Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Hindu man saved me from gangrape: Orissa nun



November 20, 2008 | 06:47:57

THE nun who was raped during communal violence in Kandhamal, Orissa, has told the Crime Branch of State police that she was saved by a local Hindu man from being gang-raped.

According to reports, the 29-year-old nun, during her examination by the Crime Branch team in New Delhi recently, told the police that after the sexual assault the intervention of a local Hindu man prevented her from being gang-raped.

In her statement before the Crime Branch team the nun was quoted to have said that a local Hindu man came to her rescue and saved her from being gang-raped. However, two others also molested and attempted to rape her immediately after the incident, she said.

Inspector General of Police (Crime Branch) Arun Ray confirmed that both the nun and Father Thomas Chelan were examined.

The nun was confident that she would be able to identify the accused, with whom she had a scuffle, reports said.

Earthquakes Still Swarm Yellowstone Supervolcano Caldera

Thanks, Natalie and William for bringing this article to my attention. -- Linda

December 31, 2008 09:07 AM ET
James Pethokoukis

Earthquakes. Supervolcanoes. Calderas. The End of Civilization. Not the usual subject matter of this blog, but I go where the news takes me. I just checked the last data from the University of Utah's seismograph station in Yellowstone. The earthquake swarm seems to have reintenstified a bit over the past 24 hours. During Dec. 27 and 28, there was a swarm of earthquakes under Yellowstone in the 3.0-3.9 range. Activity then dropped off to quakes less than 2.0 on the Richter magnitude scale. But now we are again seeing quakes above 2.0 and even a 3.5 shaker earlier this morning. Again, the University of Utah puts this all in perspective:

The University of Utah Seismograph Stations reports that a notable swarm of earthquakes has been underway since December 26 beneath Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone National Park, three to six miles south-southeast of Fishing Bridge, Wyoming. This energetic sequence of events was most intense on December 27, when the largest number of events of magnitude 3 and larger occurred. The largest of the earthquakes was a magnitude 3.9 (revised from magnitude 3.8) at 10:15 pm MST on Dec. 27. The sequence has included nine events of magnitude 3 to 3.9 and approximately 24 of magnitude 2 to 3 at the time of this release.

A total of more than 250 events large enough to be located have occurred in this swarm. Reliable depths of the larger events are up to a few miles. Visitors and National Park Service (NPS) employees in the Yellowstone Lake area reported feeling the largest of these earthquakes.

Earthquakes are a common occurrence in the Yellowstone National Park area, an active volcanic-tectonic area averaging 1,000 to 2,000 earthquakes a year. Yellowstone's 10,000 geysers and hot springs are the result of this geologic activity. A summary of the Yellowstone's volcanic history is available on the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory web site (listed below). This December 2008 earthquake sequence is the most intense in this area for some years and is centered on the east side of the Yellowstone caldera. Scientists cannot identify any causative fault or other feature without further analysis. Seismologists continue to monitor and analyze the data and will issue new information if the situation warrants it.


And here is what the Discovery channel has to say about Yellowstone and other supervolcanoes:

One way of looking at the power of volcanoes is what scientists call the Volcano Explosivity Index (VEI) — sort of a Richter scale for eruptions. And like the Richter scale used to measure earthquakes, the power of an eruption increases exponentially from number to number in the VEI index.

The VEI scale runs from zero to eight. The higher the VEI number, the bigger — and less frequent — the eruptions. On one end there are the burbling, rather gentle eruptions that happen on the big island of Hawaii. These happen daily on Earth, and even with their occasional impressive fountains of lava, they rate a zero on the VEI.

At the other extreme is the Yellowstone eruption of 2.1 million years ago, which is described on the VEI as an eight: mega-colossal, with a towering ash cloud 10 miles high that pours out at least a thousand cubic miles of ash. That Yellowstone eruption had 10 times the ejected material as a VEI 7 volcano, which modern humans have never seen either.

In fact, the last VEI 7 eruption was in Toba, Indonesia, 74,000 years ago, and it caused such global cooling that some scientists think it nearly drove humans to extinction.

The largest known eruption in the last several thousand years is believed to be that of Tambora, Indonesia, in 1815. It was tens of times more massive an eruption than Mount St. Helens in 1980. Despite pouring out 7 cubic miles of ash and causing short-term global cooling, Tambora was small fry compared with any of Yellowstone's big eruptions, or even the eruption of Toba 74,000 years ago.

No eruptions of this magnitude have happened since the dawn of civilization, about 10,000 years ago — which is lucky for us, and perhaps one reason civilization has been able to develop.

Yuma feels quake in border region

Dec. 29, 2008 07:29 AM
Associated Press

YUMA - People in the Yuma area felt a rumble over the weekend when a magnitude-4.5 earthquake rattled the Mexico-California border region.

The quake occurred at 10:17 p.m. Saturday south of Mexicali in Baja California.

Rafael Abreu, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey, says only small aftershocks were reported Sunday afternoon, with the biggest measuring 1.3.

The last major earthquake in the Mexicali area measured 5.0 in late November. That quake was felt as far away as Tucson.

In February, a series of quakes ranging from 2.1 to 5.0 kept many people in the Yuma are on edge. They also originated south of Mexicali.

The biggest earthquake in Yuma's recorded history happened in 1940. It measured 7.1.

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THE HETEROSEXUAL SINS OF SODOM

THE HETEROSEXUAL SINS OF SODOM
MESSIAN DREAD SPIRITUAL MEDITATION



WWW, December 2008 - Even though the word “Sodomy” is perceived by many to be a technical description of a specific sexual act which I will leave to the technicians to further elaborate on, it is usually connected with the sin of homosexuality as well. Homosexuality, as in two people of the same gender having any kind of sex with each other.

This article intent to explain the sins of Sodom and Gomorrah, and you might just be surprised to discover that it is not homosexuality which caused the Most High JAH to downstroy these two cities and others like them. In fact, it is a specific form of heterosexuality!

The two cities were mentioned first in the Book of Genesis in the Bible. Two angels, heavenly beings, were sent by JAH to take Lot and his family out of there just before JAH would pour down fire and brimstone on the twin-cities. Lot was sitting in the gate of Sodom, indicating that he was involved in the local politics, when the two agents of JAH arrived.

As soon as they came in the sight of Lot, he offered them a place to stay after which all hell broke loose. The men of the city were enthusiastic as well, and wanted to have sex with the two angels. Lot was not amused by this attempt to rape the messengers of the Most High and instead offered his daughters to the locals as alternative. An offer they could not refuse, but yet, they did.

The popular explanation of this refusal is, that the locals of Sodom were all male homosexuals who had no interest for females. This same popular explanation then concludes how the Most High considers homosexuality to be such a big sin, that it will in itself be a reason for Him to destroy complete cities. Usually, they will turn to the Bible, to the New Testament, where we find what seems to be a confirmation of this idea.

However, the truth is a little bit different and when you discover just which word is used in the original language, you will see how wrong the popular theory is.

Let’s go there now…
(…) “Sodom and Gomorrah, and the cities around them in like manner, giving
themselves over to fornication, and going after strange flesh, are set forth as
an example, suffering the vengeance of eternal fire” (Jude 1:7, KJV)
Even the English translation gives us an indication, as to what was going on there. The words “strange flesh”, namely, form the translation of a well familiar Greek word: heteros.

The sin we are talking about, is a specific form of… heterosexuality!

Sure, it’s true that the Sodomites were not interested in raping the daughters of Lot. The heterosexuality we talk about here, is not the sexuality between a man and a woman, neither do we speak about the heterosexuality where several men rape one woman or two, the so-called gang-bang. Even though homosexuality and immoral heterosexuality between men and women could have been going on in Sodom, this was not the reason why JAH sent down fire and brimstone.

So, what was going on?

Before we go back to Genesis, let’s just go back one verse in the book of Jude. The half-brother of Jesus, who wrote the epistle, talks about a specific event which took place before the Great Flood of Noah’s days. Let’s see what he said:

(…) “The angels which kept not their first estate, but left their own
habitation, he hath reserved in everlasting chains under darkness unto the
judgment of the great day” (Jude 1:6)
During the early days of the Christian Church, the believers knew exactly what Jude was talking about. Even though he did not refer to a book that is currently in the canon of the Old Testament, the Christians knew how he was referring to what we now know as the Books of Enoch. Jude even names Enoch by name in the 14th verse of his epistle:

“And Enoch also, the seventh from Adam prophesied of these, saying: Behold, the
Lord cometh with ten thousands of his saints, to execute judgment upon all, and
to convince all that are ungodly among them of all their ungodly deeds which
they have ungodly committed, and of all their hard speeches which ungodly
sinners have spoken against Him”. (Jude 1:14,15)
Since a few centuries, the people of the western world have the possibility to check out for themselves how Jude was literally quoting from the Books of Enoch. These books were preserved in Ethiopia after the “Church Father” and founder of the Roman Catholic doctrines, Augustine, banned the writings because he did not want people to know the horrible reality described by Enoch.

Now, let’s go back to the Book of Genesis where we can find the story on the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah in the 18th and 19th chapters. I won’t repeat the whole story here, since only one thing is important in the context of this article.

Where the popular interpretation tells us how the Sodomites were interested in the angels because they were men, I would rather argue that they were interested in the men because they… were angels!

