Five rockets fired from Syria into Israeli-held Golan: army |
- Five rockets fired from Syria into Israeli-held Golan: army
- Families wage citizen campaign to solve MH370 mystery
- Strong 6.6-magnitude quake jolts central Chile: USGS
Five rockets fired from Syria into Israeli-held Golan: army Posted: 24 Aug 2014 12:03 AM PDT JERUSALEM: Rocket fire from Syria slammed into the Israeli-occupied sector of the Golan Heights on Sunday (Aug 24) but there were no reports of casualties. "At least five rockets fired from Syria hit different locations across the Golan Heights," the Israeli army said in a statement. An army spokeswoman told AFP that it was not known who launched the rockets and the Israeli military did not return fire. She said there were no casualties in the attacks, at around 1.30am (6.30am, Singapore time) on Sunday, the 48th day of a war between Israel and the Islamist movement Hamas in and around Gaza. Last month, a rocket from Syria prompted Israeli artillery to shell Syrian army positions. In June, Israeli warplanes attacked Syrian military headquarters and positions after an Israeli teenager was killed in what the Jewish state said was a cross-border attack by forces loyal to the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Some previous incidents have been put down to stray fire from fighting between Syrian government troops and opposition forces. Late on Saturday, a rocket fired from Lebanon hit northern Israel. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the launch or reports of damage or injuries. A Lebanese security source said the rocket was fired from Dheira, three kilometres (nearly two miles) from the border with Israel. The same source noted that Israeli helicopters were seen flying around the border area. In mid-July, at least nine rockets were fired from Lebanon at the Jewish state, prompting Israel to retaliate with artillery fire. Lebanese military officials had at the time said they believed the attacks were carried out by a small Palestinian group in an act of solidarity with Gazan militants. Israel did not return fire for the Saturday night attack but sent "a strong protest" to the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, which monitors the border between Lebanon and Israel. – AFP We encourage commenting on our stories to give readers a chance to express their opinions; please refrain from vulgar language, insidious, seditious or slanderous remarks. While the comments here reflect the views of the readers, they are not necessarily that of Borneo Post Online. Borneo Post Online reserves the right not to publish or to remove comments that are offensive or volatile. Please read the Commenting Rules. |
Families wage citizen campaign to solve MH370 mystery Posted: 23 Aug 2014 09:16 PM PDT KUALA LUMPUR: Chinese physics student Jimmy Wang had no interest in aviation until Mar 8, when Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 went missing with his 58-year-old father Wang Lijun aboard. But Wang, 31, now spends evenings in central China combing through aviation blogs for Boeing 777 technical specs, exchanging what he finds with fellow MH370 next-of-kin. He is one of hundreds of relatives who – desperate to learn the fate of their loved ones– are channeling their grief in a cross-border, social-media-enabled, but so far frustrating citizen campaign to solve aviation's greatest mystery. "Malaysia Airlines and others are not doing their jobs so we have to organise," Wang, who abandoned graduate studies in Sweden to be with his grieving mother, said via Skype from his home in the city of Anyang. "I cannot live the rest of my life in questions." Through Chinese micro-blogging site Weibo – 153 Chinese were aboard MH370 – a closed Facebook group, and Skype "meetings" of up to dozens of people, participants exchange findings, discuss the latest theories, and proposals for group action. The group, calling itself Voice370 with some 300 members, receives and debates advice from aviation, legal and other experts, while similar groups formed after previous disasters such as the 2009 Air France crash offer support. While some face-to-face meetings have been held, most exchanges are conducted via webcam or extensive email strings, with members voting on strategies for pushing Malaysia Airlines and governments involved in a still-fruitless search for more information. In doing so, they juggle time zones and language barriers – "meetings" are held mainly in English, with bilingual Chinese translating for their countrymen. "Quite a community""It's really quite a community," said Sarah Bajc, an American whose partner Philip Wood was on the flight. "I feel compelled to do everything in my power to find Philip. We owe it to them." Flight MH370 disappeared with 239 people en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. No trace has been found despite an extensive, Australian-led search in the southern Indian Ocean. Some next of kin have sharply accused the airline and Malaysian authorities of a bungled response – its military tracked MH370 on radar after it mysteriously diverted, but did nothing – and withholding data from the public. Yet despite their efforts, families have seen only modest success. In an open letter to authorities in Malaysia, Australia and China in May, a skeptical Voice370 demanded to see satellite and other data that Malaysia says indicates MH370 went down in the Indian Ocean. The information was eventually released but shed little light on what happened. In June, several families, including Bajc, launched a drive to raise US$5 million (S$6 million) for any whistle-blower with information on the jet's fate. Only US$100,500 has been raised. "You get tired, and part of you wants to put it behind and say 'That's where it all ends', and part of you says, 'You can't rest until you figure things out,'" said K S Narendran, 50, a soft-spoken Indian business consultant, whose wife, Chandrika Sharma, was on MH370. Families denied AFP's request to sit in on meetings. No stone unturnedThe airline and Malaysian government deny charges of a cover-up and insist they will leave no stone unturned. "We would like to assure the next of kin of MH370 that our commitment to the search for this flight has remained consistent and has strengthened," Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said in an Aug 9 statement. The government is yet to announce any findings of its investigations into MH370. Its attention is now diverted by the Jul 17 downing of another Malaysia Airlines passenger jet, MH17, over war-torn eastern Ukraine, a tragedy that also ripped open emotional wounds for many MH370 next-of-kin. Bajc said MH17 underlines the importance of Voice370, particularly the need to highlight "critical flaws" in global aviation and police "incompetent" airlines and authorities that endanger passengers. But she and others admit resignation is setting in. Bajc no longer joins the video meetings, as she and others look increasingly for other ways to pressure authorities, such as mulling possible lawsuits against the airline or Boeing to reveal more. No significant lawsuits have been filed yet. Some families, however, say they are sifting through the complexities of where and how best to file a case in such an unprecedented disaster. "It's my father. I'm his only son. No matter what happened, we need to bring them back," Wang said. "I think if I don't do this I will feel guilty." – AFP |
Strong 6.6-magnitude quake jolts central Chile: USGS Posted: 23 Aug 2014 08:53 PM PDT CHILE: A strong 6.6-magnitude earthquake jolted central Chile on Saturday, US geologists said, though there were no immediate reports of fatalities or serious damage. The quake struck at 6:32 pm (2232 GMT) about 108 kilometers (67 miles) northwest of the capital Santiago, at a depth of 32 kilometers. The national emergency office ONEMI, which put the strength of the quake at magnitude 6.4, said the temblor shook Santiago and five other regions in the South American nation. More than five million people live in the capital. Chile is one of the most seismically active countries in the world, and is located in the so-called Ring of Fire area of the Pacific Ocean basin. An 8.2-magnitude quake in northern Chile in April killed six people and forced a million to leave their homes in the region around Iquique. And a February 27, 2010 quake that struck just off the coast of Chile's Maule region measured 8.8 in magnitude, making it one of the largest ever recorded. It killed more than 500 people and inflicted an estimated $30 billion in damages. – AFP We encourage commenting on our stories to give readers a chance to express their opinions; please refrain from vulgar language, insidious, seditious or slanderous remarks. While the comments here reflect the views of the readers, they are not necessarily that of Borneo Post Online. Borneo Post Online reserves the right not to publish or to remove comments that are offensive or volatile. Please read the Commenting Rules. |
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