Storms that produced at least 13 tornadoes swept along New Mexico's border with Texas in the southwestern U.S., destroying homes and other buildings and injuring at least 16 people, several critically, authorities said.The worst damage was reported in the towns of Logan and Clovis, communities about 80 miles apart, police said.The tornadoes, which were reported during a five-hour period Friday, damaged several buildings, downed power lines and sparked fires that were later extinguished in Clovis, town police Lt. James Schoeffel said.Thirteen people from that area were hospitalized at the Plains Regional Medical Center with injuries. Five were in critical condition with head trauma, said Liz Crouch, the center's chief operating officer.... http://www.foxnews.com censor News |
Editor - 07:42:00 03-24-07 |
Suicide Bomb Attacks Kill 30 In Iraq Police Say Sunnis Who Cooperate With U.S. And Iraqi Govt. Are Being Targeted |
Two suicide bomb attacks claimed the lives of 30 people in Iraq today, a day after a deputy prime minister was himself injured in another bombing. A suicide truck bomber struck a police station in a mainly Sunni area in Baghdad, killing at least 20 people, police said, as insurgents apparently step up their campaign against fellow Sunnis seen as collaborating with the U.S. and the Iraqi government. The blast, which could be heard across the city, sent up a huge plume of black smoke over the skyline. In another incident, a suicide bomber wearing an explosives belt struck a pastry shop in a predominantly Sunni Turkomen city northwest of Baghdad, killing at least 10 people including two off-duty policemen dressed in civilian clothes, and wounding three, an official said. The shop is in a busy market area in central Tal Afar, said the city's top administrator, Najim Abdullah said. The attack came just over a year after U.S. President George W. Bush declared that ... http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/03/24/iraq/main2604856.shtml?source=RSSattr=World_2604856
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Editor - 07:40:00 03-24-07 |
Sunni Leader: Insurgency Could End if U.S. Abolishes Militias, Stops Iranian Influence |
A prominent Iraqi Sunni leader said Friday that the insurgency in Iraq could end if the U.S. showed determination to stop the influence of pro-Iranian Shiite militias there. "The Americans must act seriously and abolish those militias, confiscate their weapons, arrest their criminals and at the same time stop the Iranian influence which is penetrating all of Iraq, including the government," said Sheik Majeed al-Gaood, a prominent tribal leader in Anbar province, the heartland of the Sunni insurgency. Al-Gaood is a leading member of a Sunni family that plays a major role in tribal politics in Anbar. He is believed to have close ties with factions of former dictator Saddam Hussein's disbanded Baath Party. Al-Gaood has previously said a truce with the United States was possible if the Shiite-dominated government of Iraq were "dismissed" and new elections held. He said he was committed to the unity of Iraq and wanted sectarian violence to end. ... http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=2978282
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Editor - 23:37:00 03-23-07 |
How mosquitoes find their targets |
The mechanism mosquitoes use to zero in on their targets has been discovered by scientists in New York. It is already known that the insects are very sensitive to carbon dioxide in exhaled breath. Now a team led by Rockefeller University has found that they sense the gas using protein receptors in the structure extending from their jaws. Writing in Nature, they say the discovery could aid the fight against insect-born diseases, such as malaria. The Rockefeller team first examined fruit flies. They discovered two protein receptors, Gr21a and Gr63a, which enable the fly to sense carbon dioxide with its antennae. The researchers worked on fly nerve cells that did not normally respond to carbon dioxide. They found that, if the Gr21a and Gr63a receptors were both switched on, the cells became excited by the gas. They also showed that when Gr63a was mutated, the mutant flies no longer responded to the high levels of carbon dioxide that wild type flies avoid.... http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/6486057.stm
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Editor - 21:55:00 03-23-07 |
NATO forces shoot Afghan child, run over another |
A distraught Afghan father buried his 12-year-old son Friday after the boy was shot in the head by NATO troops in the latest in a series of civilian deaths involving international forces. The NATO force admitted to the shooting late Thursday but said its soldiers had fired in self-defence after a civilian van had ignored verbal warnings to not approach a security cordon around a broken-down armoured vehicle. Confirming the killing, the Afghan interior ministry said the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) troops opened fire on a vehicle "which apparently tried to overtake the troops or may be the car was too close to the troops." But the boy's father, named only Zemarai, denied trying to overtake the convoy while driving seven of his relatives home after visiting family. He also said he had been several hundreds metres (yards) away and was not aware of warning shots, which troops are required to fire before taking aim.... http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070323/wl_sthasia_afp/afghanistanunrestnato
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Editor - 21:51:00 03-23-07 |
White House 'thwarted attempts by Defence Secretary to close Guantanamo' |
The US Defence Secretary has tried repeatedly to close America's controversial prison for terror suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, but has been thwarted by the White House, according to reports today. The New York Times reported that Robert Gates, who succeeded Donald Rumsfeld as Defence Secretary last December, has complained several times to the Bush Administration since January that the camp has attracted so much criticism abroad that any legal proceedings conducted there have lost their legitimacy. But his requests for its closure, and the transfer of trials of terror suspects to mainland America, have been refused in turn by the US Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales, Vice President Dick Cheney and President Bush himself, the newspaper said. Mr Gates, a former head of the CIA, has tried to strike a more moderate, less combative tone since succeeding Mr Rumsfeld last year and among his attempted reforms, the Times reported today, has been an effort to ... http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article1559041.ece
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Editor - 21:49:00 03-23-07 |
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