Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Cleveland police: teen killed, 3 wounded as fighting ends with shots - CNN

New: Cleveland police chief said officers were within 100 feet of the tyre siteNEW: tensions of musician George Clinton on Twitter incident was after the show's 16-year-old died after being shot on Saturday night in Cleveland, the authorities sayThree, others are injured following the incident, which occurred after a local festival

They(CNN) - four people were shot, one fatally, before a man pulled out a gun during a fight in Cleveland and began to shoot at a crowd after a party, police said.

Nobody had been named or arrested suspect in the case of the Sunday night.

The shooting took place on Saturday shortly after the close of the eighth annual family unit in the Park festival, held an event throughout the day in the section of Mount Pleasant in the city of Northern Ohio.

Parliament-Funkadelic, the inductee's Hall of Fame of Rock and Roll in 1997 with George Clinton, was the titular night at the free event.

After the Group wrapped all around 9: 40 p.m. and Fireworks exploded five minutes later, the crowd began to heading home, Cleveland City Councilman Zachary Reed said this Sunday.

Later, a small group of young men got into a fight with fists in a parking lot about three-fourths of a mile from the Park, said Sergeant Sammy Morris, a spokesman for the Cleveland Police Department.

One of those involved pulled out a gun and began firing, said Morris. The murder of 16-year-old died after being shot in the head.

A 20-year-old woman who was shot in the neck was "conscious and talking about", said the spokesman for the police, while 14 and 22-year-old men were shot in the leg.

"My thinking here is happening again," Cleveland mayor Frank Jackson said at a press conference Sunday, explaining his reaction to learning of the incident. "And it is again, with the children."

Chief Constable of Cleveland Michael McGrath told reporters had officers at 100 m from the shooting.

"Still suspect had the audacity to misconduct the respect and get a gun and shoot the victim," said McGrath, adding that he believed that the other three were shot with the victim.

It was not clear whether any of those involved went to the concert. Morris noted that Clinton supporters and players from Ohio, who also did tend to be more than 40. The victims are in their teens or 20s.

Clinton, on his personal Twitter page, wrote: "this incident happened after the show and they are truly saddened and we send our sincere condolences to the families".

Reed, who organized the festival represents the area where he carried out the shooting, described the mother of the victim's 16 years as "devastated" when he visited on Sunday morning.

"Forget about the event, I'm just sad for the family," said.

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Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Cain, Perry lead conservative Western Summit survey for President - Denver Post

A presidential poll in the Summit of West Denver conservative overwhelmingly chose Herman Cain for President, with the Governor of Texas Rick Perry finalist.

Cain and Perry speak during the event for three days. The Senator from Pennsylvania, Rick Santorum, who is also the presidential candidate, had addressed the Summit.

A total of 508 votes votes and Cain had received 48 percent of the vote and Perry 13 percent, according to the organizers of events.

Conference attendees include volunteers Republicans, activists from the Party of tea, the Conservatives and libertarians, along with members of the community of faith, said John Andrews, executive director of the Institute centenary and organizer of the event.

The vote on the survey of Denver alphabetically listed the following announced and undecided Republican candidates. Their names, and percent of votes continues:

Michele Bachmann-9 %

John Bolton 4 %

Herman Cain-48 %

Newt Gingrich-1 %

Rudy Giuliani-0 %

Jon Huntsman-0 %

Gary Johnson-0 %

Thaddeus McCotter-0 %

Sarah Palin-1 %

Ron Paul - 2 %

Tim Pawlenty-1 %

Rick Perry-13 %

Mitt Romney-10 %

Rick Santorum-10 %


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Libya rebels making progress in the Western mountains - Washington Post

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JAWSH, Libya — Libyan rebels battling on multiple fronts attacked and held ground Sunday in committed fighting that reached from a besieged oil refinery city in the east to the rugged desert mountain towns in the west.

Revolutionary brigades in the western Nafusa Mountains are fighting on four active fronts, making slow but steady progress — and galloping ahead in search-and-destroy commando operations — in their drive to control vital highways that crisscross the barren hills and desert plains just beyond the Libyan capital of Tripoli.

