NDP MP Rathika Sitsabaiesan reportedly under house arrest in Sri Lanka


New



CBC News Posted: Dec 31, 2013 10:43 PM ET Last Updated: Dec 31, 2013 10:43 PM ET





Stay Connected with CBC News





Inside Politics





Latest Politics News Headlines




The National



Only in Canada Year-End Poll

Which story deserves the "Viewer's Choice" crown?



Our Annual Political Showdown

Six experts. Two panels. One winning team.



At Issue: Year-Ender Edition

Wrapping up this eventful year in Canadian politics




The House



  • Political Review of 2013 Dec. 28, 2013 6:30 AM This week, The House looks back at the political events that shaped 2013 with Radio-Canada Ottawa bureau chief Emmanuelle Latraverse, National Post and iPolitics columnist Tasha Khereiddin and CBC senior political correspondent Terry Milewski.





International plan to destroy Syrian chemical weapons delayed


Security concerns and bureaucracy have caused President Bashar al-Assad's government to miss Tuesday's deadline for the removal of deadly toxins from Syria under an international effort to remove its chemical arsenal, the global chemical weapons agency said.


Bad weather and a complex multinational procurement effort for equipment have also delayed the operation, an official from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said.


Syria agreed to abandon its chemical weapons by next June under a deal proposed by Russia and hashed out with the United States after an Aug. 21 sarin gas attack that Western nations blamed on Assad's forces.



Damascus agreed to transport the "most critical" chemicals, including around 20 tonnes of mustard nerve agent, out of the Mediterranean port of Latakia by Dec. 31 to be safely destroyed abroad away from the war zone.


The Special Coordinator of the OPCW-UN Joint Mission, Sigrid Kaag, told Reuters in Damascus on Monday that the OPCW is "comfortable in the knowledge that all the work is about to be completed" but she did not say how long the delay will last.


Kaag said on Sunday the deadline will not be met, citing technical delays, and she said on Monday there had been delays at customs without elaborating further.


The Syrian government is responsible for the safe packaging, transport along roads to Latakia — including the main highway from the capital — and removal of chemical weapons.


Government forces took back control this month of the highway linking Damascus to the coast which is needed to transport the toxins. Rebel were ousted from three towns along the road but activists say convoys moving along it will remain vulnerable to rebel ambushes.


Kaag said the Syrian government has repeatedly voiced a number of security concerns. Damascus "needs to plan for any eventuality in the journey from different sites to Latakia and in Latakia itself," she said.


"This is a very complex management exercise over and above the fact that it is a chemical weapons programme that has to be destroyed at a time that a country is at war," she said.


Despite the delay, Kaag said "progress is very strong" and there is "a clear determination by all parties to achieve success."



New Year's celebrations kick off around world


The Sydney Opera House and Harbour Bridge will sparkle with tons of exploding fireworks at midnight Tuesday, and Dubai will try to create the world's largest fireworks show to ring in 2014.


Sydney officials promised that the Australian city's renowned pyrotechnics show would be more extravagant than ever, with more than 1.6 million revellers expected to line the harbour for a view.



Dubai, home to world's tallest tower, is known for its glitz, glamour and over-the-top achievements, and this New Year's Eve the city is planning to break another record by creating the largest fireworks show ever.


Organizers plan to light up the city's coastline with a flying falcon made out of fireworks that moves across a massive man-made palm-shaped island alongside a countdown in fireworks. Organizers say they will also create a burst of light out of fireworks to imitate a sunrise and dazzle spectators with a United Arab Emirates flag that could also break records for being the largest ever made out of fireworks.


The six-minute extravaganza will include 500,000 fireworks from 400 firing locations, all synchronized by 100 computers from stations across the city, said Barrett Wissman, co-chairman of IMG Artists that is managing the event. Guinness World Record officials will be on hand to measure the scale of the event.


Wissman said the display will cover 48 kilometres of seafront. "It is really mind-blowing, the size of this," he said.


In the Philippines, more than 260 people had been injured by firecracker blasts and celebratory gunfire ahead of New Year's Eve celebrations, one of Asia's most violent revelries.


Department of Health spokesman Dr. Eric Tayag said he expected the number of injuries to rise sharply when Filipinos ignite powerful firecrackers to end a year marked by tragic disasters, including a Nov. 8 typhoon that left more than 6,100 dead and nearly 1,800 others missing.


"Many here are welcoming the new year after losing their mothers, fathers, siblings and children so you can imagine how it feels," said village chief Maria Rosario Bactol of Anibong community in Tacloban, the city worst hit by Typhoon Haiyan. "I tell them to face the reality, to move on and stand up but I know it will never be easy."


In Sydney, the fireworks will be launched from four sails of the Sydney Opera House for the first time in more than a decade. The local council said the secret fireworks feature that will erupt on the Sydney Harbour Bridge will be twice the size of last year's centerpiece of the show.


China was planning to count down to the New Year with light shows at two spectacular and historic locations — part of the Great Wall near Beijing and at the Bund waterfront in Shanghai.


In Beijing, one flower shop manager said he hoped the new year brought more customers.


"Since the government started its campaign to crack down on luxury spending and promote frugality, our business with government agencies has been in decline," said Mao Xiangfei. "In the past, government clients accounted for about 10 per cent of our business, but now it's zero."


But in one polluted Chinese city, the celebrations were slated to be quieter as authorities in Wuhan in central Hubei province called off their annual New Year fireworks show and banned fireworks downtown to avoid making the smoggy air worse.


In Japan, thousands of visitors, some donning kimono, will pray, ring a bell and toss coins as offerings at shrines, wishing for health, wealth and happiness. Temple bells will ring the customary 108 times, for the 108 causes of suffering according to Buddhism, and welcome in the Year of the Horse.


Japanese are hopeful about the economy for the first time in years after some signs of revival under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whose easing lending policies and pump-priming measures have been dubbed "Abenomics."


Among those upbeat about what the new year might bring is Junya Sakata, a 23-year-old Tokyo waiter looking forward to taking sommelier classes next year so he can move up in his career.


"I hope the economy will keep improving, building up to the 2020 Olympics," he said, which will be held in Tokyo. "So many things happened this year, but I was able to grow. Maybe next year I will find a girlfriend."


In North Korea, a group of tourists, including Americans, planned to watch fireworks in Kim Il Sung Square and watch the Pyongyang Bell strike midnight, said Andrea Lee, CEO of Uritours, a tour group specializing in travel to North Korea.


"There were a lot of people out on the streets today for an outdoor dance event, and cars filled the streets," Lee said.


In Hong Kong, tens of thousands will turn out to watch the fireworks display over the southern Chinese city's famed Victoria Harbour.


Pyrotechnics will be fired off near the Kowloon peninsula and from the tops of seven skyscrapers on Hong Kong Island. A British colonial-era canon will be fired at midnight in a tradition dating from the end of the Second World War.


In Indonesia, New Year's celebrations are widespread except in the city of Banda Aceh where Islamic clerics prohibit Muslims from celebrating New Year's Eve.


In the capital, Jakarta, Governor Joko Widodo will lead a festival featuring concerts, parades, a marching band and fireworks.



Putin's Sochi gamble comes with a bloody price


Two terror attacks in the southern Russian city of Volgograd earlier this week have heightened security concerns for the upcoming Sochi Winter Olympics, jeopardizing one of Vladimir Putin's most cherished objectives.


