Showing posts with label Held. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Held. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Parents Defy Judge’s Gag Order, Speak Out About Daughter Held Custody By Hospital For Year

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Parents Defy Judge’s Gag Order, Speak Out About Daughter Held Custody By Hospital For Year

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Another War On Drugs Fail - Woman Sentenced 48 Hours Held For MONTHS

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Another War On Drugs Fail - Woman Sentenced 48 Hours Held For MONTHS

Friday, January 24, 2014

Syrian government warns it will leave Geneva talks if no "serious sessions" are held before Saturday





Syria‘s government and opposition have agreed to meet in the same room on Saturday and accept that their talks will be based on a 2012 communique which called for a transitional governing body to be set up, mediator Lakhdar Brahimi said on Friday.


“Tomorrow we have agreed that we shall meet in same room,” Brahimi told a news conference after he held separate meetings with government and opposition delegations in Geneva.


“The discussions I had with the two parties were encouraging,” he said. ”I think the two sides understand that very well and accept it,” Brahimi said, in reference to the Geneva I communique that calls for the establishment of a transitional body.


Opposition delegate Anas al-Abdah told Reuters: ”We are satisfied with Mr. Brahimi’s statement today and that the regime has accepted Geneva 1 (communique).


“And on this basis we will meet the Assad delegation tomorrow morning. It will be a short session in which only Brahimi will speak, to be followed by another session, a longer session in the afternoon,”


The talks nearly faltered before they began, with opponents of President Bashar al-Assad refusing to meet his delegation unless it first signed up to a protocol calling for a transitional government.


Plans for the two sides to sit down to talk face-to-face on Friday were ditched at the last minute. Instead, they each met separately with Brahimi, at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva.


“We have explicitly demanded a written commitment from the regime delegation to accept Geneva 1. Otherwise there will be no direct negotiations,” opposition delegate Haitham al-Maleh told Reuters.


Earlier, Syria’s Information Minister Omran Zoabi said the government would not accept demands for the establishment of a transitional governing body.


“No, we will not accept it,” Zoabi told Reuters.


Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem was quoted by state television earlier on Friday telling Brahimi that if no serious work sessions were held by Saturday, the government delegation would leave peace talks in Geneva.


“If no serious work sessions are held by (Saturday), the official Syrian delegation will leave Geneva due to the other side’s lack of seriousness or preparedness,” state television quoted Moallem as saying, citing a United Nations source.


A UN spokeswoman confirmed Brahimi was meeting the delegates separately: “There are no Syrian-Syrian talks at the moment,” said Alessandra Vellucci. “I cannot tell you anything about what will happen in the next few days.”


Even before the announcement that the direct talks were canceled, the outlook was dim.


“The objective is for the first round of talks to last until next Friday, but expectations are so low we’ll see how things develop day by day,” a Western diplomat said.


“Every day that they talk is a little step forward.”


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/syria/140124/syrian-government-warns-it-will-leave-geneva-talks-if




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Syrian government warns it will leave Geneva talks if no "serious sessions" are held before Saturday

Monday, January 20, 2014

Family of man held in NKorea worried, encouraged








American missionary Kenneth Bae speaks to reporters at Pyongyang Friendship Hospital in Pyongyang Monday, Jan. 20, 2014. Bae, 45, who has been jailed in North Korea for more than a year, appealed for the U.S. to do its best to secure his release. (AP Photo/Kim Kwang Hyon)





American missionary Kenneth Bae speaks to reporters at Pyongyang Friendship Hospital in Pyongyang Monday, Jan. 20, 2014. Bae, 45, who has been jailed in North Korea for more than a year, appealed for the U.S. to do its best to secure his release. (AP Photo/Kim Kwang Hyon)





Derek Sciba, a family friend of Washington state’s Kenneth Bae, held for more than a year in North Korea, sits in an office in Seattle on Monday, Jan. 20, 2014. “Our end goal is to see Kenneth reunited so he can recover emotionally and physically. He has chronic health problems,” Sciba said. (AP Photo/Donna Blankinship)





American missionary Kenneth Bae, right, leaves after speaking to reporters at Pyongyang Friendship Hospital in Pyongyang Monday, Jan. 20, 2014. Bae, 45, who has been jailed in North Korea for more than a year, appealed for the U.S. to do its best to secure his release. (AP Photo/Kim Kwang Hyon)





Derek Sciba, a family friend of Washington state’s Kenneth Bae, held for more than a year in North Korea, sits in an office in Seattle on Monday, Jan. 20, 2014. “Our end goal is to see Kenneth reunited so he can recover emotionally and physically. He has chronic health problems,” Sciba said. (AP Photo/Donna Blankinship)





