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  • Japan approves reactor restarts, more seen

    Nearly a year after a tsunami and 9.0 magnitude earthquake hit Japan, NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel travels to the evacuation zone surrounding the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. The plant suffered a triple meltdown in the wake of the earthquake, turning the neighborhoods in the 12 mile radius of the plant into ghost towns. Engel journeyed near the mangled plant which remains very much a hotspot.  Radiation levels were so high, the NBC News team on the ground had to wear face masks and full body suits. Even as NBC News drove half a mile from the reactor, radiation monitors were screaming in alarm.

    TOKYO -- Japan on Saturday approved the resumption of nuclear power operations at two reactors despite mass public opposition, the first to come back on line after they were all shut down following the Fukushima crisis. 

    Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, his popularity ratings sagging, had backed the restarts for some time. He announced the government's decision at a meeting with key ministers, giving the go-ahead to two reactors operated by Kansai Electric Power Co at Ohi in western Japan. 


    The decision, despite public concerns over safety after the big earthquake and tsunami crippled the Fukushima plant, could open the door to more restarts among Japan's 50 nuclear power reactors. 

    But the decision risks a backlash from a public deeply concerned about nuclear safety. As many as 10,000 demonstrators gathered outside Noda's office on Friday night amid a heavy police presence to denounce the restarts, urging the premier to step down and shouting "Lives matter more than the economy." 

    "Prime Minister Noda's rushed, dangerous approval of the Ohi nuclear power plant restart ignores expert safety advice and public outcry and needlessly risks the health of Japan's environment, its people and its economy," environmental group Greenpeace said in a statement. 

    Rachel Maddow discusses the ongoing nuclear disaster in Fukushima a year after the Japan earthquake and tsunami. Rachel also talks with Salon.com's Mariah Blake about Texas billionaire Harold Simmons' huge nuclear waste dump over the Ogallala Aquifer located beneath the Great Plains.

    The decision is a victory for Japan's still-powerful nuclear industry and reflects Noda's concerns about damage to the economy if atomic energy is abandoned following the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl. 

    The restart is being closely watched as an indicator of how aggressively the government will act to approve operations at other reactors. It has been pushing hard to bring some reactors online as soon as possible to avert power shortages as demand increases during the summer months. It says the reactors in the town of Ohi are particularly important because they are in an area that relied heavily on nuclear before the crisis, and have passed safety checks.

    "Safety is our main concern," said trade and industry minister Yukio Edano. "We have approved the beginning of the restarting process. It will take some time for the reactors to begin generating electricity." 

    But officials acknowledged that a completely fail-safe disaster prevention plan was impossible. 

    Will Japan build a backup Tokyo?

    "There is no such thing as a perfect score when it comes to disaster prevention steps," Trade Minister Yukio Edano told a news conference after the announcement. 

    Japan's disaster at the Fukushima nuclear power plant in March 2011 contaminated the land around it so badly that the area was effectively a write-off. Today the radiation-infected area is known by a name Ray Bradbury would like: "the exclusion zone." NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel reports from inside the zone, part of his report for Rock Center with Brian Williams airing Wednesday, Mar. 7, at 10pm/9c on NBC.

    "But, based on what we learned from the Fukushima accident, those measures that need to be taken urgently have been addressed, and the level of safety has been considerably enhanced (at the Ohi plant)," he said. 

    Edano, who holds the energy portfolio, said the government policy to reduce Japan's dependence on nuclear energy in the medium- to long-term was unchanged despite the decision. 

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Nik Wallenda completes tightrope walk across Niagara Falls

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    Tightrope walker Nik Wallenda walks the high wire from the U.S. side to the Canadian side over the Horseshoe Falls in Niagara Falls, Ontario, June 15, 2012.

    Reuters reports: Nik Wallenda, a member of the famed "Flying Wallendas" family of aerialists, completed a historic tightrope crossing through the mist over Niagara Falls Gorge on Friday, stepping from a two-inch (5 cm) cable onto safe ground in Canada to wild cheers from onlookers.

    Wallenda made the walk from the U.S. side of the falls to the Canadian side, a journey of 1,800 feet (550 meters) over treacherous waters and rocks, in a little more than 25 minutes.

    Geoff Robins / AFP - Getty Images

    Tightrope walker, Nik Wallenda the first walk across Niagara Falls in over a century, braving winds and heavy spray in his historic feat.

  • College education not always ticket to better jobs worldwide

    Yannis Behrakis / Reuters

    Manolis Ouranos, a 30-year-old cook, works for the Mavros Gatos (Black Cat) tavern in Psiri neighboorhood in central Athens. Manolis studied at Athens Technology University (TEI) for four years where he received a degree in civil engineering. He hoped to find a permanent job in public sector infrastructure but has been working as a cook for four months instead. He now takes cooking lessons which he funds with his salary as a cook.

    Nearly 75 million people ages 15 to 24 are unemployed worldwide and the U.N. labor office predicts “the same high level” for at least the next four years.

    For eager university graduates in the crisis-hit European Union where one in five people under the age of 24 are out of work, finding a job is almost impossible. However, the problem isn’t confined to the EU. It’s a global problem and the U.N. expects 12.7 percent of youth globally to be unemployed in 2012. The International Labour Organisation also warns that many are trapped in low paid and low skilled jobs and others have simply given up looking.

    In order to illustrate the problem, Reuters photographed  portraits of graduates from around the world who have been unable to find work in their degrees and have ended up in service industry jobs.

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    Alessandro Bianchi / Reuters

    Francesca Baldi, 32, takes care of a seven-month-old baby in a private household in Rome on May 11. Baldi studied for five years at university in Pisa where she received a degree and a doctorate in literature and philosophy. She hoped to find a job as a teacher but has been working as a childminder for five months.

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Jessica Mazza, a 28 year-old waitress, serves a customer at Novel cafe in Santa Monica, Calif. Mazza studied for five years at Ball State University where she received a degree in painting and business management. She hoped to find a job as an artist but has been working in the cafe for just under a year. Picture taken, April 24.

    Noor Khamis / Reuters

    Denis Onyango Olang (right), a 26 year-old assistant cook, prepares food in a dimly lit kitchen at a hotel in Nairobi's Kibera slum in the Kenyan capital. Onyango Olang studied statistics and chemistry at Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology where he received a degree in science. He has been searching for permanent employment for two years but has decided to make a living working in the slums for the last eight months.

    Miguel Vidal / Reuters

    Tania Leon, a 29 year-old stewardess, poses for a picture inside a bus in Santiago de Compostela, Spain. Leon studied psychology at the University of Santiago de Compostela and received a degree in 2006. She was hoping to find a job as a psychologist but has been working as a stewardess for the last two years.

    Dado Ruvic / Reuters

    Almin Dzafic, a 30 year-old waiter, serves customers in the Galerija Boris Smoje cafe in Sarajevo. Dzafic studied for four years at Sarajevo University where he received a degree in civil engineering. For the last four years he has tried to find a job in art restoration but has been working as a waiter for two years. He sees his future outside of Bosnia and Herzegovina because he can not find a job.

    Amr Abdallah Dalsh / Reuters

    Wael Abo El Saoud, a 25 year-old farmer, harvests wheat on Miet Radie farm about 37 miles northeast of Cairo. Wael studied for four years at Benha University where he received a degree in commerce. He hoped to find a job as a bank accountant but has been working as a farmer for the last five years. He earns between 30 to 60 Egypt pounds a day but does not work all year round.

    Alessandro Bianchi / Reuters

    Francesco Foglia, 37, poses for a picture as he works as a street sweeper in downtown Rome. Foggia studied for six years at university in Rome where he received a degree and a doctorate in industrial chemistry. He hoped to find a job as a researcher but has been working as a street sweeper for Rome's municipality for two years. Picture taken on April 29.

    Peter Andrews / Reuters

    Marcin Lubowicki, a 28 year-old deputy manager of a McDonald's restaurant, shows his university diploma in front of the fast food chain in the Arkadia shopping mall, in Warsaw. Lubowicki, who has degree in Russian language from Warsaw University, has been working for McDonald's since 2007. He is planning to stay in his job.

  • Nigerian whistleblower under investigation for alleged corruption

    A Nigerian legislator who uncovered a $6.8 billion scam in state fuel subsidy payments has been suspended while police investigate claims he demanded a bribe from a fuel trader, in exchange for keeping him off the list.

    Farouk Lawan's parliamentary probe blew the whistle on one of the biggest corruption scandals in Nigeria's history in April, revealing a web of collusion between oil ministry officials and fuel marketers to claim subsidy payments for billions of gallons of fuel that was never delivered.


    But allegations that he demanded - and took some of - a $3 million bribe from one of Nigeria's richest oil tycoons Femi Otedola to scrub his name off the list have cast doubt on the whole report.

    A special NBC News series: What The World Thinks of U.S. Click here for the introduction

    "The house should suspend Farouk Lawan as the chairman of the ad-hoc committee on the monitoring of the utilization of the fuel subsidy pending the investigation of the bribery allegation against him," the resolution said.

