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US announces six drone test sites

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 31 Desember 2013 | 20.24

30 December 2013 Last updated at 15:20 ET
Georgi and Nina Tushev with a homemade drone

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DIY drones: Enthusiasts making their own aircraft

The US aviation regulator has announced the six states that will host sites for testing commercial use of drones.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) picked Alaska, Nevada, New York, North Dakota, Texas and Virginia.

The sites are part of a programme to develop safety and operational rules for drones by the end of 2015.

Hitherto mainly used by the military, the potential of drones is now being explored by everyone from real estate agents to farmers or delivery services.

The head of the FAA, Michael Huerta, said safety would be the priority as it considers approval for unleashing the unmanned aircraft into US skies.

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Five surprising uses for drones

  1. Help reporters cover stories (the BBC is currently trying them out)
  2. Allow real-estate agents to sell luxury homes by showing off that stunning aerial view
  3. Deliver beer to music festival-goers
  4. Make movies (Part of The Smurfs 2 was filmed with a drone)
  5. Track the Sumatran orangutan and other endangered species

Pilots will be notified through routine announcements about where drones are being flown.

The FAA said in a statement that its decision followed a 10-month process involving proposals from 24 states.

The agency said it had considered geography, climate, location of ground infrastructure, research needs, airspace use, aviation experience and risk.

The sites chosen are:

  • A set of locations proposed by the University of Alaska in seven zones with varying climates, from Hawaii to Oregon
  • Griffiss International Airport in central New York state will test how to integrate drones into the congested north-east airspace
  • North Dakota Department of Commerce will test the human impact of drones and also how the aircraft cope in temperate climates
  • The state of Nevada will concentrate on standards for air traffic and drone operators
  • Texas A&M University plans to develop safety requirements for drones and testing for airworthiness
  • Virginia Tech university will research operational and technical areas of risk for drones

The biggest chunk of the growth in the commercial drone industry is currently expected to be for agriculture and law enforcement.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis

Tara McKelvey BBC News


For years, people thought drones would never be allowed to fly in the US. Then Jeff Bezos got involved. The Amazon chief executive said his company would start using drones to deliver packages - and even cynics began to think something might happen.

Matt Scassero, a retired US Navy captain who has worked on efforts to expand the use of drones, said he thinks Amazon moved things along. "It adds a lot of interest," he said.

The FAA announcement are signs of progress for Scassero and other drone enthusiasts. It means officials are taking their requests seriously - and things are on track for the drones to fly.

Police and other emergency services could use them for crowd control, taking crime scene photos or for search and rescue missions.

It can cost a police department hundreds of dollars an hour to deploy a helicopter, while an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) can be sent into the skies for as little as $25.

Farmers, meanwhile, might find it easier to spray crops or survey livestock with the pilotless aircraft.

The FAA estimates as many as 7,500 aircraft could be in the air five years after widespread airspace access is made legal.

However, the commercial use of drones has drawn criticism from both conservatives and liberals.

In a report last December, the American Civil Liberties Union said that giving drones access to US skies would only ensure "our every move is monitored, tracked, recorded and scrutinised by the authorities".

But lawmakers from winning states were delighted with the selections.

"This is wonderful news for Nevada that creates a huge opportunity for our economy," said Senator Harry Reid, a Democrat from Nevada.

An industry-commissioned study predicted more than 70,000 jobs - including drone operators - would develop in the first three years after Congress loosens drone restrictions on US skies.

The same study, conducted by the Teal Group research firm, found that the worldwide commercial drone market could top $89bn in the next decade.


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Huge fire after US oil train derails

31 December 2013 Last updated at 02:47 ET
Fire and smoke rising

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TV cameras and onlookers filmed some of the explosions

Wagons from a mile-long train carrying crude oil have burst into flames as they derailed after a collision in the US state of North Dakota.

A plume of thick black smoke could be seen many miles away and explosions were heard.

No injuries were reported, but officials are urging people from the nearby town of Casselton - some 2,300 people - to evacuate as a precaution.

An investigation into the incident has been launched.

A spokeswoman for the North Dakota Department of Emergency Services said the last 50 wagons of the train had been uncoupled, but another 56 remained at risk.

The derailment, after a collision involving another goods train, is reported to have happened near an ethanol plant.

Emergency and fire-fighting crews have been sent to the scene.

Cass County sheriff's office said it was "strongly recommending" that residents in parts of Casselton and anyone living five miles (8km) to the south and east evacuate.

Officials have said a change in weather patterns could expose residents to smoke and possible health hazards.

Residents within 10 miles of the scene are being asked to stay indoors.

A shelter for those evacuated has been set up in Fargo, about 25 miles away.

Casselton resident Eva Fercho said she first noticed black smoke and then heard two explosions, WDAY News reported.

"I could almost feel the house shake... it was loud," she said.

Correspondents say it is the latest in a string of incidents that have raised alarm about a rise in crude oil traffic on the railways.

In July a train carrying oil from the Bakken oil region in North Dakota derailed near the Canadian town of Lac Megantic, killing more than 40 people.


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US 'will not drop diplomat charges'

31 December 2013 Last updated at 03:06 ET

There are no plans to drop charges against against or apologise for the arrest of Indian diplomat Devyani Khobragade, US sources are quoted as saying in Indian media reports.

The reports say prosecutors are gathering more evidence ahead of a 13 January deadline for her indictment.

Her detention on visa fraud charges and underpaying her housekeeper has led to a diplomatic row and outrage in India.

She denies all the charges and has been released on bail.

India has demanded an apology from the US over her alleged "humiliation".

But Press Trust of India news agency quoted US sources in New York as saying that the US is gathering more evidence against the diplomat ahead of 13 January, the deadline for her indictment.

Ms Khobragade, India's deputy consul general in New York, was arrested in the city on 12 December on suspicion of visa fraud and making false statements, after being accused of paying her Indian maid below the US minimum wage.

She was handcuffed and strip-searched after a complaint from the maid, Sangeeta Richard.

The diplomat, who has been released on bail, denies all the charges and has in turn accused Ms Richard of theft and attempted blackmail.

Delhi had already ordered a series of reprisals against the US.

Security barricades around the US embassy in the city were removed and a visiting US delegation was snubbed by senior Indian politicians and officials. India is also checking the tax status of Americans working at schools in the country.


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Hobbit beats Wolf at US Box Office

30 December 2013 Last updated at 03:55 ET

The Hobbit: The Desolation Of Smaug has spent a third week on top of the US box office despite festive competition from The Wolf Of Wall Street.

Starring Sherlock actors Martin Freeman and Benedict Cumberbatch, the film took $30m (£18m) over the weekend, bringing its US total to $190m (£11.5m).

Disney animation Frozen was at number two, switching places with Will Ferrell's comedy Anchorman 2 at three.

Martin Scorsese's Wolf of Wall Street was the biggest new release, at five.

Marking the director's fifth collaboration with Leonardo DiCaprio, the black comedy is based on stock broker Jordan Belfort's memoir of the same name.

It took $19 million (£11.5m) after opening at number two on Christmas Day with $9.15 million (£5.5m).

Analysts said it had suffered slightly due to its three-hour length - meaning it cannot be shown as many times in a day as its competitors.

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1. Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - $30m

2. Frozen - $28.9m

3. Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues - $20.2m

4. American Hustle $19.6m

5. The Wolf Of Wall Street - $19m

Source: Rentrak

But critics have been favourable - with the Washington Post describing DiCaprio's portrayal of the badly-behaved Belfort as the "biggest, loudest role he's ever played".

The only other new entry in the top 10 was Keanu Reeves' samurai film 47 Ronin, which weathered bad reviews to debut at number nine with $9.9m (£6m).

Reuters reported that film company Universal had revised its profit estimates on Christmas Eve after it became apparent the film would not break even.

"Of course it's very disappointing and you don't want to open a picture at this level, but exit polls are decent and we think it will find its way," said Nikki Rocco, president for domestic distribution at the company.

