Tag Archives: crisis

US, SKorea to test military in signal to North

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration on Monday announced plans for two major military exercises off the Korean peninsula in a show of force aimed at North Korea, which has been blamed by investigators for a deadly torpedo attack on a South Korean warship. The White House called U.S. support for South Korea “unequivocal” and said in a statement that President Obama had directed military commanders to work with the South “to ensure readiness and to deter future aggression.” North Korean leaders have denied responsibility and warned against any retaliation, but Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Monday blamed the North for the crisis. “We are working hard to avoid an escalation of belligerence and provocation,” Clinton told reporters in Beijing, where she was to press China to support diplomatic action against its neighbor and ally, North Korea. “This is a highly precarious situation that the North Koreans have caused in the region.” U.S. officials hope a united international response, coupled with a display of military might, will deter North Korea's neo-Stalinist regime from ratcheting up tensions. An international team of investigators last week blamed the North for the March 26 sinking of the South Korean corvette, the Cheonan. Forty-six South Koreans died aboard the ship, which investigators say was ripped in two by a torpedo. The sinking was South Korea's worst military disaster since the Korean War, which started 60 years ago and ended in a cease-fire in 1953. But no formal peace treaty was ever signed, and more than 28,000 U.S. troops remain stationed in the south, a critical regional ally. Until Monday, the Obama administration had been intentionally vague on how it might respond to the report blaming North Korea for the attack, out of a reluctance to stoke tensions. But on Tuesday, the Obama administration shifted gears, taking its cue from South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, who announced Monday that he would cut all trade with the impoverished North. A Defense Department spokesman, Bryan Whitman, said the joint U.S.-South Korean exercises would take place in the “near future” and would focus on detecting submarines and monitoring illicit activities. The Pentagon confirmed the planned exercises are directly tied to the torpedo attack two months ago. Jeff Breslau, spokesman for U.S. Pacific Fleet, said the U.S. and South Korea conduct more than a dozen military exercises a year. Several typically involve anti-submarine operations and maritime security, he said. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Monday called the evidence against North Korea “overwhelming and deeply troubling,” and called on the U.N. Security Council to take action. “I am confident that the council . . . will take measures appropriate to the gravity of the situation,” he said. But any measure reprimanding North Korea will have to win the approval of all five veto-wielding members of the Security Council, including China. So far, China has sought to maintain a neutral stance and has questioned the evidence against Pyongyang. But Clinton, in Beijing for trade and strategic talks, said she has discussed the Korean crisis with Chinese officials and China recognizes “the gravity of the situation we face.” “The Chinese understand the reaction by the South Koreans, and they also understand our unique responsibility for the peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula,” she said. Chinese President Hu Jintao, speaking as the Beijing talks opened, did not mention North Korea by name. But he said the United States and China share responsibility for “managing regional hotspots” and “safeguarding world peace and security.” Speaking later, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman, Ma Zhaoxu, said China hoped “all the relevant parties will exercise restraint and remain coolheaded, appropriately handle issues of concern and prevent escalation of the event.” http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100524/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama_korea added by: onemalefla

Incredible images of the violence in Thailand

The violence in Thailand is escalating, these are some big picture images from the crisis. added by: joshuaheller

