Wounded Sri Lankans to escape conflict by sea

An injured survivor of a suicide attack in northeast Sri Lanka on February 9
The Red Cross plans to evacuate 400 sick and wounded civilians from a Sri Lankan beach, a spokeswoman said Tuesday.

Most of the patients have been without proper medical care for a week, when fighting between government forces and Tamil rebels forced the closure of a hospital where they were being treated, said Sarasi Wijeratne, a spokeswoman for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Colombo. An ICRC-chartered ferry flying a Red Cross flag left the northern city of Jaffna on Tuesday, bound for the northeastern coastal town of Puttumatalan, where the patients are waiting, Wijeratne said. “At the moment, they’re being cared for by staff from the Ministry of Health and they’re being supported by the ICRC staff,” she said. “These patients will be put on the ferry at Puttumatalan and the ferry will then sail to Trincomalee.” Three hundred of the sick and wounded waiting to be evacuated Tuesday were from a hospital in Pudukkudiyiruppu, farther inland from Puttumatalan, that had to be closed last week because of fighting, Wijeratne said. It had been the last functioning medical facility in the area. The rest are sick and wounded civilians from the vicinity who came to the beach to receive treatment, Wijeratne said. The rescue is being done with the agreement of all parties to the conflict, she said. The Sri Lankan government said Sunday that more than 10,000 civilians have fled fighting between government forces and Tamil rebels in northern Sri Lanka over the past week, a “sudden increase” in people displaced by the violence.

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Most of the displaced are from Kilinochchi, while others are from the Jaffna peninsula, according to Sri Lanka’s defense ministry. More than half are women and children, it said. The government said it is providing refuge, medical care and sustenance to the displaced civilians. Kilinochchi is the former capital of the Tamil Tiger rebel movement, which is locked in a battle with government troops over its remaining strongholds in northern Sri Lanka. The town was retaken by Sri Lankan forces in early January. The rebels have been fighting for an independent homeland for the country’s ethnic Tamil minority since 1983. Humanitarian groups say as many as 250,000 unprotected civilians are trapped in the area where the fighting is taking place, and the onslaught has intensified as government forces have closed in on the rebels. The aid agencies have asked for increased access to northern Sri Lanka, calling it a nightmarish situation. Meanwhile, the Sri Lankan military Tuesday accused Tamil Tiger rebels of killing 17 civilians and wounding 69 others who were fleeing rebel-held territory. The rebels had no immediate response to the accusation.

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UBS posts record loss, cuts 1,600 jobs

UBS has posted the largest loss in Swiss corporate history.
Switzerland’s biggest bank UBS on Tuesday posted a worse than expected loss of nearly $17 million — the largest ever by a Swiss group — and announced 1,600 new job cuts.

The bank’s full-year loss totaled 19.7 billion Swiss francs, including 8.1 billion francs during the last quarter, UBS said in a statement. UBS said the job losses would come from its investment bank unit, which suffered the largest exposure to the collapse of the U.S. sub-prime mortgage sector. It said it would reduce headcount to 15,000 from approximately 17,000, excluding roughly 500 employees at units the bank has previously announced its intention to exit. Looking ahead, the bank said its outlook remained cautious in a fragile market despite an influx of new money, but chief executive Marcel Rohner said the company would return to profitability. “The conditions for the financial industry have changed and will remain different for the foreseeable future,” he said. “We have adjusted our businesses such that they are best positioned to be profitable and to grow sustainable earnings in a new environment.”

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FBI raids peanut butter plant suspected in outbreak

The Food and Drug Administration launched a probe of Peanut Corporation of America on January 30.
FBI agents Monday raided a rural Georgia peanut butter plant suspected as the source of a nationwide salmonella outbreak, a CNN affiliate reported.

