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Storms and tornadoes leave trail of devastation across southern states and more than 200,000 without electricity. Last Modified: 17 Apr 2011 20:00 | ||
Three days of severe storms and tornadoes in the southern US have killed at least 39 people, downing power lines and wrecking hundreds of buildings along its path. North Carolina accounted for the bulk of casualties and property losses, with 22 people killed and more than 80 others injured, officials said on Sunday. Significant damage was reported in at least 15 counties and power was out to more than 200,000 people. Seven people died as a result of the storms in Alabama, seven died in Arkansas and one died in Mississippi, and two people were killed in Oklahoma when a tornado flattened buildings. It appeared to be the deadliest US storm since February 2008, when 57 people died from tornadoes in the south and Ohio Valley, said AccuWeather.com meteorologist Andy Mussoline, who said the 39 death toll may change. "I would expect that total to rise, unfortunately," Mussoline said. The storms began in Oklahoma on Thursday and then moved through the South and hit the East Coast by Saturday. There were 241 tornadoes reported, with 50 confirmed. Nuclear safety concern Dominion Virginia Power said the two nuclear reactors at its Surry Power Station in southeastern Virginia shut down automatically on Saturday when an apparent tornado touched down and cut off an electrical feed to the station. Backup generators operated normally and both units "are in safe and stable condition," the utility said in a statement. "No release of radioactive material has occurred beyond those minor releases associated with normal station operations. These minor releases are below federally approved operating limits, and pose no threat to station workers or the public," the Dominion Resources Inc. company said. North Carolina Governor Beverly Perdue declared a state of emergency on Saturday night and the National Weather Service confirmed at least eight tornadoes in the state. Statewide, high winds destroyed 60 houses and damaged 400 others, said Julia Jarema, a spokeswoman for the North Carolina Division of Emergency Management. "Many communities have downed trees, downed power lines and a significant amount of debris on the roadways," Doug Hoell, the head of emergency services, said late on Saturday. Progress Energy, the main utility in eastern North Carolina, said 220,000 customers were without electricity at The storm snapped hundreds of power poles and 30 transmission structures were damaged, company spokesman Mike Hughes said. In some areas, twisters swept up poles and wires and dropped them elsewhere. "There are some parts where a tornado took the utility structure away and we cannot find it," Hughes said. | ||
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Source: Agencies |
Sunday, 17 April 2011
Dozens dead as storms batter southern US
Nigeria's Jonathan takes big poll lead
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Incumbent president fares well in mainly Christian south as vote count continues and violence is reported from north. Last Modified: 17 Apr 2011 17:44 | |||
Early results in the Nigerian presidential polls show the incumbent, Goodluck Jonathan, leading in southern areas, while Muhammadu Buhari, the country's former military ruler, has attracted support from the country's Muslim north. Results continue to trickle in from what has largely been a peaceful presidential election, though violence has been reported from the north, where Buhari's supporters have expressed anger over perceived vote rigging. Early results on Sunday showed Jonathan had done well in much of the predominantly Christian south, including areas such as the most populous city of Lagos, where the ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP) had struggled in a parliamentary election a week ago. Reuters news agency said Jonathan had an "an unassailable" lead, having won a sufficient share of votes across the states by late afternoon to avoid an election runoff, assuming he also got the overall majority of the votes. So far, there has been no official reaction from other cadidates. The PDP has won every presidential vote since Nigeria returned to civilian rule in 1999. Al Jazeera's Yvonne Ndege, reporting the capital, Abuja, said: "It's safe to say that the cat is out of the bag, and that Jonathan has won this election." She reported earlier on Sunday that rioting had broken out in four of the country's 36 states, with the offices of the PDP being burnt down in one state after some voters suspected the party of vote rigging. "We're also told the official of the ruling party in another state had his home burnt down when some ballot boxes were found in his house," our correspondent said. "In Kano state, not far from Abuja, we're hearing that many voters refused to leave the polling stations, wanting to see all the votes counted. That caused some minor skirmishes." Crowd teargassed Al Jazeera's Ndege said that in the state of Taraba, police fired tear gas at a crowd that insisted on following the electoral commission's staff to a vote-collating centre to ensure results were not overturned. She also said that people speaking to Al Jazeera at polling stations were frustrated about living in a country that is the world's sixth largest exporter of oil, but where many still remain without basic services, such as electricity and clean water. "Corruption is also a major problem, and that's why people are acting and behaving so fervently, in terms of making sure that the vote is transparent, making sure it's free and fair," she said. Analysts say they are heartened by the fact that the poll is being taken seriously, but concerned at the possible repercussions of a north-south divide emerging in the results. "There's good news in this Nigerian presidential election: we're counting actual votes and people are interested in the count," Chidi Odinkalu, of the Open Society Justice Initiative, a non-governmental organisation, said. "And quite bad news: the country is badly divided, north vs south." 