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Reported from harpazo Ready:
- Magnitude
6.2 Earthquake Hits Japan (October 19, 2005)
- A strong earthquake rocked eastern Japan late Wednesday, the
meteorological agency said. There were no immediate reports of
injuries, damage, or a risk of tsunami from the quake. The
magnitude-6.2 quake, centered off the coast of Ibaraki, shook
buildings in Tokyo and nearby areas, including Ibaraki, Chiba and
Fukushima prefectures. more...
- Bush
vows to oust 'every single' illegal (October
19, 2005)
- President Bush said yesterday that his goal is eventually to expel
"every single" illegal alien from the United States as his
administration pressed Congress to pass a guest-worker program.
Although conceding that the administration cannot immediately deport
the estimated 11 million illegal aliens who are here, Homeland
Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and Labor Secretary Elaine L.
Chao told Congress that a temporary-worker program would give aliens
an incentive to come out of hiding and let them work legally for six
years before being forced to return home. As Mr. Bush signed the
homeland security spending bill yesterday, he said Congress should
couple a guest-worker plan with increased border security.
"We're going to get control of our borders," he said
during the signing ceremony in the East Room. "Our goal is
clear -- to return every single illegal entrant, with no
exceptions."
It was a far cry from the president's usual rhetoric on illegal
immigration, which focuses on the need to reunite families and
provide labor for companies. Since taking office, Mr. Bush has
called for relaxing rules so that illegals from Mexico can remain in
the U.S. to take unpopular jobs. The sudden hard line comes as Mr.
Bush is trying to assuage his conservative political base, much of
which is upset over his nomination of White House counsel Harriet
Miers to the U.S. Supreme Court. Mr. Bush said the government has to
stop illegal entrance in the first place, needs to improve its
ability to catch illegal aliens who have crossed, and must ensure
that those who are caught are deported. more...
- Hurricane
Wilma swells into Category 5 (October 19, 2005)
- Hurricane Wilma strengthened into a Category 5 monster early
Wednesday with 175 mph (282 kph) winds, and forecasters said a key
reading of the storm's pressure showed it to be the most powerful of
the year. Wilma was dumping rain on Central America and Mexico, and
forecasters warned of a "significant threat" to Florida by
the weekend. The storm's power multiplied greatly over the last day.
It was only Tuesday morning that Wilma grew from a tropical storm
into a weak hurricane with 80 mph (129 kph) winds. At 2:30 a.m., US
Air Force reconnaissance planes measured Wilma's top sustained winds
at 175 mph (282 kph), making it a Category 5 hurricane, according to
the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Just two hours earlier,
Wilma had been declared a Category 4 storm with maximum sustained
winds of 150 mph (241 kph). Wilma's pressure readings Wednesday
morning indicated that it was the strongest hurricane of the season,
said Trisha Wallace, a meteorologist at the National Hurricane
Center in Miami. Wilma had a reading of 892 millibars, the same
reading as a devastating unnamed hurricane that hit the Florida Keys
in 1935. more...
- Aftershocks
shake Pakistani Kashmir (October 19, 2005)
- A strong aftershock has shaken Pakistan-administered Kashmir anew,
unleashing landslides and alarming survivors as well as the aid
workers toiling to get them supplies and medical help. Despite brisk
flights of helicopters delivering aid to quake victims in recent
days, an estimated half a million survivors in Pakistan's portion of
Kashmir have yet to receive help since the 7.6-magnitude quake
struck on 8 October, levelling villages and killing more than 54,000
people. Thousands desperately need medical care. The problem is
worst in the estimated 1000 settlements outside the main cities and
towns, said regional UN disaster coordinator Rob Holden. "Many
people out there we are not going to get to in time," Holden
said. "Some people who have injuries don't have a chance of
survival." Many of the 250 injured people flown by helicopter
into the regional hub of Muzaffarabad on Tuesday were being attended
by a qualified medic for the first time since the quake, Holden
said. Rates of infection and gangrene are rising, leaving amputation
the only option in an increasing number of cases. more...
- Minor
Earthquake Hits Near San Francisco (October
19, 2005)
- A small earthquake struck Tuesday evening about 80 miles north of
San Francisco. The 4.3-magnitude quake was recorded at 5:05 p.m.
about 5 miles northwest of The Geysers in northern Sonoma County,
according to preliminary reports from the U.S. Geological Survey.
There were no reports of injuries or damage, a sheriff's department
staffer said. The Geysers is located near a volcanic field where
subterranean steam builds up and helps make the area seismically
active, according to the USGS.
- Annan:
Israel Must allow Hamas to Run in Palestinian Elections (October
19, 2005)
- Annan said, however, that it was important that no armed militia
sit in the Palestinian parliament. He also said that the demand that
Hamas disarm itself before the general elections would only
strengthen the radical Islamic group on the account of other
moderate movements. Report: Palestinian factions vow to honor PLC
election results. Twelve Palestinian factions, but not Hamas, signed
an agreement Monday night to honor the results of the January 2006
elections for the Palestinian Legislative Council, media reports
said Tuesday. The factions also agreed that they would not carry
weapons while campaigning, Israel Radio reported. The Voice of
Palestine radio station said that Hamas did not sign the agreement
under instructions from its leader in Gaza, Mahmoud Zahar, who
objected to a clause in the agreement banning campaigning in
mosques. Meanwile, the Al-Quds al-Arabi newspaper, which is printed
in London, reported Tuesday that the Palestinian Authority security
forces are taking up position in the Gaza Strip, in particular
around the main command centers, fearing an attack on them by Hamas.
