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Image of fire in Williamsburg from photo sent by Amy Letterman
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Image of fire in Williamsburg from photo sent by Amy Letterman
Emirates out in Force at Arabian Travel Market
emirates, the official carrier of the 2008 arabian travel market (atm), will bring more than 50 cane from across the group to the event to highlight the catholicity of the company’s oblation. mike simon, emirates’ divisional senior weakness president
Police ID officer who shot, killed Kettering man
harrison twp., montgomery county — dayton police constable chris cornwell fired multiple shots and killed a fleeing hold-up suspect while he sat in his car in the back yard of a home shortly preceding 1 a.m. tuesday, may 6, witnesses said.
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WASHINGTON (CNN) — The chairman of the House Veterans Committee blasted the Veterans Affairs Department on Tuesday, accusing the agency of criminal failure to respond to evidence of rising suicide rates among former soldiers.
This is a matter of life and death, said Chairman and Democratic Rep. Bob Filner, of California, and I think there was criminal negligence in the way this was handled.
In a follow-up hearing on the veteran suicide issue, Filner insisted that the VA has either ignored critical suicide data or covered up the numbers.
The pattern is deny, deny, deny, Filner told Veterans Secretary Jim Peake, then when facts seemingly come to disagree with the denial, you cover up, cover up, cover up.
The committee was reacting to a December hearing in which Ira Katz, the VA’s chief for mental health, insisted that suicide data reported in the media had been exaggerated.
Three days after his testimony, Filner said, the agency indicated some alarming statistics could, in fact, be correct.
Peake responded with a list of statistics by age and gender, insisting that such data can be incomplete and easily manipulated.
(CNN) — Poll workers in Indiana and North Carolina on Tuesday reported heavy turnout for a two primaries that could be decisive to the Democratic presidential nomination battle between Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.
While Indiana state election officials have yet to announce projection figures, polling officials at one Indianapolis precinct said that they have almost matched the record for an entire day after being open for only 4 hours.
A polling station in Raleigh, North Carolina, also saw a steady stream of voters since it opened at 6:30 a.m. Tuesday.
In all, 187 delegates are at stake in Indiana and North Carolina. Clinton, the junior senator from New York, knows that the results in these two states could shake up the race.
This primary election on Tuesday is a game changer, Clinton said. This is going to make a huge difference in what happens going forward. The entire country, probably even a lot of the world, is looking.
Judging by the numbers, Obama is the front-runner. The Illinois senator leads in pledged delegates and in states won, and is also ahead in the popular vote, if Florida and Michigan are not factored into the equation. Those states are being penalized for moving their primaries up in violation of party rules.
With Obama ahead in all these categories, Clinton has a lot on the line in Indiana and North Carolina.
It would be a game changer if Clinton wins both North Carolina and Indiana by double-digit margins, said Bill Schneider, CNN senior political correspondent. That would signal to the superdelegates that Democratic voters are having serious doubts about Obama. She needs big victories because it’s so late in the game.
In all, only 404 pledged delegates remain to be chosen, and Tuesday’s total of 187 makes it the biggest single primary day left. Clinton would need to win 70 percent of the remaining pledged delegates to catch up with Obama.
That’s very unlikely, Schneider said. She stands a better chance of catching up in the total popular vote.
With neither candidate expected to win the 2,025 delegates needed to clinch the Democratic nomination by June 3, the end of the primary season, the final decision will most likely fall to the 796 so-called superdelegates: Democratic governors, members of Congress and party officials. Watch what’s at stake in Indiana and North Carolina
The race in Indiana is close. The CNN Poll of Polls released Tuesday suggests Clinton has a four-point lead. The poll, which averages the latest surveys in the state, had been tied for the last week.
Obama acknowledged to supporters Monday that Indiana is up for grabs.
This is gonna be a tight election here in Indiana, he said in Evansville. Every poll shows it is a dead heat. We need every single vote. So, you guys are pretty persuasive. I need you to tell your members that this is something worth fighting for and that they need to come out and vote, and vote for me.
