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Ferguson: National Guard begins withdrawal

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The National Guard has begun withdrawing from Ferguson, Missouri, where the shooting of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown by white policeman Darren Wilson has sparked days of protests.

The National Guard troops were deployed in Ferguson on August 18 when demonstrations became more violent.

On August 21, Missouri Governor Jay Nixon ordered their withdrawal when it appeared that tensions had eased.

Michael Brown, 18, was killed on 9 August after being stopped by a police officer for walking in the street.

Jay Nixon had called in the National Guard to support police operations, amid unrest driven by anger over Michael Brown’s death and the police response.

However, August 20 and 21 were relatively calm with only a few arrests made.

Despite the easing of tension, some caution violence could flare up again when Michael Brown is buried on August 25.

The National Guard troops were deployed in Ferguson when demonstrations became more violent over Michael Brown’s shooting
The National Guard troops were deployed in Ferguson when demonstrations became more violent over Michael Brown’s shooting

“Monday night will be a critical night,” St Louis based Bishop Edwin Bass told the Reuters news agency.

“The funeral could have a big impact on the mood of the community,” he said.

Officer Darren Wilson, has been suspended with pay and Michael Brown’s family and supporters have called for him to be prosecuted.

A grand jury panel of residents has begun hearing evidence in the case, though officials have not said when it will reach a decision.

Attorney General Eric Holder arrived in Ferguson on August 20 to talk to justice department officials leading a separate federal investigation into the killing.

Eric Holder, who is the first black US attorney general, said on August 21 that the “national outcry we have seen speaks to the mistrust and mutual suspicions that can take hold between law enforcement and certain communities”.

“I wanted the people of Ferguson to know I personally understood that mistrust,” he said.

“This attorney general and this department of justice stand with the people of Ferguson.”

Eric Holder added that while he had gone to Ferguson to “provide reassurance, in fact they gave me hope”.

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Mark Chapman: John Lennon’s killer denied parole again

The New York authorities have denied parole to Mark Chapman, the man who shot dead John Lennon in 1980, for the eighth time.

Mark David Chapman, now 59, was sentenced to 20 years to life in 1981 after pleading guilty to second-degree murder.

He shot John Lennon four times outside a Manhattan apartment block on December 8, 1980.

Mark David Chapman shot John Lennon four times outside a Manhattan apartment block on December 8, 1980
Mark David Chapman shot John Lennon four times outside a Manhattan apartment block on December 8, 1980

The parole board said the murder of the famous British musician and former member of The Beatles “devastated a family and those who loved the victim”.

“Your release would be incompatible with the welfare of society and would so deprecate the serious nature of the crime as to undermine respect for the law,” the board said.

Mark Chapman can reapply for parole in two years.

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Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon divorce: Singer issues gag order

Nick Cannon has confirmed that he and Mariah Carey have been living separately for months, but it seems that’s all he’s allowed to say about the matter in public.

According to TMZ, Mariah Carey’s attorneys established a provision of the settlement in which Nick Cannon is on the hook for “serious financial penalties” should he reveal anything more than the fact that they are living apart.

TMZ als claims that Kim Kardashian is somehow involved in their decision to divorce after six years of marriage.

Mariah Carey, meanwhile, is allowed to announce the details of their split as she sees fit.

A Mariah Carey’s representative told Us Weekly in a statement on August 22: “I don’t comment on Mariah’s personal life, but Mariah is focusing on her children and her upcoming tour.”

Nick Cannon has confirmed that he and Mariah Carey have been living separately for months
Nick Cannon has confirmed that he and Mariah Carey have been living separately for months (photo Getty Images)

Mariah Carey, 44, and Nick Cannon, 33, have already worked out settlements regarding their children, twins Monroe and Moroccan, as well as their property.

With no prior announcement on April 30, 2008, Nick Cannon and Mariah Carey got married at her private estate on Windermere Island in The Bahamas.

In April 2011, Mariah Carey gave birth to fraternal twins Monroe Cannon and Moroccan Scott.

On January 4, 2012, Nick Cannon was hospitalized after suffering from mild kidney failure. He was then hospitalized on February 17, 2012, for blood clots in his lungs.

On March 5, 2012, Nick Cannon announced that he had been diagnosed with an autoimmune disease, lupus nephritis, which was the cause of his recent kidney problems.

On May 1, 2013, Nick Cannon and Mariah Carey lived out a fairy-tale “Fantasy” wedding at the Disneyland Resort, where they marked their fifth wedding anniversary with a renewal of vows and celebrated their twins’ second birthday.

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Most important meal may not be breakfast

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Nutrition science has in recent years been bisected over the importance of breakfast.

Recent studies land a weight of evidence thoroughly outside the realm of “most important meal”.

In one study, 300 people ate or skipped breakfast and showed no subsequent difference in their weight gained or lost.

According to researcher Emily Dhurandhar, the findings suggest that breakfast “may be just another meal”.

Recent research suggests that breakfast may be just another meal
Recent research suggests that breakfast may be just another meal

Another small new study from the University of Bath found that resting metabolic rates, cholesterol levels, and blood-sugar profiles were the same after six weeks of eating or skipping breakfast. Breakfast-skippers ate less over the course of the day than did breakfast-eaters, though they also burned fewer calories.

The crux of the breakfast divide is a phenomenon known among nutrition scientists as “proposed effect of breakfast on obesity”, or the PEBO. It’s the idea people who don’t eat breakfast actually end up eating more and/or worse things over the course of the day because their nightly fast was not properly broken.

