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  • Chile national park shut down by wildfire

    Magallanes municipal government via AFP - Getty Images

    Part of the Torres del Paine fire is seen on Friday along Chile's southern coast.

    Hundreds of tourists and locals were ordered out of Chile's Torres del Paine national park on Friday as a wildfire quickly spread and extra firefighting resources were deployed.

    President Sebastian Pinera declared the park a "disaster area," forcing the closure of Chile's most popular foreign attraction at least through January.


    Some 700 tourists and dozens of workers were quickly evacuated and Pinera asked for firefighting backup from the U.S., Argentina and Australia.

    Magallanes municipal government via Reuters

    Firefighters from neighboring Argentina help battle Chile's Torres del Paine wildfire on Friday.

    By Friday evening the wildfire had burned more than 22,000 acres of the 600,000-acre park, which is a U.N. World Biosphere Reserve.

    Gusts up to 70 mph have fanned the blaze. What caused it is still under investigation.

    Show more
  • Egypt's military: On alert for New Year's attack on Christians

    Update at 6:25 p.m. ET: Facebook has apparently taken down the account of at least one group threatening a New Year's attack on Egyptian Christians. An Arab-language Facebook page (not linked to in the story but monitored by msnbc.com reporters) no longer loads.

    Original post: The Egyptian military said Friday that it was increasing security at churches across the country before the anniversary of a deadly New Year's attack on Coptic Christians in Alexandria.

    The heightened state of alert before New Year's celebrations and the Coptic Christmas season came as anonymous threats against the Copts circulated on Facebook.


     One of those on Friday threatened a suicide bombing of an unnamed church in Egypt and said that the church's name would be posted at 11:50 p.m. local time Saturday just before the attack. A spokesman for Facebook said it was aware of the threat "and is investigating it."

    The Alexandria attack occurred just after midnight Jan. 1 as worshippers left a New Year's Mass. More than 20 people were killed, making it the worst violence against the Christian minority in Egypt in a decade.

    The military said that it would work closely with internal security forces, revolutionary youth groups and various political forces inside Egypt to ensure the safety of Christian worshippers across the country.

    In addition to New Year's Eve Masses, Egyptian Copts are preparing for the Orthodox Church's Christmas on Jan. 7. This year's Christmas celebrations and mass at the cathedral in Cairo will be attended by a senior delegation from the Muslim Brotherhood. It's the first time in nearly 30 years that the church has invited the Islamist group -- outlawed during the Mubarak regime -- to attend the Mass and celebrations.

    NBC News correspondent Ayman Mohyeldin reported from Amman, Jordan. NBC's Jacob Keryakes and msnbc.com's Suzanne Choney contributed to this report.

  • South Pole 'miracle': Record heat, plus snow, on Christmas

    Scot Jackson / National Science Foundation

    It's busy at the South Pole in December and especially this year, the centennial of Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen's trek to the South Pole. Ceremonies included this one on Dec. 14 where Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg presented a Norwegian flag to the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station.

    It's being called a Christmas miracle: the South Pole, where temperatures this time of year (the southern hemisphere's summer) tend to be around minus 15 degrees Fahrenheit, set a record high on Christmas Day with a whopping 9.9F -- that's right, 9.9, not 99.

    On top of that, it also snowed on Christmas Day. What's odd about that? The pole actually gets little in the way of snowflakes -- it's one of the driest places on Earth with just .20 inches a year -- and most of the "snow" there is actually ice from over the years, some of which scatters with the winds.

    "We like to call this our little Christmas miracle that we ended up getting snow and getting a record high for the books," Phillip Marzette, senior meteorologist at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, told The Antarctic Sun, a newspaper at the main U.S. base of McMurdo.

    The Antarctic Sun

    This South Pole Station announced the record warmth on its inhouse video system.

    And no, the record heat is not a case of global warming (though some coastal areas of Antarctica are seeing rapid glacial melt tied to rising sea temperatures).

    Winds came in from an unusual direction on Christmas Day, Marzette said, bringing with them relative warmth that started to raise temperatures rapidly at 6 a.m.

    The warmth was only around for the day, and within a few days it was back to normal: minus 15F or so.

    So what was the previous South Pole high? 7.5 F, set on Dec. 27, 1978. As for a record South Pole low (data goes back to 1957), that was minus 117F on June 23, 1982.

    Some other fun facts:

    • Warmest temperature recorded anywhere on the continent: 59F at a research base in the McMurdo Dry Valleys on Jan. 5, 1974.
    • Coldest temperature (not just on Antarctica but worldwide): minus 128.6F at Russia's Vostok Station on July 21, 1983.

     

  • Funerals held for 35 civilians killed in Turkish air strikes

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    Kurds carry the coffins of victims of a Turkish air raid, outside Uludere Hospital in Uludere, Sirnak province, on Dec. 30. The weeping mourners accompanied the coffins to the cemetery in Gulyazi village, near the Iraqi border, from the nearby town of Uludere where a service was held at the mosque.

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    Women mourn for victims of a Turkish air raid, at the cemetery of Gulyazi Village, Sirnak province, near the Iraqi border, on Dec. 30. Thousands of Kurds buried 35 civilians killed in a Turkish air raid and branded Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan a murderer.

     AP reports:

    Thousands of mourners gathered in southeast Turkey on Friday for the funerals of 35 Kurdish civilians who were killed in a botched raid by Turkish military jets that mistook the group for Kurdish rebels based in Iraq.

    Turkish television footage showed people, many weeping and lamenting the dead, as they gathered after the air strikes Wednesday that killed a group of smugglers along the border, one of the deadliest episodes in the conflict between the Turkish state and Kurdish rebels who took up arms in 1984. Continue reading...

  • Mohammed Salem / Reuters

    Palestinians carry the body of militant Momen Abu Daf during his funeral in Gaza City, Dec. 30. Israel killed the leader of an al-Qaida-inspired faction in the Gaza Strip on Friday, accusing him of involvement in firing rockets and a planned attack on the Jewish state from the neighboring Egyptian Sinai.

