Sunday, October 9, 2016

Professional athletes take issue with Trump's 'Locker room talk'

Gym Locker Room


NEW YORK - CJ McCollum, Jamal Crawford and Jacob Tamme are among current and former professional athletes on social media to criticize Donald Trump's characterization of his predatory, sexual comments about women from a 2005 video as “locker room talk.”


Trump's campaign described his remarks as “locker room banter” in a statement Saturday, and the Republican presidential nominee repeated the line multiple times Sunday during the presidential debate with Hillary Clinton.


In the tape, obtained by The Washington Post and NBC News, Trump describes trying to have sex with a married woman and brags about women letting him kiss and grab them because he is famous.


“When you're a star they let you do it,” Trump says. “You can do anything.”


He adds seconds later, “Grab them by the p--. You can do anything.”


“I haven't heard that one in any locker rooms,” McCollum wrote on Twitter in a response to a tweet from Crawford. McCollum plays for the NBA's Portland Trail Blazers and Crawford plays for the Los Angeles Clippers.


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Tamme, a tight end with the NFL's Atlanta Falcons, asked that Trump “please stop saying 'locker room talk,'” adding that “it's not normal. And even if it were normal, it's not right.”


Dodgers pitcher Brett Anderson, Chiefs wide receiver Chris Conley and retired NFL players Donte Stallworth and Chris Kluwe offered similar condemnations.


The post Professional athletes take issue with Trump's 'Locker room talk' appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Friday, October 7, 2016

5 Necessary Steps to Reliable Home Security for Your Family



 


Choose a Security Company You Can Rely On


The most important choice you'll make when planning for home security is hiring the right home security company.


Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Air rage is taking off around the world, say airlines

A Delta jetliner (foreground) is de-iced while an American Airlines plane (rear) takes off at Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C. Photo by Gary Cameron/Reuters

A Delta jetliner (foreground) is de-iced while an American Airlines plane (rear) takes off at Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C. Photo by Gary Cameron/Reuters


WASHINGTON - Incidents of unruly passengers on planes are increasing, and more effective deterrents are needed to tackle the problem, a global airline trade group said Wednesday.


There were 10,854 air rage incidents reported by airlines worldwide last year, up from 9,316 incidents in 2014, according to the International Air Transport Association. That equates to one incident for every 1,205 flights, an increase from one incident per 1,282 flights the previous year.


Incidents have been rising almost consistently since 2007, when the association began tracking the issue. That year airlines reported 339 incidents to the association.


A majority of incidents involved verbal abuse, failure to follow crew instructions and other anti-social behavior. Eleven percent included physical aggression toward passengers or crew or damage to the plane. Alcohol or drugs were a factor in 23 percent of the cases. In the vast majority of incidents involving drugs or alcohol, the substances were consumed before boarding or imbibed secretly on board, the association said.


Training staff in airport bars and duty-free shops to sell alcohol responsibly, including avoiding offers that encourage binge drinking, can cut incidents by half, the association said, citing an initiative by Monarch Airlines at London's Gatwick Airport.


Airlines already have strong guidelines and crew training on “the responsible provision of alcohol,” the association said.


A woman in England pleaded guilty in June to assaulting an easyJet pilot. Prosecutors said she punched the pilot in the face after he deemed her too intoxicated to fly. In another case, a male passenger allegedly urinated on fellow easyJet passengers as they were waiting to deplane after landing at Edinburgh.


Six men involved in a drunken brawl during a Jetstar flight from Sydney to Thailand in July were ordered off the plane after it diverted to Indonesia.
Incidents have been rising almost consistently since 2007, when the association began tracking the issue.

An American Airlines pilot tackled one passenger to the floor after he tried to force his way off the plane as it taxied to the gate in Charlotte, North Carolina. “You don't put your hands on my flight attendant!” the pilot can be heard yelling on a video taken by another passenger. The unruly passenger was arrested and charged with being intoxicated and disruptive.


Charlie Leocha, president of Travelers United, an advocacy group for airline passengers in Washington, said he knows of no changes in the way alcohol is sold in airports or on planes that would account for the increase in the rate of incidents. But he noted that the increases correspond with efforts by airlines to squeeze more passenger seats onto planes by shrinking legroom and seat width.


“We've always had alcohol sold at airports, we have always had alcohol served on aircraft,” he said. “The only difference today is that people now have less space and they are required to interact more intimately with other passengers.”


Other recent incidents include a Los Angeles-bound Delta Air Lines flight diverted to Tucson, Arizona, escorted by two Air Force fighter jets, after a passenger refused to return his seat. The following month, the FBI and Hawaii state sheriffs arrested a 35-year-old man who allegedly bit a flight attendant on a Hawaiian Airlines flight from Pago Pago in American Samoa to Honolulu.


Airlines also want more countries to ratify a 2014 treaty that closes gaps in laws for dealing with unruly passengers. So far, only six countries - Bahrain, Congo, Dominican Republic, Gabon, Guyana and Jordan - have ratified the pact.


“More are needed in order to have a consistent global approach to this issue,” said Alexandre de Juniac, the association's director general.


READ MORE: Study shows chronic fatigue among air traffic controllers


The post Air rage is taking off around the world, say airlines appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Friday, September 16, 2016

Less Parking, More City

Today hundreds of cities around the world are celebrating Park(ing) Day. Since 2005, Park(ing) Day has encouraged urban dwellers to temporarily transform parking spaces for a public purpose - parks, games, theatres, and more. This year Uber is proud to be participating in this effort to reimagine our cities.


The average car spends 95% of its life parked. In many cities, a third of all land is now dedicated to parking. In fact, there are so many parking spaces in the United States we can't even count them all - experts estimate there may be as many as 2 billion. And it's no surprise Park(ing) Day got its start in Uber's hometown of San Francisco. Writer Michael Lewis once joked that Bay Area residents spend so much time looking for parking that it “counts as a hobby.”


But parking has become an enormous problem for cities across the country. It's ugly, it's expensive to build, and it takes up valuable space. Up to a third of traffic in city centers is caused by drivers circling to find parking. Even people who don't own cars pay a high price - rents go up to accommodate the cost of building parking. Ultimately, there's no such thing as free parking.


“Park(ing) day asks people to rethink the status quo and imagine what might be possible in the future. New technology has made sharing cars, rides, bikes and multimodal trips hassle free. Self driving vehicles will accelerate these trends. Now is the time for true PPPs – public + private + people collaborations – to make sure that we get the liveable, sustainable, and just future we want. I'm excited for Uber to be participating in this three way dialogue.”


