Friday 29 August 2014

US Open Impressive win for Anderson

South Africa's Kevin Anderson has reached the third round of the US Open at Flushins Meadows after notching an impressive win over Poland's Jerzy Janowicz.

After losing the first set in a tie-break, the South African No 1 rebounded to win 6-7 (6/8), 6-2, 6-1, 6-3.

Anderson, who came through a five-set thriller against Uruguay's Pablo Cuevas in the first round, will next face Croatian 14th seed Marin Cilic in the third round.

Latest results on Friday from the fifth day of the US Open, the final Grand Slam tournament of 2014 (x denotes seeded player):

Men

Second round

Kevin Anderson (RSA x18) bt Jerzy Janowicz (POL) 6-7 (6/8), 6-2, 6-1, 6-3
Gael Monfils (FRA x20) bt Alejandro Gonzalez (COL) 7-5, 6-3, 6-2

Women

Third round

Jelena Jankovic (SRB x9) bt Johanna Larsson (SWE) 6-1, 6-0
Peng Shuai (CHN) bt Roberta Vinci (ITA x28) 6-4, 6-3

No Ebola cases in SA - health department

 There are no Ebola cases reported or confirmed in South Africa, the health department said on Friday.
The total number of cases in the current outbreak of Ebola in Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone has risen to 3 069 probable and confirmed cases, while there have been 1 552 deaths.
"The outbreak continues to accelerate. More than 40% of the total number of cases have occurred within the past 21 days," health department spokesperson Popo Maja said.
Concentrated
"However, most cases are concentrated in only a few localities. The overall death rate is 52%. It ranges from 42% in Sierra Leone to 66% in Guinea."
A separate Ebola outbreak, not related to the one in west Africa, was laboratory confirmed on Tuesday by the Democratic Republic of Congo.
It was also detailed in a separate edition of the Disease Outbreak News of the World Health Organisation (WHO).
"A detailed analysis by [the] WHO of exactly where transmission is occurring - by district level - and of time trends is ongoing," Maja said.
"Preliminary results show that cases are still concentrated - 62% of all reported cases since the beginning of the outbreak - in the epicentre of the outbreak in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone, where cases continue to rise."
Capital cities were of particular concern, owing to their population density and repercussions for travel and trade.
Monitoring situation
The WHO and its partner organisations were on the ground establishing Ebola treatment centres, and strengthening capacity for laboratory testing, contact tracing, social mobilisation, safe burials, and non-Ebola health care.
"The WHO continues to monitor for reports of rumoured or suspected cases from countries around the world and systematic verification of these cases is ongoing," Maja said.
"Countries are encouraged to continue engaging in active surveillance and preparedness activities."
The health department continued to monitor the situation and would keep South African citizens informed, he said.

Thursday 28 August 2014

Jewish community 'forced out' of Guatemala village

A community of 230 Orthodox Jews from several countries on Thursday began leaving the Guatemalan Indian village where they have lived for six years after claims and counterclaims of discrimination and threats.
Their exit from San Juan La Laguna, on the banks of Lake Atitlan and 200km from the capital Guatemala City, follows a meeting on Wednesday in which Jewish and indigenous representatives failed to reach an agreement.
"We are a people of peace and in order to avoid an incident we've already begun to leave the village," Misael Santos, a representative from the Jewish community, told AFP.
They had received threats, Santos said.
"We have a right to be there, but they threatened us with lynching if we don't leave the village," he added.
Most members of the small Jewish community are from the United States, Israel, Britain and Russia, and around 40 are Guatemalan. Approximately half are children.
Since October, the local indigenous population has accused the Orthodox Jews of discriminating against them and of violating Mayan customs.
The Council of Indigenous Elders said the Jewish community "wanted to impose their religion" and was undermining the Catholic faith that is predominant in the village.
"We act in self-defence and to respect our rights as indigenous people. The [Guatemalan] constitution protects us because we need to conserve and preserve our culture," council spokesperson Miguel
Vasquez told AFP

