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UN: Gaza School Attack A 'Criminal Act'

Written By Unknown on Senin, 04 Agustus 2014 | 00.27

Miliband Slams Cameron's Handling Of Gaza Crisis

Updated: 3:25pm UK, Sunday 03 August 2014

By Anushka Asthana, Political Correspondent

Labour leader Ed Miliband has accused David Cameron of failing to speak out about an Israeli military operation that he describes as "wrong and unjustifiable".

In a strongly worded statement, he said Mr Cameron had been right to call Hamas an appalling, terrorist organisation.

"But the Prime Minister is wrong not to have opposed Israel's incursion into Gaza," said Mr Miliband.

"And his silence on the killing of hundreds of innocent Palestinian civilians caused by Israeli's military action will be inexplicable to people across Britain and internationally.

"Hamas is a terrorist organisation and I utterly condemn their rocket attacks on Israel and the murder of Israeli soldiers.

"But that cannot excuse the scale of the loss of life of innocent Palestinian civilians, including children, that we are seeing."

In a television interview this morning the Opposition leader added: "We need the government to speak much louder and more clearly so it sends a message to Israel about the unacceptability of its actions."

Mr Miliband's comments came as 10 people were killed and 35 wounded after an Israeli missile strike at a United Nations school in the town of Rafah, which was being used as a shelter for people displaced by the conflict.

Downing Street reacted angrily to Mr Miliband's statement, insisting the Prime Minister had been clear that both sides in the conflict need to observe a ceasefire.

"We are shocked that Ed Miliband would seek to misrepresent that position and play politics with such a serious issue," said a Number 10 spokesperson.

A Labour source said the situation on the ground in Gaza had led Mr Miliband to speak out.

He said he supported Israel and believed it had the right to defend itself.

"But its military actions in the past two weeks have been wrong and unjustifiable.

"The escalation of violence engulfing Gaza has led, and is leading, to suffering and destruction on an appalling scale, and is losing Israel friends in the international community day by day."

It came amid claims that Britain is selling arms to Israel that could be being used against Palestinian citizens.

Katy Clark, a Labour MP on the Committee on Arms Export Controls, told Sky News arms had been sold since 2010 under hundreds of licences that were still in place.

Her committee found the UK can sell 22 different types of equipment to Israel including components for military combat vehicles, communications equipment, sniper rifles and water cannon.

The Government said it had started a review into all the licences, with the ultimate decision to suspend any lying with the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.

It is led by Lib Dem minister Vince Cable, who will be under pressure to act given the outspoken interventions from senior figures in his party.

Deputy Prime Minister and Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg has called on Israel to open direct talks with the political arm of Hamas.

Writing in The Guardian, he said the "daily images of human torment in Gaza have been harrowing and heartbreaking".

And he insisted Israel's "disproportionate" military response was only worsening the long-term situation.

Mr Clegg pointed to how the Queen shook hands with the former IRA commander Martin McGuinness as a reminder "that even the most intractable conflicts can be resolved".

Former Lib Dem leader Paddy Ashdown said any arms sales contributing to this conflict should be stopped.


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World War One: A Cemetery's Poignant Story

By Alistair Bunkall, Sky's Defence Correspondent

The small Belgian cemetery of St Symphorien, nears Mons, has a poignant story which makes it an appropriate venue to commemorate the outbreak of World War One.

The first shots on the Western Front were fired at dawn on August 23, 1914.

The morning was misty and damp and the British Expeditionary Force, newly arrived in Belgium, was camped in defensive positions on the bank of the Mons-Conde Canal. Facing them was the German invasion force they had come to repel.

By 10am the summer sun had risen and burnt through the fog. For the first time the enemy was revealed to the British soldiers, larger and better armed than anything they had expected.

Despite fighting valiantly through the day, the men of the BEF II Corps were overrun. By nightfall it was all over. The Germans had won the Battle of Mons, the first victory on the Western Front was theirs.

The British began the long, hard retreat towards Paris.

