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Archive for July 5th, 2008

FDA hunts for salmonella source in Mexico

posted by admin in cnn, news

AUTLAN, Mexico (AP) — Inspectors are collecting soil, water and produce samples, reviewing export logs and combing packing plants in three major tomato-growing states in Mexico.

But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration appears no closer to finding the source of a mysterious salmonella outbreak that has sickened more than 900 people nationwide. It’s not even 100 percent sure that tomatoes are the cause.

A team of three FDA inspectors has gone through five farms in the western states of Jalisco and Sinaloa in the past two weeks, looking at all aspects of tomato production: the greenhouses where they are grown, the packing plants where they are shut into boxes, the shipping methods for the trip north to the U.S.

They also plan to visit the northern state of Coahuila to finish up their study.

The results can’t come too soon for the three Mexican states that were targeted by the FDA, along with farms in Texas and Florida.

Bonanza 2001 farm in Autlan, Jalisco, which normally exports about 12,000 tons of tomatoes a year to the U.S., has hundreds of tons sitting in a warehouse near the Texas-Mexico border as demand has plummeted, said spokesman Luis Almejo.

They may rot. Sinaloa growers also face big losses.

We’re demanding that they release those results as soon as possible so that Sinaloa can be cleared of any suspicion, said Manuel Tarriba, president of Sinaloa’s Tomato Growers Association. Tarriba said he expects to get results by the end of next week.

The outbreak, which began in April in the United States, has affected 943 people so far in 40 U.S. states, more than a third of them in Texas, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There have been 225 cases reported since June 1 — evidence that the source likely has not been contained.

Salmonella can be transmitted to humans when fecal material from animals or humans contaminates food. Fever, diarrhea and abdominal cramps typically start eight to 48 hours after infection and can last a week. Many people recover without treatment. But severe infection and death are possible. At least 130 people have been hospitalized in this outbreak, the CDC said.

The U.S. tomato industry has taken a $100 million hit as restaurants temporarily dropped tomatoes from their menus, and farmers have had to plow under their fields or leave crops to rot in packing houses.

Mexico has not calculated its losses. But growers worry they still may be under a shadow of suspicion as late as November, when greenhouses harvest their summer tomatoes.

On Tuesday, the government said it would test numerous other kinds of fresh produce commonly served with fresh tomatoes while saying that tomatoes remained the leading culprit.

The FDA has begun looking at jalapeno peppers as a possible cause of the outbreak, as well as ingredients used to make salsa such as cilantro and Serrano peppers. Tomatoes continue to be investigated as well, spokeswoman Stephanie Kwisnek said.

Investigators with the CDC have interviewed people sickened in June to find out what they ate and to compare their diets with those of healthy relatives and neighbors. Officials so far have not revealed early findings, except to say they supported the investigation’s new move.

Among the possibilities FDA has said it was exploring is whether tomatoes and other produce are sharing a common packing or shipping site where both might become contaminated, or whether multiple foods might be tainted while being grown on adjoining farms or with common water sources.

FDA inspectors wouldn’t speak to an Associated Press reporter at the Bonanza 2001 farm, one of 15 in Jalisco state that export to the U.S.

As they reviewed the packing plant, workers in aprons, hairnets and plastic gloves cleaned and packed the last tomato harvest to be shipped to the company’s warehouse in Pharr, Texas.

Bonanza has about 150 acres of greenhouse tomatoes in a lush valley near Jalisco’s south coast, an area shared by several U.S.-owned tomato growing companies, including San Antonio-based Desert Glory, North America’s largest grower of greenhouse tomatoes.

Jalisco state agriculture official Martin Figueroa said the FDA inspectors visited only Bonanza but left open the possibility of returning.

In Sinaloa, which grows about 40 percent of all tomatoes sent to the U.S., they checked full operations — including irrigation methods — at four farms, Tarriba said.

Sinaloa state wrapped up its winter harvest in June. Farmers now are cleaning their greenhouses and waiting for U.S. clearance before planting more tomatoes. They also are asking Mexican and U.S. authorities to come up with a binational certification program that would establish the same sanitation standards at every agricultural producer in Mexico, Tarriba said.

Currently, private U.S. certification companies check sanitation standards in Mexico.

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Freed American hostages ‘overwhelmed with emotion’

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SAN ANTONIO, Texas (CNN) — The three Americans rescued after more than five years in captivity in Colombia say they are doing well but are overwhelmed with emotion, according to a statement released on their behalf.

Words alone can never possibly express the thrill and excitement we feel to be back home in the United States of America with our families at our side, the Friday statement from Marc Gonsalves, Thomas Howes and Keith Stansell said.

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) had held the three U.S. government contractors since February 2003, after their plane crashed in a remote region of the South American country.

They were among 15 hostages rescued Wednesday in a Colombian military operation. Watch Colombians celebrate success

Also among the rescued hostages was French-Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt, who returned to France on Friday. She is undergoing medical tests at a Paris military hospital, The Associated Press reported. Watch Betancourt’s joyous return to France

Shortly after the plane crashed, FARC members killed contractor Tom Janis, according to employer Northrop Grumman, and Colombian army Sgt. Luis Cruz, according to the U.S. State Department.

