"Am I therefore become your enemy,because I TELL YOU THE TRUTH...?"
(Galatians 4:16)

Regional Nuclear War Would Affect Entire Globe

Devastation of a regional nuclear war would be far from confined to the countries that started it.Plants and animals, including humans, would be endangered by a global ozone hole that would result and persist for years after all the bombs were exhausted, a new study suggests.The layer of ozone high up in the Earth's atmosphere absorbs ultraviolet radiation from the sun before it hits the Earth's surface. Without it, almost all lifeforms would be bombarded by this energetic radiation, and though more research needs to be done into the specific effects of a significant ozone depletion, increased UV radiation can damage DNA and has been linked to the most common forms of skin cancer,as well as melanoma(the most lethal skin cancer)and cataracts."It would have a big increase in human ailments such as cataracts and cancer," said study leader Michael Mills of the University of Colorado at Boulder.Since 1990, the chances of developing melanoma have more than doubled according to a 2003 Environmental Protection Agency document. This increase is believed to be a result of increased exposure to UV radiation from ozone depletion caused by man-made chemicals that destroy ozone, such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs).What exactly the UV bombardment will mean in terms of species extinction is uncertain, Mill said. But he added, "it would affect the food chain."Researchers used a computer model to see how a regional nuclear war (in this case between Pakistan and India) involving 50 nuclear devices the size of the bombs dropped on Hiroshima would affect global ozone levels. The effect was far more massive than previous studies done in the 1980s had suggested, even though these studies had imagined a full-scale nuclear war, the authors said.The findings are detailed in the April 7 issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.About 40 countries in the world possess enough plutonium,uranium or a combination of both to construct substantial nuclear arsenals. A nuclear exchange like the one examined in this study would be only a fraction of a percent of the total explosive power of the world's nuclear arsenal, Mills said.Of the eight nations that have known nuclear arsenals, even those with the smallest, such as Pakistan and India, are believed to have 50 or more Hiroshima-sized weapons."The world has become a far more dangerous place when the actions of two countries on the other side of the world could have such a drastic impact on the planet," study co-author Brian Toon, also of the University of Colorado at Boulder.Smoky soot plumesPrevious studies, including a 1985 National Research Council Report, had examined the effects of nuclear war on ozone loss by considering the chemicals the bombs would spew into the atmosphere. But they failed to consider the massive smoke plumes that would rise into the air as the bombed-out cities burned.The new study considers both, painting a picture of citywide firestorms and ozone destruction."It has as much to do with the bombs as it does with the fuels in modern megacities," Mills said."Pretty much everything will burn in a city."A previous study conducted by Toon showed that as buildings, cars and other infrastructure burned, the air above would fill with soot. Some of this soot would fall out of the atmosphere in so-called black rains, but the rest would make its way up into the atmosphere within a matter of days, Mills said.The heat from these firestorms (like those that destroyed Dresden, Germany, in World War II) would push the soot-filled air into the upper troposphere, the bottom-most layer of the Earth's atmosphere.The blackened air would then be warmed by incoming sunlight and would rise further, into the stratosphere, which sits atop the troposphere and is the layer of the atmosphere where the ozone that protects us from the sun's harmful ultraviolet rays is found. The soot could eventually rise 50 miles (80 kilometers) up in the atmosphere, the study found.The new study found that up in the stratosphere, the soot would continue to absorb incoming sunlight and heat the surrounding air. This heat would jump-start the chemical reactions that destroy ozone."So the temperatures go way up and this changes the rates of a number of catalytic cycles that destroy ozone," Mills told LiveScience. As these cycles speed up, they wipe out the ozone molecules much faster than they would at normal temperatures.The heating of the stratosphere would also alter its circulation, prolonging the time that it normally takes for the air in that layer to turn over, prolonging the soot's effect on ozone destruction.Global ozone holeAbove the mid-latitudes, where the United States and most of Europe lie, ozone levels would drop by 25 to 40 percent.At higher northern latitudes, ozone losses would reach 50 to 70 percent, the model results show."The models show this magnitude of ozone loss would persist for five years, and we would see substantial losses continuing for at least another five years," Mills said.The 1985 NRC report found only a 17 percent depletion of stratospheric ozone over the Northern Hemisphere, which would recover by half in just three years."The big surprise is that this study demonstrates that a small-scale, regional nuclear conflict is capable of triggering ozone losses even larger than losses that were predicted following a full-scale nuclear war," Toon said.These losses would drop ozone levels below the amount that typically marks the seasonal ozone hole over Antarctica - only this ozone hole would extend from about 20 degrees north and south of the equator, creating a near-global ozone hole.The loss of this protective "sunscreen" layer could have a terrible impact on the plants and animals living below that would then be susceptible to UV radiation.Damage to plants and animals at mid-latitudes would likely rise sharply, according to the study, which was funded by the University of Colorado at Boulder. UV rays could also damage the bacteria at the roots of some crops, which the plants depend on for some food.Previous studies have shown residents of aquatic ecosystems, especially amphibians, are particularly susceptible to UV rays because they can do little to avoid it. Many plankton in the ocean could also be wiped out, endangering the many marine organisms that depend on them for food."They can't slap on sunscreen," Mills said.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/regionalnuclearwarwouldaffectentireglobe
As in the days of Noah....

Israel warns Iran ahead of 'routine' emergency drill

JERUSALEM-A day before Israel implements a "routine" emergency drill, an Israeli official Monday said the entire country is at risk of Hezbollah rocket attacks and blamed Iran for "provoking us" by backing the terrorist group.Israeli Infrastructure Minister Benyamin Ben Eliezer warned against an attack by Iran, which he said is unlikely to happen."An Iranian attack will lead to a harsh retaliation by Israel, which will lead to the destruction of the Iranian nation," Ben Eliezer said, pointing out that Iran "will not attack Israel so quickly because they understand the ramifications." "They are certainly aware of our strength," he said."Nonetheless, the Iranians are provoking us through their allies Syria and Hezbollah,(providing)them with much weaponry, and with that we have to contend."On Tuesday, Israel will begin a nationwide emergency response starting with a 90-second-long siren that will sound across Israel at 10 a.m. (3 a.m. ET) except in the southern town of Sderot, a frequent target of rocket attacks launched by Palestinian militants in Gaza.Ben Eliezer stressed that the nationwide emergency drill "is not aimed at threatening any of the countries surrounding us."But he offered a bleak scenario for Israel in the face of a future war."I predict that in the opening strike, hundreds of rockets will land in Israel," Ben Eliezer said. "There will not be a place in the country out of the range of the missiles and rockets of Syria and Hezbollah."During Tuesday's drill, Israeli television will show a message from the military as well as instructional videos on how to seek shelter during an alert.During that time, Israeli schools and government offices will practice entering protected spaces.The country will also begin practicing its response to a variety of attacks, including rocket strikes and incidents involving chemical and biological agents.Haemek Hospital in Afula will be one of the institutions taking part in those drills, which will end on Thursday.Speaking on Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert stressed the exercise "is only a drill" and has nothing to do with "exaggerated" reports of heightened tensions with Syria."I would like to make it unequivocally clear that this is a routine drill," Olmert said before the start of his weekly Cabinet meeting."The state of Israel is not intent on any violent confrontation in the north. On the contrary, we have said more than once that we have an interest in holding peace negotiations with Syria.They know exactly what our expectations are. I can also say that we know what their expectations are; if these conditions will bear fruit, then this is what we are intent on and nothing else."Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said the exercise is a direct result of Israel's 2006 war with Hezbollah militants based in Lebanon, which failed to weaken the Hezbollah either militarily or politically."The Second Lebanon War created a situation by which the home front is part of the front," Barak said Monday. "Israel has no interest in escalating the situation in the region."

As in the days of Noah....

