British boy with tumour getting treatment in Spain, parents arrested


A critically-ill 5-year-old boy driven to Spain by his parents against doctors' advice is receiving medical treatment for a brain tumour in a Spanish hospital as his parents await extradition to Britain, police said Sunday.


Officers received a phone call late Saturday from a hotel east of Malaga advising that a vehicle fitting the description circulated by police was on its premises.



Both parents were arrested and the boy, Ashya King, was taken to a hospital, a Spanish police spokesman said.


France Britain Missing Boy

Ashya King has a severe brain tumour and needs urgent treatment. (Interpol/Associated Press)



The boy's situation will depend on medical advice, the spokesman said on condition of anonymity because he is not allowed to be cited by name in the media.


Spanish National Police had published several tweets on its official account giving details of the King family and asking the public to call an emergency number with any information.


"The Kings are currently being held in custody and police have 72 hours to question them before handing them over to a judge, who will begin extradition proceedings," said Chris Shead, of Britain's Hampshire Constabulary.


Shead said the parents were arrested on suspicion of neglect. They were receiving advice from Britain's consular services in Spain and would likely also face questioning by British police who were due to arrive in Malaga on Sunday, he added.


An international search began Thursday for the boy, who has a severe brain tumour, after his parents removed him from a hospital in the southern English city of Southampton in the county of Hampshire.


A European arrest warrant was issued by Interpol, at the request of British police, for the boy's parents, Brett and Naghemeh, both Jehovah's Witnesses. There has been no indication that the parents raised any religious issue about the boy's treatment.


The family had been seen travelling from Britain to France aboard a car ferry and Spanish police had been alerted.


Spanish state television broadcaster TVE said on its website that the minors among the couple's five other children were being looked after by their adult brothers.



Mediator walks out of B.C. teachers' strike resolution talks




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Ebola outbreak: Canadian scientists back home after being pulled from Sierra Leone


New


3 lab workers will continue voluntary isolation for undefined period


The Canadian Press Posted: Aug 29, 2014 8:03 PM ET Last Updated: Aug 29, 2014 8:12 PM ET








The Public Health Agency of Canada says the three Canadian scientists evacuated from Sierra Leone over Ebola concerns are back in Canada.



The three left earlier Friday to make the trip home.


A quarantine officer assessed the three when their plane landed in an undisclosed location.


They were deemed healthy and were allowed to travel to private residences.


The three will be in voluntary isolation for a period of time and will be monitored regularly.


Canada decided to pull them after people at their hotel complex in Kailahun, in eastern Sierra Leone, were diagnosed with Ebola.







Premiers take the ice bucket challenge in Charlottetown


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CBC News Posted: Aug 29, 2014 3:50 PM ET Last Updated: Aug 29, 2014 3:51 PM ET







Premiers Darrell Pasloski of Yukon, Christy Clark of British Columbia and Nunavut's Peter Taptuna wrapped up Council of the Federation meetings in Charlottetown Friday by enduring a shower of icy water for the ice bucket challenge.


Before being doused, Clark nominated NBA star and Vancouver Whitecaps co-owner Steve Nash, from Victoria, to take the challenge, as well as Vancouver Canucks owner Francesco Aquilini and B.C. Lions' coach Wally Buono.


The ice bucket challenge to raise awareness for Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also called ALS or Lou Gehrig's Disease, has caught fire on social media this summer and raised millions of dollars in donations.


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Coquihalla bus crash not caused by speeding, say RCMP


A dashboard camera aboard a tractor-trailer captured a tour bus rolling over on a mountain highway in British Columbia, injuring dozens of tourists, many from East Asia, as they were returning from a trip to the Rocky Mountains.


The bus carrying 56 people crashed Thursday afternoon on the Coquihalla Highway south of Merritt, B.C., sending 43 people to hospital. Health officials said five patients were in critical condition and 10 were listed as serious.


RCMP Sgt. Brian Nightingale said the dash-cam footage, captured by a truck travelling behind the bus, indicates speed was likely not a factor, leaving human error or mechanical failure as possible causes.


"It's more an issue that the driver drove into the centre median and then veered too hard trying to get onto the road," Nightingale said.


"We're doing mechanical (inspections) today on the bus, so that will rule out any kind of mechanical factors, like steering and braking and that kind of stuff."


The dash-cam footage has not been released by police.


Interior Health said passengers needing treatment were transported to hospitals in Kamloops and Kelowna. In addition to the patients with critical and serious injuries, the health authority said 28 people had less serious non-life threatening injuries.


Hospital officials in B.C. are expected to issue an update the condition of the patients sometime on Friday.


Many bus passengers from overseas


The passengers were on a tour organized by Super Vacation, a company based in Richmond, B.C., which leased the bus from Western Bus Lines.


The company, which that describes itself as the largest Chinese tour operator in North America, has said the bus was returning to Vancouver from on a trip to the Rocky Mountains and was between Kamloops and Vancouver when it rolled over around 2:30 p.m. PT about 30 kilometres south of Merritt.


Company spokesman L. Lau said many of the passengers are from mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, though he said some are from B.C. and elsewhere in Canada.


Lau said his company has been in touch with some of the patients and has been figuring out ways to provide assistance.


"We have been planning for everything right now," said Lau, who declined to give his full name. "Of course, some of the patients we can't see."


Lau said the bus was operated by Western Bus Lines, which he said is a "major local bus company with 35 years of experience."


"We are waiting for the police report," Lau said.


Western Bus Lines, based in Kelowna, did not reply to repeated voice messages and emails.


Consulate confirms 2 from Hong Kong


Abraham Lin, director of consular services for the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Vancouver, said his office had confirmed that two of the patients are Taiwanese nationals, a 20-year-old man and a 21-year-old woman.


"They are just studying for the summer and they joined the bus tour for the Rocky Mountains," Lin said.


Lin said his office had been in touch with one of the Taiwanese passengers and had contacted the other's parents in Taiwan.


Neither the Chinese embassy in Ottawa nor the consulate in Vancouver could be immediately reached.


Photos from the scene on Thursday showed the white bus upright, with visible damage to its side and the Western Bus Lines logo mostly scraped off. Passengers and emergency workers could be seen standing alongside the bus, with debris strewn about the road.


YouTube: Bus crash on the Coquihalla



British PM plans new laws to tackle homegrown terrorism


Updated


U.K. raises terror threat level to severe over Syria, Iraq concerns


Thomson Reuters Posted: Aug 29, 2014 10:16 AM ET Last Updated: Aug 29, 2014 10:50 AM ET







British Prime Minister David Cameron said on Friday he planned to introduce new legislation to make it harder for Britons to travel to Syria and Iraq to fight alongside Islamist extremists.



