Tag Archives: AFP

Cambodia opposition leader returns from exile: party

Cambodia’s newly pardoned opposition leader arrived home from exile on Friday to help his party’s bid to end Prime Minister Hun Sen’s nearly three decades in power, the party said.

Thousands of cheering supporters gathered outside Phnom Penh’s airport and lined the road to the city centre to welcome Sam Rainsy, waving flags and shouting “change change!”

“He has arrived,” Prince Sisowath Thomico, a senior member of the Cambodian National Rescue Party, told AFP after Rainsy returned from France on a flight via Bangkok.

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Japan Airlines flight for Tokyo returns to Boston

A Japan Airlines Boeing 787 that left Boston for Tokyo on Thursday returned to Boston “due to aircraft maintenance”, the company said on its website without elaborating.

Japan Airlines has one of the largest fleets of the Boeing 787 and has had several problems with the new-generation Dreamliner plane since it was allowed to resume flying after being grounded between January and April for serious battery problems.

The plane left from Boston at 12:57pm (1657 GMT) but returned to its airport of departure at around 6:00 pm.

“As a standard precautionary measure due to a maintenance message (fuel pump) indicator, JL007 bound for Tokyo-Narita decided to return to Boston Logan for check and landed safely,” Carol Anderson, a US-based JAL spokeswoman, told AFP in an email.

Boston Logan said on its Twitter site the 787 made “a precautionary return”.

“Flight has landed and is taxiing to gate,” it said.

JAL officials in Tokyo were not immediately available for comment.

Last week, another 787 used by Ethiopian Airlines caught fire at London’s Heathrow airport.

Japanese airlines Japan Airlines and ANA, which has the biggest fleet of the craft, have experienced around a dozen minor complaints with the 787 since it was allowed to resume flying after four months of being grounded.

After months of investigations, US authorities in April formally approved Boeing’s battery fix and Japanese regulators followed suit.

The battery supplier, Japan’s GS Yuasa, has voiced confidence that the system will never cause similar problems again.

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Canadian railways review rules after derailment

Canada’s two largest railways said Thursday they are reviewing procedures for securing stopped trains, pending new federal rules following the derailment of a runaway train in Quebec.

Canadian National (CN) told AFP it is reviewing what it described as already “robust policies” to secure its trains.

Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) meanwhile reportedly issued an internal bulletin announcing changes to its safety operations in anticipation of a Transport Canada order.

The bulletin, cited by the daily Globe and Mail, says parking trains carrying dangerous goods on main lines is now prohibited, and hand brakes must be applied whenever a train is left unsupervised for more than one hour.

“With the recent tragic incident that occurred in Lac-Megantic, Quebec, in preparation to a pending order by Transport Canada, Canadian Pacific is revising our operating instructions,” the companysaid.

In an email to AFP, a CP spokesman added that unattended locomotives outside a terminal or yard will now be locked.

“These enhanced safety and operating rules,” CP spokesman Ed Greenberg said, “are an update to (the company’s) current general operating instructions for our employees” and “were identified from what recently occurred” in Lac-Megantic.

Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway’s runaway oil tanker train derailed and exploded on July 6, flattening part of the picturesque Quebec town of Lac-Megantic and killing up to 50 people.

The railway’s chairman said last week that the disaster appeared to have been caused by an engineer’s failure to properly set hand brakes on the train.

The train was carrying crude oil from the Bakken shale fields of North Dakota in 72 tanker cars through the resort town of 6,000 near the Canada-US border.

It had been scheduled to cross Maine to an Irving Oil refinery in New Brunswick.

Canada’s transportation minister was not immediately available for comment nor to confirm the pending new train safety rules.

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France frees Norwegian neo-Nazi: judicial source

The French authorities on Thursday released from custody a Norwegian extremist who was detained on suspicion of plotting a “major terrorist act”, a judicial source told AFP.

Kristian Vikernes, 40, was detained together with his French wife on Tuesday but investigators found no evidence of a terror plot, the source said.

His wife Marie Cachet was freed on Wednesday.