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The success of the past few days and the still tenuous rebel advances in the mountains come at a price, as opposition commanders here worry that their lines are stretched too thin, leaving their rebel cadres composed of dentists, shop clerks and college students vulnerable to counterattack.

One of the rebel leaders in Zintan, Moktar Alakdar, left a meeting of commanders, shaking his head and saying, “Now we have too many fronts!”

Coming into the crossroads of Jawsh south of Tripoli, rebel fighters struggled for hours Sunday to enter the ghost town as snipers loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi fired from water towers and mosque minarets.

“He had very good aim,” said Mohammad Elesh, showing off his driver’s-side door where a sniper’s bullet entered his truck but did not strike him. A sandstorm of red dust clogged his throat and reduced visibility to a few hundred yards.

Many fighters have not been so lucky. The hospital in rebel-held Zintan held six fighters who were wounded by rocket shrapnel when they encountered surprisingly stiff resistance in their exploratory commando operations in the deserts farther south.

“They hit us hard,” said Mohammad Omar, whose left leg lay stretched out on a rubber mattress, a tube draining away black blood from his wound.

At the same time, opposition fighters in the mountains confess they are bewildered and disturbed by news from the rebel capital in Benghazi, where early Sunday one group of rebel fighters attacked another rebel faction now alleged to be a rogue militia whose members still support Gaddafi.

According to Mahmoud Shammam, information minister for the rebel’s Transitional National Council, security forces under the control of the council raided the suspect al-Nidaa Brigade about 3 a.m. on the western outskirts of Benghazi. Four rebels were killed and six were wounded in what became a five-hour drama.

“At 8 a.m., the barracks was brought under control. Thirty men surrendered and we took their weapons,” Shammam told reporters. “We consider them members of the Fifth Column,” meaning pro-Gaddafi elements operating among the rebels.

Al-Nidaa members are suspected of raiding two prisons in Benghazi last week and helping 200 to 300 inmates escape, including Gaddafi mercenaries and regime loyalists.

Benghazi is filled with dozens of semiautonomous brigades under various degrees of central control — a challenge that NATO officials and Washington diplomats say must be solved, and quickly.

The Benghazi clashes follow the assassination Thursday of a once popular rebel military chief, Gen. Abdul Fattah Younis, who was shot dead and his body burned under still mysterious circumstances.

Younis’s killing and the Sunday clashes between rebels in Benghazi have shaken the rebel coalition and raised doubts among their supporters.

But rebel fighting continued in the hours before Islam’s holy month of Ramadan. Opposition forces made gains in the oil town of Brega, where they have been struggling for weeks against minefields and deeply entrenched forces loyal to Gaddafi.

Libyans reporting on Facebook and Twitter networks, and witnesses on the ground, say rebel forces have also fought their way into the suburbs of the coastal city of Zlitan, just over 100 miles east of Tripoli.

The rebels appear split between their hunger to press forward and the fear that they will beaten back. An exhausted infantry commander, who fought for hours to take the town of Tekut in the western mountains, said “we need to hold this territory and advance slowly.”

But the impatience is palpable. “The important thing is we need to go. Time is running out. We have to liberate our country,” said Salah Matouk, a colonel who defected from Gaddafi’s army in March to fight in the western mountains.

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Katzenberg gives $ 2 million to group Pro-Obama - Wall Street Journal (blog)

A group founded by former aides of the White House are working to reelect President Barack Obama raised $ 3.2 million in the first half of 2011 through a small box of 25 donors, according to a Sunday at the Federal Election Commission.

Scope of action of United States of priorities most came from a single donation of 2 million dollars of Jeffrey Katzenberg, CEO of Dreamworks Animation.

The group?received?$ 500,000 worth of SEIU COPE, a political arm of the service employees International Union. Chicago?philanthropist?Fred Eychaner, a major democratic donor, you astillas in $500,000.

The Group was founded by Bill Burton and Sean Sweeney, former White House aides. Also started a group of members, the priorities of United States, to not disclose its list of donors.

The two groups are among a host of new committees for political action, working on behalf of both parties, which can raise unlimited amounts of individuals and organizations. The groups must act independently of the candidate and could not coordinate with campaigns of candidates?.

Jennifer Egan, author of "To visit from the Goon Squad", her won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction this year, he gave us action priorities $250.


