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Archive for July 11th, 2008

Ex-FARC hostage: Rebels ‘don’t recognize humanity’

posted by admin in cnn, news

SAN ANTONIO, Texas (CNN) — Three Americans rescued last week from captivity in the Colombian jungle will return to their homes Saturday, the U.S. Army South said.

Marc Gonsalves, Thomas Howes and Keith Stansell have been undergoing a reintegration process at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas, since their return 10 days ago to the United States.

The men were among 15 hostages, including former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, who were rescued July 2 in a Colombian military operation.

The men carried with them a metal lock, a bullet and a chess board made of cardboard — small items that are reminders of the years they spent away from their families, cut off from the world outside the jungle, seeing only fellow hostages and their captors, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

The group had held the three U.S. government contractors hostage since February 2003, after their plane crashed in a remote region of the South American country.

They don’t recognize humanity, they don’t recognize human rights. They’re animals. They’re terrorists, Stansell said of the FARC. We don’t want to exaggerate what happened. We just want to tell the truth.

The men painted a gruesome picture of their captivity, describing months in which they were ordered not to speak to each other and an initial campsite where they lived with a rat’s nest above them. They slept on the floors of drug labs and were forced to march for hours while chained.

Chains were very much a part of their captivity.

That was put around my neck every night, Stansell told Headline News’ Robin Meade on Thursday, holding a heavy industrial lock. This lock, with 5 meters of chain — thick, 1-inch links — went to his neck, Stansell said, pointing at Gonsalves.

We slept like that, he said. Watch how the rescue surprised the hostages

Gonsalves also held small wooden chess pawns he had carved using a broken piece of a machete. It took three months to make them, he said. Watch Gonsalves talk about how chess made him feel free

We’re in chains, sitting Indian-style on a piece of plastic, just playing chess, Stansell said. And when you’re doing that, you’re free.

Howes, the most reticent of the three, carried with him a bullet from a commander who had once threatened to kill him.

But despite the chains, the intolerable living conditions and the isolation, being away from their families was possibly the most difficult hardship to endure, the men said.

I remember my darkest day was in the first month of our captivity, Gonsalves said. We were, at that point, locked in boxes at night. … That night, I dreamt about my daughter, who was my little girl and still is. And I had this dream about her that was so real; she was sitting on my lap, and … she had little braids in her hair, he said. Watch Gonsalves talk about his darkest hour

It was a wonderful dream, with all of my family. But the problem was, I woke up.

Colombian government agents infiltrated the FARC leadership over several months, eventually tricking the rebels into moving the hostages by saying a humanitarian group wanted to check on them.

A helicopter carrying fake rebels picked up the hostages at a rendezvous point on July 2, ostensibly to take them to another rebel camp. But it was actually a Colombian military helicopter and the hostages were flown away, free, without a shot being fired. Read about the daring rescue mission

The FARC, which has been fighting with the Colombian government and other paramilitary groups for decades, defends the taking of captives as a legitimate act of war. The group is thought to be holding about 750 prisoners in the nation’s remote jungles.

Along with the former contractors, French-Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt was also freed from FARC. She was abducted by the rebels in 2002 during her campaign for Colombia’s presidency. She told CNN’s Larry King on Wednesday that her time as a hostage was hell.

Stansell, who was captured while his girlfriend was pregnant with twins, said he believed for a while that one had died. A guard told Stansell he saw a photograph of the girlfriend with only one son, he said, although the guard did not produce the photograph.

Then, one day on the radio, he heard two little guys … sending me messages. On Sundays, Caracol Radio airs a program called Voices of Captivity, a lifeline for FARC hostages as the program often plays messages from the family members of the hostages.

This is just a deep breath of happiness, Stansell said of his sons. Watch the full interview - Part 1; Watch the full interview - Part 2

The radio was also how Stansell’s girlfriend accepted his marriage proposal, which he had smuggled out with a hostage who had been released, he said. She also accepted in person after his rescue, he said.

And I looked at [her] and I said, ‘This is a go, right?’ She said, ‘That’s it. This is our family,’ he recalled.