Some studies have supported that idea, but a strong meta-analysis of all existing research last year by obesity researchers found that “the belief in the PEBO exceeds the strength of scientific evidence”, citing poor research and bias in reporting.

Another study published last year researchers at Cornell had people go without breakfast for science, and those who skipped ended up eating less by the end of the day.

In a third study published in July 2013 in the American Heart Association’s journal Circulation found that eating breakfast was associated with significantly lower risk of heart disease. That remains the most persuasive pro-breakfast case to date.

Ukraine: Lithuania’s honorary consul Mykola Zelenec killed in Luhansk

Lithuania’s honorary consul in Luhansk, Mykola Zelenec, has been killed in the rebel-held Ukrainian city.

Lithuania’s Foreign Minister Linas Linkevicius tweeted that Mykola Zelenec was “kidnapped & brutally killed by terrorists there”.

Ukraine routinely calls the pro-Russian separatists in Luhansk “terrorists”.

The news came amid reports that some Russian aid trucks had reached Luhansk without any permission from Ukraine.

There has been no comment from the rebels yet on the Lithuanian diplomat’s death.

Lithuania is among the most vociferous EU member states in its criticism of Russian actions in Ukraine. The EU and US accuse Russia of fomenting the separatist rebellion in eastern Ukraine.

The news of Mykola Zelenec’s killing came amid reports that some Russian aid trucks had reached Luhansk without any permission from Ukraine
The news of Mykola Zelenec’s killing came amid reports that some Russian aid trucks had reached Luhansk without any permission from Ukraine

Linas Linkevicius described the entry of the Russian aid convoy into eastern Ukraine as “a blatant violation of international law”, echoing Ukraine’s condemnation of the move.

The UN Security Council is holding an emergency session at Lithuania’s request to discuss the issue.

The Ukraine crisis has heightened tensions between Russia and the three Baltic republics – including Lithuania – which used to be Soviet republics governed from Moscow.

Russia’s ambassador to the UN, Vitaly Churkin, lambasted the Lithuanian delegation on Friday.

He scorned “the indefatigable delegation of Lithuania, which is always torpedoing all productive, constructive initiatives we’ve had in the Security Council”.

Vitaly Churkin said Lithuania had amended a Russian proposal calling for a ceasefire while the aid was distributed in Luhansk. He said the Lithuanian delegation “sent in amendments where they dropped the reference to Russia and included a reference to the European Union, and then dropped the reference to a ceasefire”.

At the UN, Vitaly Churkin added, “the Lithuanian delegation starts working, and of course we know the division of labor – the US and UK are not far behind”.

Kaum De Heere: India blocks Indira Ghandi assassination movie

India has blocked the release of Kaum De Heere (Diamonds Of The Community), a movie about the assassination of former PM Indira Gandhi, after complaints it glorified her killers.

Intelligence agencies had warned of potential violence if the movie is released.

Kaum De Heere had been scheduled for release on Friday, August 22.

The movie tells the story of Indira Gandhi’s Sikh bodyguards who shot her dead apparently to avenge her decision to send troops in a deadly raid on the Golden Temple.

Sikhs say thousands were murdered when the army entered Sikhism’s holiest shrine in Amritsar to flush out militants.

Kaum De Heere had been scheduled for release on August 22
Kaum De Heere had been scheduled for release on August 22

Indira Gandhi’s assassination triggered an outburst of communal violence targeted at Sikhs and more than 3,000 Sikhs were killed in attacks across India.

India’s Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) decided to halt the release “because of the law and order situation that might result from the showing of the film”, the Press Trust of India (PTI) news agency reported.

Kaum De Heere‘s producer Ravinder Ravi has defended his film vociferously, but has not yet responded to the latest decision.

In Punjab the Congress Party – which Indira Gandhi led – threatened to carry out protests if the film was released and the party’s youth wing also wrote to PM Narendra Modi asking for the film to be banned, saying it presented her assassins as heroes.

Satwant Singh and Beant Singh, her two bodyguards, are the main focus of the movie, which is what has given rise to such anger.

Beant Singh was killed by police shortly after the murder while Satwant Singh was later hanged.

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Duck Dynasty Season 6 finale: Will the show be renewed for another season or canceled?

Duck Dynasty Season 6 wrapped up on August 13 after ten episodes, with the last one titled Lake Boss.

The sixth season premiered on June 11. Episodes 9 and 10 aired on August 13, for a one-hour season finale.

According to the description for Lake Boss: “Jase plans a trip to the lake when Korie seeks ideas for celebrating Willie’s birthday; Phil and the grandchildren hunt for a raccoon that has taken up.”

Fans are wondering whether the show will be renewed for another season or canceled.

There’s no official word yet, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. It sometimes takes weeks or even months after a season ends for official confirmation of a renewal or cancellation.

Duck Dynasty ratings have slipped this year, hitting a low of 3.4 million in episode 8 on August 6.

Duck Dynasty Season 6 wrapped up on August 13 after ten episodes
Duck Dynasty Season 6 wrapped up on August 13 after ten episodes (photo A & E TV)

The show premiered back in March 2012 with only 1.8 million viewers, but climbed to 2.5 million by the end of the season.

Duck Dynasty Season 2, running from October through December 2012, found 6.4 million viewers at the season finale, and Season 3 in early 2013 climbed to about 8.5 million per episode. Season 4 in August through December 2013 had almost 12 million viewers in its premiere, although it later dipped to as low as 7.3 million.