    Funeral for Palestinian militant killed by Israeli airstrikes

    Reuters reports:

    Israel killed the leader of an al-Qaida-inspired faction in the Gaza Strip on Friday, accusing him of involvement in firing rockets and a planned attack on the Jewish state from the neighboring Egyptian Sinai.

    The deadly air strike was Israel's second against a Salafi Islamist militant this week. Militants identified him as Momen Abu Daf, chief of the Army of Islam, among a loose network of Palestinian groups which profess allegiance to al Qaeda and have been reinforced by volunteers who slip in from the Sinai. Full story.

  • Morteza Nikoubazl / Reuters

    EDITORS' NOTE: Reuters and other foreign media are subject to Iranian restrictions on leaving the office to report, film or take pictures in Tehran.
    Parvin Ahmadinejad,center, sister of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, speaks to the media while registering as a candidate for Iran's 2012 parliamentary election at the Interior Ministry building in Tehran, Dec. 30. Candidates began registering for Iran's parliamentary elections in March, the first litmus test of the clerical establishment's popularity since the 2009 disputed presidential vote.

    Ahmadinejad's sister registers as a candidate for parliament

    The Turkish Weekly reports:

    Parvin Ahmadinejad, who is currently a member of Tehran City Council, told the Mehr News Agency that she is fielding her candidacy for the March parliamentary elections from Garmsar (Semnan Province).

    On the sitting parliament's attempt to impeach the president, she said that "our president is a justice-seeker and I do not agree with his impeachment." Continue reading...

    From AP:

    The March 2 elections will be the first nationwide balloting since Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election in 2009, which the opposition said was heavily rigged. That vote set off months of near-daily protests in which hundreds of thousands took to the streets in support of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi who they claimed was the rightful winner.

    More on the elections in Iran.

  • Iraq war hero to carry Olympic torch

    Simon Brown, a British soldier shot in the head while serving in Iraq, has been chosen as one of the 2012 Olympic torch bearers. He tells NBC's Miriam Firestone about his experiences.

    More world news stories:

  • Kim Jong Il look-alike admits it may be time to hang up his dark glasses

    Prakash Singh / AFP - Getty Images

    South Korean Kim Young-Shik, a lookalike of the late North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, shows newspaper clippings in his shop in Seoul on Dec. 26, 2011.

    Prakash Singh / AFP - Getty Images

    Kim Young-Shik poses in front of his print shop in Seoul on Dec. 26, 2011.

    He's been cursed in the street, appeared in a movie and perfected the wave of North Korea's "Dear Leader". Now Kim Jong Il's leading look-alike feels that part of himself died along with the late ruler, Agence France Presse (AFP) reports.

    South Korean shopkeeper Kim Young-Shik has been impersonating Kim Jong Il for over 15 years, making appearances in advertisements and at birthday parties and even singing at weddings. 

    NBC News' Ian Williams visited the pot-bellied pseudo dictator at his shop in Seoul just over a year ago, when the signs were already looking ominous for his acting career. Now, he wistfully admits that it may be time to hang up his dark glasses, and for a younger man to step forward to play the role of the new "Great Leader", Kim Jong Un.

    "I feel very empty," he told AFP. "I'd like to do more acting as Kim Jong Il, but they'll find someone new for Jong Un. They asked if my son looked like him but he doesn't or I would have sent him to an audition,'' he said.

    Related content:

    The North Korean leader has a Seoul brother in the South, who, until recently, made a very good living impersonating the Dear Leader. NBC's Ian Williams reports in December, 2010.

    AP

    News of the North Korean leader's death sparks tears from his followers and concerns around the world as power is handed over to his successor.

  • 11 killed as Cyclone Thane hits southeast India

    Aijaz Rahi / AP

    People walk past fallen sign boards and other trash caused by heavy winds in Pondicherry, India, on Dec. 30, 2011. India's weather office has warned residents along parts of the country's southeastern coast that Cyclone Thane is likely to cause heavy rains and gale-force winds.

    Aijaz Rahi / AP

    People take shelter during heavy rain and wind in Pondicherry on Dec. 30, 2011.

    Aijaz Rahi / AP

    Motorcyclists drive past fallen trees during heavy rain and winds in Pondicherry on Dec. 30, 2011.

    The Associated Press reports from NEW DELHI:

    A cyclone brought heavy rains and gale-force winds to India's southeastern coast, killing at least 11 people, uprooting trees and damaging homes.

    The India Meteorological Department said Friday morning that Cyclone Thane was centered in the Indian Ocean, 22 miles southwest of the town of Pondicherry. Continue reading.

    Cyclone Thane has brought heavy rains and gale-force winds to India's southeastern coast, killing at least 11 people. Msnbc's Richard Lui reports.

  • Helicopter delivers aid to remote Philippines village hit by typhoon

    Richel Umel / AFP - Getty Images

    A Philippine Air Force helicopter airlifts relief goods to a remote village of Dulag, Iligan City on Dec. 30, 2011.

    Agence France Presse reports:

    Tens of thousands of flash flood survivors in the Philippines face life in tent cities for months while safe areas to resettle them are sought, top relief officials said on Dec. 26. More than 60,000 people displaced by tropical storm Washi are sheltering in government buildings in Cagayan de Oro and Iligan cities, most of them in schools that reopen after the holidays, civil defence chief Benito Ramos said.

    See more images of the effects of Typhoon Washi on PhotoBlog and in the slideshow below.

    Charlie Saceda / Reuters

    Over 1000 people are killed in flash floods, landslides following a tropical storm.

  • After 20-hour battle, Russia douses fire on nuclear sub

    Firefighters work to extinguish fire at the Roslyakovo shipyard in the northern Russian region of Murmansk.

    Updated at 6:45 a.m. ET: Russia said on Friday it had doused a raging blaze aboard a nuclear submarine after nearly a full day and night, by partially submerging the vessel after battling the flames with water from helicopters and tug boats.

