US-Kurdish Mosul Dam Attempt To Take Over from Hands ISIS

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US-Kurdish Mosul Dam Attempt To Take Over from Hands ISIS

Kurdish forces backed by air strikes in the United States seeks to seize Mosul dam of militant groups now renamed ISIS so Islamic State in northern Iraq.

Operation to recapture the biggest dam in the country since Saturday (08/16/2014) yesterday with an attack by F-18 fighter aircraft and unmanned aircraft (drones), as stated by the United States officials.
Command center said it had done nine times air strike on Saturday that the region close to the target of Arbil and Mosul dam.

Military statement said the attack destroyed a number of vehicles carrying weapons.

Military officials told NBC News that the decision to take over the dam carried out after intelligence showed ISIS "is not going to blow up at the point of installation".

Kurdish peshmerga fighters have locked position militant groups, and the mention of a ground attack that can not be confirmed.

A Kurdish commander Major General Abdelrahman Korini, told AFP that the Peshmerga have mastered the eastern part of the dam and still continue to "attack".

Meanwhile, the report mentions the massacre carried ISIS back against non-Muslim civilians in a village near Sinjar.

In addition, ISIS also suspected of killing 700 people in Deir Ezzor province near the border is like oil, according to a report that can not be independently verified.

Kenya Tightens Border Prevent Ebola

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Kenya Tightens Border Prevent Ebola

Kenya prohibit visitors from countries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone entry to the country, as an effort to prevent the spread of the Ebola virus.

Kenya's health minister said the exemption granted to citizens of Kenya and medics who fly from these countries, which will still be allowed to enter.


National carrier Kenya Airways says it will stop flying to Liberia and Sierra Leone when the ban applies on Wednesday.

The World Health Organization WHO said Kenya faced "high risk" because Ebola is a transport hub.

The epidemic started in Guinea in February, and has since spread to Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria. These four countries have announced a state of emergency related to the spread of Ebola.

Last Friday, the death rate from Ebola virus increased to 1,145 after the WHO reported 76 new deaths in two days on August 13. Reports put the number of cases of Ebola reach 2,127.

Health Minister said that the risk of transmission of Ebola during low flight.

Earlier, Kenya's health ministry declared the results of tests on four cases of Ebola in the country negatively. The case was experienced by two Nigerians, one from Liberia, and Zimbabwe.

Iraq crisis: Yazidis plead for international assistance as Australia prepares for humanitarian role

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Iraq crisis: Yazidis plead for international assistance as Australia prepares for humanitarian role

Thousands of Yazidi refugees who have fled a jihadist onslaught in Iraq have pleaded for international assistance, as Australia prepares to deliver humanitarian supplies to Iraq within days.
In northern Iraq, around 30,000 Yazidi refugees remain trapped on Mount Sinjar, 11 days after fleeing from Islamic State (IS) militants.

Kurdish and Iraqi forces are continuing their efforts to free the Yazidis, while the United States and other Western aircraft have dropped supplies to help keep the displaced people alive.

The British government says a small number of helicopters are being sent to Iraq to help evacuate as many as possible.

Kieran Dwyer, who is with the United Nations in the Kurdish capital of Erbil, in northern Iraq, says the conditions on the mountain are extremely difficult.

"Temperatures are searing. It's 45 degrees or more in as cool a place as you can find," he said.

"And there's no shelter up there. So it's extremely difficult. There are many, many children that fled with their families, many elderly.

"They're distressed, traumatised. The food and water drops have been critical, but we can't be certain they've reached everybody."

Scores of Yazidi men and children evacuated from the mountain have held a protest to plead for more assistance.

"We have no bread, and very little water. We need help. We want to get out of here. We are so desperate we want to leave Iraq," one 30-year-old protester said.

Khodhr Hussein, 44, said: "We have very little food. The lucky ones get a meal a day. Many others go hungry.

"Many people are sleeping in the sun, the camp is not big enough for everybody."

A Kurdish official running the camp said the local authorities have a partnership with the United Nations' refugee agency (UNHCR).

Iraq's northernmost province is now home to 400,000 people who've been forced to flee their homes by Islamic State militants.
PM leaves door open to combat force in Iraq

The Australian military is expected to carry out its first mission to deliver humanitarian supplies to Iraq soon, with two C-130 aircraft due to carry out their first air drops over the next few days.