    Lawan was still being questioned by police on Friday and unavailable for comment.

    The national press this week quoted Otedola as saying Lawan approached him for a bribe, some of which he paid but secretly filmed it so he could expose Lawan.

    When voting on the report, parliament inexplicably voted to remove Zenon from the list of fuel companies abusing the subsidy - the report initially estimated that Zenon owed at least $1.4 million to the government for fraudulent subsidy payments.

    The house also resolved on Friday to put Zenon back on the list in the report.

    It is not clear if the allegation is a smear campaign, a frequent tactic in Nigerian politics.

    Lawan had called for the board of the state oil firm to resign, including including its head, Oil Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke, and the firm's chief executive Austen Oniwon -- two of the most powerful people in Nigeria that few would dare take on.

    Parliament's speaker Aminu Tambuwal defended the probe into fuel subsidy abuses.

    "We reject in totality the insinuations that the allegation has eroded the integrity of the outcome of our investigation into the management of fuel subsidy," he said.

    "We have not been compromised ... in our stand against corruption."

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.
  • Egyptians protest against old regime day before presidential election

    Manu Brabo / AP

    An Egyptian protester chants slogans against presidential candidate Ahmed Safiq during a demonstration against the Supreme Constitutional Court rulings in Alexandria, Egypt, on June 15. Judges appointed by Hosni Mubarak dissolved the Islamist-dominated parliament Thursday and ruled his former prime minister eligible for the presidential runoff election this weekend, setting the stage for the military and remnants of the old regime to stay in power.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Egyptians gather to protest in Tahrir Square on June 15, in Cairo, Egypt. Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court ruled that the Islamist-led Parliament must be immediately dissolved, and also allowed the right of Hosni Mubarak's last prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, to run for president. Egyptian candidates Mohamed Morsi and Ahmed Shafiq are pegged against each other in the second round of voting for the country's president to be held on the 16th and 17th of June.

    Charlene Gubash, NBC News -- CAIRO -- Egypt's voters, already on edge after more than a year of rebellion and revolution, have been further polarized by Thursday's supreme court decision to dissolve the new Islamist-dominated parliament and allow a former prime minister to run for president.

    Many see the decision - taken by judges appointed by deposed president Hosni Mubarak - to let old regime holdover Ahmed Shafiq run in this weekend's run-offs as a soft coup by the ruling military government.

    Continue reading.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Egyptians gather to protest in Tahrir Square on June 15, in Cairo, Egypt. Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court ruled that the Islamist-led Parliament must be immediately dissolved, and also allowed the right of Hosni Mubarak's last prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, to run for president. Egyptian candidates Mohamed Morsi and Ahmed Shafiq are pegged against each other in the second round of voting for the country's president to be held on the 16th and 17th of June.

    Suhaib Salem / Reuters

    Protesters take part in a demonstration at Tahrir square in Cairo on June 15. Activists called for a protest on Friday and Islamists warned that the gains of the revolt that toppled Hosni Mubarak could be wiped out after Egypt's supreme court dissolved parliament and ruled to keep his last premier in this weekend's presidential race.

    With anger growing in Egypt over the  Mubarak verdict, protestors returned to Tahrir Square to demand justice for those who died in Egypt's revolution. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

  • Motivated by fear not hope, a polarized Egypt heads to the polls

    Voters will choose between a member of the old regime and the Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohamed Mursi. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    CAIRO -- Egypt's voters, already on edge after more than a year of rebellion and revolution, have been further polarized by Thursday's supreme court decision to dissolve the new Islamist-dominated parliament and allow a former prime minister to run for president.

    Many see the decision - taken by judges appointed by deposed president Hosni Mubarak - to let old regime holdover Ahmed Shafiq run in this weekend's run-offs as a soft coup by the ruling military government.  

    Others think it as a second chance to wrest control of the parliament from the Islamists. Those who were frightened by Islamists' tremendous political gains since the revolution rejoiced after the court's decision.


    "My friends were calling me and congratulating me," said the septuagenarian head of a prominent women's organization who asked to remain anonymous because she does not want to be seen as getting involved in politics. "At last we are done with that parliament.  Any Egyptian on the street is worth more than them."

    She didn’t vote in the first election but vows to brave long lines despite a bad knee to cast a ballot for Shafiq tomorrow. 

    Others who fear the return of the old regime lamented the court decision. 

    Dismay in Egypt as court orders newly-elected parliament to be dissolved

    "How can we elect somebody who watched the massacre of protesters and stood by and did nothing?" demanded Aly Ibrahim, a plumber. "The people voted in the parliament. How does the court have the right to overturn the people's decision.  It's not constitutional."

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Egyptians protest in Tahrir Square on Friday in Cairo, Egypt, after the country's supreme court ruled that the Islamist-led parliament must be immediately dissolved, and also allowed the right of Hosni Mubarak's last prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, to run for president.

    Ibrahim is boycotting the vote because he sees the Muslim Brotherhood candidate, Mohamed Mursi, as an academic not a political leader.  But he said many in his blue-collar neighborhood of Al Arab who were also going to skip the election have now decided to vote for Mursi because of yesterday's court decision. 

    His comrades are not necessarily going to vote for Mursi because they support him. Instead, their ballot will be an act of revenge against what they see as the ruling military government and their bid to return of the old regime to power through Shafiq.  

    Ibrahim predicts violence during the voting, which takes place on Saturday and Sunday.

    "There will be shooting at the polling stations [...] and if Mursi looses, Tahrir Square will be on fire," he said.

    Egyptians protest against old regime day before presidential election

    In an impassioned televised speech Thursday night, Mursi promised a second revolution if there is election fraud.

    "I will pay with the price of my life," he promised. 

    Threats?
    Many saw Mursi's words as a warning to foment unrest if he loses.  

    "Nothing but threats!" said Hanan Askar, housekeeper. "Now you see the true face of the Muslim Brotherhood.  Mursi's promises during the election meant nothing."

    "They want to take over everything and we will never get them out," she said.

    In Egypt's elections, politics is a new family affair

    Askar had planned on boycotting like most people in her low income-district called the Slaughterhouse. 

    Now she is going to go cast her ballot for Shafiq. 

    In Egypt's rural countryside, typically a conservative Muslim Brotherhood stronghold, veterinarian Abdul Sitar said people were enraged by the court decisions that snatched away the party's victory. 

    "Why would they overrule the will of the people," he argued.  "The parliament was chosen by the people." 

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    Presidential candidate Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood waves to a crowd outside a mosque after attending Friday Prayers in Cairo.

    He is going to vote Mursi and said everybody in his area is even more committed to vote him in.   

    On her way home to Helwan, an industrial area south of Cairo, a cook said people on her bus were cheering "Shafiq, Shafiq!!" 

    She said nobody from her area is voting Mursi because, according to recent media reports, he is physically unfit to serve as president.

    PhotoBlog: Egypt court rules Shafik can run in presidential election

    The April 6 organization, which played an integral role in helping organize the revolution that toppled the former president, have already called for a march to Tahrir against yesterday's decision and against a Shafiq win. 

    The influential revolutionary movement has already endorsed Islamist Mursi to stop the old regime from rolling back whatever gains have been made since they toppled a dictator.  

    Nobody can predict who will win as voters go to the polls on Saturday and Sunday to make the hardest choice yet facing their young democracy. 

    But one thing is certain -- the future will be anything but boring and turmoil will ensue no matter what the result. 

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  • US official: Russia sends troops to Syria as peace hopes fade

    NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports that a Russian military ship carrying troops is on its way to Syria to protect a Russian deep water port.

    Russia is sending armed troops to Syria amid escalating violence there, United States military officials told NBC News Friday, in a move certain to frustrate Western efforts to put pressure on the regime of President Bashir Assad.

    Moscow has sent a ship carrying a small contingent of combat forces to guard Russia’s deep-water port and military base at the Syrian city of Tartus, the US officials said.


    The U.S. officials also said Russia has not sent additional attack helicopters to the Syrian government, but replacement parts for the Russian helicopters the Syrians are already flying.

    Days before President Barack Obama's meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, there has been a war of words between the U.S. and Syria's longtime military supplier. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    It comes after the conflict was declared by France on Wednesday to be a full-blown civil war.

    The head of the U.N. observers in Syria said Friday a recent spike in bloodshed is derailing the mission to monitor and defuse more than a year of violence and could prompt the unarmed force to pull out. 

    "Violence over the past 10 days has been intensifying willingly by the both parties, with losses on both sides and significant risks to our observers," Maj. Gen. Robert Mood told reporters in Damascus. "The escalating violence is now limiting our ability to observe, verify, report as well as assist in local dialogue and stability projects." 

    Tartus is one of Russia’s most strategically-important assets, giving it military access to the Mediterranean Sea.

    Russia and China, both permanent members of the U.N. Security Council with veto power, frustrated attempts by key Western figures, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, to enforce a United Nations peace plan brokered by special envoy Kofi Annan.