By hosting a successful Olympic Games, Putin is hoping to demonstrate to the world that Russia is a modern state, one that controls every corner of its vast land.


But the Russian president chose the most improbable location to host the Winter Games: a snowless resort town surrounded by militants and rebels.


While Volgograd lies 700 kilometres northeast of Sochi, the two cities are essentially neighbours in a hotbed of militancy and terrorism.


Putin has wanted to show that unrest in the Caucasus, at its height during the two Chechen wars in the mid-to-late 1990s, is a thing of the past.


But reality seems to be intruding.


In July, Chechen rebel Doku Umarov — referred to as "Russia's bin Laden" in Russian media — lifted a moratorium on attacks on civilian targets, urging his supporters to use "maximum force" to prevent the Sochi Olympics from taking place.


Umarov heads the Caucasus Emirate, a terrorist organization that fights for a self-proclaimed Islamic state in Russia's southwest, and Sochi lies at the heart of this contested territory.


On Sunday, a man authorities have identified as Pavel Pechyonkin, a 32-year-old paramedic, detonated the equivalent of 10 kilograms of explosives in the main hall of the Volgograd train station filled with New Year's travellers. The attack killed 17 people and injured 45 others.


Russia Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures while speaking at his annual news conference in Moscow on Dec. 19, 2013. He has repeatedly assured the world that Russia will be safe from terrorist threats during the Sochi Olympics in February. (Ivan Sekretarev / Associated Press)



The very next morning, at rush hour, a tram carrying Volgograd commuters was blown up in front of a busy market, killing 15 people and injuring 23 others.


This was the third terrorist attack to hit the city of one million in the past two months. In October, a Dagestani woman detonated a bomb on a city bus, killing six.


Umarov, who claimed responsibility for the terrorist attacks on the Moscow Metro in 2010 and Moscow's Domodedovo International Airport in 2011, has been reported dead on many occasions.


But Umarov's supporters have heard his message and the Volgograd attacks show that his orders are being executed.


A long history


In Russia, terrorism hits home. During the past decade, Moscow and the Caucasus have witnessed car bombs, suicide attacks and hostage takings.


Heightened security measures had yet to be felt in Moscow as of Monday evening, although metal detectors and policemen scanning the capital's crowds for suspicious people and objects remain common sights.


But the policemen that dot the capital's landscape — in train and metro stations, major shopping malls and concert halls — remind Muscovites that their commute and daily activities are always a bit risky.


Attacks on Volgograd, a "soft target" according to analysts, might suggest that security forces have succeeded in keeping terrorism out of Russia's more strategic and populous sites since the bomb attack on Moscow's Domodedovo Airport 2011, which killed almost 40 people


But like many things in Russia, security is negotiable; there are often ways to get around it.


Unattended baggage — two words that would trigger an immediate response from a North American anti-bomb squad — is commonplace in the country's airports.


Moscow's metro attendants, who sit in cramped booths at the bottom of escalators, are paid 25,000 rubles a month ($810) to watch for safety violations and suspicious behaviour. But the dour-faced women often read paperbacks or do crosswords.


Putin repeatedly has assured the world that the Sochi Games will be safe. The International Olympic Committee also said it was "confident" that Sochi would be "safe and secure."


But this week's double bombings challenge those assertions.


'All necessary measures'


In response to the Volgograd attacks, Putin ordered law enforcement agencies and the country's National Anti-Terrorism Committee to take "all necessary measures" to curb terrorism.


On Monday, the Russian Minister of Interior reported that security forces had killed "a few terrorists" in the country's south on Sunday night and that security measures would be heightened at transportation hubs.


Doku-umarov

Dead or alive? It's not clear. But Chechen Islamist Doku Umarov, referred to as "Russia's bin Laden" in the Russian media, is still being listened to. (Associated Press)



More than 4,000 policemen were deployed to Volgograd on Monday to take part in an anti-terrorism operation, in which 87 people have already been detained.


Volgograd authorities have cancelled all New Year celebrations and declared five days of mourning.


Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, said that the citizens of the "hero city" formerly known as Stalingrad could not be frightened by these evil acts.


But for now, city official have said that residents are panicked. Commuters reportedly have avoided public transportation, fearing further attacks.



U.S. announces drone testing sites in 6 states


Drone

Drones have been mainly used by the military, but governments, businesses, farmers and others are making plans to join the market. (Jason Reed/Reuters)



The Federal Aviation Administration announced six states on Monday that will develop test sites for drones, a critical next step for the unmanned aircraft's march into U.S. skies.


The agency said Alaska, Nevada, New York, North Dakota, Texas and Virginia as states that will host research sites.


Drones have been mainly used by the military, but governments, businesses, farmers and others are making plans to join the market. Many universities are starting or expanding drone programs.



"These test sites will give us valuable information about how best to ensure the safe introduction of this advanced technology into our nation's skies," Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said in a statement.


The FAA said when selecting the sites it considered geography, climate, location of ground infrastructure, research needs, airspace use, aviation experience and risk.


In the case of Alaska, the FAA cited a diverse set of test site range locations in seven climatic zones. New York's site at Griffiss International Airport will look into integrating drones into the congested northeast airspace.


The state of North Dakota already has committed $5 million US to the venture and named a former state Air National Guard Commander as its test site director.


The FAA does not allow commercial use of drones, but it is working to develop operational guidelines by the end of 2015, although officials concede the project may take longer than expected. The FAA projects some 7,500 commercial drones could be aloft within five years of getting widespread access to American airspace.


An industry-commissioned study last spring predicted more than 70,000 jobs would develop in the first three years after Congress loosens restrictions on U.S. skies. The same study projects an average salary range for a drone pilot between $85,000 and $115,000.


"Safety continues to be our first priority as we move forward with integrating unmanned systems into U.S. airspace," FAA Administrator Michael Huerta said in a statement. "We have successfully brought new technology into the nation's aviation system for more than 50 years, and I have no doubt we will do the same with unmanned aircraft."



Doctors working 'hour by hour' on Michael Schumacher's head injury


Doctors treating Michael Schumacher refused Monday to predict an outcome for the seven-time Formula One champion, saying they were taking his critical head injury "hour by hour" following a skiing accident.


Chief anesthesiologist Jean-Francois Payen told reporters that Schumacher was still in a medically induced coma and doctors were focusing only on his current condition.


"We cannot predict the future for Michael Schumacher," said Payen, who is also in charge of Grenoble University Hospital's intensive-care unit.


"He is in a critical state in terms of cerebral resuscitation," he added. "We are working hour by hour."


Schumacher, the most successful driver in Formula One history, arrived at the Grenoble hospital a day earlier already in a coma and immediately underwent brain surgery.


The German driver was skiing with his son Sunday morning in the French Alpine resort of Meribel, about 130 km southeast of Geneva, when he fell and hit the right side of his head on a rock. He was wearing a helmet, but doctors said it was not enough to prevent a serious brain injury.


Gerard Saillant, a trauma surgeon who operated on Schumacher when he broke his leg in a 1999 race crash, was at the hospital as a visitor. He told reporters that Schumacher's age — he turns 45 on Jan. 3 — and his fitness should work in his favor.


Top neurology team


But the Grenoble medical team was being very cautious about Schumacher's prognosis. Working to relieve the pressure on his brain, they lowered his body temperature to between 34 and 35 degrees Celsius as part of the medically induced coma, which essentially rests the brain, slowing its metabolism to help reduce inflammation after an injury.