American missionary Kenneth Bae, second from right, arrives to speak to reporters at Pyongyang Friendship Hospital in Pyongyang Monday, Jan. 20, 2014. Bae, 45, who has been jailed in North Korea for more than a year, appealed for the U.S. to do its best to secure his release. (AP Photo/Kim Kwang Hyon)













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SEATTLE (AP) — The family of an American missionary held more than a year in North Korea was heartbroken and encouraged by a brief news conference in which Kenneth Bae, wearing a gray cap and inmate’s uniform with the number 103 on his chest, apologized and said he committed anti-government acts.


“Our end goal is to see Kenneth reunited so he can recover emotionally and physically. He has chronic health problems,” family friend Derek Sciba told The Associated Press. Sciba is a friend of Bae’s sister, Terri Chung of Edmonds, and part of a group pushing for Bae’s release.


“On the one hand it’s heartbreaking to see him in a prison uniform at the mercy of folks in North Korea, but on the other hand it’s encouraging to see him and that he’s able to speak,” Sciba said.


Bae made the comments at what he called a press conference held at his own request. He was under guard during the appearance. It is not unusual for prisoners in North Korea to say after their release that they spoke in similar situations under duress.


Bae spoke in Korean during the brief appearance, which was attended by The Associated Press and several other members of the foreign media in Pyongyang.


Bae, the longest-serving American detainee in North Korea in recent years, expressed hope that the U.S. government will do its best to win his release. He said he had not been treated badly in confinement.


“I believe that my problem can be solved by close cooperation and agreement between the American government and the government of this country,” he said.


Bae was arrested in November 2012 while leading a tour group and accused of crimes against the state before being sentenced to 15 years of hard labor. He was moved to a hospital last summer in poor health.


He made an apology Monday and said he had committed anti-government acts.


Bae said a comment last month by U.S. Vice President Joe Biden had made his situation more difficult.


“The vice president of United States said that I was detained here without any reason,” Bae said. “And even my younger sister recently told the press that I had not committed any crime and I know that the media reported it.


“I think these comments infuriated the people here enormously. And for this reason, I am in a difficult situation now. As a result, although I was in medical treatment in the hospital for five months until now, it seems I should return to prison. And moreover there is greater difficulty in discussions about my amnesty.”


Bae’s appearance came weeks after North Korea freed an elderly American veteran of the Korean War who had been held for weeks for alleged crimes during the 1950-53 conflict.


State media said 85-year-old Merrill Newman was released because he apologized for his wrongdoing and that authorities also considered his age and medical condition. Newman said after his release that a videotaped confession was made under duress.


In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the U.S. government was continuing to work with the Swedish Embassy to secure Bae’s release.


“As we have said before, we remain very concerned about Kenneth Bae’s health,” Psaki said Saturday. “We continue to urge the DPRK authorities to grant Bae amnesty and immediate release.”


North Korea has detained at least seven Americans since 2009. They were eventually deported or released without serving out their terms, some after prominent Americans such as former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter traveled to Pyongyang.


A senior U.S. envoy had planned to visit North Korea in late August to discuss Bae’s release, but Pyongyang withdrew its invitation at the last minute, accusing the United States of hostility. Analysts said North Korea was apparently trying to gain leverage in a long-running international standoff over its nuclear weapons program.


“We shouldn’t take Kenneth Bae’s comments merely as his own,” said Kim Jin Moo, a North Korea expert at the South Korean state-run Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in Seoul. “The reason why North Korea had Kenneth Bae make this statement … is that they want Washington to reach out to them.”


Other foreign analysts say North Korea wants better ties with Seoul and Washington as a way to win foreign aid and investment to boost its economy.


Bae’s detention was in the news earlier this month after former basketball star Dennis Rodman traveled to Pyongyang with other retired NBA players for an exhibition game marking the birthday of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. In an interview with CNN while in Pyongyang, Rodman made comments implying Bae was at fault.


Rodman, who has been criticized for not using his ties with Kim to help secure Bae’s freedom, later apologized.


Bae was born in South Korea and immigrated to the United States in 1985 with his parents and sister. He was allowed to call home on Dec. 29 because of the holidays, according to his sister. That was the first time his three children from an earlier marriage had spoken to him, she said. He has two children in Arizona and another in Hawaii, ages 17, 22 and 23, Chung said.


Sciba, who works with the Seattle-based Christian relief and development agency World Concern, said “Ken is a good man. He has only the best of intentions for others….We’re asking for mercy from North Korean officials.”


