NCRI - The death toll in the earthquake that struck the Iranian city of Bushehr has reached 69, amid claims the regime is blocking aid to victims, reports from inside Iran have revealed.
All lines of communication to Shanbeh in Bushehr area have also been cut, routes to the area sealed off and the only news reaching the population is from state-run media. One resident claimed that 80 per cent of the city had been devastated, with water, electricity and phone lines all severed.
Those trying to enter the area to aid the residents are being barred from entering and sometimes arrested by the army and Basij paramilitary forces.
Last Wednesday, April 10, a group including six doctors from the city of Shahrekord, north-east of Bushehr, tried to bring emergency equipment into the city but were attacked and held by security forces, it was reported.
Committee of Human Rights Reporters – Hassan Mirzakhan who was injured during the events of mass protest following the contested presidential election results of 2009, died of his sustained injuries in Taleghani Hospital in Tehran on Monday April 8th.
On June 16, 2009, Hassan Mirzakhan was shot in the spine as he was taking part in the silent peaceful march protesting the presidential election results. The bullet caused a complicated and severe spinal cord injury rendering his life very difficult and painful in the past years.
On Tuesday April 9th, officials of the Islamic Martyr Foundation and forces aligned with the conservative faction held the funeral services for Hassan Mirzakhan who was 26 years old when he died. He was buried in a plot in Tehran’s Behesht Zahra Cemetery.
QUITO – Ecuadorian broadcast journalist Fausto
Valdiviezo was fatally shot in his car, authorities said Friday.
“We are
dismayed by the murder of Fausto Valdiviezo. An embrace of solidarity for his
family and the commitment that the murder will not go unpunished,” the country’s
president, Rafael Correa, said on Twitter.
The 53-year-old journalist was
killed Thursday night after leaving his mother’s home in the coastal city of
Guayaquil, witnesses said.
Valdiviezo had been attacked Wednesday while
driving, but did not report the incident to authorities, the police chief in
surrounding Guayas province, Marcelo Tobar, said.
If the television
reporter and anchor had reported the first attack, “we would have had some
recommendations for him,” the police commander said.
The victim’s brother
said he didn’t have any enemies.
“The police are on track, the country
has known my brother for very many years from his journalism career,” Alfredo
Valdiviezo told Ecuadorian radio. “He didn’t have problems of any kind with
anyone. In reality, no enemies. So as he didn’t have enemies, I think it is very
easy to detect who it might have been.” EFE
Cuba Restores Legendary 20th Century Bar, Sloppy Joe’s
HAVANA – Sloppy Joe’s,
one of the legendary Havana bars of the 20th century for its bohemian clientele,
its long bar and famous customers like Ernest Hemingway and Spencer Tracy, has
reopened its doors after almost half a century in ruins thanks to a painstaking
reconstruction aimed at giving the city back some important
memories.
Inaugurated in 1917 by Jose Abeal, a Spanish storekeeper, the
bar was for decades a hot spot for American tourists and a symbol of where it
was all happening in Havana, but unlike other famous bars like the Floridita and
La Bodeguita del Medio, it closed down in 1965 and time destroyed it.
The
Office of the Historian, directed by Eusebio Leal, was entrusted with developing
a complex process of restoration based on old photos and with the cooperation of
people, including some in the United States, who could supply information,
anecdotes and objects related to the old bar.
Its spectacular 18-meter
(59-foot) black mahogany bar, the longest that existed in Cuba, posed one of the
biggest problems for restorers.
Stories about the bar in its heyday
indicated that it was made up of three parts, one of which was “miraculously”
recovered and from it the carpenters were able to build a similar bar, also of
mahogany, with space for 25 stools.
Other details the restorers were
careful to reproduce were the typical windows and the shelves along the walls
exhibiting dozens of liquors from around the world, as well as the preparation
of the extensive menu of sandwiches, cocktails and liquors of all kinds that
were served at the downtown Havana locale.
At the bar, now hung with
Cuban flags, were seated at one time or another such celebrities as writer
Ernest Hemingway and actors Spencer Tracy, Clark Gable, Errol Flynn and
Cantinflas.
Committee of Human Rights Reporters – Shiva Nazarahari, human rights activist, founder and former head of Committee of Human Rights Reporters, returned to Evin prison a few hours ago.
According to CHRR, Shiva Nazarahari who was granted furlough on March 12th after enduring 184 days behind bars, returned to prison on Saturday April 13th to serve the remainder of her prison term.
On December 20, 2009, Shiva was arrested while she was on a bus with other activists intending to attend the funeral of the late dissident cleric Ayatollah Montazeri. After facing harsh interrogations while in detention, Shiva Nazarahari was handed a 4-year prison sentence and 74 lashes on the charges of “moharebeh” (enmity with God), “propaganda against the regime,” and “illegal gathering with the intent of disturbing national security.” She turned herself in at Evin prison to serve her prison sentence on September 8, 2012.
MEXICO CITY – Ten people
were arrested by the Federal Police on murder, drug, kidnapping and cattle
rustling charges in the northeastern Mexican state of Tamaulipas, the National
Security Commission said.
Federal Police officers spotted two vehicles on
a highway near Ciudad Victoria, the capital of Tamaulipas, trying to evade a
checkpoint and whose “occupants had firearms and were tossing metallic items on
the pavement,” the commission said in a statement.
Officers stopped the
two vehicles and arrested the 10 people aboard.
Two of the suspects have
been linked to the killing of a Federal Police officer in Ciudad Victoria in
March, the commission said.
Officers seized two rifles, a handgun, 85
rounds of ammunition, three ammunition clips, a bullet-proof vest and small
quantities of marijuana and cocaine from the suspects.
Tamaulipas has
been plagued by a turf war pitting the Gulf cartel against the Los Zetas and
Sinaloa cartels. EFE
British scientists 'find evidence of Syrian chemical attack'
A secret British operation has smuggled out a soil sample which provides the
first forensic evidence of the use of chemical weapons in Syria, it was reported
last night.
A girl, injured in what the
government said was a chemical weapons attack, is treated at a hospital in the
Syrian city of Aleppo last month.Photo:
REUTERS
By Our Foreign Staff
11:45PM BST 12 Apr 2013
Government scientists working at the Ministry of
Defence's research facility at Porton Down, Wiltshere, found traces of "some
kind of chemical weapon" after performing tests, according to The Times.
Syria has one of the world's
largest stockpiles of chemical weapons and the US has consistently warned that
their use would be "a red line" that could trigger military intervention.
If proven the weapons were used by the regime, the new tests will add to
growing pressure for the West to intervene or at least begin arming the Syrian
rebels
The tests at Porton Down reportedly concluded that the chemical traces were
from a weapon rather than gas sometimes used by the Syrian security forces to
put down protests.
"There have been some reports that it was just a strong riot-control agent
but that is not the case - it's something else although it can't definitively be
said to be sarin nerve agent," one source told the newspaper.
The sample was reportedly smuggled out of Syria in a mission involving MI6
last month.
It was not clear whether the sample was from Aleppo, Syria's largest city,
where more than 20 people were alleged to have been killed in a chemical attack
last month.
Both the Syrian regime and rebel groups accused the other side of using
chemical weapons but definitive evidence has not yet emerged to support either
claim, or even to prove that chemical weapons were used at all.
The Ministry of Defence declined to comment on the reported tests at Porton
Down.
The fighting in Syria continued yesterday as government troops backed by
aircraft struggled to take control over a series of strategic hilltop villages
near the Lebanese border.