Meribel Village skiing

Meribel Village, a ski resort in France, located about 130 km southeast of Geneva, Switzerland. Michael Schumacher was skiing with his son in the region when he fell and struck his head. (Igluski.com)



The neurology team at Grenoble University Hospital is recognized as among the best in France and the hospital, in a city that is the gateway to the French Alps, sees a large number of skiing accidents every year.


Schumacher has been seriously hurt before. He broke his leg in a crash at the Silverstone race course in 1999. He also suffered serious neck and spine injuries after a motorcycling accident in February 2009 in Spain.


The area where Schumacher was skiing is part of a web of trails that slice down through a vast and, in parts, very steep snowfield. Although challenging, the snowfield is not extreme skiing. The runs are broad and neatly tended, and the ungroomed area in between, known as off-piste — where the resort said Schumacher was found — is free of trees.


Local hospital then Grenoble


The resort said Schumacher was conscious when first responders arrived, although agitated and in shock. But Payen said Monday that after the fall Schumacher was not in a "normal state of consciousness." He was not responding to questions and his limbs appeared to be moving involuntarily.


He was airlifted to a local hospital and then later brought to Grenoble. Doctors said this stopover was typical and did not affect his condition.


His wife and other family members were by his bedside.


"The family is not doing very well obviously. They are shocked," said his manager Sabine Kehm, who added that the family still appreciated the outpouring of support.


As news of the accident spread, Formula One drivers and fans rushed to wish Schumacher a quick recovery.


Boyhood idol


"Like millions of Germans, the chancellor and members of the government were extremely dismayed when they heard about Michael Schumacher's serious skiing accident," German Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman, Steffen Seibert, said in Berlin.


Sebastian Vettel, for whom Schumacher was a boyhood idol, told German news agency dpa: "I am shocked and hope that he will get better as soon as possible."


Ferrari, which Schumacher raced for, expressed its concern in a statement.


"Everyone at Ferrari has been in a state of anxiety since hearing about Michael Schumacher's accident," it said, adding that company president, Luca di Montezemolo, and race team leader, Stefano Domenicali, were in contact with the family.


British former world champion Jenson Button said posted that his "thoughts are with Michael Schumacher at this tough time .… Michael more than anyone has the strength to pull through this."


During his career, Schumacher won seven drivers' championships and 91 race wins. After initial success with the Benetton team, Schumacher moved to Ferrari and helped turn the Italian team into the sport's dominant force. After initially retiring in 2006, he made a comeback in 2010 and raced for three years with Mercedes.



Michael Schumacher in critical condition after ski accident


New


Michael Schumacher, 7 time champion, remains in a medically induced coma


The Associated Press Posted: Dec 30, 2013 5:35 AM ET Last Updated: Dec 30, 2013 5:35 AM ET







Doctors say they cannot predict the outcome for Michael Schumacher, the retired Formula One driver who suffered a serious head injury in a ski accident.


Chief anesthesiologist Jean-Francois Payen told reporters Monday that the seven-time champion is still in a medically induced coma.


He says the medical team was not yet able to talk about outcomes; they were focusing only on his current condition.


Schumacher arrived at the Grenoble hospital a day earlier already in a coma and immediately underwent brain surgery.


The doctors say he remains in critical condition.







Russian city hit by 2nd deadly explosion in 2 days


At least 10 people have been killed in an explosion on a trolley bus in Volgograd, Russia, according to local reports.



The Interfax News Agency reported the attack and cited law enforcement sources.


On Sunday, at least 16 people died after a suicide attacker set off a bomb in the entrance hall of a train station in the same city.


Authorities said the attacker detonated a shrapnel-filled bomb in front of a metal detector just inside the main entrance of the station, a busy hub north of the violence-plagued North Caucasus region on Russia's southern fringe.


More to come.



Canadian cruise ship passenger jumps overboard near Puerto Rico


Mona Island

Tien Phuoc Nguyen, a 26-year-old Canadian citizen who was on the final night of a seven-night Caribbean cruise with his family, was seen jumping off the ship while it was docked at Mona Island.



The U.S. Coast Guard was searching Sunday for a Canadian passenger who jumped off a Royal Caribbean Cruises ship as it motored off a remote Puerto Rican island toward the U.S. territory's mainland.


In a Sunday statement, the Coast Guard identified the missing man as Tien Phuoc Nguyen, a 26-year-old Canadian citizen who was on the final night of a seven-night Caribbean cruise with his family. His hometown was not immediately provided.


He was last seen jumping overboard by other ship passengers late Saturday as the Adventures of the Seas was transiting east of Mona Island, a rugged, uninhabited island in a rough sea passage between Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic.


Royal Caribbean spokeswoman Cynthia Martinez said Sunday that the captain immediately stopped the cruise ship, turned around and alerted local authorities after a passenger reported seeing a man going overboard late Saturday. In a Sunday email, Martinez said footage of the incident was also captured by the ship's cameras.


The Coast Guard deployed helicopters and a patrol boat to find the missing passenger but no sign of him has turned up.


The FBI is investigating the circumstances which may have led the man to jump.


When the U.S. Coast Guard assumed control of the search early Sunday, the cruise ship resumed its trip to Puerto Rico's capital of San Juan. A Royal Caribbean team was providing support to Nguyen's family, according to Martinez.


The Royal Caribbean ship was finishing its seven-night trip and returning to San Juan when he jumped overboard.



Crew being rescued from cargo ship in distress off coast of N.L.


Vessel was having problems with its hull, several people safely hoisted onto helicopter


CBC News Posted: Dec 29, 2013 4:14 PM NT Last Updated: Dec 29, 2013 4:49 PM NT



Crew being rescued from cargo ship off coast of Newfoundland


Breaking


Vessel was having problems with its hull, several people safely hoisted onto helicopter


The Canadian Press Posted: Dec 29, 2013 4:14 PM NT Last Updated: Dec 29, 2013 4:15 PM NT



Python kills security guard near Bali luxury hotel


A python strangled a security guard near a luxury hotel on Indonesia's resort island of Bali on Friday, and then escaped into nearby bushes following the deadly attack, police and a hotel employee who witnessed the incident said.


The incident happened around 3 a.m. as the 4.5-meter-long python was slithering across a road near the Bali Hyatt hotel, said Agung Bawa, an assistant security manager at the hotel, which is closed for renovations until 2015.


The victim, Ambar Arianto Mulyo, was a 59-year-old security guard at a nearby restaurant.


He had offered to help capture the snake, which had apparently been spotted several times before near the hotel, located in Bali's Sanur area, Bawa said.


Mulyo managed to secure the snake's head and tail and put it on his shoulders, but the python wrapped itself around his body and strangled him, said Bawa, who was present during the attack.


People watching the incident were unable or unwilling to help and called the police, who came but failed to save the man. The python escaped into nearby bushes, and police were still searching for it.


Denpasar police Capt. Gusti Ngurah Yudistira said Mulyo died of suffocation.


"It happened so fast," Bawa said. "We were sad because we could not do anything to help him."


Yudistira warned people to be alert since the snake was still on the loose in the area, which is popular with tourists.


Deadly attacks on adult humans by pythons are rare, but have been documented before.



Boy Scouts of America opens ranks to gay youth on Jan. 1


The Boy Scouts of America will accept openly gay youths starting on New Year's Day, a historic change that has prompted the BSA to ponder a host of potential complications — ranging from policies on tentmates and showers to whether Scouts can march in gay pride parades.