You see, the Books of Enoch describe unto great detail what we can also find in the 6th chapter of Genesis. In this chapter, we can read how the Watchers, heavenly beings, left their first estate in order to create offspring with the women, daughters of Adam and Eve, in order to create an entirely new kind of beings: they are known as the Nephilim.

The mere existence of these monsters caused a great threat to the very existence of humankind. They were stronger, bigger, much more intelligent and most of all: they were literally evil to the bone! They ruled mankind as the first gods and kings of the ancient civilizations, such as the Sumerians in what is now known as Iraq.

Genesis 6 tells us, how the situation became so dreadful that only Noah was found to be “perfect in his generations”, as the phrase goes. The very same teaching that gives us the idea how homosexuality was the cause for Jah to downstroy the twin cities, also wants us to believe that Noah was without sin, found “perfect”, but the perfection we speak about here, is not a moral perfection at all.

Noah was found “perfect in his generations”, which means nothing more or less than the fact that Noah’s bloodline was the only human bloodline being found left on the planet. When Noah would not have been saved, there would simply not be a human race left of the planet! It was not the fact that people were committing sins, it was the fact that Jah wanted to preserve the human race that He created with Adam and Eve.

In the same thought, it was not the fact that the people of Sodom and Gomorrah were doing all kinds of sinful acts, like homosexuality, which made the Most High decide to downstroy the place with brimstone and fire. Instead, the reason for the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah was the very same one which caused the Most High to send the Great Flood in Noah’s days.

Humans having sexual intercourse with angels, this is the “strange flesh” or “heteros” that Jude was speaking about. It has nothing to do with homosexuality, but rather with a form of heterosexuality, since the word “heteros” means different or strange.

As said, it was Augustine who we can hold responsible for the fact that this knowledge was hidden for a large part of the Christians throughout times and places, especially in the West. Augustine hated the Books of Enoch so much, that he banned them from the Canon or Bible of the early Church. He is equally seen as one of the founding fathers of what we now know as the Roman Catholic Church, and in the length of that, one of the founding fathers of what we now know as the Protestant or Evangelical Churches as well. After all, Martin Luther was an Augustine monk in the Roman Catholic Church.

Today, in the 21st century, the idea of humans interbreeding with heavenly beings is not as absurd as it sounded a century ago. We have people like Zecheriah Sitchin and others who build on the idea of evolution and claim how Extra-Terrestrials came on the planet to make “pre-humans” into humans. We have a lot of archeological findings that confirm the fact that yes, there were indeed intelligent beings that had sexual intercourse with humans and created some kind of offspring as a result of that.

Now, all of this may sound pretty exciting and exotic, a topic to think about during long winter nights with a cigar and a good glass of cognac. However, it is not without reason that Jah made the Books of Enoch available to each and all in this time. To understand just why, we have to go back to the days of Adolph Hitler who wanted to create what he called “Der Neue Mensch”, or in plain English: The New Man. In spite of popular belief, Hitler was not speaking about full blood white humans, sons and daughters of Japheth, when he was referring to the “Aryans”. After all, he had researchers go to Nepal (you can see the word Nephilim here) in order to find them.

Hitler was inspired by what we know as “The Secret Doctrine”, a book written by Helena Blavatsky. She was a Russian who wrote a couple of thick, rather boring books which now serve as the foundation for teachings by New Agers such as Michael Tsarion and Jordan Maxwell.

Blavatsky wrote extensively about the “New Age”, the coming times, times which Adolph Hitler wanted to install in his days. Basically, she was writing about nothing less but the restoration of the situation on this planet as it was in Noah’s times. She called this “Atlantis”.

Yesus Kristos also referred to this New Age, and He said how in the last days it would be “like in the days of Noah”. He specified this even, by pointing out to the kind of marriages that took place in these days.

Blavatsky may have written the books that she wrote, but she never claimed to be original in her teachings. The fact that Yesus spoke about it, too, indicates this. The sins of Sodom did not start with Sodom either, as we found out as well by taking a look at Genesis 6 and the Books of Enoch.

There is a very, very sinister plan from the Queendom of Satan and it is a plan to destroy the human race. They failed in Noah’s Days, because the Most High changed the atmosphere on the planet and it became increasingly difficult for the evil ones to mix their seed with that of the sons and daughters of Adam. The Great Flood caused the evil Nephilim to leave their physical bodies, after which they were doomed to roam the earth as evil spirits we call “demons”.

Yes, the evil spirits that posses people are nothing less but the spirits of the Nephilim who, when they die, do not go to heaven or hell but rather stay on the planet looking for new bodies. This teaching can be found in the very same Books of Enoch that were banned by the founders of what we now call “Christianity”: the system of denominations and church buildings that take their position in the “Church and State System”, or… Babylon!

Yes, there will be a time in the not-so-far-ahead-future, wherein once again the planet will be occupied by full blood Nephilim. This is the secret doctrine, this is the ultimate sin that took place in the twin cities of Sodom and Gomorrah.

Now, should this article be seen as an apology for homosexuality? Well, hell no! But we must be accurate in the things that we say. We can not apply texts about one thing to make it apply to another thing.

The dominionists and other Calvinists use the Bible to install a political system that is worse than the Taliban in Afghanistan, and they base their wicked ideology on false interpretations of texts like the ones we can find in the Book of Jude. Their own carnal mind make them come to the idea that homosexuality is the worst sin of all, showing how focused they themselves are on sexuality.

In reality, we see that the truth is far more sinister than the Puritans and Calvinist “Christians” want us to believe. The truth is, that the very human race is being threatened in it’s existence once more by powers so dark, that the biggest students of the Bible fail to see it.

It was in Ethiopia, that this knowledge was kept hidden only to be revealed a few centuries ago when the Books of Enoch were taken to England and translated.

In this time, we see how scientists speak about the “post-humans”, a fancy word to describe the Nephilim who will roam the earth in their own bodies once more, just like in the days of Noah. Nephilim, who were also born in the twin cities of Sodom and Gomorrah.

No, the Most High did not downstroy Sodom and Gomorrah because of homosexuality.

Yes, the destruction was and is an example of Jah’s coming wrath. We should not be afraid that the Nephilim will really take over and replace the human race with themselves. Just like in the days of Noah, the Most High will not let this happen and He will come to finally downstroy the wicked system that wants to destroy the human race.

Maranatha!

Mich. University Puts Out Banned Words List

Mich. University Puts Out Banned Words List






DETROIT -- You can finally call it a "recession," thanks to President George W. Bush's recent use of the term to describe the fragile state of the U.S. economy. But word-watchers far and wide forbid you to say the pain has spread from "Wall Street to Main Street."And refrain from calling any government aid a "bailout."

While the economy is weak, the state of the nation's cliche-busting brigade is strong. And the aggrieved have submitted their nominations to Lake Superior State University, which released its annual List of Words to Be Banished from the Queen's English for Mis-use, Over-use and General Uselessness.The school in Michigan's Upper Peninsula released its 34th version Tuesday containing 15 entries selected from about 5,000 nominations.Despite the year's economic meltdown (which itself wasn't banished but don't rule it out for next year), the most entries came from the environmental category -- for "green" or "going green.""If I see one more corporation declare itself 'green,' I'm going to start burning tires in my backyard," wrote Ed Hardiman of Bristow, Va., in his submission.The list wasn't overrun with politics given the national election -- no "change," for instance -- but one simply couldn't escape the critics' wrath."I'm a maverick, he's a maverick, wouldn't you like to be a maverick, too?" offered Michael Burke of Silver Spring, Md., in his entry for the adjective embraced by unsuccessful Republican presidential candidate John McCain.Still, words related to the economy led to a few meltdowns."I am so tired of hearing about everything affecting 'Main Street.' I know that with the 'Wall Street' collapse, the comparison is convenient, but really, let's find another way to talk about everyman or the middle class, or even, heaven forbid, 'Joe the Plumber."' wrote Stacey from Knoxville, Tenn. She provided only a first name in her bid to eradicate -- or at least separate -- Wall Street" and "Main Street.""Don't we love how Capitol Hill will bail out Wall Street, but not Main Street?" wrote Derrick Chamberlain of Midland, in his nomination to ban 'bailout' but affirming his disdain for the Wall Street/Main Street analogy.

Oh, and this year's sluggish economy and record rise in gas prices may have kept people closer to home. But the word coined for it, "staycation," is "idiotic and rootless," says Michele Mooney of Los Angeles.Think these gendarmes of jargon should "get a life"? Watch it, kiddo. That phrase was banished in 1997.The school's annual quest to throw lexicon logs on the fire always gets some end-of-the-year attention for the school in Sault Ste. Marie, the last stop before Michigan's northern border crossing with Canada. But the list is more about letting off steam and offering laughs than performing any verbal vanishing act."We get several nominations for the same word or phrase, and we still get nominations for words and phrases that have been on previous years' lists," said university spokesman Tom Pink. "At this point in time' was on the first list in 1976 and it continues to be nominated every year. People still hate it."Lake Superior State University's 2009 list of banished words:


*green


*carbon footprint or carbon offsetting


*maverick


*first dude


*bailout


*Wall Street/Main Street


*monkey


*3 (Emoticon for 'heart' used in text messages and e-mail.)


