Monday, 30 November 2009
Russian train derailed by terrorist bomb
The blast derailed the train's rear three carriages sending passengers hurtling.
A second, less powerful bomb, exploded at the crash site at 11am on Saturday.
The bomb exploded near the village of Uglovka, 250 miles northwest of the capital.
The 14-car train was travelling from Moscow to Saint Petersburg and is known to carry businessmen, politicians and tourists.
No group has yet claimed responsibility for the attack but Chechen rebels are the prime suspects.
In 2007 Russian authorities blamed them for a bomb that derailed the same service and injured 30 people.
Aleksandr Bortnikov, head of the Federal Security Service, said that a device containing the equivalent of 7kg of TNT had been used in what was Russia's worst terrorist attack outside the Caucasus in five years.
Patriarch Kirill, head of the Orthodox Church, led prayers for the victims.
He said the attackers were determined "to frighten everybody who lives in Russia" and urged the Russian people to display a strong will "for a victory over terror."
The attack is part of a long history of conflict that has spilled over from the Caucuses into Russia's heartland.
In February 2004 at least 30 people died in an explosion in the Moscow Metro and in 1999 a series of bombings throughout Russia allowed President Putin to order a military assault on Chechnya.
Sunday, 29 November 2009
Ahmadinejad and Chavez get close to deepen ties
OBAMA may have won the hearts and minds of
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad received a hero's welcome on Wednesday 25 November as he arrived in
The trip comes two weeks after President Peres of
Saudi Arabia sentences Lebanese man to death for witchcraft
Ali Sabat, 46, made predictions from his studio in
But when he headed for the holy city of
His lawyer, May al-Khansa, said: “He was told if he confessed to witchcraft he would be released and allowed to return to
Human Rights Watch called on the Saudi government to overturn its decision and halt “its increasing use of charges of witchcraft – crimes that are vaguely defined and arbitrarily used.”
The country still has no penal code allowing judges to deem certain acts as criminal according to their whim, and exact any punishment they see fit.
Thursday, 26 November 2009
Terrorists blow up Iraq-Turkey Oil Pipeline
A BOMB attack an Iraqi oil pipeline has halted exports for at least a week.
The pipeline shifts 350,000-400,000 barrels of crude a day to the Turkish port Ceyhan, where is it loaded onto ships.
Repairs were expected to take four days but today an employee of Iraq's state-owned Northern Oil Company said: "We will need another seven days."
The attack took place last week in the Salahuddin Province near Shirqat, a former hotbed of support for Al-Qaeda.
It is the second pipeline bombing in less than a month and raises fears of further attacks aimed at stunting Iraq's oil infrastructure.
The attacks come after Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki signed contracts with foreign oil companies and are an attempt to undermine his chances of success in next year's election.
BP and China's CNPC secured rights to drill in Rumailla, Iraq's biggest oil field, while Exxon Mobil and Italy's Eni have made initial deals to operate the Zubair and West Qurna Phase One oil fields.
Last month, Iraq exported 1.87 million barrels per day (bpd), bringing in 4.2 billion dollars in revenues.
In September, the country exported 1.95 million bpd and raised 3.8 billion dollars.
Iraq currently produces around 2.5 million barrels per day of crude oil, two million barrels of which are intended for export, but Oil Minister Hussein al-Shahristani wants production to be ramped up to between 10 and 12 million bpd within six years.
Around 85 percent of Iraqi government revenues are from oil sales.
Iraq has the world's third largest proven reserves of oil, with more than 115 billion barrels, behind only Saudi Arabia and Iran.