___


Associated Press writer Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul, South Korea, contributed to this report.


Associated Press




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Family of man held in NKorea worried, encouraged

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

G.I. Long Held by Afghan Militants Is Shown Alive in Video

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WASHINGTON — A video of an American soldier held captive by Afghan insurgents for the past four and a half years has been obtained by the United States government, and officials said Wednesday that it showed the soldier, Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, alive but in a state of declining health.


Few details were available on the video, which was obtained in recent days by the American military. It was not a propaganda release to local or foreign journalists, a communications technique used by insurgent groups in the past, making it likely that the military had seized the video in an operation of some type.


The video, which is now in the hands of American intelligence officials, refers to current events, prompting officials to believe that it is proof that Sergeant Bergdahl, the only American being held prisoner in Afghanistan, is still alive.


After the existence of the video was revealed by CNN, the Pentagon issued a brief statement.


“We cannot discuss all the details of our efforts, but there should be no doubt that on a daily basis — using our military, intelligence and diplomatic tools — we try to see Sergeant Bergdahl returned home safely,” said Cmdr. Elissa Smith, a Pentagon spokeswoman. “Our hearts are with the Bergdahl family.”


Sergeant Bergdahl is believed to be held by the militant Haqqani network in the tribal area of Pakistan’s northwest frontier, on the Afghan border. He was captured in Paktika Province in Afghanistan on June 30, 2009.


He has been the subject of negotiations, currently stalled, that focused on a trade of five Taliban prisoners held at the American military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, for his release.


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G.I. Long Held by Afghan Militants Is Shown Alive in Video

Friday, January 3, 2014

Egyptian Held Prisoner, No Charge Since Morsi Overthrown


Hassan has been held without charge for three months. He sought refuge in a field hospital from tear gas attacks and was arrested. His uncle, Ahmed Tharwat, …



Egyptian Held Prisoner, No Charge Since Morsi Overthrown

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

NYPD Held Mall Terrorism Exercise After Kenya Attack


Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
December 11, 2013


On Wednesday, the New York Police Department admitted it had conducted a late night drill at a closed shopping mall in November following the terrorist attack at a mall in Kenya on September 21. Police officials said the undisclosed drill was conducted in order to prevent chaos in the event such an attack occurred in New York.


NYPD boss Ray Kelly told the media during a news conference at police headquarters that the exercise was designed to rest the response of police officers. The NYPD boasts of having thwarted more than a dozen terrorist incidents since the September 11, 2001, attacks. Kelly said now “is a time for vigilance and not complacency. The world we are in remains a very dangerous place.”


Details about the police drill held at the Kings Plaza in Brooklyn arrives at the same time as news that the alleged Somali al-Shabab attackers numbered three or four and were not heavily armed as the media claimed during the stand-off at the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi, Kenya. The New York Police Department report on the siege states that only four terrorists took part in the attack and they were lightly armed with AK-47 rifles. 67 people, mostly civilians, were killed during the attack. The NYPD report concludes that the attackers may have escaped the mall on the first day of the attack. Kenyan police and military conducted a three day siege of the mall.


It was initially claimed that 18 heavily armed gunmen had participated in the raid. “Security sources familiar with the operation to retake the mall said it would have been daunting for even the best-trained soldiers in the world,” The Times reported on September 28. Despite the “bravery of have-a-go heroes,” the newspaper reported, it took hours for a disorganized and under-equipped Kenyan military to respond. Friendly fire resulted in the shooting of a policeman by the military. The military assault resulted in the collapse of several floors of the mall.


The Kenyan government and its intelligence service knew about the al-Shabab attack and had positioned assets at the mall, according to counter-terrorism documents. “We cannot say that this attack comes as a surprise,” said Farah Maalim, former deputy speaker of the Kenyan National Assembly, according to The Guardian. “The possibility of something like this happening, and of failures in the Kenyan intelligence community, has worried us for years. We have an intelligence service more worried about internal party politics than about threats to national security.”


NYPD positioned “critical response vehicles’ tlo New York malls following the Kenya attack in September.


A Harvard trained lawyer who works for the World Bank, Bendita Malakia, claimed she was rescued by an American security team five hours after the assault began. The American’s assertion raised the possibility that American intelligence also knew about the attack beforehand.


Following the attack, counter-terrorism experts warned that an attack of similar magnitude might occur in the United States. “The fear is that if a couple young men returned to the United States with training to conduct military attacks on U.S. citizens, you could take the template of this mall attack that’s happening right now in Kenya and apply it to the U.S.,” Anders Folk, the former assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Minnesota, told the Washington Times in September.


