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  • Millionaire's daughter convicted after driving London looters around during riots

    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    Laura Johnson, right, leaves Inner London Crown Court with her mother, Lindsay Johnson, Thursday in London, England, after she was convicted of burglary and handling stolen goods during the 2011 London Riots.

    A millionaire’s daughter who drove London looters around during last summer’s riots was convicted Thursday of burglary and handling stolen goods, British media reported.

    Laura Johnson, 20, of Orpington, had denied the charges, claiming she was acting under duress, the BBC reported.


    However, prosecutors claimed Johnson was a “willing participant” in an Aug. 7-10 crime spree with a group that included her crack cocaine dealer boyfriend, the Daily Mail said.

    The Inner London Crown Court jury saw pictures of Johnson laughing and joking behind the wheel of her car before finding her guilty of two charges but clearing Johnson of stealing and handling cigarettes and drinks from a BP gas station.

    A 17-year-old codefendant, who was not publicly identified because of his age, also was convicted of one burglary and cleared of another.

    Judge Patricia Lees said Johnson faces a likely jail term when she is sentenced May 3.

    The offenses were “aggravated by the fact that they were conducted in the time frame of serious civil unrest in London last summer,” Lees said.

    Riots flared in London following the police-shooting death of suspected gangster Mark Duggan on Aug. 4 and spread to Birmingham, Manchester and other cities. Police arrested 4,130 people during the civil unrest, which left five dead.

    Johnson, a University of Exeter student, chauffeured looters wearing hoodies, bandanas and balaclavas, prosecutors said. The group loaded stolen electronic equipment into her car, they said.

    Johnson set out early in the evening Aug. 7 to deliver a phone charger to her boyfriend, Emmanuel Okubote, 20, known as T-Man, prosecutors said. She was convicted of handling a TV looted from a branch of Currys at Stonelake Retail Park and stealing electronics from a Comet store in the Greenwich Retail Park, where she was arrested, the Telegraph of London reported.

    Johnson began a close friendship with Okubote during the summer after being introduced to him by a friend she met while a mental health unit outpatient. Okubote is in Feltham Young Offenders Institution from an earlier a 30-month conviction for drug dealing, the Daily Mail said. He had been out on parole during the riots.

    Police said Johnson told them that she had not refused to drive the looters because, "I didn't get the impression they were the sort of people you say no to."

    Johnson’s parents, Lindsay and Robert, attended their daughter’s trial each day, the Daily Mail reported. They run the marketing firm Avongate, the Daily Mail said. Robert Johnson also is a director of several companies and was a director in a company that took over the Daily Sport and Sunday Sport newspapers in 2007, the newspaper said.

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  • Report: US democracy workers detained in UAE

    Workers at a United States pro-democracy group were detained by the United Arab Emirates government, according to a report - a move that echoes a clampdown last month by Egypt that drew criticism from Washington.

    Foreign Policy reported that the UAE government detained foreign employees of the National Democratic Institute (NDI) and prevented at least one of them from leaving the country.


    It said the director of NDI's Dubai office, Patricia Davis, an American, and her deputy director Slobodon Milic, a Serbian national, were stopped at the Dubai airport by UAE government authorities as they tried to leave the country.

    It quoted a State Department spokesman saying Davis’ detention had been brief. There was no word on whether Milic was eventually allowed to leave. There was no immediate response from the department to msnbc.com.

    A crackdown on the organization was announced by the UAE last week, coinciding with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s peace visit to the Middle East. The New York Times described that move, and its timing, as “a surprising act of diplomatic defiance”.

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  • Evidence of bloody battle in Damascus, as Kofi Annan calls for peace

    AP

    Syrians walk through blood and debris in a neighborhood of Damascus, Syria, after a raid by Syrian troops killed several rebels and civilians on April 5. Syrian troops launched a fierce assault Thursday, days ahead of a deadline for a U.N.-brokered cease-fire, with activists describing it as one of the most violent attacks around the capital since the year-old uprising began.

    AP

    Syrian youth stand in a building damaged by tank shells in a neighborhood of Damascus, Syria, after a raid by Syrian troops killed several rebels and civilians on April 5. Syrian troops launched a fierce assault Thursday, days ahead of a deadline for a U.N.-brokered cease-fire, with activists describing it as one of the most violent attacks around the capital since the year-old uprising began.

    Syria’s year-long conflict must end at 6:00 a.m. local time on April 12, U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan said Thursday, amid reports violence in the country had worsened despite a promise by the regime to withdraw its troops from cities.

    Syria has told the U.N. it has begun withdrawals, but there were still reports of violence in the country – including attempts by the army to prevent civilians from escaping gunfire. In Damascus, fresh blood was visible on the streets.

    A man calling himself Abu Mustafa, speaking from Zabadani near the Lebanon border, told Reuters: "They are complete liars, there is no army withdrawal, they are still in the middle of the city. They fired on the city this morning, like they do every day,"

    However, he did acknowledge a pullback. "The army withdrew 15 tanks yesterday, but the rest are all around the checkpoints as usual," he said.

    The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights told msnbc.com in an email on Thursday afternoon that at least 33 people, including 14 soldiers, were killed in the past 24 hours.

    Read the full story.

    -- msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson and news services

    AP

    Sunlight peeks through shrapnel holes in a building destroyed by tank shelling in a neighborhood of Damascus, Syria, after a raid by Syrian troops killed several rebels and civilians on April 5. Syrian troops launched a fierce assault Thursday, days ahead of a deadline for a U.N.-brokered cease-fire, with activists describing it as one of the most violent attacks around the capital since the year-old uprising began.

    AP

    Syrians gather near a crater from a tank shell in a neighborhood of Damascus, Syria, after a raid by Syrian troops killed several rebels and civilians on April 5. Syrian troops launched a fierce assault Thursday, days ahead of a deadline for a U.N.-brokered cease-fire, with activists describing it as one of the most violent attacks around the capital since the year-old uprising began.

  • Swimming horses race across Venezuela's Apure River

    The Associated Press reports from Apure, Venezuela — At the blast of a whistle, a half dozen horses plunge into the Apure River and set out for the distant shore in a unique annual spectacle commemorating a historic battle.

    Thousands of cowboys and their families gather to watch each year on the anniversary of a 1819 battle fought by soldiers led by independence heroes Simon Bolivar and Gen. Jose Antonio Paez.

    Paez and about 150 soldiers swam across the river alongside their horses, then attacked and defeated a force of more than 1,000 Spanish troops who had been sent to quash their rebellion, which eventually led to independence.

    Today, only the horses do the swimming, as competitors in canoes guide them across the river. Read more.

    Ariana Cubillos / AP

    Horses jump into the Apure River during a weekend of traditional horse races across the waterway in San Fernando de Apure, Venezuela.

    Ariana Cubillos / AP

    A man jumps off his canoe to run for the finish line with his horse during a race across the Apure River in San Fernando de Apure, Venezuela.

    Ariana Cubillos / AP

    A girl watches horse races across the Apure River in San Fernando de Apure, Venezuela.

    Ariana Cubillos / AP

    Horses reach the shore led by horsemen as they dash for the finish line during a weekend of horse races across the Apure River in San Fernando de Apure, Venezuela.

    Ariana Cubillos / AP

    Cattleman Eduardo Contreras celebrates after winning one of the horse races across the Apure River in San Fernando de Apure, Venezuela.

