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)

Death toll from Pakistan bomb attack reaches 102

Pakistan (Reuters) – The death toll from a suicide attack in a volatile border region of Pakistan climbed to 102 on Saturday, showing the militants’ continued ability to stage deadly strikes despite losing ground in army offensives.

The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or Taliban Movement of Pakistan, claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack in Mohmand, a Pashtun region on the northwestern border with Afghanistan, where security forces have stepped up operations against militants in recent months.

Friday’s attack is the deadliest Pakistan has suffered since an attack on a market in Peshawar in October last year that killed 105.

Five children, aged 5 to 10, and several women were among the dead, and the toll rose on Saturday as rescuers working throughout the night found more bodies in the rubble.

“We have recovered more bodies from the debris of dozens of shops that were razed to the ground by the blast and the number of dead has increased” to 102, said Rasool Khan, assistant political agent of Mohmand.

The bomber blew himself up outside Khan’s office. There were mixed reports that a car bomb was the source of a possible second blast.

Late on Friday, a TTP spokesman in Mohmand who identified himself as Ikramullah Mohmand, said anti-Taliban tribal elders from various peace committees who had come to Khan’s office were the target.

A senior elder and two others were killed in the attack.

Among nearly 80 wounded were several people displaced by fighting between security forces and militants, who were collecting relief goods near the blast side.

The latest militant attack underscored multiple security challenges facing nuclear-armed U.S. ally Pakistan, whose support is vital in attempts to stabilize neighboring Afghanistan, where U.S.-led NATO troops are fighting a raging Taliban insurgency.

The military has made progress over the past year when they pushed militants out of the Swat valley, northwest of Islamabad. In October the army began an offensive in the militants’ South Waziristan bastion on the Afghan border.

The offensive was extended to Orakzai in March as many of the militants who fled the South Waziristan operation took refuge there and in Mohmand. Hundreds of militants have since been killed in air strikes in the two regions.

Troops killed 20 militants in an overnight clash in South Waziristan after insurgents attacked a military checkpost in their previous stronghold of Makeen, intelligence officials said. There was no independent confirmation of the casualties.

Despite losing ground in military offensives, militants have proven their ability to bounce back, responding with a barrage of bomb attacks in towns and cities, killing hundreds of people.

Two suicide bombers killed at least 42 people in an attack on Pakistan’s most important Sufi shrine in the eastern city of Lahore last week.

While praising Pakistan’s efforts to fight homegrown militants, the unabated violence is a source of worry for the United States, which also wants Islamabad to go after Afghan militants who cross the border to attack U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

In a separate incident in Afghanistan, suspected Taliban militants attacked a bus carrying Pakistani Shi’a tribesmen traveling from the Kurram tribal region and heading to Peshawar via Afghanistan, killing 11 and wounding one, residents and government officials said.

Pakistani tribesmen take a circuitous route through Afghanistan to travel between Kurram and Peshawar as the road linking the two regions is often closed because of militants and Pakistani Army operations.

(Writing by Augustine Anthony; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Jeremy Laurence)

Death toll from Pakistan bomb attack reaches 102

PESHAWAR, Pakistan, July 10 (Reuters) – The death toll from a suicide attack in a volatile border region of Pakistan climbed to 102 on Saturday, showing the militants’ continued ability to stage deadly strikes despite losing ground in army offensives.

The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or Taliban Movement of Pakistan, claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack in Mohmand, a Pashtun region on the northwestern border with Afghanistan, where security forces have stepped up operations against militants in recent months.

Friday’s attack is the deadliest Pakistan has suffered since an attack on a market in Peshawar in October last year that killed 105.

Five children, aged 5 to 10, and several women were among the dead, and the toll rose on Saturday as rescuers working throughout the night found more bodies in the rubble.

“We have recovered more bodies from the debris of dozens of shops that were razed to the ground by the blast and the number of dead has increased” to 102, said Rasool Khan, assistant political agent of Mohmand.

The bomber blew himself up outside Khan’s office. There were mixed reports that a car bomb was the source of a possible second blast.

Late on Friday, a TTP spokesman in Mohmand who identified himself as Ikramullah Mohmand, said anti-Taliban tribal elders from various peace committees who had come to Khan’s office were the target.

A senior elder and two others were killed in the attack.

Among nearly 80 wounded were several people displaced by fighting between security forces and militants, who were collecting relief goods near the blast side.

The latest militant attack underscored multiple security challenges facing nuclear-armed U.S. ally Pakistan, whose support is vital in attempts to stabilise neighbouring Afghanistan, where U.S.-led NATO troops are fighting a raging Taliban insurgency.

The military has made progress over the past year when they pushed militants out of the Swat valley, northwest of Islamabad. In October the army began an offensive in the militants’ South Waziristan bastion on the Afghan border.

