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  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    9:15am, EST

    'You can't give them away': Canada drops penny

    Ryan Remiorz / The Canadian Press via AP

    The household penny jar may soon become a thing of the past in Canada.

    By Rob Gillies, The Associated Press

    TORONTO — Canada has begun phasing out its penny, the nuisance one-cent coin that clutters dressers and costs more than its one-cent value to produce.

    The Royal Canadian Mint on Monday officially ended its distribution of pennies to financial institutions.

    Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty announced last year they were a nuisance and had outlived their purpose.


    While some may still use pennies, the government has issued guidelines urging store owners to start rounding prices to the nearest nickel for cash transactions.

    Electronic purchases will still be billed to the nearest cent.

    The government has said the cost of the penny exceeds its monetary value. Production is $11 million a year.

    The coins, which feature two maple leaves and Queen Elizabeth II in profile, will remain legal tender until they eventually disappear from circulation.

    'Nothing a penny will buy'
    Opposition New Democrat Member of Parliament Pat Martin gave a poetic goodbye to the penny in Parliament on Monday.

    "There's nothing a penny will buy any more, not a gum ball or small piece of candy," Martin said. "Note the penny is a nuisance. It costs too much to make. They clutter our change purse and they don't circulate."

    “They build up in piles in old cookie jars under our beds and in our desk drawers. You can't give them away. They cost more than what they're worth. It's time to put them all out to pasture, put them out to the curb. No, the penny is useless, but there is one thing I'd say, I hope they don't start treating old MPs this way."

    Google is marking the passing of the penny with a dedicated doodle on its Canadian home page.

    The currency museum at Canada's central bank has already taken steps to preserve the penny's place in Canadian culture. A mural consisting of nearly 16,000 one-cent pieces has been assembled at the museum to commemorate the coin's history, said assistant curator Raewyn Passmore.

    New Zealand, Australia, the Netherlands, Norway, Finland, Sweden and others have also dropped the penny.

    The U.S. Treasury Department has said the Obama administration has looked at possibly using cheaper materials to make the penny, which is now made of zinc.

    Two bills calling for the end of the U.S. penny, introduced in 2002 and 2006 by Republican Rep. Jim Kolbe, failed to advance in the House of Representatives.

    The U.S. zinc lobby has been a major opponent to suggestions that the penny be eliminated.

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    69 comments

    So much for a penny saved is a penny earned........ It still makes no Cents to me.

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  • 2
    Feb
    2013
    4:43am, EST

    How the US military can become a 'band of brothers and sisters'

    IDF

    Arielle Werner, 21, originally of Minnetonka, Minn., is a combat soldier with Israel's co-ed Caracal Battalion. "Women in combat can only bring good things," she said. "Two halves of a whole together can only be good."

    By F. Brinley Bruton, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Even before she moved to Israel, Minnesota-born Cpl. Arrielle Werner was certain she possessed what it took to fight on the front lines. 

    "I realized that I couldn't be the passive Minnesotan," said the 21-year-old member of Israel's majority female Caracal Battalion, a combat unit which patrols the volatile border with Egypt's Sinai Peninsula. "I knew this was the place for me. My friends back in the States are shocked … now I’m the wild combat soldier."

    The self-described "peace keeper of the family" said she is prepared to "give everything" on the battlefield. 

    That's the sort of gung-ho attitude that military brass appreciate in any soldier -- but it isn't an attitude many expect from a woman.

    There have long been barriers to women at war, never mind those assigned to fight at the tip of the spear. But the U.S. government's announcement on Jan. 24 that it was dropping its ban on women in combat units changed everything. (While not officially in combat units, American women have long served side-by-side with male service-members -- in fact, 152 women died while being deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan.)

    Despite living in a country "where some still think women should stay in the kitchen," Werner feels accepted by male colleagues.

    Defense Secretary Leon Panetta's decision to lift the 20-year ban on women serving in combat will open some 237,000 combat-related positions to women. Initially, women will be assigned to combat communications, logistics and drivers. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    "There is a little bit of a glass ceiling (but) ... you see women every day getting higher and higher," said Werner, who is originally from Minnetonka, Minn. "As long as you want to succeed and want to get stronger … you’re able to handle everything."

    While many worry whether society has the stomach to accept women being killed, and being killers, Werner is in no doubt about her place on the battlefield.  And she doesn't mince words about her fellow females in the co-ed Caracal Battalion.

    "These girls are tough," she said.

    Werner, who has been on stationed on the border since October, admitted that she has noticed differences between the sexes.

    "Guys are able to really to put a tough face on things (while) girls really take time to put emotion into something," she added. "Women in combat can only bring good things. Two halves of a whole together can only be good."

    Not practical or not relevant?
    As the U.S. military implements its new and controversial policy ahead of a January 2016 deadline, it will be seeking lessons from Israel and the handful of other countries that currently do not bar women from front-line combat. They include all of Scandinavia, Australia, Eritrea, France, Germany, Lithuania, Netherlands, New Zealand, North Korea, Poland and Romania.

    Despite examples set by these countries, one of the biggest worries remains that integration will undermine the essential cohesion of the so-called band of brothers that has long defined the camaraderie among fighting men.

    "(In the British military) the argument always comes down to the pure practicalities of the effectiveness of the unit rather than if a woman can't do it," said Amyas Godfrey, a former infantry officer and associate fellow at British security think tank the Royal United Services Institution (RUSI).

