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July 2, 2009

Teenager recovers in hospital after plane crash

Filed under: world news — Tags: , , — sportsboy @ 12:21 am

Bahia, who lives in Marseille, escaped with just cuts to her face and a fractured collar-bone as the Yemenia Airways Airbus A310 tried to land at Moroni airport at the end of a four-stage flight from France.

A local surgeon said Bahia was doing well in hospital. “Her health is not in danger. She is very calm given the shock she suffered,” Ben Imani told Reuters.com at Moroni’s El Marouf hospital. The girl is expected to be flown home to France on a ministerial plane, Agence France-Presse reports.

Earlier Kassim Bakari told France Info, a French radio network, that his wife and daughter were flying to Comoros to visit relatives.

“When I had her on the phone, I asked her what happened and she said, ‘Daddy, I don’t know what happened, but the plane fell into the water and I found myself in the water … surrounded by darkness. I could not see anyone,’” Bakari said.

French junior foreign minister Alain Joyandet met the girl in hospital on Wednesday and heard how she was pulled from the sea.

The head of the rescue team in the Comoros also told RTL the teenager survived astonishing odds. “It is truly, truly, miraculous,” said Ibrahim Abdoulazeb. “The young girl can barely swim.”

There was no word on any other survivors, but French officials said one of the plane’s black boxes had been found.

The Yemenia Airbus 310 jet carrying 153 people to island nation of Comoros crashed into the sea early Tuesday as it attempted to land in the dark amid howling winds.

An Associated Press reporter saw 14-year-old Bahia Bakari in a Comoros hospital Wednesday as she was visited by government officials. She was conscious with bruises on her face and a gauze bandage on her elbow.

“It is a true miracle. She is a courageous young girl,” Alain Joyandet, France’s minister for international cooperation, said at the hospital. “She held onto a piece of the plane from 1:30 a.m to 3:00 p.m. She has lost her mother. Her father arrives tomorrow.”

The girl’s father told French radio that his daughter was “fragile” and could “barely swim” but managed to hang on.

Kassim Bakari said he spoke with his oldest daughter by phone after Tuesday’s crash. Bahia had left Paris on Monday night with her mother to see family in the Comoros.

He said she was ejected and found herself beside the plane.

“She couldn’t feel anything, and found herself in the water. She heard people speaking around her but she couldn’t see anyone in the darkness,” Bakari said on France’s RTL radio. “She’s a very timid girl, I never thought she would escape like that.”

Said Mohammed, a nurse at El Mararouf hospital in the Comoros capital of Moroni, said the girl was doing well and doctors would release more on her condition later Wednesday.

Sgt. Said Abdilai told Europe 1 radio that Bahia was too weak to grasp the life ring rescuers threw to her, so he jumped into the sea to get her. He said rescuers gave the trembling girl warm water with sugar.

The crash a few miles (kilometers) off this island nation came two years after aviation officials reported equipment faults with the plane, an aging Airbus 310 flying the last leg of a Yemenia airlines flight from Paris and Marseille to the Comoros, with a stop in Yemen to change planes.

Most of the passengers were from the Comoros, a former French colony. Sixty-six on board were French nationals.

Turbulence was believed to be a factor in the crash, Yemen’s embassy in Washington said.

Gen. Bruno de Bourdoncle de Saint-Salvy, the senior commander for French forces in the southern Indian Ocean, said the Airbus 310 crashed in deep waters about nine miles (14.4 kilometers) north of the Comoran coast and 21 miles (34 kilometers) from the Moroni airport.

A French military cargo plane flew Wednesday over a zone 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of Grand Comoros Island, while two inflatable dinghies sent by French forces on La Reunion island combed waters closer to the coast.

“The search is continuing,” Joyandet said. “No other survivors have been found for the moment.”

Col. Dominique Fontaine, who is managing the rescue operations, said Wednesday that no other debris has been found so far.

A French tug arrived from the French island of Mayotte to recover survivors, corpses and debris, while a French frigate diverted from anti-piracy operations, the Nivose, and another French military ship headed to the scene.

Both France and Airbus sent experts to the Comoros to aid in the investigation.

