Saturday, November 30, 2013

Paul walker Dead or Not?

Paul Walker, Fast & Furious actor, dies in car crash

Movie star, 40, was a passenger in red Porsche that burst into flames after hitting a light pole and tree, according to reports

Paul Walker, shown with co-star Vin Diesel in Fast & Furious 5, has died in a car crash 
 
Paul Walker, shown with co-star Vin Diesel in Fast & Furious 5, has died in a car crash. Photograph: Rex Features
Paul Walker, a star of the Fast & Furious movie series, has died in a fiery car crash north of Los Angeles.
Walker, 40, was the passenger in a friend's car when it crashed on Saturday afternoon, a statement on the actor's Facebook page said. His publicist, Ame Van Iden, confirmed his death to the Associated Press.
The statement said Walker had been in the area to attend a charity event for his organisation Reach Out Worldwide.
"We ... are stunned and saddened beyond belief by this news," the statement said.
The Los Angeles county sheriff's department said deputies found a car engulfed in flames when they responded to a report of a collision in the community of Valencia. Two people found in the car were pronounced dead at the scene.
The Santa Clarita Signal reported that a red Porsche crashed into a light pole and tree and burst into flames.
Walker had been working on Fast & Furious 7 at the time of his death. He also starred in the suspense drama Hours, to be released this month

 

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Mystery of the McStay money

EXCLUSIVE - Mystery of the McStay money: Family found dead in a shallow grave could barely afford modest rent despite having $100,000 in the bank 

  • The McStay family were found in a shallow grave in the Californian desert last week, almost four years after they mysteriously vanished
  • They could barely afford to pay $210 a week on rent just months before they disappeared said a neighbor who now lives in their former home
  • Joseph and Summer McStay were also apparently being chased by debt collection agents, the IRS and lawyers representing business clients they owed money to
  • But they had $100,000 in the bank and had just bought a $230,000 family home
By Will Payne In San Clemente, California

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The McStay family - whose bodies were found in a shallow grave in the Californian desert almost four years after they mysteriously vanished - could barely afford to pay $210 a week on rent just months before they disappeared with $100,000 in the bank, it was claimed today.
Joseph and Summer McStay were also apparently being chased by debt collection agents, the IRS and lawyers representing business clients they owed money to.

Despite their apparent financial difficulties, they managed to find the cash to buy a $320,000 house around two months before they vanished on February 4 2010. They also had $100,000 in the bank when they vanished which remained untouched.

The reason for their sudden, unexplained disappearance has gripped America for almost four years, leaving law enforcement and amateur sleuths alike completely baffled.

Even the discovery of the bodies of parents Joseph and Summer and their two children Gianni and Joey Jr near a highway in Victorville, California last week has not stopped the wild speculation.

Some have suggested the family of four were killed by a Mexican cartel because of a business deal that went bad. For years it was believed they had fled to the Central American country after CCTV footage was discovered apparently showing them crossing the border on foot, four days after they went missing.

Now MailOnline has been given new information suggesting Joseph and Summer were barely able to keep up with payments for a modest rent on a small two bedroom apartment in San Clemente, California.

They lived in the property for around five years until just three or four months before their disappearance. Their landlord was apparently desperate to throw them out because they were constantly behind with the payments.
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Bodies: The McStay family bodies were found in a hole, pictured, in the Mojave desert in Victorville




But despite that, when they left the apartment, they bought a $320,000 house in nearby Fallbrook and had $100,000 in the bank. Joseph's fountain making company Earth Inspired Products was their main source of income.

The man who took over the rent at their old place is former US marine Dave White. He lived on the same street before moving into their old place and knew the family.

Mr White, 54, who now drives school buses said: 'I knew the landlord on the place before I moved in as I used to be handyman and I did some odd jobs around the place for him. I lived around ten houses up the street, so I knew the McStay’s to say hello to.

'From what I understand, before they moved out they were on the verge of being evicted, because they were behind on their rent. That was three years ago.

'The rent they were paying was only about $850 a month and the landlord, a guy called Bill, who has passed away now, was one of the nicest men you could meet.

'He was extremely easy to deal with and I had no problems at all with him, but he was in the process of evicting them. It was such a small amount and he was so easy going, I don’t understand how anyone could fall out with him.

Saddened: Michael McStay, brother of Joseph McStay, breaks down at a press conference Friday after his sibling's remains were confirmed as being found in the Mojave desert

The remains of Joseph MsStay and his wife Summer have been found in the Mojave desert in California this week, according to a family source
Problems: Mr and Mrs McStay were on the verge of being evicted from their San Clemente apartment, it has been claimed
'After I moved in I got a lot of their mail, which they obviously hadn’t redirected. I kept getting letters from attorney's representing a doctor's surgery outside of California.