Yet despite their be-prepared approach, BSA leaders are rooting for the change to be a non-event, comparable to another New Year's Day in 2000 when widespread fears of digital-clock chaos to start the new millennium proved unfounded.



"My hope is there will be the same effect this Jan. 1 as the Y2K scare," said Brad Haddock, a BSA national executive board member who chairs the policy implementation committee.


"It's business as usual, nothing happens and we move forward."



Scouts Canada’s inclusion policy


Since 2000, Scouts Canada has maintained a commitment to promoting diversity within its troops, with that commitment extending to gays and lesbians. Anyone, "regardless of gender, race, culture, religious belief, sexual orientation or economic circumstance," is welcome to be a member.


Scouts.ca



Some churches are dropping their sponsorship of Scout units because of the new policy and some families are switching to a new conservative alternative called Trail Life USA. But massive defections haven't materialized and most major sponsors, including the Roman Catholic and Mormon churches, are maintaining ties.


"There hasn't been a whole lot of fallout," said Haddock, a lawyer from Wichita, Kansas. "If a church said they wouldn't work with us, we'd have a church right down the street say, `We'll take the troop."'


The new policy was approved in May, with support from 60 per cent of the 1,400 voting members of the BSA's National Council. The vote followed bitter nationwide debate, and was accompanied by an announcement that the BSA would continue to exclude openly gay adults from leadership positions.


Under the new membership policy, youths can no longer be barred from the Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts or coed Venturers program solely on the basis of sexual orientation. However, gay Scouts will face some limitations.


"Any sexual conduct, whether heterosexual or homosexual, by youth of Scouting age is contrary to the virtues of Scouting," says one BSA document. "No member may use Scouting to promote or advance any social or political position or agenda, including on the matter of sexual orientation."


'Small pockets' of problems expected


Trying to anticipate potential friction, the BSA has distributed extensive explanations and question-and-answer documents related to the policy.


Some examples:



The Scout Law


A scout is:



  • Trustworthy

  • Loyal

  • Helpful

  • Friendly

  • Courteous

  • Kind

  • Obedient

  • Cheerful

  • Thrifty

  • Brave

  • Clean

  • Reverent



Could a Scout march in uniform in a gay-pride parade? No, says the BSA. "Each youth member is free as an individual to express his or her thoughts or take action on political or social issues but must not use Scouting's official uniforms and insignia when doing so."


How publicly active could a gay Scout be, in terms of gay-rights advocacy? The BSA's reply: "While a youth member may acknowledge his or her sexual preference, that acknowledgment may not reach the level of distraction, which may include advocacy, promotion, or the distribution of information of a sexual nature."


A frequently-asked-questions document anticipates that some objections might surface from parents — or Scouts themselves — in cases where a unit includes an openly gay boy.


Regarding shower and toilet facilities, the BSA says it is encouraging units to provide greater individual privacy, including moving away from the tradition of group showers.


"The adult leaders have the discretion to arrange private showering times and locations," the BSA says.


Sleeping arrangements also are addressed, with specific decisions left to unit leaders.


"If a Scout or parent of a Scout makes a request to not tent with another Scout, their wishes should be honoured," says the BSA.


Haddock says "isolated pockets" of problems are likely to surface, but overall he expects adult leaders will have the skills to defuse potential conflicts.


Most sponsors maintain ties


There are about 1 million adult leaders and 2.6 million youth members in Scouting in the U.S. Of the roughly 110,000 Scout units, 70 per cent are sponsored by religious organizations, including several conservative denominations that had long supported the BSA's exclusion of gay youth and gay adults.



'I don't know whether we had Scouts who are homosexual. I don't inquire.... It's not a matter of concern.'- Bill Helfand, scoutmaster of Troop 55 in Houston



Among the major sponsors, the Southern Baptist Convention made clear its disappointment with the new youth policy, but left the decision on whether to cut ties up to local churches. An SBC spokesman, Sing Oldham, said it was not known how many churches have done so.


The biggest sponsor of Scout units — the Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — commended the BSA for a "thoughtful, good-faith effort" to address a challenging issue, and said it would stay engaged in Scouting.


John Gailey of the Utah National Parks Council, the nation's largest council, said its youth membership had increased from 74,148 in December 2012 to 75,863 this month.


Like the Mormons, the Roman Catholic Church has generally accepted the new policy. Many parishes will continue to sponsor Scout units, though a few have considered cutting ties.


The National Catholic Committee on Scouting posted a question-and-answer document on its website, delving into the intersection of Scouting policy and Catholic teaching.


"The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that individuals who disclose a same-sex attraction are to be treated with the same dignity due all human beings ... and also teaches that engaging in sexual activity outside of marriage is always immoral," says the Q&A, concluding that the new BSA policy does not contradict Catholic teaching.


The ultimate decision on whether parishes would maintain or cut ties with the BSA was left to individual bishops. Several expressed cautious support for continuing in Scouting.


"As the new policy currently stands, I see no reason to prohibit our parishes from sponsoring Boy Scout troops," said Rev. Kevin Rhoades, bishop of Indiana's Fort Wayne-South Bend diocese. "At the same time, it is critical that we be vigilant on how this new policy is interpreted and implemented."


Membership remains steady


One likely target of such scrutiny will be former defence secretary Robert Gates, scheduled to take over in the spring as the BSA's next president. As leader of the Pentagon, Gates helped change the military's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy banning openly gay soldiers, and gay-rights groups hope he will try to end the BSA's ban on gay adult leaders.


Boy Scouts Gays

Bill Helfand, the scoutmaster of Boy Scout Troop 55 in Houston, said membership in his troop has remained steady in the wake of the Boy Scouts of America changing its policy to accept openly gay youths. (Pat Sullivan/Associated Press)



The new youth policy was approved during a BSA meeting in May in the Dallas-Fort Worth suburb of Grapevine, near the Scouts' national headquarters in Irving, Texas.


Texas has a long heritage of Scouting, with tens of thousands of youth members and many families claiming generations of Eagle Scouts. Among them is Gov. Rick Perry, who achieved Scouting's highest rank growing up in the small town of Paint Creek.


The membership debate was closely followed by local Scouts on both sides; some carried signs and held rallies outside the meeting place. But in subsequent months, the debate has quieted.


Bill Helfand, scoutmaster of Troop 55 in Houston, said membership in his troop has remained steady at about 225 boys.


"We never considered sexual orientation, and I don't think many troops really did," Helfand said. "I don't know whether we had Scouts who are homosexual. I don't inquire.... It's not a matter of concern."


Helfand said the membership debate, while closely covered in the media, did not extend into his meetings with leaders and parents, besides occasional discussion of the policy at camp-outs. He says he hasn't talked to any Scout about his sexual orientation and doesn't intend to.


Critics switch to alternative program


However, some Texas parents and leaders have decided to switch to Trail Life USA, an alternative which declares itself "a Christian adventure, character, and leadership program for young men." Among them is Ron Orr, a business consultant from the Fort Worth area who is signing up local units for the group.


So far, he said he has 25 groups "pre-chartered" for a Jan. 1 launch date in the territory covered by the BSA's Circle Ten and Longhorn councils. That's modest compared to the 39,000 Scouts served by the Circle Ten council alone.


Orr is part of a family with four generations of Eagle Scouts. His older son recently earned his Eagle rank and his younger son was on the verge of doing likewise. But Orr said he could not stand by after the policy change.


