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Disclosure of First Nations salaries raises eyebrows - Toronto Star

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 30 Juli 2014 | 16.14

OTTAWA—Records showing a native councillor with construction contracts worth $300,000, a chief with a six-figure salary, and an eight member band council each making about $6,500 annually are among dozens of revelations that emerged Tuesday under a new transparency law targeting First Nations leaders.

The information came from multiple First Nations communities across the country trying to meet a deadline set by the new First Nations Financial Transparency Act, which requires them to publish a range of annual business and financial records, including salaries and benefits.

The communities were previously only required to submit these records to the government without sharing them with the public.

Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada posted some of the records from at least 20 communities on its website Tuesday, including four Ontario First Nations, two from Manitoba, two from Saskatchewan and 10 from British Columbia.

In its own records, the Snuneymuxw First Nation in B.C., revealed that Eric Wesley, a councillor, received $307,201 in contracts for construction related services in the last fiscal year from his own community.

Chief John Thunder of the Buffalo Point First Nation in Manitoba earned $129,398 for the year in salaries and benefits. The community he represents is made up of less than 200 people.

But another community, the Delaware First Nation Morovian of the Thames Band had eight council members who earned an average of less than $6,500 for the year.

The Assembly of First Nations, which represents more than 600 aboriginal communities across the country, said the law was part of a "heavy-handed" Harper government propaganda strategy. The organization noted that the average elected official in aboriginal communities was making about $37,000 per year, based on 2010 estimates.

"Everything points to (an attempt) to build on the propaganda that aboriginal governments are dishonest," said Ghislain Picard, interim chief of the Assembly of First Nations, in an interview. "That's the thinking that's out there and that's what they keep building on."

Wesley didn't respond to a request for comment.

Thunder told the Star in an email, that his salary was a bargain as a chief executive officer who has brought a lot of business to his community.

"I have created an economy on our nation that is worth more than anything we will ever receive from them and (it) is the reason for getting rid of their tainted money," said Thunder. "I'm the most affordable chief executive officer in Canada, and that does not even include my 30 years of ground breaking leadership."

Communities that fail to post the information online could be ordered in court to do so, or have their federal funding yanked, based on the new law. The legislation won't apply to Inuit communities in Nunavut, which fall under a separate agreement with its own accountability rules.

Colin Craig, the prairie region director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, said the legislation is a long time coming.

He said his organization has pressured the government to change its transparency laws for First Nations since 2009. He said the group was getting complaints at that time from band members who were denied access to the records, despite concerns about waste and excessive salaries.

The new law will allow them to view these records anonymously on the Internet.

"That's especially important, because a lot of band members have told us they've been labelled troublemakers for asking for this information, or else they've been bullied for trying to get it," he said.

Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt declined to comment Tuesday. His office sent the Star a statement he released last week saying that First Nations, like all Canadians, deserve accountability and transparency from their governments.

But First Nations leaders say the requirements, first proposed as a private member's bill by Kelly Block, a backbench Conservative MP from Saskatchewan, go beyond disclosure rules for other levels of government.

Thunder suggested that the law could harm his community by giving competitors access to information about its business with the province of Manitoba.

"I don't have a problem with their money being identified, but this would never fly in the non-aboriginal business world."

Picard said the government is always trying to find ways to discredit First Nations people in Canada.

"It reflects the ideology of this government since 2006," said Picard. "They're already working very hard to find that one community that might be outside what they would (describe) as the model First Nation and then just pass that brush over to all First Nations."

Transparency by the numbers:

582: The number of First Nations bands that are estimated to be subject to the new transparency and disclosure law.

$6,462: Average honoraria of council members at the Moravian of the Thames First Nation in Ontario.

$36,845: Average salary of elected First Nations official, according to 2010 estimate by the Assembly of First Nations.

$129,318: Total salary and expenses for John Thunder, chief and CEO of Buffalo Point First Nation in Manitoba.

$307,201: Value of contracts for construction related services given to Eric Wesley, a councillor at Snuneymuxw First Nation in British Columbia.


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Xi Shows How to Catch a Tiger as All Paths Lead to Zhou Yongkang - Bloomberg

Zhou Yongkang, former member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Chinese Communist Party Central Committee.

To catch a tiger in China, it turns out first you need to swat a lot of flies.

Less than a month after Xi Jinping took the helm of the Communist Party in 2012, a brief report appeared on the state-owned news agency saying a senior official in a southwestern province was under investigation for graft.

While announcements on corruption probes were nothing new, later developments showed the move was the opening salvo by Xi, 61, in what's become the farthest-reaching takedown of a top Chinese leadership figure and his networks of influence since the aftermath of Mao Zedong's death.

When the initial target, Sichuan Province deputy party chief Li Chuncheng -- accused of enriching himself and his family with state money -- was followed by the downfall of two fellow Sichuan officials, a pattern began to emerge. The individuals all had ties to Zhou Yongkang, a hardliner who backed disgraced Bo Xilai and under whom the domestic-security budget grew bigger than defense before he retired in 2012.

By last month, the campaign by Xi, who pledged to net both "tigers and flies," parlance for cadres from the top to bottom ranks, spanned hundreds of Communists. It all came to a head yesterday with the official announcement of Zhou's purge.

Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg

Xi Jinping, China's president. Close

Xi Jinping, China's president.

Close

Open
Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg

Xi Jinping, China's president.

Zhou, 71, was a tiger as big as they come, with power stretching across government, industry and security forces. He was a onetime member of the elite Politburo Standing Committee that rules China and a former supremo of the oil industry. His roles gave him influence comparable to being Dick Cheney, who shares a background in oil, J. Edgar Hoover of the FBI and Standard Oil founder John D. Rockefeller all rolled into one.

Blood Ties

Each of those who vanished from public view could be connected to him as colleagues, subordinates and business associates, and some even by blood.

Taking down such a powerful man was unthinkable under the previous generation of leaders. Doing so violated an unwritten rule of elite factional politics against probing senior-most officials even after they left office, in order to protect patronage systems used to guarantee smooth power transitions after decades of political turmoil.

The steady progression of the Zhou-faction's dismemberment became apparent in reports in the tightly controlled Chinese media, which toward the end was freely speculating when the coup-de-grace would be delivered against its chief.

Preparing Public

How Zhou was slowly encircled reveals the care that Xi took to overcome opposition, keep the party united and prepare the public for a scandal that might damage the party's legitimacy. It's also a cautionary tale for a Communist elite that has accumulated wealth for decades while governing without public accountability.

"At least in the reform era, no other member of the Standing Committee has been attacked for corruption," said Joseph Fewsmith, a political science professor at Boston University who specializes in China's elite politics. "The fear has always been that if factional infighting is taken to the Standing Committee level, then it might deepen rifts and make maintaining the appearance of unity more difficult."

Like peeling the layers of an onion, the Zhou project has worked through layers of associates. First his old comrades from when he led Sichuan province were rounded up. Next, investigators ran through his colleagues in the energy business. They picked up in-laws of his, and his son. After that, they took down his associates in the Ministry of Public Security. They left the toughest for last -- his inner circle of senior advisers and personal secretaries.

Bo Xilai

And before they dealt with Zhou, the leadership first had to address his ally Bo Xilai, the populist Chongqing party boss with eyes on a top party slot in Beijing who was removed after his wife was convicted of murdering a U.K. businessman.

Along the way, investigators plowed through three provinces and the national broadcaster, CCTV. The campaign has felled a top general who was a Politburo member, and two incumbent members of the Central Committee, which elects the Politburo, as well as thousands of local officials.

"You work from the bottom up," Fewsmith said. "You have to accumulate evidence to build a case and to persuade politically powerful people that it is necessary to take the extra step."

Campaign's Scope

Xi's nationwide campaign to rein in graft has ensnared more than 480 officials spanning all of China's provinces and largest cities. Almost a quarter of those officials or senior executives in state-owned companies with a vice-minister rank or higher toppled during the past 18 months have direct links to Zhou, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Officials are typically detained in secret, without the opportunity to address publicly charges.

"There are many political considerations and implications in making such a decision," said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, a political-science professor at Hong Kong Baptist University. "A consensus needs to be reached at the top of the party."

Leading the investigation is the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, or CCDI, an internal party watchdog veiled in secrecy that only last year started a website and tipsters hotline.

Wang Qishan, 66, an economic specialist who rose through the banking sector before running Beijing's successful bid for the 2008 Olympics and then getting a seat on the Politburo Standing Committee, is bringing increased financial savvy to the role of anti-corruption tsar.

Lead Detectives

The CCDI doesn't have formal power to arrest or press charges. In practice, however, the zhongjiwei, as it's called in Chinese, is among the most powerful and feared organizations. It is able to detain indefinitely and investigate any one of China's roughly 87 million Communist Party members -- effectively every government official or executive at the state-owned enterprises that dominate China's economy in key sectors such as finance, energy and transportation.