The pair were brought in from their home in the central French region of Correze over fears Vikernes, who served 16 years in prison in Norway for stabbing a fellow musician to death, was planning an attack.

On Wednesday, Vikernes’s lawyer Julien Freyssinet said that the Norwegian was far from preparing a terror act, describing him as a “survivalist”.

Survivalism is a movement of people who actively prepare for emergencies — by for instance stockpiling food, water and medicine or building protective structures — and sometimes believe a social, political or natural catastrophe is imminent.

He said weapons seized by officers at the couple’s home had been acquired “completely legally and without hiding a thing, as part of a philosophy followed by the couple — that of survivalism.”

The interior ministry said at the time of the arrest that Vikernes was “close to the neo-Nazi movement” and could have been preparing a “major terrorist act”.

However Interior Minister Manuel Valls later conceded no specific target or project had been identified, but authorities had decided to “act before and not afterwards.”

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Wrong hospital? Media paranoia in UK royal baby wait

After more than two weeks camped outside St Mary’s Hospital in London, the media waiting for Prince William’s wife Catherine to give birth are having terrible thoughts — what if they are in the wrong place?

Camera crews, journalists and photographers have been staking out St Mary’s since the beginning of the month after royal officials revealed Catherine would have her baby there.

But as the days tick by with not so much as a royal corgi dog making an appearance, paranoia is setting in.

The Daily Telegraph newspaper on Thursday reported that the Duchess of Cambridge may instead give birth at the Royal Berkshire Hospital, near her parents’ home west of London.

The 31-year-old has been dividing her time in the past four or five weeks between her London base at Kensington Palace and the Middleton’s Bucklebury home, royal sources told AFP.

And the Telegraph noted that if she goes into labour while staying with her parents, the half-hour drive to the Royal Berkshire in Reading may be preferable to risking the 50-mile (80-kilometre) trip through the traffic to central London.

A spokesman for Buckingham Palace told AFP: “There are contingency plans for wherever the duchess might be in the country, and that has always been the case.”

The Royal Berkshire Hospital may be closer but as a purely National Health Service facility, it does not offer the same luxuries as St Mary’s.

Although St Mary’s is also run by the state-funded NHS, Catherine is booked into the private Lindo Wing, which offers plush suites and top quality cuisine.

No such facility exists at the Royal Berkshire, where — if she gives birth there — Catherine might end up staying on a post-labour ward with a number of other new mums.

The palace refused to confirm where the duchess has spent the past week since her reported due date on July 13, or to say whether William was with her.

But the spokesman confirmed the prince has not been at work in northwest Wales, where he is a search and rescue helicopter pilot, since the weekend.

“He’s not on shift,” he said.

Queen Elizabeth II on Wednesday revealed her impatience to meet her third great-grandchild, joking that she hoped it would arrive before she goes on holiday in Scotland next week.

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Syria air raid hits pro-rebel Lebanese region

A Syrian military helicopter fired rockets at a pro-rebel region of eastern Lebanon in the early hours of Thursday, a security source told AFP.

“A military helicopter violated Lebanese airspace and fired four rockets at 01:30 am (2230GMT) in the Arsal area, two of which exploded, causing damage,” the source said on condition of anonymity.

The attack did not cause any injuries.

Arsal is a Sunni neighbourhood in eastern Lebanon that is broadly sympathetic to the Syrian uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, and has become a transit point for Syrian refugees, as well as rebels and their weapons.

The area has been targeted on multiple occasions by Syrian regime forces, including in a June 12 attack that hit the centre of Arsal.

That raid prompted a rare warning from the Lebanese army, which threatened to respond if the attacks continued.

The Syrian conflict has increasingly spilled over into Lebanon, and has raised sectarian tensions in the fragile country, which experienced a devastating 1975-1990 civil war.

Lebanon’s powerful Shiite Hezbollah movement has sent fighters to battle alongside the regime, and many Lebanese Sunnis sympathise with the Sunni-dominated Syrian opposition.

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Navalny pulls out of Moscow polls, calls for boycott

Jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny is pulling out of the Moscow mayoral race and is calling on his supporters to boycott the vote, his election chief said Thursday.