  • Kofi Annan: All Syria violence must end April 12

    Syrians walk through blood and debris in a neighborhood of Damascus, Syria, after a raid by Syrian troops killed several rebels and civilians Thursday.

    Syria’s year-long conflict must end at 6:00 a.m. local time on April 12, U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan said Thursday, amid reports violence in the country had worsened despite a promise by the regime to withdraw its troops from cities.

    Annan told the U.N. General Assembly: "We must silence the tanks, helicopters, mortars, guns and stop all other forms of violence too - sexual abuse, torture, executions, abductions, destruction of homes, forced displacement and other abuses, including on children.”


    Earlier this week, Syria publicly accepted an official deadline of April 10 to begin withdrawing government troops from urban centers and flashpoints such as the battered city of Homs.

    That peace proposal also includes a second deadline, applying to all sides in the conflict, requiring them to “cease armed violence in all its forms” at 6:00 a.m. Syrian time on April 12 (11:00 p.m. ET on April 11).

    PhotoBlog: Evidence of bloody battle in Damascus as Annan calls for peace

    Syria has told the U.N. it has begun withdrawals, but there were still reports of violence in the country – including attempts by the army to prevent civilians from escaping gunfire. In Damascus, fresh blood was visible on the streets.

    A man calling himself Abu Mustafa, speaking from Zabadani near the Lebanon border, told Reuters: "They are complete liars, there is no army withdrawal, they are still in the middle of the city. They fired on the city this morning, like they do every day,"

    However, he did acknowledge a pullback. "The army withdrew 15 tanks yesterday, but the rest are all around the checkpoints as usual," he said.

    The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights told msnbc.com in an email on Thursday afternoon that at least 33 people, including 14 soldiers, were killed in the past 24 hours.

    Anita McNaught, reporter for Arab news channel Al Jazeera, reported from the Turkey-Syria border that families were still fleeing the country for their safety.

    "The Syrian army is bombing all around the governates of Idlib and Aleppo," she said. "The way the Syrian army has positioned itself now is to cut off escape routes.”

    In a report from Beirut, the BBC's Jim Muir said activists “are giving the clear impression that the Syrian regime is having a final crack at rebels before the ceasefire deadline”.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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  • Russian Orthodox Church apologizes for photoshopping patriarch's expensive watch

    www.patriarchia.ru

    A doctored photograph of the Russian patriarch, left, which has since been removed from his official website to be replaced by the original photo showing his watch, right.

    The Russian Orthodox Church apologized on Thursday for doctoring a photograph of Patriarch Kirill to remove what bloggers said was a luxury wristwatch following accusations that he lives a lavish lifestyle.

    The church responded after bloggers said a 2009 photo of the Patriarch on its website showed the reflection of a Breguet watch worth about $30,000 in the polished surface of a table where his arms rested during talks.

    The Church made no reference to a watch in a statement, but said a "rude violation of our internal ethics" had been made and removed the doctored 2009 photo from its Website, replacing it on Thursday with a version showing a watch on his wrist.

    "Employees of the press service's photo-editing desk made a silly mistake while working with the photo archives," the statement said, promising they would be punished.


    "We apologize to all the users of the website for the technical mistake," it said. "One of the basic principles of our work is the fundamental rejection of the use of photo editing programs to alter images."

    The Church issued a statement on Tuesday saying it was under attack from "anti-Russian forces" that wanted to erode its authority because of its backing for Putin, whose 12-year rule of Russia as prime minister and president was described by the patriarch as a miracle of God.

    "They have completely lost their minds in the Russian Orthodox Church," wrote blogger Vadim Petrichenko, a blogger who posted the doctored photo on his Facebook page on Wednesday, according to The Telegraph.

    Bloggers have since then stepped up accusations that Kirill leads an opulent lifestyle that is unbecoming of his status as head of the Church, and pro-opposition media outlets have questioned an alleged role in dealings around duty-free alcohol and tobacco imports in the 1990s.

    A journalist who met Kirill to discuss the allegations told Vesti FM radio that the Patriarch had acknowledged receiving a luxury watch as a gift but that he had not worn it. Kirill was quoted as saying photos of him wearing it were a "collage."

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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  • Time to ditch the umbrella? 20 million hit by drought in southeast England

    Justin Tallis / AFP - Getty Images

    A wooden branch lies in the dry mud at the bank of the half-full Bewl Water reservoir in the English county of Kent on Thursday. Charlie Powell, a meteorologist at the U.K.'s Met Office, told msnbc.com there was no sign of an imminent downpour over England's drought-affected areas.

    London has an undeserved reputation as a rainy city, with “things to do” when the U.K. capital is wet a popular topic of conversation among tourists.

    But this year could see that image shattered in dramatic fashion, with much of southeast England gripped by a serious drought currently affecting about 20 million people.


    Restrictions on the use of water were imposed Thursday from the southeast coast to the River Humber in the north and almost as far west as Wales.

    By the time the Olympics comes to London in July, further controls could be introduced that will prevent aircraft, London’s famous double-decker buses and other vehicles from being washed. Other restrictions are also likely.

    Brits revel in gloom ahead of London Olympics

    Those arriving for the greatest show on Earth, may find a parched, somewhat grubby city. The event itself, however, will be exempt, so rest assured there will be water in the diving pool, the rowers will not in find themselves marooned and the smiles of the synchronized swimmers will remain fixed.

    Driest 2-year period since 1884
    In an attempt to prevent the situation getting worse, seven English water companies imposed a so-called "hosepipe ban" Thursday – mainly designed to reduce the amount of water used in people's yards -- and urged people to cut back on water use by, for example, reducing time spent in the shower to just four minutes.

    The last time there was so little rain in the U.K. King George V reigned, the BBC launched its radio service and Al Jolson and Eddie Cantor had hit records. The year was 1922, and the last year and a half has had less rainfall since then. ITN's Lewis Vaughan Jones reports.

    Ignoring the ban could result in a fine of more than $1,500.

    “We have now received below-average rainfall across our region for 20 of the past 25 months, making it the driest two-year period since records began in 1884,” Martin Baggs, chief executive of Thames Water, said in a statement.

    “Imposing restrictions on the use of [hoses], although regrettable, is the most sensible and responsible next step in encouraging everyone to use less water so we can maintain supplies for as long as it stays dry, and reduce the risk of more serious restrictions later in the year,” he added.

    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    Walkers make their way around the banks of Bewl Water reservoir Monday.

    Hilary Murgatroyd, a spokeswoman for Thames Water, which supplies London and surrounding areas, said if the hosepipe ban did not produce the required effect, companies could decide to implement a more Draconian measure: the “drought order.”

    This would mean that cleaning of aircraft and public transport vehicles would be prohibited, apart from “washing require for health and safety reasons,” she told msnbc.com.

    “It [a drought order] is something that we’re considering, but it will be dependent on the reduction we see over the next couple of weeks and what the weather does, what rainfall we get,” Murgatroyd added.

    Despite its wet reputation, London gets about 23 or 24 inches of rain a year; New York City regularly gets twice that amount.

    'Nothing too torrential'
    Charlie Powell, a meteorologist at the U.K.’s Met Office, told msnbc.com there was no sign of an imminent downpour over the drought-affected areas.

