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3/05/2012

‘Everyone could have been saved’ – Concordia tragedy survivors

Rescuers and divers work near the stricken cruise liner Costa Concordia lying aground in front of the Isola del Giglio (Giglio island) on January 26, 2012 after hitting underwater rocks on January 13 (AFP Photo / Filippo Monteforte)
They still can’t sleep at night since the Costa Concordia put them through the ordeal of their lives. A Russian couple that made it ashore safe and sound believe every passenger could still be alive had the rescue operation been better organized.
They are just two of the passengers from over 4,000 people onboard the massive cruise ship Costa Concordia. Denis Golovkin and Olga Gridneva still have trouble sleeping at night.
I don't understand how they couldn’t have rescued everyone considering the liner sank no further than half a kilometer from land, in warm weather,” says Olga.
Sixteen bodies have so far been recovered and 16 people are still missing after the 290-meter long cruise liner struck a rock near the Tuscan island of Giglio.
Olga and Denis got onboard only two and a half hours prior to the disaster at the port of Civitavecchia. For them it was just the beginning of their cruise, as the liner was picking up passengers along the way.
The couple had just had dinner – incidentally, to the tune of the Titanic theme song – and were back in their cabin when the ship hit the reef.
Our glasses, laptops and cellphones flew off the table,” Olga recalls. “The boat went too close to the shoreline where it wasn’t supposed to be. And we certainly felt it, like a really strong crash or shaking…”
They grabbed their life vests and Denis suggested taking warm clothes, considering the temperature outside was 12 degrees Celsius.
I thought that we might actually have to jump overboard,” Olga says, “nobody was supervising us, we spent an hour and a half on the deck, and the speakers were saying, "Don't worry, everything is fine…” It was very scary. It was a large ship, the height of a multi-storey building. When a sensible individual starts thinking that they might have to jump overboard they assess their abilities and realize that they don’t feel like jumping from this height at all.”
There were hardly any crew members in sight helping people. This Thursday, Italy's top-ranking Coast Guard official, Marco Brusco, said that the Concordia’s Captain Francesco Schettino lost "a precious hour," which made evacuating the ship even more difficult. Had the order been given earlier, "the lifeboats could have been launched calmly, people could have been reassured," Brusco said in Senate testimony.
Instead, the evacuation was chaotic. No one knew where to run, what to do and no instructions were given out so a lot of people couldn’t leave the ship for quite a while. Denis and Olga were lucky to get off in one of the first lifeboats. Olga says that passengers were totally misinformed about what was going on and that no one had a clear picture of the real state of affairs: “Nobody told us to go out on deck. We did that on our own, following our instincts and based on what we could see and understand.” 
Hours later, safe but still tense, people recounted their stories to each other. Many said there wasn’t enough room in the boats, with the situation only worsened by the fact that it was difficult to get the boats down to the water from the upper decks, especially on the portside where it proved simply impossible. Denis, an experienced seafarer, says the crew wasn’t up to the task: “I saw a crew member climb into the boat. He could hardly start the engine. On top of it all, before mooring at the pier, we had been circling and circling for a long time. In other words, the boat was driven not by a specialist.”
There were also reports that rich Russians were buying seats in the lifeboats – but Olga dismissed them with conviction in her voice: “One should bear in mind that this cruise was mostly for economy-class passengers. There were no particularly rich Russians on this ship.”
Twice the size of the Titanic and three times the length of a football pitch, the cruise ship Costa Concordia would have been much worse off had the tragedy happened further away from the shore and in colder waters. So far, the tragedy on the Concordia has claimed 16 lives. However as divers continue to comb the submerged parts of the ship, neither Denis nor Olga can comprehend how there could have been any casualties at all: “In the heart of Europe. There must have been enough lifeboats for everyone had the rescue operation been at least somewhat organized, or had there been some instructions. If so, I believe we wouldn’t have lost anyone.”
Source: Russia Today