    Atef Safadi / EPA, file

    Israeli female soldiers take positions during clashes with Palestinian protesters from the West Bank village of Nabi Salah on Dec. 28.

    The United Kingdom is almost alone among Western European countries in not allowing women into front-line combat roles.

    "It comes down to 18-to-22-year-old boys not being able to ignore the fact that there is a woman in their midst," he said. Integrating combat units and concentrating on making space for women also "doesn't fit with the practicality of closing with and killing the enemy," he said.

    Norwegian Brigadier Odin Johannessen, who served in Bosnia and Afghanistan and commanded military units for 12 years, disagreed with the idea that men and women could not be trained to serve together.

    "In mixed units, what is most important is to become a soldier," said the 51-year-old who formerly ran the Norwegian Army Academy in Oslo. "That you are a good soldier tends to be the most prized factor of all, if you are a male or female doesn’t matter."

    "It's called a band of brothers. I would rather rephrase it to a band of brothers and sisters," he added. 

    Johannessen's exposure to military women colored the rest of his career.

    "My first day in the military I met Sgt. Bente Karlsen and she has been present in my mind for my entire service for the professional way she led us," he said.  

    Karlsen had the essential ability to convey instructions and orders, but also clearly cared about the young men under her command, Johannessen said. 

    "She was a brilliant sergeant and showed me that it matters not if you are male of female," he said. 

    Norway has no official restrictions on women joining any of its operational units, although no women are members of its special forces. Nine percent of combat roles in Norway are made up of women, and the armed forces' aim to increase that the proportion of females in military positions to 15 percent.

    'Masculine warrior culture'
    With its "no-exclusion policy," Canada is also recognized internationally as one of the few militaries to have officially removed all barriers to women. Canadian women have served and died on the front line in Afghanistan, and make up four percent of the roles in Canada's so-called combat arms divisions, and 14.8 percent of military roles overall. 

    Getty Images, file

    Canadian Master Corporal Tera Avey of Edmonton, Alberta, a mother of two and one of three female combat soldiers, wakes up on March, 2002 in the rocky Shahi Kot mountains in Afghanistan. Hundreds of American and Canadian troops were lifted into the mountainous region at high altitude to search and destroy Taliban and al-Qaida fighters.

    Karen Davis, a gender integration expert for Canada's armed forces, acknowledges that women have to adapt to the "masculine warrior culture" of combat units.

    But when Canadian men and women were sent to fight on the front lines in Afghanistan, fears that women's presence would hurt all-important unity did not bear out, she said.

    "What we learned when we went into Afghanistan is that Canadian soldiers are trained to do a job, no matter if they were men or women," Davis said, adding that proper and rigorous training before deployment helped make this happen.

    Whether women can or should be treated and tested differently from their male counterparts is at the heart of any discussion on how to integrate military operations, especially front-line combat troops.

    In Israel, where women have formed part of the military since before the founding of the state and face conscription, the training process "accepts differences between men and women and just deals with them," according to Capt. Eytan Buchman, a spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces.

    "Everybody comes in with their own baggage and physiological differences," he added.

    Johannessen, for his part, advises trainers and commanders to not give women under their command special treatment. 

    "Say there are two females in the unit. If you want to do it wrong, pay special attention to them," he said.  

    To this end, gender-neutral physical standards are also essential, he said.

    According to Davis, Canada's success at integrating women also came about as a result of a rigorously enforced non-fraternization policy. And the onus for making sure relationships don't happen lies not just on the women, but also the men throughout the chain of command, she says.

    But beyond policies and rules, Norway's Johannessen says that more women make militaries better and smarter.

    Slideshow: All-female U.S. Marine team in Afghanistan

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    View images of the women deployed as the second Female Engagement team in Afghanistan

    Launch slideshow

    "Men and women are looking at a problem from different positions," he said. "Having the possibility for a different view is many times better."

    While integrating women into combat can be down to well-thought-out polices, effective leadership and rigorous training -- natural attributes for any well-run military organization -- an important lesson is that change will most likely not come quickly or implemented uniformly.

    Gender integration expert Davis admits that even her own thinking changed radically from the time she joined an all-female land-bound unit in the Canadian Navy in 1978. At the time, she agreed that women did not belong in many roles in the military. But in 1985 that changed: Davis was asked to be one of two women to go to sea for 12 days on a formerly all-male ship.

    "I came back questioning everything," Davis said. "I had joined and completely accepted everything I had been told, but in fact none of it was rational, it could all be dismantled." 

    Related:

    Female veterans cheer new era: 'It's about time!'

    Women in the infantry? Forget about it, says female Marine officer

     

     

    1044 comments

    This whole women in combat thing is really starting to get stupid. What is wrong with our country? They are making combat into a joke.

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  • 31
    Jan
    2013
    11:48am, EST

    Serial killer mystery for women on Canada's 'Highway of Tears'

    Ben Nelms / Reuters, file

    Women whose daughters are part of a missing women's inquiry in Canada cry during discussion of a report, titled 'Forsaken,' that examines the mishandling of the Robert Pickton serial killer case.

    By Allison Martell and Teresa Carson, Reuters

    Sarah de Vries started running away when she was 13, in 1983. She lived in cheap apartments and grim hotels in downtown Vancouver, British Columbia -- places that would let a teenager turn tricks. Later, she got hooked on heroin.