The offensive was extended to Orakzai in March as many of the militants who fled the South Waziristan operation took refuge there and in Mohmand. Hundreds of militants have since been killed in air strikes in the two regions.

Troops killed 20 militants in an overnight clash in South Waziristan after insurgents attacked a military checkpost in their previous stronghold of Makeen, intelligence officials said. There was no independent confirmation of the casualties.

Despite losing ground in military offensives, militants have proven their ability to bounce back, responding with a barrage of bomb attacks in towns and cities, killing hundreds of people.

Two suicide bombers killed at least 42 people in an attack on Pakistan’s most important Sufi shrine in the eastern city of Lahore last week.

While praising Pakistan’s efforts to fight homegrown militants, the unabated violence is a source of worry for the United States, which also wants Islamabad to go after Afghan militants who cross the border to attack U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

In a separate incident in Afghanistan, suspected Taliban militants attacked a bus carrying Pakistani Shi’a tribesmen travelling from the Kurram tribal region and heading to Peshawar via Afghanistan, killing 11 and wounding one, residents and government officials said.

Pakistani tribesmen take a circuitous route through Afghanistan to travel between Kurram and Peshawar as the road linking the two regions is often closed because of militants and Pakistani Army operations. [ID:nSGE669GBL]

(Writing by Augustine Anthony; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Jeremy Laurence) (E-mail: augustine.anthony@thomsonreuters.com; Reuters Messaging: augustine.anthony.reuters.com@reuters.net; Islamabad newsroom: +92 51 281 0017)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

REFILE-Death toll from Pakistan bomb attack reaches 102

Pakistan, July 10 (Reuters) – The death toll from a suicide attack in a volatile border region of Pakistan climbed to 102 on Saturday, showing the militants’ continued ability to stage deadly strikes despite losing ground in army offensives.

The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or Taliban Movement of Pakistan, claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack in Mohmand, a Pashtun region on the northwestern border with Afghanistan, where security forces have stepped up operations against militants in recent months.

Friday’s attack is the deadliest Pakistan has suffered since an attack on a market in Peshawar in October last year that killed 105.

Five children, aged 5 to 10, and several women were among the dead on Friday, and the toll rose after rescuers working throughout the night found more bodies in the rubble.

“We have recovered more bodies from the debris of dozens of shops that were razed to the ground by the blast and the number of dead has increased” to 102, said Rasool Khan, assistant political agent of Mohmand.

The bomber blew himself up outside Khan’s office.

Late on Friday, a TTP spokesman in Mohmand who identified himself as Ikramullah Mohmand, said anti-Taliban tribal elders from various peace committees who had come to Khan’s office were the target.

A senior elder and two others were killed in the attack.

Among nearly 80 wounded were several people displaced by fighting between security forces and militants, who were collecting relief goods near the blast side.

The latest militant attack underscored multiple security challenges facing nuclear-armed U.S. ally Pakistan, whose support is vital in attempts to stabilise neighbouring Afghanistan, where U.S.-led NATO troops are fighting a raging Taliban insurgency.

The military has made progress over the past year when they pushed militants out of the Swat valley, northwest of Islamabad. In October the army began an offensive in the militants’ South Waziristan bastion on the Afghan border.

The offensive was extended to Orakzai in March as many of the militants who fled the South Waziristan operation took refuge there and in Mohmand. Hundreds of militants have since been killed in air strikes in the two regions.

But militants have proven their ability to bounce back, responding with a barrage of bomb attacks in towns and cities, killing hundreds of people.

Two suicide bombers killed at least 42 people in an attack on Pakistan’s most important Sufi shrine in the eastern city of Lahore last week.

Despite praising Pakistan’s efforts to fight homegrown militants, the unabated violence is a source of worry for the United States, which also wants Islamabad to go after Afghan militants who cross the border to attack U.S. troops in Afghanistan. (Writing by Augustine Anthony; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Alex Richardson) (E-mail: augustine.anthony@thomsonreuters.com; Reuters Messaging: augustine.anthony.reuters.com@reuters.net; Islamabad newsroom: +92 51 281 0017)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Two killed in Mexico plane crash

Mexico City, May 29 (IANS) At least two people were killed Friday when a small plane crashed in Mexico, authorities said.

According to the public security ministry, the four seater Cirrus plane crashed in the mountain range of Xalatlaco municipality, 70 km west to Mexico City, Xinhua reported.

So far, rescuers have found the corpses of a man and a women, who are yet to be identified.

Suspected sabotage derails train in India; 71 dead, 12th Ld-Writethru, AS

SARDIHA, India (AP) Rescuers scoured the wreckage of a passenger express train that derailed and collided with a cargo train in eastern India, killing at least 71 people and injuring hundreds. The government accused Maoist rebels of sabotaging the tracks.

