World News Thread & Breaking News!!

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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
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Is a Libya-North Korea war possible, will it be a win-win for both goverments if they go to a "war" where only a few dies to shift focus from internal problems:confused:

update::
Navy SEALS board, take control of rogue Libya tanker

Published March 17, 2014/
FoxNews.com




Navy SEALs have boarded and taken command of an oil tanker that was seized by three armed men at a Libyan port earlier this month, thwarting an attempt by a splinter militia group from selling nationalized oil on the black market.

A Pentagon spokesman said that the operation was carried out Sunday night in international waters southeast of Cyprus and was conducted at the request of the Libyan and Cypriot governments. There were no casualties. The USS Roosevelt provided an embarkation point for the SEALs as well as helicopter support and served as a command and control and support platform.

"The Morning Glory is carrying a cargo of oil owned by the Libyan government National Oil Company. The ship and its cargo were illicitly obtained from the Libyan port of As-Sidra," Rear Adm. John Kirby's statement read in part.

The tanker, called Morning Glory, eluded a Libyan naval blockade around port of Sidra, which is being held by militias who are demanding autonomy for eastern Libya. The maneuver led to the dismissal of Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan by that country's parliament.

The ship was docked at the port under the flag of North Korea, but officials in Pyongyang told the Associated Press they had canceled the vessel's registration after being notified that the tanker had been loaded for export in defiance of the authorities in Tripoli.

The Pentagon said that a team of sailors will take the tanker to a Libyan port.
 
update::
Navy SEALS board, take control of rogue Libya tanker

Published March 17, 2014/
FoxNews.com

Navy SEALs have boarded and taken command of an oil tanker that was seized by three armed men at a Libyan port earlier this month, thwarting an attempt by a splinter militia group from selling nationalized oil on the black market.

A Pentagon spokesman said that the operation was carried out Sunday night in international waters southeast of Cyprus and was conducted at the request of the Libyan and Cypriot governments. There were no casualties. The USS Roosevelt provided an embarkation point for the SEALs as well as helicopter support and served as a command and control and support platform.

"The Morning Glory is carrying a cargo of oil owned by the Libyan government National Oil Company. The ship and its cargo were illicitly obtained from the Libyan port of As-Sidra," Rear Adm. John Kirby's statement read in part.

The tanker, called Morning Glory, eluded a Libyan naval blockade around port of Sidra, which is being held by militias who are demanding autonomy for eastern Libya. The maneuver led to the dismissal of Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan by that country's parliament.

The ship was docked at the port under the flag of North Korea, but officials in Pyongyang told the Associated Press they had canceled the vessel's registration after being notified that the tanker had been loaded for export in defiance of the authorities in Tripoli.

The Pentagon said that a team of sailors will take the tanker to a Libyan port.