-Robin Chase, Founder of Zipcar and Author of Peers, Inc.


For decades, cities have tried to fix parking policy - and many have made progress. At Uber we're committed to tackling the underlying cause by creating an alternative to personal car ownership. Innovations like UberPOOL are helping to made mass carpooling a reality.  By getting more people in fewer cars, POOL is helping to reduce congestion in some of the world's biggest cities. Every empty seat we can fill means one less car on the road.


We're also investing in self-driving technology, which will accelerate these trends by making it cheaper and easier to hail a ride than drive yourself. Studies by the OECD found that shared autonomous vehicles could reduce the number of cars on the road by 90% or more. And as car ownership declines, so will the need for parking space.


Just imagine if a city could reclaim a third of its land, as well as all the money it has to spend on lots and meters and garages. Imagine the new homes and apartments that could take their place. Imagine all the new schools and playgrounds and parks and bike paths.


Park(ing) Day is all about preparing us to make that dream a reality. We have an enormous opportunity to make our cities more liveable, vibrant, and affordable. Today we're excited to join with people across the planet to envision a world without parking.


We invite you to come join us by transforming your own parking spot, or find other people participating in your city.


Check back throughout the the day – we'll be updating the blog with photos of some of our installations across the country.

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Teaming up with AT&T to bring college football everywhere

Welcome to college football season! It's tough to match the excitement the next 4-5 months will bring. From the rivalries, tailgates, close finishes and stunning upsets, no sport is more thrilling from one week to the next.


Regardless of where you watch your team, we want you to enjoy every part of this season. To help, we're teaming up with our friends at AT&T and DIRECTV to bring college football everywhere this fall.


This weekend, fans in Orlando can order up free rides around the city, while watching every second of the day's action. Whether you wear burnt orange, crimson, purple or any team colors during your weekend, select riders will get to travel in style with live football action via on-board Samsung tablets powered by the AT&T network. This is all courtesy of AT&T Thanks.


Additional stops take place in Columbus, Ohio (week 3); Boulder, Colo. (week 4); Phoenix (week 5); Seattle (week 6) and Pittsburgh (week 7).  Also, we're leveraging UberEats to deliver the ultimate tailgating experience to fans in San Francisco (week 3), Los Angeles (week 4), Dallas (week 5) and Atlanta (week 6). Be on the lookout during select times those weekends.


This year, riders will be able to stream content on Sundays, too. DIRECTV NOW, AT&T's OTT streaming service will also be available for fans to enjoy additional programming starting in late 2016.


Later in the season, AT&T and Uber return for the SEC Championship Game in Atlanta, to mobilize the tradition and passion of fans all around the city. Then we'll see you again in Tampa, Fla. for the sport's biggest party: the College Football Playoff National Championship in January!


As fans ourselves, we're excited to spend another season with the football faithful. We hope to see you at tailgates and parties around the country. There are plenty more details to follow about the fun in store for the AT&T Red River Showdown, SEC Championship and more. Stay tuned and enjoy kickoff this weekend!

Monday, September 5, 2016

Serena Williams Now Has More Grand Slam Wins Than Any Player Ever



NEW YORK, Sept 5 (Reuters) - Serena Williams stormed into the quarter-finals of the U.S. Open in record-smashing style on Monday, easing past Kazakhstan's Yaroslava Shvedova 6-2 6-3 to claim grand slam win number 308.



The world number one needed just 68 minutes on Arthur Ashe Stadium court to overwhelm the 52nd-ranked Shvedova and move past Roger Federer to the top of the all-time grand slam victories list.



“Oh wow, it is really exciting, this is where it all started so it is always so magical out here for me but 308 sounds pretty good,” Williams said about her landmark win, after moving a step closer to a record seventh U.S. Open title.



It has been another dominating run into the last eight for the 34-year-old American, who has yet to be broken and has faced just one break point in four matches while never spending more than 68 minutes on court.



Next up for Williams is fifth seed Romanian Simona Halep, who brushed past 11th-seeded Spaniard Carla Suarez Navarro 6-2 7-5.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Saturday, September 3, 2016

Clinton enters fall with key advantages in White House race

U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton speaks at Futuramic Tool & Engineering in Warren, Michigan August 11, 2016. REUTERS/Chris Keane - RTSMQP2

U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton speaks at Futuramic Tool & Engineering in Warren, Michigan August 11, 2016. Photo by Chris Keane/Reuters


COLUMBUS, Ohio - Two months from Election Day, Hillary Clinton has a clear edge over Donald Trump in nearly every measure traditionally used to gauge success in presidential races.


She's raising huge sums of money and flooding airwaves with television advertisements. A sophisticated data team with a history of winning White House contests is meticulously tracking voters in key battleground states. Clinton also has multiple paths to the 270 electoral votes needed to win in November - so many that she could lose Ohio and Florida and still become America's first female president.


But Trump's campaign believes there are pockets of voters eager to be persuaded not to back Clinton. While Trump squandered a summer's worth of opportunities to court those voters, his campaign heads into the fall suddenly confident in its ability to make up lost ground.


Trump aides were gleeful Friday over the release of FBI notes regarding Clinton's controversial email practices while secretary of state. His campaign plans to come out of the Labor Day weekend wielding the report as a warning about the Democrat's judgment.


Getting Trump to make that kind of consistent case against Clinton has been a herculean task for much of the campaign. But advisers say he's more receptive to his new leadership team's more scripted approach, mostly because it's coincided with a tightening in the public polls he monitors obsessively.


[Watch Video]

“There's a renewed focus on Hillary Clinton and her problems, which I think has been beneficial,” said Matt Borges, the chairman of Ohio's Republican Party. “He's got to sustain this for another couple weeks.”


Still, Trump aides acknowledge that the brash businessman needs to more to address his own shaky standing with voters.


Trump's campaign has spent no general election money on positive, biographical ads, despite having plenty of cash to do so. Efforts to highlight a warmer side of the New York real estate developer at the GOP convention were quickly overshadowed by flaps of his own making. He's also angered anew Hispanics voters, a fast-growing segment of the electorate that Republicans are desperate to draw from, by holding fast to his tough immigration policies.


“He's running up against a population trend and a demographic reality,” said Steve Schale, a Florida-based Democratic strategist.


If Trump can reshape the race, he'll need to do so quickly. Early voting begins in some states this month. North Carolinians can start submitting absentee ballots Friday. In Ohio - a state no Republican has won the White House without - people can start voting on Oct. 12, a week before the last of three presidential debates.


