Airport uses radar, noise to prevent bird strikes

Wildlife biologist Steve Osmek checks a radar screen for information on birds close to the Seattle airport.
The next time you land safely in Seattle, you may want to thank Steve Osmek.

He’s the wildlife biologist whose job is to make sure that birds don’t get in the way of airplanes arriving and departing Seattle Tacoma International Airport. Even though the bird strikes that recently caused US Airways Flight 1549 to lose both engines and land in New York’s Hudson River has brought greater urgency to the issue, the danger presented by avian life is nothing new to Sea-Tac. The airport has had a wildlife biologist on staff since the 1970s, Osmek says, and annually spends about $250,000 on bird-removal operations. Osmek and a crew of about 20 helpers use low-tech and high-tech methods to guard against bird strikes. First, they combat the environments that attract birds by planting foliage that prevents them from landing and by covering any nearby bodies of water with netting. “The main thing is to make sure the birds are not used to coming here to the airport,” Osmek says. “They don’t get used to feeding here, nesting here and in turn coming into closer contact with the aircraft.” Birds that still stray into Sea-Tac airspace are harassed relentlessly. Osmek uses a laser with a scope on it to shine a green light near birds. The light flashing near the birds mimics a predator stalking them, Osmek says, and usually causes them to take flight. For more persistent opponents, Osmek reaches into the deep arsenal of what he calls his “pyrotechnics.”

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They are explosive shells that he uses to ward off birds — sometimes large flocks of them — entering airspace near the airport’s three runways. Osmek fires the shells with a variety of pistols or a shotgun. Some boom loudly, and others scream into the sky before blowing up into puffs of smoke. One projectile travels up to 1,200 feet before exploding like a thunderclap. It is intended to ward off high-flying birds like hawks or eagles. Osmek says the pyrotechnics only scare the birds and do not harm them. “We’re not aiming the pyrotechnics right at them,” he explains. “We are usually aiming to where we can direct them to a safer place.” Watch Osmek at work at the airport » Using the pyrotechnics is also economical. One shell costs about $10, Osmek says, while a bird strike on a plane can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage or much worse. But the airport’s most valuable tool, Osmek says, isn’t one that scares off birds — it’s one that helps find them. In three separate locations around the airport are avian radar terminals that track the birds within six miles of the airport and up to 3,000 feet.

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The radar is similar to marine radar but used for a very different application. The avian radar allows the bird crew at the 2,700-acre airport to focus on specific areas. “[The birds] are objects I don’t see with my naked eye, but you look at the radar and it raises your awareness of those areas where you should take another look,” Osmek explains. “I may scan with my binoculars, but I might not necessarily know where to scan, but now I know there’s a bird there.” Innovations to the radar now help airport staff determine at what altitude the birds are flying. After studying the radar long enough, Osmek can tell from flight patterns what kind of bird he is looking at. It’s important when trying to prevent bird strikes to know if you are dealing with a sparrow or Canada goose. Ed Herricks, a University of Illinois professor who placed the radar at Sea-Tac and works with Accipiter, the maker of the radar, says the next challenge for the systems will be further implementing them into airport operations without “crying wolf.” “There is a critical need to have the data moved into the decision-making process of controllers and pilots,” Herricks says. But, he adds: “You want to be absolutely sure when you say something is there that something is there.” Tim Nohara, the president of Accipiter, foresees a time soon when the radar will not only help biologists on the ground but will be part of the information coming into airport control towers like weather and wind shear data. Electronic alerts could be sent to controllers or pilots if they are flying too closely to a flock of birds, Nohara says.

“With the radar, airports can be much more effective in the strategies they employ,” Nohara says. And if bird strikes do occur, the radar “will help investigators determine what happened,” he says. O’Hare in Chicago, JFK in New York and Dallas Fort-Worth are airports slated to receive similar radar systems this year.

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Hiddink takes charge at Chelsea

Guus Hiddink has the chance to take charge at Stamford Bridge until end of the season.
English Premier League side Chelsea confirmed Thursday that Guus Hiddink will take charge until the end of the season following the dismissal of Luis Felipe Scolari.