'Apparently they had paid Mr McStay $14,000 up front to build a fountain and ship it out to them. But they obviously didn’t get anything. After the family went missing they weren’t going to get their fountain, but I think the letters started when they were still around.

'I also got letters from the IRS and debt collectors chasing them as well, but the majority of those came after they had vanished. I guess a lot of these people didn't realize they'd gone missing.

'It's hard to say how many of these debts came because they went missing and how many were owed before, but I really can’t explain how they went from not being able to pay $850 a month to buying a house and having $100,000 in the bank.'

And it seems the McStay's apparent inability to pay their rent was not the first time they had run into financial difficulty. In 1992 Joseph had a small claims judgement of just over $5,000 against him from an associate who took him court.

Then in 1999 Joseph, his older brother Michael and sister Heather had a legal dispute with a company In San Francisco.

At the time they were running a company called Dana Point Fountains and a firm called Zen Again Productions took them to the District Court.


The McStay family home was found with food on the counter and the pet dogs abandoned when police went to investigate in 2010

Are they alive? When they vanished, Gianni was 4 (left) and Joseph Jr was 3 (right)
Are they alive? When they vanished, Gianni was 4 (left) and Joseph Jr was 3 (right)
Are they alive? When they vanished along with their parents, Gianni was four (left) and Joseph Jr was three

In 2004 Joseph seemed to run into more trouble, filing for bankruptcy with California Central Court in Santa Ana. The bankruptcy was discharged around three months later.

Joseph's business dealings have come under scrutiny in the past in relation to his disappearance.
Back in 2010 CBS News claimed detectives were looking into his association with an ex con called Chase Merritt.

The former metal worker and welder was Joseph's business partner and he was one of the first people to notice the family were missing

Department of Corrections records show Merritt served time in prison for a burglary conviction in 1978. He was then sent back to prison in 1987 for receiving stolen property, according to State records.

An acquaintance who knew Merritt in the 1980s told CBS News 8 he has a checkered past.

'I think police should look at him and anyone associated with him,' the female acquaintance said. She asked not to be identified.

Joseph's financial history certainly raises questions, but fails to provide any real answers as to why they disappeared without trace almost four years ago.

On Thursday February 4, 2010 Mr McStay – who was then 40 - had a meeting in Rancho Cucamonga about a fountain Earth Inspired Products was building.

Summer, 43, was at home with Gianni, 4; Joey Jr., 3, known as Chubba; and the two dogs, Bear and Digger.

predict four inches of snow for England

Weather forecasts predict four inches of snow as Britain prepares for the 2013 big freeze

BRITAIN is braced for winter to roar in next week with much of the country on alert for freezing Arctic gales and heavy snow.

By: Nathan Rao
 
A woman struggles to walk on the ice and battles against gale force winds A woman struggles to walk on the ice and battles against gale force winds [PA]
The mercury is set to plunge below -10C (14F) in parts with wintry showers poised to hit huge swathes of the UK.
Forecasters warned that a mass of bitterly cold air from the Arctic is set to smother the country.
Up to four inches of snow will carpet parts of the North while the first flurries are expected in central and southern regions.
The bleak news comes as long-range forecasters warn that Britain could be crippled by a “record-breaking and historical” big freeze this winter. Prolonged cold weather and relentless heavy snowfall threaten to grind the country to a halt until the beginning of spring.
Remote parts of the North – including the Cairngorm mountains in Scotland – could see the mercury plummet as low as -15C next Tuesday.
Jonathan Powell, forecaster for Vantage Weather Services, said the worst weather is due to hit during the middle of next week.
He warned that a ferocious “Polar plunge” of bitterly cold winds could see overnight temperatures dive to -10C with windchill in the North while the South will shiver in lows of -5C.

lonely Indian man with huge facial tumour

Desperately lonely Indian man with huge facial tumour undergoes surgery – and now hopes he’ll find true love

  • Lalit Ram, 23, lived as a virtual recluse in his remote Indian village
  • Has neurofibromatosis, which caused a large sagging tumour on his face
  • Condition caused him problems eating and he cried with loneliness
  • But his life has changed dramatically after team of doctors removed tumour
  • Told by local priests he had no chance of persuading a woman to marry him
  • Now hopes his improved appearance will help him find a wife
By Anna Hodgekiss
A farmer's son suffering from a large facial tumour is looking for love after having life-changing surgery.
Lalit Ram lived as a virtual recluse in his remote Indian village due to the condition neurofibromatosis which caused a large sagging tumour on his face.
Desperately poor and unable to work, Lalit was left to care for his family's buffaloes in a tiny shed and even had to sleep there.

Lalit Ram lived as a virtual recluse in his remote Indian village due to the condition neurofibromatosis which caused a large sagging tumour on his face
Lalit Ram lived as a virtual recluse in his remote Indian village due to the condition neurofibromatosis which caused a large sagging tumour on his face


The 23-year-old said before the surgery: 'When I was a kid the tumour was smaller. It grew as I grew, but no one paid attention to it.
'Whatever work I do I do at home. If I go anywhere, people laugh and stare and I get embarrassed.