“There possibly could be Americans over there that we don’t know about, and that’s one of my biggest concerns,” Rep. Michael T. McCaul, Texas Republican and chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security, told CNN. McCaul said “the idea that they can come back into the United States is a real valid concern.”


This article was posted: Wednesday, December 11, 2013 at 2:21 pm









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NYPD Held Mall Terrorism Exercise After Kenya Attack

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Women "held as slaves for 30 years"






























Det Insp Kevin Hyland: “We have never seen anything of this magnitude before”



Three women have been “rescued” from a south London house as police investigate claims they were held as slaves for at least 30 years.


Police arrested a 67-year-old man and a 67-year-old woman in Lambeth.


Last month officers were contacted by Freedom Charity after it received a call from a woman saying she had been held against her will for decades.


A Malaysian woman, 69, an Irish woman, 57, and a British woman, 30, were all rescued from the house.


The women, who are said to be “highly traumatised”, are now in safe accommodation.




Start Quote





We have never seen anything of this magnitude before”




End Quote
Det Insp Kevin Hyland
Met Police


Police said they were not related to each other and the 30-year-old had spent her whole life in servitude. Officers are trying to establish whether she was born in the house.


Det Insp Kevin Hyland, from the Metropolitan Police’s Human Trafficking Unit, said: “We have seen some cases when people have been held for 10 years, but we have never seen anything of this magnitude before.”


He added that the women had controlled lives and spent most of it indoors, but they had some freedom.


Police said the facts behind the situation were being slowly established as specialist workers were assisting the women. Officers said there was no evidence of sexual abuse.



‘Absolutely terrified’

“We applaud the actions of Freedom Charity and are working in partnership to support these victims who appear to have been held for over 30 years,” Mr Hyland said.


“We have launched an extensive investigation to establish the facts surrounding these very serious allegations.


“A television documentary on forced marriages relating to the work of Freedom Charity was the catalyst that prompted one of the victims to call for help and led to their rescue.”


Speaking to the BBC, Aneeta Prem, founder of Freedom Charity, said they charity were investigating how the women had remained hidden for so long.


“In a very busy capital city we often don’t know our neighbours. We’re looking at people who were kept against their will in an ordinary residential street in central London,” she said.


She added that the women were extremely brave to pick up the phone and contact the charity. The alleged victims were able to walk out of the house after receiving help.









Aneeta Prem, Freedom Charity: “We’ve ensured they’re in a place of safety”



The charity founder said the two people arrested were considered the “heads of the family”


Ms Prem added: “We started in-depth to talks to them when they could. It had to be pre-arranged. They gave us set times when they were able to speak to us.


“It was planned that they would be able to walk out of the property. The police were on standby.”


A Home Office spokesperson said: “The Home Secretary is shocked by this appalling case and while the police need to get to the bottom of exactly what happened here, the Home Secretary has made clear her determination to tackle the scourge of modern slavery.”




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Women "held as slaves for 30 years"

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Gun battles at Kenya mall; hostages still held








Trucks of soldiers from the Kenya Defense Forces arrive after dawn outside the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Islamic extremist gunmen lobbed grenades and fired assault rifles inside Nairobi’s top mall Saturday, killing dozens and wounding over a hundred in the attack. Early Sunday morning, 12 hours after the attack began, gunmen remained holed up inside the mall with an unknown number of hostages. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)





Trucks of soldiers from the Kenya Defense Forces arrive after dawn outside the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Islamic extremist gunmen lobbed grenades and fired assault rifles inside Nairobi’s top mall Saturday, killing dozens and wounding over a hundred in the attack. Early Sunday morning, 12 hours after the attack began, gunmen remained holed up inside the mall with an unknown number of hostages. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)





Groups of onlookers gather on a road looking down over the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Multiple barrages of gunfire erupted Sunday morning from the upscale Kenyan mall where there is a hostage standoff with Islamic extremists nearly 24 hours after they attacked using grenades and assault rifles. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)





Relatives help a woman at the Nairobi City Mortuary after she identified the body of a victim of the mall attack in Kenya, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Kenyan authorities said Islamic extremist attackers remain inside the upscale Kenyan shopping mall, holding an unknown number of hostages, after killing at least 39 and injuring 150 during Saturday’s attack. (AP Photo/Khalil Senosi)





A line of soldiers from the Kenya Defense Forces run in front of the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Multiple barrages of gunfire erupted Sunday morning from the upscale Kenyan mall where there is a hostage standoff with Islamic extremists nearly 24 hours after they attacked using grenades and assault rifles. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)





Kenya security personnel move to their positions as others stand guard outside a shopping mall in Nairobi, Kenya, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Kenya authorities said Islamic extremist attackers remain inside the upscale Kenyan shopping mall, holding an unknown number of hostages, after killing at least 39 and injuring 150 during the Saturday’s attack. (AP Photo/Sayyid Azim)













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NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Kenyan military forces engaged in sporadic gun battles Sunday with the Islamic extremists holding an unknown number of hostages inside an upscale Nairobi mall, as officials said the death toll from a grenade-and-gunfire siege a day earlier rose to 59, with at least 175 wounded.