Both campaigns expect enormous audiences for the debates. Clinton, who has been in intensive study sessions with her debate team in recent days, is sure to face higher expectations from voters. Trump's political inexperience leaves him with a lower bar to clear.


Privately, Republican leaders say it will take more than strong debates for their nominee to alter a race that appears to be leaning in Clinton's favor. While Trump publicly maintains support from numerous high-ranking GOP officials, a striking number of discussions among Republicans in Washington often begin with an assumption that Clinton will be president come January.


Trump advisers vigorously dispute that the race has slipped from their grasp. They contend most Americans are just now tuning into the presidential campaign in a serious way.


“We're very much on schedule to do what we need to do to turn out the vote for Mr. Trump,” said Bob Paduchik, Trump's Ohio state director and one of the most experienced operatives on the Republican's staff. Paduchik said Trump's efforts heading into the fall are focused primarily on rallying “disaffected Democrats and independents.”


Clinton's campaign has long argued that Trump is overestimating the number of voters willing to switch from voting Democratic in presidential election to Republican. But Clinton aides are monitoring movement toward a pair of third party candidates, Libertarian Gary Johnson and the Green Party's Jill Stein.


“There's no question you've got two candidates who are both underwater on their favorables right now,” Joel Benenson, Clinton's chief strategist and pollster, said by way of explaining the appeal of Johnson and Stein. “I think it's important as this gets closer that people understand the stakes and the importance of their vote.”


Clinton and running mate Tim Kaine will have an all-star stable of Democrats making that case on their behalf through the fall.


President Barack Obama is expected to spend much of October campaigning for Clinton, focusing in particular on increasing turnout among young people, blacks and college-educated whites. Vice President Joe Biden will camp out in working class areas of Ohio and Pennsylvania. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Clinton's vanquished primary rival, will be rallying the young voters and liberals who backed his campaign.


Trump will be largely on his own, with the exception of running mate Mike Pence and a few loyal supporters such as New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani. In the battle for control of the Senate, most Republicans in competitive races have stayed away from Trump.


Democrats now see a clear path to taking back control of the Senate, with party leaders identifying Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania as favorable opportunities to pick up seats. Democrats are also confident that if Clinton wins in some of the most contested state such as New Hampshire, North Carolina and Nevada, she'll bring along the party's Senate candidates.


There are bright spots for Republicans in the Senate contests. Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio is running a campaign that mirrors Clinton's more than Trump's - disciplined, well-funded, and heavily centered on data - and appears on track to hold his seat, even if Clinton carries the state in the presidential race.


Associated Press writer Chad Day in Washington contributed to this report.


The post Clinton enters fall with key advantages in White House race appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Big Jump in Foreign Buyers at Latest Treasury Auction Is a 'Hint'

Wednesday's Treasury auction of five-year notes went well thanks to record demand from indirect bidders, mostly foreign central banks.

The successful auction plus the strong foreign buying from foreign central banks suggests the Fed won't hike rates soon, strategists say. Mark Grant of Hilltop Securities headlined his report "Hint, Hint."

Monday, August 8, 2016

Here's What Gymnastics Judges See That You Don't



If you watched the U.S. women kick international butt in the Rio Olympics on Sunday, you're all set to watch them go for gold in the team finals on Tuesday. But after seeing Simone Biles's atmospherically high vault or Madison Kocian's slick bars routine, you were a little confused: The commentators kept talking about all the things that were wrong. And then the scores popped up, and the judges had found deductions for routines that, to your eyes, looked pretty much perfect.



At which point you probably turned to the person next to you and demanded, “Where the hell are all these deductions coming from?!”



If that's you, you're not alone.











It turns out that in gymnastics ― as in real life ― a woman can never be truly perfect. There are always faults to be found and nits to be picked. But you have to know what you're looking for.



Here are a few things to watch for if you're trying to understand why Olympics judges aren't handing out perfect scores like a bar giving out free drinks on ladies' night. Most of these you can only spot in the slow-motion replay, but international gymnastics judges are used to watching routines fly past them and picking out what a gymnast got right and wrong. 





First, the easy stuff: wobbles big and small. This means anything from a little jerk to the side, sometimes called a “balance check,” to a serious break in a gymnast's body line and interruption of her routine as she attempts to stay on the balance beam. Wobbles are penalized with deductions of 0.10 for little ones, 0.30 for medium ones, and 0.50 for the big ones you'll find hard to miss. The Code of Points, the 200-plus page rule book for gymnastics competitions, calls wobbles “additional movements to maintain balance.” People who are rooting for a gymnast who's doing one call them “tiny panic attacks.”



Next up, form errors. This can mean a separation of the legs when they're supposed to be together, which you'll find on all four events. Look out for it especially when gymnasts are rotating forward twice ― like in a bars dismount, or in a tumbling pass ― when they'll often do something called “cowboying.” That means they pull their legs apart and their knees up toward their ears, instead of rotating in the correct tuck position, with their knees together and tight to their chest. This form error can be put down to simple physics: Cowboying makes it easier to rotate faster.



You'll also find leg separations on bars, where lots of time is meant to be spent in a perfectly straight handstand position. As on vault, you may actually be able to spot those better than the judges can, because the camera gets a different angle than they do, and they don't use instant replay. Form errors can also mean bent knees when they're supposed to be straight. You'll often find these on vault and floor, where gymnasts tend to bend their knees early in anticipation of landing.





Once a gymnast is done being penalized for having her legs too separated, she can move on to being docked points for not having them separated enough. Split jumps and leaps, of which there are a lot in gymnastics, are meant to hit 180 degrees or more, and if they don't, the deduction can be 0.10 or 0.30, depending on how egregiously un-split the leap is.





Next, unpointed toes. You'll find them on bars, where gymnasts often flex their feet to avoid hitting them on the bar, or on leaps and jumps on floor and beam. Each time a gymnast fails to point her toes, she gets a 0.10 deduction. 





Another common place for deductions is landing errors, whether it's a dismount or a tumbling pass. That means steps out or slight hops (0.10 for each one), landing with legs or feet apart (0.10 each time), or landing bent over with a low chest (0.10 or 0.30, depending on how low she goes).



As you can see, it's a veritable cornucopia of critique, and we're not close to done.



If a gymnast attempts a twisting element (on floor, vault, beam or in a bars dismount), the twist must be clearly completed, or the judges consider it downgraded, say, from 3 twists to 2 1/2, which means the deduction is taken out of the difficulty score ― a gymnast only get credit for twists she completed, not ones she merely attempted. Watch the feet in twists, to spot whether they're crossed or separated in the air (0.10) or if they're not facing straight ahead when she lands, a sign she under-twisted.



