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Snapchat Hackers Post Explicit Images Online

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 11 Oktober 2014 | 16.15

Explicit images taken with the photo sharing app Snapchat have reportedly been intercepted via a third party app and leaked online.

Users of the app, many of them teenagers, have apparently had their photos gathered over a number of years before being posted on a website.

The leak - dubbed the 'Snappening' - comes after the iCloud security breach in which nude photos of stars including Jennifer Lawrence and recently former Dr Who Matt Smith were published online.

San Francisco-based Snapchat said it was not the source of the latest leak and that it strictly prohibits use of third party apps, which are created by separate developers as "add-ons".

"We can confirm that Snapchat's servers were never breached and were not the source of these leaks," a spokeswoman said.

"Snapchatters were allegedly victimised by their use of third-party apps to send and receive Snaps, a practice that we expressly prohibit in our terms of use precisely because they compromise our users' security.

"We vigilantly monitor the App Store and Google Play for illegal third-party apps and have succeeded in getting many of these removed."

Snapchat allows users to share videos and images that "disappear" after up to 10 seconds. However, recipients can "screen-grab" and save the pictures if they wish.

The app came under fire earlier this year after hackers published 4.6 million Snapchat user names and phone numbers on a website.

Police and children's charities have previously warned teenagers about the dangers of using the app to send intimate photos.

In last month's so-called 'Fappening' scandal a hacker posted hundreds of naked images of celebrities on the online community 4Chan.

Jennifer Lawrence, one of the most high-profile victims, told Vanity Fair: "It's not a scandal. It is a sex crime."

Other victims include Kim Kardashian, Rihanna, actress Winona Ryder and Matt Smith's ex-girlfriend Daisy Lowe.


16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

Ebola Crisis: Alex Crawford's Special Report

In a week when the World Health Organisation declared deaths from ebola have reached over 4,000, Sky's Special Correspondent Alex Crawford gained exclusive access to a body recovery team in Liberia.

You can watch a special version of the highlights of the report, or watch the full documentary and read her full story.

Our Health Correspondent Thomas Moore looks in detail at this latest global health crisis in this Sky News special report.

:: Watch a special Sky News programme on the ebola crisis at 3.30pm today and 3.30pm on Sunday - available on skynews.com, Sky News for iPad and on Sky 501, Virgin Media 602, Freesat 202 and Freeview 132.

Video: Liberia Gripped By Ebola Virus Fear
Video: Africa Ebola Crisis: Special Report

16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

UN Warning As Deaths From Ebola Pass 4,000

Fears are growing worldwide about the spread of the ebola outbreak in west Africa as the number of people killed by the virus passed 4,000.

The figure came after staff threw medical gloves at the Spanish prime minister when he visited a hospital in Madrid where a nurse has ebola.

According to the World Health Organisation, 4,033 people had died from the disease as of October 8 out of a total of 8,399 registered cases in seven countries.

The sharp rise in deaths was revealed as the United Nations said aid pledges to fight the epidemic have fallen well short of the $1bn (£0.63bn) needed.

Meanwhile, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has predicted the number of cases could reach 1.4 million by January unless efforts to contain the virus are stepped up.

Video: Hospital Staff Throw Gloves At PM

On Friday the Canadian government advised its citizens to leave African countries worst hit by ebola, while arranging for travellers to be screened at its own borders.

It follows the decision by the US and Britain to begin ebola screening at major airports and in the UK's case at Eurostar rail terminals.

Serious concerns remained in Spain over how the virus could have spread in the country's main isolation centre at the Carlos III hospital in Madrid.

Video: Ebola Screening Coming To The UK

Healthcare workers told AFP the quarantine floor where 44-year-old nurse Teresa Romero was infected was shut last year as a result of spending cuts.

They said it only re-opened for two missionaries flown back from Africa with the disease in August.

Ms Romero, who caught the deadly virus while caring for the pair, was said to be in a "stable but serious" condition on Friday.

Video: 'We Responded To Medical Advice'

The hospital took in three more patients for observation on Friday, bringing to 17 the number under surveillance, including Ms Romero, her husband and other medical staff.

Elsewhere, a public building in Paris was briefly evacuated on Thursday when an African man became unwell. Test showed he did not have ebola.

In Macedonia people who had come into contact with a Briton who died after exhibiting ebola-like symptoms were quarantined.

Video: Ebola 'Could Become Next AIDS'

A Guinean man in Brazil feared to have ebola was also quarantined, although the authorities stressed it was a precautionary measure and he no longer had a fever.

The Moroccan government has called for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations to be postponed due to the epidemic.

Ebola causes fever, diarrhoea, vomiting and in some cases internal and external bleeding, and is spread by contact and the exchange of bodily fluids.