As night fell Friday, railway workers and paramilitary soldiers were using two cranes to lift and pry apart train cars in search of survivors from the Jnaneswari Express, which was heading from Calcutta to suburban Mumbai when it derailed about 1:30 a.m.

Friday. Railway officials said they expected the death toll to rise because bodies were still trapped between the engines of the two trains, which collided along a rural stretch of track near the small town of Sardiha, about 90 miles (150 kilometers) west of Calcutta in West Bengal state.

The area is a stronghold of India’s Maoist rebels, known as Naxalites, who had called for a four-day general strike in the area starting Friday. The Naxalites have launched repeated and often-audacious attacks in recent months despite government claims that it was launching its own crackdown.

Just 11 days ago, the rebels ambushed a bus in central India, killing 31 police officers and civilians. A few weeks before that, 76 soldiers were killed in a rebel ambush the deadliest attack by the rebels against government forces in the 43-year insurgency.

There also have been dozens of smaller attacks. On Friday, the government vowed once again to crush the Naxalites.

“The Maoists have done this work,” West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee told reporters in Calcutta. “All-out efforts will be made to free the state and the country from this danger.

” But analysts say the government is hobbled by vacillating policies, poorly trained and ill-armed security forces and vast tracts of India where the government has little influence and where poverty has brought considerable support to the Naxalites, who claim to be fighting on behalf of the rural poor. The rebels, who have tapped into the poor’s anger at being left out of the country’s economic gains, are now present in 20 of the country’s 28 states and have an estimated 10,000 to 20,000 fighters, according to the Home Ministry.

“There is an absence of government, there is an absence of competence in government, there is an absence of coherence in response,” said Ajai Sahni, a New Delhi-based analyst with close ties to India’s security establishment. “The purpose of the Maoists is not to resolve grievances but to harvest them, and there are numerous grievances in the country to harvest.

” In Sardiha, officials said the train tracks had been sabotaged but disagreed about exactly what had happened, with some saying it was caused by an explosion and others blaming cut rail lines. Bhupinder Singh, the top police official in West Bengal, said posters from the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities, a group local officials believe is closely tied to the Maoists, had been found at the scene taking responsibility for the attack.

However, a spokesman for the group, Asit Mahato, denied any role, the Press Trust of India news agency reported. The Maoists seldom claim credit for their attacks.

Survivors described a night of screaming and chaos after the derailment, and said it took rescuers more than three hours to reach the scene, where the blue passenger train and red cargo train were knotted together in mangled metal. Sher Ali, a 25-year-old Mumbai factory worker, was traveling with his wife, two children and his brother’s family when they were jerked awake by a loud thud.

A moment later, their car was tossed from the track, he said. “My sister-in-law was crushed when the coach overturned.

We saw her dying, but we couldn’t do anything to help her,” said Ali, who had cuts on his head and arms. The rest of the family survived, though a 10-year-old nephew was badly injured and hospitalized.

Ali was unable to go to the hospital, though, because all his money was in his luggage inside the wreckage and he was afraid it would be stolen unless he kept watch. Soumitra Majumdar, a railway spokesman said 71 people were confirmed dead and nearly 200 people were injured.

Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee said the Saridha area had been the scene of earlier Naxalite attacks, and that trains were under orders to travel slowly through the region in part so the drivers can keep watch for sabotaged tracks or bombs, and in part so the effects of a crash are lessened if a train does derail. ___ Associated Press writers Tim Sullivan, Ashok Sharma and Muneeza Naqvi contributed to this report from New Delhi.

US man returns to finish marathon after suffering heart attack

New York, May 21 (ANI): A Texas dentist, who suffered a heart attack while taking part in the New York City marathon, returned after six months to the Big Apple to finish what he started.

Michael Goulding, 51, who is an avid runner, had collapsed in Harlem, seven miles from the finish line when he ran the course for the first time November 1.

Paramedics on the scene restarted his heart with a two shocks from a defibrillator. Two months later he ran a half marathon and did fine.

He said he trained six months before attempting his first marathon, and couldn’t believe when he woke up in the hospital that his heart had given out.

Before the reunion, Goulding went to the Harlem street corner where he had collapsed and ran the last seven miles by himself. There were no cheering crowds or blue line to follow, but he was satisfied just the same.

“It felt good. It shows how close the line is between life and death. I’m just very humbled,” the New York Post quoted him as saying.

Of the paramedics who saved his life, Goulding had nothing but praise for them.

“I was just touched by their professionalism,” he said on May 20 after a reunion with his rescuers.

“This isn’t a job for them. It’s a calling,” he added. (ANI)

Coal mine death toll in Russia rises to 47

Workers labored intensely Tuesday to try to restore ventilation to the Siberian coal mine where 43 miners remain missing more than two days after a pair of explosions roared through the tunnels.

