Thanks to Milford for this alert:
Explosives found at French campus
AN ELABORATE system of incendiary devices was discovered yesterday at
an international business school near Paris where the French
president, Nicolas Sarkozy, is to address business leaders next week.
Cleaning staff found the devices in a bathroom.
This article: http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=1345572007
Last updated: 24-Aug-07 01:23 BST
CK: “Dagestan Mothers” who protested against kidnappings stop hunger-strike
Caucasian Knot
23/8/2007
“Dagestan Mothers” who protested against kidnappings stop hunger-strike
Tonight, the women from the “Dagestan Mothers” Public Organization who
protested against kidnappings of their relatives have stopped their
hunger strike.
Svetlana Isaeva, one of the hunger-strikers, has informed, that it
happened after the women were visited by a delegation led by the State
Secretary of Dagestan Takibat Makhmudova and the head of the
Analytical Department under President of Dagestan Miyasat Muslimova,
the “Interfax” reports.
According to Ms Isaeva, on the last day the number of hunger-strikers
dropped down to two persons. Gulnara Rustamova and herself continued
the action at the office of “Dagestan Mothers” in Makhachkala, the
“Gazeta.Ru” writes.
http://eng.kavkaz.memo.ru/newstext/engnews/id/1195409.html
IOL: Gutseriyev’s son dies in crash
iol.co.za
Billionaire’s son dies in crash
August 24 2007
Moscow - The British-educated son of a Russian billionaire who is
facing heavy government pressure has been killed in a car crash in
Moscow, his family said.
Chingiskhan Gutseriyev, 21, was the son of Mikhail Gutseriyev, the
former head of oil firm Russneft.
He died on Wednesday and was buried in the family’s native region of
North Ossetia on Thursday in a Muslim ceremony attended by the
president of neighbouring Ingushetia. Russneft said he had died of a
brain haemorrhage following the crash.
The dead man’s father accused the Russian government in July of
“unprecedented bullying” after Russneft received back tax demands
totalling $800-million.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/chechnya-sl/
Date: Fri 24 Aug 2007
Source: CDC MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2007; 56(33); 842-6 [edited]
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5633a2.htm?s_cid=mm5633a2_e
Norovirus activity: United States, 2006-2007
North Carolina
Outbreaks were preceded by illness among food handlers in 4 of the 17
long-term—care facilities, suggesting that these outbreaks might
have been caused initially by foodborne transmission. At least 2
outbreaks were preceded by illness among staff members who also
worked at other long-term—care facilities with reported norovirus
outbreaks. Many long-term—care facilities used disinfectants that
had limited effectiveness against norovirus (such as, quaternary
ammonia compounds) during these outbreaks. Although all AGE and other
communicable disease outbreaks in North Carolina are reportable by
long-term—care facilities to health departments, in at least 4 of
the 17 outbreaks in 2006, health departments were notified of the
outbreaks by emergency medical personnel or residents’ family members
rather than directly by the facilities, suggesting incomplete
reporting of these outbreaks by long-term—care facilities in this
state.
Wisconsin
The 45 outbreaks in long-term—care facilities reported in Wisconsin
in 2006 included 2071 clinical cases; 44 patients were hospitalized,
and 2 died. The primary causes of death were not reported. The
duration of outbreaks in long-term—care facilities ranged from 2 to
30 days (median: 11 days). Challenges in investigating these
outbreaks included delayed reporting and incomplete collection of
clinical data by long-term—care facilities.
New York
The New York State Department of Health does not routinely perform
viral testing at the state laboratory for all AGE outbreaks.
Therefore, of the 298 outbreaks that occurred in long-term—care
facilities, only 11 (4 percent) outbreaks had a laboratory-confirmed
etiology; 4 of these had laboratory confirmation of norovirus by
RT-PCR, and 7 had laboratory confirmation of non-viral etiologies.
The majority of outbreaks that did not have a laboratory-confirmed
etiology were clinically and epidemiologically consistent with
norovirus infection (1).
