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Toronto Sun and Globe and Mail report new video and audio reveal crack use, insults against politicians
CBC News Posted: Apr 30, 2014 10:28 PM ET Last Updated: Apr 30, 2014 10:57 PM ET
Live Blog
CBC News Posted: Apr 30, 2014 10:28 PM ET Last Updated: Apr 30, 2014 10:57 PM ET
Kyle Lowry poured in 36 points to lift Toronto to a nailbiting 115-113 victory over the Brooklyn Nets on Wednesday, giving the Raptors a 3-2 lead in their best-of-seven playoff series.
DeMar DeRozan added 23 points, while Jonas Valanciunas finished with 16, and Greivis Vasquez added 15.
Amir Johnson chipped in with 11 points for the Raptors who gave up a 26-point lead in the fourth quarter, making for some tense moments at the Air Canada Centre, but held on for the victory.
Joe Johnson led the Nets with 30 points, while Mirza Teletovic added 17, and Deron Williams and Alan Anderson finished with 13 apiece.
The series heads back to Brooklyn's Barclays Center for Game 6 on Friday.
The Raptors controlled the game through second and third quarters where it seemed they could do no wrong, and led by 26 points twice late in the third.
They headed into the fourth up 91-69 advantage and appeared poised to cruise to an easy victory, but the Nets had plenty of fight left in them, tying the game at 101-101 on a three-pointer by Johnson with 3:16 to go and stunning the crowd.
Vasquez and Teletovic traded threes and it was tied with 1:23 to go before Lowry drained a three and then scored on a driving hook shot to put Toronto up by three with 27 seconds left.
Two DeRozan free throws put Toronto up by five, but Alan Anderson was fouled on a three to pull the Nets to within a point with 10 seconds to play. DeRozan and Blatche traded free throws then Blatche chucked a wayward ball meant for Williams that was ruled a backcourt violation, sealing the victory.
The rock-solid Lowry, playing with his right knee in a protective brace after injuring it in Game 3 in Brooklyn, had his best game of the series, providing all kinds of highlight-reel plays.
There was the diving 31-footer he drained at the buzzer to cap the first half that left him sprawled laughing on the floor. There was the 85-foot outlet pass that found an unmarked Terrence Ross under the basket.
But the point guard was particularly big down the stretch, taking charges and slicing through the Nets' defence for buckets.
The teams split the first two games in Toronto, and did the same in Games 3 and 4 in Brooklyn. A Game 7, if necessary, would be Sunday in Toronto.
The capacity ACC crowd of 19,800 that included Drake and rapper 50 Cent — who dipped his head when the camera was on him to show fans his "Northern Uprising" hat — was loud all game long, from the moment the fans sang along to O Canada to the final buzzer.
The arena was a sea of white, as fans wore their white "We The North" T-shirts. They mocked the Nets by chanting "Broo-klyn!" the traditional chant at the Barclays Center.
The Nets even took note, posting on the team's official Twitter account: ".Nets fans take note- this is what a playoff crowd sounds like..set your DVD and take notes .RAPTORSvNETS."
Despite the rain and chilly temperatures, some 4,500 fans jammed into Maple Leaf Square outside the ACC to watch the game on the big screen. They were given rain ponchos. Some 1,200 fans were also given black and gold OVO/Raptors lint-rollers, a nod to Drake using a lint-roller while sitting courtside during Game 2.
An array of Toronto sports celebrities took the stage, including Toronto FC's Jermain Defoe, Michael Bradley and Julio Cesar, and former Raptors Morris Peterson and Jerome Williams.
"I've never seen support like this. This is special," Defoe said in an on-stage interview. Cesar, wearing a No. 7 Raptors jersey, yelled "Let's go Raptors!"
This series has been spirited from Day 1 when Raptors GM Masai Ujiri took the stage and dropped his famous F-bomb about Brooklyn.
An enterprising man outside the ACC on Wednesday was selling F—- Brooklyn buttons, three for $5. Fans were wearing the same on T-shirts at the game.
Johnson led the way with nine points for Toronto in a first quarter that saw neither team lead by more than six. The Raptors ended the quarter with a 10-2 run capped by a Lowry three-pointer that put Toronto up 28-25 going into the second.
The Raptors trailed by four points with just over five minutes to go in the second, but finished the quarter on a 26-4 run capped by Lowry's three, part of a 13-point performance in the quarter for the point guard. The Raptors went into the locker-room at halftime buoyed by a 62-44 lead.
The third quarter has been the Raptors' nemesis in this series, but not so on Wednesday. They didn't take their foot off the pedal, shooting 58 per cent to twice go ahead by 26 points. Toronto went into the fourth with a 91-69 lead.
Breaking
The Associated Press Posted: Apr 30, 2014 8:53 PM ET Last Updated: Apr 30, 2014 8:55 PM ET
The threat posed by antibiotic resistant bacteria is a real and present one, the World Health Organization warns.
Antibiotic resistance occurs when some bacteria change, rendering drugs that are meant to kill them useless or ineffective. Those bugs then survive and spread the resistance.
Wednesday’s report from the United Nations health agency showed antibiotic resistance in microbes that cause common and serious diseases such as urinary tract infections and pneumonia in all regions of the world.
Adriano Picente is a medical laboratory technologist working in Dr. Andrew Simor's lab at Toronto's Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre. (Melanie Glanz/CBC)
"What it means, is that all of us, our family members, all of the persons in this room, our friends, when we are most vulnerable and in need of these medicines, there is a chance that they are simply not going to be available and we are not going to be able to have access to effective medical care in a number of instances," Dr. Keiji Fukuda, one of the agency's assistant director-generals, told reporters.
In many countries, treatments for drug-resistant E. coli that cause problems such as meningitis and infections of the skin, blood and kidneys, no longer work in more than half of patients, according to the report.
The situations differ depending on the country.
"A post-antibiotic era, in which common infections and minor injuries can kill, far from being an apocalyptic fantasy, is instead a very real possibility for the 21st century," Fukuda said.
"We already see cases where treatment has failed," Dr. Johan Struwe of the WHO’s antimicrobial resistance team said in an interview. "It's reported in tuberculosis; there are countries reporting untreatable gonorrhea as a result of drug resistance and it's well known in malaria where it's been around for quite a long time. So we see it already."
Dr. Andrew Simor, head of microbiology at Toronto’s Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, said the major resistance threats at his hospital and likely other Canadian hospitals are C. difficile and MRSA. Multi-drug-resistant germs called CRE (carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae) are still uncommon but on the rise.
Some countries have been aggressive in terms of surveillance for antibiotic resistance, which the WHO says is important for early detection of resistant strains in addressing public health concerns and to inform clinical decision-making, for example by doctors and staff in nursing homes.