The CCDI sits parallel to the government's law enforcement authorities, and outside of Zhou's onetime control of the domestic-security apparatus. It answers only to the party hierarchy and ultimately the secretary general, President Xi.

CCDI units can report suspicions directly to Xi, state media say, letting them bypass mid-ranking bureaucrats who might seek to stymie any investigations.

'Direct Line'

"The direct line between the dispatched central investigators and Xi showed the leadership's resolve to crack down on corruption," said Zhu Lijia, professor of public affairs at the Chinese Academy of Governance in Beijing. It shows that "no matter how senior the suspect is, whoever the case might involve, the investigation will get to the bottom of it," Zhu said.

It's unclear what specifically triggered the investigation into Zhou, though there are plenty of theories. Zhou had backed Bo Xilai, the charismatic former head of the city of Chongqing. Bo was a candidate for higher office before he was jailed for life on charges including bribery after his wife was convicted of murdering a British businessman who allegedly helped ferry the family wealth abroad.

Steve Tsang, director of the China Policy Institute at the University of Nottingham, said party insiders told him the last straw might have been when Zhou ordered the phones of Xi and other Politburo members tapped ahead of the 18th Party Congress in November 2012, when Xi was appointed secretary general.

Kicking Off

Just 22 days after Xi's appointment, the government announced the detention of Li Chuncheng, one of two deputy party secretaries of Sichuan, the western province famous for its spicy food and rugged mountains.

Sichuan's capital, Chengdu, garnered headlines in 2012 as the location to which Bo Xilai's onetime police chief Wang Lijun fled with evidence that Bo's wife was involved in the murder of Briton Neil Heywood. Wang took refuge at the U.S. consulate in the city.

Zhou served as provincial party chief of Sichuan, one of China's four most populous provinces, from 1999 to 2002.

Li Chuncheng was the first of at least 18 Sichuan-based politicians and business executives tied to Zhou who have been detained, ousted or probed. Among them was Tan Li, vice governor of Hainan at the time of his downfall, who worked for 37 years in Sichuan, including as propaganda chief in Chengdu.

By August last year, the investigation turned to the oil industry, where Zhou had risen through the ranks for three decades from a technician in Daqing, China's most important oilfield, during the Cultural Revolution. He ascended to lead what later became China's biggest oil producer, China National Petroleum Corp.

Oil Industry

The highest-ranking executive detained in the probe came in September with the fall of Jiang Jiemin, 58, the former chairman of China National Petroleum, who had been promoted to head of a commission overseeing state-owned companies.

At least 13 oil-related executives have either been punished or are under investigation. More than a hundred officials and staff were queried by disciplinary agents, according to Caixin magazine.

By the end of 2013, Zhou was powerless to stop the spread of stories on China's internet and in its media that he was destined for a fall. His family became tabloid fodder in an apparent attempt to turn public opinion against him.

Zhou Yongkang's son Zhou Bin was reported by Caixin magazine to have done business deals with Liu Han, the Sichuan businessman sentenced to death after being convicted of running a billion dollar mafia empire involved in murder and extortion. Zhou Bin had attended university in Texas before moving back to China to dabble in tourism and oil-services companies with his wife and in-laws.

Tourists Flock

Chinese tourists started flocking to the outskirts of Wuxi, the ancestral Zhou family home in coastal Jiangsu province, after Chinese media broke the story of arrests of family members, upending a longstanding taboo on reporting on senior officials' private lives. During his high-school years in Jiangsu, Zhou changed his name to Yongkang -- meaning always safe and healthy in Chinese -- from Yuangen because a classmate had the same name.

Zhou's two brothers are accused of using his influence to get rich, according to the Beijing News. Photos and a video taken from a drone flight showed a large, white-walled compound ringed with security cameras. Family members owned luxury cars and a dealership for high-end liquor, and for a price would use their connections to settle business disputes, reports in state media said.

Piercing Stronghold

By December, the CCDI started piercing Zhou's stronghold in the security sector, detaining an ex-deputy minister, Li Dongsheng. Li, a former propagandist with no law-enforcement experience who had worked for the state broadcaster CCTV for more than two decades and then the propaganda ministry, was promoted by Zhou to the public security ministry in 2009.

Li had introduced Zhou to his second wife, a journalist for CCTV's finance channel 28 years his junior, the South China Morning Post reported, citing a person close to the Supreme People's Procuratorate. The two married in 2001.

Since then, other CCTV employees have been accused of corruption, including the popular host of a business program, Rui Chenggang -- famous for his nationalist criticism of a Starbucks Corp. coffee shop's presence in Beijing's Forbidden City -- and his boss.

The investigation later swept into north China's coal-rich Shanxi province. A provincial mayor was accused of buying his position from a Zhou relative, according to state media. Eventually, at least 15 senior provincial officials were toppled, including the brother of former President Hu Jintao's top aide.

Dropping Pretext

China's media dropped any pretext that Zhou wasn't the target on March 14, when the Global Times, which is owned by the party's official People's Daily, was the first Chinese outlet to identify explicitly Zhou Bin's father as Zhou Yongkang.

"He is already being tried in the tabloids," said Erica Downs, a specialist on Chinese energy companies at the Brookings Institution in Washington, speaking before the official announcement of the probe into Zhou himself on July 29. "Chinese media has been given the green light to go after him and his family."

The final preparatory act came July 2, when three of Zhou's former personal secretaries were expelled from the party for corruption and had their cases forwarded to prosecutors on the same day. Tan Hong was a senior member of the leadership's Secret Service-like bodyguard. Yu Gang was one of the party's top public security officials. Ji Wenlin was Zhou's longest-serving secretary, assisting him from 1998 to 2008 before getting promoted to vice governor of Hainan province.

Top Aides

In all, six of Zhou's former personal secretaries, who perform a function similar to chiefs of staff in American politics and who are groomed for higher office, have been investigated. They include a former vice governor of Sichuan and two senior executives at China National Petroleum.

"They can be very powerful," Zhu at the Chinese Academy of Governance said of personal secretaries. "They are often treated like the extended family of the leader and nobody would want to offend them."

The day after the three cases were formally handed over to prosecutors, the People's Daily website ran a flowchart illustrating "how to beat big tigers" in the Politburo. At the bottom of the diagram was a pithy conclusion: "No special zone for corruption, no off-limits zone for anti-corruption."

Alumni Reunion

The last time Zhou was seen publicly was at an alumni reunion on China's National Day, Oct. 1, at the China University of Petroleum.

He has been under virtual house arrest since December, according to a South China Morning Post report.

During the 18-month campaign against Zhou and his networks, none of China's senior or retired leaders spoke publicly about his fate. Analysts see that silence as an implicit consent in his downfall.

"There is consensus within the party that it must purge itself, and that if it doesn't then its crisis will deepen," said Kerry Brown, the director of the China Studies Centre at the University of Sydney. Xi and his supporters concluded that Zhou and his clan "grew corrupt because they did not adhere sincerely to orthodox ideology and were looking after themselves," Brown said. "So they needed to be taken out."

To contact the reporters on this story: Ting Shi in Hong Kong at tshi31@bloomberg.net; Shai Oster in Hong Kong at soster@bloomberg.net; Aibing Guo in Hong Kong at aguo10@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Chris Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net Neil Western


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Flying on your own, the Alberta Conservative way - Macleans.ca

