Japan rescue helicopter crash kills 5: report

(Reuters) – Five people died when a rescue helicopter sent to help a party of climbers crashed in mountains near Tokyo Sunday, local media reported.

Two people survived the crash in Chichibu, Saitama Prefecture, police were quoted as saying.

The helicopter, belonging to the Saitama prefectural government, went down after lowering rescuers to help a 55-year-old woman, Kyodo news agency reported.

A warning had been issued by the local meteorological observatory of heavy rain and lightning in the area, it said.

(Reporting by Michael Watson; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Japan rescue helicopter crash kills 5 – media

July 25 (Reuters) – Five people died when a rescue helicopter sent to help a party of climbers crashed in mountains near Tokyo on Sunday, local media reported.

Two people survived the crash in Chichibu, Saitama Prefecture, police were quoted as saying.

The helicopter, belonging to the Saitama prefectural government, went down after lowering rescuers to help a 55-year-old woman, Kyodo news agency reported.

A warning had been issued by the local meteorological observatory of heavy rain and lightning in the area, it said. (Reporting by Michael Watson; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

US spends $40 mn for ‘secret’ Mexican anti-drug unit

Mexico City, May 15 (IANS/EFE) The US has spent around $40 million for training a ‘secret’ dedicated unit of around 200 Mexican police and army personnel in an effort to hunt down drug kingpins, a media report said.

The group was trained by the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and has captured at least four ‘top-level lieutenants’ of Mexican drug lords during 2006-2010, Mexican newspaper Milenio said in a report Friday.

The secret unit, called the SIU, received $40 million from the DEA in salaries, equipment, training and consultancy in the last four years.

The daily also cited DEA documents as saying that the US Congress has been asked to budget another $10.8 million for the year 2011 in order to provide the Mexican unit with additional security teams.

The Mexican government and the US Embassy are hoping that the trained unit would weaken the drug cartels ‘by means of lightning-like operations’, the report said.

The government has deployed over 45,000 soldiers and 20,000 federal agents in its war against the drug cartels.

`No team can get near us,’ says Tait

St. Lucia (West Indies), May 14 (ANI): Lightning fast bowler Shaun Tait has said that no team “can get near us” if Australia continue to play to their ability at the World Twenty20 in the West Indies.

“”If we play well, I don”t think anyone can get near us. We”re a disciplined outfit. We all know our games very well. We have gelled as a team perfectly and we”re playing really good cricket. The only way we can come unstuck is against ourselves,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Tait, as saying.

“We”re our biggest challenge. If we play badly, I think that”s the only way we can bomb out of the comp,” he added.

“Without getting too far ahead of ourselves and too cocky or arrogant, if we play our best cricket we”ll win the tournament,” Tait said on Wednesday.

Undefeated Australia play defending champions Pakistan in their semi-final in St Lucia on Friday.

England has entered the final after beating Sri Lanka by seven wickets in the first semi-final on Thursday.

Tait was one of the heroes for Australia in the 2007 World Cup with 23 wickets in the Caribbean, and can see plenty of similarities between the current T20 campaign and the way Australia crashed through all comers in the one-day international showpiece three years ago.

“Definitely. It sort of reminds me a little bit of the World Cup in 2007 when we went through flawless,” Tait said.

Despite not advancing beyond the semi-finals in the two previous World T20 tournaments in 2007 and 2009, Australia have swept through the group and Super Eights rounds.

“We”ve been pretty relaxed, the atmosphere. We haven”t had great long meetings about opposition teams,” said Tait.

“We are just concentrating on our own game. We know that we”ve got the team and the players. If we play well, we should win the competition,” he said. (ANI)

Unbeaten Mayweather survives early Mosley onslaught

Floyd Mayweather Jr preserved his unbeaten professional record with an unanimous points decision victory over fellow American Shane Mosley in a non-title welterweight bout on Saturday.

Widely regarded as the best defensive fighter of his generation, Mayweather dominated 11 of the 12 rounds with his lightning hand speed and agile movement to improve his career record to 41-0 with 25 knockouts.