Video: How Doctors Should Deal With Ebola

16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

US Military: Airstrikes Alone May Not Stop IS

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 09 Oktober 2014 | 16.15

Airstrikes alone may not be able to stop the advance of Islamic State fighters in Syria, US officials have warned.

Barack Obama met military commanders to discuss the campaign against IS in Syria and Iraq amid fears troops would be needed on the ground.

"Our strikes continue, alongside our partners. It remains a difficult mission," the US President said.

"As I've indicated from the start, this is not something that is going to be solved overnight."

US-led airstrikes have continued on Kobani - where IS militants have been fighting a fierce battle with Kurdish forces - although senior commanders have warned the Islamists could still take the strategic border town.

Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby said: "Airstrikes alone are not going to do this, not going to fix this, not going to save the town of Kobani.

"We know that. And we've been saying that over and over again.

Video: Sam Kiley On The Battle For Kobani

"We all need to prepare ourselves for the reality that other towns and villages and perhaps Kobani will be taken by IS."

Rear Adm Kirby said troops would be needed to defeat IS, adding: "We don't have a force inside Syria that we can co-operate with and work with."

The US military's Central Command said American-led forces carried out 14 coalition strikes on Wednesday and 19 bombing raids near Kobani since Tuesday, in an attempt to help Kurdish militia.

"Indications are that Kurdish militia there continue to control most of the city and are holding out against ISIL," a statement said.

Video: Airstrikes Target IS In Border Town

Activists said the strikes killed at least 45 IS militants since Monday evening, forcing the group to withdraw from parts of the town.

Over the past few days, thousands of IS fighters armed with heavy weapons looted from captured army bases in Iraq and Syria had managed to push into some areas.

The fighting has forced 200,000 residents and villagers to flee and seek shelter across the border in Turkey.

Idriss Nassan, deputy head of Kobani's foreign relations committee, said the town was "still in danger" and more airstrikes were needed.

1/18

  1. Gallery: Protests Rage In Turkey Over IS

    Residents walk through a damaged street in downtown Diyarbakir following overnight clashes with police

  2. Violence erupted in Turkish towns and cities, mainly in the Kurdish southeastern provinces, as protesters take to the streets to demand more be done to protect Kobani

  3. Kobani, a predominantly Kurdish settlement which has been surrounded by Islamic State fighters for three weeks

  4. Kurdish protesters set fire to a barricade set up to block the street as they clash with riot police in Diyarbakir

  5. Flames are seen near a Turkish police vehicle in Diyarbakir during a demonstration of Kurds to demand more western intervention against Islamic State militants (IS) in Syria and Iraq

  6. Kurdish protesters set fire to a public bank

  7. A branch of Halkbank is set ablaze

  8. Kurdish protesters clash with Turkish riot policemen

  9. Police used tear gas and water cannon in Istanbul

  10. Smokes rises from the Gaziosmanpasa district in Istanbul

  11. A public bus burned by Kurdish protesters is pictured at the Gaziosmanpasa district

The Kurdish population, who live in many of the areas IS controls in northern Syria, northern Iraq and parts of southeast Turkey, has been pressuring Ankara to intervene to defend Kobani.

Turkey says it does not want the town to fall and has encouraged the US to set up a no-fly zone and a humanitarian corridor (buffer zone) on the border.

France is backing calls for a buffer zone and the US and Britain said they were willing to "examine" the idea of a safe haven.


16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

Canada Authorises Airstrikes Against IS In Iraq

By Sky News US Team

Following a request from the US, the Canadian parliament has voted to authorise airstrikes against the Islamic State militant group in Iraq.

The motion introduced by Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservative Party passed 157-134 on Tuesday.

It allows airstrikes in Iraq for up to six months, and explicitly rules out using ground troops in combat operations.

The combat mission includes up to six CF-18 fighter jets, a refuelling tanker aircraft, two surveillance planes and one airlift aircraft.

About 600 airmen and airwomen will be involved.

"The threat posed by ISIL is real," Mr Harper said in a statement, referring to the Islamic State by one of its acronyms.

Video: The Brutal Battle For Kobani

The US has been bombing IS in Syria for more than two weeks with the help of Arab allies, and hitting targets in Iraq since August.

European countries have joined the campaign in Iraq but not in Syria.

It is unclear how effective the airstrikes are in weakening the group.

IS appears close to capturing the strategically important town of Kobani near the border with Syria.

The White House welcomed Canada's deployment.

"Canadians and Americans have fought alongside each other in several major conflicts over the past century, and we are grateful for Canada's further contribution against terrorism," a White House statement said.


16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

The Apocalyptic Prophecy Fuelling IS Militants

An ancient prophecy that sees an "infidel horde" in a monumental battle with an Islamic army in the Syrian town of Dabiq has apparently been seized upon by IS fundamentalists.

The Sunni Muslim tale dates back more than 1,300 years and tells of the "horde" flying 80 banners before an Islamic triumph that triggers the end of days.