Sounds like the North Koreans washed their hands of it and it boils back down to an internal Libyan dispute, which was the real issue from the beginning.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
speaking of North Korean Hand washing
17 March 2014 Last updated at 07:32 ET
China backs North Korea on human rights
China has dismissed a UN report that compared human rights abuses in North Korea to those in Nazi Germany.
A Chinese diplomat said the report lacked credibility, adding to fears that Beijing will block further action. He said some of the recommendations were divorced from reality.
North Korea called the report - which details murder, torture and starvation - a fabrication by hostile forces.
It was drawn up by UN-appointed jurists to document abuses in North Korea.
The head of the international panel of inquiry, Michael Kirby, told the council that great nations had had the courage to tackle the crimes of Nazi Germany, the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia and apartheid South Africa.
He said they must now act on North Korea.
The report accused the state of systematic murder, torture, enslavement and starvation on a scale unparalleled in the modern world.
China had already indicated that it would not back the report.
The Chinese diplomat, Chen Chuandong, has now gone further by questioning the credibility of the report and making it all but certain that Beijing was prepared to veto any resolution at the Security Council.
"The inability of the commission to get support and co-operation from the country concerned made it impossible for the commission to carry out its mandate in an impartial, objective and effective manner," he said.
The panel was not allowed to enter North Korea or talk to North Korean officials. It based its findings on the testimony of North Korean refugees and defectors, some of whom gave their evidence in public hearings in the South Korean capital, Seoul, and other cities.
China maintains that public censure is not the way to tackle human rights issues in North Korea.
It has recommended what it calls constructive dialogue with the government in Pyongyang.
North Korea has condemned the report as a political attack orchestrated by the United States and its allies with the aim of bringing down the regime.
The European Union and Japan, with US backing, sponsored the proposal to investigate North Korean abuses.
They want it to be submitted to the security council for a referral to the international criminal court or another body able to hold the North Korean leaders to account.
The resolution is expected to meet significant opposition in Geneva, where Cuba, Russia and Vietnam sit on the Human Rights Council as well as China.
Testimony given to the panel from defectors included an account of a woman forced to drown her own baby, children imprisoned from birth and starved, and families tortured for watching a foreign soap opera.
17 March 2014 Last updated at 05:40 ET
North Korea abductee: Japan parents meet grand-daughter
The parents of a Japanese girl abducted by North Korea have described a meeting with her daughter as "miraculous".
Megumi Yokota was kidnapped by North Korean agents on her way home from school in 1977, when she was 13.
North Korea says she married a South Korean abductee and had a daughter before killing herself in 1994.
Her parents were allowed to meet their grandchild for the first time in Mongolia last week, Japan's foreign ministry announced over the weekend.
Megumi Yokota was one of a number of Japanese nationals abducted by Pyongyang in the 1970s and 80s to train North Korean spies.
North Korea has returned five such abductees and says the others have died, but Japan says it has failed to provide adequate proof of their deaths.
'Dream come true'
The case of Megumi Yokota, as the youngest of the abductees, has huge resonance in Japan.
She was snatched by agents in the Japanese city of Niigata and taken to North Korea by boat.
Her parents, Shigeru and Sakie Yokota, have campaigned for years to find out what happened to her.
North Korea returned what it said were her remains in 2004 but DNA tests subsequently disputed that claim.
Japan's foreign ministry announced on Sunday that Mr and Mrs Yokota spent several days last week with their grand-daughter in the Mongolian capital, Ulan Batur.
The couple said of their meeting with 26-year-old Kim Eun-gyong: "It was a miraculous event and it provided great pleasure."
"We had hoped to meet her as a family," Sakie Yokota told reporters. "What we have dreamt about for such a long time has come true."
The couple did not ask about the fate of their daughter, AFP news agency reported.
"We did not want to make the meeting with her [Kim Eun-gyong] anything that involves political matters," Mrs Yokota said. "She has grown up in that country. We weren't sure how much of the truth she could tell us."
However, Mrs Yokota added that she continued to hold onto the belief that her daughter was alive.
In a statement, the couple added that they hoped the meeting would "pave the way for rescuing all the abductees," Kyodo news agency said.
The abduction issue remains a key sticking point in the relationship between Japan and North Korea, who do not have diplomatic ties.
16 March 2014 Last updated at 18:46 ET
Syria 'recaptures rebel border town Yabroud'
The Syrian military says it has recaptured Yabroud, the last rebel stronghold near the Lebanese border.
Government forces and Lebanese allies from the Hezbollah group have besieged the town for weeks, as part of a battle for control of key transport routes.
Separately, two Hezbollah members were killed in a car bomb in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, near the border with Syria.
The Shia group has increasingly become the target of attacks over its involvement in the Syria conflict.