Cameron, who said he would detail his plans in parliament on Monday to confiscate passports, was speaking as Britain raised its international terrorism threat level to "severe", its second highest level.


"I will be making a statement in the House of Commons on Monday. This will include further steps to stop people travelling, with new legislation that will make it easier to take people's passports away," Cameron told a news conference.


Meanwhile, Britain raised its terror level from substantial to severe, the Associated Press reported.


A severe threat means that a terrorist attack is considered highly likely. It is the second highest of five levels.


Home Secretary Theresa May said the decision was related to developments in Iraq and Syria. There was no information to suggest an attack was imminent.


May urged the public "to remain vigilant and to report any suspicious activity to the police."


The decision is made by the Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre, she said. It is made on the basis of intelligence and is independent of government.



With files from the Associated Press



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Putin urges safe passage for Ukrainian troops 'to avoid senseless deaths'



Russia's President Vladimir Putin on Friday called on pro-Russian separatists to release Ukrainian soldiers who have been surrounded by the rebels in eastern Ukraine.


Putin's statement came several hours after Ukraine accused Russia of entering its territory with tanks, artillery and troops, and Western powers accused Moscow of lying about its role and dangerously escalating the conflict.




NATO said at least 1,000 Russian troops are in Ukraine and later released what it said were satellite photos of Russian self-propelled artillery units moving last week.


For the second day, Russian markets reacted nervously to the growing escalation of the conflict in Ukraine with the Russian ruble diving to the all-time low of 37.10 rubles against the U.S. dollar in early morning trading.


Markets dropped on Thursday on reports of Russia's apparent invasion in Ukraine, sparking investors' fears of further economic sanctions directed at Moscow. The ruble lost 1.4 per cent against the dollar and the MICEX benchmark shed 1.6 per cent.


"I'm calling on insurgents to open a humanitarian corridor for Ukrainian troops who were surrounded in order to avoid senseless deaths," Putin said in the statement published on the Kremlin's website in the early hours on Friday.


Ukrainian troops must lay down arms, rebels say


Putin did not address the claims about Russia's military presence in Ukraine. Instead, he lauded the pro-Russian separatists whom he described as "insurgents" for "undermining Kyiv's military operation which threatened lives of the residents of Donbass and has already led to a colossal death toll among civilians."


UKRAINE-CRISIS/

Separatist militias continue to be supplied with weapons and ammunition from Russia, NATO asserted again on Thursday. (Maxim Shemetov/Reuters)



Putin's statement could be referring to Ukrainian troops who have been trapped outside the strategic town of Ilovaysk, east of Donetsk, for nearly a week now. Protesters rallied outside the Ukrainian General Staff on Thursday, demanding reinforcements and heavy weaponry for the troops outside Ilovaysk, most of whom are volunteers.


A top rebel leader in the rebel stronghold of Donetsk promptly reacted to Putin's appeal but said the Ukrainian troops would have to lay down the arms before they were allowed to go.


"With all our respect to Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin, the president of a country which gives us moral support, we are ready to open humanitarian corridors to the Ukrainian troops who were surrounded with the condition that they surrender heavy weaponry and ammunition so that this weaponry and ammunition will not be used against us in future," Alexander Zakharchenko said on Russia's state Rossiya 24 television.


Two columns of tanks and other equipment entered southeastern Ukraine at midday on Thursday, following heavy shelling of the area from Russia that forced overmatched Ukrainian border guards to flee, according to Col. Andriy Lysenko, a spokesman for Ukraine's national security council.


Obama rules out military action


U.S. President Barack Obama spoke with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has been a key power broker between the West and Russia, and both leaders agreed Russia must face consequences for its actions.


Obama ruled out a military confrontation between the U.S. and Russia. He said Russia's activity in Ukraine would incur "more costs and consequences," though these seemed to be limited to economic pressure that will be discussed when Obama meets with European leaders at a NATO summit in Wales next week.


In a phone conversation with Ukraine's President Petro Poroshenko late on Friday, Merkel assured the Ukrainian leader of her support for "decisive actions" that could be taken at a European Council meeting on Aug. 30, Poroshenko's press office said.


In Donetsk, the largest city under rebel control, the mayor's office reported sustained shelling across town on Friday morning. No casualties were immediately reported.



Ukraine crisis: Obama rules out military action


Reports that Russia has opened a new front in the war in eastern Ukraine Thursday between pro-Russia separatists and the new government of President Petro Poroshenko, led to widespread condemnation.


President Barack Obama, speaking to reporters in Washington, said that Russia’s actions are leaving it isolated from the international community.



"I just spoke to Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany. We agree that Russia is responsible for the violence in eastern Ukraine," said Obama. "Russia has repeatedly violated the sovereignty and territory of Ukraine."


Obama stopped short of calling it an invasion, and said that a military action from the West is not on the table.


Ukraine crisis

A military truck tows a damaged vehicle through the steppe near the village of Krasnodarovka in Rostov region August 28, 2014. A Reuters reporter saw on Thursday a column of armoured vehicles and dust-covered troops, one of them with an injured face, driving through the Russian steppe just across the border from a part of Ukraine which Kiev says is occupied by Russian troops. None of the men or vehicles had standard military identification marks, but the reporter saw a Mi-8 helicopter with a red star insignia -- consistent with Russian military markings -- land next to a nearby military first aid tent. The column was driving east away from the Ukrainian border across open countryside near the village of Krasnodarovka in Russia's Rostov region. REUTERS/Maria Tsvetkova (RUSSIA - Tags: MILITARY POLITICS CONFLICT) - RTR4449A (Maria Tsvetkova/Reuters)



Instead, increasing economic sanctions will seek to punish Russia.


The president added that he will meet with Porosehnko at the White House in September.


Russia has described the Russian citizens fighting with the separatists as volunteers.


NATO officials said at least 1,000 Russian troops had entered Ukraine. NATO produced satellite images to provide what it called additional evidence that Russian combat soldiers, equipped with sophisticated heavy weaponry, are operating inside Ukraine's sovereign territory.


"This is highly sophisticated weaponry that requires well-trained crews, well-trained command and control elements, and it is extremely unlikely that this sort of equipment is used by volunteers," said Nico Tak, director of NATO's Comprehensive Crisis Operations Management Center.


