Author's posts

Morning Shinbun Thursday November 25




Thursday’s Headlines:

Decoded turkey genome could make better birds

USA

Mistakes Still Prevalent in Hospital Care, Study Finds

‘Hate group’ designation angers same-sex marriage opponents

Europe

Desperate fight to save the euro

Dubliners Angry at Government Rather than IMF

Middle East

The man who dares to take on Egypt’s brutal regime

Egypt cracks down on Muslim Brotherhood ahead of elections

Asia

Adult supervision from Beijing needed as Kims flex weapons

Aasia Bibi, Pakistani Christian, will get clemency or pardon: presidential aide

Africa

Ethiopia PM warns of Nile war

Man spends two months in Zim jail with untreated wounds

Latin America

Rio de Janeiro gun battles leave at least 14 people dead

Rage in the Time of Cholera

N. Korea warns of retaliation; Seoul orders security beefed up

S. Korea government in emergency meeting; joint exercises with U.S. move ahead

msnbc.com news services

INCHEON, South Korea – South Korea’s president vowed Thursday to boost security around islands near the site of this week’s artillery attack by North Korea.

His order to beef up security came as North Korea warned of more “retaliation” if Seoul carries out “reckless military provocations.”

“We should not let our guard down in preparation for another possible North Korean provocation,” South Korean President Lee Myung-bak said at an emergency government meeting Thursday.

Morning Shinbun Tuesday November 23




Tuesday’s Headlines:

WikiLeaks release: WikiLeaks to release three million secret US documents

USA

Elsewhere, profiling is preferred method of airport security

New poll undercuts GOP claims of a midterm mandate

Europe

Irish PM is forced to call election as €90bn bailout sparks unrest

Nicolas Sarkozy ‘calls journalist a paedophile’

Middle East

Plebiscite required for return of Israeli land

Intel on Iran has telling flaw

Asia

Aung San Suu Kyi reunited with her son after 10 years

Pakistan opens its door to US ops

Africa

International justice and Congo ‘warlord’ on trial

Constitutional referendum passes in Madagascar

Latin America

Bolivian president criticizes U.S. in front of Robert Gates

North and South Korea Exchange Dozens of Artillery Shells



By MARK McDONALD

Published: November 23, 2010


SEOUL, South Korea – North and South Korea exchanged artillery fire on Tuesday after dozens of shells fired from the North struck a South Korean island near the countries’ disputed western sea border, South Korean military officials said.

The South Korean military immediately went to “crisis status,” said a Defense Ministry official. There were widespread media reports that Seoul had scrambled F-16 fighter jets but the official declined to confirm whether the planes were in the air.

The South Korean broadcaster YTN reported that one marine had been killed and three others seriously wounded in the shelling on the island, in addition to two civilian casualties. TV footage showed large plumes of black smoke spiraling from the island.

Morning Shinbun Monday November 22




Monday’s Headlines:

Carbon emissions set to be highest in history

USA

Administration to Seek Balance in Airport Screening

‘Don’t ask, don’t tell’ to be released day earlier than planned

Europe

IMF and EU bail out Ireland amid fears of Eurozone contagion

Villepin backs ‘Karachigate’ claims against Sarkozy

Middle East

No return to Middle East talks without halt to settlement construction, warns Abbas

Israeli troops guilty of Gaza abuse

Asia

New Zealand mine explosion: ‘Every chance’ miners are still alive, says PM

Film executive quits Hollywood to help Cambodia’s poor

Africa

New twist in SA’s Aids war

Uganda’s salt miners dying for a climate change deal

High-seas piracy drama plays out in U.S. courtroom

Five Somalis accused of attacking a Navy ship await their fate in the first such trial in almost 200 years.

By Bob Drogin, Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Norfolk, Va. –

The moon was bright, the sea was calm, and the pirates easily spotted their prey – a large gray ship plodding through waves 576 nautical miles off the coast of Somalia.

Three men jumped from a command boat into an open skiff and raced toward the target. They opened fire with AK-47 rifles as they neared the starboard side, hitting a mast and several life lines.

No one was hurt, and the April 1 incident normally might have drawn little notice. Somali sea bandits have attacked several hundred freighters, tankers and other merchant ships this year. They have successfully hijacked 40 vessels and their crews and held them for ransom..

