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Car bombs kill 28 in Syria's Aleppo as tanks hit Homs
02/10 | 22:01 GMT
DAMASCUS (AFP) - Twin car bombs targeting security posts in Syria's second city of Aleppo killed at least 28 people on Friday, state media said, as rebels accused the regime of launching the attacks as a diversion.
DAMASCUS (AFP) - Twin car bombs targeting security posts in Syria's second city of Aleppo killed at least 28 people on Friday, state media said, as rebels accused the regime of launching the attacks as a diversion.
The explosions came as tank-backed troops advanced on pockets of resistance in the battered and besieged protest hub of Homs, and as heavy security deployments nationwide thwarted planned protests against regime ally Russia.
The powerful mid-morning blasts ripped through the northern commercial hub, also wounding 235 people, said state television, which broadcast gruesome footage.
Mangled bodies were shown in pools of blood outside rows of shattered buildings and piles of rubble strewn across a broad avenue.
State t0elevision called the bombings, the first in Aleppo since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad's regime erupted almost a year ago, the work of "armed terrorist gangs."
It said a "suicide bomber in a car packed with explosives" had attacked a police station, flattening a nearby food distribution centre. The second targeted an intelligence base.
The rebel Free Syrian Army blamed the government itself for the attacks.
"This criminal regime is... carrying out bomb attacks in Aleppo to steer attention away from what it is doing in Homs, Zabadani and elsewhere," its spokesman, Colonel Maher Nouaimi, told AFP in a telephone interview.
State television showed emergency workers holding body parts, including hands, feet and a torso. Soldiers were among the casualties, it said.
"The number of casualties from the two car bombs in Aleppo has risen to 28 dead and 235 wounded," said the health ministry. Among the dead were soldiers and civilians, including children.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 30 people were killed in the Aleppo blasts.
Several people interviewed on television denounced Turkey and Qatar for not standing by the regime as it seeks to put down the revolt.
"Is this the freedom they want?" asked one angry looking man, holding up a severed arm and referring to those leading the protest movement.
Syria blamed the blasts on "terrorists" backed by Arab and Western nations, in a letter sent to the UN secretary general, the UN Security Council, the Arab League and other organisations.
"Certain countries in the region are behind a propaganda campaign against Syria and are harbouring armed terrorists for so-called humanitarian reasons," it wrote, the official SANA state news agency reported.
Aleppo has been largely spared the unrest that has rocked the country since mid-March and killed more than 6,000 people, say rights groups.
In central Syria, tanks stormed the Inshaat district in Homs overnight as troops launched a house-to-house sweep to crush regime opponents, the Observatory's Rami Abdel Rahman said.
Inshaat is next to Baba Amr district, which has been subjected to a withering assault by regime forces since Saturday that has killed more than 450 people, activists say.
In addition to the victims of the attacks in Aleppo, the Observatory said another 44 people were killed across Syria on Friday -- 28 civilians, nine soldiers and seven deserters.
Security forces deployed heavily outside mosques nationwide, firing on worshippers in some areas to prevent protests denouncing Russia's steadfast support for the Assad regime, activists said.
"Demonstrations broke out in various parts of the country, but they were small in numbers because of the heavy deployment of army and security forces as well as the cold weather," said Abdel Rahman.
Internet-based activists had urged protests under the banner of "Russia is killing our children."
But Moscow said Syria's opposition "bears full responsibility" for the ongoing violence, while accusing the West of pushing regime opponents into armed conflict.
Arab and Western governments have so far resisted mounting calls for military aid to the outgunned and outnumbered rebels in Syria.
The US ambassador to Syria, Robert Ford, posted declassified photographs on his Facebook site that Washington said shows an army attacking a civilian area of Homs.
State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the "declassified US national imagery" shows the destruction of Homs.
She said Ford, who left Damascus when the US embassy was closed for security reasons on Monday, would continue to use Facebook to "talk to the Syrian people on a regular basis, along with his Twitter feed."
