Monday, September 26, 2011

?Many of them died in their sleep?

Monsoon rains caused mud-walled homes to collapse and kill at least 31 people in India's most populous state.

|||

Lucknow, India - Monsoon rains caused mud-walled homes to collapse and kill at least 31 people in India's most populous state over the weekend, while thousands have been marooned by flooding elsewhere in the north, officials said on Monday.

Rescuers struggled to reach affected villages in eastern part of Uttar Pradesh but were hampered by rains expected to continue another two days. Rivers including the Ganga were flowing above danger levels.

Thirteen people died in the state's Mirzapur district “when the roof of their mud houses collapsed,” Relief Commissioner K.K. Sinha said.

Another 18 died in Jaunpur district.

“Many of them died in their sleep,” said PK Upadhaya, a district magistrate. “Heavy rainfall hampered the rescue operation.”

More than 50 villages in Chandauli district were also flooded. The northern Indian state offered compensation of about $2 200 to victims' families.

Water overflowing from dams in Uttar Pradesh, meanwhile, caused widespread flooding in 12 districts of neighbouring Bihar state, Water Resources Minister Vijendra Choudhary.

Thousands of people were taking shelter on embankments and rooftops.

The state also ordered all engineers to cancel any holidays and guard the riverbanks from further erosion. - Sapa-AP

Source: http://www.iol.co.za/many-of-them-died-in-their-sleep-1.1144929

Botswana Chelsea Digital media US economic growth and recession Everton Spending review 2010

This is Nottingham published Gallery: Watford 0 Forest 1

Gallery


Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503354/s/18ddff92/l/0L0Sthisisnottingham0O0Cpictures0CGallery0EWatford0E0A0EForest0E10Cpictures0E1340A59680Edetail0Cpictures0Bhtml/story01.htm

Women Endangered species Motherwell Burlesque Paul Myners Fifa

Grave may hold remains of 1 200

Skull fragments scattered over a desert field are grim testament to a massacre of more than 1 200 prisoners.

|||

Tripoli -A bone wrapped with rope and skull fragments scattered over a cactus-covered desert field are grim testament to a 1996 massacre of more than 1 200 prisoners by Muammar Gaddafi's regime.

Libyan officials announced on Sunday that they found a mass grave believed to hold the remains of the victims outside the white walls of Tripoli's Abu Salim prison, where Gaddafi locked up and tortured opponents or simply made them disappear. Excavation has not begun, but several bone fragments and pieces of clothing already have been found in the topsoil.

Those bones could offer some of the most damning evidence of the brutality of Gaddafi's nearly 42-year rule, and allow relatives of the victims to learn the truth about their fates after years of regime stonewalling. They also hold symbolic importance to the Libyan revolution itself, which was sparked in mid-February in the eastern city of Benghazi by demonstrators demanding the release of a prominent lawyer representing the families of slain inmates.

“We have discovered the truth about what the Libyan people have been waiting for for many years, and it is the bodies and remains of the Abu Salim massacre,” military spokesman Khalid al-Sherif said at a news conference.

Soldiers and relatives sifted through the sand during a visit on Sunday, displaying a pair of pants and other remains for reporters brought to the site. A group of former rebels at the site shouted “Allahu Akbar” - “God is great” - as relatives wandered through the area.

Al-Sherif and members of a committee tasked with finding mass graves said they were confident the field holds the remains of the prison massacre victims based on information from witnesses, including former security guards who have been captured in the fight against the authoritarian leader.

Gaddafi has been in hiding since revolutionary forces swept into Tripoli in late August, though his supporters continue to fight in several parts of the country. He, one of his sons and his intelligence chief face international charges of crimes against humanity for the regime's bloody effort to wipe out anti-government protests this year, but not for earlier killings.

The June 1996 massacre occurred after inmates rioted to protest their treatment. Guards responded by opening fire on them. Al-Sherif said authorities believe the bodies were kept in the prison before they were buried in 2000.

The killings became a focal point for Gaddafi's opponents. Most of the inmates were political prisoners, including Islamic clerics and students who had dared to speak against the erratic leader, who wielded almost complete control over the oil-rich North African nation.

For many years, families of those killed were not told the truth and were barred from visiting, but reports about the shootings began to emerge after one of the guards spoke out and human rights groups began to investigate. Gaddafi had agreed to pay the families compensation, but activists insisted that those responsible be brought to justice.