I was pretty sure the press had squeezed the last ounce of public entertainment out of ex-Premier Alison Redford's outrages against the Alberta treasury. Her attempt at constructing a secret premier's residence in Edmonton's Federal Building was always going to be hard to top, and for brazen North Korea-esque megalomania it still takes the cake. But just when you think the CBC's investigative team of Rusnell & Russell have served their last scoop, there's suddenly a waffle cone in your hand shedding chocolate dip and sprinkles all over the place. [Enough dessert metaphors. Do you need a cookie? -ed.]The pair has got hold of a draft report by Alberta's Auditor-General which adds a shocking new twist to the tales of government aircraft abuse already written into the Redford legend. Redford's staff, according to Auditor-General Merwan Saher's report, apparently made a habit of ensuring that the premier would not have to fly in the same aluminum tube as civil servants (ew!) or other MLAs (God no!) by faking flight bookings—adding fictional passengers in order to crowd persons with official business out of the empty seats, then removing the names when the manifest was printed out.Redford and her last chief of staff, Farouk Adatia, are denying any knowledge of the practice. In the report Saher says the accusation was supported in interviews both with the premier's own staff and with "multiple staff" from the Treasury Board. In other words, it does not seem to have been the world's best-kept secret, even if the details actually were kept from the premier whose ethical lapses have shared a weird theme of paranoia and isolation. (Her Federal Building hideaway was to include "sleeping and grooming quarters with clothing storage for an adult and one teenager".)The new revelation about Redford's cavalier use of government aircraft is on an echelon of seriousness above the previous ones, since it involves the active falsifying of government data—and data that pertains to aviation, at that. That seems like the kind of thing that might get the police interested in a breach-of-trust case, and maybe Transport Canada would have a thing or two to ask about it, too. (Or maybe totalitarian air security is just for peons, and federal regulators are totally cool about air carriers screwing around with their own records.)The leaders of Alberta's Wildrose and Liberal parties called for an RCMP investigation into the faked passenger lists, as did PC leadership candidate Jim Prentice. Rival Ric McIver mentioned "proper authorities", but fellow candidate Thomas Lukaszuk used a little more PC-style finesse, saying that as premier he would ask an "independent legal expert" to review "expenses and travel arrangements" made by Redford and her staff. "I'd pick up the phone and call the cops" was apparently not the preferred answer to this mini-quiz.Lukaszuk added that he would consider ejecting Redford from the Progressive Conservative caucus, helpfully reminding us that she is still the Progressive Conservative member for Calgary-Elbow. The Wildrose Party and the NDP have gotten nominations underway for the anticipated 2016 election, but the PCs have yet to start their process. It was a bit of a surprise that Redford did not resign from the Assembly when she stepped aside as premier in March, and the surprise surely grows with each passing day. It hardly seems credible that Redford can continue to live in Alberta, much less work in any position involving more responsibility than a Slurpee machine, but perhaps she is clinging to Elbow as a last lone bargaining chip.
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Canada Accuses Chinese Hackers of Cyberattack - TIME

TIME World Canada

Canada Accuses Chinese Hackers of Cyberattack

Canada singles out China for a cyberattack on the government's leading research body at a time when Ottawa hopes to increase its oil sales to Beijing

In an unprecedented move, Canada accused Chinese hackers of infiltrating a computer network at the National Research Council on Tuesday, although Beijing denied responsibility for the assault.

Canadian officials lodged an official complaint to Beijing that state-backed hackers penetrated the council — the government's primary research body that works with many companies, including major manufacturing firms. "The government takes this issue very seriously, and we are addressing it at the highest levels in both Beijing and Ottawa," said Caitlin Workman, a Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Department spokeswoman, according to Bloomberg.

Yang Yudong, a spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Ottawa, told Reuters that the claims against Beijing were based on "groundless speculation."

China has garnered a slew of media attention for reported cyberattacks, most recently by a New York Times report revealing that Chinese hackers broke into a U.S. government agency in March, but this is the first time that Canada has accused Beijing of hacking. Canada's claim of the security breach also comes at a time when the country is hoping to bolster its oil sales to China.

The council's computers are being quarantined from the rest of the government system as a precaution. "We have no evidence that data compromises have occurred on the broader government of Canada network," Corinne Charette, Canada's chief government information officer, said in a statement, as quoted by Agence France-Presse.


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Gaza conflict: At least 15 dead after tank shells hit UN school - CBC.ca

Israeli tank shells slammed into a crowded UN school sheltering Gaza war refugees Wednesday, killing 15 Palestinians and wounding 90 after tearing through two classroom walls, a health official and a spokesman for a UN aid agency said.

The Israeli military had no immediate comment.

The strike in the Jebaliya refugee camp came amid Israel's heaviest air and artillery assault in more than three weeks of Israel-Hamas fighting. Tuesday marked the deadliest day so far, with 128 Palestinians killed, according to a Gaza health official.

The overall Palestinian death toll rose to at least 1,258, with more than 7,100 wounded, said the health official, Ashraf al-Kidra. Israel has lost 53 soldiers and three civilians.

Israel Palestine Gaza conflict

A Palestinian woman holds her grandson, who medics said was injured in an airstrike in Gaza on Wednesday. Its estimated that 43 people were killed overnight. (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters)

On Wednesday, the military said it hit 75 sites, including five mosques it claimed were being used by militants. At the same time, intense tank shelling was reported in some areas, including in Jebaliya.

Tank shells hit a UN school in the camp early Wednesday, said Adnan Abu Hasna, a spokesman for the UN Relief and Works Agency. The agency is sheltering more than 200,000 people displaced by the fighting at dozens of UN schools in Gaza.

'Where will we go next?'

Starting at around 4:30 a.m., several shells hit the compound of the Abu Hussein school, a few minutes apart, said the principal, Fayez Abu Dayeh. He said shells hit two classrooms and a bathroom.

In one of the classrooms, the front wall was blown out, leaving debris and bloodied clothing. Another strike tore a large round hole into the ceiling of a second floor class-room.

About two hours after the strike, hundreds of people still crowded the courtyard, some dazed, others wailing.

Aishe Abu Darabeh, 56, sat on the ground with her relatives, just a few metres from the destroyed classroom.

Israel Palestine Gaza conflict

Many Palestinians are reeling in neighbourhoods throughout Gaza after the heaviest day of bombardment since renewed fighting between Israel and Hamas began three weeks ago. (Finbarr O'Reilly/Reuters)

"Where will we go?" she asked. "Where will we go next? We fled and they (the Israelis) are following us."

Four of the dead were killed just outside the school compound, two in their home and two who were struck in the street after returning from pre-dawn prayers, their relatives said.

The bodies of two members of the al-Najar family, 56-year-old Shaher and his 41-year-old brother, Bassem, were laid out in one of the rooms of their small home, surrounded by wailing relatives.

Outside the gate, another relative held on to his crying son, hugging him tight and saying: "I'm here, I'm not going anywhere."

'No place is safe in Gaza'

Al-Kidra, the health official, said at least 15 people were killed and about 90 wounded in the strike on the school.

Abu Hasna, the UN agency spokesman, said the international community must step in.

"It's the responsibility of the world to tell us what we shall do with more than 200,000 people who are inside our schools, thinking that the UN flag will protect them," he said. "This incident today proves that no place is safe in Gaza."

The deadly strike came as Israel intensified its air and artillery assault on what it says are Hamas targets in Gaza.

Israel has vowed to stop the Hamas rocket and mortar fire that has reached increasingly deeper into its territory and to destroy a sophisticated network of Hamas military tunnels used for attacks in Israel.

For its part, Hamas has so far rejected ceasefire efforts unless its demands are met, including a lifting of a punishing blockade.

The military said that since fighting began July 8, Israeli forces have hit 4,100 targets in Gaza, about one-third connected to the militants' ability to launch rockets at Israel.

An army statement said that since Tuesday morning, troops have demolished three more tunnels leading from Gaza to Israel. Hamas has used such tunnels to sneak into Israel to carry out attacks.

The army said 32 tunnels have so far been located but did not say how many remain.

Rockets found at Gaza school: UN

The UNRWA said it had found a cache of rockets at one of its schools in the Gaza Strip Tuesday and deplored those who had put them there.

Spokesman Chris Gunness condemned those responsible for placing civilians in harm's way by storing the rockets at the school but he did not specifically blame any particular party.

Gunness said the body had called in a UN munitions expert to dispose of the rockets and make the school premises safe, and added that he could not get to the site due to fighting in the area.


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Ebola victim widow: I fear an outbreak in the US - Telegraph.co.uk

His wife Decontee Sawyer, speaking from her home in Coon Rapids, in the US state of Minnesota, said her husband had planned to come home for two of his three daughters' birthdays next month.

She had learned that her husband caught the disease from his sister, who fell ill and died of Ebola. He did not know at the time that she had Ebola, Sawyer said, as the virus shares symptoms with other diseases including malaria.

Ms Sawyer said: "We ought to be concerned about that. If we're not, we're kidding ourselves. If we think that it can't come to the US and that's another fear of mine. Because we've already lost Patrick and we're losing tons of people there. And we don't need that killer to come here as well."

No cases of Ebola have been confirmed in the US, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Monday it posed little risk to the general US population, but it is causing some to cancel travel plans and stirring fear in Minnesota, which has the largest Liberian immigrant population in America.


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Changes afoot for aboriginal treaty talks and resource development - The Globe and Mail

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 29 Juli 2014 | 16.14

The Conservative government is launching more flexible options for aboriginal treaty talks after setbacks to its ambitious resource development plans.

The announcement signals Ottawa's desire to give its stagnant British Columbia treaty process a boost by negotiating smaller, incremental treaties where possible and signing deals with aboriginal groups outside the formal treaty process.

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It is also promising to improve its nation-wide approach to aboriginal consultation, which has been at the heart of a string of court defeats for the federal government as it attempts to speed up resource projects like mining and new pipelines, particularly in Western Canada.

Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt made the announcement on Monday in Vancouver via a news release and was not available to answer questions.

The plans are in response to recommendations in a November, 2013, report from Douglas Eyford, who was appointed last year by Prime Minister Stephen Harper as Canada's special federal representative on West Coast energy infrastructure.

Mr. Eyford's report called for better relations between governments and aboriginals in order to build the trust required to reach agreement on resource development. However, trust is in short supply at the moment when it comes to aboriginal relations and the Harper government.

While the Prime Minister won high praise with his 2008 apology for Canada's residential schools history, his government has inspired resentment over its approach to resource development and education reform. The Assembly of First Nations is leaderless because of internal disagreement over how to work with Ottawa.

Mr. Valcourt's announcement also comes on the heels of a Supreme Court ruling in June that for the first time recognized the existence of aboriginal title on a particular site in B.C. – a decision that put aboriginals on a new footing, in part because it said they still own their ancestral lands if they did not surrender them through treaties.

Anne Johnson, a Queen's University community relations expert and PhD candidate in mining, said Ottawa appears to be redoubling its efforts to persuade First Nations people they would benefit from resource projects such as the Northern Gateway pipeline to the B.C. coast.

"It's a step forward," she said. "But I think the government is looking at it through their own lens, which is that development is the highest good and a desirable outcome."

Historic treaties and modern land agreements cover most of Canada, but B.C. is a clear exception. According to Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada, 57 groups representing two-thirds of all First Nations people in the province are currently participating in the B.C. treaty process. Since the negotiations were launched in 1993, the government has signed and implemented three modern treaties.

Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, the president of the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, called the government's announcement a "misguided" attempt to calm jitters among industry stakeholders.

"This is a pathetic effort to revitalize the treaty process in the aftermath of a dramatic change to the legal landscape," he said, referring to the Supreme Court decision. "It's going to take more than that."

Monday's announcement includes an offer from Ottawa to facilitate shared territory disputes between aboriginal groups in relation to major resource development projects. It is also offering to stop clawing back federal transfers for health, education and social development based on an aboriginal government's own sources of revenue. Ottawa will also resume treaty fisheries negotiations in B.C., which had been deferred as part of a public inquiry into the Fraser River Sockeye population.

"Our goal is to work in partnership so we can seize opportunities to promote prosperous communities and economic development for the benefit of all Canadians," Mr. Valcourt said in a statement.

Follow us on Twitter: Kathryn Blaze Carlson @KBlazeCarlson, Bill Curry @curryb

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Russia 'violated 1987 nuclear missile treaty', says US - BBC News

29 July 2014 Last updated at 07:46

Russia has violated a key arms control treaty by testing a nuclear cruise missile, the US government says.

Russia tested a ground-launched cruise missile, breaking the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty signed in 1987 during the Cold War, the US said.

A senior US official did not provide further details on the alleged breach, but described it as "very serious".

The bilateral agreement banned medium-range missiles with ranges between 500 and 5,500 km (300 to 3,400 miles).

The US claims come at a time of heightened tensions between the two sides, with the US criticising Russia for its alleged involvement in the conflict in Ukraine.

'Prohibited items'

A senior US official, who was not named, said in a statement that the testing of the missile was "a very serious matter which we have attempted to address with Russia for some time now".

"We encourage Russia to return to compliance with its obligations under the treaty and to eliminate any prohibited items in a verifiable matter," the official added.

US President Barack Obama has written to Russian leader Vladimir Putin over the matter, officials say.

This is the first time the US government has made its accusations public, though the issue has simmered for years, the BBC's Paul Blake in Washington reports.

In January, the New York Times reported that US officials believed Russia had begun testing ground-launched cruise missiles as early as 2008.

The US State Department had said at the time that the issue was under review.

The 1987 treaty is at the heart of American-Russian arms control efforts, and was signed by then-Presidents Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in the final years of the Cold War, our correspondent says.


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Netanyahu warns Israel to prepare for long Gaza conflict, blasts kill at least 10 - Washington Post

GAZA CITY — Israel pounded the Gaza Strip early Tuesday in some of the heaviest bombardments since the conflict began after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned his country the mission will be longer and bloodier than previously thought, dashing any hope it could end soon despite intense international efforts to bring about a cease-fire.

Israeli air strikes struck a fuel tank off Gaza's only electricity plant early Tuesday, forcing it to shut down, according to Palestinian officials. The attack is almost certain to cut power completely to the more than 1.7 million residents of Gaza, who were only getting electricity about three hours a day.

Israeli air strikes also struck the home of one of the top leaders of Hamas, the Islamist militant group that runs Gaza, as well as Hamas' Al Aqsa TV broadcast center, a finance building and the homes of local mayors. Along the coast of the tiny seaside enclave, Israel struck at least four times, striking the sea port and shaking hotels where scores of international journalists are staying.

Palestinian officials said at least 40 people were killed overnight, bringing the death toll on the Palestinian side to some 1,100 people, about 70 percent of them civilians.

The Israeli military said five Israeli soldiers were killed in a battle Monday evening when militants from Gaza infiltrated southern Israel via a tunnel from Gaza. A gunfight broke out, leaving at least one militant dead, as well as five soldiers, bringing the total number of Israeli soldiers killed in the three-week-old conflict to 53, the largest toll since its 2006 war with Lebanon. Hamas mortar and rocket attacks from Gaza have also killed two Israeli civilians and a Thai worker.

Multiple rocket barrages from Gaza overnight sent people scurrying to shelters in Tel Aviv, Israel's commercial capital, in the dead of the night.

Rebuffing appeals from President Obama, the United Nations and others for an immediate cease-fire, Netanyahu said Monday in a televised address, "We will not finish the mission, we will not finish the operation, without neutralizing the tunnels" through which Hamas fighters have sought to infiltrate Israel. The tunnels, he said, "have the sole purpose of destroying our citizens, killing our children."

In Gaza City, explosions Monday rocked a neighborhood and left at least 10 people dead, including children playing on a street, as a brief lull on one of Islam's holiest days gave way to fresh attacks and tragedy.

Palestinian health officials said the deaths were among 18 reported in Gaza on Monday, the start of the Muslim Eid al-Fitr holiday capping the end of the fasting month of Ramadan. They said 70 people were injured.

Hamas officials blamed Israeli airstrikes for the blasts at the al-Shati camp, also called Beach Camp. A spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces denied firing at the neighborhood and attributed the explosions to failed rocket launches from Gaza militants.

Reporters said that a shell or rocket also crashed into a medical facility in the Shifa Hospital compound in Gaza City but that there was no serious damage and that it was unclear whether there were any deaths or injuries from that strike. Hamas and the Israeli military each denied responsibility for the blast.

In a text message to journalists, Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri called the strike on Beach Camp "a massacre" and vowed that "this crime will not break our will, and the occupation will pay a price."

Later, Hamas militants fired three rockets into southern Israel, as revenge, they said.

At Shifa Hospital, the best-equipped in the coastal enclave, chaotic scenes unfolded as the dead and the wounded arrived, some by ambulance, some carried in the arms of relatives. One woman was shaking uncontrollably and screaming, "My brother, my brother!" One man was crying in front of the mangled corpse of his father.

Naji al-Deen was seated on a chair, staring blankly, his clothes covered in blood.

Like hundreds who had come to the hospital, he was from the al-Shati camp, a seaside neighborhood filled with the families of refugees from the 1948 war that created the Israeli state. On Monday, it was a death zone. Children had been playing on a portable swing set brought in to celebrate the holiday, as well as in the narrow, tree-lined street, witnesses said. About 4:30 p.m., the blast occurred.

"It was Eid, and the children wanted to play," said Deen, his voice cracking. "Then we heard the explosion. I saw my son running covered in blood. There were kids torn to pieces."

Deen said he carried his son to the hospital, where he was being treated for his injuries. At least seven children were killed, witnesses said.

There were signs of rising hostilities Monday evening. Israeli media reported that militants had sneaked into southern Israel via a tunnel. The reports said that there was an exchange of fire and that five militants were killed.

Sirens sounded across southern, central and northern Israel, warning people to seek shelter from incoming Gaza rockets.

The Israeli military made cellphone calls and sent text messages to thousands of Palestinians living in the Shijaiyah, Zeitoun and Jabalya neighborhoods, warning them to evacuate immediately and head for Gaza City. Similar mass messages have preceded large strikes and incursions by Israel recently.

"If the terrorist organizations in Gaza think they can break Israel and its citizens, they will come to understand in the next few days that this is not the case," said Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon.

The day started quietly, with many Palestinians hoping to celebrate Eid al-Fitr, typically a joyous time of parties. Israel mostly held its fire overnight, shelling only a site in the northern Gaza Strip in response to rocket fire there. But it turned out to be the briefest of respites in Gaza.