Duck Dynasty Season 5 saw a big dropoff, down to as low as 4.7 million viewers.

This season has been the worst since season 1, with just the premiere above 4 million viewers.

On July 17, 2014, the show came in with 3.7 million viewers over all–but most importantly, with 1.4 million in the coveted 18-49 age bracket, the best for the night.

Si Robertson launches Tea Cup Photo Contest

Duck Dynasty’s Si Robertson has launched his Tea Cup Photo Contest.

Participants can win one of Si Robertson’s signed tea cups and a bobble head from the Duck Commander Store.

Si Robertson has launched his Tea Cup Photo Contest
Si Robertson has launched his Tea Cup Photo Contest (photo Facebook)

Si Robertson announced on his Facebook page: “The #MyTeaCup Photo Contest starts today JACK! Submit your best tea cup photo for a chance at winning a signed tea cup and bobble head from the Duck Commander Store! Your picture could even be posted on my page! Click this link to enter: https://a.pgtb.me/zW63nC.”

Willie, Korie, Uncle Si and Al Robertson at Columbus North Gym on August 23

Duck Dynasty stars Willie, Korie, Uncle Si and Al Robertson will be in Columbus, Indiana, on August 23.

They will meet fans at the Columbus North Gym and will talk about their family, their business and how their Faith has laid the foundation in these areas.

Willie, Korie, Si and Alan Robertson will answer audience questions and comments.

Si Robertson wrote on his Facebook page: “It’s four days ’till I’m gonna be in Columbus, IN with Willie and Korie! You can still get tickets JACK! On Saturday at 5:00 PM TWO meet & greet passes will be raffled off. There will also be FREE outside activities planned for the entire afternoon.”

Willie, Korie and Uncle Si Robertson will be in Columbus, Indiana, on August 23
Willie, Korie and Uncle Si Robertson will be in Columbus, Indiana, on August 23 (photo Facebook)

Location:Columbus North Gym
1400 25th Street
Columbus, 47201

A Night with A&E’s Duck Dynasty: Willie, Korie, Si, and Alan

Great seats are available starting at $25.  Prices are from $25 – $55

How to purchase tickets: By phone to Blank Slate Ticket Office 812-343-9762, on line at www.blankslatepro.org, or locally at Midwest Computer Solutions in Columbus IN

Time: August 23, 2014 7:00 pm. Doors open at 6:00 pm.

Reed Robertson leaves West Monroe for Nashville to pursue a music career

Duck Dynasty’s Reed Robertson, the son of Jase and Missy Robertson, has left his West Monroe’s home for Nashville to pursue his music career, his mother has announced.

Jase and Missy Robertson’s teenage son is actually a talented musician who landed himself a spot on a tour with American Idol alum Colton Dixon, among others.

Duck Dynasty’s Reed Robertson is the son of Jase and Missy Robertson
Duck Dynasty’s Reed Robertson is the son of Jase and Missy Robertson (photo Facebook)

If you were able to pick up Duck the Halls, you might remember Reed Robertson as the album’s high point in the tune Camouflage and Christmas Lights.

Reed Robertson boasted a pretty good voice — as well as some guitar skills — which he showed off in a school performance last year.

Missy Robertson wrote on Facebook:Reed, our firstborn, left the nest for Nashville this morning to follow his dream of music. Jase and I are trusting God to lead him in this endeavor. We’re very proud of how he has chosen to live for Jesus and the risks he is willing to take to pursue this step in his life. Please keep him in your prayers…and us as well. We’ve raised him to leave home, but it’s still hard on this mama.”

Anthony Carbajal: Photographer with ALS explains Ice Bucket Challenge

Photographer Anthony Carbajal, who was recently diagnosed with ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis), has posted a hilarious video of himself as part of his very own Ice Bucket Challenge.

However, the rest of the video, where Anthony Carbajal explains his story and addresses the “haters” of the challenge sparked his call to arms to go viral.

“ALS is so, so f***ing scary,” Anthony Carbajal says.

“That’s probably why nobody talks about it. No one wants to see a depressing person that’s dying.”

ALS runs in the wedding photographer’s family – his mother has the disease and his grandmother passed away from it.

Anthony Carbajal, who was diagnosed with ALS earlier this year, had to stop working and is already experiencing lack of muscle control
Anthony Carbajal, who was diagnosed with ALS earlier this year, had to stop working and is already experiencing lack of muscle control

The disease, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, slowly breaks down the motor neurons that send signals to the spine and brain. When all the motor neurons are broken down, the ultimate result is death.

Anthony Carbajal was diagnosed with ALS on January 27, 2014.

“Eventually I won’t be able to walk, talk or breathe on my own” he says.

The video shows Anthony Carbajal caring for his bed-ridden mother.

According to his YouCaring crowd-funding page, Anthony Carbajal also had to stop working and is already experiencing lack of muscle control. His message has spread, because so far, the page has raised over $100,000 – a little over half of his goal.

Despite arguments against the challenge, Anthony Carbajal is grateful for the support: “You have no idea how every single challenge lifts my fears, lifts every single ALS patients’ fears.”

“You are making a difference.”

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UN: Syrian conflict death toll exceeds 191,000

UN human rights chief Navi Pillay has announced that 191,369 people have been killed in the Syrian conflict up to April 2014.