"In my view here in Canada, we have had real success but modest as compared to Scandinavia and Europe [but] we are clearly doing better," Simor said. "I think our control measure have been only wishy-washy compared to what they do. I don't think we have as comprehensive or as effective national surveillance in place."
Infection control methods in Canada are good but could be a lot better, he said.
'We have to stop our love affair with antibiotics.'- Dr. Michael Gardam of the University Health Network in Toronto
To stop outbreaks in hospitals, doctors first need to know where they’re happening, said Dr. Michael Gardam, director of infection prevention and control at the University Health Network in Toronto.
"We have to stop our love affair with antibiotics," Gardam said. "It's so easy to give them, We have to start thinking of these drugs as not only are they not benign but also we're running out of them."
Canadian experts said governments have to find ways to encourage research and development into new antibiotics and prevention and treatment approaches given that pharmaceutical companies don't have a financial incentive to develop new drugs for infections that just last for a week or two.
The WHO said other important actions include preventing infections from happening in the first place through better hygiene, access to clean water, infection control in health-care facilities, and vaccination to reduce the need for antibiotics.
The lengthy time it took the Law Society of Upper Canada to investigate a complaint and disbar a crooked Ontario lawyer once again highlights the need to reform how the profession is regulated, says a former law school dean.
Earlier this week, CBC News reported that while Ontario's law society spent 6½ years dealing with Richard Chojnacki's disciplinary case, he went on to steal almost $5 million from unsuspecting clients.
Former University of Western Ontario law dean Philip Slayton, who also spent 20 years as a practising lawyer, has long criticized Canada's system where provincial law societies handle complaints and police their own, a topic he tackled in his 2007 book, Lawyers Gone Bad.
"No law society wants to admit too easily that a member of the law society is a bad guy," he said in an interview. "The law society runs its disciplinary proceedings as it decides to do, so it draws up the rules. And I don't think that’s a good idea.
Law Society of Upper Canada head Thomas Conway says it's still unclear whether England's new independent system for complaints against lawyers would be the right move for Ontario. (CBC)
"It's still a question of the law society judging its own members and… more often than not, judging them in a way that most people would regard as favourable or lax or inadequate," he added.
Slayton said an independent body should instead deal with complaints about lawyers. He pointed to parts of the United Kingdom, which took policing powers away from their law society in 2010 and put them in the hands of an independent ombudsman.
"It was felt that the complaints handling was actually very poorly managed," said Adam Sampson, the chief legal ombudsman for England and Wales. "There was a belief that the legal profession looked after its own."
Now that an independent body addresses complaints, they are handled with twice the speed and half the cost of the previous system, Sampson said. "It's really important that there is somebody external with the responsibility and power to hold the lawyer to account," he said. Parts of Australia have a similar model.
Reforming the system Canada-wide would be a challenge because the country's law societies are under provincial jurisdiction. "Not impossible, but difficult," said Slayton, who wishes there was more political will at both the political and federal level to initiate change.
But the current head of the Law Society of Upper Canada, Thomas Conway, said he does not want to hand over power. "We don't want to lose the right to self-regulation," he said.
Conway said that the jury is still out on whether the new U.K. format is the solution and that Canada's system is "a model that in my view has served the public quite well."
He added that the law society aims "to protect the public, and not to protect lawyers or their reputations."
In 2013 alone, Ontario's law society launched investigations based on a variety of complaints involving 1,824 lawyers.
New
The Associated Press Posted: Apr 30, 2014 5:14 PM ET Last Updated: Apr 30, 2014 5:21 PM ET
Northern Ireland police say they have arrested Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams on suspicion of involvement in the Irish Republican Army's 1972 abduction, killing and secret burial of a Belfast widow.
Adams confirmed his own arrest Wednesday in a prepared statement and described it as a voluntary, prearranged interview.
Police had been expected to question the 65-year-old Adams about the 1972 killing of Jean McConville, whom the IRA executed as an alleged spy. The IRA did not admit the killing until 1998.
Adams was implicated in the killing by two IRA veterans who gave taped interviews to researchers for a Boston College research project. The Northern Ireland police took legal steps to acquire the interviews, parts of which have already been published after one IRA interviewee died.
Family members, mountaineers and government officials gathered in Nepal's capital Wednesday for a memorial service for the 16 Nepalese Sherpa guides killed in avalanche on Mount Everest.
They offered flower garlands and lit candles and incense in front of the photographs of the 16 Sherpa guides who died in the April 18 avalanche. The 13th day after death is the customary end of mourning and the day when Nepalis generally hold memorials.
"We are still disappointed at the government, which has done little for the family members. The help they have given is a joke, like giving money to a beggar. The state should take care of the families of the dead," said Pasang Doma, who lost her brother in the avalanche.
The government initially announced giving 40,000 rupees ($415) to the family members, which angered the Sherpa community.
The government later said it would provide another 500,000 rupees (5,210) for the families, but by that time most of the Sherpa mountain guides had decided to return home and the spring climbing season has almost come to an end.
While 13 bodies have been recovered, the three others are buried under heavy snow and ice.
Most of the expedition teams have left the mountain while the rest are packing their bags and gear in the base camp.
The avalanche was the deadliest disaster on the world's highest mountain. It was triggered when a massive piece of glacier sheared away from the mountain along a treacherous section of constantly shifting ice and crevasses known as the Khumbu Icefall, marked by overhanging ice as big as office buildings.
Al Feldstein, whose 28 years at the helm of Mad magazine transformed the satirical publication into a pop culture institution, has died. He was 88.
Feldstein died Tuesday at his home in Livingston, according to the Franzen-Davis Funeral Home and Crematory. No cause of death was released.
In 1956, publisher William M. Gaines put Feldstein in charge of the magazine, which gleefully parodied politicians and mocked traditional morality.
Feldstein and Gaines assembled a pool of artists and writers who turned out such enduring features as Spy vs. Spy, The Lighter Side of... and Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions.
Building on a character used by Mad founding editor Harvey Kurtzman, Feldstein turned the freckle-faced Alfred E. Neuman into an underground hero — a dimwitted everyman with a gap-toothed smile and the recurring stock phrase, "What, Me Worry?"
Neuman's character was used to skewer any and all, from Santa Claus to Darth Vader, and more recently in editorial cartoonists' parodies of President George W. Bush.
The Portable Mad, a compilation of magazine highlights edited by Feldstein in 1964, gives a picture of the typical Mad features that year. Among its offerings: "Some Mad Devices for Safer Smoking" (including a "nasal exhaust fan" and "disposable lung-liner tips"); "The Mad Academy Awards for Parents" (one nominee does her "And THIS is the thanks I get!" routine); "The Lighter Side of Summer Romances"; and "Mad's Teenage Idol Promoter of the Year" (which skewers Elvis Presley and the Beatles.)