In North Carolina, the CNN Poll of Polls released Tuesday indicates that Obama is up by 10 points over Clinton, 51 percent to 41 percent. A poll of polls released on Monday had Obama up by only 8 points after enjoying weeks of double-digit leads.
If Obama wins both North Carolina and Indiana, that would be a game changer, but not the one Clinton is talking about, Schneider said. The superdelegates would take that as a signal that the voters are ready to close the deal up with Obama.
Both candidates have spent the past two weeks shuttling between Indiana and North Carolina, each arguing to crucial working-class voters that their rival is out of touch when it comes to the pocketbook issues that are dominating the campaign.
Clinton is touting her plan to repeal the federal gas tax (about 18 cents a gallon for regular unleaded) to give Americans who are facing $4-per-gallon gas prices some relief this summer.
I think you should have some immediate relief, she said Monday. In fact, I think it’s a false choice, as my opponent and others have been trying to say: ‘Oh we can’t do anything in the short run to help people, we can only worry about what we do in the long run.’
People live in the short run. People get up every day and have to go fill up their tanks, they have to go the grocery store, so let’s have immediate relief and long-term relief.
Clinton is also touting her populist message in a new commercial: Hillary is the one who gets it. Hillary Clinton is the candidate who is going to fight for working people. Watch what Clinton has to say about the tax holiday and other issues
Obama calls the Clinton plan, and a similar proposal by presumptive GOP presidential nominee John McCain, a sham and pure pandering for votes.
We can’t afford to settle for a Washington where politicians only focus on how to win instead of why we should; where they check the polls before they check their gut; where they only tell us whatever we want to hear whenever we want to hear it, Obama said Monday. That kind of politics may get them where they need to go, but it doesn’t get America where we need to go. And it won’t change anything. Watch what Obama has to say about the tax holiday and other issues
This new disagreement over whether to repeal the federal gas tax is the latest clash in a long feud between the two rivals.
YANGON, Myanmar (CNN) — The Myanmar military regime said Tuesday that at least 15,000 people were killed and the U.N. estimates up to a million could be homeless after the catastrophic cyclone that has battered the country.
The country’s state-run MRTV reported Tuesday that more than 10,000 people were killed in Myanmar’s Irrawady Delta region and 59 in the Yangon division. It said thousands were missing and that the death toll was expected to rise.
China’s state-run Xinhua news agency reported a death toll of more than 15,000, citing official sources. More than 10,000 were killed in the township of Bogalay, according to Xinhua.
CNN’s Dan Rivers, the only western journalist in Bogalay, said he had seen nothing but destroyed homes for 30 kilometers and people were now sheltering under canvas covers. They had little food bar a small amount of eggs and rice. Watch family huddle in ruined home
Rivers said he had seen the army and Red Cross in the area, but the weather remained awful and conditions were miserable.
The aftermath has pushed Myanmar’s normally secretive ruling military junta to ask for aid and release details of the devastation. However, the U.N. said its aid workers were still waiting for visas to enter the country. It, the Red Cross and other aid organizations have been gathering supplies to ship to the country.
Some aid agencies reported their assessment teams had reached some areas of the largely isolated region but said getting in supplies and large numbers of aid workers would be difficult, The Associated Press reported.
Maung Maung Swe, Myanmar’s social welfare minister, told reporters Tuesday that 95 percent of the homes in Bogalay — a city of 190,000 — had been destroyed, AFP reported. Watch how the cyclone crippled Yangon
Ninety-five percent of the houses in Bogalay were destroyed, he said, adding that most of the damage was caused by the 3.6 meter storm surge that accompanied the cyclone.
Many people were killed in a 12-foot tidal wave, he said.
Swe said the country needed aid now, AP reported.
Instead of waiting for figures on casualties and damage, it will be practical to send humanitarian aid to victims as soon as possible.
The U.N. World Food Program (WFP), which was preparing to fly in food supplies, offered a grim assessment of the destruction: up to a million people possibly homeless, some villages almost totally destroyed and vast rice-growing areas wiped out, AP reported.
We hope to fly in more assistance within the next 48 hours, WFP spokesman Paul Risley said in Bangkok. The challenge will be getting to the affected areas with road blockages everywhere.
