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  • 9
    Apr
    2013
    10:15am, EDT

    2 US service members killed in Afghanistan helicopter crash

    Rahmat Gul/AP

    U.S. Black Hawk helicopters arrive to the scene after a NATO helicopter crashed in a field killing two American service members, near Gerakhel, eastern Afghanistan, on April 9.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Two American service members were killed in a helicopter crash Tuesday in eastern Afghanistan, the military said.

    A spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force said Tuesday that there was no enemy activity in the area when the crash occurred and that the cause was under investigation.

    The helicopter went down in the Pachir Agam district of Nangarhar province, Reuters quoted Ahmad Zia Abdulzai, a spokesman for the governor's office, as saying.

     

     

    52 comments

    RIP and Thank You for your service. Standing for those who stood for us....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: deaths, afghanistan, nato, military, helicopter-crash, featured, two-killed
  • 14
    Mar
    2013
    12:11pm, EDT

    At least 21 dead, 4 missing in China mining accident

    At least 21 miners have died and four others are trapped after a mine explosion in China. NBCNews.com's Richard Lui reports.

    BEIJING — China says 21 coal miners have been killed and four more are missing following an accident inside a mine in the southern province of Guizhou.

    The State Administration of Work Safety said Wednesday that a rescue effort had been mounted. State media reported that another 58 miners escaped the accident.

    China's mines have long been the world's deadliest, although the government announced last month that the total death toll fell by more than 30 percent last year to 1,384 as a result of stricter management.

    China is the world's largest producer of coal, which generates about two-thirds of its energy needs.

    The Associated Press

    7 comments

    Sad thing is they have no regard for human rights. So basically if any are alive they will not look for them. They will die. Very sad.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: energy, deaths, china, safety, coal, mining, featured
  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    6:39pm, EDT

    US ends investigation of terror detainees' deaths without charges

    By Jim Miklaszewski, NBC News

    The Justice Department announced Thursday that it has ended a lengthy investigation into the CIA's interrogation and treatment of prisoners without bringing any criminal charges. 

    U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced the investigation into the deaths of two suspected terrorists  who died in CIA custody -- one in Iraq and another in Afghanistan -- was ended without charges because "the admissible evidence would not be sufficient to obtain and sustain a conviction beyond a reasonable doubt." 


    Follow Open Channel on Twitter and Facebook.


    The two cases include the highly publicized case of Manadel al-Jamadi, who died in a shower stall at the infamous Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq while in CIA custody.  Several U.S. soldiers, who were photographed with al-Jamadi's body, packed in ice inside a body bag, were later prosecuted and convicted in military courts for prisoner abuse. 


    The investigation spanned more than four years. It began with an investigation into the CIA's destruction of videotapes of aggressive interrogations of terrorist suspects, but was later expanded to include the deaths of the two detainees. 

    In all the Justice Department investigated the treatment of 101 detainees who been held in U.S. custody since 9/11. 

    CIA Director David Petraeus issued a statement thanking everyone at the CIA who supported the Justice Departments investigations.  

    In an apparent effort to put the incidents and investigations to rest, Petraeus added, "As intelligence officers our inclination of course is to look ahead to the challenges of the future rather than backwards at those of the past."

    More from Open Channel:

    • ·  S. African telecom firm helped Iran evade US sanctions, documents show
    • ·  Vote on an iPad? Technology could supplant voter IDs at polls
    • ·  One of the most dangerous cities in the US plans to ditch its police force
    • ·  Navy sought to stifle concerns about radiation at ex-base, emails show
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    • ·  Florida once again a battleground as rules tighten on voter registration
    • ·  What ID do I need to vote in my state?

     

    Follow Open Channel from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

    51 comments

    How about prosecuting these murders in the same courts that you try terrorist. If those courts are as fair as the administration claims and are built to handle sensitive information, there should be no problem.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: deaths, cia, investigation, terrorism, detainees, abu-ghraib, featured, commentid-featured
  • 22
    Aug
    2012
    6:54am, EDT

    'No one really cares': US deaths in Afghanistan hit 2,000 in 'forgotten' war

    Lucas Jackson / Reuters, file

    Paratroopers from Chosen Company of the 3rd Battalion (Airborne), 509th Infantry rest towards the end of a helicopter assault mission to improve their biological database, near the town of Ahmad Khel in Afghanistan's Paktiya Province on July 16.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    KABUL, Afghanistan -- It was once President Barack Obama's "war of necessity." Now, it's America's forgotten war.