Then, there's missed connections ― the best thing about Craigslist, but one of the hardest things in gymnastics. You'll notice these most on beam, where gymnasts are required to complete series of tricks without a break between them. According to the code, that means without a stop or a step in between, or obvious loss of balance, or obvious preparation before the next trick. It can be hard to tell where the line is here. A missed connection can be a lot like pornography ― you know it when you see it.





Another mistake that's easy to spot if you know what you're looking for is a long pause before attempting a trick, whether it's a wait before dismount from the beam, or in the corner before a tumbling pass on floor. Each time you do this, you get a deduction of 0.10. On floor, if you wait on two feet too many times, or take small shuffling steps to adjust your position before you tumble, that's an additional 0.10 each time. 



And we can't overlook insufficient height in flight elements. Those huge release moves ― where a gymnast lets go of the bar and either flies over it or does a somersault and then grabs the same bar again ― are incredibly impressive to watch. Judges are less easily impressed, though, and if the gymnast doesn't get enough air, they'll dock her 0.10 or 0.30, depending on how close to the bar she is.





Finally, though this list is far from exhaustive, don't forget excessive leg tapping. When a gymnast is winding up for a dismount on bars, she'll often do one or two full swings around the high bar ― those are called “giants.” Notice if, at the bottom of the giant, she lets her feet trail and then “taps” them up using her hips. This move adds more power to the giant and thus to the dismount, but if a tap is too big, the judges will take off 0.10.



These errors are hard to spot, unless you've had a lot of practice. But once you know what the judges are looking for, it's easier to understand how a perfect execution score inevitably eludes every gymnast.



In gymnastics ― as in life ― no one is perfect, and everyone makes mistakes. So, go forth and nitpick ― or, just sit back, ignore the little mistakes, and enjoy the sight of dozens of mindbogglingly strong women trying to defy gravity and, for a few seconds, actually succeeding.



 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Sexual Harassment Claims and Small Business Liability

It's 2016 -- by now every small business owner should know that sexual harassment cannot be tolerated in the workplace and even one sexual harassment lawsuit is one too many. Fostering a healthy work environment and preventing sexual harassment at...

Wednesday, June 22, 2016

High Court Says VA Must Open More Bids to Veteran-Owned Businesses

Sometimes but not that often everyone on the US Supreme Court agrees on a topic. That is what happened last week when the eight justices had to consider government contracts for veteran-owned businesses. The nation's highest court decided last...

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Partnering with Capital One to Launch Payment Rewards

When you Uber, chances are you don't think about your payment method very often. After all, you can hop in and hop out without ever having to pull out your wallet.


But sometimes how you pay for your Uber rides can make a difference - and today that's certainly the case. We're excited to announce that we've partnered with Capital One® to bring a new, rewarding experience to riders. Now, every 10th ride is free (up to $15) when you pay with a Capital One Quicksilver® or QuicksilverOne® card through March 2017.


And to give you more visibility and control over these benefits, we're introducing Payment Rewards - a way to discover, track, and redeem rewards right in the Uber app.


Here's how the new Payment Rewards in-app experience works:


Discover rewards: Access Payment Rewards from the payment menu in the app. Tap Unlock ride discounts to learn more about our first benefit, powered by Capital One. Don't have a Quicksilver card? Apply now!


iPhone6_Payment_Rewards (2)


Track progress: Once you have a Quicksilver card on file, you'll see a progress bar showing how close you are to earning your next free ride, both when requesting a ride and in the payment menu.


iPhone6_Request_Conf_Progress (1)


Redeem rewards: See when you have a free ride available and control when you use it. If you don't want to use it right then, simply tap Save for Later.


5. Request Ride - with Free Ride and save for later option


We're always looking for ways to make riding with Uber even more rewarding. Stay tuned for more from Payment Rewards in the future.


P.S.- Make sure you have the latest version of the Uber app to track your progress and redeem your free rides!


 


 

Friday, May 27, 2016

For an Income Boost, Look to Preferreds

Offering 5% yields and backed by high-quality banks, preferred stocks are a good way to boost income in a diversified fixed-income portfolio, writes Brian Rehling, global fixed income strategist at Wells Fargo, in a May 24 report.

But he has a few caveats. He doesn't think investors should overdo it and he doesn't think a lot of price appreciation is ahead. Read More»

 

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Dash-cam video: Deputies save woman from burning wreckage of truck vs. car collision

Indian River County (FL) Sheriff's Office deputies make rescue


The post Dash-cam video: Deputies save woman from burning wreckage of truck vs. car collision appeared first on Statter911.

How many synthetic genes does it take to sustain life?

Syn 3.0 bacterial cells  magnified about 15,000 times by an electron microscope. This is the world’s first minimal bacterial cell. Its synthetic genome contains only 473 genes. Surprisingly, the functions of 149 of those genes are unknown. Photo by Tom Deerinck and Mark Ellisman of the National Center for Imaging and Microscopy Research at the University of California at San Diego

Syn 3.0 bacterial cells magnified about 15,000 times by an electron microscope. This is the world’s first minimal bacterial cell. Its synthetic genome contains only 473 genes. Surprisingly, the functions of 149 of those genes are unknown. Photo by Tom Deerinck and Mark Ellisman of the National Center for Imaging and Microscopy Research at the University of California at San Diego


How many genes does it take to survive and grow strong? 473..if you’re bacteria. Synthetic biologists based in California have nailed down the essential genes for life in a species of bacteria, Mycoplasma mycoides. Engineered by many of the same people who sequenced the human genome, this minimalist microbe may serve as the broth for cooking up the core functions of life.


For example, scientists have cataloged the genomes of thousands of species, yet despite this prior research, no one knows the functions for 31 percent of the genes needed to sustain life in this synthetic germ.


“I think we’re showing how complex life is, even in the simplest of organisms,” geneticist and study co-author Craig Venter said of the work published today in the journal Science. One open question is whether the essential, yet mysterious genes of this synthetic microbe can reveal why so much of human genome — 85 to 92 percent — has lacked a discernible function so far.


This landmark find has been 20 years in the making at the J. Craig Venter Institute, and its origins formed the basis for the human genome project. In 1995, scientists at this institute sequenced the first genome for a free-living organism, Haemophilus influenzae. Later that year, the institute would partner with Clyde A. Hutchison III, a microbiologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and publish the smallest genome ever found for a self-replicating organism. Its owner: the bacteria Mycoplasma genitalium. Everything to follow came from this diminutive collection of genetic code.