    Sarah's big sister, Maggie, remembers a bubbly, adorable baby. But life was not always easy. Of mixed race, with some black and aboriginal ancestry, Sarah was targeted by racist bullies, and sometimes felt disconnected from her white adoptive family.


    In 1995, she wrote about how many women were missing from her neighborhood, Vancouver's rough Downtown Eastside.

    "Am I next? Is he watching me now?" she wrote in a journal her sister published years later, after Sarah, too, disappeared. "Stalking me like a predator and its prey. Waiting, waiting for some perfect spot, time or my stupid mistake."

    We know now that the Downtown Eastside was where serial killer Robert Pickton found his victims, picking up sex workers, killing them, and disposing of their bodies on his pig farm.

    Investigators charged him with 26 murders, but only six counts went to trial. Found guilty in 2007, Pickton was jailed for life, the toughest sentence possible in Canada, which has no death penalty.

    Vancouver police now admit they made mistakes probing the murders, and a public inquiry report released last month, titled "Forsaken," highlighted a "systemic bias" against the victims, paired with public indifference.

    'Compelling information'
    When Sarah de Vries went missing in 1998, her disappearance was one of many unsolved cases in the Downtown Eastside.

    Vancouver police believed there had been an increase in disappearances but were unsure why. Some officers recognized a serial killer at work, but others clung to the idea that the women had just moved and did not want to be found.

    A Vancouver police review from 2010 said the case was clear only in hindsight. But it also found that even in 1998 and 1999, police had "compelling information" pointing to Pickton: tales of bloody clothes and of a woman's body suspended in his barn.

    Andy Clark / Reuters -- file

    A supporter lights candles surrounding photos of murdered women outside the Missing Women's Commission of Inquiry in Vancouver, British Columbia on Dec. 17.

    Pickton agreed to a search in 2000, but it was never done, and he was caught in 2002 only because of a separate weapons probe. DNA linked him to 33 of the Downtown Eastside's more than 60 missing women, including Sarah de Vries.

    Vancouver police, who say they have made changes since 2002, have apologized: "We could have, and we should have, caught Pickton sooner," Chief Constable Jim Chu said in December.

    Pickton's farm was in an area that is under the jurisdiction of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who have said they will study the inquiry report. They declined to comment on the case.

    Canada is still wrestling with what the Pickton case means. It prompted questions about the fate of scores of other missing and murdered women, and in the years since Pickton's 2002 arrest, police have set up new task forces to investigate some of the disappearances.

    One of these is the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's Project E-Pana, which was asked to determine whether one or more serial killers had stalked young women along British Columbia's highways.

    'Highway of Tears'
    In northern British Columbia, so many women, many of them aboriginal, have gone missing along Highway 16 that their families call it the "Highway of Tears." Those cases, along with disappearances near two other highways in the province, are Project E-Pana's focus. The 18 cases it is dealing with date from 1969 to 2006.

    But E-Pana, which police say they named for an Inuit goddess who cares for the dead, has not cracked any of the cases along Highway 16.

    Gladys Radek, who grew up in northern British Columbia, said she has known about the disappearances since she was a girl. In 2005, her niece, 22-year-old Tamara Chipman, went missing.

    "The RCMP have always been in denial that there is a Highway of Tears," she said.

    Among Canada's major provinces, British Columbia has the lowest clearance rate -- 49 percent of the murders are unsolved, compared with 39 percent nationally -- perhaps because of the Highway of Tears and Downtown Eastside cases that remain open.

    Aboriginal women are disproportionately likely to be murdered in Canada, and they were overrepresented among Pickton's suspected victims.

    Wally Oppal, whose inquiry produced the "Forsaken" report, recommended that British Columbia's government replace the patchwork of police jurisdictions in the Vancouver area with a regional force. He said geographic isolation, poor transit and poverty in the north of the province have put women and girls at particular risk.

    The matter is urgent, he wrote: "Serial predators are committing violence today; that is an inescapable fact."

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    76 comments

    paidmyfee Hummmmmmmmmm ... You sound like a "Dexter" fantasy supporter! To believe another human deserves to be murdered for their "behavior" or being a woman alone on the road is most disturbing ... If I was investigating any serial murders .... you'd be at least on my "look at" list! Seek he …

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  • 26
    Jan
    2013
    6:01am, EST

    'Not survivable': Wreckage of missing Antarctica plane found, rescuers say

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A plane that went missing in Antarctica slammed into a mountain and there are not believed to be any survivors, rescuers said Saturday.

    Three Canadians were on board the Twin Otter aircraft when it went missing Wednesday about halfway between the South Pole and the McMurdo Station research center.

    “The aircraft wreckage is on a very steep slope, close to the summit of Mt Elizabeth. It appears to have made a direct impact that was not survivable.  No details are available on the cause of the crash,” Maritime New Zealand, which has been coordinating the search operation, said in a statement. “The next of kin have been informed.”

    It said the site of the crash was at the northern end of the Queen Alexandra mountain range at an altitude of about 13,000 feet.

    Two helicopters reached the site at around 7.15 p.m. New Zealand time (1.15 a.m. ET), but were not able to land.

    Rescuer Tracy Brickles said in the statement that it was very sad end to the operation.