*icon or iconic


*game changer


*staycation


*desperate search


*not so much


*winner of five nominations


*it's that time of year again

Environment Minister thinks Man Made Climate Change is a Con

Environment minister Sammy Wilson: I still think man-made climate change is a con
(me too Sammy!)

Wednesday, 31 December 2008

Environment minister Sammy Wilson
More pictures

Spending billions on trying to reduce carbon emissions is one giant con that is depriving third world countries of vital funds to tackle famine, HIV and other diseases, Sammy Wilson said.
The DUP minister has been heavily criticised by environmentalists for claiming that ongoing climatic shifts are down to nature and not mankind.

But while acknowledging his views on global warming may not be popular, the East Antrim MP said he was not prepared to be bullied by eco fundamentalists.

“I’ll not be stopped saying what I believe needs to be said about climate change,” he said.

"Most of the people who shout about climate change have not read one article about it."

“I think in 20 years’ time we will look back at this whole climate change debate and ask ourselves how on earth were we ever conned into spending the billions of pounds which are going into this without any kind of rigorous examination of the background, the science, the implications of it all. Because there is now a degree of hysteria about it, fairly unformed hysteria I’ve got to say as well.

“I mean I get it in the Assembly all the time and most of the people who shout about climate change have not read one article about climate change, not read one book about climate change, if you asked them to explain how they believe there’s a connection between CO2 emission and the effects which they claim there’s going to be, if you ask them to explain the thought process or the modelling that is required and the assumptions behind that and how tenuous all the connections are, they wouldn’t have a clue.

“They simply get letters about it from all these lobby groups, it’s popular and therefore they go along with the flow — and that would be ok if there were no implications for it, but the implications are immense.”

He said while people in the western world were facing spiralling fuel bills as a result of efforts to cut CO2, the implications in poorer countries were graver.

“What are the problems that face us either locally and internationally. Are those not the things we should be concentrating on?” he asked.

“HIV, lack of clean water, which kills millions of people in third world countries, lack of education.
“A fraction of the money we are currently spending on climate change could actually eradicate those three problems alone, a fraction of it.

“I think as a society we sometimes need to get some of these things in perspective and when I listen to some of the rubbish that is spoken by some of my colleagues in the Assembly it amuses me at times and other times it angers me.”

Despite his views on CO2, Mr Wilson said he does not intend to backtrack on commitments made by his predecessor at the Department of the Environment, Arlene Foster, to make the Stormont estate carbon neutral.

He said while he wasn’t worried about reducing CO2 output, he said the policy would help to cut fuels bills.

“I don’t couch those actions in terms of reducing Co2 emissions,” he said. “I don’t care about Co2 emissions to be quite truthful because I don’t think it’s all that important but what I do believe is, and perhaps this is where there can be some convergence, as far as using fuel more efficiently that is good for our economy; that makes us more competitive. If we can save in schools hundreds of thousands on fuel that’s more money being put for books or classroom assistants.

“So yes there are things we can do. If you want to express it terms of carbon neutral, I just express it terms of making the place more efficient, less wasteful and hopefully that will release money to do the proper things that we should be doing.”

Egypt cancels New Year’s Eve over Gaza ‘massacres’





CAIRO (AFP) — Egypt has cancelled official New Year’s Eve events in solidarity with the suffering of the Palestinians being “massacred” in Gaza, the state-owned Al-Ahram daily reported on Wednesday.

“In solidarity with the painful events in the Palestinian territories and the massacres which Gazans are faced with … the ministries of culture and information have decided to cancel New Year’s festivities,” the paper said.

Cancelled events include a special concert by famed Egyptian singer Mohammed Munir set to be held at Cairo’s Opera House and a variety performance hosted by the ministry of information due to be broadcast on state television.

Egyptian state television official Ossama al-Sheikh said on Tuesday that the launch of new channel “Nile Comedy,” set for January 1, would be delayed “out of solidarity with the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip.”

Since Israel unleashed its massive aerial attack on Hamas and the Gaza Strip on Saturday, at least 374 Palestinians, including 39 children, have been killed and 1,720 wounded, Gaza medics say.

During the same period, four Israelis have been killed by rockets fired from Gaza.

Lawyer in Alamo case: Bible no defense for abuse

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - A lawyer suing jailed evangelist Tony Alamo over alleged abuse says the preacher's right to religious freedom doesn't allow him to beat children.

In federal court filings this week, W. David Carter wrote that protecting the public trumps constitutional protections afforded to religion. Alamo's lawyer said in a court filing last week that the Bible requires spanking unruly children, and he suggested that Alamo had permission from church parents to discipline their children.

The 74-year-old Alamo faces trial in February on charges he took children across state lines for sex.

Alamo was convicted of tax-related charges in 1994 in Memphis, Tenn., and served four years in prison after the IRS said he owed the government $7.9 million. Prosecutors in that case argued that Alamo was a flight risk and a polygamist who preyed on married women and girls in his congregation.

Alamo once had a clothing store in Nashville, Tenn., as well as a church and a downtown mission there.



Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Scientists eye unusual swarm of Yellowstone quakes

Late coverage by the media, was blacked out. Thanks, William! For up to the minute coverage go to
http://www.seis.utah.edu/req2webdir/recenteqs/Maps/Yellowstone.html

Lan Lamphere will have Robert Smith on his OvernightAM talk show tonight 9 p.m. - 12 midnight CST POSTPONED UNTIL DEC. 31, 2008

http://www.lanlamphere.com/audio/livejava.php

Linda


Dec 29, 9:17 PM EST
By MEAD GRUVER
Associated Press Writer

CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) -- Yellowstone National Park was jostled by a host of small earthquakes for a third straight day Monday, and scientists watched closely to see whether the more than 250 tremors were a sign of something bigger to come. Swarms of small earthquakes happen frequently in Yellowstone, but it's very unusual for so many earthquakes to happen over several days, said Robert Smith, a professor of geophysics at the University of Utah.

"They're certainly not normal," Smith said. "We haven't had earthquakes in this energy or extent in many years."

Smith directs the Yellowstone Seismic Network, which operates seismic stations around the park. He said the quakes have ranged in strength from barely detectable to one of magnitude 3.8 that happened Saturday. A magnitude 4 quake is capable of producing moderate damage.

"This is an active volcanic and tectonic area, and these are the kinds of things we have to pay attention to," Smith said. "We might be seeing something precursory.

"Could it develop into a bigger fault or something related to hydrothermal activity? We don't know. That's what we're there to do, to monitor it for public safety."

The strongest of dozens of tremors Monday was a magnitude 3.3 quake shortly after noon. All the quakes were centered beneath the northwest end of Yellowstone Lake.

A park ranger based at the north end of the lake reported feeling nine quakes over a 24-hour period over the weekend, according to park spokeswoman Stacy Vallie. No damage was reported.

"There doesn't seem to be anything to be alarmed about," Vallie said.

Smith said it's difficult to say what might be causing the tremors. He pointed out that Yellowstone is the caldera of a volcano that last erupted 70,000 years ago.

He said Yellowstone remains very geologically active - and its famous geysers and hot springs are a reminder that a pool of magma still exists five to 10 miles underground.

"That's just the surface manifestation of the enormous amount of heat that's being released through the system," he said.

Yellowstone has had significant earthquakes as well as minor ones in recent decades. In 1959, a magnitude 7.5 quake near Hebgen Lake just west of the park triggered a landslide that killed 28 people.

© 2008 The Associated Press.

Ninth border tunnel in 3 months found

Dec. 30, 2008 10:18 AM
Associated Press

NOGALES - A clandestine tunnel along the Arizona-Mexican border has been found near downtown Nogales.

That makes nine tunnels found in the U.S. Border Patrol's Tucson Sector since October.

Agents found the newest tunnel Monday night during routine patrol. It was hidden with clumps of grass about 50 yards north of the border and 100 yards northwest of the port of entry.

Agents found the origin of the tunnel using technology. Mexican authorities found the tunnel was carved out of a storm drain.

The Border Patrol says 34 separate tunnels were found and filled in the Tucson Sector between the fiscal years of 2003 and 2008.

The Border Patrol says the tunnels are a result of more effective border security efforts.

SHHHHHHHHHHH!

Shhhh! As the world waits for Obama to voice his opinion on Gaza, America's president-in-waiting hits the golf course

By Mail Foreign Service
Last updated at 3:54 PM
on 30th December 2008

Barack Obama remained silent over the violence in Gaza as Israel today threatened to continue its attacks for weeks.

Instead, the president-elect is continuing his 12-day Christmas holiday in Hawaii and was seen enjoying a round of golf.

He joined a group of friends at a private club near his £6million rented, beach-front holiday home in Hawaii yesterday.

Shh: Mr Obama, who is staying silent on the Israeli attacks, asks the crowd to be quiet as he finishes his putt

Meanwhile, 9,000 miles away in the Middle East, Israel rejected any truce with Hamas today and said it was ready for 'long weeks of action' in the Gaza Strip.

Observers said that at least ten people were killed and another 40 injured as up to 16 bombs were dropped by Israeli warplanes during early morning attacks.

The targets included the offices of Hamas prime minister Ismael Haniyeh, police stations and Gaza’s treasury and foreign ministry buildings.

More...
Demonstrator burns policeman's cap as thousands try to storm Israeli embassy in London
Sites linked to Hamas’ military wing Izzadin Kazzam were also hit, including the home of the Gaza division commander.

