Saturday, January 15, 2011

Smoking 'causes damage in minutes', US experts claim

Smoking 'causes damage in minutes', US experts claim

Smoking
There may be genetic damage just moments after smoking

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Smoking damages the body in minutes rather than years, according to research in the US.

The report, published in Chemical Research in Toxicology, shows that chemicals which cause cancer form rapidly after smoking.

Scientists involved in the small-scale study described the results as a stark warning to people considering smoking.

Anti-smoking charity Ash described the research as "chilling" and as a warning that it's never too early to quit.

The long term impact of smoking, from heart disease to a range of cancers, are well known. This study suggests the damage begins just moments after the first cigarette is smoked.

Faster than you might think

The researchers looked at the level of chemicals linked with cancer, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), in 12 patients after smoking.

A PAH was added to the subject's cigarettes, which was then modified by the body and turned into another chemical which damages DNA and has been linked with cancer.

The research shows this process only took between 15 and 30 minutes to take place.

Professor Stephen Hecht, from the University of Minnesota, said: "This study is unique, it is the first to investigate human metabolism of a PAH specifically delivered by inhalation in cigarette smoke, without interference by other sources of exposure such as air pollution or the diet.

The results reported here should serve as a stark warning to those who are considering starting to smoke cigarettes."

Martin Dockrell, director of policy and research at Ash (Action on Smoking and Health), said: "Almost everybody knows that smoking can cause lung cancer.

"The chilling thing about this research is that it shows just how early the very first stages of that process begin - not in 30 years but within 30 minutes of a single cigarette for every subject in the study.

"The process starts early but it is never too late to quit and the sooner you quit the sooner you start to reduce the harm."

The research was funded by the US National Cancer Institute.

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Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Governor Jerry Brown unveils California spending plan

Governor Jerry Brown unveils California spending plan

Jerry Brown Mr Brown's plan calls for cuts in programmes at universities and medical care for the poor

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California Governor Jerry Brown has unveiled the first spending plan of his administration, hoping to resolve the state's $25bn (£16bn) budget deficit.

The Democratic governor's $86bn plan for the coming fiscal year calls for cuts in programmes at universities and medical care for the poor.

The scheme would also eliminate new corporate tax breaks and two state-wide incentives for business development.

Mr Brown said he hoped to get "the state on a balanced footing".

"Here's the problem - we're very divided," Mr Brown said of the California electorate.

"My job is to find some common core here that we can agree on."

His budget projects the deficit at $25.4bn over the next 18 months.

'Shifting responsibilities'

To reduce the state's deficit, the governor's plan calls for $12.5bn in spending cuts, including reductions in the provision of welfare, social services and higher education, as well as $12bn in funding shifts and new revenue if voters approve tax extensions.

Under the new plan, Mr Brown hopes that shifting numerous responsibilities - from incarcerating offenders convicted of minor crimes to providing foster care - to local governments will reduce the weight of California's economic woes.

The governor said the new proposal for the coming fiscal year, which begins on 1 July, seeks to end the state's deficit and balance the state's budget for the next few years without borrowing money.

"It's better to take our medicine now and get the state on a balanced footing," he said.

Under the new plan, fees at community colleges in the state would increase, while colleges in California would also lose roughly $400m in funding.

Visits to doctors' offices for recipients of the state's Medi-Cal health insurance programme would be limited to 10 per year under the new proposal. Some annual benefits would also be capped and new co-payments expected from those in the programme.

Mr Brown said he wants the legislature in California to call a special election in June to ask for tax extensions, which are due to expire this year.

But the election would require support from Republican lawmakers in the state, who have not viewed the idea favourably.

Voters previously rejected the extension of those taxes in 2009, as part of a measure placed on the ballot by the state's legislature and former Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.

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Sunday, January 9, 2011

Seychelles tortoises: Giants ruling the Aldabra lagoon

Seychelles tortoises: Giants ruling the Aldabra lagoon

By Tim Ecott

Aldabra lagoon
Aldabra is one of the most important habitats for evolutionary study

The inaccessible Aldabra lagoon in the Indian Ocean is a Unesco World Heritage Site and home to a unique collection of plants and animals, including more than 100,000 giant tortoises.

For three hours, the island supply plane cruises above the seemingly empty blue plain of the Indian Ocean.

At Assumption Island, there is an airstrip where we transfer to a motorboat for the crossing to Aldabra.