 

'I have problems eating and drinking. Sometimes I feel so lonely because I have no one to talk to. I cry when I am on my own.
'Because I sleep in the shed with the buffalo, the mosquitoes bite me all the time. It is so hot in that room I have to get up and walk around in the middle of the night.
'I keep my feelings buried in my heart. I want to earn money, work hard, go out to work and get married.


But his life has changed dramatically after an amazing team of doctors came together to help him.
A new TV series of inspiring human stories reveals the pioneering surgery and follows the medical team as they battle to save Lalit and transform his life.
Lalit, 23, said: 'I feel very happy because things are much better. Having the operation was scary because I didn't know if I would live or die.
'But I knew I had to go through with it because I couldn't carry on as I was. Not only was it making me sad, but it was making everyone around me sad. Now things are much better.
Change: Since this picture was taken, Lalit's life has changed dramatically after a team of doctors came together to help him
Change: Since this picture was taken, Lalit's life has changed dramatically after a team of doctors came together to help him
'I can go to work and earn money. And maybe now I can find a wife.
'My future wife should be a little educated, be able to run the household, maintain the house and be beautiful.'

Villagers in remote Bihar, north India, are even planning to help Lalit by building him a home of his own.
It was a massive change from just months earlier when doctors did not know if Lalit would survive surgery after he started bleeding excessively during the operation.
Surgeons knew removing the tumours - caused by the genetic disorder neurofibromatosis - would be a huge risk after discovering Lalit's growth was packed with tiny blood vessels that would bleed heavily when cut.
They also learned Lalit suffered from abnormally low levels of hemoglobin - a protein that transports oxygen in the blood - because of his poor nutrition.
Lalit, who started developing the tumours as a child, was treated and opted to go through with the six-hour surgery last year despite the risks.
Dr Vivek Kumar, of the Sir Ganga Ram Hospital in Delhi, explained before the operation: 'I have never seen such a big tumour in my career.
'With Lalit, the tumour extended from the forehead, over part of the cheek, part of the ear, going behind the ear, involving the neck, chin and even up to the chest. It was very complicated.'
And there was a scare on the operating table when Lalit lost 1.5 litres of blood - five times the safe amount - and his vitals signs became critically unstable. 

WHAT IS NEUROFIBROMATOSIS?

Neurofibromatosis is the name for a number of genetic conditions that cause swellings or lumps.
Although many people who have the condition inherit it from one of their parents, up to 50 per cent develop it randomly from a gene mutation before they are born.
Despite their alarming appearance, the growths and swellings - called neurofibromas and caused by a growth of cells - are not cancerous or contagious.
The condition has long been associated with the ‘Elephant Man,’ the name given to Joseph Carey Merrick, who was severely disfigured.
However, in 1986, a new theory emerged that Mr Merrick may actually have had Proteus syndrome, a condition which involves symptoms such as abnormal growth of the bones, skin and head.
The confusion was again compounded in 2001 when it was proposed that he had suffered from a combination of neurofibromatosis type one (NF1) and Proteus syndrome.
However, DNA tests on his hair and bones have proven inconclusive.

Drinking Coffee can knock off your sleep

Drinking even one strong coffee in the afternoon can knock an HOUR off your sleep

  • The stimulating effects of caffeine last for up to six hours
  • The findings suggest coffee should not be consumed after about 5pm
By Emma Innes

Be it frothy-topped, laced with alcohol or taken as a warming accompaniment to the cheeseboard, coffee is seen as the drink that makes a meal complete.
But those late-night brews could be wiring you for a sleepless night ahead, research has shown.
According to scientists, drinking two or three cups of coffee, even six hours before bedtime, could cost you up to an hour’s sleep.
An after dinner coffee can disrupt your sleep for most of the night, reducing the amount of shut-eye you get by up to an hour
An after dinner coffee can disrupt your sleep for most of the night, reducing the amount of shut-eye you get by up to an hour, according to new American research
Researchers from Wayne State University, Michigan, followed the sleeping habits of 12 people who were given pills containing 400mg of caffeine – the equivalent of two or three coffees.
Over four days, the trial members took their doses six and three hours before bedtime and another when they turned out the lights. One of the three daily pills was a placebo, with no caffeine in it, and on one day all three pills were placebos.
 