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said the world had to stand united in demanding a halt to the violence and for Assad to step down, saying she was appalled by reports of "the brutal attacks by the Syrian armed forces in Homs."
Saudi King Abdullah said world confidence in the United Nations had been "shaken" after Russia and China vetoed a resolution condemning the Assad regime's crackdown.
In Geneva, the UN rights office said Syrian officials responsible for carrying out or ordering crimes against humanity should face prosecution by the International Criminal Court.
The opposition Syrian National Council, meanwhile, said it expects to be recognised by several Arab states within days. So far only post-revolt Libya has recognised the umbrella group as its sole Syrian interlocutor.
Turkey also said it was open to a US proposal for a "Friends of Democratic Syria" group, an initiative that seemed to be gaining momentum on Friday.
A Western diplomat in London said that the 22-member Arab League was likely to launch such a grouping and appoint a special envoy to Syria at a meeting this weekend.
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Regional news agendas on the following day’s big news stories. An international monthly news agenda is produced each week. Updated news agendas are produced several times each day.
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Jordan to contest Abu Qatada extradition ruling
02/10 | 15:56 GMT
AMMAN (AFP) - Jordan will contest a European Court of Human Rights ban on Britain extraditing Islamist cleric Abu Qatada, who is wanted in Jordan in connection with two 1998 attacks, an official said on Friday.
AMMAN (AFP) - Jordan will contest a European Court of Human Rights ban on Britain extraditing Islamist cleric Abu Qatada, who is wanted in Jordan in connection with two 1998 attacks, an official said on Friday.
The court ruled that Britain cannot deport the 51-year-old Jordanian because evidence used against him in any trial in the Arab kingdom may have been obtained through torture.
Jordan will "will contest in writing the European decision ... promising to offer every guarantee of a fair trial in the kingdom," state news agency Petra quoted government spokesman Rakan al-Majali as saying.
"Constitutional reforms instituted last year prohibit all forms of torture or physical or psychological abuse" in the country, he added.
On Thursday, British Prime Minister David Cameron spoke with King Abdullah II about finding an "effective solution" to the case.
Abu Qatada, allegedly a former top aide of late Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, has been fighting British attempts to deport him to Jordan for more than six years, most of which he has spent in detention without charge.
On Monday, a British judge ordered Abu Qatada released under strict bail conditions despite government concerns that he poses a security risk.
Cameron and King Abdullah "discussed the ECHR ruling on Abu Qatada and the prime minister explained the frustrating and difficult position that the ruling had created for the UK," a spokesman for the British prime minister's office said.
"The prime minister complimented the king on the close and effective collaboration between Britain and Jordan on this case over a number of years, and noted that the court had endorsed the UK-Jordanian memorandum of understanding on deportation with assurances."
UK News
Jordan to contest Abu Qatada extradition ...Baby 'unharmed if pregnant mum has chemotherapy'
02/10 | 12:52 GMT
PARIS (AFP) - Women who are given chemotherapy during pregnancy do not run a risk of harming their baby, doctors reported in The Lancet Oncology on Friday.
PARIS (AFP) - Women who are given chemotherapy during pregnancy do not run a risk of harming their baby, doctors reported in The Lancet Oncology on Friday.
European cancer specialists looked at 68 pregnancies, producing 70 children, during which 236 cycles of cancer drugs were administered.
On average, the women were 18 weeks pregnant when their cancer was diagnosed. The children were born at 36 weeks on average.
The investigators assessed the children at birth, at the age of 18 months, and at either five, eight, nine, 11, 14 or 18 years.
They examined the children for general health, damage to the central nervous system, heart and hearing problems, and tested their cognitive skills.
They found no evidence that the children were harmed by the cancer treatment, said the study.
Babies born prematurely tended to do less well in cognitive tests, but this is common among pre-term infants across the general population, it noted.
"We show that children who were prenatally exposed to chemotherapy do as well as other children," the paper concluded.