Protesters scale Golden Gate Bridge

SAN FRANCISCO - Three people protesting China's human rights record and the impending arrival of the Olympic torch climbed up the Golden Gate Bridge Monday and tied the Tibetan flag and two banners to its cables.The banners read "One World One Dream. Free Tibet" and "Free Tibet."The protesters wore helmets and harnesses as they made their way up the cables running next to the south tower of the famed span. The climb had the group suspended several dozen feet above traffic.Mary Ziegenbien, a spokeswoman with the California Highway Patrol, said authorities would not try to go get the protesters out of concern for their safety."We don't want to put their lives in danger by going and grabbing them off the suspension cables right now," she said.The torch relay is scheduled for Wednesday in San Francisco, its only North American stop.Its path around the globe already has been marked by protests against China's policies toward Tibet and Sudan. In Paris, organizers canceled the final leg of the Olympic run after chaotic protests, snuffing out the torch and putting it aboard a bus.Rallies, vigils and news conferences related to the torch's arrival have taken place in San Francisco almost daily for the past several weeks. More are planned over the next two days in anticipation of the torch's arrival.About 80 torchbearers will carry the flame on a six mile route along the San Francisco Bay.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080407/ap_on_re_us/olympic_torch_san_francisco;_ylt=AsVvDPKB01Pqs4y8q3tRQCxI2ocA
As in the days of Noah....

Arrest made in Texas polygamy case

SAN ANGELO, Texas - State police made an arrest as they searched a sprawling rural compound built by polygamist leader Warren Jeffs in their investigation into a possible underage marriage, an official said Monday.The person was charged with interfering with the duties of a public servant for actions made during the search of the religious compound, Department of Public Safety spokesman Tom Vinger said.Vinger said the person arrested was not Dale Barlow, the man listed in warrants related to the marriage of an underage girl. He said he had no other details.The girl's report to authorities last week led to a raid at the 1,700-acre West Texas compound run by the sect led by Jeffs, the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.The girl said she had a baby at 15 and authorities were investigating whether she had been abused. They have removed more than 220 women and children from the compound in Eldorado but had yet to locate the girl who made the report.Authorities moved the women and children Sunday from Eldorado to a historic fort-turned-museum in San Angelo, about 40 miles north. Child Protective Services spokeswoman Marleigh Meisner said that location was chosen because investigators wanted all the children and women to stay in one place as caseworkers continue interviews.Officials were struggling Monday to persuade anyone in the large extended families to give them any information about the goings-on inside the compound. "When children live in a pretty secluded environment and they're as sheltered as these children, it's very difficult to get them to talk to you and to open up. If you can get them to a neutral place, they're a lot more prone to answer you truthfully," said Debra Brown, who is with a local child advocacy group that is representing the children in legal proceedings.So far, only 18 children have been legally put in state custody, but Meisner said more court action was likely Monday. Brown said with a backlog of cases in the Texas foster care system, placing all the children will be difficult.State troopers armed with a search warrant raided the ranch on Friday to look for evidence of a marriage between Barlow,50,and the teen who called authorities a week ago.Under Texas law, girls younger than 16 cannot marry, even with parental approval.Authorities were still not sure Monday whether the girl was among those taken from the compound.Midday Sunday, dozens of women and children, mostly girls, were seen boarding buses on their way to San Angelo. The women wore long pastel dresses and many carried bedding; several had infants.Prosecutor Allison Palmer said other law enforcement agencies "know where (Barlow) is and have talked to him, but our investigators have not."Barlow's probation officer, Bill Loader, told The Salt Lake Tribune that he was in Arizona. Phone messages seeking comment from Loader and Barlow were not immediately returned Monday.Barlow was sentenced to jail last year after pleading no contest to conspiracy to commit sexual conduct with a minor. He was ordered to register as a sex offender for three years while he is on probation.The search warrant instructed officers to look for marriage records or other evidence linking the teen to the man and the baby. The warrant authorized the seizure of computer drives, CDs, DVDs or photos.The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, headed by Jeffs after his father's death in 2002, broke away from the Mormon church after the latter disavowed polygamy more than a century ago.The compound sits down a narrow paved road and behind a hill that shields it almost entirely from view in Eldorado, a town of fewer than 2,000 surrounded by sheep ranches nearly 200 miles northwest of San Antonio. Only the 80-foot-high white temple can be seen on the horizon.FLDS church members began building the compound several years ago as authorities in Arizona and Utah began increasingly scrutinizing the group.Jeffs is jailed in Kingman, Ariz., where he awaits trial for four counts each of incest and sexual conduct with a minor stemming from two arranged marriages between teenage girls and their older male relatives.In November, he was sentenced to two consecutive sentences of five years to life in prison in Utah for being an accomplice to the rape of a 14-year-old girl who wed her cousin in an arranged marriage in 2001.The investigation prompted by the girl's call last week was the first in Texas involving the sect.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080407/ap_on_re_us/polygamist_retreat;_ylt=AtUyNIAB8_ldppZGWtyUNz5I2ocA
As in the days of Noah....

BLASPHEMY WATCH:Erotic Jesus sparks art debate in Austria

VIENNA-They knew it would be risky to exhibit a homoerotic version of Christ's Last Supper, but curators at museum of Vienna's Roman Catholic Cathedral weren't ready for a barrage of angry messages and calls to be shut down.The source of the dispute, which Austrian media has dubbed Vienna's version of the Mohammad caricature row, is a retrospective honoring Austria's cherished artist Alfred Hrdlicka, who turned 80 earlier this year.But not everyone has been wishing Hrdlicka a Happy Birthday. And the Cathedral Museum's director and Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, the archbishop of Vienna, have both come under fire from some museum visitors and Catholic websites.The Church hastily removed the main picture, "a homosexual orgy" of the Apostles as Hrdlicka describes it.But the protest has continued, much to the surprise of the small Cathedral Museum which is nestled down a narrow street in Vienna's historic Gothic quarter.The museum's director defends both Hrdlicka's work and his decision to host the artist's controversial versions of biblical imagery in a museum tied to the Catholic Church."We think Hrdlicka is entitled to represent people in this carnal, drastic way," Bernhard Boehler said in his small museum office, across the street from Vienna's imposing St. Stephan's Cathedral.He said the museum never intended to offend people but that art should be allowed to provoke a debate. "I don't see any blasphemy here," he said, gesturing at a Crucifixion picture showing a soldier simultaneously beating Jesus and holding his genitals. "People can imagine what they want to."Boehler says that picture drew particular criticism from some visitors, along with a sculpture of Jesus on the cross without a face or loincloth that some Christians found offensive.But the most disputed work was 'Leonardo's Last Supper, restored by Pier Paolo Pasolini' which showed cavorting Apostles sprawling over the dining table and masturbating each other.Hrdlicka says he represented the men in this way because there are no women in the Da Vinci painting which inspired it. Pasolini was a controversial Italian filmmaker and writer who was murdered in the 1970s.The exhibition has attracted fierce criticism on religion blogs in Austria, Germany and even in the United States, with bloggers denouncing it with terms such as "blasphemy" and "desecration.""The exhibition should never have taken place. The Director should apologize to Catholics worldwide for this," an article on conservative Catholic website kreuz.net said.In the United States, conservative columnist Rod Dreher wrote on his widely read religion blog "I wouldn't have guessed that, given his reputation, a man like (Cardinal) Schoenborn would have stood for this abomination for half a second."The museum took down the Last Supper piece at Cardinal Schoenborn's request just over a week after the 'Religion, Flesh and Power' exhibition opened, leaving a blank black wall at the entrance to the display. "This has nothing to do with censorship, rather corresponds with the understood "reverence for the sacred," the Cardinal's spokesman said in a statement.
To read more go to:
As in the days of Noah....