IS 'waterboarded' Syria captives

 At least four Western hostages held by the Islamic State in Syria, including murdered American journalist James Foley, were waterboarded in the early part of their captivity, The Washington Post said on Thursday.
Foley, whose recent execution at the hands of the extremists provoked revulsion, and the other kidnapped Westerners were waterboarded "several times", the newspaper said, citing people familiar with their treatment.
Sources involved in trying to free the hostages have confirmed to AFP that waterboarding was used on at least one hostage.
Waterboarding, which was used by the CIA during interrogations of suspected terrorists after the 11 September 2001 attacks, is a widely condemned form of torture that simulates drowning.
The Post quoted one person with direct knowledge of what happened to the hostages as saying the Islamists, who last week released a grisly video showing Foley's beheading, "knew exactly how it was done".
The captives, including Foley who was kidnapped in northern Syria in November 2012, were held in Raqa, the heartland of the "caliphate" IS has declared, the Post said.
It quoted a second person familiar with Foley's time in captivity as saying that the American, who contributed reports to GlobalPost, Agence France-Presse and other media outlets, was tortured, including by waterboarding.
The black-masked militant seen in the video holding Foley, 40, by the scruff of the neck, said the journalist's killing was to avenge American airstrikes against the IS in Iraq.

Real draw Liverpool in CL

Champions Real Madrid will play five-time former winners Liverpool while fellow Spanish giants Barcelona plucked big-spending Paris Saint-Germain as the Champions League group stage draw was made in Monaco on Thursday.
But the most mouth-watering draw saw 2013 champions Bayern Munich paired with Manchester City, Roma and CSKA Moscow in Group E.
It is the third time in four years that Bayern and City will have faced each other in the group stages.
For English Premier League winners City, who failed to progress from the group stages in two of the last three years, it continues a run of tough draws at this stage of Europe's premier club competition.
In 2011/12 they were paired with Bayern and Napoli and missed out on the knock-out stages after failing to beat the Italians at home.
A year later they finished bottom of a group containing Real, Borussia Dortmund and Ajax as they failed to win a single game.
Only last year, when they were also thrown in with Bayern, did City manage to get through the group stages and this time their job will not be simple.
But perhaps the most eagerly-anticipated group matches will see four-time winners Barcelona come up against PSG, who recruited Brazilian centre-back David Luiz from Chelsea in the close season.
He will be meeting a familiar foe in new Barca signing Luis Suarez, the former Liverpool forward.
Four-time former winners Ajax, another of Suarez's previous sides, are alongside the pair in Group F, as well as Cypriots Apoel.
Real and Liverpool will be confident of progressing from Group B where debutants Ludogorets of Bulgaria, who were only formed in 20001 and whose stadium holds just 8,000 fans, and Swiss outfit Basel, who knocked out Manchester United at this stage three years ago, await.
Ludogorets's participation came in large part thanks to the heroics of defender Cosmin Moti.
He was forced into goal in the last minute of extra-time of their play-off second leg 1-1 draw with Romanians Steaua Bucharest after goalkeeper Vladislav Stoyanov was dismissed in the final minute.
The game went almost immediately into penalties where not only did Moti score his side's first spot-kick but he saved two of the Romanians to send the Bulgarians into the lucrative group stages.
There was a kinder draw, on paper at least, for 2012 champions Chelsea, who poached Germans Schalke 04, Sporting Lisbon of Portugal and Slovenia's Maribor in Group G.
Arsenal, bidding to reach the knock-out stages for the 12th year in a row, plucked Borussia Dortmund, the 2013 finalists, in a tough Group D with Galatasaray, who beat them in the 2000 UEFA Cup final, and Belgian giants Anderlecht.
Last year's runners-up Atletico Madrid, the Spanish champions, pulled Italian champions Juventus out of the hat in Group A, along with Greeks Olympiakos, who regularly struggle at this stage, and Swedes Malmo, the European Cup runners-up from 1979.
Portuguese pair Porto and Benfica were given manageable draws, the latter plucking Ukrainians Shakhtar Donetsk, Athletic Bilbao of Spain and Belarus representatives BATE Borisov in Group H.
Benfica, the twice former winners, were drawn against Russians Zenit St Petersburg, coached by former Porto boss Andre Villas-Boas, Bayer Leverkusen of Germany and Russian-backed Monaco in Group C.