“A decision has been made to boycott the elections,” Leonid Volkov told AFP, saying Navalny has decided to quit the race.

The announcement came just hours after Navalny was sentenced by a Russian court to five years in a penal colony on embezzlement charges.

Volkov said Navalny would formally notify the Moscow Election Commission of his decision shortly.

“It would be strange if we participated in some sort of beating, turned the other cheek,” Volkov said separately in televised remarks, referring to the mayoral race.

The Election Commission on Wednesday registered Navalny, the 37-year-old leader of the protest movement against President Vladimir Putin, as a candidate to run in mayoral polls on September 8.

The move was seen as an ominous sign, with critics saying Navalny would never have been allowed to campaign had he had any real chance at standing in the tightly-controlled vote.

An opinion poll by the independent Levada Centre showed that current Moscow mayor Sergei Sobyanin is set to retain the post with 78 percent of the vote.

Navalny was expected to come second with eight percent.

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Israel 'readying peace gestures' to Palestinians

The Israeli military is preparing to lift some restrictions on Palestinian movement in advance of possible renewed peace talks, army radio said on Thursday.

“It appears that in the next few days the future of negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians will be determined,” its reporter for the Palestinian territories reported.

“In the light of security assessments, two roads in the territories are expected shortly to be opened to Palestinian traffic; one north of Ramallah and one close to Beit Haggai,” he added, referring to a settlement near the southern West Bank city of Hebron.

The radio quoted the military spokesman’s office as saying that the plans were a gesture for the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan and not linked to peace efforts.

The office did not immediately reply to an AFP request for comment.

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas was to meet senior members of his Palestine Liberation Organisation in the West Bank city of Ramallah later on Thursday to brief them on his meetings in Jordan with US Secretary of State John Kerry, a Palestinian official said.

Kerry said Wednesday that his intense diplomacy in six visits to the Middle East was bearing fruit, narrowing gaps between Israel and the Palestinians.

The Palestinians have said that they will not renew peace talks, stalled for almost three years, until Israel agrees to accept as a baseline the borders that existed before the 1967 Middle East war, when it occupied the Gaza Strip and West Bank.

They say Israel needs to freeze all settlement construction in the occupied lands, including in east Jerusalem, which it annexed in a move never recognised by the international community.

Israel rejects such “preconditions”.

Regional Development Minister Silvan Shalom told the radio that easing some restrictions on Palestinians’ daily lives did not constitute bowing to preconditions.

“I think that in the framework of opening negotiations, if we carry out what is known as confidence-building measures which do not endanger security, such things have always been possible as part of a larger context,” he said.

“If it is the judgement of security officials that such a thing does not damage security, then of course we have the possibility to do that.”

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Indian forces shoot dead six protesters in Kashmir

Indian paramilitary troops Thursday shot dead six people protesting outside a Border Security Force station in Kashmir, two police officers said.

The incident happened in Gool, 230 kilometres (143 miles) south of the main city of Srinagar, the officers said on condition of anonymity.

“It is mayhem. Six are dead and dozens injured. The death toll could rise further,” said one.

Protesters had gathered outside the Border Security Force (BSF) station to demonstrate against an incident involving troops at a mosque on Wednesday evening, witnesses said.

The troops had entered the mosque in Gool to complain about the loud recitation of prayers by worshippers during the holy month of Ramadan, the witnesses told AFP.

Worshippers gathered outside the security force station from early Thursday to protest at the incident.

“The BSF soldiers fired indiscriminately, downing protesters left, right and centre,” one witness who declined to be identified told AFP by phone from the nearby village of Dharam.

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Zou Shiming's American dream

China’s two-time Olympic boxing champion Zou Shiming says it is his dream to make it big in the United States, ahead of just his second bout as a professional fighter.

The 32-year-old Zou, who is also a three-time amateur world champion, is attempting to become the first Chinese to make a name for himself on the global stage in a sport that was once banned in his country.

His US promoters Top Rank are hoping the flyweight’s fame in China will open the door to a lucrative and untapped market. But Zou, Olympic gold medallist in 2008 and 2012, is looking in the opposite direction.