Boston, Massachusetts
The Boston Public Health Commission (BPHC), which coordinates
syndromic surveillance in all 10 Boston hospital EDs, examined data
from the city’s EDs to determine whether an AGE increase had
occurred. These EDs submit demographic and chief complaint data to
BPHC every 24 hours. Chief complaints are grouped into syndromes and
analyzed for unusual activity. These data indicated citywide
increases in the number of ED visits for a gastrointestinal syndrome
defined as nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea among all age groups during
5 Dec 2006-24 Mar 2007. During this 16-week period, ED visits
attributable to this gastrointestinal syndrome averaged 96 per day
(7.4 percent of all visits), compared with 74 visits per day (5.8
percent of all visits) during the same period in the previous year
(pl less than 0.001, by Pearson’s chi-square test).
United States
CDC laboratory surveillance
[Reported by: P Jenkins, S Greene, JP Davis, MD, JR Archer, MS, D
Hoang-Johnson, Wisconsin Div of Public Health. M Quinn, MS, P Duncan,
G Johnson, BI Rosen, PhD, P Smith, MD, New York State Dept of Health.
V Reddy, MPH, New York City Dept of Health and Mental Hygiene. J
Schlegelmilch, MPH, J Pendarvis, MPH, M Donovan, JE Gunn, MPH, MA
Barry, MD, Boston Public Health Commission. M Davies, MD,
Coordinating Office of Terrorism Preparedness and Emergency Response;
J Vinje, PhD, M-A Widdowson, VetMB, Div of Viral Diseases, National
Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases; Z Moore, MD, JK
Schaffzin, MD, PhD, JE Tate, PhD, EIS officers, CDC]
MMWR editorial note
7
Whether the increase in outbreaks is a result of increased
pathogenicity or transmissibility of new strains, lower immunity in
the population, or other factors is unclear. During late 2006 and
early 2007, increases in AGE outbreaks consistent with norovirus (1)
were reported by many state health departments. A high proportion of
specimens tested were positive for norovirus, which suggests that the
increase in AGE outbreaks was associated with norovirus infection.
The magnitude and consistency of increases in multiple states suggest
an actual increase rather than increased reporting resulting from
increased awareness of and testing for norovirus.
A large proportion of AGE outbreaks in 2006 occurred among residents
of long-term—care facilities, a population that has higher attack
rates from AGE than non-institutionalized populations (6). Illness
compatible with norovirus infection was the primary cause of death
recorded for a resident of a long-term—care facility in North
Carolina; in addition, 2 deaths in Wisconsin and 16 deaths in New
York were associated with AGE outbreaks in health-care facilities.
Norovirus infection as a confirmed cause of death has not been
reported previously in the United States. Additional investigation of
deaths associated with AGE outbreaks in health-care settings is
needed to better understand the role of norovirus.
Noroviruses are the most common cause of sporadic cases and outbreaks
of AGE (8). Transmission occurs via foodborne and person-to-person
routes as well as through contact with contaminated environmental
surfaces. The low infectious dose of norovirus (less than 10 viral
particles) required for transmission, in addition to the virus’s
environmental persistence and prolonged shedding after recovery,
coupled with the shared toilet facilities, close living quarters, and
immobile or incontinent residents in long-term—care facilities
predispose these facilities to prolonged outbreaks with high attack
rates http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5009a1.htm
9).
Control of norovirus outbreaks depends on consistent enforcement of
measures such as strict hand hygiene and use of effective
environmental disinfectants [see Box in original text] (10).
The findings in this report are subject to at least 2 limitations.
First, no national surveillance system exists for AGE or norovirus
outbreaks that are transmitted from person to person; reporting
methods and completeness of reporting vary substantially by state.
Thus, this report likely underestimates the number of norovirus
outbreaks and cannot accurately quantify the increase in frequency
from 2005 to 2006. Second, laboratory testing for norovirus is
limited to the state public health laboratories, and norovirus
testing is not routinely performed on all specimens from all AGE
outbreaks; the low number of outbreaks with norovirus confirmation
likely reflects this. During October-December 2006, only 29 percent
of all reported AGE outbreaks in 24 states had laboratory
confirmation of norovirus. States such as Wisconsin that routinely
test specimens from outbreaks determined that a high proportion were
attributable to norovirus.
