October 26, 2009

Two Afghan choppers crash, 14 Americans killed.Report


Kabul: A series of helicopter crashes killed 14 Americans in insurgent-wracked Afghanistan on Monday, the US military said. It was one of the deadliest days of the war for US troops.
In the first crash, a chopper went down in the west of the country after leaving the scene of a firefight with insurgents, killing 10 Americans _ seven troops and three civilians working for the government. Eleven American troops, one US civilian and 14 Afghans were also injured. In a separate incident in the south, two other US choppers collided while in flight, killing four American troops and wounding two more, the military said.
US authorities have ruled out hostile fire in the collision but have not given a cause for the other fatal crash in the west. Taliban spokesman Qari Yusuf Ahmedi claimed Taliban fighters shot down a helicopter in northwest Badghis province's Darabam district. It was impossible to verify the claim and unclear if he was referring to the same incident.

US forces also reported the death of two other American troops a day earlier: one in a bomb attack in the east, and another who died of wounds sustained in an insurgent attack in the same region. The deaths bring to at least 46 the number of US troops who have been killed in October.
Earlier this month, insurgents killed eight American troops in an attack on a pair of isolated US outposts in the eastern village of Kamdesh near the Pakistan border. That was the heaviest US loss of life in a single battle since July 2008, when nine American soldiers were killed in a raid on an outpost in Wanat in the same province.
''These separate tragedies today underscore the risks our forces and our partners face every day,'' Col. Wayne Shanks, a spokesman for the NATO-led coalition, said Monday. ''Each and every death is a tremendous loss for the family and friends of each service member and civilian. Our grief is compounded when we have such a significant loss on one day.''
This has been the deadliest year for international and US forces since the 2001 invasion to oust the Taliban. Fighting spiked around the presidential vote in August, and 51 US soldiers died that month _ the deadliest for American forces in the eight-year war.
The deaths come as US officials debate whether to send tens of thousands more troops to the country and the Afghan government scrambles to organize a Nov. 7 runoff election between President Hamid Karzai and his top challenger from an August vote that was sullied by massive ballot-rigging. President Barack Obama's administration is hoping the runoff will produce a legitimate government. Another flawed election would cast doubt on the wisdom of sending more troops to support a weak government tainted by fraud.

US military spokeswoman Elizabeth Mathias said coalition forces had launched an operation to recover the wreckage of the helicopter that was downed in the west.
She said the aircraft was leaving the site of a joint operation with Afghan forces when it went down.
The joint force had ''searched a suspected compound believed to harbor insurgents conducting activities related to narcotics trafficking in western Afghanistan,'' NATO said in a statement. ''During the operation, insurgent forces engaged the joint force and more than a dozen enemy fighters were killed in the ensuing firefight.
Afghanistan is the world's largest producer of opium _ the raw ingredient in heroin _ and the illicit drug trade is a major source of funding for Taliban and other insurgent groups.
On Sunday, Karzai and his rival, former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah, both ruled out a power-sharing deal before the runoff, saying the second round of balloting must be held as planned to bolster democracy in this war-ravaged country.
Meanwhile, security forces in Kabul fired automatic rifles into the air for a second day Monday to contain hundreds of stone-throwing university students angered over the alleged desecration of a Muslim holy book, the Quran, by US troops during an operation two weeks ago in Wardak province. Firetrucks were also brought in to push back protesters with water cannons. Police said several officers were injured in the mayhem.
US and Afghan authorities have denied any such desecration and insist that the Taliban are spreading the rumor to stir up public anger. The rumor has sparked similar protests in Wardak and Khost provinces.
On Sunday, the students in the capital burned Obama in effigy and chanted slogans such as ''down with Americans, down with Israel'' as they marched from Kabul University to the parliament building, where riot police turned them back.

Saudi king pardons female reporter from flogging

DUBAI :  The king of Saudi Arabia waived a 60 lashes punishment for a female journalist charged with involvement in a TV show in which a Saudi man publicly talked about his raunchy sex life, a government official said Monday.
The Information Ministry's spokesman, Abdul-Rahman al-Hazza, said that the king waived the sentence he was given details about the case by the information minister.
Last week a court in Jeddah sentenced journalist Rosanna Yami to 60 lashes for her role in the July broadcasting on Lebanese satellite channel LBC of the sex talk episode called "Bold Red Line."
In the episode a divorced Saudi father of four who works for the national airline, Mazen Abdul-Jawad, described an active and raunchy sex life and showed sex toys that were blurred by the station in the footage shown on TV.
The government moved swiftly in the wake of the case, shutting down LBC's two offices in the kingdom and arresting Abdul-Jawad.