    There was no radiation leak and crew inside the submarine were monitoring the stricken vessel's nuclear reactors which had been shut down, Russian officials said.


    At least nine people were injured fighting the flames which witnesses quoted by local media said rose 30 feet above the Yekaterinburg submarine at the navy ship yard in the Murmansk region of northern Russia.

    "The fire on the submarine has been totally extinguished," Emergencies Minister Sergei Shoigu told officials leading the firefighting effort, more than twenty hours after the blaze began Thursday afternoon at 7:20 a.m. ET.

    His remarks were reported by Interfax news agency.

    Updated 4:53 a.m. ET: An unspecified number of crew remain inside a burning nuclear submarine that caught fire on Thursday at an Arctic shipyard, Russia's military said Friday.

    Seven other crew were sent to hospitals after inhaling toxic fumes, the country's defense ministry said.

    State-owned news agency RIA reported military proescutor spokesman Alexander Grigoriev saying: "Some of [the crew] are still on the submarine. They consist of those servicemen who are ensuring the safety of of the nuclear submarine."

    It said there has been no radiation leak from the fire on board the submarine Yekaterinburg, which was in drydock.

    Fire brigades were still struggling to put out the blaze on Friday at 12 p.m. local time (4 a.m. ET).

    The military said the fire had begun on wooden scaffolding and then engulfed the submarine's rubber-coated outer hull. It said the sub's nuclear reactor had been shut down and its 16 nuclear-tipped missiles had been unloaded before the repairs.

    The ministry's statement left it unclear whether the crew members inside the vessel were trapped there or ordered to stay inside.

    Emergency workers said efforts to partially sink the submarine at the dock had failed to fully extinguish the fire.

    A defense ministry spokesman said on Thursday the nuclear reactor had been shut down and all weapons had been removed from the Yekaterinburg, which launched an intercontinental ballistic missile from the Barents Sea at a firing range thousands of miles away in Kamchatka as recently as July.

    The Yekaterinburg is a Delta-IV-class nuclear-powered submarine that normally carries 16 nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missiles. It was built in 1984.

    Most modern submarines' outer hulls are covered with rubber to make them less noisy and more difficult for an enemy to detect.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

     The Associated Press and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

  • At least 13 killed in Venezuela tanker truck fire

    Dispositivo Bicentenario de Seguridad via AFP - Getty Images

    Firemen spray water over a tanker on fire in Caracas on Dec. 29, 2011. At least 14 people were killed and 16 wounded Thursday when a truck carrying gasoline overturned and exploded on the Pan American highway connecting Caracas with the satellite city of Los Teques, authorities said.

    AP reports: CARACAS, Venezuela — A tanker truck filled with gasoline crashed and burst into flames on Thursday in Venezuela, engulfing several cars and a bus and killing at least 13 people.

    The tanker truck tipped over and spilled gasoline, which ignited and burned seven vehicles, Caracas fire chief William Martinez said.

    Martinez said the tanker truck driver apparently lost control on the highway in Caracas but the cause of the accident was unclear.

    Fernando Llano / AP

    Bystanders watch at a burned bus at the site of an accident that killed at least 13 people in Caracas, Venezuela, Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011.

    Juan Camacho/Noticias24 via Reuters

    The body of a victim lies on the street as firefighters inspect the wreckage of a burned bus after a traffic accident in Caracas Dec. 29, 2011. At least 13 people were killed and 13 wounded on Thursday when a truck carrying gasoline overturned and exploded in a highway, authorities said.

     

  • Saddam got weapons during Thatcher era

    The British government under Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s covertly supplied military equipment to Saddam Hussein's Iraq, according to once secret files being made public Friday.

    The Financial Times said the files "contain an exhaustive list of equipment" that included Hawk fighter jets, Land Rovers, radar and spare tank parts.

    Britain was officially neutral in Iraq's war with Iran, which began in 1980, and the Times noted it had also backed a U.N. resolution calling on its members to “refrain from any act which may lead to a further escalation and widening of the conflict”.

    Britain later joined the U.S. in fighting Iraq when it invaded Kuwait in 1990.

  • Boot Hezbollah from Twitter or we sue, group says

    Al-Manar is Hezbollah's "media arm," says the group seeking to have it and other terrorist-related groups removed from Twitter.

    An Israeli law center said Thursday it is threatening to sue Twitter unless the social network cuts off access to groups, including Hezbollah, that are considered terrorist organizations by the United States.

    The law center, Shurat HaDin, describes itself as being "dedicated to enforcing basic human rights through the legal system," and says it has represented "victims of terrorism in courtrooms around the world."

    In a letter to San Francisco-based Twitter, attorney and Shurat HaDin executive director Nitsana Darshan-Leitner wrote that "it has come to our attention that Twitter, Inc. provides social media and associated services" to such groups as Hezbollah and the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Al-Shabaab — labeled as "foreign terrorist organizations" (or FTOs) by the United States.

    "Please be advised that providing social media and other associated services to terrorist groups is illegal and will expose Twitter, Inc. and its officers to both criminal prosecution and civil liability to American citizens and others victimized by terrorisms carried out by Hezbollah, Al-Shabaab or other FTOs."

    Shurat HaDin specifically contends that Twitter's service goes against a 2010 Supreme Court case declaring unlawful "any assistance or support" to terrorist organizations. 

    The law center, which has a New York office, wants Twitter to "immediately provide us written confirmation" that it will "permanently" discontinue access to Hezbollah, "Al-Manar TV, Al-Shabaab and any other FTOs ... Absent such confirmation, we will seek all available relief and remedies against Twitter, Inc. in all relevant jurisdictions."

    A spokesman for Twitter said the company does not have any comment about the potential lawsuit or the issue of allowing access to the groups. But it has long made a point of saying it does not take political sides, and favors free speech.