The tragedy — and dwindling hopes that anyone else made it out alive — prompted an outcry in Comoros, where residents have long complained of a lack of seat belts on Yemenia flights and planes so overcrowded that passengers had to stand in the aisles.

The Comoros, home to some 700,000 people, is an archipelago of three main islands situated 1,800 miles (2,900 kilometers) south of Yemen, between Africa’s southeastern coast and the island of Madagascar.

French aviation inspectors found a “number of faults” in the plane’s equipment during a 2007 inspection, French Transport Minister Dominique Bussereau said.

European Union Transport Commissioner Antonio Tajani said the airline had previously met E.U. safety checks but would now face a full investigation amid questions why passengers were put on another jet in the Yemeni capital of San’a.

The vice president of Comoros criticized French officials for not telling his nation about any suspected problems.

“We wish the French could have informed us of any irregularity or any problems with that plane,” Idi Nadhoim said Wednesday on France-24 television.

“Most if not all of the planes of Yemenia are Airbus,” he said. “They are supposed to be serviced by Airbus.”

“We trust the civil aviation authorities of the countries we are working with,” he added, suggesting that French authorities discriminated against “those French who are left by themselves to fly this type of plane” — French citizens from former French colonies.

Airbus said the plane that crashed went into service 19 years ago, in 1990, and had accumulated 51,900 flight hours. It has been operated by Yemenia since 1999.

The father of a teenage girl who remarkably survived a plane crash off the Comoros islands has described how his daughter was ejected from the plane into the Indian Ocean. Glad to hear this. Hope she can live happily and without suffering from the air crash. More information in http://www.9ico.com

July 1, 2009

Partial recount shows Iran’s election valid

Filed under: world news — Tags: , , — sportsboy @ 5:09 am

(NFL jerseys)Iran’s ruling clerics closed ranks around President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Tuesday, hailing him as a “champion” amid signs that he may have begun purging his government of anyone perceived as an opposition sympathizer.

A sense of resignation mingled with indignation settled over supporters of Mir Hossein Mousavi, Iran’s embattled opposition leader, whose insistence that massive fraud robbed him of victory in the June 12 presidential election touched off two weeks of violent street clashes between protesters and police.

Iran’s highest electoral authority proclaimed the election outcome valid Monday — paving the way for Ahmadinejad to be sworn in next month — and the incumbent leader sent a stern message to those in his administration who survived his first term: He won’t tolerate dissent in his second.

There was “no tangible irregularity,” Guardian Council spokesman Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei told government-run Press TV after reporting that a recount of some 10 percent of the votes found no significant differences. “After this, the file will be closed and from today on in the presidential election, the file has been closed.”

In an hour-long interview addressing a series of complaints, Kadkhodaei noted that some 40,000 representatives of the various candidates observed the ballot boxes to ensure that rules were followed. Given there were 46,000 ballot boxes, that meant 6,000 were unattended. Even so, allegations of wrongdoing were investigated thoroughly, he said.

Kadkhodaei acknowledged that some ballot boxes may have contained more ballots than the number of voters in a given area, but said that did not necessarily mean there were irregularities. Voters were not restricted to polling places in their home town, so the extra votes could have come from travelers, he said.

Charges of vote buying also were investigated, and “we didn’t find that to be true,” he said.

Iranian authorities have barred journalists for international news organizations from reporting on the streets and ordered them to stay in their offices. This report is based on the accounts of witnesses reached in Iran and official statements carried on Iranian media.

Saying it had completed an investigation into alleged voter irregularities, Iran’s election authority on Monday stood by its findings that gave hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad an overwhelming victory and sparked more than two weeks of chaos in the streets.

Green Dam

Filed under: world news — Tags: — sportsboy @ 5:00 am

Green Dam is actually the combination of two programs manufactured by two companies: Green Dam by Zhengzhou Jinhui Computer System Engineering Co. (Jinhui), and Youth Escort by Beijing Dazheng Human Language Technology Academy Co. (Dazheng).