“When I first started practising boxing, I saw from television that a lot of fights were held in the US, so it’s my dream to fight there,” he told AFP ahead of his fight on July 27 in Macau against Mexico’s Jesus Ortega (3-1, 2 KOs).

“In recent years, China is paying more attention to boxing. I will start by fighting in Macau or Asia first, and then hope finally I will have the chance to fight in the US.”

The softly spoken Zou, who is from Guizhou province, in southwestern China, says that he wants to be challenging for a world title “within one or two years”. But he admits that it is a steep learning curve.

He defeated the unknown Eleazar Valenzuela on points on his pro debut, in Macau in April, failing to deliver the knock-out that the 15,000-capacity CotaiArena was baying for.

“I think in the first fight I was very inexperienced,” he said at a promotional event in Hong Kong, speaking through a translator.

“Though I have been boxing for many years, it was mainly in the Olympics. I showed many shortcomings in the first fight, but I think that I will be more mature after more bouts.”

Zou has been hard at it in Hollywood with the highly respected trainer Freddie Roach, trying to iron out the habits he has picked up after so many years as an outstanding amateur.

“At the Olympics you can win the fight in a short time. But for the prizefight there are more rounds, so it is more demanding physically. The way you use your strength to punch — or be punched — makes it much more intense.”

Roach, who has trained some of the best in the business including Manny Pacquiao, admitted that he had been disappointed by Zou’s debut.

With the fight later this month set to be shown again live on state television in China, meaning a potential audience of hundreds of millions, Roach hopes Zou will showcase his speed to pull off a convincing win.

“I’ve seen an improvement in the last few months, but then I saw that last time and it didn’t show in the fight obviously. The crowd got to him,” said Roach.

“He didn’t perform as well as I thought he would. But we’ve had another great training camp and the sparring has been going well.

“I have told him that he needs to give the crowd what they want, …read more

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Fighting drug gangs in the notorious Golden Triangle

A Thai police gunboat prowls the waters of the Mekong River searching for the drug gangs that haunt this territory deep in the Golden Triangle, an age-old smuggling route — with a new scourge.

At one time this frontier region, where the remote edges of Thailand, Myanmar and Laos meet, was awash with heroin, flooding over the border from the then world’s biggest opium producer Myanmar.

Times have changed and now the drug of choice is methamphetamine often in the form of “yaba” — Thai for “crazy medicine” — bound for the streets and clubs of Asia.

“It is very difficult to prevent drug trafficking into Thailand,” said general Manop Senakun, commander of police in Chiang Saen, the Thai town at the gateway to the Golden Triangle.

It is estimated that at least 1.4 billion yaba tablets — with an estimated street value of $8.5 billion — are being produced each year in the region.

The drug is mostly made in isolated mobile laboratories hidden in the forests of Shan State in Myanmar, which is still the second largest global source of opium after Afghanistan.

Police “tried every way” to stem the flow of narcotics, Manop said. But it was the notorious slaying of 13 Chinese sailors on the Mekong in 2011 that caused regional authorities to launch a concerted crackdown on trafficking.

China, from where the river snakes, has added its weight to the anti-trafficking efforts.

An operation dubbed “Mekong Safe” — led by Beijing with the involvement of its Golden Triangle neighbours — between late April and late June led to the arrest of 2,534 suspects and the seizure of almost 10 tons of drugs, according to Thai authorities.

China executed Myanmar drug lord Naw Kham for the sailor killings. The two boats involved, found with some 900,000 methamphetamine tablets on board and riddled with bullet holes, have been left to rust in Chiang Saen port.

“The frequent occurrence of drug-related crimes on the Mekong River has been effectively contained,” said the Chinese Embassy in Myanmar in June.

A dedicated Thai unit of 30 policemen, with three boats, now patrols a 17-kilometre (11 mile) stretch of the river border.

But far from being deterred, as the crackdown starts to take effect on the river heavily-armed traffickers are finding alternative routes, with some choosing to trek with their valuable contraband through the jungle from Myanmar.