In June 2006, the Council for State and Territorial Epidemiologists
passed a resolution stating that all AGE outbreaks should be
reportable nationally, regardless of mode of transmission (that is,
foodborne or person to person). This will be implemented in 2008
through the National Outbreak Reporting System. In addition to better
surveillance, specific protocols are needed to investigate the role
of norovirus in diarrheal deaths, particularly among older adults.
Development and application of new, easy-to-use norovirus assays for
routine clinical practice could better define the prevalence of
norovirus among persons with AGE who seek health-care services.
CaliciNet, a centralized database at CDC, is used to collect and
compare norovirus sequences to identify emergent strains, track more
virulent strains in real time, and determine the role of contaminated
foods in their emergence; this database soon will be widely
accessible to state and local health departments.
References
8. Mead PS, Slutsker L, Dietz V. Food-related illness and death in
the United States. Emerg Infect Dis 1999; 5:607-25.
9. CDC. Norwalk-like viruses: public health consequences and outbreak
management. MMWR 2001;50(No. RR-9): 1-17.
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5009a1.htm
10. CDC. Norovirus in healthcare facilities fact sheet. Atlanta, GA:
US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2006. Available at
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dhqp/id_norovirusFS.html#
* AGE outbreaks are considered consistent with norovirus if all of
the following criteria are met: 1) vomiting in more than 50 percent
of affected persons, 2) mean or median incubation period of 24-48
hours, 3) mean or median illness duration of 12-60 hours, and 4) no
bacterial pathogens isolated from stool culture (1).
—
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail
promed@promedmail.org
Many reports to read about terror:
http://www.basicsproject.org/terrorism/reports_studies_testimonies.htm
http://www.basicsproject.org/terrorism/legislation_debate.htm
Guide to Wahhabis Organizations in North America:
http://www.basicsproject.org/reports/wahabbi_oragnziations_north_america.pdf
Thanks to Milford421:
Check MySpace.com for intel
PoliceOne Technology Tips
Thanks to Renee Taylor.
Check MySpace.com for intel Submit a Tip
Submitted by:
Officer Larrick Winslow, Ferndale (WA) PD
07/18/2007
Me and a department buddy always check www.MySpace.com for local
intel. You will find all sorts of things on their pages, such as
upcoming MIP parties, etc, but more importantly, you can gather
information on felonious activity. We recently gathered intel on who
is claiming gang affiliation.
On the street, we’d noticed several that several familiar youths had
begun wearing red. We checked on Myspace.com and, sure enough
these same individuals were claiming Bloods, and most were holding
weapons such as sawed-off long guns!
They have also made the mistake of making statements on their pages
in regards to shooting rivals as well as law enforcement. This could
all be bravado, but now we can use this information to treat them as
possible armed suspects during our encounters.
Thanks to Milford421 for this report:
NYC Taxi Drivers Threaten Sept. 5 Strike
http://wcbstv.com/topstories/local_story_235170645.html
Think about this one...
“The issue over a driver’s privacy is the driving issue in the
debate, with a driver’s location being tracked no matter where he or
she goes.”
Aug 24, 2007 9:40 am US/Eastern
NYC Taxi Drivers Threaten Sept. 5 Strike
Taxi Workers Alliance Members May Curb Cabs In GPS-Privacy Debate
Brendan Keefe
Reporting
(CBS) NEW YORK After this month’s transit meltdown, the last thing
commuters want to deal with is a taxi strike that could have
crippling effects on a city whose residents and tourists alike rely
on the Taxi and Limousine Commission. A scary reality, however, is
that such a strike could occur — and in less than two weeks.
The New York Taxi Workers Alliance — which accounts for more than
8,000 city drivers — is threatening to curb their cabs on Sept. 5
if the Taxi and Limousine Commission does not get rid of their GPS
system, which the union says invades a driver’s privacy.
Continued.