The death toll so far in Gaza is estimated at 320, with five Israeli fatalities, and hundreds of injuries.

Grief: Palestinian mourners carry the body of four-year-old Haya Hamdan in Gaza
World leaders, including Gordon Brown and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, have called for an immediate ceasefire.

Mr Ban even said that Israel’s response attacks from Gaza amounted to an ‘excessive use of force’.

But Mr Obama has made the decision to leave all comments to outgoing President George Bush, who has so far chosen only to attack Hamas.

On the golf course, his security team even turned away a letter from pro-Palestinian campaigners urging him to help stop the four-day-old violence.

Pensioner Robert Steiver, 65, of Honolulu, said he was disappointed that the president-elect was not echoing the condemnation of other world leaders.

He told the Honolulu Advertsier: ‘I don't think he's taking a vacation, he's preparing to be the next president.

‘I'm deathly afraid he'll continue the failed policies of the Bush administration. I've been suffering with the Palestinians for years.’
Enlarge
Palestinians look at destroyed houses after an Israeli air strike in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip

Earlier this week, his chief adviser David Axelrod said that Mr Obama ‘recognises the special relationship between the United States and Israel'.

But despite trying to stay quiet, Mr Obama - who was wearing sunglasses, a white shirt, khaki shorts, white and brown golf shoes, and a red baseball cap – still couldn’t avoid any drama.

He was greeted by applause when he walked up to the 18th green - and then, motioning for them to be quiet by putting a finger to his lips, finished with a 20-yard putt.

‘That was pretty good, right?’ he said to more cheers as he went to meet his fans.

It was Mr Obama's third visit to the Mid Pacific Country Club course in Kalilua while on holiday.
But he may not be able to remain tight-lipped about Gaza for too long.

Protesters demonstrate in front of the Israeli embassy in Vienna

As well as air strikes, Israel has also massed tanks, artillery and soldiers on the border with Gaza in preparation for a possible ground assault on the territory, with its defence minister warning that the country is engaged in a ‘war to the bitter end’ against Hamas and its allied militant supporters.

Israel’s deputy defence minister Matan Vilnai said today that his country was prepared for a prolonged struggle to protect its citizens from the repeated missile attacks which have been launched from the Gaza strip over recent months.

‘The army is prepared for a long operation,’ he said. ‘We have made preparations for some long weeks of action.’

Horror: An Israeli woman in Sderot screams after Hamas rockets hit houses

Hamas said that its squads had fired 43 home-made rockets, 17 longer-range Grads and six mortar shells at Israel; other militant groups have also fired rockets at Israel.

Further details emerged of earlier attacks by Israel against Hamas targets.

A grainy video taken by an Israeli drone plane showed several men loading a pick-up truck with what the Israeli military said were medium-range Grad rockets.

Moments later, a big explosion from an Israeli missile strike envelops the image.

In another air assault, an Islamic Jihad commander was killed walking near his house, said Abu Hamza, a spokesman for Islamic Jihad’s military wing.

Meanwhile there have been reports that Hamas militiamen have been killing injured members of rivals Fatah in a brutal bid to relieve hospital beds.

China moving out of Dollar

above quote from FORMER CEO of Citigroup about a year ago or so...

The article below is another indication of the fact that China in their traditional gradual manner is moving slowly away from the US dollar and towards convertibility for the Yuan for business settlements. The long term effect will be bearish for the dollar and bullish for gold.

Respectfully yours,Monty Guildwww.GuildInvestment.com

China to allow freer yuan trades
Thursday, 25 December 2008

China has said it is to allow some trade with its neighbours to be settled with its currency, the yuan. The pilot scheme was announced in a package of measures designed to help exporters hit by the global downturn. It means if the two parties to a trade have yuan available, they need not enter world exchange markets to pay. Most of China's foreign trade is settled in US dollars or the euro, leaving exporters vulnerable to exchange rate fluctuations.

The yuan is not yet a freely convertible currency. Officials did not say when the trial scheme would start. When it does, the yuan could be used to settle trade between parts of eastern China (Guangdong and the Yangtze River delta) and the territories of Hong Kong and Macau, and between south-west China (Guangxi and Yunnan) and the Asean group of countries (Brunei, Burma, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam). More...

Ramping up in Gaza Strip

Israel Hints at Ground Operation as Gaza Rockets Hit Cities

By Gwen Ackerman and Saud Abu Ramadan
Dec. 30 (Bloomberg) -

- Israel hinted it was ready to broaden its assault on the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip with a ground operation after three days of air raids failed to bring an end to cross-border rocket attacks.

“If the criminal, intentional rocket fire at the citizens of Israel is not stopped immediately, Israel will use all legal means at its disposal to stop the illegal and aggressive acts against civilians,” Defense Minister Ehud Barak said in an e- mailed statement from his office.

Barak, who earlier said Israel was waging an “all-out war” against Hamas, spoke after more than 70 rockets fell in Israel, hitting the port city of Ashdod for the first time. Two people were killed in the rocket attacks.

At least 345 Palestinians have been killed and 1,400 wounded since Israel started its aerial campaign on Gaza on Dec. 27, according to the Palestinian emergency services office in Gaza City. Israeli leaders said they began the bombardment to halt rocket attacks on southern towns by Islamic militants after a six-month cease-fire with Hamas expired Dec. 19.

Channel Two showed footage of tanks massed on Israel’s border with Gaza and soldiers from the ground brigades waiting for orders.

“A ground operation was a likely option from the very start, and the destruction of the tunnels between Gaza and Egypt was a key preparation for that in that it limits Hamas’s ability to bring in new weapons,” said Gerald Steinberg, a political scientist at Bar Ilan University outside Tel Aviv.

Military Zone
The Cabinet on Dec. 28 cleared the way for the army to draft as many as 7,000 reserves and the military yesterday declared a swath of Israel just north of Gaza a closed military zone, where movement and traffic was restricted. The army said schools in towns within a 20-kilometer (12-mile) radius of Gaza would remain closed until further notice. Classes resume in the rest of the country today after a Hanukkah holiday that began Dec. 23.

“The signs are there that a ground invasion may be coming because of lessons learned in Lebanon,” said Shmuel Sandler, also from Bar Ilan University. “Israel must show it is not afraid to move in ground forces, which is what we need for deterrence.”

The Israeli government and army were criticized by a state inquiry for their handling of the monthlong battle with the Shiite Muslim Hezbollah in south Lebanon in 2006. The government acted hastily and the army relied too heavily on air power to stop rocket attacks over the northern border, the inquiry found.

Hamas Regime
Opposition Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu told parliament yesterday that Israel must topple the Hamas regime in Gaza to stop the rockets and urged the government to show determination in its fight against the Islamic militants.

“In recent years, as a result of a policy of weakness and mistakes, our enemies have begun to believe that our national strength is deteriorating. There is nothing more important than changing this perception,” he said.

Palestinian rockets killed an Israeli Arab construction worker in Ashkelon, a port about 15 kilometers north of Gaza, and another person near the communal farm of Nahal Oz, the army said. Four people were seriously wounded in Ashdod, Israel’s second- largest port city, which lies 30 kilometers north of Gaza.

Hamas issued a statement in Gaza City taking responsibility for the rockets. Leaders of Hamas, an Arab acronym for the Islamic Resistance Movement, say Israel has no right to exist and condemn Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas as a stooge for conducting peace talks.

The group seized control of Gaza in 2007 after a brief power-sharing arrangement with Abbas of the rival Fatah party, who called the action a coup.

Impoverished Strip
Israel imposed a blockade on the impoverished strip after Hamas took control, periodically lifting restrictions to allow in humanitarian goods. Fifty-eight trucks with food, medicine and other essentials were allowed in to Gaza yesterday along with five ambulances from the West Bank, an army spokesman said, speaking anonymously by regulation.

Ahmed Qureia, the chief Palestinian negotiator under Abbas, announced a break-off of talks in response to Israel’s bombardments.

“It is impossible to hold peace negotiations with Israel while its army is committing massacres against our people in the Gaza Strip,” Qureia told reporters in the West Bank city of Ramallah.
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, speaking to parliament, called for international support of Israel’s military attack on Hamas. “Israel is fighting, but it is not just Israel’s battle. This is the battle of the free world against terror and we expect support,” she said.

Next Prime Minister
Livni, who heads the ruling Kadima Party; Barak, chairman of the Labor Party; and Netanyahu, are campaigning to become Israel’s next prime minister in a Feb. 10 election. Polls have Livni and Netanyahu running neck and neck. Prospects for Barak, now a distant third, may be determined by his success or failure in the Gaza campaign.

Israel wants to avoid sending troops into Gaza because of the potential for bloodshed on both sides, Gabriela Shalev, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. Israelis are united in seeing the air attacks as a “just” action to stop rocket and mortar fire, she said.

At least 51 of the Palestinians killed in the Israeli bombings were civilians, while the majority were members of Hamas, said Christopher Gunness, a spokesman for the UN Relief and Works Agency.

The attacks on Gaza, where about 1.4 million people live and unemployment is 49 percent, have triggered global calls for restraint.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called the escalation of violence “unacceptable.” The Bush administration and the German government blamed Hamas for the violence and called on the group to halt rocket attacks on Israel and restore the cease-fire.

