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Friday, April 1, 2016

Bury St Edmunds Zeppelin terror raids remembered 100 years on

Civilian deaths inflicted by German airships during World War One are being remembered on the 100th anniversary.
Bombs fell on Bury St Edmunds and Sudbury during an attack by Zeppelin airships on the night of 31 March-1 April 1916.
Twelve people were killed in Suffolk, with further deaths in Essex.
A service of commemoration is to be held at Bury St Edmunds cemetery at 12:00 BST.

Bury St Edmunds, where seven people died, was believed to have been targeted because it was a base for the Suffolk Regiment and home to the Robert Boby engineering plant, which manufactured shells.
Fatalities from an earlier Zeppelin raid on the town, in 1915, were restricted to a dog.
Ron Murrell, of Moyse's Hall Museum in Bury St Edmunds, said: "It would have been terrifying to hear these bombs going off around you - the shock would have been like a spaceship turning up today.
"It would have had an effect on the morale of British soldiers serving on the western front knowing their families back home were at risk, and it would have bolstered morale in Germany."
Five people were killed in Sudbury - four civilians and an off-duty soldier.
Shirley Smith, Sudbury Town Council employee and co-author of No Glorious Dead, said: "It was the first time it brought terror on to the home front and the impact of the war was felt by civilians."
That night, the fleet of airships also dropped bombs on Braintree, Chelmsford and Brentwood in Essex.
A spokesman for Braintree Museum said four people were killed in the town that night, but accurate records for civilian casualties were not kept everywhere.
Ian Hook, curator of the Essex Regiment Museum in Chelmsford, said: "They were such a shock to British civilian life because we regarded ourselves as an impregnable island defended by the world's greatest navy.
"These Zeppelin air raids suddenly changed people's perceptions and they realised we were vulnerable to attack from the air."

Tesla Unveils Mass Market Electric Car Model

Electric car maker Tesla has unveiled its new, cheaper mass market model and revealed it had already taken 130,000 orders even though it is more than a year away from production.

Enthusiasts had queued overnight outside Tesla stores in California to put down deposits on the car, which will sell for $35,000 (£24,000), half the price of its current models, the Model S and the Model X, which start at $70,000 (£49,000).

Chief executive Elon Musk said it was the final step In the company’s plan to develop a "mass market, affordable car".

It is expected to have a range of more than 200 miles on an electric charge - around double what drivers currently get from competitors it is price range. Features will include automatic lane-changing.

Tesla is aiming to lift its car production to 500,000 by 2020, up from 50,000 last year.

It also plans to double the number of stores it has worldwide to 441 by the end of 2017.

Mr Musk unveiled a prototype of the Model 3 Sedan in Hawthorne, California, outside Los Angeles at an event attended by hundreds of Tesla owners and media.


Libya: UN to 'lift fund sanctions' if government regains control

The UN has said it will consider lifting sanctions on Libya's sovereign wealth fund if a UN-backed government can regain control of the country.
The sovereign wealth fund contains an estimated $67bn but has been restricted by sanctions since 2011.
The UN-backed unity government arrived in Tripoli on Wednesday but remains confined to the capital's port area after reports of gunfire in the city.
The new government is opposed by the coalition that controls Tripoli.
Over recent days, the city's airspace was intermittently closed to stop the new government, which has been based in neighbouring Tunisia, from arriving by air.
In a televised address, the head of the Tripoli authorities, Khalifa Ghweil, said he regarded the politicians as interlopers and said they were not welcome.
He urged "the illegitimate outsiders to surrender and be safe in our custody or to return to where they came from".
If the unity government can regain control of Libya, the UN's 15-member security council has pledged to lift an asset freeze on the Libyan Investment Authority (LIA). 
The freeze was imposed in 2011 to prevent former leader Muammar Gaddafi removing funds from the country. 
The security council unanimously renewed sanctions on Libya on Thursday and requested the new unity government confirm "as soon as it exercises sole and effective oversight" over the LIA, National Oil Corporation and the Central Bank of Libya.
But it is not clear how the unity government will be able to take over state institutions in Tripoli, given the stiff opposition they face.
Libya has been in chaos since the 2011 overthrow of Gaddafi by Nato-backed forces.
From 2014 it has had two competing administrations, one in Tripoli backed by powerful militias and the other about 1,000km (620 miles) away in the port city of Tobruk.
Western powers have recognised the new unity government as Libya's sole legitimate government but it faces opposition in east and west Libya.
In December, some rival lawmakers signed up to the UN agreement to form a unity government, but the deal has not yet been backed by all the country's many militia brigades that formed after the uprising.
The deal saw the formation of a nine-member Presidency Council, which includes the unity Prime Minister Fayez Sarraj who arrived with some of his deputies at a naval base in Tripoli on Wednesday.
Mr Sarraj said it was time to turn a new page and reconcile, saying he intended to build state institutions and implement a ceasefire.
"Revenge, alienation, antipathy, and hatred don't build a state," the AP news agency quoted him as saying.
UN envoy Martin Kobler said the politicians' arrival in Tripoli - after at least two failed attempts to fly in - marked "an important step in Libya's democratic transition and path to peace, security and prosperity".
US Secretary of State John Kerry said it was "not the time for obstructionists to hold back progress".