OVERCOME EVIL WITH GOOD

"For as we have many members in one body,and all members have not the same office:
So we,being many,are one body in Christ,and every one members one of another.
Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us,whether prophecy,let us prophesy according to the proportion of faith;
Or ministry,let us wait on our ministering:or he that teacheth,on teaching;
Or he that exhorteth,on exhortation:he that giveth,let him do it with simplicity;he that ruleth,with diligence;he that sheweth mercy,with cheerfulness.
Let love be without dissimulation.Abhor that which is evil;cleave to that which is good.
Be kindly affectioned one to another with brotherly love;in honour preferring one another;
Not slothful in business;fervent in spirit;serving the Lord;
Rejoicing in hope;patient in tribulation;continuing instant in prayer;
Distributing to the necessity of saints;given to hospitality.
Bless them which persecute you:bless,and curse not.
Rejoice with them that do rejoice,and weep with them that weep.
Be of the same mind one toward another.Mind not high things,but condescend to men of low estate. Be not wise in your own conceits.
Recompense to no man evil for evil.Provide things honest in the sight of all men.
If it be possible,as much as lieth in you,live peaceably with all men.
Dearly beloved,avenge not yourselves,but rather give place unto wrath:for it is written, Vengeance is mine;I will repay,saith the Lord.
Therefore if thine enemy hunger,feed him;if he thirst,give him drink:for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head.
Be not overcome of evil,but overcome evil with good.
Romans 12:4-21

Protests cut short Paris Olympic flame relay

PARIS-The Paris leg of the Beijing Olympic flame relay was cut short Monday after pro-Tibet activists disrupted the event, repeatedly forcing officials to douse the torch and take refuge on a bus.The constant interruptions by hundreds of campaigners protesting China's human rights record finally forced the organisers to halt the planned torch procession outside the French parliament, where some deputies hung a Tibetan flag on a railing.It was taken by bus to its final destination-a stadium in the south of the city where clashes promptly broke out between pro-Tibetan activists and China supporters, forcing police to intervene.
There had been scuffles from the very start as the flame set out on its journey from the Eiffel Tower, with police hauling men and women out of the planned route and a man in a wheelchair knocked over in the chaos.The torchbearers were forced at least four times to take refuge on a bus as they struggled through the capital protected by a phalanx of motorcycle outriders, jogging firemen, and police on rollerblades.Each time the running torch had to be extinguished and relit from the "eternal flame" which was surrounded by heavy security.A high-profile ceremony planned at city hall was called off after officials draped a Tibetan flag from the building.Paris Mayor Bertrand Delonoe said Chinese Olympic organisers had changed their route to avoid the protests.At least eight people were arrested, including a local politician wielding a fire extinguisher, two pro-Tibet campaigners and five media rights activists, three of whom had chained themselves to the Eiffel Tower.As the relay set off, hundreds of pro-Tibetans booed and jeered from Human Rights Square across the River Seine.
They carried banners with messages such as "Tiananmen 1989 - Lhasa 2008" and "For a bloody world welcome to the Olympics made in China."Members of the media rights group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) were at the forefront of the protests, unfurling large black banners-showing the Olympic rings turned into handcuffs-from the Eiffel Tower, along the Champs Elysees and over the main door of Notre-Dame Cathedral.The incidents in Paris came a day after rowdy protests on the torch's London leg, where its progress was disrupted several times and where it also had to be briefly put on a bus for security.International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge called Monday on China to peacefully end unrest in Tibet, piling further pressure on the nation's communist rulers ahead of the Beijing Games in August."Violence for whatever reason is not compatible with the values of the torch relay or the Olympic Games," he said at a meeting of National Olympic Committee heads in Beijing.Exiled Tibetan leaders say more than 150 people have been killed in the unrest against Chinese rule which began on March 10.China insists its security forces have killed no one while trying to quell the protests. It says Tibetan "rioters" have killed 20 people.In China, the state-controlled CCTV's late night news reported briefly on the protests, saying a small number of people tried to disrupt the flame's journeys through London and Paris.The Xinhua news agency later issued a dispatch in English saying the torch was extinguished twice "for safety reasons."The leader of the Tibetan community in Paris, Thupten Gyatso, called the day of protests a "great success."But the head of the French Olympics Committee condemned the protests as "highly regrettable.""I think people should have let this flame through, that they could have held their protests to one side," said Henri Serandour.The Olympic torch was lit again for a brief ceremony outside the stadium before being finally extinguished at around 6:00 pm (1600 GMT).From Paris the flame leaves for the Americas, with stops in San Francisco on Wednesday and Buenos Aires on Friday, on the latest leg of a worldwide tour from Greece to Beijing.

As in the days of Noah......

Olmert, Abbas to meet again after seven weeks

JERUSALEM-Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas meet on Monday for the first time in six weeks as Middle East peace talks get back on track under heavy US pressure.Abbas, who suspended his bi-weekly meetings with Olmert at the beginning of March after an Israeli military operation in Gaza killed more than 130 people, said on Sunday that he would not accept a peace deal at any price."We are negotiating seriously and we are striving to arrive at a solution for all the final-status issues, but it will not come at any price," Abbas told a meeting of local officials in the West Bank political capital of Ramallah.The talks were given new impetus after US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, during a visit to the region last week, managed to secure an Israeli commitment to ease hardships on West Bank Palestinians and convince Abbas to resume his meetings with Olmert.Senior Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat said Abbas and Olmert would discuss a mutual ceasefire, lifting the Israeli siege on the Gaza Strip and the implementation of the 2003 Middle East roadmap agreement.The international roadmap peace blueprint urges Israel to freeze Jewish settlement construction and calls on the Palestinians to improve security in their territories.But the latest peace talks have made little progress since they were launched at a US-sponsored conference in Annapolis outside Washington in November, with each side accusing the other of neglecting its obligations.Israel has "not implemented a single one of its obligations as specified in the roadmap. It has not halted the (growth of) settlements or freed prisoners or removed checkpoints," negotiator Erakat told AFP.An Israeli official said Olmert, who last met with Abbas on February 19, was "looking forward to the renewal of talks.""We want the Annapolis process to succeed and the meetings between the leaders will continue focusing on the crucial elements of the peace talks," the official said on condition of anonymity.The two leaders are expected to discuss several of the core issues at the heart of the conflict, but the sides remain divided on many issues.Olmert said last month that he does not envisage the possibility of anything more than an outline agreement by 2009, despite the US target of a peace deal by the end of 2008, and that settlement expansion on Palestinian land would continue.Abbas has in turn accused Israel of splitting the Palestinian territories into isolated cantons as a means to prevent the creation of a viable Palestinian state.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080407/ts_afp/mideastdiplomacy_080407041954;_ylt=AvX7A77Z4m_jAzLGFj4O4MaFOrgF
As in the days of Noah.....

Palestinians:IDF shell kills 5-year-old in Gaza

A 5-year-old Palestinian boy was killed on Sunday when an Israel Defense Forces shell exploded near his home in the al-Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, Palestinian officials said. Medical workers and militant groups said the boy, Abdullah Buhar, was killed during fighting between IDF soldiers and Palestinian militants in the Hamas-controlled Strip. The medical workers, who examined the boy's body in a Gaza hospital, said he was killed by a shrapnel fragment from an IDF tank shell.The militant groups said they fired anti-tank missiles and mortar bombs at IDF troops during the fighting near the refugee camp. An IDF spokeswoman confirmed troops exchanged fire in the area with armed Palestinians but said they were unaware of casualties. The IDF force, composed of soldiers from the Givati Brigade and the Armored Corps, had walked from Israeli territory to the outskirts of Bureij, where they encountered fire from several sources, including from inside homes and other structures. The soldiers returned fire. It was not immediately clear whether the boy was killed by the IDF forces operating in the area or by Palestinian militants who may have misfired a mortar shell. Doctors said a 16-year-old boy also was wounded. IDF forces often carry out raids in Gaza towns and refugee camps, to stop the firing of rockets on Israel and to arrest militants suspected of terrorist activities. Also on Sunday, five mortar shells and one Qassam rocket were fired into Israel from Gaza yesterday. No injuries were reported. Despite ongoing efforts mediated by Egypt for a cease-fire with Hamas, violence has continued to ensue between Israel and militants in the coastal territory. A senior member of the militant Palestinian group Hamas said Sunday that Israel has refused its offers for a temporary cease-fire proposed through Egyptian mediation. Moussa Abu Marzouk, deputy head of Hamas' political bureau said that Israel has responded negatively via the Egyptian mediators to an offer for a truce with the group both in the Gaza Strip and in the West Bank. Abu Marzouk also said that if Israel does not release 350 Palestinian prisoners, it will never get kidnapped soldier Gilad Shalit back alive, a Kuwaiti newspaper reported Sunday. On Saturday, a Palestinian farmer was killed in the northern Gaza Strip in a similar incident. Also Saturday, a Qassam rocket was fired at Ashkelon from the Gaza Strip, and landed in an open field south of the city's industrial zone. No injuries or damage was reported in the incident. Ashkelon went into a state of alert as sirens sounded for the first time since the last escalation between Israel and Hamas. On Friday, Palestinian sniper fire targeted a delegation that included Israel's public security minister, Avi Dichter. Dichter was unhurt, but an aide to the minister was wounded by the gunfire.

As in the days of Noah....