    The short-messaging microblog network, which limits posts to 140 characters, has come under fire in recent months for being used as a tool for disruption. Some disruption is considered positive, such as the role Twitter played in helping to foment the Arab Spring. But not all disruption is lauded.

    Twitter, as well as Facebook and RIM's BlackBerry phones, were all cited by British officials as the means for coordinating flash mobs and rioting last summer in Britain. More recently, in the U.S., Sen. Joe Lieberman, (I-Conn.), chairman of the Homeland Security Committee, is leading an effort to get Twitter to block some accounts that are pro-Taliban.

    The site, in operation for five years, has been the frequent target of legal action by activist groups and celebrities seeking to stop or pull down information they don't like. It generally refuses unless the account in question misrepresents itself as belonging to someone else.
     
    Otherwise, Twitter says, it will comply only with legal U.S. court orders, and it has often clashed with law enforcement agencies that seek to go further.
     
    In January, Twitter successfully appealed the Justice Department's decision to keep under seal a subpoena for account records of a member of the Icelandic Parliament with ties to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
     
    Earlier Thursday, Twitter was ordered to hand over information about the account of a user active in the Occupy Boston protests. The case came to public attention after the company refused prosecutors' request to keep the subpoena secret and alerted the account holder that his information was being sought

    Twitter has more than 100 million active users around the world who say they use the free service at least once a month.

    An analyst at the Center for Naval Analysis, Will McCants, told NPR this week there is no research so far that shows terrorists are getting many new recruits via social media like Twitter.

    "Social media is interesting as a new outlet for terrorist groups, but in terms of achieving al-Qaida's goal or the Taliban's goal of creating new recruits. ... I think it is a complete disaster," he said.

    But, said Darshan-Leitner in the Shurat HaDin press release, Hezbollah "and its terrorist networks have entered the global world of social media to further their murderous agenda. Twitter’s complicit service to known foreign terrorist organizations is not only morally irresponsible, it is also illegal. Twitter needs to take responsibility for the platform it is providing to known terrorists and cease and desist immediately. Their failure to do so exposes them to severe liability."

    Shurat HaDin practices what it calls "Pro-Israel Lawfare." It partners with lawyers in countries around the world to sue governments, financial institutions and companies that it says knowingly or unknowingly assist anti-Israeli terrorist organizations.
     
    The group's mission, it says, is to "bankrupt the terror groups and grind their criminal activities to a halt — one lawsuit at a time."

    In February, Darshan-Leitner was co-counsel in an action brought by five readers who sued former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and his publishers for $5 million, alleging that in his 2006 book, "Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid," Carter made "false and knowingly misleading statements intended to promote the author's agenda of anti-Israel propaganda."

    The case, which was filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, was dropped in May.
     
    In September, Darshan-Leitner threatened to sue about 150 U.S. colleges for allegedly refusing to fight anti-Semitism on their campuses.

    Msnbc.com's M. Alex Johnson contributed to this report.

    Related stories:

    Check out Technolog, Gadgetbox, Digital Life and In-Game on Facebook, and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

  • Gay sex remarks lands Zimbabwe lawmaker in jail

    In Zimbabwe, alleging the president had gay sex can get you arrested.

    The BBC News relays that local media said lawmaker Lynette Karenyi was held for seven days after telling supporters at a rally that President Robert Mugabe had sex with two male politicians.

    Karenyi, who was released Thursday on bail, has denied insulting the president, which is a crime in Zimbabwe.

    Mugabe is known for his extremist anti-gay views, having called gays "worse than pigs or dogs." 

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    
  • Iran tracks US aircraft carrier amid Strait of Hormuz tension

    FARS NEWS/ AFP - Getty Images

    The USS John C. Stennis aircraft carrier is seen as it allegedly went "inside the manoeuvre zone" where Iranian ships are conducting 10 days of wargames in the Gulf, accoridng to Iranian officials.

    An Iranian surveillance plane has video recorded and photographed a U.S. aircraft carrier near a strategic waterway in the Persian Gulf, the country's IRNA news agency reported Thursday.

    The report did not provide details, and it was unclear what information the Iranian military could glean from such images. But the announcement is an indication that Iran is seeking to cast its navy as having a powerful role in the region's waters.


    IRNA quoted Iran's navy chief, Adm. Habibollah Sayyari, as saying the action shows that Iran has "control over the moves by foreign forces" in the area, where Tehran is holding a 10-day military exercise.

    Iran has alarmed American officials and the world by declaring it would close the main artery for oil exports from the Persian Gulf if the West imposes sanctions over its nuclear program. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    "An Iranian vessel and surveillance plane have tracked, filmed and photographed a U.S. aircraft carrier as it was entering the Gulf of Oman from the Persian Gulf," Sayyari said.

    He added that the "foreign fleet will be warned by Iranian forces if it enters the area of the drill."

    State TV showed what appeared to be the reported video, but it was not possible to make out the details of the carrier because the video was shot from far away.

    The Iranian exercise is taking place in international waters near the Strait of Hormuz — the passageway for one-sixth of the world's oil supply.

    Beyond it lie vast bodies of water, including the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Aden. The U.S. Navy's Bahrain-based 5th Fleet is also active in the area, as are warships of several other countries that patrol for pirates there.

    Lt. Rebecca Rebarich, a spokeswoman for the U.S. 5th Fleet, said the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis and guided-missile cruiser USS Mobile Bay headed out from the Gulf and through the Strait of Hormuz on Tuesday, after a visit to Dubai's Jebel Ali port.

    She described the passage through the strait as "a pre-planned, routine transit" for the carrier, which is providing air support from the north Arabian Sea to troops in Afghanistan.

    Rebarich did not directly address Iranian claims of possessing the reported video but said the 5th Fleet's "interaction with the regular Iranian Navy continues to be within the standards of maritime practice, well known, routine and professional."