Iran’s Intervention in Iraq - Product of Historical Conflict Between Arabs and Persians
Special Dispatch-Iran/Jordan/Iraq
August 24, 2007
No. 1696
Jordanian Parliamentary Speaker: Iran’s Intervention in Iraq - Product
of
Historical Conflict Between Arabs and Persians
To view this Special Dispatch in HTML, visit:
http://www.memri.org/bin/opener_latest.cgi?ID=SD169607.
In a meeting with Kuwaiti journalists, Jordanian Parliamentary Speaker
‘Abd
Al-Hadi Al-Majali stated that Iran’s intervention in Iraq has nothing
to do
with either religion or with the Sunni-Shi’ite conflict, but that it
was
nationalistically motivated and part of an historical conflict between
the
Arabs and the Persians.
This statement reflects a shift from Jordan’s previous view of Iran’s
intervention in Iraq as part of the Sunni-Shi’ite conflict. In the
past,
Jordan’s King Abdullah had warned of the danger posed by the “Shi’ite
crescent,”(1) estimating that “the main problem would center around
Iraq,
where a terrible inter-Islamic conflict would erupt between the Sunnis
and the
Shi’ites.”(2)
This new Jordanian approach is in line with the Saudi position.
Although Saudi
Arabia considers the Iran-Iraq confrontation to be a sectarian clash
between
the Sunnis and the Shi’ites, it has been careful not to refer to it as
such
publicly, phrasing its harsh criticism of Iran in nationalist, rather
than
sectarian/religious, terms. Thus, for example, earlier this year, Saudi
Foreign Minister Saud Al-Faisal called on Iran “not to interfere in
Arab
affairs.”(3)
The following are excerpts from Al-Majali’s statements, as published in
the
Kuwaiti daily Al-Rai.
“...[Iran is] harboring plans to significantly weaken the [Arab]
identity.
What is happening in Iraq [today] has nothing to do with either the
Sunnis or
the Shi’ites. Iran’s intervention in Iraq is for nationalist reasons,
and not
in order to support the Shi’ites, as some claim. Hence I believe that
Arab
identity in Iraq is under threat.
“Iran’s current actions are the product of a historical conflict
between the
Arabs and the Persians. This conflict was renewed with great force
during the
eight-year Iran-Iraq war, whose grounds were nationalist, rather than
religious. Indeed, during that war, Iran murdered hundreds of thousands
of
Shi’ites and their families, a fact that stresses the national, rather
than
sectarian, aspect of the conflict. Similarly, what is going on in Iraq
today
is unrelated to religion...”
According to Al-Majali, there is a need for a unified Arab Islamic
framework
to preserve the Arab identity. He also stressed that Iran’s ability to
eradicate the Arab identity should not be underestimated.
As for the Iran-Hizbullah relationship, Al-Majali contended that
Hizbullah was
the foremost stronghold of Iran and its policy in the region, and that
Iran
was the one supplying it with money and weapons. The motive for this,
he said,
is that Hizbullah is Iran’s tool for attaining its interests, and not
as
Iran and Nasrallah claim for liberating Palestine.
Al-Majali went on to state that the conflict between Lebanon and Israel
had
come to an end, since Israel had conclusively and officially withdrawn
from
all Lebanese territories, in accordance with the international
resolutions. As
concerns the Shab’a Farms, he stated that Israel seized them not from
Lebanon
but from Syria... Al-Majali further stated that he did not believe that
Hizbullah would relinquish its military character even if the Shab’a
Farms
were liberated.(4)
Endnotes:
(1) http://ammannet.net, December 9, 2004.
(2) Middle East Quarterly (U.S.), Spring 2005.
(3) Le Figaro (France), January 24, 2007.
(4) Al-Rai (Kuwait), August 15, 2007.
*********************
The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) is an independent,
non-profit
organization that translates and analyzes the media of the Middle East.
Copies
of articles and documents cited, as well as background information, are
available on request.
MEMRI holds copyrights on all translations. Materials may only be used
with
proper attribution.
The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI)
Daily Mail: Russian police arrest ‘Britons’ at air show
Russian police arrest ‘Britons’ at air show
24th August 2007
Russian police said they had detained three British citizens at an air
show outside Moscow in an area used by military aviation enterprises.
