Wednesday, January 28, 2026
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Syria: Rival rebel groups agree Azaz ceasefire

Two rival Syrian rebel groups in the northern town of Azaz have agreed a ceasefire.

The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), linked to al-Qaeda, seized the town on Wednesday from the larger Western-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA).

Fighting between rebel groups has raised fears of a war within a war.

The clashes come ahead of a deadline, on Saturday, for Syria to provide a list of its chemical weapons facilities as part of a US-Russian deal for the country to destroy its deadly arsenal.

Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister, Sergei Ryabkov, is currently holding talks in Damascus about the deal.

But the agreement still faces many hurdles – including the differing opinions of the US and Russia.

US Secretary of State John Kerry said a “definitive” UN report had proved that the Syrian government was behind a deadly chemical weapons attack in the Damascus suburbs of Ghouta on August 21.

But Damascus – backed by Moscow – insists that rebel forces carried out the attack.

The West also wants any UN resolution on Syria’s chemical weapons to include the threat of military force in the result of non-compliance – but Russia objects to any mention of this.

Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, in an interview with Fox News, said it could take about a year to destroy Syria’s chemical stockpiles and could cost about $1 billion.

Under the ceasefire deal in Azaz the two rebel sides have agreed to exchange prisoners and hand back property.

Two rival Syrian rebel groups in the northern town of Azaz have agreed a ceasefire
Two rival Syrian rebel groups in the northern town of Azaz have agreed a ceasefire

It is unclear whether the ceasefire will have an impact on clashes between the groups elsewhere in the country.

Analysts say there is more chance that the US and other Western powers may arm the Free Syrian Army if it shows a distinct separation from the Islamists.

The fighting in Azaz began when a wounded rebel – either from ISIS or from an allied group, al-Muhajireen – was taken to a field clinic and, while there, he was filmed as part of a fundraising exercise.

The wounded fighter demanded the film, and called some of his friends to come and help him.

Free Syrian Army (FSA) rebels from a unit called the Northern Storm brigade were guarding the field clinic, and there was a confrontation which ended up with ISIS launching a full attack on the town, pushing out the Northern Storm brigade.

ISIS is reported to have made a number of arrests of activists, journalists and even Sharia court officials during the time it controlled Azaz.

One eyewitness inside the town said no-one was smoking on the streets – tobacco is forbidden according to strict Islamist doctrine.

While the Azaz violence seems to have been the result of a particular set of circumstances rather than a long-planned offensive, our correspondent says there is a record of skirmishes between the Jihadis and FSA brigades for control of the border crossings into Turkey.

Meanwhile, the party of Syria’s Deputy Prime Minister Qadri Jamil insists he was misquoted in Friday’s edition of the UK’s Guardian newspaper.

Qadri Jamil reportedly told the paper that the civil war had reached stalemate, with neither government forces nor the rebels strong enough to win – and that the government would use proposed talks in Geneva to call for a ceasefire.

But the People’s Will Party said the Guardian journalist was ”neither precise nor professional” about what he quoted Qadri Jamil as saying.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has said Tehran is ready to help broker peace in Syria, as part of what he called his country’s “constructive engagement” policy with other nations.

In an article in the Washington Post newspaper, Hassan Rouhani wrote: “We must create an atmosphere where peoples of the region can decide their own fates.”

Correspondents say the article is the latest signal that Hassan Rouhani wants to improve Iran’s relationship with the US and other countries that believe Iran is developing nuclear weapons.

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Honey Boo Boo Season 3: June Shannon confirms show is coming back soon

Fans of Here Comes Honey Boo Boo have been unable to find if the show as renewed or not until now.

As TLC aired the show’s Season 2 finale, June Shannon went to Facebook to confirm that the show is coming back for Season 3.

June Shannon confirmed that Here Comes Honey Boo Boo is coming back for Season 3
June Shannon confirmed that Here Comes Honey Boo Boo is coming back for Season 3

Mama June and Sugar Bear have been in LA doing talk shows to promote the big show finale.

The Season 2 last episode featured their commitment ceremony.

Mama June also said: “Thanks so much for supporting us through another season looking forward to next season as we start backup production tomorrow…”

There is a confirmation that Here Comes Honey Boo Boo will be back for season 3 on TLC.

It is still unknown when it will actually air.

Taking paracetamol before a workout can stop you overheating

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A new study found that taking paracetamol before a workout can stop you overheating.

Researchers found paracetamol helps cyclists exercise for longer in hot conditions by reducing the impact of heart exertion.

It was already known that paracetamol swallowed before exercise can lift performance through a reduction in perceived pain.

The latest study shows the positive effect in hot conditions. Researchers at the University of Kent in UK said the drug appears to reduce the body’s temperature during exercise, which subsequently improves tolerance to stifling heat.

The study involved 11 young recreational exercisers, all male, who were given three exercise challenges.

They consumed single doses of paracetamol, or a placebo, before cycling at a fixed intensity for as long as they could in temperatures of 18C (64F) and 30C (86F).

During the exercise, measures of core and skin temperature were recorded, alongside the participants’ perception of the heat.

The results showed the drug allowed them to cycle significantly longer at 30C – by an average of four minutes.

Researchers found paracetamol helps cyclists exercise for longer in hot conditions by reducing the impact of heart exertion
Researchers found paracetamol helps cyclists exercise for longer in hot conditions by reducing the impact of heart exertion

Men had a significantly lower core, skin and body temperature and found the exercise produced less heat strain.

Dr. Lex Mauger, who led the study at The University of Kent’s School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, said the study raised questions that needed to be settled by sports bodies, including “rescue remedies” for people undertaking exercise in hot climates.

He said: “Firstly, consideration by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and local anti-doping authorities should be made about the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in sport – on both health and performance grounds.

“Secondly, the utility of paracetamol as a first-response drug to exertional heat illness should be investigated.”

The same research team has previously shown that paracetamol can improve endurance performance through a reduction in exercise-induced pain.

Dr. Lex Mauger added: “Whilst we have found that paracetamol improves the time someone can exercise in the heat, and that this occurs alongside a reduced body temperature, we did not measure the specific mechanisms by which this may have occurred.

“It is important now to try and isolate how paracetamol reduced participants’ body temperature during exercise.”

In a 2008 study, researchers at the University of Bedfordshire, UK, gave paracetamol to 10 cyclists before they completed a simulated 10-mile time trial.

On average, they completed this time trial 30 seconds faster after taking the drug than when they performed the same test after taking a placebo.

The cyclists’ ratings of perceived exertion were the same on both occasions, which led to the conclusion that paracetamol was improving performance capacity by reducing pain.

The study is reported in the journal Experimental Physiology.

Si Robertson grandson: Scott and Marsha Robertson welcome their fourth son Wyatt

Duck Dynasty’s Uncle Si Robertson has become Grandpa Si.

Si Robertson has a new grandson – Wyatt – from his son Scott.

Si Robertson welcomed his new grandson Wyatt from son Scott
Si Robertson welcomed his new grandson Wyatt from son Scott

Wyatt is Scott Robertson and his wife Marsha’s fourth son as they have other three boys together: Ethan and twins Logan and Connor.