    Thursday's report follows U.S. warnings over Iranian threats to choke off traffic through the Strait of Hormuz if Washington imposes sanctions targeting Iran's crude exports. On Wednesday, Rebarich said the Navy was "always ready to counter malevolent actions to ensure freedom of navigation."

    The U.S. 5th Fleet said on Wednesday it would not allow any disruption of traffic in the Strait of Hormuz.

    "Anyone who threatens to disrupt freedom of navigation in an international strait is clearly outside the community of nations; any disruption will not be tolerated," the Bahrain-based fleet said in an e-mail.

    Gen. Hossein Salami, the acting commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guard, rejected the warning.

    "The U.S. is not in a position" to affect Iran's decisions, Salami told the semi-official Fars news agency Thursday. "Iran does not ask permission to implement its own defensive strategies."

    Reuters and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

  • Egyptian forces raid activists' offices

    Filippo Monteforte / AFP - Getty Images

    Egyptian soldiers stand guard outside the U.S.-based National Democratic Institute during a raid Thursday in Cairo.

    UPDATED: 3 p.m. ET

    CAIRO -- Egyptian security forces raided 17 offices of human rights and and non-governmental groups on Thursday in a move that has triggered widespread fear and condemnation among pro-democracy groups and activists. 

    Three American groups, Freedom House, the National Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute, were among the organizations whose offices were raided. 

    The United States said the harassment should stop immediately and hinted it could review its $1.3 billion in military aid if the raids continue. "This action is inconsistent with the bilateral cooperation we have had over many years," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told a news briefing.


    Police and military forces stormed the offices, confiscating computers, seizing papers and files, and taking down the names of Egyptians working for the organizations. 

    According to judicial sources, the raids were ordered by Egypt's general prosecutor's office and were carried out by inspectors from his office with the assistance of military forces and the police.

    Judicial sources tell NBC News the raid was part of an ongoing investigation based on complaints that human rights organizations and prominent activists were receiving foreign funding without the appropriate permits and approval from the government, a crime under Egyptian law.

    Mohammed Asad / AP

    Egyptian military stand guard as officials raid a non-governmental group's office in Cairo on Thursday.

    The Arab Network for Human Rights Information quickly denounced the raids, saying they were aimed at "terrorizing activists and organizations to stop their work in fighting against abuse and torture". The network added they and other non-governmental groups feared such a crackdown was imminent and had prepared for it. 

    "Even Mubarak's regime did not dare carry out such practices before the revolution," it added. 

    The Arab Center for the Independence of the Judiciary and the Legal Profession said its office was one of the 17 raided, and that military forces confiscated documents and computers while preventing its staff from leaving during the raid.

    Some rights groups have supported recent protests demanding that the army, in power since February when President Hosni Mubarak was ousted, hand power swiftly to elected civilians. The army has pledged to step aside by mid-2012.

    Clashes between protesters and soldiers in Cairo earlier this month killed 17 people. 

    Two of the U.S. groups raided are loosely associated with the U.S. Democratic and Republican political parties. They say they take a neutral political stance, fostering democracy in Egypt by training members of nascent parties in democratic processes.

    "The National Democratic Institute has been training new parties ... in how to participate in elections," a leading member of a liberal party told Reuters on condition of anonymity. "This has been with the full knowledge of authorities and was not clandestine."

    The NDI issued a statement noting that some of the groups "are working on observation efforts for the country’s ongoing parliamentary elections. The third and final round for those polls is scheduled to begin on Tuesday."

    “Cracking down on organizations whose sole purpose is to support the democratic process during Egypt’s historic transition sends a disturbing signal,” said NDI President Kenneth Wollack.

    The International Republican Institute, in its own statement, noted that "it is ironic that even during the Mubarak era IRI was not subjected to such aggressive action."

    Freedom House President David Kramer called the raids a sign the military "has no intention of permitting the establishment of genuine democracy and is attempting to scapegoat civil society for its own abysmal failure to manage Egypt’s transition effectively."

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

  • Rare 'faceless and brainless' fish seen off UK coast

    Andrew Want - Marine Scotland / Courtesy Scottish Government

    Amphioxus - a "faceless and brainless" fish-like creature - recorded in a marine study in Scotland.

     A rare species of fish described as “faceless and brainless” was among the unusual finds made by marine scientists off Britain’s coast, according to a Scottish government report published on Thursday.

    The prehistoric amphioxus species, which grows to about two inches long and has no fins, was recorded off Orkney, part of the Northern Isles that lie off the far northern coast of mainland Scotland.


    The elusive fish is regarded as a modern representative of the first animals that evolved a backbone, the Scottish government said.

    With a nerve cord down its back, it has no specific brain or face. According to The Scotsman newspaper, it has a translucent, fish-like body but has no true skeleton.

    It is usually found buried in sand in shallow parts of temperate or tropical seas, the newspaper said. In Asia, the species is harvested commercially to use as food for pets.

    Other rare finds from the marine surveys, which covered over 2,000 square miles, included giant mussels with shells measuring up to 18 inches and new communities of Northern Feather Star, a brightly colored species with 10 feather-like arms fanning out from a central disc, which were revealed off the Sound of Canna, near Skye.

    The Scottish Government said the findings will further the country's knowledge of the biodiversity of its seas.

    Scottish Natural Heritage and Edinburgh's Heriot-Watt University were among organizations that carried out the work.

    Underwater video was shot and acoustic and 3D images were used in the surveys.

    Dr Dan Barlow, head of policy with environmental campaign group WWF Scotland, added: “These surveys highlight that Scotland’s seas and coasts are home to a truly amazing range of weird and wonderful wildlife.

    “By providing vital information on what lies beneath the waves, these surveys will help inform decisions on better ways to protect this important resource.”

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  • Aladdin's lock-up: Cops find $6.5 million in gems, silver, cash in Sydney storage unit

    Reuters

    Australian police found $6.5 million worth of gems, jewelry, cash, silver bullion and antiques, in a storage unit on Wednesday. They believe the stash is the result of a string of robberies across Sydney and Melbourne in September.