Venter, Hutchinson and their colleagues realized if they wanted to solve the basic questions of life, they would need to work with the most minimal genome.


“The only way to do that would be by trying to synthesize a genome, and that started our 20-year quest to do this,” Venter said. In other words, they would need to create synthetic life.


Mycoplasma provided the ideal starting ground, given these bacteria contain so few genes. In 2010, the institute announced that they had completed step one in this mission. The scientists had assembled nucleotides, the building blocks of DNA, into a working synthetic genome for Mycoplasma mycoides. Mycoplasma mycoides is a relative of bacterial species that launched this project, but it grows faster, which expedites this brand of work.


That’s important because creating synthetic life requires numerous rounds of trial-and-error. To start, they had to stitch together 1.07 million DNA base pairs — the railroad tracks of genomic code — inside of a test tube. Each rail is chemically added one by one, but there’s a margin of error. The team wanted to create a precise replica, so they had to repeat the process until a facsimile of the microbe’s natural genome emerged. Six years ago, they announced their initial success and named this synthetic genome Syn 1.0. They named this genome Syn 1.0.

Steps in creating Syn 3.0. Major advances in DNA technologies have made it possible for biologists to now behave as software engineers and rewrite entire genomes to program new biological operating systems. Illustration and caption by J. Craig Venter Institute

Steps in creating Syn 3.0. Major advances in DNA technologies have made it possible for biologists to now behave as software engineers and rewrite entire genomes to program new biological operating systems. Illustration and caption by J. Craig Venter Institute


Today, the researchers introduced Syn 3.0, which they created by introducing mutations, one by one, into 901 genes of Syn 1.0. Through multiple iterations, this process exposed which genes were truly essential for the survival of Mycoplasma mycoides. The team landed on 473 genes that maintained the cells replication.


Some genes initially thought of as non-essential, because of what’s known about their jobs in other species, turned out to perform the same critical function as a second gene. In other words, the cell could survive without one of these genes, but not without both of them.


“I love their approach; people can argue over scientific results about whether or not a gene is essential, but the synthesis of this genome draws a line in the sand, and shows unequivocally what is possible,” University of California Los Angeles biochemist Sriram Kosuri, who wasn’t involved in the research, told GENeS.


It’s worth emphasizing that Venter and his team didn’t create new life. In essence, they cut spokes from a bike wheel in order to see how many are required to keep rolling.


“[Syn 3.0] displayed substantial defects in growth and morphology that suggest it is extremely unlikely that such a cell would survive outside of the laboratory. Hence any potential risks associated with [Syn 3.0] are minimal,” Samuel Deutsch, head of DNA synthesis and Assembly at the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, told GENeS.


Also, the 473 genes that are essential for Mycoplasma mycoides are not likely to be the same crucial genes for human life — or even other species of bacteria.


Still, there’s something special about starting from scratch. Syn 3.0 offers a foundation for adding new genes and seeing what they do, and the applications could be widespread, if not a long way from fruition.


“Our long-term vision has been to design and build synthetic organisms on demand where you can add in specific functions and predict what the outcome is going to be,” said Daniel Gibson, vice president of DNA Technologies at Synthetic Genomics who partnered on the project. “So we believe that these cells would be very useful for many industrial applications, from medicine to biochemicals, biofuels, nutrition and agriculture.”


The post How many synthetic genes does it take to sustain life? appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Friday, March 11, 2016

UN: Women and girls are ‘currency’ in South Sudan’s civil war

In a Skype interview, David Marshall of the U.N. describes findings in a new report on violence in South Sudan.


South Sudan’s government forces are encouraging its armed militias to take women and girls as “currency” in place of wages, a new U.N. report found.


Human rights atrocities, including rape, killings and looting, are taking place on both sides of South Sudan’s civil war, which has been raging for more than two years, according to the report released on Friday.


“In South Sudan, the reality is you’re either a loyalist (to the government) or you’re not. And if you’re not, you’re in peril of harassment, detention and death,” said David Marshall, coordinator of the U.N. human rights agency’s recent assessment of South Sudan.


“The youth (in government-aligned militias) were told by the army commanders to take what you can, including women and girls” since the fighters couldn’t be paid wages, Marshall told the PBS NewsHour’s Hari Sreenivasan. The government sends its armed forces into areas thought to contain the opposition in order to take the residents’ cattle and destroy civilian property including homes, hospitals and schools. Government officials have denied the findings.


Both sides accuse the other of targeting places of refuge, including churches, hospitals and U.N. bases. U.N. forces sent into South Sudan to protect civilians were blocked by warring parties from certain areas.


A woman reported being tied to a tree as her child was gang-raped, said Marshall. “For me, one of the most shocking findings is after two-and-a-half years of extreme sexual violence, how it’s corroding … the fabric of the community. So mothers have seen children gang-raped, they’ve lost their husbands, they’re on the run, they’re starving. And the communities are broken.”


The campaign of violence has continued even though South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir and opposition leader Riek Machar signed a comprehensive peace agreement in August. “There appears to be little political will to explore issues of truth, justice and accountability,” according to the report.


Since the fighting began in December 2013, more than 600,000 have fled to camps in Uganda, Kenya and Ethiopia, and 1.5 million people have been displaced within South Sudan, putting them in danger of severe food shortages and possible famine, the report said.


In Sudan, and now South Sudan, over decades there have been cycles of extreme violence followed by reconciliation, forgiveness and amnesties, followed by more violence, said Marshall. “There’s no meaningful justice and this is clearly the problem.”


The U.N. report recommends the political and military leadership are removed from power, investigated, prosecuted and punished. And a transitional government should not include anyone who orchestrated the violence and commit to justice, he said.



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Friday, March 4, 2016

Results from 58th Annual Science and Engineering Fair

Winners were announced on Thursday at the San Joaquin County Office of Education of the 58th annual Science and Engineering Fair.


Judges had spent the last two days reviewing 300 individual, group and whole-class projects, submitted by more than 600 K-12 students in the county. Overall, 26 schools from eight school districts, three private schools and three charter schools participated.