The hostage crisis passed the 24-hour mark and fears rose of a protracted standoff with terrorists using hostages as pawns. Kenyan security forces were seen entering Westgate Mall with at least two rocket-propelled grenades, heavy weaponry for a potential indoor battle with hostages present.


Elite military units were inside the Westgate mall, and volleys of gunfire continued into the afternoon Sunday. Two wounded Kenyan soldiers were seen being carried out of the mall in the morning.


Kenyan security officials didn’t — or couldn’t — say how many people the estimated 10 to 15 terrorists were holding hostage. Kenya’s Red Cross said in a statement citing police that 49 people had been reported missing. Officials did not make an explicit link but that number could form the basis of the number of people held hostage.


Former Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga told reporters at the mall that he had been told officials couldn’t determine the exact number of hostages, amid indications that Israeli military personnel were providing Kenya’s military assistance.


“There are quite a number of people still being held hostage on the third floor and the basement area where the terrorists are still in charge,” Odinga said.


Kenyan security officials sought to reassure the families of hostages inside but implied that hostages could be killed. Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph Lenku said the security operation was “delicate” because Kenyan forces hoped to ensure the hostages are evacuated safely.


“The priority is to save as many lives as possible,” Lenku said. More than 1,000 people escaped the attack inside the mall on Saturday, he said.


Britain’s prime minister, in confirming the deaths of three British nationals, told the country to “prepare ourselves for further bad news.”


“It’s an extremely difficult situation but we’re doing everything we can to help the Kenyans in their hours of need,” David Cameron said.


More than 175 people were injured in the attack, Lenku said, including many children. Kenyan forces were in control of the mall’s security cameras, Lenku said. Combined military and police forces surrounded the mall in the Westlands neighborhood of Nairobi, an area frequented by foreigners and wealthy Kenyans.


“Violent extremists continue to occupy Westgate Mall. Security services are there in full force,” said the United States embassy in an emergency text message issued Sunday morning advising Americans to stay indoors and close to home.


Somalia’s al-Qaida-linked rebel group, al-Shabab, claimed responsibility for the attack in which they used grenades and assault rifles and specifically targeted non-Muslims. The rebels said the attack was retribution for Kenyan forces’ 2011 push into Somalia.


Al-Shabab said on its new Twitter feed — after its old one was shut down on Saturday — that Kenyan officials were asking the hostage-takers to negotiate and offering incentives.


“We’ll not negotiate with the Kenyan govt as long as its forces are invading our country, so reap the bitter fruits of your harvest,” al-Shabab said in a tweet.


Westgate Mall is at least partially owned by Israelis, and reports circulated that Israeli commandos were on the ground to assist in the response. Four restaurants inside the mall are Israeli-run or owned.


In Israel, a senior defense official said there were no Israeli forces participating in an assault, but the official said it was possible that Israeli advisers were providing assistance. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was discussing a classified military issue, would not elaborate.


Israel has close ties to Kenya going back many years. And in recent years, Israel has identified East Africa as an area of strategic interest and stepped up ties with Kenya and other neighboring countries, due to shared threats posed by al-Qaida and other extremist elements. In 2002, militants bombed an Israeli-owned luxury hotel near Mombasa, killing 13 people, and tried to shoot down an Israeli airliner at the same time.


“We have received a lot of messages from friendly countries, but for now it remains our operation,” Lenku said, adding later: “I want to assure Kenyans that our security agencies are fully in control of the situation.”


President Uhuru Kenyatta — who said he lost his nephew and his nephew’s fiance — visited a hospital Sunday where he shook hands and exchanged words of encouragement with victims. M.P. Shah Hospital Chairman Manoj Shah said Kenyatta appeared visibly distraught at hearing the feelings of all the patients.


“He looked at many of the patients who had bullet wounds, who were suffering shrapnel damage. He shook their hands and wished them well,” Shah said.