The veteran Dutchman currently coaches the Russian national team, which he led to the semifinals of last year’s European Championship. Chelsea said it thanked the Russian Football Union for its “understanding and cooperation.” It was unclear whether Hiddink would continue as Russian coach. Asked if he could combine both high-profile jobs in an interview earlier this week with Russian newspaper Sport Express, Hiddink replied: “You correctly use the word “if”. He added: “I can’t rule out that option but it is at the stage of being examined. If everything is organized properly a move to London could happen.” Russia have two World Cup qualifiers between now and the end of the Premier League season — Azerbaijan at home at the end of March and Liechtenstein away on April 1. Hiddink has previous experience of managing a club and country at the same time, successfully combining roles at PSV Eindhoven and Australia.

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Scolari went on Monday after a string of indifferent results which have left Chelsea in fourth place in the Premier League, but in the last 16 of the Champions League and fifth round of the FA Cup. “Unfortunately the results and performances of the team appeared to be deteriorating at a key time in the season,” said a statement on the club’s official Web site. “In order to maintain a challenge for the trophies we are still competing for we felt the only option was to make the change now.”

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Oklahomans dig out from tornado debris

A large home stands in ruins after Tuesday night's tornadoes in Oklahoma.
The severe storms that uprooted trees, demolished homes and killed at least eight people in central Oklahoma on Tuesday are expected to weaken Wednesday, authorities said.

A tornado watch that was in effect early Wednesday for central Oklahoma was lifted, the National Weather Service said. That was good news for people in the city of Lone Grove, who were dealing with extensive damage from the deadly storms that hit the area. Lone Grove, near the Texas line about 90 miles south of the capital, Oklahoma City, had all of the fatalities and most of the approximately 50 injuries caused by the storms, according to the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management. Watch funnel cloud touch down » Also hit hard by the storms were the towns of Pawnee and Edmond, both north of the capital. Dramatic television footage of one storm showed large funnel clouds that darkened the sky as the storm approached. It mangled homes, snapped trees and crushed cars with debris as it touched down. “The wind started blowing really hard and then died down,” a Lone Grove man told CNN affiliate KOCO-TV. Then, “all heck broke loose. I mean, it just broke loose. The whole house shook.” Watch post-tornado damage »

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Donetta Singleton, manager of Bill’s Fish House in Lone Grove, said one tornado’s path took it right past the restaurant. She said the post office was gone and a church was damaged. Lone Grove police said a trailer park was hit, while KOCO showed several homes flattened by the storm.

Mercy Memorial Health Center in Ardmore, about eight miles east of Lone Grove, received 46 people with injuries — seven considered major — after the storms passed, said Shana Hammond, a hospital spokeswoman. The storms knocked out power to about 29,000 OG&E customers, including nearly 10,000 in Bethany. iReport.com: Are you there Share photos, video

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Global alert issued for 85 terror suspects

Interpol says the scope of its global alert is unprecedented.
Interpol has issued a rare global security alert for 85 suspected al Qaeda-linked terrorists wanted by Saudi Arabia.

The “orange alert,” issued on Tuesday, comes after Saudi Arabia asked for Interpol’s help last week in apprehending the 83 Saudis and two Yemenis. Interpol Secretary General Ronald Noble said the alert is unprecedented. “Never before has Interpol been asked to alert the world about so many dangerous fugitives at one time,” Noble said in a news release. He also pointed out that the alert comes ahead of the 16th anniversary of the first World Trade Center bombing in New York. “Therefore must be especially vigilant of fugitive al Qaeda terrorists,” Noble said. Six people were killed and more than 1,000 injured on February 26, 1993, when a 1,200-pound (540 kilogram) bomb exploded in a rented van in the parking garage below Two World Trade Center. The 85 wanted “terrorists” are suspected of plotting attacks against Saudi Arabia, Interpol said.

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It is rare for the kingdom to announce that some of its most wanted terrorists are on the loose. It is also unusual for Saudi Arabia to ask for help in finding them. By asking for Interpol’s help, Saudi Arabia is sending a clear message that it thinks the men are dangerous. The country has taken great strides to crack down on al Qaeda within its borders, touting the fact that the suspects have fled beyond its borders as proof that operations against them are successful. In some cases, terror suspects wanted by Saudi Arabia have fled to the neighboring country of Yemen because they can hide out there more safely than Saudi Arabia, a source explained. Interpol is an international police organization aimed at facilitating cross-border police cooperation. It is headquartered in Lyon, France.

