2014, മേയ് 19, തിങ്കളാഴ്‌ച

32 children die in Colombia bus fire

London: At least 32 children were burnt to death Sunday when their bus caught fire in Colombia, authorities said.

The incident took place near the town of Fundacion in Magdalena department.

Magdalena police chief Adan Leon said that 18 people were rescued, but they suffered various injuries. They were being treated at nearby hospitals, BBC reported.

The fire broke out when they were returning from an event at an evangelical Christian church near the city of Fundacion, 750 km north of Bogota.

It is not known how the fire started, but local media said the bus may have been used for smuggling petrol, Leon said.

Colombia's President Juan Manuel Santos expressed his condolences on his Twitter account and said he would visit the city soon.

2014, മേയ് 18, ഞായറാഴ്‌ച

Atletico Madrid win La Liga title

BARCELONA: Atletico Madrid claimed their 10th Spanish league crown on Saturday but first in 18 years after coming from behind to draw 1-1 away at title rivals Barcelona.
Alexis Sanchez´s stunning strike fired Barca into the lead on 33 minutes, but Diego Godin´s header four minutes into the second-half was enough to give Atletico the point they needed to become the first side other than Barca and Real Madrid to win La Liga in 10 years.

A point for both sides means that Barca finish the season ahead of third-placed Real Madrid thanks to a better head-to-head record, three points adrift of Atletico.

The visitors had started brightly but were dealt a huge blow after just 15 minutes when top scorer Diego Costa pulled up with the recurrence of a hamstring injury that will also make him a huge doubt for the Champions League final against Real Madrid next weekend.

Arda Turan was then also forced off with a hip injury as Adrian Lopez and Raul Garcia entered the fray.- Barca frustration -Barca grew into the game as the half developed and could have been ahead when Pedro Rodriguez wastefully headed over Dani Alves´ precise cross from the right.

When the Catalans did go in front just after the half hour it was in spectacular fashion as Lionel Messi cushioned the ball into Sanchez´s path on the right side of the area, but despite the narrow angle he managed to thrash the ball high past Thibaut Courtois at the Belgian´s near post.

Atletico forced a series of corners without carving out a clear-cut chance in their search for an equaliser before the break, but the half-time whistle also brought frustration on the part of the Barca players as both Messi and Sergio Busquets were booked for dissent.

David Villa came within inches of an equaliser a minute after the restart when his low effort came back off the post and the former Barca striker had another opening moments later that was smothered by Jose Manuel Pinto in the Barca goal.

However, Simeone´s men only had to wait a minute longer to be level as Godin rose highest in the box to power home Gabi´s corner.Barca then suffered an injury blow of their own as Busquets had to be replaced by Alex Song, whilst Neymar was also introduced by coach Gerardo Martino in the search for a winner.

Messi did have the ball in the net with 25 minutes remaining, but he was flagged offside as he latched onto a loose ball inside the area.

Alves stung the palms of Courtois with an effort from 25 yards as Barca camped themselves in the Atletico half for the final 10 minutes.

However, despite piling bodies forward, Barca failed to carve out another clear opening in the final stages as Atletico saw the game out to stretch their unbeaten run against Barca to six games this season. (AFP)
 

Saudi Arabia reports 5 new deaths from MERS

RIYADH: Saudi health authorities reported another five deaths Tuesday from a potentially fatal Middle Eastern respiratory virus that has sickened hundreds in the kingdom.

The previous evening, they reported that the same number of victims had also died from the virus, known as the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome.

A total of 152 people have now died and 495 have been confirmed to have contracted the virus in Saudi Arabia since it was discovered in 2012. Most cases of the disease have been in the desert kingdom.

Four of those confirmed dead Tuesday were previously diagnosed with MERS in the western city of Jiddah. The fifth was one of four new MERS infections identified in the capital, Riyadh.

MERS is part of the coronavirus family of viruses, which includes the common cold and SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, which killed some 800 people in a global outbreak in 2003. MERS can cause symptoms including fever, breathing problems, pneumonia and kidney failure.

Scientists believe camels likely play a role in initial infections. The disease can then spread between people, but typically only when they are in close contact with one another, such as with infected patients and health-care workers.

American health officials this week confirmed a second U.S. case of MERS. The virus was confirmed in a resident of Saudi Arabia who was visiting Florida. He is being treated in an Orlando hospital.

An earlier, unlinked U.S. patient diagnosed with MERS was released from an Indiana hospital late last week.
 