Shah said his doctors received 128 patients and performed 28 surgeries to remove bullets and shrapnel in the first 24 hours since the attacks began Saturday.


“We have at least two critical patients currently, one with bullets lodged near the spine,” Shah said. He added that many of the victims_and four of the 19 fatalities at this particular hospital_were children.


Kenyans and foreigners were among those confirmed dead, including British, French, Canadians a Ghanaian and Chinese.


A 38-year-old Chinese woman was killed in the shopping mall “terror attack,” the Chinese Embassy in Kenya said in a statement Sunday. Her son was injured in the attack and in a stable condition in hospital, according to the statement posted on the embassy’s website.


Ghanaian poet and former chairman of the council of state Kofi Awoonor died after being injured in the attack, Ghana’s presidential office confirmed. Ghana’s ministry of information said Awoonor’s son was injured and is responding to treatment.


Kenya’s presidential office said that one of the attackers was arrested on Saturday and died after suffering from bullet wounds.


Britain’s Foreign Office said that Foreign Secretary William Hague has chaired a meeting of Britain’s crisis committee and sent a rapid deployment team from London to Nairobi to provide extra consular support.


The United Nations Security Council condemned the attacks and “expressed their solidarity with the people and Government of Kenya” in a statement.


There was some good news on Sunday, as Kenyan media reported that several people in hiding in the mall escaped to safety, suggesting that not everyone who was inside overnight was being held by al-Shabab.


Cecile Ndwiga said she had been hiding under a car in the basement parking garage.


“I called my husband to ask the soldiers to come and rescue me. Because I couldn’t just walk out anyhow. The shootout was all over here — left, right— just gun shots,” she said.


Security forces had pushed curious crowds far back from the mall. Hundreds of residents gathered on a high ridge above the mall to watch for any activity. Police lobbed multiple rounds of tear gas throughout the day at hundreds of curious Kenyans who gathered near the mall.


___


Associated Press reporters Tom Odula and Jacob Kushner in Nairobi, Kenya; Josef Federman in Jerusalem; Louise Watt in Beijing; and Cassandra Vinograd in London contributed to this report.


Associated Press




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Gun battles at Kenya mall; hostages still held

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Ohio man who held 3 women captive found hanged







FILE – This Wednesday, July 17, 2013 file photo shows Ariel Castro standing before a judge during his arraignment on an expanded 977-count indictment in Cleveland. Castro, who held 3 women captive for a decade, has committed suicide, Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2013. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak, file)





FILE – This Wednesday, July 17, 2013 file photo shows Ariel Castro standing before a judge during his arraignment on an expanded 977-count indictment in Cleveland. Castro, who held 3 women captive for a decade, has committed suicide, Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2013. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak, file)













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(AP) — The man serving a life prison term for kidnapping three women and repeatedly raping them in his home for nearly a decade has been found dead and is believed to have committed suicide, a prison official said.


Ariel Castro, 53, was found hanging in his cell around 9:20 p.m. Tuesday at the Correctional Reception Center in Orient, located south of Columbus in central Ohio, JoEllen Smith, Department of Rehabilitation and Correction spokeswoman, said early Wednesday.


Prison medical staff performed CPR before Castro was transported to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead around 10:50 p.m.


Castro’s attorneys tried unsuccessfully to have a psychological examination of Castro done at the Cuyahoga County Jail, where Castro was housed before he was turned over to state authorities following his guilty plea and conviction, his attorney, Jaye Schlachet, told The Associated Press early Wednesday. Schlachet said he could not immediately comment further.


In an interview last month after Castro’s conviction, Schlachet and attorney Craig Weintraub said their client clearly fit the profile of sociopathic disorder and that they hoped researchers would study him for clues that could be used to stop other predators.


The three women disappeared separately between 2002 and 2004, when they were 14, 16 and 20 years old. They escaped from Castro’s Cleveland home May 6, when Amanda Berry, one of the women, broke part of a door and yelled to neighbors for help.


“Help me,” she said in a 911 call. “I’ve been kidnapped, and I’ve been missing for 10 years and I’m, I’m here, I’m free now.”


The two other women were so scared of Castro that they held back initially even as police officers began to swarm the house. But quickly they realized they were free.


“You saved us! You saved us!” another of the captives, Michelle Knight, told an officer as she leaped into his arms.


Castro was arrested that evening. He had also fathered a child with Berry while she was in captivity; that girl was 6 years old when freed. A judge rejected Castro’s request to have visiting rights with his daughter.