    Russia’s foreign minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday repeated Moscow's strong opposition to external interference in Syria, said it was not discussing plans for a Syrian political transformation following the exit of Assad.

    PhotoBlog: Inside Syria

    At a news conference after talks with his Iraqi counterpart, Lavrov said he had seen reports saying U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland had suggested Washington and Moscow were discussing a post-Assad strategy in Syria. 

    "If that was really said then it's not true," Lavrov said. "Such discussions are not being held and cannot be held, because to decide for the Syrian people contradicts our position completely. 

    "We do not get involved in overthrowing regimes - neither through approval of unilateral actions by the U.N. Security Council nor by participation in any political plots." 

    Nuland was asked at a news conference on Thursday whether the United States and Russia were discussing a transition of power similar to that seen in Yemen last year, in which President Ali Abdullah Saleh was replaced by a deputy. 

    "We are continuing to talk about a post-Assad transition strategy in that context," she said.

    Government forces in Syria have driven rebel fighters out of the town of Haffa near the Turkish border and are now allowing UN monitors to enter the area. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    Lavrov said any broad international talks on Syria must include Iran and must only address ways to create conditions for a political dialogue in Syria - not the content of that dialogue or preconditions such as Assad's exit. 

    Russia, which has come under increasing criticism from the West for arms deliveries to Syria, responded to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's allegations that attack helicopters were on the way from Russia to Syria. 

    In a statement on the Foreign Ministry website, Russia said it had made no new deliveries of military helicopters to Syria but under old contracts it had repaired helicopters sent to Syria "many years ago". 

    "There are no new deliveries of Russian military helicopters to Syria. All arms industry cooperation with Syria is limited to a transfer of defensive arms," the ministry said on its website. 

    "As regards helicopters, planned repairs of (helicopters) delivered to Syria many years ago were conducted earlier," it said. It did not say when they had been repaired or, if they were repaired in Russia, when they were returned to Syria. 

    Inside Syria: War-torn city of Homs scarred by violence, riddled with fear

    Syria's ambassador to Russia said on Thursday Russia had not sent new attack helicopters to Syria. 

    Russia says it is fulfilling existing contracts for air defense systems against external attacks. President Vladimir Putin, due to meet U.S. President Barack Obama next week, said the weapons Russia sends could not be used in civil conflicts. 

    A source close to Russia's arms exporting monopoly Rosoboronexport said Clinton's comments may have referred to helicopters sent to Russia in 2009 for repairs and which may be on the way back to Syria. 

    The source said on Wednesday at least nine Mi-25 helicopters were sent to Russia's Baltic exclave of Kaliningrad to be repaired by Oboronservis, owned by the Defense Ministry. 

    Russia delivered three different missile systems including Bastion anti-ship missile units and another anti-aircraft system to Syria last year. 

    At least two ships carrying Russian weapons have reportedly travelled to Syria since the beginning of the year, though possibly not on behalf of state arms exporter Rosoboronexport. 

    Reuters contributed to this report. Jim Miklaszewski is the chief Pentagon correspondent for NBC News. 

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  • Replacing pickets with missiles: Spanish mining protests grow violent

    Emilio Morenatti / AP

    Miners run from tear gas fired by riot police officers as they try to defend their position inside the mine "El Soton" during clashes in El Entrego near Oviedo, Spain, on June 15. Strikes, road blockades, and mine sit-ins continue as 8,000 mineworkers at over 40 coal mines in northern Spain continue their protests against government action to cut coal subsidies.

    Emilio Morenatti / AP

    Miners run away from tear gas fired by riot police officers, unseen, as they try to defend their position near the mine "El Soton" during clashes in El Entrego near Oviedo, Spain, on June 15.

    Emilio Morenatti / AP

    Coal miners shout slogan against the police as they defend their positions near the mine "El Soton" during clashes in El Entrego near Oviedo, Spain, on June 15.

    On Tuesday, AP reported -- Striking coal workers blocked roads with burning tires and fired missiles at police to stop them breaking up protests in northern Spain on Tuesday, officials from the recession-hit country said.

    While some miners have remained underground for 23 days, thousands of others in the northern provinces of Asturias and Leon set tires alight — sending plumes of black smoke into the night sky — to highlight calls for negotiations on job cuts, said Anibal Vazquez, mayor of Mieres.

    Read the complete story.

    Eloy Alonso / Reuters

    Coal miners fire a rocket during a clash with Spanish national riot police in the surroundings of the "El Soton" coal mine in El Entrego, near Oviedo, northern Spain on June 15. The miners were protesting against the government's proposal to decrease funding for coal production.

    Eloy Alonso / Reuters

    A coal miner use a slingshot in a clash with Spanish national riot police in the surroundings of the "El Soton" coal mine in El Entrego, near Oviedo, northern Spain on June 15. The miners were protesting against the government's proposal to decrease funding for coal production.

    Emilio Morenatti / AP

    Miners fire handmade rockets at riot police officers, unseen, as they defend their positions near the mine "El Soton" during clashes in El Entrego near Oviedo, Spain, on June 15.

    Emilio Morenatti / AP

    Coal miners are seen behind their handmade shields as they defend their position from riot police officers inside the mine "El Soton" during clashes in El Entrego near Oviedo, Spain, on June 15.

  • Public outcry helps lift ban on 9-year-old food blogger

    Courtesy of David Payne

    Scottish schoolgirl Martha Payne, 9, can now continue blogging about her school lunches -- which often leave something to be desired, like the sad-looking pizza and croquette above.

    A ban on a popular food blog documenting school lunches run by a 9-year-old girl in West Scotland was reversed Friday after a firestorm on social media.

    Martha Payne, who goes by “VEG,’’ on her blog, NeverSeconds, posted on Thursday that she was told she was no longer allowed to take photos of the food in the cafeteria of her school, Lochgilphead Primary in Argyll. The blog had spurred discussion over the quality of school food offerings and received more than two million page views while grabbing the attention of British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver.

    Story: Food blogger, 9, crusades for better school lunches

    Oliver initially helped catapult the blog to success by linking to it in a tweet to his 2 million of followers, saying, “Shocking but inspirational blog. Keep going. Big love from Jamie x.” After hearing of the ban, Oliver again expressed his support via Twitter Friday, urging Martha to "stay strong."

    Twitter

    After the ensuing outcry over the ban on Twitter and other social media, Roddy McCuish, the leader of the Argyll and Bute Council, made the decision to allow her to continue posting photos on her blog, deeming the ban a form of censorship.

    “There's no place for censorship in the Argyll and Bute council and never has been and there never will be,’’ McCuish told BBC radio. “I've just instructed senior officials to immediately withdraw the ban on pictures from the school dining hall. It's a good thing to do, to change your mind, and I've certainly done that."

    Martha's father, David, told TODAY.com via email that "Martha is very pleased the ban has been lifted and she's looking forward to continuing to blog," adding, "She is more pleased at the incredible response to Mary's Meals and is beaming." Mary's Meals is a charity that brings food to hungry children and Martha has been helping raise money for the organization through her blog. 

    The council’s main ire came from a headline in a Scottish newspaper saying “Time to Fire the School Dinner Ladies,’’ in reaction to Payne's depiction of the food offerings.

    McCuish’s reversal came only hours after the council had issued a statement saying “Argyll and Bute Council wholly refutes the unwarranted attacks on its schools catering service which culminated in national press headlines which have led catering staff to fear for their jobs."

    The council went on to say that the blog "misrepresented the options" in the cafeteria, and that the ban was needed to "protect staff from the distress and harm [the blog] was causing."

    McCuish said he will be getting to the bottom of how the ban was enacted and who was responsible.

    “I will be dealing with that in due course,’’ he said. “I don’t know what went wrong, but I will do my best to find out.”

    He added that there have been no complaints regarding the catering in the school up to now and that he is “comfortable’’ with the catering in the school. He also said that the cafeteria women who came under fire in the newspaper articles have “100 percent backing’’ from him.

    In a previous interview, Martha told TODAY.com that since she started blogging about her lunches, “The sizes have improved but it’s not still the nicest food.”

    More from TODAY Food:

  • Three dead, one critical in Alberta campus shooting

    REUTERS/Dan Riedlhuber

    Police investigate the scene of an armored-car robbery at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Friday.

    Three people were killed and one is in critical condition after a shooting at the scene of an apparent armed robbery at the University of Alberta campus in Edmonton, Canada early Friday, according to reports.

    “It was an apparent armed robbery of armored vehicle and or vehicles,” police spokesman Scott Pattison told the National Post of Canada.


    “The university was quickly put into lockdown, it has its own protocols and it remains in lockdown now,” he said. “It’s a crime scene so students are required to stay remain in their dorms.”

    Dan Riedlhuber/Reuters

    Police investigate the scene of an armored-car robbery at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Friday.

    No students were involved in the shooting, he added.