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Adebayor wins African Footballer of the Year Award

Emmanuel Adebayor poses for photographs with second placed Mohamed Aboutrika
Emmanuel Adebayor was Tuesday crowned African football player of the year.

The Arsenal striker saw off strong competition from Al Ahly’s Egyptian playmaker Mohamed Aboutrika and Chelsea’s Ghanaian midfielder Michael Essien to become the first ever player from Togo to pick up the award. “I’m very happy to have received this award,” he told the assembled dignitaries in Lagos, Nigeria, after receiving his accolade. “I’m highly honored by what I have done in African football and now that the World Cup is coming close and is in Africa, we’ll work hard to win the championship.” Adebayor, who beat Aboutrika into second place, was the overwhelming choice for the award after a stunning season where he scored 30 goals in all competitions for Arsenal and led Togo to the African Cup of Nations as well as the final round of qualifying for the 2010 World Cup. The Confederation of African Football (CAF) African Footballer of the Year award is one of the most prestigious awards in world football, one that recognizes some of the finest footballers in the game, whilst alerting the best teams in Europe to a huge pool of untapped talent. What do you think of Adebayor’s win Have your say Two of Africa’s most respected footballers, former winners Didier Drogba and Samuel Eto’o had backed the Arsenal man to win whilst former nominee Jay-Jay Okocha had spoken out in favor of the Aboutrika, who would have been the first African-based player to win the award in over two decades.

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“If it [CAF] is to pick the player that merits the 2008 award, I will give it to Aboutrika without blinking my eyes,” Okocha told Nigeria’s Daily Sun newspaper in the build up to Tuesday’s award. Certainly Aboutrika made a good claim for the accolade. Whilst Adebayor and Essien were pivotal players for club and country, both finished 2008 empty handed. Aboutrika, on the other hand, scored the goal that won Egypt the African Cup of Nations and drove his club side Al Ahly to both domestic league and African Champions League glory. The ceremony has been dogged with controversy in recent years. Nigerian forward Okocha, who controversially missed out to Samuel Eto’o for the 2004 award, claimed that internal political considerations, rather than footballing achievement, are the most important factors when deciding a winner. “Politics plays a very important role in the emergence of the best African player,” he said. “My inability to win the award [in 2004] made a lot of people cry foul.” And last year Chelsea forward Didier Drogba vowed to boycott the awards after being told that only players who turned up to the ceremony would have a chance of winning.

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“A prominent CAF official [was] telling me that if I did not come to the ceremony, the rules would be changed and the award would be given to the second-placed player,” he told French newspaper L’Equipe. The award eventually went to Sevilla’s prolific striker Frederic Kanoute. CAF deny that they switched the awards at the last moment. But it wasn’t all bad news for Egyptian football. “The Pharaohs” won National Team of the Year whilst Hassan Shehata was named Coach of Year. The other nominees Mohamed Aboutrika, Al Ahly, Egypt Few outside of Africa had heard of Mohamed Aboutrika until the rangy midfielder took the 2008 African Cup of Nations by the scruff of the neck. Aboutrika is quite simply the beating heart of both Al Ahly and the Egyptian national team. With his penetrating runs from midfield, goals and ability to be the creative fulcrum around which the rest of the team pivots, Aboutrika is arguably Africa’s most complete player. He may well be the only footballer on the list who doesn’t play in one of Europe’s top teams but there’s no questioning his achievements. In 2008 he lead Egypt to back to back African Cup of Nations victories, secured yet another domestic title for Al Ahly and, for good measure, was instrumental in their record sixth African Champions League title. Michael Essien, Chelsea, Ghana Last year was nothing if not action packed for Chelsea’s combative midfielder Michael Essien. Africa’s most expensive player began 2008 with a virtuoso performance at the 2008 African Cup Of Nations in his home country, driving the Black Stars to the semi finals and being named team of the tournament. But it was for Chelsea that he truly excelled, being instrumental in driving Chelsea on to second place in the Premiership and runners up in both the Champions League and the Carling Cup. Currently on the sidelines with a serious knee injury, Chelsea has been a shadow of their former selves without the Ghanaian. This is the fourth time in a row that Essien has made the final shortlist.