Navi Pillay said the figure was “probably an underestimate” and criticized what she called “international paralysis” on the issue.

The figure is more than double the UN estimate given a year ago.

Opposition groups in Syria have been fighting President Bashar al-Assad for over three years, but have lost ground in recent months.

More than 191,000 people have been killed in the Syrian conflict up to April 2014
More than 191,000 people have been killed in the Syrian conflict up to April 2014

The UN report was based on data from four different monitoring groups and the Syrian government which was then cross-checked.

“Tragically it is probably an underestimate of the real total number of people killed during the first three years of this murderous conflict,” Navi Pillay, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said.

“The killers, destroyers and torturers in Syria have been empowered and emboldened by the international paralysis” she added.

The highest number of killings was recorded in Damascus province, with 39,393 deaths, followed by Aleppo, with 31,932.

Both the Syrian government and Syrian rebel groups have been accused of war crimes by the UN.

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Miley Cyrus’ Dominican Republic concert banned on morality grounds

Miley Cyrus’ Dominican Republic concert planned for September 13 has been banned by a governmental commission that oversees public performances on morality grounds, Associated Press reported.

The commission said in a statement on August 21 that it took the action because Miley Cyrus, 21, often “undertakes acts that go against morals and customs, which are punishable by Dominican law”.

Miley Cyrus’ Dominican Republic concert has been banned by a governmental commission on morality grounds
Miley Cyrus’ Dominican Republic concert has been banned by a governmental commission on morality grounds (photo Getty Images)

Tickets ranging from $27 to $370 for the concert in Santo Domingo have been on sale since July.

Some critics have declared Miley Cyrus’ onstage antics, including twerking, as vulgar.

Concert organizers in the Dominican Republic did not comment on the ban.

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Amy Van Dyken-Rouen: Paralyzed swimmer walks for first time with bionic legs

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Paralyzed swimmer Amy Van Dyken-Rouen is walking for the first time with the help of bionic legs since an ATV accident in June.

The accident left Amy Van Dyken-Rouen, 41, paralyzed from the waist down.

Paralyzed swimmer Amy Van Dyken-Rouen is walking for the first time with the help of bionic legs
Paralyzed swimmer Amy Van Dyken-Rouen is walking for the first time with the help of bionic legs

The Olympic champion, who said she felt “1,000 times better” after being released from a Colorado rehabilitation hospital last week, documented her first time standing and walking with the aid of a walker and leg devices Thursday on her Instagram account.

“Standing up for the first time on my own in 2 1/2 months,” Amy Van Dyken-Rouen captioned on the photo.

Amy Van Dyken-Rouen was paralyzed from the T11-12 vertebrae down after being thrown from an ATV in Arizona on June 6, though she has since said that she’s felt movement below her belly button and hopes to regain feeling in her legs some day.

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Russian aid convoy starts to move towards Luhansk without permission

The Russian aid convoy has moved across the Ukrainian border, without permission, after Russia accused Ukraine of obstructing it.

Russia’s foreign ministry said Ukraine had held up the convoy in order to pursue war against rebels in Luhansk, where the aid is destined.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it was “not part of that convoy in any way”.

Reports suggest the trucks are being escorted by rebel fighters.

“Our humanitarian aid convoy is starting to move towards Luhansk,” the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement.

It warned Ukraine not to take any action against the convoy without specifying the consequences.

Ukraine fears that the aid convoy of at least 260 trucks, which arrived at the border more than a week ago, is part of a broader Russian intervention in eastern Ukraine.

Russia denies accusations that it arms and trains the rebels in the rebellion in Luhansk and the neighboring region of Donetsk, where four months of fighting have left more than 2,000 people dead and has caused more than 330,000 people to flee their homes.

The Russian aid convoy has moved across the Ukrainian border, without permission
The Russian aid convoy has moved across the Ukrainian border, without permission (photo Reuters)

The rebel-held city of Luhansk has been without running water, power and phone communications for 20 days as government forces hold it under siege.

As many as 70 trucks have entered Ukrainian territory, moving out of the no-man’s land between the Russian and Ukrainian border posts.

Reporters at the scene saw rebel fighters in front of the convoy as it passed over the border, in a rebel-held sector near the Russian town of Kamensk-Shakhtinsky.

It is normally a drive of about two hours from the trucks’ camp to the city of Luhansk.

However, it is unclear if the convoy will be able to use the motorway there because of continuing combat between rebels and government forces.

An ICRC spokesperson in Moscow said it had concluded that it had not “received the necessary security guarantees from the fighting parties to allow us to escort the convoy at this time”.

It cited “heavy shelling overnight” in Luhansk.

“We understand that the convoy is now moving, however the ICRC is not part of that convoy in any way,” the spokesperson added.

The Russian branch of the ICRC said earlier it was ready to take part in the relief operation and was contacting its international colleagues.

“We are warning against any attempts to sabotage this purely humanitarian mission, which was prepared a long time ago, in an atmosphere of full transparency and in co-operation with the Ukrainian side and the ICRC,” the Russian foreign ministry said.

Delays in Ukrainian clearance for the convoy had “become unbearable”, it said.

“All excuses for blocking the delivery of aid to people in the area where this humanitarian catastrophe is happening have been exhausted,” it added.

“The Russian side has decided to act. Our convoy carrying humanitarian aid is beginning to move towards Luhansk.”

There was no immediate comment on news of the convoy’s entry from the Ukrainian authorities.