On Jan. 14, 2008, the former Ministry of Information Industry (MII), now MIIT, issued an urgent notice requesting the Green Dam Internet filter software. There are two standards for testing this software, and both Jinhui and Dazheng are among those that set up the standards. Four months later, MIIT announced the bidding winners: Jinhui and Dazheng. That means that Jinhui and Dazheng had set up the rules of the bidding, were most likely involved in the testing, and successfully won the bid with a dysfunctional product.

In Western countries, this is called a conflict of interest.–NFL jerseys blog

PC sales representatives at Bainaohui, one of Beijing’s largest electronics retailers, say their merchandise is not pre-installed with Green Dam, a Web filtering software the government said was necessary to prevent children from viewing pornography and other harmful content. Some retailers were unclear as to when the software would even be available on new units.

Computer experts say manufacturers have not had enough time to pre-install new computers with the software — which is one reason behind the government’s delay. PC companies may also be taking more time to test the software after programming errors, with the potential to make computers susceptible to hackers, were detected by University of Michigan professors. The Chinese government said that these errors have been fixed.

The international backlash against the Green Dam directive may be further delaying the pre-instillation process. Twenty-two chambers of commerce and trade groups made an appeal to Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao urging that he abandon the software mandate.

“China is putting companies in an untenable position by requiring them, with virtually no public notice, to pre-install software that appears to have broad-based censorship implications and network security issues,” said U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke in a press-release.

When the University of Michigan team found that the FalunWord file appeared to be a word list for a more sophisticated sentence processing algorithm, what they really discovered was an updated “Falun Gong concept censorship system” word library.

However, the design of Green Dam makes the inclusion of this concept censorship system futile, because it conflicts with the keyword filter. When an article with sensitive keywords is filtered, the article or the Web site with the article is blocked and there is nothing left to be analyzed. There is no need to judge the contents of the article because there will be no such article left to be judged.

During the Sichuan earthquake in 2008, the whole world witnessed how poorly built school buildings collapsed. The Chinese people began calling the construction of these Sichuan school buildings “tofu dregs.” These kinds of “Tofu Dregs Projects” are everywhere, in almost every field of made-in-China products. There is no reason for high technology to be an exception. Green Dam is the Tofu Dregs of the Great Firewall.

Whether the Green Dam represents the top technology of China’s Internet censorship, or if this far-from-the-best product can only win the bid in a rigged competition, in either case, the Great Firewall of China wouldn’t be as strong as it is now, or wouldn’t even be working at all, if not for the direct involvement of foreign technology.

Since the beginning, the Golden Shield has been helped by many Western companies. This long list starts with Nortel, which supplied the Golden Shield core equipment and claimed their products were used against Falun Gong practitioners. Also on the list of corporations that helped build Golden Shield are such large firms as Intel, Yahoo, Cisco, Sun Microsystems, and Motorola, according to Canadian researcher Greg Walton.

Had the government not delayed its controversial order that all computers be equipped with Green Dam by July 1, the result would have been the same — Chinese computer retailers were far from ready.China extends deadline for Internet filtering software to accompany PCs.

England host 2015 Rugby World Cup

Filed under: world news — Tags: , , — sportsboy @ 4:51 am

England offers more riches, more possibilities, a fatter bottom line. Given that two buttons is all that some unions can manage to rub together in these straitened times, the returns from a World Cup staged in England cannot be ignored. Nor will they be.

The guaranteed payback into International Rugby Board coffers is £80 million. And with a fair wind, it might expect to generate double that from all sales, minus costs. England, meanwhile, from ticket sales, might expect to plough back £15 million, perhaps more, into grass-roots rugby.

Why does money matter so much? Simple. It is the motor that drives the game worldwide. The IRB will be taking something of a financial hit from the 2011 tournament in New Zealand, not least because of lower television revenue. Money was always going to be a priority. All the more so in credit-crunch days.

Of course, all four bidding countries – Italy, Japan and South Africa will follow England through the door to make their presentations – have agreed to underwrite the £80 million guarantee, but England offer a more well-endowed market in which broadcasters and sponsors thrive.

They have more bums to put on seats, too, with a commitment to hit three million ticket sales, an improvement by 30 per cent on France’s record of getting people through the turnstiles. Impressive stuff, but only if they can pull it off.