    “It has been difficult operation in challenging conditions but we remained hopeful of a positive result. Our thoughts are now with the families of the crewmen,” she said.

    The Calgary Sun newspaper previously identified one of those aboard the plane as Bob Heath of the Northwest Territories, calling him a “star pilot” for Canadian firm Kenn Borek Air, which owns the plane.

    In an emailed statement, Kenn Borek Air said one of its aircraft and a New York Air National Guard plane had also made “visual contact” with the crash site.

    “No signs of activity are evident in the area surrounding the site, and it appears that the impact was not survivable,” the statement said.

    It added that helicopter crews and mountain rescue teams would attempt to get to the site.

    Related:

    Plane with 3 on board missing near South Pole

    100-mph winds ground search for plane missing in Antarctica

    84 comments

    Been following this story since it unfolded down here and we were hoping that some how they survived. But seems it is no longer the case...a sad outcome for all and sympathy to the families involved in Canada...the lost are a long way from home....

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  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    11:23am, EST

    Weather keeps Antarctic search for missing Canadian plane grounded

    Lynn M. Arnold / National Science Foundation via AP

    A De Havilland Twin Otter like the one missing since Wednesday lands at the National Science Foundation's Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station in 2003.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Bad weather continued to stop rescuers from searching for a Canadian airplane that went missing in Antarctica with three people on board, officials in New Zealand rescue team said Friday. 

    Though winds, which had been blowing at over 100 mph, had calmed to just over 20 mph by 5 p.m. Friday New Zealand time (11 p.m. ET Thursday), conditions would not allow sighting of the downed twin-engine airplane.


    "Visibility is down to (1,300 feet) and the snow is almost horizontal," Kevin Branaghan, an official with Rescue Coordination Center New Zealand, said in a statement. "The weather is expected to improve slightly after 12-24 hours."

    The plane, owned by Kenn Borek Air of Calgary, Alberta, was on its way from the U.S.-run Amundsen-Scott South Pole station to Italy’s Mario Zucchelli station while supporting an Italian research project, according to the National Science Foundation, which manages U.S. programs on the icy continent.

    Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

    It took off at about 3 a.m. ET Wednesday and flew for an hour before its emergency locator beacon was detected in New Zealand, which is responsible for monitoring that section of Antarctica.

    The beacon was tracked to a spot about 11,000 feet above sea level at the northern end of the Queen Alexandra Mountain range, some 400 miles from the aircraft’s departure point near the South Pole, rescue-team spokesman Michael Flyger said Thursday.

    Hours of flyovers by aircraft from the United States, Canada and New Zealand proved fruitless because of cloud cover and blowing snow, he said.

    'Extremely cold'
    Kenn Borek Air said in a Thursday statement that weather had kept another of its planes from landing at a makeshift airbase 35 miles from the site of the locator beacon.

    The company has otherwise released little information, saying it is "maintaining a respectful silence" until the fate of the plane is known.

    If the plane has crashed, any survivors would have faced extreme conditions in the mountains, Rescue Coordination Center spokesman Flyger said Thursday.

    "It’s a cold place to start with," he said. "The elevation is around 11,000 feet so ... combined with the wind and snow ... it’s going to be extremely cold."

    Flyger noted that the crew was carrying heavy-duty, cold-weather gear and a five-day supply of water.

    "We are still operating with the expectation that we will find them alive," his colleague Branaghan said Friday.

    The search-and-rescue team's website, however, referred to searching for a "crash site."

    Related:

    100 mph winds halt search for missing plane

    Plane with 3 on board missing near South Pole

    5 comments

    Optimism is always the best, and there's always that chance.... but I'd also be prepared for what's more likely if I were family and friends. Given the conditions, the mountainous area where the crash was believed to have happened, surviveable landing sounds to not be in range of good or even odds.  …

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  • 24
    Jan
    2013
    12:02pm, EST

    100-mph winds ground search for plane missing in Antarctica

    A plane carrying three Canadians has gone missing in Antarctica. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    (Editor's note: This story includes a correction.)

    Howling winds and snow grounded an effort Thursday to find a small plane missing in a mountainous area of Antarctica for more than two days, rescuers said.

    The twin-engine plane, carrying three Canadian crew members, was about an hour into a flight from the U.S.-run Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station to an Italian research station at Terra Nova Bay, when its emergency beacon was heard by rescue officials in Wellington, New Zealand, at about 10 p.m. local time Wednesday (4 a.m. ET)


    The company that owns the plane, Kenn Borek Air Ltd. of Calgary, Alberta, said it was "maintaining a respectful silence" until the fate of the plane and its crew was known.

    The Calgary Sun newspaper identified one of those aboard the plane as Bob Heath of the Northwest Territories, calling him a "star pilot" for Kenn Borek Air.

    www.nsf.gov

    A file photo shows a twin-engine Otter, the type of plane missing in Antarctica with three Canadians aboard.

    The newspaper quoted Heath’s wife Lucy Heath as saying she was “worried” and “waiting for news.”

    A search plane spent about five hours circling over the site of the beacon, which is in a mountainous area, but heavy cloud cover hampered the search and then the weather got worse, officials said.

    Winds have topped 100 mph and it was also snowing, Michael Flyger, spokesman for New Zealand’s Rescue Coordination Center, said.

    He added he hoped the next weather forecast "will bring good news,” enabling the search to continue.