Collated draw for the 2014/2015 European Champions League group stages made in Monaco on Thursday:

Group A
Atletico Madrid (ESP)
Juventus (ITA)
Olympiakos (GRE)
Malmo (SWE)

Group B
Real Madrid (ESP)
Basel (SUI)
Liverpool (ENG)
Ludogorets (BUL)

Group C
Benfica (POR)
Zenit St Petersburg (RUS)
Bayer Leverkusen (GER)
Monaco (FRA)

Group D
Arsenal (ENG)
Borussia Dortmund (GER)
Galatasaray (TUR)
Anderlecht (BEL)

Group E
Bayern Munich (GER)
Manchester City (ENG)
CSKA Moscow (RUS)
Roma (ITA)

Group F
Barcelona (ESP)
Paris Saint-Germain (FRA)
Ajax (NED)
Apoel (CYP)

Group G
Chelsea (ENG)
Schalke 04 (GER)
Sporting Lisbon (POR)
Maribor (SLO)

Group H
Porto (POR)
Shakhtar Donetsk (UKR)
Athletic Bilbao (ESP)
BATE Borisov (BLR)

Hip injury strikes down Pirlo

juventus playmaker Andrea Pirlo has been ruled out for the first month of the season with a hip injury, the Serie A champions said on Thursday.
Juventus said in a statement that an MRI had revealed a sprain and that "30 days will be necessary for a complete recovery".
The announcement is an early blow for new coach Massimiliano Allegri, who took over in July after Antonio Conte resigned.
Conte had led Juventus to three successive Serie A titles in as many seasons with Pirlo as the team's main inspiration.
Juventus are away to Chievo in Serie A's opening match on Saturday.

Wednesday 27 August 2014

UN: Crimes against humanity spread in Syri

An independent UN commission said on Wednesday that the Syrian government has likely used chlorine gas to attack civilians and that the Islamic State group committed crimes against humanity with attacks on civilians in two cities in the country's north and west.
The report from the commission, which has been tasked to investigate potential war crimes in the country, marks the first time the United Nations has assigned blame for the use of the chemical agent. Specifically, the commission said government forces loyal to President Bashar Assad likely unleashed chlorine on civilians in northern Syrian villages eight times in April.
The commission also noted widespread and systematic civilian killings by Islamic State, which now controls a swath of north and eastern Syria, in the northern city of Aleppo and in the western city of Raqqa where the group has its headquarters.
The findings mean that UN officials now believe Islamic State has committed crimes against humanity in Syria and Iraq, the two countries in which the group has carved out a self-styled caliphate.
"This is a continuation, and a geographic expansion of the widespread and systematic attack on the civilian population", according to the report of the four-member commission that is chaired by Brazilian diplomat and scholar Paulo Sergio Pinheiro.
The commission also said Assad's government forces continue to perpetrate crimes against humanity, the most serious and systematic type of widespread crime against civilians through massacres and systematic murder, torture, rape and disappearances.
On Monday, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, said the Islamic State fighters reportedly killed up to 670 prisoners in Mosul and committed other horrific abuses in Iraq that amount to crimes against humanity

Marikana killers must be arrested - miner

Those responsible for the murder of two security guards and two policemen during the August 2012 strike-related unrest at Marikana should be arrested, the Farlam Commission of Inquiry heard on Wednesday.
One of the leaders of the strike at Lonmin's platinum mining operations at Marikana, near Rustenburg in the North West, Xolani Nzuza, told the commission in Pretoria he felt "bad" about the deaths.
"I am hurt about security officials who were killed because they were in a place they were not meant to have been in," said Nzuza.
"I would be happy if the people who killed the security guards were arrested.
"If there is evidence about who killed the two police officers, they should also be arrested," Nzuza said.
A witness, known only as Mr X, who testified before the commission several weeks ago, said he was present when security guards Hassan Fundi and Frans Mabelani were killed.
He said the strikers killed the guards, removed some body parts, and used their burnt remains in muti rituals.
The workers believed that the muti would make them strong and invincible against the police.
A police officer who led the Marikana operation testified last year about how his two colleagues, Tsietsi Monene and Sello Lepaku, were killed.
"I heard [teargas shooting]. I then realised that strikers had turned against police. It wasn't a very good scene," said Major General William Mpembe at the time. He was the deputy police commissioner of the North West.
"I saw Warrant Officer Monene being chopped and killed in front of me. I saw how officer Lepaku was killed," he said.
On Wednesday, Nzuza told the commission the police officers responsible for the deaths of 34 of his colleagues should also account.
"If the police were found to have done wrong, they should also be arrested," said Nzuza.
Some of the miners involved in the unrest were arrested and were now unemployed.

