Friday, 12 July 2013

Six held after London skyscraper protest

Six Greenpeace protesters who scaled Britain's tallest building are in police custody after being arrested over the stunt.

The group of female activists reached the top of the Shard in central London on Thursday evening following 15 hours of climbing in protest at oil drilling in the Arctic.

On reaching the top of the 72-storey building, two of the campaigners unfurled a 10 metre by 10 metre blue flag with 'Save the Arctic' written in white across it.

They were later arrested by the Metropolitan Police on suspicion of aggravated trespass.

The women, who evaded security guards to begin their climb in the early morning, said it was intended to put Shell and other oil companies in the spotlight.

The demonstrators live-streamed the climb from helmet cameras, with birds-eye views of their ascent broadcast live at www.iceclimb.savethearctic.org.

Source: http://bigpondnews.com/articles/TopStories/2013/07/12/Six_held_after_London_skyscraper_protest_887347.html

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Thursday, 11 July 2013

Rail chief blames engineer in deadly Quebec crash

LAC-MEGANTIC, Quebec (AP) ? The head of a U.S. railway company whose oil-laden train crashed into a Quebec town, exploding and killing at least 15 people, blamed the accident on an employee who he said had failed to properly set the brakes.

Edward Burkhardt, president and CEO of Rail World Inc., made his comments Wednesday during his first visit to Lac-Megantic, where some 60 people remain missing following Saturday's fiery crash. He arrived with a police escort and was heckled by angry residents,

He said a train engineer has been suspended without pay.

"I think he did something wrong ...We think he applied some hand brakes but the question is did he apply enough of them," Burkhardt said. "He said he applied 11 hand brakes, we think that's not true. Initially we believed him, but now we don't."

The unmanned, Rail World-owned Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway train broke loose early Saturday and hurtled downhill through the darkness nearly seven miles (11 kilometers) before jumping the tracks at 63 mph (101 kph) in Lac-Megantic, near the Maine border, investigators said. All but one of the 73 cars were carrying oil. At least five exploded.

Rail dispatchers had no chance to warn anyone during the runaway train's 18-minute journey because they didn't know it was happening, Transportation Safety Board officials said.

At a press conference, Quebec Premier Pauline Marois faulted the company's response to the disaster.

"We have realized there are serious gaps from the railway company from not having been there and not communicating with the public," Marois said.

Burkhardt said that he had stayed in Chicago to deal with the crisis in his office, where he was better able to communicate with insurers and officials in different places during what he described as 20-hour work days.

Quebec police inspector Michel Forget said they were pursuing a wide-ranging criminal investigation but had ruled out terrorism as a cause. Forget said an array of possibilities are under investigation, including criminal negligence. Other officials have raised the possibility that the train was tampered with before the crash.

"This is an enormous task ahead of us," Forget said. "We're not at the stage of arrests."

The heart of downtown is being treated as a crime scene and remained cordoned off.

At the center of the destruction is the Musi-Cafe, a popular bar that was filled at the time of the explosion, which also forced about a third of the town's 6,000 residents from their homes. By Tuesday, about 800 were still barred from returning to their houses.

Efforts continued to stop waves of crude oil spilled in the disaster from reaching the St. Lawrence River, the backbone of the province's water supply.

Investigators were looking closely at a fire on the train less than an hour before it got loose while parked in the nearby town of Nantes.

The train's engine was shut down ? standard operating procedure dictated by the train's owners, Nantes Fire Chief Patrick Lambert said. Burkhardt had suggested earlier that shutting off the locomotive to put out the fire might have disabled the brakes.

The accident has thrown a spotlight on MMA's safety record. Over the past decade, the company has consistently recorded a much higher accident rate than the national average in the U.S., according to data from the Federal Railroad Administration.

Last year, the railroad had 36.1 accidents per million miles traveled by its trains. The national average for 2012 was 14.6.

Before Saturday's accident, the company had 34 derailments since 2003, including one death, according to the federal agency. The severity of those incidents is difficult to determine from the agency's 10-year data overviews on railroad safety.

Burkhardt said the figures were misleading.