"As Christians, from a scriptural basis, we love all folks, but the scripture is very clear that being homosexual is a sin," Orr said. "We've got to be able to hold a strong line and set a consistent example for our young men."


Orr said his decision to cut ties with the BSA rested in part on the Scout Oath, which includes the admonition to remain "morally straight."



BlackBerry faces uncertain year as CEO launches rescue attempt


BlackBerry hopes to clean the slate again as it heads into the new year with another lease on life and a leader who believes he can do what his predecessors couldn't — save the company from a slow death.


After months of painful uncertainty and dismal financial results, BlackBerry is in the hands of chairman and chief executive John Chen who hopes to navigate the company into 2014 with reinvigorated vision.



"I need to go out and convince the world that the fight has now started," said Chen during a recent media event at the company's headquarters.


"It's a long haul journey — no question," he added.


The odds are stacked against him, but Chen insists he will rebuild the BlackBerry name by chasing the business customers who helped make the company a powerhouse in the smartphone industry.


"It's really kind of going back to the roots," he said.


If the situation sounds familiar, that's because BlackBerry has been here before.


The Waterloo, Ont.-based company has spent the last few years losing the fight for a stronger position in the market as Apple's iPhone and other smartphones on the Android operating system pulverized its reputation with consumers as a cutting-edge technology developer.


Last January, after two major delays, BlackBerry lifted the curtain on its latest smartphones and operating system in New York, ushering in what it hoped was a new era that would prove naysayers wrong.


But once the dust settled, it was clear the new BlackBerry 10 phones didn't connect with consumers.


'Too many different paths to see'


Most of the advertisements sold vague ideas about the phone's features, and often the products were leaning on the clout left in BlackBerry's name, rather than promoting features of the phones.


li-blackberry-01422250

BlackBerry has struggled in recent years to keep up with Apple's iPhone and other smartphones on the Android operating system. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)



Chen believes BlackBerry executives were lost as they struggled to deliver the new devices.


"In the past when we were a little troubled ... there were too many different paths to see," he said, reflecting on the days before he started at the company.


"We lost some good, valuable market time that people have taken advantage of [and] from this point on the fun for them will be greatly curtailed."


A few months ago, even BlackBerry executives weren't this certain about the company's future.


The smartphone maker looked like it was about to be broken up and sold, or shrunk into a private company, until a group of investors agreed in November to inject US$1 billion — enough money for another swing at a recovery.


It was a surprise decision by Fairfax Financial, one of BlackBerry's largest shareholders, who led the charge to raise the financing, but also a sign that few others were interested.


BlackBerry had spent months shopping around its assets, but was never able to find a suitor. The company's co-founders Mike Lazaridis and Doug Fregin sidelined their attempted bid, while big players like Facebook were reported to have entertained the possibility before deciding to bow out.


Customers defecting


The new financing agreement brought many quick changes to BlackBerry, including the exit of CEO Thorsten Heins and the departure of various other high ranking executives and board members, some who helped build the company to its former heights.


Chen is confident about the direction he's headed, even though the reality facing the smartphone maker isn't so optimistic.


The government agencies and companies he's determined to chase are notoriously loyal, but once they've strayed to alternative platforms it's hard to lure them back, mainly because business contracts are typically long term.


Many customers prefer BlackBerry's security technology, but even some big Canadian banks and U.S. corporations, have started to defect to alternative offerings from competitors.


According to the latest financial statements, BlackBerry has lost about 68 per cent of its enterprise business customers over the past few years, dropping to 80,000 from about 250,000 at its heights.


To help retain customers, BlackBerry has given away free upgrades and trials to its latest enterprise operating system that last until the end of 2013. After that, it will make a case for customers to start paying for the service.


"We are going to take the technology message out," Chen said.


"With the last company I ran, I kept the message on for like 10 years. It probably took five years before anybody even listened to me, and it took another five years for people to believe it. You just need to focus."


Smartphone sales fall


Whether or not BlackBerry has time is debatable.


In its most recent quarter, BlackBerry posted a US$4.4-billion loss as sales of its smartphones continued to fall. The company also burned through about $1.1 billion in cash, though the total amount in its coffers — which sits at $3.2 billion — was propped up by the Fairfax-led investment and a significant tax return.


On Tuesday, Lazaridis grabbed attention for selling $26 million of BlackBerry shares, a move that came before the tax-loss deadline in Canada, but also lowered his stake below five per cent.


Investors appear optimistic, at least for now, helped by Chen's determined persona. The company's badly beaten stock has climbed 24 per cent since its latest financial results were released a week ago. On Tuesday, BlackBerry shares closed at $8.25, up 27 cents, on the Toronto Stock Exchange.


"People are excited today, but we'll see how patient they are in two more quarters when there probably won't be any evidence of a turnaround," said Mike Genovese, an analyst at MKM Partners.


He said BlackBerry will need at least another year before any semblance of a turnaround can materialize, while Chen has said he doesn't expect the company to become profitable until at least the middle of 2016.


Whether the rest of the world has that sort of patience remains to be seen, and investors are taking a risk holding the stock in their hands, Genevese said.


"Six months from now I'm not so sure investors are going to be as excited as the stock price seems to be telling us right now," he said.


"The stock is a lottery ticket on the miracle they get something right."



Czech Republic stuns Canada in SO at world juniors


Dominik Simon got the deciding goal in a shootout as the Czech Republic shocked Canada with a 5-4 victory on Saturday at the world junior championship in Malmo, Sweden.


Jonathan Drouin scored for Canada on the first attempt of the shootout, but Nic Petan and Connor McDavid failed to beat Marek Langhammer while David Pastrnak and Simon scored on Jake Paterson.


The result left Canada at 1-0-1 and the Czechs, who were beaten 5-1 by the Americans in their tournament opener, at 1-1-0.


The crowd of 3,011 at the Isstadion saw the Czechs take four one-goal leads only to have Canada tie it each time. Most of the action was in the third frame, when five goals were scored.


Charles Hudon forced overtime with a 13:01 of the third period, while Sam Reinhart, with his second in as many games, Drouin and Aaron Ekblad also scored in regulation time for Canada.


David Kampf, Michal Plutnar, Vojtech Tomecek and Jakub Vrana scored in regulation for the Czechs.


Canada gave up the first goal in all three pre-tournament games as well as their opening win over Germany. They did it again when Kampf got the Czechs on the board 7:10 into the game.


The Czechs had heavy pressure in Canada's end, forcing a turnover from Ekblad, and Kampf put a soft shot along the ice that slid past Paterson.


Canada was on the power play when its youngest line tied it at 15:50 on a tic-tac-toe play from McDavid to Bo Horvat to Reinhart in the slot for a shot that Langhammer had no chance.


But rather than gain legs from the goal, Canada had a messy second period in which it was outshot 11-5 and the Czechs got the go-head just after a power play ended. Plutnar, who scored their lone goal in a 5-1 loss to the U.S. on Thursday, wired a high shot from the point that beat Paterson at 17:16.


There was a skirmish at the end of the period after McDavid shot into the Czech net after time expired and it put Canada on the power play to start the third. Drouin drilled in a goal off a feed from Reinhart only 24 seconds in.


A Canadian power play was nullified after four seconds when McDavid took a hooking penalty. With the faceoff in Canada's end, centre Tomecek pushed the puck forward and scored on a spin-around shot at 4:05.


Ekblad tied it short handed after Canada took a too many men on the ice penalty as Curtis Lazar went hard to the net and the 17-year-old rearguard followed in to score into an open net at 11:09.