In an emergency meeting that stretched into early Monday, the U.N. Security Council urged Israel and Hamas to "accept and fully implement the humanitarian cease-fire into the Eid period and beyond," allowing for the delivery of urgently needed assistance to Palestinians, who cannot leave the territory.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon again appealed to Israel and Hamas to end the bloodshed.

Netanyahu heaped scorn on the U.N. statement, saying it focused on "the needs of a murderous terrorist organization that is attacking Israeli civilians and does not address Israel's security needs, including the demilitarization of the Gaza Strip."

In a telephone conversation, Netanyahu told Ban that the United Nations had ignored Hamas attacks on Israeli civilians and the group's use of civilians as human shields.

On Sunday, Obama had also urged an immediate humanitarian cease-fire, according to the White House.

In Washington on Monday, U.S. officials confirmed that Israeli authorities had detained a 15-year-old American citizen for allegedly taking part in violent protests in East Jerusalem this month. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the U.S. government was urging a quick resolution of the case of Mohamed Abu Nie, arrested July 3. Israeli officials alleged that he had a knife and threw rocks and attacked police during a protest, Psaki said. She added that the U.S. government was concerned about reports that he had been beaten while in custody.

Raghavan reported from Gaza.


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Ebola: More than doctors needed to contain West Africa's unprecedented outbreak - CBC.ca

Doctors alone aren't enough to contain West Africa's deadly Ebola outbreak, which has already infected, and in some instances killed, key medical personnel, including prominent Western and local physicians.

Quebec doctor Marc Forget, who has been on the front lines of the epidemic in Guinea for seven weeks, told CBC News that past Ebola outbreaks were contained quite quickly with the intervention of international groups such as Doctors Without Borders working in conjunction with a country's ministry of health.

This time, he says, "the magnitude of the disease is unprecedented," and a stronger response is required, both in resources and personnel — including water, sanitation and logistics specialists, as well as medical staff.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, says one of the big challenges facing the three West African countries fighting the epidemic is that "people are not seeming to even admit, in some cases, that there is a problem, not believing that Ebola is there.

"There have been some very unusual perceptions that it's the health workers that are actually bringing the Ebola in," Fauci said in an interview with TV2Africa.

He also cited the lack of resources for appropriate care and treatment, and noted that another challenge is that the disease is no longer clustered in small, underpopulated regions, but is now showing up in larger centres "where there's a high density of population."

The fast-acting Ebola virus produces a violent hemorrhagic fever that leads to internal and external bleeding, and has already killed over half those infected in the current outbreak, according to the World Health Organization.

As of July 23, the number of Ebola cases in West Africa reached 1,201, with 672 deaths.

The outbreak is devastating large areas of three countries. Guinea has had the most deaths, 319; Sierra Leone has had the most cases, 525; and hundreds are affected in Liberia as well.

Physicians infected

Dr. Sheik Umar Khan

Sheik Umar Khan, head doctor fighting the Ebola virus in Sierra Leone, had treated more than 100 Ebola victims before getting the deadly disease himself. (Umaru Fofana/Reuters)

Currently, two Americans, Dr. Kent Brantly and missionary Nancy Writebol, are receiving treatment for Ebola in Monrovia, Liberia's capital. They are both with the American medical charity Samaritan's Purse.

Ugandan doctor Samuel Muhumuza Mutoro died from the virus on July 1 in Liberia.

So did Liberian government official Patrick Sawyer, who died July 25 in Nigeria, becoming that country's first Ebola case. (The hospital where he was treated is now under quarantine.)

On Saturday, Dr. Samuel Brisbane, one of Liberia's most high-profile doctors, died from the disease.

And in Sierra Leone, the top Ebola doctor, Sheik Umar Khan, is receiving treatment.

While these high-profile cases garner media attention, the World Health Organization says "stepping up outbreak containment measures, especially effective contact tracing," is what's now needed.

Quebec doctor returns from the battlefront

Quebec's Forget agrees. He left Africa on July 9, after working in Guinea for seven weeks with Doctors Without Borders, the main aid organization in that battle.

Marc Forget, Ebola doctor

Dr. Marc Forget returned to Canada in July after seven weeks in Guinea with Doctors Without Borders, fighting the unprecedented Ebola outbreak in West Africa. (MSF)

At night, Forget treated patients at the group's clinic in Guéckédou, the epicentre of the epidemic, then during the day he did outreach.

That requires responding to alerts when someone is sick in a village. Everyone who has been in contact with an infected person displaying symptoms is at risk, so Forget and his team needed to check the patient, do contact tracing and then follow up with those people.

For the patient, "If we have any suspicion, we bring him back in a special ambulance so he's isolated, and we explain to his family and the community why he needs to come to the centre," Forget told CBC News during a telephone interview from Montreal.

Outreach also requires that whenever someone tests positive for Ebola, it's essential to decontaminate their home. "We burn, for example, the mattresses, decontaminate the walls and everything with chlorine solution, so people can go back home safely," Forget explains.

Certificate of recovery provides reassurance

The Doctors Without Borders team also takes the few survivors back to their villages and give them a certificate of recovery to fight the stigma toward cured patients.

Ebola - Guinea - Saa Simbiano

Saa Simbiano, along with his mother, shows off his certificate of recovery after receiving treatment for Ebola from Dr. Marc Forget at the Doctors without Borders centre in Guéckédou, Guinea. (MSF)

"If we don't give them any certificate of recovery, then it's sometimes very difficult. They are cured but then they are rejected from the community because people don't understand what's going on."

Forget says that in Guinea, "there's so much misunderstanding and fear about the disease" that community education is critical. "There's a lot of paranoia" about Ebola and even about the outreach programs.

Sometimes people "think it's a foreigner thing that was brought by Médecins Sans Frontières [Doctors Without Borders] and we're spraying the houses and we give them Ebola," he says.

"We faced resistance, we faced hostility. In some villages they completely shut down, they're throwing rocks at us, at ministry of health authorities, Red Cross workers."

Safe burial

Another challenge in trying to contain Ebola is the very strong cultural beliefs in that area of Africa.

Ebola treatment centre, Sierra Leone

A nurse receives a suspected Ebola patient inside the high-risk area at the Doctors Without Borders treatment centre in Kailahun, Sierra Leone, on July 9. (Sylvain Cherkaoui/Cosmos/MSF)

As Forget explains, the No. 1 contamination risk is touching the body around the time someone has died from Ebola.

"They do rituals before they bury the body that involves washing the bodies and even, sometimes, sleeping with them, the dead person."

So after someone dies at a treatment centre, the Doctors Without Borders staff bring the family to the centre and do what they call a safe burial.

"We wash the body and we put them in a body bag, but with the zipper open so they can see the face, and we bring the body to the village," in conjunction with the Guinea Red Cross, Forget says.

"People can still do a burial process but in a safe way so they don't touch the body … they can still pray and perform ceremonies but without touching the body.

"When that is understood, things get easier for us," he notes.

Forget says he may return to Africa in October after working in Northern Canada, and hopes others will volunteer.


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Fighting stops MH17 investigators reaching Ukraine crash site - CNN

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Dutch Justice Ministry says fighting has prevented international teams from accessing site
  • Head of the Dutch mission says recovering victims' remains is still their top priority
  • Fighting in the area of the crash site has forced investigators to turn back for past two days
  • EU is considering further sanctions against Russian interests over Ukraine

Donetsk, Ukraine (CNN) -- International investigators and observers were again prevented from reaching the crash site of downed Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 on Tuesday by fierce fighting in the area between pro-Russia rebels and Ukrainian forces.

The Dutch Justice Ministry said the team was unable to leave the city of Donetsk because "there is too much fighting at the moment on and near the route to the disaster site."

The 50-person team of Dutch and Australian experts, accompanied by monitors from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, was also forced to abandon its attempts to reach the site on Sunday and Monday.

The latest setback comes as EU ambassadors prepare to discuss broader sanctions against Russia over its actions in Ukraine, in line with new measures to be taken by Washington.

U.S. and Ukrainian officials have said that a Russian-made missile system was used to shoot down Flight 17 from rebel territory. Russia and the rebels have disputed the allegations and blamed Ukraine for the crash.

Twelve days since MH17 was blown out of the sky, the Dutch investigators in charge of finding out what happened have yet to lay eyes on the wreckage or the human remains believed still to be strewn across the huge debris field near the town of Torez.

The OSCE Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine had said earlier Tuesday via Twitter that "intensive planning" was under way to reach the crash site "as soon as it is safe to do so."

Pieter Jaap Aalbersberg, head of the Dutch repatriation mission, said in a statement late Monday that the team had turned back to Donetsk then because of gunfire near the town of Shaktarsk.