A 4-1 favourite going into the highly anticipated bout at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, Mayweather was stunned by a flurry of punishing blows from Mosley in the second round.

However, the 33-year-old Mayweather immediately regained control and dictated the rest of the fight with his probing right hand, rock-solid defence and a series of telling combinations.

The flamboyant American gained one-sided verdicts from all three judges — by 119-109, 119-109 and 118-110.

WBA welterweight champion Mosley, who had not fought since a ninth-round TKO upset of feared Mexican slugger Antonio Margarito in Jan. 2009, slipped to 46-6 with 39 knockouts.

(Editing by Ian Ransom; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Residents appeal against wind tower placement

A central Victorian residents’ group has lodged an appeal against the re-installation of a wind tower north-east of Kyneton.

The tower at Baynton East is measuring wind speeds to test if a wind farm could be viable.

Last month, the Macedon Ranges Shire permitted it to remain standing for five years.

Some local residents say the tower is a lightning and bushfire hazard, but the Shire says safety precautions have been taken.

A spokesman for the Granite Boulders Landscape Guardians says residents lodged an appeal with VCAT last week.

Union helps revamp Jubilee Oval

The Broken Hill Football League has announced the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union will contribute $40,000 to the continued upgrade of Jubilee Oval.

League chairman David Sedunary says the money will go towards installing a digital scoreboard, as well as upgrading the lights around the oval.

He says it will not just benefit the football league, but a range of different sports that also use the oval.

“Not only helping Aussie Rules, they’re helping cricket because we’ll have cricket there, we have softball there … school football’s played there, soccer people train there, well they did previously, there has been some baseball played there and also we’re going to have rugby league as well, it’s been very helpful and I think it’s been just a situation … [of] appreciation of all the sport that’s gone around Broken Hill,” he said.

In other football news, the Lightning Preseason Cup will be held tomorrow, with all four of the league’s teams taking part.

Roach to join Gayle in WA

West Indies skipper Chris Gayle will return to Western Australia next summer to suit up for the Warriors’ Twenty20 campaign and will bring lightning quick Kemar Roach along for the ride.

Gayle was restricted to just two games for WA last summer after picking up a side strain in his first outing for the Warriors.

But the 30-year-old still made a sizeable impact, hammering 40 off just 16 balls against South Australia.

Roach has quickly become of the most exciting pacemen in the Test arena.

The 21-year-old has taken 20 wickets in five Tests and injured Australian captain Ricky Ponting last summer with a fearsome bouncer.

“In Chris Gayle we have secured one of the game’s best Twenty20 players for the second successive season, while Kemar Roach is one of the most promising young pacemen in world cricket,” WACA chief executive Graeme Wood said.

“It has been extremely disappointing to miss out on the opportunity to compete at the first two Champions League Twenty20 tournaments.

“We strongly believe that with Chris and Kemar added to the exciting local talent in the Warriors’ squad, we can give ourselves a great chance of qualifying for the 2011 edition.”

- AAP

More calls to replace police radio network

The Western Australian Opposition has renewed calls for the State Government to replace the ageing regional police radio network.

Labor’s spokeswoman for police, Margaret Quirk, says there were 10 system failures in the Kalgoorlie region last year and another which lasted several hours just over a month ago.

Ms Quirk says the equipment is more than 20 years old and needs to be urgently replaced.

“We need to back our police officers and in making sure that they can make the communications that they need to make and so they’re not exposed by not being able to get through to their colleagues,” she said.

A spokeswoman for Police Minister Rob Johnson says funding to replace the network is being considered as part of the budget process.

Goldfields Esperance Superintendent Kevin Looby says police have a number of procedures in place to cope with network outages.

“There was an incident a couple of years ago where our communications were struck by lightning and that caused quite a severe outage for a while and we’ve had other breakdowns, but we’ve always been able to manage to get on with the business of policing and there’s been no real risk to the community in those instances,” he said.