Last week, the Palestinian Authority asked Israel not to meddle in
the elections, and not to attempt to prevent the participation of
Hamas, lest this serve only to strengthen the organization. more...
- Strong
Earthquake Shakes Izmir, No Casualties (October
18, 2005)
- A strong earthquake with a magnitude of 5.7 on Richter's scale
shook western city of Izmir at 08.45 a.m. on Monday. Officials at
Kandilli Observatory Center said that the epicenter of the quake was
Aegean Sea. There were no immediate reports of any casualties after
the quake which was felt in Izmir and surrounding cities and towns.
Izmir Governor Oguz Kagan Koksal told reporters that according to
preliminary reports, there were no casualties or damage. Meanwhile,
Kandilli Observatory Center stated that aftershocks continue in the
region.
- Old
Europe votes for its decline (October
18, 2005)
- AFTER last week's creation of a German government in which Angela
Merkel will not even control the finance and foreign ministries, all
three of the great European nations that have dominated the
continent's history for 2000 years - Germany, France and Italy - are
effectively leaderless. They will almost certainly remain
politically paralysed at least until the French presidential
election of 2007. The power vacuum now covering the whole of
continental Europe is almost unprecedented, at least since the
disastrous period between the two world wars. But is the inability
of German, French and Italian voters to choose effective political
leaders and then to decide on clear programs of social and economic
reform -- or more precisely the unwillingness to do so -- a cause
for worry? Or should we instead regard it as a natural product of
the prosperous and comfortable societies that Europeans have created
and simply want to preserve? Before I try to answer these questions,
let me consider the main premise: that the German elections, along
with the French referendum, really do represent an important
punctuation mark in the history of Europe -- the point when the
ambitious market-oriented economic reform program that started in
the 1950s but really accelerated in the 1990s was brought to a full
stop. This is the clear message from the composition of the new
Government -- with all the key "reform" ministries,
including finance, labour, health, environment, transport and social
services, ceded to the Social Democrats, who only last month were
denouncing the modern market economy as a biblical plague of
locusts, laying waste to Germany's traditional welfare state. more...
- U.S.
Urges Israel to Ease Up on Palestinians (October
18, 2005)
- In a message also delivered privately by Lt. Gen. William Ward,
the U.S. security envoy in the region, the State Department said
that it condemned the attacks but continued to ask the Israeli
government "to take steps to ease the daily plight of the
Palestinian people." The State Department spokesman Sean
McCormack said "the Palestinian side" has an obligation to
fight terror and to dismantle terror networks. "It's important
to see action," he said, in sounding a now-familiar call for
Abbas and other leaders of the Authority. Israel, like the United
States, is a victim of terror attacks, McCormack said, and "it
is an important duty and responsibility of any government to protect
its own people." However, he said, "at the same time we
urge them, in whatever steps that they do take and keep their eye on
the ultimate objective which we all know and all sides share - two
states living together side by side in peace and security." On
the eve of the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, security officials raised
the alert level Monday evening after receiving dozens of terror
warnings, none place-specific. The move followed Sunday's drive-by
shooting attack. more...
- First
Results Show Victory for Iraqi Constitution (October
17, 2005)
- If approval is confirmed the constitution will be ratified and
elections in December will replace the transitional administration
with a four-year parliament and the first permanent government since
the 2003 invasion. Sunnis ended a political boycott by voting in
their millions to kill the document, ushering in a strategy of using
the ballot box as well as the bullet to register protest. The show
of strength appeared to have failed in its immediate aim but it
shifted the political landscape, creating opportunities and dangers
for the Iraqi government and US involvement in the country.
"The key here is the Sunnis have voted in large numbers. One
way or another, the Iraqis will be in a position to move
forward," said the US secretary of state, Condoleeza Rice.
"You defeat an insurgency politically as well as
militarily." The high turnout in three of the four largely
Sunni provinces exposed a serious split in the insurgency and marked
the community's first attempt to use peaceful means to challenge the
hegemony of Shias and Kurds. Failure to kill the charter could
produce a violent backlash by making Sunnis, resentful at losing
power since Saddam Hussein's fall, feel even more marginalized. more...
- Israel
weighs unilateral pullout from 90 percent of West Bank (October
16, 2005)
- The government of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is examining plans
for a multi-stage unilateral withdrawal from as much as 90 percent
of the West Bank. Officials said the Israeli withdrawal plans have
been discussed with the United States. On Oct. 20, President George
Bush was scheduled to meet Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud
Abbas, and last week Bush assured a Palestinian delegation that
Israel would withdraw from additional areas of the West Bank.
Officials said the Defense Ministry and military have been reviewing
a range of options for unilateral withdrawal in the West Bank by
2007, Middle East Newsline reported. They said the National Security
Council has drafted options for the removal of between 10,000 and
100,000 Jews from the area. "Only unilateral [withdrawal] can
work in this era," [Res.] Brig. Gen. Eyval Giladi, a senior
adviser to Sharon, said. "Israel determines where, when and how
it withdraws." more...
Reported from Steve Quayle:
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