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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Australia opens combat roles to women

Wed Sep 28, 2011

Australian Defense Force has approved a government plan to allow women soldiers to serve in frontline combats within the next five years, Press TV reports.

Stephen Smith, Australian defense minister, said that as long as women meet the physical entry standards, they would be able to serve in all military roles, including the Special Forces, infantry and army artillery roles.

“If a woman is fully capable of doing the entrance program for the Special Air Service or Commandos, they'll be in it,” Smith said.

The move has been criticized by the founding member of “Stop the War Coalition” and the campaigner for women's rights, Pip Hinman.

“This reform will do nothing to empower women in our society, if anything, over the next five years it will mean that women will increasingly will be drawn into the longest-running war in Australia's history in Afghanistan,” Hinman told Press TV.

Australian military has sent more than 2,000 troops to fight in Iraq and currently makes up the largest contingent of any non-NATO member fighting in Afghanistan.

As of August, 335 women were serving on overseas operations, accounting for more than 10 percent of Australia's fighting forces deployed overseas.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/201655.html.

Spain's PM dissolves parliament

Mon Sep 26, 2011

Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has dissolved the country's parliament two months ahead of the next parliamentary elections.

Zapatero had earlier in the year announced that he would not seek a third term in office, after having held on to power since 2004.

“A stage is coming to an end, and that stage puts an end to my political activity,” AFP quoted Zapatero as saying in a news conference on Monday.

The elections will determine the country's next prime minister.

Zapatero expressed optimism about the country's economy, saying it would be able to climb out of its current debt crisis.

Moreover, Zapatero had in late July announced November 20 as the date for the parliament's General Election, which was originally scheduled for March 2012.

Many analysts believe the conservative People's Party (PP) will defeat Zapatero's Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) in the upcoming elections.

Meanwhile, Spanish Finance Minister Elena Salgado had last week said that the country's economic growth was moving too slowly, despite the government's efforts to boost economic activity.

“We are recovering more slowly than we would like, in particular more slowly as regards employment which is without doubt the main problem we have,” Salgado said.

Spain faces an unemployment rate of nearly 21 percent, with more than 4.1 million Spaniards having lost their jobs due to the economic crisis.

Spain's economy grew by a meager 0.2 percent in the second quarter of 2011.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/201325.html.

Armies of teachers jolt France's streets

Tue Sep 27, 2011

Thousands of teachers and their supporters take to the streets across France following a related national strike to protest at the government-ordered job cuts in the education sector.

On Tuesday, more than 165,000 demonstrators took part in over 100 nationwide protests, the Associated Press reported.

The public voiced outrage at French President Nicolas Sarkozy's government, which has shed tens of thousands of education-related positions since 2007 and plans to rid a further 14,000 in 2012.

The measures have caused schools to run into training problems and staff shortages.

The protest action was for the first time joined by private school teachers as well as their public sector colleagues.

According to France's Education Ministry, more than one in four school teachers went on the strike, though, two teachers' unions put the figure at over 50 percent of the workforce.

Sarkozy, however, adopted a comparatively relaxed tone, saying, "I know quite well that there are protests today. It's normal in a democracy."

"But the jobs under threat are not in the public sector - it's jobs in industry, jobs in business, and jobs exposed to competition," he said.

Teachers say endangering the education system as a means of shrinking France's massive red-ink budget will, in the long run, compromise the country's ability to keep up with an educated workforce.

The popular indignation came as the country is gearing up for the next-year's presidential and legislative elections and amid the labor unions' efforts to pile up pressure on the ruling conservatives.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/201530.html.

Venus Weather Not Boring After All

Greenbelt MD (SPX)
Sep 28, 2011

At first glance, a weather forecaster for Venus would have either a really easy or a really boring job, depending on your point of view. The climate on Venus is widely known to be unpleasant - at the surface, the planet roasts at more than 800 degrees Fahrenheit under a suffocating blanket of sulfuric acid clouds and a crushing atmosphere more than 90 times the pressure of Earth's. Intrepid future explorers should abandon any hope for better days, however, because it won't change much.

"Any variability in the weather on Venus is noteworthy, because the planet has so many features to keep atmospheric conditions the same," says Dr. Tim Livengood, a researcher with the National Center for Earth and Space Science Education, Capitol Heights, Md., and now with the University of Maryland, College Park, Md.