    Pattison told CTV the victims are all thought to be employees of an armored vehicle security company. "The suspect and or suspects remain at large at this time," he told the station.

    The shooting happened shortly after midnight in the Hub Mall area, which is a combination of student residences and shops, according to an Associated Press report.

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  • Starring role for China's first female astronaut

    AFP - Getty Images

    Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force fighter pilot Liu Yang, left, together with her two male colleagues, Jing Haipeng, center, and Liu Wang, right, in their spacesuits as they pose for an official photo at the Jiuquan space base, in China's Gansu province. Picture taken on June 12, 2012 and made available on June 15.

    Jason Lee / Reuters

    Liu Yang answers a question during a news conference on June 15, 2012.

    China will send its first woman into space Saturday along with two other astronauts for the nation's first crew-controlled docking with a temporary space station, taking a key step toward setting up a permanent base in orbit.

    Liu Yang, a 34-year-old air force pilot, and two male colleagues will be launched Saturday aboard the Shenzhou 9 spacecraft, which will dock with the bus-sized Tiangong 1 space module now orbiting 213 miles above Earth. Read the full story.

    NASA, ESA, CXC, JPL, Caltech and

    See out-of-this-world views of a solar eclipse, the high points of a milestone space mission and other stunning cosmic images from May 2012.

  • AFP - Getty Images

    2,500 houses torched in a week in Myanmar sectarian clashes

    A fire truck arrives at a site where houses are on fire in Sittwe, capital of the western state of Rakhine, Myanmar, on June 15, 2012.

    More than 30,000 people have been displaced by deadly sectarian clashes in western Myanmar, a senior local official said on Thursday, and at least 29 people have been killed since June 8, with scores more wounded.

    More than 20 houses were burned down late on Thursday in a village near Sittwe, residents said, adding to the 2,500 torched in the past week. But there were no reports of further deaths.

    -- Agence France Presse and Reuters contributed to this report

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

  • 'Forest Boy' mystery solved: Man admits lies over identity

    AFP / Getty Images

    Known as "Forest Boy," a young man turned to authorities in Berlin nine months ago saying he had lived in a forest for five years and did not know who he was.

    Updated at 9:40 a.m.: MAINZ, Germany - Police in Berlin said on Friday the mysterious "Forest Boy", who turned up in the German capital nine months ago claiming to have lived in woods for several years, has admitted inventing his story after he was identified.

    Investigators said a woman in The Netherlands contacted Dutch police, saying she recognized the young man as her 20-year old step-son who had gone missing in September.

    Police said the man admitted inventing the story about his name, background and supposed 'wild' life in the woods.


    "We are 100 percent certain that he is this 20-year-old boy, because his step-mother positively identified him," a police spokeswoman told Die Welt.

    The woman said she saw a picture that had been issued to the international press on Wednesday by German authorities seeking clues on the mystery man’s identity.

    The boy, who first told police he was called Ray, told authorities he had been living in woods until the death of his father. He said his father told him he was born June 20, 1994 -- which would have made him 17 -- but claimed not to know his last name or where he was from.  

    'Forest boy' mystery: Stumped German police release photo

    Ursula Kinzel, a spokeswoman for the Berlin police told NBC News: "In the police interrogation today, the young man admitted that his name is Robin and that he had made up the story which he had been telling police and youth authorities for the past 10 months." 

    Kinzel added that "officials here are evaluating whether they will launch criminal proceedings over social benefit fraud against the Dutch man".

    "It turns out that the young man presented a Pinocchio story,"  police spokesman Michael Maass added. "We now know that the young man turned 20 in April and was reported missing in the Netherlands by his family last September."

    AFP / Getty Images

    German investigators say a woman in The Netherlands contacted Dutch police to say she recognized "Ray" as her 20-year old step-son who had gone missing in September.

    Officials stressed that the young man has not been placed under arrest and that he would be free to leave.

    "Ray" told police his mother, Doreen, died in a car accident when he was 12, after which he and his father, Ryan, took to the forest. He said they wandered using maps and a compass, and stayed in tents or caves overnight. 

    However, police said he had quickly adapted to city life and technology, using a laptop and cell phone with no problems. "There are many question marks," police spokesman Thomas Neuendorf said on Wednesday.

    The case echoes that of the 'Piano Man', a mysterious figure who turned up at a hospital in Britain in 2005 apparently unable to speak and with no clues to his identity except a talent for playing the piano. After spending months in a psychiatric hospital he admitted he was a German man who had fled to Britain after losing his job. 

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  • Libyans could be turning against the West, think tank says

    AFP - Getty Images

    Members of Libya's security forces look at a British convoy car that was attacked by a rocket-propelled grenade in Benghazi on Monday.

    Libyans who overthrew dictator Moammar Gadhafi could now be turning on the West, according to a counter-extremism think tank that says militant Islamists are exploiting the country’s fragile security situation.

    A recent string of attacks on Western targets – including one on United States diplomatic offices in Benghazi – has been carried out by an armed group whose “language and choice of targets reflect a Jihadist influence," according to the London-based Quilliam Foundation.


    The warning echoes concerns by observers and some U.S. intelligence sources that the collapse of the Gadhafi regime could be exploited by groups seeking to turn Libya into an Islamic state.

    Fourteen armed militias were killed ear Tripoli on Wednesday in the third straight day of fighting, underscoring the country's volatility ten months after Gadhafi's overthrow.

    The country is preparing for a July 7 election to choose a national assembly that will write a new national constitution. Bouts of deadly violence, mostly in the southern Sahara and in the mountainous west, have highlighted old feuds between rival factions that pre-date the Gadhafi era.

    “The recent events in Libya underline the fragile security situation in the country and the difficulties faced by the Libyan authorities in creating a stable environment, thus generating a security vacuum ready to be exploited by various militant groups,” Noman Benotman, a former Libyan jihadist who now works for the Quilliam Foundation, told msnbc.com.

    Benotman said a group named the Sheikh Omar Abdul Rahman Brigade has claimed responsibility for attacks in Benghazi in recent days -- two against the neutral International Red Cross (ICRC) headquarters and one each against the U.S. offices in the city and the British Ambassador’s motor convoy.

    The brigade is named after “The Blind Sheikh” Omar Abdul Rahman who is currently serving a life sentence in the U.S. for his connections to the 1993 World Trade Center bombings.

    Don Emmert / AFP, file

    Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, shown here in a picture from 1993, gives his name to the Sheikh Omar Abdul Rahman Brigade, which has claimed responsibility for recent attacks in Libya. The so-called Blind Sheikh is currently serving a life sentence in the U.S. for his connections to the 1993 World Trade Center bombings.

    Benotman said the first attack on the ICRC mission, on May 22, was carried out after the group accused the organization of distributing Bibles and facilitating missionary lectures aiming to convert Libyan Muslims to Christianity.

    Slideshow: Libya's uprising

    The Sheikh Omar Abdul Rahman Brigade, and similar groups, “take advantage of the accessibility to weapons, explosives and combat facilities available in the country since the Libyan revolution,” he said. “Inspired by a Jihadist ideology, the group can also increase its impact and attract dozens of Libyans who were previously involved in fighting to overthrow the Gadhafi regime.”

    He said Libyan authorities “still face a serious gap in their attempt to control the security situation between the bureaucratic and the operational levels.”

    In September, U.S. intelligence officials told the Washington Times that Jihadists among the Libyan rebels planned on the Internet to subvert the post-Gadhafi government and create an Islamist state.

    The sources said spy agencies were stepping up surveillance of Islamist-oriented elements among Libyan rebels, and that a U.S. government report circulated Tuesday detailed how extremists were observed “strategizing” on Internet forums about how to set up an Islamist state in Libya.

    Could Libya be the next Mediterranean tourism hotspot?

    More than 600 former al-Qaida–linked militants, rounded up by the Gadhafi regime during the post-U.S. invasion Iraq insurgency, were freed from Tripoli's Abu Salim prison during last year’s political revolution.

    However, Benotman’s warnings were played down by Richard Dalton, the former British Ambassador to Libya and Associate Fellow of the Middle East and North Africa Programme at British think tank, Chatham House.

    He told msnbc.com: “Libya is not a fertile area for Jihadism, and not a natural recruiting ground for Islamist extremism. Apart from some eastern and southern areas, there is little evidence that Jihadists are posing a substantial threat to the country’s security any more than they would in any other country in the region."

    “There is not a political vacuum in Libya. The overall picture is one that is heading more towards progress than setbacks and the ability to overcome incidences of violence.”

    The former Libyan intelligence officer Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, who was convicted of taking part in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing but was released after eight years for health reasons, has died in Libya of prostate cancer. NBC's Jim Maceda reports from London.

    Dr Omar Ashour, director of the Middle East Graduate Studies Program at the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, University of Exeter, and a visiting fellow in the Brookings Doha Center, has reported that former Jihadists in Libya, such as Abd al-Hakim Belhaj, the commander of Tripoli's Military Council, have been forced to “mature politically, recalculate strategically, moderate behaviorally [and] modify their ideological beliefs”.