Record year

With two days left to go, the North American Box Office is on track to beat last year's record takings of $10.8bn (£6.5bn), said chart trackers Rentrak.

It estimated ticket sales would top $10.9bn (£6.9bn) by the New Year, boosted by several award-friendly films in the Top 10.

Chief among them is American Hustle, which has already gained seven Golden Globe nominations.

Directed by David O. Russell, it stars Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper, who appeared in his Oscar-winning Silver Linings Playbook, alongside Amy Adams and Christian Bale, from the similarly-lauded Russell drama The Fighter.

Based on an undercover investigation into political corruption in the 1970s, it has held the number four spot for two consecutive weeks, taking £19.6m (£11.8m) in the latest chart.

Emma Thompson also has a Golden Globe nomination for her role as Mary Poppins' author PL Travers in Saving Mr Banks, which took sixth place.

Meanwhile, Ben Stiller's feel-good comedy The Secret Life Of Walter Mitty - about an office-bound worker who daydreams himself into extraordinary situations - took seventh place.

The Hunger Games sequel, Catching Fire, was in eighth, followed by 47 Ronin, and Tyler Perry's Madea Family Christmas completed the top 10.


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US jobless to lose unemployment aid

28 December 2013 Last updated at 18:14 ET

More than a million Americans will lose their unemployment benefits after an emergency federal programme expired on Saturday.

Lawmakers failed to agree on an extension of the scheme before the US Congress began its winter recess.

Former President George W Bush introduced the assistance plan in 2008 at the start of the recession.

Under the programme, jobless people received an average monthly stipend of $1,166 for up to 73 weeks.

The White House says the benefits have kept millions of families out of poverty, but many Republicans argue that the scheme's annual $25bn price tag is too expensive.

The stalemate comes two months after a budget fight in the US Congress led to the partial shutdown of the government.

'Urgent priority'

President Barack Obama has vowed to push for the renewal of the expired programme when Congress reconvenes in early January.

"The president said his administration would, as it has for several weeks now, push Congress to act promptly and in bipartisan fashion to address this urgent economic priority," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.

An estimated 1.3 million people will initially be cut off with the end of the "emergency unemployment compensation", US officials say.

Millions more could be affected next year after they lose state benefits, which in many states expire after six months.

The financial aid was designed to help US citizens who lost their jobs during the recession and were unable to find new work while receiving the state benefits.

The US unemployment rate fell to a five-year low of 7% in November, according to the US Labor Department.

But the long-term jobless rate remains a problem for the economy, with some 4.1 million Americans currently out of work for six months or longer.

There has been repeated political wrangling between the Republicans, who control the lower house - the House of Representatives - and the Democrats, who have a majority in the upper house, the Senate.

Because of disagreements between the two houses over federal government spending, the US Congress failed to pass a budget before the fiscal year ended on 30 September.

Both sides eventually struck a last-gasp deal in October to end the federal shutdown and raise the federal debt limit.


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Britney dazzles critics in Las Vegas

30 December 2013 Last updated at 06:35 ET

Pop star Britney Spears has received rave reviews for the opening night of her Las Vegas residency on Friday.

"Spears stomped into town with a 21-hit salute," wrote Marco della Cava in USA Today, noting the show "artfully melded spectacle with stagecraft".

MTV's Sophie Schillaci highlighted the "larger-than-life production, blaring beats and rapid-fire dance moves".

But the LA Times' Mikael Wood observed: "She was wearing a microphone, though it wasn't clear she was using it."

"The singer appeared to be lip-syncing for the majority of her performance.

"That went for high-energy dance numbers such as Womanizer as well as slower-paced ballads like Perfume," said Wood, who went on to praise the event's "elaborate razzle-dazzle".

"The vast majority of the show was lip-synced," agreed Keith Caulfield in Billboard.

"Only occasionally were any seemingly live vocals heard [and] there was a certain thrill in actually hearing Spears breathing into the microphone - however infrequent."

Despite that, Caulfield praised the "non-stop hits bonanza" and pointed out that the tightly-choreographed Gimme More gave Spears "a moment of Vegas redemption" after her infamously lacklustre performance of the song at the MTV Awards, held in the city in 2007.

Britney: Piece Of Me is named after the 32-year-old's tabloid-baiting hit single from 2007.

A retrospective of her 15-year pop career, the 24-strong setlist includes hits such as Toxic, Scream and Shout, Womanizer and Baby ...One More Time, with only two songs culled from her recent, under-performing Britney Jean album.

Among the crowd on opening night were fellow pop stars Katy Perry, Adam Lambert, Selena Gomez and Miley Cyrus, who posted several pictures of herself enjoying the show on Twitter.

"If you told me I'd be front row and center on @britneyspears opening night 10 years ago I would've never believed you," she wrote.

Others were less enthusiastic, however.

"Her dancing, touted as the show's linchpin, was lackadaisical and - as has become the norm for Spears - reliant on arm movements," wrote Caryn Ganz in Rolling Stone magazine.

"Spears seemed truly frightened," during the number Slave 4U, Ganz said, "remaining safely on a throne, executing minimal choreography while her dancers did the heavy lifting".

Britney Spears and dancers

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Spears will perform the Piece Of Me show 100 times over the next two years

"In general, the set design was more imposing than she was," agreed Jon Caramanica in the New York Times.

"Magical things are happening all around her — ornate sets, clever video displays, fiery dancing — but Ms Spears is there mostly to activate memories, to be a souvenir for the eyes."

However, said Hannah Dreier for the Associated Press, the "eye-popping" show kept the 4,500 audience members "on their feet for about 90 minutes".

Dreier added that Spears is hoping to draw a younger demographic to Las Vegas than the usual entertainers in residence - from Elvis in the 1970s to Celine Dion and Bette Midler today.

"She cuts a different figure from the typical Strip headliner," she wrote. "Judging from Friday's show, her fans are more likely to be found at a casino mega-club than in front of a slot machine."

"One could almost make the argument that this show might entertain a non-Britney fan because of its production values, which is likely not the case with other residencies," added Marco della Cava.

"If you don't care for Elton John, not even a $10 million piano would keep you seated for his Vegas hit parade."

Spears is due to perform 50 shows each in 2014 and 2015 at Planet Hollywood's Axis theatre, and casino executives say the run could be extended if it proves a success.

They denied that the star lip-synced throughout the show, saying Spears sang against a pre-recorded track of her vocals to help her through the more physically gruelling parts of the set.


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Life support extended for US girl

30 December 2013 Last updated at 20:19 ET

The family of a US teenager declared brain dead after a routine operation went wrong has won an extension to the court order keeping her alive.

The court order keeping her on life support in California had been due to expire on Monday evening.

Jahi McMath, 13, had a tonsillectomy this month to treat a sleep disorder but she began bleeding heavily after surgery and went into cardiac arrest.

Her family says there is still hope for recovery.

However, the Children's Hospital & Research Center, which carried out the procedure, wants to turn off her ventilator.

On Monday, Alameda County Superior Court Judge Evelio Grillo ordered the hospital to maintain Jahi on a ventilator until 7 January.

Jahi's mother, Nailah Winkfield, said she wept when she heard about the ruling.

She said the delay was an answer to a prayer and a sign that she was right to keep fighting.

"Who wants to know the date and the time their child would die?" she said. "I don't care what anyone has to say about what I'm doing... I have to do what is right for me and for Jahi."

Jahi's family believes she is still alive but the hospital in Oakland, California, has argued in court papers that there is no medical treatment they can give to the teenager because she is "practically and legally" dead.

An independent paediatric neurologist from Stanford University supported that view.

Continue reading the main story

We believe a parent has the right to make decisions concerning the existence of their child"

End Quote Jahi McMath's family statement

In an earlier ruling, a judge at Alameda County Superior Court agreed and issued an order allowing Children's Hospital to remove Jahi from a breathing machine at 17:00 local time on Monday (01:00 GMT on Tuesday).

Hospital spokesman Sam Singer said they would comply with the judge's new order.