The jihad against the Jews

The jihad has a problem with the Jews.Not just a problem with Israel. Not just the occupation. Not just the policies of the Israeli government, the actions of the Israel Defense Forces, the support by Washington and the West for Israel's embargo against Hamas-ruled Gaza. Islamists don't care who knows it anymore. They hate the Jews. And, not to put too fine a point on it, they want the Jews dead. Some of it one has grown to expect. "Today there is no room for he who says that we should only fight the Jews in Palestine," Osama Bin Laden's second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahri said after Israel's incursion into Gaza last month."Let us strike their interests everywhere, just like they gathered against us from everywhere." Some of it is becoming better known. In a groundbreaking article in The New York Times this week, Steven Erlanger details, among other elements of Gaza life, the tides of Jew-hate washing over the Strip with the Hamas seal of approval. There is imam and legislator Sheik Yunus al-Astal, who, citing a Koranic verse indicating that "suffering by fire is the Jews' destiny in this world and the next," concludes that "we are sure that the holocaust is still to come upon the Jews." There is imam and legislator Marwan M. Abu Ras, chairman of the Palestinian Scholars League and a religious authority who anchors Hamas policies in Koranic sanction, branding Jews "the brothers of apes and pigs." This dovetails nicely with programming decisions taken by Hezbollah's Al Manar Television, which broadcast a Syrian-produced mini-series that showed a Jew killing a Christian child to obtain blood for baking Passover matza. And then there is the case of the much anticipated, widely feared new film by Dutch lawmaker Geert Wilders, "Fitna." Officials across Europe and throughout the Muslim world have braced for the possibility of violent protests, demonstrations on the model of those sparked by Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, which protesters saw as a grave insult to Islam. But the initial reaction has been muted, despite, or because of, an emphasis on footage such as Islamic clerics voicing virulent attacks against Jews, urging that Jews be killed and even beheaded, clips of a little girl quoting Allah in the Koran terming Jews "apes and swines," and of demonstrators promising "another Holocaust" and praising Adolf Hitler. It is worth noting that, in an initial response to the release of the film on the Internet at the end of last week, the attorney representing the umbrella group for Dutch Muslims said that at first glance, "Fitna" does not constitute an insult to their religion. One has to wonder, why not? Are calls to kill Jews as Jews not considered an insult? And while we're asking questions, it would be worth inquiring of Hamas officials that if, as they often declare, their conflict is with Zionists and not Jews, their charter cannot be amended to remove references to the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, statements that Jews have "control of the world media [and use their] wealth to stir revolutions," and a quotation from the Koran that reads "The Day of Judgment will not come about until Moslems fight the Jews, when the Jew will hide behind stones and trees. The stones and trees will say O Moslems, O Abdulla, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him." There will be those who will counter that critics of Israel are often mistakenly and/or derisively termed anti-Semitic. That is too often true. But it is no justification for letting true Jew hate slide. Quite clearly, there are those for whom the existence of the Jews is intolerable. That they feel free to spread the message - and teach it to children - must be condemned as intolerable by the rest of us, Jew or not.
By Bradley Burston
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/970653.html
As in the days of Noah....

Bush and Putin hold final talks

Beirut's largest synagogue in danger of being demolished

The largest synagogue in Beirut is in danger of being demolished as part of a city center renovation project. Lebanese sources involved in preserving Jewish tradition in the country published pictures last month of the desolate synagogue,Magen Avraham, and surrounding buildings. The photos, which were taken covertly because civilians are banned from the area, show that buildings in the area are in the process of being demolished.The roof of a building next to the synagogue has been dismantled, which some fear is the first stage of that building's destruction. At this point, the synagogue itself does not appear to have been damaged.However, the Lebanese sources said that widespread demolition is taking place even though the structures in the area had previously been declared designated for preservation. The renovation of central Beirut is being carried out by the Lebanese construction company Solidar, owned by the Hariri family. Magen Avraham has been left desolate for about 20 years.The Jewish community, which at various points included tens of thousands of people, pretty much disappeared from the country in the 1980s.Sources have told Haaretz that there are still Jews living in Lebanon, but only a few admit their religious identity, fearing they would be harmed if their neighbors discovered they were Jewish.The community's silence is a problem when it comes to Jewish communal property. Although officially there is a head of the Jewish community, which constitutes one of the 19 official religious communities in Lebanon, no one knows who it is.Solidar has said that it is working to preserve many buildings in the heart of Beirut, including the three buildings surrounding the synagogue. The company said it submitted an opinion to the high council for urbanization saying that the buildings should be preserved, but the council has allowed the landowners to demolish the buildings as long as the original front is reconstructed. It is not clear whether the synagogue belongs to the Jewish community or has been sold to private owners.
As in the days of Noah....

U.S., Israel to pressure North Korea to cut nuclear ties with Iran

The United States and Israel seek to pressure North Korea to cease its nuclear cooperation with Iran, which is one of the motives behind their agreement to disclose details on the air-force strike in Syria last September. According to foreign press reports, the strike targeted a nuclear installation built with North Korean assistance. According to information obtained by Washington and Jerusalem, North Korea transferred technology and nuclear materials to Iran to aid Tehran's secret nuclear arms program. U.S. and Israeli officials agreed last week that the talks between the U.S. and North Korea, scheduled to take place in Singapore tomorrow, should be used to pressure Pyongyang to disclose its nuclear cooperation with countries in the Middle East. As a pressure tactic, U.S. officials could reveal details of North Korea's cooperation with Syria to Congress.Foreign news sources reported that in addition to helping Syria build the nuclear facility that Israel attacked, North Korea sent engineers and various materials to the site. Israel and the U.S. fear that Pyongyang could be doing even more to boost Iran's nuclear program. During their talks in Washington last week with high-ranking officials, Yoram Turbowicz and Shalom Turjeman, advisers to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, agreed that the details of the air strike would be released by the Americans. Israel would continue to decline commenting on the matter, as it has done since September, and would not alter its censorship policy. Syria claimed that the facility hit was an unused military installation and denied having a nuclear development program. North Korea also denies exporting its nuclear expertise. Iran claims that its nuclear program is for civilian purposes only. In the past few months Olmert has met with key world leaders to discuss Syria. The most important meeting in Olmert's "campaign" to defend the Israeli air strike and create a united international front against Syria was with Russian President Vladimir Putin. On October 10, about a month after the attack, the two leaders spoke on the phone about Syria and other issues. They agreed that due to the sensitivity of the matter, talks should be continued face to face. On October 18, Olmert flew to Moscow for a five-hour visit. It had been announced, to much surprise, the day before. Officials in the Prime Minister's Office said at the time that the Iranian issue was the focus of the talks, and that Olmert planned to present Putin with intelligence on a number of strategic issues. Haaretz learned that Olmert presented Putin with the problems relevant to Syria. One week later, Olmert flew to Paris and London, where he met with President Nicolas Sarkozy and Prime Minister Gordon Brown, respectively, and filled them in on the operation. While in London, Olmert also met with his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was also visiting the British capital. After the air strike in Syria, two detachable fuel tanks from Israeli fighter planes were found in Turkish territory, near the Syrian border. Turkish news reports said this proved that Israeli aircraft had flown over Turkish airspace on their way to their target. Turkey made a formal complaint to Israel and asked for clarifications from Jerusalem. In his hour-long meeting with Erdogan, Olmert briefed the Turkish prime minister on the situation. A few days later Olmert informed the cabinet that he had apologized to Erdogan for the fuel-tank incident. "If Israeli planes indeed penetrated Turkish airspace, then it was without prior intent or any intent to infringe upon or undermine Turkish sovereignty, which we respect," Olmert told the cabinet.
As in the days of Noah....

TO EVERY MAN THE MEASURE OF FAITH.......