Giorgio Armani Hotel in Dubai: Raw Video

Italian designer Giorgio Armani opened his first hotel at the world's tallest tower in Dubai on Tuesday (April 27), giving a boost to the Gulf Arab emirate's bid to recover from a debt crisis. The designer brought his trademark minimalist style to a city famous for excess, with the Armani Hotel Dubai designed with an understated palette of cream and earth colours. Armani — whose business is worth around 2.4 billion USD a year in sales — partnered with Emaar Properties, the Arab world's largest listed developer, in 2005 to develop a series of hotels, resorts and residences in key cities around the world. From man-made islands shaped like palm trees to an indoor ski slope in the desert, Dubai has marketed itself as the city of bling, putting itself on the map with a bigger is better policy. A standard room in the hotel, which does not have a single picture on its walls, will cost 4,000 dirhams (1,089USD) a night, while the best suite has a price tag of 40,000 dirhams. A table at the Prive lounge, which is home to the world's largest LCD screen, will cost at least 3,000 dirhams a visit, as guests can feast their eyes on Armani shows and videos. The 160-room Armani hotel occupies six floors in the Burj Khalifa tower, which opened on January 4, in addition to eight floors dedicated to 144 Armani luxurious residences. The two parties declined to reveal the cost of the hotel. Dubai, one of seven members comprising the United Arab Emirates and the Arab world's trade and tourism hub, saw the sharpest drop in hotel revenues in the Middle East for 2009, hit by the global financial crisis. The heavily indebted emirate generates around 19 percent of its gross domestic product from tourism and its economy has suffered as people tightened budgets after the crisis. Dubai's construction boom started when it first allowed foreigners to buy into its property market in 2002. Luxury resorts, hotels, serviced apartments and holiday villas mushroomed, drawing nearly 7 million tourists in 2007. The Middle East, despite being hit by the global downturn, has shown some resilience over the past year with revenue dropping less than other regions, industry figures showed. Dubai's hotel market is closest to the bottom of the cycle and is showing signs of recovery with beach hotels leading the way and showing positive growth, a recent report by real estate service company Jones Lang LaSalle said. added by: ctv

Catherine Keener: ‘At Some Point You’ve Got to Call Reality’

This week’s Please Give returns Catherine Keener to the fraught, funny world of Nicole Holofcener, marking their fourth collaboration since 1996’s Walking and Talking . This time, the crisis on hand is as social as it is personal — the epidemic of white liberal guilt that wallops her Kate into a new, unusual variety of midlife crisis. Making matters worse, Kate’s daughter Abby (Sarah Steele) has bad skin and a jones for $200 jeans, while husband Alex (Oliver Platt) has only slightly more compunctions about the affair he’s having with his neighbor’s granddaughter (Amanda Peet) than he does about waiting for the neighbor to die so he can expand their apartment.

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Catherine Keener: ‘At Some Point You’ve Got to Call Reality’

Pope on the Ropes: Your 2010 Papal Scandal Primer [Religion]