The McMaths are hoping that a New York facility will care for their daughter. Two California care homes have already withdrawn offers to accept Jahi.

It is unclear how the girl's operation on 9 December went so badly awry. She was having her tonsils removed to treat her apnoea, a condition that causes sleepers to experience irregular breathing.

Jahi was declared brain dead three days after surgery.

The family said in a statement at the weekend: "We have our strong religious convictions and set of beliefs and we believe that, in this country, a parent has the right to make decisions concerning the existence of their child: not a doctor... and definitely not a doctor who runs the facility that caused the brain death in the first place."

Children's Hospital says it is willing to work with the family to transfer Jahi to another facility, as long as it can legally do so.

"We need to be able to talk to the other facility to understand what it is they are capable of doing," Cynthia Chiarappa, a hospital spokeswoman, said.

"This is not transferring an individual in a vegetative state, but a dead body."

Jahi's family has launched an online fundraising drive, which had collected more than $22,000 (£13,000) by Monday morning, to transfer their daughter to another facility.

The McMaths' lawyer, Chris Dolan, said he was waiting to hear from a hospital in New York, where officials have been considering the case.

"The family is together, and today everybody is praying and being together," Mr Dolan told the Associated Press news agency on Sunday.


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Bombardier sells 10 jets for $259m

30 December 2013 Last updated at 21:56 ET

Canadian aerospace manufacturer Bombardier has announced it has sold 10 Challenger jets for $259m (£157m) to an anonymous buyer.

This was the second order in a week for the firm.

The previous order, worth a little over $280m, was for five Challenger 300s and five Challenger 605 jets.

Bombardier is one of the biggest manufacturers of business jets with brands such as Challenger, Global and Learjet.


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VIDEO: US gripped by freezing temperatures

Bitterly cold weather has gripped several states in the US and temperatures are expected to plummet further.

Homeless shelters in Maine are struggling to cope with the extra demand for places, while drivers in North Dakota have been advised to stay off the roads unless their journey is absolutely necessary.

Wendy Urquhart reports.


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Slovakia takes Guantanamo Uighurs

31 December 2013 Last updated at 08:09 ET

Three Chinese Muslim Uighurs have been flown to Slovakia from the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, the Slovak interior ministry says.

The three are now in the capital Bratislava, a ministry official told the BBC. None of them are terror suspects, the ministry stressed.

Slovakia - a member of the EU and Nato - also accepted three inmates from Guantanamo in 2010.

The US says all the Uighur prisoners have now been released from Guantanamo.

Since 2001 the prison has housed suspects detained by US forces during operations against al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

"As in the case of the first transport, the persons in this transport have never been suspected nor accused of terrorism. The transport is a follow-up to the agreement of 2009 [with the US]," the Slovak ministry statement said.

A US Department of Defense statement named the latest three Uighurs as Yusef Abbas, Saidullah Khalik and Hajiakbar Abdul Ghuper.

"These three are the last ethnic Uighur Chinese nationals to be transferred," the statement said, adding that they "are voluntarily resettling in Slovakia".

The US refuses to repatriate Uighur detainees to China because of the risk that they could be mistreated. China has cracked down hard on Uighur dissidents who oppose rule from Beijing.

Prisoner transfers

The latest release brings down the total of Guantanamo detainees to 155. Many have been held there for more than a decade, and many were cleared for release years ago.

More than 100 inmates went on hunger strike earlier this year.

According to a prisoner list published on the Wikileaks website, 22 Chinese Uighurs were imprisoned at Guantanamo by US forces after capture in Afghanistan.

In April US President Barack Obama renewed his call to close the prison, saying "it is inefficient, it hurts us in terms of our international standing".

Previously six Uighurs have been sent from Guantanamo to the Pacific island nation of Palau, while 11 others have gone to Bermuda, Albania and Switzerland.

The Uighurs are a mainly Muslim, Turkic-speaking minority based in western China's Xinjiang region.


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India steps up US diplomatic row

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 29 Desember 2013 | 20.24

28 December 2013 Last updated at 12:01 ET

India is checking the tax status of Americans working at schools in the country, after the arrest this month of an Indian diplomat in New York.

Devyani Khobragade was handcuffed and strip-searched while in custody.

Her detention on charges of visa fraud and underpayment of her housekeeper sparked outrage in India.

India would no longer turn a blind eye to tax violations by diplomats' spouses taking up work in the country, Reuters cited an unnamed official as saying.

Continue reading the main story

The story so far...

  • 23 June: Maid Sangeeta Richard goes missing. Ms Khobragade informs Office of the Foreign Missions and New York police
  • 8 July: India revokes Ms Richard's passport, says she's staying in the US illegally; Ms Khobragade accuses her of theft and attempt to blackmail
  • 4 September: US state department asks Indian embassy to inquire into Ms Richard's allegations disputing her terms of employment
  • 8 October: Indian embassy writes to state department explaining facts of the case and accusing Ms Richard of "seeking to subvert both Indian and US laws"
  • 19 November: A Delhi court issues warrant for arrest of Ms Richard
  • 6 December: India forwards the warrant to the US embassy in Delhi and the state department
  • 10 December: Ms Richard's husband and children fly to the US
  • 12 December: Ms Khobragade arrested in New York, produced in court and released on a $250,000 bond

Delhi has also withdrawn some privileges enjoyed by American diplomats and their families in the country, added the official.

"Spouses and children have no more immunity. So if there is a parking offence or... something else happening in Bangalore etcetera, they would be held liable."

The US embassy declined to comment on the latest steps.

While US Secretary of State John Kerry has expressed his "regret" over Ms Khobragade's arrest, the state department has said it will not drop charges, as requested by India.

Delhi has also demanded an apology from the US over the diplomat's alleged "humiliation".

India's deputy consul general in New York was arrested in the city on 12 December on suspicion of visa fraud and making false statements, after being accused of paying her Indian maid below the US minimum wage.

She was handcuffed and strip-searched after a complaint from the maid, Sangeeta Richard.

Continue reading the main story

What is diplomatic immunity?

  • A form of legal immunity that ensures diplomats are exempt from prosecution under the host country's laws
  • Agreed as international law in the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961)
  • Under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (1963) a consul is afforded a variation of diplomatic immunity called consular immunity
  • It guarantees immunity from the host country's laws only with respect to acts related to consular duties

The diplomat, who has been released on bail, denies all the charges and has in turn accused Ms Richard of theft and attempted blackmail.

Delhi had already ordered a series of reprisals against the US. Security barricades around the US embassy in the city were removed and a visiting US delegation was snubbed by senior Indian politicians and officials.

According to documents filed in a New York court, Ms Khobragade wrote on a visa application that the maid would be paid $4,500 a month, but she was paid under $573 - less than the New York state minimum wage.

If found guilty, Ms Khobragade faces a maximum sentence of 10 years for visa fraud and five years for making false statements.


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VIDEO: 'We have no power, no heat, no water'

The BBC's Lucy Hockings reports on the conditions in Quebec where, like many other households in Canada and the northern US, she is facing a Christmas without electricity.

Nearly 400,000 customers in eastern Canada and 390,000 in the US are still without power, with Michigan worst hit.

In Toronto, a utility has said power may not be restored for most residents until Thursday, and that some may be without electricity until the weekend.


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VIDEO: Man dressed as Santa shot in back

A man dressed as Santa Claus is recovering after being shot in the back with a pellet gun in Washington DC as he was giving out gifts.

Fire Department spokesman Timothy Wilson said the man was taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

Someone dressed as fictional Christmas grump The Grinch continued with the planned toy giveaway.


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NSA surveillance lawful, judge says

27 December 2013 Last updated at 13:23 ET
Edward Snowden

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The surveillance programme was leaked by former National Security Agency contractor, Edward Snowden

A US federal judge has ruled that mass government surveillance of the phone network is legal, a week after another court said the opposite.

New York District Judge William Pauley described the snooping as a "counter-punch" against al-Qaeda.

He said the National Security Agency (NSA) programme might even have prevented the 9/11 attacks.