    He said that little rain was expected to fall over the next few days although about 0.4 inches was expected Monday “in a few places.”

    “Nothing too torrential. Anything is better than nothing at this stage, but no significant, prolonged rainfall,” Powell said.

    'Meterological March Madness' mostly random

    He said that March had been particularly dry with much of the U.K. as a whole receiving less than half the average rainfall for that month.

    This came after a winter that saw eastern Scotland and south and eastern England receive about 75 percent of average rainfall, while northern Ireland and the north and west of Scotland was particularly wet with 120 percent.

    Floods in Fiji finally recede after leaving 5 dead

    One regularly mooted solution to drought in the south is pipe water from Scotland, which usually has plenty to spare.

    But Murgatroyd said this was not a “practical” option: water is heavy and therefore expensive to move and also has a different chemical makeup in different places due to the type of rock and treatments used to make it drinkable that could cause problems in the pipes, such as corrosion.

    Warmest March on record for dozens of cities

    Last month, saw a desalination plant open in East London, which will take sea water from the Thames Estuary and turn it into enough water for a million people.

    But the question remains, will British people pull together, let their prized hydrangeas wilt in the sun and put up with being slightly less well washed?

    One indicator could be how willing people are to report neighbors who break the hose ban to authorities.

    According a non-scientific poll in The Guardian newspaper at 10:50 a.m. ET, more than 70 percent would not. 

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  • Libyans flock to beaches once preserved for Gadhafi elite

    As temperatures rise in Libya hundreds of people are making their way to the coast and enjoying beaches that were previously exclusively for members of the former regime. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Libyans have been taking to beaches once reserved for slain dictator Moammar Gadhafi, amid hopes that the war-ravaged country could build a tourist industry.

    The country has the longest stretch of coastline on the Mediterranean Sea with hundreds of miles of largely deserted beaches.

    Could sun-soaked Libya become a tourism hot spot?


    Attracting overseas tourists may prove problematic with some ongoing fighting between rival groups.

    Militias have clashed in Zuwara, western Libya, in recent days, killing at least 18 people.

    However an army official told Reuters Thursday that the two groups had stopped fighting after government troops imposed a ceasefire.

    Reuters reporters in the town said there was no sign of fighting Thursday, in marked contrast to the day before when mortars and rockets were kicking up plumes of smoke, and the town hospital was over-flowing with the wounded.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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  • After 5 million views in 2 days, China orders Ai Weiwei to turn off webcams

    Ed Jones / AFP - Getty Images

    Artist Ai Weiwei holds a webcam that he was reportedly ordered by Chinese police to disconnect at his home in Beijing on Thursday.

    Artist and activist Ai Weiwei turned off four live webcams in his home late Wednesday after Chinese authorities ordered him to take them down. The live stream had been viewed around 5.2 million times in two days, he told NBC News.

    Ai had launched the live video at weiweicam.com on April 3, the one-year anniversary of his detention at Beijing's international airport. He was held for three months during a crackdown on dissent and was subsequently fined 15 million yuan ($2.4 million) for alleged tax evasion, which he denies.

    "I wanted them to see me on the first anniversary of my detention," Ai told NBC News in a phone interview on Thursday. "I'm still under surveillance from the public security."


    Chinese authorities called him and said they "noticed I put something out on the Internet," and said they hoped he would take it down, Ai told NBC.

    Behind The Wall: Ai Weiwei turns camera on himself, citing 'global' problem

     

    Despite his arrest earlier this year, Ai Weiwei, has made challenging China's government practically a sport. NBC's Adrienne Mong has more on the latest standoff between the Chinese artist and the Chinese government.

    "And I asked them, 'Is that an order?' And they said 'Yes, it's an order,'" Ai said.

    He was not given a reason for the order, The Guardian newspaper reported.

    Coup rumors spark China crackdown on social media websites

    Despite having to turn off the live stream, Ai said he had still sent out a message.

    "It's about power and individual creativity and about the Internet and about the privacy. You know, this issue about intruding into other people's privacy."

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  • 'Ghost ship' sinks to bottom of Gulf of Alaska after Coast Guard fires at it

    RAW VIDEO: In this U.S. Coast Guard video, a USCG boat fires on a Japanese ship adrift off the coast of Alaska in an attempt to sink the unmanned vessel and clear it from shipping lanes.

    Updated at 10:30 a.m. ET: A fishing vessel set adrift by the tsunami in Japan has sunk in the Gulf of Alaska after a cutter fired at it, The Coast Guard said.

    Petty Officer David Moseley told msnbc.com that the vessel caught fire and took on water after the Coast Guard Cutter Anacapa fired its 25mm cannon at the derelict ship on Thursday, aiming to sink what it called a threat to shipping.

    The ship sank to the bottom of the ocean after it was pummeled at by high-explosive ammunition, the Vancouver Sun reported Friday morning. Explosives were fired at the stricken vessel in a "slow and deliberate" manner to ensure accuracy, Veronica Colbath, Coast Guard public affairs officer, said, The Sun reported.

    It took about four hours for the ship to vanish into the water, said Chief Petty Officer Kip Wadlow in Juneau. It sank into waters more than 6,000 feet deep, about 180 miles west of the southeast Alaska coast, the Coast Guard said.

    Citing a Coast Guard spokesman, the Associated Press reported the firing began after a brief delay caused by a Canadian ship that wanted to salvage the Ryou-un Maru -- but then quickly found it it wasn't able to tow it back to shore.

    Besides clearing a shipping lane, sinking the nearly 200-foot-long vessel provides the Anacapa crew "a great way for them to put their skills to use," Coast Guard spokesman Kip Wadlow told msnbc.com from Juneau, Alaska.


    Wadlow said the drifting vessel makes shipping in the area extremely dangerous. "There's no crew on board, it doesn't have any light ...  and it's in a high volume shipping lane," he noted.

    The Coast Guard fired cannons on the ship that had drifted to the Gulf of Alaska after becoming unmoored after the Japan tsunami, choosing to sink the vessel rather than having it pose a risk to maritime traffic. NBC's Savannah Guthrie reports.

    The fishing boat, which was in port waiting to be scrapped when the tsunami took it out to sea, is far enough away that any fuel on board would not make it to shore, Wadlow added. The Coast Guard later elaborated that it appeared to be carrying little fuel since it was riding high in the water, the AP reported.

    A Coast Guard C-130 was flying over the area to warn away any nearby ships for what is described as a "live fire exercise."

    More photos of the Ryou-un Maru sinking

    Dropping crews aboard the boat is too dangerous, Wadlow said, and "the owner no longer wants it."

    But that didn't stop the Bernice C from trying to make some money off the rusty vessel.

    Based in Petersburg, Alaska, the Anacapa arrived Wednesday night alongside the Ryou-un Maru, which entered U.S. waters on April 1. The ship was moored at a harbor in Hachinohe, Japan, when the earthquake and tsunami hit on March 11, 2011.

    The vessel is the first large object to reach North America following the tsunami. Smaller objects have been found on U.S. coasts but much more debris is expected to make its way via currents to U.S. and Canadian beaches by 2014.

    State officials have been working with federal counterparts to gauge the danger of debris including material affected by a damaged nuclear power plant, to see if Alaska residents, seafood or wild game could be affected.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • UK's Sky News -- part-owned by News Corp -- admits email hacking

    LONDON -- U.K. broadcaster Sky News -- part-owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation -- admitted Thursday that it approved the hacking of emails by a journalist, but insisted it had been done in the public interest.