New revelations of child molestation by Catholic priests, and the Pope’s indifference, have his critics and defenders locked in a holy war of words. Some anticipate his downfall. Others see a secularist smear campaign. Here’s your guide to the controversy. It’s been a rough month for Pope Benedict XVI. First, his letter to Irish Catholics apologizing for past abuses by priests there didn’t go over well . Then the Times printed documents showing that while Benedict headed the Church’s office charged with defrocking priests, he ignored reports of a bishop who molested 200 deaf boys in Wisconsin. And before that, as archbishop of Munich, he allowed a known pedophile to continue leading a parish . Finally, this weekend the Pope had enough. He struck back against the media during his Palm Sunday address , saying he won’t be “intimidated by petty gossip,” and that he doesn’t appreciate the “ignoble attempts” to tarnish his good name. Yesterday, the Times ran an article that says as archbishop of Munich, the Pope, then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, “expended more energy pursuing theological dissidents than sexual predators,” and that he wasn’t much concerned with the day-to-day managerial side of being archbishop. Like the annoying amount of paperwork that probably goes along with prosecuting a kiddie-toucher? Instead, he focused on more important things, like disciplining a priest for leading a mass at a peace rally in 1981. That priest eventually left the Church, disillusioned. In an editorial on Friday , the National Catholic Reporter said, “the Holy Father needs to directly answer questions, in a credible forum, about his role […] in the mismanagement of the clergy sex abuse crisis.” Andrew Sullivan thinks the Pope’s “cult of total authority” stands in the way of owning up to any personal culpability, and diminishes the authority of the Catholic Church. “It’s obvious he should resign. It’s also obvious he cannot. That’s why this crisis is so grave,” Sullivan writes. Even Sinead O’Connor jumped in, railing against Benedict in a Sunday Washington Post op-ed. The Guardian polled its readers over the weekend: But the Vatican is fighting back. It started Twitter pages in six different languages on March 20. The first tweet was a link to Benedict’s letter to Irish Catholics . And the Pope even has a fan club! They have a website called the The Benedict Blog , and lately it has been busy countering the Pope’s critics in the nasty, secular press. The Telegraph ‘s Blogs Editor, Damian Thompson, goes after “liberal Catholics” for Pope-bashing , and for trying to “sabotage” Benedict’s “liturgical reforms.” New York’s Archbishop Timothy Dolan rushed to the Pope’s defense and compared his plight to the persecution of Jesus, saying “Palm Sunday mass is surely a fitting place for us to express our love for and solidarity for our earthly shepherd now suffering from the same unjust accusation and shouts of the mob as Jesus did.” The Times ‘ religion reporter, Laurie Goodstein, has really pissed off the Vatican. She blew open the story of Reverend Lawrence Murphy, the kiddie-touching Milwaukee priest with a thing for deaf children. Goodstein writes : Top Vatican officials – including the future Pope Benedict XVI – did not defrock a priest who molested as many as 200 deaf boys, even though several American bishops repeatedly warned them that failure to act on the matter could embarrass the church, according to church files newly unearthed as part of a lawsuit. The internal correspondence from bishops in Wisconsin directly to Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the future pope, shows that while church officials tussled over whether the priest should be dismissed, their highest priority was protecting the church from scandal. The documents emerge as Pope Benedict is facing other accusations that he and direct subordinates often did not alert civilian authorities or discipline priests involved in sexual abuse when he served as an archbishop in Germany and as the Vatican’s chief doctrinal enforcer.” The documents can be seen here . Then there’s Rev. Peter Hullerman. He molested boys at his parish in Germany , was sent to therapy for pedophilia, and days later returned to work with children. He was convicted of molesting boys at another parish that Benedict helped transfer him to. But supporters of the Pope are trying to lay the blame on his right hand man, Rev. Gerhard Gruber. There’s some really bizarre stuff out there, too, like this YouTube video. In a “parody” of the 2004 movie Downfall , Adolf Hitler learns of Benedict’s popularity among “the youth” and loses his mind. One of Hitler’s aides in the bunker tells him: “But at least we got the secular media against [Benedict].” Are they equating critics of the Pope with Nazis? No, of course not. It’s a parody! Ha! Kind of like posting the picture below of Benedict, then Herr Joseph Ratzinger, as a totally unenthusiastic member of the Hitler Youth. Funny stuff! So there’s your 2010 papal scandal as of today. The chorus of prominent Catholics demanding his resignation is growing, but if the Pope’s latest comments are any indicator, old Ratzinger is not going down without a fight. [ Images via Getty ]

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Pope on the Ropes: Your 2010 Papal Scandal Primer [Religion]

A river of sh*t: World Water Day

Today is World Water Day, a day dedicated to raising awareness around water issues – scarcity, access and quality. It’s probably the one day each year we all really stop to think about how to better manage this precious resource.