Visitors are infrequent... Somali pirate activity has reduced that market to almost zero

Lindsay Chong Seng, science director for the Seychelles Islands Foundation, is my guide and, after an hour on the sparkling sea, he points out a long, low strip of rugged shoreline.

It is South Island, the largest of the four main islands surrounding the great central lagoon.

The lagoon is shallow, a place of ripping currents and vast sand flats, and is so big that the whole of Manhattan could fit inside it - twice.

'Shark-infested waters'

Stepping from the back of the speedboat into gin-clear water up to my knees, I see I am not alone.

Dozens of black-tip sharks cluster in the shallows, and among them are larger lemon sharks - each over seven feet (two metres) long.

Sharks in the lagoon
Its isolation means the lagoon is free from overfishing and pollution

The splashing of our feet sounds, I am told, like the noise an injured fish might make and the sharks come to investigate.

Once close enough to see that I am human, they dart away skittish and alarmed, their pale dorsal fins sticking out of the water like the very cartoon image of "shark-infested water".

There is no hotel here, although the expense of running the island and staffing it means that the idea is sometimes proposed.

Visitors are infrequent - just a few yachtsmen. Until last year, there was the occasional small cruise ship, but Somali pirate activity has reduced that market to almost zero.

In fact, a few months ago, some pirates landed on the beach having run out of food and water.

With the help of the rifles the rangers use to shoot feral goats, the pirates were arrested, locked in a store room and sent back to the capital, Victoria.

Dominant reptiles

Outside the small research block, island manager Doctor Nancy Bunbury introduces me to the first of the Aldabra giant tortoises.

"Please don't feed him," she warns, "or he'll follow you into our dining room. And if he doesn't want to leave, it becomes a bit of a problem."

Giant tortoise
Aldabra's giant tortoise population is the largest in the world

Once harvested for meat and exported to the inhabited islands, the tortoises can weigh over 600lb (300kg). Standing fully upright on all four leathery legs, their heads reach easily to my waist.

Lindsay Chong Seng explains that they will eat anything including other dead tortoises, any vegetation they can reach and, intriguingly, a kind of algae which they seem to cultivate by leaving their droppings in tidal pools.

As well as hungry tortoises, Aldabra's scrubby vegetation also has to cope with salt spray, thin soil and cyclones.

One endemic grass has even evolved so that its flower-spikes turn downwards from the stem so that the reptiles do not eat it while they are grazing.

With at least 100,000 giant tortoises - 10 times as many as in the Galapagos - Aldabra is valued by biologists as an ecosystem dominated by reptiles, something that has not been seen elsewhere since the time of the dinosaurs.

Isolation makes Aldabra's wildlife bold.

Fluffy Aldabra nightjars nest on the ground, fearlessly allowing me to lie right beside them with my camera.

A small elegant bird with big feet and a russet plumage stalks the undergrowth. Lindsay names it as the white-throated Aldabran rail, the last flightless bird in the Indian Ocean.

One day I watch as a rail discovers a baby giant tortoise - smaller than my palm - and attempts to peck at it. The tortoise does what tortoises do and retreats inside its shell until the rail loses interest.

It will need to avoid not just the rails, but also the two species of land crabs that live on Aldabra, including the coconut crab with a leg span of more than three feet (1m) and weighing up to 10lb (4.5kg).

At night, they stalk the accommodation block and I learn to carry a torch.

Another world

On excursions into the lagoon and along the mangrove-forested shore, I see frigate birds, crab plovers, dimorphic egrets, green herons and plenty more sharks.

Map of Seychelles

At slack tide, it is hard to tell which way lies the open sea and which way the lagoon.

I feel as though I am in another world, a place where nature has been left to take its course. The water sparkles, the sand is as white as the clouds above and the undergrowth crackles as the crabs and tortoises patrol.

Seychelles protects Aldabra by subsidising the ranger's station and science facilities here with income from the Vallee de Mai - another Unesco World Heritage Site on the island of Praslin that is easily accessed by tourists.

It is home to Seychelles' unique double coconut - the coco-de-mer, the tree with the largest seed in the plant kingdom.

They may not know it but those day-trippers are paying to keep Aldabra free of visitors and a safe haven for a unique collection of plants and animals which few people will ever see.