The death toll from the blasts rose to 47 on Tuesday, the Emergencies Ministry said, and the prospect of pulling anyone out alive appeared to be diminishing rapidly. Ministry spokeswoman Veronika Smolskaya said rescuers searching the tunnels have not established contact with any of the missing.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin traveled to the Raspadskaya mine, about 3,000 kilometers (1,900 miles) east of Moscow, on Tuesday to observe rescue operations, and he raised a series of sharp questions about mine safety and whether the initial rescue work was conducted improperly.

Many of the dead were rescue workers who went into the shafts of Russia’s largest underground coal mine after the first blast late Saturday and were caught in the second explosion – which was so powerful that it shattered the main shaft and a five-story building at the mine head.

Both the explosions are being blamed on methane, and Putin questioned why rescuers were sent into the mine without a preliminary assessment of the gas concentration, according to the RIA Novosti news agency.

The head of the mine rescue service, Alexander Sin, said rescuers are under orders to immediately render help, the agency reported.

Putin ordered officials to investigate “how production technology was observed, how control instruments operated, what measures the mine managers took to raise reliability, what was the state of individual means of protection and how rescue operations were organized,” the ITAR-Tass news agency reported.

There was no information on what set off the blast. Mine explosions and other industrial accidents are common in Russia and other former Soviet republics, and are often blamed on inadequate implementation of safety precautions by companies or by workers themselves.

But Aman Tuleyev, governor of the Kemerovo region where the mine is located, was quoted by the business newspaper Vedomosti as saying the mine was one of the world’s most technically advanced.

The deadliest explosion in Russia’s coal mines in decades occurred in March 2007, when 110 miners were killed.

The Raspadskaya mine produces about 10 percent of Russia’s coking coal, Vedomosti said, and a long interruption of production could affect Russia’s steel industry.

Radio tags may help save lives after earthquakes

Washington, May 7 (ANI): A new study claims that radio frequency identification, RFID, could be used in the immediate aftermath of a major earthquake to save lives.

The study has been published in the International Journal of Innovation and Sustainable Development.

Yen-Chun Jim Wu of the National Sun Yat-Sen University and Ching-Yuan Hung, of the National Kaohsiung First University of Science & Technology, in Taiwan, said that there is a ”golden” rescue period following an earthquake, which lasts just 72 hours. During this time the efficiency of emergency response procedures is key to the rescue operation, especially given the possibility of aftershocks and continued risk caused by collapsing buildings, fires and gas explosions. Particularly challenging is knowing how many people are present in a building, a hospital or school, for instance.

“Continuously updated information on casualties and losses must be made available to disaster response managers in real time so that they can arrange and deploy relief supplies in an appropriate and timely manner,” the researchers say.

RFID could be applied to help provide such real-time information, allowing for quicker and more efficient dispatching of rescue personnel and more precisely organized search and rescue missions following an earthquake. They have used the Sichuan earthquake (magnitude 8.0) of May 2008. 100 magnitude 4.0 aftershocks hit the area following the disaster as a model for studying how RFID might be used in such a situation. However, the concepts would be equally applicable to other disasters.

They have devised a deployment of RFID that could potentially mitigate a wide array of post-disaster logistical challenges, such as allowing rescuers and the emergency services to manage and monitor transferred evacuees and to control the flow of medical and other supplies.

Practically speaking, however, not every building can keep a pre-disaster record of its activity or install a security system that is suitable for coping with disasters, the team concedes.

However, a practical count of the number of people trapped at certain public venues, offices, hospitals and schools that have already been equipped with RFID technology could be made possible.

“Office workers would have their identity badges embedded in their RFID tags, while visitors would be given temporary RFID tags when they enter the lobby,” they suggest. Similarly, identity tags for hospital staff and patients could embed RFID technology. There is an ethical and moral dimension to tagging schoolchildren and students or members of the public, of course. (ANI)

Indo-Pak trust deficit looms large over Bhutan SAARC summit

New Delhi, Apr.21 (ANI): Persisting ambiguity over the possibility of an Indo-Pak dialogue taking place on the sidelines of next week”s SAARC summit in Bhutan, has once again hijacked attention from broader and more complex issues involving this nearly 25-year-old regional grouping.

Whether the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, will meet his Pakistani counterpart,Yousuf Raza Gilani? Whether it will be a structured dialogue or a photo op?, Whether India is ready to resume the stalled “composite dialogue” with Pakistan during the summit? All of these speculations are doing the rounds.

Scant attention, however, is being paid to the SAARC agenda, which does not mandate its members to raise or discuss bilateral issues.

But, paradoxically, bilateral issues have always dominated multilateral agenda and the sixteenth SAARC Summit in Thimpu is not expected to be any different from the past.

The “trust deficit” in the Indo-Pak relationship has time and again eclipsed and cast a shadow on multilateral agenda of the SAARC. It has remained a source of frustration for smaller nations like Bangladesh, Maldives, Nepal and Bhutan.