    Police on Wednesday uncovered a treasure trove of allegedly stolen goods in a storage unit in Sydney, Australia, including silver bullion, jewelry and 4 million Australian dollars in cash, according to reports.

    The Australian Associated Press reported that the total value of the goods is around $6.5 million, and that the loot is believed to be the result of a string of robberies across Sydney and Melbourne in September.


    In addition to the cash and 264 pounds of silver bricks likely cast from melted-down jewelry, New South Wales police found pistols, war medals and precious gems.

    Reuters

    Included in the treasure trove was 264 pounds of silver bricks likely cast from melted-down jewelry.

    They found the items after carrying out a search warrant on a storage facility in Waterloo, Sydney.

    Police investigating the September burglaries arrested two men on December 19. The father-and-son pair, aged 56 and 33, are being held in Victoria, The Sydney Morning Herald reported.

    Reuters

    New South Wales police found 4 million Australian dollars in cash in the Sydney storage unit.

    "We believe there may be a number of owners of both commercial and residential premises who are unaware that their safes have been tampered with and entered and that their property has been taken," Acting Assistant Commissioner Mal Lanyon said according to the Herald.

    Lanyon said the thieves were highly sophisticated and planned out their robberies carefully, but he did not detail their methodology.

    Reuters

    In addition to the jewelry and cash, police found pistols and war medals.

    Police were urging people to check their safes in case they had been targeted and were unaware of it, the Herald reported.

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    Msnbc.com editor Marian Smith contributed to this report.

  • Fire on Russian nuclear submarine; reactor shut down

    TV21 via Reuters

    Firefighters work to extinguish the blaze on a nuclear-powered submarine at a shipyard in Murmansk, Russia, on Thursday.

    MOSCOW - Russia tried to submerge a burning nuclear submarine at a navy shipyard on Thursday after battling for hours with helicopters and tug boats to bring the raging blaze under control.

    There was no radiation leak, authorities said.

    Television pictures showed a giant plume of smoke above the yard in the Murmansk region of northern Russia as over 100 firemen struggled to douse flames which witnesses said rose 30 feet above the stricken vessel.

    Emergency workers said efforts to partially sink the submarine at the dock had failed to fully extinguish the fire. A defense ministry spokesman quoted by state news agency RIA said the blaze, which began at 1220 GMT (7:20 a.m. ET), was under control more than eight hours later.

    Russia said the nuclear reactor had been shut down and all weapons had been removed from the Yekaterinburg, which launched an intercontinental ballistic missile from the Barents Sea at a firing range thousands of miles away in Kamchatka as recently as July.

    "Radiation levels are normal," a spokeswoman for the emergencies ministry said. "No one was injured."

    After hours of trying to put out the flames, officials decided to partially submerge the hull of the 18,200-tonne submarine at the Roslyakovo dock, one of the main dockyards of Russia's northern fleet 900 miles north of Moscow.

    Local media reports were vague, but the blaze was believed to have started when wooden scaffolding caught fire during welding repairs to the submarine, which had been hoisted into a dry dock.

    The submarine can carry 16 ballistic missiles, each with four warheads. Its nuclear reactor was not damaged in the fire and Russian navy submarine reactors are built to withstand enormous shocks and high temperatures.

    "The reactor has been shut down and does not pose any danger," Interfax news agency quoted a source at navy headquarters as saying.

    Russia's worst post-Soviet submarine disaster occurred in August 2000 when the Kursk nuclear submarine sank in the Barents Sea killing all 118 crewmen aboard.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.
  • Filipinos call for help following devastating typhoon

    Aaron Favila / AP

    A Filipino girl holds a sign calling people to help victims of floods in southern Philippine Cagayan De Oro and Iligan cities as they light candles in Quezon city, north of Manila, Philippines on Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011. More than a thousand people were killed as tropical storm Washi hit the country about two weeks ago and about 60,000 residents are still cramped inside evacuation centers as flash floods swept their homes in southern Philippines.

    Charlie Saceda / Reuters

    Over 1000 people are killed in flash floods, landslides following a tropical storm.

     

  • Reuters

    Demonstrators hold a poster of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, right, shaking hands with Sudanese General Mustafa al-Dabi during an anti-Assad protest in Kafranbel, near Adlb, Syria, in a screengrab from a video made on Dec. 25, 2011 and made available by Reuters on Dec. 29. The sign reads: "Be careful military gangs".

    Syrian opposition criticizes Arab League observers' chief

    The Associated Press reports:

    Syrian opposition activists are criticizing the Sudanese head of the Arab League monitoring mission to Syria for serving as a senior official with the "oppressive regime" of President Omar al-Bashir, who is under an international arrest warrant on charges of committing genocide in Darfur.

    Lt. Gen. Mohamed Ahmed Mustafa al-Dabi is a longtime loyalist of al-Bashir and once served as his head of Sudanese military intelligence.

    Amnesty International said under al-Dabi's command, military intelligence in the early 1990s "was responsible for the arbitrary arrest and detention, enforced disappearance, and torture or other ill-treatment of numerous people in Sudan."

    Related content:

  • Australian woman survives 3 days trapped upside-down in crashed car

    Ambulance Service Of NSW/Handout / EPA

    Debbie McKnight was trapped for three days in her car after the vehicle plunged down an embankment on Christmas Day in Tumut, Australia.

    A woman who crashed her car on Christmas Day survived for three days with her leg pinned in the wreckage after it plunged down an embankment in southern Australia, according to local reports.

    Debbie McKnight, 45, was driving home from her daughter's house in Tumut, New South Wales, when she swerved to avoid a kangaroo and the vehicle left the road. Her car flipped and landed on its roof 26 feet below, The Sydney Morning Herald reported.


    Teenager Caleb Wilks found her late Wednesday when he walked past the wreck and heard her screaming for help, Sky News Australia reported.