Ukrainian media did report, however, that the convoy had not received the go-ahead from Ukraine.

In a statement on its website, Luhansk’s official council reported on August 22 that the dire situation in the city remained unchanged with no halt in the bombardment.

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MH17: Remains of 20 Malaysian victims returned to Kuala Lumpur

The bodies of 20 Malaysian victims of Flight MH17 that crashed in Ukraine last month have arrived in Kuala Lumpur.

A specially chartered plane took off from Amsterdam and landed around 10:00 local time.

National flags are flying at half-mast for the day of mourning.

Flight MH17 is believed to have been shot down by a missile fired by pro-Russian rebels. They deny the claim.

All 298 passengers and crew on board the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 died on July 17.

From office workers to train drivers, many among the nation of 30 million observed a minute’s silence as white hearses drove the remains from the airport to private funerals in various provinces.

Malaysia’s public transportation, including the national rail system and Kuala Lumpur’s monorail, paused during the minute of silence.

PM Najib Razak, who turned his Twitter and Facebook pages black, wrote a condolence message that was widely shared.

The bodies of 20 Malaysian victims of Flight MH17 that crashed in Ukraine last month have arrived in Kuala Lumpur
The bodies of 20 Malaysian victims of Flight MH17 that crashed in Ukraine last month have arrived in Kuala Lumpur (photo Getty Images)

“Last month, 43 Malaysian lives were taken over eastern Ukraine. Today we mourn the loss of our people. Today, we begin to bring them home.”

“Our thoughts and our prayers are with the families and friends of those who lost their lives. Today we stand with you, united as one.”

Transport minister Liow Tiong Lai said in a statement that the government will “redouble” efforts to bring home the remaining victims.

Malaysia Airlines is organizing a public prayer session and a spokesman also expressed the company’s condolences.

Earlier on Thursday, a contingent of Malaysian soldiers met the plane to escort the coffins to the hearses.

All the coffins were draped in the national flag. Three of the 20 bodies have been cremated in the Netherlands.

The victims’ bodies have been given to their families and relatives to be laid to rest.

This is the first time Malaysia is holding a national day of mourning for civilian victims.

The honor has traditionally been accorded only to the royal family and heads of government.

Of the 43 Malaysian victims, 28 have been identified in the Netherlands so far, which is leading an international investigation into the crash in eastern Ukraine.

More than 200 coffins with remains of the victims have so far been taken to the Netherlands.

The inquiry is being hampered by continuing fighting between Ukrainian government troops and pro-Russian rebels near the crash site.

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Klaus Zapf dead: German anti-Capitalist millionaire dies from heart attack at 62

German millionaire and removals entrepreneur Klaus Zapf, who shunned the trappings of wealth, has died from a heart attack at the age of 62.

Klaus Zapf was the founder and co-owner of Zapf Umzuge, one of the largest relocation companies in Europe.

He earned himself a legendary reputation for living well below his means, and was known for acts such as collecting returnable bottles at night.

Klaus Zapf died on August 20, his company announced on its website.

Despite his vast wealth, Klaus Zapf lived in a small flat and was paid just enough to cover his basic living costs, according to Der Spiegel.

He once said that he collected empty bottles on which there is a deposit to be reclaimed and only shopped at supermarkets with the lowest prices.

According to reports, he lived on less than 300 euros ($400) a month.

Klaus Zapf was the founder and co-owner of Zapf Umzuge, one of the largest relocation companies in Europe
Klaus Zapf was the founder and co-owner of Zapf Umzuge, one of the largest relocation companies in Europe

“I don’t need money. It just makes us unequal,” he was quoted as saying.

German press reports describe him as being “deeply immersed” in the left scene during his student years, and names Rudi Dutschke – a prominent leader of Germany’s socialist student movement in the late 1960s – as among his peers.

Klaus Zapf founded his removals company in Berlin in 1975, after cutting his university studies short.

He came to West Berlin 45 years ago and labored, humping furniture, which inspired him to set up his own company.

Klaus Zapf never got a driving license, so he relied on others to drive the transit van while he did the heavy lifting and later moved into management.

When the Berlin Wall came down, he reportedly predicted that the capital would move from Bonn to Berlin, leading him to set up a depot there and get the lion’s share of the moving business.

The company says it has some 600 employees and more than 60,000 customers per year at 14 different locations.

Klaus Zapf, who married twice – most recently in June this year – leaves behind a daughter.

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Venezuela to fingerprint shoppers to combat food shortages and smuggling

A mandatory fingerprinting system will placed in Venezuela’s supermarkets to combat food shortages and smuggling, President Nicolas Maduro has announced.

Nicolas Maduro said the system would stop people from buying too much of a single item.

However, the opposition in Venezuela rejected the plan, saying the policy treated all Venezuelans as thieves.

Critics said fingerprinting consumers of staple products was tantamount to rationing and constituted a breach of privacy.

Up to 40% of the goods which Venezuela subsidizes for its domestic market are smuggled to Colombia, where they are sold at much higher prices, the authorities say.

A mandatory fingerprinting system will placed in Venezuela’s supermarkets to combat food shortages and smuggling
A mandatory fingerprinting system will placed in Venezuela’s supermarkets to combat food shortages and smuggling

“The amount of staples smuggled to Colombia would be enough to load the shelves of our supermarkets,” Gen. Efrain Velasco Lugo, a military spokesman, told El Universal newspaper earlier this week.