'Orderly and transparent' Festus Mogae, a former president of Bostwana and head of the Commonwealth observer mission monitoring the vote, told Al Jazeera he was "very impressed" with what he had seen, and described the elections as "orderly and transparent and therefore a pleasant surprise given that fact that is country has been notorious for flawed elections." He also said that the public has been "very, very patient and orderly". "Of course, I'm crossing my fingers, because the polls are not totally out, not all of them, and there have been isolated reports of violence but ... at the vast majority of polling stations, polling went very well," Mogae said. "Across the country it will be close," Nasir el-Rufai, a former government minister and Buhari supporter, told Reuters at a vote-counting centre in the capital Abuja. "My only fear is it will become a north-south issue if we see a situation where Buhari sweeps the north and Jonathan does well in the south. We may have to go to a runoff," he said. To win in the first round, a candidate needs a simple majority and a quarter of the vote in two thirds of the 36 states. There are more than 73 million registered voters and 120,000 polling stations. Final results could take days. A runoff between Jonathan and Buhari could risk polarising voters along regional lines in the country of 150 million, where ethnic and religious rivalries bubble near the surface. While international observers were positive about the elections, there were some reports of irregularities, including an Associated Press report that said boys who appeared to be under 18 - the voting age in Nigeria - were seen queuing to vote. Elsewhere, party officials helped people ink their fingers and mark their ballots. One party worker accompanied an elderly woman to drop off her ballot in the box despite regulations banning party workers from voting stations. And at one collation center in Lagos, volunteers carried blank ballots without supervision from election officials. Security forces were on high alert after an explosion at a police station in Maiduguri, in the country's northeast, early on Saturday before the polls were due to open - the second such attack in 24 hours. | |||
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Source: Al Jazeera and agencies |
Deaths reported as protests continue in Syria
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Two people reportedly killed near the city of Homs, a day after the president vowed to lift emergency law within a week. Last Modified: 17 Apr 2011 21:06 | ||||||
At least two people have been killed in protests near the central Syrian city of Homs, witnesses and activists say. Government sources told Al Jazeera that two policemen were killed in the town of Talbiseh on Sunday while other reports said protesters were killed. Our correspondent Cal Perry, in Damascus, reported that more than a dozen people had been wounded in what officials said was a "co-ordinated attack from both rooftop sniper fire and fire from the ground". He said it was unclear who was behind the firing. Officials blamed "foreign elements" while protesters said it was security forces dressed in civilian clothes. "The situation is incredibly chaotic", he said. The official news agency SANA reported that one policeman was killed in Talbiseh when "a group of armed criminals opened fire" on security personnel. Online activists told Al Jazeera that two civilians had been killed and many injured in Talbiseh. They said security forces opened fire as mourners gathered for a funeral for a person killed in protests a day earlier. Many people were arrested, they said. They also said five protesters, including a 14-year-old boy, were killed when security forces and "government thugs" broke up a rally in Homs, using live ammunition. Officials said "unknown assailants" were shooting from vehicles at people on the streets in Homs. Al Jazeera could not independently verify the differing accounts. Protesters beaten Earlier on Sunday, about 300 anti-government protesters took to the streets in the southern city of Suweida. Witnesses said they were attacked and badly beaten by government supporters. Mazen Darwish, an activist in Damascus, said two people had been injured and taken to hospital. "Protesters were sitting in the square, chanting slogans for political freedom," he told Al Jazeera. "After a few minutes, people in civilian clothes attacked them." There were also reports of demonstrations in Aleppo, Syria's second biggest city, in the coastal city of Baniyas, and in Homs.
Suhair Atassi, a rights activist, said on Twitter that 400-500 people were protesting in Aleppo, chanting slogans for national unity. In the town of Hirak, outside the southern city of Daraa, thousands of mourners at the funeral of a soldier reportedly chanted slogans calling on the president to step down, Reuters news agency reported. Sunday's demonstration came a day after Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, said the country's decades-long emergency laws would be lifted within a week and also promised a number of other reforms. Activists had called for protests across Syria on Sunday, which is Syria's Independence Day, commemorating the departure of the last French soldiers 65 years ago and Syria's proclamation of independence. The Damascus Declaration, an opposition umbrella group, called for peaceful protests in all Syrian cities and abroad to "bolster Syria's popular uprising and ensure its continuity". 'Blood of martyrs' In a statement posted on its website, the Damascus Declaration said the government was responsible for killing and wounding hundreds of Syrians who have been calling for their legitimate rights in the past month. "The regime alone stands fully responsible for the blood of martyrs and all that will happen next in the country,'' the statement said. Other activists also called for protests through social network sites. Assad promised on Saturday to end the emergency law, which had been a key demand of the protests which began one month ago. But the president coupled his concession with a stern warning that further unrest will be considered sabotage.