Vrana, another 17-year-old, scored from the left circle after a faceoff win in Canada's end at 12:45, but only 16 seconds later, Hudon collected a puck that was knocked off Anthony Mantha's stick and threaded a shot in from the high slot.



Head of railway in Lac-Mégantic disaster 'also a victim,' he says


The railway executive behind the company whose train smashed into Lac-Mégantic wants people to know he's been suffering, too.


Looking back at the year as it comes to a close, Ed Burkhardt said he's still troubled by the Quebec derailment and has thought about it every day since the July 6 catastrophe killed 47 people and destroyed part of the town.


The chairman of Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway Ltd. also told The Canadian Press in a recent interview that he's sustained significant personal financial losses since the disaster.



"They had every reason to be very upset with what had occurred," Burkhardt said about the anger directed toward him by the people of Lac-Mégantic.


"But what they didn't know was that I was equally upset and I was also a victim of this whole thing."


Investment wiped out


hi-852-burkhardt-04708386

The chairman of Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway Ltd. also told The Canadian Press in a recent interview that he's sustained significant personal financial losses since the disaster.



Burkhardt, who said he is the largest shareholder in the now-insolvent MMA, explained that he lost his entire investment after the crash forced the company to file for bankruptcy protection.


"That's a big pile of money, I might say," Burkhardt, the president of MMA parent company Rail World Inc., said in a phone interview from his Illinois office.


"It's reduced me from being a fairly well-off guy to one that's just getting by. But OK, that's what happens."



He added, however, that he wasn't complaining about the hit he took to his bottom line, insisting he didn't want to criticize the people of Lac-Mégantic because "they went through hell."


"[Financial losses are] not in the same category as the personal losses, the deaths and all of that, that people suffered in Lac-Mégantic," he said.


Burkhardt's frequently blunt remarks, often lacking public-relations massaging and sentimentalism, made him public enemy No. 1 last summer in Lac-Mégantic.


His brief stop in the town in the aftermath is perhaps best-remembered for his tumultuous news conference, during which he was heckled by irate locals.


Heavily criticized


Burkhardt, who also faced criticism for waiting more than four days before visiting the town after the crash, had anticipated the rough reception. He defended his delayed appearance, saying he was dealing with the crisis from his office.


Before travelling to Lac-Mégantic, Burkhardt even quipped that he'd probably have to wear a bulletproof vest during his visit.


Burkhardt displayed his straight-shooting style in the middle of the news conference when a reporter asked him how much he was worth, financially. He replied: "A whole lot less than I was Saturday [the day of the derailment]."


Reflecting on his reputation in Lac-Mégantic, Burkhardt believes local anger was directed at him because, as chairman, he was the voice of the company.



"I think I assumed too much of a personal role up there, so I guess I was the magnet for all of the people's unhappiness, which is not terribly surprising," the railway boss said.


He then repeated an allegation he first made publicly at that July news conference: the train driver didn't do his job properly the night of the disaster.


"They view me terribly, but I wasn't the guy who didn't set the brakes on the train," he said.


Burkhardt has alleged that the driver did not apply enough handbrakes before the train broke loose and barrelled about 10 kilometres down a hill into Lac-Mégantic.


Train driver did not respond


Tom Harding, the train's driver, was suspended by MMA following the accident. Harding's lawyer did not respond to a request to comment on Burkhardt's allegation.


Firefighters from the neighbouring town of Nantes have said they responded to a blaze on board the train hours before it came off the tracks in Lac-Mégantic. MMA has suggested the fire department's decision to shut off the locomotive to extinguish the fire might have disabled its air brakes.


Police and federal transport safety officials are conducting investigations into the crash.


In the months since the disaster, Burkhardt says he's questioned whether his trains should have ever been transporting crude oil.


"I've asked myself a number of times as to whether we should have been handling this oil at all," Burkhardt said.


"Hindsight is 20-20 vision, so at this point I wish we hadn't been handling oil. We would have obviously not been exposed to such a situation."


MMA stopped hauling oil after the crash, but Burkhardt noted that other Rail World operations in Europe have continued to transport other highly explosive cargoes, like propane.


Canadian authorities have indicated that the deadly oil in Lac-Mégantic proved to be as flammable as gasoline, though it had been improperly labelled as something less volatile.


"There's always going to be risks in handling dangerous commodities," he said.


"You try to minimize those risks, you try to manage your company well, so that those risks are low. But the risks are never zero."


Burkhardt said he welcomes the fresh debates over regulations for the rail industry, as long as any eventual changes are harmonized in Canada and the United States.


For example, he thinks tank-car construction needs to be improved, though due to the high costs he expects any transition to a more-durable tanker to take a long time.


He also encouraged more testing of operating employees, with particular attention placed on brake management and in preventing runaway trains.


Still, he thinks it should be up to railway managers to enforce any changes, rather than a heavier-handed approach by regulators.


"I put the pressure on the management, not on the regulator," Burkhardt said.


"I don't want the regulator telling me what to do. I want to figure this out within management."


MMA and Rail World executives, including Burkhardt himself, are among those named in pending lawsuits in Canada and the United States over the Lac-Mégantic​ crash.


The insolvent MMA has filed for bankruptcy protection and is now under trusteeship, though it continues to manage its day-to-day operations. MMA is expected to be sold off in the coming weeks.


There are concerns in Lac-Mégantic that a new owner could eventually resume oil shipments in the area. MMA's train service recently returned to the community, though it will no longer carry dangerous freight through town.


Burkhardt said the railway's next owner will need additional traffic along the line for it to be profitable. It will be up to them, he added, to decide whether to start hauling crude oil again.


On that question, he doesn't think the door should be forever closed to moving oil on the MMA line.


Burkhardt said MMA's decision to stop handling oil after the derailment was made easy by the fact it was unlikely to be commercially viable under the circumstances.


"Obviously, the shippers were just as horrified as we were by what occurred and probably wouldn't have used our services anyway," he said.


"Although the risks of moving over some other railroad to destination are probably just as great."



Head of railway in Lac-Mégantic disaster 'also a victim,' he says


The railway executive behind the company whose train smashed into Lac-Megantic wants people to know he's been suffering, too.


Looking back at the year as it comes to a close, Ed Burkhardt said he's still troubled by the Quebec derailment and has thought about it every day since the July 6 catastrophe killed 47 people and destroyed part of the town.


The chairman of Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway Ltd. also told The Canadian Press in a recent interview that he's sustained significant personal financial losses since the disaster.



"They had every reason to be very upset with what had occurred," Burkhardt said about the anger directed toward him by the people of Lac-Megantic.


"But what they didn't know was that I was equally upset and I was also a victim of this whole thing."


Investment wiped out


Burkhardt, who said he is the largest shareholder in the now-insolvent MMA, explained that he lost his entire investment after the crash forced the company to file for bankruptcy protection.


"That's a big pile of money, I might say," Burkhardt, the president of MMA parent company Rail World Inc., said in a phone interview from his Illinois office.


"It's reduced me from being a fairly well-off guy to one that's just getting by. But OK, that's what happens."



He added, however, that he wasn't complaining about the hit he took to his bottom line, insisting he didn't want to criticize the people of Lac-Megantic because "they went through hell."


"(Financial losses are) not in the same category as the personal losses, the deaths and all of that, that people suffered in Lac-Megantic," he said.