The results, published in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, revealed the pills made users toss and turn and lose up to an hour’s sleep – prompting a warning to avoid caffeine after 5pm.
Psychiatrist Professor Christopher Drake, of Wayne State University, in Michigan, said: ‘Drinking a big cup of coffee on the way home from work can lead to negative effects on sleep just as if someone were to consume caffeine closer to bedtime.
‘People tend to be less likely to detect the disruptive effects of caffeine on sleep when taken in the afternoon.
Sleep disturbance was measured subjectively with a standard sleep diary, and objectively using a home sleep monitor.
Dr Safwan Badr, of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, said: ‘Sleep specialists have always suspected caffeine can disrupt sleep long after it is consumed.
‘This study provides objective evidence supporting the general recommendation avoiding caffeine in the late afternoon and at night is beneficial for sleep.’
The research published in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine is the first to investigate the effects of a given dose of caffeine taken at different times before sleep.
The results suggest caffeine generally should be avoided after 5pm in order to allow for healthy sleep.
Experts have found caffeine, the stimulant in coffee, interrupts the flow of melatonin –the chemical that actually sends us to sleep.
Secreted by the pineal gland deep in the brain, the hormone helps control body rhythms and tells our bodies when to sleep and when to wake.
A previous study in Israel showed caffeinated coffee halves the body's levels of the sleep hormone and leads to an hour and a half less sleep a night.
Britons spend about £850million a year on coffee. Researchers at Bristol University have shown drinking several cups each morning helps people to work more efficiently.
But heavy consumption of more than four cups a day has been linked to ill health.

Eating a full English breakfast CAN help you lose weight

 Protein - not cereal or fruit -  is best for preventing hunger pangs

  • A meal high in protein instead of carbohydrate or fibre for breakfast can fight off hunger and avoid the urge to over-eat later in the day
  • Cereal and fruit were found to be less filling, resulting in hunger pangs

Eating a full English for breakfast can help you lose weight, a new study suggests.
Research shows that a meal high in protein instead of carbohydrate or fibre for breakfast can fight off hunger and avoid the urge to over-eat later in the day.

A hearty sitting of foods like sausage, egg or bacon instead of low-fat cereals or fruit for the first meal of the day helps to curb hunger throughout the morning and cut the number of calories eaten at lunch time, experts claim.
A hearty sitting of foods like sausage, egg or bacon for the first meal of the day helps to curb hunger throughout the morning and cut the number of calories eaten at lunch time
A hearty sitting of foods like sausage, egg or bacon for the first meal of the day helps to curb hunger throughout the morning and cut the number of calories eaten at lunch time

An experiment at the University of Missouri on a group of 18 to 55-year-old women showed that a high-protein breakfast kept them fuller longer than a meal with less protein but the same amount of fat and fibre.
The team, led by research scientist Dr Kevin Maki, found eating between around 35 grams of protein for breakfast - the equivalent to a four-egg omelette or two sausages and a rasher of bacon - helped regulate appetite.

 

He said: 'Eating a breakfast rich in protein significantly improves appetite control and may help women to avoid overeating later in the day.'
In the experiment the participants all ate a 300 calorie meal with equal amounts of fat and fibre, although one group had between 30 and 39g of protein in their bowls and a third group were given just a glass of water.

Dr Heather Leidy, an assistant professor specialising in appetite regulation, explained: "In the USA, many people choose to skip breakfast or choose low protein foods because of lack of high protein convenient choices.
The team tracked the test subjects' hunger throughout the morning, using appetite questionnaires every half an hour to gauge levels of hunger, fullness, and desire to eat before before breakfast and up until lunch.
The group who ate a high-protein meal had improved appetite rating scores and ate less of the lunchtime meal of tortellini and sauce than the other groups.
Dr Leidy said: "These results demonstrate that commercially prepared convenient protein-rich meals can help women feel full until lunch time and potentially avoid overeating and improve diet quality."

Salt of Earth

Salt of the earth: The 5,000-year-old mines inside caves and tunnels in Turkey which are still in use today

From the surface there is nothing special about the hilly countryside around the city of Cankiri in Turkey.
However 1,300ft below ground is a stunning salt mine which was first dug by primitive humans around 5,000 years ago.
Despite its incredible age the mine is still in use today and produces more then 500 tonnes of salt each year which is used in cooking and for a range of souvenirs.

This is the salt mine outside of Cankiri in Turkey which began being mined in 300BC and is still in use today
This is the salt mine outside of Cankiri in Turkey which began being mined in 300BC and is still in use today

The original miners were Hitties, an ancient race of people who had an empire in the Middle East and used primitive tools and their hands to extract the salt
The original miners were Hitties, an ancient race of people who had an empire in the Middle East and used primitive tools and their hands to extract the salt


The pictures were taken by Melih Sular, 32, as part of the 2013 National geographic photography cometition
The pictures were taken by Melih Sular, 32, as part of the 2013 National geographic photography cometition

According to a 1971-79 survey there is still more than 1billion tonnes of ore left in the mine, which is extracted using machines and underground blasting.
These pictures were taken by Melih Sular, 32, who was guided through the caves by Murat Danaci as part of the National Geographic photography contest.