Dozens dead, hundreds injured in Argentina as train crashes into platform



At least 50 people are reported dead and over 600 injured after a train crashed in a busy station in Buenos Aires. Dozens were trapped inside a damaged carriage but were eventually rescued.
According to reports the passenger train was going too fast and failed to slow down approaching the station. At the time it hit the platform its speed was 26 km/h. The train hit the stopping barrier of the platform, crushing the front carriage. The engine and first car were crushed together. One of the carriages was driven nearly six meters into the next.
Passengers said windows exploded as the tops of the train carriages became detached.
Between 1,000 and 2,000 people were traveling on the train. Police say 50 were killed, including one child. Around 30 passengers remained trapped for several hours in the train but all have now been taken to safety. Buenos Aires TV stations showed emergency workers cutting through the roofs of carriages in order to evacuate them.
Argentina’s transportation authority said 461 of some 600 injured were taken to hospital.
Officials in Buenos Aires say the train was in good order and the brakes worked well. It is not yet clear what exactly caused the accident.
“This train left the shop yesterday. From what we know, it braked without problems at previous stations,” Ruben Sobrero, union chief on the Sarmiento line, told Radio La Red.
Argentina has decreed two days of mourning following the accident and cancelled the official carnival celebrations that were due to take place on Friday, the Buenos Aires Herald reports. President Kristina Fernandez de Kirchner has expressed her condolences to the families of the victims.
Reuters / Enrique Marcarian
Reuters / Enrique Marcarian
Reuters / Enrique Marcarian
Reuters / Enrique Marcarian

Reuters / Enrique Marcarian
Reuters / Enrique Marcarian
Reuters / Enrique Marcarian
Source: Russia Today

Anonymous geek-topia: Hackers change Hungarian constitution

(AFP Photo / Valery Hache)
In Hungary, IT workers retire at 32 and get pensions equal to 150 per cent of their salaries. That’s according to Anonymous’ version of the Hungarian Constitution, which they posted after hacking the website of the Constitutional Court.
“Ideals and rulers of tyranny, or dictators represent but short periods of history. The people have the right to eliminate tyranny or rebel against it,” said the “new constitution” written by the Anonymous hacker group. 
The hackers have made their own adjustments to basic Hungarian law. Thus, according to the group’s version of the constitution, IT workers not only get to retire early on a luxurious pension, but are also exempted from paying tax. 
The text of Anonymous’ “ideal” constitution was swiftly removed from the court’s website.
Anonymous has wide experience of launching such IT attacks. They have succeeded in taking down the websites of large security companies, law-enforcement organizations or government agencies, including the White House, the CIA, FBI, Department of Justice, Universal Music Group, RIAA and Motion Picture Association of America.
On February 29 Interpol arrested 25 members of the group in Europe and South America. Not surprisingly, the group downed Interpol's main website in response.

Source: Russia Today

Around 30,000 evacuated as military depot catches fire



A major fire has broken out at an ammunitions storage depot in Central Russia, triggering explosions. At least 61 were injured and two elderly people have died from heart attacks said to have been brought on by the incident.
Over 25 have been hospitalized.
The fire that caused ammunition explosions at the depot broke out on Thursday night in Russia’s republic of Udmurtia, 28 kilometers south of Izhevsk.
Military personnel at the site and local residents totaling around 30,000 people have been evacuated to safety. The shockwave from the blast burst windows in the city of Agryz in Tatarstan, as far as 10 kilometers away from the artillery depot.
By 3pm Moscow time the fire at the ammunition depots had been localized, a source in the information department of the Ministry of Emergency Situations told Itar-Tass on Friday.
A task force of over 1200 people and 191 pieces of machinery are currently involved in the clean-up of the incident. 
Emergency ministry aviation has poured over 800 tons of water on the raging flames on Friday, Interfax news agency reports. 
A ministry source told the agency that seven aircrafts are currently working at the site. This includes four Il-76 airplanes, two Mi-8 helicopters and one Mi-26 helicopter.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said that despite the authorities claiming the fire had been contained, evacuees could not be returned to their homes until it was completely put out. 
Addressing the Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov, he added that those responsible for accident must be punished. 
“Two military depot fires in the span of two weeks – a pattern is emerging. The Defense Minister must report who will answer for that and how,” he said. “Since certain people failed to draw conclusions, we will have to strip them of their shoulder-decorations.”
This depot houses some serious artillery including rocket shells intended for Russia’s “Grad” multiple rocket launching systems and overall 5,000 truckloads of ammunition, a source from the emergency response headquarters told Interfax.
"The total weight of the projectiles is approximately 150,000 tonnes,” he said.
Details are still unclear as to what has caused the blaze, but officials believe that it may have been a cigarette.
An investigation has been launched by military investigation department of the Russian Investigation Committee in the Izhevsk garrison, reports Itar-Tass. A team of detectives rushed to the incident site. A criminal case has been opened based on charges of contravening the rules on arms use.
Panic broke out Thursday night in the central Russian republic of Udmurtia when a fire took place at the artillery depot at around 11:10pm Moscow time, sparking several explosions. An entire house is thought to have burned down in a nearby housing estate.
The scale of the blaze has caused widespread destruction to the transport links within the region. Railways have been stopped and trains rerouted. According to the latest reports, five trains cannot proceed on their routes. Some passengers will be taken to their destinations by buses.
The police have been ordered to prevent any instances of looting in the area surrounding the depot, Udmurtia’s Interior Minister Aleksandr Pervukhin told journalists on Friday.
A criminal case has already been opened against a man from the village of Malaya Purga, who stole products from a local liquor store.
"All attempts [at looting] will be suppressed in the toughest manner," Pervukhin said. "Seven other people suspected of looting have been detained."
The incident comes just a week after another ammunition depot fire in the neighboring republic of Bashkiria, which injured 12 people and destroyed more than 40 houses. Over 2,000 people have been evacuated from the area with fragments of artillery believed to have landed as far away as 3 kilometers from the site of the blaze.
Two years ago, another fire broke out at an artillery depot at the city of Ulyanovsk in November of 2009. Two naval personnel and eight servicemen were killed in that incident.
Source: Russia Today