It has become a fundamental part of the philosophy that drives Islamic State militants.

Having captured Dabiq in August, the town's symbolic significance far outweighs its relatively minor strategic importance to the group, compared with cities it controls such as Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq.

But as the militants come under heavy bombardment from the air by the US and allies seeking to halt their march, Dabiq is increasingly becoming a rallying call.

Video: Sam Kiley On The Battle For Kobani

Shadi Hamid, a fellow at the Brookings Institute, said: "It raises morale.

"It is fair to assume that the vast majority of (IS) fighters believe in this type of talk."

The prophecy itself was made by the Prophet Mohammed, according to his companion Abu Hurayrah's report, or hadith.

Abu Hurayrah is described as the most prolific narrator of hadith - accounts of the Prophet Mohammed's deeds, teachings and sayings - in Sunni Islam, adding to the importance of the prophecy in the eyes of IS.

Video: Where Does IS Get Its Money?

Among IS supporters on social media, Dabiq has become a byword for a struggle against the West, with the US-led coalition portrayed as modern-day Crusaders. IS has even named its official magazine Dabiq.

One Twitter user in Tunisia recently wrote: "The lions of Islam have raised the banner of the Caliphate in Dabiq. Now they await the arrival of the Crusader army."

The prophecy has been passed down in different versions, but in all cases it features a great battle between a Muslim army and the forces of non-believers.

IS supporters have been interpreting a series of recent events as further evidence of its truth.

Video: Is Town 'About To Fall' To IS?

The US-led coalition's members now number more than 60 countries, with many watching closely in anticipation of when the prophecy's "80 banners" are reached.

Comments by US General Martin Dempsey on the possible need for ground forces have also been seized on by some as a signal, with supporters on Twitter using the hashtag: "It is Dabiq, by God."

In reference to the prophecy, one user simply posted: "When you despair of your air power, you will find us waiting in Dabiq."

Anjem Choudary, a radical British Islamist preacher who has expressed support for IS, said he did not believe Muslims sought to make the foretold battle a reality.

1/10

  1. Gallery: The Moment RAF Jet Attacks IS Truck

    The RAF carried out its first airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Iraq on 1 October, 2014 (All pictures: MoD)

  2. Tornados destroyed a heavy weapon position, which was attacking Kurdish forces, and an armed pick-up truck (pictured). The red circle shows the path of the missile fired at the vehicle

  3. The strikes were the first since MPs voted to support aerial raids in Iraq last Friday

  4. The targets were in the northwest of Iraq

  5. The moment the truck, which had a mounted machine gun, was destroyed by a Brimstone missile

  6. A plume of smoke rose above the area

  7. The strike was successful, according to an initial assessment, said Defence Secretary Michael Fallon

  8. The Tornados safely returned to their base at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus after the sortie

  9. Six of the GR4 fighter jets are based on the island in the Mediterranean

  10. The aircraft began their combat missions on Saturday

"It could happen now; it could happen in the future," he said.

"I don't think any Muslim strives to bring it about."

But many IS supporters are convinced of the prophecy's validity, with one writing on Twitter: "Dabiq will happen for certain.

"The US and its allies will descend on Syria once they see that the air campaign has failed. That is a promise by God and his Messenger."


16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

FBI Asks For Help With Tracking IS Fighters

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 08 Oktober 2014 | 16.15

The FBI has appealed for public help with tracking potential Islamic State recruits or fighters returning from Iraq and Syria.

Investigators also highlighted the case of an English-speaking IS militant with a "North American" accent, who appears in a propaganda video for the terrorist group.

In a statement on the agency's website, the FBI's counter-terrorism division assistant director Michael Steinbach said: "We need the public's assistance in identifying US persons going to fight overseas with terrorist groups or who are returning home from fighting overseas.

"No piece of information is too small." 

In the IS propaganda video the masked man, wearing camouflage and waving a gun, stands in front of captives as they dig their own graves before presiding over their killing.

The FBI said the man appeared to have a US accent.

Video: FBI: IS Hostage Killer Identified

The agency believes around a dozen Americans are fighting with IS in Iraq and Syria.

The appeal came after US authorities arrested a 19-year-old-man who was allegedly heading to the Middle East to join the jihadists at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport.

The Justice Department said Mohammed Hamzah Khan had been charged with one count of attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organisation.

Video: Digitally Unmasking Jihadi John

16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

Protesters Killed In Anti-IS Turkey Clashes

At least 12 people have been killed during pro-Kurdish demonstrations in Turkey amid claims the country is not doing enough in the fight against Islamic State jihadists.

According to reports, five people have been killed in Diyarbakir, the largest town in Turkey's majority-Kurdish southeast region.

Several other deaths were recorded in other southeastern towns, including three in Mardin, two in Siirt, one in Batman and another in Mus.

