Tag Archives: Norway

1 dead, 2 wounded in Danish harbor shootout

Danish police say one man was killed and another suspect wounded in a shootout after police attempted to search a boat that they said was carrying a large haul of marijuana.

Police spokesman Thomas Kristensen says one policeman was also wounded in the operation in Aalbaek harbor, located in northern Denmark, and one other suspect was apprehended.

Kristensen said Monday that police found 250 kilograms (550 pounds) of marijuana on the boat.

The nationality of three suspects was not immediately clear, although Norwegian media were reporting that the three were from Norway.

Such shootouts are extremely rare in Denmark. Kristensen said a special bureau will take over the investigation to determine whether police were justified in using their firearms.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Austrian Jewish leader says anti-Semitism growing

The leader of Vienna’s Jewish community says the number of anti-Semitic incidents in Austria reported to his office have doubled over the past year and adds that Jews are under duress elsewhere in the EU as well.

Oskar Deutsch tells the Kurier newspaper that the Jewish community registered 135 such incidents last year, compared to 71 in 2011.

In comments published Monday, he named Hungary, Sweden, Norway, Finland, France and Greece as the EU countries where Jews are most under threat, adding that fearful Jewish families in Hungary have recently started to immigrate to Austria.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

British government extradites Al Qaeda suspect to US

Police in Britain have extradited a terror suspect to the United States to face charges that he took part in an alleged Al Qaeda plot to detonate explosives aboard the New York City subway system.

Authorities handed over Abid Naseer, 26, to U.S. authorities on Thursday.

Prosecutors want Naseer to stand trial in the United States for his alleged role in a terror campaign that would have also struck at targets in Britain and Norway.

U.S. prosecutors told a British court hearing his extradition case two years ago that they plan to prove that Naseer collected bomb ingredients, conducted reconnaissance and communicated with Al Qaeda operatives. The alleged activities were part of a foiled New York plot and another plot to bomb a shopping area in the northern English city of Manchester.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Anti-Depressants In Pregnancy Not Linked To Stillbirth And Infant Deaths

A pregnant woman taking anti-depressant SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) drugs does not have an increased risk of stillbirth or infant mortality. The finding was published in JAMA and came from new research involving almost 30,000 females from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden who were taking SSRI drugs during pregnancy…
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Medical News Today

Mexico bishop inspires, infuriates with activism

The white-haired bishop stepped before some 7,000 faithful gathered in a baseball stadium in this violence-plagued northern border state. He led the gathering through the rituals of his Mass, reciting prayers echoed back by the massive crowd. And then his voice rose.

Politicians are tied to organized crime, Bishop Raul Vera bellowed while inaugurating the church’s Year of Faith. Lawmakers’ attempts to curb money laundering are intentionally weak. New labor reforms are a way to enslave Mexican workers.

How, Vera asked, can Mexicans follow leaders “who are the ones who have let organized crime grow, who have let criminals do what they do unpunished, because there’s no justice in this country!”

In a nation where some clergy have been cowed into silence by drug cartels and official power, Vera is clearly unafraid to speak. That makes him an important voice of dissent in a country where the Roman Catholic Church often works hand-in-hand with the powerful, and where cynicism about politics is widespread and corrosive.

Vera’s realm is a wide swath of Coahuila, a state bordering Texas that’s become a hideout for the brutal Zetas drug cartel. It’s where the current governor’s nephew was killed in October and the former governor, the victim’s father, resigned last year as leader of the political party that just returned to power with newly inaugurated President Enrique Pena Nieto.

Marked by his unvarnished speech, the Saltillo bishop’s voice now carries beyond his diocese here, especially when he weighs in on hot issues such as drug violence, vulnerable immigrants and gay rights.

In late 2007, Mexico City’s Human Rights Commission denounced death threats against Vera and a burglary of the diocese’s human rights offices. The following year, after Coahuila became the first Mexican state to allow civil unions for gay couples, a move the bishop endorsed, Vera was invited to speak at a U.S.-based conference for a Catholic gay and lesbian organization. In 2010, he was awarded a human rights prize in Norway.

Anonymous critics have hung banners outside the cathedral asking for what they called a real Catholic bishop. And last year, the 67-year-old was summoned to the Vatican to explain a church outreach program to gay youth.

Natalia Niño, president of Familias Mundi in Saltillo, told the Catholic News Agency last year that Vera had placed too much focus on supporting the gay community.

“A pastoral commitment to homosexual persons is necessary and welcomed, but not at the expense of the family and a solid pastoral plan for marriage and family, which is unfortunately being neglected in the diocese,” she said.