How to listen to: From Our Own Correspondent

Radio 4: Saturdays, 1130. Second weekly edition on Thursdays, 1100 (some weeks only)

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Israel destroys East Jerusalem hotel for settlements

Israel destroys East Jerusalem hotel for settlements

Palestinians watch as the Hotel Shepherd is torn down, East Jerusalem (9 Jan 2011) Palestinians accused Israel of trying to "erase" them from the city

Israeli bulldozers have demolished part a hotel in East Jerusalem to make way for 20 new homes for Jewish settlers.

The destruction of the Shepherd Hotel has angered Palestinians, who want East Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state.

Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas said Israel was destroying any chance of returning to peace talks by carrying out the demolition.

Israel says it has a right to build homes in any part of the city.

The Shepherd Hotel was built in the 1930s and was once home to Amin al-Husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem who became an ally of Adolf Hitler in WWII.

Its current ownership is disputed - Israel says it belongs to a Jewish-American property developer but Palestinians say it was seized illegally after Israel occupied East Jerusalem in 1967.

"By doing this, Israel has destroyed all the US efforts and ended any possibility of a return to negotiations," said Nabil Abu Rudeina, a spokesman for Mr Abbas.

'Erase identity'

Attempts by the US to revive peace negotiations stalled last year, after Israel refused to end settlement building on occupied Palestinian land.

"Israel has no right to build in any part of east Jerusalem, or any part of the Palestinian land occupied in 1967," said Mr Abu Rudeina.

The Palestinian governor of Jerusalem, Adnan al-Husseini, said it was the latest in a line of demolitions of historic buildings and accused Israel of "trying to erase any Palestinian identity from the city of Jerusalem".

View of East Jerusalem (photo: Martin Asser)

The US had criticised the project as far back as 2009, when building approval was granted.

But Israeli officials said the demolition had been carried out legally and defended its decision.

"This is something that every country does in its own domain without the necessity to give any report to any other government," said the minister for national infrastructure, Uzi Landau.

Nearly half a million Jews live in more than 100 settlements built since Israel's 1967 occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

The settlements are considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.