Like his father, Scott Merritt Robertson, 35, is enrolled in the US Army and had several deployments to Iraq.

Marsha Robertson is a certified independent consultant for Scentsy – a company promoting safe, wickless alternative to scented candles.

Scott Robertson lives with his family in Williamsburg, Virginia.

Empire State Building to be listed on NYSE

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The Empire State Building’s owners are planning to sell shares in the company, according to paperwork filed with regulators.

Empire State Realty Trust is aiming to raise $1 billion from listing on the New York Stock Exchange.

Some 71.5 million shares will be offered at a price of between $13 and $15 each. The final price will reportedly be set on October 1.

The landmark New York City skyscraper is the company’s most important asset.

The Empire State Building was opened during the Great Depression in 1931 and was the world’s tallest building until 1972 when the World Trade Center claimed its crown.

It is perhaps best known for its starring role in the 1933 movie version of King Kong.

The Empire State Building was opened during the Great Depression in 1931 and was the world's tallest building until 1972
The Empire State Building was opened during the Great Depression in 1931 and was the world’s tallest building until 1972

The Empire State Building has also featured prominently in other films such as Sleepless in Seattle and An Affair to Remember.

Empire State Realty Trust, which is a real estate investment trust, holds more than 18 other properties in its portfolio.

Its initial public offering has taken two years to come to market because of opposition from a small group of investors.

But it is expected to be one of the largest initial public offerings of a US real estate investment trust.

An investor said he was “very satisfied” with the prospectus.

“I voted for the REIT [Real Estate Investment Trust],” Barrett Browd, who owns units in the Empire State Building said.

“I felt that it was a good time to cash in.”

Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise seized by Russian security forces in Barents Sea

At least 30 Greenpeace activists are being held at gunpoint by Russian security officers who stormed the group’s ship in the Arctic.

About 15 men in balaclavas seized the Arctic Sunrise ship in the Barents Sea, an activist said.

This comes a day after four Greenpeace members tried to board a Russian oil platform to prevent it from drilling.

The group says this threatens a unique and fragile environment – a claim denied by Moscow.

One activist on the ship said Greenpeace members were being held in the galley of the Arctic Sunrise, while the captain was being detained on the bridge.

The activist said he believed the armed men were members of Russia’s internal security service, the FSB.

About 15 men in balaclavas seized the Arctic Sunrise ship in the Barents Sea
About 15 men in balaclavas seized the Arctic Sunrise ship in the Barents Sea

Greenpeace also said its vessel was boarded in international waters and called on Russian President Vladimir Putin to release the crew immediately.

The ship is now expected to be taken to the Russian port of Murmansk.

The Russian foreign ministry earlier accused the group of “aggressive and provocative” behavior.

It said the actions of the activists who had tried to board Gazprom’s Prirazlomnaya drilling rig on Wednesday “threatened people’s lives and could lead to environmental catastrophe in the Arctic with unpredictable consequences”.

Moscow also said that its coastguard vessel had to fire warning shots across the Dutch-flagged Arctic Sunrise.

The Dutch ambassador to Moscow was summoned to the foreign ministry over Greenpeace’s action.

A foreign ministry spokesman in The Hague later told Dutch media the issue had “our full attention” and that contacts with the Russian authorities would be pursued over what had happened.

The Gazprom project is Russia’s first effort to extract oil from the Barents Sea.

Prirazlomnaya is scheduled to begin production by the end of the year. Russia’s economy and its recent growth depend to a large extent on income from its huge oil and gas deposits.

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House of Representatives votes to cut nearly $4 billion from food stamp funding

The House of Representatives voted to cut nearly $4 billion from food stamp funding even after Democrat Rep. Jackie Speier used some congressional dinner expenses as ways to try to shame them into supporting the funding.

The 217-210 vote on Thursday was a win for conservatives and it was approved even though Democrats were united in opposition.

The bill’s savings would be achieved by allowing states to put broad new work requirements in place for many food stamp recipients and to test applicants for drugs.

The bill also would end government waivers that have allowed able-bodied adults without dependents to receive food stamps indefinitely.

Democratic Representative Jackie Speier used her time on the floor to talk about the $3,588 that one of her Republican peers spent on meals during a trip to Russia and how another had a dining budget of $137.42 per day on a visit to Argentina, where she said he “probably had a fair amount of steak”.

Jackie Speier didn’t name the men that she was making references to, but CNN later identified them as Rep. Steve King who went to Buenos Aires and Rep. Frank Lucas who went on the trip to Russia where “he probably drank a fair amount of vodka and probably even had some caviar”.

Even though Jackie Speier brought a bottle of Smirnoff, some caviar and a plate of steak on the floor with her, it apparently didn’t drive the point home as the cut was approved even with 15 Republicans voting against the measure.

House conservatives, led by Majority Leader Eric Cantor from Virginia have said the almost $80 billion-a-year program has become bloated.

he House of Representatives voted to cut nearly $4 billion from food stamp funding
he House of Representatives voted to cut nearly $4 billion from food stamp funding

More than 47 million Americans are now on food stamps, and the program’s cost more than doubled in the last five years as the economy struggled through the Great Recession.

Democrats said the increase during tough economic times showed the program was doing its job.

“This bill is designed to give people a hand when they need it most and most people don’t choose to be on food stamps. Most people want a job … They want what we want,” Eric Cantor said on the floor just before the bill passed.

Finding a compromise – and the votes – to scale back the feeding program has been difficult. The conservatives have insisted on larger cuts, Democrats opposed any cuts and some moderate Republicans from areas with high food stamp usage have been wary of efforts to slim the program.

The White House has threatened to veto the bill.

The new work requirements proposed in the bill would allow states to require 20 hours of work activities per week from any able-bodied adult with a child over age 1 if that person has child care available.

The requirements would be applicable to all parents whose children are over age 6 and attending school.

Every Democrat voting on Thursday opposed the bill. Many took to the floor with emotional appeals.

Democratic House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said the bill is a “full assault on the health and economic security of millions of families”.

Going further, Texas Rep. Lloyd Doggett called it the “let them starve” bill.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said Thursday that House Republicans are attempting to “literally take food out of the mouths of hungry Americans in order to, again, achieve some ideological goal”.

The Congressional Budget Office says that if the bill were enacted, as many as 3.8 million people could lose their benefits in 2014.

Around 1.7 million of those would be the able-bodied adults who would be subject to work requirements after three months of receiving food stamps.

The 1996 welfare law put that limit into law, but most every state has been allowed to waive that requirement since the Great Recession began in 2008.

The Census Bureau reported this week that just over half of those who received food stamps were below poverty and 44% had one or more people with a disability.

By state, Oregon led the nation in food stamp use at 20.1%, or 1 in 5, due in part to generous state provisions that expand food stamp eligibility to families.

Oregon was followed by more rural or more economically hard-hit states, including Mississippi, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan and Tennessee.

Wyoming had the fewest households on food stamps, at 7%.

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NASA: No life on Mars as Curiosity probe failed to find greenhouse gas

NASA has failed to find any evidence that Mars’ atmosphere is supporting life after a year roaming the surface of the Red Planet, it was revealed today.