The Rugby Football Union held off competition from South Africa, Italy and Japan to receive the endorsement from Rugby World Cup Limited.

Japan have been recommended as hosts for the 2019 World Cup while the final decision will be made by the IRB’s council on July 28.

RFU chairman Martyn Thomas said: “The RFU is delighted that Rugby World Cup Limited has decided to recommend England to the IRB Council as the host for RWC 2015.

“When we presented to the council in May we said that in the current difficult economic environment we could deliver a low-risk, high-return tournament that would leave a lasting legacy for the global game.

England lost a huge amount of face when they bid for the 2007 Rugby World Cup, which went to France, getting only one independent vote despite spending great chunks of money travelling the world to win favour and influence people. The people – all bar the Canadians –snubbed them. This time England have cut to the chase, and are all the better for it.

Might is right has always been a refrain in rugby that has proven difficult to refute. True, there will be subtlety and grace and fun there, too, crucial elements of the Rugby Football Union bid, but when England flex their commercial muscle, the rest of the rugby world can do little but sit up and take note.

England’s ambitions of staging the 2015 Rugby World Cup received a massive boost on Tuesday when tournament organisers recommended their bid to the International Rugby Board.  More information in http://www.9ico.com

A 5-year-old boy found alive after plane crashes in sea

Filed under: world news — Tags: , , , — sportsboy @ 3:53 am

(NFL jerseys blog)A 5-year-old boy recovered alive from Yemeni jet crash in Indian Ocean.A five-year-old boy was miraculously pulled alive from the sea after a passenger jet from Yemen crashed in the Indian Ocean early Tuesday, killing everyone else on board.

 

Capt. Mohammed Abdel Rahman Abdel Qadir also told reporters that a child who was reported found alive was a 5-year-old boy. He did not give further details of the child’s condition.

 

“The French said that (Wednesday) they will send more French units to the accident location in order to retrieve the bodies and possibly that they may be able to locate people who are still alive,” he said.

The Airbus 310 went down early Tuesday, carrying 143 passengers and 11 crew members on a flight that originated in Yemen’s capital, Sanaa. Qatir said the jet took off from Sanaa shortly before 10 p.m. Monday and vanished from radar when it was about 16 miles from Comoros’ capital, Moroni.

Searchers have not located the plane’s data recorders, Qatir said, and investigators were not speculating on the cause of the crash.

“The weather conditions were indeed very troubling and the winds were very strong, reaching 61 kilometers per hour (38 mph),” he said. “That’s one thing. The other thing was that the sea was very rough when the plane approached landing at Moroni airport.”

But French Transport Minister Dominique Bussereau noted that France banned the A310-300 several years ago because of safety concerns.

“People are talking about poor weather conditions, but for the moment, we are unsure,” Bussereau said. “It seems the plane may have attempted an approach, put on the gas, and attempted another approach, which then failed. For the moment, we must be careful because none of this information is verified.”

Qatir said it was too early to blame the aircraft for the crash.

“This plane is just like any other plane,” he said. “It can have a malfunction, but we don’t know what really happened before the investigation is over. And then we can determine if there is a technical issue, bad weather or anything else that may have led to the crash.”

It was the second crash involving an Airbus jet in a month. On June 1, an Air France Airbus A330 crashed off Brazil while en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris, France. All 228 aboard are presumed dead. The cause remains under investigation.

Former pilot and aviation analyst John Cox said there were no similarities between the two incidents.

“These are two dramatically different airplanes flown by two different airlines,” Cox told CNN’s “American Morning.”

“The accidents happened at two different regimes of flight. And Airbus has hundreds of millions of hours flying safely. I don’t believe that … we can draw any conclusions because the manufacturer was the same in these two very different types of accidents.”

At first, Comoros officials said there were no signs of survivors among the dead bodies floating in the choppy waters. But then rescuers found the child.

Cox said it reminded him of the 1987 crash of Northwest Flight 255 in Detroit, Michigan, in which only a 4-year-old girl survived while 156 others died.

“This has come up before and it’s where the toddler was seated (during the impact) that allowed them to survive,” he said.