Belgium WW1 There are 229 Commonwealth and 294 German graves in the cemetery

The following year, 1915, after much heavy fighting, German soldiers dug up the dead around Mons. A local landowner gave them a patch of land on the edge of the small suburb of St Symphorien.

But it came with one condition attached: he insisted the German troops bury the Commonwealth dead with the same dignity and respect they do their own comrades. The Germans agreed.

Today, the cemetery is cared for by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. There are roughly an equal division of graves: 229 Commonwealth, 284 German.

Two stand out: That of Private John Parr of the Middlesex Regiment. He was shot and killed by a German sniper on August 21, 1914, and became the first soldier to die on the Western Front.

His grave, by sheer coincidence, faces that of Private George Ellison of the Royal Irish Lancers. He was killed on November 11, 1918, hours before the Armistice Declaration was signed - the last British soldier to be killed on the Western Front.

On Monday, relatives, members of European Royal families and senior politicians will gather at this small cemetery to remember the outbreak of the war 100 years ago.


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British Woman 'Murdered' At Safari Lodge

A British woman thought to have been murdered in South Africa has been described as a "wonderful lady" and "very kind".

Christine Robinson, 59, who had been living in the country for about 10 years, is believed to have been found stabbed to death and robbed at her safari lodge.

Her body was discovered on Wednesday in her bedroom in Limpopo, near Thabazimbi, 150 miles north-west of Johannesburg.

The wages she had just withdrawn to pay staff were missing, according to a family spokesman.

Mrs Robinson, a former primary school teacher who was originally from Liverpool, jointly owned the lodge with her husband, Robbie, who died from cancer two years ago.

Limpopo Ms Robinson's body ws found in her bedoom near Thabazimbi, Limpopo

Her niece Lehanne Sergison, 43, from Bickley, Kent, said friends and relatives were "heartbroken".

She said the Foreign Office confirmed there was a suspect but he could have "fled" to Zimbabwe.

She said of her aunt: "She was wonderful, she really was a wonderful lady. Very kind, humble woman. It's hard to express how wonderful she is.

"Christine was the most wonderful woman anyone could wish to meet, a warm, cheerful, compassionate, kind-hearted and very popular human being, who enriched the lives of everyone she met.

"She was also bubbly and full of fun. She was adventurous, too, and travelled the world - Europe, the Middle East and China - teaching English to foreign children in international schools."

Ms Sergison added: "We know very little (about the incident). She was murdered on Wednesday. We haven't had much joy out of the police in South Africa, so we don't really know anything more than that."

She also said her aunt treated her employees "as family".

A Foreign Office spokeswoman said: "We were notified of the death of a British national on July 30 in South Africa. We are providing consular assistance to the family at this difficult time."


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Deadly Quake Topples 12,000 Homes In China

At least 150 people have been killed and more than 1,400 injured by an earthquake in southwest China.

Some 12,000 homes collapsed in Ludian, a densely populated county in Yunnan province, according to the Xinhua news agency. 

News reports said rescuers are still trying to reach victims in more remote towns.

An injured child is carried on a stretcher after the quake in Yunnan province. Rescuers carry an injuried child on a stretcher in Ludian county

The epicentre was in the town of Longtoushan where one official was quoted as saying: "Too many buildings were damaged."

Ma Liya, a resident of Ludian county, which was a few miles away, said the streets were like a "battlefield after bombardment". 

"The aftermath is much, much worse than what happened after the quake two years ago," Ma said.

A paramilitary policeman carries a baby in his arms after an earthquake hit Ludian county of Zhaotong A paramilitary policeman carries a baby in his arms after the quake

"I have never felt such strong tremors before. What I can see are all ruins."

She added that her neighbour's house, a new two-storey building, had toppled.

Many of the homes that collapsed in Ludian, which has a population of about 429,000, were old and made of brick.

Electricity and telecommunications have also been cut off in the county

A paramilitary policeman carries an elderly man on his back after an earthquake hit Ludian county of Zhaotong Power lines and communications have been badly affected

Xinhua is reporting at least 49 people dead and 102 people injured in Qiaojia county.