Police have also used tear gas and water cannons to disperse angry protests in Istanbul and Ankara.

Turkish Interior Minister Efkan Ala accused the pro-Kurdish protesters of "betraying their own country".

"Violence will be met with violence," he said.

"This irrational attitude should immediately be abandoned and (the protesters) should withdraw from the streets."

The demonstrations called by the main pro-Kurdish party, the People's Democratic Party (HDP), stem from claims that Ankara is failing to intervene militarily against IS jihadists fighting for the Syrian border town of Kobani.

Video: IS Footage Shows Kobani Onslaught

Fresh coalition airstrikes have targeted fighters around the town, where some 400 people are believed to have been killed and thousands displaced during weeks of fighting.

Plumes of smoke billowed into the air over Kobani after US, Saudi Arabian and United Arab Emirates jets launched five attacks against targets south of the city.

In a statement, US Central Command said four armed vehicles, anti-aircraft artillery, a tank and a militant unit were hit during the strikes.

Video: Turkey Turns Water Cannon On Kurds

Reports suggest the fighting has become less intense following the coalition attacks.

Reporter Jenan Moussa, positioned just 500m over the border in Turkey, told Sky News: "I can still hear shooting and shelling but (it is) nothing compared to Monday.

"I heard and I saw three airstrikes. One on the western side and two on the eastern."

1/14

  1. Gallery: Assad's Forces Seize Area From Islamists

    Forces of Syria's President Bashar al Assad carry a Syrian flag as they head towards a spot where a flag of the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front is positioned on a hillside in Zor al-Mahruqa village

  2. Assad's forces said they had regained control of the area and its surrounding hills, in the Hama countryside

  3. The flag of the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front is burnt on the hill

  4. The Syrian national flag is erected

  5. Assad forces inspect military equipment, which they said were left behind by rebel fighters in Zor al-Mahruqa village

  6. An abandoned base where caves were dug by rebel fighters in Zor al-Mahruqa village

  7. Assad forces inspect an underground base where caves were dug by rebel fighters in the nearby al-Hareeqa village

  8. A Polish army member hods the German flag in front of an Eurofighter aircraft during a visit of new NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg of Norway (not pictured) at Lask air base

  9. NATO will stand by member state Turkey if it comes under attack as a result of the fighting in neighboring Syria, alliance Secretary-General Stoltenberg said

It comes after Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan warned Kobani was "about to fall".

1/20

  1. Gallery: IS Attacks Town Near Turkish Border

    Turkish army tanks take up position on the Turkish-Syrian border near the southeastern town of Suruc in Sanliurfa Province

  2. Kurdish fighters vowed not to abandon their increasingly desperate efforts to defend the Syrian border town of Kobani from Islamic State militants pressing in from three sides and pounding them with heavy artillery

  3. Despite the heavy fighting, which has seen mortars rain down on residential areas in Kobani and stray fire hit Turkish territory, a Reuters reporter saw around 30 people cross over from Turkey, apparently to help with defence of the town

  4. An IS fighter walks near a black flag belonging to the Islamic State near Kobani

  5. Kurdish refugees from Kobani sit in front of their tents in a camp in the southeastern town of Suruc

  6. Islamic State is trying to seize Kobani, which is predominantly Kurdish, and has ramped up its offensive in recent days despite being targeted by US-led coalition airstrikes aimed at halting its progress

  7. Turkish Kurds look at Kobani as they stand on top of a house near Mursitpinar border crossing. Continue through for more pictures


16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

Ebola Dead Abandoned On Streets After Strike

Ebola victims are being left on Sierra Leone's streets because of a strike by burial teams, according to media in the country.

The workers, who arguably have one of the world's most dangerous jobs, complain they have not been paid.

The situation is "very embarrassing", said health ministry spokesman Sidie Yahya Tunis.

He promised money was available for the workers.

Sky's Alex Crawford saw first-hand the extreme precautions burial teams in the region have to take as they retrieve corpses.

Video: Suiting Up In An Ebola Hotspot

Six hundred people have died from the virus in Sierra Leone, according to the World Health Organisation, and more than 3,400 in total.

The deadly virus has swept through West African countries Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone and Nigeria.

A Spanish nurse continues to be treated in a Madrid hospital after becoming the first person outside Africa to contract ebola.

Video: 56 Being Checked For Ebola In Spain

Two of the four other people also quarantined at the hospital have tested negative.

In Britain, David Cameron is to chair a meeting of the COBRA emergency committee as four hospitals stand by to handle any UK cases.

More follows...

Video: UK Ebola Risk 'Remains Low'

16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

Putin: Muzhik To Ears Of Ordinary Russians

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 07 Oktober 2014 | 16.15

Beyond the gleaming skyscrapers of the capital, there is another Russia.