Ibrahim Abu Shima, a member of the committee looking for mass graves, said investigators believe 1 270 people were buried in the field, based on a list of prisoners reported killed. He stressed that Libya needed help from the international community to find and identify the remains because they lacked sophisticated equipment needed for DNA testing.

The Geneva-based International Committee of the Red Cross has said at least 13 mass graves have been found in Libya since Tripoli fell.

Soaade Messoudi, a Red Cross spokeswoman in Tripoli, said the organisation dispatched two forensics experts this month to help with the management of human remains. But she said the organisation is not involved in collecting evidence that could be used in any legal proceedings.

“We urge the people to be careful in uncovering human remains,” she said. “This could really affect any possible recovery of the identity of these missing persons.”

The New York-based group Human Rights Watch has urged Libya's transitional government to keep mass grave sites secure and to stop exhuming remains until it can be done properly.

Sami al-Saadi, who said he lost two brothers in the massacre and was himself imprisoned at one point, said it was important to bring closure for relatives who have gone years without knowing where their loved ones are buried.

He said he had rejoiced when revolutionary forces succeeded in ousting Gaddafi, but the memory of his brothers Mohammed and Adel cast a shadow over the celebrations.

“The people who are responsible for this massacre should be brought before a judge and we can give now sure evidence to all the world about Muammar Gaddafi and how this dictator led this country and its people,” al-Saadi said as he stood in the field, walls lined with barbed wire towering behind him.

Mabrouka al-Sayed said she has waited years for news of her son Abdul-Aziz, who was believed killed in the massacre. She said representatives from the prison claimed he died after becoming ill but she didn't believe them. They never returned his body, giving her only a death certificate.

“I've been in deep sadness because I didn't know where my son was,” she said as she sat in a pickup truck with her grandson while male relatives went to see the field. “I feel great relief now that I know where his burial place is.”

The prison itself, near what had been Gaddafi's sprawling compound, sits empty now. Its inmates were freed amid fierce fighting as rebels swept Gaddafi's regime from the capital. - Sapa-AP

Source: http://www.iol.co.za/grave-may-hold-remains-of-1-200-1.1144413

Highlands Property Food and drink Crime Classical music Sir Michael Lyons

Angolan police break up rally

Authorities in Angola have broken up an anti-government rally by a group calling itself the Young Revolutionaries Movement.

|||

Luanda - Angolan police broke up an anti-government demonstration on Sunday 10 minutes after about 100 youngsters began a rally in the capital calling for President Jose Eduardo Dos Santos to resign.

A substantial police deployment dispersed members of a group calling itself the Young Revolutionaries Movement, sources said.

They had planned to march to Independence Square but when police stopped them they decided to camp in front a nearby cemetery.

“Thirty-two years in power is too much! Jose Eduardo Dos Santos, you must go!” said the protesters, who also called for the release of 17 colleagues arrested at a rally earlier this month.

Police violently broke up the group's September 3 demonstration, which was called to protest a lack of basic services like running water and electricity in Africa's second largest oil producer.

The Young Revolutionaries Movement is made up mostly of university students and some popular rappers, who sing against Dos Santos.

Sunday's demonstration saw the partners and mothers of some of those arrested previously take part.

Police spokesperson Carmon Neto said officers had only applied the law in “calmly stopping” the protest which he said the force had not been informed about.

“There were no clashes between police and Luanda's youth,” he said. - Sapa-AFP

Source: http://www.iol.co.za/angolan-police-break-up-rally-1.1144255

Moscow Energy Bulgaria Enjoy England TwiTrips Tim Cahill Roberto Mancini

Grave may hold remains of 1 200

Skull fragments scattered over a desert field are grim testament to a massacre of more than 1 200 prisoners.

|||

Tripoli -A bone wrapped with rope and skull fragments scattered over a cactus-covered desert field are grim testament to a 1996 massacre of more than 1 200 prisoners by Muammar Gaddafi's regime.

Libyan officials announced on Sunday that they found a mass grave believed to hold the remains of the victims outside the white walls of Tripoli's Abu Salim prison, where Gaddafi locked up and tortured opponents or simply made them disappear. Excavation has not begun, but several bone fragments and pieces of clothing already have been found in the topsoil.

Those bones could offer some of the most damning evidence of the brutality of Gaddafi's nearly 42-year rule, and allow relatives of the victims to learn the truth about their fates after years of regime stonewalling. They also hold symbolic importance to the Libyan revolution itself, which was sparked in mid-February in the eastern city of Benghazi by demonstrators demanding the release of a prominent lawyer representing the families of slain inmates.