Elation over the women’s rescue soon turned to shock as details emerged about conditions of their captivity. Investigators say they were bound with chains, repeatedly raped and deprived of food and bathroom facilities. Knight told investigators she was beaten and starved several times to force her to miscarry.


Messages left for the women’s lawyers were not immediately returned early Wednesday.


Castro was sentenced Aug. 1 to life in prison plus 1,000 years on his guilty plea to 937 counts including kidnapping and rape.


In a rambling statement, he told the judge he was not a monster but a man suffering from a pornography addiction.


“I’m not a monster. I’m sick,” Castro said at his sentencing.


Knight was the only one of the three who appeared in court at his sentencing.


“You took 11 years of my life away, and I have got it back,” she said in the hushed courtroom. “I spent 11 years in hell. Now your hell is just beginning.”


Castro was in protective custody because of the notoriety of his case, meaning he was checked every 30 minutes, but was not on suicide watch, Smith said. She said suicide watch entails constant observation.


Castro was also watched closely in the Cuyahoga County Jail in the several weeks after his arrest and before his case was resolved by a guilty plea, with logs noting his activity every 10 minutes. He was taken off county jail suicide watch in early June after authorities determined he was not a suicide risk.


This is the second high-profile suicide in an Ohio prison in a month.


On Aug. 4, death row inmate Billy Slagle was found hanged in his cell just days before his scheduled execution. He was condemned to death for fatally stabbing a neighbor.


___


Andrew Welsh-Huggins can be reached on Twitter at https://twitter.com/awhcolumbus.


Associated Press




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Ohio man who held 3 women captive found hanged

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Rates held until unemployment falls






























LIVE: Bank of England governor’s inflation report



Bank of England governor Mark Carney has said the Bank will not consider raising interest rates until the jobless rate has fallen to 7% or below.


Mr Carney said this would require the creation of about 750,000 jobs and could take three years.


The UK unemployment rate currently stands at 7.8%.


The unemployment threshold will hold unless inflation levels threaten to rise too fast or it poses a significant threat to financial stability.


Mr Carney said that until the threshold was reached the Bank would not cut back on its £375bn asset purchase programme, known as quantitative easing (QE).


While upbeat on the prospects for the UK economy, Mr Carney said it had not reached “escape velocity” yet.


“A renewed recovery is now underway in the United Kingdom and it appears to be broadening,” he said.


“While that is certainly welcome, the legacy of the financial crisis means that the recovery remains weak by historical standards and there is still a significant margin of spare capacity in the economy, this is most clearly evident in the high rate of unemployment.”


On the markets, shares rose and the pound fell immediately after the Bank’s statement was released, although the movements were quickly reversed.


There had been widespread expectation that Mr Carney would commit the Bank to the new strategy, known as “forward guidance”.


With short-term interest rates already at historic lows, the aim is to reduce longer-term interest rates.


Knowing interest rates could remain low, potentially for years, gives banks and mortgage lenders the ability to “lock-in” customers at lower rates for longer.




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Rates held until unemployment falls

Monday, August 5, 2013

Castro victim returns to Cleveland house where she was held for years




  • Michelle Knight, 32, was held by Ariel Castro for 11 years

  • Knight thanked residents on Seymour Avenue who helped in her rescue

  • Altagracia Tejeda says Knight asked: “Did you see me?”



Cleveland, Ohio (CNN) — Michelle Knight, one of three women kidnapped by Ariel Castro, returned Friday to the Cleveland house where she was chained up and tormented for 11 years, a neighbor said.


The visit came a day after Knight came face-to-face with Castro, telling him during a sentencing hearing: “I spent 11 years in hell, and now your hell is just beginning.” Castro was sentenced to life in prison plus 1,000 years.


Knight, 32, stood outside the house at 2207 Seymour Avenue, looking at where she and two other women — Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus — had been held for years, neighbor Altagracia Tejeda said through a translator. Then she walked across the street to Tejeda’s house, she said.


It was Tejeda’s house where Berry and her 6-year-old daughter fled after making their escape May 6 from Castro’s house.





Michelle Knight: ‘I was so alone’


It was there, using a cell phone, that Berry made her now famous 911 call: “Help me, I am Amanda Berry. I’ve been kidnapped and I’ve been missing for 10 years. And I’m here. I’m free now.”


On Friday, Knight thanked Tejeda and others for helping in the women’s rescue.


During her captivity, Knight said had glimpsed Tejeda on her porch.


A couple of times over the years, Tejeda said she saw what she believed was a young girl through a screen door at Castro’s house. She later learned the girl was actually a diminutive woman. It was Knight.


“Did you see me?” Knight asked, according to Tejeda.


Her answer: Yes.