The Curiosity rover currently scanning the Red Planet has not detected any methane, a gas that is produced by living things.

Since landing in Gale Crater last year, every morning and evening Curiosity has analyzed Mars’ air and scanned it with a tiny laser in search of the greenhouse gas.

Not finding it means that it is unlikely that microbes capable of producing the gas are living below the planet’s surface, scientists said today.

NASA had high hopes that the rover would inhale methane after orbiting spacecraft and Earth-based telescopes detected plumes of the gas several years ago.

On Earth, most of the gas is a by-product of life, spewed when animals digest or plants decay.

“If you had microbial life somewhere on Mars that was really healthy and cranking away, you might see some of the signatures of that in the atmosphere,” said mission scientist Paul Mahaffy of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.

The Curiosity rover currently scanning the Red Planet has not detected any methane, a gas that is produced by living things
The Curiosity rover currently scanning the Red Planet has not detected any methane, a gas that is produced by living things

During Curiosity’s first eight months on the red planet, it probed the air during the day and at night as the season changed from spring to summer.

“Every time we looked, we never saw it,” said Christopher Webster, of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, who led the research published online in the journal Science.

Christopher Webster said while the result was “disappointing in many ways”, the hunt for the elusive gas continues. While methane is linked to living things, it can also be made by non-biological processes.

Mars today is a hostile place – extremely dry and constantly bombarded by radiation. Billions of years ago, the planet boasted a thicker atmosphere and possible lakes. Scientists generally agree that nothing can exist on the Martian surface at present since it’s too toxic. If there are living things on Mars, scientists theorize they’re likely underground.

Just because Curiosity didn’t detect methane near its landing site doesn’t mean the gas is not present elsewhere on the planet, said Bill Nye, chief executive of the Planetary Society, a space advocacy group.

“Suppose you’re an alien coming to Earth and you landed in the Four Corners area, would you feel as if you’ve explored the Earth?” he said.

Several years ago, scientists became excited at the prospect of methane-producing microbes after Michael Mumma of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center noticed a mysterious belch of methane from three regions in Mars’ western hemisphere.

Michael Mumma, who had no role in the latest study, said he stood by his observations.

Earlier this month, Curiosity reached its first rest stop in its long trek toward Mount Sharp, a mountain rising from Gale Crater near the equator. The rover will take monthly readings of the Martian atmosphere during the road trip, expected to last almost a year.

Curiosity probe previously found evidence of an ancient environment that could have once been suitable for microscopic life. While the latest finding diminishes hope for present-day life, scientists still hope to uncover signs of ancient life by looking for organic compounds at the base of Mount Sharp.

Hurricane Manuel: At least 97 people killed by storms in Mexico

At least 97 people have been killed by storms that hit Mexico earlier in the week, according to authorities.

In the village of La Pintada, near the Pacific coast, a landslide partially engulfed the town.

At least 15 bodies have been recovered and almost 70 residents are missing, the authorities said.

A helicopter involved in the rescue effort in the area has disappeared with three crew on board, according to Mexican media.

Officials are hoping that the helicopter had to land amid bad weather conditions and that the crew has been unable to update their base on their location.

Police and navy teams are to begin looking for the helicopter early on Friday when visibility improves, the Excelsior newspaper reports.

Meanwhile, President Enrique Pena Nieto has announced in a statement that he is cancelling a planned trip to the UN in New York next week to focus on relief efforts.

Tropical Storm Manuel, which on Thursday briefly became a hurricane, has now moved north, forcing hundreds from their homes in Sinaloa state.

As it hit land, Hurricane Manuel brought torrential rain and winds of up to 75mph and caused flash floods in Sinaloa.

Schools in the region have been closed and a fishing village of Yameto was evacuated as Hurricane Manuel approached.

At least 97 people have been killed by storms that hit Mexico
At least 97 people have been killed by storms that hit Mexico

More than 100,000 were affected by the hurricane, the State governor, Mario Lopez Valdez told reporters.

It then gradually began losing strength, according to the United States National Hurricane Center, going back to being a tropical storm.

Hurricane Manuel is now expected to dissipate before the weekend.

However, weather conditions are expected to remain poor over the coming days as a third storm is forecast.

With the Gulf Coast having been hit by Hurricane Ingrid, this week was the first time since the 1950s that Mexico has had to deal with two storms simultaneously.

The resort town of Acapulco and its surrounding areas were worst hit by Hurricane Manuel earlier in the week.

Since then, more than 10,000 stranded tourists have been airlifted by military planes out of the resort town of Acapulco.

Several stores have been looted and residents of the outskirts of Acapulco have complained about being left to fend for themselves.

Residents of La Pintada, a remote village of about 600 people north-west of Acapulco, described how the hillside buried their homes as they were holding independence day celebrations on Monday evening.

The landslide tore through the middle of the village, destroying the church, the school and the kindergarten.

“We were eating when it thundered, and when the mountain collapsed the homes were swept away and the thundering noise became louder,” Erika Guadalupe Garcia told AFP news agency.

Ana Clara Catalan, 17, described the noise as “ugly, worse than a bomb”.

“More than half of La Pintada was demolished, few homes were left,” Maria del Carmen Catalan said.

Most of the residents have been now been evacuated by helicopter.

Hurricane Ingrid made landfall on Monday in the town of La Pesca on Mexico’s Gulf Coast. It mainly affected the state of Tamaulipas, where thousands of people were moved from low-lying areas to higher ground.

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Miss Kay Robertson reveals Alan saved her from suicide during Phil’s dark days

Miss Kay Robertson spoke at the Night of Ducks and Hucks fundraising event in Monroe, North Carolina, over the weekend.

The Duck Dynasty matriarch talked candidly about the well-publicized dark period she endured with husband Phil Robertson during the early days of their marriage, going as far as to explain how her oldest son Alan, at the tender age of just 10, convinced her not to take her own life.

As Phil Robertson discussed in his book Happy, Happy, Happy, he was a man more interested in killing ducks and getting his next drink than he was at being a husband or father. He left Miss Kay alone to raise Alan, Jase and Willie (Jep wasn’t born yet) as he fell deeper and deeper into alcoholism.

Miss Kay Robertson spoke at the Night of Ducks and Hucks fundraising event in Monroe, North Carolina
Miss Kay Robertson spoke at the Night of Ducks and Hucks fundraising event in Monroe, North Carolina

“I had ten bad years with Phil and he was horrible. He was a rascal and I tell ya’, he was just like the people he was fussing about,” Miss Kay explained.

When reflecting on a story Phil Robertson shared about getting in a fight in which he hit a woman Miss Kay stated: “And you say, <<How can he hit a woman? Well, I tell ya>>, the devil gets in women just like he gets in men. That was a mean lady. I’m not saying they should have got beat up by Phil at all, but you live like that and that’s one of the consequences.”

Then Miss Kay Robertson shared an extremely personal moment within her family, perhaps the most pivotal moment for her, the boys’ and Phil’s life, wanting that openness of her struggles to provide a perspective of hope to the audience: “I can tell you right now that people I talk to who say they have no hope I can say I’ve been there. Sometimes you can’t feel like you can live at all without hope. That night I was without any of it. I cried in that bathroom and I just didn’t want to live anymore. I wanted Phil to be punished, to realize what he was doing.”