    Five-day water supply
    The beacon’s signal is coming from an area about 11,000 feet above sea level, Flyger said.

    "It’s pretty mountainous terrain. It’s impossible to say whether it crashed or made an emergency landing or they had a mechanical problem and had to ditch the plane," he said. "At the moment we have a plane that’s not where it should be and a locator beacon is going off."

    The beacon can be switched on manually, but it also would begin transmitting if sensors detected a crash, Flyger said.

    Despite the conditions in the area, there may be reason for optimism, he added.

    "We do know that onboard the aircraft there was a significant amount of survival equipment — heavy-duty mountain tents, enough water for three people for five days,” he said. “They’ve certainly got the equipment to look after themselves."

    The National Science Foundation, which manages the U.S. Antarctic Program, said the plane was flying in support of Italian Antarctic research.

    Searchers from the United States, Italy and Canada are assisting in New Zealand's efforts and have helicopters and airplanes ready to return to the site, Flyger said, adding that the the ideal scenario would be for a helicopter to either land or use a winch to bring up survivors.

    "If conditions are good enough, hopefully we can land a short distance away and the team will walk to the crash site," he said.  "There’s some frustration that the weather has been the way it’s been. The searchers are very keen to get in and crack on with the job."

    "We’re very aware that not only are there people out there who need our help, but there are people ... wanting to know what’s going on. We hope to be able to give some good news."

    Related:

    Plane with 3 on board missing near South Pole

    15 comments

    Sending positive thoughts that they are safe and are found alive.

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  • 22
    Jan
    2013
    5:44am, EST

    Reports: Canadian shoots doctor, lawyer to death in Philippines court

    Chester Baldicantos / AP

    Police examine the scene where prosecutor Maria Teresa Casino was wounded at the Regional Trial Court building in Cebu city in central Philippines on Tuesday.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A Canadian man shot dead a doctor who was suing him and the doctor’s lawyer in a court in the Philippines on Tuesday, according to reports.

    Police said the man had smuggled a pistol into the court in the central city of Cebu, the AFP news agency reported.

    The report said the Canadian had been accused of petty mischief.

    A government prosecutor was also injured and the Canadian was shot and wounded during a melee, police told local radio DZBB. His condition was not clear Tuesday.

    BBC News reported that the 65-year-old had been accused of mischief by his neighbors.

    AFP said there was a public debate in the Philippines over stricter gun-control laws after a number of gun-related deaths in January.

    92 comments

    Now even Canadians are giving guns a bad name, eh? We're just gonna have to ban people if all this madness keeps up.

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  • 21
    Jan
    2013
    11:06am, EST

    Algerian prime minister: Canadian coordinated Islamists' attack on gas plant

    Algeria's prime minister says a Canadian coordinated the attack leading to a bloody hostage-taking and siege. Extremists used rocket-propelled grenades and mortars to take over a gas plant. NBC's Keir Simmons reports that there are still an unknown number of Americans among the victims.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A Canadian national coordinated the Islamist militant attack on a gas plant in Algeria where dozens of foreign workers were taken hostage and at least 37 were slain, Algerian Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal told a Monday news conference. 

    Sellal said Monday that 37 foreign workers from eight nations had been killed and another five were still missing. He also said 29 militants were killed with three captured alive, Reuters reported.

    He was speaking as dramatic stories began to emerge from hostages who escaped the bloody end to the siege at the Tiguentourine plant near In Amenas.


    Reuters had reported earlier Monday that an Algerian security source said two of the attackers found dead at the gas plant were Canadian. That report could not be immediately confirmed.

    Canadian authorities acknowledged that they were investigating reports of the involvement of at least one of their citizens.

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    In a statement, Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs said it was "aware of reports that Canadians may have been involved in the hostage-taking in Algeria."

    "We are pursuing all appropriate channels to seek further information and are in close contact with Algerian authorities," the statement added. "Canada condemns in the strongest possible terms this deplorable and cowardly attack and all terrorist groups which seek to create and perpetuate insecurity in the Sahel countries of West Africa."

    One American, three Britons and two Romanians have been confirmed dead by their home countries and Reuters, citing Japanese government sources, reported that at least nine Japanese nationals also had been killed. An Algerian security source also told Reuters that at least one Frenchman had died.

    About 800 people, including some 700 Algerians and 100 foreigners, managed to escape after militants stormed the compound on Wednesday last week.

    During Monday's news conference, Sellal provided additional details on the attack, saying the initial objective had been to capture a bus carrying foreign workers and hold them hostage. He also said the attackers tried to blow up the gas facility by planting explosives in a gas pipe and trying to detonate it Friday night.

    Algerian troops launched their first raids on the site on Thursday, but the standoff continued until Saturday, when government forces captured or killed the remaining militants and ended the siege.

    Among the escaped hostages was Alan Wright, 37, of Scotland, one of 22 Britons who survived the ordeal and were flown back to the U.K. 

    'Really bad situation'
    Wright told ITV News that he had gone to work as usual Wednesday, but then the power went out.

    "We thought it was just a normal shutdown," he said. "Then somebody said, 'There's been a terrorist attack.'"

    Wright described gathering food, water and satellite phones and hiding in an office with his co-workers. They huddled there as chaos ensued.

    "You could hear gunfire outside, machine-gun fire and mortars and everything going off," he said. "Sometimes rapidly, sometimes quiet for a while, but we knew it was a really, really bad situation."