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Castro victim returns to Cleveland house where she was held for years

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Funeral held for man in ex-Patriot"s murder case







Pallbearers carry the casket of Odin LLoyd following a funeral ceremony at the Church of the Holy Spirit in Boston in Boston, Saturday, June 29, 2013. Hundreds of relatives, friends and well-wishers wept together and hugged at the funeral for LLoyd, a semi-pro football player whose killing led to murder and weapons charges against former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)





Pallbearers carry the casket of Odin LLoyd following a funeral ceremony at the Church of the Holy Spirit in Boston in Boston, Saturday, June 29, 2013. Hundreds of relatives, friends and well-wishers wept together and hugged at the funeral for LLoyd, a semi-pro football player whose killing led to murder and weapons charges against former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)





Odin Lloyd’s teammate Shaquil Wilkie, right, and an unidentified woman leave LLoyd’s funeral service at Church of the Holy Spirit in Boston, Saturday, June 29, 2013. Hundreds of relatives, friends and well-wishers wept together and hugged at the funeral for LLoyd, a semi-pro football player whose killing led to murder and weapons charges against former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)





Odin Lloyd’s mother, Ursula Ward, center, and his sister Olivia Thibou, left, leave the funeral ceremony for Lloyd at the Church of the Holy Spirit in Boston, Saturday, June 29, 2013. Hundreds of relatives, friends and well-wishers wept together and hugged at the funeral for Lloyd, a semi-pro football player whose killing led to murder and weapons charges against former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)





Odin Lloyd’s teammates, including Shaquil Wilkie, front left, leave Lloyd’s funeral ceremony at Church of the Holy Spirit in Boston, Saturday, June 29, 2013. Hundreds of relatives, friends and well-wishers wept together and hugged at the funeral for LLoyd, a semi-pro football player whose killing led to murder and weapons charges against former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)





Odin Lloyd’s teammates arrive for Lloyd’s funeral service at Church of the Holy Spirit in Boston, Saturday, June 29, 2013. Hundreds of relatives, friends and well-wishers wept together and hugged at the funeral for LLoyd, a semi-pro football player whose killing led to murder and weapons charges against former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)













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(AP) — Hundreds of relatives, friends and teammates wept together and hugged Saturday at the funeral of a semi-pro football player whose killing led to murder and weapons charges against former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez.


The body of Odin Lloyd was found June 17 near Hernandez’s home. Police arrested Hernandez on Wednesday and charged him with orchestrating the execution-style shooting.


Lloyd played for the Boston Bandits and was dating the sister of Hernandez’s fiancee. Members of Lloyd’s team showed up for the funeral in their uniforms and chanted his name as pallbearers placed his casket in a hearse outside Church of the Holy Spirit in Boston’s Mattapan neighborhood. The crowd of mourners was so large that some could not find room inside the church for the two-hour service.


Hernandez has pleaded not guilty and is being held without bail. Two other men are also in custody. Prosecutors say the three were in a car with Lloyd shortly before his death.


Authorities have said trouble that led to Lloyd’s killing happened June 14, when Lloyd went with Hernandez to a Boston nightclub. Hernandez became upset when Lloyd began talking with people Hernandez apparently didn’t like, prosecutors said.


On June 16, the night before the slaying, a prosecutor said, Hernandez texted two unidentified friends and asked them to hurry to Massachusetts from Connecticut.


A few minutes later, he texted Lloyd to tell him he wanted to get together, prosecutors said. Authorities say Hernandez, Carlos Ortiz and Ernest Wallace picked up Lloyd at around 2:30 a.m. June 17, drove him to an industrial park near Hernandez’s home and shot him five times. They have not said who fired the shots.


Prosecutors said an ammunition clip found in Hernandez’s Hummer matched the caliber of casings found at the scene of Lloyd’s killing.


Hernandez’s lawyer argued in court that the case is circumstantial. He said Hernandez, who was cut by the Patriots the day he was arrested, wanted to clear his name.


Ortiz’s attorney, John Connors, said he will seek bail for his client at the July 9 hearing. He described Ortiz as a “gentle person” and said he will advise Ortiz to plead not guilty to the gun charge he is facing.


Wallace surrendered in Miramar, Fla., on Friday, police said. Authorities had been seeking Wallace on a charge of acting as an accessory after Lloyd’s murder. Details of that allegation weren’t released.


Hernandez was drafted by the Patriots in 2010 and signed a five-year contract worth $ 40 million last summer. He could face life in prison if convicted.


Associated Press




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Funeral held for man in ex-Patriot"s murder case