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Iraq crisis: Yazidis plead for international assistance as Australia prepares for humanitarian role

Updated 14 Aug 2014, 12:32amThu 14 Aug 2014, 12:32am
Displaced Yazidis walk towards the Syrian border Photo: The UN says it is proving extremely difficult to meet the needs of the fleeing Yazidi population. (Reuters: Rodi Said)
Related Story: Role in Iraq humanitarian 'at this stage', Abbott says
Map: Iraq

Thousands of Yazidi refugees who have fled a jihadist onslaught in Iraq have pleaded for international assistance, as Australia prepares to deliver humanitarian supplies to Iraq within days.

In northern Iraq, around 30,000 Yazidi refugees remain trapped on Mount Sinjar, 11 days after fleeing from Islamic State (IS) militants.

Kurdish and Iraqi forces are continuing their efforts to free the Yazidis, while the United States and other Western aircraft have dropped supplies to help keep the displaced people alive.
Plight of the Yazidis
Guardian correspondent Martin Chulov has just spent two days on the road reporting on the Yazidi refugees. He spoke to PM about their plight:

Tens of thousands of these desperate people are just streaming across the Nineveh plains into Syria and then walking across a long wooden bridge across a river into Iraqi Kurdistan.

Refuse everywhere; rags, plastic bags, people carrying their very last possessions. Most of them arriving in blazing 45-degree heat, looking understandably dehydrated and distressed.

We are told that people have died on this journey as they did on the mountain top during the early days of retreating up that mountain, being chased up that mountain, being chased up there by the IS insurgents when there was no food and water.

Most of those [people taken away to prisons in Sinja and Mosul] who have been detained appear to be women and there are consistent reports that many of these women, or girls, are being married off or sold as effectively as slaves.

I was sitting with a family on the border who had just crossed yesterday in blazing heat, sitting in the dirt, and a father received a phone call from his daughter who was in a prison in Central Mosul.

He'd been speaking to her most days. But yesterday the phone call suddenly turned desperate because she told him that she'd been told by her captors that she was to be sold that afternoon to an Islamic State man for a little more than $10.

You can imagine the father's distress hearing this, he was saying "Here I am sitting in another country, unable to do anything about this while my daughter gives me news such as this", and he simply broke down and his tears were spilling into the desert soil and it was an incredibly sad thing to watch.

Listen to more here

The British government says a small number of helicopters are being sent to Iraq to help evacuate as many as possible.

Kieran Dwyer, who is with the United Nations in the Kurdish capital of Erbil, in northern Iraq, says the conditions on the mountain are extremely difficult.

"Temperatures are searing. It's 45 degrees or more in as cool a place as you can find," he said.

"And there's no shelter up there. So it's extremely difficult. There are many, many children that fled with their families, many elderly.

"They're distressed, traumatised. The food and water drops have been critical, but we can't be certain they've reached everybody."

Scores of Yazidi men and children evacuated from the mountain have held a protest to plead for more assistance.

"We have no bread, and very little water. We need help. We want to get out of here. We are so desperate we want to leave Iraq," one 30-year-old protester said.

Khodhr Hussein, 44, said: "We have very little food. The lucky ones get a meal a day. Many others go hungry.

"Many people are sleeping in the sun, the camp is not big enough for everybody."

A Kurdish official running the camp said the local authorities have a partnership with the United Nations' refugee agency (UNHCR).

Iraq's northernmost province is now home to 400,000 people who've been forced to flee their homes by Islamic State militants.
PM leaves door open to combat force in Iraq

The Australian military is expected to carry out its first mission to deliver humanitarian supplies to Iraq soon, with two C-130 aircraft due to carry out their first air drops over the next few days.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott has also left the door open to possible military action.
Video: Explained: The political struggle for Baghdad (Middle East correspondent Matt Brown)

Defence Minister David Johnston said Australia had agreed to provide the humanitarian assistance but declined to rule out any military action.

"What we've seen is an extreme act of barbarism by a group of terrorists," he said.

"What the future holds, no-one can predict. The Australian Government has signed off on providing humanitarian relief and that is all."

The United States has ruled out sending combat troops back into the country.

European countries have also stepped up their humanitarian support, with the European Union increasing its annual aid budget for Iraq to $23 million.

The EU failed to agree on a joint position on supplying weapons to the Kurds, but said individual members could send arms in coordination with the government in Baghdad.

After a request from the Kurdish president, France agreed to immediately supply arms "to meet the urgent needs voiced by the Kurdish regional authorities".

"France intends to play an active role by providing, along with its partners and in liaison with the new Iraqi authorities, all the assistance required," president Francois Hollande said in a statement.