    "Otherwise we wouldn't have found her," Sergeant Brian Hammond told Sky.

    'She was so desperate'
    McKnight was flown to Canberra Hospital where surgeons amputated her leg. She was listed in stable condition.

    "She was so desperate she was actually going to cut off her leg herself but she couldn't find anything sharp enough," Hammond said.

    Ambulance Service Of NSW/Handout / EPA

    Paramedics at the scene of the crash in Tumut, Australia.

    The Ambulance Service of New South Wales said the pressure from the car on her leg likely acted as a tourniquet and stopped any life-threatening bleeding.

    Tumut's mayor John Larter told the Sydney Morning Herald that McKnight was fortunate to have survived.

    "As anyone would be in a vehicle lying upside-down for three days over Christmas, I imagine anyone would have been distressed," Larter said. "You'd be missing your family over Christmas and I suppose you'd be wondering when somebody was going to come and rescue you." 

     

  • Syrians take to streets, inspired by observers

    Handout / Reuters

    A girl holds a sign reading "People want a no fly zone" during a demonstration against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Homs on Tuesday.

    UPDATED: 5 p.m. ET

    HOMS, Syria -- The presence of Arab League monitors in Syria has re-energized the anti-government protest movement, with tens of thousands turning out over the past three days in cities and neighborhoods where the observers are expected to visit. The huge rallies have been met by lethal gunfire from security forces apparently worried about multiple mass sit-ins modeled after Cairo's Tahrir Square.

     On Thursday, security forces opened fire on tens of thousands protesting outside a mosque in a Damascus suburb and killed at least four. The crowd had gathered at the mosque near to a municipal building where cars of the monitors had been spotted outside.


    Much of the bloodshed of the past few days appeared to be a desperate attempt by authorities to keep protesters from gaining ground for multiple mass sit-ins where they can recreate the model of Cairo's Tahrir Square. The two-week sit-in at Tahrir brought down longtime authoritarian ruler Hosni Mubarak in February and inspired other uprisings across the Arab world.

    On Tuesday, as monitors visited the flashpoint city of Homs in central Syria, troops shot at thousands of protesters trying to reach the city's central Clock Square. On Wednesday, the scene was repeated in nearby Hama, where protesters were shot trying to reach Assi Square and activists said at least six people were killed.

    "This is the regime's biggest fear, to have hundreds of thousands of people gathered in one place," said one Homs resident.

    Syria has allowed the monitors in, released about 800 prisoners and pulled some of its tanks from the city of Homs. But it has continued to shoot and kill unarmed protesters and has not lived up to any other terms of the agreement.

    Syria's top opposition leader, Burhan Ghalioun, told reporters in Cairo after meeting Arab League Chief Nabil Elaraby that the aim of the mission is not only to observe, but to make sure that the Syrian government is "stopping the killing and shooting." He added that the Syrian government is holding more than 100,000 detainees, "some of them held in military barracks and aboard ships off the Syrian coast." He added: "There is real danger that the regime might kill them to say there are no prisoners."

    State-run TV said monitors also visited the Damascus suburb of Harasta, the central city of Hama and the southern province of Daraa, where the uprising against Assad began in March.

    The Observatory said a total of 26 people have been shot by security forces and killed on Thursday, most of them in several suburbs of Damascus. The Local Coordination Committees, another activist group, said 35 people were killed. The differing death tolls could not be immediately reconciled as Syria bans most foreign journalists and keeps tight restrictions on the local media.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Syrian army tanks in the background as a group of Arab League observers tour the flashpoint central city of Homs on December 27, 2011.

    The Syrian government organized a tour to the restive central city of Homs, where one team of monitors has been working for the last three days.

    At the entrance to the city, which witnessed much of the violence in the past months, two checkpoints were stopping cars and asking for people's identity cards. Inside, most shops were closed and streets had few people and cars as sporadic gunfire rang out. Most main streets were clean, but side streets were lined with piles of garbage bags.

    At the military hospital, one of the largest in the city, a large number of civilians and members of the military were receiving treatment. One of them was a soldier who was shot in the stomach while in a Homs street Thursday morning. He was undergoing an operation, his mother said.

    "My son did not harm anyone. He is a soldier to protect the country," said his mother, Zeinab Jaroud, as she stood holding back here tears outside the operating room.

    Troops fired live ammunition and tear gas to disperse large protests in several areas of the country, including central Damascus, killing at least 26 people nationwide, activists said. A key activist network, the Local Coordination Committees, said it has documented the names of 130 people, including six children, who died since the Arab League monitors arrived in Syria Monday night.

    The ongoing violence, and new questions about the human rights record of the head of the Arab League monitors, are reinforcing the opposition's view that Syria's limited cooperation with the observers is nothing more than a farce for President Bashar Assad's regime to buy time and forestall more international condemnation and sanctions.

    Still, the presence of outside monitors has invigorated frustrated protesters and motivated them to take to the streets again in large numbers after months of demonstrations met by bullets had dashed their hopes of peaceful change.

    "We know the observers won't do anything to help us," said Yahya Abdel-Bari, an activist in the Damascus suburb of Douma. "But still, we want to show them our numbers, to let them know what is really happening here," he said.

    The 60 Arab League monitors, who began work Tuesday, are the first Syria has allowed in during the nine-month anti-government uprising. They are supposed to ensure the regime complies with terms of the Arab League plan to end Assad's crackdown on dissent. The U.N. says more than 5,000 people have died in the uprising since March.

    The plan, which Syria agreed to on Dec. 19, demands that the government remove its security forces and heavy weapons from cities, start talks with the opposition and allow human rights workers and journalists into the country. It also calls for the release of all political prisoners.

    As word spread Thursday morning that the observers would be visiting Douma — which saw an intense government crackdown in the early days of the uprising — thousands of people began gathering outside the Grand Mosque, calling for Assad's downfall and for international protection for civilians.