Under Gaines and Feldstein, Mad's sales flourished, topping 2 million in the early 1970s. In a 1997 interview with the Bozeman Daily Chronicle, Feldstein credited Mad's challenges to authority with helping incite the cultural revolution of the 1960s.
"Who's covering up? That was one of our slogans," he said. "We were orienting them to the adult world."
But not everyone was amused.
Mad once held a spoof contest inviting readers to submit their names to legendary FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for an "Official Draft Dodger Card." Feldstein said two bureau agents soon showed up at the magazine's offices to demand an apology for "sullying" Hoover's reputation by using his name in Mad.
The magazine also attracted critics in Congress who questioned the magazine's decency, and a $25 million lawsuit from songwriters who objected to their work being parodied.
By Feldstein's retirement in 1984, Mad's heyday was past: Circulation had dropped to less than a third of its peak.
Feldstein moved West, first to Wyoming and later Montana. From a horse and llama ranch north of Yellowstone National Park, he ran a guest house and pursued his "first love" — painting wildlife, nature scenes and fantasy art and entering local art contests.
Born in 1925, Feldstein grew up in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn. He found early success as an artist a World's Fair contest for children and later trained at Manhattan's High School of Music and Art and Brooklyn College.
He got his first job in comics as a teenager, drawing background foliage for Sheena, Queen of the Jungle, which starred a female version of Tarzan.
"Then I got a great promotion," he told the Bozeman Daily Chronicle in a 1997 interview. "I was drawing leopard spots on her groin and breasts."
Feldstein served a stint in the military at the end of the Second World War, painting murals and drawing cartoons for Army newspapers. After his discharge, he freelanced for various comics before landing at Entertainment Comics.
Feldstein's survivors include his wife, Michelle, stepdaughter Katrina Oppelt, her husband, and two grandsons, the funeral home said.
Designed for children but loved by many adults, Entertainment Comics' titles included Tales From the Crypt, Weird Science and Feldstein's eventual vehicle to fame, Mad.
In 2000, a year after receiving an honorary doctorate in fine arts from Rocky Mountain College, Feldstein returned to the school to give its commencement address. He told students that while their carefree college days were ending, the "party of real life" was about to begin.
"If you're not having fun at the party you're at," he told the grads, "go find another party."
Updated
Thomson Reuters Posted: Apr 30, 2014 2:59 PM ET Last Updated: Apr 30, 2014 3:21 PM ET
The train that derailed and caught fire in Lynchburg, Virginia, belongs to CSX Corp. and was carrying crude oil, a city official said on Wednesday.
Some 14 cars derailed at around 2:00 p.m. Wednesday afternoon and three to four of those are leaking, said JoAnn Martin, director of communications for the city.
The accident occurred near the waterfront and some crude oil is leaking into the James River, which feeds into the Chesapeake Bay, Martin added.
More than 300 people were evacuated following the accident because of the smoke, according to Martin.
CSX couldn't be reached for comment.
A series of fiery derailments of trains carrying crude oil over the past year have prompted critics to question the safety of hauling explosive liquids by rail.
The Associated Press Posted: Apr 30, 2014 2:26 PM ET Last Updated: Apr 30, 2014 2:40 PM ET
The NBA owners' advisory/finance committee will hold a meeting Thursday to discuss the next steps in the removal of Donald Sterling as owner of the Los Angeles Clippers.
The 10-member committee will have a conference call two days after Commissioner Adam Silver banned Sterling for life from the league and fined him $2.5 million US for making racist comments. Silver also said he would urge owners to use their power to force Sterling to sell the team.
That would require the support of three-fourths of the league's owners in a vote. Silver said Tuesday during a news conference that he was confident he had the votes, which appears true given the numerous statements of support that were released by teams.
Minnesota owner Glen Taylor chairs the committee, which also includes Miami's Micky Arison, the Lakers' Jeanie Buss, Oklahoma City's Clay Bennett, New York's James Dolan, Boston's Wyc Grousbeck, San Antonio's Peter Holt, Phoenix's Robert Sarver, Indiana's Herb Simon, and Toronto's Larry Tanenbaum.
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Live Chat
CBC News Posted: Apr 30, 2014 8:18 AM ET Last Updated: Apr 30, 2014 12:13 PM ET
Parliament is back!
And after weeks of heated debate, the fair elections act is about to head back to the House of Commons for a final vote. But first, the committee studying the bill has to go through a long list of proposed amendments. What will the final version of C-23 look like?
MPs are also dealing with the fallout of the Temporary Foreign Worker program controversy. How will the minister responsible for the file, Jason Kenney, respond?
Kady O'Malley will answer your question about all the big political stories of the week at noon ET.
Mobile users can follow the live chat here.
There are unconfirmed reports at least three people have been shot at the Western Forest Products mill in Nanaimo, B.C.
City officials have confirmed a shooting has taken place at the mill, but have released no other details.
Air ambulances and multiple police vehicles are on the scene.
RCMP are expected to release more details shortly.
More to come
Google Maps: Western Forest Products Sawmill, Nanaimo
Chat preview
CBC News Posted: Apr 30, 2014 8:18 AM ET Last Updated: Apr 30, 2014 8:18 AM ET
Parliament is back!
And after weeks of heated debate, the fair elections act is about to head back to the House of Commons for a final vote. But first, the committee studying the bill has to go through a long list of proposed amendments. What will the final version of C-23 look like?
MPs are also dealing with the fallout of the Temporary Foreign Worker program controversy. How will the minister responsible for the file, Jason Kenney, respond?
Kady O'Malley will answer your question about all the big political stories of the week at noon ET.
Mobile users can follow the live chat here.
Ruth Bennett died protecting the last child left at her day care centre as a tornado wiped the building off its foundation in Louisville, Miss. A firefighter who came upon Bennett’s body pulled the toddler from her arms.
"It makes you just take a breath now," said neighbour Kenneth Billingsley, who witnessed the scene at what was left of Ruth's Child Care Center in this logging town of 6,600.
"It makes you pay attention to life."
Bennett, 53, was among at least 35 people killed in a two-day outbreak of twisters and other violent weather that pulverized homes from the Midwest to the Deep South. The child, whose name was not released, was taken to a hospital. Her condition was not known.
One of the hardest-hit areas in Monday evening's barrage of twisters was Tupelo, Miss., where a gas station looked as if it had been stepped on by a giant.
Francis Gonzalez, who also owns a convenience store and Mexican restaurant attached to the service station, took cover with her three children and two employees in the store's cooler as the roof over the gas pumps was reduced to aluminum shards.
"My Lord, how can all this happen in just one second?" she said in Spanish.