Last week a Washington DC federal judge ruled the surveillance was "likely unconstitutional" and "Orwellian".

But in Friday's decision, Judge Pauley, of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, said "the balance of equities and the public interest tilt firmly in favour of the Government's position".

'Extremely disappointed'

In his 53-page ruling, he concluded: "The right to be free from searches and seizures is fundamental, but not absolute."

Continue reading the main story
  • Accessing internet company data
  • Tapping fibre optic cables
  • Eavesdropping on phones
  • Targeted spying

He also noted: "Every day, people voluntarily surrender personal and seemingly-private information to trans-national corporations, which exploit that data for profit.

"Few think twice about it, even though it is far more intrusive than bulk telephony metadata collection.

"There is no evidence that the Government has used any of the bulk telephony metadata it collected for any purpose other than investigating and disrupting terrorist attacks."

Judge Pauley dismissed a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which told the BBC it would appeal.

"We are extremely disappointed with this decision, which misinterprets the relevant statutes, understates the privacy implications of the government's surveillance and misapplies a narrow and outdated precedent to read away core constitutional protections," said the civil rights organisation's deputy legal director, Jameel Jaffer.

The Obama administration, which has been on the defensive over the NSA revelations, welcomed the ruling.

"We are pleased the court found the NSA's bulk telephony metadata collection program to be lawful," US Department of Justice spokesman Peter Carr told the BBC.

'Arbitrary invasion'

Friday's ruling contradicts that on 16 December by Washington DC federal Judge Richard Leon, who said the NSA's surveillance was "indiscriminate" and an "arbitrary invasion".

His 68-page decision backed a conservative activist's legal challenge on the merits of the Fourth Amendment, the clause in the US constitution barring unreasonable search and seizure by the government.

Judge Leon suspended his ruling pending an appeal by the justice department, enabling the programme to continue for now.

The NSA's snooping was leaked in June by Edward Snowden, a former contractor for the agency. He fled to Russia, which granted him temporary asylum.

Under the programme, America's electronic surveillance agency orders Verizon - one of the largest phone companies in the US - to hand over its metadata.

This includes telephone numbers, times and dates of calls, calling card numbers and the serial numbers of phones, from millions of calls Verizon processes in which at least one party is in the US.

The disclosures about the NSA's tracking of the communications by ordinary citizens as well as world leaders, such as German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, have dismayed civil rights activists and diplomats.

In his end-of-year news conference, President Barack Obama hinted at a possible review of such snooping.

In light of "disclosures that have taken place", there might be "another way of skinning the cat", he said earlier this week.

Mr Obama is expected to announce next month whether he will act on a White House-appointed panel's advice to rein in the NSA.

Among the task force's sweeping recommendations were that the spy agency should no longer store the data.

David Rivkin and Glenn Greenwald

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Lawyer David Rivkin and Glenn Greenwald, the former Guardian columnist, put their arguments forward


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Newtown shooting report 'painful'

27 December 2013 Last updated at 19:43 ET

US police have released thousands of documents related to their investigation into the killing of 26 people at a school in Connecticut.

Officials described as "painful" some of the details in the report, which includes photos and transcripts.

It reveals new facts about the life of gunman Adam Lanza, 20, said to have suffered from mental health issues.

Lanza turned a gun on himself after opening fire at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown in December 2012.

Before killing 20 children and six adults with a semi-automatic rifle, he shot dead his own mother at the family home. She had bought him the weapons used in the rampage.

Last month, Connecticut police published a summary of their findings, showing that Lanza had "an obsession" with the 1999 Columbine massacre, during which two teenagers killed 12 students and a teacher.

Investigators also found that Lanza had acted alone and planned the shooting, which took less than 11 minutes.

'Destruction and war'

The final report contains evidence that Lanza's mother discussed her son's "disabilities" with a friend the day before the Sandy Hook attack.

One of the gunman's former teachers said Lanza's creative writing was "so graphic that it could not be shared". The student would "write 10 pages obsessing over battles, destruction and war".

The findings also reveal autopsy reports and new information about how the shooting unfolded.

A teacher hiding in a closet said he heard janitor Rick Thorne challenge Lanza. Mr Thorne, who survived the attack, apparently yelled "Put the gun down".

Among the audiovisual material released on Friday were photos of items found in Lanza's home, including numerous rounds of ammunition, gun magazines, shooting earplugs and a gun safe with a rifle in it.

The files were heavily redacted to protect the students' identity and to withhold gruesome details of the crime.

The Newtown shooting prompted a renewed US campaign for stricter firearms controls.

While no legislation was passed at a national level, some states - including Connecticut and Colorado - imposed tougher gun laws. Other states loosened restrictions.


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Nine-year-old climbs Argentine peak

27 December 2013 Last updated at 19:53 ET
Tyler Armstrong

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Tyler Armstrong: "Most nine-year-olds my age usually play video games"

A nine-year-old boy from the United States has become the youngest person to reach the summit of Aconcagua, the highest mountain in the Americas.

Tyler Armstrong climbed the mountain, in the Argentine Andes, with his father and Tibetan sherpa Lhawang Dhondup.

"Any kid can really do this, all they have to do is try. And set their mind to the goal," he said after reaching the peak, on Christmas Eve.

Last year, he climbed Mount Kilimanjaro - Africa's highest peak.

More than 100 people have died attempting to conquer Aconcagua, which rises 6,962m (22,841ft) above sea level.

"You can really see the world's atmosphere up there. All the clouds are under you, and it's really cold," said Tyler.

His father, Kevin Armstrong, told AP that his son trained twice a day for six months before attempting to climb Aconcagua.

"Most people think we as parents are pushing Tyler to do this, when it's completely the opposite," he said.

Because of his age, Tyler needed special authorisation from a judge in Argentina to make the attempt.

His father said the judge took into account the fact that the team were raising money for muscular dystrophy research.

The youngest person to have conquered the mountain before him was 10-year-old Matthew Moniz, also from the United States, in 2008.


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Libya 'frees' US military personnel

27 December 2013 Last updated at 23:37 ET

Libyan authorities have freed four US military personnel briefly detained on Friday, US officials have said.

The US citizens were reportedly arrested near the city of Sabratha, west of the Libyan capital, Tripoli.

Images purporting to show two of the Americans' passports and embassy ID cards were posted on social media.

The head of Sabratha's military council said the US military staff were travelling in two SUVs when they were stopped at a checkpoint.

The State Department announced on Friday evening that the four had been detained while reviewing evacuation routes for embassy staff.

But little more than an hour later unnamed US officials said they had been released. The reasons for their detention remain unclear.

The Americans were allegedly armed and carried communications equipment.

One of their cars was said to have been set on fire afterwards.

US diplomats have operated in the country under very tight security since last year's attack on the US consulate in the city of Benghazi, in which US ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans were killed.

The security situation in and around Benghazi has been worsening in recent months, with militants blamed for almost daily attacks.

Last week, seven people were killed at a security checkpoint near Benghazi in the first known suicide bomb attack in Libya since the fall of Col Gaddafi two years ago.


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VIDEO: Nine-year-old scales Argentine peak

A nine-year-old boy from the United States has become the youngest person to reach the summit of Aconcagua, the highest mountain in the Americas.

Tyler Armstrong climbed the mountain, in the Argentine Andes, with his father and Tibetan sherpa Lhawang Dhondup.


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US jobless to lose unemployment aid

28 December 2013 Last updated at 18:14 ET

More than a million Americans will lose their unemployment benefits after an emergency federal programme expired on Saturday.

Lawmakers failed to agree on an extension of the scheme before the US Congress began its winter recess.

Former President George W Bush introduced the assistance plan in 2008 at the start of the recession.

Under the programme, jobless people received an average monthly stipend of $1,166 for up to 73 weeks.

The White House says the benefits have kept millions of families out of poverty, but many Republicans argue that the scheme's annual $25bn price tag is too expensive.

The stalemate comes two months after a budget fight in the US Congress led to the partial shutdown of the government.