At least three people died in the suicide car bomb attack that struck a petrol station in Al-Nabi Othman village, security sources say.
'Revenge for Yabroud'
A group calling itself the al-Nusra Front in Lebanon put out a statement on Twitter claiming to be behind the attack, saying it was "a quick response to the bragging and boasting of the party of Iran [Hezbollah] over their raping of Yabroud".
It is not clear what links the group has to the al-Nusra Front in Syria - an al-Qaeda-linked force fighting Mr Assad's government.
Another extremist group - Liwa Ahrar al-Sunna in Baalbek - also claimed responsibility for the attack, describing it as "revenge for Yabroud".
The government launched an offensive in mid-November to oust rebel fighters from the Qalamoun mountains near the Lebanese border.
They recaptured the towns of Qara, Deir Attiya and Nabak, to the north-east of Yabroud along the motorway linking Damascus with the city of Homs.
In mid-February, Assad forces launched a full offensive on Yabroud, which had been controlled by the opposition for much of the three-year conflict.
"The crushing of the terrorist groups is a continuation of the successes made by the Syria army in Qalamoun," an unnamed military spokesman said on state television on Sunday.
"It completes an important circle in securing the border regions between Syria and Lebanon, and also cuts the supply roads."
Footage on Hezbollah's Al Manar TV channel showed handfuls of Syrian soldiers moving through Yabroud, where the streets were otherwise deserted.
Syrian state media said government forces had killed or captured many rebel fighters.
One fighter from the al-Nusra Front said they had decided to pull out and were heading towards nearby villages.
But some opposition sources said the government was not yet in total control, and that some fighters from extremist groups were still in the town and were prepared to fight to the death.
The BBC's Arab affairs editor Sebastian Usher says the government victory does not shift the effective stalemate in the fighting, but it does add to the sense that government forces are gaining momentum.
The bombardment of Yabroud and the fighting on its outskirts have forced much of its 40,000-strong population to flee, many to Lebanon.
More than 100,000 have been killed since the conflict between rebels and President Bashar al-Assad's forces began in March 2011.
17 March 2014 Last updated at 09:41 ET
Venezuelan forces clear Caracas protest hotspot
Venezuelan soldiers have cleared protesters from Plaza Altamira in the capital Caracas.
The square in the east of the city has been at the centre of anti-government demonstrations which have disrupted the country for more than a month.
President Nicolas Maduro said government forces would "continue liberating territory" from the protesters.
At least 28 people have been killed in six weeks of unrest.
Deadline
The clearance of the square took place on Sunday.
On Saturday, President Maduro had warned protesters - whom he calls Chuckys in reference to the murderous doll in the 1980s horror film Child's Play - to leave or face eviction.
"I'm going to give the Chuckys, those assassins that have taken over Plaza Altamira and Francisco de Miranda Avenue, a few hours, and if they don't clear out today I am going to clear those spaces with public force," he said.
President Maduro has blamed the opposition for many of the protest-related deaths and has charged opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez with inciting violence.
Among the dead are a number of government supporters and members of the National Guard.
But the opposition accuses the security forces of violently repressing the protests, shooting live rounds at demonstrators and severely beating those detained.
Eight members of the security forces have been arrested in connection with the shooting on 12 February of an anti-government protester and a government supporter.
Soldiers drove into Altamira square on around 50 motorcycles on Sunday, detaining more than a dozen protesters.
They also fired water cannon and tear gas at those gathered in the square.
Opposing views
Plaza Altamira, in the opposition Chacao neighbourhood, has been the scene of nightly protests by Venezuelans calling for the resignation of the government of President Maduro.
The current wave of protests first started in the western city of San Cristobal when students demonstrated about the lack of security in Venezuela.
It quickly spread to the capital and other cities and has been joined by many who are disgruntled by the country's high inflation and shortages of some staple foods.
But there have also been mass rallies in support of President Maduro.
On Sunday, thousands marched to the presidential palace to show their backing for the government's policy of subsidising certain food staples.
When your nation Runs out of Toilet paper In my opinion It's time to make a good wash of the leadership. Pun Intended.
17 March 2014 Last updated at 14:29 ET
Magnitude 4.4 earthquake felt near Los Angeles
An earthquake has been strongly felt near Los Angeles, California, rattling nerves but so far causing no major damage, injury or deaths.
The 4.4-magnitude quake struck 9km (5.6 miles) from the Los Angeles neighbourhood of Westwood.
It hit at 06:25 local time (13:25 GMT), US officials said.
It was the strongest earthquake in Los Angeles since the last aftershocks from the 1994 Northridge quake, a government scientist said.
Dr Lucy Jones of the US Geological Survey (USGS) told the local CBS broadcaster there was a 5% chance another strong quake would strike within the next three days.
USGS seismologist Robert Graves told US media the quake occurred at a depth of nearly 8km (5 miles) and there were several aftershocks, including one of 2.7 magnitude.
"This is reminder we live in earthquake country," he said, noting it was unusual for a quake of that magnitude to strike a large population centre.