    The Afghan conflict generates barely a whisper on the U.S. presidential campaign trail. It's not a hot topic at the office water cooler or in the halls of Congress — even though more than 80,000 American troops are still fighting here and dying at a rate of one a day.

    Americans show more interest in the economy and taxes than the latest suicide bombings in a different, distant land. They're more tuned in to the political ad war playing out on television than the deadly fight still raging against the Taliban. Earlier this month, protesters at the Iowa State Fair chanted "Stop the war!" They were referring to one purportedly being waged against the middle class.


    By the time voters go to the polls Nov. 6 to choose between Obama and presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney, the war will be in its 12th year. For most Americans, that's long enough.

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

    'Bumper sticker deep'
    Public opinion remains largely negative toward the war, with 66 percent opposed to it and just 27 percent in favor in a May AP-GfK poll. More recently, a Quinnipiac University poll found that 60 percent of registered voters felt the U.S. should no longer be involved in Afghanistan. Just 31 percent said the U.S. is doing the right thing by fighting there now.

    Not since the Korean War of the early 1950s — a much shorter but more intense fight — has an armed conflict involving America's sons and daughters captured so little public attention.

    "We're bored with it," said Matthew Farwell, who served in the U.S. Army for five years including 16 months in eastern Afghanistan, where he sometimes received letters from grade school students addressed to the brave Marines in Iraq — the wrong war.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Hoshang Hashimi / AP

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

    Launch slideshow

    "We all laugh about how no one really cares," he said. "All the 'support the troops' stuff is bumper sticker deep."

    Top US general's aircraft hit by rocket-fire in Afghanistan

    Farwell, 29, who is now studying at the University of Virginia, said the war is rarely a topic of conversation on campus — and he isn't surprised that it's not discussed much on the campaign trail.

    "No one understands how to extricate ourselves from the mess we have made there," he said. "So from a purely political point of view, I wouldn't be talking about it if I were Barack Obama or Mitt Romney either."

    Ignoring the Afghan war, though, doesn't make it go away.

    According to the defense department's latest tally (updated on August 21, 2012 at 10 a.m. ET), 1,972 Americans have died in Afghanistan since President George W. Bush launched attacks there in October 2001 to rout al-Qaida.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The terrorist group used Afghanistan to train recruits and plot the Sept. 11 attacks that killed nearly 3,000 Americans.

    If casualties in other countries are included, the number of Americans killed since the start of the war is 2,091.

    According to an analysis of U.S. forces killed in the war by The New York Times, three out of four who died were white, nine out of 10 were enlisted service members and the average age of those who died was 26. Half of the deaths were in Afghanistan's Kandahar or Helmand provinces — in the country's Taliban-dominated south, the Times reported.

    The war drags on even though al-Qaida has been largely driven out of Afghanistan and its charismatic leader Osama bin Laden is dead — slain in a U.S. raid on his Pakistani hideout last year.

    Strangely, Afghanistan never seemed to grab the same degree of public and media attention as the war in Iraq, which Obama opposed as a "war of choice."

    Unlike Iraq, victory in Afghanistan seemed to come quickly. Kabul fell within weeks of the U.S. invasion in October 2001. The hardline Taliban regime was toppled with few U.S. casualties.

    But the Bush administration's shift toward war with Iraq left the Western powers without enough resources on the ground, so by 2006 the Taliban had regrouped into a serious military threat.

    Slideshow: Living in the combat zone

    Get an intimate view of the lives of infantry soldiers with the 10th Mountain Division, as they encounter danger and then have down time in Logar Province, Afghanistan.

    Launch slideshow

    Candidate Obama promised to refocus America's resources on Afghanistan. But by the time President Obama sent 33,000 more troops to Afghanistan in December 2009 in a policy known as the "surge", years of war in Iraq and Afghanistan had drained Western resources and sapped resolve to build a viable Afghan state.

    Army casualties during the surge were heaviest at Fort Campbell in Kentucky (home to the 101st Airborne Division) and Fort Drum in New York (home to the 10th Mountain division), according to the Times' analysis of deaths. Units at both bases were frequently deployed to Afghanistan during the surge, the Times reported.

    Panetta intervenes after 10th US service member killed in 2 weeks in Afghanistan

    Over time, Obama's administration has grown weary of trying to tackle Afghanistan's seemingly intractable problems of poverty and corruption. The American people have grown weary too.