This is the Russia of small towns and decaying wooden villages, a countryside strewn with the remains of long abandoned collective farms, untouched by the recent oil wealth.

There are problems with jobs, electricity and water.

So you might expect people out here to be critical of their president.

Not so.

From the first truck stop, where we met a 63-year-old lady washing dishes to supplement her pension, to the babushkas manning markets stalls with pickles and vegetables in the cold in Valdai, we heard a litany of complaints, but none of it apparently Mr Putin's fault.

Instead they described the Putin they see on the evening (state-controlled) TV news - the strong president striding from one high profile meeting to another, berating officials and travelling the world to stand up for Russia overseas.

"Putin can't solve everything, you know," one lady told us. "He can't personally do everything in the whole of the country to make things happen."

Video: Sky News Special Report: Putin

The implication was clearly that if he could, he would.

A retired tractor driver used the Russian word "muzhik" to describe Mr Putin.

It comes from the Russian for peasant, but means something more - a "manly man", a man of strength and integrity, a "salt of the earth" type who can be trusted.

The rouble has just hit an all-time low, capital flight for the year is expected to top $120bn, and inflation is more than 8%.

The oil and gas-dependent economy is stalling.

Video: How Popular Is Putin In Russia?

But domestically, Mr Putin is flying.

Pumped up by the patriotic fervour whipped up by the national media, Mr Putin's approval rating is at 86%.

Whilst some of that could be the product of a population long-schooled in telling those in authority what they want to hear, the people we spoke to seemed genuinely happy with their president - he brings stability.

The older generation remembers the collapse of communism, and the painful transition to democracy.

Revolution in Russia tends to be followed by violence and uncertainty - and history says it doesn't end well.

1/15

  1. Gallery: Vladimir Putin - Man Of Action

    Vladimir Putin has earned a reputation as something of an action man. Here in 2013 he is seen shaking hands with a walrus on a visit to the under-construction Primorsky Aquarium.

  2. Seemingly always keen to be seen with members of the animal kingdom, he was also pictured touching a dolphin during his trip to the new attraction on the Russky Island, in the far eastern city of Vladivostok.

  3. Here, at a Moscow sports complex in St Petersburg, he shows off his judo skills.

  4. He joined a group of scientists in the Arctic to help tag endangered polar bears.

  5. In the Siberian mountains, he rode bare-chested on a horse.

  6. Mr Putin walks along the Khemchik River in southern Siberia's Tuva region.

  7. The Russian leader with a big catch from a fishing trip in Siberia ...

  8. ... during which he was also photographed getting familiar with some other wild animals.

  9. On a trip to Chkalov island, Mr Putin attached a satellite tracking tag to a Beluga whale.

  10. He has taken to the skies...

  11. Here, the president rolls in the snow with excitable dogs.

  12. During a dive to an underwater archaeological site at Phanagoria on the Taman Peninsula, he returned to the surface with a precious artefact - but it later emerged that it had been planted in advance.

  13. Mr Putin also made a grand entrance on a Harley Davidson at a biker festival in the town of Novorossiysk.

  14. Mr Putin sits in a car from the Renault Formula One team before test driving it at a racing track in Leningrad Region.

Some of the ladies in Valdai said they had seen Mr Putin flying over in his helicopter, on his way to his private residence.

But they didn't seem to resent it, or the millions of roubles, rather they seemed to find it reassuring - that he was acting as a president should.

Russia is a vast country, and, so the logic goes, it needs a strong hand to hold it together.

Mr Putin is still the 'muzhik' out here.


16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

Putin Stronger Than Ever As He Turns 62

By Katie Stallard, north west Russia

Since his last birthday Vladimir Putin has annexed part of another country, hosted a Winter Olympics, weathered a storm of international criticism, and been kicked out of the G8.

A number of his close friends have been sanctioned, and the economy has stalled.

But the latest opinion poll puts Mr Putin's approval rating at 86%, close to his highest ever as he marks his 62nd birthday.

A fervour of patriotic sentiment, whipped up by state-controlled media, seems to be shielding the president from criticism at home.

But we wanted to find out whether that support extends beyond Moscow, and its gleaming skyscrapers.

By the side of the main road from Moscow to St Petersburg, the concrete suburbs give way to wooden villages in various stages of decay.

We met 75-year-old Alexei Alexeyevich, selling his apples by the side of the road.

He stands out here all day, making about £1.50 a bucket to supplement his pension, but he loves Vladimir Putin.

Video: Russian Views On Putin

"He is a great man, he's a real man!" he said, giving an enthusiastic thumbs-up.

"He gets everything done, he says what he thinks, and he does us good."

Further north, the landscape is beautiful, but life is tough.

A few kilometres off the main road, we passed the ruins of the long-abandoned collective farm that would once have been the main employer here.

Tatyana Smirnova, 53, has been told she will lose her job as a cleaner at the local community centre next month - there just aren't enough people to keep it open.

