A swarm of Locusts invades Achikulak, Russia. - Locust Invasion - YouTube - Wednesday August 5th, 2015 at 1:41 PM
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Published on Jul 30, 2015
Achikulak, Russia
A swarm of Locusts invades Achikulak, Russia.
A swarm of Locusts invades Achikulak, Russia.
Koko Tanimoto Kondo was just a baby on Aug. 6, 1945, when her father’s church in Hiroshima crumbled around her. For decades, she has told her story to remind society of the horrors of war.
KABUL — Civilian deaths and injuries from the Afghan conflict remained at “record high levels” during the first half of this year, a new United Nations report has found. The report, released here Wednesday, said 1,592 civilians had been killed and 3,329 injured between January and June.Read full article >>
A rich natural gas field and a fleet of ships has turned Qatar, once a poor nation of fishers and pearl divers, into a major player in the global energy trade.
Ambassador accuses London of deliberately delaying visas for embassy staff
The Latest: More Homes Razed by Northern California Wildfire
ABC News The latest on wildfires burning in California (all times local): 8:45 a.m.. At least 39 homes and 52 outbuildings have now been destroyed by an unruly Northern California wildfire that has been raging for a week. The numbers jumped from Tuesday when ... and more » |
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 2
New York Daily News |
Triple Homicide Investigated as Ritualistic Killing
ABC News Florida authorities are investigating whether a triple homicide was committed as part of a ritualistic ceremony in connection with the recent blue moon. Escambia County Sheriff David Morgan said Tuesday that the bodies of 77-year-old Voncile Smith and ... Witchcraft cited as possible factor in 'ritualistic' Pensacola triple murderAL.com “Witchcraft” Suspected in Savage Murder of Family in PensacolaWKRG Sheriff: Triple murder may be tied to blue moon Pensacola News Journal all 17 news articles » |
The Guardian |
Natalia Molchanova: world's 'greatest free-diver' feared dead
The Guardian The woman considered one of the greatest free divers of all time is feared dead after she failed to surface after a dive off the Mediterranean island of Formentera. Natalia Molchanova was diving to a planned depth of 35 metres (115 feet) with friends ... World's greatest freediver Natalia Molchanova feared deadCNN International Free Diver Natalia Molchanova Descends for Fun, Then VanishesNew York Times Natalia Molchanova, world-class freediver, feared deadWashington Times New Zealand Herald -KSPR all 59 news articles » |
NBCNews.com |
Two Special Ops Airmen Killed During Free-Fall Training in Florida
NBCNews.com A two-time recipient of the Bronze Star was among two U.S. special operations airmen killed during military free-fall training in Florida, the Air Force announced late Tuesday. Tech. Sgt. Timothy Officer Jr., 32, and Tech. Sgt. Marty Bettelyoun, 35 ... Airman killed in Florida training accident has ties to Portland-areaKATU 2 airmen killed during parachute training in FloridaWashington Times all 173 news articles » |
CBS News |
Small Washington town evacuated as wildfire advances, crews fight to save homes
Fox News ROOSEVELT, Wash. – A wildfire burning near the Oregon border has forced the evacuation of an entire small Washington town, authorities said. The Klickitat County sheriff's office issued the mandatory order for Roosevelt Tuesday afternoon. Roosevelt, Washington, Evacuated as Wildfire Roars Toward HomesNBCNews.com Washington town evacuated as wildfire approachesKATU Wildfire forces evacuation of small town in WashingtonAlbany Democrat Herald KTVZ all 62 news articles » |
The Express Tribune |
Pakistan Official Hopes Kabul-Taliban Talks to Resume Soon
New York Times ISLAMABAD — A close aide of Pakistan's prime minster says he is optimistic the stalled peace talks between Kabul and the Taliban will resume soon in the interest of peace in Afghanistan. The talks were indefinitely postponed following last week's ... Afghan talks only way to achieve peace: Pakistan army chiefThe Daily Star New Taliban leader moves fast to heal rifts in Afghan insurgencyswissinfo.ch Sher Abbas Stanekzai replaces Tayyeb Agha as Taliban's chief negotiatorThe Express Tribune all 173 news articles » |
Amid High-Profile Missing-Prisoner Case, Russian Lawmakers Crack Down On 'Double' Gameby support@pangea-cms.com (Tom Balmforth)
The reported sighting in Moscow of a former Defense Ministry official who was supposed to be serving a five-year sentence for corruption has spurred speculation that she may be using a "double" to serve her sentence for her. Now, just in case the rumor mill is accurate, lawmakers want to crack down on the practice.