US tells Buhari Building Nigeria, not an overnight

The United States has acknowledged Nigeria’s challenges and told President Muhammadu Buhari administration that building Nigeria would not be “an overnight operation.”
The US Secretary of State, Mr. John Kerry, who stated this on Wednesday at the US-Nigeria Binational Commission’s meeting in Washington, said America wanted Nigeria to succeed.
 He stated, “You know there are challenges.  That’s what your election was about.  And so we are all aware that the world right now is facing many different challenges in terms of governance in various parts of the world and for various reasons: absence of capital, absence of structure, having to build capacity.
“These things take time.  Nobody is pretending that it’s an overnight operation.  It wasn’t for us.  And some people sometimes are very revisionist in America about our own history, but we’ve gone through some very difficult periods and very difficult issues.”
Kerry recalled that America took slavery out of its constitution after it had been written in, adding that it was no small task.
 He stated, “We’ve been through a history.  And what we’re trying to do is, really, share with people the shortcut, if you will – how you can manage to avoid some of the mistakes that we’ve made in the course of our own development in ways that can embrace the hopes and the aspirations of millions upon millions of people.  That’s what this is about.”
He added that Nigeria was finding very vibrant expression in every branch of the arts. He said that   like the United States, Nigeria “is a diverse country with a very large and assertive civil society.”
 Kerry said,  “The United States, let me be clear, is very encouraged by President Buhari’s commitment to an economy that is more diversified, less dependent on a single commodity for export earnings, and that means we need to develop sustainability.
“Sustainable growth depends on a climate that is welcoming to investment and respectful of the environment and of workers’ rights.  And we have learned in these last 25, 30 years that it is never a competition between the environment and development.
  “That is a false choice – completely false, and particularly in the context of today’s challenge of climate change.  You can develop in ways that protect the environment and also are competitive and provide jobs for people.”
According to him, Nigeria’s future is in Nigerians’ hands.  He said the United States would help Nigeria.
“Our development assistance this year will top $600m, and we are working closely with your leaders – the leaders of your health ministry – to halt the misery that is spread by HIV/AIDS, by malaria, and by TB,” he added.
 He explained that the US Power Africa Initiative was aimed at strengthening the energy sector where shortage in electricity had frustrated the population and impeded growth.
 He explained that America’s long-term food security programme, Feed the Future, would help to create more efficient agriculture and to raise rural incomes in doing that.
 Kerry said that under Buhari’s administration, Nigeria had been taking the fight to Boko Haram and  had reduced Boko Haram’s capacity to launch full-scale attacks.
 He, however, stated that the group remained a threat to the entire region, adding  that the US and Nigerian governments had been collaborating on new ways to institute security measures.
“The threat that is posed by Boko Haram is serious, but it must not – and I really believe this – it will not be allowed to shape Nigeria’s future.  Nigeria is a country with could almost boundless capacity for economic growth,” he stated.
  He also said no country could make progress with a culture of impunity.
 The US also supported Nigeria’s fight against corruption. The secretary of state also backed Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission’s efforts to prosecute corruption cases.
 Kerry said that no country, including Nigeria, could make progress with a culture of impunity.
 He stated, “We back the role of civil society and of the media in exposing corruption and in advocating for greater transparency.
“And we emphasise the message that in the United States, we don’t have a holier-than-thou attitude about this.  Believe me, we don’t.  We’ve had our own challenges with organised crime through some of our history, but we have fought back against it.
“And we have fought back against it with prosecutors, who are above reproach, above the possibility of any kind of interference, and that has made all the difference in the world.  You cannot have impunity in your culture – in anybody’s culture – and expect to be able to make progress.”
He added that all countries should emphasise that the fact that the soliciting of a bribe at any level of government could not be considered business as usual.
 In his address, Nigeria’s Foreign Minister, Geoffrey Onyeama, said it had not been easy for Nigeria.
“President Buhari has really persisted.  He is somebody, as you all know, whose unimpeachable integrity is respected in Nigeria and around the world.  And it was not an easy task for him in opposition to come into power, but as you found also with your incumbent President, anything and everything is possible,” he said.
 Meanwhile, the BNC in a communiqué at the end of the meeting said it discussed among other things, measures to counter violent extremism and encourage defections from Boko Haram; the importance of protecting civilians and safeguarding human rights; the need for integrated planning for the restoration of full civilian authority, resettlement and reconstruction; the need to understand and eliminate sources of terrorist financing; and ways to expand intelligence sharing.
 The BNC’s discussion on security cooperation was co-chaired by Mansur Dan-Ali, Nigeria’s Minister of Defence and US Deputy Secretary of State, Antony Blinken.