"The experts and I are deeply disappointed that we were unable to reach the crash site again," he said.

"It is frustrating to have to wait to do the job they came to do. Their motivation comes from the deep conviction that the relatives are entitled to have their loved ones and their personal effects returned to them. At the same time, we have to guarantee the safety of our people."

Aalbersberg said the OSCE was talking to all sides in the conflict to try to secure safe access. Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans and his Australian counterpart Julie Bishop are also pursuing diplomatic avenues in Kiev, he said.

Aalbersberg said the search for victims was the team's top priority. "If the experts find remains, they will be recovered immediately," he said, using a refrigerated train wagon near Torez. "If the train is inaccessible for whatever reason, we will arrange other transport. We will not leave any remains behind."

OSCE spokesman Michael Bociurkiw told CNN's "New Day" on Monday that the monitors were "really sick and tired of being delayed" in their vital mission.

"We all know there are still human remains out there exposed to the elements, number one," he said. "Secondly, it is one of the biggest open crime scenes in the world as we speak, and it is not secured. There's no security perimeter around the 30- or 35-square-kilometer site."

Tougher sanctions

Representatives from EU member states are meeting Tuesday in Brussels to consider their next steps over Russia's alleged involvement in Ukraine's conflict.

The new proposals include sanctions on weapons, goods that can be used for both civilian and military purposes, access to European capital markets and on the export of energy technology from Europe to Russia.

White House Deputy National Security Adviser Tony Blinken announced Monday that the United States would place new sanctions on Russia this week, without elaborating.

U.S. President Barack Obama held a joint call Monday with British Prime Minister David Cameron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi in which the leaders decided further steps were needed to put pressure on Russia.

They agreed that Russia has failed to deescalate the crisis, a spokesman for Cameron said, and that "even since MH17 was shot down, Russia continues to transfer weapons across the border and to provide practical support to the separatists.

"Leaders agreed that the international community should therefore impose further costs on Russia and specifically that Ambassadors from across the EU should agree a strong package of sectoral sanctions as swiftly as possible."

Japan announced its own assets freeze Monday against Russian individuals and companies it believes to be involved in fostering instability in eastern Ukraine and in Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea region.

Russia's Foreign Ministry responded Tuesday by warning that the move would harm relations between their two nations and was an "unfriendly and short-sighted step based on deeply mistaken view about the real causes of what is happening in Ukraine."

Tokyo "encouraging Russia to take action" was particularly inappropriate, the ministry said. "We would like to point out the fact that the Russian side was the first to call for an open and impartial international investigation of the circumstances of the tragedy."

U.N.: Impartial investigation needed

The United Nations and other countries have repeatedly called for a cease-fire to allow investigators a safe working environment at the crash site, which the U.N. human rights chief said Monday could be the scene of a war crime.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said that what happened "may amount to a war crime."

"It is imperative that a prompt, thorough, effective, independent and impartial investigation be conducted into this event," Pillay said.

As of Monday, 227 coffins bearing remains from the crashed plane had been sent to the Netherlands, where forensic investigators were working to identify them.

Of the 298 people killed in the crash, 193 were Dutch, 43 were Malaysian, and 27 were Australian.

More than 200 forensics experts from all over the world are working at a Dutch military base to identify the remains.

Cruise missile tests claim

Also Monday, the United States accused Russia of violating the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, citing cruise missile tests that date to 2008, senior State Department and White House officials said.

"This is a very serious matter which we have attempted to address with Russia for some time now," said a senior State Department official.

Russia's suspected violation of the treaty was first reported Monday by The New York Times.

The violation was for cruise missile tests that date back to 2008, prompting an administration review as to whether the tests are in violation of the 1987 treaty between the United States and Russia banning medium range missiles.

Officials told CNN that Washington had called for senior-level talks, but insisted the situation was not related to the violence in Ukraine.

CNN's Nick Paton Walsh reported from Donetsk and Laura Smith-Spark wrote in London. CNN's Michael Pearson, Susannah Palk, Mick Krever and Lindsay Isaac contributed to this report.


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Unarmed Australian police to help Dutch-led force secure Malaysian jet crash site - Fox News

Written By Unknown on Senin, 28 Juli 2014 | 16.14

CANBERRA, Australia –  Australia's prime minister says unarmed Australian police will be sent to the Malaysian airliner's crash site in rebel-held territory in eastern Ukraine as part of a Dutch-led police force to secure the area and help recover victims' remains.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott said Sunday that by using unarmed police, Ukraine's Parliament will not need to ratify the deployment as it would if the security force were to be armed.

Australian Federal Police Commissioner Tony Negus said 11 Australian police will initially be sent Monday into the debris field, which covers 50 square kilometers (20 square miles). He said Dutch police also will be unarmed.

The pro-Russia separatists have been blamed for shooting down Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 with a surface-to-air missile on July 17, killing all 298 people aboard.


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Men killed in crash loved flying, assembled plane together - Times Colonist

Joyce Weir and Caroline Thom are taking comfort that their husbands died doing something they loved.

Michael Weir, 73, of Saltspring Island and Gerald Thom, 51, of Youbou were friends for nearly 30 years. They shared a love of flying, and together built an Avid amphibian airplane from a kit.

They were in that plane Saturday evening when it crashed shortly after take-off from Nanaimo Airport, killing both.

"Caroline was the one who always fretted because Gerald is new to flying," said Joyce Weir on Sunday.

"Michael's been flying since the late 1960s and he's a very accomplished Cessna pilot — he's as meticulous with his flying as he is with his beautiful woodwork."

Michael Weir was a carpenter and builder. "If there's ever a natural disaster, Michael's the one you want to be with because he would find you shelter, he would find you water, he would find you food and he would find you warmth. He could do it all," his wife said.

Joyce, 59, first met her husband-to-be in a Jasper classroom. He was her Grade 8 science teacher. Much later, after Michael retired from teaching to study carpentry, they met and started a relationship.

"He had a very wry sense of humour and I love how he did his best at everything. He was a bit of a perfectionist and he was such a good dad to [daughter] Elfi," said Joyce.

Joyce and Elfi were Michael's second family. He had older children who finished high school when his first marriage ended.

"I can still close my eyes and see Michael . . . holding Elfi after she was born," Joyce said. "He looked up and said 'This is the most wonderful moment of my life.' "

He stayed home and looked after the baby while Joyce returned to her teaching job.

"He was such a good dad — he taught her how to knock nails in, and he was so proud of her," she said.

Joyce said when the RCMP arrived at her door Saturday evening, it didn't even occur to her that anything could have happened to Michael.

"Honestly, it didn't cross my mind until he said 'Are you Joyce Weir?' and I said 'Yes.' And he said 'And Michael Weir is your husband?' and he very quickly said, 'I'm so sorry,' " Joyce recalled.

She asked about Gerald and was told he was dead, too. Then it hit home.

Elfi, a commercial pilot, is due to arrive home on Saltspring on Monday to help Joyce make arrangements for a memorial service.
 

© Copyright Times Colonist


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Oil tanker catches fire amid clashes in Libyan capital, government appeals for help - Fox News

  • b4e4a2c428c2fc1d5a0f6a706700b840.jpg

    FILE - In this Sunday, July 13, 2014 file image made from video by The Associated Press, smoke rises from the direction of Tripoli airport in Tripoli, Libya. The United States shut down its embassy in Libya on Saturday, July 26, 2014, and evacuated its diplomats to neighboring Tunisia under U.S. military escort amid a significant deterioration in security in Tripoli as fighting intensified between rival militias, the State Department said. (AP Photo/File)The Associated Press

  • Mideast Libya-2.jpg

    In this Saturday, July 26, 2014 frame grab from video obtained from a freelance journalist traveling with the Misarata brigade, fighters from the Islamist Misarata brigade fire towards Tripoli airport in an attempt to wrest control from a powerful rival militia, in Tripoli, Libya. The battle for control of Tripoli's international airport began two weeks ago when Islamist-led militias - mostly from the western city of Misrata - launched a surprise assault on the airport, under control of rival militias from the western mountain town of Zintan. Heavy clashes in the country's restive east between Libyan soldiers loyal to a renegade general and Islamist-led militias killed dozens of people including civilians, health officials said Sunday. On Saturday, the U.S. evacuated its diplomats in Tripoli to neighboring Tunisia and shut its embassy. (AP Photo/AP video)The Associated Press

CAIRO –  The Libyan government is appealing for "international help" after several oil tankers caught fire amid clashes over the country's international airport in the capital, Tripoli.

In a statement posted on its website on Monday, the interim government says the fighting between rival militias caused the huge blaze, which could trigger a "humanitarian and environmental disaster."

Libyan TV stations are calling on residents to evacuate areas near the airport. Social networking sites posted images of billowing black smoke over Tripoli skyline.