“(Traffickers) walk in a caravan with 20 to 30 people,” Manop told AFP. “They would have a lot of weapons with them.”

Clashes with the army or the police are common. In one incident in 2012, eight suspected traffickers were killed by security forces and Manop predicts things will only get “more violent”.

Pierre-Arnaud Chouvy, a geographer at France’s CNRS national research centre, said he was “not convinced by the efficacy” of the river crackdown.

“We have a few cases of very high-profile seizures, but no real evaluation of how effective these patrols have been,” Chouvy said, adding that networks tend to be small in scale and “flexible”, so hard to track.

Corruption within the very forces meant to catch the …read more

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China bars GSK executive from leaving amid bribery probe

Chinese authorities have barred the British finance director of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) in China from leaving the country, the company said Thursday as it faces a bribery probe.

But the Shanghai-based executive, Steve Nechelput, has not been detained or arrested, GSK said.

“We have been aware of travel restrictions for Steve since the end of June. His travel is unrestricted within China,” it said in a statement to AFP.

A spokesman for the British Consulate in Shanghai said it was providing him assistance, but declined to go into details.

Chinese authorities allege GSK staff bribed government officials, pharmaceutical industry groups, hospitals and doctors to promote sales.

Police have already detained four top executives of GSK, all Chinese nationals, a ministry of public security official said earlier this week.

Media reports say more than 20 people have been detained in the case, including pharmaceutical and travel industry personnel.

GSK employees gave the bribes directly and through travel agencies and project sponsorship, the public security ministry said last week.

GSK executives also took kickbacks from travel agencies in return for organising conferences, some of which did not exist, according to an interview with one of the detained executives aired on state television.

Chinese state media on Wednesday blasted GSK for being “dirty and devious”, accused the firm of inflating its prices and said the case provided a lesson for others.

GSK has said it “shares the desire of the Chinese authorities to root out corruption” and would “cooperate fully” with the investigation.

“These allegations are shameful and we regret this has occurred,” it said in a statement earlier this week.

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Taliban accuses Malala of smear campaign

A senior Pakistani Taliban commander has written to Malala Yousafzai, the teenage education activist shot by militants, accusing her of “smearing” them and of promoting “satanic” values, while urging her to return home.

Gunmen from the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) shot Malala, now 16, in the head in her home town in Swat last October after she had campaigned for the right of girls to go to school.

She made a powerful speech to the U N on Friday in her first public appearance since the near-fatal attack, vowing to continue her struggle for education and not be silenced by the militants.

In an open letter released Wednesday, Adnan Rasheed, a former air force member turned TTP cadre, said he personally wished the attack had not happened, but accused her of running a “smearing campaign” against the militants.

“When you were attacked it was shocking for me,” Rasheed wrote in English.

“I wished it would never happened (sic) and I had advised you before.”

But he added: “Taliban believe that you were intentionally writing against them and running a smearing campaign to malign their efforts to establish Islamic system in Swat and your writings were provocative.

“… It is amazing that you are shouting for education, you and the UNO (UN) is pretending that you were shot due to education, although this is not the reason… not the education but your propaganda was the issue,” he continued.

“What you are doing now, you are using your tongue on the behest of the others.”

The letter was sent to reporters in northwest Pakistan and its authenticity confirmed to AFP by a senior Taliban cadre who is a close associate of Rasheed. It is understood Malala has not received the letter herself.

Rasheed accused Malala of seeking to promote an education system begun by British colonialists to produce “Asians in blood but English in taste”, and said students should study Islam and not the “satanic or secular curriculum”.

“I advise you to come back home, adopt the Islamic and Pashtun culture, join any female Islamic madrassa near your home town, study and learn the book of Allah, use your pen for Islam and plight of Muslim ummah (community),” Rasheed wrote.

Malala was given life-saving treatment in Britain, where she now lives with her family.

Rasheed was sentenced to death over a 2003 attack on Pakistan’s then military ruler Pervez Musharraf, but escaped from custody in a mass jailbreak in April last year.