“What probably saved me from doing anything to myself that night… I always describe it as I hear three little sets of house shoes and that was Al and Jase and Willie. Alan knocked on the door and said, <<Mama don’t cry anymore, please don’t cry anymore>>. He said, <<God’s going to take care of you>>. He was 10-years-old, Jason was 6, Willie was 3. And he [Alan] said, <<Mom, He will take care of all of us, please don’t cry anymore>>.  I felt like right then God told me, <<I got plans for you>>. Those little kids knew what I needed and they told it to me through a bathroom late at night. And I want to tell you something, the next day I did give my heart to Jesus.”

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Jessica Robertson on her marriage to Jep

Duck Dynasty’s Jessica Robertson revealed she was only 20 years old when she married Jep on October 7, 2001, just four months after they began dating.

Jep and Jessica Robertson have been married now for close to twelve years, and have four beautiful children together: Lily, 10; Merritt, 8; Priscilla, 6; and River, 4.

Jessica Robertson recently opened up about how she first met Jep with A&E.

“Jep and I saw each other for the first time around February 2001 at our mutual hair stylist,” she says. And this was well “before the beard” for Jep Robertson.

Nothing came of their hair stylist encounter, but Jep and Jessica Robertson would bump into each other again at a concert about a week later.

“That was the first time we actually said more than a word to each other,” Jessica Robertson recalls.

“I started hanging out with him and all his friends that March, but we didn’t admit to liking each other until the end of May.”

Jessica Robertson was only 20 years old when she married Jep on October 7, 2001, just four months after they began dating
Jessica Robertson was only 20 years old when she married Jep on October 7, 2001, just four months after they began dating

They began officially dating in June and by October were married.

So what’s Jessica Robertson’s secret to making a marriage last? She offered up her relationship-strengthening tips:

Be loyal to your spouse

“Be committed to each other, even when it seems like the rest of the world views commitment and loyalty as a thing of the past.”

Forgive your spouse

“When I struggle with forgiveness, I think of how God forgave me by not holding the past against me. Then I can’t help but forgive. Never be too stubborn to say <<I’m sorry>>.”

Respect your spouse

“Showing respect can make or break your spouse’s confidence. A look, a smirk, a rude comment, even the tone of your voice can speak volumes. Build up your spouse; don’t bring him or her down.”

Cherish your spouse

“We sometimes forget to nurture the relationships with our spouse the way we do with our children. We get so busy being a mom or dad that we lose sight of this very important need. Go above and beyond to spend as much quality time together as possible. Jep and I try to go on a date a week and it has really helped keep our relationship strong.”

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Pope Francis: Catholic Church must heal wounds instead of being focused on abortion and contraception

Pope Francis has warned that the Catholic Church is too focused on preaching about abortion, gay people and contraception and needs to become more merciful.

The Pope warned that the Church’s moral structure could “fall like a house of cards” unless it changed.

Pope Francis used the first major interview of his papacy to explain comments he made in July about homosexuality.

He told a Jesuit magazine the Church must show balance and “heal wounds”.

The pontiff used the 12,000-word interview with La Civilta Cattolicato to set out his priorities as Pope, acknowledge his own shortcomings and open up about his cultural interests.

Pope Francis’ vision for relegating the Catholic Church’s reliance on rules marks a contrast to the priorities of his predecessors, John Paul II and Benedict XVI, who saw doctrine as the paramount guide for clergy

“The church’s pastoral ministry cannot be obsessed with the transmission of a disjointed multitude of doctrines to be imposed insistently,” Pope Francis said.

“We have to find a new balance; otherwise even the moral edifice of the church is likely to fall like a house of cards, losing the freshness and fragrance of the Gospel.”

Instead, he said, the Catholic Church must work to heal the wounds of its faithful and seek out those who have been excluded or have fallen away.

“It is useless to ask a seriously injured person if he has high cholesterol and about the level of his blood sugars,” he said.

“You have to heal his wounds. Then we can talk about everything else.”

Pope Francis said the Church had become tied up in “small-minded rules” and risked losing its true purpose.

Pope Francis has warned that the Catholic Church is too focused on preaching about abortion, gay people and contraception and needs to become more merciful
Pope Francis has warned that the Catholic Church is too focused on preaching about abortion, gay people and contraception and needs to become more merciful

“The most important thing is the first proclamation: Jesus Christ has saved you. And the ministers of the Church must be ministers of mercy above all.”

His remarks are could generate dismay among clergy in the United States who have already expressed disappointment that Francis has not pressed Church teaching on abortion, contraception and homo***uality.

Last week, Bishop Thomas Tobin of Providence, Rhode Island, wrote in his diocesan newspaper that he was “disappointed” Pope Francis hadn’t addressed abortion since his papacy began six months ago, according to AP.

Pope Francis said it was not necessary to speak out on such issues.

“We cannot insist only on issues related to abortion, gay marriage and the use of contraceptive methods. This is not possible,” he said.

“The teaching of the Church, for that matter, is clear and I am a son of the Church, but it is not necessary to talk about these issues all the time.”

Pope Francis created headlines two months ago when he spoke about gay priests during an impromptu news conference on a return flight from Brazil. He said it was not up to him to judge about the sexual orientation of clergy as long as they were searching for God and had goodwill.

In his latest interview, Pope Francis said his remarks were in line with Catholic teaching.

“This Church with which we should be thinking is the home of all, not a small chapel that can hold only a small group of selected people. We must not reduce the bosom of the universal Church to a nest protecting our mediocrity,” he said.

Pope Francis also used the interview to detail his favorite composers, artists, authors and films, which include Mozart, Caravaggio, Dostoevsky and Fellini’s La Strada.

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Julie Chen denies having nose surgery

Julie Chen has denied she had a nose job after admitting that she had eye surgery at 25.

Julie Chen, 43, who revealed last week that she was once told she would never be an anchor because she is Chinese, told The Talk yesterday that she has not had any other cosmetic surgery.

“For the record, I have never had a nose job,” Julie Chen said.

“I have only had plastic surgery done to my eyes that I’ve already told you about.”

Julie Chen says that the difference in the appearance of her nose in her “after” photo was thanks to her make-up artist’s contouring skills. She demonstrated this with side-by-side photos of herself before her eye surgery and herself now before make-up.

She also shared a 20-second time-lapse video of her hair and make-up process, including her make-up artist’s expert contouring.

That is not to say that she didn’t consider a rhinoplasty though. Julie Chen says she decided against it, however, after her grandmother told her that the shape of her nose is considered a “good fortune nose” in Chinese culture – and they both shared the same feature.

Julie Chen has denied she had a nose job after admitting that she had eye surgery at 25
Julie Chen has denied she had a nose job after admitting that she had eye surgery at 25

Julie Chen also insisted on Monday’s edition of the show that her intention with the eye procedure was not to make herself look “less Asian”, rather that she wanted her eyes to look “more open”.

Referring to “haters” who shared “hurtful” responses to her story, Julie Chen said: “The hateful comments that I read where people were judging me were people within my own community. 