“It’s a miracle and I’m glad … the toddler is safe. I’m just saddened for the loss of everybody else,” he added.

The Yemeni crash occurred as the plane approached the Hahaya airport in Moroni. The plane tried to land, then U-turned before it crashed, Nadhoim said. Officials did not know why the plane could not land, he said.

Airbus A310-300

Launched in 1983, entered service in 1985

Widebody, twin-engine aircraft, typically carries 220 passengers

Suited to medium-range routes of up to 5,200 nautical miles (9,600km)

Typical cruise speed of Mach 0.8, maximum operating speed of Mach 0.84

214 A310s now in service with 41 operators

Global A310 fleet, including the A310-300, has logged 11.7 million flight hours on 4.5 million flights

Major sub-assemblies produced in northern France, Germany, UK and Spain. Final assembly in Toulouse, southern France
(Source: Airbus)

Flight 626 was expected to be a four-and-a-half-hour flight. The airline has three regular flights a week to Moroni, off the east coast of Africa, about 2,900 km (1,800 miles) south of Yemen.

The crash occurred about 1:30 a.m., Nadhoim said.

There was no indication of foul play behind the crash, the official in Yemen said.

Yemenia Air had used the jet since 1999 on about 17,300 flights, Airbus officials said. The company said it would assist in investigating the crash.

“The concerns and sympathy of the Airbus employees go to the families, friends and loved ones affected by the accident,” the company said in a statement.

In the wake of the Air France crash on June 1, United States accident investigators have been probing two recent failures of airspeed and altitude indications aboard Airbus A330s.

One flight was between the United States and Brazil in May, and the other between Hong Kong and Japan in June. The planes landed safely and there were no injuries or damage, according to the National Transportation Safety Board.

France was sending a patrol boat, recon frigate,divers and a medical a team to the scene.

“There is considerable dismay,” Salord said. “These are families that, each year on the eve of summer, leave Marseille and the region to rejoin their families in the Comoros and spend their holidays.”

Searchers have recovered the bodies of three people who were aboard a Yemenia Airways jet that crashed off the coast of Comoros in the Indian Ocean, a spokesman for Yemen’s Civil Aviation department said Tuesday.Boy, 5, found alive after plane from Yemen carrying 153 crashes off the Comoros islands. Good luck for him! Don’t be afraid, you are home now.

June 16, 2009

Mainland China’s holding of US Treasury bonds drops first time in 11 months

Filed under: world news — Tags: , , , — sportsboy @ 4:22 am

China’s holdings of US Treasury bonds fell - to $763.5 billion in first time in 11 months.

The figure, down from March’s $767.9 billion, was the lowest since June 2008. NFL jerseys blog shared.

They do not include US Treasury bond holding in Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, which climbed to $80.9 billion in April from $78.9 billion the previous month.

The decline in the China holding “seems to stem from net selling of Treasury bills,” said Chirag Mirani of Barclays Capital Research.

On the whole, foreigners decreased holdings of Treasury bills by $44.5 billion in April, the data showed.

As the largest holder of US Treasury bills, which are crucial to funding Washington’s multi-trillion-dollar recovery plans, China had expressed concerns recently over what it called the safety of its dollar-linked assets.

US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner traveled to Beijing about two weeks ago to reassure Chinese leaders, saying their money is “very safe” despite the US budget deficit, which he pledged to cut.

The United States has been running large budget shortfalls since the tenure of Democratic President Barack Obama’s Republican predecessor George W. Bush.

Other emerging powers Russia and Brazil have also trimmed their US bond holdings, the US Treasury said in its monthly international capital data report.

The three nations plan to purchase tens of billions of dollars in bonds to be issued by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for the first time, in what is seen as part of moves by the trio to diversify from large dollar holdings.

Beijing owned 763.5 billion dollars in US Treasury securities in April, the lowest level since ramping up purchases in June 2008, the Treasury data showed. The April holdings fell from 767.9 billion dollars in March.

They do not include US Treasury bond holding in Hong Kong, China’s special administration region, which climbed to 80.9 billion dollars in April from 78.9 billion dollars the previous month.