Source

~~~~~~~~

Commentary

How do you create a country when every week more and more of it's capital and it's land are being taken?

The Hague has already deemed such actions illegal, but apparently they're not illegal enough to garner any help from the E.U, A.U, or U.S.

What a sad state of affairs it seems.

Iran passenger plane crash 'kills 70'

Iran passenger plane crash 'kills 70'

Map

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An Iranian passenger plane with more than 100 people on board has crashed, killing at least 70 people, according to the state news agency Irna.

Thirty-two people were injured, the agency said, quoting deputy head of the Iranian Red Crescent Heidar Heidari.

The IranAir plane was flying from the capital Tehran when it came down near the north-western city of Orumiyeh - which was its final destination.

Reports said it crashed in bad weather, and snow was hampering rescue efforts.

"At least 70 people have been killed and 32 others were injured in the crash," Mr Heidari said, according to Irna.

"The death toll is expected to increase."

Earlier reports had said that 50 people survived the crash.

The plane came down near Orumiyeh, 700km (430 miles) north-west of Tehran, at around 1945 local time (1615 GMT), an official in West Azerbaijan province said earlier, quoted on Iranian state television's website.

The official said the plane had taken off an hour later than scheduled, and came down because of bad weather conditions.

The head of Iran's emergency services, Gholam Reza Masoumi, said rescue work was being made more difficult by heavy snow, which was around 70cm (27 inches) deep around the crash site.

His remarks were quoted by the semi-official Fars news agency.

Old planes

There have been a number of accidents involving Iranian planes over the last few years.

The last major crash was in July 2009, when a plane caught fire mid-air and crashed in northern Iran, killing 168 people.

In 2003 an Iranian troop carrier crashed in the southeast, killing all 276 soldiers and crew on board.

Iran's civil fleet is made up of planes in poor condition due to their old age and lack of maintenance.

Source

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Commentary

This is completely unacceptable. At most a country should have one crash every couple decades, which is the norm for most countries. For Iran, they feel it necessary to have many crashes in a few years...

There needs to be serious regulations in place to curtail these disasters.

70 families are now shocked with deaths that were unnecessary and as a result of MONEY.

With enough extra money and regulation, all those deaths could have been spared. This is completely wrong, irresponsible, immoral, and unjust.

All in charge of this industry must immediately be fired, replaced, and sent to jail.

US wants Twitter details of Wikileaks activists

US wants Twitter details of Wikileaks activists

Julian Assange outside the High Court (16 December 2010) Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is currently fighting extradition from the UK to Sweden

The US government has subpoenaed the social networking site Twitter for personal details of people connected to Wikileaks, court documents show.

The US District Court in Virginia said it wanted information including user names, addresses, connection records, telephone numbers and payment details.

Those named include Wikileaks founder Julian Assange and an Icelandic MP.

The US is examining possible charges against Mr Assange over the leaking of 250,000 classified diplomatic cables.

Reports indicate the Department of Justice may seek to indict him on charges of conspiring to steal documents with Private First Class Bradley Manning, a US Army intelligence analyst.

Mr Manning is facing a court martial and up to 52 years in prison for allegedly sending Wikileaks the diplomatic cables, as well military logs about incidents in Afghanistan and Iraq and a classified military video.

'Given a message'

According to the court order issued on 14 December by the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, the US Attorney's Office has provided evidence to show that the information held by Twitter is "relevant and material to an ongoing criminal investigation".

Analysis

As the Wikileaks saga has unfolded, Twitter has been one of the main forums where supporters and opponents of the whistle-blowing site have debated the issues. Now the social network has been dragged into the affair, as the US authorities pursue a case against Wikileaks.

This leaves Twitter executives in a very difficult position. Like all social networks, they have been keen to stress that they comply with local laws, especially when it comes to tracking down criminals. But they have also been eager to promote Twitter's role as a forum for free expression in countries like Iran.

If confidential details of overseas Twitter users are disclosed to the US authorities, how keen will an international audience be to trust this or other American social networks in future?

The San Francisco-based website was given three days to respond was also told not to disclose that it had been served the subpoena, or the existence of the investigation.

However, the same court removed those restrictions on Wednesday and authorised Twitter to disclose the order to its customers.

The subpoena requested the details of Mr Assange, Pfc Manning and Icelandic MP Birgitta Jonsdottir, as well as Dutch hacker Rop Gonggrijp and US programmer Jacob Appelbaum, both of whom have previously worked with Wikileaks.

The information sought includes mailing addresses and billing information, connection records and session times, IP addresses used to access Twitter, email accounts, as well as the "means and source of payment".

Mr Assange condemned the court order on Saturday, saying it amounted to harassment.

"If the Iranian government was to attempt to coercively obtain this information from journalists and activists of foreign nations, human rights groups around the world would speak out," he said in a statement.

The order was unsealed "thanks to legal action by Twitter", he added.

Start Quote

Twitter may have to disclose information which its originators and its members probably thought was strictly confidential? Doesn't this go to prove how gullible people can be when using social networks?”

End Quote Alfred Penderel Bright

And Mr Assange's lawyer, Mark Stephens, said the US government was attempting to intimidate people.

"It's a great disappointment that the department of justice has stopped playing lawyers and started playing politics," he told BBC News.

Twitter has declined to comment on the claim, saying only: "To help users protect their rights, it's our policy to notify users about law enforcement and governmental requests for their information, unless we are prevented by law from doing so."

Ms Jonsdottir, who until recently was a vocal supporter of Wikileaks, revealed on Friday that the department of justice had asked Twitter for her personal details and all of her tweets since November 2009.

She said she had 10 days to appeal against the subpoena.

Ms Jonsdottir wrote on her Twitter feed: "USA government wants to know about all my tweets and more since 1 November 2009. Do they realise I am a member of parliament in Iceland?"

She said that she would call Iceland's justice minister to discuss the request.

"I think I am being given a message, almost like someone breathing in a phone," she said.

Ms Jonsdottir was the chief sponsor of the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative (IMMI) law, which made Iceland an international haven for investigative journalism and free speech.

She has said she helped to produce a video for Wikileaks showing a US Apache helicopter shooting civilians in Iraq in 2007.

Birgitta Jonsdottir says she helped produce a controversial Wikileaks video

The classified video, released by Wikileaks last April, brought the whistle-blowing website to the world's attention.

The website's founder, Julian Assange, is currently fighting extradition from the UK to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning as part of an inquiry into alleged sex offences.

Ms Jonsdottir reportedly left Wikileaks late last year after she argued unsuccessfully that Mr Assange should take a low-profile role until his legal troubles were resolved.

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