He said when he saw his sons for the first time, it was as though he had known them since birth.

I opened the door. … I hear, ‘Papa, Papa, Papa, he said. And they just hit me; it was like I had never even been gone.

Captivity also separated Howes from his wife and two sons.

Before this [I] was a guy that was kind of a typical American guy that was working, busy working, running through a life full-speed, he said. I had a little boy when we crashed that was 5 years old, another one 15. Had a wife who was back in the States; we just got a house. I had 12 nights in the house of my dreams in the States, he said.

found here.

Glitch hampers iPhone launch

posted by admin in cnn, news

NEW YORK (AP) — Apple Inc.’s new iPhone went on sale Friday to eager buyers worldwide, but there were problems getting the phones to work.

Kenny Pichardo, 24, was the first to buy an iPhone 3G at an ATT store in the New York borough of Queens, but he said it took the store half an hour to get the phone working.

That boded badly for the approximately 70 people after him in line. Pichardo had camped out overnight to be first.

A spokesman for ATT Inc., the exclusive carrier for the iPhone in the U.S., said there was a global problem with Apple Inc.’s iTunes software that prevented the phones from being fully activated in-store, as had been planned.

Instead, employees are telling buyers to go home and perform the last step by connecting their phones to their own computers, spokesman Michael Coe said.

When the first iPhone went on sale a year ago, customers performed the whole activation procedure at home, freeing store employees to focus on sales. But the new model is subsidized by carriers, as is standard in the wireless industry, and Apple and ATT therefore planned to activate all phones in-store to get customers on a contract.

The problem extended to owners of the previous iPhone model. A software update released for that phone on Friday morning required the phone to be reactivated through iTunes.

It’s a mess, said freelance photographer Giovanni Cipriano, who updated his first-generation iPhone only to find it unusable.

On Thursday, Apple had problems with the launch of a new data service, MobileMe. The service is designed to synchronize a users personal data across devices, including the iPhone, but many users were denied access to their accounts.

Nevertheless, enthusiasm was high for the new model ahead of the 8 a.m. launch in the U.S.

At the flagship Apple store on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue, a line of hundreds encircled the block ahead of the 8 a.m. opening. Many of them were already owners of the first iPhone, suggesting that Apple is preaching to the choir with the new model, which updates the one launched a year ago by speeding up Internet access and adding a navigation chip.

Thanks to subsidies by the carrier, the price has also been cut substantially to $199 for the cheapest model in the United States.

Alex Cavallo, 24, was in line at the Fifth Avenue store, just as he had been a year ago for the original iPhone. He sold that one recently on eBay in anticipation of the new one. In the meantime, he has been using another phone, which felt uncomfortable.

The iPhone is just a superior user experience, he said. The phone also proved a decent investment for him: He bought the old model for $599 and sold it for $570.

Outside an ATT store in Atlanta, Georgia, more than hundred people had lined up. Watch as iPhone fans get their first chance to buy

Edward Watkins, a 34-year-old engineer and avowed techno nut, said he didn’t mind paying an extra $10 a month to the carrier to upgrade his phone.

I’d pay an extra $30 or $40 a month for that. It’s a smoother running phone. It’s driving a Beamer as opposed to a Chevy Metro.

Fueled by bags of Doritos, three games of Scrabble and two packs of cigarettes, 24-year-old grad student Nick Epperson stayed up all night for a phone, after selling his old one online. When asked why he was waiting in line, he responded simply Chicks dig the iPhone.

The new phone went on sale Friday in 22 countries. In most of them it was the first time any iPhone was officially sold there, though several countries have seen a brisk grey-market trade in phones imported from the U.S. iReport: See the first sales in New Zealand

On the Japanese market, the iPhone’s capabilities are less revolutionary, where people have for years used tech-heavy local phones for restaurant searches, e-mail, music downloads, reading digital novels and electronic shopping.

The latest Japanese cell phones have two key features absent on the iPhone — digital TV broadcast reception and the electronic wallet for making payments at stores and vending machines equipped with special electronic readers.