Charges dropped
Last week, the Ga-Rankuwa Magistrate's court dropped the charges against 279 miners who were arrested during the violence.
Charges were dropped because the State would have been unable to prove their cases if the matter went to trial.
The accused had faced charges of public violence, illegal gathering, possession of dangerous weapons and intimidation.
Initially, they also faced charges related to murder but these were provisionally withdrawn by the court.
Nzuza said the dropped charges were evidence that people were arrested "for nothing".
"They were arrested and tortured and then there was no case against them after they attended the case for two years," he said.
"It makes me feel bad because now we can see that there was no truth in what they were arrested for," he said.
It was also hurtful to know that many of his colleagues died but had done nothing wrong, said Nzuza.
The commission, chaired by retired Judge Ian Farlam, is investigating the deaths of 44 people killed during the strike-related unrest in August 2012.
Thirty-four people, mostly striking mineworkers, were shot dead in a clash with police on 16 August 2012. Over 70 people were wounded and over 200 were arrested. Police were apparently trying to disperse them.
In the preceding week, 10 people, including the two policemen and two Lonmin security guards, were killed.

FAMILY AFFAIR! COUSINS BATTLE EACH OTHER FOR 10MILLION NAIRA AND BRAND NEW CAR ON ‘STAR THE WINNER IS

The quest for the mouth-watering grand prize of Star lager sponsored TV game show ‘Star The Winner Is’ got more exciting when two contestants who interestingly are cousins, went head to head in a duel battle for the brightest voice during the weekend.

Contestants, Jahtell Ilem and Blessing Ogainyo both equally astounding singers put all family interests aside and went up against each other in the fiercest duel round of the night. Blessing however surrendered after she witnessed the vocal prowess Jahtell commanded, walking away with 100,000 naira.

Plus sized beauty, Jahtell, turned out the clear choice of the 101 jury members in that round and subsequently for the episode making it through to the semifinal round after beating another opponent Daniel Buba in the final round of the night.

With a breath-taking rendition of BoyzIImen classic, I’ll make love to you and an outstanding delivery of Jenifer Hudson’s I’m changing, Jahtell won the hearts of the audience, viewers at home and most certainly, Almighty 101 jury members on the show.

Daniel who was a strong contender delivered remarkable performances like Seal’s Kiss From A Rose after which he however made a smart choice to walk away with 400,000 naira offered by host, Uti Nwachukwu in the final round, leaving Jahtell to move on when he lost confidence in his performance.

Gabriel Udogu, Josephine Onyejebose and Ese Amadasun also sang their hearts out to the delight of the audience and jury members but not as impressive as Jahtell Ilem who undoubtedly deserved to wear the winner’s crown for the night.

Jahtell joins Philip, Brenda, Happiness, Rhema and Naomi in the battle for 10million naira and a brand new car in the semi final round.

Kim Kardashian West blasted for texting during tribute at MTV VMAs

Angry fans are now blasting the girls for not paying attention during the moment of reflection.