“It was comments like, <<Way to give in to the Western standards of beauty>>. [and] <<You’re denying your heritage. You’re trying to look less Asian>>.

“Guess what? I don’t look less Chinese! I’m not fooling anybody here. That’s number one.

“Number two: half of us Asians are born with the double-eyelid.

“My mother was born with it. My father has one lid that was creased, one lid that didn’t get its crease until he hit his late teens. I have one sister born with the creases, one sister born without it, so it wasn’t denying my heritage.

Julie Chen added in an interview with People magazine: “The goal was to simply have bigger eyes so the camera didn’t make me look sleepy, bored, angry or disinterested in my interviews.

“The goal was to look, in my opinion, more alert and more interested on camera for my work/career.”

Julie Chen’s The Talk co-star Sharon Osbourne says the furor surrounding the eye surgery compares to her own rhinoplasty.

Sharon Osbourne said on Monday’s show: “I got rid of my Jew-bump on my nose and I still tell people I’m half a Jew. I just didn’t want it!

“You are what you are. I love being what I am, I embrace being what I am, but did I want that nose? No!”

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Powerball winning ticket sold at Murphy USA station in Lexington

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The winning ticket in the latest Powerball drawing was sold in Lexington, central South Carolina, officials say.

The $400 million Powerball jackpot is the nation’s fifth-largest ever.

Lottery officials said that the ticket was sold at the Murphy USA station. The winning numbers drawn Wednesday night were 7-10-22-32-35 with the Powerball of 19.

The actual value is $399.4 million, with a direct cash option of $233 million.

It’s the largest Powerball winning ticket sold in South Carolina and the fourth largest in the history of the game.

South Carolina also had a $1 million winning ticket sold at a gasoline station in Hampton. That ticket matched the first five numbers.

The latest jackpot comes after a $448 million prize in early August, which was split among three tickets.

The winning ticket in the latest Powerball drawing was sold in Lexington, central South Carolina
The winning ticket in the latest Powerball drawing was sold in Lexington, central South Carolina

Winners were Mario Scarnici of South Brunswick, New Jersey, Paul White, of Minnesota, and a group
of 16 Ocean County, New Jersey, employees – dubbed the “Ocean’s 16” – who had gone through Hurricane Sandy together and each put in $6 to purchase lottery tickets.

In May, a Florida widow won the biggest Powerball jackpot in history – a $590 million pot.

The game’s rules were changed in early 2012 to boost payoffs and now organizers of the country’s other big lottery, Mega Millions, are planning changes of their own.

Although Mega Millions still holds the record for the largest jackpot in U.S. history – a $656 million prize in March 2012 – organizers are hoping to more regularly see huge jackpots by lessening the odds of winning big while upping a player’s shot at smaller but still hefty prizes.

Mega Millions doesn’t plan to change its $1 ticket price, but an extra $1 option already in the game will be expanded to allow players to increase their secondary prize total to between $1 million and $5 million, a major increase from $250,000.

Game changes also include boosting the starting jackpot from $12 million to $15 million, and allowing the jackpot to grow by at least $5 million between drawings when no top winner is selected.

It’s those jackpots, not the name on the game, that ultimately draw in 45-year-old Trent Shenefield.

“Depends on what’s up the highest,” the electrician said Tuesday while at a QuickTrip convenience store in suburban Kansas City.

“I guess everyone wants to win the big one.”

But fellow lottery player Bob Knowles, a school bus driver in Iowa, said the changes didn’t really matter.

The 62-year-old said he purchases tickets for both games several times a week and would be happy with any jackpot.

“That’s nice, but I don’t care. I can get by with $10 million. I can get by with $3 million,” he said after buying Powerball tickets at a grocery store in Des Moines.

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London Whale: JP Morgan makes $920 million payout to regulators

JP Morgan Chase has agreed to pay four regulators $920 million relating to a $6.2 billion loss incurred as a result of the “London Whale” trades.

Under the settlement, $200 million will go to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and $215 million to the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).

As part of the deal JP Morgan admitted violating US federal securities laws.

Traders at JP Morgan’s London office built up huge losses in derivatives trades at the beginning of last year.

Two former JP Morgan traders face criminal charges in the US relating to the case.

They deny charges of lying about the size of their trades in order to hide their mounting losses.

In a statement, the SEC said there had been failings in JP Morgan’s internal controls and in senior management.

The regulator said the bank – whose chief executive Jamie Dimon once described the trading problems as a “tempest in a teacup” – had admitted the facts underlying the SEC’s charges.

JP Morgan Chase has agreed to pay four regulators $920 million relating to a $6.2 billion loss incurred as a result of the "London Whale" trades
JP Morgan Chase has agreed to pay four regulators $920 million relating to a $6.2 billion loss incurred as a result of the “London Whale” trades

“JP Morgan failed to keep watch over its traders as they overvalued a very complex portfolio to hide massive losses,” said George Canellos, co-director of the SEC’s division of enforcement.

The Wall Street firm, one of the biggest investment banks in the world, is paying $300 million to the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), and $200 million will go to both the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the US Federal Reserve.

A further $215 million will be paid to the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority as part of the global settlement.

It said JP Morgan’s conduct “demonstrated flaws permeating all levels of the firm: from portfolio level right up to senior management”.

Tracey McDermott, the FCA’s director of enforcement and financial crime, said the failings had undermined trust and confidence in the UK’s financial markets.

“This is yet another example of a firm failing to get a proper grip on the risks its business poses to the market,” she said.

“Senior management failed to respond properly to warning signals that there were problems.

“As things began to go wrong, the firm didn’t wake up quickly enough to the size and the scale of the problems. What is worse, they compounded this by failing to be open and co-operative with us as their regulator.”

The London Whale was the name given to then-JP Morgan derivatives trader Bruno Iksil, who is believed to have racked up the losses and is now co-operating with authorities in criminal cases against other traders.

The bank’s chief investment officer, Ina Drew, stepped down following the revelation of the losses in 2012.

Jamie Dimon, whose “tempest in a teacup” comment in April 2012 prompted criticism he was underplaying the affair, said in a statement on Thursday the bank “accepted responsibility and acknowledged our mistakes from the start”.

“We have learned from [our mistakes] and worked to fix them. We will continue to strive towards being considered the best bank – across all measures – not only by our shareholders and customers, but also by our regulators,” he said.

“Since these losses occurred, we have made numerous changes that have made us a stronger, smarter, better company.”

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World Cup 2022: UEFA members agree a summer event could not be played in Qatar

The prospect of a winter World Cup in 2022 took a step forward after UEFA members agreed a summer event could not be played in Qatar.

Summer temperatures in the Gulf state can reach 50C, sparking health fears for players and fans alike.

UEFA’s 54 member associations backed the switch at a meeting in Croatia.

“The World Cup cannot be played in Qatar in the summer,” said FIFA vice-president Jim Boyce.

“Everyone was certainly in agreement about that.”

UEFA members agreed a summer World Cup 2022 could not be played in Qatar
UEFA members agreed a summer World Cup 2022 could not be played in Qatar

Jim Boyce, a former president of the Irish Football Association, added that the debate was now whether the tournament would be played in January of 2022 or in November and December of that year.