She said she would sell honey from her beehives. Her husband has multiple sclerosis, so where else would they go?

Video: Sky News Special Report: Putin

But still, she thinks Mr Putin is doing a good job.

"I think there is more order under his rule," she said.

"If you look at him, he goes around the country, and goes to other countries as well.

"He improves things everywhere."

When the power and water go off in the village, people here might be angry with the government - particularly the local government - but they don't seem to blame the man at the top.

In the forests of Valdai we found the gleaming golden domes of the Iversky monastery - restored at huge cost, reportedly with help from state-controlled companies.

1/15

  1. Gallery: Vladimir Putin - Man Of Action

    Vladimir Putin has earned a reputation as something of an action man. Here in 2013 he is seen shaking hands with a walrus on a visit to the under-construction Primorsky Aquarium.

  2. Seemingly always keen to be seen with members of the animal kingdom, he was also pictured touching a dolphin during his trip to the new attraction on the Russky Island, in the far eastern city of Vladivostok.

  3. Here, at a Moscow sports complex in St Petersburg, he shows off his judo skills.

  4. He joined a group of scientists in the Arctic to help tag endangered polar bears.

  5. In the Siberian mountains, he rode bare-chested on a horse.

  6. Mr Putin walks along the Khemchik River in southern Siberia's Tuva region.

  7. The Russian leader with a big catch from a fishing trip in Siberia ...

  8. ... during which he was also photographed getting familiar with some other wild animals.

  9. On a trip to Chkalov island, Mr Putin attached a satellite tracking tag to a Beluga whale.

  10. He has taken to the skies...

  11. Here, the president rolls in the snow with excitable dogs.

  12. During a dive to an underwater archaeological site at Phanagoria on the Taman Peninsula, he returned to the surface with a precious artefact - but it later emerged that it had been planted in advance.

  13. Mr Putin also made a grand entrance on a Harley Davidson at a biker festival in the town of Novorossiysk.

  14. Mr Putin sits in a car from the Renault Formula One team before test driving it at a racing track in Leningrad Region.

The president is said to have a private residence nearby.

Quite a contrast to the old Soviet housing blocks in the town, and the babushkas selling vegetables and pickles in the bitter cold.

Sixty-seven-year-old Klaudia Mikhailovna's pension is not enough to live, but she's grateful for it and to Mr Putin.

"Under him we started getting our pensions and salaries on time - compared to Yeltsin there is a huge difference," she said.

The people we spoke to were frightened of chaos in Ukraine but they would rather have what they see as the stability of Mr Putin's rule - at pretty much any price.


16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

Nurse First To Contract Ebola Outside Africa

A Spanish nurse has become the first person to contract ebola outside of West Africa, amid an outbreak that has killed more than 3,400 people.

The woman was part of a medical team at Madrid's La Paz-Carlos III hospital that treated two missionaries, who died shortly after being repatriated from Africa with the disease.

It comes as US President Barack Obama said his administration was beefing up airport screening measures in the country to help identify people who might have the deadly virus.

Spain's health minister, Ana Mato, said an emergency protocol had been put in place and authorities were working to establish the source of the contagion at the Madrid hospital.

"We are working to guarantee the safety of all citizens," she said.

Video: Liberia Gripped By Ebola Virus Fear

Spanish priest Miguel Pajares, 75, was infected with ebola in Liberia and died at the hospital on 12 August.

Another Spanish missionary, Manuel Garcia Viejo, 69, was repatriated from Sierra Leone and died at the hospital on 25 September.

Both were members of a Roman Catholic group that runs a charity working with ebola victims in Africa.

A Spanish health official said 30 medical staff who treated the two priests are being monitored.

The infected nurse began to feel ill on 30 September, but did not go to hospital until Sunday complaining of a fever.

The assistant nurse, who is married without children, is being treated in isolation at a hospital in a southern Madrid suburb.

Video: Filming In An Ebola Virus Hotspot

Health authorities are trying to track down all the people she may have come in contact with since she contracted the disease.

She is said to be in a stable condition.

Sky's Health and Science Correspondent Thomas Moore said it is the first time the virus has been transmitted outside West Africa during the current epidemic.

Meanwhile, Mr Obama announced tougher screening measures after meeting health and security officials who are involved in attempting to prevent an outbreak of the disease in the US.

He told reporters the chance of an outbreak in the US was "extraordinarily low", but that there was not a large margin for error.

The White House is not currently proposing a travel ban for West Africa, epicentre of the outbreak.


16.15 | 0 komentar | Read More

Face-To-Face With The Dying In An Ebola Centre

Written By Unknown on Senin, 06 Oktober 2014 | 16.15

By Garwen McLuckie, Sky News Cameraman

Before filming inside the high-risk zone, we were told that all or equipment would have to be either disinfected or incinerated.