    Echorouk Elyaoumi / AP

    Algerian bomb squads scouring a gas plant where Islamist militants took dozens of foreign workers hostage found "numerous" new bodies on Sunday as they searched for explosive traps.

    Wright said Algerian employees among the group eventually decided they were better off making an escape attempt.

    They provided clothing and hats to help the foreign workers "blend in," he said, and cut a hole in a fence to escape.

    They were spotted by Algerian soldiers, who rescued them.

    "I'm just delighted to be home," Wright said. "My thoughts now are with my friends and their families who don't know what's happened to their loved ones."

    The terrorist monitoring service SITE said Monday that the al-Qaida-linked Mulathameen Brigade, which claimed the mass hostage-taking, threatened to carry out more attacks unless Western powers ended what it called an assault on Muslims in neighboring Mali, Reuters reported.

    Reuters and ITV News contributed to this report.

     Related content:

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    138 comments

    Canada has a looming problem with the large numbers of Muslims who have immigrated there over the past few decades, they are a much bigger percentage of the population than Muslims in the US.

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    Explore related topics: canada, algeria, featured, gas-plant, hostage-crisis, in-amenas
  • 11
    Jan
    2013
    3:10pm, EST

    Killer whales' plight in ice an example of climate change impact, researcher says

    Clement Rousseau

    Killer whales trapped in the ice near Inukjuak on Tuesday. The pod apparently escaped Wednesday or Thursday when a path broke open.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The plight of a pod of killer whales that got trapped by ice in a mostly frozen Canadian bay this week was a “good example of what climate change can do” in the Arctic, a researcher said Friday.

    The 11 killer whales apparently escaped the ice in Hudson Bay late Wednesday or early Thursday morning, when shifting currents helped break open a path to the sea, according to Petah Inukpuk, mayor of Inukjuak, a remote Inuit village in Quebec where locals had crafted a plan to help the animals, also known as orcas. Other reports said there were 12 orcas in the pod.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    The killer whales were hundreds of miles from where they should be at this time of year, such as in the Hudson Strait or the North Atlantic, said Lyne Morissette, a mariner researcher with the Quebec-based St. Lawrence Global Observatory.

    The bay, which normally freezes over in late November or early December only froze over earlier this week.

    “It’s definitely a direct effect, a good example of what climate change can do,” she told NBC News on Friday of the orcas’ plight. “All the dynamics of how the ice is going to move and where the ice is going to be -- it’s not only about ice melting in the Arctic, you know -- it’s the whole dynamics and currents that could change because of climate changes.

    “ … we will see that kind of unusual situation (like with the killer whales) or unusual features of the ice more and more because it’s changing quite a lot in the Arctic right now.”

    A wide search by Inukjuak villagers in a small plane later Thursday revealed a number of openings in the bay, plus some ducks and a polar bear with its cubs. But there was no sign of the whales, he said Friday.

    Though animals can get lost and the pod was in a better position than earlier this week, the animals “definitely, definitely shouldn’t be in the Hudson Bay,” Morissette said.

    It's believed that shifting winds may have broken up the ice that confined the killer whales, who survived by taking turns coming up for air. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    “They are entrapped in the whole Hudson Bay right now. They are in an area where at least they can breathe and they … have the space to breathe, but the whole Hudson Bay is covered with ice,” she said. “Will they be able to go from one opening to the other and just find their way out of the Hudson Bay? Or will they just stay there for the whole winter until the ice goes out? We have no idea right now.”

    Eleven killer whales free after being "locked in" ice, mayor says

    The migration of animals relies upon indicators, such as sensors based on food resources or temperature.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    “If food changes and temperatures are changing in the Arctic, they don’t have the same kind of sensors or indicators that it’s time for them to leave,” Morissette said. “In this case, with climate change, we know that the whole environment is changing quite a lot, so it might be because their sensors or the things that indicate to them that it is time to do a certain part of their life cycle is not tuned to their biology right now because everything is changing so fast.”

    Inukpuk said killer whales were not spotted in the area every summer, but every second or third one. However, this was the first time that they were "locked in,” he said.

    One pod of orcas died in 2005 when they were trapped in thick ice. There have been some other cases, too, said Paul Wade, a research fisheries biologist at the National Marine Mammal Laboratory in Seattle.

    Killer whales, technically in the oceanic dolphin family, are highly social and typically travel in pods numbering from two to 15, though there can be larger groups, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. They are most numerous in colder waters, such as Antarctica, Alaska and Norway, although they can also be found in temperate and tropical waters.

    Their numbers are not known in the area where the pod was trapped, and the video caught of the group provided some invaluable information, Morissette said.

    “Compared to other species, they are really social animals,” she said. It was “really interesting for us to see how they could organize their time and their energy for sharing that little hole to breath instead of” the strongest in the pod trying to survive.

    “Apparently they were trying to find a strategy for the survival of the whole group,” she added.

    139 comments

    Wow, the amount of vitriol at this is.... well it's actually as I expected by those who think they know more than scientists. Well have fun in the new world.