Tak said the satellite images were only "the tip of the iceberg" in terms of the overall scope of Russian troop and weapons movements.


The new southeastern front raised fears that the separatists are seeking to create a land link between Russia and Crimea, which Russia annexed in March.



'An affront to democracy': EU lawmakers threaten to sink Canada trade deal


EU lawmakers are threatening to block a multi-billion dollar trade pact between Canada and the European Union — a blueprint for a much bigger EU-U.S. deal — because it would allow firms to sue governments if they breach the treaty.


The agreement with Canada, a draft of which was seen by Reuters, could increase bilateral trade by one fifth to $37 billion (26 billion euros).


But European consumer and environmental groups say a mechanism in the accord would allow multinationals to bully the EU's 28 governments into doing their bidding regardless of environmental, labour and food laws and would set a bad precedent for the planned EU-U.S. trade pact.


The European Parliament must ratify both the Canada and the U.S. pacts. Since elections in May, the rise of nationalist, Eurosceptic parties in the legislature, many of them opposed to globalization, have complicated the EU's free-trade ambitions.


"The Greens will fight hard to get a majority in the parliament against (the EU-Canada deal)," said Claude Turmes of the Green group, echoing concerns from others in the European Parliament, including the Socialist bloc.


Deal an "affront to democracy"


Tiziana Beghin, an EU lawmaker from Italy's anti-establishment 5-Star Movement who sits on the parliament's influential trade committee, called the EU-Canada deal an "affront to democracy".


"Giving corporations the right to sue governments for loss of anticipated profit would be ridiculous if it were not so dangerous," she told Reuters.


According to the draft accord, the chapter on "Investor-State Dispute Settlement" (ISDS) allows companies to sue either an EU country or Canada in a special court if they think their trade interests have been damaged.


Some member states, including Germany, the EU's biggest economy, have also expressed opposition to the ISDS.


Canada and the European Commission deny accusations that the ISDS mechanism will give multinationals too much power. They say dispute settlement has been an important part of trade deals since the North American Free Trade Agreement 20 years ago.


Some in business consider it an insurance policy against the impact of laws on their profits or against expropriation.


Negative signal


In the European Parliament, it is not yet clear whether there is enough opposition to block the EU-Canada deal, but the very fact such threats are being made indicates the change in tone from the previous, more business-friendly parliament.


Together with the Socialists' 191 members, the political groups opposing the agreement could count on 341 votes, just 35 short of a majority.


Passing the accord is likely to depend on centrist parties forming a grand coalition and much will depend on how the Socialists, who say they oppose the dispute mechanism, vote.


In 2012 the EU Parliament flexed its muscles by rejecting an Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, which would have set global standards for enforcement of intellectual property rights.


Blocking the Canada trade deal would send a very negative signal on the chances of the even more ambitious EU-U.S. accord, which if approved would encompass almost half of the global economy and about a third of world trade.


"This issue is very important since the accord with Canada with the arbitration clause would foreshadow a deal with the United States," said French far-right leader Marine Le Pen.


Hostility to the dispute settlement panel has united those such as Le Pen, who see it as a threat to national sovereignty, and those worried about the implications for environmental law.


Dutch Green MEP Bas Eickhout said the draft deal would "open the backdoor" for firms to kill off environmental legislation.


The EU and Canada hope to sign the accord — officially known as the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA)— at an Ottawa summit on Sept. 25-26, officials said. It must still be ratified by both the EU and Canadian parliaments.



ISIS executes 250 Syrian soldiers after seizing air base


ISIS fighters have executed 250 Syrian soldiers captured when the group seized an air base in the province of Raqqa at the weekend, according to a video posted on YouTube on Thursday and confirmed as genuine by an Islamic State fighter.



The video showed the bodies of dozens of men lying face down wearing nothing but their underwear. Their bodies were stretched out in a long line that appeared to be dozens of metres long.


The video also showed a separate pile of bodies nearby.


"The 250 shabeeha taken captive by the Islamic State [ISIS] from Tabqa in Raqqa have been executed," read the caption posted with the video, referring to the soldiers by the name to forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad by Islamist militants fighting him.


Talking to Reuters via the Internet, an ISIS fighter in Raqqa said: "Yes we have executed them all."


'How many have you killed?'


Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, a radical offshoot of al Qaeda, stormed Tabqa air base on Sunday after days of clashes with the army and said it had captured and killed soldiers and officers in one of the fiercest confrontations yet between the two sides.


ISIS-IRAQ-SECURITY-YAZIDIS-KILLINGS-Aug-11-2014

Displaced people from the minority Yazidi sect, fleeing violence from forces loyal to ISIS in Sinjar town, are heading for the Syrian border. (Rodi Said/Reuters)



The capture of Tabqa, the Syrian army's last foothold in that area, and apparent killing of large numbers of its soldiers shows Islamic State's grip on the north of the country. The group has also seized territory in eastern Syria and large areas of neighbouring Iraq in recent months.


The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the conflict using sources on the ground, said the soldiers who were executed had been trying to escape from the airport when they were captured by militant fighters of the Islamic State.



'Who's your father? Do you know who your father is? You can't possibly know who your father is. You're a bastard.'- ISIS interrogator



Another video posted online appeared to show the interrogation of at least one Syrian soldier in front of a group of other captured men in their underwear, as voices off camera shout sectarian insults.


The soldier identifies himself as an officer and says he is from the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam, like President Bashar al-Assad and the majority of high-ranking military officers. Islamic State members are Sunni Muslims.


"Who's your father? Do you know who your father is? You can't possibly know who your father is. You're a bastard," the interrogator says, using insults suggesting that Alawites are born out of wedlock.


At one point the soldier briefly looks down at the floor and rubs his eyes, another interrogator throws a metal rod at him, making him flinch and then pay attention to the main interrogator again.


"How many have you killed? How many have you raped?" the interrogator shouts. The soldier replies: "None. I've been stationed here in the airport."


Back to hell


The interrogator asks why the soldier had been fighting on behalf of Assad and did not defect and he replies that he would have just been sent back to the army.


"They would have sent you right back to the army? And we're going to send you right back to hell: by slaughter," the interrogator says, making him chant Islamic State slogans.


Syrian state media confirmed the attack on the base but has not reported any deaths or any army members being captured. It has said Islamic State suffered heavy losses in the battle over the base.


Tabqa was the army's last foothold in an area otherwise controlled by the Islamic State militants, who aim to set up a trans-border caliphate in the Iraqi and Syrian territory they have captured.