Appeals for calm after Nigeria sectarian slaughter

JOS, Nigeria — Nigerian troops were patrolling villages near the northern city of Jos Tuesday after the massacre of more than 500 Christians there that sparked international shock and outrage. But survivors of the latest wave of inter-ethnic violence, in which women and children were hacked to death or burned alive in their homes, denounced the authorities for having failed to intervene in time. Relatives of the dead meanwhile attended funerals Monday for the victims of the three-hour orgy of violence in three Christian villages close to the northern city of Jos. Related article: Survivors wail as children, women buried in Nigeria Witnesses have blamed the massacre on members of the mainly Muslim Fulani ethnic group, and according to media reports Muslims villagers were warned two days before attack via text messages to their phones. The security forces said they had detained 95 suspects in the violence. “We have over 500 killed in three villages and the survivors are busy burying their dead,” said state information commissioner Gregory Yenlong. “People were attacked with axes, daggers and cutlasses — many of them children, the aged and pregnant women.” Around 200 people were being treated in hospital, said the information ministry. Much of the violence was centred around the village of Dogo Nahawa, where gangs set fire to straw-thatched mud huts as they went on their rampage. The explosion of violence was just the latest between rival ethnic and religious groups. In January, 326 people died in clashes in and around Jos, according to police although rights activists put the overall toll at more than 550. “The attack is yet another jihad and provocation,” the Plateau State Christian Elders Consultative Forum (PSCEF) said. It had taken the army two hours to react from the time a distress call was put through and “the attackers had finished their job and left”, they added. Acting President Goodluck Jonathan has already sacked his chief security advisor. John Onaiyekan, the archbishop of the capital Abuja, told Vatican Radio that the violence was rooted not in religion but in social, economic and tribal differences. “It is a classic conflict between pastoralists and farmers, except that all the Fulani are Muslims and all the Berom are Christians,” he said. Fulani are mainly nomadic cattle rearers while Beroms are traditionally farmers. Locals said Sunday's attacks were the result of a feud which had been first ignited by a theft of cattle and then fuelled by deadly reprisals. Rights activists also said the slaughter appeared to be revenge for the January attacks, in which mainly Muslims were killed. The Vatican led a wave of outrage with spokesman Federico Lombardi expressing the Roman Catholic Church's “sadness” at the “horrible acts of violence”. UN chief Ban Ki-moon told reporters he was “deeply concerned”, but added: “I appeal to all concerned to exercise maximum restraint. “Nigeria's political and religious leaders should work together to address the underlying causes and to achieve a permanent solution to the crisis in Jos.” US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged “all parties to exercise restraint.” She added: “The Nigerian government should ensure that the perpetrators of acts of violence are brought to justice under the rule of law and that human rights are respected as order is restored.” Survivors said the attackers were able to separate the Fulanis from members of the rival Berom group by chanting 'nagge,' the Fulani word for cattle. Those who failed to respond in the same language were hacked to death. Witnesses said armed gangs had scared people out of their homes by firing into the air but most of the killings were the result of machete attacks. “We were caught unawares… and as we tried to escape, the Fulani who were already waiting slaughtered many of us,” said Dayop Gyang, of Dogo Nahawa. Gbong Gwon Jos, a Muslim resident of Dogo Nahawa, told The Nation daily he received advanced warnings of the attacks. “I got a text message about movement of the people.” Witnesses told Human Rights Watch that some of the attackers were former residents of the villages who had fled previous inter-community conflicts. “I recognized a few of [the attackers'] voices,” one witness told them. Another witness told the group many of the attackers had their heads wrapped in cloth to make it hard to identify them, and that some had cried “Allahu Akbar” (God is Great). Amid continuing tension Monday, Christian youths set upon a Muslim journalist covering one of the mass burials near Jos, an AFP reporter said. Police had to pull him to safety and he needed treatment for a broken nose. http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5j7Ka7dhD48QseiCShJ-RhYxI6Exg added by: Toni801

Glenn Beck Advertiser Offers "Survival Seeds"

New Survival Seed Bank Let's You Plant A Full Acre Crisis Garden!! Wait, what? You guys, this will be better than gold once the “emerging totalitarianism” occurs. Want! [ Via ] View

Code Orange — ‘Shore’ Situation at LAX Security

Filed under: Celebrity Justice , Exclusives , Jersey Shore Crisis was averted at LAX the other day — as The Situation got his bag checked by airport security. But The Sitch wasn’t the only “Jersey Shore” star to go through some extra special security measures — Pauly D was also pulled aside and inspected. … Permalink

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Code Orange — ‘Shore’ Situation at LAX Security

‘Twilight’ Star Tinsel Korey On Haiti: ‘This Is Just The Beginning’

MTV News’ guest correspondent observes the best parts of the ‘Hope for Haiti Now’ telethon and reminds us there’s more work to be done. By Tinsel Korey Tinsel Korey [Editor’s Note]: In response to the crisis in Haiti, the world’s top stars came together Friday (January 22) for the one-of-a-kind telethon “Hope for Haiti Now.” Pitching in alongside Robert Pattinson and her other co-stars, “Twilight Saga” actress Tinsel Korey was eager to help in any way she could. Earlier, Tinsel published her plea for donations in an exclusive piece written for MTV.

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‘Twilight’ Star Tinsel Korey On Haiti: ‘This Is Just The Beginning’