The Peanut Corporation of America plant in Blakely, Georgia, was sealed off by federal authorities Monday morning, WABL reported. The company is accused of knowingly shipping tainted products now linked to nearly 600 illnesses, including eight deaths, in 43 states. The recent outbreak has led to one of the largest food recalls in U.S. history, encompassing more than 1,000 products. The Food and Drug Administration’s Office of Criminal Investigations launched a probe of the company on January 30. Previously, the Peanut Corporation of America had said said it shipped products only after subsequent tests came back negative for salmonella. Representatives from the company have not returned repeated calls from CNN.

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Chelsea begin search for new manager

Brazilian Scolari lasted  just seven months at Stamford Bridge.
Chelsea began their hunt for a successor to Luiz Felipe Scolari on Tuesday with Guus Hiddink and former boss Avram Grant the early favorites to replace the sacked Brazilian.

Russia coach Hiddink was odds-on with most English bookmakers with Grant also reported to be in the running, just eight months after departing Stamford Bridge following Chelsea’s defeat to Manchester United in the Champions League final. Dutchman Hiddink has an impeccable record in club and international football and his agent Cees van Nieuwenhuizen told BBC Radio Tuesday that he would be open to an offer from Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich. “I think because of the personal relationship he has with Mr Abramovich he will definitely talk to him and listen to him but I think Mr Abramovich realizes he also he has not finished his job (with Russia),” he said. “He is focused on his job with Russia, he is with the team on a training camp in Turkey and he is looking forward to qualifying with Russia for the World Cup.” Grant, who has also been linked with the Portsmouth vacancy following the earlier sacking of Tony Adams on Monday, took charge after the departure of Jose Mourinhio at the start of last season and led Chelsea to second place in the Premier League and the finals of the League Cup and Champions League. The 53-year-old is a personal friend of Abramovich and could be installed on a caretaker basis until the end of the season. Other names linked with the job include former Barcelona coach Frank Rijkaard, AC Milan’s Carlos Ancelotti, former Chelsea favorites Gianfranco Zola and Roberto Di Matteo and inevitably Mourinho, who is in charge at Inter Milan. 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. You say: Were Chelsea right to dismiss Scolari Who should replace him “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.

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“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. “The search for a new manager has already started and we hope to have someone in place as soon as possible. “While that continues assistant coach Ray Wilkins will take charge of the team on a temporary basis.” The 60-year-old Scolari, who won the 2002 World Cup with Brazil before enjoying success with the Portugal national team, was the fourth manager of the Abramovich era, following Claudio Ranieri, Mourinho and Grant. Ranieri, now Juventus coach, will take his side to Stamford Bridge for the first leg of their Champions League last 16 tie, a match that takes on added significance with Chelsea all but out of the running in the Premier League. But Ranieri sees Scolari’s sacking as a bad omen for his team. “We could have done without this change,” Ranieri told Press Association. “Now the players will have an excuse and I, who had studied Scolari’s team by memory, will have to start from the beginning. “It will be another Chelsea and I will only have two weeks to get to know it.” Chelsea will hope to have a new coach installed before their FA Cup tie at second-flight Watford on Saturday. A week later they go to Aston Villa, currently a place above them in the league, before the Juventus clash.

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Israelis go to polls in crucial election

Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu and wife Sara vote in Jerusalem.
Israelis braved pouring rain and strong winds Tuesday to cast ballots in an election that will pick not just the next prime minister but create a new balance of power and lay the groundwork for the next stage of the nation’s future.

If the polls hold true, the right-wing Likud Party may come out ahead, allowing former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to once again take the reins of the country. But Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni’s ruling Kadima Party is still in contention after polling a very close second in last week’s final surveys of voters’ intentions. “The majority of the people want a windfall,” Netanyahu said Tuesday while casting his ballot. “They want a change of direction to security, honor and hope, and I think they will vote for this today.” Livni hoped the weather would not dampen turnout. “Rain or no rain, cold or heat, you must come to the polling booth, stand behind the screen and consider whom to vote for,” she said. “This isn’t a storm. Rain just makes you wet.” But with no single party expected to win an overall majority in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, the party that emerges from Tuesday’s election with the most seats still faces the challenge of building a viable governing coalition. A government needs a controlling majority in the 120-seat Knesset of 61. Neither Likud nor Kadima were expected to reach even half of that figure. That could benefit other parties capable of acting as makeweights, including Yisrael Beiteinu, a nationalistic political movement which has surged into third place in the aftermath of Israel’s military campaign against Hamas militants in Gaza.