"Earth has seasons because its rotation axis is tilted by about 23 degrees, which changes the intensity of sunlight and the length of the day in each hemisphere throughout the year. However, Venus has been tilted so much, it's almost completely upside down, leaving it with a net tilt of less than three degrees from the sun, so the seasonal effect is negligible," explains Livengood, who is stationed at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

"Also, its orbit is even more circular than Earth's, which prevents it from getting significantly hotter or cooler by moving closer to or further away from the sun. And while you might expect things to cool down at night - especially since Venus rotates so slowly that its night lasts almost two Earth months - the thick atmosphere and sulfuric acid clouds act like a blanket while winds move heat around, keeping temperatures pretty even. Finally, almost all the planet's water has escaped to space, so you don't get any storms or precipitation like on Earth where water evaporates and condenses as clouds."

However, higher up, the weather gets more interesting, according to a new study of old data by NASA and international scientists. The team detected strange things going on in data from telescopic observations of Venus in infrared light at about 68 miles (110 kilometers) above the planet's surface, in cold, clear air above the acid clouds, in two layers called the mesosphere and the thermosphere.

"Although the air over the polar regions in these upper atmospheric layers on Venus was colder than the air over the equator in most measurements, occasionally it appeared to be warmer," said Dr. Theodor Kostiuk of NASA Goddard.

"In Earth's atmosphere, a circulation pattern called a 'Hadley cell' occurs when warm air rises over the equator and flows toward the poles, where it cools and sinks. Since the atmosphere is denser closer to the surface, the descending air gets compressed and warms the upper atmosphere over Earth's poles. We saw the opposite on Venus.

In addition, although the surface temperature is fairly even, we've seen substantial changes - up to 54 degrees Fahrenheit (about 30 K change) - within a few Earth days in the mesosphere - thermosphere layers over low latitudes on Venus. The poles appeared to be more stable, but we still saw changes up to 27 degrees Fahrenheit (about 15 K change)."

Kostiuk and Livengood are co-authors of a paper about these observations that appeared July 23 in the online edition of the journal Icarus.

"The mesosphere and thermosphere of Venus are dynamically active," said lead author Dr. Guido Sonnabend of the University of Cologne, Germany. "Wind patterns resulting from solar heating and east to west zonal winds compete, possibly resulting in altered local temperatures and their variability over time."

This upper atmospheric variability could have many possible causes, according to the team. Turbulence from global air currents at different altitudes flowing at more than 200 miles per hour in opposite directions could exchange hot air from below with cold air from above to force changes in the upper atmosphere. Also, giant vortexes swirl around each pole. They, too, could generate turbulence and change the pressure, causing the temperature to vary.

Since the atmospheric layers the team observed are above the cloud blanket, they may be affected by changes in sunlight intensity as day transitions to night, or as latitude increases toward the poles. These layers are high enough that they could even be affected by solar activity (the solar cycle), such as solar explosions called flares and eruptions of solar material called coronal mass ejections.

Changes were seen over periods spanning days, to weeks, to a decade. Temperatures measured in 1990-91 are warmer than in 2009. Measurements obtained in 2007 using Goddard's Heterodyne Instrument for Planetary Wind and Composition (HIPWAC) observed warmer temperature in the equatorial region than in 2009. Having seen that the atmosphere can change, a lot more observations are needed to determine how so many phenomena can affect Venus' upper atmosphere over different intervals, according to the team.

"In addition to all these changes, we saw warmer temperatures than those predicted for this altitude by the leading accepted model, the Venus International Reference Atmosphere model," said Kostiuk.

"This tells us that we have lots of work to do updating our upper atmospheric circulation model for Venus." Although Venus is often referred to as Earth's twin, since they are almost the same size, it ended up with a climate very different from Earth. A deeper understanding of Venus' atmosphere will let researchers compare it to the evolution of Earth's atmosphere, giving insight as to why Earth now teems with life while Venus suffered a hellish fate.

The team measured temperature and wind speeds in Venus' upper atmosphere by observing an infrared glow emitted by carbon dioxide (CO2) molecules when they were energized by light from the sun. Infrared light is invisible to the human eye and is perceived by us as heat, but it can be detected by special instruments.