Burkhardt's frequently blunt remarks, often lacking public-relations massaging and sentimentalism, made him public enemy No. 1 last summer in Lac-Megantic.


His brief stop in the town in the aftermath is perhaps best-remembered for his tumultuous news conference, during which he was heckled by irate locals.


Heavily criticized


Burkhardt, who also faced criticism for waiting more than four days before visiting the town after the crash, had anticipated the rough reception. He defended his delayed appearance, saying he was dealing with the crisis from his office.


Before travelling to Lac-Megantic, Burkhardt even quipped that he'd probably have to wear a bulletproof vest during his visit.


Burkhardt displayed his straight-shooting style in the middle of the news conference when a reporter asked him how much he was worth, financially. He replied: "A whole lot less than I was Saturday (the day of the derailment)."


Reflecting on his reputation in Lac-Megantic, Burkhardt believes local anger was directed at him because, as chairman, he was the voice of the company.



"I think I assumed too much of a personal role up there, so I guess I was the magnet for all of the people's unhappiness, which is not terribly surprising," the railway boss said.


He then repeated an allegation he first made publicly at that July news conference: the train driver didn't do his job properly the night of the disaster.


"They view me terribly, but I wasn't the guy who didn't set the brakes on the train," he said.


Burkhardt has alleged that the driver did not apply enough handbrakes before the train broke loose and barrelled about 10 kilometres down a hill into Lac-Megantic.


Train driver did not respond


Tom Harding, the train's driver, was suspended by MMA following the accident. Harding's lawyer did not respond to a request to comment on Burkhardt's allegation.


Firefighters from the neighbouring town of Nantes have said they responded to a blaze on board the train hours before it came off the tracks in Lac-Megantic. MMA has suggested the fire department's decision to shut off the locomotive to extinguish the fire might have disabled its air brakes.


Police and federal transport safety officials are conducting investigations into the crash.


In the months since the disaster, Burkhardt says he's questioned whether his trains should have ever been transporting crude oil.


"I've asked myself a number of times as to whether we should have been handling this oil at all," Burkhardt said.


"Hindsight is 20-20 vision, so at this point I wish we hadn't been handling oil. We would have obviously not been exposed to such a situation."


MMA stopped hauling oil after the crash, but Burkhardt noted that other Rail World operations in Europe have continued to transport other highly explosive cargoes, like propane.


Canadian authorities have indicated that the deadly oil in Lac-Megantic proved to be as flammable as gasoline, though it had been improperly labelled as something less volatile.


"There's always going to be risks in handling dangerous commodities," he said.


"You try to minimize those risks, you try to manage your company well, so that those risks are low. But the risks are never zero."


Burkhardt said he welcomes the fresh debates over regulations for the rail industry, as long as any eventual changes are harmonized in Canada and the United States.


For example, he thinks tank-car construction needs to be improved, though due to the high costs he expects any transition to a more-durable tanker to take a long time.


He also encouraged more testing of operating employees, with particular attention placed on brake management and in preventing runaway trains.


Still, he thinks it should be up to railway managers to enforce any changes, rather than a heavier-handed approach by regulators.


"I put the pressure on the management, not on the regulator," Burkhardt said.


"I don't want the regulator telling me what to do. I want to figure this out within management."


MMA and Rail World executives, including Burkhardt himself, are among those named in pending lawsuits in Canada and the United States over the Lac-Megantic crash.


The insolvent MMA has filed for bankruptcy protection and is now under trusteeship, though it continues to manage its day-to-day operations. MMA is expected to be sold off in the coming weeks.


There are concerns in Lac-Megantic that a new owner could eventually resume oil shipments in the area. MMA's train service recently returned to the community, though it will no longer carry dangerous freight through town.


Burkhardt said the railway's next owner will need additional traffic along the line for it to be profitable. It will be up to them, he added, to decide whether to start hauling crude oil again.


On that question, he doesn't think the door should be forever closed to moving oil on the MMA line.


Burkhardt said MMA's decision to stop handling oil after the derailment was made easy by the fact it was unlikely to be commercially viable under the circumstances.


"Obviously, the shippers were just as horrified as we were by what occurred and probably wouldn't have used our services anyway," he said.


"Although the risks of moving over some other railroad to destination are probably just as great."



Target hackers got card PIN numbers too


New


Computer hackers were able to steal 40 million card numbers but also passwords, retailer reveals


The Associated Press Posted: Dec 27, 2013 1:15 PM ET Last Updated: Dec 27, 2013 1:15 PM ET







Target says customers' encrypted PIN data was removed during the massive data breach that occurred earlier this month.


Previously Target had said that encrypted data was stolen but stopped short of identifying it as PIN numbers. But the company issued a statement Friday saying that additional forensic work has shown that encrypted PIN data was removed along with customers' names and card numbers.



A PIN number is the personal identification code used to make secure transactions on a credit or debit card.


Data connected to about 40 million credit and debit cards used at Target were stolen between Nov. 27 and Dec. 15. Security experts say it's the second-largest theft of card accounts in U.S. history, surpassed only by a scam that began in 2005 involving retailer TJX Cos. In addition to the encrypted PIN numbers, the stolen data from Target included customer names, credit and debit card numbers, card expiration dates and the embedded code on the magnetic strip on back of the card.


Still safe, retailer says


But Target said it believes the PIN numbers are still safe because the information was strongly encrypted. The retailer said that PIN information is encrypted within its systems and can only be decrypted when it is received by its external, independent payment processor


"We remain confident that PIN numbers are safe and secure," said spokeswoman Molly Snyder in an emailed statement. "The PIN information was fully encrypted at the keypad, remained encrypted within our system, and remained encrypted when it was removed from our systems."


Minneapolis-based Target said it is still in the early stages of investigating the breach. It has been working with the Secret Service and the Department of Justice.









Stay Connected with CBC News





Latest Business Headlines






Markets


TSX COMPOSITE



Dec 27, 2013 1:04 PM ET Dec 27, 2013 1:04 PM ET Dec 27, 2013 1:04 PM ET Dec 27, 2013 1:05 PM ET Dec 27, 2013 1:04 PM ET





































IndexLast TradeChange
TSX COMPOSITE13569.8051.78
DOW16468.29-11.59
NASDAQ4157.38-9.80
SP 5001841.08-0.94
TSX-VENTURE913.039.81

The data on this site is informational only and may be delayed; it is not intended as trading or investment advice and you should not rely on it as such.






Ex-minister among dead in Lebanon bombing


Updated


Senior aide to former Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri among 5 killed


The Associated Press Posted: Dec 27, 2013 3:02 AM ET Last Updated: Dec 27, 2013 4:04 AM ET







The state news agency says a bombing in central Beirut has killed five people, including a senior aide to former Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri.


It says Mohammed Chatah and his driver were both killed in the powerful explosion early Friday in downtown Beirut. Chatah served as finance minister in Hariri's government, then as his senior adviser after Hariri lost the premiership in early 2011.


It says three other people were also killed and more than 15 wounded.







Large explosion rocks Beirut


Breaking


A plume of black smoke was seen rising in the downtown business district


The Associated Press Posted: Dec 27, 2013 3:02 AM ET Last Updated: Dec 27, 2013 3:02 AM ET



'Knock-out' game attack leads to hate-crime charge


A white man has been arrested on federal hate crimes charges for allegedly shooting video of himself sucker-punching a 79-year-old black man in a "knockout game"-style attack.


Conrad Barrett, 27, made a brief appearance Thursday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Frances Stacy, who scheduled a detention hearing for the man on Friday.