    The news channel said that in one case it broke into the emails belonging to Anne and John Darwin, who became notorious after the latter tried to fake his own death in a canoeing accident as part of an elaborate insurance fraud.


    NBC News Correspondent Jim Maceda shares details from the testimony.

    The news channel said in a statement Thursday that "we do not take such decisions lightly or frequently" and said the investigation had served the public interest, The Associated Press reported.

    John Ryley, the head of Sky News, told The Guardian newspaper that the broadcaster had "authorized a journalist to access the emails of individuals suspected of criminal activity."

    Ex-tabloid editor and friend of UK PM arrested in phone-hacking probe

    James Murdoch insists he didn't mislead British lawmakers

    Journalist: CNN star Piers Morgan must have known about tabloid phone hacking

    Former chief executive of News International, Rebekah Brooks, has been arrested for a second time by police investigating allegations of illegal phone hacking. ITN's Neil Connery reports.

    The Guardian named the journalist involved as Gerard Tubb, the broadcaster's northern England correspondent.

    It said he also accessed email accounts of a suspected child sex offender and his wife.

    Darwin went missing in Britain in 2002 after going out to sea in a canoe and was presumed dead. However, he flew to Panama and his wife later joined him there. They were exposed after posing for a photograph with a realtor in Panama.

    Undeterred by arrests and criminal investigations of his staff, media tycoon Rupert Murdoch launched the publication of a new tabloid, the Sunday Sun, He hopes to fill the gap left by the paper he had to close because of a phone hacking scandal. Annabel Roberts reports.

    Sky News didn't identify which story was the result of hacking, but The Associated Press reported that in an article dated July 21, 2008, Tubb said the channel had uncovered documentary evidence showing that John Darwin had decided to come back to England because he was having trouble staying in Panama.

    "We discovered an email," the article begins, without giving any explanation of how the message was obtained.

    Sky News said the emails were later handed to police, according to The AP.

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    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

  • Online coup rumors spark China crackdown on social media websites

    China has been shutting down internet and social media sties that have been fuelling rumors of a military coup, ITV's Angus Walker reports from Beijing.

    China's government shut down some social media websites this week after photos of tanks on the streets were posted online. The images sparked false rumors of a coup. 

    ITV News' Angus Walker reports from Beijing.

    Check out more China coverage on msnbc.com's Behind The Wall blog.

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  • Protests, fighting go on as UN pushes for Syria cease-fire

    Anonymous / AP

    Syrians raise their hands vowing to continue fighting until President Bashar Assad's regime falls during a protest in a neighborhood in Damascus on April 4, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Syrian troops fought rebels in a town near Damascus on Thursday before a senior U.N. peacekeeper was due to seek President Bashar al-Assad's agreement for 250 unarmed U.N. observers to monitor a U.N.-backed ceasefire next week.

    Explosions and heavy machinegun fire rocked Douma, 8 miles from the capital, sending columns of smoke rising from several buildings, anti-Assad activists from the Revolutionary Council of the Damascus Countryside said.

    Fighting shows no sign of abating even though Assad agreed more than a week ago to a six-point peace plan drawn up by U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan to end the year-long conflict. Continue reading.

    Anonymous / AP

    Syrian activists prepare signs for upcoming protests, at a house in a neighborhood in Damascus on April 3, 2012. The Arabic on the poster, center, reads

  • Better luck next year? Scotland's pandas fail to mate

    The pandas of Edinburgh Zoo are to have one last chance to create a cub. Itv's Science Editor Lawrence McGinty has been monitoring the developments.

    After three days of speculation, tension and excitement, a zoo announced Thursday that Scotland's only pandas -- Sweetie and Sunshine -- had failed to mate.

    Normally kept separately, they were only introduced to each other Tuesday, but the signs looked good.


    "Gentle giant" Sunshine, or Yang Guang, had been doing "panda handstands" to display his virility, while "very smart" Sweetie, or Tian Tian, also seemed interested.

    In Edinburgh, Scotland, two new pandas from China have been confined together in the hopes that they would breed but so far, despite the zoo's best efforts, they appear disinterested. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    In a brief emailed statement, Edinburgh Zoo said they noticed a drop in Sweetie's hormones late Wednesday and "limited breeding behavior was seen in both pandas" Thursday morning.

    The only pandas in the United Kingdom have been brought together for the first time, after it was determined that the female was ready to mate. Msnbc.com's Alex Witt reports.

    "As a result Tian Tian and Yang Guang were not put in together today [Thursday]. Edinburgh Zoo can announce that the panda breeding season for 2012 has now come to an end and both pandas are back on display," the statement said.

    Lack of mating experience hinders Scotland's pandas

    There was perhaps a note of sadness in the final line of the email, which was sent to msnbc.com and other media outlets. 

    "No interviews will be given today and there’s no access on site."

    Two giant pandas went on public display for the first time at Edinburgh Zoo today. ITN's Debi Edward was at the zoo along with hundreds of other eagerly waiting visitors to catch a glimpse of the pair.

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  • Man holds knife to wife's throat in horrific 6-hour standoff

    A tense standoff in which a Thai man held his wife hostage with a knife to her throat ended after six hours when police used a Taser gun to disable him.

    A crowd gathered to watch as 30-year-old Sakdawut Hamsiri threatened his wife, Thawee Naiyanit, on a street in Bangkok.

    Police are pressing charges against Hamsiri in connection with physical restraint and narcotics usage, The Associated Press told msnbc.com.

    His wife was sent to hospital to be treated for minor injuries.

    Sakchai Lalit / AP

    Sakdawut Hamsiri holds a knife to his wife Thawee Naiyanit's throat on a street in Bangkok, Thailand, on April 5, 2012.

    Sakchai Lalit / AP

    A policeman talks to Hamsiri during the standoff.

    Sakchai Lalit / AP

    Police said Hamsiri was under the influence of drugs.

    Sakchai Lalit / AP

    Police electroshock Hamsiri with a Taser to bring the incident to an end.

  • 'Martyr for Greece': Retiree's suicide sparks violent protests

    Hundreds of anti-austerity protesters in Greece have been remembering one of their own. In front of the parliament in Athens a 77-year-old retired pharmacist killed himself. In a note he said government cuts wiped out his pension and robbed him of his dignity. ITV's Martin Geissler reports.

    ATHENS -- An elderly Greek's suicide outside parliament has quickly become a symbol of the pain of austerity and has been seized upon by opponents of the budget cuts imposed by Greece's international lenders.

    Dimitris Christoulas, 77, shot himself in the head on Wednesday after declaring that financial troubles pushed him over the edge. A suicide note said the retired pharmacist preferred to die than scavenge for food.

    The highly public -- and symbolic -- nature of the suicide prompted an outpouring of sympathy from ordinary Greeks, who held a protest march and set up an impromptu shrine with notes condemning the crisis at the spot where he killed himself.


    The BBC reported that violence flared at the demonstration on Wednesday night, with some protesters hurling Molotov cocktails at police. They responded by firing tear gas.

    "As you walk around the streets of Athens and beyond you can see the social fabric tearing," the BBC's Mark Lowen said.