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Led by Avigdor Lieberman and drawing support from Israelis who resent the country’s Arab population, Yisrael Beiteinu has been the wild-card in the race as it has worked to sap right-wing support away from Likud. According to the newspaper Ma’ariv, Yisrael Beiteinu could be the “new scale-tipping party” when it comes to coalition building. Lieberman has agitated many Israeli Arabs by questioning and demanding their loyalty and has called for Israel’s boundaries to be redrawn to exclude many of them — a move that would strip them of their citizenship. “The close race between Likud and Kadima has finally injected some long-overdue excitement into the campaign. A few weeks ago, Likud seemed to have victory sewed up. Now it is in real danger of losing out to Kadima,” according to a recent article in Israel’s Ha’aretz newspaper. Other parties among the 33 on ballot papers, include the once-dominant and now sliding left of center Labor Party in fourth place, led by current defense minister and former prime minister Ehud Barak, and Shas, an Orthodox religious movement, in fifth, according to polls conducted by three major newspapers Friday. The remainder include the Israeli Arab parties, the left-wing Meretz, the Greens, and Hadash, and smaller right-wing parties called United Torah Judaism, Jewish Home, and National Union. Both Netanyahu and Livni have promised to form broad-based coalitions, most likely with Barak continuing to serve as defense minister, according to CNN Senior Political Analyst Bill Schneider. But he said a Netanyahu victory would probably mean a different mood in Israel, with the government indulging in more forceful rhetoric and taking a tougher stance in its external relations with Arab countries, Europe and the Obama administration, which has made the Middle Eastern peace process a foreign policy priority. A Livni victory would mean greater continuity with the policies of her Kadima predecessors, Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert.

“The difference is mainly one of mood and rhetoric. But mood and rhetoric could be a crucial difference,” Schneider said. About 5.2 million people are eligible to vote until 10 p.m. (3 p.m. ET), the daily newspaper Haaretz said.Voter turnout in the last election in 2006 was 63.2 percent, the lowest in Israel’s history, the newspaper said.

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Australian bushfire survivors count cost as death toll rises

A fire crew douses hotspots on the edge of Healesville, north of Melbourne.
Parts of southeastern Australia turned to recovery Tuesday even as fires smoldered and sometimes raged across sections of the scarred landscape.

Tent cities sprung up around Whittlesea, just north of Melbourne, as relief agencies pitched camps for those forced out of their homes. Weekend bushfires “completely wiped out” the towns of Marysville and Kinglake, officials said. More than 20 fires were burning Tuesday, according to the Country Fire Authority. Frustration also brewed as residents desperately wanted to return to their homes, or what was left of them, but were prevented by authorities because of safety concerns. The toll from Saturday’s inferno has grown day by day. Police in the state of Victoria put the number of deaths from the fires at 181 on Tuesday. Watch the devastation brought to homes » Victims included 78 year old Brian Naylor, a former newsreader who reported on the Ash Wednesday bushfires in 1983, some of the worst devastation the country has seen. Naylor was well known in Australia after presenting lead news bulletins on major networks for more than 20 years. Rescue workers say they found the bodies of Naylor and his wife Moiree in their home in the small town of Kinglake West. “We think there will be more deaths,” Police Chief Christine Nixon said. “It’s a major issue … that we’re finding more bodies as we gain access to locations.” Photos: Bushfires leave path of destruction » But there was hope. “We don’t muck around in this country. It will be back to the same in 18 months,” said Ash Phelin, a volunteer worker helping displaced families. “It might not look the same. It’ll be a bit burnt. But it’ll be back.” The scope and scale of the fire brought Monique Locklier to help her bush mates. “Its up the road from where we live,” she said. “It’s the worst tragedy we’ve ever seen and I hope we never see it again.”iReport.com: ‘Thank God we were spared’ Charitable contributions continued to pour into the Salvation Army as Australians were touched by the crisis. “We’re in the midst of this huge financial crisis and people want to give,” Maj. Rodney Barnard said. “The Salvation Army has been running an appeal and we’ve raised in excess of $2 million (Australian).” The need for humanitarian aid is expected to be great, with Prime Minister Kevin Rudd laying out the costs of the fires before Parliament.