The US Geological Survey said it had a 6.3 magnitude, while China Earthquake Networks Centre measured it at 6.5.

The earthquake hit at a depth of six miles at about 4.30pm (9.30am UK time).

Pictures posted online by state media showed troops taking people away on stretchers.

China.

Power lines and communications have been badly affected by the strongest earthquake to hit Yunnan in 14 years.

In 1970, a magnitude-7.7 earthquake in Yunnan killed at least 15,000 people, and a magnitude-7.1 quake in the province killed more than 1,400 in 1974.

In September 2012, 81 people died and 821 were injured in a series of quakes in the Yunnan region.


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Pesticide Blamed For High Cancer Rate In India

By Neville Lazarus, Sky News India Producer

It's nine o'clock at night and 39-year-old Sukha and his family are waiting to board the 339 Abohar train, infamously called the Cancer Express. Sukha's wife and mother suffer from the disease.

The family is not alone on this journey. Scores of patients board the Cancer Express every night from Punjab.

Locals tell us there are about 50 to 60 patients every day and on a Sunday the train is packed. They are all headed to the government hospital, 200 miles away in Bikaner, Rajasthan. 

Navdeep, 25, is taking his grandmother for her monthly check-up. He tells Sky News: "The pesticides and chemicals used on crops has infected the food and that's why so many people are getting the disease."

It's early morning now and the Acharya Tulsi Regional Cancer Treatment and Research Center (RCC) in Bikaner hospital is overflowing.

Some wait outside on the side walk. The hospital provides all medication free of charge to those who are too poor to pay.

India cancer train Many cancer patients have to travel 200 miles for treatment

Dr Ajay Sharma, director of the centre, has been working here for over two decades. He has since seen a steep increase in the number of patients and says the 8,000 fresh cases are a worry.

Though he attributes the numbers to an increasing population and change in lifestyle, he tells Sky News: "Nowadays everything is polluted. People use insecticides and injections to grow more and bigger vegetables."

The cancer centre deals with almost 400 patients a day. Last year 80,000 patients walked through the doors and a large number from the Malwa region of Punjab. 

Records at the Health Department of the Government of Punjab show 34,430 people died due to cancer in the last five years - 20 deaths each day.

In the 1960s there was concern that India would be unable to feed its growing population.

It embarked on the green revolution - increasing agricultural output with the use of modern farming, hybrid seeds chemicals, fertilisers and pesticides. Punjab led this revolution and became the breadbasket.

India cancer train The use of pesticides has been blamed for the high cancer rate

Sky News travelled to the cancer belt of the Malwa region. The village of Jajjhar has an unusually high rate of cases and deaths. The disease carries a stigma and no one wants to talk about it. 

The headman, Baba Gyan Das, says the village is in disrepute, and that no outsider wants to marry into the community. He shows us file after file of young and old people who have died. 

"It's been disastrous for us. Pesticides have killed young men, women and the elderly and the government is doing nothing."

Umendra Dutt, of the Kheti Virasat Mission, wants farmers to switch to organic farming. He believes the indiscriminate and unscientific use of chemicals on the land has made it medically and environmentally unsustainable.

"Punjab is a victim of intensive agriculture based on mechanisation and chemicalisation, and due to this Punjab has a cancer crisis, reproductive health crisis, farmer suicides, debt and water crisis," he tells Sky News.

Punjab is one of the most prosperous states in India, but this prosperity is not without a price.


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PM Warns Nato 'Russia Could Be A Threat'

Nato must bolster its military presence in eastern Europe so it could respond quickly to any threat from Russia, David Cameron has warned.

The Prime Minister has written to his Nato counterparts urging a rethink on relations with Moscow following its "illegal" actions in Ukraine, including the annexation of Crimea earlier this year.

He wrote: "We must review our long-term relationship with Russia. While Nato has only ever sought to be a partner to Russia, not a threat, it is clear that Russia views Nato as an adversary.