The opposition blames what it says are the failed left-wing policies of the past 15 years – initiated by late President Hugo Chavez – for the country’s economic crisis.

Dissatisfaction with the shortage of many staples, as well as rampant crime and high inflation, led thousands of people in the western Venezuelan states of Tachira and Merida to take to the streets in January.

The protests quickly spread to the rest of Venezuela, which faces similar problems.

Earlier this month Venezuela launched an anti-smuggling operation on its border with Colombia.

It deployed 17,000 troops along the border and began closing all the crossings at night.

The one-month ban will be lifted in mid-September.

The decision to close the border was agreed with Colombia, where the smuggling of cheap goods from Venezuela is also seen as a major problem.

The Colombian government says it leads to a big loss in taxes, with complaints of unfair competition faced by local businesses.

Ebola outbreak: Dr. Kent Brantly released from hospital

Dr. Kent Brantly, one of the US aid workers who recovered from an Ebola infection, is “thrilled to be alive” as he is discharged from hospital.

Dr. Kent Brantly, 33, thanked supporters for their prayers at a news conference in Atlanta.

Nurse Nancy Writebol, 59, was discharged on August 19.

The two were brought to the US for treatment three weeks ago.

The outbreak has killed more than 1,300 people in West Africa, with many of the deaths occurring in Liberia.

“Today is a miraculous day,” said Dr. Kent Brantly, who appeared healthy if pallid as he addressed reporters on Thursday at Emory University hospital.

“I am thrilled to be alive, to be well, and to be reunited with my family. As a medical missionary, I never imagined myself in this position.”

Dr. Kent Brantly contracted the Ebola virus in Liberia, where he and his family moved in October 2013
Dr. Kent Brantly contracted the Ebola virus in Liberia, where he and his family moved in October 2013 (photo AP)

Dr. Kent Brantly said Ebola “was not on the radar” when he and his family moved to Liberia in October.

After his family returned to the US as the Ebola outbreak tore through West Africa, Kent Brantly continued to treat Ebola patients and woke up on July 23 feeling “under the weather”.

Dr. Kent Brantly said he lay in bed for nine days, getting progressively sicker and weaker.

On August 1, he was flown to Atlanta for treatment at Emory unit.

Emory infectious disease specialist Dr. Bruce Ribner said after rigorous treatment and testing officials were confident Dr. Kent Brantly had recovered “and he can return to his family, his community and his life without public health concerns”.

The group for which Dr. Kent Brantly was working in Liberia, Samaritan’s Purse, said they were celebrating his recovery.

“Today I join all of our Samaritan’s Purse team around the world in giving thanks to God as we celebrate Dr. Kent Brantly’s recovery from Ebola and release from the hospital,” Franklin Graham said in a statement.

Nancy Writebol’s husband David said in a statement that she was free of the virus but was significantly weakened.

Her family decided to leave the hospital privately in order to allow her to rest and recuperate.

Meanwhile, South Africa on Thursday said non-citizens arriving from Ebola-affected areas of West Africa – the countries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone – would not be allowed into the country.

There is no cure for Ebola, one of the deadliest diseases known to humans, with a fatality rate in this outbreak of 50-60%.

But both Dr. Kent Brantly and Nancy Writebol received an experimental treatment known as ZMapp.

The drug, which has only been made in extremely limited quantities, had never been tested on humans and it remains unclear if it is responsible for their recovery.

ZMapp was also given to a Spanish priest, who died, and three Liberian health workers, who are showing signs of improvement.

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James Foley killing: US refused to pay $132 million ransom

James Foley’s killers wanted a $132 million ransom for his release, his employer has said.

GlobalPost CEO Philip Balboni said the Islamic State (ISIS) militants first demanded money last year.

James Foley was abducted in November 2012, and a video of his beheading was released by ISIS earlier this week.

In the video, they threatened to kill another American, journalist Steven Joel Sotloff, if the US did not stop its air strikes against the group in northern Iraq.

US air strikes have continued near Mosul despite the warning.

The US has begun a formal criminal investigation into James Foley’s death, with Attorney General Eric Holder saying that the US has a “long memory and our reach is very wide”.

In the UK, police and security services are trying to identify the jihadistwho appeared in footage of James Foley’s killing.

Unconfirmed reports suggest the man – who had a British accent – is from London or south-east England.

Journalist James Foley was abducted in Syria in November 2012
Journalist James Foley was abducted in Syria in November 2012

On Thursday, Eric Holder said the US pursuit of James Foley’s killer would be determined.

“We have an open criminal investigation, and those who would perpetrate such acts need to understand something: this Justice Department, the Department of Defense, this nation, we have long memories and our reach is very wide,” he said.

“We will not forget what happened and people will be held accountable one way or the other.”

Earlier President Barack Obama condemned the killing and vowed to bring the perpetrators to justice.

“We will be vigilant and we will be relentless,” he said.

“When people harm Americans, anywhere, we do what’s necessary to see that justice is done.”

The US launched more air strikes on ISIS targets in Iraq on Thursday.

US aircraft destroyed or damaged four ISIS vehicles and several bomb placements in strikes near Mosul dam, the military said.

Since August 8, the US military says it has conducted a total of 90 airstrikes across Iraq.

Of those 90 strikes, 57 have been near Mosul Dam, the military said.

The US defense department has revealed that the US “attempted a rescue operation recently to free a number of American hostages held in Syria”.

“Unfortunately, the mission was not successful because the hostages were not present at the targeted location.”