According to sources, three agreements, the Trade in Services in SAFTA, Natural Disaster Response Mechanism and the Convention on Cooperation on Environment have been finalized by the SAARC Expert committee meeting, which took place in Thimpu in March.

But at the last minute, Pakistan vetoed the SAARC Natural Disaster Response Mechanism that was intended to build a permanent team of rescuers from all eight nations who could provide contingency rescue services in the case of emergencies or natural catastrophes.

Islamabad has reportedly scuttled the mechanism because it is wary of opening its borders to Indian rescue workers.

Analysts believe this move by Islamabad is not only counter-productive for itself and India, but will also be a setback to other smaller nations like Maldives, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka which are prone to marine disasters.

Located along the high seismic zone of the Himalayas, Afghanistan and Nepal could have been major beneficiaries of the regional mechanism.

Over the years, SAARC nations have been pushing for connectivity and free transit. Talks of a visa free regime are also heard aloud at the forum, but nothing has been translated into reality.

With countries like Afghanistan, Nepal and Bhutan landlocked, overcoming high transaction costs due to poor trade facilitation appears to be a priority for the regional grouping.

Pakistan has shown no cooperation in opening a transit route to Afghanistan for Indian goods.

Similarly Bangladesh wants India to open up a transit route to Nepal and Bhutan.

This can only happen if there is unanimity, especially among the larger member nations like India and Pakistan.

The implementation of the SAFTA in real terms still seems a distant dream.(ANI)

Tiny tot, grandma saved 123 hours after deadly China quake

Qinghai (China), Apr.20 (ANI): Rescuers in China’s Sichuan province have pulled out two survivors from the rubble of last week’s devastating earthquake.

A four-year-old girl and her 68-year-old grandmother, who had been trapped for about 123 hours, were miraculously retrieved from rubble in a village in earthquake hit Yushu prefecture.

The girl, Tsering Palkyi, suffered only minor injuries and has returned to her family, according to rescuers.

Her grandma, Urgyen Tsemon, has been kept under medical observation for potential life-threatening injuries.

“They were determined to stay alive,” Ao Dingqiang, a 40-year-old rescuer from Guang”an of Sichuan, told the China Daily.

The latest miracle came as rescuers stretched their efforts from Gyegu to reach remote villages in the mountainous plateau terrain.

Both survivors are from Xinzhai village, about 20 km east of Gyegu town and 3 km from the main road.

An eight-man team was involved in the rescue operation.

They used a hydraulic jack to lift the collapsed mud-brick wall and roll it down a slope to make enough room for the trapped villagers to get free. (ANI)

Briefly World

China quake toll surges past 1000

Beijing: The death toll crossed the 1000-mark in China’s quake-hit Qinghai province, where rescuers raced against time to save hundreds of people buried under the rubble, three days after the 7.1 magnitude temblor flattened the remote northwestern region. The death toll had climbed to 1,144 and another 417 remained missing on Friday evening, state-run Xinhua news agency said.

Lanka govt may convict Fonseka to deny seat

Colombo: Detained former Sri Lankan Army Chief Sarath Fonseka may be convicted by early next week to prevent him from taking oath as a lawmaker, his party alleged on Friday. “We strongly suspect a court martial convened on Monday would convict him by Thursday to prevent his entry into Parliament to take oath,” Anura Kumara Dissanayake, a senior leader of the Marxist JVP, said here.

Ousted Kyrgyz leader’s kin hand over weapons

TEYIT: Relatives of Kyrgyzstan’s ousted President were submitting weapons to officials on Friday in their home village, a day after the President fled the country. While the move appeared to reduce the likelihood of resistance by Kurmanbek Bakiyev backers, Kyrgyzstan’s interim authorities were still searching for one of his brothers after issuing a warrant for his arrest, and it was unclear if Zhanybek Bakiyev would submit peacefully.

Obama orders hospitals to allow gays visitation

WASHINGTON: US President Barack Obama directed all hospitals that participate in Medicare and Medicaid to allow visitation rights for gay, lesbian and transgender couples. “There are few moments in our lives that call for greater compassion and companionship than when a loved one is admitted to the hospital. In these hours of need and moments of pain and anxiety, all of us would hope to have a hand to hold, a shoulder on which to lean — a loved one to be there for us, as we would be there for them,” Obama said in his memorandum

Olmert faces corruption charges in property deal

Jerusalem: Close on the heels of three suspected cases of graft, which cost him the premiership, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is now allegedly involved in what is being dubbed as the “biggest corruption scandal” in the history of Israel. The Rishon Letzion Magistrate’s Court has lifted its gag order on the identity of the senior official suspected of taking bribes being described as the “Holyland affair” after the name of the highrise buildings, revealing the suspect to be Olmert, who served as mayor of Jerusalem from 1993-2003, Ha’aretz reported on Friday.

