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Thursday, December 3, 2015

Oscar Pistorius Conviction Changed To Murder


An appeal judge said the original verdict was "flawed" and the athlete will now be re-sentenced by the original court and will almost certainly go back to jail
A murder conviction carries a much heftier sentence: a minimum of 15 years in South Africa.
Justice Leach said Pistorius must have foreseen that firing into the small toilet cubicle would have led to death - but went ahead anyway.
A picture taken on January 26, 2013 shows Olympian sprinter Oscar Pistorius posing next to his girlfriend  Reeva Steenkamp at Melrose Arch in Johannesburg
Reeva Steenkamp's mother, June, closed her eyes but remained silent as the decision was read out in the Bloemfontein court.
The athlete is currently under house arrest at his uncle's luxurious home in Pretoria after serving less than a year for killing his girlfriend on Valentine's Day 2013.
Pistorius had said he accidentally shot dead his girlfriend after believing there was an intruder in his house.
He was originally convicted of culpable homicide - akin to manslaughter - after a long-running trial under the glare of the world's media.
The prosecution appeal centred on the concept of dolus eventualis - a Latin legal phrase meaning the act was carried out by the accused knowing it would lead to death and the accused went ahead anyway.

The U.K. Launches Air Strikes Against ISIS in Syria

Britain Syria
                                              Parliamentary Recording Unit—AP                                             
(AKROTIRI, Cyprus) — British warplanes carried out airstrikes in Syria early Thursday, hours after Parliament voted to authorize air attacks against Islamic State group targets there.
Four Royal Air Force Tornados took off from a British air base in Akrotiri, Cyprus, shortly after the 397-223 vote by lawmakers in the House of Commons.
A Ministry of Defense spokesman told the AP the planes had conducted strikes in Syria, and details about their targets would be provided later Thursday,
He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to give his name when discussing operations.
The RAF has been launching strikes against IS targets in Iraq since 2014. The decision to expand the campaign to Syria came after an emotional 10 1/2-hour debate in which Prime Minister David Cameron said that Britain must strike the militants in their heartland and not “sit back and wait for them to attack us.”
Opponents argued that Britain’s entry into Syria’s crowded airspace would make little difference, and said Cameron’s military plan was based on wishful thinking that overlooked the messy reality of the Syrian civil war.
Cameron has long wanted to target IS in Syria, but had been unsure of getting majority support in the House of Commons until now. He suffered an embarrassing defeat in 2013 when lawmakers rejected a motion backing attacks on the forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad.
The mood has changed following the Nov. 13 Paris attacks, claimed by IS, that killed 130 people. Both France and the U.S. have urged Britain to join their air campaign in Syria, and Cameron said Britain should not let its allies down.
He said Britain was already a top target for IS attacks, and airstrikes would reduce the group’s ability to plan more Paris-style carnage.
“Do we work with our allies to degrade and destroy this threat and do we go after these terrorists in their heartlands, from where they are plotting to kill British people?” he said. “Or do we sit back and wait for them to attack us?”
He said that attacking IS was not anti-Muslim but “a defense of Islam” against “women-raping, Muslim-murdering, medieval monsters.”
Cameron was backed by most members of his governing Conservative Party — which holds 330 of the 650 Commons seats — as well as members of the smaller Liberal Democrat party and others.
Labour, the main opposition, was divided. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn — who represents the left wing of the party — spoke against what he called a “reckless and half-baked intervention.” But more than 60 Labour lawmakers, including senior party figures, voted in support of airstrikes, a move likely to make fissures between the right and the left of the party even worse.
Labour foreign affairs spokesman Hilary Benn said Britain could not “walk by on the other side of the road” when international allies were asking for help against IS “fascists.”
Britain already conducts airstrikes against IS targets in Iraq, and in August launched a drone strike that killed two British IS militants in Syria.
British officials say Royal Air Force Typhoon and Tornado fighter jets, armed with Brimstone missiles capable of hitting moving targets, would bring the campaign highly accurate firepower and help minimize civilian casualties.
President Barack Obama welcomed the British vote to join the air campaign in Syria, saying the Islamic State group “is a global threat that must be defeated by a global response.”
Critics claim British airstrikes will make little practical difference, and that ground forces will be needed to root out IS. Britain has ruled out sending troops, and critics of the government have responded with skepticism to Cameron’s claim that there are 70,000 moderate Syrian rebels on the ground.
Cameron stood by that claim Wednesday, though he conceded, “I’m not saying that the 70,000 are our ideal partners.”
Karin von Hippel, who was chief of staff to U.S. Gen. John Allen when he was the United States’ anti-ISIS envoy, said force alone would not defeat the militants — but neither would diplomacy by itself.
“The Brits have expertise and capabilities,” she said. Their involvement “brings moral authority and legitimacy to the fight.”
The British vote came as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said NATO members were ready to step up military efforts against the Islamic State group — and held out hope of improved cooperation between the West and Russia to end Syria’s four-year civil war.
A day after U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said the United States would deploy a new special operations force to Iraq to step up the fight against the militants, Kerry said other countries could provide assistance that did not involve combat. He said the effort to expand operations would require more medical facilities, intelligence-gathering, military support structure, refueling operations, aerial defenses and other action.
The German Cabinet has approved plans to commit up to 1,200 soldiers to support the anti-IS coalition in Syria, though not in a combat role.
Despite talk of increased international cooperation, tension has soared between Russia and Turkey after the shooting down of a Russian military jet by Turkish forces last week.
On Wednesday, Russia’s deputy defense minister, Anatoly Antonov, accused Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his family of benefiting from illegal oil trade with Islamic State militants.
Erdogan called the claim “slander” and said Turkey would not “buy oil from a terror organization.”
Russia and the United States also disagree about tactics in Syria, with Moscow backing Assad and Washington saying he must go.
But Kerry, speaking after NATO meetings in Brussels, said that if Russia’s focus on fighting IS was “genuine,” it could have a constructive role in bringing peace. He didn’t say whether the U.S. might be willing to bring Russia into its military effort against the group, as some members such as France have proposed.
The top NATO commander in Europe, U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, said the bulk of Russia’s air operations in Syria are still directed against moderate anti-Assad opposition forces, not Islamic State positions.
U.S. officials had hoped Russia would change its bombing focus after the Oct. 31 attack on a Russian airliner over Egypt, which killed 224 people.
Asserting that the “vast majority” of Russian sorties targeted moderate groups, Breedlove said coalition forces were “not working with or cooperating with Russia in Syria” but had devised safety routines to make it easier for both groups.
The British debate was sometimes bad-tempered as opposition lawmakers demanded Cameron apologize for remarks, reportedly made at a closed-door meeting, in which he branded opponents a “bunch of terrorist sympathizers.”
Cameron did not retract the comments but said “there’s honor in voting for, there’s honor in voting against” the motion to back airstrikes.
From the passionate speeches in the House to the anti-war protesters outside Parliament, the debate recalled Britain’s divisive 2003 decision to join the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq on what turned out to be false claims about Saddam Hussein’s alleged weapons of mass destruction. Many lawmakers came to regret supporting the war and ensuing chaos, and blamed then-Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair for lacking a plan for post-war reconstruction.
Labour leader Corbyn said that “to oppose another reckless and half-baked intervention isn’t pacifism. It’s hard-headed common sense.”
Labour’s Shabana Mahmood — one of the few Muslim lawmakers in Parliament — called IS “Nazi-esque totalitarians who are outlaws from Islam,” but said she opposed the strikes because “we cannot simply bomb the ground, we have to have a strategy to hold it as well.”
But Cameron said doing nothing was a worse option.
“The risks of inaction are greater than the risks of what I propose,” he said.
___
Lawless reported from London. Associated Press writers Danica Kirka and Gregory Katz in London, Suzan Frazer in Ankara, Deb Riechmann in Washington, Jamey Keaten in Brussels and Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad contributed to this report.