In the research, it appeared as a line on a graph from a spectrometer, an instrument that separates light into its component colors, each of which corresponds to a specific frequency. The width of the line revealed the temperature, while shifts in its frequency gave the wind speed.

The researchers compared observations from 1990 and 1991 using Goddard's Infrared Heterodyne Spectrometer instrument at NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, to observations from 2009 using the Cologne Tunable Heterodyne Infrared Spectrometer instrument at the National Optical Astronomy Observatory's McMath Telescope at Kitt Peak, Ariz.

Source: Space Daily.
Link: http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Venus_Weather_Not_Boring_After_All_999.html.

2 Killed in Zarqa Brawl

2011-09-25

AMMONNEWS - A fight in Hashemiyah district in Zarqa on Saturday escalated, resulting in the death of two people and the injury of two others.

Medical sources told Ammon News that two people were pronounced dead at the hospital after sustaining gun-shot wounds.

Security forces cordoned off the area in an attempt to contain the clashes, which lasted until Saturday night.

Tribal leaders in the area intervened to contain the incident and prevent possible escalation in violence after the death of two people.

An investigation was launched into the incident.

Source: Ammon News.
Link: http://en.ammonnews.net/article.aspx?articleNO=13867.

Jordanian prisoner in Israeli jail goes on open hunger strike

2011-09-26

AMMONNEWS - After 17 days a Jordanian prisoner in Israeli jails refuses to eat to protest the Israeli authorities repeated refusal to allow his wife and children visit him.

Ala’a Hammad, a Jordanian prisoner in Israeli occupation jails since 2006, is serving a 12-year sentence, has been held in Israeli jail since 2006.

The Palestinian prisoner society said in a statement on Monday that Hammad told its lawyer during a visit to Gilboa jail that his wife’s repeated requests to the Israeli embassy in Amman to visit him were always denied.

The society, meanwhile, noted that the Israeli administration in Gilboa jail had transferred 17 detainees to Megiddo jail.

Source: Ammon News.
Link: http://en.ammonnews.net/article.aspx?articleNO=13883.

Students Forced to Pledge Distance from Political Parties

2011-09-27

AMMONNEWS - University students receiving 'Makruma' scholarships were asked to sign a pledge not to join memberships of any political parties and not to conduct any political activities on university campuses.

The Higher Coordination Committee of the Jordanian National Opposition Political Parties on Monday blasted the move to force students to sign such pledges, stressing that such a stipulation violates principles of freedom and obstructs the development of democratic and political life.

Students who receive 'Makruma' scholarships allocated for underprivileged areas noted that they were asked to sign a pledge not to participate in political activism inside university campuses.

A statement issued by the Opposition Political Parties' Coordination Committee on Monday cited receiving notice from the 'National Campaign for Students' Rights' noting that Makruma students were asked to sign the pledge.

The Committee requested clarification from Prime Minister Marouf Bakhit during a meeting last Saturday, at which Bakhit noted that he had no knowledge of such a decision.

Source: Ammon News.
Link: http://en.ammonnews.net/article.aspx?articleNO=13901.

1200 Students Returning from Libya, Yemen to Enroll in Jordanian Universities

2011-09-28

AMMONNEWS - Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research on Wednesday said that 1,200 Jordanian students returning from study abroad in Libya and Yemen will be admitted into Jordanian Universities.

Higher Education Minister Wajih Oweis will announce in a press conference on Wednesday the standards that the Ministry will adopt in implementing the Royal 'Makruma' scholarships to enroll returning students into Jordanian Universities.

Ammon News learned that the Ministry will administer a comprehensive exam for first, second, and third year students for evaluating the fields of study that students will be enrolled in.

Fourth year students will be admitted into programs without examination.

990 students studying in universities in Yemen registered their cases with the Ministry, of them 664 students are studying medicine.

Meanwhile, 166 students returning from Libya also submitted applications for admission into Jordanian universities, of them, 110 are medical students.

Over 375 of the students who returned from Yemen and Libya as a result of the ongoing developments there have achieved 85 percent or above in the Tawjihi (General Secondary School Certificate) Examination.

Source: Ammon News.
Link: http://en.ammonnews.net/article.aspx?articleNO=13910.