He warned there will no longer be "an excuse" for organising protests once Syria lifts emergency rule and implements a spate of reforms, which he said will include a new law allowing the formation of political parties. "After that, we will not tolerate any attempt at sabotage," Assad said in a televised address to his newly appointed cabinet. George Jabbour, a former member of the Syrian parliament who was an adviser to Assad's father, the former president Hafez al-Assad, said he thought the proposed reforms should be enough to quell anti-government demonstrations. "It was greeted with, I suppose, satisfaction, by most people, maybe all. I'm glad he [said in his speech] that the lifting of emergency law will strengthen rather than weaken the security of Syria," he told Al Jazeera. But our correspondent said what is more likely to keep protesters from the streets is gangs of armed pro-Assad protesters. Relatives' release urged Within hours of Assad's speech on Saturday, about 2,000 protesters staged a sit-in in the suburb of Douma, demanding the release of relatives arrested on Friday during a major day of nationwide protests, activists said. The official SANA news agency also reported around 2,000 people demonstrated in the southern protest hub of Daraa late on Saturday, chanting slogans for "freedom" and the lifting of emergency laws. The laws - in force since 1963 - restricts public gatherings and movement, authorises the interrogation of any individual and the monitoring of private communications and imposes media censorship. Assad has said armed gangs and a "foreign conspiracy" were behind the unrest, not true reform-seekers. SANA said on Sunday that security forces seized a large quantity of weapons hidden in a lorry coming from Iraq. It reported that the weapons were confiscated at the Tanaf crossing on the Syrian-Iraqi border. It said the shipment included machine-guns, automatic rifles, night vision goggles and grenade launchers. | ||||||
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Source: Al Jazeera and agencies |
Libyan rebels resist Ajdabiya assault
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Anti-government forces hold sway in key town but frontline fighters complain of lack of supplies and fear infiltrators. Evan Hill Last Modified: 17 Apr 2011 20:59
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Saturday, 16 April 2011
Wednesday, 13 April 2011
Prince Talal offers Egypt land options
Wednesday, 13 April 2011
Prince Alwaleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia is the world's wealthiest Arab. (File photo)
By DINA AL-SHIBEEB
Al Arabiya
The world’s wealthiest Arab, Prince Alwaleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia, has dismissed allegations that he had conceded land that he had bought to anyone.
According to his spokesperson, Mohammed Sami Jamal al-Din, the prince has offered two options for Egyptian authorities to consider. The first is that he be reimbursed the sum he paid for the 100,000 feddan (420 million square-meter) land, in addition to expenditures his company incurred. The second option is that he cedes half the land for LE50 per feddan for the youth of the revolution while he retains the remaining land. Authorities have yet to respond to his offer.
The prince’s purchase of the land in Toshka in 1998 was approved by the then minister of agriculture Youssef Wali. The land serves as part of a project that pumps water from Egypt’s Aswan High Dam reservoir and delivers it via a 30-mile canal to reclaimed farmland 60 kilometers from the Sudan border. This project has long been criticized for failing to create the fertile land that was promised.
Egypt's population is estimated at 85 million.
Since the toppling of President Hosni Mubarak on February 11, Egypt’s prosecutors have been looking into business transactions of former officials often accused of corruption and widely believed to have monopolized the country’s deals for their benefit.
Egypt’s second largest real estate developer, Palm Hills—which has links to Ritz Carlton, India’s Taj Hotels and Dubai’s Jumeirah Holding—is one example of a business that the authorities are investigating for alleged wrongdoings. On Thursday, a judicial panel concluded that Palm Hills’ purchase of a land in Cairo’s suburb was illegal, saying the company paid a sum considerably below market price, adding that the deal should be scrapped.
This is not the only allegation Palm Hills faces. It is accused of selling approximately a 960,000-square-meter parcel of land in New Cairo for a sum below market prices. This deal is said to involve Mr. Mubarak’s son, Alaa and his other son’s brother-in-law.
Palm Hills is believed to have paid $50.27 billion less than the market price for properties measuring 50 million meters in different locations. So far, the government has asked Palm Hills to return 798 million square-meters from its property in Six of October City which represent 1.7 percent of the total land owned by the company.