BlackBerry strikes deal to offer Amazon apps on BB10

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BlackBerry strikes deal to offer Amazon apps on BB10

BlackBerry has announced it will license 240,000 Android applications from Amazon - in a move that may presage a downgrading of its internal developer relations efforts for its stuttering BB10 software.

The company announced the deal on Wednesday, saying in a blogpost that "We've heard your appeals for access to more applications for your BlackBerry 10 device [sic] and we are delivering." The move will give users access to popular apps such as Groupon, Netflix, Pinterest, Candy Crush Saga and Minecraft, all available through a direct download, the company said.

But the company has seen a number of key departures from its app developer relations division, just as analysts expect more losses in its forthcoming first-quarter financial results and slow handset sales in its first-quarter results to be announced on Thursday.

The former head of the developer relations division, Alec Saunders, has been moved to a position with QNX Software Systems - owned by BlackBerry - where he is working on the "internet of things", according to his LinkedIn profile page. His title as "Vice President Developer Relations and Ecosystem Development" is relegated to a past achievement. Others who have worked in the developer relations division, including some involved in contact with public-facing initiatives, have either been moved to other jobs or left the company in the past few months.

Developer relations are important for smartphone companies because their staff encourage outside programmers to write apps that enhance the value of the device. For Apple and Google, the creation of a huge "ecosystem" of developers who have written millions of apps, and who earn billions of pounds from phone owners' purchases.

Rumours on one BlackBerry fan site previously suggested that all the division's jobs could be affected as the iconic Canadian smartphone company tries to steer itself back to profitability, and stem defections among both consumers and business customers.

The deal with Amazon could be key in retaining consumers who want access to popular apps. One of BlackBerry's key efforts in its new BB10 software has been to enable its newest range of smartphones to run Android apps. But the app developers still had to make some changes for them to work on the BlackBerry handsets, and owners faced some challenges installing them. BlackBerry says that the Amazon deal will mean owners can download the apps directly from Amazon's app store.

The announcement contains no hints about the effect on the internal developer relations team, nor what the deal means for third-party developers who have been working to support the platform.

In a statement, BlackBerry told the Guardian that there was “nothing new" to report about its developer division and that "any headcount reductions we are making have already been disclosed previously. Alec Saunders continues to be employed at BlackBerry, he is the Head of the Internet of Things, QNX Cloud.” The company did not respond to questions about the future role of the developer relations division.

Despite Saunders' best efforts when in charge of attracting outside developers, BlackBerry has struggled to build a strong ecosystem around its new BB10 operating system, launched in January 2013 with the Z10 smartphone. The discovery that a third of the apps on the BlackBerry app store were written by one company, Hong Kong-based S4BB, suggested that there was less broad interest than seemed the case from the raw number of apps in the store.

Senior members of the development team and of its social media team have either shifted jobs or left the company. Alex Kinsella, formerly a senior product manager and social media manager at the company, left in January 2014 after a five-year career, while Victoria Berry, formerly the "director of ecosystem PR" - and so important in attracting developer interest through media relations - left in April after nearly 10 years at the company.

Patrick Kosiol, chief executive of the S4BB, told the Guardian before the Amazon announcement: "I am seeing BlackBerry in constant restructuring over the past years … there has always been a quite vivid rotation of personnel within the developer relation folks."

BlackBerry has seen its fortunes plummet in the past two years as buyers have turned away from its keyboard-based devices towards Apple's iPhone and others using Google's Android mobile software. In its past two financial years since March 2012 it ha recorded net losses of $6.5bn, cut thousands of jobs, and seen handset shipments drop from a peak of 14.9m per quarter in December 2010 to just 1.3m in the quarter to the start of March 2014.

John Chen, BlackBerry's chief executive brought in to effect a rescue of the company last September after an abortive attempt to find a buyer or organise a leveraged buyout, has been focussing on cutting costs and concentrating on the core business, of government and large business users who demand high security.

In its fourth quarter to the end of February, BlackBerry recorded revenues of just $976m - its smallest since the same period in 2007 - and shipped just 1.3m phones, and recorded net losses of $423m.

With its first-quarter results due on Thursday, analysts expect it to report revenues of $970m, and a loss of about $200m.