It was the first time the US government had acknowledged that its forces had operated in Syria since the country’s civil war began in 2011.

The Pentagon statement did not specify whether the operation had intended to rescue James Foley.

However, senior US officials – speaking on condition of anonymity – confirmed this. They added that the troops had killed several ISIS militants.

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Bank of America to pay $16.7 billion mortgage settlement

Bank of America has agreed pay a record settlement of $16.7 billion for misleading investors about the quality of loans it sold.

The loans were sold by Countrywide Financial and Merrill Lynch before Bank of America bought them in 2008, at the height of the financial crisis.

The associate attorney general said “no institution is either too big or too powerful to escape” punishment.

The settlement will cut the bank’s third-quarter profits by $5.3bn.

Bank of America will pay a total of $9.65 billion in cash and provide consumer relief worth about $7 billion, much of which will go towards homeowners struggling with their mortgages.

The cash component consists of a $5 billion civil penalty and $4.63 billion in compensation payments.

The case centered on Countrywide Financial, the biggest lender at the time of the crisis, and Merrill Lynch selling mortgage loans to investors but not explaining the full extent of the risk involved.

Bank of America has agreed pay a record settlement of $16.7 billion for misleading investors about the quality of loans it sold
Bank of America has agreed pay a record settlement of $16.7 billion for misleading investors about the quality of loans it sold

Tony West, the associate attorney general, explained: “It’s kind of like going to your neighborhood grocery store to buy milk advertised as fresh, only to discover that store employees knew the milk you were buying had been left out on the loading dock, unrefrigerated, the entire day before, yet they never told you.

“And just like you might be in for an unpleasant surprise when you got home and poured yourself that glass of milk, investors – such as public pension funds and federally-insured financial institutions – were unpleasantly met with billions of dollars in losses when those securities investments soured.”

Brian Moynihan, Bank of America’s CEO, said: “We believe this settlement, which resolves significant remaining mortgage-related exposures, is in the best interests of our shareholders, and allows us to continue to focus on the future.”

On Wall Street, shares in Bank of America opened 1.5% higher on relief that a major cloud hanging over the firm had been removed.

Previously, the largest banking fine by US regulators was a $13 billion settlement reached with JPMorgan in 2013, for misleading investors during the housing crisis.

The Bank of America fine is the latest in a line of penalties imposed by the US on banks since the 2008 financial crisis.

In March 2014, Bank of America agreed to pay $9.5 billion to settle charges that it misled US mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac over mortgage securities.

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Generations: South African soap opera cast fired over strike

The entire cast of popular South African soap opera Generations has been sacked after going on strike in a long-running dispute over pay and contracts.

The show’s 16 actors, watched nightly on state broadcaster SABC, were fired after resisting calls to return to work at studios in Johannesburg.

The program will continue to air until October, while producers have indicated new actors will be recruited.

Generations follows black middle-class characters working in advertising.

It first aired in 1993, a year before South African’s first democratic multi-party elections brought Nelson Mandela to power.

The show – known as a “soapie” – is a popular draw with ordinary South Africans, providing a source of aspiration to TV viewers.

Executive producer Mfundi Vundla told a South African radio station that new cast members would be sought.

The entire cast of Generations has been sacked after going on strike in a long-running dispute over pay and contracts
The entire cast of Generations has been sacked after going on strike in a long-running dispute over pay and contracts

“There were other actors before, there will be other actors in the future,” he told Talk Radio 702.

“Generations will go on, it doesn’t mean the demise of the series.”

“We’ve been engaging with them since October last year,” said Mfundi Vundla, who added the cast had been asked to continue recording the show while negotiations continued but had not returned to work.

“That’s it, it’s finished, it’s a termination,” he added.

Mfundi Vundla branded the actors’ pay and contractual demands “unreasonable” and claimed 12 of South Africa’s highest paid actors were Generations cast members.

The cast have contended they are underpaid and also receive no repeat fees for their work, which is screened in other African countries.

Among the actors losing their jobs is Sophie Ndaba, who has played Queen Moroka since the show’s inception.

The cast’s lawyer said they would seek further advice before deciding how to fight the show makers’ decision.

South Africa’s Arts and Culture minister, Nathi Mthethwa, said he was willing to help reach “a speedy and amicable resolution to this matter” and added the drama had helped foster the development and growth of the country’s creative industries.

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PM Elio Di Rupo’s laptop stolen in Brussels

The laptop of outgoing Belgian PM Elio Di Rupo has been stolen after a thief broke into his car in Brussels.

The theft took place on August 18 while PM Elio Di Rupo was at the gym, but details have only just emerged.

Elio Di Rupo’s spokesman has denied reports that the laptop contained state secrets and sensitive details about the royal family.

The theft primarily involved “personal notes and some work documents”, the spokesman said.

The thief saw his chance when Elio Di Rupo’s driver popped into a bookshop while the prime minister was in the gym in the centre of Brussels, Dutch-language daily Het Laatste Nieuws reported on August 21.

Elio Di Rupo’s laptop has been stolen after a thief broke into his car in Brussels
Elio Di Rupo’s laptop has been stolen after a thief broke into his car in Brussels

He smashed a side window in the Audi A6, folded the back seat and found the laptop in the boot of the car.

PM Elio Di Rupo made a statement to police soon afterwards in which the newspaper reported he had referred to important details about internal politics and the royal family.

A briefcase, suit, white shirt and mobile phone charger were among other items stolen, the report said.