On Tuesday, the growl of chain saws cut through the otherwise still, hazy morning in Tupelo. Massive oak trees, knocked over like toys, blocked roads. Neighbours helped one another cut away limbs.
"This does not even look like a place that I'm familiar with right now," said Pam Montgomery, walking her dog in her neighbourhood. "You look down some of the streets, and it doesn't even look like there is a street."
By the government's preliminary count, 11 tornadoes — including one that killed 15 people in Arkansas — struck the nation's midsection on Sunday, and at least 25 ravaged the South on Monday, the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center said.
Among those killed was 21-year-old University of Alabama swimmer and dean's list student John Servati, who was taking shelter in the basement of a Tuscaloosa home when a retaining wall collapsed on him.
Convenience store owner Francis Gonzalez, centre back, and her three children stand in front of their heavily damaged business on Monday in Tupelo, Miss. Gonzalez and her kids ran into a cooler in the back of a convenience store, which also houses a Mexican restaurant, as a tornado approached. (Adrian Sainz/The Associated Press)
His death — and that of at least two others in Alabama -- came the day after the third anniversary of an outbreak of more than 60 tornadoes that killed more than 250 people across the state.
In Kimberly, Ala., north of Birmingham, the firehouse was among the buildings heavily damaged.
Four firefighters suffered little more than cuts and scrapes, but the bays over the fire trucks were destroyed, and the vehicles were covered with red bricks, concrete blocks and pieces of the roof.
The trucks were essentially trapped, so the town had to rely on nearby communities for emergency help.
Louisville was also one of the hardest-hit areas, with officials reporting at least nine dead in and around town because of a powerful tornado with a preliminary rating of EF4, just shy of the top of the scale.
Sennaphie Yates arrived at the small local hospital to check on her grandfather just ahead of the twister. As the funnel cloud closed in, staff members herded people into a hall.
"They had all of us against the wall and gave us pillows. They said, 'Get down and ... don't get up,"' she said.
The winds knocked down two walls and tore holes in the roof. Doctors moved some emergency room patients to a former operating room and sent some to other hospitals.
Bennett's day care centre was not far from the hospital. Her niece Tanisha Lockett had worked at Ruth's Child Care since it opened seven years ago.
She said all but the one child — a 4-year-old girl who had been in the centre's care since she was a baby — had been picked up before the storm.
On Tuesday, Bennett's family and those who worked for her stepped over schoolbooks, first aid supplies and a Hooked on Phonics cassette as they tried to salvage paperwork.
"We're just trying to keep a smile on our faces," said Jackie Ivy, an employee. "I cried all last night."
Bill Browder, an investment firm executive and human rights activist, is trying to persuade Canada to ban Russians who were involved with the torture and death of a Russian lawyer in 2009.
Browder, who was expelled from Russia in 2005 and now runs his firm Hermitage Capital Management from London, is appearing before a parliamentary subcommittee on international human rights Tuesday.
He will tell the story of Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian tax lawyer, who helped Browder expose tax refund fraud carried out by Russian government officials.
Magnitsky testified against the officials involved, and was arrested and put in prison on pretrial detention in 2008. Over a year later, without ever being brought to trial, his health gradually deteriorated, and in 2009 he was found dead in his cell.
Russian tax lawyer Sergei Magnitsky was arrested and died in a Moscow jail after he exposed tax fraud by Russian government officials. His death has become an international human rights issue. (Alexander Zemlianichenko/Associated Press)
Browder told the same committee in a previous appearance in 2012, that Magnitsky had been beaten with rubber batons.
Browder, whose firm he described as the largest foreign investment firm in Russia, has vowed to bring world attention to Magnitsky's death and seek retribution for the officials who persecuted him.
In 2012, he managed to convince the U.S. to pass the Magnitsky Act. The act, Browder told the committee, "freezes assets, bans visas, and names names of the people who killed Sergei Magnitsky. Broader than that, it bans visas, freezes assets, and names names of people who perpetrate other human rights abuses in Russia."
On Tuesday, Browder will also appear at a news conference on Parliament Hill with human rights activist and Liberal MP Irwin Cotler.
The two will make the case that while Canada has imposed sanctions in response to Russian aggression in Ukraine, the government should respond similarly to domestic human rights abuses perpetrated by Russian officials, according to a press release issued by Cotler's office.
Browder has been conducting an international campaign for Magnitsky's cause, and the European parliament just adopted a resolution calling on European governments to impose sanctions on Russian officials.
In 2012, Browder told the committee he didn't believe Russia would ever properly investigate what happened to Magnitsky. But he said if officials were to be confronted with the prospect of their assets being frozen overseas and a travel ban, they might think twice about committing a human rights crime.
"My hope, as a campaigner for justice, but also for Sergei's legacy, is that the law with his name on it will save lives in the future, because people will be afraid to do these types of things," he said.
Browder made the same plea in Canada in 2012 but no action was taken. Now that the government has strongly condemned Vladimir Putin's regime in Russia over its aggression in Ukraine, it may be more amenable to extending its list of banned Russians.
A Canadian organization that provided humanitarian aid to Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza has been formally branded a terrorist group before the start of a court battle over the revocation of its charitable status.
The move came as the RCMP confirmed it had raided locations in Ontario and Quebec as part of a terrorism-financing investigation.
In a letter to the International Relief Fund for the Afflicted and Needy, the RCMP said the federal government had added the group to a list of "terrorist entities" as of April 24.
"IRFAN is now classified as a 'terrorist group' under Canadian law," the letter from Supt. Stephane Bonin states.
"As a consequence, any property or asset belonging to IRFAN is now frozen."
The letter offers no reason for the listing decision but Canada Revenue Agency has said the organization supported Hamas, itself branded as a terrorist organization.
A statement Tuesday from Public Affairs Minister Steven Blaney noted CRA's contention — which was to be argued in court next week — that IRFAN provided aid to groups run by officials of, or who supported Hamas.
IRFAN, based in Mississauga, Ont., sent about $14.6 million in resources to "various organizations associated with Hamas" between 2005 and 2009, the statement said.
The non-profit IRFAN was due in Federal Court of Appeal on May 6 to contest a 2011 CRA decision to revoke its charitable status because of its alleged ties to Hamas and failure to keep proper records.
No one for IRFAN was available to comment, but a lawyer speaking for the group condemned the listing as an attack on humanitarian support for Palestinians.
IRFAN did not know the terrorist listing was in the works and had no opportunity to respond or offer its side of the story, Ottawa-based lawyer Yavar Hameed said in an interview.
There's no evidence the group did any direct funding of Hamas, he said.
"This listing happens days before we are to present arguments for the first time to the Federal Court of Appeal, so we're very concerned about the timing with which this listing happens which completely undermines any ability for this organization to work as a charity," Hameed said.