    The conservative newspaper Eleftheros Typos called the victim a "martyr for Greece" and said his act was filled with "profound political symbolism" that could "shock Greek society and the political world and awaken their conscience" in the weeks before a parliamentary election that will determine Greece's future.

    'Family man'
    Anger was directed as much at politicians as it was at the austerity medicine prescribed by foreign lenders in return for aid to lift the country out of its worst economic crisis since the Second World War.

    "It's horrible. We shouldn't have reached this point. The politicians in parliament who brought us here should be punished for this," said Anastassia Karanika, a 60-year-old retiree.

    The head of the Attica Pharmacists' Union, Constantinos Lourantos reportedly told Skai radio that Christoulas was "a calm, family man."

    John Kolesidis / Reuters

    A mourner cries on Thursday at the spot where 77-year-old Dimitris Christoulas took his own life in Syntagma Square in Athens, Greece.

    With the tragedy occurring barely a month before elections are expected in Greece, smaller parties opposed to harsh spending cuts included in the country's second bailout were quick to point the finger at bigger parties backing the rescue.

    "Those who should have committed suicide -- who should have committed suicide a long time ago -- are the politicians who knowingly decided to bring this country and its people to this state of affairs," said Panos Kammenos, a conservative lawmaker who recently set up the Independent Greeks anti-austerity party.

    Smaller parties like the Independent Greeks have been riding high in opinion polls at the expense of the two main co-ruling parties, the conservative New Democracy and socialist PASOK, backing the bailout.

    The two big parties are together expected to take less than 40 percent of the vote. Losing more voters to the smaller parties could put them at risk of not having enough seats in parliament to forge a pro-bailout coalition again.

    That in turn would have profound implications for Greece's finances, given continued aid from European partners and the International Montary Fund is contingent on Greece's new government pushing through reforms demanded as part of the bailout.

    Yorgos Karahalis / Reuters

    A protester throws a stone at police officers during rioting in Syntagma Square in Athens, Greece, on Wednesday night.
    Greek police fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of protesters taking part in a rally commemorating the death of Dimitris Christoulas.

    Sorrow
    New Democracy and PASOK, which have ruled Greece for decades, expressed their sorrow for the tragedy. Political opponents attacked them for joining in the mourning.

    "Shame on them. The accomplices responsible for the suffering and despair of the Greek people ... should at least keep quiet in the face of the hideous results of the capitalist crisis and their policies, instead of pretending to be saviors and sensitive," the KKE Communist party said.

    Resentment is growing in Greece over repeated rounds of wage and pension cuts that have compounded the pain from a slump which has seen the economy shrink by a fifth since 2008.

    Unemployment has surged to a record 21 percent -- twice the eurozone average -- with one out of two young people without a job. The number of suicides has surged and many Greeks feel ordinary people like the retired pharmacist are being forced to pay for a crisis that was not of their making.

    Economy-related suicides hit Italy
    Meanwhile, an Italian man shot himself dead on Wednesday because his company was going bust, following a wave of economy-related suicides in the country which one opposition politician blamed on Prime Minister Mario Monti's reforms.

    The 59-year-old Rome-based construction firm owner left a note apologizing to family members and explaining that his business had failed, police said.

    A day earlier, a 78-year-old woman in Sicily jumped to her death because her monthly pension payments had been reduced. On Monday, a picture-frame maker hanged himself because of economic difficulties.

    And last week, two men set themselves on fire in northern Italy due to financial woes. Both survived, one with severe burns.

    Opposition politician Antonio Di Pietro, leader of the Italy of Values (IDV) party, criticized the government's reform agenda in parliament, and said Monti had the suicides of people who can't make it to the end of the month "on his conscience".

    At a news conference on Wednesday, Monti refused to reply to the comments from Di Pietro, a fiery former anti-corruption magistrate, who was one of the harshest critics of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

    Italy is struggling with a recession, rising unemployment and increasingly severe austerity measures.

    Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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  • 'I've got snakes on a plane': Pilot makes emergency landing

    An Australian pilot was forced to make an emergency landing after a snake slithered into his cockpit. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    A pilot made an emergency landing during a flight in Australia, reportedly telling air traffic controllers, "Look, you're not going to believe this. I've got snakes on a plane."

    Australia's ABC News reported that Braden Blennerhassett, 26, swiftly put the Air Frontier plane on the ground after making the unusual mayday call during a flight from Darwin to the remote town of Peppimenarti on Tuesday. Air Frontier offers charter and scenic flights throughout Australia’s northern territory.


    "My blood pressure and heart rate was a bit elevated -- it was an interesting experience," Blennerhassett told Nine News. "As the plane was landing, the snake was crawling down my leg, which was frightening."

    On the ground, a firefighter discovered that the snake that crawled down Blennerhassett's leg was not alone -- a green tree frog was also on the aircraft, Nine News reported. No other wildlife was found, and both animals had disappeared by the time a wildlife ranger came for them.

    Frog hunted?
    It is thought the snake, believed to be a non-venomous green tree snake, may have been hunting the frog, Nine News said.

    Geoffrey Hunt, director of Air Frontier, which owns the plane, clearly hadn't seen the Hollywood film "Snakes on a Plane."

    "I have heard of crocodiles being loose in planes, but not snakes," he told ABC News.

    He added that the plane was grounded "until we find the snake," expressing the hope that the aircraft would not have to be taken apart.

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  • With $10 million bounty on his head, Pakistan militant openly taunts US

    Aamir Qureshi / AFP - Getty Images

    Hafiz Saeed, who is suspected of masterminding the attack on India's financial capital Mumbai in 2008 that killed 166 people, leaves a news conference in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, on Wednesday. Released from house arrest in 2009, Saeed is a free man.

    RAWALPINDI, Pakistan --  Who wants to be a millionaire? In Pakistan, all you have to do is give the United States information leading to the arrest or conviction of Hafiz Saeed -- an Islamist leader whose whereabouts are usually not a mystery. Saeed is suspected of masterminding the attack on India's financial capital Mumbai in 2008 that killed 166 people, including six Americans.

    U.S. authorities placed a bounty on Monday of up to $10 million on Saeed, but on Wednesday he was openly wandering across Pakistan's military garrison town of Rawalpindi, hanging out with some of the most anti-American characters in the country.

    "This is a laughable, absurd announcement. Here I am in front of everyone, not hiding in a cave," Saeed told a news conference at a hotel -- a mere 40-minute drive from the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad and just across from the headquarters of Pakistan's army, recipient of billions of dollars in U.S. aid.


    Saeed operates openly in Pakistan from his base in the eastern city of Lahore and travels widely, giving public speeches and appearing on TV talk shows. He has been one of the leading figures of the Difa-e-Pakistan, or Defense of Pakistan Council, which has held a series of large demonstrations in recent months against the U.S. and India.

    "Now that he has a price on his head, for this money anyone is willing to do anything," said Javed, a 55-year-old government employee who declined to give his full name. "Once people see the money there is no saving him, only God can save him."

    In Washington, U.S. officials said the decision to offer the $10 million reward under the State Department's longstanding "Rewards for Justice" program came after months of discussions among U.S. agencies involved in counter-terrorism.

    Khuram Parvez / Reuters

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

    The $10 million figure signifies major U.S. interest in Saeed. Only three other militants, including Taliban leader Mullah Omar, fetch that high a bounty. There is a $25 million bounty on the head of al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.