Rs5 billion Ramazan package announced by punjab govt.

LAHORE: The government of Punjab Sunday announced Ramazan package amounting to Rs5 billion, Geo News reported.

Punjab Chief Minister, Shahbaz Sharif said that the citizens would be provided flour bags at subsidized rates in the open market also besides Ramazan bazaars, while 2,000 free meal service centers across the province would also be set up for Sehri and Iftar

Sources said that the meeting held here with the Punjab chief minister in chair decided that 360 Ramazan bazaars and 334 fair price shops would be set up all over the province, where 10 essential items would be made available on wholesale rates.

Shahbaz Sharif said that the green colour flour bags at subsidized rates would be available in Ramazan bazaars and grey colour in open market. He also directed that 2,000 free meal centers at Iftari and Sehri times also be set up for the convenience of fasting people.
 

Three killed, 21 injured in two road mishaps

KARACHI: At least three people were killed and 21 others wounded in two separate road accidents early on Sunday, Geo News reported.

Rescue sources said three people of a family were killed and another person wounded when two vehicles collided near Kathor bridge at Super Highway.

In another road mishap, twenty people including women and children sustained injured when a bus carrying picnickers from Karachi to Keenjhar lake collided with a bus coming from opposite direction near Thatta.

The injured were taken to Gharo hospital. The condition of several is said to be critical.
 

4 die in Rajanpur house filled with generator smokes

RAJANPUR: Four persons asleep were found suffocated to death due to smokes filled in the house from the running generator on Sunday morning here, Geo News reported.

Sources said that following last night rain and power outage, the residents of a house had left the generator running and went to sleep, when the smokes emitted from the generator filled in the house suffocated to death four persons including three children.

A bride is also included among the dead, while the bridegroom said to be in critical condition has been shifted to the Dera Ghazi Khan Hospital, sources said.

2014, മേയ് 17, ശനിയാഴ്‌ച

Saudi MERS death toll rises to 163

RIYADH: Health authorities in Saudi Arabia have reported three more fatalities from the MERS respiratory virus, taking the death toll in the world´s worst-hit country to 163.The health ministry website also revealed on Saturday that 520 cases have been recorded in the country since Middle East Respiratory Syndrome first appeared in Saudi Arabia in 2012.It said three women died on Friday, including one in Riyadh, 48, and a 67-year-old in the western city of Taif.

A third woman died in Jeddah, the port city where a spate of cases among staff at King Fahd Hospital last month sparked public panic and the dismissal of its director and the health minister.

Other nations including Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, the Netherlands, the United Arab Emirates and the United States have also recorded cases, mostly in people who had been to the desert kingdom.

On Wednesday, the World Health Organisation said its emergency committee, which includes global medical and policy experts, had flagged mounting concerns about the potentially fatal virus.

The WHO called on countries to improve infection prevention and control, collect more data on MERS and to be vigilant in preventing it from spreading to vulnerable countries, notably in Africa.

But it has so far stopped short of declaring an international health emergency, which would have far-reaching implications such as travel and trade restrictions on affected countries.

A WHO team carried out a five-day inspection visit to Saudi Arabia earlier this month and pinpointed breaches in its recommended infection prevention measures as being partly responsible for the spike in hospital infections.

MERS is considered a deadlier but less transmissible cousin of the SARS virus that appeared in Asia in 2003 and infected 8,273 people, nine percent of whom died.

Like SARS, it appears to cause a lung infection, with patients suffering coughing, breathing difficulties and a temperature. But MERS differs in that it also causes rapid kidney failure.
 

Young girl’s skeleton reveals Native American origins



WASHINGTON: A teenage girl who fell into a hole more than 12,000 years ago in Mexico´s Yucatan Peninsula is offering new clues about the origins of the first Native Americans, researchers said Thursday.

Named "Naia" by scientists, her skeleton is among the oldest known and best preserved in the Americas.

She was discovered by a team led by the Mexican government´s National Institute of Anthropology and History and supported by the Washington-based National Geographic Society.

Naia´s remains were found in 2007, submerged in an underwater cave along with the bones of saber tooth tigers, giant sloths and cave bears, some 135 feet (41 meters) below sea level.

At the time she fell, some 12,000 to 13,000 years ago, the area, called Hoyo Negro, or Black Hole in Spanish, was dry and above ground.

Melting glaciers caused sea level rise that covered the pit with water for the last 8,000 years.