“They have been handed to representatives of the FSB, who are
investigating,” said a police spokesman, referring to Russia’s federal
security and intelligence service.
But a Foreign Office spokesman said: “Apparently they’re not British -
they’re English-speaking tourists and they were detained.”
She also believed they had been released.
The reported incident came after repeated Russian accusations of
British espionage.
Relations have been badly strained by the dispute over the radiation
poisoning death of former Russian security agent and Kremlin critic
Alexander Litvinenko in London last year.
Russia has refused to hand over the suspect named by British
prosecutors.
The International Aviation and Space Show opened on Tuesday at a
former secret military airfield.
It is an international trade fair showcasing Russia’s latest military
and civilian planes - and this year claimed to be Russia’s largest air
show in post-Soviet history.
At the start of the six-day show at Zhukovsky military airfield
President Vladimir Putin challenged Russian manufacturers to “more
actively enter” the world market for passenger and transport aircraft.
“The task stands before us of maintaining our leadership in the
production of military aviation technology.”
The Kremlin is determined to revive the heyday of Soviet aviation, and
the government - bolstered by oil and gas revenues - has invested in a
new S-400 missile defence system and enhanced its MiG and Sukhoi
fighter jets - all on exhibition at the show.
Nearly 800 companies from about 100 countries are participating in the
show. The largest foreign delegations are from China, Latin America
and Arab countries.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/worldnews.html
Thanks to Milford421 for this update:
Update: Jail time for man who drove car into Glen Cove bar crowd
Jail time for man who drove car into Glen Cove bar crowd
Sayed El-Waraky, 20, a Virginia college student who drove his Jaguar
into a crowd after a Glen Cove bar altercation last summer was
sentenced to the maximum of 1 and 1/3 years to 4 years in prison
Tuesday.
BY SOPHIA CHANG | sophia.chang@newsday.com
12:34 PM EDT, August 21, 2007
Article tools
E-mail Share this
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Single page view Reprints Reader feedback Text size: A Virginia
college student who drove his Jaguar into a crowd after a Glen Cove
bar altercation last summer, critically injuring two men, was
sentenced to the maximum of 1 and 1/3 years to 4 years in prison
Tuesday for driving under the influence and leaving the scene of an
accident.
Sayed El-Waraky, 20, a student at American University in Washington,
D.C. and resident of Vienna, Va., faces additional prison time if he
is convicted on two charges of assault related to the incident in an
upcoming trial next month.
During the sentencing in front of Nassau County Supreme Court
Justice Joseph Calabrese, the father of one of the victims spoke of
his son’s painful recovery since the June 2006 incident, and blasted
El-Waraky. “I just feel that you do not have any respect for the
laws of this country,” William Basdavanos, father of victim Sean
Basdavanos, told El-Waraky.
Related links
Sayed El-Waraky Photo
El-Waraky’s lawyer, Kevin Keating of Garden City, characterized the
night of the incident as being “far from a situation where people
were in control,” and said his client’s life had been irrevocably
damaged.
“This has had a significant impact on this young man,” Keating told
the court, noting that El-Waraky had been in Nassau County jail for
more than a year awaiting the conclusion of the trial.
In his sentencing, Calabrese remarked that El-Waraky had a “very
unusual mind-set” in not reporting the bar fight to authorities.
Instead “he got on top of the situation,” Calabrese said. “It’s a
question of taking matters into his own hands.”
More articles
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/nassau/ny-lihit0822,0,4443791.story
MT: Critical Ingush News Site Under Fire
The Moscow Times
Friday, August 24, 2007. Issue 3728. Page 3.
Critical Ingush News Site Under Fire
By Alexander Osipovich
Staff Writer
Prosecutors said Thursday they have opened a criminal case against
Ingushetiya.ru, a web site known for its investigations of corruption
among Ingush authorities, for incitement of ethnic hatred.
The case stems from an article published on the site by Ingush
activist Khadzhimurat Kostoyev, Ingushetiya.ru said.
Magomed Yevloyev, director of Ingushetiya.ru, said authorities had
opened the case in response to the site’s muckraking journalism. “It
is 100 percent connected, in my opinion,” he said.