Doctors should not be fearful about administering cancer drugs to pregnant women, nor should they be tempted into inducing early birth in the belief that this will protect the baby, it said.
"In practice, it is possible to administer chemotherapy from 14 weeks gestational age onwards," said the paper.
"To allow the bone marrow to recover and to minimise the risk of maternal and foetal sepsis and haemorrage, delivery should be planned at least three weeks after the last cycle of chemotherapy, and chemotherapy should not be given after 35 weeks since spontaneous labour becomes more probable."
The study added a small note of caution, saying further work is needed to assess whether chemo causes any long-term problems.
The research was led by Frederic Amant of Leuven Catholic University's Cancer Institute.
Health/Medicine
Baby 'unharmed if pregnant mum has ...Redknapp to stay with Spurs amid England clamour
02/11 | 00:11 GMT
LONDON (AFP) - Harry Redknapp may be the fans' favourite to become the next England manager but the man himself was in no hurry to take on the job Friday, saying he wanted to see out the season with Tottenham Hotspur.
LONDON (AFP) - Harry Redknapp may be the fans' favourite to become the next England manager but the man himself was in no hurry to take on the job Friday, saying he wanted to see out the season with Tottenham Hotspur.
England are looking for a new manager following Fabio Capello's shock resignation and Redknapp is the leading contender to replace the Italian.
After Capello quit on Wednesday, four months before Euro 2012 in Poland and Ukraine, the Football Association installed Under-21 manager Stuart Pearce as caretaker boss for this month's friendly against the Netherlands at Wembley.
England then don't have a match to play until two weeks after the conclusion of the Premier League season and Redknapp could yet be in a position to manage his country at Euro 2012 in Poland and Ukraine.
But the 64-year-old, with Spurs third in the table and pushing for a first English title since 1961, wants to stay at White Hart Lane until the season ends.
"I'd be very surprised if I didn't finish the season with Tottenham, that's for sure," he told reporters at the club's training ground.
"I haven't thought about not being here at the end of the season and I've got no idea why I shouldn't."
Redknapp is in pole position to succeed Capello, who resigned in protest at the FA's decision to strip John Terry of the England captaincy.
But the Englishman, who won the 2008 FA Cup with Portsmouth, insisted he did not expect the FA to come calling.
"I don't think you ever think you're going to be in a position" where you will be appointed manager, he said.
"I haven't got a big ego... Whilst it is flattering to be mentioned at the moment, I never think I should be doing this or that. I'm happy, but if the opportunity comes, and I get asked (about England), I'll have to consider it."
No manager has won a major trophy with England since Sir Alf Ramsey guided the team to their lone World Cup title, on home soil in 1966.
"You have to understand what a tough job it is," said Redknapp. "No-one has a magic wand and the list of top-class managers who have all gone in full of hope, people like Kevin Keegan, who did a fantastic job at Newcastle... they all found it very, very difficult.
"It's certainly not an easy job. Whoever takes that job has a real job on their hands."
Capello's decision was announced just hours after Redknapp was cleared of tax evasion charges in a London court on Wednesday. The verdict removed what many believed was the last remaining obstacle to his taking charge of his country.
FA officials have suggested they could opt for a caretaker coach for Euro 2012, allowing their manager to combine the England post with a club role.
However, Redknapp was wary of doubling up, saying: "It is hard enough managing a league club let alone managing your country, it's two very difficult jobs.
"I can't take my eye off the ball at Tottenham at the moment because we're looking to get Champions League football, we're still in the FA Cup and I owe it to them to continue to keep completely focused on the job I'm doing here."
Capello resigned after the FA removed Terry as England captain without consulting him. The Chelsea defender is contesting a charge of racially abusing QPR defender Anton Ferdinand at a trial in July -- after Euro 2012.
The former England boss told an Italian TV show Friday: "I didn't flee, I left because there was a misunderstanding.
"I felt great but sometimes you decide to leave."