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    Explore related topics: canada, environment, climate, climate-change, quebec, orcas, hudson-bay, killer-whales
  • 10
    Jan
    2013
    1:23pm, EST

    11 killer whales free after being 'locked' in ice, mayor says

    It's believed that shifting winds may have broken up the ice that confined the killer whales, who survived by taking turns coming up for air in a hole the size of a pickup truck. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Eleven killer whales that were “locked in” by ice in a Canadian bay, with only a small area of open water for them to surface, are now apparently free, possibly due to a change in current that helped break open a path to the sea, the mayor of a nearby village said Thursday.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    Two scouts sent to check on the killer whales around 8 a.m. local time found a passage of water had been created in Hudson Bay all of the way to the open sea – nearly 25 miles away -- and the ice hole that the marine mammals had been trapped in was empty, said Petah Inukpuk, mayor of Inukjuak, a remote Inuit village home to 1,800, in Quebec.

    “They are free. They are no longer here. When there is a new moon, the water current is activated. It could have helped … completely trap them, but in this case it caused an open passage out to the open water,” he told NBC News, adding that they probably were freed overnight. “It was mother nature that helped them. ... They are no longer icelocked.”

    A hunter had found the killer whales, also known as orcas, on Tuesday morning in the bay in northeastern Canada about one mile from shore. Two of the orcas appeared to be adults; the remaining nine were smaller in size, said Inukpuk, 61. Other reports said there were 12 orcas in the pod.


    Canada's fisheries and oceans department said it received confirmation from the community "that winds and tides shifted overnight, opening the ice that had trapped the whales." Two of its scientists were en route to Inukjuak to collect scientific information and work with the community.

    A video taken by villager Clement Rousseau on Tuesday revealed a tough situation facing the killer whales: the water opening appeared to be just large enough for a few of them to surface at a time. 

    “They are in a confined area,” Inukpuk told NBC News on Wednesday, noting then that there was “no more open water.”

    “From time to time, they are in a panic state and other times they are gone for a long period of time, probably looking for another open water (space) which they are unable to find," Inukpuk said. "They keep going back to the same spot.”


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The villagers held a meeting Wednesday night and crafted a plan similar to a rescue performed in 1988 of two California gray whales that got stuck in ice in Alaska. In Operation Breakthrough, which made international headlines and inspired the 2012 film "Big Miracle," Eskimo whalers cut more than a half mile of holes for the whales to travel through on their way to open sea. Two Soviet icebreakers helped by crushing a critical thick wall of ice that blocked their path and freed the animals after 20 days, according to a story on the rescue by the Los Angeles Times.

    Twenty of the Inukjuak villagers were tasked with doing much the same: they were going to remove the broken ice around the area and use chainsaws to enlargen the hole, which was getting increasingly smaller. A neighboring Inuit village had also offered a large chainsaw capable of cutting the ice. The villagers even got offers of help from far afield, including Germany and England.

    "We were prepared to endure it, make their breathing hole bigger and create another breathing hole nearby. Enlarge it, going step by step," he said. "We were prepared to do that method because the closest icebreaker was ten days away … without assistance they would not have made it."

    Clement Rousseau

    Killer whales that were trapped in the ice near Inukjuak, photographed on Jan. 8, 2013.

    A Canadian fisheries official told CBC.ca that some icebreakers were being used in the Saint Lawrence River, where three commercial ships got stuck this week. 

    Geoff Carroll, a wildlife biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game who helped release the two California gray whales, said Operation Breakthrough showed the power of the simpler methods.

    “Our experience up here was that it seemed like the local knowledge and the low-tech approaches to working with the whales were the ones that worked best,” Carroll said. “It seemed like there were lots of high-tech efforts made to get those whales out and they kind of failed one after the other. What really worked was when we got local guys with chainsaws cutting one hole after another and we could kind of walk the whales out that way.”

    There have been reports of other whales getting caught in ice, but it was an anomaly for killer whales -- technically in the oceanic dolphin family -- which tend to hunt around the ice, said Deborah Giles, a graduate student researcher at the University of California, Davis, who has studied killer whales for eight years.

    Giles recalled that one pod of orcas died in 2005 when they were trapped in thick ice, and Paul Wade, a research fisheries biologist at the National Marine Mammal Laboratory in Seattle, noted there have been some other similar cases, too.

    Wade said he watched videos of the pod near Inukjuak online and thought some were engaging in normal behavior -- such as "spyhopping," when adult males shoot straight up out of the water -- while others appeared agitated. He said it looked like the pod included two adult males, several juveniles and female adults or younger adult males. The group was most likely related, said Giles.

    Photoblog: Images of whales that were stuck in ice

    Killer whales are highly social and typically travel in pods numbering from two to 15, though there can be larger groups, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. They are most numerous in colder waters, such as Antarctica, Alaska and Norway, although they can also be found in temperate and tropical waters. Different groupings have distinctive whistles and pulsed calls that are thought to be used by them to communicate.

    Inukpuk said killer whales were not spotted in the area every summer, but every second or third one. However, this was the first time that they were "locked in,” he said.

    “Why these whales hung around so long is a mystery,” Wade said. But he added: “Even the types of whales that live in the ice a lot or much closer to the ice more frequently than killer whales -- they make mistakes as well.”

    The winter was unusual this year in that the bay did not freeze up as it normally does at the end of November or beginning of December. There was open water after Christmas but earlier this week it got "really cold," leaving just an area of water the size of a swimming pool open that was getting smaller, Inukpuk said.

    "People here were very much ready to help and it is surprising because the killer whales are (our) competitors for the same species," such as seals, he said. "We were ready to give aid to make sure that they survived until help could come."