To contact the reporters on this story: Gwen Ackerman in Jerusalem at gackerman@bloomberg.net; Saud Abu Ramadan in Gaza City through the Tel Aviv newsroomt . Last Updated: December 29, 2008 17:31 EST

Monday, December 29, 2008

Crazy Bathers



Want a healthy life? Take a dip in icy water
www.chinaview.cn 2008-12-29 08:37:15

Members of a local ice swimming club head for the water to swim in the Yenisey river in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk Dec. 28, 2008. The club promotes a healthy life style, encouraging its members to spend most of their free time in the countryside.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

Oregon Mileage Tax? via Satellite?

urg!
Kulongoski to pursue mileage tax
By Hasso Hering
Albany Democrat-Herald

A year ago, the Oregon Department of Transportation announced it had demonstrated that a new way to pay for roads — via a mileage tax and satellite technology — could work.

Now Gov. Ted Kulongoski says he’d like the legislature to take the next step.

As part of a transportation-related bill he has filed for the 2009 legislative session, the governor says he plans to recommend “a path to transition away from the gas tax as the central funding source for transportation.”

What that means is explained on the governor’s website:“As Oregonians drive less and demand more fuel-efficient vehicles, it is increasingly important that the state find a new way, other than the gas tax, to finance our transportation system.”

According to the policies he has outlined online, Kulongoski proposes to continue the work of the special task force that came up with and tested the idea of a mileage tax to replace the gas tax.

The governor wants the task force “to partner with auto manufacturers to refine technology that would enable Oregonians to pay for the transportation system based on how many miles they drive.”

The online outline adds: “The governor is committed to ensuring that rural Oregon is not adversely affected and that privacy concerns are addressed.”

When the task force’s study and test were in the news in 2006 and 2007, critics worried that the technology could be used to track where vehicles go, not just how far they travel, and that this information would somehow be stored by the government.

In more than one interview with the Democrat-Herald and others, James Whitty, the ODOT official in charge of the project, tried to assure the public that tracking people’s travels was not in the plans.

The task force’s final report came out in November 2007. It was based largely on a field test in which about 300 motorists in the Portland area and two service stations took part over10 months, ending in March 2007.A GPS-based system kept track of the in-state mileage driven by the volunteers. When they bought fuel, a device in their vehicles was read, and they paid 1.2 cents a mile and got a refund of the state gas tax of 24 cents a gallon.

The final report detailed the technical aspects of the program. It also stressed the issue of privacy.“The concept requires no transmission of vehicle travel locations, either in real time or of travel history,” the report said.

“Accordingly, no travel location points are stored within the vehicle or transmitted elsewhere. Thus there can be no ‘tracking’ of vehicle movements.”

Also, the report said, under the Oregon concept of the program, “ODOT would have no involvement in developing the on-vehicle devices, installing them in vehicles, maintaining them or having any other access to them except, perhaps, in situations involving tampering or similar fee evasion activities.”

Equipment for the Oregon test was developed at Oregon State University.Whitty said last year it might take about $20 million to establish that the mileage tax is commercially viable.

Eventually, GPS devices would have to start being built into cars, and fueling stations would have to be similarly equipped.

The gas tax would stay in force — Kulongoski has proposed that it be raised 2 cents — for vehicles not equipped to pay the mileage tax.

20 killed in Pakistan blast

Nirupama Subramanian

ISLAMABAD: More than 20 people were killed and several injured in an apparent car-bomb attack near Swat in the North-West Frontier Province on Sunday during voting in a by-election for the National Assembly.

The attack targeted a school which was being used as a polling station in the by-election in Buner, near the militant-infested Swat valley.

Police said there were indications that the attack could have been caused by a car-bomb, as parts of a vehicle were found at the site of blast. Police are also investigating if the vehicle was detonated by a possible occupant of the car who may have perished in the attack.

Two policemen and children were among those killed in the blast, which destroyed the school building and damaged nearby houses and shops.

© Copyright 2000 - 2008 The Hindu

Hamas calls for third Intifada

Atul Aneja

Israel’s bombardment continues for second successive day



DUBAI: The Palestinian group Hamas has called for a fresh uprising against Israel following massive aerial bombardment which has continued for a second successive day on Sunday.

The wave of airstrikes has been the largest since the Arab-Israeli war of 1967. The death toll from the bombardment has now reached 280, while 800 persons have been wounded.

Hamas politburo chief Khaled Mashaal called upon Palestinians to wage a new Intifada (mass uprising) against Israeli occupation, including a return to martyrdom (suicide) operations.

In an interview on Al-Jazeera television, Mr. Mashaal said: “We called for a military intifada against the enemy. Resistance will continue through martyrdom operations”. “I call upon you [Palestinians] to carry out a third Intifada.” The first mass uprising against Israel took place in the eighties, while the second began in 2000.

Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh declared that the massive use of force by Israel was futile. “We will not leave our land, we will not raise white flags and we kneel only before Allah,” he said.

Israeli warplanes on Sunday attacked 60 targets including the media apparatus of Hamas. In the first strike on Sunday, a mosque, located near the Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, was destroyed. Two bodies were recovered from the debris.

Israeli aircraft also targeted Al Aqsa television station used by Hamas. The station has continued its broadcast through its mobile units, despite the destruction of the studio building during the attack.

Hundreds of Israeli infantry troops and tanks are massing at Israel’s border with Gaza in preparation for a possible ground offensive.

Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak said Israel wished “to totally change the rules of the game [in Gaza].”

Responding to the attacks, the Palestinian groups in Gaza have continued to fire rockets inside southern Israel. Around 40 rockets were fired on Sunday, out of which one landed in the city of Ashdod, nearly 37 km inside Israeli territory from Gaza. This is the longest distance that a Palestinian rocket fired inside Israel from Gaza has covered so far. A woman suffered shrapnel injuries when three rockets hit the industrial city of Ashkelon.

On Sunday, there has been a cascade of protests in West Asia, starting from the Palestinian West Bank to Morocco, and including Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Yemen and Syria, against the killings in Gaza. Hamas officials have accused Egypt of having foreknowledge of the attacks and of misleading the group prior to the strikes.
Massacre: Iran

Meanwhile, Iran will observe Monday as a day of national mourning following the killing of the Palestinians. Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei described the Israeli strikes on Saturday and Sunday as a “deliberate massacre” committed against Palestinians. Ayatollah Khamenei said those who masterminded the “abysmal catastrophe” should be personally tried and accordingly punished. He lamented that “some Muslim leaders have paved the way for Tel Aviv to commit these crimes against humanity.” The Palestinian group Hamas, which has been targeted by Israel, has blamed Egypt of having foreknowledge of the attacks.

© Copyright 2000 - 2008 The Hindu

Sunday, December 28, 2008

8 killed in Colombo suicide blast

B. Muralidhar Reddy
The Hindu

COLOMBO: At least eight people were killed and 17 injured as a suspected LTTE cadre exploded himself outside the Civil Defence Force (CDF) office on the outskirts here on Sunday.

As per the police, the blast took place near a church in Wattala at 9 a.m. An Army officer and six CDF personnel were among those killed while 13 CDF personnel and four civilians were injured.

The police said the suicide bomber had exploded himself when security personnel stopped him at the CDF office. The attack came amid intense fighting in the north.

Separately, fighter jets attacked identified LTTE “resistance positions” South of Mullathivu.

Air Force spokesperson Janaka Nanayakkara said the strikes were carried out in support of the advancing troops.

© Copyright 2000 - 2008 The Hindu

Israeli troops mobilize as Gaza assault widens

Dec 28, 10:08 PM EST
By IBRAHIM BARZAK and KARIN LAUB
Associated Press Writers

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) -- Israel widened its deadliest-ever air offensive against Gaza's Hamas rulers Sunday, pounding smuggling tunnels and government strongholds, sending more tanks and artillery toward the Gaza border and activating thousands of reservists for a possible ground invasion.

Israeli leaders said they would press ahead with the Gaza campaign, despite enraged protests across the Arab world and Syria's decision to break off indirect peace talks with the Jewish state. Israel's foreign minister said the goal was to halt Gaza rocket fire on Israel for good, but not to reoccupy the territory.

With the two-day death toll nearing 300 Sunday, crowds of Gazans breached the border wall with Egypt to escape the chaos. Egyptian forces, some firing in the air, tried to push them back into Gaza and an official said one border guard was killed.

Hamas, in turn, fired rockets deeper than ever into Israel, near the Israeli port city of Ashdod.

Yet Hamas leaders were forced into hiding, most of the dead were from the Hamas security forces, and Israel's military intelligence chief said Hamas' ability to fire rockets had been reduced by 50 percent. Indeed, Hamas rockets fire dropped off sharply, from more than 130 on Saturday to just over 20 on Sunday. Still, Hamas continues to command some 20,000 fighters.

Israel's intense bombings - some 300 air strikes since midday Saturday - wreaked unprecedented destruction in Gaza, reducing entire buildings to rubble.

After nightfall, Israeli aircraft attacked a building in the Jebaliya refugee camp next to Gaza City, killing a 14-month-old baby, a man and two women, Gaza Health Ministry official Dr. Moaiya Hassanain said. In the southern town of Rafah, Palestinian residents said a toddler and his two teenage brothers were killed in an airstrike aimed at a Hamas commander.