He said: 'When I first entered the salt cave I was afraid. I thought to myself: "What happens if it collapses?"
The mine produces about 500 tonnes of salt every day which is sold on for use in cooking and as souvenirs
The mine produces about 500 tonnes of salt every day which is sold on for use in cooking and as souvenirs

While temperatures on the surface regularly reach 91F (33C) they rarely stray above 59F (15C) in the caves
While temperatures on the surface regularly reach 91F (33C) they rarely stray above 59F (15C) in the caves
At its deepest point the mine extends down more than 1,300ft (400m) below the ground
At its deepest point the mine extends down more than 1,300ft (400m) below the ground

'The cave is cool and scentless, which is because it is a very old salt cave. The walls are all made of rock salt and the texture is varied because of the digging machines used.'


The ore extracted from the mine often comes in at 90 per cent purity
The ore extracted from the mine often comes in at 90 per cent purity

He added: 'I've never seen anything like it before. The most striking part of the caves is the old gallery, which were dug by Hittites.
'It's interesting because they dug this gallery with simple tools and their own hands, unlike today's methods.'
While temperatures in the city regularly reach 92 Fahrenheit (33C), the mercury never strays much above 59 degrees (15C) inside the ancient caves.

The Hitties were an ancient race who built an empire in the Middle East which covered most of modern-day central Turkey, northern Syria and Iraq and flourished between 1,400 and 1,200BC.
They were famous for their skill in building and making chariots and wrote in a hieroglyphic-type language called cuneiform.
They were eventually destroyed after several costly wars, particularly a defeat to the army of Ramses II, pharaoh of the Egyptians. Competition for succession of the throne also drained their resources.
Today the mine has 16 workers and contains a small canteen, a mosque, repair room, workshop and a first aid room.
All the ore extracted from the mine, which measures in at around 90 per cent purity, is taken by diggers to nearby railway tracks where it is transported to a factory for processing.
There is so much salt contained in the ground around the mine that it appears around the edge of a nearby lake after being dissolved into the water.
The Hitties, who first mined here in 3000BC, had an empire which reached from Turkey into Syria and Iraq
The Hitties, who first mined here in 3000BC, had an empire which reached from Turkey into Syria and Iraq

The 16-strong workforce use digging machines and dynamite blasts to extract the salt from the clay soil
The 16-strong workforce use digging machines and dynamite blasts to extract the salt from the clay soil
Despite its age a survey in 1979 showed the mine had more than 1billion tonnes of ore still left
Despite its age a survey in 1979 showed the mine had more than 1billion tonnes of ore still left

Bay-area sinkhole prompts evacuations

Two Dunedin homes topple in, boat saved

 

 

DUNEDIN — Residents of several Florida homes have been evacuated because of a sinkhole that opened in a back yard in Pinellas County on Thursday.
Dunedin Deputy Fire Chief Trip Barrs said the hole appeared to be about 12 feet wide when officials arrived on the scene. Residents of the neighboring houses also were evacuated as a precaution.
News media reports say the ground is so unstable that two homes must be demolished.
Television footage showed part of a patio caved in and a boat on the edge of the hole. Tampa area television stations reported that a neighboring pool appears to have cracks.
The affected neighborhood is in Dunedin, a small city in northern Pinellas County, about 20 miles north of St. Petersburg.
Sinkholes are common in Florida because the peninsula is made up of porous carbonate rocks such as limestone that store and help move water underground. Over time, the rocks can dissolve from an acid created from oxygen in water, causing a void under the limestone roof. When dirt, clay or sand gets too heavy for the limestone roof, it can collapse, creating a sinkhole.
On Feb. 28, Jeffrey Bush died when a sinkhole opened under his bedroom in Seffner, near Tampa. His body was never recovered. In August, sections of a building at a resort near Orlando collapsed into a sinkhole. No one was injured.
Homeowner Michael Dupre said the family heard a noise that sounded like a sledgehammer pounding on the wall early Thursday morning.
Dupre told Bay News 9 there had been “sinkhole activity” in the area. “After the Seffner sinkhole, we were scared. We've been dealing with our insurance company and finally two days ago, they started working on our house. Now it looks like our house is gone.”
As the hole grew, it swallowed the Dupre's porch and new boat. Now, his neighbor's swimming pool and a portion of that home have fallen in as well.
Engineers were called in to assess the homes and ultimately decided both Dupre's home and his neighbor's would be complete losses.
A backhoe was used to pull Dupre's boat from the hole.
Crews had feared fuel in the boat could leak into groundwater.
Otherwise, the rescue crews are in a holding pattern until the hole stabilizes.
State officials say three counties in the Tampa region are known as “sinkhole alley.”
Two-thirds of the sinkhole damage claims reported to the state Office of Insurance Regulation between 2006 and 2010 came from Hernando, Hillsborough and Pasco counties.

Russia: Very Good Chance For a Deal with Iran

Russia: Very Good Chance For a Deal with Iran

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says that the world powers and Iran have no fundamental disagreements.