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 3
Amid High-Profile Missing-Prisoner Case, Russian Lawmakers Crack Down On 'Double' Gameby support@pangea-cms.com (Tom Balmforth)
The reported sighting in Moscow of a former Defense Ministry official who was supposed to be serving a five-year sentence for corruption has spurred speculation that she may be using a "double" to serve her sentence for her. Now, just in case the rumor mill is accurate, lawmakers want to crack down on the practice.
Rescuers saved 400 people, though 25 died when the boat overturned, and another hundred were feared to have drowned, Italian officials said.
Denying historical facts is wrong, whether they concern the Holocaust or Red Army atrocities
Over the past 24 hours I have been receiving slightly ironic congratulations by email from fellow historians. They were prompted by the order from the Ministry of Education in the Yekaterinburg region of Russia to withdraw all my books from schools and colleges. They are to be removed “from the access of students and teaching staff”. (It is interesting that teaching staff are not to be allowed to make up their own minds.) I am accused of “promoting stereotypes formed during the Third Reich” and developing the “propaganda myth” of Joseph Goebbels that Red Army soldiers committed mass rapes of German women.
Continue reading...
As the heir apparent to his dictator father, Saif al-Islam Gaddafi led a charmed life, keeping pet tigers and speaking at Davos. Now a court in Libya has sentenced him to death. Is this really the end for the would-be reformer?
When the judge condemned him to death by firing squad, Saif al-Islam Gaddafi was not in court. The man who once thought he would rule Libya is being held more than a hundred miles west of Tripoli in the town of Zintan, prisoner of a militia that rejects the authority of those who control the capital. The fate of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s second son has come to symbolise a revolution that erupted in 2011 with cries for justice and freedom, but has collapsed into feuding and violence.
Saif al-Islam predicted it himself in a notorious TV broadcast as the uprising against his father’s regime gathered pace in February 2011. “There will be civil war in Libya … We will kill one another in the streets,” he said, wagging his finger at the camera. “All of Libya will be destroyed. We will need 40 years to reach an agreement on how to run the country, because today, everyone will want to be president, or emir, and everybody will want to run the country.”
Continue reading...
DETROIT (AP) -- When researchers at two West Coast universities took control of a General Motors car through cellular and Bluetooth connections in 2010, they startled the auto industry by exposing a glaring security gap....
Russian investigators summon former oil tycoon's father for questioning in 1998 murder case
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 4
US government offers $5 million reward in hunt for escaped Mexican drug lord 'El Chapo'
The Indian Express |
Video: Islamic State Threatens to Kill Croatian in Egypt
New York Times CAIRO — A purported Islamic State group video released Wednesday threatened to kill a Croatian hostage if Egyptian authorities do not release "Muslim women" held in prison within 48 hours, a day before the country plans to unveil a highly promoted new ... History of the Islamic State group amid Egypt hostage threatWashington Post In new video, IS threatens to kill Croatian hostage in EgyptHindustan Times Islamic State 'threatens to kill Croatian hostage' in EgyptIrish Independent RTE.ie-The Daily Star all 33 news articles » |
18 Turkish Journalists Face Prison for 'Terror Propaganda'by webdesk@voanews.com (Associated Press)
Turkish prosecutors are seeking sentences of up to seven and a half years in prison for 18 journalists they accuse of engaging in terror propaganda for publishing photos showing a militant pointing a gun at a prosecutor who was killed in a failed hostage rescue operation in March. The state-run Anadolu Agency reported late Tuesday that an indictment prepared by the Istanbul chief prosecutor's office is demanding prison terms for editors of nine newspapers, including Can Dundar,...
Massive swarms of locusts in southern Russia are invading farmlands, destroying crops and devastating farmer’s livelihoods.
Russia’s Agricultural Ministry has declared a state of emergency in the region as millions of insects quickly devour thousands of hectares of corn and other crops, CNN reports.
“In Kalmikya, Astrakhan, Volgagrad, and Dagestan, there is already no food left for the locusts, so they have moved on to other sources of food,” Tatiana Drishcheva of the Russia Agricultural Center, told CNN.
Since the plague began in July, the locusts, which measure about 8 c.m. long, have destroyed 10% of crops in the affected areas.
Russian officials have responded by increasing the amount of aerial pesticides used, but frustrated locals say it is not effective.
Though swarms of locusts descend on this part of southern Russia every year, locals say they have not seen it this bad in 30 years. State broadcasters are blaming higher than unusual temperatures and recent flooding.
[CNN]
|
This post has been generated by Page2RSS
Read the whole story
· ·
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 5
A man suspected of massacring and dismembering his six children and pregnant wife in the Volga city of Nizhny Novgorod has been detained in the Vladimir region in central Russia, a spokeswoman for the Russian Interior Ministry's Vladimir region said.