He said he had originally wanted to write to Malala to warn her against criticising the Taliban when she rose to prominence with a blog for the BBC Urdu service chronicling life under the militants’ 2007-9 rule in Swat, in northwest Pakistan.

The Taliban have destroyed hundreds of schools across the northwest, an area on the frontline of the country’s bloody struggle against Islamist militants.

But Rasheed said the attacks were necessary because government forces used schools as hideouts and bases.

Gordon Brown, the former British prime minister turned UN special envoy for global education, who has supported Malala since she was shot, issued a caustic response to …read more

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Steam seen in Fukushima Reactor 3 building

Steam has been spotted near a pool storing machinery removed from a crippled reactor at the Fukushima nuclear power plant, its Japanese operator said Thursday.

“Steam has been seen around the fifth floor of the Reactor 3 building,” a TEPCO spokesman told AFP.

The roof of the building was blown off in a hydrogen explosion in the days after the March 2011 meltdowns.

“(The steam) was drifting thinly in the air and it’s not like a big column of steam is spurting up,” the spokesman said.

“Neither the temperature of the reactor nor readings at radiation monitoring posts have gone up.

“We do not believe an emergency situation is breaking out although we are still investigating what caused this.”

The pool is on the fifth floor and stores devices and equipment removed from the reactor.

The incident is the latest in a growing catalogue of mishaps at Fukushima that have cast doubt on TEPCO’s ability to fix the world’s worst atomic disaster in a generation.

A series of leaks of water contaminated with radiation have shaken confidence, as did a blackout caused by a rat that left cooling pools without power for more than a day.

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Blatter pushes for 2022 World Cup in winter

FIFA president Sepp Blatter will push for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar to be moved to the winter after getting a personal taste of the Middle East’s blast furnace climate.

There has been widespread concern over the health dangers posed by staging the tournament in the Gulf in June and July where temperatures rocket to 50 degrees (122 degrees Fahrenheit).

Blatter insisted on Wednesday that he will push to have the World Cup moved despite the effects it could have on domestic leagues when the FIFA Executive Committee meets in October.

“The Executive Committee will certainly follow me,” Blatter was quoted by AFP subsidiary, SID, as telling a two-day sports conference in Austria.

Blatter said that a recent visit to Jordan and the Palestinian Territories had brought home the dangers of the intense heat.

He expressed his fears despite the Qataris’ ambitious plans to build air-conditioned arenas.

“It is clear that you cannot play in this heat in the summer and we have to consider the players,” he said.

“It is certainly possible to cool a stadium, but not an entire country. That’s why we need to have courage in the Executive Committee and to create awareness among the leagues that we need to change something.”

Qatar plans to spend around ??65 billion ($101 billion, 76 billion euros) on infrastructure projects, including building new high-tech stadiums, which the Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee said would likely cost $4-5 billion.

Average temperatures in Qatar are markedly cooler in December, with highs of 24C and lows of 15C.

In June this year, UEFA general secretary Gianni Infantino added his weight to calls for the 2022 World Cup to be staged later in the year.

“I fully share the view that you have to play in the best period for football; that is not June or July in Qatar. This is an issue that FIFA has to sort out,” he said.

“The sooner they do it, the better. The decision for 2022 was taken in 2010, so in 12 years you can organise yourself.”

Qatar has already said it was ready to host the World Cup in summer or in winter.

“Various figures from the world of football have raised preferences for hosting in the winter,” the Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee said in a statement earlier this year.

“We are ready to host the World Cup in summer or winter. Our planning isn’t affected either way.”

The committee said it planned to provide air-conditioning in stadiums, training area and public zones, and would do so with renewable energy.

“We will forge ahead with implementing and developing this technology. Our commitment to this is grounded in the legacy it will offer for Qatar and countries with similar climates.”

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Death toll in Guinea ethnic violence rises above 50: medic

The bodies of 54 people burned alive or hacked to death in ethnic clashes in the west African state of Guinea have been identified, a medic said on Wednesday, indicating that the death toll would continue to rise.

The violence broke out in the southern forest region early Monday when petrol station guards from the Guerze tribe in the town of Koule beat to death an ethnic Konianke youth they had accused of stealing.