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Murders shock super-yacht industry

English Harbor, Antigua, where Australian luxury yacht captain Drew Gollan was murdered in January.
The murders of two super-yacht staff within a fortnight have shaken the luxury yacht industry and sparked calls for crews to exercise extreme caution.

Both murders occurred in popular yachting destinations in the Caribbean islands and involved violent attacks. Last week, U.S. luxury yacht chef Sara Kuszak, of Savannah, Georgia was murdered after being abducted during a morning run in the Puerto del Rey marina in Fajardo, Puerto Rico. Kuszak’s five months pregnant body was found in a field with a slashed throat. A local man has been arrested by police in connection with the incident. On January 22, Australian man Drew Gollan, captain of Perini Navi yacht Perseus was shot dead in what was described as a “failed robbery” in English Harbor, Antigua. Gollan, 38, was described as a “widely respected member of the yachting community.” His murder came less than a year after the double murder of a British couple on the island. Suspects have been arrested and charged with murder in both cases. Antigua, in particular, is highly dependant on the industry to boost its local economy — and it appears news of the crimes is already having a negative impact. In a press release, the Antigua Charter Yacht Meeting acknowledged that “a number of boats have decided to leave Antigua in the wake of this incident.” Further reports from yachting magazine, SuperYachtWorld suggest several captains on the island have also decided to leave. Meanwhile, luxury yacht staff who are remaining in the Caribbean have been urged by industry web site yotcru.com, to “exercise vigilant personal safety at all times.” Find out more about luxury yachts at CNN’s MainSail. After the death of Gollan, local Antigua politicians and yacht industry representatives held an emergency meeting to discuss the problem. At the meeting, Prime Minister of Antigua & Barbuda, the Honorary Baldwin Spencer said: “Antigua is still a safe place to be. It’s an unfortunate situation, however, we are all hoping that justice will be done,” SuperYachtWorld reported. Spencer also pledged new security efforts to help prevent future crimes. International charter company manager and luxury yacht industry expert, Els Bucknell, said yacht crews and clients were “shocked and saddened” by the deaths, and there would likely be a short-term impact on the Caribbean region. “Most people assumed that this part of Antigua was safe and I think it has come as a shock. “Some boats have already left and I think you will see some of that.” However, Bucknell felt the incident would not affect region in the long-term. “People do forget about these things over time … and the local business people with police and other authorities have made a serious attempt to make it safer. “The economy being the way it is has more to do with how business operates than these kind of things,” she said.

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Deadly tornadoes rip through parts of Oklahoma

A car is severely damaged in the wake of a tornado Tuesday night in Lone Grove, Oklahoma.
The severe storms that uprooted trees, demolished homes and killed at least eight people in central Oklahoma on Tuesday are expected to weaken Wednesday, authorities said.

A tornado watch that was in effect early Wednesday for central Oklahoma was lifted, the National Weather Service said. That was good news for people in the city of Lone Grove, who were dealing with extensive damage from the deadly storms that hit the area. Lone Grove, about 90 miles south of the capital, Oklahoma City, had all of the fatalities and most of the approximately 50 injuries caused by the storms, according to the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management. Watch funnel cloud touch down » Also hit hard by the storms were the towns of Pawnee and Edmond, both north of the capital. Dramatic television footage of one storm showed large funnel clouds that darkened the sky as the storm approached. It mangled homes, snapped trees and crushed cars with debris as it touched down. “The wind started blowing really hard and then died down,” a Lone Grove man told CNN affiliate KOCO-TV. Then, “all heck broke loose. I mean, it just broke loose. The whole house shook.” Watch post-tornado damage »

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Donetta Singleton, manager of Bill’s Fish House in Lone Grove, said one tornado’s path took it right past the restaurant. She said the post office was gone and a church was damaged. Lone Grove police said a trailer park was hit, while KOCO showed several homes flattened by the storm.