UEFA favors January so that it does not impact on the Champions League, but British associations want to ensure their domestic festive fixtures are protected.

Jim Boyce says the associations do not want FIFA to rush that decision.

“There is still nine years to go and people feel FIFA should sit down with all the major stakeholders and come up with a solution that would cause the minimum disruption to football,” he said.

“There is plenty of time to do that in my opinion.”

FIFA could agree in principle to alter the timing of the World Cup at a meeting in Zurich early next month, but the news that European football chiefs are backing a switch is significant.

That is because European associations represent 10 members of FIFA’s 22-strong executive committee, which will make the final decision.

Head of the Qatar 2022 World Cup, Hassan al-Thawadi, has rejected calls for the tournament to be awarded to another country.

Earlier this week, Australia’s soccer chief Frank Lowy said his country’s Football Federation (FFA) may seek compensation if the 2022 World Cup is switched to the winter.

Australia lost out to Qatar in the voting but has asked FIFA to look at awarding “just and fair compensation” to those nations that “invested many millions, and national prestige, in bidding for a summer event”.

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Korie and Willie Robertson’s children: John Luke and Sadie go to dentist for wisdom teeth removal

Last night’s Duck Dynasty showed Korie and Willie Robertson in the dentist’s operating room while their teens, John Luke and Sadie, were having wisdom teeth removed.

It also seemed out of character for a man like Phil Robertson, so grounded in Christian values, to consider discarding rotten meat in his church’s dumpster without first asking permission.

It felt contrived that Jase and Jep Robertson couldn’t get to the manager of the Mexican restaurant without first being seated, served salsa and chips and drinks, and being serenaded by a mariachi band, while Phil was waiting in the truck with a load of rotten seafood and meat.

Last night’s episode of Duck Dynasty focused on wisdom teeth removal for John Luke and Sadie, Willie and Korie Robertson's teenagers
Last night’s episode of Duck Dynasty focused on wisdom teeth removal for John Luke and Sadie, Willie and Korie Robertson’s teenagers

Si Robertson was absent from much of last night’s show, away on a Virginia trip to see his grandchild’s birth. Uncle Si departed in the first minute or two, with one of the truest Si-isms to date: “A man can never have too many snacks.”

Korie and Willie Robertson’s son John Luke, under the influence of gas in the dentist’s chair, appeared to be a fill-in for Si Robertson this week. He discussed his “eagle powers,” suggested “hungry fella” to his mother, repeatedly sang the praises of “Bumble Bee tuna,” thought something fit “like a glove” and wondered: “Where’s the Chapstik?”

Regardless, much of this week’s show focused on the efforts of Jase and Jep Robertson, with their father Phil driving the truck, to find some place to dispose of the garbage. In order, they considered their church’s dumpster, where they didn’t have permission; a Mexican restaurant’s dumpster, where an employee shouting “muerto” (dead) chased them off: and the community dumpster in the neighborhood of their pastor, who suggested they use the church dumpster.

The rest of the show focused on wisdom teeth removal for John Luke and Sadie, Willie and Korie Robertson’s teenagers. The blood and pulled teeth had Willie Robertson nearly fainting.

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Si Robertson goes to Virginia for his grandchild’s birth

This week’s episode of Duck Dynasty starts with Si Robertson making a strange noise.

It turns out Uncle Si is blowing up an inflatable pillow, which is just one of the plethora of items he’s packing up to take with him on his trip to Virginia to see the birth of his grandchild.

As Jase Robertson remarks, Uncle Si looks like he’s packing to go to China for a month instead of a short trip a few states over. Si Robertson also apparently will be using the soothing sounds of whale songs for relaxation, and of course he can’t resist mimicking the beautiful creatures’ call in his own way. Soon enough, the whole warehouse is joining in, and that’s of course when Willie appears.

Willie Robertson takes it in stride, though, because he knows this is just one example of the thing he might be avoiding while Uncle Si is gone.

It’s the classic addition by subtraction method, and Willie Robertson figures Uncle Si’s absence will give him the chance to see just how counterproductive his uncle really is. That said, Willie is in no hurry to crack the whip right away.

Si Robertson is going to Virginia to see the birth of his grandchild
Si Robertson is going to Virginia to see the birth of his grandchild

When Si Robertson is out the door he leisurely pulls up a chair and joins in the warehouse laze, tossing some Rolos he pilfered from Si to a waiting John Godwin. He’s just relaxing a bit before he has to take John Luke and Sadie to the dentist, where they both are getting their wisdom teeth taken out. He’s looking forward to seeing how wacky they act after being put under.

Jase Robertson comes in with this week’s crisis, a faulty freezer that has stopped working and let all the meat they’ve put in it from hunting season spoil. Their reactions to seeing the ruined carcasses and smelling the accompanying stench make for pretty good TV, although it can be bad if you’re one of those viewers who empathizes a little too much and can end up smelling it yourself. I’d advise just skipping that part then.

The queasy reactions continue at the dentist’s office, where Willie Robertson thinks he’s going to take advantage of Sadie’s wooziness by treating it like truth serum and asking her questions about her love life. But that all changes when he starts seeing all the bloody pieces of gauze and the genteel dentist ripping at his little girl’s mouth like he’s using the back of a hammer to pull out a nail.

As for the post-anesthetic wackiness, John Luke wins that contest by a Louisiana mile. The kid comes out of the surgery shaking his head around like Stevie Wonder and mumbling all sorts of nonsense, most of it pretty sassy. He even grabs the dentist’s spray gun and waters the office a little bit. Willie is enjoying his usually quiet son’s new personality, as is Korie, who eagerly records everything for purposes of future social embarrassment.

Jase and Jep Robertson are wretching while cleaning out the freezer until their father Phil makes a rare appearance at the warehouse looking for recruits to help him get rid of some cottonmouths on his property. Phil Robertson agrees to haul the rancid pile of meat in exchange for their help. The most convenient dumpster turns out to be the one at their church, but the guys are a little concerned about that No Dumping sign.

They end up punting on the idea and trying their luck at a Mexican restaurant, hoping to throw out their nasty payload with whatever the eatery is disposing of that day. They go inside and try to talk to the manager, but end up grabbing some chips and salsa and being serenaded by a mariachi band. Not sure how they could be hungry after being around all that fetid meat, but hey, the stomach wants what it wants.

After all that, though, the restaurant refuses to let them dump the meat. So off they go again, and Jase Robertson calls his brother Alan for reinforcement, asking if maybe they could dispose of it in his community’s dumpster. Alan Robertson suggests they go to the church instead. Phil has a laugh, but he stops laughing when he tells the camera that maybe Jase and Jep ought to walk home.

Miss Kay is seen at the house making a milkshake and singing.

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Ty Warner: Beanie Babies toys creator faces up to 5 years in prison after admitting tax evasion

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Beanie Babies toys creator Ty Warner could face up to five years in prison after agreeing to admit a charge of tax evasion.

Federal prosecutors said that Ty Warner, 69, “went to great lengths” to hide more than $3 million of income in a secret Swiss bank account.