Fighting quickly spread to the nearby provincial capital N’Zerekore, 570 kilometres (350 miles) southeast of Conakry, leaving 80 people wounded and several homes destroyed.

Authorities had put the death toll at 16 but the figure began to rise sharply as bodies were collected from the streets as an uneasy calm returned to the city on Wednesday.

The doctor, from a N’Zerekore hospital, said a number of bodies in the mortuary had not yet been identified because several “have no head, while others have no identity papers”.

“For the 54 identified, we went on their identity documents. That has helped us a lot,” he said, adding that the bodies would be returned to the Guerze and Konianke communities.

Security forces were deployed to break up the fighting on Monday but were initially unable to quell the violence despite a curfew imposed by N’Zerekore prefect Aboubacar Mbop Camara.

A number of witnesses told AFP Guerzes and Koniankes had been attacking one another with machetes, axes, sticks, stones and firearms, setting fire to houses and cars.

Guerze chief Molou Holamou Azaly Zogbelemou was among those wounded and taken to hospital, Camara told AFP.

A resident of N’Zerekore told AFP an “uneasy calm” had descended and there had been “a slight lifting of the tension”.

Most inhabitants had shut themselves into their homes during the bloodshed but people were beginning to venture outside again, said the resident, adding however that the violence could restart at any time.

Another resident and a medical source both described a fragile calm in N’Zerekore, the second-largest city in Guinea with an estimated population of up to 300,000.

Security forces, medical staff and aid workers took advantage of the lull to recover bodies from the streets.

Communal violence is common in the region, near the border with Liberia, where clashes between the two tribes regularly break out over religious and other grievances.

The indigenous Guerze are mostly Christian or animist, while the Konianke — seen as newcomers — are Muslims considered to be close to Liberia’s Mandingo ethnic community.

In Liberia’s civil war, which ended in 2003, rebels fighting the forces of then president Charles Taylor drew much of their support from the Mandingo community.

The Guerze, known as Kpelle in Liberia, were generally considered to be supporters of forces loyal to Taylor, who was jailed last year for “aiding and abetting” war crimes in neighbouring Sierra Leone.

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Blast kills 3 children at swimming area in Iraq

A bombing killed three children at a popular swimming area in Iraq on Wednesday, following a similar attack two days before, police and a doctor said.

The bomb was planted near Al-Shakha river in the Muqdadiyah area northeast of Baghdad.

The explosion came after mortar rounds struck a swimming area on the Tigris river north of the capital on Monday, killing four people, including a child.

Muqdadiyah has been hit by several attacks in recent days, including a bomb targeting worshippers leaving a Sunni mosque on Tuesday, killing four people and wounding 15.

The children killed on Wednesday were also Sunni.

A plague of sectarian violence killed tens of thousands of people in Iraq in past years, and there are persistent fears that tensions will again boil over into all-out conflict.

In the northern city of Kirkuk on Wednesday, two bombings wounded two members of the Kurdish peshmerga security forces, a senior officer and a doctor said.

Kirkuk is part of a swathe of northern territory that the autonomous Kurdistan region wants to incorporate over the strong objections of the federal government in Baghdad — a dispute that officials and diplomats warn is one of the main threats to Iraq’s long-term stability.

Wednesday’s attacks come as Iraq struggles with its worst violence since 2008.

More than 2,600 people have been killed so far this year, according to AFP figures based on security and medical sources.

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Jihadists 'expelled from flashpoint Kurdish Syrian town'

Kurdish fighters have expelled jihadists from the Syrian flashpoint frontier town of Ras al-Ain and well as the nearby border crossing with Turkey, a watchdog said on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, a car bomb attack killed at least seven people, among them a child, southwest of Damascus, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

Kurdish fighters took total control of Ras al-Ain “after 24 hours of fighting. The (jihadist) groups were expelled from the whole of Ras al-Ain, including the border post” with Turkey, said Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman.

Earlier, the Britain-based group had reported clashes pitting Kurds against Al-Nusra Front, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) and other groups.