Several winners of the fair will proudly represent San Joaquin County in the California State Science Fair in Los Angeles in May. The winners are listed below:


Kindergarten through second grade:



  • Class winner: Mrs. Hoptry’s class for “Pop Goes the Kernel” (Bethany Elementary; Lammersville Unified)

  • 1st place (tie): Cade Riesenbeck for “Hot Marshmallows” (Dent Elementary; Escalon Unified)

  • 1st place (tie): Theodore Harp for “There is More Than One Way to Crack a Nut” (Dent Elementary; Escalon Unified)

  • 2nd place: Wyatt Riesenbeck for “Operation Parachute” (Dent Elementary; Escalon Unified)

  • 3rd place: Elijah Gori for “Let’s Race” (Lammersville Elementary; Lammersville Unified)


Third through fifth grade:



  • 1st place Science: Jordan Prawira for “Egg-cellent Parachute” (Altamont Elementary; Lammersville Unified)

  • 1st place Engineering: Genevieve Casazza for “Preventing a Water Pipe from Freezing Without Electricity” (Dent Elementary; Escalon Unified)

  • 2nd place: Mathilde Beckman-Forman for “Superhydrophobia Coating” (Wicklund Elementary; Lammersville Unified)

  • 3rd place: Jake Bowen for “The Effects of Video Games on Children’s Eyesight” (Bella Vista Christian Academy)


Sixth through eighth grade:



  • 1st place Science: Jacqueline Prawira for “Coffee-Doh Battery” (Altamont Elementary; Lammersville Unified)

  • 1st place Engineering: Anna Matthews for “Going Green-Water Detector” (Elkhorn School; Lodi Unified)

  • 2nd place: Alicia and Ashlyn Roice for “Cure the Burning Heart” (Altamont Elementary; Lammersville Unified)

  • 3rd place: Ashley Teele for “Save the Avocado!” (Bethany Elementary; Lammersville Unified)


Ninth through 12th grade:



  • 1st place: Baani Minhas for “The Effect of Honey on Shelf Life and Vitamin C Content of Fruits” (Mountain House High School; Lammersville Unified)


Environmental Awards

Environmental Award winners receive cash prizes donated by the San Joaquin County Audubon Society and the Synopsys Outreach Foundation.



  • Sanskriti Singh for “Does the Ocean Ever Freeze?” (Altamont Elementary; Lammersville Unified)

  • Miles McCarthy for “Filtration Station” (Tom Hawkins Elementary; Jefferson Elementary School District)

  • Bernice Lozasa for “Recycling Gray Water” (Questa Elementary; Lammersville Unified)






Tuesday, February 16, 2016

U.S. to Russia: 'Put up or shut up' on Syrian ceasefire

People rest in the ruins of a destroyed Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) supported hospital hit by missiles in Marat Numan, Idlib province, Syria, February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Ammar Abdullah   - RTX2776N

People rest in the ruins of a destroyed Medecins Sans Frontieres-supported hospital hit by missiles in Marat Numan, Idlib province, Syria, Feb. 16, 2016. Photo by Ammar Abdullah/Reuters

WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration, frustrated by Syria's ongoing violence, told Russia on Tuesday to "put up or shut up" about implementing a ceasefire in the Arab country, even as the U.S. backpedaled from an agreement for the truce to begin by Friday.


Washington and Moscow announced after at a conference in Germany last week that the ceasefire would start by Feb. 19, raising hopes of a major breakthrough in a war that has raged for nearly five years, killed more than 250,000 people, beset Europe with its worst refugee crisis since World War II and helped the Islamic State emerge.


But State Department spokesman Mark Toner on Tuesday only stressed the need to "see some progress on a cessation of hostilities in the coming days." He said he couldn't "say categorically that ... there must be a cessation of hostilities" by Friday.


Toner blamed Russia for the impasse, condemning it for "unacceptable" attacks on hospitals and civilians. Russia must exert influence with Syrian President Bashar Assad's government to halt its ground offensives, Toner said. Russia says it is targeting terrorists, not civilians.


Speaking after a U.S.-Asian summit in California, President Barack Obama echoed the criticism.


"Russia has been propping up Assad this entire time," Obama said. He described Russian President Vladimir Putin's decision to send troops and aircraft to Syria as "a testament to the weakness of Assad's position."


"A country has been shattered because Assad was willing to shatter it," Obama added. Russia, he said, "has been party to that entire process."


Despite all the recent talk of ceasefire, the conflict is threatening to escalate. Turkey said Tuesday it is pressing for ground operations in Syria amid fears that U.S.-backed Kurdish militants are making gains at the opposition's expense. Washington sees the Kurds as an effective fighting force against the Islamic State.


Little headway appears to have been made on securing humanitarian access to besieged areas throughout the country.


Last week's Munich agreement demanded that access be provided immediately amid Western charges that Assad is starving his opponents and civilians into submission. Toner said some aid has reached certain areas, despite no United Nations confirmation of successful deliveries. In Syria, U.N. peace envoy Staffan de Mistura said he hoped food and other supplies would make it through Wednesday.


The ceasefire announced by Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart last week appears most unlikely at this point. Toner said a U.S.-Russian-led task force that is supposed to map out the details of the truce still hasn't even met. He expressed hope of an initial gathering Wednesday.


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Monday, February 15, 2016

Here's What Happened Last Time An Outgoing President Made A Supreme Court Nomination


Just minutes after news broke Saturday afternoon that Antonin Scalia had died at 79, Republicans said they would not confirm President Barack Obama's nomination to replace the conservative Supreme Court justice -- no matter who it is. "Justice Scalia was an American hero," Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), a presidential candidate and member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, tweeted Sunday. "We owe it to him, & the Nation, for the Senate to ensure that the next President names his replacement."


Republicans control the U.S. Senate, which must approve Supreme Court nominees. They believe the next president could be a Republican who would nominate a conservative replacement for Scalia, instead of the liberal Obama would be likely to nominate.


It's tempting to look to history to figure out what might happen now. But there aren't any directly comparable recent episodes.


No president in recent memory has faced a Supreme Court vacancy that opened during his final year in office. Justice Anthony Kennedy, the court's current swing vote, took office during Ronald Reagan's final year in office. But Reagan had nominated him the previous November. He was Reagan's third choice -- after Robert Bork, who was rejected by the Senate, and Douglas Ginsburg, who withdrew from consideration. And the vacancy he was filling had opened the previous July.


The most recent broadly similar situation occurred in June of 1968 (an election year), when President Lyndon Baines Johnson, who had said he would not run for re-election, nominated Associate Justice Abe Fortas to take over as chief justice of the Supreme Court. Republicans and conservative southern Democrats filibustered Fortas' nomination, and Johnson eventually withdrew it.


But there are a few key difference between the Fortas situation and Scalia's passing.


