Morning Shinbun Saturday September 18




Saturday’s Headlines:

Toyota reaches settlement with families after fatal crash

Prime time for moongazers

USA

Wide G.O.P. Field Tests the Waters for 2012 Contest

Capitol Hill reaction to poverty figures sidetracked by political concerns

Europe

Row with Merkel leaves Sarkozy more isolated than ever

Why Russia wants ‘Enemy No. 1’ Akhmed Zakayev back

Middle East

Special Ops and the ‘End of Combat’ in Iraq

Yom Kippur fasting day beginning; Israel grinds to a halt

Asia

Candidates kidnapped on eve of Afghan elections

Eviction game hits a nerve in China

Africa

Violence spirals out of control in east DRC

Latin America

First bore hole for rescue reaches Chile miners

Toyota reaches settlement with families after fatal crash



By the CNN Wire Staff

September 18, 201


Toyota has reached a settlement with two families over product liability claims following a crash that killed four family members, a spokesman for the automaker said.

California Highway Patrolman Mark Saylor; his wife, Cleofe Lastrella; a 13-year-old daughter, Mahala; and Saylor’s brother-in-law, Chris Lastrella, were killed when a Lexus sedan they were in accelerated uncontrollably on a freeway near San Diego last year and crashed over an embankment.

Lexus is a division of Toyota.

Prime time for moongazers

Cosmic Log

Alan Boyle  

The moon is getting its figurative “day in the sun” this weekend during a global celebration of lunar looks, and the great thing is that you don’t need to be a hotshot astronomer to join in.

More than 275 events in 40 countries are planned on Saturday during International Observe the Moon Night, with most of those events aimed at casual observers who usually wouldn’t give the moon a second look.

Our only natural satellite tends to get noticed only during unusual astronomical events – for example, when it blots out the sun during a solar eclipse (such as the one that occurred July 11), or when Earth’s shadow creates a total lunar eclipse (as it will on Dec. 22).

USA

Wide G.O.P. Field Tests the Waters for 2012 Contest



By JIM RUTENBERG and JEFF ZELENY

Published: September 17, 2010


DES MOINES – The Republican presidential field for 2012 is beginning to take shape in a period of intensive upheaval set off by the rise of the Tea Party movement, expanding the roster of potential candidates but presenting a more complicated road to the nomination.

The opportunities and pitfalls were on full display Friday – in some ways a kickoff to the Republican contest – as no fewer than six possible contenders made appearances in Washington and, in one especially closely watched case, here in Iowa, the first stop on the path to the White House. At least as many more Republicans are already taking steps to test candidacies of their own.

Capitol Hill reaction to poverty figures sidetracked by political concerns

 

By Michael A. Fletcher

Washington Post Staff Writer  


Deborah Weinstein, a longtime advocate for the poor, calls the news that one in seven Americans is living in poverty “a national emergency.” But for much of Washington’s political class, the shocking new poverty numbers provoked not alarm about the poor but further debate over tax cuts for the middle class.

“We know that a strong middle class leads a strong economy,” President Obama told reporters in the Rose Garden on Friday, as he used the new census report, which also showed that middle-class income has dipped slightly over the past decade, to continue making his case for limiting the cuts to family incomes under $250,000.

Europe

Row with Merkel leaves Sarkozy more isolated than ever



By John Lichfield in Paris  Saturday, 18 September 2010

The German Chancellor Angela Merkel has rubbished a claim by President Nicolas Sarkozy that she planned to follow France’s example and bulldoze Roma camps in Germany.

The humiliating disavowal by France’s closest ally left President Sarkozy more isolated than ever in his battle with the European Union over his campaign against Roma migrants from eastern Europe.

Why Russia wants ‘Enemy No. 1’ Akhmed Zakayev back

Russia considers Chechen separatist Akhmed Zakayev, picked up in Warsaw today under an international arrest warrant, as ‘Enemy No. 1.’  

By Fred Weir, Correspondent / September 17, 2010  

Moscow

Russia is demanding that Poland turn over Chechen separatist Akhmed Zakayev, who was detained in Warsaw Friday under an international arrest warrant.