    “The National Transitional Council, with the support of NATO has a good chance of avoiding an Iraq-like or an Algeria-like scenario in Libya,” he wrote in an article for Foreign Policy.

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  • 'People need some way out': Bartering takes hold in austerity-wracked Greece

    NBC News

    Artemis Zafiriou at market in Volos, Greece. "I want to use euro but it's very expensive and I believe trade is better," she says.

     

    VOLOS, Greece -- Residents of this town in northeastern Greece are resorting to an age-old solution to deal with a desperate new problem –- using barter instead of cash for essentials.

    "I want to use euro but it's very expensive and I believe trade is better," said 30-year-old Artemis Zafiriou, who works at an agency helping immigrant workers but hasn’t been paid in months.

    The port town of Volos is like countless other communities in Greece, where millions are strapped for cash amid crushing European Union-imposed austerity measures. A steady flow of people come and go at the unemployment office, but most find no work.


    So Zafiriou and her partner Kostas Christou, 40, have joined a small but growing network of people who trade goods and services without cash.   

    In Greece, a senior judge is to be put in charge of a caretaker government to run the country until a new General Election on June 17. Questions are growing over whether the country's finances will last that long. Hundreds of millions of euros have been withdrawn from Greek banks in recent days over fears of a departure from the euro - and return to a devalued drachma. Jonathan Rugman, Channel Four Europe reports.

    They sell chicken eggs, homemade marmalade and soap at an open-air market in town. Looking like a mix between a flea market and a farmers' market, it is packed with colorful stalls displaying fresh produce, home-baked bread, second-hand clothes and jewelry. 

    Members can also go online and buy or sell services like yoga classes and piano lessons. An alternative currency, known as TEMs in Greek, is used. When members sell their goods or services, either online or at the market, these accrue in their online account and can be used to buy from other members. 

    Portraits of Greek survival in an economic meltdown

    The Volos barter network -- people can join for free online -- started two years ago with only 15 members.  As the Greek economy continued its rapid decline the network mushroomed to 600 active members. About 400 more are registered with the network.

    NBC News

    TEM - an alternative currency in Greece.

    "People need some way out, some other way to do things.  I guess also people need to get to know each other," said founding member Christos Papaioannu.

    The market is not simply about trading goods -- it is a way for people to reconnect with their community and foment solidarity during difficult times.

    The world braces for messy impact from Greece

    "There is no middleman, everyone exchanges directly -- it makes people happy," Papaioannu said.

    Irene Blomy, a school teacher who was at the market to sell her five-year-old son George's puzzles, said bartering gave comfort from daily economic woes.

    "Things are getting worse and worse in Greece. There is no future for the next few years there," says Christos Christoglou, a Greek inspection engineer, who moved to Germany to find work.

    "It's very nice, I think I don't have stress," she said. "When you have to buy something in euros you're always in stress. But now I'm OK."

    The market is not meant to completely replace the euro, Papaioannou said.

    "It's a parallel way, but a way where people decide together how to arrange and deal with things. Everything is transparent, and open. Everything is small scale.” 

    Customers flock to Greek farmers selling cheap spuds

    Zafiriou, whose first sale was one of her marmalades, said she hopes to accrue enough TEMs to buy feed for the chickens back on the farm.

    That may not be enough for her and her partner, Kostas Christou, 40, a contract electrical technician who works for the Greek Army who took a 50 percent cut in his salary 12 months ago. 

    Until a few weeks ago very few people had heard of him, but Alexis Tsipras could soon be the next Prime Minister of Greece. His anti-austerity stance won his party second place in the recent election, and the forecasts for next month's run-off suggest they could do even better.

    The couple live on the outskirts of town in a small farm started with money borrowed from the local bank. Their chickens, ducks and six goats have so far helped augment their drastically reduced income.

    Greece abandons quest to form new government

    But now they are struggling to pay the monthly mortgage as well as buy basic supplies, including feed for their goats and chickens. 

    "I have debt in the bank, and if I don't manage to pay the bank, the bank will come here and take the field and my home,” Christou said.

    "I don't know what to do," he added. 

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  • Last fugitive in 1995 Tokyo subway gas attack arrested

    Asahi Shimbun / AFP/Getty Images

    FILE PHOTO: On March 20, 1995, subway passengers waited to receive medical attention after inhaling nerve gas.

    Updated at 7:11 a.m. ET: TOKYO - After 17 years on the run, the last remaining member of the Japanese doomsday cult wanted for the deadly 1995 sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway system was arrested by police Friday.

    Katsuya Takahashi, a former member of the Aum Shirikyo cult who is believed to have been responsible for transporting cult members to the site of the subway attack, which left 13 dead and 54 wounded.


    He was arrested at a 24 hour comic book cafe after a tip-off to Tokyo police from a cafe employee.

    The search for Takahashi had been dormant for close to two decades, but took a dramatic turn earlier this month when another former cult member Naoko Kikuchi who had been wanted for her involvement in the sarin production, was apprehended by the police.

    Suspect in 1995 Tokyo gas attack arrested in Japan

    After questioning Kikuchi, investigators were able to piece together the last 17 years of Takahashi's life, leading them to the construction company where Takahashi had been working up until Kikuchi's arrest.

    From there, surveillance videos surfaced capturing images of Takahashi at a nearby bank and a shopping center.

    Takahashi has told police that he was only following orders from the cult, and wasn't aware of some of the operations' objectives.

    AP / Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department via Kyodo News

    Video footage of a surveillance camera released by Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department shows Katsuya Takahashi, a former member of Aum Shinrikyo cult, at a bank near Tokyo.

    Although the principle ringleaders of the cult have long been convicted and sentenced, authorities are hoping that this arrest of the last Aum Shirikyo suspect will shed new facts and details on the cults' most heinous crimes.

    The cult was founded in 1984 by leader Shoko Asahara on a doomsday principle that World War III would be instigated by the United States. Asahara predicted the world would come to an end in 1997.  

    Msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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  • Egyptian media target Islamist candidate

    Suhaib Salem / Reuters

    A man reads a newspaper featuring Muslim Brotherhood presidential candidate Ahmed Shafiq outside his shop in Cairo on Wednesday.

    CAIRO – With Egypt ready to go to the polls this weekend in the presidential run-off election – swords are being drawn between the Islamic Muslim Brotherhood’s political party and remnants of the old regime.

    On Thursday, judges appointed by former President Hosni Mubarak dissolved the Islamist-dominated parliament and ruled that Mubarak's former prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, can stand in the presidential runoff this weekend. 

    Prior to the dramatic court ruling – described as a military coup by some commentators – the  Egyptian media took to the airwaves to blast the Muslim Brotherhood’s presidential candidate, Mohamed Mursi, raising questions about whether he was even fit to serve as president if he won the election.


    Brain tumors, seizures, Hep C? 
    The popular Egyptian talk show, NassBook, on the Rotana satellite channel, disclosed what it claimed were private medical records from the United States and Egypt. The show asserted the records proved that Mursi had had operations to remove benign brain tumors, which could cause him to suffer from seizures as a result, and is afflicted with Hepatitis C.   

    Investigative reporter, Adel Hamoud, and talk show host, Hala Sarhan, displayed what they said was a pharmacy receipt showing that Mursi had purchased prescription medicine in the United States to treat Hepatitis C for 48 weeks.

    Dismay in Egypt as court orders newly-elected parliament to be dissolved

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    A protestor stands on a barricade of barbed wire as Egyptian military police stand guard during a protest against presidential candidate Ahmed Shafiq outside the Supreme Constitutional Court on Thursday.

    They also showed what they claimed was a request from Mursi for medical assistance from an Egyptian university for the equivalent of roughly $42,000. The TV presenters maintained that the amount requested by Mursi indicated he needed major surgery. 

    A separate newspaper report also alleged that Mursi had two operations to remove benign tumors in 1985 and 2008 in the U.S. and London, respectively. 

    Mursi’s media relations person, Dr. Murad Ali, called in to the talk show to defend the candidate, pointing to Mursi’s ability to take part in a punishing campaign schedule as proof that the candidate is in good health.  Ali repeatedly refused to answer pointed questions about previous brain surgeries. 

    Photo blog: Egypt court rules Shafik can run in presidential election

    ‘Spare has a flat’
    Whether the late breaking reports of ill health will sway undecided voters is still uncertain. Mursi’s bedrock supporters would vote for him “if he were a body in a coffin,” said one political observer. But others might be influenced by his alleged ill health.   

    “The spare has a flat,” quipped one voter. Egyptians jokingly refer to Mursi as “the spare” after he replaced Khairat El Shater as the Muslim Brotherhood candidate.  El Shater was disqualified days before the first round of voting because he was recently imprisoned under the Mubarak regime.

    Other stories in Thursday’s independent newspapers could discourage voters who are already lukewarm on Mursi. 