First, Fortas was already on the court. The nomination was to make him chief justice, not to bring him on, and making him chief justice would not have changed the court's ideological makeup. (When Johnson nominated Fortas for chief justice, he also nominated Homer Thornberry, a judge and former congressman, to fill Fortas' seat. But when the Senate rejected Fortas for chief justice, Thornberry's nomination died, too.)


Second, there were ethical concerns involved. Fortas was criticized for accepting $15,000 for speaking at American University's law school -- money that was provided by corporations. Obama will aim to nominate someone whose ethics are beyond question.


Finally, today's politics -- in which most conservatives are Republicans and most liberals are Democrats -- are dramatically different than those of 1968, when both parties were split.


There's an informal Senate rule that came out of the Fortas fight that Republicans will likely claim applies here. That's the "Thurmond rule," named after former Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.), which, in the words of my colleague Ryan Grim, means "no lifetime judicial appointments would move in the last six months or so of a lame-duck presidency." Obama has more than six months left in his tenure, but remember, this is an informal rule -- it's not written down anywhere.


Mitch McConnell, the Republican Senate majority leader, controls the Senate's agenda. He's already said that the next president should appoint Scalia's replacement. And there's no telling whether Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), who heads the judiciary committee, will even allow Obama's nominee a hearing. He's been dragging his feet with lower court appointees as it is.


Expect a fight.


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Wednesday, February 3, 2016

2016 voters will be most diverse ever

Latino leaders and immigration reform supporters gather at Farrand Field on the campus of the University of Colorado to launch

By Nov. 8, nearly one-in-three eligible voters will be Hispanic, black, Asian or any other racial and ethnic minority. Photo by Evan Semon/Reuters


Voters in this year's presidential election will be some of the most diverse ever, according to the Pew Research Center. By Election Day, nearly one-in-three eligible voters will be Hispanic, black, Asian or any other racial and ethnic minority.


Pew diverse votersYoung Hispanics are the driving force behind a diversifying voting population. Many of these new voters are American-born and will turn 18 by Election Day. Pew writer and editor Jens Manuel Krogstad says that that makes Latino millennials a key demographic.


"They're almost half of all eligible Latino voters," he says. "That really stands out compared to whites millennials at just 27 percent."


The number of eligible voters is growing steadily overall. There are more than 10 million new eligible voters this election cycle compared to 2012. That increase also includes non-Hispanic, white Americans. The white electorate isn't declining, it just isn't growing at nearly the same rates as blacks, Hispanics and Asians. Krogstad says there's several reasons, one being an aging population. More whites are getting older and dying.


"There are also fewer white U.S. citizens turning 18," he says. "So as a result, white voters' percentage of the electorate fell from 71 to 69 percent since 2012."


READ MORE: Latino millennials could be major voting bloc — if they turnout


While immigration reform is a hot-button issue among Latino voters on both sides of the aisle, it's Asian-Americans who experienced the largest increase in eligible voters due to naturalization. Since 2012, nearly 60 percent of newly eligible Asian voters gained the right to vote from becoming naturalized American citizens. And by 2055, Asians will be the largest immigrant group in the country, potentially growing the voting population even more in the future.


According to Pew, the percentage of all minority eligible voters will continue to climb. And the changing face of the American electorate poses new outreach challenges for political parties looking to gain support among young people and minorities. Hispanics, blacks and Asians largely identify with Democrats while whites are more evenly split. Generational differences are also more common among whites.


But it's one thing to register to vote, it's another to show up to the polls. Across racial lines, minorities have lower voter turnout rates, especially among young people. And despite their growing percentage of the electorate, Hispanic millennials have lower turnout rates compared to black and white millennials. Krogstad says for Latinos, the youth is their greatest strength in terms of growing their political power.


"There's a lot of potential there for young Latinos to influence the presidential elections," he says. "The question is whether they will turn out to vote."


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Sunday, January 3, 2016

Vilmos Zsigmond, Oscar-Winning Cinematographer, Dead At 85


Cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond, who won an Oscar for his work on Steven Spielberg's "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," has died. He was 85 years old


Zsigmond, who was born in Szeged, Hungary, died on New Year's Day, Deadline reported. His business partner and friend Yuri Neyman confirmed the news on Facebook on Sunday afternoon. 





Throughout his career, Zsigmond was also nominated for Academy Awards for Michael Cimino's "The Deer Hunter" (1978), Mark Rydell's "The River" (1984) and Brian De Palma's "The Black Dahlia" (2006).


He became well-known after working on a group of movies in the 1970s including Robert Altman's "McCabe and Mrs. Miller," "Images" and "The Long Goodbye." 


Before becoming one of the most important cinematographers in the industry, Zsigmond worked as a photographer and lab technician in the 1960s. He was first credited as a cinematographer on the 1963 cult film "The Sadist." Through the end of the decade he continued to work on exploitation films, horror films and low-budget comedies, such as "Tales of a Salesman" (1965) and "The Monitors" (1969). 


In more recent years, Zsigmond worked on three Woody Allen films, including 2010's "You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger," and also shot a number of episodes of Mindy Kaling's "The Mindy Project" between 2012 and 2014.  


Zsigmond ranked among the top 10 most influential cinematographers in the history of film in a 2003 survey conducted by the International Cinematographers Guild.


He was also honored with lifetime achievement awards from the American Society of Cinematographers in 1999 and Poland's Camerimage festival in 1997


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Saudi Arabia Cuts Diplomatic Ties With Iran, Foreign Minister Says




DUBAI/RIYADH, Jan 3 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia cut ties with Iran on Sunday, responding to the storming of its embassy in Tehran in an escalating row between the rival Middle East powers over Riyadh's execution of a Shi'ite Muslim cleric.


Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir told a news conference in Riyadh that the envoy of Shi'ite Iran had been asked to quit Saudi Arabia within 48 hours. The kingdom, he said, would not allow the Islamic republic to undermine its security.


Iranian protesters stormed the Saudi embassy in Tehran early on Sunday and Shi'ite Iran's top leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, predicted "divine vengeance" for the execution of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, an outspoken opponent of the ruling Al Saudi family.


Jubeir said the attack in Tehran was in line with what he said were earlier Iranian assaults on foreign embassies there and with Iranian policies of destabilizing the region by creating "terrorist cells" in Saudi Arabia.


"The kingdom, in light of these realities, announces the cutting of diplomatic relations with Iran and requests the departure of delegates of diplomatic missions of the embassy and consulate and offices related to it within 48 hours. The ambassador has been summoned to notify them," he said.