"This is the only significant mainline derailment this company has had in the last 10 years. We've had, like most railroads, a number of smallish incidents, usually involving accidents in yard trackage and industry trackage," he told the CBC earlier this week.

___

Associated Press writers Sean Farrell in Lac-Megantic, Charmaine Noronha in Toronto and Jason Keyser in Chicago contributed to this story.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rail-chief-blames-engineer-deadly-quebec-crash-211015099.html

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Texas Republicans Send Women Back to the Dark Ages (Little green footballs)

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Panasonic GH3 and G5 firmware update brings low light AF, silent shooting

Panasonic GH3 and G5 firmware update brings low light AF, silent shooting

If you've been spooking subjects or failing to focus on them with your Panasonic Lumix GH3 or G5, you might feel like you got a brand new camera today thanks to a firmware update. Its new features include low-light (-3EV) autofocus and a "silent mode" setting that'll turn off the electronic shutter, all sounds and the flash emission in one go, leaving subjects like deer or golfers undisturbed. You'll also get an exposure compensation shutoff reset option, better AF performance with certain lenses and a WiFi fix for Mac computers. You can grab it at the source, proving it's not only hackers that bring free goodies to pricey cameras.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/_X49yO7nl4s/

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Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Prince Hisahito: the future of Japan's monarchy

AFP - As an expectant Britain gets royal baby fever and readies to welcome a future monarch -- male or female -- the young boy who carries the destiny of Japan's ancient imperial family lives a life much less examined.

Six-year-old Prince Hisahito is the only boy in four decades born into the world's oldest monarchy, and will be entrusted with keeping alive a genealogical line traditionalists say can be traced back to a prehistoric goddess.

Unlike the House of Windsor, which lives life in the full tabloid glare and whose members provide endless fodder for gossip and speculation, the details of the lives of Japan's imperial family are scarcely discussed.

Commentators say the young prince leads a happy life, but one in which he is already being prepared for his future role as emperor at the head of a staid and revered institution, far removed from the common folk.

"I don't think Prince Hisahito plays computer games" like other boys his age, said Shinji Yamashita, a former official of the Imperial Household Agency and now a journalist specialising in royal matters.

"But he seems to be leading an unconstrained childhood," said Yamashita.

Japan's emperor is the nominal head of state and sits at the apex of the indigenous Shinto religion, an animistic belief system found only in Japan.

Although wealthy, the lives of the royal family inside ornate and spacious Tokyo palaces are heavily restricted and full of rituals, many of which are only hazily understood outside a tight inner circle of advisers.

Absent are the boozy exploits of Prince Harry, the charming common touch of Prince William, or the crusading environmentalism of Prince Charles.

Theirs is a life of regime and regimen; where their rare public appearances are carefully choreographed and recorded only by approved media, who dutifully snap the smiles of staged photo opportunities and then put the cameras away.

One such moment in Hisahito's life was his fifth birthday when he went through rites that involved the donning of traditional flowing kimono trousers and having a symbolic haircut.

The ritual, to mark a birthday considered important in Japan, along with ages three and seven, saw him standing on a "Go" checkboard, wearing the trousers for the first time in his life.

An aide, in the clothes of the Heian period (794-1185), combed his hair and then cut a few strands, before Hisahito jumped from the raised gameboard.

The tradition is one of many that stretch back through the annals of Japan's never-colonised history, where the emperor was treated as a god whose presence legitimised the authority of powerful political clans and warlords.

United States-led forces, who occupied Japan after its defeat in World War II, stripped the role of its semi-divine status, but the hushed reverence remains to the present day, with no mainstream media reporting anything but the authorised version of imperial lives.

There are nods to modernity -- Hisahito is the first royal child to go to a primary school other than the traditional Gakushuin, an institution built for the royals, while his oldest sister, Princess Mako, is a student at a liberal Christian university that is known for its diverse culture.

The middle child, 18 year-old Kako, is more unconventional still -- one of a five-piece dance troupe at high school with carefully curled hair.

But changes like this do not come from within, said Yamashita, rather they are absorbed from the nation the family symbolises.

"The imperial family are not supposed to seek change themselves," he said. "They adjust to the state of the country and reflect the values of Japanese people of their time," he said.