I had prepared hard - bringing tailor-made plastic sealed containers for the small DSLR camera I would be using and rigging up microphones for Sky News Correspondent Alex Crawford to carry under her clothing, or in a waterproof "dry sack".

In the end, none of them worked, but we were saved by our DSLR camera mike, which provided astonishing sound quality despite being smothered in plastic.

On arrival at the unit, we were first taken to a wooden shed so we could change into medical scrubs.

I felt confident, even excited about the challenge ahead as we moved to a small room be prepped for the high-risk area.

Each person was assigned a nurse to help us dress and to make sure we were properly covered.

First we had to put on large plastic socks which went up to our calves and white plastic boots.

Then there was a hairnet, followed by a plastic PPE (Personal Protection Equipment) onesie which zipped right up to my neck and had a double sticky seal down the zip.

The first of three latex gloves went on and were sealed on to the onesie by duct tape round my wrist.

The onesie had its own hood which I pulled over my head, followed by a surgical mask over my mouth and nose.

I was then given another separate hood which went over my head and shoulders, covering my forehead, chin and neck. By this stage I was really feeling the heat and the humidity.

A huge yellow plastic apron was draped over me before my face was finally sealed by goggles. Not even a millimetre of my skin was exposed under these three layers of protection.

Almost immediately I was struggling with the heat and an extreme claustrophobic sensation which I had never experienced before - I wondered how long I would last.

Within a very short time, perspiration was filling my face mask, covering my nose and mouth and I could feel the bubbling of my own sweat as I kept trying to suck in air.

There didn't seem to be much of it.

At one stage while Alex was talking to one of the ebola victims I had to close my eyes whilst filming to try to calm myself.

I kept thinking: "I can't breathe, I can't breathe."

After filming for an hour, it took a painstaking 10 to 15 minutes to strip off each layer and be carefully disinfected each time.

The doctor could see I was anxious to get everything off but it was essential to observe all the health protocols.

My upbringing means I always give way to women, letting them through doors first and so on.

But in this case I think I would have rugby-tackled Alex to the ground if she hadn't let me go through the disrobing procedure before her.


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IS Militants Close In On Syrian Border Town

Islamic State has seized a strategic hill overlooking a Syrian border town despite airstrikes from the US and its Arab allies.

Kurdish fighters have been battling IS militants around Kobani after a nearly three-week siege of the town.

Idris Nahsen, a Kobani official, said the militants were less than a mile from the town, which was hit by rockets and mortars during the fighting.

The US carried out three airstrikes in Syria over the weekend on IS positions.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights claimed at least 33 IS militants and 23 Kurdish defenders were killed during the fighting.

One shell was fired from inside Syria and hit a house in the Turkish village of Buyuk Kendirci, injuring four people.

IS began its advance on Kobani on 16 September, forcing around 186,000 people to flee across the border into Turkey.

It has seized swathes of Syria and Iraq after declaring an Islamic caliphate in June, including a long stretch of the Syria-Turkey border.

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  1. Gallery: IS Oil Refineries Hit By US Airstrikes

    A man inspects damage at an oil refinery that was targeted by what activists said were US-led air strikes at al-Khaboura village, near the Syrian town of Tel Abyad of Raqqa governate

  2. Three makeshift oil refineries in Syria's Raqqa province were hit as part of an assault to weaken Islamic State (IS) militants

  3. The United States has been carrying out strikes in Iraq against the Islamic State since July and more recently in Syria with the help of allies

  4. It aims to damage and destroy the bases and forces of the al Qaeda offshoot which has captured large areas of both countries

  5. Street vendors selling diesel and gasoline wait for customers along a street in the Islamic State's stronghold of Raqqa

  6. Activists said that the price of the diesel and gasoline has increased since the beginning of the US air raids. Continue through for more pictures

The Turkish parliament authorised involvement in the campaign against IS last week, but no military operations have been announced.

It comes after a masked IS militant was filmed murdering British aid worker Alan Henning and threatening US hostage Peter Kassig in a video released on Friday.

The 47-year-old former taxi driver, from Eccles in Greater Manchester, was captured as he drove an ambulance full of aid supplies into Syria on 27 December last year.


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American Hostage's Parents Issue Video Plea

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 05 Oktober 2014 | 16.15

By Sky News US Team

The parents of American hostage Abdul-Rahman Kassig, formerly known as Peter, have issued a video plea asking for his safe return.

Mr Kassig appeared at the end of a clip posted online on Friday that showed the killing of British aid convoy volunteer Alan Henning by an Islamic State (IS) militant.

Ed and Paula Kassig pleaded with their son's captors to let him go in a video statement released on Saturday.

"We implore those who are holding you to show mercy and use their power to let you go," Mr Kassig's father said.