Freed IS Hostage Warns Against Bombing Syria

Nicolas Henin was held with four hostages - Americans James Foley and Steven Sotloff, and Britons David Haines and Alan Henning - who were all murdered by British extremist Mohammed Emwazi.
Former French hostage and journalist Nicolas Henin is greeted by his family moments after a transfer by helicopter from Evreux to the military airbase in Villacoublay
He was released in April 2014. In a short video by the opposition group the Syria Campaign, he warned that IS strikes were a "trap" that would push locals into the hands of extremists.
"We are just fuelling our enemies and fuelling the misery and disaster for the local people …" he said.
"The winner of this war will not be the party that has the newest, the most expensive or the most sophisticated weaponry but the party that manages to have the people on its side."
He blamed the rise of IS extremists on Syrian president Bashar al Assad's repression of the revolution and the lack of action by the global community, which led to "Syrians living in total despair".
"The international community failed to assist the Syrian democrat as they were yelling for their freedom," he said in the message coinciding with Britain's parliamentary vote in favour of airstrikes.
The key to forcing the "collapse" of IS was to find a political solution engaging the local people and imposing no-fly zones on all regions held by the Syrian opposition, he said.
Describing the jihadis who held him captive, he said: "They have a vision of the world that is self-coherent.
"This vision is like a parallel world.
"This Western jihadi was always telling me about the moving matrix, that now we are living in a different matrix.
"They follow the news intensively and every single event that happens in the world they will see it as a confirmation of their belief."
But he believes last summer's refugee crisis was a blow to IS propaganda and that extremists hated seeing hundreds of thousands fleeing a "Muslim land" to go to what IS regard as the "land of the unbelievers".