'Urgent priority'

President Barack Obama has vowed to push for the renewal of the expired programme when Congress reconvenes in early January.

"The president said his administration would, as it has for several weeks now, push Congress to act promptly and in bipartisan fashion to address this urgent economic priority," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.

An estimated 1.3 million people will initially be cut off with the end of the "emergency unemployment compensation", US officials say.

Millions more could be affected next year after they lose state benefits, which in many states expire after six months.

The financial aid was designed to help US citizens who lost their jobs during the recession and were unable to find new work while receiving the state benefits.

The US unemployment rate fell to a five-year low of 7% in November, according to the US Labor Department.

But the long-term jobless rate remains a problem for the economy, with some 4.1 million Americans currently out of work for six months or longer.

There has been repeated political wrangling between the Republicans, who control the lower house - the House of Representatives - and the Democrats, who have a majority in the upper house, the Senate.

Because of disagreements between the two houses over federal government spending, the US Congress failed to pass a budget before the fiscal year ended on 30 September.

Both sides eventually struck a last-gasp deal in October to end the federal shutdown and raise the federal debt limit.


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Benghazi attack: 'No al-Qaeda role'

29 December 2013 Last updated at 06:24 ET

Al-Qaeda had no direct involvement in the September 2012 attack on the US consulate in the Libyan city of Benghazi, according to a New York Times investigation.

The US ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens, was killed when gunmen stormed the compound and set it on fire.

Some US Republicans accuse the Obama administration of failing to admit the involvement of terrorist groups.

But the New York Times (NYT) says a local Islamist militia leader was key.

The paper bases its report on months of interviews with local residents who have extensive knowledge of the events of 11 September 2012 and American officials linked to a criminal investigation.

Initially, Washington said the attack grew out of violent protests against an anti-Islam video produced in the US.

Later findings suggested that it was an organised attack planned by local militias.

Some Republicans accused al-Qaeda of launching the assault to mark the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in the US.

'Murkier'

The NYT reports that the reality was "murkier". The assault was neither "meticulously planned", nor "spontaneous", though "fuelled in large part" by anger at the video.

The paper's investigation "turned up no evidence that al-Qaeda or other international terrorist groups had any role in the assault".

In the aftermath of the attack, Republicans repeatedly criticised the Obama administration for blaming the video protest instead of a deliberate terrorist attack.

An investigation commissioned by the US state department found in December 2012 that security at the consulate had been inadequate but that there had been "no immediate, specific" intelligence pointing to threats.

The NYT says the attack was led by fighters who had benefited from Western support during the uprising against long-time Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi.

It says a central figure was "an eccentric, malcontent militia leader, Ahmed Abu Khattala".

Mr Khattala denies involvement, but witnesses describe him "strolling calmly through the chaos" at the compound, according to the NYT.

He is also alleged to have directed local fighters in the attack. Mr Khattala, whose exact whereabouts are unknown, was charged by US investigators in August.

Charges have also been filed against an unknown number of other alleged attackers.

Ambassador Chris Stevens was one of four Americans to die. The others killed were another state department worker and two former Navy Seals.


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VIDEO: 'We have no power, no heat, no water'

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 28 Desember 2013 | 20.24

The BBC's Lucy Hockings reports on the conditions in Quebec where, like many other households in Canada and the northern US, she is facing a Christmas without electricity.

Nearly 400,000 customers in eastern Canada and 390,000 in the US are still without power, with Michigan worst hit.

In Toronto, a utility has said power may not be restored for most residents until Thursday, and that some may be without electricity until the weekend.


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VIDEO: Man dressed as Santa shot in back

A man dressed as Santa Claus is recovering after being shot in the back with a pellet gun in Washington DC as he was giving out gifts.

Fire Department spokesman Timothy Wilson said the man was taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

Someone dressed as fictional Christmas grump The Grinch continued with the planned toy giveaway.


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Japan agrees Okinawa US airbase move

27 December 2013 Last updated at 03:10 ET

Japan has approved the relocation of a US military airbase on its southern island of Okinawa, officials said.

The governor, Hirokazu Nakaima, agreed to landfill work to develop a new base in a less densely populated part of the island, officials said.

The agreement is a breakthrough following years of deadlock over where a new US base should be placed.

The US has around 26,000 troops on Okinawa under a long-standing security alliance with Japan.

However, the bases are unpopular locally and there is growing pressure from residents for the US military footprint to be reduced.

The US Futenma airbase will now be relocated to a new site near Nago, a less densely populated area in the North of the island.

Continue reading the main story
  • 1429: King Sho Hashi establishes Ryukyu kingdom
  • 1609: Satsuma clan from southern Japan invade
  • 1872: Japan makes Ryukyu kingdom a feudal domain; absorbs it in 1879
  • 1945: An estimated 100,000 Okinawan civilians die in Battle of Okinawa; Japan surrenders; US takes control of Okinawa
  • 1972: Okinawa reverts to Japan; US bases stay

The move comes after years of negotiations. In 1996, Japan and the US agreed to close the Futenma airbase.

However, Okinawa's local government had been opposed to building a new base on the coast.

Some critics have demanded that the US airbase move out of Okinawa prefecture completely and the decision has already prompted furious reactions.

"What the governor has done is unforgivable,'' Yuichi Higa, head of the assembly in Nago, where the new base is to be built, is quoted as saying by the Associated Press news agency.

"Residents who are opposed will surely resort to the use of force, such as blocking roads to stop this from happening," he adds.

The decision is politically difficult for Mr Nakaima who was re-elected in 2010 opposing the relocation of the base on Okinawa.

Mr Nakaima's decision came after Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe met him on Wednesday to urge him to agree to a new base. Mr Abe pledged an economic stimulus package to Okinawa every year until 2021.

There has been a US military presence on Okinawa since the Americans invaded the island during World War II.


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NSA surveillance lawful, judge says

27 December 2013 Last updated at 13:23 ET
Edward Snowden

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The surveillance programme was leaked by former National Security Agency contractor, Edward Snowden

A US federal judge has ruled that mass government surveillance of the phone network is legal, a week after another court said the opposite.

New York District Judge William Pauley described the snooping as a "counter-punch" against al-Qaeda.

He said the National Security Agency (NSA) programme might even have prevented the 9/11 attacks.

Last week a Washington DC federal judge ruled the surveillance was "likely unconstitutional" and "Orwellian".

But in Friday's decision, Judge Pauley, of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, said "the balance of equities and the public interest tilt firmly in favour of the Government's position".

'Extremely disappointed'

In his 53-page ruling, he concluded: "The right to be free from searches and seizures is fundamental, but not absolute."

Continue reading the main story
  • Accessing internet company data
  • Tapping fibre optic cables
  • Eavesdropping on phones
  • Targeted spying

He also noted: "Every day, people voluntarily surrender personal and seemingly-private information to trans-national corporations, which exploit that data for profit.

"Few think twice about it, even though it is far more intrusive than bulk telephony metadata collection.

"There is no evidence that the Government has used any of the bulk telephony metadata it collected for any purpose other than investigating and disrupting terrorist attacks."

Judge Pauley dismissed a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which told the BBC it would appeal.

"We are extremely disappointed with this decision, which misinterprets the relevant statutes, understates the privacy implications of the government's surveillance and misapplies a narrow and outdated precedent to read away core constitutional protections," said the civil rights organisation's deputy legal director, Jameel Jaffer.

The Obama administration, which has been on the defensive over the NSA revelations, welcomed the ruling.

"We are pleased the court found the NSA's bulk telephony metadata collection program to be lawful," US Department of Justice spokesman Peter Carr told the BBC.

'Arbitrary invasion'

Friday's ruling contradicts that on 16 December by Washington DC federal Judge Richard Leon, who said the NSA's surveillance was "indiscriminate" and an "arbitrary invasion".

His 68-page decision backed a conservative activist's legal challenge on the merits of the Fourth Amendment, the clause in the US constitution barring unreasonable search and seizure by the government.

Judge Leon suspended his ruling pending an appeal by the justice department, enabling the programme to continue for now.