Israeli aircraft also bombed the Islamic University and government compound in Gaza City, centers of Hamas power, and the house next to the residence of Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh in a Gaza City refugee camp. Haniyeh, in hiding, was not home.

Shlomo Brom, a former senior Israeli military official, said it was the deadliest force ever used in decades of Israeli-Palestinian fighting. "Since Hamas took over Gaza (in June 2007), it has become a war between two states, and in war between states, more force is used," he said.

European leaders called on both Israel and Hamas to end the bloodshed.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy spoke Sunday with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who leads a rival government to Hamas in the West Bank, and condemned "the provocations that led to this situation as well as the disproportionate use of force."

The White House was mum about the situation in Gaza on Sunday after speaking out expansively on Saturday, blaming Hamas for provoking Israel's retaliatory strikes.

In the most dramatic attacks Sunday, warplanes struck dozens of smuggling tunnels under the Gaza-Egypt border, cutting off a lifeline that had supplied Hamas with weapons and Gaza with commercial goods. The influx of goods had helped Hamas defy an 18-month blockade of Gaza by Israel and Egypt, and was key to propping up its rule.

Sunday's blasts shook the ground several miles away and sent black smoke high into the sky. Earlier, warplanes dropped three bombs on one of Hamas' main security compounds in Gaza City, including a prison. Moments after the blasts, frantic inmates, their faces dusty and bloodied, scrambled down the rubble. One man, still half buried, raised a hand to alert rescuers.

Gaza's nine hospitals were overwhelmed. Hassanain, who keeps a record for the Gaza Health Ministry, said more than 290 people were killed over two days and more than 800 wounded.

The Palestinian Center for Human Rights, which keeps researchers at all hospitals, said it had counted 251 dead by midday Sunday, and that among them were 20 children under the age of 16 and nine women.

Across Gaza, families pitched traditional mourning tents of green tarp outside homes. Yet the rows of chairs inside these tents remained largely empty, as residents cowered indoors for fear of new Israeli strikes.

Israeli leaders gave interviews to foreign television networks to try win international support.

Public Security Minister Avi Dichter, speaking Arabic, spoke on Arab satellite TV stations, denouncing Hamas rule in Gaza. And Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni told NBC that the assault came because Hamas, an Islamic group backed by Syria and Iran, is smuggling weapons and building a "small army."

In Jerusalem, Israel's Cabinet approved a callup of 6,500 reserve soldiers, raising fears of an impending ground offensive. Israel has doubled the number of troops on the Gaza border since Saturday and also deployed an artillery battery. It was not clear, though, whether the deployment was meant to pressure Hamas or whether Israel is determined to send ground troops.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said it was unclear when the operation would end but told his Cabinet was "liable to last longer than we are able to foresee at this time."

Since Israel's withdrawal from Gaza in 2005, after 38 years of full military occupation, Israeli forces have repeatedly returned to the territory to hunt militants. However, Israel has shied away from retaking the entire strip, for fear of getting bogged down in urban warfare.

The diplomatic fallout, meanwhile, was swift.

Syria decided to suspend indirect peace talks with Israel, begun earlier this year, and the U.N. Security Council called on both sides to halt the fighting and asked Israel to allow humanitarian supplies into Gaza; 30 trucks were let in Sunday.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on Israel to open its crossings "for the continuous provision of humanitarian supplies." In a statement, he said one Palestinian U.N. employee, and eight trainees, were among the dead.

The prime minister of Turkey, one of the few Muslim countries to have relations with Israel, called the air assault a "crime against humanity."

The carnage inflamed Arab and Muslim public opinion, setting off street protests across the West Bank, in an Arab community in Israel, in several Middle Eastern cities and in Paris.

Some of the protests turned violent. Israeli troops quelling a West Bank march killed one Palestinian and seriously wounded another. A crowd of anti-Israel protesters in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul became a target for a suicide bomber on a bicycle. In Lebanon, police fired tear gas to stop demonstrators from reaching the Egyptian Embassy.

Egypt, which has served as a mediator between Israel and the Palestinians as well as between Hamas and its rival Fatah, has been criticized for joining Israel in closing its borders with Gaza. The blockade was imposed after the Hamas takeover in June 2007.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit called on Hamas to renew its truce with Israel. The cease-fire began unraveling last month, and formally ended more than a week ago. Since then, Gaza militants had stepped up rocket fire on Israel.

A Hamas leader in exile, Osama Hamdan, said the movement would not relent. "We have one alternative, which is to be steadfast and resist and then we will be victorious," Hamdan said in Beirut.

Also in Beirut, Hassan Nasrallah, leader of the Hezbollah militia, said he would not abandon Hamas, but did not threaten to attack Israel. During the Israel-Hezbollah war of 2006, the militia fired thousands of rockets into Israel.

Hundreds of thousands of Israelis live in cities and towns in Gaza rocket range, and life slowed in some of the communities. Schools in communities in a 12-mile radius from Gaza were ordered to remain closed beyond the weeklong Jewish holiday of Hanukkah, which ends Monday.

In the southern city of Ashkelon, home to some 120,000 people, streets were relatively busy, despite the military's recommendations against being out in the open.

Several times throughout the day, however, that routine was briefly interrupted by the sounds of wailing sirens warning of an imminent attack. Pedestrians scurried for cover in buildings. After a number of rocket landed in the distance, a woman taking cover nearby briefly fainted. She refused water and food from bystanders, instead shivering in a corner, apparently in shock.

---

Additional reporting by Aron Heller in Ashkelon, Israel. Karin Laub reported from Jerusalem.

© 2008 The Associated Press.

Cold War humanitarian program had covert side

Dec 28, 1:22 PM EST
By ARTHUR MAX and RANDY HERSCHAFT
Associated Press Writers

BAD AROLSEN, Germany (AP) -- In the locked attic of a German archive is a dusty file that harks back to a long forgotten chapter of the Cold War - a humanitarian endeavor that, it now emerges, also had a covert side.

Marked "Escapee Program," it contains a list of thousands of names of people who, through cunning, bravery and luck, slipped through the Iron Curtain that divided Europe after World War II and found freedom in the West.

President Harry Truman's administration launched the program in 1952 to rehabilitate and resettle refugees from Eastern Europe, feting them as heroes who defied communist tyranny.

Recently declassified U.S. documents disclose that, from the start, the program went beyond giving them new lives and sought to use them for intelligence and propaganda. Some were offered money to be smuggled back to their home countries to gather information on Soviet military defenses and public attitudes toward the communist regimes that had replaced Hitler's Nazi occupiers.

The file in the attic of the International Tracing Service adds yet another previously unknown element to this Cold War episode: For years, a humanitarian group dedicated to family reunification ran background checks on the escapees at the United States' request.

Associated Press reporters, who have been allowed repeated access to the archive in the past two years, recently gained entry to the attic, where even employees rarely venture. Cardboard boxes storing old letters were stacked on the floor, and binders of inactive and uncatalogued files lined floor-to-ceiling metal shelves. The Escapee Program carton sat among those files, apparently undisturbed for many years.

Each name on the list gave a reference to a case file and is among the 17.5 million persons in the archive's publicly accessible index of people killed or otherwise persecuted by the Nazis. The Escapee Program files reviewed by the AP gave personal details, names of relatives, movements and jobs before and after they fled to the West. Their number is not known, but the ITS says it handled more than 7,400 cases in the program's first year.

There is no suggestion that the U.S. program was coercive, or that any escapee was denied refuge if he refused a request to go back across the Iron Curtain.

Miloslav K., for instance, says he refused an offer of money to return to Czechoslovakia, but nonetheless was able to immigrate to the U.S. and is now living a quiet retirement in New York City.

He said that after threading his way on foot across the Czechoslovakian border in December 1953, he wound up in a refugee camp where he was repeatedly debriefed about life under the communists and about a military airstrip near his hometown.

He said he was offered 1,000 marks - less than $2,000 at a time when money and jobs were scarce - to gather intelligence in Czechoslovakia. He knew of one man who accepted the assignment but was captured on his second trip to Prague when he visited his wife. Miloslav said he never heard of him again.

"I risked my life at least three times" to escape, he recalled telling the U.S. recruiting agent. "Do you think for 1,000 marks I will risk my life again?"

One program devised by the CIA for covert actions was Operation REDSOX, which the agency launched in the early 1950s to infiltrate escapees back into the Communist bloc to encourage resistance and defections.

Most of the teams were captured, however. According to a CIA history, 75 percent of the 85 REDSOX agents "disappeared from sight and failed in their missions."

As an intelligence operation, the Escapee Program failed to produce the quality intelligence the spymasters were after, and reflected the general disarray at that time in the intelligence community, says Sarah-Jane Corke, author of the 2008 book "U.S. Covert Operations and Cold War Strategy: Truman, the CIA and Secret Warfare."

Information from the escapees often was unreliable, cooked up to impress interrogators and secure resettlement, she said.

"As the Escapee Program was building up, American covert operations in Eastern Europe were unraveling," Corke said by telephone from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. By 1952, the Soviets had penetrated or exposed all the U.S. clandestine missions in the East. The CIA's credibility was shot, and the administration was floundering for an anti-communist policy.