The United States has carried out air strikes on Islamic State in Iraq and has left open the option for similar action in Syria.



ISIS executes dozens of Syrian troops captured at airbase


ISIS fighters have executed dozens of members of the Syrian army they captured after seizing an air base in the northeast of the country, a group monitoring the violence said on Thursday.



Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, a radical offshoot of al Qaeda, stormed Tabqa air base on Sunday after days of clashes with the army and said it had captured and killed soldiers and officers in one of the fiercest confrontations yet between the two sides.


The capture of Tabqa, the Syrian army's last foothold in that area, and apparent killing of large numbers of its soldiers shows Islamic State's grip on the north of the country. The group has also seized territory in eastern Syria and large areas of neighbouring Iraq in recent months.


ISIS-IRAQ-SECURITY-YAZIDIS-KILLINGS-Aug-11-2014

Displaced people from the minority Yazidi sect, fleeing violence from forces loyal to the Islamic State in Sinjar town, walk towards the Syrian border, on the outskirts of Sinjar mountain, near the Syrian border town of Elierbeh of Al-Hasakah Governorate Aug. 11. (Rodi Said/Reuters)



The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the conflict using sources on the ground, said the soldiers who were executed had been trying to escape from the airport when they were captured by militant fighters of the Islamic State.


A video posted online by Islamic State supporters on Thursday appeared to show members of the group making scores of Syrian army captives walk and run through the desert in their underwear.


Reuters could not confirm the contents of the video, which was posted on You Tube and social media. It showed at least 135 men, some with their hands on their heads, running barefoot through a desert landscape as armed men jeered them.


It was not clear what happened to the men afterwards, but photos posted by Islamic State supporters online on Wednesday appeared to show them gunning down at least seven members of the army.



'Who's your father? Do you know who your father is? You can't possibly know who your father is. You're a bastard.'- ISIS interrogator



Another video posted online appeared to show the interrogation of at least one Syrian soldier in front of a group of other captured men in their underwear, as voices off camera shout sectarian insults.


The soldier identifies himself as an officer and says he is from the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam, like President Bashar al-Assad and the majority of high-ranking military officers. Islamic State members are Sunni Muslims.


"Who's your father? Do you know who your father is? You can't possibly know who your father is. You're a bastard," the interrogator says, using insults suggesting that Alawites are born out of wedlock.


At one point the soldier briefly looks down at the floor and rubs his eyes, another interrogator throws a metal rod at him, making him flinch and then pay attention to the main interrogator again.


"How many have you killed? How many have you raped?" the interrogator shouts. The soldier replies: "None. I've been stationed here in the airport."


The interrogator asks why the soldier had been fighting on behalf of Assad and did not defect and he replies that he would have just been sent back to the army.


"They would have sent you right back to the army? And we're going to send you right back to hell: by slaughter," the interrogator says, making him chant Islamic State slogans.


Syrian state media confirmed the attack on the base but has not reported any deaths or any army members being captured. It has said Islamic State suffered heavy losses in the battle over the base.


Tabqa was the army's last foothold in an area otherwise controlled by the Islamic State militants, who aim to set up a trans-border caliphate in the Iraqi and Syrian territory they have captured.


The United States has carried out air strikes on Islamic State in Iraq and has left open the option for similar action in Syria.



Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt get married


New


Hollywood's most famous couple married Saturday in France, says a spokesman


The Associated Press Posted: Aug 28, 2014 8:44 AM ET Last Updated: Aug 28, 2014 8:56 AM ET







Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt were married Saturday in Chateau Miraval, France, says a spokesman for the couple.


Jolie and Pitt wed Saturday in a small chapel in a private ceremony attended by family and friends. In advance of the nondenominational civil ceremony, Pitt and Jolie also obtained a marriage license from a local California judge. The judge also conducted the ceremony in France.


The couple's children took part in the wedding. Jolie walked the aisle with her eldest sons Maddox and Pax. Zahara and Vivienne threw petals. Shiloh and Knox served as ring bearers, the spokesman says.


More to come



With files from The Associated Press



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Device police describe as seeming to be 'explosive' found near Montreal hospital


Police say a suspicious device that appears to be an "explosive" was found at a street corner near Montreal Children's Hospital early this morning.


The device was found at the corner of Tupper Street and Atwater Avenue.


Atwater is closed between René-Lévesque Boulevard and Ste-Catherine Street.


More to come



Ailina Tsarnaeva, sister of Boston bombing suspect, arrested for bomb threat


Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's sister was arrested Wednesday on suspicion she threatened to bomb a woman who previously had a romantic relationship with her boyfriend.


Ailina Tsarnaeva, who lives in North Bergen, New Jersey, made the threat against an upper Manhattan woman via telephone on Monday, police said. She turned herself in at a Manhattan police precinct, and police charged her with aggravated harassment.


Several media outlets reported Tsarnaeva told the Harlem woman she had "people who can go over there and put a bomb on you."



Officers gave Tsarnaeva an appearance ticket and released her pending a Sept. 30 court date.


A telephone number linked to Tsarnaeva was disconnected. Her lawyer, George Gormley, said he had left his office and would speak Thursday.


Tsarnaeva has been required to check in with Massachusetts probation officers since prosecutors said she failed to cooperate with a 2010 counterfeiting investigation.


Prosecutors said Tsarnaeva picked up someone who passed a counterfeit bill at a restaurant at a Boston mall and "lied about certain salient facts during the investigation."


At a hearing last October, Gormley said Tsarnaeva was pregnant with her second child and was unlikely to flee.


Tsarnaeva once lived in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at an apartment linked to her brothers, Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who were the subjects of an intense manhunt in the Boston area in the days after the deadly April 2013 marathon bombing.


Records show Tsarnaeva now lives with a sister, Bella Tsarnaeva.


Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is charged with building and planting the two pressure cooker bombs that exploded near the marathon's finish line, killing three people and injuring more than 260 others. He has pleaded not guilty.


Tamerlan Tsarnaev died after a gunbattle with police.



2 people rescued from disabled boat near brink of Niagara Falls


New


A 19-foot motor boat with two men aboard was anchored in the Niagara River


The Associated Press Posted: Aug 27, 2014 12:32 PM ET Last Updated: Aug 27, 2014 12:45 PM ET





Authorities say two boaters were about three kilometres from the brink of Niagara Falls when they were rescued from their disabled vessel by a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter.


Coast Guard officials say their Buffalo station received a call around 9:15 p.m. Monday reporting a 19-foot motor boat with two men aboard was anchored in the Niagara River about 2,000 feet inside the 2.5-mile exclusion zone from the falls.