Bunbury helps Perth storm clean-up

Emergency service crews from Bunbury are heading to Perth to help authorities deal with a backlog of calls for help after yesterday’s freak storm hit the city, causing widespread damage.

Five State Emergency Service crews will help in the clean up after the storm dumped heavy rain and hail on the city, smashing car windows, flooding roads and causing widespread power blackouts during peak hour traffic.

Emergency service personnel say it is the worst storm damage they have seen for 16 years.

Marisa Chapman from Western Power says more than 95,000 customers around the city remain without power.

She says it is one of the worst storms the city has seen.

“Certainly, the only one that would be close to an equivalent would be 1994, I think there were about 60,000 homes that were affected, but we had about half the population, so it’s a bit difficult to compare, but certainly it’s one of the worst storms that Western Power has faced,” she said.

The Fire and Emergency Services Authority says so far there has been no reported damage in the south-west.

However, a Bunbury man was lucky to escape injury after being struck by lightning.

The man, known as John, says lightning struck a calculator in his pocket.

“Just as I left the house I’ve never heard a crack of thunder like it in my life, I had this calculator in my pocket and it actually hit it and it jumped out of my bloody pocket,” he said.

Fire at Andhra Pradesh High Court

Hyderabad, Aug 31 (ANI): A fire broke out in the Andhra Pradesh High Court building in the wee hours on Monday.

According to sources, the fire started around 4. am. in the second floor of the court which houses library and lockers of the advocates.

Over 10 fire tenders extinguished the flames after battling it for about five hours.

Fire personnel suspect that a short circuit triggered by the lightning may have caused the fire. However, actual cause of fire is yet to be ascertained.

The court will remain closed at least for two days to take stock of the damage. (ANI)

Eight people injured in Rawalpindi blast

Rawalpindi Aug 21 (ANI): At least eight people, including four policemen, were injured in a powerful blast which took near a police patrol car on the Misryal road here on Thursday.

City Police Officer Rao Iqbal said initial investigation suggested that some policemen were on patrol in a private car when probably a grenade was hurled at them from a distance.

All the injured have been admitted to the DHQ hospital, where doctors described one of the injured, Mohammad Imran’s condition as critical.

Another injured person, Mohammad Arif, said after receiving a call from his brother that he has been stopped by police on the Misryal road, he (Arif) along with his friends reached the spot for verification of certain documents when suddenly the blast occurred.

“It looked as if lightning had struck from the sky,” Arif said.

The injured policemen were identified as Aftab, Yousaf, Malik Liaquat and Saeed, The Dawn reports. (ANI)

‘Spiderbots’ inside Mount St Helens may detect impending volcanic eruption

Washington, August 15 (ANI): NASA scientists have placed about a dozen monitoring ‘spiderbots’ inside the volcanic crater in Mount St Helens in the US, which are high-tech devices that can detect an impending eruption.

Mount St. Helens is one of the most active volcanoes in the US. Its most devastating eruption in 1980, and the most recent seen here in 2004.

According to a report in National Geographic News, about a dozen so-called Spiders were placed on Mount St. Helens in July.

The pods, designed to go where no human can, were lowered by helicopter inside and around the volcano center.

“We can detect the differences between snow falling off of a branch, an animal running by, wind, a thunderstorm and the very subtle signatures of magma moving at depth, perhaps even kilometers beneath the surface of the earth,” said Steve Chien, Principal Scientist, Autonomous Systems, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory .

The pods form a virtual wireless network and communicate with each other and a NASA satellite called Earth Observing-1, or EO-1.

Each pod contains a seismometer, a GPS receiver, an infrared sounder to sense explosions, and a lightning detector.

According to Chien, “They have the ability to recognize different kinds of events such as seismic events, earthquakes, that are basically indications that something is happening at the volcano.”

“In the context of volcano monitoring, we want to have the best educated guess to make decisions that will save life and properties,” said Sharon Kedar, Geophysicist, NASA /Jet Propulsion Laboratoy.