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In addition to those killed, more than 500 people were injured, nearly 1,000 homes were destroyed, thousands were left homeless and 365,000 hectares (901,935 acres) of the Australian countryside have been burnt black, he said. See a map of the area » “The seventh of February will become etched in our national memory as a day of disaster, of death and of mourning,” Rudd said, as he announced that offers of assistance had poured in from around the world, including from France, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, Thailand and the United States. “All Victorians and all Australians should know that in this darkest hour, they are not alone,” he said. Wildfires are an annual event in Australia, but the unprecedented carnage wrought by the fast-moving infernos, called the worst ever by police, have shaken and surprised the nation. This year, a combination of factors has made them especially intense: a drought, dry bush and one of the most powerful heat waves in memory. News that some fires may have been deliberately set brought a note of disgust from the prime minister.

What do you say about anyone like that” Rudd said. “There’s no words to describe it, other than it’s mass murder.” Victoria authorities have banned the use of barbecues and any equipment that might spark a fire. One man has been charged with violating the ban and of “conduct endangering life” in connection with a grass fire, and another has been charged with lighting fires in the neighboring state of New South Wales.

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1 killed, 7 wounded in China hotel fire

Police suspect fireworks to be the cause of the blaze at the 40-story Mandarin Oriental.
Police in China say a fireworks display may be to blame for a massive fire at a newly constructed, unoccupied luxury hotel that killed a firefighter and wounded seven other people in central Beijing Monday.

The firefighter died of smoke inhalation, Beijing officials said Tuesday. The others who were injured — six other firefighters and a construction worker — were recuperating in hospitals. The fire at the 40-story Mandarin Oriental began as crowds watched a nearby fireworks display marking the end of Lunar New Year celebrations. Fred Rice, a British national who lives in Beijing, told CNN that “the top of the building was exploding.” See photos of the blaze » “We weren’t sure if it was gas canisters or what. It was a spectacular sight for sure,” he said. Watch flames devour the hotel » “It was spreading incredibly fast,” said another witness, Stephen Chaytor. “It went from small flames to being totally engulfed in flames.”

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The fire reached past the 30th floor, but did not spread to any adjacent buildings. The hotel is next to a newly constructed tower for China Central Television (CCTV), but no one has moved into that building either. The blaze erupted in the final hours of new year’s celebrations as people set off fireworks across the city. Watch dramatic video of the fire from iReporters in Beijing » Beijing residents were supposed to stop selling and lighting fireworks by midnight, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported. The modern, angular building was a sign of Beijing’s recent transformation and modernization. It had been scheduled to open late last year, but the opening was postponed until this year, though most of the building had been constructed.

iReport.com: Eyewitnesses worried ‘building might topple’ According to its Web site, the Mandarin Oriental-Beijing is the flagship property in China for the Mandarin Oriental hotel chain. The tower stands more than 500 feet high and contains 241 rooms, Xinhua reported.