Vera, who has had government bodyguards before, said he was foregoing similar security despite the criticism and threats. Such measures were rare and frowned upon in Saltillo, he said.

“I’m not the only one exposed, there are lots of people exposed who work with immigrants, with the missing,” Vera said. “How do I cover myself? Them?”

Mexico‘s Bishops Conference did not respond to repeated requests for an interview about Vera. The church’s hierarchy in Mexico did issue a statement in 2010 congratulating Vera on his human rights prize, and last year, the church condemned anonymous threats against him.

Vera’s office often lends more weight to his words, especially when he speaks up about human rights, said Emiliano Ruiz Parra, a Mexican journalist and author of a new book that portrays Vera and other “black sheep” of the church in Mexico.

“Among the defenders of human rights he is the one who hedges the least, he says things the way they are,” Parra said before Pena Nieto’s Dec. 1 inauguration. “He’s not afraid, for example, to take on the president, the one who’s leaving or the president-elect.”

Vera’s homily on an October Sunday in Monclova included a lengthy diatribe about an alleged vote-buying scheme involving grocery store gift cards critics say were distributed by the Institutional Revolutionary Party, known as the PRI. Citing press reports, the bishop told the crowd organized crime paid for the scheme and helped Peña Nieto’s victory. He also labeled as “collaborators” anyone who took a gift card in exchange for their vote.

“What we’re seeing now is nothing other than the reaccommodation of the criminal groups with the new government teams,” Vera said later as he raced back to Saltillo for another Mass. “The criminal groups always have their agreements with those who are in the state governments, in the federal government.”

An industrial hub on the high desert about an hour west of Monterrey, Saltillo had long been known as a quiet haven in Mexico, distinguished by its auto manufacturing and a modern museum exhaustively detailing the surrounding terrain.

In recent years, however, the area has fallen victim to the drug violence plaguing other parts of Mexico. In 2011, 729 murders hit the state, compared to 449 the year before and 107 in 2006, according to preliminary figures released by the government this summer. Four bodies were found hanging from a Saltillo overpass earlier this month.

Until the nephew of Gov. Ruben Moreira was killed in early October, the political class had showed little concern for violence, Vera said.

“Fear of the conditions that Mexico is going through with the insecurity, with so much violence, makes us silent, and Don Raul is a strong voice who says what the rest of us are too scared to say,” said Maria Luz Lopez Morales, a Vera friend and self-professed atheist who runs literacy programs for women in rural areas outside Monclova.

Vera arrived in Saltillo in 2000, after serving as the co-bishop in a deeply divided diocese in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas, where Zapatista rebels were battling government troops. He came with a reputation as a social crusader.

“Ever since I arrived here, as I came from Chiapas and I wasn’t a person who was going to support the government, since this moment they decided that my image needed to be restrained,” Vera said. He pointed to critical coverage from a local television network where a host once displayed Vera’s picture surrounded by flames of eternal damnation. Vera said he believed the host was paid to do the government‘s bidding.

In February 2006, Vera celebrated Mass at the Pasta de Conchos coal mine where 65 miners had perished and spent days with their families hammering the mine’s owners, government officials and union leaders for dangerous working conditions.

Five months later, he traveled to Castanos, a small town near Monclova, where soldiers had been arrested in connection to the sexual assaults of more than a dozen prostitutes. He and his longtime collaborator Jackie Campbell started their own investigation, leading the diocese’s human rights office to successfully push to try some of the soldiers in civilian courts, where several were sentenced.

Mysterious cars followed Vera and Campbell during that time. Campbell’s home phone line was cut and Vera was threatened. Campbell eventually moved to Argentina for three years to escape the harassment and to pursue graduate studies.

Vera has also demanded investigations into the thousands of migrants who have gone missing while passing through the state and clamored for a DNA database to identify bodies. In an email, the Rev. Pedro Pantoja, who oversees the diocese’s migrant programs, said he’s enjoyed total support from Vera and called his commitment to social causes “prophetic.”

What’s drawn perhaps the most controversy has been Vera’s stand on gay rights, which even drew attention from Rome. In 2001, the Rev. Robert Coogan, an American priest in Saltillo ordained by Vera, suggested starting an outreach program to gay youth, after a teenager came to him when his parents threw him out of the house. Vera lent his support to the program, called Comunidad San Elredo, and later escaped reprimand when called to the Vatican to explain it.

“It flows out of his conviction: The church is for everyone,” Coogan said.