The decline in the China holding “seems to stem from net selling of Treasury bills,” said Chirag Mirani of Barclays Capital Research.

On the whole, foreigners decreased holdings of Treasury bills by 44.5 billion dollars in April, the data showed.

As the largest holder of US Treasury bills, which are crucial to funding Washington’s multi-trillion-dollar recovery plans, China had expressed concerns recently over what it called the safety of its dollar-linked assets.

US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner traveled to Beijing about two weeks ago to reassure Chinese leaders, saying their money is “very safe” despite the US budget deficit, which he pledged to cut.

But state Chinese media expressed opposition to Beijing’s policy of buying massive amounts of US debt, saying the value of China’s assets could be battered as the financial crisis continues.

According to an online poll, 87 percent of respondents considered China’s dollar assets unsafe, the Chinese newspaper Global Times reported this month.

The United States has been running large budget shortfalls since the tenure of Democratic President Barack Obama’s Republican predecessor George W. Bush.

Obama administration officials estimate a deficit of 1.841 trillion dollars for the 2009 budget and 1.258 trillion dollars in 2010.

In recent weeks bond markets have been roiled by worries about the rise in US debt, as China, Brazil and Russia said they planned to purchase bonds to be issued by the IMF as part of the fund’s move to boost resources to help crisis-hit nations.

China was eyeing purchases of 50 billion dollars in IMF bonds while Russia and Brazil were considering those for 10 billion dollars each.

Brazil cut its US bond holdings to 126.0 billion dollars in April from 126.6 billion dollars the previous month while Russia reduced its ownership to 137.0 billion dollars from 138.4 billion dollars.

“While it may seem that they are going to continue to buy US dollars and buy US debt, they are telling the world they are actively seeking alternatives,” said Andrew Busch, a forex strategist with BMO Capital Markets.

“There may not be many alternatives now, but over long enough time frames there will be,” he said.

The new bonds will be offered in the IMF accounting unit, Special Drawing Right (SDR), whose value is based on a basket of currencies, rebalanced daily, in which the dollar represents only a 41 percent share.

It is the dollar’s relative weakness in SDRs that has raised market concerns that some countries are seeking to distance themselves from the greenback, the world’s reserve currency.

The latest Treasury data also showed that net overseas purchases of US long-term securities dropped to 34.3 billion dollars in April from 56.4 billion dollars the previous month.

Brian Bethune, an economist with IHS Global Insight, said it underscored a “rebalancing of risk perceptions” and “should not raise too many alarm bells.”

Obama administration officials estimate a deficit of $1.841 trillion for the 2009 budget and $1.258 trillion in 2010.For the first time in 11 months China’s holdings of US Treasury bonds fell - to $763.5 billion in April. It is a good news for China.

June 4, 2009

Mr Purnell called on Mr Brown to ’stand aside’

Filed under: world news — Tags: , , , — sportsboy @ 11:06 pm

(NFL jerseys)PM told to go as minister quits. He is the third cabinet member in three days to say they are standing down.

James Purnell has stepped down from the cabinet and told Prime Minister Gordon Brown to “stand aside”.

In a letter to several newspapers, the work and pensions secretary said Mr Brown’s continued leadership made a Tory victory “more, not less likely”.

Downing Street said Mr Brown was “disappointed” but would be getting on with the job but David Cameron said the government was “falling apart”.

Mr Brown was set to reshuffle his team within days as he fights to hang on to his tenure as prime minister.

‘Fighting chance’

But in his letter to Mr Brown, published in Friday’s newspapers, Mr Purnell said he owed it to the Labour Party to “say what I believe no matter how hard that may be”.

He said he was not seeking the leadership but wrote: “I now believe your continued leadership makes a Conservative victory more, not less likely. That would be disastrous for our country.”

 

 

He added: “I am therefore calling on you to stand aside to give our party a fighting chance of winning. As such I am resigning from government.”

The BBC understands Mr Purnell only came to his decision to resign on Thursday but is said to have been frustrated for some time.

BBC political editor Nick Robinson said it was the first direct challenge to Mr Brown from a cabinet minister.