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Saturday that there is a “very good chance” of reaching a long-sought deal on Iran’s nuclear program, reports RIA Novosti.
Speaking to Russian television, Lavrov said that the world powers and Iran have no fundamental disagreements.
“Now there are no fundamental disagreements on the issues that need to be resolved in practical terms,” and what is necessary is to “correctly draw up the agreement we have reached in diplomatic language to make it a truly joint document rather than the one imposed from outside,” Lavrov noted.
He added that last week’s talks in Geneva with Iran’s foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif showed for the first time in many years that the six world powers and Iran are “ready to seek common ground instead of presenting mostly uncorrelated views.”
The talks in Geneva between Iran and the six world powers came close to a deal. While they ended with no agreement and with both sides blaming each other, another round is set for November 20.
World powers and Iran are negotiating a tentative deal that would freeze some of Iran’s suspected nuclear activities in exchange for relief from crippling economic sanctions.
Lavrov’s comments seem to confirm remarks made by a senior administration official in the United States on Friday.
The official had indicated that the sides were "getting close" to an interim deal with Iran that would prevent its nuclear program "from advancing, and roll it back" in key areas.
The official added that such a deal would "extend the breakout time" that Iran would need to achieve a nuclear weapon and "shorten the time to notice if they tried.”
Israel has repeatedly warned that the deal being offered to Iran is a dangerous one and would allow it to continue its nuclear program, leading to a public fight with American officials over the issue.
On Thursday, Economics Minister Naftali Bennett delivered a speech at the Brookings Institution in Washington in which he warned against lifting the sanctions on Iran.

Egypt Gives Russian Dignitaries Red Carpet Welcome


Egypt Gives Russian Dignitaries Red Carpet Welcome 


In an echo of the Cold War, Egypt gave the red carpet welcome Thursday to senior Russian officials aiming to expand Moscow's influence through military and economic cooperation with a key U.S. ally in the Middle East.
The flirtation underscores how U.S.-Egyptian relations have soured lately over the Obama administration's criticism of the July 3 military coup. And although Egyptian officials say the one-time Soviet client is not turning away from the United States, the military-backed government is clearly signaling it has options.
Egypt's Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy sought to downplay speculation of a major foreign policy shift, describing the visit by Russian's foreign and defense ministers as an "activation" of existing ties and speaking positively of cooperation between the two countries "in multiple fields."
But the fact that Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Defense Minister Sergei Shogiu arrived in Cairo weeks after the United States froze millions of dollars in military aid is significant.
The officials gave no details about any arms deals being discussed.
Russia's Interfax news agency recently quoted an unidentified official of the state Rosoboron export arms trader as saying that there are no plans to sign big contracts during the Cairo talks.
It said Egypt has shown interest in purchasing Russian air defense missile systems and MiG-29 fighter jets, combat helicopters and other weapons. But it quoted an unnamed official dealing with arms trade as saying that no big deals are expected in the near future as Egypt currently can't afford it.
However, a retired Egyptian military general who maintains close ties to the present army leadership said Egypt was inching close to signing a $2 billion deal with Russia for the purchase of 24 MiG fighter-jets as well as anti-tank missiles and an air- defense system.
"Do you want us to take the (U.S.) slap on our face and remain silent? Of course not," said the retired general, Hossam Sweilam. "This pressure is not acceptable, so we returned to the Russians to maintain our fighting capabilities."
Tensions are high between Egypt and the U.S. — its chief foreign backer and benefactor since the 1970s, since the ouster of Morsi, Egypt's first freely elected president, and the subsequent crackdown on his Islamist supporters that has left hundreds dead and thousands arrested.
Lavrov and Shogiu were greeted with an honor guard and met at Defense Ministry headquarters for talks with Egypt's powerful Defense Minister and military chief, Gen. Abdel-Fatah el-Sissi, who led the coup that ousted Morsi, and his commanders.
Throughout the day, state television broadcast black-and-white archival footage of Soviet and Egyptian leaders meeting in the 1950s and 1960s, the two decades that saw the two nations forge a strategic friendship at the height of the Cold War and Egypt's wars with Israel, Washington's closest Middle East ally.
"We seek to energize a relationship that is already in existence," Fahmy told reporters later after meeting with Lavrov.
When asked whether Russia would replace the U.S. as his country's chief ally, Fahmy said Egypt was not looking for a "substitute for anyone" and that Russia was too significant for such a role.
Lavrov, speaking through an interpreter, described the meeting as "historic.