There were no immediate reports of injuries, though many Los Angeles area residents said the quake had frightened them out of bed.
"It felt like a bomb going off underneath our house," resident George McQuade told the Associated Press news agency.
"Nothing was damaged, but it sure woke everyone up. It was an eye-opener."
Yvonne Villanueva told broadcaster KTLA she was getting ready for the morning and "all of a sudden I felt it jolt".
"You always have the big one in the back of your head," she said.
The San Andreas fault, on the edge of the Pacific tectonic plate, runs directly through California, and the western US state has long braced for a devastating quake.
The Northridge quake, a 6.7-magnitude one, left at least 60 people dead. A 6.9-magnitude quake in San Francisco five years earlier killed 67 people.
Speaking of after Shocks
17 March 2014 Last updated at 10:46 ET
Cosmic inflation: 'Spectacular' discovery hailed
By Jonathan Amos
Science correspondent, BBC News
Scientists say they have extraordinary new evidence to support a Big Bang Theory for the origin of the Universe.
Researchers believe they have found the signal left in the sky by the super-rapid expansion of space that must have occurred just fractions of a second after everything came into being.
It takes the form of a distinctive twist in the oldest light detectable with telescopes.
The work will be scrutinised carefully, but already there is talk of a Nobel.
"This is spectacular," commented Prof Marc Kamionkowski, from Johns Hopkins University.
"I've seen the research; the arguments are persuasive, and the scientists involved are among the most careful and conservative people I know," he told BBC News.
The breakthrough was announced by an American team working on a project known as BICEP2.
This has been using a telescope at the South Pole to make detailed observations of a small patch of sky.
The aim has been to try to find a residual marker for "inflation" - the idea that the cosmos experienced an exponential growth spurt in its first trillionth, of a trillionth of a trillionth of a second.
Theory holds that this would have taken the infant Universe from something unimaginably small to something about the size of a marble. Space has continued to expand for the nearly 14 billion years since.
Inflation was first proposed in the early 1980s to explain some aspects of Big Bang Theory that appeared to not quite add up, such as why deep space looks broadly the same on all sides of the sky. The contention was that a very rapid expansion early on could have smoothed out any unevenness.
But inflation came with a very specific prediction - that it would be associated with waves of gravitational energy, and that these ripples in the fabric of space would leave an indelible mark on the oldest light in the sky - the famous Cosmic Microwave Background.
The BICEP2 team says it has now identified that signal. Scientists call it B-mode polarisation. It is a characteristic twist in the directional properties of the CMB. Only the gravitational waves moving through the Universe in its inflationary phase could have produced such a marker. It is a true "smoking gun".
Speaking at the press conference to announce the results, Prof John Kovac of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and a leader of the BICEP2 collaboration, said: "This is opening a window on what we believe to be a new regime of physics - the physics of what happened in the first unbelievably tiny fraction of a second in the Universe."
Completely astounded
The signal is reported to be quite a bit stronger than many scientists had dared hope. This simplifies matters, say experts. It means the more exotic models for how inflation worked are no longer tenable.
The results also constrain the energies involved - at 10,000 trillion gigaelectronvolts. This is consistent with ideas for what is termed Grand Unified Theory, the realm where particle physicists believe three of the four fundamental forces in nature can be tied together.
But by associating gravitational waves with an epoch when quantum effects were so dominant, scientists are improving their prospects of one day pulling the fourth force - gravity itself - into a Theory of Everything.
The sensational nature of the discovery means the BICEP2 data will be subjected to intense peer review.
It is possible for the interaction of CMB light with dust in our galaxy to produce a similar effect, but the BICEP2 group says it has carefully checked its data over the past three years to rule out such a possibility.
Other experiments will now race to try to replicate the findings. If they can, a Nobel Prize seems assured for this field of research.
Who this would go to is difficult to say, but leading figures on the BICEP2 project and the people who first formulated inflationary theory would be in the running.
One of those pioneers, Prof Alan Guth from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, told the BBC: "I have been completely astounded. I never believed when we started that anybody would ever measure the non-uniformities of the CMB, let alone the polarisation, which is now what we are seeing.
"I think it is absolutely amazing that it can be measured and also absolutely amazing that it can agree so well with inflation and also the simplest models of inflation - nature did not have to be so kind and the theory didn't have to be right."
British scientist Dr Jo Dunkley, who has been searching through data from the European Planck space telescope for a B-mode signal, commented: "I can't tell you how exciting this is. Inflation sounds like a crazy idea, but everything that is important, everything we see today - the galaxies, the stars, the planets - was imprinted at that moment, in less than a trillionth of a second. If this is confirmed, it's huge."
 