The NSA's snooping was leaked in June by Edward Snowden, a former contractor for the agency. He fled to Russia, which granted him temporary asylum.

Under the programme, America's electronic surveillance agency orders Verizon - one of the largest phone companies in the US - to hand over its metadata.

This includes telephone numbers, times and dates of calls, calling card numbers and the serial numbers of phones, from millions of calls Verizon processes in which at least one party is in the US.

The disclosures about the NSA's tracking of the communications by ordinary citizens as well as world leaders, such as German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, have dismayed civil rights activists and diplomats.

In his end-of-year news conference, President Barack Obama hinted at a possible review of such snooping.

In light of "disclosures that have taken place", there might be "another way of skinning the cat", he said earlier this week.

Mr Obama is expected to announce next month whether he will act on a White House-appointed panel's advice to rein in the NSA.

Among the task force's sweeping recommendations were that the spy agency should no longer store the data.

David Rivkin and Glenn Greenwald

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Lawyer David Rivkin and Glenn Greenwald, the former Guardian columnist, put their arguments forward


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US and Canada outage misery persists

27 December 2013 Last updated at 14:31 ET

More than 130,000 householders in parts of the US and Canada still have no electricity supply, after last weekend's ice storm.

As of Friday morning, about 64,000 customers remained without power in the US state of Michigan and 12,000 were in the dark in the state of Maine.

Nearly 62,000 in eastern Canada, including 32,000 in Toronto, were still suffering outages.

Ten deaths in the US and 17 in Canada have been blamed on the storm.

Several of those were from apparent carbon monoxide poisoning caused by generators, charcoal stoves and other appliances that people have been using to heat their homes in freezing temperatures.

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford warned at a media briefing on Friday morning that poor weather forecast for Friday evening could cause further outages.

Frustrations have been mounting among off-the-grid customers.

"I mean, it's great that there's a warming centre, but if you don't have a TV or a radio that works, how are you going to know that there's a warming centre?" Toronto resident Rick Medeiros told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

At the height of the power cuts following last weekend's ice storms, more than 1.2 million customers had no electricity across the US and Canada.

Even the Premier of Ontario, Kathleen Wynne, was without power on Christmas morning, she told reporters.

The Toronto District School Board has closed all of its facilities until further notice for safety inspection, including child care centres.

Utility crews are working around the clock, but warn that some homes could be without power at least until this weekend.

Lucy Hockings

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The BBC's Lucy Hockings: "We're having to melt snow on the BBQ to give us water"

Toronto Hydro has asked the public not to distract its repair workers by engaging them in conversation.

The perils of the job were underlined when a repairman fell from a ladder in Lansing, Michigan, suffering broken ribs and a shoulder injury on Tuesday.

Consumers Energy repairman Jeff Morrall, who has been on duty in recent days in the west of that state, said the work has been arduous.

"You look up and you can barely see out of your safety glasses," the 51-year-old, who has spent much of the past week in motel rooms, told the Associated Press news agency.

"When we were working Sunday in Muskegon, you could see the branches breaking. You hear a big old crash, thinking, 'I hope these branches don't break over our heads'."

But he said the workers were cheered up by grateful residents who brought them Christmas dinner.


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Newtown shooting report 'painful'

27 December 2013 Last updated at 19:43 ET

US police have released thousands of documents related to their investigation into the killing of 26 people at a school in Connecticut.

Officials described as "painful" some of the details in the report, which includes photos and transcripts.

It reveals new facts about the life of gunman Adam Lanza, 20, said to have suffered from mental health issues.

Lanza turned a gun on himself after opening fire at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown in December 2012.

Before killing 20 children and six adults with a semi-automatic rifle, he shot dead his own mother at the family home. She had bought him the weapons used in the rampage.

Last month, Connecticut police published a summary of their findings, showing that Lanza had "an obsession" with the 1999 Columbine massacre, during which two teenagers killed 12 students and a teacher.

Investigators also found that Lanza had acted alone and planned the shooting, which took less than 11 minutes.

'Destruction and war'

The final report contains evidence that Lanza's mother discussed her son's "disabilities" with a friend they day before the Sandy Hook attack.

One of the gunman's former teachers said Lanza's creative writing was "so graphic that it could not be shared". The student would "write 10 pages obsessing over battles, destruction and war".

The findings also reveal autopsy reports and new information about how the shooting unfolded.

A teacher hiding in a closet said he heard janitor Rick Thorne challenge Lanza. Mr Thorne, who survived the attack, apparently yelled "Put the gun down".

Among the audiovisual material released on Friday were photos of items found in Lanza's home, including numerous rounds of ammunition, gun magazines, shooting earplugs and a gun safe with a rifle in it.

The files were heavily redacted to protect the students' identity and to withhold gruesome details of the crime.

The Newtown shooting prompted a renewed US campaign for stricter firearms controls.

While no legislation was passed at a national level, some states - including Connecticut and Colorado - imposed tougher gun laws. Other states loosened restrictions.


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Nine-year-old climbs Argentine peak

27 December 2013 Last updated at 19:53 ET
Tyler Armstrong

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Tyler Armstrong: "Most nine-year-olds my age usually play video games"

A nine-year-old boy from the United States has become the youngest person to reach the summit of Aconcagua, the highest mountain in the Americas.

Tyler Armstrong climbed the mountain, in the Argentine Andes, with his father and Tibetan sherpa Lhawang Dhondup.

"Any kid can really do this, all they have to do is try. And set their mind to the goal," he said after reaching the peak, on Christmas Eve.

Last year, he climbed Mount Kilimanjaro - Africa's highest peak.

More than 100 people have died attempting to conquer Aconcagua, which rises 6,962m (22,841ft) above sea level.

"You can really see the world's atmosphere up there. All the clouds are under you, and it's really cold," said Tyler.

His father, Kevin Armstrong, told AP that his son trained twice a day for six months before attempting to climb Aconcagua.

"Most people think we as parents are pushing Tyler to do this, when it's completely the opposite," he said.

Because of his age, Tyler needed special authorisation from a judge in Argentina to make the attempt.

His father said the judge took into account the fact that the team were raising money for muscular dystrophy research.

The youngest person to have conquered the mountain before him was 10-year-old Matthew Moniz, also from the United States, in 2008.


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Libya 'frees' US military personnel

27 December 2013 Last updated at 23:37 ET

Libyan authorities have freed four US military personnel briefly detained on Friday, US officials have said.

The US citizens were reportedly arrested near the city of Sabratha, west of the Libyan capital, Tripoli.

Images purporting to show two of the Americans' passports and embassy ID cards were posted on social media.

The head of Sabratha's military council said the US military staff were travelling in two SUVs when they were stopped at a checkpoint.

The State Department announced on Friday evening that the four had been detained while reviewing evacuation routes for embassy staff.

But little more than an hour later unnamed US officials said they had been released. The reasons for their detention remain unclear.

The Americans were allegedly armed and carried communications equipment.

One of their cars was said to have been set on fire afterwards.

US diplomats have operated in the country under very tight security since last year's attack on the US consulate in the city of Benghazi, in which US ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans were killed.

The security situation in and around Benghazi has been worsening in recent months, with militants blamed for almost daily attacks.

Last week, seven people were killed at a security checkpoint near Benghazi in the first known suicide bomb attack in Libya since the fall of Col Gaddafi two years ago.


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VIDEO: Nine-year-old scales Argentine peak

A nine-year-old boy from the United States has become the youngest person to reach the summit of Aconcagua, the highest mountain in the Americas.

Tyler Armstrong climbed the mountain, in the Argentine Andes, with his father and Tibetan sherpa Lhawang Dhondup.


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India steps up US diplomatic row

28 December 2013 Last updated at 04:11 ET

India is checking the tax status of Americans working at schools in the country, after the arrest this month of an Indian diplomat in New York.

Devyani Khobragade was handcuffed and strip-searched while in custody.

Her detention on charges of visa fraud and underpayment of her housekeeper sparked outrage in India.