"For I say,through the grace given unto me,to every man that is among you,not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think;but to think soberly,according as God hath dealt to every man the measure of faith."
Romans 12:3

Thousands protest anti-Quran film in Pakistan

KARACHI, Pakistan-More than 25,000 people rallied in the largest protest in Pakistan so far against an anti-Quran film made by a Dutch lawmaker, urging their government to expel the Netherlands ambassador."They call this freedom of expression, but it's freedom of aggression," keynote speaker Munawwar Hasan, a leader of the main Islamic party Jamat-e-Islami, told the crowd Sunday as it chanted "God is great."The 15-minute film by Geert Wilders, which sets verses from the Muslim holy book against a background of violent images from terror attacks, was released in March. It has sparked weekly protests in Pakistan, usually drawing hundreds of people after prayers on Friday, the Muslim holy day.But police officer Syed Suleman estimated Sunday's crowd at 25,000, while organizers claimed more than 100,000 people turned out.
Wearing head bands inscribed "We are ready to sacrifice our lives for the sanctity of the prophet," they marched for two kilometers (more than a mile), then gathered on Karachi's main street to listen to speeches.They also burned an effigy of Wilders as speakers said their government should sever diplomatic ties with Western countries supporting the publishers of cartoons defaming the Prophet Muhammad."The Muslim world is on one side, but Muslim rulers like (President Pervez) Musharraf are toeing the Western agenda under the garb of secularism," Hasan said, referring to Musharraf's role in Washington's war on terrorism.Hasan said this rally, named "The glory of the prophet march," was not against the West in general, but was aimed at creating awareness among Muslims that they need to unite against a war against Islam.

As in the days of Noah....

U.S. Embassy in Yemen urges caution after rocket attack

SANAA,Yemen-A housing complex used by foreigners in Yemen's capital came under attack late Sunday, with explosives shattering windows but causing no injuries, U.S. and Yemeni officials said.The U.S. Embassy in Yemen said "three explosive rounds" hit the compound in the upscale Haddah neighborhood.Two rounds exploded inside the compound and another blew up outside the building,it said in a statement. "The embassy advises all U.S. citizens to exercise caution in this area of the city," the statement said.After the blasts, Westerners were seen evacuating the compound. Some rolled suitcases and carried boxes to vehicles with diplomatic plates. Women huddled in idling cars, while children lugged backpacks.One of the Yemeni security officials, describing himself as the head of security in the area, said the blast was caused by multiple "projectiles.""Broken windows ... were all that resulted from the projectiles' attack," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to speak to the media. No one was injured, he added.The two other security officials, who also spoke on condition of anonymity for the same reason, corroborated his account.A witness said a blast shook the neighborhood."I heard a big blast that shook the southern suburb, but there was no fire or smoke coming out of the area," said Mohammed Omar, 30, who lives in the same area.Last month, mortar shells were fired at the U.S. Embassy but exploded instead at a nearby girls' school, killing a security guard and wounding more than a dozen students.Yemen, the poorest country in the Arab world, is Osama bin Laden's ancestral homeland and has a persistent al Qaeda movement that has attacked and killed foreigners on several occasions.Sunday's attack came amid a backdrop of violence in Yemen's south, where security forces have been trying to put down riots by thousands of former southern Yemen army officers, political activists and unemployed men who accuse the government of unequal treatment. Two people were killed and eight others were wounded Sunday in continued clashes there.

As in the days of Noah....

SIGN of the TIMES:Incest couple John and Jenny Deaves's first child died

THE first child of a father and daughter who admitted to forming a sexual relationship died from congenital heart disease days after birth. Now living in South Australia, John Deaves’ daughter Jennifer gave birth to their first child seven years ago in Rockhampton, in northern Queensland, according to court documents. “The first child was born in 2001 but died a few days after birth due to a congenital heart disease,” SA district court judge Steven Millsteed said when sentencing the pair for incest last month. On March 20, the couple were sentenced to a three-year good behaviour bond after pleading guilty to two counts of performing an act of incest.Mr Millsteed said at the time he took concerns about the health of children born from incestuous relationships into consideration while deciding a sentence.“Relevant factors include: the need to prevent the high risk of congenital defects of children born of incestuous relationships; and to prevent children, who are brought up in a family unit founded on an incestuous relationship, suffering psychological harm and social stigmatisation,” he said.
To read more and watch the video go to:
As in the days of Noah....

'Day Four of the War' - Israel's Largest Emergency Drill Ever

The State of Israel is under attack from Syria, Lebanon and Gaza according to the practice exercise starting Sunday.The IDF Home Front Command, in cooperation with "Rachel" (the newly established National Emergency Authority), local authorities, different governmental offices, security and rescue teams and the educational system will participate in a comprehensive national training exercise which will take place across the country beginning Sunday.
Israelis awoke to radio announcers describing the scenario being practiced for: It is the fourth day of the war. Israel is under missile attack from the Hizbullah in Lebanon and from Syria. Kassam rockets and Grad-type Katyusha missiles are being launched at Netivot and Ashkelon from Gaza.The IDF dispatched a statement assuring citizens that the drill has been planned "as part of the IDF 2008 work plan," and emphasizing: The exercise was not planned in relation to any current events.
Syria and Lebanon are reportedly on high alert, nonetheless. Army Radio reported that while the practice exercizes are being held, Hizbullah terrorists and Syria will be deployed and readied for an all-out confrontation - something Syria is claiming is a result of the fear that Israel will launch an attack.The National Emergency AuthorityThis will be the first exercise led by the recently-established National Emergency Authority, called "Rachel" for its Hebrew acronym. "The aim of the exercise is to prepare the different services and institutes operating in the civilian environment for various emergency situations," the IDF said. "The exercise will incorporate operations at a staff and field level, and will be operated by the National Emergency Authority and the Home Front Command."Citizens to be Involved TuesdayAs part of the exercise, a minute and a half long siren will be heard on Tuesday, April 8th, at 10 a.m. across the country. Every town will be included except for "Sderot and the communities surrounding the Gaza Strip," according to the IDF - ostensibly because terrorists would use a practice drill as an oppurtunity to launch real rockets. It is unclear whether Ashkelon will be included.The government has hired veteran news anchor Gadi Sukenik to broadcast emergency instructions Tuesday - and to do the same in the event of a real emergency. Channel 33 will feature instructions from 10 to 11 a.m., broadcast from the Home Front Command's new studio. During the broadcast Sukenik will speak on behalf of GOC Home Front Command (H.F.C.), Maj. Gen. Yair Golan. H.F.C. will broadcast guidance and tutorial videos on how to choose a protected space and how to behave during an alert.At the same time, an exercise led by the national educational institutions will take place in which schools and kindergartens will practice entering protected spaces. During the sounding of the siren, Home Front Command bases as well as Governmental Offices and Public Institutions will also practice entering protected spaces. A national exercise will also take place with the participation of local and other authorities and with the participation of the Home Front's liaison units who were especially recruited for the exercises.On Tuesday- Thursday, April 8-10th, 2008, a field exercise that will simulate various potential scenarios will take place. Among the scenarios to be practiced: conventional and non-conventional rockets hitting Israel, chemical-biological incidents, an exercise in "HaEmek" hospital in Afula and different search and rescue drills.A notice regarding the location and possible hours for covering the exercise will be sent separately to the media. For further information: Home Front Information Center- *1207, or online: http://www.oref.org.il/.
by Ezra HaLevi
As in the days of Noah....

'Ruthlessness gene' discovered:Dictatorial behaviour may be partly genetic, study suggests.