"On its face, we believe it is an unfair and unconstitutional decision that has been taken."
Hameed also said the listing was a "nail in the coffin" for Canadian humanitarian support for "orphans and destitute" Palestinians and wondered if the decision was politically motivated.
Even acting for IRFAN as a lawyer puts him in a "tenuous" position because any support for the group could be seen to run afoul of the Criminal Code, he said, adding it is only the second time a Canadian domestic organization has been listed as terrorist group.
Meanwhile, RCMP said Tuesday it had raided IRFAN's head office in Mississauga and a residence in Quebec as part of a terrorism-financing investigation.
"An extensive amount of documentary evidence along with stored media, money and other records were seized," police said in a statement.
RCMP offered no further details of Monday's raids.
Blaney's statement noted "severe penalties" are in place for those who run afoul of the listing law.
"Canada will not tolerate terrorist activities including the financing of terrorist groups," Blaney said.
"IRFAN-Canada has knowingly financed Hamas, a listed terrorist entity, for many years."
In revoking its charitable status that followed two audits over 10 years, CRA referred to unproven suggestions from the U.S. government that IRFAN had ties to an Hamas-linked American aid group.
It also claims IRFAN "repeatedly misrepresented its fundraising activities to the public" and that the revocation decision was fair and legal.
It was not immediately clear whether the Federal Court of Appeal case against CRA had been rendered moot by Ottawa's listing decision.
A Canadian organization that provided humanitarian aid to Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza has been formally branded a terrorist entity days before the start of a court battle over the revocation of its charitable status.
In a letter to the International Relief Fund for the Afflicted and Needy, the RCMP said the federal government had added the group to a list of "terrorist entities" as of April 24.
"IRFAN is now classified as a 'terrorist group' under Canadian law," the letter from Supt. Stephane Bonin states.
"As a consequence, any property or asset belonging to IRFAN is now frozen."
The letter offers no reason for the listing decision but Canada Revenue Agency has said the organization supported Hamas, itself branded as a terrorist organization.
IRFAN was due in Federal Court of Appeal next week to contest a 2011 CRA decision to revoke its charitable status because of its alleged ties to Hamas and failure to keep proper records.
No one for IRFAN was immediately available to comment, but a lawyer speaking for the group condemned the listing as an attack on humanitarian support for Palestinians.
IRFAN did not know the terrorist listing was in the works and had no opportunity to respond or offer its side of the story, Ottawa-based lawyer Yavar Hameed said in an interview.
There's no evidence the group did any direct funding of Hamas, he said.
"The real nub of the matter is that it's basically going through Palestine, therefore it's supportive of Hamas," Hameed said.
By listing IRFAN-Canada, only days ahead of the Federal Court Appeal hearing, the Canadian government is, without due process, pre-empting the legal debate before the Federal Court of Appeal to determine whether the organization's charitable status should be reinstated.
"This listing happens days before we are to present arguments for the first time to the Federal Court of Appeal, so we're very concerned about the timing with which this listing happens which completely undermines any ability for this organization to work as a charity," Hameed said.
"On its face, we believe it is an unfair and unconstitutional decision that has been taken."
Hameed also said the listing was a "nail in the coffin" for Canadian humanitarian support for "orphans and destitute" Palestinians.
Pro-Russian separatists took control of the regional prosecutor's office and television centre in the eastern Ukraine city of Luhansk on Tuesday, having earlier seized the government headquarters, a Reuters photographer reports.
The photographer saw separatists inside the prosecutor's office and gunmen guarding the entrance of the television centre.
The gunmen said they were in control of the building, and Interfax news agency said protesters had burned the Ukrainian flag.
Earlier, protesters demanding more power for Ukraine's regions stormed the government building with baseball bats.
Pro-Russian protesters attack a pro-Ukrainian protester during a rally in the eastern city of Donetsk. The EU has released the names of more than a dozen new targets of sanctions because of their role in the Ukraine crisis. (Marko Djurica/Reuters)
The move further raises tensions in the east, where insurgents have seized city halls, police stations and other government buildings in at least 10 cities and towns.
The demonstrators who overran the building are seeking — at the very least — a referendum on granting greater authority to Ukraine's regions.
Eastern Ukraine, which has a large Russian-speaking population, was the heartland of support for Viktor Yanukovych, the president who fled to Russia in February. The government that replaced him in Kyiv has resisted those demands so far, fearing they could lead to a breakup of the country or mean that more regions — like Crimea — are annexed by Russia.
The storming came as 1,000 demonstrators gathered in front of the building. About 150 people, some masked and wielding baseball bats, broke out of the crowd and charged into the building, meeting without resistance. Later protesters formed a corridor for police who had been inside the building to leave.
Luhansk, a city of about 450,000, is just 25 kilometres west of the border with Russia.
Regional autonomy is a core issue in the unrest in eastern Ukraine, where insurgents fear the government that took power after Yanukovych will suppress the region's Russian-speakers.
In Kyiv, Ukraine's parliament on Tuesday discussed the possibility of holding a national referendum on whether the country should remain united or become a loose federation that allows the regions more powers. However, no consensus was reached on how such a referendum would be phrased or when it could be held.
Ukraine is already holding a new presidential election on May 25.
Yulia Tymoshenko, a former prime minister who is running for president and whose party dominates the new government, spoke out Tuesday against excessive decentralization.
"While we are giving authority to local administrative bodies, we are obliged — under any circumstances — not to lose authority over the country," Tymoshenko told lawmakers. She asked them to allow local self-governance "but not to lose the possibility of building a whole, unified, governable country, a country that is moving ahead under a strategy determined by all the elites and the people."
Russia has massed tens of thousands of troops in areas near the Ukrainian border, feeding concerns that Moscow aims to use unrest in the east as a pretext for an invasion.
In Kyiv, Deputy Foreign Minister Danylo Lubkivsky again accused Russia of fomenting the unrest in Ukraine and said the insurgents it was supporting were violating an international agreement on overcoming the crisis in Ukraine.
"The east, though, still remains a trouble spot, with civilians being threatened and attacked. Russian terrorists are refusing to surrender arms," he told reporters. "They have no real political agenda. They have no political goals and they have no intention of holding any dialogue. They simply execute orders from Russian authorities."
Speaking after a meeting with Lamberto Zannier, chief of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, Lubkivsky called on the pro-Russia forces to release the hostages they are holding, including a group of OSCE military observers.
Zannier called for the restoration of order throughout Ukraine.
In an unusually blunt public warning, a vice-president of the International Olympic Committee on Tuesday called the delayed preparations for the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro "the worst I have experienced."
John Coates, who has made six trips to Brazil as part of the IOC's co-ordination commission for Rio, said the Brazilians are behind "in many, many ways" and are in worse shape than Greek organizers were in preparing for the 2004 Olympics.