NASA would like to someday use this same technology on the surface of Mars to study atmospheric events like dust storms, which are mini-tornadoes, as well as seismic activity. (ANI)

Launch of NASA’s Endeavour to take place on Sunday

Cape Canaveral (Florida, US), July 12 (ANI): The lauch of the space shuttle Endeavour will take place on Sunday evening local time (on Monday morning IST) to give technical teams more time to evaluate lightning strikes at the launch pad.

Liftoff is scheduled for 7:13 p.m. EDT, a NASA release said.ensors on Friday indicated that there were 11 lightning strikes within 0.35 miles, which is inside the launch pad’s threshold.

Teams have seen nothing so far that indicates anything has been affected.

The Mission Management Team will meet at 8 a.m. Sunday to evaluate the latest data. Fueling of the external fuel tank is scheduled to begin at 9:48 a.m. Sunday.

The 16-day STS-127 mission will feature five space walks and complete construction of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s Kibo laboratory.

Astronauts will attach a platform to the outside of the Japanese module that will allow experiments to be exposed to space. (ANI)

Lightning-struck girl saved by her iPod

London, Jun 19 (ANI): A teenage girl, who was sheltering from a storm beneath a tree, survived a devastating lightning strike after her iPod, which was round her neck, diverted the 300,000-volt surge that hit her.

Sophie Frost, 14, received just minor burns and singed hair as the bolt zipped through the headphone wire hanging from her school uniform, scorching her clothes but missing all her vital organs.

She was rushed to a specialist burns unit, where doctors said that they were confident she would make a full recovery, and that too without even a scar.

“I don’t remember a thing about what happened, but from what everyone tells me it’s a miracle I’m still here,” the Sun quoted Sophie as saying on June 18.

“Everybody’s said the iPod must have diverted the lightning away from my body, which probably saved my life. I’ve got a few burns, but it’s all healing OK,” she said.

Sophie, of Southend, Essex, was holding hands with boyfriend Mason Billington, 14, when the lightning struck them in Rayleigh.

Both were knocked unconscious and Mason suffered eye damage, although it is hoped this will not be permanent.

“I just thank God my daughter is still alive,” Sophie’s mum Julie said.

“The doctors say her iPod saved her. Her nan only bought it a few days ago. Luckily, she wasn’t actually wearing the headphones. If she had been, she might not be here today.

“Mind you, the only thing Sophie seemed worried about was that her new iPod was frazzled,” she added. (ANI)

‘UFO’ hits Queensland mountain

Melbourne, June 19 (ANI): In the latest UFO riddle to grip Australia, a flaming object has been spotted crashing into a mountain in central Queensland.

The spectacle was initially treated as a possible plane crash but is now believed to be a meteor or space junk falling to earth.

Police said the Australian Search and Rescue Authority received no mayday or distress calls from aircraft.

The AGL Action Rescue helicopter has been tasked to search the mountainous area at Takilberan Creek northwest of Gin Gin.

Property owner Hazel Marlin told ABC Radio the mountain was covered in smoke.

A spokesman for the AGL Action Rescue Helicopter said a crew had not been able to identify what caused the fire.

Police are also conducting a ground search of the thickly wooded area.

“They’ve conducted ground searches as well as an aerial search,” the Courier Mail quoted him as saying.

“There is a fire up there but it could have been caused by a space junk or meteor strike, or even a lightning strike,” he added.

A spokeswoman for UFO Research Queensland said that they had received no reports about the incident. (ANI)

Pierce Brosnan turns real-life hero, saves Uma Thurman

London, May 29 (ANI): Actor Pierce Brosnan became a real life hero when he saved co-star Uma Thurman from an out-of-control van, it has emerged.

According to the reports, former James Bond star was shooting on the set of ‘Percy Jackson And The Lightning Thief’ when he noticed a runaway vehicle hurtling down a hill towards Thurman, reports the Daily Express.

The 56-year-old star immediately sprung into action. He jumped into the stunt car and pushed the brakes to veer into a curb instead of an assembled group of cast and crew.