Selfish dictators may owe their behaviour partly to their genes, according to a study that claims to have found a genetic link to ruthlessness. The study might help to explain the money-grabbing tendencies of those with a Machiavellian streak-from national dictators down to 'little Hitlers' found in workplaces the world over. Researchers at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem found a link between a gene called AVPR1a and ruthless behaviour in an economic exercise called the 'Dictator Game'. The exercise allows players to behave selflessly, or like money-grabbing dictators such as former Zaire President Mobutu, who plundered the mineral wealth of his country to become one of the world's richest men while its citizens suffered in poverty.The researchers don't know the mechanism by which the gene influences behaviour. It may mean that for some, the old adage that "it is better to give than to receive" simply isn't true, says team leader Richard Ebstein. The reward centres in those brains may derive less pleasure from altruistic acts, he suggests, perhaps causing them to behave more selfishly.
Prosocial hormone
Ebstein and his colleagues decided to look at AVPR1a because it is known to produce receptors in the brain that detect vasopressin, a hormone involved in altruism and 'prosocial' behaviour. Studies of prairie voles have previously shown that this hormone is important for binding together these rodents' tight-knit social groups.Ebstein's team wondered whether differences in how this receptor is expressed in the human brain may make different people more or less likely to behave generously.To find out, they tested DNA samples from more than 200 student volunteers, before asking the students to play the dictator game (volunteers were not told the name of the game, lest it influence their behaviour). Students were divided into two groups: 'dictators' and 'receivers' (called 'A' and 'B' to the participants). Each dictator was told that they would receive 50 shekels (worth about US$14), but were free to share as much or as little of this with a receiver, whom they would never have to meet. The receiver's fortunes thus depended entirely on the dictator's generosity.About 18% of all dictators kept all of the money, Ebstein and his colleagues report in the journal Genes, Brain and Behavior 1. About one-third split the money down the middle, and a generous 6% gave the whole lot away.
Long and short
There was no connection between the participants' gender and their behaviour, the team reports. But there was a link to the length of the AVPR1a gene: people were more likely to behave selfishly the shorter their version of this gene.It isn't clear how the length of AVPR1a affects vasopressin receptors: it is thought that rather than controlling the number of receptors, it may control where in the brain the receptors are distributed. Ebstein suggests the vasopressin receptors in the brains of people with short AVPR1a may be distributed in such a way to make them less likely to feel rewarded by the act of giving.Though the mechanism is unclear, Ebstein says, he is fairly sure that selfish, greedy dictatorship has a genetic component. It would be easier to confirm this if history's infamous dictators conveniently had living identical twins, he says, so we could see if they were just as ruthless as each other.
By Michael Hopkin
To read more go to:

Islamic Revolution Fervor Kept Alive for Iran's Youth

NEW YORK -Zahra Saremi took a different sort of vacation this year to celebrate Iranian New Year-touring the bloody battlefields of Iran's long war with Iraq at a week-long camp dedicated to martyrdom and patriotism.Such tours are a crucial tool for Iran's clerical leaders as they seek to keep alive fervor for the 1979 Islamic Revolution, especially among young people with little or no memory of it.Saremi and about 100 young men and women lined up at buses one morning in Tehran in late March, heading for the border regions of southwest Iran. About 1 million Iranians are taking the same journey during the three-week Nowruz holidays, which extend until mid-April, in tours organized by the Basij, the volunteer paramilitary wing of Iran's Revolutionary Guards.They visit the desert scenes where Iranian troops threw themselves in deadly human wave attacks against Iraqi lines in offensives with codenames like "Dawn is Coming" and "Certain Conquest." They hear lectures from military officers, visit the old trenches and bunkers and sleep in military garrisons.Most importantly, they commemorate martyrs."It is like a spiritual tour," said the 21-year-old Saremi, her black, all-encompassing chador flapping in the morning breeze. She has gone once before, two years ago. "I went there to pay tribute to those who fought the enemy and lost their lives to bring peace for us."Just how far the fervor for the Revolution has ebbed is visible in Tehran's streets, rife with Western influences the revolution once sought to purge. Shops are packed with bootleg DVDs of Western movies and music, and many women now shirk the chadors required in the revolution's early years—instead wearing tight jackets and headscarves that cover only a small part of their hair.Many among the millions of Iranians born since 1979 just want to put the revolution—and its Islamic clerical rule—behind them.That has made the Basij even more important for clerical leaders, who want to keep up the drumbeat of slogans re-enforcing the revolution's principles: fierce resistance to the United States and Western culture, adherence to strict Islamic law and reverence for sacrifice.The Basij is seen by some as the Islamic republic's "hidden army." Their numbers are not known, though the Revolutionary Guards say they are in the millions. Basijis are in nearly every government institution, from post offices to schools—normal employees except for their membership in the force.Their role has increased under hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who is believed to have stepped up state funding for Basij groups. That mirrors the growing prominence of the Basij's patron, the Revolutionary Guards: former and current Guards officers have gained important posts, and Guards-linked companies have received lucrative government contracts for construction and other projects.The U.S. has branded the Guards' elite Quds Force a terrorist group, accusing it of backing militants in Iraq, and the U.N. has slapped sanctions on Guards-linked firms accused of links to Iran's nuclear program.At times, the Basij plays its role through force. In 1999, they helped put down student protests that began at Tehran University in rioting that left several people dead. Basijis also are known to stop women in the streets, scolding them to wear Islamic dress.Far more pervasive, though, are the cultural events that Basijis lead. Student groups organize seminars and films at universities, often about Israeli "massacres" of Palestinians. Basiji theater groups put on plays depicting stories of "revolution and resistance."There's even a Basiji film company that produces movies about the Iran-Iraq war. One studio boasts a yard full of old tanks and other armor, on the side of the highway from the new Imam Khomeini airport into Tehran.The battlefield tours resonate because the 1980-1988 war with Iraq, in which at least 1 million people died overall, is an emotional rallying point for Iranians.Nearly every Iranian family lost a relative in the brutal fighting, and even Iranians with no love for the Islamic revolution express nationalist pride at fending off then-Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.For Hassan Taheri, a 53-year-old war veteran boarding the same bus as Saremi, the tour is a chance to reconnect with an earlier era. "Years of war, blood and resistance," said Taheri, who was bringing his wife. "Many of my friends never came back from the war. When I go there, I feel I am with them."But most of those on the tours are young Basijis and their families—and a constant theme is linking the war to the "third generation of the revolution." Those joining Saremi's tour were largely from Tehran's poorer districts, strongholds of support for Ahmadinejad and other hard-liners.The tours are extensively covered on state-run television, which throughout the holidays shows footage of young people touring battle zones or weeping at martyrs' graves.They have been organized since 1992 by a Basiji-run agency. The group says 1 million people are participating this year, up from 700,000 last year."The willingness to obey shown by the martyrs is what made them successful," one military commander, Gen. Ali Asghar Rajai, told a group of young Basijis taking part in one late March tour, according to the group's news agency."Today, that should be the example for all of us to follow," he said.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,347048,00.htmL
As in the days of Noah....

London receives spring snow

BE NOT CONFORMED TO THIS WORLD

"I beseech you therefore,brethren,by the mercies of God,that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice,holy,acceptable unto God,which is your reasonable service.
And be not conformed to this world:but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind,that ye may prove what is that good,and acceptable,and perfect,will of God."

Romans 12:1-2

Muslim grave desecrated in France

Muslim graves desecrated in French WW1 cemetery

LILLE, France-Vandals desecrated 148 graves in the Muslim section of a military cemetery in northern France, hanging a pig's head on one of the headstones, police said on Sunday.French President Nicolas Sarkozy called the attack "a hateful act" and around 100 police were sent to the Notre-Dame de Lorette cemetery near Arras to hunt for clues.State prosecutor Jean-Pierre Valensi said the vandals struck overnight, daubing insults on the graves."They directly referred to Islam and there were also insults directed at the justice minister," Valensi said, referring to Rachida Dati, whose parents came from North Africa.The desecration came almost exactly a year after youths daubed Nazi inscriptions and swastikas on Muslim tombs in the same cemetery in Ablain Saint-Nazaire. France's political class united in denouncing the vandalism. "This is a most unacceptable act of racism and the president shares the pain of France's Muslim community," Sarkozy's office said in a statement. Prime Minister Francois Fillon called it a "revolting act" and said those responsible would be found.Police arrested two men over the 2007 attack and sentenced them each to a year in prison.Notre-Dame de Lorette is one of France's biggest World War One military cemeteries and was built on the site of a battlefield where many French and German soldiers died between October 1914 and October 1915.
To read more go to:
As in the days of Noah...

PESTILENCE WATCH:South Korea reports new suspected bird flu case

SEOUL-South Korea on Saturday reported a suspected outbreak of the H5 strain of bird flu at a farm in the southwest of the country, near another farm that authorities said earlier this week had an outbreak of the deadly H5N1 strain.The farm ministry said the latest outbreak took place at a duck farm and it has yet to confirm if it is also the H5N1 strain. It expects to finish testing on Monday.Workers on Saturday will cull about 6,500 ducks at the farm that was raising about 12,500 ducks in Jeongeup, which is 27 km (17 miles) from the farm that had the H5N1 outbreak, the ministry said.On Thursday, the country confirmed the first outbreak of highly virulent bird flu in 13 months at a farm in Gimje, about 215 km (135 miles) south of Seoul, and started culling over 300,000 chickens and other poultry.The ministry also banned distribution of 3.6 million animals within a 10 km radius of the Gimje outbreak site and the destruction of eggs produced, and already distributed, in the area.The country has had seven outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu between November 2006 and March 2007 and has spent 58.2 billion won ($59.17 million) on quarantine measures.Bird flu has killed 238 people globally since 2003, according to the World Health Organisation.It largely remains an animal disease, but the big concern is that it could mutate into a disease that easily passes from one person to another, triggering a deadly global pandemic.