Nepal to accept 3,000 Maoist combatants

Kathmandu: The Nepal government on Friday said that it will accept only 3,000 of the 19,000-strong Maoist combatants in various security agencies. All major political parties other than the Unified CPN-Maoist have agreed in principle on the integration of the former rebels at a meeting chaired by Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal. Prachanda, who abstained from the meeting, rejected the offer saying “all 19,000 Maoist combatants should get the chance to be integrated into the Army”.

Tibetans mourn dead as China quake toll hits 760

Tibetans mourned their dead relatives in the stricken Chinese town of Gyegu on Friday, as the death toll from a strong earthquake earlier this week climbed to 760.

Addressing residents of Gyegu in remote and windswept Yushu county high on the Tibetan plateau late on Thursday, Premier Wen Jiabao clambered over rubble and pledged continued rescue efforts.

Survivors of Wednesday’s tremor spent the night huddled under quilts and in tents, while doctors struggled to treat the wounded in a makeshift medical centre.

At a foothill under the main monastery of Gyegu, monks had gathered to chant Tibetan Buddhist mantras in front of piles of dead. Some helped residents look for kin among what appeared to be hundreds of bodies, collected on a covered platform.

“Many of the bodies you see here don’t have families or their families haven’t come looking for them, so it’s our job to take good care of them,” said Lopu, a monk clad in maroon robes.

“I’d say we’ve collected a thousand or more bodies here. Some we found ourselves, some were sent to us.”

Some local Tibetans said they didn’t believe the official death toll estimate of 760, saying many more had died without being officially counted.

Many more bodies had already been removed by family members, Lopu said.

The actual death toll is still unclear, but the damage was mainly around Gyegu, where most of Yushu county’s 100,000 people reside. Estimates by NGOs support a figure of around 1,000 dead.

Some 243 people are still listed as missing, and over 1,000 as “seriously injured”.

In remarks translated into Tibetan to a receptive crowd, Premier Wen pledged that rescuers would not give up hope of finding people still trapped under rubble.

But temperatures well below freezing at night leave little chance of anyone still surviving under collapsed buildings.

Many injured locals spent a cold night in tents or outdoors waiting for medical aid. Harried doctors said they had had almost no sleep over the past two days.

Some pregnant women were transferred 1,000 km (620-km) to the provincial capital, Xining, after at least two babies were born in tents outside Gyegu’s damaged hospital, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

Chinese President Hu Jintao cut short a summit in Brazil, and cancelled a planned trip to Venezuela and Chile in order to return early to China.

Convoys carrying tents, water, food, blankets and medical equipment continued to roll into Yushu county on Friday. Chinese volunteer organisations and state media launched fund-raising and clothing drives.

WA boat rescue ends safely

A twelve metre catamaran which broke down off the Western Australia’s South West coast late Tuesday night has been towed to safety.

Rescuers battled heavy seas and gale force winds to reach the boat, the Dawn Glory, which was on its way from South Africa to Fremantle.

The craft arrived in Bunbury after the six hour towing effort by a crew from Bunbury Sea Rescue.

Before the rescue boat arrived, there were fears the Dawn Glory could be washed onto the Naturaliste Reef.

One of the crew, Karl Dahlmann, says the three men and one woman on board the yacht are safe and well and will spend the night moored at the Bunbury jetty.

“It was rough, we’ve been in rougher along the way but it was rough, uncomfortable and wet. A nice hot shower and a beer and we’re going home.”

Rescuers venture back into West Virginia coal mine

* Previous rescue attempt stopped by dangerous gases

* Four missing miners could be in refuge chambers

* Worst U.S. mine disaster since 1984, at least 25 dead

By Jon Hurdle

MONTCOAL, West Virginia, April 9 (Reuters) – Rescuers ventured back into a West Virginia coal mine on Friday to search for four miners missing deep underground since an explosion nearly four days ago killed 25 others.

Dangerous gases forced rescuers to retreat from the Massey Energy (MEE.N) mine early on Thursday until it could be further ventilated through 1,100-foot (335-metre) boreholes. A buildup of methane is often cited as causing mine explosions.

Rescue teams went back into the mine at about 12:30 a.m. EDT (0430 GMT) to head 5 miles (8 km) underground to check if the missing miners made it to refuge chambers stocked with food, water and air, though officials have warned the odds were slim.

“Now is the time to move,” West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin told a news briefing, adding that the families of the miners were “relieved knowing that the process is nearing an end.”

Officials said it would take two teams of eight rescuers each about 90 minutes to get within 500 feet (150 metres) of the first refuge chamber. The second refuge chamber they plan to check is a further 2,000 feet (600 metres) inside the mine.

Nitrogen is being pumped into the mine, which is about 30 miles (48 km) south of the state capital Charleston, through one of the boreholes to prevent the gases from reaching explosive levels again by neutralizing them, authorities said.