Despite the critical delays, the Australian said there is no backup plan and the games will take place in Rio.
Coates noted that the IOC had taken the unprecedented step of embedding experts in the host city to help the local organizing committee deliver the games.
"The IOC has formed a special task force to try and speed up preparations but the situation is critical on the ground," Coates told an Olympic forum in Sydney, outlining that construction delays are just part of the problem. "The IOC has adopted a more hands-on role. It is unprecedented for the IOC, but there is no plan B. We are going to Rio."
Brazil has also come under fire from football's world governing body, FIFA, for long delays in construction of stadiums and other infrastructure and the overdue delivery of venues for the World Cup, which kicks off in June. Two years out from the 2016 Olympics, the situation on the construction front is just as bleak.
"We have become very concerned. They are not ready in many, many ways," Coates said. "And this is against a city that's got social issues that also have to be addressed; a country that's also trying to deal with the FIFA World Cup coming up in a few months."
Coates said dealing with three levels of government in Brazil made it harder for local organizers than it was for the heavily criticized organizers of the Athens Games, which were also plagued by construction delays and earned a "yellow light" warning from then-IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch.
"I think this is a worse situation than Athens," Coates said. "In Athens, we were dealing with one government and some city responsibilities. Here, there's three.
"There is bureaucracy, there is little co-ordination between the federal, the state government and the city — which is responsible for a lot of the construction. The flow of funds from the federal government is not happening quickly enough. We think we need to help facilitate that."
Coates, who chairs the IOC co-ordination commission for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, said he thinks the IOC has put the message across in Brazil.
"We have to make it (the Olympics) happen and that is the IOC approach, you can't walk away from this," he said. "If it comes off — the first (Olympic) Games on the South American continent, in a magical city in so many ways — it'll be a wonderful experience for the athletes."
Work hasn't begun at Deodoro, a complex for eight Olympics sports venues, and the course that will host golf's return to the Olympic program for the first time in more than a century doesn't have grass yet. Water pollution is a big worry for sailing and other sports.
Concern over the delays has been building over time but hit crisis levels at the SportAccord meeting in Belek, Turkey, earlier this month.
In a rare display of unified, open criticism against an Olympic host, 18 sports federations publicly aired concerns over Rio's preparations, with some sports asking about "Plan B" contingencies.
The IOC has decided to send a senior troubleshooter, IOC executive director Gilbert Felli, to Brazil as part of a series of emergency measures to tackle the delays threatening the games. Coates said other experienced, high-level staff will soon be appointed.
Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes fired back last week at the complaints by sports federations, saying they were making too many unnecessary demands.
Paes said the federations were asking for too many "large things" that won't be used by the city after the Olympics.
There is much worth mulling over in former PMO communications director Andrew MacDougall's musings on political communications in the age of the internet.
You'll find few journalists able — or willing — to counter his caveats on the dangers of the always-on news cycle.
That said, you'll find at least one — hello there! — who will argue that the trials and tribulations endured by Democratic Reform Minister Pierre Poilievre recently in defence of his efforts to rewrite the country's election law make a pretty good case for knowing when to step away from the talking-point generating machine, and listen to the response.
As Poilievre announced last Friday, his bill will itself be rewritten as a direct result of the ensuing furor.
By week two on the front lines, Poilievre must have been muttering darkly about sharper teeth, longer arms and freer hands in his sleep — presuming, that is, that he was getting any sleep by that point, what with his seeming omnipresence on television, radio and in print.
It's fair to say, in this case at least, reciting the same bumper-sticker-ready motto as an all-purpose response to questions, concerns and criticism swiftly transformed it into a sort of rhetorical white noise — a verbal tic, like an extended "um," that one could safely ignore in favour of a more substantive comment, which is pretty much the opposite of the intended goal of most strategic communications.
An example, albeit one deliberately vague on the details in order to protect the identity of the other party (a now reflexive practice for Hill journalists that likely deserves its own column at some point):
Shortly after Poilievre revealed his intention to bring forward amendments, I was chatting with a mid-level government staffer about one of the few lightning-rod elements of the bill the minister hadn't addressed: namely, the oft-repeated demand for the elections commissioner to be given power to compel testimony, as is currently the case for his counterpart at the Competition Bureau.
Instead of simply replying with the standard talking point that not even the police have that power, my friend pointed out that, unlike the Competition Bureau, which relies on a system of fines and administrative penalties, cases investigated by the elections commissioner can potentially lead to criminal charges, which is why the government doesn't believe it would be appropriate to give him the ability to force witnesses to talk against their will.
Now, that's obviously a point wide open for debate — and indeed, had it been made in the course of the discussion of the bill, almost certainly would have been.
But every time the question came up at committee or on a political panel, the Conservative on defence duty at the time seemed to fall back on the "not-even-the-police" line without providing any additional context — context that, in this case, would have made their argument more compelling, if not necessarily convincing.
Is that, as MacDougall suggests, simply an unavoidable consequence of the 24/7 news cycle?
Not necessarily — although I'll agree it certainly doesn't help.
In the case of C-23, even the minister would likely quietly agree that, in hindsight, much of the sound and fury that has accompanied discussion of the bill thus far could have been sidestepped had the government opened up the floor to the audience from the get-go, rather than spending more than a month insisting that it was "terrific" as written.
Yes, Poilievre did claim from the start to be open to the possibility of amendments, but let's be honest: given this government's aversion to making major (or even minor) tweaks to legislation at committee, if it was always his intention to keep an open mind on improvements, he should have made it clear that this time, he really meant it.
If he hadn't allowed — and even, some might argue, tacitly encouraged — the debate to degenerate into a Mobius loop of partisan rhetoric, that message would have been quickly picked up and propagated by the very same news-famished media maw that his former colleague bemoans.
Of course, for that to happen, we of the aforementioned maw would have to do our part to boost the signal at the expense of the noise — namely, not instantly declaring any indication of an openness to reconsider or willingness to compromise as a tacit admission of defeat.
Finally, one last minor plea: For heaven's sake, enough with the dismissal of "process stories" as somehow unworthy of journalistic attention.
In politics, at any rate, "process" is How Stuff Happens, which can often be invaluable in understanding why it happens and, ultimately, what it means. Without knowing what went into a legislative sausage, how can Canadians make an informed decision on whether to take a bite?
Take that same election bill — which, it's worth noting, will change the process whereby Canadians exercise their very democratic franchise by casting a vote — as a textbook example of why process matters.
Had the initial ingredients and cooking methods not been so painstakingly detailed in the press, it's entirely possible there would have been no ensuing uproar.
Without that uproar, the minister may not have been persuaded to tweak his original recipe to better suit the public taste.