Meanwhile, the actor undertook his first tour of the White House on May 19 and met with staff to discuss the preservation of whales.

Brosnan told Politico he didn’t meet President Barack Obama but was thoroughly impressed by his first glimpse inside the White House. (ANI)

Ex- fiance compares Heather Mills to a “tornado”

London, May 26 (ANI): Heather Mills’ ex fianc‚ has revealed that the former glamour model’s anger was no less than a thunderstorm.

Documentary maker Chris Terrill admits that the 12 months he recently spent reporting on some of the world’s deadliest storms is not dissimilar to living with Heather.

“I have indeed just spent a year in the grip of the planet’s most savage storms – giant hail, multiple lightning strikes, deafening thunder, 160mph winds, mountainous seas and ferocious firestorms,” the Daily Express quoted him as telling the Radio Times.

“It was thrilling and terrifying all at the same time. Heather, bless her, was also an amazing experience, for much the same reason.

“She was a force of nature in her own right who can do a very passable impersonation of a tornado in all its fury,” he added. (ANI)

McChrystal’s appointment as new US commander in Afghanistan, a double-edged sword

Washington, May 12 (ANI): Lt. General Stanley A. McChrystal’s appointment as the new American commander in Afghanistan represents a jarring shift for U.S. Forces in Afghanistan, which are currently transitioning commands between the 101st and 82nd Airborne Divisions.

According to reports, it is still unclear what having a Special Operations commander in charge will do the overall country strategy, just as it is unclear what two major changes of commands in a short period of time will do to the current units who are deployed there.

Lt. Gen. McChrystal has received much praise for his command of the Joint Special Operations Command, which was credited with the capture of Saddam Hussein in December of 2003, and the killing of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in 2006, but he also carries with him a dark side as well.

One unit under his command, the now-notorious Task Force 6-26, which was assigned to find HVTs, or High Value Targets in Iraq, is credited with the ultimate death of Zarqawi. The problem is, along the way they faced accusations of running a secret camp that tortured prisoners, and they were implicated in at least two detainee deaths during torture sessions.

Their camp, called Camp Nama, became something of a lightning rod after a “computer malfunction” destroyed upwards of 70 percent of their records and an investigation into their conduct stalled out.

More relevant to Afghanistan is Lt. Gen. McChrystal’s involvement in the shameful cover-up of Pat Tillman’s friendly-fire death.

While he was named among the list of high-ranking military personnel believed to have covered up the circumstances of Tillman’s death, Lt. Gen. McChrystal was “spared because he had apparently drafted a memo urging other officials to stop spreading the lie that Tillman died fighting the Taliban.

He drafted that memo, however, after signing the award for Tillman’s posthumously awarded Silver Star, the commendation for which claims, in part, that he was leading the charge against a Taliban assault.

Lt. Gen. McChrystal has never clarified why he signed an award for Tillman dying under enemy fire right before begging his colleagues and superiors to stop lying about Tillman dying under enemy fire. (ANI)

‘Fall Out Boy’ call on voodoo man to banish curse on U.S. tour

London, May 6 (ANI): Pop punk band Fall Out Boy have decided to call on a shaman for their current U.S. tour to banish a curse that has been plaguing them.

The band have been running into a number of bad incidents on their current road trip, including several injuries to crewmembers, technical glitches, and a bout of severe food poisoning.

After they became convinced that the tour is jinxed, they called in the witch doctor, and they even made “reverse voodoo dolls” in a bid to turn their luck around.

“It’s actually been a little bit cursed. We’ve had two trips to the hospital and we’ve had a show that was cancelled due to lightning,” the Daily Star quoted bass player Pete Wentz as telling TheAquarian.com.

“There was a food poisoning that ran rampant through one bus, and then someone broke their ankle, or did something to their ankle.

“So we have a shaman coming in to bless the tour today, and we’re making the opposite of voodoo dolls, whatever that is. There’s a bit of a hex on this tour, but the show’s nuts.

“We’re doing anti-rain dances. We’re going to make it happen. We need this show blessed,” he added. (ANI)