Recovery teams were also being sent into the mine to begin recovering the remaining 18 bodies. Seven of the 25 dead were recovered soon after the blast on Monday, which was the deadliest U.S. mine disaster since 1984.

“Pray for the families and the rescue workers,” Massey Energy Chief Executive Don Blankenship posted on Twitter on Thursday.

U.S. President Barack Obama ordered mine safety officials to report next week on the cause of the explosion, the Upper Big Branch mine’s safety record and what steps the government could take to prevent a similar disaster in the future.

Questions have risen about Massey’s safety record and U.S. mining laws. Massey, the largest coal producer in the Central Appalachia mountain region, has defended its record, saying its accident rate hit an all-time low in 2009.

The Upper Big Branch mine had three fatalities since 1998 and a worse-than-average injury rate in the past 10 years, according to federal records, which also show it has been cited for more than 100 safety violations already this year.

It was cited for two mine safety violations on Monday, which mining authorities said were unrelated to the blast.

Shares of Massey closed up about 2 percent on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday after losing more than 10 percent since the accident. Analysts predict long-term financial health for the company.

The Upper Branch mine blast is the nation’s deadliest mining disaster since 27 miners died in a fire in Utah in 1984. West Virginia was home to the worst U.S. coal mine disaster, when 362 miners died at the Monongah mine in 1906. (Writing by Michelle Nichols and Ellen Wulfhorst, editing by Eric Beech)

Rescuers suspend US mine search

Dangerous gases have forced rescue teams to temporarily suspend a search for survivors of a massive explosion at a West Virginia coal mine that killed at least 25 workers.

Officials say worrying levels of gases mean rescuers cannot enter the mine to search for four workers who have been missing since Monday’s blast.

Chris Adkins, the chief operating officer for mine owner Massey Energy, says surface crews have resumed drilling to help ventilation below.

Anxious families have clung to the hope that some of the miners survived the blast and made their way to one of the mine’s underground refuge chambers that are stocked with food, water and air, though officials said the odds are slim.

Those shelters offered the only escape from poisonous gases in the mine, authorities said.

The blast at the Montcoal, West Virginia operation, about 48 kilometres south of the state capital Charleston, is the deadliest US mine disaster since 1984.

Eighteen bodies remain in the mine.

US president Barack Obama has ordered mine safety officials to next week report on the cause of the explosion, the Upper Big Branch mine’s safety record, and what steps the government could take to prevent a similar disaster in future.

Questions have risen about Massey’s safety record and laws governing the mining industry.

Massey has defended its record, saying its accident rate hit an all-time low last year.

The Upper Big Branch mine has had three fatalities since 1998 and a worse-than-average injury rate in the past 10 years, according to federal records, which also show it has been cited for more than 100 safety violations already this year.

It was cited for two mine safety violations on Monday which mining authorities said were unrelated to the blast.

On Thursday morning, teams of rescuers began the gruelling eight-kilometre underground trip into the mine, but the gases forced them to turn back, governor Joe Manchin said at an earlier press conference.

The setback marks the second time rescuers were driven back by the build-up of dangerous methane and carbon monoxide. The build-up of combustible methane is often cited as a cause of mine explosions.

Rescuers may enter West Virginia mine on Thursday

MONTCOAL, West Virginia, April 8 (Reuters) – Rescuers could begin searching a West Virginia coal mine on Thursday for four miners missing since a blast killed 25 others in the largest U.S. mine disaster in a quarter century, officials said.

After more than two days trapped in the Massey Energy (MEE.N) mine, authorities said the missing miners were only likely to be alive if they had made it to a refuge chamber stocked with several days worth of food, water and air.

Deadly gases in the Upper Big Branch mine were falling toward levels safe enough for rescuers to venture 5 miles (8 km) underground to check two refuge chambers, said Kevin Stricklin of the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration.

The blast on Monday at the mine, 30 miles (48 km) south of the state capital Charleston, killed 25 miners. Eleven bodies have been identified but 14 were still in the mine, along with the four missing men. Another two miners were taken to a hospital.

“We are getting a little closer to rescue teams going underground,” Stricklin told a news briefing. “If the air is too bad or we find that it’s unsafe for the teams to go underground, our plan B is to drill from the surface and use cameras.”

The decision to send in rescuers depended on the results of air quality tests at the bottom of a 1,100-foot (335-metre) borehole that rescuers had drilled to vent the mine of noxious gases. Tests at the top of the borehole had shown the gases were thinning out, Stricklin said.

While the cause of the explosion has not been determined, the buildup of combustible methane gas is often cited in mine blasts. But questions have also been raised about Massey’s safety record and laws governing the mining industry.

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Shares of Massey, the largest coal producer in the Central Appalachia mountain region, closed down almost 7 percent on Wednesday. But analysts predicted long-term financial health for the company.