Congo arms depot blasts kill over 200, injure 1,500

A plume of smoke can be seen over Brazzaville from across the Congo River in Kinshasa, capital of neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo. on March 4, 2012 (AFP Photo / Marc Hofer)
At least 206 people have been killed in a fire and a subsequent series of blasts at an arms depot in the east of the Republic of Congo’s capital, Brazzaville. Up to 1,500 have been seriously injured.
The explosions, which were caused by the fire, took place in the Regiment Blinde base in the riverside Mpila neighborhood, state radio station reported, citing Defense Minister Charles Zacharie Bowao. 
There have been no official statements about the cause of the fire.  
“According to sources at the central hospital we’re talking of around 200 dead and many injured,” said Betu Bangana, an official from the president’s office. "Some people are still trapped in their houses… They're saying the entire neighborhood of Mpila has been destroyed," he added.
At least three Chinese workers were among those killed, Xinhua news agency reports.  Dozens were injured, with some in a serious condition.
There were about 140 Chinese workers of the Beijing Construction Engineering Group at the construction site when the blasts occurred, according to the report.
Eyewitnesses at the scene reported that houses in the area had been flattened.
The Russian Embassy in Brazzaville, which is one kilometer from the depot, was partly damaged by the explosion.  Windows were shattered and one of the walls was partially destroyed by the force of the blasts.
Source: Russia Today

‘Most tragic disaster in years’: Poland’s deadly train crash kills 16 (VIDEO)



Two trains traveling towards each other on the same track collided head-on in southern Poland on Saturday night, killing 16 people and injuring 56 others. Polish Prime Minister has called it the most tragic train catastrophe in Poland in many years.
Scores of injured passengers have been ferried to hospital.
The trains, carrying about 350 people in total, collided in the small town of Szczekociny.
Officials say one train was traveling from the eastern city of Przemysl to Warsaw, while the other  – on the wrong track – was heading south from Warsaw to Krakow. 
They said they had not yet identified the cause of the malfunction. 
An investigation into the accident was launched on Sunday.
Prime Minister Donald Tusk visited the site of the tragedy early on Sunday calling it Poland’s “most tragic train disaster in many, many years.” 
Tusk said the trains were carrying passengers from Ukraine, Spain and France, but none of them appeared to be among the dead or badly injured. 
Source: Russia Today

Stolen .. Then invited them to dating

سرقها.. ثمّ دعاها إلى موعد عاطفي
Romantic signed a thief in the United States by police after he stole the woman thencalled her to ask her to accompany him in the dating.

The channel (so that any KDE) in Pittsburgh that a thief in the 26-year-old woman stole $ 60 dollars for the Taatrgel from a bus, then called her twice to ask her out with him.

The woman told police that the thief keeps track of contacts and was able to arrest himas he tries to attack the woman once again in front of a shop with her mother.

The victim said the man seemed very stupid.

Source: Jerusalem Arab

Dutch police hit the car for registration irregularities

«Misfortunes of some people the benefits of», the car owners are the most benefit from the warning made ​​by the unions, Dutch police to the Minister of the Interior, and includedgiving him a deadline of noon today (Monday) to respond to their demands need to prepare a new regulation on the salaries, retirement and only stopped editing offenses against vehicles that violate traffic laws, and said they would not move except in serious cases.
The media said that the Dutch police unions have threatened to Minister of Justice andSecurity Evo Obstltn that it will proceed with that, if the Minister has not made the bestproposal for the work contracts. Where trade unions demanded an increase on salariesof up to 3 per cent, in addition to improving the financial compensation for early retirement from work. She added that the deadline given to the minister is very time of 12 noon today (Monday), and if not made a good proposal, then the police will stop the registration of the offenses and the distribution of fines.


Source: Middle East

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