The three freed Americans are being treated at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas. Learn about the former hostages

For five-and-a-half long years, we all hoped and prayed this day would come, their statement said. Now that it has, we’re just overwhelmed with emotion. The love and the joy we’re all experiencing is beyond description.

We want to offer our heartfelt thanks to the government and the armed forces of Colombia. The operation they conducted to rescue us was one for the history books — something we will never forget for the rest of our lives.

Colombian authorities unveiled details and a videotape Friday describing the mission, which involved tricking the leftist rebels into giving up their hostages. Watch video of the rescue

Government agents had infiltrated the FARC leadership over several months. This week they talked the rebels into moving the hostages, saying a humanitarian group wanted to check on them.

A helicopter carrying fake rebels picked up the hostages at a rendezvous point, ostensibly to take them to another rebel camp. It actually was a government helicopter, and the hostages were whisked to freedom without a shot being fired. Learn about FARC

On Thursday, doctors at the Brooke Army Medical Center said the three Americans appeared to be in good health. Initial tests had for now ruled out the suspicion of infectious diseases, and although other medical tests are pending, everything really looks well, said Col. Jackie Hayes, a psychiatrist and the lead physician on the men’s medical team.

Hayes said patient confidentiality rules prevented him from commenting on reports that Gonsalves was suffering from hepatitis.

found here.

University given huge collection of 78 rpm records

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SYRACUSE, New York (AP) — A vast collection of 78 rpm records is being donated to Syracuse University by the estate of a prominent New York City record shop owner.

The more than 200,000 records represented the entire inventory of Records Revisited, a landmark Manhattan store owned by Morton Savada, who died in February of lung cancer at age 85.

The collection, valued at $1 million, weighs 50 tons and represents more than a half-century of American music history.

Included are recordings from 1895 to the 1950s, with big band, jazz, country, blues, gospel, polka, folk, Broadway, Hawaiian and Latin among the genres. The collection also contains spoken-word, comedy and broadcast recordings, and V-disks, which were distributed as entertainment to the U.S. military during World War II.

It’s a treasure trove of that era, said Joe Lauro, founder of Historic Film Archive, whose holdings include more than 40,000 musical performance clips and which holds exclusive rights to such famous shows as The Ed Sullivan Show and Don Kirshner’s Rock Concert.

In terms of individual records at high prices … there’s not a lot of that in there. The value is that it’s the largest massing of recordings from one particular era, said Lauro, who was befriended by Savada as a teenager and visited his store often during their 35-year-long friendship.

Even though they don’t yet know what gems await them in Savada’s collection, university officials were ecstatic about the donation, which boosts the Belfer Audio Laboratory and Archive’s collection of 78 rpm records to about 400,000 — second in the United States only to the Library of Congress collection. His family also donated Savada’s collection of catalogs, discographies and other materials.

found here.

Afghanistan: Airstrikes kill civilians

posted by admin in cnn, news

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The U.S. military said airstrikes by its attack helicopters hit two vehicles carrying insurgents in eastern Afghanistan. The province’s governor said 22 civilians, including a woman and a child, were killed.

A spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition said Friday the airstrikes in Nuristan province hit militants who earlier attacked a U.S. military base with mortars.

The helicopters identified the militants’ firing positions, tracked them down and destroyed the vehicles they were traveling in, said 1st Lt. Nathan Perry.

These were combatants. These were people who were firing on us, Perry said. We have no reports of noncombatant injuries.

He gave no account of casualties in the vehicles.

Nuristan’s Gov. Tamim Nuristani said, however, 22 civilians were killed in the Waygal district of Nuristan province. This afternoon (Friday), two civilian vehicles were hit by airstrikes, Nuristani said over the phone.

Among those killed were a woman and a child. All 22 dead bodies were brought to a provincial hospital, Nuristani said. Seven other people were wounded.

found here.

Afghanistan: Airstrikes kill civilians

posted by admin in cnn, news

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The U.S. military said airstrikes by its attack helicopters hit two vehicles carrying insurgents in eastern Afghanistan. The province’s governor said 22 civilians, including a woman and a child, were killed.

A spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition said Friday the airstrikes in Nuristan province hit militants who earlier attacked a U.S. military base with mortars.

The helicopters identified the militants’ firing positions, tracked them down and destroyed the vehicles they were traveling in, said 1st Lt. Nathan Perry.

These were combatants. These were people who were firing on us, Perry said. We have no reports of noncombatant injuries.

He gave no account of casualties in the vehicles.

Nuristan’s Gov. Tamim Nuristani said, however, 22 civilians were killed in the Waygal district of Nuristan province. This afternoon (Friday), two civilian vehicles were hit by airstrikes, Nuristani said over the phone.

Among those killed were a woman and a child. All 22 dead bodies were brought to a provincial hospital, Nuristani said. Seven other people were wounded.

found here.

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