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Posted on 03/12/2004 8:23:06 PM PST by thecabal
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- This week's deadly train bombings in Spain will not lead to a rise in the U.S. color-coded terror threat alert system, a Department of Homeland Security spokesman said Friday.
"Based on the current intelligence, we have no specific indicators that terrorist groups are considering such an attack in the U.S. in the near term," said department spokesman Brian Roehrkasse.
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
Very interesting read - the Bermuda/Cuba/Farrakan connection. I didn't realize Bermuda was that close to the eastern coastline. Tinfoil license granted.
It cost lives.
This is all very interesting. I don't think the Bermudians would ever go for it. They are very British. I lived there once upon a time.
The strategy looks like:
1. Get the British out
2. Turn the island into a Base for Islam by causing race riots like they had a number of years ago
3. Go communist
These people ruin everything the are associated with.
Speaking of Communists/Liberals/Progressives ...
Tue Mar 16,11:41 AM ET
By Stephanie Nebehay
GENEVA (Reuters) - Health experts on Tuesday warned Asia's bird flu could still spark a deadly human influenza pandemic and urged all countries to step up readiness.
Vaccines and anti-virals would be in short supply in the early stages of any global flu pandemic, when measures from quarantines to travel warnings could save lives, they added.
Around 100 experts from 40 countries are attending a three-day meeting called by the World Health Organization (WHO) to review global preparedness for a long-predicted flu pandemic.
Bird flu, which spread across eight countries of Asia from late last year, has killed a total of 23 people in Vietnam and Thailand. Some 100 million poultry have died or been culled.
"If the virus acquired full capacity human to human transmission, we should expect a pandemic with huge morbidity and mortality," Hitoshi Oshitani, head of WHO's Western Pacific Regional Office, told the opening session.
"In many countries there is no established surveillance system for animals and humans. Unfortunately, most developing countries still don't have national pandemic plans," he added.
PANDEMIC PLANNING
The annual influenza epidemic claims between 500,000 and one million lives worldwide, including some 36,000 in the United States, according to Stohr. Many victims are chronic disease patients whose cases are complicated by influenza and fever.
There has been an average of 27.5 years between pandemics since 1883. The largest, in 1918-1919, claimed 40 to 50 million lives for a mortality rate of 2.2 percent, he said.
But the last such pandemic was in 1968, although there have been 12 outbreaks with that potential since then, including five in the last five years, with bird flu among them.
Klaus Stohr, head of WHO's global influenza program, said that only 36 of the United Nations' agency's some 190 members had reported pandemic plans.
Early detection and sound surveillance systems are key for slowing the spread of a pandemic, so as to "buy time" until appropriate new vaccines become available, according to WHO.
"We certainly cannot prevent the global spread of the virus, but we can slow it down," Stohr said in a speech.
"It has been estimated it could travel around the world in four to eight months," he added. "The lead time we have may be relatively short especially as travel may hasten the spread."
Stohr said vaccines were the main defense, but noted it would take months to develop and produce ones to target new strains.
He predicted "severe anti-viral and vaccine shortages," with supplies virtually "absent" in developing countries.
About 75 percent of vaccine production capacity is currently in Europe, he said. "Without a doubt, countries will look at their own backyard...Countries will not share easily."
Desperate Afghan Makes an Ass Out of Himself
Tue Mar 16,10:18 AM ET
KABUL (Reuters) - A frustrated Afghan soldier who could not afford to get married has been released without charge after being caught having sex with a donkey, police said Tuesday.
The soldier, who was not identified, was detained for several days last week after a young boy spotted him with the animal in an abandoned house in the southeastern town of Gardez.
"The man insisted he had no other choice but the donkey because he could not afford to pay a dowry to get married," a local police officer told Reuters.
The man had since been released without charge, he said.
In many parts of Afghanistan men must pay at least $3,000 to the parents of their prospective bride, making marriage difficult for many in a country where the average annual income is only a few hundred dollars.