    The Shurouk newspaper’s headline promised “Details of the Secret Meetings Between the Brotherhood and the Military before the Elections.” The Al Dustour newspaper asked “Will Egypt become like Tunis??!!! The Brotherhood Rule Tunisia….and the people can’t remove them [from power].” And the Wafd paper warned its readers that “The Brotherhood will lead Egypt toward a Military Coup.” 

    Many here are considering voting for Mursi as the lesser of two evils. They view a vote for former Prime Minister Shafiq as a vote for the old disgraced regime. 

    In a hard-fought race between two candidates who were neck and neck in the first round of elections, each vote counts and the last thing any candidate wants at this point is negative press.

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  • Toyota unveils customizable compact car at Tokyo Toy Show

    Toyota has unveiled a new miniature car that has the appeal of a toy for children but actually runs as a car for adults. NBC's Arata Yamamoto reports.

    TOKYO – A car company at Tokyo’s Toy Show? 

    More than 200 companies displayed some 35,000 products at a toy industry preview on Thursday, ranging from board games to the latest computer games. And while the classic radio-controlled cars fit right in, there was one unlikely vendor promoting its newest product: Toyota.

    The Japanese car company used the Tokyo Toy Show to unveil its Camatte concept vehicle –  a compact car that can be dismantled and customized, just like a toy – and can hold up to three people.

    "It’s geared towards families with children with the goal of having fun and making the best car,” said Kenji Tsuji of Toyota's Product Planning Division.

    All of the outer body parts are held together with large plastic green knobs that are easily twistable, even for children. 

    While the weight of the frames would probably require some serous adult help, with a few dismantling and twist of screws, the Camatte can be transformed from a mini sedan into a classic retro car. 

    It also has adjustable seats and pedals so that a child that is at least 4 feet tall can take over the driver's seat and actually drive on go-cart courses, while an adult can sit in the back to assist in the steering and the braking.

    "This car is meant to get children interested in cars, and really to understand the sheer joy of cars," said Tsuji. "When the vehicle is dismantled, children can see how the pedals and the steering wheel functions.”

    Need to attract young drivers
    There's a reason why Tokyo would want to sow the seeds for future drivers.

    Japanese automakers have long been trying to woo back Japan's young generation, who are no longer appear as eager to own their own sets of wheels. 

    According to Japan's Automobile Manufacturer's Association, in a poll conducted in 2008, car ownership ranked 17th place on university students' wish list – trailing behind music players and computer games. Just 20 years ago, cars ranked number 7 on the wish list.

    Moreover, police statistics show that the number of teens between 16 and 19 years old applying for their driver's license dropped 3.2 percent in 2011 from the previous year.

    But Toyota is hoping that with some help from parents, and with early exposure to cars, that this trend can be reversed.

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  • Britain plans mass surveillance of private emails, text messages

    LONDON - Britain’s Government on Thursday confirmed plans to log details about every email, phone call or text message in the country to help anti-terror services track suspects.

    Police and security agencies will also be able to access records of activity on social network sites, webmail, Internet-based phone calls and online gaming.


    Britain’s Home Secretary, Theresa May, said the change – costing $2.7 billion public funds - was needed to keep up with how criminals were using new technology.

    But many others, including lawmakers from May’s own Conservative Party such as David Davis, who described it as “incredibly intrusive”.

    Under the proposed law, which has yet to be approved by parliament, telecoms companies would be obliged to gather a wealth of information on their customers and keep it for up to one year. 

    Read more on the story at ITV News

    Local councils would be barred from access to the data, but police, the security services, customs and tax officials would be able to use the information.

    The Home Office said it would not need to read the body text of emails or eavesdrop on phone calls without a warrant.

    The chief executive of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection told ITV News that he welcomed the government's new plans into tracking suspects through their use of emails and websites. Peter Davies said that data is needed "to protect the public" from serious offenders.

    However, Nick Pickles, director of privacy campaign group Big Brother Watch, said the proposals were "the very definition of Big Brother" and described the law as “dangerous”.

    In an editorial article in Britain’s Murdoch-owned mass-market daily tabloid, The Sun, May defended her proposals as “sensible and limited," adding that worries that the Bill would stomp on free expression were "ridiculous" and dreamed up by "conspiracy theorists." 

    The Home Office claimed the cost of the data-gathering would be covered by reductions in tax fraud and seizure of criminal assets.

    ITV News is the UK partner of NBC News.

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  • Gruesome photos put spotlight on China's one-child policy

    Family photo

    Photos of Feng Jianmei on her hospital bed after a forced abortion have been circulating on the web. The photos were taken by her sister who in turn contacted the media about the story. The photos originally appeared in a local newspaper report online and then they were picked by netizens and distributed online.

    Updated at 10:33 p.m. ET: China state media says city officials have apologized to Feng Jiamei and suspended three officials, the BBC reported.

    Xinhua news said the Ankang city government will urge the county government to review its family planning operations, according to the BBC report.

    BEIJING – Feng Jianmei  says she was manhandled by seven people, some of them local family planning officials, some of whom she didn’t know. 

    Feng, 22 years old and seven months pregnant, was dragged out of her relative’s home, carried and shoved into a van that headed straight to a hospital on June 2, she told NBC News in phone interview.

    She was blindfolded, thrown on a bed, and forced to sign a document that she couldn’t read with the blindfold still on her eyes. Then two shots were injected into her belly. Thirty hours later, on the morning June 4, she gave birth to a dead baby girl.

    Feng is one of the many Chinese women who have been forced to have abortions under China’s strict one-child-only policy started in late 1970s to contain the country’s fast growing population, which has now topped 1.3 billion people.


    One-child policy
    China’s long time Communist leader Chairman Mao Zedong originally encouraged women to have as many children as possible during the Cold War-era when human power was believed to be an important force if war broke out. But the country’s rulers soon found it too difficult to feed the huge population – so they adopted a harsh policy that allows urban citizens to have only one child, and rural couples to have two, if the first child is a girl.  

    The policy has been carried out for more than three decades despite public opposition, from human rights activists to ordinary people. Thousands of years of Chinese culture fostered the belief that “more children is more blessing,” especially in remote and rural areas where the elderly lack adequate social benefits and depend on children as they grow old.

    Government family planning officials are also under pressure to make sure their constituencies follow the quota of babies allowed. When there’s no clear law telling them what they can and cannot do, forced abortions, often on late-terms pregnancies, have become the norm, particularly for the poor who are unable to pay the hefty fines to have additional children.   

    Advocates on behalf of these women are usually ignored or face government repression. For example, Chen Guangcheng, the famous blind lawyer and human rights activist, represented victims of family planning abuse in Shandong Province. Chen was jailed for four years for his advocacy and put under house arrest until he recently escaped illegal detainment and fled to the U.S. last month.

    More on Chen Guangcheng

    There are no official figures of how many women in China unwillingly terminate pregnancies every year. “All Girls Allowed,” an organized founded by former 1989 student protest leader Chai Ling, claims there are 1.3 million forced abortions annually

    ‘How can I agree to do that, as a mother?’
    Feng Jianmei didn’t realize she wasn’t allowed to have a second child (her first daughter was born in 2007) since everyone else around her was permitted to have a second child. Both she and her husband Deng Jiyuan took for granted that they would have the same right.  But the family planning office in Zengjiazhen, a small town in Shaanxi province in the heart of China, thought differently.  

    Through a rigorous and rigid household registration system designed to control population movement, the central government classifies all its citizens as either city dwellers or rural peasants.  The registration, also known in Chinese as hukou, determines not only a citizen’s residence but also what kind of social services individuals are eligible for.

    It is very difficult to change one’s hukou although there are many ways, including marrying a person with a different registration status, applying for a new status through one’s job, or paying an enormous sum of money. 

    The local family planning office decided that Feng wasn’t allowed to have a second child because she didn’t have the necessary permit – apparently she had failed to relocate her hukou to Zengjiazhen when she moved from her original province of Inner Mongolia.

    But the couple says they had no idea their plan to have a second child was connected with Feng’s hukou.

    They were given another option that would solve the problem: pay a fine of $6,400. But that was an impossible amount for the couple to afford – Deng is a migrant worker and Feng is a farmer. 

    “I told you, $6,400, not even a penny less. I told your dad that and he said he has no money,” the family planning official wrote to Deng in a text message that has been made public. “You were too careless, you didn’t think this was a big deal.”

    Feng’s sister received the same warning;  if they couldn’t afford to help pay the fine, it was only a matter of time before her sister had to get rid of the baby, whether she wanted to or not.

    Things came to a head on June 2, but according to the local government, Feng agreed to the abortion.

    The Zhenping Population and Family Planning Bureau released on June 11 an official stamped document, which says  that “after government cadre’s repeated persuasion, Feng Jianmei agreed to have an abortion at 15:40 on June 2.” 

    “No, I didn’t agree to do it,” Feng told NBC News. “How can I agree to do that, as a mother?”

    She sobbed when asked what happened next, and said she was too upset to think about it. She said all those officials who kidnapped her disappeared after the abortion, and she’s still suffering from a constant headache.