Mr Purnell’s resignation was a message to the rest of the Labour Party to make up their minds about Mr Brown’s leadership, he said.

‘Undivided attention’

A Downing Street spokesman said: “The prime minister is disappointed by the resignation of James Purnell, of which he was informed shortly before 10pm.”

He said Mr Brown’s focus over coming days would be “restructuring the government on the big challenges facing the country for the future”, tackling the global economic downturn, trust in Parliament and reforming public services.

“He will continue to give his undivided attention to addressing these great challenges facing our country and putting the interests of the British people first and foremost,” he said.

 

 

But Conservative leader Mr Cameron, repeating his call for an immediate general election, said: “In a deep recession and a political crisis we need a strong united government. Instead we have a government falling apart in front of our eyes.”

Meanwhile, other cabinet ministers have been rallying round Mr Brown.

Defence Secretary John Hutton, said Mr Purnell was a “good friend” but added: “I think he has made the wrong decision because I firmly believe that Gordon Brown is the right man to lead our party and our country.”

Northern Ireland Secretary Shaun Woodward also said he was “deeply disappointed” by Mr Purnell’s decision and that he fully backed Mr Brown.

‘Ultra Blairite’

A source close to Justice Secretary Jack Straw said he was “very surprised and deeply saddened” by the news and “remained very supportive” of Mr Brown.

And the BBC understands Foreign Secretary David Miliband, who was touted as a possible challenger to Gordon Brown’s leadership last year, does not intend to resign and had said he did not agree with Mr Purnell.

Other Labour figures have strongly criticised the decision - former London mayor Ken Livingstone said it was no surprise as Mr Purnell had been “the most ultra-Blairite of ministers”.

“If you were going to get a knife in the back it’s where you would have expected it from,” he said.

 

 

Backbencher Peter Kilfoyle, one of the few Labour MPs not to back Mr Brown for the leadership in 2007, told the BBC: “I’m very dismayed by the attitude of people like Purnell and indeed Hazel Blears.”

He said they had been “self serving” in backing Mr Brown for the leadership and the cabinet should back him now: “They have a wider responsibility than merely their personal careers. It’s also about the future of the Labour Party, not just in government but in the country.”

The news comes as the polls closed across the UK for the European elections and, in England, 27 county and seven unitary council elections.

Secret ballot

Senior Labour backbencher Barry Sheerman told the BBC there should be a ballot of Labour MPs to see if Gordon Brown still has the confidence of the party.

He told the BBC: “This goes far beyond just a few people, this is a large number of us who are really unhappy about the present situation.”

But Labour’s leader in the Lords Baroness Royall defended Mr Brown’s style of leadership on BBC One’s Question Time.

She said: “We haven’t got a media star, we have got a person who works damned hard and is taking us through the economic crisis.”

There have been predictions Labour could be pushed into third or fourth place in the Euro elections behind the UK Independence Party (UKIP), following damaging revelations about expenses claims in the Daily Telegraph.

Mr Brown’s much anticipated reshuffle was pre-empted earlier this week with the news that Jacqui Smith had asked to step down as home secretary.

Fevered atmosphere

She later said she believed Gordon Brown was the right person to lead the Labour Party but was stepping down for her family - who had been “at the forefront” of expenses allegations against her.

Then Hazel Blears announced on Wednesday that she would be stepping down as communities secretary.

In her resignation statement she did not pay the customary tribute to the prime minister, who weeks ago had described her own actions on expenses as “totally unacceptable”.

Alistair Darling’s position as chancellor is also thought to be vulnerable after questions about his expenses.

Some Labour backbench MPs say they are circulating a letter among MPs seeking support for a call on Mr Brown to go.

About 70 Labour MPs would be required to nominate a specific alternative candidate to trigger a leadership contest.

Amid a fevered atmosphere at Westminster - where the expenses saga has dominated the agenda during the election - two junior ministers Beverley Hughes and Tom Watson have also said they are to step down.

An Air France Passenger Plane missing over the Atlantic Ocean

Filed under: world news — Tags: , , — sportsboy @ 10:39 pm

Blog NFL jersey reported that an Air France passenger plane carrying more than 200 passengers and crew is  missing over the Atlantic Ocean. The Air France Airbus 330, 200-series reportedly hit bad weather.  According to the airline, a number of data messages from flight 447 were sent out about 15 minutes later indicating an electrical problem.