Until Hisahito's birth in September 2006, traditionalists had been gripped by fears for the future of a family they claim has ruled Japan for more than 2,600 years.

The heir to the throne, Crown Prince Naruhito, and his wife had produced no son.

The crisis prompted the Japanese government to reluctantly consider reforms to the law that would allow Naruhito's daughter, Princess Aiko, to ascend to the Chrysanthemum throne.

The debate was largely extinguished when the wife of Naruhito's younger brother gave birth to Hisahito. On Naruhito's death, the throne will pass to his brother, who in turn will pass it to his son, Hisahito.

In Britain, a change in the law means that whether William's wife Catherine gives birth to a boy or a girl this month, the child will inherit the throne.

But Yamashita, like many traditionalists, believes such a change in Japan is not possible.

"If Princess Aiko were to take the throne, it would mean her child, whose father would come from an ordinary background, would be only linked to the imperial family through the maternal line," he said.

"That has never happened in the past at least more than 1,000 years," he said.

The debate has nothing to do with gender equality, said Yamashita, but is something in a different realm.

"This is simply the nature of the Japanese imperial family," he said.

Source: http://www.france24.com/en/20130710-prince-hisahito-future-japans-monarchy

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Sunday, 7 July 2013

2 years after immigration laws, Ga., Ala., stable

VIDALIA, Ga. (AP) ? Two years after Georgia and Alabama passed laws designed to drive away people living in the country illegally, the states' agricultural areas are still heavily populated with foreign workers, many of whom don't have legal authorization to be here.

There are still concerns over enforcement and lingering fears among immigrants, but in many ways it appears that people have gone on with life much as it was before the laws were enacted.

Farmers say many of the foreign workers have returned because the laws are not heavily enforced and it once again seems safe to be here.

But the story is more complicated than that: Some are still staying away or have gone underground, according to community activists, and some farmers say they are filling labor shortages not with returning immigrants but with workers hired through a program that grants temporary legal visas.

Meanwhile, employers and workers in both states are watching as Congress wrestles over plans that aim to simultaneously prevent future illegal immigration and offer a chance at citizenship for millions now living in the country illegally.

Georgia and Alabama were two of five states to pass tough crackdowns on illegal immigration in 2011, a year after Arizona made headlines for a hard-line immigration enforcement law that ended up being challenged in the U.S. Supreme Court.

Immediately after the laws were passed, farmers in both states complained that foreign workers who lived there had left and that the itinerant migrants who generally came through were staying away. American workers weren't stepping forward to perform the back-breaking work immigrants had done for years, and crops were rotting in the fields because of a lack of laborers, they said.

An informal survey conducted in Georgia showed that farmers of onions, watermelons and other hand-picked crops lacked more than 11,000 workers during their spring and summer harvests of 2011, Georgia Department of Agriculture Commissioner Gary Black told a U.S. Senate subcommittee hearing on immigration enforcement and farm labor.

But then as courts began blocking significant elements of the law and some loopholes became apparent, some of the workers who had fled for fear of arrest and deportation returned. Others were drawn back by their longstanding ties to the communities.

Victor Valentin, 25, and his wife, Maria Gonzales, 23, came to the Vidalia onion growing region in south Georgia five years ago and found work quickly. But when the state passed its law cracking down on illegal immigration, they feared they would be caught and deported, and left for neighboring North Carolina.

They didn't last long. With two young children and no support network there, life was difficult. At the same time, the situation in Georgia seemed to have calmed down.

"We still talked to people here, and we heard there weren't really any problems, that things hadn't really changed," Valentin said, explaining that the family decided to return to the Vidalia area after about nine months. He's found work harvesting pine straw since his return.

This year, Black and a number of industry leaders in Georgia told The Associated Press they haven't heard of any labor shortages.

The situation in Alabama is similar.

"No one seems to be having any problems," said Alabama's agriculture commissioner, John McMillan, who added that he has spoken with farmers who saw migrants return once it became clear the law passed in Alabama was, in practice, mostly toothless. Courts blocked most of the law's toughest sections, including one that required public schools to check students' citizenship status, and the massive arrests envisioned by some simply didn't happen.