According to prosecutors, the attack happened Nov. 24 in the town of Katy, but it wasn't until 12 days later that authorities connected the attack to the cellphone video of it.


Authorities learned of the case because Barrett allegedly showed the video on the night of the attack to an off-duty arson investigator he had just met at a restaurant in nearby Folshear, Texas. Barrett asked the off-duty investigator and the woman with the investigator if they knew about the knockout game, according to the criminal complaint. He told them he played earlier that day, then showed them the video, prosecutors allege.


The investigator then flagged down a uniformed officer across the street and led him to Barrett.


The attack video doesn't show Barrett's face, but investigators matched his voice to the voice in the video and the couple at the restaurant told investigators that Barrett was wearing the same shorts and shoes at the person who shot the video.


According to prosecutors, the video shows Barrett approach the victim and ask, "How's it going, man?" A "loud smack" is then heard, the victim falls to the ground, Barrett laughs and says, "Knockout." The assailant then flees in his vehicle.


The victim lost three teeth and needed surgery to repair his jaw, which had been broken in two places. He was hospitalized for more than four days, authorities said.


Investigators retrieved other videos from Barrett's phone, including some in which he uses racial epithets and talks about trying to work up the courage to play the knockout game, the complaint states. In one, Barrett says: "That plan is to see if I were to hit a black person, would this be nationally televised?"


U.S. Attorney Kenneth Magidson said Thursday that such crimes won't be tolerated.


"Evidence of hate crimes will be vigorously investigated and prosecuted with the assistance of all our partners to the fullest extent of the law," Magidson said.


Barrett's attorney, George Parnham, said Barrett has bipolar disorder and has been prescribed heavy medications to treat it. He said Barrett's family "feels horribly sympathetic" for the person who was attacked.


"When you start peeling back the layers of the onion and look at the mindset behind the action you soon realize there's a mental issue," said Parnham, who added that he's trying to gather as much information about Barrett's mental health as possible.


If convicted of the hate crime charge, Barrett could be sentenced to up to 10 years in prison and fined up to $250,000 US.



Canada routs Germany to open world juniors


Anthony Mantha scored three goals, all set up by linemate Jonathan Drouin, as Canada got the world junior championship started with a one-sided 7-2 victory over Germany on Thursday.


Josh Anderson, Bo Horvat, Sam Reinhart and Nic Petan also scored for Canada, which is 12-0 all-time against Germany at the IIHF under-20 event.


Dorian Saeftel and Janik Moser had first-period goals for the Germans.


The announced crowd of 1,831 was mostly fans dressed in Hockey Canada jerseys at the 5,800-seat Isstadion, the smaller of the two tournament venues, but they made plenty of noise.


The ice was mostly tilted toward the German zone, although they caused Canada some shaky moments in their few meaningful incursions into the attacking zone.


Germany even got the first goal as Lennart Palausch won a faceoff in Canada's end and defenceman Saeftel threaded a pass through traffic and past Jake Paterson only 1:33 into the game.


Matt Dumba breezed into the German zone and flipped a puck to the net that Anderson banged in at 6:21.


Mantha, the Quebec Major Junior Hickey League scoring leader with the Val d'or Foreurs, scored from the slot on a power play at 10:41, but Moser tied it at 15:59 with a man advantage after Adam Pelech whiffed on a clearing pass.


Mantha came out from behind the net to beat Shawinigan Cataractes goalie Marvin Cupper at 17:36 and Reinhart slipped the puck to Horvat for a goal at 18:29.


Reinhart was left alone during a German line change to take a feed from Jos Morrissey and go in alone to score 6:45 into the second frame and Mantha was at the side of the net to knock in Drouin's pass on a power play at 10:28.


The 16-year-old Conner McDavid got his second assist of the game as he came from behind the net to set up Petan's goal at 10:13 of the third.


Canada's next group stage game is Saturday against the Czech Republic.



Robert Latimer in court to challenge travel restrictions


headline-robert-latimer

Robert Latimer is seeking changes to his travel restrictions so he can travel freely outside Canada.



A Saskatchewan farmer who was convicted of killing his severely disabled daughter is challenging a National Parole Board decision that prevents him from travelling freely outside of Canada.


Robert Latimer filed a notice of application in Federal Court in Vancouver on Monday, requesting a judge review a decision that was made by the parole board's appeal division in November and requires him to obtain pre-approval for international travel.


The application is timely because about a month ago, Latimer received clearance to travel to Peru for a Habitat for Humanity project, but his plans might fall through because officials won't be able to process his travel documents until mid-February, said his lawyer Jason Gratl.


The parole board did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


"International travel for parolees is often a complex, Byzantine exercise that can be difficult to arrange," said Gratl during an interview. "This would be akin to advance approval for all those travel arrangement and would cut through a tremendous amount of bureaucratic red tape."


For example, the parole board must pre-authorize a parolee's travel arrangements and co-ordinate their activities with foreign customs officials and even airlines, said Gratl.


None of the work can be done in a reasonable amount of time, and it is often so complicated and bureaucratic that travel is not practical, he added.


But according to the document filed by Latimer, the parole board can grant a permanent exemption to international travel restrictions.


This past July, though, it turned down a request by Latimer that he be allowed to travel freely outside the country without having to apply for a limited-time passport.


The appeal division upheld that decision in a Nov. 14 ruling.


In the Federal Court document, Latimer argues the appeal division did not consider his application based on its merits and did not find the earlier decision on the issue by the board unreasonable.


The document also questions whether the parole board's policy of granting exemptions is consistent with the Corrections and Conditional Release Act.


The application asks the judge to set aside the appeal division's decision and refer the matter back to the parole board.


It also asks the judge to declare the parole board's policy on the matter inconsistent with federal legislation.


Latimer, who farmed in the Wilkie, Sask., area, was convicted of second-degree murder in 1997 and sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 10 years for killing his severely disabled daughter, Tracy.


His daughter was 12 at the time of her death in 1993. She had cerebral palsy and died when her dad piped exhaust into the cab of his truck.


He was released from prison on day parole in 2008 and granted full parole, with some conditions, in 2010.


This past July, the board removed another of Latimer's release conditions, and ruled he no longer needs one-on-one psychological counselling as part of his full parole.


But Latimer was still banned from having responsibility for anyone with a significant disability, and it denied his request to travel freely outside Canada without having to apply first for a limited time passport.



FILM REVIEW: The Wolf of Wall Street


Video



CBC News Posted: Dec 26, 2013 9:00 AM ET Last Updated: Dec 26, 2013 8:28 AM ET







Director Martin Scorsese shows off a more playful mood with The Wolf of Wall Street, an orgy of excess starring his frequent collaborator Leonardo DiCaprio as an unquenchable, over-the-top stock broker.


Bolstered with impressive performances from Matthew McConaughey and Jonah Hill, the black comedy based on a true story about a New York trader's spectacular rise and fall is definitely entertaining, says CBC reviewer Eli Glasner.


Watch Eli Glasner's review in the attached video.










Stay Connected with CBC News




The Buzz



  • Smithsonian introduces video games to its collection by Jessica Wong Dec. 19, 2013 4:14 PM For those who might still think video games aren't worth one's time, the Smithsonian begs to differ. The venerable institution's American Art Museum has added two unique titles to its permanent collection, a high-profile validation of the form.




Latest Arts & Entertainment News Headlines




Q Blog





CBC Books