"We must accept that the co-operation of recent years is not currently possible because of Russia's own illegal actions in Nato's neighbourhood and revisit the principles that guide our relationship with Russia."

Measures should include sustaining a "robust" defensive presence in eastern Europe, adopting a new schedule of military exercises, positioning equipment and supplies in key locations and boosting Nato's Response Force.

The letter comes days after a report from the House of Commons Defence Committee warned that transatlantic defence forces were not prepared for any threat from Russia.

A Russian tank rolls outside a former Ukrainian military base in Perevalnoye, near the Crimean capital Simferopol A Russian tank rolls outside a former Ukrainian military base in Crimea

Mr Cameron wants to use next month's Nato summit in south Wales to agree "long-term measures to strengthen our ability to respond quickly to any threat, to reassure those allies who fear for their own country's security and to deter any Russian aggression".

He believes the summit comes at a "pivotal" time in the organisation's history.

"In 2014, the world is more unpredictable than ever," the Prime Minister said. "To the East, Russia has ripped up the rulebook with its illegal annexation of Crimea and aggressive destabilisation of Ukraine. To the South, an arc of instability spreads from North Africa and the Sahel, to Syria, Iraq and the wider Middle East.

"So we must use the summit to agree how Nato should adapt to respond to and deter such threats; and to ensure the continued collective defence of all its members."

Meanwhile, Russia's Foreign Ministry has accused the European Union of withdrawing a ban on supplying Ukraine with military equipment "on the quiet".

Its statement also urged Europe not to be "goaded" by Washington over events in east Ukraine.


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Four Dead As Flash Floods Hit Italian Festival

Four men have died at a festival in Italy after a thunderstorm caused flash floods.

Another 20 people were injured when around water around six feet high swept away festival goers.

About 100 people were enjoying an annual gathering by a stream near the northern town of Refrontolo when the violent downpours began.

The scene of floods in Italy, where four festival goers died. Emergency workers clear up near the town of Refrontolo

Mirco Lorenzon, a local civil protection official, said: "Nobody had ever seen anything like it.

"There were two metres of water. People grabbed on to trees to save themselves."

The storm caused about 50 mudslides as well as damage to property, Mr Lorenzon added.

Several cars were also swept away.

The scene of floods in Italy, where four festival goers died. Up to two metres of water swept away festival goers

Luca Zaia, governor of the Veneto region, said: "There was an hour-and-a-half of rain so heavy that you couldn't see anything.

"Within the hour, I will sign papers declaring a state of emergency for the area."

It is not the first time floods have led to fatalities in Italy over the past year. In November storms in Sardinia caused floods that killed 18 people.


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'Incredible Talent': American Idol Singer Dies

A former contestant in the TV singing competition American Idol has died at the age of 35.

Michael Johns was a finalist in the seventh series of the Fox music show and finished eighth after being knocked out in April 2008.

The Australian-born singer died on Friday and his family said the loss of "a wonderful husband, son, brother, uncle, and friend" was devastating.

Former American Idol judge Simon Cowell was among those who also paid tribute to Johns.

He tweeted: "I just heard the very sad news that Michael Johns has passed away. A truly great guy. Rest in peace Michael."

Another ex-judge Paula Abdul tweeted: "Heartfelt condolences to the family of @michael_johns from @AmericanIdol season 7. He will be missed.#RIPMichaelJohns

Simon Cowell Simon Cowell called Johns a 'truly great guy'

"I'm heartbroken over the loss of @michael_johns. His enormous talent, gigantic heart & infectious personality will live in my heart forever."

Fox said: "Michael Johns was an incredible talent and we are deeply saddened by the news of his passing.

"He was a part of our American Idol family and he will be truly missed. Our hearts and prayers go out to his family and friends during this difficult time."

After the show, Johns released an album, Hold Back My Heart, in 2009.

His cause of death has not been revealed but the Hollywood Reporter said he suffered a blood clot in his ankle.