Also, according to government statistics, thousands of employers in Alabama have been ignoring a provision in the state's immigration law that requires them to register with the federal E-Verify system, a program to electronically verify workers' legal status.

And yet, at least in Georgia, the story is a bit more complicated than it may seem on the surface.

Some migrant families ? both legally and illegally in the country ? are indeed still avoiding Georgia because they fear discrimination and profiling, said Andrea Hinojosa, a community organizer who has worked with Latino workers in the Vidalia area for more than 20 years.

Other laborers who had worked their way up from the fields into more stable factory or construction work have turned to less stable jobs because businesses are starting to use E-Verify, a key provision of the Georgia law, Hinojosa said.

"I think it has probably put people back into hiding, put them back in the shadows," Hinojosa said. "It doesn't mean they're not working. It could mean that they have just found a job where they can't be detected."

Maria Barbosa, a legal permanent resident from Mexico, opened Los Olivos, a store that caters to the Vidalia area's Latino population, in July 2008. She estimates that her profits at the store, which stocks international phone cards, traditional foods and party supplies, dropped by about 30 percent after Georgia's law passed. It has rebounded somewhat in the past two years, but it's still not as strong as it was, she said.

One reason labor shortages in the fields have subsided ? in addition to the return of migrant workers who had fled ? is that some of the biggest farms in the area have started using or increased their use of a federal guest-worker program to bring in foreign workers legally.

Farmer R.T. Stanley of Stanley Farms, which grows more than 1,000 acres of onions, as well as other crops and vegetables in the area, is one of them.

Stanley said he has started to use more legal guest workers, who are brought into the country on a visa for a defined period of time, because he is not able to find as many experienced migrant workers locally as he used to.

For Barbosa, that can hurt business, because guest workers aren't nearly as reliable as customers as those who settle in and develop attachments to a community.

"They'll come in and buy some beans and tortillas and then send $1,000 to Guatemala," she said of the guest workers.

Many farmers have long complained the federal guest-worker program is too rigid and difficult to use.

"We know we've got to deal with the rules, and we do," said Bob Stafford, director of the Vidalia Onion Business Council. "We do the best we can with them."

Now farmers and workers both are turning their attention to the debate over national immigration reform and are hoping for provisions that will help them.

"We need a real good guest-worker program," Stafford said, "something that will work ... for the growers and for the workers and for the community."

Barbosa, whose husband works as a crew leader recruiting and overseeing field workers for farmers, is also watching Washington.

"People have hope," she said. "But there's been a lot of talk about immigration reform before and nothing has happened, so there's still a lot of doubt."

___

Associated Press Writer Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Ala., contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/2-years-immigration-laws-ga-ala-stable-135856668.html

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Moody's places UK bank RBS's debt ratings under review

By Matt Scuffham

LONDON (Reuters) - Ratings agency Moody's has placed Royal Bank of Scotland's credit ratings on review for downgrade after Britain's finance ministry said it was considering breaking up the bank.

The government, which holds an 81 percent stake, has appointed Rothschild to examine whether to transfer RBS's remaining toxic loans into a so-called 'bad bank' leaving the 'good bank' better placed to lend.

Moody's said on Friday its decision was in response to the uncertainty for bondholders that resulted from the government's move. It said some of the options being considered by the government could result in losses for creditors.

"The heightened level of uncertainty is likely to remain at least until the publication of the government's conclusion from its assessment, after which Moody's expects to conclude its ratings review," the agency said.

Moody's said, however, that the probability of losses to RBS creditors remained low.

The government said this week that it expected to conclude its review into a possible breakup by the autumn.

Moody's said it had placed on review for downgrade RBS's D+ standalone bank financial strength rating, its A3 long-term debt and deposit ratings and the bank's subordinated debt and junior capital instruments.

Meanwhile, the BBC reported on Friday that the Treasury had received approaches from sovereign wealth funds and private-equity businesses to buy around 10 percent of part-nationalized Lloyds Banking Group .

The Treasury declined to comment on the Lloyds report and the RBS downgrade.

(Reporting by Matt Scuffham; Editing by Sophie Walker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/moodys-places-uk-bank-rbss-debt-ratings-under-174548712.html

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