    At the same time it targeted Saeed, the U.S. government also offered a smaller reward -- $2 million -- for Hafiz Abdul Rahman Makki, whom it said was the second in command of the militant group founded by Saeed, Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT).

    As with many militants sought by the United States -- and unlike Saeed -- Makki's whereabouts are unknown to U.S. authorities. The bounty would be paid for information leading to his location. Makki is Saeed's brother-in-law.

    Pakistan banned LeT 2002 under U.S. pressure, but it operates with relative freedom under the name of its social welfare wing Jamaat-ud-Dawwa — even doing charity work using government money.

    The U.S. has designated both groups as foreign terrorist organizations. Intelligence officials and terrorism experts say LeT has expanded its focus beyond India in recent years and has plotted attacks in Europe and Australia. Some have called it "the next al-Qaida" and fear it could set its sights on the U.S.

    Bin Laden widows sentenced to jail

    The announcement of a reward for Saeed comes at a time of heightened tension between the United States and Pakistan and is likely to increase pressure on Pakistan to take action against the former Arabic scholar. It is also likely to please India, the target of numerous LeT attacks.

    'US is acting like it's Clint Eastwood'
    Released from house arrest in 2009, Saeed is a free man in Pakistan, a strategic U.S. ally and one of the world's most unstable countries. The United States, which sees Saeed as a major security threat, is hoping the bounty will trigger a stampede of Pakistanis who come forward with information that could lead to his arrest and conviction. Pakistani officials say Saeed and Jamaat-ud-Dawwa have been cleared by Pakistani courts.

    Pakistan wants to dramatically overhaul the rules of engagement with the U.S. in an attempt to clarify relations that have deteriorated dramatically since the Osama bin Laden raid last year. In an exclusive Andrea Mitchell Reports interview, Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar explains the country's response if the U.S. refuses to ends its drone attacks.

    They say they don't understand what all the fuss is about and complain the Americans are acting like cowboys. "The United States is acting like it's Clint Eastwood," said a senior security official, speaking on condition of anonymity. "It's as if they just want to ride a horse into Pakistan and just drag people like him away."

    Another security official nodded in agreement while a television repeatedly showed footage of Saeed. "What would happen if we put a bounty on President (Barack) Obama's head because American drone strikes sometimes kill Pakistani civilians?" The drone strikes, which the United States regards as a highly effective and accurate weapon against militants, are deeply unpopular in Pakistan.

    Saeed, a short, bearded man with a quiet but intense demeanor and henna-dyed hair, has turned the drone strikes and other explosive issues like the presence of Western troops in Afghanistan into a rallying cry against the United States. That has won him support on Pakistan's streets.

    "He wants the drone strikes to stop. He wants the bloodshed in Afghanistan to end," said a senior police official in Pakistan's commercial capital Karachi. "Hafiz Saeed isn't saying anything wrong. In fact, he's a patriot."

    A Pakistani court has sentenced Osama bin Laden's three wives, and two of his daughters to 45 days in prison, for violating immigration laws. His youngest wife, who was with bin Laden when U.S. forces raided his compound last May, has provided the Pakistani Intelligence with a detailed account of the al-Qaida mastermind's life on the run since September 11, 2001. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.

    Some Pakistanis could not understand why the bounty was issued while Saeed is in plain view. His capture may ultimately depend on cooperation from Pakistan, often accused by the West of supporting militant groups. Pakistan denies the charges.

    "It is unlikely that anything will come out of this. You put bounties on people who are hiding, not those walking around free," said businessman Haris Chaudhry. "It's ridiculous."

    Bin Laden widow denies details of leaked statements

    Saeed, 61, founded LeT in the 1990s and it became one of South Asia's best-funded militant organizations. He abandoned its leadership after India accused it of being behind an attack on the Indian parliament in December 2001. India has long called for Saeed's capture, blaming the LeT for the Mumbai carnage. He denies any wrongdoing and links to militants.

    Lashkar-e-Taiba, which means Army of the Pure, belongs to the Salafi movement, an ultraconservative branch of Islam similar to the Wahabi sect — the main Islamic branch in Saudi Arabia from which al-Qaida partly emerged. Lashkar-e-Taiba and al-Qaida operate separately but have been known to help each other when their paths intersect

    Jihadists are entrenched in Kashmir and they're seeking to incite war between nuclear-armed Pakistan and India, author Dilip Hiro tells NBC's Carol Grisanti.

    Saeed, a former professor of Islamic studies, seemed unfazed by the bounty. As stern-faced bodyguards with AK-47 assault rifles kept a close watch, he ridiculed the Americans during his press conference at The Flashman's Hotel.

    He was flanked by some of Pakistan's most hard line Islamists who all belong to an alliance of groups campaigning for a break in ties with the United States and India. They included Sami-ul-Haq, a cleric best known as "the father of the Taliban" for his historical ties to the Afghan militant movement. Another member, Hamid Gul, a former head of Pakistan's intelligence service, was also present. On the edge of Islamabad, a Pakistani intelligence officer who has handled militant groups for decades, shook his head as he pondered the U.S. reward.

    Osama bin Laden's brother-in-law, Zakaria al-Sadah, spoke to NBC News in Islamabad in his first interview with an American television network. He said he is concerned for his sister, who was shot in the raid that killed the al-Qaida leader, and frustrated she and her children have been in custody ever since. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.  

    "If the guy who decided to do this could get a job in the State Department, then I could be the president of the United States," the chuckling operative, wearing a suit and puffing on a cigarette, said.

    "God bless America."

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Reports: Financier, 23, who ran up $315,000 bar bill arrested in trading probe

    A 23-year-old financier who garnered headlines after reportedly running up a bar bill of more than $315,000 last month has been arrested over suspected unauthorized trading.

    Alex Hope's spending during a night out in Liverpool, England, included a near-8 gallon bottle of Armand de Brignac Champagne known as the Ace of Spades that had to be carried to his table by two people. It alone was worth nearly $200,000, "the drinks business" website reported. It said this was a world-record bar bill at a nightclub, beating the previous record of $270,000 by U.S gambler Don Johnson in London last year. 


    "After just three years in finance, Hope is well known in the industry as a high flyer, and has been tipped by many to become one of the biggest traders in London," the website said last month.

    However, the U.K.'s Financial Services Authority posted a statement on its website on Tuesday saying police had carried out a search of an address in East London "into a suspected unauthorized foreign exchange trading scheme."

    "A 23-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of committing offenses" under financial and fraud regulations, the FSA said, adding that the man had not been charged "at this stage."

    'I can't talk'
    A FSA spokesman declined to comment on his identity when contacted by msnbc.com Thursday, but newspapers reportedly widely that it was Hope.

    "I can't talk. I've got no comment whatsoever, to be honest with you ... I don't want to comment on anything,” Hope told The Guardian.

    He has been more talkative in the past.

    Hope set up a "showreel" on YouTube, in which he said, "you don’t see a lot of people my age in the City [of London] doing what I do and I feel I've got lots of good opinions of the markets as well which you don't hear from people my age."

    Hope also promoted himself on his blog, alexhopefx, and on Facebook.

    "Alex knows and loves the FX [foreign exchange] market. Throughout his youth, his passions were football and…currencies!  At the age of 11, Alex had a deep-rooted interest in the different currencies and relished trips across Europe where he could explore this interest first hand," he wrote on the blog, according to the Daily Mail.