However, Elio Di Rupo’s spokesman said the theft did not involve classified information or state secrets and the laptop itself was thoroughly protected. Such documents were always transported according to rules and adapted procedures, a statement said.

Brussels police are investigating the theft.

Elio Di Rupo’s computers have received unwanted attention in the past, too. In September 2013, federal prosecutors opened an inquiry into two possible hacking incidents in the prime minister’s office.

A French-speaking Socialist, Elio Di Rupo took on the role of prime minister in 2011 after more than 500 days of political deadlock in which Belgium was left without a government.

Elio Di Rupo submitted his resignation after elections in May this year, but has continued in the role in a caretaker capacity.

Russia Targets More McDonald’s Restaurants

More unscheduled checks on McDonald’s restaurants across Russia have been announced by the country’s consumer watchdog as part of a probe into food standards.

The move comes after watchdog Rospotrebnadzor temporarily shut four McDonald’s restaurants in Moscow.

The actions come amid rising tensions and sanctions between Russia and the West over the crisis in the Ukraine.

The regulator denied the checks were politically motivated. McDonald’s said “top quality” food was its priority.

The regulatory agency said: “There are complaints about the quality and safety of the products in fast food restaurant chain McDonald’s.”

McDonald’s is one of the symbols of America.

Russian parliament has also called for checks on other US fast-food brands, including Burger King and KFC.

McDonald’s said its main priority was to serve customers “top quality menu items”, and that it was studying a claim by the food standards watchdog “to define what should be done to re-open the [Moscow] restaurants as soon as possible”.

Russian state news agency Ria Novosti reported that the regulator was preparing to take McDonald’s to court over alleged breaches of health and safety regulations.

Russia’s first ever McDonald's opened in 1990 in Moscow’s Pushkin Square
Russia’s first ever McDonald’s opened in 1990 in Moscow’s Pushkin Square (photo McDonald’s)

McDonalds decline to comment on that report.

Unscheduled checks will be made in McDonald’s restaurants in the region of Sverdlovsk in west-central Russia, the Volga region of Tatarstan, the central Voronezh region, and the Moscow region.

“There has been a selection of microbiology tests, sanitary and chemical tests, and identification indicators,” the watchdog said.

McDonald’s said it was “open to any checks”.

A company spokeswoman for European operations said it was aware that the regulator was carrying out the checks, which would be likely to continue for a couple of months.

The spokeswoman added that McDonald’s serves millions of customers a day in Russia, and wanted minimal disruption for them.

According to Ria Novosti, checks have been ordered across Russia’s Central Federal District, and that inspections of McDonald’s in all of the country’s regions will take place.

The checks and restaurant closures come amid a background of diplomatic tensions and tit-for-tat sanctions between Russia and the West over the crisis in the Ukraine. The West has accused Russia of supporting pro-Russian militants.

Earlier this month, Russia imposed an embargo on food imports from the EU, US and some other Western countries, in response to sanctions over Ukraine.

On August 20, the regulator temporarily closed four Moscow restaurants as part of an ongoing investigation of McDonald’s.

The first ever McDonald’s in Pushkin Square, which opened in 1990, was one of the outlets that was shut. Restaurants on Manezh Square, Svobodny prospect 35b and Prospect Mira were also closed.

Jens Breivik: Anders Breivik’s father to publish book on son

Jens Breivik, the father of jailed Norwegian mass murderer Anders Breivik, has written a book expressing feelings of guilt and responsibility over his son’s actions.

Anders Behring Breivik admitted killing 77 people when he bombed central Oslo and then went on a shooting spree at a youth camp on nearby Utoeya island in 2011.

His parents separated when Anders was a year old and Jens Breivik claims to have had little contact with his son.

Entitled My Fault? A Father’s Story, the book is set for release in October.

“I feel some guilt and I feel some responsibility. What would have happened if I had been a better father? Would Anders have done what he did?” Jens Breivik wrote, according to an excerpt of the book released by the publisher Juritzen.

A retired Norwegian diplomat living in southern France, Jens Breivik wrote the book with the help of a ghost writer and is expected to question his behavior as a parent and his role in the life of the radical far-right killer.

Jens Breivik has written a book expressing feelings of guilt and responsibility over son Anders' actions
Jens Breivik has written a book expressing feelings of guilt and responsibility over son Anders’ actions

In 2012, Anders Breivik was sentenced to the maximum 21 years in prison for carrying out the country’s worst peacetime massacre in its modern history.

Anders Breivk harbored extremist right-wing views and claimed he had reacted against what he saw as a Marxist-Islamic takeover of Europe.

His deadly rampage against a Labor Party youth camp on Utoeya island was found by an Oslo court to have been a premeditated act of terrorism.

Anders Breivik’s jail term can be extended if he is deemed to remain a danger to society.

Jens Breivik has often been described as an absent father after the separation from his wife. At the time of the separation, Jens Breivik attempted to win custody over Anders but was unsuccessful, and he lost touch with his son when Anders was a teenager.

A previous book about Anders Breivik’s late mother, Wenche, portrayed Jens Breivik as a domestic tyrant.

During the murder investigation and trial, it emerged that Norwegian social services had suspected Anders Breivik was neglected at home as a child.

According to the editor of My Fault? A Father’s Story, Arve Juritzen, the book is a form of self-trial for Jens Breivik.

Jens Breivik has re-established contact his son in the last two years but has not shared the manuscript with him.