miles from the Guard's headquarters complex. Nevada Army National Guard spokeswoman April Conway said she didn't know why the five Guard soldiers had met at the IHOP. Conway said she did not believe any of the Guard at the restaurant were armed soldiers.

"Our guards would have no reason to be carrying military weapons here today," Conway said. "We have no reason to believe that any of them were armed with personal weapons."

Furlong says they're analyzing the shooter's weapon to determine whether it is automatic or semi-automatic.

Nevada's capital city of some 50,000 is normally a sleepy town when lawmakers are not in session, a jumping off point 30 miles south of Reno for travelers headed to Lake Tahoe gold back to California across the Sierra.

"I ve lived in Carson City since 1961 and I've never seen anything like this," said Fran Hunter, who works at the Sierra Bone pet shop just north of the IHOP. "This is the kind of thing that happens in New York City or L.A., not here."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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