    "Opening his first account with just £500, in one day he'd doubled his money and turned the £500 into £1,100 by trading gold. A talented, charismatic and thoroughly likeable man, Alex Hope exudes knowledge and you can't help but respect and admire this self-taught and self-made young trader. Watch out trading markets, Alex Hope is kicking up a storm!"

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  • New Zealand charges owners of stricken ship with causing environmental disaster

    The owners of the stranded and sinking cargo ship Rena are being charged for damage in New Zealand's worst maritime environmental disaster. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    WELLINGTON, New Zealand -- The owners of a stricken container ship wrecked on a reef off a popular New Zealand holiday spot have been charged with causing the country's worst environmental disaster in decades, maritime officials said on Thursday.

    Daina Shipping, a unit of Greece's Costamare Inc., has been charged with discharging harmful substances after its 47,230-ton Liberian-flagged ship Rena struck a reef about 12 miles off Tauranga, New Zealand's biggest export port, in early October.


    The charge carries a maximum fine of $488,000. The owners face an additional daily fine of $8,130.

    PhotoBlog: Stern of stricken container ship sinks off New Zealand

    The ship's captain and second officer have already pleaded guilty to operating the ship in a dangerous manner, releasing toxic substances and to altering the ship's documents.

    The two Filipino men face sentences of up to seven years in jail. They will be sentenced in late May.

    Marine officials said high winds and seas have battered the wreck, causing more containers to fall into the sea and spreading oil still leaking from the ship.

    Maritime New Zealand via Reuters

    The bow section of the stricken container ship Rena remains above water about 14 nautical miles from Tauranga on the east coast of New Zealand's North Island, in this April 4 handout picture. The remains of the ship are stuck on a rock reef six months after it ran aground, in what authorities say is one of the nation's worst environmental disasters.

    The ship spilt around 3301 tons of thick, toxic fuel oil when it hit the reef, killing thousands of sea birds and polluting beaches up to 60 miles from the reef.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.
  • British couple flee Timbuktu as town falls to al-Qaida

    A British couple made a dramatic escape from Timbuktu, Mali, after the town fell to fighters linked to al-Qaida, The Daily Telegraph of London reported Wednesday.

    The newspaper said militiamen aided Neil Whitehead, 58, and Diane English, 53, in making an 850-mile desert trek to Nouakchott, the capital of Mauritania.


    The couple since 2010 operated the budget Hotel Alafia, catering to backpackers and independent travelers, until they learned al-Qaida offered to pay for their deaths, the Telegraph said.

    Read the original story in The Telegraph

    The town fell to the al-Qaida-linked fighters last weekend after a military coup left the area defenseless. The couple tried to leave Saturday but fleeing Mali soldiers blocked the roads, The Telegraph said.

    English told the Telegraph the couple ran into a firefight she called “rather alarming.”

    “We went back to the house again to keep our heads down but there was a lot of firing in the town -- it was clear a lot of people had a lot of weapons," English told the Telegraph.

    British and French diplomats helped arrange their escape through the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), the main rebel group in the region, the report said. This Tuareg force helped kinfolk in Libya during that country's civil war, then returned with weapons looted from Col. Moammar Gadhafi’s abandoned armories.

    The MNLA told alleged al-Qaida members hunting for the couple that they had already left, the Telegraph said. It's not clear what the relationship between the MNLA and the al-Qaida-linked fighters is.

    After a three-day, largely sleepless excursion in old army trucks, the couple are seeking refuge in the French Embassy in Nouakchott, the Telegraph reported.

    Bing map

    A British couple reportedly fled from Timbuktu, Mali, to Nouakchott, Mauritania.

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  • Auction house to sell blood from scene where Gandhi was killed

    mullocksauctions.co.uk

    It’s hard to discern from the photograph, but Mullock’s, a British auction house, believes it has a sample of dried blood and soil from the scene where Mahatma Gandhi was assassinated in 1948.

    Gandhi was steps from a prayer meeting when he was shot point blank by a Hindu radical. Amid the chaos, a man named P.P. Nambiar scoured the area for Gandhi’s blood, which he found on a nearly dried blade of grass. He gathered some soil and wrapped it all in a piece of Hindi newspaper he found nearby. 

    In 1996, Nambiar wrote that it was “the most sacred of all relics.” He preserved the soil and grass in a small wooden box with a clear glass lid.


    For that, Mullock will ask for between $15,000 to $23,000.

    Mullock will also auction Gandhi’s personal prayer book, round-rimmed steel glasses from when he studied law and a spinning wheel. The auction is scheduled for April 17.

    Richard Westwood-Brookes, the auction house's historical documents expert, told Reuters that he estimated that Gandhi’s letters and prayer book would sell for $127,000 to $158,000.

    "The letters are much easier to value because there's plenty of auction records which give a good pointer as to what an important Gandhi letter is worth,” Westwood-Brookes told Reuters. “But how on earth do you put an estimate on a piece of soil?"

    Gandhi’s descendants have called the auction, “reprehensible … morbid,” according to India’s Independent News Service. Gandhi, revered as India’s “father of the nation,” led movements to oust British colonialists from India and to alleviate poverty and improve women’s rights. He was a vegetarian and a firm believer in non-violent civil disobedience, employing an ethos that influenced the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

    In this 1946 photograph, Indian philosopher and nationalist leader Mahatma Gandhi, poses with women during his tour of Bengal province. Two years later, he was assassinated in New Dehli.

    “If the ownership of the other objects like the glasses, letters and a spinning wheel are valid, I don't see how you can stop private auctions from selling them,” Tushar Gandhi, Mahatma Gandhi’s great-grandson told the Indepdendent News Service.

    He said that he tried to pressure the Indian government to intervene in a sale of Gandhi’s bowls and plates in New York. “Many common Indians took it up as a matter of national pride,” he told the news service.

    Tara Gandhi-Bhattacharjee, Gandhi’s granddaughter, lamented that it wasn’t possible to stop the auction.

    “The auction is ironical, because Gandhi was a classical and an original minimalist,” she said. “If people want to donate to charity, they can. If we cannot hold him in spirit, what is the point of selling memorabilia of a man who was an apostle of non-violence and peace?”

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  • Report: North Korea's Kim Jong Un was poor student, chronic truant

    KCNA via Reuters file

    North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (L) watches a military exercise of the Korean People's Army in an undisclosed location, in this undated picture recently released by the official Korean News Agency KCNA.

    The current ruler of nuclear-armed North Korea was a laggard student who frequently skipped class when he was attending a school in Switzerland in the 1990s, according to the Daily Record news site.  

    The UK publication, citing leaked documents, reported that the Kim Jong Un, 29, who took the helm of the isolated totalitarian country upon the death of his father, Kim Jong Il, in December, missed 75 days of school his first year of school at the International School in Berne.

    Kim missed 105 days his second year at the elite private school, where he registered under a pseudonym as the son of a North Korean diplomat. It was not clear from the report which grade levels he was in at the time, but he would have been in his mid-teens.  


    An unnamed source who said he was a school friend of Kim said that Pak Un — as Kim was known there — often did not show up at school until afternoon, preferring instead to play video games or watch basketball on television.

    His grades seemed to suffer accordingly. According to the report, he failed science and got minimum pass grades in English and German, the main language used in the Swiss capital of Bern, but did well in music and technical studies.