Under the strict Islamic rule of the fundamentalist Taliban regime overthrown in 2001, sex outside of marriage or bestiality were punished by stoning to death or flogging.
ARKHANGELSK, Russia (AFP) - At least 24 people, including three children, were killed and dozens more feared dead after an explosion at an apartment building in northern Russia that officials said was likely caused by a gas leak.
And the fire from the other day:
Two Russian firemen killed in huge blaze near Kremlin Sun Mar 14
MOSCOW (AFP) - At least two Russian firemen died battling a huge blaze that engulfed a historic exhibition hall in central Moscow and sent 30-meter flames shooting up into the night sky next door to the Kremlin.
Fire in Kremlin area mars Putin's likely victory MONDAY, MARCH 15
MOSCOW: A huge fire broke out Sunday night at Menezh exhibition hall, a historic building located just 200 metres away from Kremlin walls, in central Moscow, diverting Russian people's attention from the projected landslide victory of Vladimir Putin in presidential polls.
The fire, which sent flames high into the air and thick smoke billowing over Kremlin towers, was reported shortly before 9.30 pm (00.00 hrs IST), when Russia's chief election commissioner had just begun announcing the preliminary results of presidential polls.
Tue Mar 16,10:57 AM ET
By IRA DREYFUSS, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The Agriculture Department is planning a tenfold increase in the number of cattle tested for mad cow disease in response to discovery of the nation's first case of the disease last December.
The department announced plans Monday to test more than 221,000 animals over a 12- to 18-month period beginning in June.
Included would be 201,000 animals considered to be at high risk of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE, because they show symptoms of nervous system disorders such as twitching.
Random tests also will be conducted on about 20,000 older animals sent to slaughter even though they appear healthy. Those tests are aimed at sampling cattle old enough to have eaten feed produced before 1997, when the Food and Drug Administration banned the use of cattle tissue in feed for other cattle.
The government last year conducted mad cow tests on tissues from 20,543 animals, virtually all of them cattle that could not stand or walk and had to be dragged to slaughter. After the case in December, the department initially doubled the number of animals to be tested this year to 40,000.
Agriculture Department officials emphasized that the expanded testing regime announced Monday is a one-time deal only. They said they hope to begin it in June and meet the total target over the next 12 to 18 months.
Dr. Ron DeHaven, the Agriculture Department's top veterinarian, said the need for testing in the range of 200,000 animals a year will be re-evaluated once the initial round is completed.
Cattle eating the tissue of a diseased cow is considered the primary way the misshapen protein blamed for BSE is transmitted. For humans, eating meat that contains BSE can cause a similarly rare but fatal illness in people, variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman estimated that the new testing will cost $70 million. She said the expanded testing reflects the recommendations of an international scientific review panel she appointed a week after mad cow disease was confirmed in a Washington state Holstein slaughtered on Dec. 9.
"We are committed to ensuring that a robust U.S. surveillance program continues in this country," Veneman said.
Nearly 50 countries imposed bans on American beef after the first U.S. case was confirmed. Poland has lifted its ban and Mexico has relaxed its prohibitions, but major importers like Japan and South Korea have said they will not allow American beef back in until all 35 million cattle slaughtered in the United States each year are tested.
The new U.S. testing plan still does not meet Japanese requirements, said Tadashi Sato, agricultural attache at the Japanese Embassy in Washington.
"We want to see the U.S. government introduce the same system for beef safety, or at least an equivalent system, that we have in Japan. We test all slaughter cattle, regardless of age not some," he said.
Domestic critics also weren't satisfied. Felicia Nestor, food safety director for the Government Accountability Project, a watchdog group, said the new testing doesn't guarantee that any animals with BSE won't enter the food supply.
The National Cattlemen's Beef Association supported the limited-duration testing program. But it said the new rapid tests that return results within hours instead of weeks have the potential to label animals as BSE-infected when they aren't. The Agriculture Department has said any positive results from the rapid tests will be verified by more exact tests.