A financial analyst who wanted to remain anonymous told Alarabiya.net that the government’s decision on Palm Hills had created ripples in the real estate sector. Prices for building material have reduced, and developers are heading to Gulf states.
It is not just real-estate developers that are under authorities’ microscope. Ahmed Ezz, the founder of one of Egypt’s biggest publicly traded steel producers, Ezz Steel, and a close Mubarak ally, was arrested in February for illegally creating a monopoly. Along with 45 other companies, Ezz Steel was also banned from trading in the bourse for failing to meet disclosure supplies on whether they have assets or shareholders under investigation. The company resumed trading on March 24.
(Dina Al-Shibeeb of Al Arabiya can be reached via email at: dina.ibrahim@mbc.net)
Saudi writers suing preacher
Wednesday, 13 April 2011
Saudi Islamic preacher Mohammed al-Areefi. (File photo)
By KHALED AL-SHAEI
Al Arabiya
RIYADH—Several Saudi journalists and newspapers are filing a lawsuit against preacher Mohammed al-Areefi for labeling them “collaborators” and “rotten” in a sermon.
Their complaint is being filed with the Ministry of Islamic Affairs in this capital city.
In the sermon he gave last Friday, Mr. Areefi said Saudi papers and journalists working in them were unpatriotic and only catered to the needs of foreign powers. He also said that their writings were mainly driven by their whims and instincts.
Mr. Areefi’s accusations are part of his usual desire to be in the limelight, said Turki al-Sudairi, editor-in-chief of al-Riyadh newspaper and head of the Saudi Journalists Association (SJA).
“He wants to be the talk of the town and he actually succeeded in reaching that end, though in a negative way,” he told Al Arabiya.
Jasser al-Jasser, editorial manager of the Saudi newspaper al-Jazirah, said that Islamic preachers should work on uniting the people instead of sowing the seeds of sedition among them like Mr. Areefi had done.
“Areefi divides people into categories and lashes out at those with different ideologies,” he told Al Arabiya. “Hurling accusations at fellow Muslims violates the teachings of Islam. How can a preacher act against what he preaches?”
Mishari al-Thaidi, a writer, said that Mr. Areefi belonged to the hardline al-Sahwa (The Awakening) movement, which specifically targets journalists as part of their alleged battle against whoever they call “liberals.”
“Areefi and other members of the Sahwa act like there is a personal vendetta between them and the media. They like to promote the idea of ‘mercenary writers’ who serve the interests of foreign countries,” he told Al Arabiya.
Mr. Thaidi added that while Mr. Areefi alleged that foreign countries pay Saudi journalists, it was he and other preachers that belonged to the same line who are paid for the lectures they gave. These preachers earned much more than journalists, he said.
“Let us remember the survey by Forbes magazine about the wealth of those new preachers,” Mr. Thaidi said, referring to one of the American magazine’s popular features, lists of the world’s wealthiest people.
Saleh al-Tariki, a writer at the Saudi newspaper Okaz, said in an article that he opposed the use of mosques for inciting hatred against specific sectors of Saudi society.
“Friday sermons cannot be used to serve personal agendas and to tarnish the reputation of other Muslims,” he told Al Arabiya.
While Mr. Areefi was not available to comment, prominent preacher Sheikh Saad al-Suhaimi objected to the principle of generalization to which Areefi resorted in his attack against journalists.
However, Mr. Suhaimi added that some journalists were not patriotic enough when it came to certain crises that the kingdom experienced. He cited the conflict with Houthi rebels on the borders with Yemen, and the March 2011 protests—known as the Hanin Revolution—that demanded political reforms.
“Areefi was right about those journalists who either did not support the nation against sedition or were writing about trivial matters while drastic events were taking place,” he told Al Arabiya.
Mr. Suhaimi said that Mr. Areefi’s accusations were basically related to writers who had connections with foreign embassies, according to statements made by Saudi Interior Ministry Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz.
“Prince Nayef said that some writers were found to have suspicious connections with embassies of foreign countries and this is what inspired Areefi,” he said.
Mr. Suhaimi objected to writers’ reservations about using mosques or Friday sermons to discuss national or political issues.
“Mosques are a venue for discussing all kinds of topics and not only religious sermons. Also the imam has to come up with new topics or else worshippers will be bored,” he said.
Mr. Suhaimi accused writers who lashed out at Mr. Areefi of not practicing what they preached since they did not accept his opinion.
“How can they be promoting freedom of expression while they attack people who disagree with them? If they want to object to what Areefi said, they should do so rationally and not through attacking his person.”
(This article by Khaled al-Shaei of Al Arabiya was translated from Arabic by Sonia Farid, also of Al Arabiya.)
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