Based on a satellite map made available by the U.N., the storm’s damage was concentrated over about a 30,000 square-kilometer area along the Andaman Sea and Gulf of Martaban coastlines, which is home to nearly a quarter of Myanmar’s 57 million people.
Kyi Minn, of the international aid group World Vision, told CNN that the situation was bleak.
It could be worse than [the] tsunami, Minn said, comparing the cyclone’s impact on Myanmar to the damage caused following the tsunami that struck the region in late 2004. The tsunami was triggered by a a massive earthquake off the coast of Indonesia and killed more than 150,000 across the region.
Minn said clean drinking water, food, medicine and shelter were all at a premium. Watch the cyclone hammer Yangon
Tropical Cyclone Nargis pummeled Yangon for more than 10 hours from Friday night into Saturday, with 20 inches of rain and winds above 240 km/hr.
While Myanmar’s ruling military junta has been accused by U.S. first lady Laura Bush of not warning the public about the approaching cyclone, witnesses say state media did report the storm — it just came too late.
We did get a warning, but it seems the military warned at a late stage, an Australian witness in Yangon told CNN, adding there was no time for people to evacuate or buy emergency supplies.
She also said that perhaps a lot of Burmese didn’t take it as seriously as they could have.
MRTV disputed media accounts of insufficient warnings ahead of the storm.
Timely weather reports were announced and aired on TV and radio two to three days in advance to keep people safe and secure, an MRTV anchor reported.
Video from the scene showed residents in some areas hacking their way through downed trees and trudging through knee-deep, swirling brown water. Thousands of tropical trees had been ripped up and thrown down, some into roadways.
Terje Skavdal, of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Human Affairs, called it a major crisis.
It is a major undertaking to get it right for the government, Skavdal told CNN in an interview from Bangkok, Thailand. There is a major job ahead of us.
As the international community prepared a response, survivors faced the chaos the disaster caused.
Most telephone and cell phone service was down in Yangon, a city of about 6.5 million people, Rivers said earlier Tuesday before traveling to Bogalay.
In some places, the price of fuel had quadrupled to $10 a gallon in the wake of the storm, he said. Even with that price lines for gas stretched around the block and some were turning to the black market.
The price of eggs had doubled, the main water supply had been cut in many areas and power lines were down, Rivers said.
No food. No water, an exasperated man told him. So you have to find everything. See photos of the destruction
Residents of one small community told Rivers that the army had been through to clear the main road but had not helped with recovery efforts.
The U.N. said International aid organizations were meeting to determine how best to help the thousands of people who had been affected by the storm.
A U.N. humanitarian official told CNN a five-person disaster assistance coordination team had arrived in Bangkok, but they would not know until later on Tuesday when they could enter Myanmar.
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said it had released $190,000 to help with the aftermath of the storm, the European Commission has pledged $3.1 million, Canada $2 million, China an unspecified amount and Thailand $100,000 in cash and aid.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Embassy in Myanmar has issued a disaster declaration in the country and authorized the release of $250,000 for cyclone relief efforts, Deputy State Department spokesman Tom Casey said. A disaster relief team was on standby, he said, but the Myanmar government had not given permission for the team to enter the country. Listen to Irrawaddy journalist discuss the situation in Myanmar
The State Department issued a travel warning Monday night, authorizing the departure of non-emergency U.S. personnel at the embassy and warning American citizens to strongly consider departing Myanmar.
The country’s state radio said Saturday’s vote on a military-backed draft constitution would be delayed until May 24 in 40 of 45 townships in the Yangon area and seven in the Irrawaddy delta, AP reported.
The constitutional referendum is referred to in the state-run media as the fourth step of a seven-step road map to democracy.
The government has said elections will be held in 2010 to choose a representative government to replace the military junta.
Myanmar, traditionally known as Burma, last held multi-party elections in 1990, when Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy handily won. The military junta ignored the results. Learn more about Myanmar
The regime has come under intense international pressure, especially after using force last year to suppress a pro-democracy movement.
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My name is Izabel Potrito. You are reading my Fair Proxy blog where I'll share latest news in USA and world. My thoughts to make this country a better place.