The battle for control of the airport began two weeks ago when Islamist-led militias — mostly from the western city of Misrata — launched a surprise assault on the airport, under control of rival militias from the western mountain town of Zintan.

The fighting has killed dozens of people.


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Two infected Americans, a dead Liberian doctor, and the worst-ever Ebola ... - Washington Post

All weekend, the Ebola news kept getting worse. It began on Saturday, when Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, confirmed that it was the latest country to confirm a death by Ebola. He was Liberian, and he had died after landing in Lagos airport on Tuesday.

Then came the news that a Sierra Leone woman, the first woman to have contracted the disease in the national capital of Freetown, who had fled medical care when she was diagnosed, had died.

Next it was announced that one of Liberia's most high-profile doctors, who had spearheaded national efforts against the disease, had also died after three weeks fighting the virus.

Also this weekend: Two Americans have been infected with Ebola in an outbreak that has killed more than 670 across several West African nations and frustrated and confounded both aid workers and national agencies.

One of the Americans was aid worker Nancy Writebol of Charlotte who was working with the Christian Samaritan Purse in Monrovia, Liberia, when she got sick — though according to the Charlotte Observer, she didn't have contact with patients. "They did not take chances, I assure you," Samaritan Purse spokesperson Melissa Strickland told the Observer. "We are investigating how that contact could have occurred. Of course it's a highly contagious disease. … It's a risk, unfortunately."

The other American, 33-year-old Kent Brantly of Indianapolis, was medical director for Samaritan Purse Ebola case management center in Monrovia. Days after he sent his wife and two kids home to the United States, he started noticing the symptoms. He has since isolated himself, and the Charlotte Observer reports he is working now, chatting with doctors and working on his computer at an isolation unit.

The situation "is getting more and more scary," an assistant health minister named Tolbert Nyenswah told the Associated Press.

According to Writebol's Facebook profile, she arrived in Liberia in August of 2013. "Thanking God for His grace in travel!!!" she wrote. "We arrived in Liberia last night, on time, with all eight of our bags — plus carry on. … We are excited to watch God at work in Liberia!"

Soon, however, something else would get to work in Liberia, and in late March the first cases of Ebola appeared in Liberia. By March 27, according to the World Health Organization, there were at least eight suspected cases and six deaths in residents who had traveled from Guinea, believed to be the outbreak's country of origin.

Within days, Writebol took notice of the emerging crisis, her Facebook page shows. "Please continue to pray for Liberia," she wrote, sharing a page that listed her humanitarian group's preparations. Days later, she again urged prayer for Liberia and shared images that her humanitarian group had uploaded. One showed a makeshift "isolation unit" her husband, David, had helped construct in a local chapel. "Stay Away!" a sign read outside. "ISOLATION UNIT: Authorized personnel only!"

Meanwhile, the disease continued its deadly progression through the West African population, hopping borders and killing at least 672 people in 1,201 cases, according to the World Health Organization's latest batch of numbers. In Liberia, where Whitebol worked, the disease killed 129 in 249 cases.

On Sunday, the humanitarian group announced the news. Whitebol, who has two kids and tested positive on Friday, had contracted Ebola. "Nancy tested positive for the Ebola virus and is undergoing treatment at the isolation center at ELWA."

"It's just devastating news," John Munro, a Whitebol's senior pastor, told the Charlotte Observer. "On Tuesday, she'd been very unwell. Initially, they thought it might be malaria."

Her husband has since informed their Charlotte church congregation. "He's devastated," the pastor explained to the Charlotte Observer. "He can't really be with his wife. She's in isolation. Ebola is very contagious. … She's not doing well. It's grim news."

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Gaza conflict: Fighting lulls as UN backs ceasefire calls - CBC.ca

A relative lull descended on the war-torn Gaza Strip at the start of a major Muslim holiday on Monday, as international efforts intensified to end the three-week war between Israel and Hamas and the UN called for an "immediate" ceasefire.

The calm came as Muslims started celebrating the Eid al-Fitr holiday marking the end of the fasting month of Ramadan.

But there was little holiday cheer in the Gaza Strip, where Palestinian families huddled inside their homes, fearing more airstrikes. At a cemetery in Gaza City's Sheik Radwan neighbourhood, those who came to pay traditional respects at their ancestors' graves gathered around a large crater from an airstrike a week ago that had broken up several graves.

Israel Palestine Gaza conflict

U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power speaks with Israel's UN ambassador Ron Prosor, before a midnight meeting of the Security Council. Both Israel and Palestinian representatives condemned the UN's actions thus far in relation to the conflict in Gaza. (Lucas Jackson/Reuters)

The Israeli military said it had not carried out any attacks in Gaza since 9:30 p.m. local time on Sunday but that troops on the ground were pressing on with efforts to destroy the cross-border tunnels constructed by Hamas for attacks inside Israel.

The military also said that Hamas fired a single rocket into Israel in the morning hours Monday, but that there was no damage or casualties.

In New York, an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council called for "an immediate and unconditional humanitarian ceasefire," its strongest statement yet on the conflict that has already killed 1,030 Palestinians and 43 Israeli soldiers. Also, two Israeli civilians and a Thai worker in Israel have died in rocket and mortar attacks from Gaza.

The pressure for a ceasefire followed new attacks launched by Israel and Hamas on Sunday despite back-and-forth over proposals for another temporary halt to the fighting. The Security Council urged Israel and Hamas "to accept and fully implement the humanitarian ceasefire into the Eid period and beyond." It said this would allow for the delivery of urgently needed assistance.

The council's presidential statement also called on the parties "to engage in efforts to achieve a durable and fully respected ceasefire, based on the Egyptian initiative."

Israel did not immediately comment on the statement.

On Sunday, President Barack Obama telephoned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to express his concern over the mounting Palestinian casualties.

The White House said Obama reiterated that Israel has a right to defend itself and condemned Hamas' rocket attacks. Obama said a lasting peace will ultimately require a demilitarized Gaza and dismantling of terror groups. The U.S. president also pushing for an immediate, unconditional ceasefire that would allow Israeli and Palestinian civilians to return to normalcy.

International diplomats have hoped that a temporary lull in the fighting could be expanded into a more sustainable truce to end the bloodshed.


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Lightning strike kills man on Venice Beach, Los Angeles - BBC News

28 July 2014 Last updated at 10:05
Rescue helicopter searches near pier on Venice Beach

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Lightning struck people on Venice Beach, as Wendy Urquhart reports

One man has been killed and several people have been hurt after lightning strikes on crowded Venice Beach in Los Angeles, California.

The lightning struck amid a rare summer thunderstorm, spreading panic among bathers and visitors.

Lifeguards fanned out across the beach and the water to attend to the injured, many of whom were treated at the scene.

Elsewhere in California, emergency crews are battling to contain wildfires that are threatening hundreds of homes.

At least 14 homes have reportedly been destroyed in the fires, which have blazed across drought-stricken grassland and forest.

A fire in the Sacramento region has spread to cover an area of about 4,000 acres, while another blaze has been threatening homes around Yosemite National Park.

'Big flash of light'

The man killed at Venice Beach is said to have been 20 years old. The exact cause of his death is not yet known, and it is unclear if he was struck directly.

Witnesses say the sky darkened suddenly and screams filled the air as the storm hit the beach on Sunday afternoon. Eight people were admitted to hospital.

One of the injured is said to be in a critical condition. Several people received treatment for milder symptoms, including anxiety.

Stuart Acher told KABC-TV he was hit by lightning while playing volleyball.

"All of a sudden there was a big flash of light and a boom, and it felt like someone punched me in the back of my head," he told the station.

"It went down the whole side of my right body, and my calves sort of locked up, and I fell over. And I looked up and everybody else was, you know, falling over."

Fire burning near Plymouth, California (26 July 2014)

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Footage shows the flames engulf huge parts of the Californian countryside

Steve Christensen told Associated Press news agency that his friend had tried to help lifeguards searching for a missing swimmer.

"He went out to the water to find him and walked right into him," he said. "He was face down on the bottom."

Lightning also hit Catalina Island, near Los Angeles.

A 57-year-old man who was playing golf was injured in the strike. His condition is said to be stable.

Until the latest strike, at least 15 people had been killed this year by lightning in the US, according to the National Weather Service.


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Germany may reject free-trade with Canada: Report - Toronto Star

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 27 Juli 2014 | 16.14

OTTAWA—Canada's effort to open up trade with the huge European market appears increasingly at risk after a spike in concern in the EU about investor rights measures that have become a key feature of today's free-trade pacts.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced last fall that Canada and the European Union had reached a tentative agreement on a trade liberalization deal. But negotiations are still going on and, in the meantime, Europeans are growing increasingly wary of trade deals that allow multinational corporations to challenge government rulings before special international tribunals.