Brussels attacks: Airport 'ready to partially reopen'

The Brussels airport hit by deadly bomb attacks says it is ready to partially reopen but flights will not restart until Friday evening at the earliest.
Zaventem airport has been closed since 22 March when two suicide bombers blew themselves up in the departure hall.
In a statement, the airport's operators said the departures area would only be operating at 20% of normal capacity.
The attacks on the airport and another suicide bomb on the Brussels Metro killed 32 people and injured hundreds.
So-called Islamic State (IS) has said it was behind the bombings.
Thursday's announcement follows days of tests for a temporary check-in system at Zaventem.
"Brussels Airport Company has received the go-ahead from the fire services and the Belgian Civil Aviation Authority for a partial restart of passenger flights at the airport," the airport's statement said.
"The airport is thus technically ready for a restart of passenger flights in the temporary infrastructure foreseen for check-in. 
"However, the authorities have yet to take a formal decision on the restart date. Until Friday evening no passenger flights will take place at Brussels Airport."
It said the temporary system could receive 800 departing passengers per hour, far fewer than normal.
However, the baggage reclaim and arrivals area was only slightly damaged and has since been made ready for use, it added.
"The final step for the restart is the formal political approval. In the meantime, it has been decided that there will be no passenger flights until Friday evening."
Chief executive Arnaud Feist said earlier this week that the airport would take months to reopen fully.
Meanwhile, Brussels airport police have said they criticised security well ahead of the attacks. 
In an open letter to authorities published by Belgian broadcaster VRT (in Flemish), police said they had sent "strong daily signals regarding the overall security at the airport". 
They complained "there had not been any security control of passengers or luggage from the airport complex right up to the centralised body searches" area.
They also alleged that too many airport employees had criminal backgrounds. 
Police are still searching for the third man who took part in the airport attacks. The man, pictured on CCTV wearing a hat, was said to have fled the scene without detonating his explosive device.
The two airport bombers who died have been named as Najim Laachraoui and Ibrahim el-Bakraoui.
Bakraoui's brother, Khalid el-Bakraoui, blew himself up at Maelbeek metro station.
Police later found a computer in which Ibrahim el-Bakraoui left a final message.
The BBC has learned that the same computer contained plans and photos of Prime Minister Charles Michel's office and home.