    While most Americans are sympathetic to the plight of the Afghan people, they have become deeply skeptical of President Hamid Karzai's willingness to tackle corruption and political patronage and the coalition's chances of "budging a medieval society" into the modern world, says Ann Marlowe, a visiting fellow at the Hudson Institute, a policy research organization in Washington.

    "With millions of veterans home and talking with their families and friends ... some knowledge of just how hard this is has percolated down," said Marlowe, who has traveled to Afghanistan many times.

    The Pentagon issues new guidelines to U.S. troops in Afghanistan following a deadly week. NBC's Atia Abawi reports.

    It has also been hard to show progress on the battlefield.

    World War II had its Normandy, Vietnam its Tet Offensive and Iraq its Battle of Fallujah. Afghanistan is a grinding slough in villages and remote valleys where success is measured in increments.

    The Afghan war transformed into a series of small, often vicious and intense fights scattered across a country almost as large as Texas.

    What's leading Afghan troops to turn on coalition forces?

    In July, 40 U.S. service members died in Afghanistan in the deadliest month for American troops so far this year. At least 31 have been killed this month — seven when a helicopter crashed during a firefight with insurgents in what was one of the deadliest air disasters of the war. Ten others were gunned down in attacks from members of the Afghan security forces — either disgruntled turncoats or Taliban infiltrators.

    Many argue that bin Laden's death justifies a quick U.S. exit from Afghanistan. Others say it's important to stay longer to shore up the Afghan security forces and help build the government so that it can stand on its own. An unstable Afghanistan could again offer sanctuary to militants like al-Qaida who want to harm American and its allies, they say.

    "Those of us who have been at this for a long time continue to think that it's important, and that we have a chance now of a path forward with a long-term perspective that will produce the results," said James Cunningham, the new U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan.

    US forces in Afghanistan ordered to keep weapons loaded at all times

    The U.S.-led coalition's combat mission will wind down in the next few years, leading up to the end of 2014 when most international troops will have left or moved into support roles.

    Military analysts say the U.S. envisions a post-2014 force of perhaps 20,000 to hunt terrorists, train the Afghan forces and keep an eye on neighboring Iran and other regional powerhouse nations.

    Americans aren't likely to know the number until later this year. But will anyone other than families of service personnel take note?

    As NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports, US military officials are investigating whether or not the Taliban was in fact involved in deadly Black Hawk helicopter crash that claimed the lives of seven US soldiers and four Afghan troops.

    "I have heard others say that the danger that their spouses or children are serving in is just simply not being cared about," said Fred Wellman, a 22-year Army veteran who did three tours in Iraq. "I think a lot of veterans feel it is just forgotten."

    Political satirist Garry Trudeau captured the apathy about the war in a comic strip this year showing a U.S. servicewoman stationed in Afghanistan calling her brother back home.

    After he complains that his children have the flu and how he's struggling to keep up with their hectic hockey schedule, he asks her where she's calling from. She tells him she's in Afghanistan.

    "Oh, right, right ..." her brother replies. "Wait, we're still there?"

    The Associated Press and NBC News staff contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Trayvon Martin case: How might it be treated abroad?
    • Israelis fret over 'lynching' of Palestinian
    • Video: Poaching surge threatens survival of rhinos
    • Anti-tanning 'Facekinis' cause stir on China beach
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    • Reports: Olympic sprinter drowned when migrant boat sank
    • With wife's conviction, what is next for China's Bo Xilai?

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


    812 comments

    Yes it is a forgotten war because the Nobel Peace prize recipient is president.

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  • 18
    Aug
    2012
    3:40am, EDT

    Report: 211 die during drugs trials in India

    By NBC News staff

    Some 211 people died during clinical trials for new drugs in just six months in India, an official reportedly said.

    The Times of India newspaper said investigations were underway to see how many of the deaths were caused by the drugs or by diseases affecting the trial subjects, such as cancer.


    The Times said that in 2011 some 438 cases of serious adverse events were reported, with 16 later found to be due to clinical drugs trials.

    India’s Central Drugs Standard Control Organization has now proposed ways to reduce the number of problems and a new formula for compensation, the paper reported.

    Compensation is currently decided “according to the will” of the drug company, the Times added. Previous compensation payments of families of people who died during trials amounted to just a few dollars.

    "When a 70-year-old patient who is terminally ill dies during a clinical trial due to an adverse reaction of the drug, the compensation should be less than that given to a 22-year-old man in the first stage of the same disease who dies of the same drug," a CDSCO official told the paper.