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Afghan dog finds new life in Britain

Bear plays for the first time out of quarantine after coming to Britain from Afghanistan.
His life has never been easy. Born into poverty and war, his ears and tail were chopped off when he was just a few months old in preparation for dog-fighting. He escaped to find a better life, only to be trapped in lonely, sterile quarantine for six months.

But all that changed Monday when Bear the dog stepped out of British quarantine and through the doors of a London animal shelter. “He’s absolutely a loving dog,” said former British Royal Marine Paul “Penny” Farthing, who helped bring Bear to England. “He just loves people. It’s a good thing he was brought back to the U.K. when he was quite young, so he’s never gone through having to fend for himself in the street and be made to dogfight.” An unknown soldier in Afghanistan first found Bear last year and brought him to a local Afghan animal shelter. The shelter wasn’t able to care for Bear, so it contacted Farthing, who now runs a charity for stray and abandoned animals, primarily dogs from Afghanistan. Farthing’s Nowzad Dogs is named for the Afghan town where he was based for a few months in 2006. He asked Mayhew International, an arm of London’s Mayhew Animal Home, to help find Bear a new home. Mayhew International says Bear is one of the few dogs it has brought back to Britain. Usually it tries to find animals new homes within their own countries. “Although Mayhew International does not encourage people to bring dogs to the U.K. from abroad as a general policy, we made an exception in this case as it was the perfect opportunity to highlight the plight of thousands of stray animals in Afghanistan,” the organization said in a statement. Bear’s story may be unique, but he is certainly not alone. Mayhew International, which works around the world to educate people about animal welfare, says there are countless dogs in Afghanistan that are homeless or trapped in a life of dogfighting — an increasingly popular pastime in Afghanistan. “Animal welfare is not looked so highly upon in Afghanistan,” said Christopher Sainsbury, Mayhew’s international projects officer. “In war-torn areas, people tend to forget the animal welfare side of things. [We want to] make people aware that this is a key side of things that needs to be assessed, needs to be worked on.” Bear is a Koochi dog, a large breed common in Afghanistan, according to Dr. Mohammadzai Abduljalil, a Mayhew veterinarian from Afghanistan. While no one knows Bear’s exact age, Abduljalil said they believe he is just about a year old. You wouldn’t know it by Bear’s size. He’s already a large dog nearly 3 feet high with large paws to match. Stepping into the Mayhew play area Monday for the first time, Bear made sure to sniff every corner of the room and mark his territory a few times before settling in to play. He had a puppy’s curiosity and quickly started playing fetch and tug-of-war with Farthing, wagging enthusiastically the small part of his tail which is left. Bear is lucky. He escaped a violent and uncertain future in Afghanistan. Not so for many other dogs left behind. It is those dogs that Farthing hopes to help with his charity. “They need someone to look after them, so why not me” Farthing said. It began when the Royal Marines arrived in the war-torn town of Now Zad, in Afghanistan’s Helmand province, in October 2006. They found stray dogs wandering the streets, scavenging for food, dodging bullets and seeking shelter from the hot days and cold nights. Many were also being used for dogfighting, with their ears and tails docked to make the fights last longer and give their opponents less to bite. Farthing and other Marines began to feed and care for a few dogs that wandered into their camp. At first they had three dogs, but other strays soon figured out the camp was a source of food and shelter, and before long the Marines found themselves caring for seven dogs and 14 puppies. Time was running out, however. The Marines were due to leave Now Zad in February 2007 and knew they couldn’t take the dogs with them. They looked for some way to make sure the dogs would be taken care of after they left. That’s when Farthing first contacted Mayhew International. They put him in touch with a small shelter in northern Afghanistan that Mayhew had assisted since its inception, providing advice and veterinary support. The shelter offered to take the dogs on one condition: The Marines had to arrange for the dogs’ transfer to Kabul, a difficult and dangerous three days’ drive away. Finding a taxi willing to accept dogs was the first hurdle; the second was that the drivers refused to allow the dogs to be transported in Western-style cages, which would give away to the Taliban that the car was carrying foreigners. Instead, the dogs had to be tied with ropes, the Afghan way, and the puppies had to be stashed in small crates — in this case, a bird cage. “A lot was done on trust,” Farthing told CNN. “The Afghans did it as a favor to us. We paid for some of their fuel and their costs, but it was fantastic. It was them helping us out. They didn’t have to do it. It shows that the people of Afghanistan and us, we can work together.” In the end, most of the dogs made it to Kabul, but not without casualties. Two were left behind for lack of room in the taxi, and two more escaped along the way when a car door was accidentally left open. Three of the largest puppies were stolen, probably for dog fighting. Three dogs and eleven puppies finally made it to the shelter, but nine of the puppies later died due to an outbreak of disease and shortage of vaccines. Sainsbury, of Mayhew International, says the story of the Now Zad dogs and of Bear shows their efforts can help animals, even if it’s just one at a time. Mayhew International works with organizations already established in developing countries to plan mass sterilization drives that reduce the number of unwanted animals. They also train veterinary surgeons in modern neutering techniques that are quick and humane. “The way that war makes looking after animal welfare harder is quite clear,” Sainsbury said. “Animal welfare gets forgotten and it becomes a back-burner because organizations … that were working in those war-torn countries will probably be unable to operate any longer. They’ll be unable to aid the populations of stray and community animals which would rely on their help originally.” Mayhew CEO Caroline Yates said staff have no idea how long it will take for Bear to find a new home. They hope the publicity surrounding his arrival in Britain will encourage people to think about adopting him. Yates said they hope to have him adopted within a month. Said Farthing, “To be able to help just one [dog] is a reward in itself and a huge step to highlighting the undocumented suffering that animals in all war zones are subjected to.”