World’s Wealthiest Banker Charged With Corruption in Brazil

Joseph Safra, the Brazilian banker said by many to be the world’s wealthiest, was charged Thursday with bribing officials in his home country to reduce his tax bill.
Brazilian authorities believe that Safra is linked to a scheme that paid tax officials $4.2 million in exchange for reduced taxes on a major Brazilian bank, Banco Safra, in which the billionaire has a majority stake, the Guardian reported.
The alleged payments took place in 2014 — the same year that Safra, who has an estimated net worth of $18.3 billion, bought the iconic London skyscraper known as the Gherkin.
Authorities say that Safra did not directly arrange the transactions, instead soliciting an employee to act on his behalf. A spokesperson for Safra Group, the family conglomerate Safra heads, has dismissed the charges as “unfounded.”
The charges placed against the billionaire are the latest in a nationwide campaign in Brazil to target and eradicate corruption. The attendant controversies have reached the highest levels of the country’s government: President Dilma Rousseff currently facescalls for her resignation following accusations that she exploited state funds to boost her re-election campaign in 2014.

India Kolkata flyover collapse: Dozens remain trapped

Rescuers have worked through the night to reach dozens of people believed to be trapped under a collapsed flyover in the Indian city of Kolkata (Calcutta). 
The bypass was under construction in the Girish Park area when it collapsed suddenly on Thursday night. 
At least 23 people were killed and scores were injured. 
The 2km-long (1.2 mile) flyover had been under construction since 2009 and missed several deadlines for completion.
Officials said more than 90 people have been rescued, some of whom where in hospital in a critical condition.
"Many of the people rescued have been seriously injured," police chief Ajay Tyagi told the Reuters news agency. 
"Many could still be buried below the debris."
The BBC's Justin Rowlatt in Kolkata says much of the rubble has been cleared.
Rescue workers have struggled to get cranes and other machinery through the narrow and congested streets of Burrabazar area where the incident happened.
An injured construction worker said he had been working on the structure before it collapsed and added that he had seen bolts sticking out of the metal girders.

Safety issues

"We were cementing two iron girders for the pillars, but they couldn't take the weight of the cement," Milan Sheikh told the AFP news agency. 
"The bolts started coming out this morning and then the flyover came crashing down."
The cause of the disaster was not immediately clear, but safety issues such as lack of inspections and the use of substandard materials have plagued construction projects in India.
The company in charge of the construction, IVRCL, said it would co-operate with investigators. However one of its senior officials said in a news conference that the collapse had been "an act of god" as the company had a good safety record.
The flyover was in one of Kolkata's most densely populated neighbourhoods, with narrow lanes, and shops and houses built close together, making it difficult to get heavy equipment to the scene. 
The BBC's Rahul Tandon in Kolkata described chaotic scenes on Thursday night, with officials trying to clear the area in case the structure collapsed further.
CCTV footage posted on social media appears to show the moment a 100-metre section of the structure collapses, hitting passers-by, auto rickshaws and nearby buildings.
Witnesses said other cars, buses and lorries were also hit. People are said to have been living in makeshift homes under the flyover.
Emergency teams are using sniffer dogs, concrete cutters, drilling machines and sensors to detect life, a rescue official told AFP news agency.
A spokesman for the National Disaster Management Authority (NDRF), Anurag Gupta, told AFP that soldiers and NDRF personnel were at the scene alongside hundreds of police and local officials.
The chief minister of West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee, has said the authorities will take "stringent action" against those responsible for the disaster. 

A recurring tragedy


  • August 2015: At least 11 people die after a building collapses near India's western city of Mumbai
  • July 2015: Five killed after a four-storey building collapses in Delhi
  • April 2013: 74 people die after a high-rise residential building in Mumbai collapses
  • June 2014: At least 10 people killed when a three-storey building in Delhi collapses
  • June 2014: At least 60 people killed when a building collapses in a Chennai suburb
  • November 2010: 69 killed and more than 80 injured in a collapse in Delhi
  • September 2009: Chimney of a power plant in Chhattisgarh caves in, killing 40 people