    "The youth could be the sole bread-winner of the family and would have lived longer but for the adverse drug reaction. So, the guidelines quantify accordingly who should get how much compensation. At present, both could get the same amount and it could be abysmally low if decided by the pharmaceutical company,” the official added.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Could teddy bears unsettle 'Europe's last dictator'?
    • Police find severed human head, foot in park near Toronto
    • Russian court sentences Pussy Riot rockers to 2 years in prison
    • Women allowed on bicycles as N. Korea turns wheels of change
    • Flames of Syria's conflict singe rest of region
    • What's causing Afghan troops to turn on coalition forces?
    • I'd like a beer, 70-year-old says after icy 6-day ordeal in Alps

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    61 comments

    The article fail to mention the name of the drug company who conducted the drug trials. I think it very critical to know the who is behind the death of so many people and the under compensations of those deaths because of the rush to make money.

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  • 10
    Feb
    2012
    6:09pm, EST

    Rash of teenage suicides sets off alarm in Russia

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    MOSCOW -- After a rash of teenage suicides in Russia, including those of two 14-year-olds who plunged to their deaths from a 14-story building while holding hands, experts are urging the government to take immediate action.

    “Children are constantly under pressure,” Lyudmila  Rubina, a Russian child psychiatrist, told Al Jazeera. “They can’t find a common language to express their feelings at home and sometimes they are physically punished. There is no support at school and schools don’t want to play any role in the child's upbringing.”

    Russia has the world's third-highest rate of suicide among teenagers ages 15 to 19, with about 1,500 taking their own lives every year, according to a recent UNICEF report. The rate is higher only in the neighboring former Soviet republics of Belarus and Kazakhstan.


    In recent years, there have been 19 to 20 suicides annually per 100,000 teenagers in Russia — three times the world average, Boris Polozhy of the respected Serbsky psychiatric center in Moscow said Friday.

    "Until the highest authorities see suicide as a problem, our joint efforts will be unlikely to yield any results," Polozhy said.

    In the southwestern Siberian region of Tuva, the rate reaches a staggering 120 suicides per 100,000 teenagers, while the nearby region of Buryatiya has an average rate of 77 per 100,000. Both regions are impoverished and have high crime and alcoholism rates.

    'Better kill me'
    Two 14-year-old girls, Liza Petsylya and Nastia Korolyova, killed themselves this week by jumping off the roof of a 14-story building while holding hands. They had skipped classes for two weeks and were terrified of what their parents would do to them once they found out, Russian media quoted their friends as saying.

    Several other recent teen suicides have been reported elsewhere in Russia.

    Experts say that domestic violence and problems in schools are among the main reasons why adolescents take their lives.

    Relations between Russian children and their parents are often "notable for their cruelty," said Natalya Sinyagina of the Education Ministry's Center for Education Issues in Moscow. "(But) school is also not the safest place for kids."

    Russia's public schools are underfunded, are staffed with poorly paid teachers and have been widely criticized for neglecting the issue of bullying among children.

    "We've seen cases when a child says, 'Better kill me, I'm not going to school,'" Sinyagina said.

    'Lend a helping hand'
    Internet-savvy and handy with cell phones and computers, Russian teens spend hours on social networking websites and idolize pop stars just like teens elsewhere in the world. Experts say some teens romanticize early death and suicide, perceiving them as games, and are attracted by online suicide clubs that list the best ways to take your life.

    "Video games and information found online have devaluated death," said Urvan Parfentyev of the Moscow-based Center for Safe Internet.

    "I have seen websites that offer a thousand ways of killing oneself," said Zurab Kikelidze, Health Ministry's chief psychologist.

    Pavel Astakhov, the government-appointed children's rights ombudsman, said school psychologists should find and help suicidal teenagers on social networking websites and crack down on cyber-bullying, another widespread cause of teenage suicides.

