Showing posts with label Collision. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Collision. Show all posts

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Ship sinks after collision off Philippines; 31 dead




  • NEW: Number of rescued rises to 629, Coast Guard official says

  • NEW: Rescue crews continue searching for survivors

  • 217 passengers aboard the ferry are still unaccounted for

  • Their ferry hit a cargo ship off Cebu City in the southern Philippines



(CNN) — Rescue crews have found 24 bodies, and are looking for 217 other people, after the ferry they were on collided Friday with a cargo ship in waters between southern Philippine islands, a Coast Guard official said.


Lt. Elgen Gregorio, from the Philippine Coast Guard, told CNN on Saturday morning that 629 people had been rescued.


At that time, authorities were still looking intently for survivors.


The incident occurred around 9 p.m. Friday in the Mactan Channel about 2 miles northwest of Cebu City, the capital of Cebu province.


The passenger ship — MV St. Thomas Aquinas — was coming from nearby Butuan City and the cargo ship — the Sulpicio, which had about 20 people aboard — was leaving Cebu for the province of Davao in Mindanao.


The passenger ferry sank, but not before sending out a distress call heard by Coast Guard officials.


The cargo vessel involved in the crash — along with Navy, Coast Guard and commercial vessels — was helping in the rescue efforts.


At least 44 people were being treated at one hospital in Cebu.


The incident recalls one of the worst maritime disasters in world history dating to December 20, 1987, also off the Philippines.


Between 1,700 and more than 4,000 people were killed when the ferry Dona Paz collided with the tanker MT Victor. The number of casualties has varied; many claim the Dona Paz was extremely overcrowded.


CNN’s Greg Botelho contributed to this report.




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Ship sinks after collision off Philippines; 31 dead

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Reid And Boehner On A Debt Limit Collision Course


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) each laid down incompatible positions on the debt limit Tuesday, possibly setting the stage for another round of brinksmanship this fall over whether the federal government will default on its obligations.


“We are not negotiating on the debt ceiling,” Reid told reporters. “The President has said this. I’ve said it. And I don’t know how many more times we need to say that.”


He was responding to a question about whether he’d consider GOP demands such as defunding Obamacare or significantly cutting spending in exchange for raising the debt limit.


Just hours earlier, Boehner put down an equally categorical marker.


“We’re not going to raise the debt ceiling without real cuts in spending. It’s as simple as that,” he said. He floated the so-called “Boehner rule” requiring dollar-for-dollar cuts, which Democrats acceded to in 2011 in order to raise the debt limit, as the right way to go.


Privately and publicly, White House officials insist that they won’t negotiate on the debt ceiling under any circumstances, and that it’s Congress’ duty to make sure the United States continues to pay its bills. Burned by the failed deficit talks of 2011, senior Obama aides also don’t trust Boehner to deliver Republican votes even if he does want a deal. (A running joke in the White House is that Boehner couldn’t deliver a pizza.)


Boehner, in particular, faces huge challenges within his conference.


His leadership team backed down earlier this year in the face of Democrats’ insistence that they won’t negotiate on the debt ceiling, convincing members to vote to increase temporarily the limit in exchange for forcing Senate Democrats to pass a budget. He now faces a conference full of vocal lawmakers who are demanding actual spending cuts and insist they won’t settle for anything less. Already aggrieved by the possibility of leadership violating the majority-of-the-majority principle on matters like immigration reform and the farm bill, they’re working to back Boehner into a corner.


Meanwhile, a significant faction of more moderate Senate Republicans, tired of going along with routine obstruction, are rising up against tea party conservatives and pushing for more cooperation with Democrats, be it on the budget, immigration or presidential nominees.


“I do think that some folks are starting to re-evaluate the consequence of giving a handful of very junior, very ideological Senators the unfettered ability to drive our side,” said an aide to a veteran Republican senator, speaking on condition of anonymity. “I think we may have learned in the recent crisis that having the sheer volume of objections at the same time is not in our interests. It makes it harder to argue the high ground.”


All the while, Boehner has repeatedly insisted that default is not an option, leaving many Democrats to conclude that he’s bluffing by suggesting he won’t permit a debt limit increase. On Tuesday his spokesman Brendan Buck called on Democrats to compromise.



Sahil Kapur

Sahil Kapur is a congressional reporter for TPM. He previously covered politics and public policy for numerous publications including The Guardian and The Huffington Post. He can be reached at sahil [at] talkingpointsmemo.com.





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Reid And Boehner On A Debt Limit Collision Course

Reid And Boehner On A Debt Limit Collision Course


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) each laid down incompatible positions on the debt limit Tuesday, possibly setting the stage for another round of brinksmanship this fall over whether the federal government will default on its obligations.


“We are not negotiating on the debt ceiling,” Reid told reporters. “The President has said this. I’ve said it. And I don’t know how many more times we need to say that.”


He was responding to a question about whether he’d consider GOP demands such as defunding Obamacare or significantly cutting spending in exchange for raising the debt limit.


Just hours earlier, Boehner put down an equally categorical marker.


“We’re not going to raise the debt ceiling without real cuts in spending. It’s as simple as that,” he said. He floated the so-called “Boehner rule” requiring dollar-for-dollar cuts, which Democrats acceded to in 2011 in order to raise the debt limit, as the right way to go.


Privately and publicly, White House officials insist that they won’t negotiate on the debt ceiling under any circumstances, and that it’s Congress’ duty to make sure the United States continues to pay its bills. Burned by the failed deficit talks of 2011, senior Obama aides also don’t trust Boehner to deliver Republican votes even if he does want a deal. (A running joke in the White House is that Boehner couldn’t deliver a pizza.)


Boehner, in particular, faces huge challenges within his conference.


His leadership team backed down earlier this year in the face of Democrats’ insistence that they won’t negotiate on the debt ceiling, convincing members to vote to increase temporarily the limit in exchange for forcing Senate Democrats to pass a budget. He now faces a conference full of vocal lawmakers who are demanding actual spending cuts and insist they won’t settle for anything less. Already aggrieved by the possibility of leadership violating the majority-of-the-majority principle on matters like immigration reform and the farm bill, they’re working to back Boehner into a corner.


Meanwhile, a significant faction of more moderate Senate Republicans, tired of going along with routine obstruction, are rising up against tea party conservatives and pushing for more cooperation with Democrats, be it on the budget, immigration or presidential nominees.


“I do think that some folks are starting to re-evaluate the consequence of giving a handful of very junior, very ideological Senators the unfettered ability to drive our side,” said an aide to a veteran Republican senator, speaking on condition of anonymity. “I think we may have learned in the recent crisis that having the sheer volume of objections at the same time is not in our interests. It makes it harder to argue the high ground.”


All the while, Boehner has repeatedly insisted that default is not an option, leaving many Democrats to conclude that he’s bluffing by suggesting he won’t permit a debt limit increase. On Tuesday his spokesman Brendan Buck called on Democrats to compromise.



Sahil Kapur

Sahil Kapur is a congressional reporter for TPM. He previously covered politics and public policy for numerous publications including The Guardian and The Huffington Post. He can be reached at sahil [at] talkingpointsmemo.com.





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Reid And Boehner On A Debt Limit Collision Course