A crew from the Coast Guard air station in Detroit was dispatched to the scene, along with a Coast Guard vessel from Buffalo and boat crews from state and local police.


The river's shallow depth prevented the vessels from reaching the anchored boat. A Coast Guard helicopter rescued the two boaters shortly before midnight.


The boat remains on the river. The owner is arranging salvage with a commercial service company.


Lt. Cmdr. Jason Trichler, pilot of the Coast Guard rescue helicopter said in a press release "the training that we do everyday prepared us for this rescue, and it felt great to successfully get these guys out of a tough, and I am sure, scary situation."


The owner of the vessel will coordinate salvage with a commercial service company Monday.





Kids' shirt resembling WW II concentration camp uniforms pulled by Zara


Spanish fashion retailer Inditex said Wednesday it has withdrawn a children's shirt that triggered an outcry from people who said it was reminiscent of the clothes Jews were made to wear at Nazi concentration camps.


The long-sleeved shirt with horizontal dark stripes and a six-pointed yellow star on the left side of the chest prompted a storm on social media, with many people finding the shirt distasteful because it conjured up memories of the Holocaust.


"It was only on sale for a few hours, only online, it didn't hit the stores" said a spokeswoman with Inditex, which owns the chain Zara where the shirt was sold. "It was withdrawn this morning."


Inditex said the shirt was designed to be part of a Wild West clothing theme and the star was intended as a sheriff's badge and had "nothing to do with the Second World War."


"But obviously we're aware of the sensitiveness of the issue and that's why we have withdrawn it," said the spokeswoman. She spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with company policy.


The company said it removed the item from sale after several hours due to the protests and apologized to customers.


The item was posted on sale online overnight in three European countries but could be viewed as a catalog item in many others. The spokeswoman could not comment on how many shirts were sold, or if customers who ordered the shirt would receive it.


Jews and others detained in the WW II camps by the Nazis were made to wear pajama-type clothing with dark vertical stripes. During the war, the Nazis also made some Jews wear yellow stars on their chest as part of a discrimination policy.



Ukraine fears rebels want control of land to link Crimea, Russia


A town in east Ukraine came under shellfire by pro-Russian rebels on Wednesday, amid fears that they are launching a counter-offensive on government-held parts of the region.



In response to outgoing fire early Wednesday, rebel forces lobbed at least 10 shells at the government-held town of Novoazovsk. Plumes of black smoke rose above the town, which was repeatedly shelled Tuesday, injuring four residents in a local hospital, according to the town's mayor, Oleg Sidorkin.


The renewed fighting came a day after the Russian and Ukrainian leaders met in Minsk, Belarus, to discuss the escalating crisis in east Ukraine.


Despite a one-on-one session between Vladimir Putin and Petro Poroshenko that lasted over two hours, there was no indication of a swift resolution to the fighting that has dragged on since April and claimed at least 2,000 civilian lives.


After the talks, Ukraine's president said Putin had accepted the principles of a peace plan for the region. The Russian leader, however, insisted that only Kyiv could secure a ceasefire deal with the pro-Moscow separatists.


"This is not our business," Putin said of any ceasefire plan. "This is Ukraine's business."


Novoazovsk lies on the Azov Sea on the road that runs from Russia to the major Ukrainian port of Mariupol and west to Crimea, the Black Sea peninsula annexed by Russia earlier this year.


The latest shelling has raised fears that the separatists are aiming to take control of a strip of land that would link Russia to Crimea.



Peter Theo Curtis, U.S. journalist, returns home after kidnapping in Syria


Journalist Peter Theo Curtis returned home to the United States on Tuesday, two days after being freed by a Syrian extremist group that held him hostage for 22 months, his family said.



Curtis family spokeswoman Betsy Sullivan said in a statement that Curtis arrived at Newark Liberty International Airport Tuesday afternoon after leaving Tel Aviv. By evening he had been reunited with his mother Nancy Curtis at Boston Logan International Airport.


"I have been so touched and moved, beyond all words, by the people who have come up to me today — strangers on the airplane, the flight attendants, and most of all my family — to say welcome home," Curtis said in the statement.


He also said he was "deeply indebted" to the U.S. officials who worked to get him released.


Curtis, 45, of Boston, was released by al-Nusra Front, a Sunni extremist group.


Last week, journalist James Foley, who also was kidnapped in 2012 while covering the Syrian uprising, was killed. The Islamic State group posted a Web video showing his execution.


The extremists said they killed the Rochester, New Hampshire, resident in retaliation for U.S. airstrikes targeting Islamic State positions in northern Iraq.


Curtis' mother said she was "overwhelmed with relief" that her son had been returned to her. "But this is a sober occasion because of the events of the past week," she said. "My heart goes out to the other families who are suffering."


U.S. freelance journalist, Austin Tice of Houston, disappeared in Syria in August 2012. He is believed to be held by the Syrian government.



Apple reportedly rolling out larger iPads amid sales slump


New


Company currently struggling with declining sales because people replace iPads less frequently


Thomson Reuters Posted: Aug 26, 2014 8:24 PM ET Last Updated: Aug 26, 2014 8:24 PM ET







Apple Inc is preparing to roll out a larger, 12.9-inch version of its iPad for 2015, with production set to begin in the first quarter of next year, Bloomberg cited people with knowledge of the matter as saying on Tuesday.



The report comes as Apple struggles with declining sales of its 10-inch and 7.9-inch tablets, which are faltering as people replace iPads less frequently than expected and larger smartphones made by Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and other rivals encroach upon sales.


Apple has been working with its suppliers for over a year on larger touch-screen devices, Bloomberg cited the sources as saying.


It is expected to introduce larger versions of its 4-inch iPhone next month, although the company has not publicized plans for its most important device. Apple was not immediately available for comment.







Support for aboriginal women inquiry grows ahead of premiers meeting


The federal government is rejecting renewed calls for a public inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women in advance of a meeting Wednesday between premiers and native leaders, one of whom says the prime minister is isolated in his position.


The premiers and aboriginal leaders endorsed the idea of an inquiry when they met last year, but there is growing momentum behind such a proposal, said Ghislain Picard, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations.



"The difference between last year and this year is that there is more and more support," Picard said in an interview ahead of the meeting in Charlottetown.


"What we have today is that the federal government is standing alone."


Native leaders say the need for an inquiry has been highlighted by the death earlier this month of a 15-year-old aboriginal girl whose body was found wrapped in a bag that was dumped in the Red River in Winnipeg.