Speaking on Iranian state television, Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said in Tehran's first response that by cutting diplomatic ties, Riyadh could not cover up "its major mistake of executing Sheikh Nimr."


The United States, Saudi Arabia's biggest backer in the West, responded by encouraging diplomatic engagement and calling for leaders in the region to take "affirmative steps" to reduce tensions.


"We believe that diplomatic engagement and direct conversations remain essential in working through differences and we will continue to urge leaders across the region to take affirmative steps to calm tensions," an official of President Barack Obama's administration said.



Tensions between revolutionary, mainly Shi'ite Iran and Saudi Arabia's conservative Sunni monarchy have run high for years as they backed opposing forces in wars and political conflicts across the Middle East, usually along sectarian lines.


However, Saturday's execution of a cleric whose death Iran had warned would "cost Saudi Arabia dearly," and the storming of the kingdom's Tehran embassy, raised the pitch of the rivalry.


Strong rhetoric from Tehran was matched by Iran's Shi'ite allies across the region, with Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, the head of Lebanese militia Hezbollah, describing the execution as "a message of blood." Moqtada al-Sadr, an Iraqi Shi'ite cleric, called for angry protests.


Demonstrators protesting against the execution of the cleric, Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, broke into the embassy building, smashed furniture and started fires before being ejected by police.


Iran's President Hassan Rouhani condemned the execution as "inhuman," but also urged the prosecution of "extremist individuals" for attacking the embassy and the Saudi consulate in the northeastern city of Mashhad, state media reported.


Tehran's police chief said an unspecified number of "unruly elements" were arrested for attacking the embassy with petrol bombs and rocks. A prosecutor said 40 people were held.


"The unjustly spilled blood of this oppressed martyr will no doubt soon show its effect and divine vengeance will befall Saudi politicians," Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was quoted as saying by Iran's state television.



PROTESTS


Nimr, the most vocal critic of the dynasty among the Shi'ite minority, had come to be seen as a leader of the sect's younger activists, who had tired of the failure of older, more measured, leaders to achieve equality with Sunnis.


His execution, along with three other Shi'ites and 43 members of Al Qaeda, sparked angry protests in the Qatif region in eastern Saudi Arabia, where demonstrators denounced the ruling Al Saud dynasty, and in the nearby Gulf kingdom of Bahrain.


Relatives of Nimr, reached by telephone, said authorities had informed them that the body had been buried "in a cemetery of Muslims" and would not be handed over to the family.


Although most of the 47 men killed in the kingdom's biggest mass execution for decades were Sunnis convicted of al Qaeda attacks in Saudi Arabia a decade ago, it was Nimr and three other Shi'ites, all accused of involvement in shooting police, who attracted most attention in the region and beyond.


Khamenei's website carried a picture of a Saudi executioner next to notorious Islamic State executioner 'Jihadi John', with the caption "Any differences?". The Revolutionary Guards said "harsh revenge" would topple "this pro-terrorist, anti-Islamic regime."


Saudi Arabia on Saturday summoned the Iranian ambassador to protest what it described as hostile remarks emerging from Tehran. On Sunday, Riyadh's Gulf allies the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Bahrain also summoned Tehran's envoys to their countries to lodge complaints.



IRAQ ALSO FURIOUS


In Iraq, whose Shi'ite-led government is close to Iran, religious and political figures demanded that ties with Riyadh be severed, calling into question Saudi attempts to forge a regional alliance against Islamic State, which controls swaths of Iraq and Syria.


Iraq's top Shi'ite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani described the executions as an "unjust aggression." The opinion of Sistani, based in the Shi'ite holy city of Najaf south of Baghdad, carries weight with millions of Shi'ites in Iraq and across the region, including in Saudi Arabia.


Despite the focus on Nimr, the executions seemed mostly aimed at discouraging jihadism in Saudi Arabia, where dozens have died in the past year in attacks by Sunni militants.


But Saudi Arabia's Western allies, many of whom supply it with arms, are growing concerned about its new assertiveness.


The U.S. State Department said Nimr's execution "risks exacerbating sectarian tensions at a time when they urgently need to be reduced," a sentiment echoed by EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini. The State Department also urged Saudi Arabia to respect and protect human rights.


France said on Sunday it deeply deplored the mass execution and said it reiterated its opposition to the death penalty in all circumstances.


In Istanbul, hundreds of protesters, some carrying pictures of Nimr and chanting "Saudi Arabia will pay the price," gathered outside its consulate on Sunday as riot police stood guard.


The four Shi'ites had been convicted of involvement in shootings and petrol bomb attacks that killed several police during anti-government protests from 2011-13. More than 20 Shi'ites were shot dead by the authorities in those protests.


Family members of the executed Shi'ites have denied they were involved in attacks and said they were only peaceful protesters against sectarian discrimination.


Human rights groups say the kingdom's judicial process is unfair, pointing to accusations that confessions have been secured under torture and that defendants in court have been denied access to lawyers. Riyadh denies torture and says its judiciary is independent. (Additional reporting by Sami Aboudi, Sam Wilkin, Noah Browning, Omar Fahmy, Katie Paul, Dubai newsroom, Michel Rose in Paris, Stephen Kalin in Baghdad, Laila Bassam in Beirut, Hamdi Istanbullu in Istanbul, Parisa Hafezi in Ankara and Jeff Mason in Washington; Writing by Kevin Liffey; Editing by Richard Balmforth)


 


 


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Friday, January 1, 2016

Dubai investigates New Year’s Eve fire that engulfed hotel

Investigators in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, launched a probe to determine the cause of a fire that broke out at The Address Downtown luxury hotel Thursday, a couple of hours before the city’s New Year’s Eve fireworks display.

Firefighters worked to snuff out the fire, which raged as the New Year’s event lit up the nearby Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest skyscraper. It took four teams of firefighters more than 20 hours to completely control the fire.

Dubai’s Media Office said at least 14 people suffered minor injuries, while one person had a heart attack from the overcrowding and smoke at the site. All those injured have since been released from the hospital, except for two — a pregnant woman and an elderly man — who are in good condition and were kept for “close medical observation,” Dubai’s civil defense said in a statement released Friday.

Although the cause of the fire remains unknown, the city’s media office said it originated outside the 20th floor of the hotel.

Dubai’s Media Office tweeted several photos of the damage to the interior and exterior portions of the building.

Flames engulfed the hotel while nearby, tens of thousands had gathered for the massive fireworks display. While onlookers waited for the event, they captured for social media the blaze and smoke that billowed from the 63-story building.

This story was updated.

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