The case, which Moscow’s Kuntsevo District Prosecutor’s Office opened
July 30, results from a complaint by former North Ossetian leader
Alexander Dzasokhov, who now represents the republic in the Federation
Council, he said.
Dzasokhov complained to prosecutors that Kostoyev’s article violated
the law against inciting ethnic hatred, Yevloyev said. The article was
itself a response to an earlier article in a North Ossetian newspaper
about the disputed Prigorodny district that the web site said
“insulted the Ingush people.”
North Ossetia and Ingushetia fought a brief war over the district in
1992 and tensions have remained high ever since.
Yevloyev said the article in the North Ossetian newspaper “clearly
incited ethnic hatred,” but prosecutors had not taken any interest in
it. “It’s clear that they are taking a very one-sided position,” he
said.
A spokeswoman for Moscow city prosecutors said she could not comment
on the case. A statement by prosecutors about the case said the
investigation was ongoing, without providing details.
The case raised questions about press freedoms in the region, as
Yevloyev said he believed Ingush President Murat Zyazikov had offered
support to Dzasokhov’s initiative and was determined to shut down the
site, which has often been critical of him.
Phone calls to Zyazikov’s spokesman were not answered.
http://www.moscowtimes.ru/stories/2007/08/24/011.html
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1886545/posts
VEGAS BILLIONAIRE SELLS MGM STAKE TO DUBAI ROYAL FAMILY
Vegas Luxe Life with Robin Leach ^ | Wednesday, August 22nd, 2007 at 9:13 am | Vegas Luxe Life with Robin Leach
Posted on 08/25/2007 2:22:10 PM PDT by Issaquahking
Billionaire Kirk Kerkorian and MGMs Board of Directors are expected to announce today (WED) that certain members of the Royal Family of Dubai- a Mid-East oil-rich kingdom - are buying into MGM Mirage and its $7-billion City Center hotel-condo complex. My Wall Street sources are abuzz this morning saying the multi-billion dollar deals signal the next phase of corporate takeovers and foreign investment into the booming Vegas gaming and hospitality business.
Photo co: MGM
Kirkorians company, Tracinda that owns his share of MGM is reducing his stake from 54.15% to 51.65% in the transaction and Wall Street believes that Dubai World will ultimately buy all of Kerkorians stake in the future.
Bear Stearns Vegas watcher Joe Greff commented early this morning in a 4:55 a.m. email to his investors: MGMs stock closed last night (TUES) at $74.32. Dubai World will buy 14-million shares of MGM at $84 per share for a total of $1.2 billion in the open market and another $1.2 billion worth of shares directly from the company. Furthermore Dubai World will purchase a 50% share in MGMs City Center project for just under $3-billion!
Greff went on to say: All in all, the deal will inject nearly $3.9B of cash into MGM. We believe this deal should be a positive for the stock, as it demonstrates value for the company and reduces development risk with selling half of City Center. Partnering with Dubai World should also help MGM penetrate international markets in which it currently does not have a presence. In addition, the deal immediately improves the companys balance sheet, as it reduces leverage for other development deals, share buybacks, and/or special dividends.
Greff has put a new price target of $95 on the stock before year-end. It is expected that all Vegas hotel stocks would rise at the Wall Street open this morning- and The Venetian opened hovering at the $100 mark just 5- days in advance of its grand gala opening of Sheldon Adelsons new Cotai Strip megaplex in Macau. (See our Friday edition of Luxe Life for all the advance details of Sheldons superplan to bring his version of Venice to the Chinese colony when he opens his 2nd property there early next week).
The banker analyst concluded: At this point, we do not foresee any regulatory issues with the deal.
Its believed that MGM will use some of the proceeds from this deal for its planned partnership at the adjoining Circus Circus land block its assembled with Sol Kerzner who intends to build a version of his Bahamas resort, The Atlantis there. Ironically - or coincidentally- Kerzner has a resort in Dubai in partnership with certain members of the kingdoms Royal Family. Some are speculating that he may well have played a role in this new mega-billion-dollar deal.