    Two appalling photos of her were taken and posted online that show her lying in bed, looking weak and helpless, with a dead and bloody baby next to her. The photos were taken by her sister who in turn contacted the media about the story. The photos originally appeared in a local newspaper report online and then they were picked by netizens and distributed online.

    ‘If this evil policy is not stopped, this country will have no humanity’
    Forced abortions in China are not new, but Feng’s story spread rapidly via social media, and outrage was immediate and unanimous. On Weibo, China’s Twitter-like microblogging site, netizens left thousands of angry comments, although many of the posts were quickly deleted by government censors.   

    “The purpose of family planning was to control population, but now it has become murder population,” wrote Li Chengpeng, a well-known Chinese writer. “It was a method to contain population, but now it is a way to make money. When you can make money by killing, what else are you afraid to do? A seven-month baby can think already. I want to ask the murderer, how do you face your own mother when you go home? If this evil policy is not stopped, this country will have no humanity.”

    Zhao Chu, another writer, called it pure murder. “This is not about enforcing the policy, it is about depriving someone’s right to live. We avoid the nature of it by using a medical word ‘enforced abortion.’ For so long family planning seems like something completely irrelevant of human life. It’s like coal mining or digging mushrooms. Human life has become lifeless indexes, some cold, meaningless numbers.

    “Also, pushed by heavy fines, the controversial policy has become profit-oriented activities that everyone hates. The worst victims are those of low-class rural people who have no power to fight. Their tears and cries are not heard by so called mainstream society and the victims become worse than the untouchables,” said Zhao.

    Many called for the one-child policy to be outlawed. “We feel so sorry for the dead baby girl, we criticize those so-called law enforcers. But we should rethink the 30-year-long family planning policy. It’d be worth it if this could help to change the policy! We keep our eyes open!” commented user A-Kun on his Weibo page.

    Even Hu Xijin, chief editor of Global Times, one of China’s most pro-government newspapers, criticized the forced abortion on his Weibo account.

    “I strongly oppose the barbarous forced abortion to this 7-month-pregnant mother. Time has changed and the intensity of enforcing family planning has changed. We should promote civilized family planning,” Hu wrote.

    But he added that he didn’t think the whole policy should be abolished. “Don’t use Hong Kong and Japan as an argument to deny China’s population policy. Those places are small and developed early, fed by the whole world’s resources. But the world resources cannot afford to feed a China with billions of people.”

    ‘This has damaged the image of family planning work’
    NBC News tried to contact both town and city level family planning offices in Zengjiazhen and Ankang, but the calls went unanswered.  

    A report from Xinhua, China’s official government news agency, released on Thursday said that the Shaanxi Provincial Family Planning Committee has sent an investigation team to Zengjiazhen and requested local government to have the responsible parties held accountable.

    “This has damaged the image of family planning work, and had an adverse effect on the society. The committee will resolutely prevent such things from happening again,” the Xinhua news report said.

    Feng’s conversation with NBC News was interrupted three times by what she said were government cadres entering her hospital ward to talk.

    When asked what she would do next or whether they will seek legal help, she uttered an answer in a very low voice: “I have no idea.” 

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  • Corruption allegations as DoJ seeks to seize Malibu mansion of playboy Africa leader's son

    Abdelhak Senna / AFP - Getty Images, file

    A file picture showing Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, son of the Equatorial Guinea president, speaking in his home country.

    Detailed allegations of massive corruption and theft in Equatorial Guinea have been filed in a court by the U.S. Department of Justice as it seeks to recover assets - including a $30 million mansion in Malibu and Michael Jackson’s studded white tour glove– from the playboy son of the Africa country’s president.

    The D.o.J. filing, made this week, accuses Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue of defrauding the U.S. banking system in order to channel ill-gotten funds from his homeland into property, luxury cars and even a private jet in the U.S.


    The filing is viewable in this PDF document hosted on the website of anti-corruption charity, Global Witness.

    It is the latest stage of an attempt by the U.S. government to seize assets worth $71 million – a move triggered by a 2004 Senate report that alleged U.S. banks failed to monitor suspicious transactions from regimes, including that of Equatorial Guinea.

    It alleges Teodoro, who was appointed Forestry Minister by his father in the 1990s and who reportedly once dated the rapper Eve, forced the country’s timber companies to pay him personally approximately 10 percent of the value of all the wood harvested for export in exchange for their export licenses.

    Mansions, jets, yachts: Warrant sought for African ruler's 'playboy' son

    It also alleges he received tens of millions of dollars in payments from fraudulently inflated construction contracts in Equatorial Guinea.

    “This filing provides significantly more detail on allegations of corruption against Teodorin Obiang. It further validates concerns that Global Witness has raised over the years about Teodorin’s source of funds that sustain his luxury lifestyle,” said Robert Palmer, a campaigner with Global Witness.

    Prosecutors hope the evidence will be enough to allow the U.S. to recover the assets acquired in California, including the Malibu home - a 15,000-sqaure-foot mansion with eight bathrooms set on 19 acres of grounds overlooking the Pacific. The property, at 3620 Sweetwater Mesa Road, includes a swimming pool, tennis court, four-hole golf course and Hollywood stars Mel Gibson, Britney Spears and Kelsey Grammer as neighbors according to a 2006 Forbes report that listed its purchase as among the highest-value real estate transactions of that year nationwide.

    Studded glove
    Smaller assets include more than $1 million of Michael Jackson memorabilia bought at auction following the singer’s death, such as the $275,000 studded white glove worn on the ‘Bad’ tour.

    Interpol faces legal threat for helping oppressive regimes hunt dissidents

    The latest court filing also gives details on purchases being examined by foreign governments, such as a $15 million house in Sao Paolo, Brazil, a $1m diamond-studded Piaget watch and more than $7 million in renovations to the playboy’s home in Paris.

    Teodoro’s father - President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo - has ruled the former Spanish colony since a 1979 coup, making him one of the longest-serving African leaders following the demise of Libya's Moammar Gadhafi.

    Although his country is only the size of Maryland and has a population of less than 700,000, it is strategically significant to the U.S. as it produces about 240,000 barrels of oil per day. The New York Times has reported that decades of repression and “systematic” torture have created a culture of fear in Equatorial Guinea. It said American oil companies have billions of dollars invested there.

    Father and son posed with President Obama in a picture taken by the State Department in 2009, while President Teodoro was welcomed to Washington D.C. by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in 2006.

    'Character assassination'
    In January, Teodoro asked a U.S. court to dismiss attempts by the Obama administration to seize the assets, denying charges that they were obtained with allegedly corrupt funds taken from his country.

    He argued he had not violated U.S. or Equatorial Guinea law and called the corruption allegations "character assassination" against him and his country.

    Details of his incredible lifestyle have been reported extensively by Foreign Policy.

    There was no immediate response to a request for comment from the Equatorial Guinea embassy in Washington D.C. on Thursday.

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  • Worker suicide at Chinese plant of Apple supplier, Foxconn

    TAIPEI - A young worker at a Chinese plant supplying tech giant Apple jumped from his apartment Wednesday, it was reported - the first suicide since the plant's owners agreed to improve work conditions. 

    Foxconn Technology Group, the main supplier of Apple Inc, said on Thursday that the 23 year-old employee fell to his death from his apartment located outside the plant in the southwestern city of Chengdu.


    The worker had joined the company last month and police were investigating the death. 

    "Foxconn is sparing no efforts in cooperating with the police and helping with the investigations," the statement said, according to a report on the website of news channel Focus Taiwan.

    Apple and Foxconn reached an agreement in March to improve conditions for the 1.2 million workers assembling iPhones and iPads, a landmark decision that could change the way Western companies do business in China. 

    iPhone game to benefit Foxconn employee who attempted suicide

    According to the agreement, Foxconn would hire tens of thousands of new workers to reduce overtime work, improve safety protocols and upgrade housing and other amenities. 

    The move comes after Apple, criticized over working conditions at its sprawling chain of suppliers in China, agreed to an investigation by the independent Fair Labor Association earlier this year to stem criticism that its products were built in sweatshop-like conditions. 
    A series of suicides among young workers were reported at Foxconn in 2010, and three workers died in an explosion at a Foxconn plant in Chengdu last June. 

    A report in The New York Times also documented the cramped living conditions of Foxconn employees, as well as excessive hours on the job and seven-day workweeks in which employees stand for hours without break

    'This American Life' retracts damning report on Apple manufacturer Foxconn

    Foxconn also announced in mid-February it had raised wages for workers by 16 to 25 percent. 

    Hon Hai Precision Industry, which makes iPhones and iPads for Apple, is the main listed unit of the Foxconn group, while Foxconn International manufactures handsets for clients such as Nokia and Sony Ericsson.