But they don’t have the iPhone’s nifty touch screen or glamour image. By Friday morning, the line at the Softbank Corp. store in Tokyo had grown to more than 1,000 people, and the phone quickly sold out.

Just look at this obviously innovative design, Yuki Kurita, 23, said as he emerged from buying his iPhone, carrying bags of clothing and a skateboard he had used as a chair during his wait outside the Tokyo store. I am so thrilled just thinking about how I get to touch this.

The phone went on sale first in New Zealand, where hundreds of people lined up outside stores in New Zealand’s main cities to snap it up right at midnight — 8 a.m. Thursday in New York.

found here.

Oil price surges near $147

posted by admin in cnn, news

(CNN) — Oil hit a record trading high Friday as tensions with Iran, the possibility of renewed violence in Nigeria and a planned labor strike in Brazil threatened already tight supplies.

Light sweet crude for August delivery was up $5 to $146.64 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Earlier prices touched a new trading record of $146.90, eclipsing the mark of $145.85 set July 3.

Oil rallied more than $5 a barrel late Thursday after the oil producing nation of Iran conducted a second missile test in the Persian Gulf Thursday evening, increasing tensions with Israel and the West over its nuclear program.

One of the great fears facing oil investors is the possibility that Iran could blockade the nearby Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway that carries a large percentage of the world’s oil traffic.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had earlier warned Iran that the United States would defend its allies. Iran then responded with another missile launch.

Unrest in Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil producer, has also set investors on edge. The nation’s main rebel group threatened to renew attacks after the British expressed support for the country’s current government. Militants have commonly targeted Nigeria’s oil infrastructure.

Also adding to concerns was a potential labor strike against Brazilian oil company Petroleo Brasileiro. Brazil’s Oil Workers Confederation said it was planning a 5-day strike that could affect 80 percent of the South American country’s oil supply.

There’s always a fear premium in pricing. The tensions in Iran and the threat of supply disruption will help support oil prices, said Jeff Brown, managing director of FACTS Global Energy in Singapore told The Associated Press.

JBC Energy in Vienna, Austria, told AP the news about Iran, Nigeria, as well as a reported threat of a strike by oil workers in Brazil were enough to wake the market from its two-day slumber.

found here.

Report: Teen pregnancies up for first time in 15 years

posted by admin in cnn, news

Atlanta, GEORGIA (CNN) — Teen pregnancies rose in the United States for the first time since 1991, the National Institutes of Health reported Friday.

The new data also show that eighth-graders smoke less, according to the report America’s Children in Brief: Key National Indicators of Well-Being 2008.

The report comes after a spate of high-profile teen pregnancies: that of 17-year-old TV star Jamie Lynn Spears, who recently gave birth to a daughter, as well as the pregnancies of numerous students at Gloucester High School in Massachusetts.

Federal health experts said they don’t know why the teen pregnancy numbers went up from 2005 to 2006, and that not enough data have been collected to say whether it’s a trend.

It may be a blip in the data, and it may come down, Edward J. Sondik, Director of the National Center for Health Statistics in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said. Among other key findings from the study: Injury and mortality among adolescents ages 15 to 19 went down from 2004 to 2005. But more youth offenders ages 12 to 17 were involved in serious violent crimes in the same time period. The number of students who reported using illicit drugs over the past 30 days did not change significantly from 2006 to 2007 among eighth-, 10th-, or 12th-graders. Read more about teenage behavior in the report

Pregnant teens aged 15 to 19 are less likely to get prenatal care and gain appropriate weight, experts say. They are also more likely smoke than pregnant women aged 20 years or older.

Teen pregnancy is one of the key indicators for the health of the teen population because it not only reflects their health at this point, but it reflects their health and well-being for the next 20 to 40 years, Sondik said.

The numbers also say something about the health of these teenagers’ children, who are more likely to have a low birth weight, said Sondik, which is a cause of concern.

Low birth weight infants, defined as less than 5 pounds 8 ounces, are at increased risk for infant death and such lifelong disabilities as blindness, deafness and cerebral palsy. The report also showed an overall increase in low birth weight infants.