As in the days of Noah....

Clashes in Nile Delta after strike aborted

MAHALLA EL-KUBRA, Egypt-Egyptians angry with the government about high prices set fire to shops and two schools in a Nile Delta textile town on Sunday after police thwarted plans for a general strike and countrywide protests.Police fought battles through the streets of Mahalla el-Kubra with the protesters, led by textile workers who tried to go on strike for more pay to compensate for inflation.The demonstrators set ablaze a primary school, a preparatory school and a travel agency, among other shops in the working-class town, and stopped an incoming train by putting blazing tires on the railway tracks, witnesses said.Police fired rubber bullets and tear gas to disperse the protests. Some 40 people were injured and hundreds of others had breathing problems from gas inhalation, security sources said.Protesters threw stones at police, attacked police vehicles and tore down the posters of the ruling party's candidates in Tuesday's local elections, witnesses said.Egypt's urban consumer inflation jumped to an 11-month high of 12.1 percent in the year to February. Higher prices for food have hit the poorest Egyptians hardest.Independent workers groups and opposition parties had hoped the 20,000 workers at state-owned Misr Spinning and Weaving Company in Mahalla would go on strike as the centerpiece of a national day of protest at economic grievances.But a strong police presence, stormy weather and stern warnings from the government helped to thwart their plans.
To read more go to:
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSL0648812520080406
As in the days of Noah....

Attempt to extinguish Olympic flame

Afghan leader hints at re-election bid

KABUL, Afghanistan - Afghan President Hamid Karzai hinted Sunday that he plans to run for a second term, saying he has goals left to accomplish.The comments were his first public indication that he will stand for re-election in 2009 despite discontent over his government, which is widely seen as weak.Karzai, who was elected in 2004 to a five-year term in Afghanistan's first post-Taliban vote, told a news conference that "every human" wants to complete the work he has started."I pray to God that the people of Afghanistan are happy with me ... and will allow me to complete the work that I started-if they vote for me," Karzai said on the grounds of the presidential palace.But Karzai added, "If you ask my heart, God is a witness that I am not happy to run again."
In diplomatic circles, Karzai is sometimes referred to as the "Mayor of Kabul," a reference to his control of the capital but weak authority in remote areas of the country.Earlier this year, Michael McConnell, the U.S. National Intelligence Director, said Afghanistan's central government controls just 30 percent of the country. The Taliban controls about 10 percent and local tribes control the rest, he said.Afghanistan's Defense Ministry denied the assertion.But last year was Afghanistan's bloodiest since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion, and analysts have warned that the Taliban's resurgence is threatening to turn the international effort here into a failure.Marvin Weinbaum, a former State Department analyst on Afghanistan and now a resident scholar at the Washington-based Middle East Institute, said the U.S. would continue to back Karzai despite shortcomings that include a willingness to tolerate corruption within the Afghan government."It's like with (Pakistani President Pervez) Musharraf, this administration finds it very difficult to get ahead of the curve, to see the need to transition," Weinbaum said. "They are afraid of any kind of change, that the alternative may be worse. It's just not been their thing to see beyond the person they're working with.'Weinbaum added that the U.S. probably views Karzai as "the best of the lot, just as he was to begin with."Although the vote is scheduled to be held in about 18 months, no other prominent Afghan leaders have announced their intention to run for president.The Afghan-born U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Zalmay Khalilzad, is often mentioned as a possible candidate, but he has said he will not run.Others seen as potential candidates include Ali Jalali, a former interior minister under Karzai who has been teaching at the National Defense University in Washington, and Yunus Qanooni, the speaker of Afghanistan's lower house of parliament.It's not yet clear exactly when and how Afghanistan will hold its next round of elections. The presidential vote is slated for the fall of 2009, with parliamentary elections scheduled a year later.But each election is estimated to cost at least $100 million, and international donors do not want to pay for two elections. It is not clear if the Afghan government can afford the cost of both.Karzai said Sunday he does not want his term extended for another year to allow the merger of the two elections in 2010. "I do not want to spend one day longer than the time the Afghan people (have) given me," he said.Meanwhile, Karzai said talks that some Afghan leaders were holding with Taliban fighters were good for the country.Speaking shortly after his return from the NATO summit in Romania, Karzai said members of the Taliban were part of Afghanistan, and he wanted them to live peacefully in the country.Talks have been held between the Taliban and leaders of the opposition National Front for the last several months. Karzai has repeatedly called for talks with the Taliban, but critics in the National Front say he hasn't followed up those words with any action.Karzai has said insurgents must lay down their weapons and accept the country's constitution before they would be welcomed into society. However, he ruled out reconciliation with any al-Qaida or hard-line Taliban militants.
As in the days of Noah....

'Hizbullah may send bomb-laden UAVs'

As tensions rise with Syria, fears have mounted in the defense establishment that Hizbullah may fly an explosives-packed drone into Israel in retaliation for the February assassination of Imad Mughniyeh in Damascus, The Jerusalem Post has learned.During the 2006 war with Lebanon, Hizbullah launched four unmanned aerial vehicles at Israel. One was shot down by a Python 5 air-to-air missile fired by an F-16, another crashed shortly after takeoff, one was shot down over the sea and another crashed in Israel.The UAVs were all Iranian-made Ababils, which have a known range of 150 km., and can reach 300 kph. and carry 45 kg. of high-grade explosives. Alternatively, they can carry surveillance equipment.According to globalsecurity.org, Iran has a number Ababil- and Mohajer-class UAVs. Both can carrying surveillance equipment as well as explosives for kamikaze attacks. Iran is known to have supplied at least a dozen Mohajer-4 UAVs to Hizbullah in recent years; they are called Misrad-1 by the guerrilla group.According to the Web site, Syria has a number of Soviet-made Tupolev DR-3 drones.There are fears in Israel that Hizbullah could receive these UAVs. "Our assumption is that whatever is small enough to fit into a shipping container can have been sent from Iran or Syria to Hizbullah," a top defense official said.While Israel played down reports of tensions with Syria over the weekend, officials stressed the defense establishment was operating under the assumption that Hizbullah would retaliate for Mughniyeh's assassination.A large-scale attack - the downing of an Israeli civilian aircraft with a shoulder-to-air missile or the crashing of an explosive-laden UAV into Israel - could prompt a severe IDF response against Hizbullah and possibly also Syria.On Thursday, the IDF passed a message to the Syrian military via UN forces in Syria that Israel had no offensive intentions but that if attacked it would respond forcefully.
Officials warned over the weekend that a retaliatory attack for Mughniyeh's death could also come in the form of assassinating a current or former top Israeli military or diplomatic official, an attack against an Israeli embassy or a Hizbullah attempt to kidnap soldiers along the northern border.Intelligence officials from the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency), Mossad and Military Intelligence have been meeting on a regular basis since the assassination to analyze the intelligence and to assess the threat.The defense establishment believes that the threat level will continue to be high through Pessah, Independence Day and possibly until the end of the year.
The latest assessments have said there is less danger of an attack against a Jewish organization abroad - such as Hizbullah's 1994 bombing of the main Jewish community center in Buenos Aires - with the more likely scenario being either an attack in Israel or against an Israeli embassy or consulate.Measures taken include beefing up security on overseas Israeli flights. The number of air marshals on Israeli planes servicing certain destinations has been increased and more security personnel have been assigned to surround aircraft before takeoff and on landing. Some flights in Europe and Asia are escorted by helicopters during takeoff and landing.

As in the days of Noah....

FOR WHO HAS KNOWN THE MIND OF THE LORD?