Tina Fontaine had been in the city for less than a month when she ran away from foster care. Police are treating the case as a homicide.


"In light of recent events ... it's clear that this issue cannot be overshadowed by other pressing issues," Picard said.


Not a 'sociological phenomenon': PM


Prime Minister Stephen Harper said last week that cases like Fontaine's should not be viewed as a "sociological phenomenon" but rather a serious crime to be investigated by police.


The federal government says it is taking steps to deal with the problem of violence against aboriginal women, such as setting up a national DNA missing person's index and introducing tougher sentences for murder, sexual assault and kidnapping.


"We don't need yet another study on top of the some 40 studies that have already been done," a spokeswoman for Justice Minister Peter MacKay said in a statement.


"We need police to catch her killer and ensure the perpetrator or perpetrators are punished and face the full force of the law."


Several premiers, including Ontario's Kathleen Wynne, Manitoba's Greg Selinger and Brad Wall of Saskatchewan, have spoken out in recent days calling on the federal government to change its mind.


Wynne said Harper's comments were "outrageous," suggesting the prime minister is ignoring the systemic problems behind the violence faced by aboriginal women.


Wall said the provinces remain united with aboriginal leaders.


"Saskatchewan, on a percentage basis, has a high First Nations and Métis population ... so we'd like to see it the subject of an inquiry," he said in an interview.


"There's a societal element that we do need to look at and the provinces and the federal government bear responsibility in that regard."


Roundtable proposed


Michele Audette, president of the Native Women's Association of Canada, said an inquiry could take years to complete its work, which is why she would like to see a federal-provincial working group established to spur some action.


Audette said her roundtable proposal would bring together federal and provincial ministers responsible for various programs affecting aboriginal people.


"It would help to stop working in silos," she said in an interview.


"And it would help end the broken relationship between indigenous people and this current government. ... If the federal government says no to this, it's obvious there's a huge problem here."


P.E.I. Premier Robert Ghiz said the call for an inquiry is part of the meeting agenda, but he is also interested in the roundtable idea.


"Dialogue is good," said Ghiz, who will be the longest-serving premier at the meeting. "If one door closes, you always have to look for another to open up."


The premiers will continue with their own meetings on Thursday and Friday. Ghiz said other items on the agenda include health-care innovation, internal trade, competitiveness and the temporary foreign worker program.


The long-term bid to create a national energy strategy will also be discussed, but Ghiz suggested he doesn't expect much progress because two of the largest energy-producing provinces — Alberta and Newfoundland and Labrador — are in the midst of replacing their premiers.



Celebrations in Gaza as new 'open-ended' ceasefire announced


Israel and Hamas announced Tuesday that they agreed to an open-ended ceasefire in the Gaza war after seven weeks of fighting that killed more than 2,200 people, the vast majority Palestinians.



The ceasefire was to take effect at 7 p.m. local time (noon ET), but violence persisted until the last minute.


In Gaza, massive celebratory gunfire erupted after 7 p.m. Chants normally reserved for Muslim holidays could be heard from mosque loudspeakers.


In Israel, mortar shells fired from Gaza killed one man and seriously wounded two people, authorities said.


In Gaza, police reported that an Israeli airstrike collapsed a seven-story building in the town of Beit Lahiya, the sixth highrise to be toppled since the weekend. Booms from Israeli strikes could be heard in Gaza after the truce announcement was made.


MIDEAST-GAZA/

Palestinians gather around the remains of a tower building housing offices that witnesses said was destroyed by an Israeli air strike in Gaza City early Tuesday. (Mohammed Salem/Reuters)



Earlier, officials from Hamas and Islamic Jihad, the main groups fighting Israel, had said the ceasefire included an Israeli agreement to ease its blockade of Gaza to allow relief supplies and construction materials into the war-battered territory.


Talks on more complex issues, such as Hamas' demand to build an airport and a seaport for Gaza, would begin in a month, said Ziad Nakhala, a senior Islamic Jihad official.


The details of the ceasefire would effectively mean Hamas and Islamic Jihad settled for terms that are similar to those that ended more than a week of fighting with Israel in 2012.


Under those terms, Israel promised to ease restrictions gradually, while Hamas pledged to halt rocket fire from Gaza at Israel. The truce held for long stretches, but Gaza's border blockade also remained largely intact.


Even though it apparently had little to show for, Hamas declared victory.


APTOPIX Mideast Israel Palestinians

A ball of fire rises from an explosion on al-Zafer apartment tower following an Israeli air strike in Gaza City Saturday. Israeli aircraft fired two missiles at a 12-story apartment tower in downtown Gaza City on Saturday, collapsing the building. (Adel Hana/Associated Press)



"We are here today to declare the victory of the resistance, the victory of Gaza, with the help of God, and the steadfastness of our people and the noble resistance," Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said in a news conference at Gaza's Shifa Hospital.


Israel and Egypt imposed the blockade after Hamas seized Gaza by force in 2007. Under the restrictions, virtually all of Gaza's 1.8 million people cannot trade or travel. Only a few thousand are able to leave the coastal territory every month.


During the war, Hamas had said it would only cease fire if the blockade is lifted.


However, Israeli pressure on the group has been escalating. Hamas is believed to be left with just one-third of its initial rocket arsenal of 10,000, while Israel says it has destroyed most of Hamas' network of military attack tunnels.


Israeli strikes have destroyed or severely damaged more than 17,000 Gaza homes, according to United Nations estimates, leaving about 100,000 people homeless. The number of dead has also been rising steadily, reaching at least 2,140 by Tuesday, with more than 11,000 Gazans wounded since July 8, Palestinian health officials said.


On the Israeli side, 69 people have been killed, all but four of them soldiers. Thousands of Israelis living near Gaza have fled their homes, including in recent days when Gaza militants stepped up mortar fire on southern Israel.



New 'open-ended' Gaza ceasefire announced


Egyptian state media has announced a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel to halt the seven-week Gaza war, which has killed more than 2,100 people.



Both Egyptian state television and the state news agency MENA announced the deal Tuesday night. Both said it begins at noon ET (7 p.m. local time), without elaborating.


The Israeli news website Haaretz.com tweeted that Israel had accepted the Egyptian-brokered deal.