bd popeye

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(Reuters) - A Venezuela National Guard captain died on Monday after being shot in the head during a demonstration, the military said, the 29th fatality in six weeks of clashes between protesters and security forces.

General Padrino Lopez, head of the armed forces' strategic operational command, said the captain was shot late on Sunday at a street barricade set up by demonstrators in the central city of Maracay, in Aragua state.

"He was another victim of terrorist violence," Lopez said on Twitter, calling for an end to the confrontations.

"Our armed forces don't repress peaceful protests, they protect them ... Much more Venezuelan blood would have been shed if it were not for the responsible actions of our National Guard."

CHINESE MERCENARY' CAPTURED

Tareck El Aissami, governor of Aragua state and a member of the ruling Socialist Party, said authorities arrested a "Chinese mercenary" near where the National Guard captain was killed.

"This terrorist was captured carrying a firearm - a Glock pistol, and we found an arsenal in his home," Aissami said, showing video of hundreds of rounds of different calibres.

"We also seized a revolver, advanced telecoms systems, two-way radios, military uniforms, helmets, balaclavas and tear gas canisters," the governor said, adding the haul was "irrefutable proof" the opposition had violent plans.

Aissami gave the man's Venezuelan identity card number, but did not elaborate on the raid or where the man was from originally. The government has often talked about alleged assassination plans, rarely with many details.

An article in Spanish with photos of the arrested mans home.

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Miragedriver

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We may someday have inexpensive energy again:

As scientists in Shanghai are told to accelerate plans to build the first fully-functioning thorium reactor within ten years, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency Hans Blix runs through the aspects of the fuel that make it a viable source of energy

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bd popeye

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By Mary Wisniewski

The Chicago Transit Authority train, a mass transit train that ran on electricity, is expected to remain in place for at least a day while investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board try to determine how it jumped a bumper at the end of the line.

"The train is not going to go anywhere for the foreseeable future - it's not going anywhere today," NTSB investigator Tim DePaepe told a news conference.

Investigators will review station video of the train arriving and an outward-facing video recorder at the front of the electrified "L" train, along with signals and the train's condition, he said.

It was not immediately clear how fast the train was moving, but authorities were looking at speed as a possible factor, said transit authority spokesman Brian Steele.

Neither the female train operator nor any of the passengers faced life-threatening injuries, said Chicago Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford.

DePaepe said the operator had been on duty for about six hours at the time of the crash. She was still being examined at a local hospital and had not yet been interviewed by investigators, DePaepe said.

Robert Kelly, president of Amalgamated Transit Union Local 308 that represents the operators, said the woman had worked more than 60 hours during the last seven days.

"The operator might have dozed off. She did indicate to me that she was extremely tired," said Kelly, who spoke to the operator after the crash.

"She doesn't have an explanation of how this happened."

Langford said the eight-car train jumped a bumper at the end of the line just before 3:00 a.m. Chicago time (0800 GMT).

It was not immediately clear how long train service on that part of the line will be suspended. Buses were shuttling passengers from O'Hare to the next train station, according to CTA officials.

Passersby gawked at the crash scene, with some people saying the incident made them a little more nervous about traveling by train.

"I feel like there's accidents all the time with the trains, but not this bad," said Meghan Cassin, 25, a Chicago resident who was heading to work after a trip to Florida. "They take corners really fast."

In September, an unmanned Chicago Transit Authority train collided with a standing train at a station in a western suburb of Chicago during the morning rush hour, injuring at least 33 people.

(Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Ken Wills)
 
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By Jonathan Kaminsky

Snohomish County officials reported the higher casualty count hours after the local emergency management department expressed doubt anyone else would be plucked alive from the muck that engulfed dozens of homes when a rain-soaked hillside near Oso, Washington, collapsed on Saturday morning.

Meanwhile, concern lingered about flooding from water backing up behind a crude dam of mud and rubble dumped into the North Fork of the Stillaguamish River by the slide in an area along State Route 530, about 55 miles northeast of Seattle.

"The situation is very grim," said Travis Hots, the local fire chief. "We're still holding out hope that we're going to be able to find people that may still be alive. But keep in mind we haven't found anybody alive on this pile since Saturday in the initial stages of our operation."

President Barack Obama, who was in Europe on Monday for a meeting with world leaders, signed an emergency declaration ordering U.S. government assistance to supplement state and local relief efforts in the aftermath of the mudslide and flooding, the White House said.

More than 100 properties were hit by the cascading mud, 49 of which had a house, cabin or mobile home on them, Pennington said. At least 25 of those homes were believed to have been occupied year round.

"I'm pissed off I'm losing my house. I mean I hate to lose it. I've been working on it for 15 years," said 73-year-old Dennis Hargrave, who drove up from Kirkland, near Seattle, to learn what he could of his vacation home.

"But that's not my concern. My concern is, are my neighbors still alive? Is anybody surviving this?" he said
 
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