'Intervene in Iraq and Syria or Britain will face terror attacks': Blair warns UK should get involved as he defends decision to topple Saddam

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'Intervene in Iraq and Syria or Britain will face terror attacks': Blair warns UK should get involved as he defends decision to topple Saddam

Tony Blair this morning said Britain needed to take action in Iraq and Syria - or face terror attacks in at home.The former Prime Minister said the UK needed to intervene to stop a 'total disaster'. He insisted that he was not calling for troops on the ground - but suggested the 'selective use of air power' was one option on the table.

Mr Blair said: 'If we don't deal with the Syria issue then the problems are not just going to be for Syria and for the region, the problems are actually going to come back and they are going to hit us very directly even in our own country.'

He added: 'If you talk to security services in France and Germany and the UK, they will tell you their biggest single worry today returning jihadists fighters - our own citizens by the way - from Syria.

'We have to look at Syria, and Iraq and the region in context. We have to understand what's going on there and engage.'

He said that didn't mean 'ground troops' but it we shouldn't 'wash our hands of it and walk away'.

Mr Blair's remarks this morning come as extremist fighters from the al-Qaida-inspired 'Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant' bear down on Baghdad.

Rounded up to be killed: ISIS militants seize dozens of Iraqi soldiers before driving them to the desert to be shot

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Rounded up to be killed: ISIS militants seize dozens of Iraqi soldiers before driving them to the desert to be shot

Iraq's top military spokesman, Lt. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, confirmed the photos' authenticity today. He said he was aware of cases of mass murder of captured Iraqi soldiers in areas held by ISIS.

The full set of photos shows militants loading the men into flatbed trucks before forcing them to lie face-down in a shallow ditch with their arms tied behind their backs. The final images appear to show the bodies of the captives after being shot.

The grisly images could further sharpen sectarian tensions as hundreds of Shiites heed a call from a spiritual leader to take up arms against the Sunni militants that have swept across the north.

ISIS has vowed to take the battle to Baghdad and cities further south housing many Shiite shrines. Hundreds of Shiite men were today attending recruitment centres in Baghdad to be armed in response to a call by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani for Iraqis to defend their country

A car bomb meanwhile exploded in central Baghdad, killing 10 and wounding 21, according to police and hospital officials. Baghdad has seen an escalation in suicide and car bombings in recent months, mostly targeting Shiite neighbourhoods or security forces.

UN human rights chief Navi Pillay warned on Friday of 'murder of all kinds' and other war crimes in Iraq, and said the number killed in recent days may run into the hundreds, while the wounded could approach 1,000.

Speaking in Geneva, she said her office has received reports that militants rounded up and killed Iraqi soldiers as well as 17 civilians in a single street in Mosul.

Her office heard of 'summary executions and extrajudicial killings' after militants overran Iraqi cities and towns, the statement said.

However, despite the bloodshed, some Iraqis are already returning to Mosul after Islamist insurgents promised them cheap fuel and food, restored power and water, and the removal of barricades.

Many appeared excited to return, swelled with sectarian pride with the quick advances of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, who Sunni Muslims regard as liberators.

But elsewhere, tens of thousands of others, mainly Shiites, are piling into refugee camps as they flee the deadliest conflict to grip Iraq since the 2003 U.S.-UK invasion.

Transport Plane Shot Down, 49 Soldiers Killed Ukraine

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Transport Plane Shot Down, 49 Soldiers Killed Ukraine

Forty-nine Ukrainian military personnel were killed on Friday (13/06/2014), when a transport plane they were traveling in was shot down in Lugansk, a city in eastern Ukraine, by a group of armed pro-Russian.
Data victims Ukrainian military spokesman, Vladislav Seleznov, Saturday (14/06/2014). The ministry had earlier issued a statement that the aircraft payload type Ilyushin-76 carrying personnel and equipment to the International Airport flight destinations Lugansk.
Lugansk is one of the major cities in the eastern regions of Ukraine were hit by a wave of pro-Moscow separatist violence. An anti-terrorist crackdown carried out by the Ukrainian army has caused at least 270 people killed in the past two months.
The attack on the aircraft carrier is the case no more than a week to hold the government to the International Airport attack Lugansk to get rid of the armed groups from the airport.
Meanwhile, the United States on Friday (06/13/2014) has accused Russia of sending tanks and launchers to the pro-Moscow armed groups in Ukraine. "Americans have the information bawaha tanks no longer in use in Russia are in locations southwest of Russia," said deputy State Department spokesman Marie Harf, Friday. "We believe that these tanks from Russia."
Previously, Harf told reporters that the convoy of three T-64 tanks, some BM-21 Grad, or multiple rocket launchers and other military vehicles have crossed from Russia to Ukraine.
 
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