In 2005, the number of births for girls aged 15 to 17 was about 133,000, or 21 for every 1,000 girls. That number rose to nearly 139,000, or 22 for every 1,000 girls, in 2006.

Along the same lines, 1/3 of girls in the United States got pregnant before age 20, and more than 435,000 babies were born to teens between 15 and 19 years in 2006, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A cutback in community resources for youth over the last eight years could help explain the increase in teen pregnancies, said Michele Ozumba, director of the Georgia Campaign for Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention.

All small-community based organizations doing youth programming are struggling just to keep the doors open, she said. There are no additional resources to respond to the needs that we’re seeing every day.

Still, she cautioned that the data reflect only one year of change, meaning it does not necessarily point to a trend.

The report also showed that daily smoking among eighth-graders in the U.S. went down from 4 percent in 2006 to 3 percent in 2007. That’s a striking decrease from 1996, when 10 percent of eighth-graders smoked daily.

They’re making right choice in early lives, and we certainly hope that this trend will remain, Sondik said.

He attributed the downward trend to efforts convincing kids and adults not to smoke, as well as policies that restrict smoking in public places and tax cigarettes.

found here.

Report: Teen pregnancies up for first time in 15 years

posted by admin in cnn, news

Atlanta, GEORGIA (CNN) — Teen pregnancies rose in the United States for the first time since 1991, the National Institutes of Health reported Friday.

The new data also show that eighth-graders smoke less, according to the report America’s Children in Brief: Key National Indicators of Well-Being 2008.

The report comes after a spate of high-profile teen pregnancies: that of 17-year-old TV star Jamie Lynn Spears, who recently gave birth to a daughter, as well as the pregnancies of numerous students at Gloucester High School in Massachusetts.

Federal health experts said they don’t know why the teen pregnancy numbers went up from 2005 to 2006, and that not enough data have been collected to say whether it’s a trend.

It may be a blip in the data, and it may come down, Edward J. Sondik, Director of the National Center for Health Statistics in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said. Among other key findings from the study: Injury and mortality among adolescents ages 15 to 19 went down from 2004 to 2005. But more youth offenders ages 12 to 17 were involved in serious violent crimes in the same time period. The number of students who reported using illicit drugs over the past 30 days did not change significantly from 2006 to 2007 among eighth-, 10th-, or 12th-graders. Read more about teenage behavior in the report

Pregnant teens aged 15 to 19 are less likely to get prenatal care and gain appropriate weight, experts say. They are also more likely smoke than pregnant women aged 20 years or older.

Teen pregnancy is one of the key indicators for the health of the teen population because it not only reflects their health at this point, but it reflects their health and well-being for the next 20 to 40 years, Sondik said.

The numbers also say something about the health of these teenagers’ children, who are more likely to have a low birth weight, said Sondik, which is a cause of concern.

Low birth weight infants, defined as less than 5 pounds 8 ounces, are at increased risk for infant death and such lifelong disabilities as blindness, deafness and cerebral palsy. The report also showed an overall increase in low birth weight infants.

In 2005, the number of births for girls aged 15 to 17 was about 133,000, or 21 for every 1,000 girls. That number rose to nearly 139,000, or 22 for every 1,000 girls, in 2006.

Along the same lines, 1/3 of girls in the United States got pregnant before age 20, and more than 435,000 babies were born to teens between 15 and 19 years in 2006, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A cutback in community resources for youth over the last eight years could help explain the increase in teen pregnancies, said Michele Ozumba, director of the Georgia Campaign for Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention.

All small-community based organizations doing youth programming are struggling just to keep the doors open, she said. There are no additional resources to respond to the needs that we’re seeing every day.

Still, she cautioned that the data reflect only one year of change, meaning it does not necessarily point to a trend.

The report also showed that daily smoking among eighth-graders in the U.S. went down from 4 percent in 2006 to 3 percent in 2007. That’s a striking decrease from 1996, when 10 percent of eighth-graders smoked daily.

They’re making right choice in early lives, and we certainly hope that this trend will remain, Sondik said.

He attributed the downward trend to efforts convincing kids and adults not to smoke, as well as policies that restrict smoking in public places and tax cigarettes.

found here.

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