Morning Shinbun Sunday November 21




Sunday’s Headlines:

Oscar-winning producer says fear is behind neglect of British film-making talent

USA

Guns used to kill police officers: Where they come from and how they get in the hands of criminals

Extensive insider trading investigation drawing to close, official says

Europe

Eric Cantona’s call for bank protest sparks online campaign

The European ‘dream’ has finally collided with reality

Middle East

Iraqi parliament to get down to work

Rights group cautions Egypt on election harassment

Asia

Deep in a mine, the phone rings unanswered

‘Anyone Can Be Arrested at Any Time’

Africa

South African township struggles to cope with killing of Anni Dewani

 British mercenaries hired to take on the Somali pirates

North Koreans Unveil Vast New Plant for Nuclear Use



By DAVID E. SANGER

Published: November 20, 2010


WASHINGTON – North Korea showed a visiting American nuclear scientist earlier this month a vast new facility it secretly and rapidly built to enrich uranium, confronting the Obama administration with the prospect that the country is preparing to expand its nuclear arsenal or build a far more powerful type of atomic bomb.

Whether the calculated revelation is a negotiating ploy by North Korea or a signal that it plans to accelerate its weapons program even as it goes through a perilous leadership change, it creates a new challenge for President Obama at a moment when his program for gradual, global nuclear disarmament appears imperiled at home and abroad. The administration hurriedly began to brief allies and lawmakers on Friday and Saturday – and braced for an international debate over the repercussions.

Random Japan

SAY WHAT?

Officials in Toyama are taking multitasking to a whole new level with a project that trains hairdressers to spot emotionally disturbed customers who might be contemplating suicide.

How do you know when you’ve become an obasan? A survey of young Japanese women showed that muttering “Yoisho” is the number one indicator that you’ve made the transition from sexy young thing to a life of cutting in lines and holding on to other people when laughing.

Nissan has developed the world’s first Wrong-Way Alert Program, which gives clueless drivers a heads-up when they’re going against the flow of traffic.

Major insurance firm Nipponkoa became the first Japanese company of its kind to enter the daycare business

Morning Shinbun Saturday November 20




Saturday’s Headlines:

World Toilet Day: Top 10 nations lacking toilets

USA

BP faces new fines over second Alaska spill

U.S. wants to widen area in Pakistan where it can operate drones

Europe

Balotelli: The star playing a losing game against racism

Berlusconi aide was ‘liaison’ with mafia

Middle East

Egypt tells US not to interfere in its affairs

Iran dismisses UN rights criticism

Asia

Asylum seekers sew lips shut over camp conditions

Japan developers build a wall against yakuza

Africa

Diamond producers slam watchdog on Zim gems

Latin America

Angry gangs bring UN protest to Haitian capital

In Lisbon, they talk. In Afghanistan, they die.

Christopher Davies, 22, was the 100th British serviceman to die this year in a war that Nato’s leaders – gathered today for a crucial summit – have no idea how to win.

By Michael Savage and Kim Sengupta in Lisbon Saturday, 20 November 201

Christopher Davies, a guardsman with the 1st Battalion Irish Guards, has been named as the 100th member of Britain’s armed forces fighting in Afghanistan to die this year.

The 22-year-old’s death was given extra poignancy yesterday as world leaders gathered to formulate an exit strategy from the bloody and intractable campaign. It has now claimed the lives of 345 British servicemen and women since it began in 2001.

Guardsman Davies, from St Helens, Merseyside, died after being ambushed and shot by insurgents while on patrol in the Nahr-e Saraj district, Helmand Province, on Wednesday.

Morning Shinbun Friday November 19




Friday’s Headlines:

Conservationists launch appeal to save nature’s ‘ugly ducklings’

USA

Obama Forces Showdown With G.O.P. on Arms Pact

One family’s plunge from the middle class into poverty

Europe

Nato to debate Afghanistan at crucial Lisbon summit

Irish bank woes trigger urgent talks to end crisis

Middle East

Al-Qaeda ideologue held in Syria

How to win power in Egypt

Asia

Chinese woman sent to labour camp for retweeting

Aung San Suu Kyi: Determined to build on national euphoria

Africa

Madagascan coup attempt fizzling

Latin America

Amazon champ meets his match

The peace prize war

Nobel ceremony may be cancelled, for the first time in 106 years, after China threatens diplomats in row over jailed dissident

By Paul Vallely Friday, 19 November 2010

For the first time in the history of the Nobel Peace Prize the award may not be handed out this year after a strenuous campaign by the Chinese government to stop one of its citizens, the jailed human rights campaigner Liu Xiaobo, receiving the honour.