The girl was aged 15 to 16 and may have slipped into what appeared to her, and to the animals who met the same demise, to be a watering hole. Her pelvis appears to have broken on impact, suggesting she died quickly after her fall, said Jim Chatters, an archeologist and forensic anthropologist in Bothell, Washington.

Her skull shows she had a small, narrow face, wide-set eyes, a prominent forehead and teeth that jutted outward.

Her appearance was "about the opposite of what Native Americans look like," Chatters told reporters. But a genetic marker found in the girl´s rib bone and tooth shows that her maternally inherited lineage was the same as that found in some modern Native Americans.

- Origins in Asia -

The report in the journal Science suggests she descended from people who migrated from Asia across the Bering Strait, over a land mass that was known as Beringia.

"What this study is presenting for the first time is the evidence that paleo-Americans with those distinctive features can also be directly tied to the same Beringian source population as contemporary Native Americans," said Deborah Bolnick, an assistant professor at the University of Texas at Austin.

That goes against theories held by some experts that Native Americans were descendants of people who migrated later, perhaps from Europe, southeast Asia or Australia.

"I used to be one of those advocates of multiple immigration events," said Chatters, an archeologist who is best known for his work on Kennewick Man, a 9,800-year-old skull and skeletal remains found in the US state of Washington.

Chatters initially believed that the Kennewick Man descended from European settlers, because his skull did not resemble a typical Native American face.

But subsequent research, including the DNA analysis on Naia, has changed his way of thinking about where the earliest Native Americans came from.

The international team of researchers working on Naia has identified just one genetic marker from her mitochondrial DNA, called mtDNA haplogroup D1."Haplogroup D1 is derived from an Asian lineage but is found only in the Americas today," explained Bolnick.

"Approximately 11 percent of Native Americans exhibit this genetic lineage," she added.

"It´s found throughout North, Central and South America and this D1 lineage is especially common in some South American populations."

Bolnick said their analysis at this point cannot exclude the possibility that other early peoples, known as paleo-Americans, came from places other than Beringia, but that so far the evidence does not support that possibility.

Naia is the sixth oldest human found in the Americas, said Chatters.

Future research aims to sequence her nuclear DNA, which should reveal more details about her ancestry. (AFP)
 

 

Google buys written language translation startup

SAN FRANCISCO: Google on Friday confirmed it has bought a startup specializing in using smartphones to translate signs, billboards or other written words in real time.

Quest Visual and the technology built into its Word Lens application will become part of a Google team devoted to developing translation features and services.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed and Google declined to make any comment on the record.

"With Word Lens, we´ve seen the beginnings of what´s possible when we harness the power of mobile devices to see the world in your language," Quest said in a blog post.

"By joining Google, we can incorporate Quest Visual´s technology into Google Translate´s broad language coverage and translation capabilities in the future."

Word Lens uses smartphone video cameras to "read" words in one language and translate them into another almost instantly without need for network connections.

Versions of the application have been tailored for smartphones powered by Apple or Android software as well as for Google Glass eyewear that links to the Internet.

The news came as Google this week began letting anyone in the United States buy Glass, priced at $1,500 a pair.

Google has promised lower-priced, fashionably versions of Glass in the not too distant future and has been prepping the market for their arrival.

Fashion industry veteran and jewelry artist Ivy Ross will take charge of Google´s Glass efforts beginning Monday, according to the California-based technology titan.

"I look forward to answering the seemingly simple, but truly audacious questions Glass poses," Ross said in a post at Google+ social network.

"Can technology be something that frees us up and keeps us in the moment, rather than taking us out of it?"

Her resume includes stints at Calvin Klein, Swatch, Coach, Mattel, Bausch & Lomb, Gap and, most recently, Art.com.

The decision to open the "Glass" test, or beta, program on Wednesday to anyone with enough money and curiosity came about a month after a one-day sale of the eyewear to the public. (AFP)
 

36 killed in fighting in eastern Libya

TRIPOLI: Libya´s Health Ministry says fighting between troops loyal to a rogue general and two Islamist militias in the country´s second-largest city has killed 36 people.

A statement Saturday said 139 people were wounded in the fighting that broke out a day earlier in Benghazi when army troops under the command of Gen. Khalifa Hifter besieged the bases of the two militias.

Military aircraft and helicopters under Hifter´s command also flew over the city. The fighting halted Saturday.

The central government criticized Hifter´s attack, although many in the country were divided over the offensive.

Benghazi has been gripped by violence blamed on powerful militias who act outside of government control.

Benghazi´s airport was closed for the second day Saturday because of the fighting.