MIDEAST-GAZA/

Palestinians gather around the remains of a tower building housing offices that witnesses said was destroyed by an Israeli air strike in Gaza City early Tuesday. (Mohammed Salem/Reuters)



Earlier, officials with from Hamas and Islamic Jihad, the main groups fighting in Gaza against Israel, said a ceasefire had been reached. Israeli officials have not immediately commented. They described it as an "open-ended" ceasefire that included an Israeli agreement to ease its blockade of Gaza to allow relief supplies and construction materials into the war-battered territory.


Talks on more complex issues, such as Hamas' demand to build an airport and a seaport for Gaza, would begin in a month, he said.


Egypt planned an announcement at noon ET Tuesday.


If the terms of the ceasefire are confirmed, it would effectively mean Hamas in the end settled for terms that are similar to those that ended more than a week of fighting with Israel in 2012.


APTOPIX Mideast Israel Palestinians

A ball of fire rises from an explosion on al-Zafer apartment tower following an Israeli air strike in Gaza City Saturday. Israeli aircraft fired two missiles at a 12-story apartment tower in downtown Gaza City on Saturday, collapsing the building. (Adel Hana/Associated Press)



Under those terms, Israel promised to ease restrictions gradually, while Hamas promised to halt rocket fire from Gaza at Israel. The truce held, but Gaza's border blockade remained largely intact.


Israel and Egypt imposed the blockade in 2007, after Hamas seized Gaza by force in 2007. Under the restrictions, virtually all of Gaza's 1.8 million people cannot trade or travel. Only a few thousand are able to leave the coastal territory every month.


During the war, Hamas had said it would only stop firing at Israel if the blockade were lifted. However, in recent days Israel has escalated its strikes in Gaza, toppling five highrise buildings housing offices, apartments and shops since the weekend.


This Gaza war has so far killed at least 2,133 Palestinians and wounded more than 11,000, according to Palestinian health officials and the United Nations. The UN estimates more than 17,000 homes have been destroyed, leaving 100,000 people homeless.


On the Israeli side, 68 people have been killed, all but four of them soldiers.


Earlier Tuesday, Israel bombed two Gaza City highrises with dozens of homes and shops, collapsing one building and severely damaging the other, in a further escalation of seven weeks of cross-border fighting with Hamas.


In the past, the military has hit targets in highrises in pinpoint strikes, but left the buildings standing. Since Saturday, it has toppled or destroyed five towers and shopping complexes in an apparent new tactic aimed at increasing pressure on Hamas.


The objects of the latest strikes contain apartments inhabited almost exclusively by middle-class Gazans, who up until now have been largely spared the considerable dislocation that has affected tens of thousands of other Gaza residents in densely populated neighbourhoods like Shijaiyah.


That has raised the possibility that the Israeli military is trying to use better-off Gazans, like professionals and Palestinian authority employees, to put pressure on Hamas to end the fighting on Israel's terms.


Tuesday's strikes leveled the 15-story Basha Tower with apartments and offices and severely damaged the Italian Complex, built in the 1990s by an Italian businessman, with dozens of shops and offices.


Both buildings were evacuated after receiving warnings of impending strikes. Gaza health official Ashraf al-Kidra said 25 people were wounded in the attack on the Italian Complex.


One Italian complex resident, 38-year-old engineer Nael Mousa, said that he, his four children and 70-year-old mother had managed to flee the building late Monday night after a guard had alerted them of an impending strike, and that he was in his car some 300 meters (yards) away when it was bombed by an Israeli F-16 fighter jet.


Linked to militants


Within two hours, he said, it had been completely levelled by at least five additional bombs.


"I have become homeless, my children's fear will never be soothed, and something new has now been added to our feelings toward Israel and all the world which has been looking on without doing anything," he said.


The Israeli military said it targeted sites linked to militants Tuesday, but made no specific reference to the two buildings. Israel alleges Hamas often operates from civilian locations. The military has not said why it has begun collapsing large buildings, rather than carrying out pinpointed strikes against suspected militant targets located there.


In an email message to The Associated Press, military spokesman Lt. Col. Peter Lerner said the strikes were "a direct result to Hamas' decision to situate their terrorist infrastructure within the civilian sphere including schools, hospitals and highrise buildings."


"We are determined to restore security to the State of Israel, and are unprepared to enable Hamas to continue to kill Israelis, target our towns and cities and expect to operate without consequence to their facilities, militant operatives and the leadership of their heinous attacks against Israel," he said.


Political scientist Mkhaimar Abu Sada from Gaza's Al Azhar University said he believed the Israeli tactic was a deliberate attempt to pressure Hamas by targeting middle class structures in neighbourhoods like Rimal and Tel al-Hawa, which have so far been spared the worst of the fighting.


He said the tactic will end up creating even greater antipathy toward Israel, but might also result in some tough questions being asked about Hamas's conduct of the war.


Hamas offices suspected


"Some people will now be wondering why Hamas did not accept a ceasefire proposal during the first week of the fighting, when the damage here was still relatively small," he said.


Retired Israeli air force brigadier general Shlomo Brom, now a fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, said he was doubtful that the highrise structures had been targeted solely because of their middle-class makeups.


"I have no doubt that these buildings were hit primarily because they contained offices or other facilities that belonged to Hamas," he said.


Also on Tuesday, two people were killed in an airstrike on a house in Gaza City, police said.


Israel's military said it carried out 15 air strikes in Gaza on Tuesday.



Thigh bone on Mars? Curiosity rover snaps strange photo


New


Red Planet never had enough oxygen to support complex animals with bones, NASA says


CBC News Posted: Aug 26, 2014 12:10 PM ET Last Updated: Aug 26, 2014 12:10 PM ET



Rogers, Shaw launch rival Netflix-like service Shomi



The Canadian Press Posted: Aug 26, 2014 9:37 AM ET Last Updated: Aug 26, 2014 10:10 AM ET





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IndexLast TradeChange
TSX COMPOSITE15649.8051.06
DOW17121.6344.76
NASDAQ4564.196.84
SP 5002001.723.80
TSX-VENTURE1011.273.03

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Ebola has 'upper hand' in West Africa, U.S. health official warns


The Ebola virus has the "upper hand" in an outbreak that has killed more than 1,400 people in West Africa, a top American health official said, adding that experts have the tools to stop it.


Dr. Tom Frieden, the director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is visiting Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, the three hardest hit countries, this week.



Liberia Ebola

A Liberian soldier, right, scans people for signs of the Ebola virus in Monrovia, Liberia on Saturday. (Abbas Dulleh/Associated Press)



Nigeria has also recorded cases, but officials have expressed optimism that its spread there can be controlled. On Tuesday, Frieden continues his visit in Liberia, which has the most cases and deaths.