Parishioner Julia Castillo, of Saltillo, said Vera wasn’t just making headlines with his bold stands. He was also inspiring Mexicans at a time when many are feeling besieged.

“He talks about all of the injustice there is right now, of all the danger there is, that we have to stick together to fight against the corruption, above all in the government and the police,” Castillo said. “We like the way he is.”

___

Associated Press writer Galia Garcia-Palafox in Mexico City contributed to this report.

Source: Fox World News

Increasing competitiveness through equality

Countries and individual businesses are always on the search to increase their competitive edge, giving themselves an advantage against their competitors in the never-ending quest for profits and growth. A new report out of Norway is giving countries a clue as to how they could give themselves that competitive edge – through equality. According to the report, the countries that have done the most to promote equal opportunities also have access to far more talent than countries that have fallen behind with regard to equality. Their results were presented this summer at the annual conference of the Academy of International Business, attended by no less than 1,400 academics in Washington D.C.
Source: Phys.org

Guyana to get $45M from Norway for saving forests

The South American country of Guyana says it will receive an additional $45 million in cash from Norway as a reward for protecting its Amazonian rainforest.

President Donald Ramotar says the money will help fund a hydroelectric project in central Guyana and provide electricity and Internet service in remote jungle communities.

Ramotar said in a statement Saturday that Guyana has so far received $115 million of a $250 million grant it negotiated with Norway as part of a 2009 agreement. The money serves as incentive for Guyana to protect its lush forests through sustainable mining, timber harvesting and other projects.

Most of Guyana‘s 730,000 people live on a narrow strip of coastal land, leaving the interior largely unoccupied. About 70 percent of Guyana‘s land mass is covered in forest.

Source: Fox World News

Philippine government, rebels agree on truce

The Philippine government and communist rebels have agreed on a nationwide truce to help restart peace talks to end one of Asia‘s longest-running insurgencies.

The Communist Party of the Philippines says it has ordered the New People’s Army to stop attacks on military and police forces starting Thursday. The cease-fire agreement was reached following a meeting of negotiators this week in Holland where rebel leaders live in exile.

The rebels had earlier declared a month-long cease-fire in a southern province ravaged by a typhoon that killed more than 1,000 people. Thursday’s announcement says this has been extended to Jan. 15, and will cover other areas where the guerrillas operate.

The negotiators have agreed to meet again early next year. Norway is brokering the talks.

Source: Fox World News

Norway's Statoil buys US shale gas land

Norwegian energy company Statoil ASA says it has bought 70,000 acres of land rich in gas and liquid gas in West Virginia and Ohio.

The $590 million deal expands the company’s assets in the Marcellus Shale gas deposits in the Appalachian region.

Company spokesman Baard Glad Pedersen said Statoil bought the latest acreage from unlisted companies Grenadier Energy Partners, Protege Energy and PetroEdge Energy.

Statoil entered the Marcellus in 2008 through a partnership with Chesapeake Energy.

Statoil also owns shale land in Texas and operates leases in North Dakota and Montana.

Norway‘s government owns 67 percent of Statoil’s shares.

Source: Fox World News

Anti-Islam groups rally in Norway

About 40 people gathered for an anti-Islam demonstration in Oslo, and were met with jeers and chants of “no Nazis on our streets” from a larger group of counterdemonstrators.

The protest was staged by the Norwegian Defence League, a group inspired by the larger English Defence League, which has carried out rowdy anti-Islam protests in Britain. The defense leagues say they’re not racists but “patriots” opposing a perceived Islamization of Europe.

Police spokesman Finn Belle said Saturday’s demonstration was peaceful and police successfully kept the two sides apart. He said three counterdemonstrators were detained for disturbing the peace and were fined before being released.

The anti-Islam gunman who killed 77 people in Norway last year expressed support for the English Defence League and similar groups, though most denounced his attacks.

Source: Fox World News

EU receives Nobel Peace Prize

European leaders are in Norway to collect the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize, awarded to the European Union for fostering peace on a continent ravaged by war. Nobel committee chairman Thorbjoern Jagland will present the prize, worth $1.2 million, at a ceremony in Oslo City Hall later Monday. Some 20 European government leaders are to attend the ceremonies and an evening banquet. This year’s prize comes against a backdrop of protests as the EU grapples with its worst financial crisis, which is causing deep tensions within the union, soaring unemployment and requiring massive austerity measures. Nobel laureates in medicine, chemistry, physics and literature will be feted at similar ceremonies in the Swedish capital, Stockholm. The ceremonies are always held on the anniversary of award founder Alfred Nobel‘s death in 1896.
Source: Fox World News