India would no longer turn a blind eye to tax violations by diplomats' spouses taking up work in the country, Reuters cited an unnamed official as saying.

Continue reading the main story

The story so far...

  • 23 June: Maid Sangeeta Richard goes missing. Ms Khobragade informs Office of the Foreign Missions and New York police
  • 8 July: India revokes Ms Richard's passport, says she's staying in the US illegally; Ms Khobragade accuses her of theft and attempt to blackmail
  • 4 September: US state department asks Indian embassy to inquire into Ms Richard's allegations disputing her terms of employment
  • 8 October: Indian embassy writes to state department explaining facts of the case and accusing Ms Richard of "seeking to subvert both Indian and US laws"
  • 19 November: A Delhi court issues warrant for arrest of Ms Richard
  • 6 December: India forwards the warrant to the US embassy in Delhi and the state department
  • 10 December: Ms Richard's husband and children fly to the US
  • 12 December: Ms Khobragade arrested in New York, produced in court and released on a $250,000 bond

Delhi has also withdrawn some privileges enjoyed by American diplomats and their families in the country, added the official.

"Spouses and children have no more immunity. So if there is a parking offence or... something else happening in Bangalore etcetera, they would be held liable."

The US embassy declined to comment on the latest steps.

While US Secretary of State John Kerry has expressed his "regret" over Ms Khobragade's arrest, the state department has said it will not drop charges, as requested by India.

Delhi has also demanded an apology from the US over the diplomat's alleged "humiliation".

India's deputy consul general in New York was arrested in the city on 12 December on suspicion of visa fraud and making false statements, after being accused of underpaying her Indian maid.

She was handcuffed and strip-searched after a complaint from the maid, Sangeeta Richard.

Continue reading the main story

What is diplomatic immunity?

  • A form of legal immunity that ensures diplomats are exempt from prosecution under the host country's laws
  • Agreed as international law in the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961)
  • Under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (1963) a consul is afforded a variation of diplomatic immunity called consular immunity
  • It guarantees immunity from the host country's laws only with respect to acts related to consular duties

The diplomat, who has been released on bail, denies all the charges and has in turn accused Ms Richard of theft and attempted blackmail.

Delhi had already ordered a series of reprisals against the US. Security barricades around the US embassy in the city were removed and a visiting US delegation was snubbed by senior Indian politicians and officials.

According to documents filed in a New York court, Ms Khobragade wrote on a visa application that the maid would be paid $4,500 (£2,746) a month.

But investigators said she instead paid only $573 per month - less than the New York state minimum wage.

If found guilty, Ms Khobragade faces a maximum sentence of 10 years for visa fraud and five years for making false statements.


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US court quashes priest's conviction

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 Desember 2013 | 20.24

26 December 2013 Last updated at 16:40 ET

Roman Catholic Church official William Lynn has had his conviction for child endangerment reversed by a court in the US city of Philadelphia.

Monsignor Lynn was the first US Church official to be convicted in a criminal court for covering up sex abuse claims.

He was sentenced in 2012 to three to six years in prison but could now be released as early as Thursday.

The court said it had not been proven Mr Lynn had acted with the "intent of promoting or facilitating the crime".

'Unfair imprisonment'

Philadelphia's District Attorney Seth Williams said he was likely to appeal against the decision.

Prosecutors argued that Monsignor Lynn had endangered the welfare of a child by reassigning a priest with a history of sexual abuse to a parish in Philadelphia which was unaware of his past.

As secretary for clergy for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia from 1992 to 2004, Monsignor Lynn was in charge of supervising about 800 priests, including investigating sex abuse claims.

Monsignor Lynn admitted during his trial that he was aware of a complaint dating back to the 1990s that the priest, Edward Avery, had sexually abused an altar boy.

Mr Lynn helped Avery get treatment. But years later, he reassigned the priest to the Philadelphia parish where Avery again sexually assaulted an altar boy.

Avery later pleaded guilty to assaulting the 10-year-old and is currently in jail.

On Thursday, the appeals court rejected the prosecutors' argument that Monsignor Lynn had supervised the welfare of any particular child.

Mr Lynn's lawyer successfully argued that under the laws in effect when the monsignor held his post, he could not have been held responsible for the welfare of Avery's victim as that role only fell to parents and caregivers, not to supervisors like Mr Lynn.

The law was amended in 2007 to include the people supervising the child.

Mr Lynn's lawyer said the appeal court's ruling demonstrated he should never have been prosecuted.

"He's been in prison 18 months for a crime he didn't commit and couldn't commit under the law,'' the lawyer said.

Philadelphia is the sixth largest US archdiocese, with 1.5 million members.

Child sex abuse cases across Roman Catholic churches in the US have cost billions in settlements, driving some US dioceses into bankruptcy.


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Utah bid to halt gay marriage fails

23 December 2013 Last updated at 17:17 ET

A judge who lifted a gay marriage ban in Utah, one of the most conservative US states, has denied an application by officials to reverse the move.

Judge Robert Shelby's ruling on Friday that Utah's ban on same-sex nuptials was unconstitutional has dismayed the Republican governor and Mormon church.

He has now denied state lawyers' bid to suspend his ruling pending an appeal.

Hundreds of gay couples have been tying the knot in several counties where marriage licences are being issued.

The state asked the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver to grant an emergency stay that would have immediately stopped gay weddings until the court can rule on whether last week's decision was valid.

Judge Shelby himself heard Monday's challenge, and rejected it.

'Chaos'

His ruling makes Utah the 18th state, alongside California and New York, to legalise same-sex weddings. It came in the same week as New Mexico approved gay marriage.

Continue reading the main story

The status quo has changed"

End Quote Peggy Tomsic Lawyer for same-sex couples

The Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or Mormon church, has said it hopes the ruling will be overturned by a higher court.

The case was brought by three couples who had been denied licences or recognition in the state, including one couple who had been legally married in Iowa.

They challenged a ban on gay marriage passed by Utah voters in 2004 by 66%. Judge Shelby said that violated same-sex couples' rights to equal protection.

On Monday, Republican Governor Gary Herbert said the judge's ruling had resulted in "a lot of chaos".

"This uncertainty is creating a lot of problems for us with the conflicting laws in the state of Utah, what the clerks should be doing, what the tax laws are going to be," he said in a statement.

But according to the Salt Lake City Tribune newspaper, Peggy Tomsic, a lawyer for the three same-sex couples who brought the case, told Judge Shelby on Monday: "The status quo has changed. The cloud of confusion is in the minds of the state."

In Friday's ruling, Judge Shelby said Utah had failed to show that allowing gay marriages would affect opposite-sex unions.

"In the absence of such evidence, the state's unsupported fears and speculations are insufficient to justify the state's refusal to dignify the family relationships of its gay and lesbian citizens," he wrote.


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Astronauts repair space station pump

24 December 2013 Last updated at 18:26 ET
Astronauts Rick Mastracchio and Mike Hopkins on spacewalk outside the ISS

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The spacewalk was broadcast live by Nasa

Two US astronauts have successfully repaired a critical cooling system pump at the International Space Station, the US space agency Nasa says.

Rick Mastracchio and Mike Hopkins completed a spacewalk of 7.5 hours to replace the faulty ammonia pump.

The pump broke down two weeks ago, leaving the US side of the station without half its cooling system.

All non-essential equipment had to be switched off and many scientific experiments were halted.

Nasa now says all the systems should be back up and running by the weekend.

"It's the best Christmas ever," Mission Control radioed the astronauts.

In reply, Mr Hopkins said: "Merry Christmas to everybody. It took a couple (of) weeks to get her done, but we got it."

It was the two astronauts' second spacewalk in three days to replace the pump, which is about the size of a refrigerator.

Nasa has said that the station's six-member crew was never in danger.

It was only the second Christmas Eve spacewalk in the history of the space programme. The only previous spacewalk on 24 December was in 1999 during a Hubble Space Telescope repair mission.