Under Nobel Prize rules, the 10 million kronor (£880,000) award can only be collected by the laureate or a close family member.

The government in Beijing placed Mr Liu’s wife under house arrest as soon as the award was announced last month and his two brothers are under surveillance.

Morning Shinbun Thursday November 18




Thursday’s Headlines:

WW2 file: The Guernsey resistance

USA

Terror Verdict Tests Obama’s Strategy on Detainees

General Motors’ public offering may net $20 billion

Europe

Economic crash to drive 100,000 out of Ireland

Champagne bubbles up from the sea bed after 200 years

Middle East

Israel finally leaves tiny village straddling Middle East’s political fault line

President to protect Saddam deputy

Asia

Kabul gets its own stimulus package

A whole new world for US and Asia: Can America adapt to the power shift?

Africa

Military officers in Madagascar claim coup takeover

Nigerian military rescue 19 hostages in Niger Delta

Latin America

Cholera, fear spread beyond the border

Senate to vote again on military gay ban  

Reid plans vote after Thanksgiving; White House urges passage before year’s end  

msnbc.com news services

WASHINGTON – Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Wednesday that he will call for a vote after Thanksgiving on legislation that would allow gays to serve openly in the military.

His announcement makes good on his pre-election promise to resurrect during the lame-duck session legislation that would repeal the 1993 law known as “don’t ask, don’t tell.”

NBC/WSJ poll: Record support for gays serving openly in the military.But it remains far from certain whether the legislation would have enough votes to pass. Several leading Republicans, including Sen. John McCain, have said they oppose lifting the ban.

Morning Shinbun Tuesday November 16




Tuesday’s Headlines:

Edward Wedbush’s roof leaks, but his wallet doesn’t

USA

Access to General Motors stock offering won’t include many of its rescuers

Erin Brockovich prepares for a real-life sequel

Europe

Nato eyes ‘fresh start’ with Russia

Battling Merkel calls for stability to end euro zone crisis

Middle East

Woman sentenced to death by stoning confesses ‘sin of adultery’ to Iran TV

Israel blames Egypt for Hamas rearm

Asia

Family leads outcry at blasphemy death penalty

Delhi building collapse: 51 dead

Africa

Senegal to open inquiry into deadly 2002 ferry sinking

Southern Sudan begins registration for independence vote

Latin America

Protestors in Haiti attack UN peacekeepers in cholera backlash

Europe Fears That Debt Crisis Is Ready to Spread  

 

By LANDON THOMAS Jr. and JAMES KANTER

Published: November 15, 2010


LONDON – European officials, increasingly concerned that the Continent’s debt crisis will spread, are warning that any new rescue plans may need to cover Portugal as well as Ireland to contain the problem they tried to resolve six months ago.

Any such plan would have to be preceded by a formal request for assistance from each country before it would be put in place. And for months now, Ireland has insisted that it has enough funds to keep it going until spring. Portugal says it, too, needs no help and emphasizes that it is in a stronger position than Ireland.

Morning Shinbun Monday November 15




Monday’s Headlines:

Online outrage after judgement of Twitter airport bomb threat joke

USA

SAIC Motor Corp in talks with General Motors over 1% stake

Junior Democrats in Senate seek to change the way chamber does business

Europe

Botched cabinet reshuffle gives Sarkozy’s rivals new strength

Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams to resign from British Parliament to run for seat in Irish Republic

Middle East

Mecca Metro: Muslims take new train to Hajj sites

In Jordan, a bookstore devoted to forbidden titles

Asia

‘I’m not free until the people are free’ – Suu Kyi

Ultra-small is beautiful for Japanese homeowner

Africa

Zim nationals held for bribes: MDC

South Sudan begins registration for independence referendum

Latin America

Haiti cholera death toll soars

U.S. would end Afghan combat by 2014 in plan  

A phased wind-down framework will be presented at a NATO summit  

By Peter Baker and Rod Nordland  

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration has developed a plan to begin transferring security duties in select areas of Afghanistan to that country’s forces over the next 18 to 24 months, with an eye toward ending the American combat mission there by 2014, officials said Sunday.

The phased four-year plan to wind down American and allied fighting in Afghanistan will be presented at a NATO summit meeting in Lisbon later this week, the officials said. It will reflect the most concrete vision for transition in Afghanistan assembled by civilian and military officials since President Obama took office last year.

Load more