TMZ said he had twisted his ankle and it appeared it triggered the clot.

Johns leaves behind his wife, Stacey. The couple met in West Hollywood in 2003 and married four years later.


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Royal Navy Rescues British Nationals From Libya

By Alistair Bunkall, Defence Correspondent

The Royal Navy has assisted the evacuation of around 110 British and EU nationals from Libya.

HMS Enterprise was earlier moved into position off the coast of North Africa before sailing into Tripoli.

LIBYA-UNREST-AIRPORT There has been a severe deterioration in the security situation

The ship was moored offshore as her survey boat, Spitfire, collected people from the Port of Tripoli.

A detachment of armed personnel, usually Royal Marines, are providing force protection to the ship in the event of attack.

A Foreign Office (FCO) statement said: "A number of passengers were transferred to Enterprise by boat and given supplies for the journey."

Britain is also planning to temporarily suspend its embassy operations in the troubled north African country, the FCO said.

A file picture of HMS Enterprise. HMS Enterprise. File picture

The routine follows a similar scenario in 2011 during the uprising when HMS Cumberland, a Type 22 frigate, evacuated foreign nationals and refugees from the civil war.

Many of the consular staff were evacuated last Monday but the ambassador and core staff remained.

Defence Secretary Michael Fallon said: "The Royal Navy is helping British citizens leave Libya based upon Foreign and Commonwealth Office advice.

"I thank the crew of HMS Enterprise for their support and professionalism in carrying out this important task."

Although the United States used F-16 fighter jets for air cover when their citizens left Libya by road for Tunisia last week, it is not thought any British aircraft will be involved in this mission.

Britain is one of the last countries to wind down its diplomatic mission in Libya following a severe deterioration in the security situation as rebel groups continue fighting each other.

France and America, two of the other principal players in the 2011 war, closed their embassies last week.

The Ministry of Defence said: "As the Foreign Office has made clear, the UK Government will provide assisted departure for a number of UK nationals before suspending consular operations on Monday.

"For operational reasons we will not discuss further details including whether, and in what ways, the MoD could support these efforts."


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US Doctor With Ebola 'Seems To Be Improving'

An American doctor infected with the ebola virus in West Africa "seems to be improving," according to a US official.

Aid worker Kent Brantly was flown from Liberia to his home country on Saturday and is now being treated at a hospital in Atlanta, Georgia.

Wearing a white bio-suit, he was seen walking slowly into the medical facility which has a state-of-the-art isolation unit.

Another person in an identical suit was holding both Dr Brantly's gloved hands outside the Emory University hospital.

Doctors say they are confident the deadly virus will not escape.

Dr Kent Brantly and missionary Nancy Writebol Dr Kent Brantly and missionary Nancy Writebol were infected in Liberia

Tom Frieden, the director of the Atlanta-based Centres for Disease Control, told CBS: "It's encouraging that he seems to be improving.

"That's really important, and we're hoping he'll continue to improve. But Ebola is such a scary disease because it's so deadly."

More than 700 people have died in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia during the current outbreak but Mr Frieden is confident it can be contained.

A general view of Emory University Hospital in Atlanta Emory University Hospital in Atlanta has a dedicated containment unit

"The plain fact is, we can stop it. We can stop it from spreading in hospitals and we can stop it in Africa," he said.

"In fact, we have stopped every previous outbreak, and I'm confident we can stop this one."

The disease has a fatality rate of 60-90%.

Dr Brantly, who had been treating people in Liberia, was transported in a specially equipped plane to contain infectious diseases.

Staff carry the body of an ebola victim in Guinea More than 700 people have died in the latest outbreak

A second American with the virus, missionary Nancy Writebol, is due to arrive on a later flight as the aircraft is only able to carry one patient at a time.

Meanwhile, one of Britain's leading public health doctors has said drug companies are "morally bankrupt" for failing to invest in research into the virus.

Doctor John Ashton, who is president of the Faculty of Public Health, has accused the West of "tardiness" in its response to the disease.


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