Salafi Detainees Abused in Jordanian Prisons ~ lawyer

2011-09-28

By Amal Ghabayen

AMMONNEWS – Jordan's special military tribunal has repeatedly wronged and been gravely unjust towards members of Salafi Islamist movements, a legal expert on Islamist movements said on Tuesday.

Musa al-Abdullat, an attorney defending the cases of over 100 Salafists has spoken out against the State Security Court’s oppression.

Abdullat said during a press conference Tuesday evening that Salafists have faced grave violations of human rights, torture, and indignity, particularly those tried in the aftermath of the Zarqa clashes in April.

In exposing the double-standards practiced by the State Security Court (SSC), Abdullat indicated that SSC has been trying the Salafists on charges of committing violence and inciting strife, while it has failed to arrest or bring any of the 'thugs' involved in violence against protestors throughout the kingdom since the beginning of the year to trial.

He added that the testimony of a number of the security officers in the SSC's court sessions supported the Salafis and contradicted other testimonials which were at odds with what was said before the public prosecutor since the investigation.

Al-Abdallat said that some of the Salafis had been arrested from their homes without an arrest warrant or inspection, revealing that a number of the security personnel had raided their homes ‘savagely’ and some of them had tampered with belongings within houses.

Al-Abdallat displayed video clips of the Zarqa events that in his view pointed to the innocence of the Salafis of terrorist charges.

On his part, the Chairman of the Popular Committee for Defending Detainees Muhammad al-Hadid claimed that Salafi detainees had been beaten and tortured, and indicated that they had been undressed and photographed inside prisons by members of the Public Security Department.

Lawyer, Majid al-Fatawi, spoke of the suffering of the families during the court cases since most of them were not allowed to attend, and they were forbidden from sitting under the canopy in front of the prison, even though most of them came from provinces far from Amman.

Al-Fatawi said that excessive violence had been used to arrest the detainees and firearms employed to open the doors of houses. Security personnel had also, according to al-Fatawi, entered bedrooms without respecting the sanctity and privacy of homes.

The spokesperson for the Committee, Wissam al-Amush, also known as ‘Abu Abida,’ noted that 150 families were being punished and are suffering from the detention of their sons, adding that what happened in Zarqa was no more excessive than what happened at the Interior Ministry Circle in March, or the Nakhil Square in July.

He continued that most of what happened in Zarqa was no more than a brawl between the Salafis and the ‘thugs’, saying they refused to divide people into first-class and second-class citizens, since such a division would only bring disarray and tension.

Source: Ammon News.
Link: http://en.ammonnews.net/article.aspx?articleNO=13919.

Morocco pursues UN Security Council seat

2011-09-27

Morocco will apply for a 2012-2013 non-permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council, MAP reported on Monday (September 26th). Foreign Minister Taieb Fassi Fihri called Monday in New York for UN General Assembly members to support Morocco's candidacy.

In his address, Fassi Fihri noted Morocco's commitment to peace, stability and solidarity. Morocco continues to work towards disarmament and non-proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, he added. The minister also pointed out that over the last several decades; more than 50,000 members of the Royal Armed Forces have participated in peacekeeping operations around the world.

Source: Magharebia.
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/newsbriefs/general/2011/09/27/newsbrief-03.

Bahrain continues detaining females

Wed Sep 28, 2011

The Saudi-backed Bahraini regime admits that its security forces are still holding 20 women in detention for holding a protest against the Al Khalifa monarchy in Manama, Press TV reports.

Those still in the regime's detention are among the 45 females, who came under arrest in the capital on Saturday for chanting slogans against the ruling regime in a shopping mall.

The protest had been formed against recent controversial parliamentary by-elections, which, according to Bahraini government's own website, were shunned by over 80 percent of the legitimate voters.

Amnesty International on Monday said the females -- who included seven minors -- had been tortured and denied legal representation.

"They were apprehended without arrest orders, interrogated without lawyers present and some of them reportedly tortured or otherwise ill-treated," the group said.

Meanwhile, Bahrain's Military Prosecutor-General Yussef Fleilfal announced on Monday that the sheikhdom's military court had sentenced another 32 people to 15 years in prison for participating in pro-democracy demonstrations earlier this year.

Bahrainis have been holding peaceful anti-government rallies since mid-February, demanding an end to the Al Khalifa's over-40-year-long rule over the Persian Gulf island.