Mr. Zakayev, whom Moscow describes as “Enemy No. 1,” had been placed on an Interpol “red notice” wanted list by Russia for alleged involvement in terrorist acts. Polish authorities said Friday they detained him as he arrived to attend an international conference of Chechens, pursuant to their international legal obligations.

Middle East

Special Ops and the ‘End of Combat’ in Iraq



By STEVEN LEE MYERS

CAMP SYVERSON, Iraq – One thing did not change after President Obama officially declared an end to the American combat mission in Iraq on Sept. 1: the size and role of American Special Operations forces here.

And if the first weeks of Operation New Dawn are any indication, their operations will test the public’s perception – cultivated by the administration – that American combat in Iraq is, in fact, over.

“We have stayed at steady state,” the American Special Operations commander here, Col. Mark E. Mitchell, said in an interview at his headquarters, a highly secured camp-within-a-camp at Joint Base Balad, north of Baghdad.

Yom Kippur fasting day beginning; Israel grinds to a halt

Yom Kippur: Israel all but shuts down for the duration of the fast day. There are no TV or radio broadcasts, businesses are shuttered and the streets are so devoid of cars that thousands of children take advantage of Yom Kippur to ride their bicycles down highways.

By Associated Press / September 17, 2010

Jerusalem

Israel came to a virtual standstill at sundown Friday as Jews began observing the start of the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, the 25 hours of fasting and contemplation known as Yom Kippur.

Though most Israelis are not religious, Israel all but shuts down for the duration of the fast day. There are no TV or radio broadcasts, businesses are shuttered and the streets are so devoid of cars that thousands of children take advantage of the day to ride their bicycles down highways.

Polls show that most Israeli Jews fast on Yom Kippur, also know as the Day of Atonement, and the Friday editions of the papers carried tips on how to prepare: have an egg for breakfast, drink 10 cups of water during the day and eat lots of carbohydrates.

Asia

Candidates kidnapped on eve of Afghan elections

 

By Julius Cavendish in Kabul Saturday, 18 September 2010

Militants kidnapped two parliamentary candidates and 18 election workers ahead of today’s parliamentary elections in Afghanistan in the latest sign that the vote will be marked by bloodshed and intimidation.

Reports of violence across the country, government seizures of fake voter cards and observer accreditation badges, and the closure of polling stations deemed too insecure added to a gloomy prognosis for the ballot, which election officials hope will not be a repeat of last year’s disastrous presidential ballot.

Eviction game hits a nerve in China

 

Tania Branigan

September 18, 2010  


BEIJING: It may lack the sophistication and addictive power of Farmville or World of Warcraft. But an online game in which a family fights off a demolition crew with slippers and bullets has hooked Chinese internet users.

The Big Battle: Nail House Versus Demolition Team has triumphed not through playability, but by tapping into anger about forced relocations.

”Nail houses” are the last homes left standing in areas slated for clearance, so called because they stick out when all around them have been demolished.

Africa

Violence spirals out of control in east DRC

First the rebel soldiers told residents of the villages in the mineral-rich eastern DRC not to worry. They were just there for a rest and would do no harm. But as dusk fell, the fighters encircled five villages simultaneously, and the gang rapes began.  

MICHELLE FAUL | WALIKALE, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO     – Sep 18 2010

Six or seven men lined up to take their turn. The victims ranged from a month-old baby boy to a 110-year-old great-great-grandmother.

They forced husbands and children to watch as they gang-raped the villagers for four days. Some victims told doctors the fighters raped them with their fists, saying “We’re looking for the gold.”

It took days for help to arrive, even though the villages are 20km from a camp of UN peacekeepers from India.

Latin America

First bore hole for rescue reaches Chile miners

Next step is to widen tube so the men can be plucked out

Associated Press

SANTIAGO, Chile – Rescuers achieved a key breakthrough in efforts to rescue 33 trapped miners on Friday, reaching the caverns where they are imprisoned with a 12-inch bore hole that will now be widened so that they can be pulled to freedom.

Atacama region Gov. Ximena Matas said the T130 probe had reached the mine area 2,070 feet  beneath the surface, near the chamber where the men have taken refuge.

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