    "Each suicide case must be thoroughly investigated to find out what caused it: whether it was the situation inside the family, problems at school or conflicts with classmates," Astakhov told Itar-Tass, Russia’s news agency. "In critical situations, children cannot be left alone, face to face with their problems. The entire society must lend a helping hand, and first of all, professionals –- psychologists and psychiatrists. No preventive efforts will be successful without their help."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • What gives? Another American in Libya no-fly limbo
    • Report: Saudi Arabia to buy nukes if Iran tests A-bomb
    • Zen monk fights radiation in Japan
    • Himalayan ice melt estimates get a major downsizing

     

    2 comments

    So why are the free nations of the world not taking any military action to stop the destruction of thousands of innocent civilians in Syria, and why is it that the MEDIA concentrates their discussions on the death and destruction issue but not on the subject of why there is NO CONCERTED EFFORT to st …

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    Explore related topics: deaths, russia, suicide, moscow, teens
  • 3
    Feb
    2012
    2:22pm, EST

    Europe tries to shield homeless from deep freeze

    Freezing temperatures and heavy snowstorms across Europe have caused massive traffic and energy problems, and  left at least 37 dead. The rare snow in Rome also forced the closing of The Colosseum and other tourist attractions. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports. 

    By msnbc.com news services

    KIEV, Ukraine – Russia and Ukraine took extra precautions on Friday to protect homeless people during a brutal cold snap, ordering new facilities and medical care after scores of people have frozen to death on the streets of Europe.

    As the death toll from the past week rose to at least 175 on Friday, Russian Emergencies Minister Sergei Shoigu ordered the creation of facilities nationwide to feed and provide medical assistance to the homeless.


    The weeklong freeze — Eastern Europe's worst in decades — is causing power outages, frozen water pipes and widespread closure of schools, nurseries, airports and bus routes.

    Other parts of Europe experienced frigid temperatures unseen in years. A roundup:

    Ukraine
    In the hardest-hit country, health officials have told hospitals to stop discharging the hundreds of homeless patients after they are treated for hypothermia and frostbite. The goal is to prevent them from dying once they are released into temperatures as low as minus 32 Celsius (minus 26 Fahrenheit).

    Authorities also have set up nearly 3,000 heating and food shelters.

    PhotoBlog: Images of Europe's deep freeze

    Thirty-eight more fatalities were reported from frostbite and hypothermia in Ukraine on Friday, raising the nation's death toll to 101. Emergency officials have said many of the victims were homeless.

    Bosnia
    Bosnia reported its first deaths. Five people died Friday in Sarajevo, most of them while shoveling snow, Dr. Tigran Elezovic said, and one person died in the southern city of Mostar, where ambulances could not reach the victim because of snow.

    Rome
    Thick snowflakes fell on Rome on Friday, forcing the closure of the Colosseum over fears tourists would slip on the icy ruins, and leaving buses struggling to climb the city's slushy hills.

    The snowfall prompted authorities to stop visitors from entering the Colosseum, the adjacent Roman Forum and the Palatine Hill, the former home of Rome's ancient emperors.

    A woman looks through an icy window in a bus in Ukraine's capital, Kiev, on Friday.

    Authorities appealed to Italians to stay off highways, as the cold snap was predicted to continue well into the next week.

    Northern Italy also has been gripped by snow and ice that is disrupting train travel.

    Netherlands
    Police in the eastern city of Wageningen reported that a homeless man found dead Thursday in a shed died of hypothermia, making him the first confirmed Dutch victim of the cold.

    Traffic around the Netherlands was thrown into chaos Friday by snow. Trains ran with long delays and several flights in and out of Schiphol were delayed or canceled.

    Poland
    The Interior Ministry recorded eight more deaths on Friday and said two other people died of asphyxiation from carbon monoxide-spewing charcoal heaters.

    Croatia and Montenegro
    In Croatia, some highways were closed and waters of the Adriatic Sea froze in some areas. Buses that travel from Zagreb, the capital, toward the coast have been canceled. In Montenegro, the airport in the capital, Podgorica, was closed due to heavy snow.

    This article includes reporting from Reuters and The Associated Press.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Panetta report fuels concerns that Israel will attack Iran
    • 3 die in Egypt clashes as anger at deadly riot spills into second day
    • A retired teacher's courageous crusade: Tackling neo-Nazi hate
    • Mexico's 'super labs' send meth pouring into US

     

    154 comments

    Mitt Romney would have supplied each homeless person with a net full of holes. Compassionate Conservative, indeed!

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  • 12
    Jan
    2012
    1:21pm, EST

    One killed every half hour in Mexico drug-related violence

    Jose Luis Gonzalez / Reuters

    Children look at a puddle of blood at a Nov. 4, 2011, crime scene in Ciudad Juarez. Tens of thousands of people have abandoned Ciudad Juarez, a city wrecked by Mexico's drug violence.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    One person died in drug-related violence every half hour in Mexico last year, amounting to 48 executions per day on average, according to the Mexican Excelsior newspaper, a sign that the violence surrounding the country's powerful cartels continues unabated.