Ras al-Ain is home to a majority Kurdish population and is of strategic importance given its location close to Turkey.

Kurdish fighters are trying to ensure neither the regime of President Bashar al-Assad nor the opposition takes control of its areas.

The clashes between Kurdish fighters and jihadists broke out after Al-Nusra Front attacked a convoy of Kurdish women fighters, Abdel Rahman said.

Nine jihadists and two Kurdish fighters have been killed since the fighting broke out, the Observatory said.

Activists in Ras al-Ain said members of the jihadist groups had taken advantage of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, which began last week, to try to impose their extreme version of Islam.

In the early days of the Syrian conflict, when opponents of the Assad regime were desperate for assistance from any quarter, jihadist fighters were welcomed but a spate of abuses has fuelled a major backlash.

Elsewhere, a child and six men were killed when a car bomb attack hit Kanaker, in Damascus province, said the Observatory.

In the north of the capital, troops renewed their shelling campaign on rebel parts of Barzeh, while clashes raged in the neighbourhood, the group added.

And in the central city of Homs, an army onslaught aimed at taking back rebel districts went into its 18th day, activists said.

Troops launched a new attempt to break into the rebel area of Bab Hud, which like other areas of Homs has been under tight army siege for more than a year, Homs-based activist Yazan told AFP via the Internet.

Meanwhile, “the humanitarian situation continues to deteriorate day after day because of the suffocating siege”, said Yazan.

The lack of medical equipment in Homs’ flashpoint areas means “there is a growing need to evacuate dozens of wounded, who urgently need operations that cannot be performed here”, he added.

More than 100,000 people have died in Syria’s 28-month war, says the Observatory.

Wednesday’s violence comes a day after at least 112 people were killed across Syria, the group added.

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Tourists among 23 hurt in Thai train derailment

Foreign tourists were among 23 people injured when an overnight sleeper train derailed in Thailand early Wednesday, the national rail operator said.

The Bangkok-Chiang Mai express service was carrying almost 300 passengers when seven carriages came off the tracks in the northern province of Phrae, according to the State Railway of Thailand.

Eighteen foreign tourists suffered minor injuries, including visitors from Australia, France, Spain, China, Japan and the United States, as carriages toppled onto their sides.

“Derailments happen quite often,” said State Railway of Thailand governor Prapat Chongsanguan, adding that the tracks were in the process of being upgraded.

“Initially we think that this time it’s due to old rail track,” he told AFP.

Services on the route were suspended for the day.

Safety standards are generally poor in Thailand and road traffic accidents are also common.

Thailand’s cabinet in March approved a plan to spend $68 billion on a high-speed railway and other transportation mega projects to drive the nation’s economic development.

Under the seven-year scheme, which has yet to be approved by parliament, 200 high-speed trains will whizz across the kingdom on four lines linking the capital Bangkok with the north, south and east of the country.

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Prisoner killed, 4 police hurt in Indian Kashmir attack

Suspected rebels killed a prisoner and wounded four police officers and a passer-by in Indian Kashmir when they lobbed a grenade at a police vehicle Wednesday, police said.

The vehicle was hit while passing through a crowded market in the Batamaloo area of the state capital Srinagar. A passer-by also suffered injuries in the attack.

Shakeel Ahmad Ksana, a prisoner who was being shifted to a jail in the vehicle, died while receiving treatment in a local hospital, a police statement said.

“It was a random attack on police. No one has been arrested for the attack,” local police official Afadul Mujtaba told AFP.

Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan by a UN-monitored boundary known as the Line of Control. But both countries claim the Himalayan region in full and have fought two of their three wars over the territory.

Armed violence in Kashmir has declined during the last decade but recent months have witnessed more attacks by separatist militants on Indian forces.

On June 24 heavily armed rebels ambushed an army convoy and killed eight soldiers on the outskirts of Srinagar, on the eve of a rare visit to the region by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

About a dozen armed rebel groups have been fighting Indian forces in Kashmir since 1989 for independence or merger with Pakistan. The fighting has left tens of thousands, mostly civilians dead.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News