One escapee was Jiri Wertheimer who, with a friend named Zdenek Volf, stole a single-engine Piper sports plane from the Prague Communist Youth Flying Club and skittered across the frontier, evading pursuing Czech Air Force Messerschmitts and gunfire from Soviet watch towers.

Communist Czechoslovakia "was a dictatorship. You had to keep your mouth shut, otherwise you could be arrested for not following the party line," Wertheimer, now 80, told AP 55 years later. "We didn't want to spend our lives in this kind of system."

After landing in a German potato field, Wertheimer said, he went through several interrogations over a period of weeks, first by the CIA, then by the intelligence agencies of Britain, France and West Germany.

Wertheimer said he did not resent the questioning, which was to be expected. "There was nothing brutal about it," he said. "It's never a pleasant thing, even though it may be conducted in a very polite and respectful way. Nevertheless, it was an interrogation."

Wertheimer, an engineer, worked for Boeing for 33 years and lives in Newcastle, Wash.

Miloslav K. said he left Czechoslovakia because of the humiliations he suffered at Soviet hands.

"Nobody liked the Russians. Stalin was a dictator, a former bank robber. Nobody liked the soldiers," said Miloslav.

A retired printer, now 86, he spoke on condition of anonymity, saying he didn't want to be disturbed by publicity. But he relished retelling the story of his 120-mile journey to the U.S.-occupied zone of Germany.

He said he spent seven days moving through forests and villages, begging food, shelter and directions from East German peasants.

He remembers each farmer, shopkeeper, train conductor and Russian soldier he encountered.

The border was a 30-foot-wide strip of rough road constantly patrolled by armed soldiers. Miloslav hid behind a boulder in the woods for hours. Two armed Russian soldiers with a dog came, stayed, and finally left.

Then he saw his chance. Speaking in English that faltered as he relived the excitement, he gave this account:

"Now is the time. Now is the time. Now is the running. I was running directly to the spot." He saw the ditch, jumped across, then sprinted along the road.

"All of a sudden I turned. Behind me was running the German shepherd. Directly at me. I said, 'that's finished.' It was a trained dog. It was going at the face. Lucky I had this little briefcase. I put it in front of my face. He jumped and hit the briefcase. It was a lucky move, believe me. He hit it with full speed."

The dog fled, pursued by soldiers who didn't see Miloslav racing the other way. "I believe it was a miracle," he said.

Miloslav said he was interviewed on the Voice of America and Radio Free Europe, which had its origins in, and was partly financed by, the CIA. "I was good," he said. But having himself turned down an offer to go back, he never encouraged people to flee.

"I knew how dangerous it is," he said. "If they caught somebody, he was sent to the uranium mine or they killed him."

---

U.S. authorities in Germany first turned to the International Tracing Service for help in 1953, saying they wanted to verify the escapees' identities and eligibility for immigration. But these background checks also were part of a broader effort to weed out Soviet spies, communist sympathizers and criminals.

The ITS was then run by the Allied High Commission of occupied Germany. Its initial mission was to use its vast collection of Nazi documents - concentration camp registries, transport lists, forced labor files, death records and displaced persons files - to track people missing in the postwar chaos and to reunite families.

In its 1953 annual report, ITS said helping the Escapee Program contributed to a "considerable backlog" in documenting wartime compensation claims.

The chief U.S. screening officer, James E. Crosby, wrote that he found the first batches of replies so useful that "we felt it advisable to suspend any further eligibility evaluations without an ITS check."

The process continued after the ITS was handed over to the International Committee of the Red Cross in 1955, which still runs it. The Escapee Program was succeeded by the U.S. Refugee Program in 1963, but the ITS continued to denote U.S. queries under the initials EP at least into the 1970s.

Chief archivist Udo Jost acknowledged the ITS checked several thousand names in response to U.S. requests to know whether refugees had been in Germany before 1948, which would disqualify them from escapee status, and to verify the information in U.S. files was correct.

The massive archive, the world's largest repository of documents on Nazi victims, is in the quiet town of Bad Arolsen. It was closed to researchers and to the public for more than 60 years. It opened its doors in November 2007 after a prolonged campaign led by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, allowing Holocaust survivors and scholars for the first time to inspect its 50 million pages.

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In Washington, around the time Wertheimer and Miloslav made their escapes, the migration office of the U.S. State Department wrote a secret assessment of the Escapee Program. It was declassified last year.

In the late 1940s, it said, the Soviet Union was capitalizing on the plight of people who had fled the Eastern bloc and were "forced into debilitating inactivity in government camps or marginal existence as free-living persons." Some were locked up with criminals. Others gave up on the West and returned home.

As early as January 1950 Truman's national security advisers saw the refugees as having "positive value for U.S. intelligence, operational or propaganda purposes."

And 15 months later, a directive from the National Security Council said a program to encourage East bloc defections would further U.S. aims "by placing maximum strain on the Soviet structure of power through threatening the regime's control of its population."

In December 1951 the Psychological Strategy Board, responsible for psychological warfare and answerable to the National Security Council, drew up a program to employ, resettle and care for escapees from the Soviet orbit.

These people "should be capable of providing certain necessary services to assist U.S. operating programs," the review said, underscoring their covert potential.

A State Department history released in 2007 drew an explicit link, saying the Escapee Program's goals were to "provide care and resettlement for current escapees and facilitate their use by CIA and the Armed Forces."

The board met in January 1952 to work on details. According to minutes obtained from the U.S. National Archives in College Park, Md., Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, the CIA director, told the senior State and Defense Department officials that the refugees could be recruited into a volunteer army.

Under legislation known as the Kersten Amendment, $100 million was available "to support resistance behind the Iron Curtain."

Truman authorized the Escapee Program in March 1952, and approved $4.3 million in funding.

However, plans to form an active military unit, called the Volunteer Freedom Corps, collapsed under objections from other allies.

By the end of the first year 14,000 people - Czechoslovaks, Hungarians, Poles, Bulgarians, Romanians, Soviets, Albanians and Balts - had benefited from the program. Camps were improved. Clothing was provided, along with medical and dental services. Some 4,000 people were approved for resettlement.

Nothing was said publicly about the program's clandestine side. Some material about the CIA's involvement in the program is still secret.

In the Cold War atmosphere of the time, said author Corke, it would not be surprising for humanitarian organizations to help the intelligence services.

"There was an idea in the 1950s that you were all in it together. You had an obligation to help the government in time of the Cold War," she said.

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On the Net:

International Tracing Service: http://www.its-arolsen.org

U.S. National Archives: http://www.archives.gov/research/arc/

ITS Inventory Archive: http://tinyurl.com/5l98lr

© 2008 The Associated Press.

Child maid trafficking spreads from Africa to US

Dec 28, 8:23 PM EST

By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI
Associated Press Writer

IRVINE, Calif. (AP) -- Late at night, the neighbors saw a little girl at the kitchen sink of the house next door. They watched through their window as the child rinsed plates under the open faucet. She wasn't much taller than the counter and the soapy water swallowed her slender arms.

To put the dishes away, she climbed on a chair.

But she was not the daughter of the couple next door doing chores. She was their maid.

Shyima was 10 when a wealthy Egyptian couple brought her from a poor village in northern Egypt to work in their California home. She awoke before dawn and often worked past midnight to iron their clothes, mop the marble floors and dust the family's crystal. She earned $45 a month working up to 20 hours a day. She had no breaks during the day and no days off.

The trafficking of children for domestic labor in the U.S. is an extension of an illegal but common practice in Africa. Families in remote villages send their daughters to work in cities for extra money and the opportunity to escape a dead-end life. Some girls work for free on the understanding that they will at least be better fed in the home of their employer.

The custom has led to the spread of trafficking, as well-to-do Africans accustomed to employing children immigrate to the U.S. Around one-third of the estimated 10,000 forced laborers in the United States are servants trapped behind the curtains of suburban homes, according to a study by the National Human Rights Center at the University of California at Berkeley and Free the Slaves, a nonprofit group. No one can say how many are children, especially since their work can so easily be masked as chores.

Once behind the walls of gated communities like this one, these children never go to school. Unbeknownst to their neighbors, they live as modern-day slaves, just like Shyima, whose story is pieced together through court records, police transcripts and interviews.

"I'd look down and see her at 10, 11 - even 12 - at night," said Shyima's neighbor at the time, Tina Font. "She'd be doing the dishes. We didn't put two and two together."

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Shyima cried when she found out she was going to America in 2000. Her father, a bricklayer, had fallen ill a few years earlier, so her mother found a maid recruiter, signed a contract effectively leasing her daughter to the couple for 10 years and told Shyima to be strong.

For a year, Shyima, 9, worked in the Cairo apartment owned by Amal Motelib and Nasser Ibrahim. Every month, Shyima's mother came to pick up her salary.

Tens of thousands of children in Africa, some as young as 3, are recruited every year to work as domestic servants. They are on call 24 hours a day and are often beaten if they make a mistake. Children are in demand because they earn less than adults and are less likely to complain. In just one city - Casablanca - a 2001 survey by the Moroccan government found more than 15,000 girls under 15 working as maids.

The U.S. State Department found that over the past year, children have been trafficked to work as servants in at least 33 of Africa's 53 countries. Children from at least 10 African countries were sent as maids to the U.S. and Europe. But the problem is so well hidden that authorities - including the U.N., Interpol and the State Department - have no idea how many child maids now work in the West.