    He said they were "very pleased" with the outcome and he had a wish for the pod, too: "I hope they find a good meal and they have a hearty feast because they are probably pretty hungry."

    Eleven killer whales were trapped for days under thick arctic ice in a remote corner of Quebec, taking turns to breathe through a tiny hole.

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    348 comments

    According to NOAA, Orca whale counts in 2011, there are only 240 resident whales (dolphin family) in that region of the world. So 15 Orcas represents about 7% of that areas population. Let us all hope, pray, vision or whatever it takes to save these precious ones. Having seen them many times in the  …

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    Explore related topics: canada, environment, orcas, killer-whales
  • 3
    Jan
    2013
    6:42am, EST

    Cops: Fugitive behind $1 million Medicare fraud nabbed in Canada

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    U.S. Postal Inspection Service

    Toronto police say they arrested Leonard Nwafor on an extradition warrant in the Canadian city on Wednesday.

    TORONTO -- An American fugitive convicted in a $1-million health-care fraud scheme in California was arrested Wednesday in Canada.

    Police said Leonard Nwafor was detained on an extradition warrant at his Toronto residence. The U.S. Marshals Service contacted Toronto authorities in August to seek their help in finding Nwafor and issued the extradition warrant last month.

    Nwafor was convicted on two counts related to health-care fraud for submitting false claims to Medicare through his Los Angeles-based company in 2008. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, most of the claims were for power wheelchairs costing up to $7,000 each that were not required by patients.


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    Federal prosecutors said he made more than $1.1 million in fraudulent claims to Medicare, the U.S. government's health-care program for the elderly and disabled, and received more than $500,000 in payments.

    Nwafor fled California after the conviction. In 2010, he was sentenced in absentia to nine years in prison and ordered to pay more than $500,000 in restitution and $25,000 in fines.

    He was also ordered to forfeit more than $500,000 in stolen funds to the U.S. government.

    Full international coverage from NBC News

    Authorities believe he had been living in Canada since he fled.

    Nwafor was also wanted by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, which had placed him among its 10 most-wanted fugitives.

    The agency charges that Nwafor opened fraudulent credit card accounts in Arizona and used the cards in Southern California.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report

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    215 comments

    so basically its illegal for a private citizen to do so yet not for the politicians who have been doing the same damn thing for years?

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    Explore related topics: canada, toronto, featured, medicare-fraud, fugitive-arrested, leonard-nwafor
  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    11:12am, EST

    Unbreakable WWII carrier pigeon code cracked, says Canadian enthusiast

    Courtesy Bletchley Park Trust

    This coded message from World War II was found in November enclosed in a canister attached to the leg bone of a dead carrier pigeon.

    By Rachel Elbaum, NBC News

    LONDON — A note written in code that was found on the skeleton of a carrier pigeon dating from World War II has been cracked, according to a Canadian history enthusiast.

    Originally discovered in November, the message was enclosed in a red canister attached to the leg bone of the carrier pigeon. David Martin found the pigeon in the chimney of his home in Surrey, England.


    The U.K. Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), one of Britain’s three national intelligence agencies, said at the time that the handwritten message “cannot be decoded without access to the original cryptographic material.”

    A World War II code delivered by carrier pigeon is stumping today's cypher specialists. Can you break it? NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    But Gordon Young, from Peterborough, Ontario, set his mind to deciphering the message using his great-uncle’s World War I code book.

    "It follows same sort of code they used in the first war," Young told NBC News. "I’m not saying my note is perfect, but I am saying the code is crackable and this one is pretty close."

    Experts: Unbreakable code message found on WWII carrier pigeon


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    It took Young, the editor of a local volunteer history group, 17 minutes to understand the message, which consists of 25 five-letter code groups.

    He believes that the message was sent one afternoon in 1944, not long after the Allied landing at Normandy. It was written by an officer who was dropped behind enemy lines, confirming an earlier lunch-time note he sent giving the map coordinates of the Germans’ guns and tanks. It also confirmed that several units of American and British troops had finally met up.

    In addition to using his uncle’s code book, Young double checked with infantry maps online to confirm his hypotheses.

    Retirement home bands together to bring WWII stories to life

    "To really understand the exact circumstances of the note, we would need access to British and American war diaries from the time," he said.

    'Impossible to verify'
    Despite Young’s translation, the GCHQ still maintains that without the original codebooks the note is indecipherable.

    “We stand by our press notice of 22 November 2012 in that without access to the relevant codebooks and details of any additional encryption used, the message will remain impossible to decrypt,” a spokesman for the GCHQ told NBC News in an emailed statement. “Similarly it is also impossible to verify any proposed solutions, but those put forward without reference to the original cryptographic material are unlikely to be correct.”

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    The pigeon is thought to have been part of a flock of 250,000 that were used to carry messages between the European front and Britain during World War II.

    "I am hoping that this will stir up some interest in the bravery of the men who were dropped on the battlefield," said Young.

    "Imagine a guy dropping down behind enemy lines with crates of pigeons and a couple of bags of feed. How they didn’t get caught is amazing. It wasn't like today where there are unmanned drones. These guys were risking their lives," he added.

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    62 comments

    The message was a recipe for squab..

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    Explore related topics: canada, britain, europe, england, code, world-war-ii, u-k, carrier, message, pigeon, featured, gchq
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