EU leaders accept Peace Prize in anti-EU bastion

European leaders arriving in the frosty Norwegian capital to receive this year’s Nobel Peace Prize are coming to a wealthy and deeply EU-skeptic nation that has twice voted to stay outside the bloc grappling with one of its worst financial crises since the union was founded. Nobel committee chairman Thorbjoern Jagland will hand the prestigious award on Monday to a troika of leaders — EU Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission head Jose Manuel Barroso and the president of the EU Parliament, Martin Schulz — against a backdrop of demonstrations in this northern stronghold of anti-EU sentiment. The Norwegian Nobel Committee announced in October that it was granting this year’s prize, worth $1.2 million, to the European Union for fostering peace on a continent ravaged by war — a decision derided by many who see the EU as an elitist super state that erodes citizens’ rights and their identities. About 20 European government leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, will attend the award ceremony at Oslo City Hall, followed by a banquet at the Grand Hotel. It will be the biggest gathering of EU leaders in the Scandinavian country to date, sparking a major security operation exceeded only by President Barack Obama‘s visit in 2009, when he won the peace prize. Measures include a two-day flight ban over the capital, armed police securing key sites with military helicopter backup and strict border controls. As the leaders begin to arrive Sunday they will be met by demonstrators marching under the banner: “EU2012: No peace prize for our time.” A rally backed by three former peace prize winners — the International Peace Bureau, Mairead Maguire and Adolfo Perez Esquivel — and more than 40 Norwegian and international organizations will pass through central Oslo, near the hotel housing the delegates. But, demonstration organizers said, they decided on a one-day protest before the prize awarding ceremonies to avoid confrontation. “We do not want trouble. This will be peaceful and dignified,” said Heming Olaussen, head of Norway‘s anti-EU movement. The European Union grew out of the conviction that ever-closer economic ties would ensure that century-old enemies like Germany and France never turned on each other again, starting with the creation in 1951 of the European Coal and Steel Community, declared as “a first step in the federation of Europe.” The Nobel committee said in its award citation that it was a sign that “through well-aimed efforts and by building up mutual confidence, historical enemies can become close partners.” About 60 years later, the union has grown into a 27-nation bloc with a population of 500 million, with other nations eagerly waiting to join, even as European unity is being threatened by a debt crisis that has stirred deep tensions between north and south. The crisis has caused unemployment to soar, sending hundreds of thousands into the streets to protest austerity measures, and is threatening the euro — the common currency used by 17 of its members — and even the structure of the union itself. It is also fueling extremist movements such as Golden Dawn in Greece, which opponents brand as neo-Nazi. European leaders will celebrate the peace prize in a prosperous, oil-rich nation of 5 million on the outskirts of Europe, far from the financial woes. Norwegians have rejected EU membership in two referendums, with the “No to EU Alliance” movement claiming more than 27,000 members, including members of leading political parties and trade unions, Cabinet ministers, farmers and fishermen. “(The strong alliance) explains why Norway is staying out of EU . and I think it will be forever,” Olaussen says, describing this year’s award as “a provocation to a vast number of Norwegians.” The EU delegation in Oslo sees the prize as a chance to soften Norwegians’ image of the union. But resistance is tough, even though Norway implements most EU legislation through the Agreement on the European Economic Area. Moreover, the Schengen pact allows Norwegians the right to travel passport-free within some European countries. Janos Herman, EU ambassador to Norway, says he hopes the prize will help highlight the EU as a global player with roots in the rule of law and humanitarian values. “We hope very much that the prize will give an opportunity to widen the picture,” Herman said. The other Nobel Prizes — in medicine, chemistry, physics and literature, and the Nobel Memorial Prize in economic sciences — will be handed out at a separate ceremony on Monday in the Swedish capital, Stockholm. The ceremonies are always held on the anniversary of award founder Alfred Nobel‘s death in 1896. ___ Associated Press writer Matti Huuhtanen contributed to this report from Helsinki, Finland.
Source: Fox World News

Citing crime, Norway to close Venezuela embassy

Norway says it will close its embassy in Venezuela due to rampant crime in the South American country. Norwegian officials have decided to move the diplomatic mission to Bogota, the capital of neighboring Colombia. The government of President Hugo Chavez estimates that more than 14,000 people were killed in Venezuela last year. That gave the country a homicide rate of 50 per 100,000 people and made it one of the most violent countries in Latin America and the world. Norwegian Ambassador Lars Vaagen said Wednesday that the embassy will be moved from Caracas next year.
Source: Fox World News