Kim Kardashian West has caused outrage after she was spotted playing on her phone during a moment of silence held as a tribute to the conflict in Ferguson. The 33-year-old reality TV star and her half-sisters Kendall and Kylie Jenner, 18 and 16 respectively, were blasted on Twitter by angry fans last night, August 24, after they were caught staring at their mobiles during the period of reflection at the MTV Video Music Awards (VMAs) held at the Forum in Inglewood, California. Mieke Olva Vlok posted: "Let's not pretend we're shocked the #Kardashian girls were texting during a moment of silence for #Ferguson at the #VMAs." While Kid Codi, wrote: "I would pay TOP DOLLAR to see Kim Kardashian point out Ferguson on a map." The emotional tribute was led by rapper Common, who had asked for the audience's undivided attention whilst they honor Michael Brown, who died after being shot by police in Ferguson, Missouri, earlier this month. Common said: "I want us all to take a moment of silence for Michael Brown and for peace in this country and in the world." The Keeping Up With the Kardashians star are yet to comment on the backlash, but it is believed there may have been a delay in the footage being shown on television, which could mean they weren't using their phones at the time of the tribute.

Miley Cyrus, 50 Cent, Jennifer Aniston, & More Stars Sung Chelsea Handler Off E!

“I am delighted to lead this song with my good friend, Chelsea Hammer” —Gwen Stefani

Chelsea Handler said goodbye to Chelsea Lately after seven years on Tuesday night with a slew of famous faces, singing a personalized version of “We Are The World.”

Gwen Stefani kicked things off, making fun of her Adele Dazeem moment (“Colbort” Report) at the Emmys on Monday.

Joining Chelsea and Gwen were singers, like Fergie and Josh Gad…













And Alanis Morissette and Gerard Butler!

But, there were also non-singers, like Tim Gunn.



Mexico thanks California for helping migrants

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto thanked California on Thursday for improving the lives of immigrants from his country, including legalising drivers' licenses for undocumented migrants and making it easier for them to work and start businesses.
Pena Nieto, on his first trip to the United States since becoming president in 2012, addressed a joint session of the California legislature, detailing economic and electoral reforms enacted back home and emphasising his country's social and economic ties to the state.
"I want to thank you for what you have done for migrants, especially the ones from Mexico", Pena Nieto said. "It's no coincidence that my first visit to the United States is in California."
Pena Nieto's visit was the latest in a series of exchanges with Mexico that included a trip to that country last month by California governor Jerry Brown, a Democrat, and a visit to Sacramento by Mexico's foreign minister, Jose Antonio Meade.
The visits, part of an ongoing effort to further economic ties between California and Mexico, are taking place against a backdrop of growing tensions from the flow of thousands of undocumented children from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras into the United States from Mexico.
For their part, the Mexican leaders have expressed concern that efforts to enact comprehensive immigration reform have stalled in the US, amid opposition from Republicans in Congress.
On Thursday, several Republican state lawmakers who had been invited to a luncheon with Pena Nieto declined to attend, citing the ongoing detention of US marine sergeant Andrew Tahmooressi, who was arrested on 31 March by Mexican customs agents who found guns in his pickup truck at the San Ysidro border crossing between San Diego and Tijuana.
A group of protesters demonstrated against Tahmooressi's detention across the street from Sacramento's Leland Stanford mansion, where the luncheon was being held.
Tahmooressi maintains he accidentally crossed the border, and had no intention of transporting weapons across an international border. He is being held in a federal penitentiary in Mexico.
"I could not go to the lunch in good conscience", said state senator Joel Anderson, a Republican whose district includes parts of Riverside County east of Los Angeles. "I don't have an appetite for foreign dignitaries who deny US citizens their human rights."
Pena Nieto did not discuss the issue of the migrant children or the Tahmooressi case.