Israel - Saudi contingency plan

Israel working with Saudi Arabia on Iran’s nuclear contingency plan - report

Tehran's research reactor centre (AFP Photo)
Tehran's research reactor centre (AFP Photo)

Israel’s Mossad, along with Saudi officials, is working on contingency plans that could include an attack on Iran if its nuclear program is not curbed enough during the negotiations in Geneva this week, a new report has revealed.
Both powers have expressed concern that restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program will not be enough. According to The Sunday Times newspaper, Saudi Arabia already gave Israel the green light to use its airspace in the case of an attack on Iran.
It was also revealed that the Saudis were willing to assist an Israeli attack by cooperating with the use of drones, rescue helicopters, and tanker planes. “Once the Geneva agreement is signed, the military option will be back on the table. The Saudis are furious and are willing to give Israel all the help it needs,” an unnamed diplomatic source told the paper.
Tehran has been negotiating sanction relief in Geneva with the P5+1 countries - consisting of the US, Britain, France, Germany, Russia, and China - in exchange for assurances that it will not develop a nuclear weapon. Exact terms on offer from both sides have not been made public, but no agreement was made last weekend. The sides will sit down for a new round of talks on November 20.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned that lifting sanctions on Iran without demanding sufficient concessions in return will only encourage Tehran on its path to nuclear armament and lead to future conflict.
Israel has been lobbying hard against appeasement, with Netanyahu himself claiming that Iran is about to clinch “the deal of the century.”
On Saturday, Netanyahu spoke to French daily Le Figaro about the situation, stating that Israel and the “leading states in the Arab world” agree when it comes to Tehran and its nuclear capabilities.
“We all think that Iran should not be allowed to have the capacities to make nuclear weapons,” he said. “We all think that a tougher stance should be taken by the international community. We all believe that if Iran were to have nuclear weapons, this could lead to a nuclear arms race in the Middle East, making the Middle East a nuclear tinderbox.”
The prime minister’s comments were made just before French President Francois Hollande was scheduled to arrive in Israel for talks on Iran on Sunday. French objections reportedly caused an obstacle in the Iran talks last weekend.

An attack would be an ‘economic catastrophe’

Iranian political analyst Seyed Mohammad Marandi told RT that an imminent joint attack on Iran was unlikely given the serious ramifications it could provoke for the region.
“It is highly unlikely that the Saudis and Israelis would want to attack Iran because at the end of the day both countries would be losers, they would be seen as aggressors and obviously the Iranians would retaliate,” Marandi told RT.
Although he consented that the Saudis and Israelis have been moving closer together lately, neither of them stood to gain from attacking Iran.
“It would create an economic catastrophe for the world and only the Saudis and the Israelis would be to blame,” said Marandi.

 

Saudi Capital hit with Flood

Saudi capital hit with rare floods, residents urged to stay indoors

ars drive through a flooded street in northern Riyadh, on November 17, 2013, after heavy rains fell overnight in the Saudi capital, caused floods and traffic jams which forced the Saudi Eduction Ministry to suspend studies in schools and universities for one day (AFP Photo / Fayez Nureldine)
ars drive through a flooded street in northern Riyadh, on November 17, 2013, after heavy rains fell overnight in the Saudi capital, caused floods and traffic jams which forced the Saudi Eduction Ministry to suspend studies in schools and universities for one day (AFP Photo / Fayez Nureldine)

Severe flooding is being reported in Saudi Arabia, especially in the kingdom’s capital of Riyadh, with the government closing schools and urging people to stay indoors amid heavy rain. Flooding is rare in the country dominated by the Arabian Desert.
Witnesses in Riaydh, which is also the country’s largest city, are reporting flooded streets and shops. Pictures posted on Twitter show cars drowning in rainwater.
Saudi Civil Defense warned citizens to stay indoors for their own safety, Al Arabiya reported.
Weather forecasts are predicting heavy rains to continue to batter Saudi Arabia for the entire weekend. The eastern part of the country looks to be hit the most by the rains. 
The government is setting up a disaster management center in the holy city of Mecca and is planning to close schools and evacuate people in low-lying areas, Bahrain’s Gulf Daily News reported.

Rains in the northwest city of Ha’il are expected to flood the Al Adeera valley, according to media reports. 
Meanwhile, witnesses reported that villagers 70 kilometers west of Ha’il were taking shelter on the rooftops of houses, mosques, and even mountaintops as the flooding began.
The desert kingdom has in the past been criticized for its lack of preparedness for such situations, as flooding is rare in that part of the world. 
Residents were killed during flash floods in Riyadh, Baha, and Ha’il on May 13. The rain was reportedly the heaviest in more than 25 years. 
Floods in the port city of Jeddah, located on the Red Sea, killed 123 people in 2009 and 10 others in 2011.