Tuesday's repair mission came on the 45th anniversary of the now iconic Earthrise photograph, taken by the crew of Apollo 8 as they orbited the Moon in 1968.


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Obama signs bipartisan budget bill

26 December 2013 Last updated at 17:29 ET

US President Barack Obama has signed a two-year bipartisan federal budget bill, averting the risk of a government shutdown in January.

The hard-fought legislation was passed by both the Senate and the House of Representatives earlier this month.

The bill had been drafted by a cross-party budget committee set up after October's 16-day government shutdown.

Mr Obama also signed a bill cracking down on a sexual assault in the military and six other bills.

He did so while holidaying in Hawaii at the end of the year that has seen a political gridlock over his signature healthcare law, the federal debt limit and issues ranging from immigration to gun control.

'Nothing written in stone'

Congress will now have until 15 January to pass a $1.012tn (£617bn) fiscal spending bill for 2014.

But any hopes that a new era of cross-party unity between Democrats and Republicans could be dawning in Washington DC may be premature, analysts say.

"This is a budget," Democratic Senator Carl Levin told reporters last week. "A budget could be amended next year. Nothing is written in stone around here."

The Senate's top four Republicans - who are in the minority in the upper chamber - voted earlier this month to block consideration of the budget bill. However, their opposition was seen as mainly symbolic and it is thought they knew the bill would ultimately go forward.

But the chamber's Republican leader hinted a separate brawl could lie ahead over the government's borrowing limit, which is due to be raised next spring.

"I doubt if the House, or for that matter the Senate, is willing to give the president a clean debt ceiling increase," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters.

"We'll have to see what the House insists on adding to it as a condition for passing it."

The bill aims to shave up to $23bn from the nation's $642bn annual budget deficit.

It also rolls back $63bn in military and domestic spending cuts automatically imposed in January when Democrats and Republicans failed to reach a budget compromise.

Democrats supported the measure even though they were unhappy that it did not extend long-term unemployment benefits for nearly 1.3 million Americans.

And members of both parties voiced disapproval of the bill's provision to cut inflation increases to pensions for military retirees under the age of 62.


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Santa's helper shot giving out toys

24 December 2013 Last updated at 17:49 ET
Man dressed as Santa carried into ambulance

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The man dressed as Santa was shot in the back with a pellet gun

A Santa's helper delivering toys in the US city of Washington has been shot in the back with a pellet gun.

As a TV crew videoed him in the street, he said "Merry..." before staggering in pain as the pellet hit.

The man, who has not been named and is recovering in hospital, initially said he wanted to carry on with the giveaway but paramedics stepped in and took him away in an ambulance.

A Grinch character then saved Christmas by stepping in to deliver the gifts.

On the video posted on the website of WJLA-TV, the man waves as he walks down the street.

He says: "This is awesome, Merry..." but then recoils in pain.

"Someone's shooting. Someone just shot me."

He recovers to say, "I'm glad I got hit and nobody else go hurt", before being taken to hospital. A man dressed as the green-clothed Dr Seuss character then took over.

ABC reported that the man would be out of hospital on Christmas Eve after the pellet was removed.

Its reporter quoted witnesses as saying two shots were fired from a second-floor window of a home, but no-one has yet been arrested.

Police are investigating the incident.


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'Obamacare' help offered amid rush

24 December 2013 Last updated at 20:44 ET

The US government has offered help to anyone who missed the 24 December deadline to enrol for the new health insurance - known as "Obamacare".

It said anyone who failed to finish their application through a dedicated website - HealthCare.gov - could still obtain a policy for the new year.

On Monday, the government extended the original deadline by a day amid high demand and technical issues.

HealthCare.gov has been plagued by glitches since its 1 October rollout.

The problems with President Barack Obama's signature bill have hit his popularity ratings hard.

The website was set up under a 2010 healthcare law that seeks to cover millions of Americans who do not have health insurance.

'Don't worry'
Continue reading the main story
  • Nov 27: Year's delay in online insurance enrolment for small businesses
  • Nov 26: Spanish-language sign-up tool is postponed until December
  • Nov 22: Enrolment deadline for individuals is pushed back a week in December
  • Nov 14: Obama announces insurers can keep customers on existing plans for another year
  • Oct 23: Deadline for individuals to avoid penalties is pushed back six weeks to March 2014
  • July: Businesses with over 50 workers given until 2015 to provide insurance or pay a penalty

"Sometimes despite your best efforts, you might have run into delays caused by heavy traffic to HealthCare.gov, maintenance periods, or other issues with our systems that prevented you from finishing the process on time," a message on the federal marketplace website said just hours before the Tuesday midnight (0500 GMT) deadline.

"If this happened to you, don't worry - we still may be able to help you get covered as soon as 1 January."

The website also provided helpline contact numbers and told applicants to "tell our customer service representative that you've been trying to enrol and explain why you couldn't finish by the deadline.

"They can tell you what you can do to finish your enrolment and still get covered for 2014."

Two states have extended the deadline for coverage in the new year even further, to 27 December in Maryland and 31 December in Minnesota.

While the website has been upgraded over the course of the past two months, it has still experienced downtime in the past few weeks.

Americans may still enrol in private insurance plans through the website after Tuesday, but they will not be guaranteed coverage at the start of the new year.

A more important deadline for the Obama administration is 31 March, when enrolment in the programme ends for the year.

Those who do not have coverage through their employer, government-run health programmes or through the federal or state-run websites by then will have to pay a tax penalty.

Last week, President Obama said that more than one million people had enrolled in private insurance through federal and state-run websites since 1 October.

Previously White House estimates called for 3.3 million Americans to enrol by the end of 2013, and about 7 million by the end of March 2014.


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End mass surveillance, says Snowden

25 December 2013 Last updated at 11:58 ET
Edward Snowden

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Edward Snowden: ''Asking is cheaper than spying''

Ex-National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden has delivered an "alternative" UK Christmas message, urging an end to mass surveillance.

The broadcast was carried on Channel 4 as an alternative to the Queen's traditional Christmas message.

Mr Snowden focused on privacy, saying: "A child born today will grow up with no conception of privacy at all."

The 30-year-old has temporary asylum in Russia after leaking details of US electronic surveillance programmes.

'Mission accomplished'

Mr Snowden opened his two-minute message, recorded in Russia, with a reference to novelist George Orwell, author of 1984, saying the surveillance technology described in his works was "nothing compared to what we have today".

Continue reading the main story
  • Accessing internet company data
  • Tapping fibre optic cables
  • Eavesdropping on phones
  • Targeted spying

He said: "A child born today will grow up with no conception of privacy at all. They'll never know what it means to have a private moment to themselves, an unrecorded, unanalysed thought.

"The conversation occurring today will determine the amount of trust we can place both in the technology that surrounds us and the government that regulates it.

"Together we can find a better balance, end mass surveillance and remind the government that if it really wants to know how we feel, asking is always cheaper than spying."

Channel 4's alternative Christmas message has in the past featured Iran's then-President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad and fictional characters Ali G and Marge Simpson.

Earlier this week, Mr Snowden told the Washington Post: "In terms of personal satisfaction, the mission's already accomplished. I already won."

Mr Snowden was granted temporary asylum in Russia on 1 August.

He fled the US in late May, taking a huge cache of secret documents with him. He faces espionage charges in the US.

"I didn't want to change society. I wanted to give society a chance to determine if it should change itself," he told the Post.

"All I wanted was for the public to be able to have a say in how they are governed."

Last week, a federal judge declared the mass collection of telephone data unconstitutional and a presidential advisory panel suggested reforms.

Both the judge and the panel said there was little evidence that any terrorist plot had been thwarted by the programme.

A few days later, in his end-of-year news conference, US President Barack Obama suggested there might be a review of surveillance by the NSA.

In light of "disclosures that have taken place" and public concerns about the programmes, there might be "another way of skinning the cat", he said.

However, he accused Mr Snowden of causing "unnecessary damage" by leaking documents.

President Obama said he would make a "definitive statement" in January about recommendations by the White House panel.


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