    Kim Jong Un was enrolled in the Kim Il Sung Military University in Pyongyang from 2002 to 2007, most analysts agree.

    Kim Jong Un, now dubbed the "great successor," is the third-generation North Korean leader in his family, though virtually nothing was known about him before he was appointed to a set of powerful positions in 2011. His father, Kim Jong Il, came to power in a similar fashion, moving into the top military, government and party roles left by his father, Kim Il Sung, a communist guerrilla fighter who is considered the father of the country.

    North Korea analysts continue to puzzle over the newest Kim in charge. It remains unclear how much support he has within the military, and whether he has any inclination toward reform — seen as essential to restarting the country’s moribund economy and breaking the country’s isolation.

    The United States, South Korea and other allies were discouraged by Pyongyang’s recent insistence that it soon will launch a rocket — purportedly to put a satellite in orbit — but widely viewed as a pretext for a long-range missile test.

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  • Lifting the veil on Afghanistan's female addicts

    Left: A drug addict in Kabul smokes for an additional kick after injecting himself with heroin, Aug. 2007. Image: Saurabh Das / AP
    Right: An Afghan woman holds up opium as she attends a counseling session at the Nejat drug rehabilitation center, Jan. 2012. Image: Ahmad Masood / Reuters

    Reuters reports: Anita lifted the sky-blue burqa from her face, revealing glazed eyes and cracked lips from years of smoking opium, and touched her saggy belly, still round from giving birth to her seventh child a month ago.

    "I can't give breast milk to my baby," said the 32-year-old Anita, "I'm scared he'll get addicted.”

    Left: Male drug addicts sit in the detox room at the Kabul Drug Treatment and Rehabilitation Center, Sept. 2009 in Kabul, Afghanistan. Image: Paula Bronstein / Getty Images
    Right: Female drug addicts visit the Nejat drug rehabilitation center in Kabul, Jan. 2012. Image: Ahmad Masood / Reuters

    While it is not uncommon to see men shooting up along the banks of the dried up Kabul riverbed in broad daylight, women in the ultra-conservative culture of Muslim Afghanistan are expected to stay out of public view for the most part. They often have to seek permission from a male relative or husband to leave their home, and when they do they are encased in the head-to-toe burqa.

    No estimates are available on how many women are addicted to opium or heroin. Nejat estimates around 60,000 women in Afghanistan regularly take illegal drugs, including hashish and marijuana. Full story

    Left: An Afghan drug addict smokes heroin in the city of Ghazni west of Kabul, Afghanistan. Aug. 2007. Image: Musadeq Sadeq / AP
    Right: A woman addict sits cross-legged during a counseling session at the Nejat drug rehabilitation center, Jan. 2012. Image: Ahmad Masood / Reuters

    Left: An Afghan policeman stands behind a pile of burning illegal narcotics in Kabul, April 2009.
    Right: A drug addict waits for her turn to see doctors at the Nejat drug rehabilitation centre in Kabul, Jan. 2012. Images: Ahmad Masood / Reuters

    Left: Afghan farmers work in an opium poppy field in Nawa district of Helmand province, south of Kabul, Afghanistan, April 2009. Image: Abdul Khaleq / AP
    Right: A drug addict holds her child as she visits the Nejat drug rehabilitation center, Jan. 2012. Image: Ahmad Masood / Reuters

    Left: A doctor gives advice to a new detox patient in the Nejat detox program at the Kabul Drug Treatment and Rehabilitation Center, Sept. 2009 in Kabul, Afghanistan. Image: Paula Bronstein / Getty Images
    Right: An Afghan doctor explains the use of condoms to a group of women addicts at a counseling session at the Nejat drug rehabilitation center, Jan. 2012. Ahmad Masood / Reuters

    More photos from Afghanistan on PhotoBlog

    PhotoBlog: Saffron replacing heroin?

    More photos from Afghanistan in our slideshow: Nation at a crossroads

  • Did Scotland's new pandas mate? Lack of experience hinders pair

    In Edinburgh, Scotland, two new pandas from China have been confined together in the hopes that they would breed but so far, despite the zoo's best efforts, they appear disinterested. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Sweetie, a female giant panda, met her intended breeding mate, Sunshine, at Edinburgh Zoo a day ago.

    Sparks flew, there was "vocalization," lots of encouragement and some physical contact, but the prospective lovers did not close the deal due to a lack of experience, said Iain Valentine, director of research and conservation at the zoo.

    “Each time the pair met we saw a huge amount of eagerness and attraction between Tian Tian (whose name means Sweetie in Chinese) and Yang Guang (Sunshine)," Valentine said in a statement. "... He mounted her several times, however full mating did not occur. Although both have bred before and have borne cubs with other pandas, they are both still relatively inexperienced."


    With time running out for a mating this year, the pair may have to wait until 2013, zoo officials said.

    The pandas arrived in the Scottish capital in December from China as part of a 10-year conservation project. They have been munching their way through nearly 110 pounds of bamboo a day since then as they settled into their new home, the zoo said.

    Sweetie, 8, has previously given birth to twins. She is described by the zoo as being mischievous and quite fussy with her food, but also a panda of "great character and very smart." Sunshine, also 8, is a "gentle giant," who allows keepers to get very close and loves food and being outside -- even in heavy rain.

    The pair had their first close encounter after 9 a.m. Tuesday, when the zoo's "panda cams" were turned off and an indoor enclosure was lifted so they could make one another's acquaintance. "Amidst much excitement, most of it from the pandas, the two met," the zoo said in the statement.

    David Moir / Reuters

    Yang Guang, a male giant panda rubs himself against the barrier to the enclosure of female giant panda Tian Tian, as he walks in his enclosure at Edinburgh zoo in Scotland April 4, 2012.

    There were several other encounters on Tuesday and Wednesday, and they were to see each other later Wednesday. But the chances of achieving a successful mating this year have decreased, the zoo said. Females can only conceive once a year and there is a narrow 36-hour window to mate, which can make reproduction tough.

    Experts had decided the time was right after doing hormone testing and observing their behavior over several weeks. Valentine had noted Sweetie going into her pool in late March, which he said she was likely to be doing to cool down as her body prepared for ovulation, and that Sunshine was doing handstands to show "how fit and virile he is."

    Visitors had "also spotted them both with their paws up against the grate between the two outdoor enclosures at the same time, popularly dubbed the ‘love tunnel,’" Valentine said.

    The only pandas in the United Kingdom have been brought together for the first time, after it was determined that the female was ready to mate. Msnbc.com's Alex Witt reports.

    Although they didn't end up mating, the experience for them and the zoo was "immeasurable," the zoo said. 

    "We are hugely encouraged by how much the natural sparks flew between the two animals as, like humans, not all male and female pandas are attracted to each other. Both were keen to mate, but their inexperience showed," Valentine said.

    The pandas came to Scotland after an agreement was signed in January 2011 between the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland and the Chinese Wildlife Conservation Organization. China has historically sent the furry creatures abroad as a sort of cultural ambassador.

    Giant pandas are in serious decline due to habitat loss, with fewer than 1,600 remaining in the wild. China's Wolong National Nature Reserve has 60 sites set up to help protect the panda population and increase its numbers in the wild, which has helped, though they are still an endangered species, the zoo said.

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