"For I would not,brethren,that ye should be ignorant of this mystery,lest ye should be wise in your own conceits;that blindness in part is happened to Israel,until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in.
And so all Israel shall be saved:as it is written,There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer,and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob:
For this is my covenant unto them,when I shall take away their sins.
As concerning the gospel,they are enemies for your sakes:but as touching the election,they are beloved for the father's sakes.
For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance.
For as ye in times past have not believed God,yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief:
Even so have these also now not believed,that through your mercy they also may obtain mercy.
For God hath concluded them all in unbelief,that he might have mercy upon all.
O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!how unsearchable are his judgments,and his ways past finding out!
For who hath known the mind of the Lord?or who hath been his counsellor?
Or who hath first given to him,and it shall be recompensed unto him again?
For of him,and through him,and to him,are all things:to whom be glory for ever.Amen."
Romans 11:25-36

ISRAEL:Country begins biggest-ever drill

In face of increased tensions with Syria and Iran's efforts to obtain a nuclear weapon, parts of the country will shut down later this week for what security officials say is the largest emergency exercise in Israel's history.The drill, which is being organized by the newly-established National Emergency Authority, will start on Sunday and last five days. Preparations for the exercise are being overseen by Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilna'i.The first two days of the drill include security cabinet meetings - led by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert - to simulate the effectiveness of the current decision-making process during an enemy attack. On Tuesday, sirens will sound briefly nationwide; the public is asked to use the time to locate the closest bomb shelter or protected room.Drawing from lessons of the Second Lebanon War and in preparation for Iranian nuclear bombs as well as possible chemical and biological attacks, the Israel Police, IDF Home Front Command, other military branches, all of the country's hospitals, the Fire and Rescue Service, Magen David Adom and other rescue services will participate in the five-day drill.Rescue services will simulate mass evacuations from "hit zones" - including chemical and biological attacks - and hospitals will drill their ability to treat thousands of injured.On Saturday, Hizbullah said it would "vigilantly follow" this week's IDF exercise."Israel's military drill is not a testament to its strength but of its frustration and despair following its defeat in the Second Lebanon War," Nabil Kaouk, the group's commander in southern Lebanon, was quoted as saying Saturday.The Lebanese newspaper A-Safir quoted UNIFIL sources as saying that the IDF had asked the peacekeeping force to pass on reassuring messages of calm to Lebanon and its army ahead of the drill. A-Safir went on to say that Israel was making great efforts to clarify to Lebanon that the drill was a Home Front Command exercise and that there would not be any extraordinary maneuvers along the northern border.On Saturday night, Defense Minister Ehud Barak said that the northern front was "especially sensitive," but stressed that Israel had no interest in deterioration."The other side knows this and according to our assessments they too have no interest in deterioration," he added.According to Barak, who spoke at a conference in honor of wounded soldiers from the Armored Corps, "Israel is vigilantly watching [the situation] and is prepared for any development."Israel Radio reported that Barak also discussed the Home Front Command drill, saying that "in our day and age, the preparedness of the home front is a critical component of military victory."

As in the days of Noah....

PAGAN WATCH:New head of voodoo brings on the charm

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti: The goat tethered to a tree outside of Max Beauvoir's home is doomed.Beauvoir, tall and majestic with closely cropped white hair, is a voodoo priest who was just named the religion's supreme master, a newly created position that is aimed at reviving voodoo.His grand residence on the outskirts of the Haitian capital serves as a voodoo temple for practitioners and a late-night hangout for those paying customers eager to take in an exotic evening of spiritual awakening.Called the Peristyle de Mariani, it is where Beauvoir and his followers dance around a giant totem to the beat of drums. It is where they light bonfires to summon the spirits. And it is where they drain the blood of animals like that scrawny white goat to, among other things, heal the sick.On a recent night, Haiti's voodooists convened for a special ceremony. With music blaring and devotees dancing with all their might, two children threw white rose petals on a red carpet. Then along came Beauvoir.Popular in Haiti even among many of those who attend Christian churches, voodoo lacks the formal hierarchy of other religions. Most voodoo priests, known as houngans, operate semi-independently, catering to their followers without a whole lot of structure.But many of Haiti's houngans recently came together into a national federation and named Beauvoir, 72, as their public face. He is now the spokesman for a religion that followers believe too often gets a bad rap and is in dire need of an image overhaul. (Think "voodoo economics.") Even before he got the job, Beauvoir was a voodoo promoter extraordinaire. With his own Web site, www.vodou.org, and a following among foreigners intrigued by voodoo, Beauvoir is criticized by some purists as too much of a showman."My position as supreme chief in voodoo was born out of a controversy," Beauvoir said, explaining how Haiti's elite have marginalized the houngans that generations ago wielded significant influence in society. "Today, voodooists are at the bottom of society. They are virtually all illiterate. They are poor. They are hungry. You have people who are eating mud, and I don't mean that as a figure of speech."Beauvoir, a doctor's son who was not particularly interested in spiritual matters in his youth, left Haiti in the mid-1950s for the City College of New York, where he studied chemistry. Then he went off to the Sorbonne for graduate study in biochemistry. After various jobs in the New York area, he returned to Haiti in the early 1970s to conduct experiments on traditional herbal remedies.It was then that voodoo called.His nonagenarian grandfather was dying and the entire extended family had gathered around his bed. Before he went, though, the old man pointed at Beauvoir and ordered him to take over his duties as a voodoo priest.Beauvoir said he was taken aback. He did not know the man well and could not understand why he had been selected from the 20 or so other family members in the room. And he knew almost nothing about voodoo.But that was decades ago. Beauvoir has devoted the rest of his life to studying the religion, a mix of Christianity (introduced by slaves to mask their paganism from their masters) and animism that traces its origins to West Africa, which is also where Haitians, descendants of slaves, originated. The more he learns about voodoo, Beauvoir said, the more convinced he is that it can, and should, play a role in resolving Haiti's problems, especially given the religion's reach among the most disenfranchised people.As it is now, he said, the government seeks the input of Catholic and Protestant leaders when grappling with societal issues. "But do they call for the input of the voodooists?" he asked, shaking his head.Haiti has long been a battleground for Christian missionaries who view voodoo as devil worship and work tirelessly to convert the population to Christ. Voodoo also has one god, modeled on God of the Christian Bible, but it incorporates pagan elements that make Christians uneasy: casting spells and catering to spirits that are seen as the major forces of the universe.To turn things around, Haiti's voodooists decided they needed to organize themselves and confront voodoo-bashing head on."We decided to come together and form a new voodoo structure," Beauvoir said. "We Haitians want to move forward in life. We need to find our identity again, and voodoo is our identity. It's part of our collective personality. We feel the government we have is relying too much on foreigners to fill their pockets."
To read more go to:
As in the days of Noah.....

Montenegro holds first presidential election since splitting from Serbia

PODGORICA, Montenegro: Montenegrins voted Sunday in the tiny Balkan state's first presidential election since it split from Serbia two years ago.The ballot will help determine whether the Adriatic Sea nation of 620,000 cements its independence or slides back under Serbia's influence.Ethnic Serbs, about 30 percent of the population, are still unhappy about the country's separation from Serbia in a May 2006 referendum.They are seeking closer political and economic ties with Belgrade, which have been chilly since the breakup.Incumbent Filip Vujanovic of the ruling Democratic Party of Socialists is regarded as the likely winner of the four-man race. His party has ruled virtually unchallenged for the past 20 years."Those presidential candidates who were against Montenegro's independence two years ago have no moral right to lead the country in the future," Vujanovic said in an interview. "We won independence, now we have to start our fight for Montenegro in the European Union."Nebojsa Medojevic of the liberal Movement for Changes, and pro-Serbian challengers Andrija Mandic and Srdjan Milic were likely to split the rest of the votes, according to pre-election surveys. "Whatever anyone says, Montenegro remains a Serbian state," Mandic said, adding that his victory would mean that the pro-independence support in the country has changed.Vujanovic, a 53-year-old lawyer, said he is confident of winning more than 50 percent of the votes on Sunday, which would avert a runoff in two weeks. His party fears that the pro-Serbian and liberal groups could unite behind one candidate in a runoff.Montenegro was an independent kingdom before World War I, then part of Yugoslavia until that nation disintegrated in violence in 1991. Montenegro remained joined with Serbia until it seceded peacefully.Since the split, its economy has boomed. Annual economic growth is about eight percent and foreign direct investment since 2006 was about $1 billion, propelling Montenegro to the top of Europe's per capita foreign investment list.But it has had trouble getting rid of its image as a smuggling society rife with corruption.
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/04/06/news/Montenegro-Elections.php
As in the days of Noah....