"Lots of hard work is happening, lots of good things are happening," Frieden told a meeting attended by President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf on Monday. "But the virus still has the upper hand."


The current outbreak is the largest ever and experts have struggled to contain it for a host of reasons: doctors took a long time to identify it, it is happening in a region where people are highly mobile, it has spread to densely populated areas and many people have resisted or hid from treatment.


The disease has overwhelmed already struggling health systems in some of the world's poorest countries.


Optimism about containment


Ivory Coast Ebola Awareness Campaigns

In Abidjan, Ivory Coast, an Ebola awareness campaign is in full swing. (Sevi Herve Gbekide/Associated Press)



But Frieden expressed optimism that the outbreak can be contained.


"Ebola doesn't spread by mysterious means, we know how it spreads," he said in his remarks, which were broadcast on Liberian TV.


"So we have the means to stop it from spreading, but it requires tremendous attention to every detail."


Liberia has resorted to some of the most stringent measures to control the disease, including sealing off an entire slum neighbourhood in the capital.


​Sirleaf also declared a state of emergency and ordered all her ministers and top government officials to remain in the country or return from any trips.


Late Monday, her office said in a statement that any official who defied that order had been fired.


The order was issued a few weeks ago and officials had been given a week to return. The statement did not say how many or who had been fired.


Latest WHO tally


According to the latest World Health Organization tally, the Ebola outbreak has killed 1,427 people of the 2,615 sickened.


The UN health agency says that 240 health care workers have been infected with Ebola, calling that an unprecedented number. Half of those infected have died.


The agency said that the high number of infections among health workers is due to a shortage of protective gear and its improper use and a shortage of staff to treat the tremendous influx of patients.


In the current outbreak as many as 90,000 protective suits will be needed every month, according to Jorge Castilla, an epidemiologist with the European Union Commission's Department for Humanitarian Aid. That estimate takes into account a recent increase in the number of beds available for treating Ebola patients and more stringent standards to protect health workers.


There has been a severe shortage of that equipment that is only now beginning to be resolved, he said. He did not say exactly how many suits were lacking.


The outbreak also desperately needs more workers to trace the people that the sick have come into contact with and more centres where patients can be screened for the disease in a safe way that contains any Ebola infections, said Castilla, who recently returned from a trip to Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.


A separate Ebola outbreak emerged over the weekend in Congo, though experts say it is not related to the West African epidemic. Doctors Without Borders, which is running many of the treatment centres in the West Africa outbreak, said it was also sending experts and supplies to Equateur, a northwestern province of Congo. But the medical charity has already warned that the West African outbreak has stretched its resources.


"In normal times, we're able to mobilize teams specializing in hemorrhagic fevers, but currently we are facing an enormous epidemic in West Africa, limiting our capacity to respond to the outbreak in Equateur province," said Jeroen Beijnberger, the group's medical coordinator in Congo. "We need other actors to rapidly mobilize with us to help the [Congolese] Ministry of Health: We won't succeed alone."



Rogers, Shaw launch Netflix rival streaming service Shomi



The Canadian Press Posted: Aug 26, 2014 9:37 AM ET Last Updated: Aug 26, 2014 9:43 AM ET





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U.S. high-tech weapon destroyed during test after glitch


A hypersonic weapon being developed by the U.S. military was destroyed four seconds after its launch from a test range in Alaska early on Monday after controllers detected a problem with the aircraft, the Pentagon said.


The craft was destroyed to ensure public safety, and no one was injured in the incident, which occurred shortly after 4 a.m. EDT (0800 GMT) at the Kodiak Launch Complex in Alaska, said Maureen Schumann, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Defense Department.


"We had to terminate. That's correct," Schumann said.


"The weapon exploded during takeoff and fell back down in the range complex," she said, adding that the test craft was destroyed in the first four seconds of its launch.


"I don't know the exact altitude, but it was not very far," she said.


The weapon was developed by Sandia National Laboratory and the U.S. Army as part of the military's "Conventional Prompt Global Strike" technology development program, which is seeking to build a weapon that can destroy targets anywhere on Earth within an hour of getting data and permission to launch.


Schumann said the craft, known as the Advanced Hypersonic Weapon, was one of several platforms being tested as part of the Prompt Global Strike program. The craft had successfully flown from Hawaii to the Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands during a previous test in November 2011, she said.


The weapon, described by the Army as a first-of-its-kind glide vehicle, was supposed to fly from Alaska to the Kwajalein Atoll during Monday's test.


Schumann said that, in addition to the previous successful flight test, the hypersonic weapon had "gone through a series of ground testing and modelling and simulation." She said she wouldn't characterize Monday's terminated flight as a significant setback for the prompt global strike program.


"This was one concept that we were looking at in a range of possible CPGS (Conventional Prompt Global Strike) concepts," she said. "The whole CPGS program is event-driven, not time- or schedule-driven. So we learn, we keep learning from a variety of ground testing and modeling and simulation and other tests done on the range of concepts under CPGS."


Schumann said officials from the program, the U.S. Army, Navy and Missile Defense Agency were conducting an extensive investigation to determine the cause of the accident.


The investigation will inform future tests for the weapon and other prompt global strike vehicles, she said.



Russell Williams settles lawsuits with some of his victims


New


Disgraced former Canadian Forces colonel pleaded guilty to 88 charges in 2010


The Canadian Press Posted: Aug 26, 2014 6:52 AM ET Last Updated: Aug 26, 2014 6:52 AM ET





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Inside The Russell Williams Case


Inside The Russell Williams Case 44:20





Inside The Russell Williams Case 44:20






A published report says sex-killer Russell Williams has reached an out-of-court settlement with some of his victims.


Maclean's reports financial settlements were reached in lawsuits launched by Williams's first sexual assault victim, "Jane Doe", and another by the family of murder victim Jessica Lloyd.



Maclean's says the settlements were announced in a statement released by the victims' lawyer Michael Pretsell.


Maclean's quotes the statement as saying the suits, which also named Williams' ex-wife Mary Elizabeth Harriman, have been resolved. The report says the actions against Harriman will be dismissed.


Williams, once a rising star in the Canadian Forces at CFB Trenton in eastern Ontario, was sentenced to life in prison in October 2010 after pleading guilty to the murders of Lloyd and Cpl. Marie-France Comeau.


Lawyers for Williams and the victims could not be reached for comment on Monday night.


Maclean's reported that another lawsuit against Williams remains active.