The jet was on a night flight from Rio de Janeiro to Paris.  

At a news conference in Paris, an Air France spokesman described that specific chain of events.

“The plane went through turbulence and then a number of automatic messages were transmitted by the aircraft to say that there was a fault,” said the spokesman.  “Around 7:00 [am] Paris time, it was clear that the plane was in deep trouble.”

A government source in Brazil says the plane disappeared from Brazilian radar screens around three-and-a-half hours into the flight. That would put it closer to Brazil than France, but the jet’s last-known location is not precisely known.

Brazilian air force planes on the island of Fernando de Noronha have been searching for the airliner.

France’s ambassador to the west African country of Senegal says French military planes there have also joined in the search.

Meanwhile at Charles de Gaulle airport outside Paris, friends and relatives of those onboard are being taken care of at a special closed off area.
It is a bad news for every victim, especially for their family and friends. Hope they do not suffer too much and the victims can survive well.Air France Passenger Plane Goes Missing Over the Atlantic. http://www.9ico.com provides.

May 15, 2009

North Pole Ice Melt Ends Explorers’ Trek

Filed under: world news — Tags: , , , — sportsboy @ 4:14 am

(nfl jerseys blog)North pole ice is becoming increasingly thinner. Explorers are afraid of it and it may end their trek.

British explorers in northern Canada to measure the thickness of floating Arctic sea ice ended their expedition short of reaching the North Pole due to an early summer ice melt, the team said Thursday.

Explorers Pen Hadow, Ann Daniel and photographer Martin Hartley had planned a three-month journey to the North Pole, but ended their arduous trek Wednesday, approximately 304 miles (490 kilometers) from their destination, said Hadow.

The trio stopped after 73 days, during which they measured the thickness of floating sea ice to provide data to scientists studying the impact of global warming in the region.

“This year, the summer melt came a little early,” Hadow said during a Webcast conference from Resolute Bay in northern Canada. “We would have rather reached the Pole if we could have, but we’ve always regarded (getting there) as the cherry on the cake.”

Information the team gathers could contribute to a better understanding of global warming, which is believed to be the main culprit in the rapidly melting polar ice cap that is freeing up new sea routes and untapped mineral resources on the ocean bottom.

Hadow said the group’s goal was to cover as much distance as possible and gather as much information as possible.

“Along the way we realized (getting to) the Pole was not achievable so we sacrificed it very easily,” he said.

The data will be used to help scientists further understand climate change by getting a better picture of when sea ice in the North Pole will melt completely and not refreeze seasonally.

The trekkers said they captured 16,000 observations and took 1,500 measurements of the thickness and density of the ice and snow by drilling into the striking blue ice.

The group discovered the average thickness of the sea ice was 5 feet (1.5 meters).

“This seems to suggest it was almost all first-year ice. Our science advisers had told us to expect thicker, older ice on at least part of the route, so it is something of a mystery where that older ice has gone. It’ll be interesting to see what scientists think about this,” said Hadow.

He also said there was little snow cover.

Peter Wadhams, a professor of Ocean Physics at the University of Cambridge, said that “the data already sent back shows the team have been traveling on first-year ice and provided an insight into its rate of growth this year.”

Wadhams also heads the Polar Ocean Physics Group in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at Cambridge.

Hadow said the findings would be presented at a conference on climate change in December in Copenhagen, where alternatives to the Kyoto Protocol environmental treaty.

But for now, the group is happy to be on solid ground after trekking amid treacherous snow conditions and temperatures dropping below minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 70 degrees Celsius) with a wind chill.

“It’s delightful to be back (on the ground),” said Daniel. “I had the window wide open last night because I got so used to the cold. But I woke up quite often in the night feeling just luxuriated in a bed. And it’s absolutely wonderful to eat on a plate, with a fork and knife, while sitting on a chair.”

This phenomenon is a warning to people all over the world. The world should take action and try to deal with it. (more news about it in www.9ico.com )

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