"In most homes, these girls are not allowed to use so much as the same spoon as the rest of the family," said Hany Helal, the Cairo-based director of the Egyptian Organization for Child Rights.

By the time the Ibrahims decided to leave, Shyima's family had taken several loans from them for medical bills. The Ibrahims said they could only be repaid by sending Shyima to work for them in the U.S. A friend posed as her father, and the U.S. embassy in Cairo issued her a six-month tourist visa.

She arrived at Los Angeles International Airport on Aug. 3, 2000, according to court documents. The family brought her back to their spacious five-bedroom, two-story home, decorated in the style of a Tuscan villa with a fountain of two angels spouting water through a conch. She was told to sleep in the garage.

It had no windows and was neither heated nor air-conditioned. Soon after she arrived, the garage's only light bulb went out. The Ibrahims didn't replace it. From then on, Shyima lived in the dark.

She was told to call them Madame Amal and Hajj Nasser, terms of respect. They called her "shaghala," or servant. Their five children called her "stupid."

While the family slept, she ironed the school outfits of the Ibrahims' 5-year-old twin sons. She woke them, combed their hair, dressed them and made them breakfast. Then she ironed clothes and fixed breakfast for the three girls, including Heba, who at 10 was the same age as the family's servant.

Neither Ibrahim nor his wife worked, and they slept late. When they awoke, they yelled for her to make tea.

While they ate breakfast watching TV, she cleaned the palatial house. She vacuumed each bedroom, made the beds, dusted the shelves, wiped the windows, washed the dishes and did the laundry.

Her employers were not satisfied, she said. "Nothing was ever clean enough for her. She would come in and say, 'This is dirty,' or 'You didn't do this right,' or 'You ruined the food,'" said Shyima.

She started wetting her bed. Her sheets stank. So did her oversized T-shirt and the other hand-me-downs she wore.

While doing the family's laundry, she slipped her own clothes into the load. Madame slapped her. "She told me my clothes were dirtier than theirs. That I wasn't allowed to clean mine there," she said.

She washed her clothes in a bucket in the garage. She hung them to dry outside, next to the trash cans.

When the couple went out, she waited until she heard the car pull away and then she sat down. She sat with her back straight because she was afraid her clothes would dirty the upholstery.

It never occurred to her to run away.

"I thought this was normal," she said.

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If you could fly the garage where Shyima slept 7,000 miles to the sandy alleyway where her Egyptian family now lives, it would pass for the best home in the neighborhood.

The garage's walls are made of concrete instead of hand-patted bricks. Its roof doesn't leak. Its door shuts all the way. Shyima's mother and her 10 brothers and sisters live in a two-bedroom house with uneven walls and a flaking ceiling. None of them have ever had a bed to themselves, much less a whole room. At night, bodies cover the sagging couches.

Shown a snapshot of the windowless garage, Shyima's mother in the coastal town of Agami made a clucking sound of approval.

"It's much cleaner than where many people here sleep," said Helal, the child rights advocate. He explains that Shyima's treatment in the Ibrahim home is considered normal - even good - by Egyptian standards.

Even though many child maids are physically abused, child labor is rarely prosecuted because the work isn't considered strenuous. Many employers even see themselves as benefactors.

"There is a sense that children should work to help their family, but also that they are being given an opportunity," said Mark Lagon, the director of the U.S. State Department's Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons.

That's especially the case for well-off families who transport their child servants to Western countries.

In 2006, a U.S. district court in Michigan sentenced a Cameroonian man to 17 years in prison for bringing a 14-year-old girl from his country to work as his unpaid maid. That same year, a Moroccan couple was sentenced to home confinement for forcing their 12-year-old Moroccan niece to work grueling hours caring for their baby.

In Germantown, Md., a Nigerian couple used their daughter's passport to bring in a 14-year-old Nigerian girl as their maid. She worked for them for five years before escaping in 2001. In Germany, France, the Netherlands and England, African immigrants have been arrested for forcing children from their home countries to work as their servants.

In several of these cases, the employers argued that they took the children with the parents' permission. The Cameroonian girl's mother flew to Detroit to testify in court against her daughter, saying the girl was ungrateful for the good life her employers had provided her.

Shyima's mother, Salwa Mahmoud, said her father believed she would have better opportunities in America.

"I didn't want her to travel but our family's condition dictated that she had to go," explained Mahmoud, a squat, round-faced woman with calloused hands and feet. She is missing two front teeth because she couldn't afford a dentist.

"If she had stayed here in Egypt, she would have been ordinary," said Awatef, Shyima's older sister. "Just like us."

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On April 3, 2002, an anonymous caller phoned the California Department of Social Services to report that a young girl was living inside the garage of 28 Pacific Grove.

A few days later, Nasser Ibrahim opened the door to a detective from the Irvine Police Department. Asked if any children lived there beside his own, he first said no, then yes - "a distant relative." He said he had "not yet" enrolled her in school. She did "chores - just like the other kids," according to the police transcript.

Shyima was upstairs cleaning when Ibrahim came to get her. "He told me that I was not allowed to say anything," said Shyima. "That if I said anything I would never see my parents again."

When police searched the house, they turned up several home videos showing Shyima at work. They seized the contract signed by Shyima's illiterate parents.

Asked by police if anyone other than his immediate family lived in the house, Eid, one of the twins, said: "Hummm ... Yeah ... Her name is Shyima," according to the transcript. "She uh ... She works - she works for us at the house, like, she cleans up the dishes and stuff like that."

Twelve-year-old Heba got flustered: "Yeah. She's uh - my - uh - How do I say this? Uh ... My dad's ... Oh, wait, like ... She's like my cousin, but - She's my dad's daughter's friend. Oops! The other way. Okay, I'm confused."

Heba eventually admitted that Shyima had lived with the family for three years in Egypt and in California.

The police put Shyima in a squad car. They noted her hands were red and caked with dead, hard-looking skin.

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For months Shyima lied to investigators, saying what the Ibrahims had told her to say.

She went without sleep for days at a stretch. She was put on four different types of medication. She moved from foster home to foster home. Her mood swings alarmed her guardians. In school for the first time, she struggled to learn to read.

Investigators arranged for her to speak to her parents. She told them she felt like a "nobody" working for the Ibrahims and wanted to come home. Her father yelled at her.

"They kept telling me that they're good people," Shyima recounted in a recent interview. "That it's my fault. That because of what I did my mom was going to have a heart attack."

Three years ago, she broke off contact with her family. Since then she has refused to speak Arabic. She can no longer communicate in her mother tongue.

During the 2006 trial, the Ibrahims described Shyima as part of their family. They included proof of a trip she took with the family to Disneyland. Shyima's lawyer pointed out that the 10-year-old wasn't allowed on the rides - she was there to carry the bags.

The couple's lawyers collected photographs of the home where Shyima grew up, including close-ups of the feces-stained squat toilet and of Shyima's sisters washing clothes in a bucket.

In her final plea, Madame Amal told the judge it would be unfair to separate her from her children. Enraged, Shyima, then 17, told the court she hadn't seen her family in years.

"Where was their loving when it came to me? Wasn't I a human being too? I felt like I was nothing when I was with them," she sobbed.

The couple pleaded guilty to all charges, including forced labor and slavery. They were ordered to pay $76,000, the amount Shyima would have earned at the minimum wage. The sentence: Three years in federal prison for Ibrahim, 22 months for his wife, and then deportation for both. Their lawyers declined to comment for this story.

"I don't think that there is any other term you could use than modern-day slavery," said Bob Schoch, the special agent in charge for Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Los Angeles, in describing Shyima's situation.

Shyima was adopted last year by Chuck and Jenny Hall of Beaumont, Calif. The family lives near Disneyland, where they have taken her a half-dozen times. She graduated from high school this summer after retaking her exit exam and hopes to become a police officer.

Shyima, now 19, has a list of assigned chores. She wears purple eyeshadow, has a boyfriend and frequently updates her profile on MySpace. Her hands are neatly manicured.

But in her closet, she keeps a box of pictures of her parents and her brothers and sisters. "I don't look at them because it makes me cry," she said. "How could they? They're my parents."

When her father died last year, her family had no way of reaching her.

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EPILOGUE: On a recent afternoon in Cairo, Madame Amal walked into the lobby of her apartment complex wearing designer sunglasses and a chic scarf.

After nearly two years in a U.S. prison cell, she's living once more in the spacious apartment where Shyima first worked as her maid. The apartment is adorned in the style of a Louis XIV palace, with ornately carved settees, gold-leaf vases and life-sized portraits of her and her husband.

She did not agree to be interviewed for this story.

Before the door closed behind her, a little girl slipped in carrying grocery bags. She wore a shabby T-shirt. Her small feet slapped the floor in loose flip-flops. Her eyes were trained on the ground.

She looked to be around 9 years old.

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EDITOR'S NOTE - This story is based on interviews in Los Angeles, Irvine and Beaumont, Calif., and in Cairo and Agami, Egypt, in September and October. In addition to interviews with Shyima, her mother and nine of her brothers and sisters, the AP also interviewed her neighbors in Irvine, law enforcement officials and the lawyer who prosecuted her case. Quotes and scenes were observed by the reporter or described by Shyima and confirmed in police transcripts and court records.

© 2008 The Associated Press.