Massey Energy has defended its safety record, saying its accident rate hit an all-time low in 2009.

But the Upper Big Branch Mine has had three fatalities since 1998 and has a worse-than-average injury rate over the last 10 years, according to federal records, which also show it has been cited for more than 100 safety violations already this year.

The company, which was fined nearly $900,000 last year for more than 500 violations, was cited for two safety violations from the Mine Safety and Health Administration on Monday, which Stricklin said were not related to the explosion.

The Mine Safety and Health Administration has appointed a team to investigate the blast.

Miner Stanley Stewart told CNN on Wednesday he was about 300 feet (91 metres) inside the mine waiting to start his shift when the blast happened. He knew something was wrong when strong winds and debris started blowing through the mine.

“My eyes were filling with dirt,” he said. “I had to put my head down. I couldn’t see and I felt panic setting in although I knew I didn’t have far to go.”

Mining has always been dangerous, but 2009 was the safest ever for U.S. miners, with 34 deaths, 18 fewer than 2008, according to federal data.

The Upper Branch Mine blast is the country’s deadliest mining disaster since 1984, when 27 miners died in a fire in Utah. West Virginia was home to the worst U.S. coal mine disaster, when 362 miners died at the Monongah mine in 1906. (Writing by Michelle Nichols and Ellen Wulfhorst, editing by Philip Barbara)

Rio hit by fresh landslide

A landslide has swept away dozens of houses near Rio de Janeiro, worsening a disaster caused by heavy rains that has killed at least 138 people around Brazil’s second-biggest city.

The heaviest rains in more than four decades that began on Monday triggered at least 180 mudslides that crushed shacks in hillside slums, causing most of the deaths, leaving 53 people missing and more than 3,200 homeless.

Hundreds of residents and rescuers scrambled to find buried victims after a hill gave way in Niteroi, which lies on the other side of a bay from Rio.

“We are very sad… It seems there were more than 40 houses,” said Jose Mocarzel, Niteroi’s public services secretary.

The Globo network reported that two bodies had already been pulled from the debris.

After flooding caused transportation chaos on Tuesday, the city famed for its beaches and Carnival slowly returned to normal on Wednesday, but heavy rain began falling again in the evening and forecasters warned of more to come.

Firemen covered in mud struggled for hours to rescue an eight-year-old boy who had called for help from the rubble of a collapsed house in one hillside slum, only to find that the child had died by the time they reached him.

“I promised his father I would get the boy out alive but I couldn’t,” tearful fireman Luis Carlos dos Santos said.

The mudslide in Rio’s historic Santa Teresa area killed at least 18 people, most of whom had been sleeping on Monday night when the hillside collapsed.

Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes urged people living in high-risk areas to stay away from their homes as the city braced for another night of rain.

Authorities say at least 10,000 houses are still at risk of collapse and the national government has sent security forces to help with rescue operations.

Death toll rises in Rio floods

Rescuers searched for flood and landslide survivors in south-eastern Brazil after the heaviest downpours in almost half a century left at least 113 people dead.

The state of Rio de Janeiro was in mourning as the extent of the disaster became clear and a third day of rains compounded the misery for 5,000 municipal employees trying to clear streets turned to mud.

The situation “is better than it was yesterday”, Rio de Janeiro mayor Eduardo Paes said, although he maintained the maximum alert level and urged people in high-risk areas to evacuate their homes.

“During the night, fortunately, there were no new landslides but the risk still exists,” he said.

Rain fell intermittently on Wednesday (local time) amid sunny spells, providing hope that the worst was over.

But the toll could rise further as dozens were reportedly still missing following the rains which displaced more than 1,400 people and destroyed scores of homes.

Emergency officials said most fatalities were in hillside slums around the city of Rio de Janeiro, where torrents of water have triggered devastating mudslides and scenes of chaos since Monday.

Dozens were killed in Rio itself but hardest hit was Niteroi, a city on the other side of the bay from the state capital where at least 54 people have died.

The flooding was so intense that authorities urged residents to remain indoors and not venture downtown where streets were impassable.

Some motorists abandoned their partially submerged cars, while others were stranded for hours inside stalled vehicles.

“All the major streets of the city are closed because of the floods,” Mr Paes said.

Mr Paes ordered schools in Rio closed on Wednesday for a second day in order to keep people off the streets, while state governor Sergio Cabral decreed three days of mourning.

The killer floods also wreaked havoc with air traffic, delaying most international flights in and out of Rio’s Antonio Carlos Jobim airport and forcing the cancellation of many domestic services.

In a neighbourhood close to the mountain where Rio’s iconic Christ the Redeemer statue is located, the local weather service said the recent rainfall was twice the amount normally registered for the month of April.

National weather service Inmet said Tuesday’s rainfall was the heaviest in 48 years.