    Amateur videos posted on the Internet showed protesters in Douma facing off with Syrian soldiers, shouting "Freedom, Freedom!" Troops then opened fire to disperse the protesters, whose numbers had swelled to around 20,000.

    "It came like rain, they used heavy machine guns, Kalashnikovs, everything," said Abdel-Bari.

    Four people were killed and scores others wounded, said Abdel-Bari and various activist groups.

    Rami Abdul-Rahman, head of the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said cars belonging to the Arab League monitors were seen in front of a municipal building close to the mosque around the same time.

    But after the killings, Abdul-Rahman and Abdel-Bari said the monitors were barred by security officials from entering Douma and the situation quickly deteriorated. A witness said angry citizens closed off streets with rocks and garbage containers and thousands of people returned to the area around the Grand Mosque to stage a sit-in.

    Troops also surrounded a mosque in Damascus' central neighborhood of Midan and tossed tear gas canisters at hundreds of people calling for the downfall of the regime.

    In the northern Idlib province, some 150,000 protesters took to the streets — more than on any other day recently, the Observatory said.

    "The presence of monitors is a source of comfort to the Syrian street and breaks the barrier of fear for those who were hesitant about protesting," said Abdul-Rahman.

    Although the violence against protesters has not stopped, he said the death toll would have probably been double what it is had there been no monitors on the ground.   

  • Turkish airstrike aimed at militants kills 35 Kurdish villagers

    Protesters take to the streets of Istanbul in response to the military airstrike that killed 35 people. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Updated at 9:45 a.m. ET

    DIYARBAKIR, Turkey - Turkish warplanes launched airstrikes against suspected Kurdish militants in northern Iraq near the Turkish border overnight, the military said on Thursday, but local officials said the attack killed 35 smugglers who were mistaken for guerrillas.

    The Turkish military confirmed it had launched the strikes after unmanned drones spotted suspected rebels of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), but said there were no civilians in the area and it was investigating the incident.


    The attack, which Turkey's largest pro-Kurdish party called a "crime against humanity," sparked clashes between hundreds of stone-throwing protesters and police in Diyarbakir, the largest city in Turkey's restive mainly Kurdish southeast.

    Police responded by firing water cannon and tear gas at the demonstrators. Seven people were detained. One police officer was hurt after being hit by a stone, witnesses said.

    Story: 'Pushed aside': Turkey's Kurds lose hope

    "We have 30 corpses, all of them are burned. The state knew that these people were smuggling in the region. This kind of incident is unacceptable. They were hit from the air," said Fehmi Yaman, mayor of Uludere in Sirnak province.

    The Sirnak governor's office said 35 people had been killed and one wounded during an operation near the border with Uludere district.

    ENN via AFP - Getty Images

    Locals gather in front of a truck carrying the bodies of people who were killed in a warplane attack in the Ortasu village of Uludere, in Turkey's Sirnak province on Thursday.

    Local villagers said the smugglers were carrying drums of diesel on mules and tractors, according to the Turkish Hurriyet Daily News. The diesel drums exploded in the airstrike and burned them to death, they said.

    'This is a massacre'
    The pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) said party leaders were heading for the area and that it would hold demonstrations in Istanbul and elsewhere to protest the deaths.

    "This is a massacre," BDP Deputy Chairwoman Gultan Kisanak told a news conference in Diyarbakir.

    "This country's warplanes bombed a group of 50 of its citizens to destroy them. This is a war crime and a crime against humanity," she said.

    The Turkish military said it had learned the PKK had sent many militants to the Sinat-Haftanin area, where the strikes occurred in northern Iraq, to retaliate after recent militant losses in clashes.

    "It was established from unmanned aerial vehicle images that a group was within Iraq heading towards our border," it said.

    "Given that the area in which the group was spotted is often used by terrorists and that it was moving towards our border at night, it was deemed necessary for our air force planes to attack and they struck the target at 21:37-22:24 (2:37-8:24 p.m. ET)," it said.

    "The place where the incident occurred is the Sinat-Haftanin area in northern Iraq where there is no civilian settlement and where the main camps of the separatist terrorist group are located," it said.

    The military added that an investigation was in progress, without referring to any deaths in the strikes.

    The Turkish government, which has been battling the PKK since the group took up arms in 1984 to fight for an ethnic Kurdish homeland, was not immediately available for comment.

    The incident threatens to spoil efforts to forge Turkish-Kurdish consensus for a planned new constitution that is expected to address the issue of Kurdish rights.

    Smugglers or militants?
    Smuggling is an important source of income for locals in provinces along the Iraqi border, with many villagers involved in bringing fuel, cigarettes and other goods from Iraqi villages on the other side of the border.

    PKK militants also cross the border in these areas.

    "There were rumors that the PKK would cross through this region. Images were recorded of a crowd crossing last night, hence an operation was carried out," a Turkish security official said.

    "We could not have known whether these people were (PKK) group members or smugglers," he said.

    Television images showed a line of corpses covered by blankets on a barren hillside, with a crowd of people gathered around, some with their head in their hands and crying.

    Donkeys carried corpses down the hillside to be loaded into vehicles and taken to hospital.

    Security sources said those killed were carrying canisters of diesel on mules and their bodies were found on the Iraqi side of the border.

    They said the dead were from Uludere on the Turkish side of the border on what was a regular smuggling route.

    The Firat news agency, which has close ties to the PKK, said that 17 people were still believed to be missing. It said those killed were aged around 17-20.

    In northern Iraq, PKK spokesman Ahmet Deniz condemned the strike and said F-16 jets had bombed a group of around 50 people taking goods across the border and that 19 people were missing.

    The PKK, regarded as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the European Union and the United States, launches attacks on Turkish forces in southeastern Turkey from hideouts inside the remote Iraqi mountains.

    Turkish leaders vowed revenge in October with air and ground strikes after the PKK killed 24 Turkish soldiers in one of the deadliest attacks since the PKK took up arms in 1984 in a conflict in which more than 40,000 people have been killed.

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    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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