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Monday, August 1, 2011

Syrians mark sombre Ramadan after 80 dead in Hama - Reuters

A view shows the smoke rising in the city of Hama in this still image taken from video July 31, 2011. REUTERS/YouTube via Reuters TV

1 of 2. A view shows the smoke in the city of Hama in this still image video from July 31, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/YouTube via Reuters Dragonforce Khaled Yacoub Oweis

AMMAN | Sun 31 Jul 2011 8: 20 pm EDT

Amman (Reuters) - Syrians began the Muslim Ramadan quickly in somber mood Monday after troops stormed Hama, scene of a massacre of 1982, in one of the bloodiest days of a five month uprising against President Bashar al - Assad.

Rights activists said that 80 civilians died in the assault with support from tanks on Sunday in the central city of Syria where Assad father crushed an armed rebellion of the Muslim Brotherhood for 29 years by sweeping neighborhoods and killing many thousands of people.

The security forces had besieged the city Muslim Sunni 700,000 for almost a month before the crackdown on Sunday on the eve of Ramadan, a month sacred when the Muslim fasting hours of the day.

Many attend mosque prayers at night, sometimes they can offer opportunities for the protests multiplied by Syria.

The State News Agency Syria, said the military introduced Hama to purge the armed groups were citizens terrorize, an account dismissed as "nonsense" by an American diplomat in Damascus.

The Agency said that eight police officers were killed while "against armed terrorist groups" in Hama.

Of Barack Obama of the United States President said he was dismayed by the violence of "horrible" from the Syrian Government against its people in Hama and promised to work with others to isolate to Assad.

"Syria is a place better when a democratic transition goes forward", Obama said in a statement.

Great Britain and France condemned the attack on Hama. Italy calls for a tough statement by the Security Council United Nations, where Russia and China have opposed previously any condemnation of Syria.

Germany asked the Security Council will meet on Monday, said a spokesman for the Mission of the United Nations. He said that Germany had asked the India, which holds the Presidency of the Council for August, scheduled closed consultations and these were probably will take place in the afternoon, New York time.

The plans of the European Union to extend the sanctions on Monday by slap active freezes and five Syrians travel bans. EU sanctions already go to Assad and at least two dozens of officials, as well as the Syrian companies involved in the military.

Turkey, one of the main allies of Assad until the uprising, said that he and the rest of the Muslim world were "very disappointed" by the violence that denied Assad before reform pledges.

The human rights organization SIRIUS Sawasiah said the civilian deaths number in Hama rose to 80. The independent group cited medical officials and witnesses in his report.

Syrian authorities have expelled more independent journalists since the riots anti-Assad began in March, making it difficult to verify reports of violence and victims.

Assad has relied more and more to the security services and units of the army, dominated by members of his minority Alawite sect, which has dominated the power from a 1963 Ba'ath party coup to quell the protests in Syria, where the majority of people are Sunni Muslims.

In a letter to the troops on the occasion of army day, Assad reiterated earlier statements that Syria faces a foreign plot to sow sectarian strife, adding that its aim was to "tear Syria in small statelets which are competing to satisfy those who have worked to cut off..."

"All the honorable people of Syria are confident that we will go stronger from the crisis," said Assad.

"They wanted to cause sectarian conflict that destroys everything." "We have achieved avoid sectarian strife and examine ourselves to find mistakes and deal with them."

MASSACRE INFUNDI? FEAR

The massacre of 1982 Hama instilled such fear that few Syrians are willing to openly challenge rule Assad family until this year, when many were inspired by the popular uprisings in much peaceful toppled Arab autocrats in Egypt and Tunisia.

United States press added J.J. Harder "authorities think that somehow you can prolong their existence through full war armed its own citizens," he told Reuters.

The Muslim Brotherhood accused the elite Alawi of waging sectarian war in Sunni attacking Hama.

"Syria is witness to a war of sectarian cleansing." The regime has linked its annihilation opened with the half moon of Ramadan. "Is a war about the identity and beliefs of the Syria nation... the Muslim Arab Syria, added in a statement."

Citing hospital officials, the Syrian Centre for human rights said earlier that the number of dead in Hama is likely to rise, adding that dozens were seriously injured.