Mobile users, view the full list of proposed government and opposition amendments here.
New
The Canadian Press Posted: Apr 28, 2014 6:06 PM AT Last Updated: Apr 28, 2014 6:06 PM AT
Canada is imposing more sanctions on two Russian companies and nine individuals, following a move by the United States earlier today to step up economic pressure on Russia over the crisis in Ukraine.
The names of the companies and individuals will be announced shortly, a government source said Monday.
"Our government has been very clear that any further intimidation or actions to de-stabilize the Ukrainian government will result in consequences," Prime Minister Stephen Harper said in a statement Monday.
"The illegal occupation of Ukraine continues and Russia's military aggression persists.
A pro-Russian activist blocks the office of "Privatbank," whose owner is seen as backing the pro-Western government in Donetsk, Ukraine. Canada and the U.S. imposed new sanctions Monday against Russia, which is being blamed for unrest in Ukraine. (Efrem Lukatsky/Associated Press)
"Until Russia clearly demonstrates its respect for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity, Canada will continue to work with its allies and like-minded countries to apply pressure that will further isolate Russia economically and politically," Harper said.
The federal government will also announce today that six CF-18 fighter jets Canada is sending to assist NATO operations in Eastern Europe will be stationed in Romania, a government source told CBC News.
Harper announced the planes on April 17 in response to a request made by NATO. The CF-18s are expected to depart Tuesday from Bagotville, Que.
The United States announced its third round of sanctions Monday morning amid increasing violence in eastern Ukraine, slapping sanctions on seven Russian government officials and 17 companies linked to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The U.S. also revoked licenses for some high-tech items that could be used by the Russian military.
The White House said this round of sanctions is in response to Putin's failure to follow through with the April 17 agreement in Geneva.
The seven individuals will be subject to a freeze on any assets they hold in the U.S. and a ban on travel. The 17 companies assets have been frozen.
More to come
New
The Canadian Press Posted: Apr 28, 2014 1:01 PM ET Last Updated: Apr 28, 2014 1:30 PM ET
New
The Associated Press Posted: Apr 28, 2014 11:40 AM ET Last Updated: Apr 28, 2014 11:47 AM ET
Police in Connecticut say singer Paul Simon and his wife, Edie Brickell, have been arrested on disorderly conduct charges.
New Canaan police provided no details Monday, except to say officers responded to investigate a "family dispute" involving the singers Saturday night.
Singer Edie Brickell is an acclaimed singer, most recently winning the Grammy for best American roots song, alongside Steve Martin, for Love Has Come For You, in January. (Dan Steinberg/Invision/Associated Press)
The 72-year-old Simon and 47-year-old Brickell were released and an arraignment is scheduled for Monday in Norwalk.
A phone number for Simon is unlisted and his agent in Los Angeles did not immediately return a call seeking comment. An agent for Brickell did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.
Simon is a 12-time Grammy winner and member of The Songwriters Hall of Fame and Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame — as half of the duo of Simon and Garfunkel and as a solo artist.
The two were married in 1992.
Microsoft Corp is rushing to fix a bug in its widely used Internet Explorer web browser after a computer security firm disclosed the flaw over the weekend, saying hackers have already exploited it in attacks on some U.S. companies.
PCs running Windows XP will not receive any updates fixing that bug when they are released, however, because Microsoft stopped supporting the 13-year-old operating system earlier this month. Security firms estimate that between 15 and 25 percent of the world's PCs still run Windows XP
Microsoft disclosed on Saturday its plans to fix the bug in an advisory to its customers posted on its security website, which it said is present in Internet Explorer versions 6 to 11. Those versions dominate desktop browsing, accounting for 55 percent of the PC browser market, according to tech research firm NetMarketShare.
Cybersecurity software maker FireEye Inc said that a sophisticated group of hackers have been exploiting the bug in a campaign dubbed "Operation Clandestine Fox."
FireEye, whose Mandiant division helps companies respond to cyber attacks, declined to name specific victims or identify the group of hackers, saying that an investigation into the matter is still active.
"It's a campaign of targeted attacks seemingly against U.S.-based firms, currently tied to defense and financial sectors," FireEye spokesman Vitor De Souza said via email. "It's unclear what the motives of this attack group are, at this point. It appears to be broad-spectrum intel gathering."
He declined to elaborate, though he said one way to protect against them would be to switch to another browser.
Microsoft said in the advisory that the vulnerability could allow a hacker to take complete control of an affected system, then do things such as viewing changing, or deleting data, installing malicious programs, or creating accounts that would give hackers full user rights.
FireEye and Microsoft have not provided much information about the security flaw or the approach that hackers could use to figure out how to exploit it, said Aviv Raff, chief technology officer of cybersecurity firm Seculert.
Yet other groups of hackers are now racing to learn more about it so they can launch similar attacks before Microsoft prepares a security update, Raff said.
"Microsoft should move fast," he said. "This will snowball."
Still, he cautioned that Windows XP users will not benefit from that update since Microsoft has just halted support for that product.
The software maker said in a statement to Reuters that it advises Windows XP users to upgrade to one of two most recently versions of its operating system, Windows 7 or 8.
Breaking
Thomson Reuters Posted: Apr 27, 2014 7:44 PM ET Last Updated: Apr 27, 2014 10:20 PM ET
A 'mass casualty situation' was reported in the town of Vilonia, Arkansas, on Sunday after a tornado touched down there, a spokesman for the Faulkner County Sheriff's office said.
The spokesman said the number of casualties was not immediately clear.
The Los Angeles Clippers chose not to speak publicly about owner Donald Sterling before they faced the Golden State Warriors for Game 4 of their first-round series Sunday. Instead, they made a silent protest to generate attention.
In response to Sterling's purported comments urging a woman to not bring black people to his team's games, the Clippers let their uniforms become a show of solidarity.
They ran out of the tunnel wearing their usual warmups. Then they huddled at centre court and tossed the outer layer of their warmups to the ground, going through their pregame routine with their red Clippers' shirts on inside out to hide the team's logo.
Players also wore black wristbands or armbands during the game, which they lost 118-97. They also donned black socks with their normal jerseys.
"It's just us, only us. We're all we got," Clippers point guard Chris Paul could be heard shouting to teammates before they ran out.
Los Angeles Clippers players warm up before Sunday afternoon's game against Golden State with their warm-up shirts turned inside out. (Kelley L Cox/USA TODAY Sports/Reuters)
The Warriors' announced sellout crowd of 19,596, decked out in gold shirts, booed the Clippers — as they always do — during team introductions.
Sterling's wife, Shelley, was sitting courtside across from the Clippers' bench. Commissioner Adam Silver had said Donald Sterling would not be at the game.