Suspects Named in California Attack

A law enforcement official has identified Syed Farook as the male suspect in a mass shooting in Southern California.
The official, who was briefed on the case, was not authorized to speak to the media about the ongoing investigation and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Police later identified the woman killed after the mass shooting as 27-year-old Tashfeen Malik. Family members say the two suspects were married.
Police say the two suspects were killed in a gunbattle with police after the shooting at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino.
Police say another person who was spotted running near the gunbattle was detained but they have said it is unclear if that person had anything to do with the shooting.

RAF Tornado Jets Bomb IS Oilfield In Syria



A Ministry Of Defence spokesman confirmed RAF Tornados had returned from their "first offensive 
Earlier, four Tornado GR4s - armed with Paveway IV guided bombs and precision-guided Brimstone missiles - took off from Akrotiri base in Cyprus.
Sky's Defence Correspondent Alistair Bunkall said the first missions were launched "barely an hour" after MPs backed airstrikes by a majority of 174.
"The target was an oilfield held by Islamic State in the east of Syria," he said. "This is a show of intent from the Government.
"Clearly they had some pre-planned targets ready to go if the vote was a yes ... they did not want to hang around."
The Tornados are a small but significant addition to the coalition strike force in Syria and more aircraft will soon be joining them from the UK.
Six typhoon jets from RAF Lossiemouth are expected to head to Cyprus along with more Tornados from RAF Marham in Norfolk.
Their British-designed Brimstone missiles are a vital asset, with the ability to hit targets with remarkable accuracy and limit collateral damage.
US President Barack Obama welcomed the UK's vote agreeing to expand military action against IS - saying it demonstrated the coalition's "unity and resolve".
On Wednesday night, MPs voted by 397 to 223 in favour of extending British action against IS - also known as ISIS, ISIL and Daesh - from Iraq into its Syrian stronghold.
The margin of victory was larger than most had predicted.

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Apple Puts iOS 9 Adoption At 70% Based On App Store Usage Numbers

It’s been two and half months since Apple released iOS 9, and the company just shared some adoption numbers on its website. According to Apple, 70 percent of iOS devices accessing the App Store are running iOS 9. This adoption rate is higher than last year’s adoption rate.
22 percent of iOS devices are running iOS 8, and 8 percent are currently using iOS 7 or earlier. Together, 92 percent of active iOS users are running iOS 8 or iOS 9. This is a key metric as it lets developers drop support for iOS 7 in their apps for instance. In particular, it lets developers use newer APIs and clean up their code base.
So how does this year’s number stack up to previous years? Last year, 60 percent of iOS users had installed iOS 8 on November 21. Two years ago, 74 percent of people were using iOS 7 by early December.
It looks like this year’s number is on par with iOS 7 adoption rate and slightly above iOS 8 adoption rate. As a reminder, many delayed updating to iOS 8 last year because Apple required a lot of free storage. This year, Apple released a slimmer update in order to make it easier to update.
Similarly, if your device runs iOS 8, you can update it to iOS 9. Apple didn’t drop support for any older device with this year’s major update. On October 16, 55 percent of iOS users had updated to iOS 9.
Screen Shot 2015-12-02 at 16.23.54
Comparatively, when it comes to Android, around 26 percent of users were using Lollipop or Marshmallow on November 2, 2015. Google’s latest mobile operating system was released in early October, so that’s why Marshmallow’s adoption rate is so low.
But even if you add Lollipop it doesn’t even come close to iOS 9 adoption rate. Google released Lollipop in November 2014. Apple’s fast adoption cycle is a key advantage when it comes to pushing out new features to end users. Many Android users have to buy a new phone to get a newer version of Android.
Screen Shot 2015-12-02 at 16.50.52

What the rest of the world wonders about America, according to Google

What kind of questions does the rest of the world wonder about Americans? Following the news of another deadly mass shooting, this time in San Bernardino, Calif., you can probably guess the answer to this question.

The autocorrect suggestions below, from different Google country pages around the world, show the most popular questions that people have about Americans. Google says its Autocomplete suggestions are generated by algorithms that reflect what other people are searching for, the content of web pages, and recent searches you have done in the past. They're not in real time, so it doesn't reflect necessarily what people are Googling this second, but it gives a good hint.

Google search records in English-speaking countries all suggest that the rest of the world is focused on America's fascination with guns. For whatever reason, the non-English results are more diverse.