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Philippines works to save 200 dolphins

A pod of dolphins swims across the Bohol Sea in January 2005.
Authorities in the Philippines were trying to drive back to sea a pod of about 200 dolphins that had swarmed to shallow waters in Manila Bay on Tuesday morning.

“This is the first time as far as I can remember that so many dolphins are inside Manila Bay and acting so erratically,” said Malcolm Sarmiento, director of the Philippines’ Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources. The dolphins were spotted about a mile offshore near the townships of Pilar and Orion in Bataan province, he said. Volunteers and rescue workers kept them from beaching and were using about 20 boats to push them back toward deeper waters. “We prevented a massive stranding. We’re now trying to find out what exactly is causing this strange behavior,” Sarmiento said. The dolphins may have headed toward the bay for two reasons, he said. “A sea quake perhaps,” he said. “If they were underwater, the water pressure would injure their eardrums.”

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The pod might also have been following a sick or wounded leader. If so, rescue workers will have to find the weakened dolphin and isolate it from the pod. “Hopefully, the healthy can go back to sea if the leader’s out of sight,” Sarmiento said.

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Workers walk out of Hong Kong’s PCCW

A worker cleans a PCCW telephone booth in January in Hong Kong, China.
Hundreds of workers from one of Hong Kong’s largest telecommunications companies stormed out of work Tuesday, chanting protests about possible job cuts.

An estimated 350 contract workers at PCCW walked off the job for a half-day and staged a protest outside the company headquarters, chanting slogans such as: “We are against pay cuts. We are against layoffs.” Organizers told CNN that PCCW hired about 2,000 to 3,000 workers from other companies and those workers have now been told they face at least a 10 percent salary cut and might lose their jobs. The company said in a written statement, “No decision has been taken to date about cutting contract rates with subcontractors. The company reviews its commercial arrangements with contractors annually and looks to achieve productivity gains and reduced rates where possible. … We commenced discussions with subcontractors last week and questioned whether a 10 percent reduction in contract rates might be possible.”

Unions are trying to negotiate a settlement, strike organizers said. It was inappropriate to make any assumptions about staff pay cuts or layoffs, because discussions are ongoing, the company said.

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