Mrs Kassig, speaking directly to her son, added: "Most of all, know that we love you, and our hearts ache for you to be granted your freedom so we can hug you again and then set you free to continue the life you have chosen, the life of service to those in greatest need."

Ed Kassig said his son, who founded an organisation that provides aid to Syrians impacted by the country's civil war, "grew to love and admire the Syrian people and felt at home there".

Video: IS Threatens To Kill US Hostage

Peter Kassig changed his name to Abdul-Rahman after years of humanitarian work in the region "culminated in him embracing Islam", his father added.

A family spokesperson previously said that Mr Kassig's faith "has provided him comfort during his long captivity".

The 26-year-old Indiana native and Iraq War veteran was captured by IS militants on 1 October 2013 while en route to Deir Ezzor in eastern Syria.

Video: Henning's Family 'Numb With Grief'

At the end of the video showing Mr Henning's murder, an IS militant spoke directly to President Barack Obama as he threatened to kill Mr Kassig next.

He said: "Obama, you have started your aerial bombardment in Sham. So it's only right we continue to strike the necks of your people."

In the plea for his son's release, Mr Kassig said: "We asked our government to change its actions, but like our son, we have no more control over the US government than you have over the break of dawn."

Video: 'IS Call To Send Ground Troops'

On Friday, Mr Obama condemned Mr Henning's "brutal" murder, saying the US would bring those responsible to justice.

Four IS hostages - two Americans and two Britons - have been killed since the US-led airstrikes in Iraq and Syria began on 8 August.

An estimated 15 to 20 hostages are still being held by the extremist group, according to the AP news agency.


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Brazil Presidential Race: Poll Gap Narrows

By Karine Mayer, South America News Editor

The world's seventh largest economy takes to the polls today, yet many Brazilians are still unsure who to vote for.

Although for the last month the race has been between two women - incumbent president Dilma Rousseff and environmentalist Marina Silva - polls show that conservative Aecio Neves has crept into second place just ahead of Ms Silva in the latest polls.

It has been a roller-coaster ride campaign but the latest polls show that 40 percent of Brazilians are likely to vote for the stability of the Worker's Party instead of the sustainable environment of Ms Silva, or a return to the Social Conservative party with candidate Mr Neves.

The three main candidates are known in Brazil just by their Christian names; Dilma, Marina and Aecio.

Ms Rousseff, 66, Brazil's incumbent president, was imprisoned and tortured by the country's military dictatorship as an armed Marxist guerrilla group in the early 1970s.

But it was due to the former president's support and help that she stepped into the limelight and became the first female president in Brazil.

Despite her tough stance she has failed to weed out corruption, and economic growth has stumbled under her administration.

Ms Silva is the election wild card. She was born to a desperately poor family of rubber tappers in the Amazon and was illiterate until the age of 16.

She then went from working as a maid to environmental activist alongside Chico Mendes, and became Brazil's youngest ever senator in 1994.

She became an official candidate at the end of August when her running mate was killed in a plane crash.

Mr Neves comes from a political family; his grandfather, Tancredo Neves, was the first post-dictatorship elected president in 1984 but died before being sworn in.

He represents the centre-right party. Initially labelled a playboy he has toughened his image in the last few months and attacked Ms Rousseff over the corruption scandal of state run oil company Petrobras which involved some of her colleagues.

A lot still remains to be done in Brazil as the government will have to address health, education, security and urban transport, as well as getting the country's economy growing again, as it experienced its first slowdown following the World Cup.

Some 142 million Brazilians will, by law, have to vote on today as they choose their president, 27 state governors, 513 congressmen, 1069 regional lawmakers, and a third of the Senate.

Then in three weeks' time, should no candidate win more than 50%, the second round will determine the future of the country.


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F1 Driver Taken To Hospital After Crash

Formula One driver Jules Bianchi has been taken to hospital unconscious after being injured in a crash at the Japanese Grand Prix.

Bianchi's Marussia car was reportedly in a collision with a JCB that was on the scene recovering driver Adrian Sutil's vehicle which had earlier come off the Suzuka circuit.

Frenchman Bianchi was transferred to hospital in Nagoya by ambulance because the medical helicopter could not fly amid heavy rain due to Typhoon Phanfone.

FIA head of communications Matteo Bonciani told reporters: "The driver is not conscious and has been sent to the hospital by the ambulance because the helicopter cannot fly in these conditions.

"Further updates will follow but for the moment we cannot say anything. I will keep you updated as fast as I can."

The race had needed two starts behind the safety car and ended on the 47th of 53 laps due to the crash.

The grand prix was won by Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton with team-mate Nico Rosberg second.

Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel, who was third, tweeted: "Our thoughts and prayers are with @Jules_Bianchi... We hope to hear some positive news soon."

After the prizes were presented, no champagne was sprayed on the podium and there were no celebrations.

More follows...


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