A doctor, who did not want to identify themselves more by fear of detention, told Reuters that dozens of people were injured and blood for transfusion in short of supply.

"The tanks are attacking from four directions". They are firing their machine guns heavy randomly and conquering locks improvised by the inhabitants, "the doctor said by telephone, the sound of crackling Viet machine gun fire in the background."

Residents said Alawi "shabbiha" irregular militiamen had accompanied the forces in buses and set tents overnight at Qazo roundabout in the Western District of the city.

The State news agency said that military units were fighting gunmen armed with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.

The Syrian leadership accuses "armed terrorists" in the majority of murders during the revolt, saying that it has killed more than 500 soldiers and security personnel.

Another resident said that in the assault on Sunday, bodies were lying not charged in the streets and therefore the number of dead would rise. Army snipers were posted on the ceilings of the State electricity company and the main prison, he said.

Tank shells were falling at a rate of four a minute in the vicinity of Hama in the North, residents said on Sunday morning. Reduced supplies of electricity and water to the main neighborhoods, a tactic regularly used by the military when sweeping in restive cities.

South Syria, rights activists said that security forces killed three civilians when they stormed houses in the town al - Hirak, 35 kilometers (20 miles) northeast of the city of Deraa.

The Syrian Centre for human rights said that troops had arrested more than 100 people in Mouadamiyah in Damascus. A Western diplomat said he saw several tanks entered the suburb.

In the Eastern Province of Deir al - Zor, residents said at least 11 civilians were killed in a weekend offensive.

(Additional by Suleiman al - Khalidi in Amman, Oliver Holmes in Beirut, David Brunnstrom Brussels, Daren Butler in Istanbul, Catherine Hornby in Rome;) Written by Alistair Lyon; (Edited by Mark Trevelyan)


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Ramadan added new tumult to a region plunged into chaos - Globe and Mail

Uprisings in the Arab world promise to make Ramadan this year the party either before difference.

Ramadan in Cairo, which starts on Monday, always meant fasting by day and party by night: a big slowdown in economic production and a great surge in festivals at night, as well as an orgy of gifts and much, much time family.


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Father of girl lack N.H. says 'expected' his 'come home' - CNN

Celina Cass, 11, was last seen in her New Hampshire home on Monday night.Celina Cass, 11, was last seen at his home in New Hampshire on Monday night.Celina Cass, 11, was last seen Monday night in her homeAuthorities have got about 400 potential customers, but we still don't know where she isHer father said: "whenever you want at home..." "We are waiting for Daddy"

(CNN) - the father of a girl of New Hampshire's missing 11-year-old girl pleaded for her safe return Sunday, six days after she was last seen at his home.

Local, State and federal researchers continue to search for Celina Cass, with searches "by air, by land, by water" in the vicinity of hometown girl of West Stewartstown, tax New Hampshire Senior Deputy General Jane Young said this Sunday.

He noted that authorities, including members of the FBI, had received more than 400 prospects as of Sunday evening, but "at this time, still have not discovered Celina." The community of about 1,000 people is bordered by Vermont and is also very near the Canadian border.

Young said that "we are working tirelessly to bring her home".

Fr. Adam Laro said this Sunday recovering after being released recently from the hospital - sending a message to his girl that "Daddy is OK now, I'm putting much better." He did not describe in detail why it had been hospitalized.

He added that he, like others, is "asking where is my daughter" and hoping that is safe.

"When you want to come home, Celina, Daddy will be here waiting," said Palu'e.

Celina was last time in his room, on your computer, at around 9 p.m. on Monday evening, according to police. WMUR reported their parents told the authorities that the girl had disappeared when they went to wake her up on Tuesday morning.

Friends have created a Facebook page, "Missing Celina Cass," with one of the wheels which acts as a profile picture. According to the Aviator, Celina is 5 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs 95 pounds, with long brown hair and Brown eyes. She was last seen wearing a pink shirt, pink jacket and blue pants.

Young said this Sunday that researchers consider this a case of "missing". The authorities have offered more details on the case and has not issued an alert Amber. Among other pieces of potential evidence, Young said investigators are looking for computer and telephone records, trying to find clues.

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