A car drives through a flooded street in northern Riyadh, on November 17, 2013, after heavy rains fell overnight in the Saudi capital, caused floods and traffic jams which forced the Saudi Eduction Ministry to suspend studies in schools and universities for one day (AFP Photo / Fayez Nureldine)

A car drives through a flooded street in northern Riyadh, on November 17, 2013, after heavy rains fell overnight in the Saudi capital, caused floods and traffic jams which forced the Saudi Eduction Ministry to suspend studies in schools and universities for one day (AFP Photo / Fayez Nureldine)



A Saudi labourer tries to clear a flooded street in northern Riyadh, on November 17, 2013, after heavy rains fell overnight in the Saudi capital, causing floods and traffic jams and forcing the Saudi Eduction Ministry to suspend studies in schools and universities for one day (AFP Photo / Fayez Nureldine)
A Saudi labourer tries to clear a flooded street in northern Riyadh, on November 17, 2013, after heavy rains fell overnight in the Saudi capital, causing floods and traffic jams and forcing the Saudi Eduction Ministry to suspend studies in schools and universities for one day (AFP Photo / Fayez Nureldine)



Aid for Typhoon Victims

Samaritan's Purse is delivering emergency aid to people devastated by the terrible storm  

The true extent of the nightmarish damage inflicted on the people of the Philippines by Typhoon Haiyan became shockingly clear as the Samaritan’s Purse team traveled to hard-hit areas where we are beginning to help.
As they approached, they began to see debris piled up higher and higher along the road. People stood in front of their destroyed homes—children, mothers, and families—crying out and holding signs: Need Help, We Are Hungry and Thirsty. “The sight is gut-wrenching,” said Andrew Conard, the Water, Sanitation and Hygiene specialist on the team. “In the areas where the winds were the highest intensity, nearly every house is either completely destroyed or has lost the roof.”
Hundreds of thousands of people lost their homes to the fury of the typhoon.
Hundreds of thousands of people lost their homes to the fury of the typhoon.
It’s been just over a week since the deadly super typhoon—one of the most powerful ever recorded—slammed into the Philippines. The winds leveled tens of thousands of homes. In some places, tsunami-like storm surges swept up to one-mile inland, causing more destruction and loss of life. At least 580,000 people have been displaced.
The days following the storm have revealed the true extent of the destruction.
“There is total devastation everywhere,” said Patrick Seger, the Samaritan’s Purse team leader. “People are living in the rubble of their homes and sleeping out in the rain, open to the elements. Even if they have a partial house, they are staying with it to protect their belongings. They need tarps to put over their homes as they begin to rebuild.”
Samaritan’s Purse deployed disaster response specialists, including water and nutrition experts, to the region immediately after the storm. Our team is working in the Bogo City region, on the northern part of Cebu Island, and on Bantayan Island. We are distributing protective tarps, blankets, hygiene kits, and emergency family food packets, and installing community water filters.
Samaritan's Purse has begun to distributed supplies, including tarps for shelter, on Bantayan Island.
Samaritan’s Purse has begun to distributed supplies, including tarps for shelter, on Bantayan Island.
“Bantayan Island and the smaller islands near it are struggling to get a daily supply of water and food,” Conard said. “Nearly all of the boats are destroyed. These boats were the means for their livelihoods. They depend on boats for transporting supplies, food and water to their homes. The water sources in the island are too brackish to drink and now they are short on supplies.”
Since arriving, we have been working with church partners and volunteers to prepare hygiene and family food kits. Four thousand emergency supply kits, containing food and hygiene items, have been distributed to families in northern Cebu and on Bantayan Island. Another 4,000 kits are being assembled for distribution to families in affected areas.
“We are trying to share the love of Christ and work with all the churches here,” Seger said.
Food and hygiene parcels are on their way to help people who lost everything.
Food and hygiene parcels are on their way to help people who lost everything.
On Wednesday, a team of Samaritan’s Purse staff, church pastors, and volunteers traveled to Bantayan Island to begin distributing the emergency supplies, including food parcels and tarps that can be used for shelter.
Filipino Christians help assemble food packets.
Filipino Christians help assemble food packets.
More relief arrived on Sunday morning local time, when a cargo jet chartered by Samaritan’s Purse and filled with 110 tons of emergency supplies landed in Cebu City. The airlift includeed plastic sheeting for shelters, as well as community water filtration systems, thousands of blankets and mosquito nets, medical tents, medical supplies, and generators.
“There is a huge need here for water, “ Seger said. “People want water more than they want food. Water filters are needed in towns and villages everywhere. Tarps are also needed to cover damaged roofs and homes. They are on their way.”
Samaritan’s Purse also is working with health officials to see how we can meet critical medical needs.
“They were very appreciative and very much want to incorporate us into their plan,” said Lance Plyler, medical officer for our response. “They have tentatively assigned a hospital for us to partner with and help them get back on their feet.”
As teams continue to meet physical needs, they also pray with people in dire straits, letting them know that God has not forgotten them
“When people say, ‘What are immediate needs?’ they always say water and food and shelter, which is great,” said Dave Shields, a volunteer helping to assemble the kits. “But they forget the fourth need, which is hope. As much as we can, we want to install hope and remind people that God is here in the midst of it. And the way they know God is here is because we’re here in the flesh.”