Ty Warner’s lawyer said his client had agreed to pay a $53m fine.

The Illinois tycoon’s net worth is estimated by Forbes at $2.6 billion, ranking him the 209th richest American.

Ty Warner’s attorney, Gregory Scandaglia, said his client accepted “full responsibility for his actions with this plea agreement”.

“This is an unfortunate situation that Mr Warner has been trying to resolve for several years now,” Gregory Scandaglia told the Associated Press.

The charges come as a result of a clampdown by US authorities on its citizens hiding money abroad to avoid paying tax – particularly in Switzerland.

Beanie Babies toys creator Ty Warner could face up to five years in prison after agreeing to admit a charge of tax evasion
Beanie Babies toys creator Ty Warner could face up to five years in prison after agreeing to admit a charge of tax evasion

It is alleged that Ty Warner, who also has a reputation for philanthropy, set up a Swiss bank account in 1996 with the UBS financial services company.

He failed to tell his accountants or the US tax authorities about the existence of the account, according to a press release by the US Attorney’s office in Chicago.

The prosecutor’s statement did not mention a $53 million fine.

Beanie Babies are a soft toy, popular in the 1990s, that sell for between $5 and $7.

Allen Adamson, from the branding firm Landor Associates, said the toy company could be affected by the “negative buzz” of the case.

“It’s so jarring because this product feels so sweet, so innocent,” he said.

However, branding expert Laura Ries, of Ries & Ries, disagreed.

“People may not buy [a Beanie Babies toy] because it’s not as cool as it was. But I don’t think consumers care the owner didn’t pay his taxes and is in big legal trouble.”

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Kris Jenner slammed by eBay user for selling dirty Tom Ford sunglasses

Kris Jenner received some rather negative feedback on eBay after she offloaded some designer items on the auction site recently.

Kris Jenner, 57, was slammed online after a customer bought a pair of Tom Ford black frame oval sunglasses from her.

After purchasing the item, the user in question was far from pleased to receive a pair of “dirty” shades with “makeup on it and fingerprints all over it” according to RadarOnline.com.

The description of the “pre-owned item” had previously read: “Kris’s own black oval sunglasses from Tom Ford.

“These classic oval sunglasses with gold accents are a must-have for the summer.

“Gold T accent on sides with miniature Tom Ford plate. Black gradient lenses with purple tint.

Kris Jenner was slammed on eBay after a customer bought a pair of Tom Ford black frame oval sunglasses from her
Kris Jenner was slammed on eBay after a customer bought a pair of Tom Ford black frame oval sunglasses from her

“Stand out from the crowd with these fashionable sunglasses!”

Despite the glowing review of the sunglasses, the buyer was reportedly none too impressed, subsequently providing Kris Jenner with her very first negative review.

“Received item dirty with makeup on it and fingerprints all over it,” she wrote.

The same buyer also purchased a halter top from the star, and again was left disappointed.

“Not worth what I paid Looks Cheap,” she wrote.

Kris Jenner has followed the lead of her daughter Khloe Kardashian by offloading goods on the website.

Earlier this year, Khloe Kardashian, 29, launched an eBay store with husband Lamar Odom.

Khloe Kardashian started selling items from the more intimate section of her wardrobe – including her underwear and negligees.

One of the sports bras Khloe Kardashian was selling was advertised as “pre-owned”.

And at one point she even raked in 13 bids from happy shoppers hoping to get their mitts on the workout wear Khloe Kardashian had been sweating in.

Unfortunately, her silky slips didn’t garner quite as much attention on the site.

Kim Kardashian also launched an eBay store and sold some of her wardrobe last summer, with part of the proceeds supporting Life Change Community Church.

Bloomingdale’s to combat wardrobing by introducing plastic B-tag

Bloomingdale’s has decided to fight against crafty shoppers who buy special occasion merchandise only to return it after a single wear.

The store is now attaching what they call a “B-tag” to dresses in visible spots, like hemlines. Once removed, a dress will be rendered nonreturnable under new conditions outlined by the national retailer.

The B-tag, first reported by Bloomberg on Tuesday, has been attached to all dresses retailing for over $150. The associate also said that the device is being used at all of Bloomingdale’s nationwide outlets.

Bloomingdale’s e-commerce business has also picked up on the practice. Online “details” indicate when items will be delivered with a B-tag attached.

Bloomingdale's introduces plastic B-tag to combat wardrobing
Bloomingdale’s introduces plastic B-tag to combat wardrobing

“Please note that this dress will be delivered with a black B-tag attached, with instructions for removal included. If the B-tag is removed, the dress cannot be returned,” reads an online descripton for a French Connection “opal sequin” dress.

For now, dresses are the only item at Bloomingdale’s to receive the B-tag. Bloomberg says that the retailer is “using the tactic to combat a practice known as <<wardrobing>> – buying clothes and using them once – a form of return fraud”. They say that: “National Retail Federation estimates [wardrobing] cost the industry $8.8 billion last year.”

The B-tag is a rudimentary piece of black plastic that resembles many of the store’s electronic security tags in bulk and size. The tag is not, however, electronically charged in any way.

Its teardrop shape and bulbous nature would make it difficult to wear a dress with it still attached. In this way, the B-tag tactic will likely prove very effective.

Bloomingdale’s said in a statement that the B-tags “are in place to reinforce the fact that Bloomingdale’s will be unable to accept a return of merchandise that has been worn, washed, damaged, used and/or altered”.

Egypt: Security forces clash with militants in Kerdasa

Egyptian soldiers have clashed with militants after entering Kerdasa, a town near Cairo.

Security forces went into Kerdasaa at about 05:30 local time to target “criminal and terrorist hotbeds”, officials told Mena news agency.

Militants shot dead General Nabil Farag, a senior policeman, state media said.

Eleven police officers were killed at a police station in Kerdasah last month, weeks after the overthrow of Islamist President Mohamed Morsi in July.

In the hours before police and soldiers moved in, the mood in the town was defiant.

Thousands of people attended a pro-Morsi rally on Wednesday night amid shouts of “Down with Sisi”, referring to the head of the army.

The authorities had promised to respond to the deadly attack on the police station in August.

According to state media, Assistant Interior Minister for Central Security Maj. Gen. Ashraf Abdullah met troops shortly before the mission began.

Egyptian soldiers have clashed with militants after entering Kerdasa, a town near Cairo
Egyptian soldiers have clashed with militants after entering Kerdasa, a town near Cairo

After performing dawn prayers, the troops began taking their positions in armored vehicles ready for the start of the operation, Mena reported.

State-run Nile News TV later showed live pictures of army vehicles positioned in Kerdasah and other armored vehicles moving in the area.

“I can’t be responsible if you get shot,” an officer was heard telling a local man.

An Egyptian interior ministry spokesman told Nile News: “There are still some armed elements on rooftops in Kerdasah and we are currently dealing with them.”

In a separate incident on Thursday, several metro lines in the capital were disrupted after two unexploded bombs were found on the tracks near Hilmiyat al-Zaytun station in the south of Cairo.

Security officials said bomb experts were dispatched to the scene and defused the “primitive” devices before rail services resumed.