Mercy Memorial Health Center in Ardmore, about eight miles east of Lone Grove, received 46 people with injuries — seven considered major — after the storms passed, said Shana Hammond, a hospital spokeswoman. The storms knocked out power to about 29,000 OG&E customers, including nearly 10,000 in Bethany. iReport.com: Are you there Share photos, video

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Tsvangirai sworn in as Zimbabwe PM

Morgan Tsvanirai reached a power-sharing deal with President Robery Mugabe last September.
Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai was sworn in as prime minister of Zimbabwe Wednesday as part of a new unity government that Zimbabweans hope will signal an end to the political and economic crises that have gripped the nation for months.

The unity government is the result of a power-sharing agreement reached in September between Tsvangirai — the leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) — and President Robert Mugabe after months of squabbling about the results of elections earlier in the year. Attendees applauded as Mugabe administered the oath of office to his once-bitter rival. Wednesday morning, the country wore a festive look. Police presence was heavy, but the air was light. A group of riot policemen sat in a truck singing songs in one city. Elsewhere, people crowded newspaper stands to buy up the last remaining copies of the day’s edition. The headlines spoke of a brand-new day full of promise. Zimbabweans and outsiders alike are hopeful the new government will help heal the country’s crippling economic crisis and eroding humanitarian situation, both seen as the worst since the once-prosperous nation gained its independence from Great Britain in 1980. A cholera epidemic has claimed close to 4,000 lives and infected about 65,000 people since August, aggravated by a lack of water treatment chemicals and a problem with waste disposal in much of the country. The United Nations says more than 5 million people are in need of food aid, in a country that has shortages of all essentials, including fuel, electricity and cash. The shortages have created a fertile environment for inflation. The country recorded the highest level of inflation in the world in July, at 231 million percent.

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Zimbabwe has had no Cabinet since presidential elections in March created the political impasse. Tsvangirai won the most votes in that election, but not enough to avoid a runoff, according to the government’s official count. He withdrew from the June 27 runoff days before the vote, saying Mugabe’s supporters had waged a campaign of violence and intimidation against opposition supporters. The two sides tried to end the stalemate with a series of talks that kept stalling when they couldn’t agree on how much power Mugabe would retain. Tsvangirai had said he would sign a deal only if Mugabe gave up some power.

The leaders reached a power-sharing agreement in September, with the position of prime minister created for Tsvangirai. The various ministries will be shared between the MDC and Mugabe’s ZANU-PF, with the former given 13 and the latter 15.

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Arsonists start new bushfires in Australia

Bushfires have destroyed huge tracts of the Australian countryside.
New fires blamed on arsonists hit Australia Wednesday as the toll from deadly blazes was likely to rise on the macabre discovery that charred remains initially identified as single bodies were in fact couples fused together by the heat.

The latest fires broke out Tuesday night, even as emergency workers were struggling with the aftermath of bushfires that have so far killed 181 people and burned huge tracts of the countryside in southeastern Australia. John Brumby, the premier of the hard-hit state of Victoria, said many of 20 fires burning Wednesday were suspected to have been started by arsonists — an act described earlier by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd as “mass murder.” “There seems little doubt these were deliberately lit — a number of them last night,” Brumby said on national television. “I think words escape us all when it comes to describing deliberate arson.” The toll of the past week’s fires stands at more than 500 people injured, nearly 1,000 homes destroyed, thousands left homeless and at least 365,000 hectares (901,935 acres) of the Australian countryside burned black, authorities said. See a map of the area »

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Fires, thought to have been started by arsonists have devastated the towns of Marysville and Kinglake. As many as half the homes in Kinglake have burned to the ground, police say. iReport.com: ‘Thank God we were spared’ The death toll is expected to rise. In Marysville, officials warned that as many as 100 people, or one-fifth of the town’s population, might be dead, with many bodies believed to be still buried under debris. Photos: Bushfires leave path of destruction » Likely to add to the fatality figure was the discovery by forensic scientists that some skeletal remains initially thought to be single bodies were actually two people fused together by searing temperatures.

As efforts to help those affected by the wildfires gather pace, tent cities have sprung up in Whittlesea, just north of Melbourne. Relief agencies have pitched camps for those forced out of their homes. Many fire victims have grown increasingly frustrated, kept from returning home — or to what is left of their homes — by authorities because of safety concerns.

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Wedding row leads to beheadings in India


Eight people were killed and their mutilated bodies thrown into a river over a wedding not approved by the couple’s families in eastern India, police said Wednesday.

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