The Canada-EU pact contains such an investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanism, and it has become a focus of European worries as the EU considers whether to include similar investor protections in the pact it has begun negotiating with the United States.

The backlash against these ISDS measures has been growing for months and on Saturday a German newspaper reported German Chancellor Angela Merkel's government is moving toward rejecting the Canada-EU deal over this issue.

Related stories on thestar.com:

Quoting German diplomats, the Sueddeutsche Zeitung said Merkel's government could not approve free-trade with Canada in its current form because of the investor protection provisions. All 28 European Union states must sign on to the deal for it to be implemented.

Businesses say the ISDS mechanisms are needed to convince investors their money is secure in foreign countries. But opponents of the measures say they give investors and corporations too much power to challenge national governments and get around regulations.

In January, EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht responded to these concerns by suspending the EU's free-trade talks with the U.S. to conduct special public consultations in Europe on whether the deal should include ISDS measures.

Germany has questioned the need for these measures, as has France.

Canada did not address the German newspaper report directly on Saturday. But Shannon Gutoskie, a spokesperson for International Trade Minister Ed Fast, said, "Canada's work with our European Union partners to complete the legal text of our agreement-in-principle continues. Excellent progress is being made.

"Investment protections have long been a core element of trade policy in Canada and Europe, and will encourage job-creating investment and economic growth on both sides of the Atlantic," Gutoskie added.

European officials, who believe special tribunals are not needed because the regular courts can handle any legal challenges by investor or multinational corporations, have been concerned about the investor protection measures in the Canada-EU deal for some time and it poses a risk to the completion of Ottawa's deal with Brussels, one trade expert said Saturday.

This latest question mark in the Canada-EU talks comes as negotiators from Ottawa and Brussels were otherwise reportedly close to finalizing the so-called Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), which has been five years in the making.

The Canadian government, however, appears to have been caught off guard by the eruption of worries in Europe about investor protection measures in free-trade pacts.

Those who follow trade issues say Europeans paid little attention to the content of CETA until the question of ISDS mechanisms came up in connection with the EU's negotiations with the U.S., in the so-called Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership talks.

Rupert Schlegelmilch, a senior European Commission trade official, recently said the U.S.-EU trade negotiations have created an "unprecedented focus" on the investor protection controversy.

Scott Sinclair, a Canadian who recently testified on CETA before a committee of the German parliament, said the report that Germany will not approve CETA comes as no surprise, given the level of concern he heard in Berlin about investor protection measures in trade pacts.

"The EU-U.S. negotiation raised the scrutiny of the CETA because there's been enormous controversy about this (U.S.) negotiation, including on investor-state dispute settlement. And the people started to say, 'Look, we've got this agreement with Canada and it includes the same provisions.' So that raised the temperature.

"There's a fair chance the whole (Canada-EU) agreement could unravel" over the investor protection issue, said Sinclair, a trade analyst at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

Questions in Germany about the value of ISDS measures have been fed by Swedish power company Vattenfall's move to sue Germany for billions of dollars in compensation after the German government decided to phase out nuclear power.

Similar cases have raised doubts in Canada. U.S.-headquartered energy company Lone Pine Resources Inc. launched a $250-million lawsuit against the Canadian government under provisions of the North American Free-Trade Agreement after Quebec cracked down on fracking, a drilling technique for releasing oil and natural gas from shale rock formations.

In a similar case in 2010, Ottawa paid forestry giant AbitibiBowater Inc. $130 million to compensate the company for Newfoundland and Labrador's expropriation of its assets in the province.

With files from Tanya Talaga and The Canadian Press


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Video Of Armed Police Storming Passenger Plane - Sky News

Video footage has emerged of the moment armed police stormed a plane to arrest a passenger who allegedly threatened to blow it up.

The jet, which was bound for Panama City, had taken off from Toronto in Canada with 189 people on board.

Sunwing Airlines flight 772 was turned around over West Virginia around 45 minutes into the flight and escorted back to Toronto Pearson International Airport by two F16 fighter jets.

In the video, the police are heard shouting "heads down, hands up" as they move through the aircraft.

Ali Shahi is then bundled off the jet with his hands held behind his back by one of the officers.

The 25-year-old Canadian has been charged with uttering threats and endangering the safety of an aircraft.

North American Aerospace Defence Command (Norad) said the two fighter jets from Ohio flew with the plane out of US airspace as a "precaution".

Sunwing Airlines said an "agitated passenger directly threatened the aircraft" but did not elaborate.


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Unarmed Australian police on "risky mission" to secure MH17 crash site - Sydney Morning Herald

Unarmed Australian police will immediately enter and take control of the MH17 crash site in eastern Ukraine in what Prime Minister Tony Abbott has conceded is a "risky mission".

Up to 170 Australian Federal Police officers will deploy as part of a Dutch-led operation after Russian-backed separatists agreed to allow the so-called coalition of the grieving into the war zone to collect their dead and investigate the wreckage of the downed aircraft.

"Our objective is to get in, get cracking and get out," said Mr Abbott.

"This is a risky mission, no doubt about that, but all the professional advice I have is that the safest way to conduct it is unarmed, as part of a police-led humanitarian mission."

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Eleven Australians in a 49-strong assessment team were due to be on the ground late Sunday, Australian time.

Dozens of AFP officers have arrived in Donetsk, the regional centre nearest to the MH17 crash site, from where they are expected to deploy after the assessment team inspects five wreckage sites in a 35-square-kilometre area where nearly 300 passengers died.

The AFP team was milling in the lobby of the Radisson Park Inn late on Saturday, on a day that saw only a few kilometres down the road the Ukrainian military fighting to retake a nearby city from Russia-aligned separatists.

Mr Abbott said that advice from his special envoy on the ground in the Ukraine, Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, was that going into the war-torn area outside Donetsk was "eminently doable".

"I've had advice from the Office of National Assessments that while there are risks, they can be mitigated and managed," he said.AFP Commissioner Tony Negus agreed that the safest way to recover bodies and conduct an air crash investigation in what is expected to be a two to three-week window is unarmed and without military personnel on site.

The weekend negotiations were conducted on Australia's behalf by the Organisation for Security Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in the Ukrainian city of Donetsk.

Mr Abbott said on Sunday he had been in contact over the past 24 hours with Russian President Vladimir Putin and President Petro Poroshenko of Ukraine.

He had also had further communications with Prime Minister Mark Rutte of the Netherlands and Prime Minister Najib Razak of Malaysia.

Mr Abbott was at pains to stress that the police-led mission has "nothing to do with the politics of Eastern Europe". ''We will stay as long as we can to do a professional job, but we won't stay a moment longer than we need to. We won't stay a moment longer than we absolutely need to," he said.

Air Chief Marshal Houston said AFP officers would enter the border territory of the crash site to underline the "non-threatening" nature of the operation.

The hostilities between Ukrainian forces and rebels showed no sign of quieting. Government troops fought against rebels in Horlivka just kilometres outside of Donetsk, home to the separatist-dubbed "Donetsk People's Republic."

The push by the Ukrainian armed forces follows what Colonel Andriy Lysenko, Speaker for the Ukrainian Security, claimed were successful operations in 10 other localities.

"We will not bombard Donetsk. We will use only ground forces there, which will, street after street, quarter after quarter, free the city," he said on Saturday.

The danger on the ground didn't keep Perth couple Jerzy Dyczynski and Angela Rudhart-Dyczynski from becoming the first family or friends to visit the crash site on Saturday, after the loss of their 25-year-old daughter Fatima along with 287 other passenger and crew.

But the prospect of urban warfare underscores the volatility of eastern Ukraine, a place where Malaysia believes far fewer investigators need to be deployed to the MH17 crash site than the 190 Australian Federal Police Mr Abbott plans to send.

Malaysia's three-person team that visited the site on three days last week reported on the need for a significantly smaller investigative effort - at least 30 additional investigators need to be deployed in addition to themselves, three Dutch investigators and one official of the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe.

Unreleased data from a flight data recorder retrieved from the MH17 wreckage show findings consistent with the plane's fuselage being hit multiple times by shrapnel from a missile explosion.

"It did what it was designed to do," a European air safety official said of the missile, "bring down airplanes."

The official described the finding as "massive explosive decompression."

That conclusion was consistent with more evidence from the crash site, of the blast holes through the body of the aircraft of the kind that would be inflicted by an exploding missile.

Joerg Forbrig, a defence analyst at Berlin's German Marshall Fund of the US, said it would be "nuts" to send in armed troops and a senior Australian defence figure also warned against any expectation that Australians could secure the site.

''It's kilometres long and wide. They could escort Australian officials and provide close protection, but this is a civil task rather than a military task and it's a terribly volatile area.''


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