“We have discovered the truth about what the Libyan people have been waiting for for many years, and it is the bodies and remains of the Abu Salim massacre,” military spokesman Khalid al-Sherif said at a news conference.

Soldiers and relatives sifted through the sand during a visit on Sunday, displaying a pair of pants and other remains for reporters brought to the site. A group of former rebels at the site shouted “Allahu Akbar” - “God is great” - as relatives wandered through the area.

Al-Sherif and members of a committee tasked with finding mass graves said they were confident the field holds the remains of the prison massacre victims based on information from witnesses, including former security guards who have been captured in the fight against the authoritarian leader.

Gaddafi has been in hiding since revolutionary forces swept into Tripoli in late August, though his supporters continue to fight in several parts of the country. He, one of his sons and his intelligence chief face international charges of crimes against humanity for the regime's bloody effort to wipe out anti-government protests this year, but not for earlier killings.

The June 1996 massacre occurred after inmates rioted to protest their treatment. Guards responded by opening fire on them. Al-Sherif said authorities believe the bodies were kept in the prison before they were buried in 2000.

The killings became a focal point for Gaddafi's opponents. Most of the inmates were political prisoners, including Islamic clerics and students who had dared to speak against the erratic leader, who wielded almost complete control over the oil-rich North African nation.

For many years, families of those killed were not told the truth and were barred from visiting, but reports about the shootings began to emerge after one of the guards spoke out and human rights groups began to investigate. Gaddafi had agreed to pay the families compensation, but activists insisted that those responsible be brought to justice.

Ibrahim Abu Shima, a member of the committee looking for mass graves, said investigators believe 1 270 people were buried in the field, based on a list of prisoners reported killed. He stressed that Libya needed help from the international community to find and identify the remains because they lacked sophisticated equipment needed for DNA testing.

The Geneva-based International Committee of the Red Cross has said at least 13 mass graves have been found in Libya since Tripoli fell.

Soaade Messoudi, a Red Cross spokeswoman in Tripoli, said the organisation dispatched two forensics experts this month to help with the management of human remains. But she said the organisation is not involved in collecting evidence that could be used in any legal proceedings.

“We urge the people to be careful in uncovering human remains,” she said. “This could really affect any possible recovery of the identity of these missing persons.”

The New York-based group Human Rights Watch has urged Libya's transitional government to keep mass grave sites secure and to stop exhuming remains until it can be done properly.

Sami al-Saadi, who said he lost two brothers in the massacre and was himself imprisoned at one point, said it was important to bring closure for relatives who have gone years without knowing where their loved ones are buried.

He said he had rejoiced when revolutionary forces succeeded in ousting Gaddafi, but the memory of his brothers Mohammed and Adel cast a shadow over the celebrations.

“The people who are responsible for this massacre should be brought before a judge and we can give now sure evidence to all the world about Muammar Gaddafi and how this dictator led this country and its people,” al-Saadi said as he stood in the field, walls lined with barbed wire towering behind him.

Mabrouka al-Sayed said she has waited years for news of her son Abdul-Aziz, who was believed killed in the massacre. She said representatives from the prison claimed he died after becoming ill but she didn't believe them. They never returned his body, giving her only a death certificate.

“I've been in deep sadness because I didn't know where my son was,” she said as she sat in a pickup truck with her grandson while male relatives went to see the field. “I feel great relief now that I know where his burial place is.”

The prison itself, near what had been Gaddafi's sprawling compound, sits empty now. Its inmates were freed amid fierce fighting as rebels swept Gaddafi's regime from the capital. - Sapa-AP

Source: http://www.iol.co.za/grave-may-hold-remains-of-1-200-1.1144413

Insects Poland Chalkboards James Beattie Health & wellbeing Aston villa

Nottingham Post commented Burns: Hughes deal is as simple as black and white

Article

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503354/s/18dc3d64/l/0L0Sthisisnottingham0O0CBurns0EHughes0Edeal0Esimple0Eblack0Ewhite0Cstory0E1340A4950A0Edetail0Cstory0Bhtml/story01.htm

Conservation Retirement planning Kanye West Virginia Scotland Weekend breaks

Nottingham Post published Blackmailer who sent threatening letters jailed

Article


Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503354/s/18dabed9/l/0L0Sthisisnottingham0O0CBlackmailer0Esent0Ethreatening0Eletters0Ejailed0Cstory0E1340A50A420Edetail0Cstory0Bhtml/story01.htm

Laws of football Italy Biology Hotels Tuition fees Foreign currency