Clippers coach Doc Rivers said prior that he would remain the only one to speak for the team on the issue because players wanted to remain focused on basketball. Afterward, Rivers said he knew what his players had planned but didn't voice his opinion.
River said he wasn't thrilled about the demonstration, though he didn't elaborate why. Even he, though, acknowledged that staying focused has not been easy since TMZ released the alleged recording of Sterling on Saturday.
"Our message is to play," Rivers said. "Our message is that we're going to let no one and nothing stop us from what we want to do. And I think that's a good message. I really do. I think that's the message we're trying to send. And if we can pull this off all the way, I think that would be a terrific message."
In an overcrowded post-game locker room, most of the Clippers' players deflected comment or refused to answer questions related to Sterling — other than to say they remain united and focused on basketball.
Shooting guard J.J. Redick, who is white, said the controversy has impacted everybody on the team and around the league. He also admitted it might've effected their preparation.
"Maybe our focus wasn't in the right place would be the easiest way to say it," Redick said. "I didn't get the sense that we couldn't function. I thought we competed, but give them a lot of credit as well. It wasn't just the distraction of everything that has happened in the last 24 hours. Golden State played a great basketball game, let's keep that in mind."
While the Clippers wanted to let their play do the talking, other NBA players continued to speak out on the subject.
Some talked about the hurt Sterling's alleged words caused. Others urged Silver to take an aggressive stance against Sterling, who has a history of alleged discrimination. Most of them hoped Sterling would be removed as the team's owner someday soon.
Miami Heat star LeBron James said Silver needed to take action, going so far as to suggest "there is no room for Donald Sterling in our league." Lakers star Kobe Bryant wrote on his Twitter page that he couldn't play for Sterling. Warriors coach Mark Jackson, who played for the Clippers from 1992-94, said he could forgive Sterling but couldn't play for him right now, either.
Asked if he needed to hear something from the league or Sterling to return as coach next year, Rivers said he didn't know and he was just concentrating on the playoff series.
The players union, still without an executive director since firing Billy Hunter in February 2013, is following the situation closely. The union has asked former NBA All-Star and current Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson to take a leading role on the players' behalf to address the Sterling matter.
Johnson and Silver attended the game Sunday. Johnson said he called an emergency phone meeting of every player representative to the union Saturday night and spoke with Silver before the game. He said this is a "defining moment" for the NBA and for Silver.
Johnson said players trust that the commissioner will meet their demands, which include: Sterling not attend any NBA games for the rest of the playoffs; a full account of past allegations of discrimination by Sterling and why the league never sanctioned him; the range of options that the league can penalize Sterling, including the maximum penalty, which players want if the audio recording is validated; assurance that the NBA and the union will be partners in the investigation; and an immediate and decisive ruling, hopefully before the Clippers host the Warriors for Game 5 on Tuesday night in Los Angeles.
Johnson also said there will be no league-wide protest by players or a boycott because there's enough attention on the issue already and that players "trust Adam Silver. They trust that Adam Silver will do the right thing."
The tornado hit Quapaw, Okla. (Google Maps)
Authorities say a tornado has killed two people in the small northeastern Oklahoma town of Quapaw.
Ottawa County sheriff's dispatcher Colleen Thompson says two people were reportedly killed when the twister hit the community near Oklahoma's borders with Kansas and Missouri at around 5:30 p.m. Sunday. She says the extent of the damage is still unknown.
The tornado was one of several spawned by a large storm front moving through the Midwest and South. There have been no other reported deaths due to the storms.
More to come
New
The Associated Press Posted: Apr 27, 2014 4:02 PM ET Last Updated: Apr 27, 2014 4:02 PM ET
The Los Angeles Clippers are making a silent protest of owner Donald Sterling's purported comments urging a woman to not bring black people to his team's games.
The Clippers ran out of the tunnel for Game 4 of their first-round playoff series at Golden State on Sunday wearing their warm-up uniforms. They huddled together at centre court and tossed their warm-ups to the ground and went through their pregame routine with their red Clippers' shirts on inside-out to hide the team's logo.
Clippers players again chose to remain silent and not speak out on Sterling's alleged comments before the game. Coach Doc Rivers said he would be the only one to speak for the team on the issue.
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President Barack Obama said Sunday that comments reportedly made by the owner of a U.S. pro basketball team are "incredibly offensive racist statements," before casting them as part of a continuing legacy of slavery and segregation that Americans must confront.
"When ignorant folks want to advertise their ignorance, you don't really have to do anything, you just let them talk," Obama said when asked to respond to the reported comments from Los Angeles Clippers' owner Donald Sterling.
Obama's description of the controversy as part of a larger historical context is the latest example of his continuing willingness to expound on matters of race in his second term.
'The United States continues to wrestle with the legacy of race and slavery and segregation, that's still there, the vestiges of discrimination.'- U.S. President Barack Obama
After avoiding much mention of race relations during his campaign to become the first black president and in his first term, the president last summer offered a personal reflection in response to the shooting of black teenager Trayvon Martin.
And now Obama has spoken out against an audio recording of a man identified as Sterling telling his girlfriend not to bring black people to games.
The firestorm over Sterling's comments has quickly engulfed the National Basketball Association.
Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling watches the second half of an NBA preseason basketball game between the Los Angeles Clippers and the Los Angeles Lakers in Los Angeles. On Saturday, the NBA said it is investigating a report of an audio recording in which a man purported to be Sterling makes racist remarks while speaking to his girlfriend. (Danny Moloshok/Associated Press)
Obama cast the comments through a broader prism of racism in America, adding that "we constantly have to be on guard on racial attitudes that divide us rather than embracing our diversity as a strength."
"The United States continues to wrestle with the legacy of race and slavery and segregation, that's still there, the vestiges of discrimination," Obama said during a news conference in Malaysia, where he was travelling.
"We've made enormous strides, but you're going to continue to see this percolate up every so often," he added. "And I think that we just have to be clear and steady in denouncing it, teaching our children differently, but also remaining hopeful that part of why statements like this stand out some much is because there has been this shift in how we view ourselves."
In the recording attributed to Sterling recording and posted on the website TMZ, a male voice questions his girlfriend's association with minorities. TMZ reported the woman, V. Stiviano, is of black and Mexican descent.
The man asks Stiviano not to broadcast her association with black people or bring black people to games. The man specifically mentions Lakers Hall of Famer Magic Johnson on the recording, saying, "Don't bring him to my games, OK?"
Obama said he's confident NBA Commissioner Adam Silver will address the matter. He said the NBA has "an awful lot of African American players, it's steeped in African American culture. And I suspect that the NBA is going to be deeply concerned in resolving this."
Silver had said the NBA needs to confirm authenticity of the audio tape and interview both Sterling and the woman in the recording. He called the tape "disturbing and offensive" and promised to investigate quickly.