October 25, 2009

Saudi court orders female journalist flogged

RIYADH :  A court on Saturday sentenced a female Saudi journalist to receive 60 lashes for her links with a Saudi-owned Lebanese TV network which broadcast a provocative racy show in July.
Rosanna al-Yami said a Jeddah judge dropped all charges that she had been directly involved with a program on Beirut-based network LBC in which a Saudi man boasted of his sex life, outraging Saudi conservatives and leading to the man's imprisonment.
However, Yami said the judge sentenced her to 60 lashes for having been a part-time employee for LBC's Saudi operations. The judge said that LBC had lacked the appropriate operating license.

"It's a punishment for all journalists through me," Yami told AFP by telephone.
"They just said the channel was illegal. But the Saudi minister of information himself appeared on LBC a couple week ago," she said.
Yami's sentencing comes after airline sales clerk Mazen Abdul Jawad was convicted of offensive behavior and sentenced to five years in jail and 1,000 lashes on Oct.7 for his July appearance on the LBC show "Bold Red Line" in which he talked about picking up girls and having sex with them.
Three friends who appeared on the show with him were given two-year terms and 300 lashes each, while a cameraman who helped film the episode was sentenced to two months in jail.

At least 14 people dead in Egypt train collision

CAIRO:  At least 14 people were killed and 24 others injured in a collision between two trains on Saturday in Giza district southwest of the Egyptian capital, with more bodies believed caught in the rubble, medical sources said.
A security services official said: "The two trains collided at al-Ayyat, in Giza. There are deaths and injuries."
"The trains were travelling on the same track. One ran into the other as they headed towards Upper Egypt," the security official said.
El-Ayatt and al-Wasta hospitals in Cairo received 40 wounded passengers, Said Abd el-Rahman Shaheen, spokesman for the ministry of health, adding that the death toll was yet to be determined and denying reports that more than 30 people have perished in the crash, Al Arabiya TV reported.
One medical source said people appeared to be trapped under an overturned train.
Fatal train crashes are not unusual in Egypt.
A train crash in northern Egypt killed 44 people in 2008, two years after a crash that killed 58 people. In 2002, at least 360 people were killed when fire ripped through seven carriages of a crowded passenger train.

October 24, 2009

Bank Failures Now at 106

WASHINGTON -- Small banks continued to succumb across the U.S., with state and federal regulators on Friday closing seven financial institutions in Florida, Georgia, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois.

The failures bring the number of U.S. banks shut down so far this year to 106 -- the highest number of failures in any single year since 1992.
State regulators in Wisconsin closed Racine's Bank of Elmwood, making it Friday's largest and costliest bank failure. Bank of Elmwood had total assets of $327.4 million and total deposits of $273.2 million. Tri City National Bank in Oak Creek, Wis., has agreed to assume all of Bank of Elmwood's deposits and essentially all of its assets.
In the other closings:
In Friday's second-largest failure, Illinois regulators closed First Dupage Bank, selling essentially all of its $279 million in assets and all of its $254 million in deposits to First Midwest Bank in Itasca, Ill.
Federal regulators closed Flagship National Bank in Bradenton, Fla., selling its deposits to First Federal Bank of Florida. They also closed Partners Bank in Naples, Fla., selling its deposits to Stonegate Bank in Fort Lauderdale.
Florida regulators closed Hillcrest Bank Florida in Naples, also selling its deposits to Fort Lauderdale's Stonegate. Georgia regulators closed American United Bank, of Lawrenceville, selling its deposits to Ameris Bank (ABCB) in Moultrie, Ga.
In Minnesota, state regulators closed Riverview Community Bank, selling essentially all of its $108 million in assets and all of its $80 million in deposits to Stillwater, Minn.'s Central Bank. The FDIC has agreed to share in losses on $75 million of Riverview's assets.
The closures show smaller banks, particularly those in the Southeastern U.S., are continuing to struggle even as a sluggish economic recovery appears to be taking hold across the U.S.
Separately on Friday, the National Credit Union Administration placed Mississippi's First Delta Federal Credit Union into conservatorship.
The 5,500-member credit union has assets of $5 million.