    About 100 workers from Foxconn's Chengdu plant went on the rampage earlier this month after a dispute in a restaurant turned violent. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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  • Egypt court rules Shafik can run in presidential election

    Suhaib Salem / Reuters

    A protester shouts as he stands on top of a barricade in front of soldiers outside the Supreme Constitutional Court in Cairo on June 14. Ex-military officer Ahmed Shafik was given the green light on Thursday to run for president when Egypt's constitutional court ruled against a law that would have thrown him out of the race, judicial sources said.

    Mohammed Abed / AFP - Getty Images

    Egyptians protest outside the Supreme Constitutional Court in Cairo on June 14, as the court examined a law which threatened to bar presidential candidate and former premier Ahmed Shafiq from competing in this weekend's presidential runoff.

    Reuters reports -- Ex-military officer Ahmed Shafik was given the green light on Thursday to run for president when Egypt's constitutional court ruled against a law that would have thrown him out of the race, judicial sources said.

    The court also declared that some of the rules in a parliamentary election that ended earlier this year and which handed control to Islamists were unconstitutional, the sources said. The court found that the seats of one third of members were void.

    Read the complete story.

    Suhaib Salem / Reuters

    A protester covers his mouth with tape outside the Supreme Constitutional Court, where a decision is expected on the validity of the law passed by the Islamist-led parliament that sought to bar Ahmed Shafik, Hosni Mubarak's last prime minister, from the vote pitting him against the Muslim Brotherhood's Mohamed Morsy, in Cairo on June 14.

    Khaled Desouki / AFP - Getty Images

    An Egyptian protester holds a crossed out portrait of presidential candidate and former premier Ahmed Shafiq with the Arabic writing "Down with Ahmed Shafiq" during a protest outside the Supreme Constitutional Court in Cairo on June 14, 2012 as the court examines a law which threatens to bar Shafiq from competing in this weekend's presidential runoff. The Supreme Constitutional Court is examining the legality of the political isolation law which bars senior officials of the Hosni Mubarak regime and top members of his now-dissolved National Democratic Party from running for public office for 10 years.

    Mohammed Abed / AFP - Getty Images

    Egyptians protest outside the Supreme Constitutional Court in Cairo on June 14, as the court examines a law which threatens to bar presidential candidate and former premier Ahmed Shafiq from competing in this weekend's presidential runoff.

  • China's 'Red Ants' embrace RV culture

    Zheyang Soohoo / Reuters

    Men row a boat carrying a child on a lake in front of recreational vehicles (RVs), during a camping trip at an RV park on the outskirts of Beijing on April 14, 2012. Chinese buyers bought an estimated 1,000 RVs last year, but experts say the RV business is about to take off in the country.

    Reuters reports — Dong Xuemin can't wait for weekends when he heads out with family or friends to the mountains north of Beijing or to a lake for a picnic.

    Terril Yue Jones / Reuters

    Dong Xuemin poses in front of his RV and boat at his storage company in Beijing on April 17, 2012.

    Dong is a "Red Ant" - a member of a club of urban Chinese who'll find any excuse to hit the road, not in ordinary cars, but in recreational vehicles, those quintessential Western chariots of leisure transportation used by "Snowbirds" in North America typified by white-haired retirees heading south for the winter.

    Read more stories from China on Behind the Wall

    "RVs have a long and glorious history in the West," says Dong, 41, who runs a logistics and storage business in Beijing where he stores his RV, boat, all-terrain vehicle and motorized surfboard. "Chinese are the same; we love the outdoors. So we're learning the American and Western RV culture." Read the full story.

    Zheyang Soohoo / Reuters

    Children sit around a table as they play inside an RV, during a camping trip at an RV park on the outskirts of Beijing on April 14, 2012.

    Zheyang Soohoo / Reuters

    People light a fire on a barbecue grill next to RVs during a camping trip on the outskirts of Beijing on April 14, 2012.

     

  • UK PM David Cameron grilled over links to Rupert Murdoch's empire

    David Cameron testified at the Leveson Inquiry that there was never any 'overt or covert' agreement with News International. The Prime Minister admits relations between the press and politicians have become too close, but denied any deal was made between the two. ITN's political correspondent Alex Forrest reports.

    LONDON -- British Prime Minister David Cameron, under fire for courting an exclusive media clique led by Rupert Murdoch, appeared before a judicial inquiry on Thursday to try to neuter claims his ministers tailored policy to further Murdoch's interests.

    Cameron's once-cozy ties with Murdoch's inner circle mean he is under pressure to pull off a virtuoso performance at the inquiry, which has sharpened the perception that Britain has been run for years by an elite that fawned on the News Corp chairman.

    The coalition government has divided along party lines over Cameron's backing for a minister accused of doing Murdoch's bidding when responsible for impartial oversight, as he struggles with an economy in recession and growing unease about his leadership within his own party.


    Cameron, 45, who set up the Leveson inquiry into media ethics himself last year after a newspaper phone-hacking scandal erupted, is due to be questioned for at least five hours, streamed live on television.

    Read more on this story from Britain's ITV News

    Early in the session, Cameron characterized the relationship between Britain's media and politicians as "bad."

    "I think a lot of politicians think the press always get it wrong... a lot of the press think politicians are in it for themselves," ITV News quoted Cameron as saying. 

    Vanity Fair's Sarah Ellison joins NOW w/ Alex Wagner to share her coverage on Rupert Murdoch's media empire that has been marred by investigations into a widespread hacking scandal.

    Cameron used to sign his frequent text messages to News Corp executive Rebekah Brooks with an affectionate "LOL" -- which he admitted he thought meant "lots of love" -- and employed another Murdoch editor, Andy Coulson, as his trusted spokesman.

    Former top aide to UK PM David Cameron charged in perjury case

    Cameron ordered the inquiry after the News of the World, the Sunday tabloid newspaper both Brooks and Coulson had once edited, was found to have hacked into the voicemail of, among others, a murdered schoolgirl to get stories.

    'Lapses of judgment'
    The Conservative prime minister has said politicians from both his party and the opposition Labour Party were too close to the Murdoch media empire and has vowed to resolve the problem, no matter how messy the process.

    But if Cameron had hoped the inquiry might take some heat out of the phone-hacking scandal, it has done the opposite; week after week of revelations have been served up casting British politicians as courtiers to king Murdoch.

    Former UK PM accuses Murdoch of misleading inquiry into phone-hack scandal

    "He did not foresee that it would morph into a form of war crimes tribunal," Max Hastings, one of Britain's most influential journalists, wrote in the Financial Times. "Revelations about his lapses of judgment weaken his authority to lead Britain."

    Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair testified this morning about his close ties to media mogul Rupert Murdoch, who's News of the World tabloid is in the middle of a phone-hacking scandal. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    The prime minister has been embarrassed by his association with the so-called "Chipping Norton" set, a high-powered social scene centered around the picturesque market town in Oxfordshire. Cameron, Brooks and Murdoch's daughter Elisabeth were among the high-flying friends with luxurious country homes in the area.

    Reports: UK PM leaves 8-year-old daughter in the pub

    Brooks and her husband Charlie, an erstwhile horse-riding partner of Cameron, are now charged with perverting the course of justice by allegedly hiding evidence from police investigating phone-hacking.

    Former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks and her husband, Charlie Brooks, have been charged with perverting the course of justice during the U.K. phone hacking scandal. ITV's Keir Simmons reports.

    The spectacle of a prime minister questioned under oath by one of London's top barristers on live television is a daunting prospect for Cameron's supporters, who are already reeling from criticism that he is a lightweight politician out of touch with the voters.

    The prime minister's aides said he was doing "a lot of preparation" and is being briefed by lawyers ahead of his appearance at the inquiry, where he can afford few mistakes, given his party's slump in the polls in recent months.

    Murdoch not 'a fit person' to run major firm, UK lawmakers say

    Cameron is under fire for shielding Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt, a Conservative minister, who is accused by Labour of being far too helpful to News Corp while in charge of ruling on the company's bid for full ownership of BSkyB.

    Hunt was meant to be an impartial overseer of the $12.5 billion bid for the pay-TV operator, but testimony by Murdoch's executive son James at the Leveson inquiry appeared to show that Hunt's office was in regular contact with News Corp and may have given it confidential information.

    Cameron's Liberal Democrat coalition partners abstained on Wednesday from a parliamentary vote on a motion calling for the prime minister to order an inquiry into Hunt's actions, underscoring the divide in the coalition.

    Hunt's special adviser resigned over the affair.

    'War criminal': Tony Blair heckled during inquiry into Murdoch scandal

    In a sign of the concern inside Number 10 Downing Street, aides circulated a letter from the prime minister saying that he would outline measures to increase transparency on special advisers' work and shed more light on decisions such as the one entrusted to Hunt over BSkyB.

    The prime minister is also likely to be questioned about Cameron's decision to appoint Coulson as his communications adviser, even though he had resigned as editor of the News of the World after a reporter there was jailed for phone-hacking.

    Coulson was charged with perjury last month for remarks he made in court over the hacking scandal.

    Reuters and ITV News contributed to this report. ITV News is NBC's British partner.

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