Before BSE, exports accounted for about 10 percent of the nation's more than 26 billion pounds of beef produced each year.
The department expects to announce soon a new system of rapid tests that will make the increased surveillance possible. The rapid tests could be done at laboratories around the nation, as well as the department's National Veterinary Services Laboratory in Ames, Iowa, currently the only facility that can do testing.
The testing could find one case of BSE in 10 million animals, he said. It would establish whether the United States has more cases of mad cow.
DeHaven has said it's not necessary to test every animal because the department's targeted surveillance program system would pick up one case of BSE in 10 million animals.
Moscow ultra-nationalist rally demands expulsion of foreigners... Developing... __________________________________________________________
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER Tuesday, March 16, 2004
Dems try to raise Kerry $10M in 10 days - By SHARON THEIMER ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
WASHINGTON -- Former President Clinton, New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Democratic congressional leaders are trying to raise $10 million for presidential nominee-to-be John Kerry in 10 days. ________________________________________________________
France Says It Received Threat by Islamist Group
Threats 'linked to headscarf ban' From correspondents in Paris - March 17, 2004
Tue Mar 16,11:08 AM ET
By Marie-Louise Moller
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union appeared to back away Tuesday from calls for new institutions to fight terrorism after the Madrid bombings, stressing instead the need to implement agreed measures and share information.
The leaders of France and Germany poured cold water on proposals, notably from Belgium and Austria, for a "European CIA" in the wake of last Thursday's Madrid train attacks in which 201 people died and 1,500 were injured.
The executive European Commission played down the idea of appointing a single EU counter-terrorism Czar, urging member states to adopt and apply legislation already on the table and make their police and intelligence services cooperate.
Law enforcement officials said when EU ministers hold emergency security talks Friday, they should focus on bolstering existing, practical cooperation, rather than get distracted by calls for new bodies.
Politicians' vows of tougher EU action are seen by some as an attempt to calm public fears that the attacks are a sign that Islamic militants are now targeting Europe.
"Shocking events, like the bombings in Madrid, tend to provoke the same reactions from politicians: calls for new laws...are raised almost automatically," said Heinz Kiefer, the head of the European Confederation of Police.
"What Europe needs to beat terrorism is not another decision on paper," he said in a statement.
Kiefer said member states should address shortcomings in the EU's fight against terrorism since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on U.S. cities.
AL QAEDA 'CHANGED EVERYTHING'
After meeting French President Jacques Chirac in Paris, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said an EU equivalent of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency was not the priority.
"I think the main task is to improve cooperation between the existing intelligence services," he said. Chief European Commission spokesman Reijo Kemppinen said the EU often displayed a knee-jerk reaction to call for a "Mr. This" or a "Ms. That" when a new problem arose.
The Commission listed a raft of measures proposed in the aftermath of September 11 that member states had either failed to implement or not yet enacted.
One such measure is a European search and arrest warrant, still not in force in five EU states -- Germany, Italy, Greece, Austria and the Netherlands -- which was designed to sweep away time-consuming extradition procedures.
Other steps stuck in the pipeline included a common definition of terrorism, harmonized sentences for terrorist acts and more moves to cut off terror financing.
"What good is a decision on a European arrest warrant when it takes member states years to implement it?" Kiefer asked.
A senior European Parliament leader, Graham Watson of the centrist Liberal Democrats, told a news conference: "The most important things we can do are getting police forces working together, our judicial authorities working together and perhaps most importantly getting our intelligence services working together."
"We can no longer pretend...that terrorism is a national phenomenon. Al Qaeda has changed that forever and our individual national experiences with terror are worthless if we cannot build them into a common multilateral strategy for the future."
EU Justice and Home Affairs Commissioner Antonio Vitorino urged member states to make better use of the EU's police agency Europol to pool intelligence and Eurojust, created last year to boost cooperation between national judicial authorities.
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