Protests resume over shooting death of Michael Brown

More than 100 demonstrators marched peacefully in St Louis on Tuesday demanding the
arrest of a white police officer who shot and killed an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, Missouri, almost three weeks ago.
By nightfall, a small group of about 30 people marched in Ferguson along the street that has been the centre of protests since the death of Michael Brown, 18, although the atmosphere was subdued and police presence was limited.
Brown's death focused global attention on the state of race relations in the United States and evoked memories of other racially charged cases, including the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old African-American, in Florida in 2012.
Family and supporters of Brown celebrated his life on Monday at a music-filled funeral service at a St Louis church that rang with calls for peace and police reforms.
The 9 August shooting sparked two weeks of demonstrations, some with violent clashes and scores of arrests, in which protesters demanded Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson be charged in Brown's death.
Demands for policing reforms
Demonstrations have been more subdued in recent days.
On Tuesday afternoon, demonstrators marched a few blocks from St Louis City Hall to the federal court building, chanting: "Fired up, fed up, time that we stand up."
The protesters, who called for Wilson's arrest and the removal of Ferguson police leaders, were blocked from walking up the courthouse steps by a group of officers, most on bicycles.
US Attorney Richard Callahan from the Eastern District of Missouri met five of the protesters, who were allowed to enter the courthouse, and heard their demands for policing reforms and justice for Brown.
"Just the fact that he agreed to meet with us means he is taking this seriously," said Montague Simmons, a member of the Organisation for Black Struggle, who attended the meeting.
Simmons said Callahan told the protesters he would raise their demands with US Attorney General Eric Holder.
Catalyst
There have been differing accounts of the shooting.
Police have said Brown struggled with Wilson, who shot and killed him. However, some witnesses say Brown held up his hands and was surrendering when he was shot multiple times in the head and chest.
A St Louis County grand jury has begun hearing evidence and the US justice department has opened its own investigation.
Despite continuing protests, the scene was peaceful and relatively calm as temperatures cooled to about 29°C on Tuesday night after reaching 36°C in mid-afternoon. Lightning flashed in the distance but a brief rain shower had passed.
arlick, who laid white roses by the memorial, said she was about to sign a six-month lease on an apartment in the complex where Brown lived to support the community.
"The verdict is everything. If he doesn't go to jail for what he did, this place is going to burn," she said of Wilson.Smalls groups also gathered earlier on Tuesday at the memorial in Ferguson, where the majority of residents are black and most elected officials and police are white.
"This community has had a story to tell for a long time and this has just been the catalyst," said Chelsea Warlick, 29, a photographer from Savannah, Georgia.
Warlick, who laid white roses by the memorial, said she was about to sign a six-month lease on an apartment in the complex where Brown lived to support the community.
"The verdict is everything. If he doesn't go to jail for what he did, this place is going to burn," she said of Wilson

15 Australian fighters killed in Iraq, Syria

 Fifteen Australians, including two young suicide bombers, are believed to have died fighting in Syria and Iraq, intelligence chief David Irvine said on Wednesday, warning that espionage and foreign intervention threats were increasing.
Canberra has expressed alarm that around 60 Australians have joined violent jihadist groups such as Islamic State (IS) overseas.
One Islamic State fighter, Australian man Khaled Sharrouf, sparked outrage when an image of his Sydney-raised son posing with the rotting head of a Syrian soldier was reportedly posted on Twitter.
"The draw of foreign fighters to Syria and Iraq is significant and includes more Australians than any other previous extremist conflicts put together," Irvine said.
He said the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) believed the number of citizens posing a potential security threat had increased substantially as a result.
"ASIO believes there are about 60 or so Australians fighting with the two principal extremist al-Qaeda derivatives, Jahabat-al-Nusra and the Islamic State in Syria or Iraq," Irvine said.
"We believe 15 Australians have already been killed in the current conflicts, including two young Australian suicide bombers."
'Malicious insiders'
Irvine said 100 more people in Australia were "actively supporting" these extremist groups by recruiting new fighters, grooming suicide bombing candidates, and providing funds and equipment.
Australia has boosted its efforts to counter terrorism on fears that the bloody conflicts in Iraq and Syria are creating a new generation of militants, including increasing spending on security and intelligence and strengthening terror laws.
Irvine said intelligence agencies were concerned about the dangers posed when some of these people - potentially with a commitment to violence and training in the use of weapons or bomb-making - returned to Australia.
He also warned that the age-old threats of espionage and foreign interference were on the rise against Australia.
"I can say that we are seeing growth in espionage and foreign interference against Australia, both through cyber and more traditional methods," he said.
"Further, the threat to government information from self motivated malicious insiders has increased."
Asked about the killing of United States journalist James Foley, beheaded on a graphic video posted online last week, Irvine said he had no view on whether media outlets should have shown the footage.
But he added: "It has, whether you liked it or not... brought home to us an understanding of the nature of what we are dealing with''