Scores of people have been killed and hundreds more arrested in a brutal Manama-ordered and Riyadh-backed crackdown in the country, which hosts a huge American military installation for the US Navy's Fifth Fleet in the Persian Gulf.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/201552.html.

Bahrain to imprison 32 women, girls

Tue Sep 27, 2011

The Bahrain regime has sentenced 32 women and girls, who were arrested for protesting against the recent parliamentary by-elections in the Persian Gulf kingdom, to 15 years in jail.

These Bahraini protesters, including seven minors aged between 12 and 15, were arrested on Friday, one day before the by-elections -- boycotted by the opposition -- to replace 18 lawmakers who resigned from the parliament in protest to the crackdown on anti-government demonstrators.

According to Amnesty International (AI) the women were tortured in detention and they have been denied access to their lawyers and families.

AI says the girls remain in custody despite a Bahraini juvenile court order for their release.

On Monday, Bahrain's Military Prosecutor-General Yussef Fleilfal announced that the kingdom's military court had sentenced another 32 people to 15 years in prison for taking part in anti-government protests earlier this year.

Bahrainis have been holding anti-government rallies since mid-February, demanding an end to the Al Khalifa dynasty's 40-year rule.

Scores of people have been killed and hundreds of others have been arrested in a brutal crackdown on peaceful protesters in Bahrain, which is home to a huge American military installation for the US Navy's Fifth Fleet in the Persian Gulf.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/201431.html.

US claims kick up furor in Pakistan

Tue Sep 27, 2011

Pakistani people have staged anti-US rallies across the country to protest at American officials' recent threats and accusations against Islamabad.

Protesters shouted, “We'll sacrifice our lives to save Pakistan" and "Death to America" in a demonstration held outside the US consulate in the southern city of Karachi, AFP reported on Tuesday.

Rallies were also held in the town of Landikotal in the Khyber Agency near the common border with Afghanistan as well as the city of Hyderabad in southern Pakistan.

The already-fragile relations between the two sides were further strained last week, when the US military chief accused Pakistan's intelligence agency of “exporting” violence to Afghanistan.

The Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, said the Inter-Services Intelligence was supporting the Taliban-allied Haqqani network of militants that is blamed by Washington for recent attacks on the US Embassy and the US-led military alliance of NATO's headquarters in the Afghan capital, Kabul. Islamabad has stiffly rejected the accusations.

On Monday, the US Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who serves on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said Washington had to consider military action against Pakistan in the event of, what he called, Islamabad's continued support for militant attacks against the US troops in Afghanistan.

The US says it is considering listing the Haqqani network as a terror group. The potential designation, analysts say, would provide Washington with excuse to go ahead with the attack.

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gillani warned on Tuesday that military course of action by the US inside 'a sovereign country' would not be 'acceptable.'

The premier said the Untied States blames Pakistan for recent attacks in Kabul because “they (the US) have not achieved what they visualized” in Afghanistan, referring to the US-led forces' failure to defuse tension on the Afghan soil, despite their 2001-present presence there.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/201541.html.

NATO approves C2 system tests

Sept. 28, 2011

MASSY, France, Sept. 28 (UPI) -- NATO has given approval to Air Command Systems International in France to test a fully integrated C2 system.

The NATO ACCS is the first fully integrated command-and-control system for planning, tasking and execution of air operations and will replace multiple, aging air C2 systems in NATO countries.

"NATO ACCS is the largest system of its kind to be delivered across multiple nations and provides critical new capabilities, including resource management, surface-to-air missile planning and automated flight safety aids in support of modern NATO operations," said Jack Harrington, chief executive officer of ThalesRaytheonSystems, ACSI's parent company.

"ACCS has left the factory to complete its validation at the NATO Test and Validation Facility and the national operational sites."

ACCS was identified as one of the Top 10 NATO priorities at the Lisbon Summit in 2010. With ACCS, NATO operators will have a state-of-the-art air C2 system. ACCS will provide opportunities for common training, standard operational procedures and centralized maintenance for all NATO nations.

Source: United Press International (UPI).
Link: http://www.upi.com/Business_News/Security-Industry/2011/09/28/NATO-approves-C2-system-tests/UPI-55921317210149/.