At least 1,000 people – including about 100 police officers – have died in unrest following President Mohamed Morsi’s removal from power.

The deadliest incidents took place when security forces moved in to disperse two pro-Morsi sit-ins in Cairo last month.

Kerdasa, known for producing and selling textiles, is 8.7 miles from Cairo.

Egyptian forces arrested dozens of residents during a raid on Monday on pro-Morsi supporters in the town of Delga, Minya province, about 200 miles south of Cairo.

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Bashar al-Assad: One year to destroy chemical weapons

Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad has said he is committed to a plan to destroy his country’s chemical weapons but warned it could take about a year.

Speaking to Fox News,Bashar al-Assad again denied claims that his forces were responsible for a deadly chemical attack near Damascus on August 21.

The Syria disarmament plan was unveiled by the US and Russia last weekend.

The West wants the deal enshrined in a UN resolution backed by the threat of military force, but Russia objects.

Damascus – backed by Moscow – has insisted that rebel forces carried out last month’s attack in the Ghouta area.

In a separate development, fierce fighting has been reported between two rebel groups in the north of Syria.

Activists said the fighting began when jihadists from the al-Qaeda-linked group, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), and fighters from the Western-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA) clashed in the town of Azaz, near the Turkish border.

This is believed to be one of the biggest confrontations so far between the jihadists and the FSA.

Referring to the issue of destroying Syria’s stockpiles of chemical weapons, Bashar al-Assad said it was “a very complicated operation, technically”.

“And it needs a lot of money, some estimates about a billion.

“So it depends, you have to ask the experts what they mean by quickly. It has a certain schedule. It needs a year, or maybe a little bit more.”

Bashar al-Assad has said he is committed to a plan to destroy his country's chemical weapons but warned it could take about a year
Bashar al-Assad has said he is committed to a plan to destroy his country’s chemical weapons but warned it could take about a year

And when asked whether he would be willing to hand over chemical weapons to the US, President Bashar al-Assad said: “It needs about one billion. It is very detrimental to the environment. If the American administration is ready to pay this money and take the responsibility of bringing toxic materials to the United States, why don’t they do it?”

Bashar al-Assad also used the one-hour interview recorded in Damascus to criticize the US stance in the Syrian crisis.

Unlike the Russians, he said, Washington had tried to get involved in Syria’s leadership and governance.

Bashar al-Assad argued that if there was mutual respect, there would not be any problems.

“Listen to your people. Follow the common sense of your people,” he said, in an apparent reference to US President Barack Obama.

Bashar al-Assad’s comments come shortly after a senior Russian diplomat said Damascus would fulfill its commitment to eliminate its chemical weapons by mid-2014.

After talks in Syria on Wednesday, Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said Bashar al-Assad was “very serious” about the disarmament plan.

Sergei Ryabkov also said that Syrian officials had handed him “material evidence” that showed the rebels were involved in the sarin attack last month, contradicting claims by the US that the regime was responsible.

And the Russian diplomat criticized the United Nations for being “one-sided” in its recent report on the attack – a claim the UN denied.

The report – prepared for UN weapons experts after a visit to Syria – did not apportion blame for the August 21 attack.

Meanwhile Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel has said in an interview on German television that chemicals exported to Syria which were capable of being used to make poison gas were used for civilian purposes.

The German government, responding to a request from a member of parliament, said 137 tonnes of two substances capable of being used to make the poison gas, Sarin, were exported to Syria between 2002 and 2006.

Angela Merkel added that officials were still trying to ascertain what use was made of chemicals exported after 2006 and before May 2011, when Germany imposed strict controls on exports to Syria.

More than 100,000 people have been killed since Syria’s civil war began in early 2011, according to the UN.

Millions of Syrians have fled the country and millions more have been left homeless.

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Ken Norton dies aged 70

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Heavyweight boxing legend Ken Norton, who beat Muhammad Ali, has died at the age of 70, his son announces.

Ken Norton, who had been in poor health following a series of strokes, died at a care facility in Las Vegas, Nevada.

He broke Muhammad Ali’s jaw in their first bout in San Diego, California, in 1973, which Ken Norton won.

In their last meeting on September 1976 at New York’s Yankee Stadium, Muhammad Ali won a narrow and controversial decision to retain the heavyweight title.

Heavyweight boxing legend Ken Norton has died at the age of 70
Heavyweight boxing legend Ken Norton has died at the age of 70

“I’m sure he’s in heaven now with all the great fighters,” Gene Kilroy, Muhammad Ali’s former business manager, told the Associated Press news agency.

“I’d like to hear that conversation.”

Ken Norton began boxing during his time in the US Marines, and turned professional shortly after he left the military in 1967.

He won a heavyweight title in 1977, but lost the following year in a classic 15-round fight with Larry Holmes.

After his boxing career ended, Ken Norton appeared in several movies and became a fight commentator.

Ken Norton had five children, one of whom went on to play professional football and now coaches in the National Football League for the Seattle Seahawks.

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Hurricane Manuel approaches north-western Mexico

Tropical Storm Manuel, which has battered the south-west of Mexico, has gathered strength and is now a category one hurricane, US meteorologists say.

Hurricane Manuel is now approaching north-western Mexico and threatens more destruction, the US National Hurricane Centre said.

The tropical storms Ingrid and Manuel killed 80 people earlier this week.

Now 58 people are reported missing after a landslide buried a village in the south-west of the country.

US experts say Hurricane Manuel is sustaining winds of 75mph and moving towards the coast.

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto said that 58 people were missing after the landslide in the village of La Pintada in Guerrero state.

“It doesn’t look good, based on the photos we have in our possession,” said Mexican Interior Minister Miguel Angel Osorio Chong, saying it was a “very powerful” landslide.

“Up to this point, we do not have any [confirmed] dead in the landslide,” he added.

Tens of thousands of tourists, cut off by landslides caused by Manuel, are still being transported out of the Mexican resort of Acapulco.

Tropical Storm Manuel, which has battered the south-west of Mexico, has gathered strength and is now a category one hurricane
Tropical Storm Manuel, which has battered the south-west of Mexico, has gathered strength and is now a category one hurricane

More than 2,000 tourists have been airlifted from the Air Base Seven military facility north of the resort.

Since the weekend, passengers have been stranded in hotels and at Acapulco’s international airport, where water flooded the terminal.

Manuel was almost immediately followed by Hurricane Ingrid, causing widespread devastation in the east of the country. It was the first time since 1958 that two powerful storms hit Mexico within 24 hours.

Main roads out of Acapulco have been blocked by landslips, leaving tourists and local residents stranded in the city and along Mexico’s west coast.

At Air Base Seven, soldiers guarded families who waited for hours outside the base until they were allowed to board one of the few aircraft which would take them to Mexico City.

In Acapulco, passengers were being taken directly from shelters to the runway because the main airport terminal remained closed.

Dozens of other towns in the south-western Guerrero state have also been hit by Manuel since it made landfall on Sunday.

There are fears that remote hillside communities may be particularly affected.

In the east, Hurricane Ingrid was downgraded to a tropical storm shortly before it made landfall on Monday near the town of La Pesca.

More than 20,000 people have since been evacuated in the state of Veracruz.

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