The Kremlin on August 4 played down a report by OSCE monitors who found an armed man in separatist-controlled eastern Ukraine who identified himself and a group of uniformed soldiers as a members of Russia’s armed forces.
Talks in Minsk aimed at a pullback of weapons from the front lines in eastern Ukraine have remained at an impasse. That's unlikely to surprise the men of the Ukrainian armed forces entrenched near Donetsk airport. They say they are under daily shelling from pro-Russian separatists. (Katerina Malofeyeva, RFE/RL's Current Time, www.currenttime.tv)
Two buses have collided in Russia's Far East, killing at least 12 people.
Russian free diver Natalia Molchanova remains missing three days after she went on a recreational dive off Spain's Balearic Islands and never resurfaced.
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 6
Central Asian Neighbors Seek Calm After Border Violenceby support@pangea-cms.com (RFE/RL)
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan have deployed troops and dispatched officials to a volatile frontier region where two days of violence highlighted combustive tensions in the borderlands of ex-Soviet Central Asia.
Russian Enmity Toward U.S. Fueled by Own Weaknessby support@pangea-cms.com (RFE/RL)
Russia, and the Kremlin in particular, has an unhealthy and misguided obsession with U.S. power and intentions, and this means badly strained relations between Washington and Moscow won't improve anytime soon, former U.S. Ambassador Michael McFaul told RFE/RL in an interview.
McFaul, who was a chief architect of President Barack Obama's first-term "reset" with Russia as a senior White House adviser, later became one of the most vilified U.S. ambassadors to Moscow in recent memory.
During his two-year stint, which ended in February 2014, McFaul was regularly stalked by Russian state TV reporters and pro-Kremlin activists, and publicly accused of trying to foment revolution in Russia.
In an interview with RFE/RL on August 4, McFaul, who now teaches at Stanford University in California, said even before he took up his post in January 2012, he had been tagged by some officials and agencies in Russia as being a subversive, particularly ahead of the presidential election that was held in March of that year.
"Was it unexpected to me? Yes. Especially because it became so personal, so fast. Even before I met any Russians, there were already pieces on television about me," he said. "I hadn't met anyone yet. I was still unpacking my bags."
"As one very senior Kremlin official pointed out to me -- he said: 'Hey, don't take it personally. We need an enemy now, for election purposes, for foreign policy purposes. The United States is the obvious candidate and you are the poster child for the enemy'," McFaul said.
McFaul, whose successor, John Tefft, has cut a lower profile in Russia, said that Obama considered his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to be a "straightforward and clear thinking" man, as well as pragmatic.
That's why Obama was able to reach several important foreign policy successes with Russia, McFaul said, such as securing its membership in the World Trade Organization, agreement on the "Northern Supply Network" to bring weapons and personnel to U.S. forces in Afghanistan.
'Zero-Sum Game'
Putin, however, has now all but given up on a peaceful relationship with the United States, viewing geopolitics as a Cold War-style "zero-sum" game for influence and power, McFaul said.
"Putin thinks that the United States is out to get Russia, is out to weaken Russia, is out to win in zero-sum terms, not win-win outcomes. And that's a fundamental different world view," he said.
The Kremlin has portrayed the turmoil that erupted in Ukraine in late 2013 as the result of Western meddling and the "Euromaidan" protests that pushed President Viktor Yanukovych from power in February 2014 as a U.S.-backed coup.
Russian media, most of which is beholden to state influence, have routinely pointed to the presence of a top State Department official handing out food to protesters in Kyiv as indicative of U.S. involvement.
"When you think that handing out cookies is leading to regime change, you're assigning a lot of power to one individual…. To me that's a sign of Russia's weakness and Russia's insecurities, not the other way around," McFaul said.
"On the one hand, they talk about Obama being weak. And on the other hand, they seem scared to death of Obama. And every little thing that he and his administration do, they think is designed to destroy Russia," he said. "I mean, you know, a more competent country, a more competent leadership would not be worrying every day that Russia is about to be destroyed.
"Nobody in America, for instance, worries about the United States being undermined by Russia," he said. "We're not worried every night that Texas is going to leave because of some Russian power thing. I think there's a real schizophrenia about American power in Russia today."
Written by Mike Eckel based on an interview conducted by Petr Cheremushkin of RFE/RL's Russian Service
Read the whole story
· · ·
Khodorkovsky Says Elderly Father To Be Questioned In Russian Mayor's Killing by support@pangea-cms.com (RFE/RL)
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Comments
Post a Comment