Journalist held captive in Syria arrives in US

 Journalist Peter Theo Curtis returned home to the United States on Tuesday, two days after being freed by a Syrian extremist group that held him hostage for 22 months, his family said.
Curtis family spokesperson Betsy Sullivan said in a statement that Curtis arrived at Newark Liberty International Airport on Tuesday afternoon after leaving Tel Aviv. By evening he had been reunited with his mother Nancy Curtis at Boston Logan International Airport.
"I have been so touched and moved, beyond all words, by the people who have come up to me today — strangers on the airplane, the flight attendants, and most of all my family — to say welcome home," Curtis said in the statement.
He also said he was "deeply indebted" to the US officials who worked to get him released.
Curtis, 45, of Boston, was released by al-Nusra Front, a Sunni extremist group.
Last week, journalist James Foley, who also was kidnapped in 2012 while covering the Syrian uprising, was killed. The Islamic State group posted a Web video showing his execution.
The extremists said they killed the Rochester, New Hampshire, resident in retaliation for US airstrikes targeting Islamic State positions in northern Iraq.
Curtis' mother said she was "overwhelmed with relief" that her son had been returned to her ".But this is a sober occasion because of the events of the past week," she said. "My heart goes out to the other families who are suffering."
US freelance journalist, Austin Tice of Houston, disappeared in Syria in August 2012. He is believed to be held by the Syrian government.

Tuesday 26 August 2014

UK cops urge public to rat on aspiring terrorists

 British police on Tuesday urged people to identify "aspiring terrorists" among their family members, friends and neighbours after the killing of US journalist James Foley, apparently by a man with an English accent.
The appeal also comes amid growing government concern that British passport holders who travel to fight in Iraq and Syria could return to carry out attacks on home soil.
Jihadist group the Islamic State (IS) posted a graphic video online last week showing the beheading of Foley, who had been missing since his 2012 capture in Syria.
"We are appealing to the public, family members and friends to help identify aspiring terrorists; they may be about to travel abroad, have just returned or be showing signs of becoming radicalised," said Scotland Yard Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley, the country's most senior police officer on counter-terrorism, in a statement.
"Every reasonable person in the country has been touched by the pitiless murder of James Foley at the hands of Islamic State terrorists, and the murderer's apparent British nationality has focused attention on extremism in the UK as well as the Middle East."
He said British police had arrested five times more people in the first half of this year compared with 2013 for "Syria-related" offences.
There were 69 arrests in the first half of 2014 on suspicion of offences including travelling abroad for terrorist training, preparing acts of terrorism and fund raising for terrorist activity.
Some 1 100 pieces of extremist material are also being removed from social media websites such as YouTube, Facebook and Twitter, he added, 800 of them relating to Syria or Iraq.
Intelligence services say 500 Britons have travelled to Syria or Iraq to fight alongside jihadists in the last few years.
The government is under increasing pressure to take steps to combat radicalisation and Home Secretary Theresa May said Saturday that she was considering introducing new powers.
Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond on Sunday called it an "utter betrayal" that the killing had apparently been carried out by a Briton.
Rowley also said that "significant progress" was being made in the hunt for Foley's killer and Britain's ambassador to the US, Peter Westmacott, told CNN Sunday that the country's authorities were "close" to identifying the man.

Monday 25 August 2014

5-Year-Old Girl Threatens To Shoot Rapist

A little girl in Lagos shocked police officers when she asked for a weapon to shoot the man who raped her

The girl was said to have been sexually assaulted until she bled by a man identified simply as Okafor.
The incident was reported at the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID)in  Yaba and the suspect was arrested.
After his arrest, the victim allegedly asked a female police officer for a gun to shoot her assailant.

The crime was said to have been committed at an uncompleted building in the Badagry area of the state.

Go Topless Day:Women March Half-Naked For Equal Rights

The women marched topless on the streets of New York

Yesterday, August 24, 2014 was the seventh annual International “Go Topless Day” and women marched to campaign for equal rights.
One of such parades held in Manhattan, New York where going topless is actually legal.
The mission of the movement is to ensure that women are allowed to go topless in public just like men.
The women in NY marched without tops and with banners and placards and some men supported them.

The major goal of the campaign is to de-sexualize and demystify women's chests