    A total of 12,903 were murdered in the first nine months of 2011, Excelsior and other newspapers reported, sourcing data from the country's Attorney General's office (link in Spanish).


    Nationwide, 47,515 people have been killed since December 2006, when President Felipe Calderon deployed thousands of troops to drug hot spots, through to September 2011, the Attorney General's Office said on Wednesday. The deaths include those involved in the drugs trade, civilians and members of security forces fighting the cartels, according to Excelsior.

    The most dangerous city in the country during the first nine months of 2011 was Ciudad Juarez in Chihuahua, on the border with the United States, and the second-most dangerous was Acapulco, Guerrero, on the western coast of the country.

    • US: Mexico kingpin Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman is 'world's most powerful drug trafficker'

    The Associated Press reported on Wednesday that two decapitated bodies had been found inside a burning SUV at the entrance of one of Mexico City's most expensive shopping centers, feeding fears that conflict was seeping into parts of society previously thought safe.

    Police recovered the mutilated bodies before dawn off a toll highway at a shopping mall entrance in the heart of the Santa Fe district that's a haven for international corporations, diplomats and the wealthy. The heads and a threatening message were dumped a few yards away, Mexico City prosecutors said in a statement.

    By F. Brinley Bruton, London-based senior writer and editor

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • 'Deplorable': US defense chief condemns urinating Marines video
    • In Haiti, billions in aid remain unused, thousands still live in tents
    • Nigeria: Main oil union threatens production shutdown
    • Nuclear killing: Is West waging 'covert war' against Iran?
    • Iran's Ahmadinejad talks tough during Latin America tour
    • Mexican team bobbles heart headed for transplant

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    489 comments

    I enjoyed and experimented with a few "substances" in my younger years. Now days you should really think about people dying(some innocent) when you smoke, snort, or ingest illegal substances. It's a bitch but this is a humanitarian crisis that we here in the U.S. have helped create in Mexico.

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  • 14
    Dec
    2011
    11:44pm, EST

    143 killed by tainted batch of bootleg booze in India

     

    By The Associated Press

    Updated at 10 a.m. ET: The death toll from a tainted batch of bootleg liquor had risen to 143 by Thursday evening, according to Surajit Kar Purkayaspha, a top West Bengal state police official. About 100 people were being treated in hospitals, he said.

    Updated at 12:50 a.m. ET

    KOLKATA, India -- A tainted batch of bootleg liquor killed 102 people and sent dozens more to the hospital near the eastern Indian city of Kolkata, in the state of West Bengal, officials said.

    Day laborers and other poor workers began falling ill late Tuesday after drinking the brew that was laced with the toxic methanol around the village of Sangrampur, about 30 kilometers (20 miles) south of Kolkata, according to district magistrate Narayan Swarup Nigam.

    AP

    Relatives of victims gather at Diamond Harbour hospital in the village of Sangrampur on Wednesday.

    "It's a very sad thing that this has happened. Why don't the police stop this? I cannot understand? What connection do they have?" said Anwar Hassan Mullah, who brought six people from his village to the hospital. All of them died, Mullah told NDTV news channel.

    Police arrested four people in connection with making and distributing the toxic booze, said police official Surajit Kar Purkayastha.

    Mamata Banerjee, chief minister of the state of West Bengal, promised a crackdown.

    "I want to take strong action against those manufacturing and selling illegal liquor," she said, according to Press Trust of India. "But this is a social problem also, and this has to be dealt with socially also along with action."

    • PhotoBlog: Dozens killed by bootleg booze

    The deaths came just days after more than 90 people were killed in a hospital fire in nearby Kolkata that led to the arrest of the facility's directors for culpable homicide.

    The latest tragedy began Tuesday night when groups of poor laborers finished work and bought some cheap homemade booze for about 10 rupees (20 cents) a half liter, less than one-third the price of legal alcohol.

    The men were drinking along the roadside near the railway station, when they began vomiting, suffering piercing headaches and frothing at the mouth, Nigam said.

    Arman Seikh, 23-years-old, rushed his brother-in-law to the hospital.

    "He complained of burning chest and severe stomach pain last night," he told The Associated Press.

    Furious villagers ransacked the illegal alcohol shops.

    Cheap bootleg liquor kills dozens of people every year in India. In 2009, at least 112 people died from a toxic brew in western India.

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

    117 comments

    "Tainted " "bootleg" Alcohol killed here frequently too, in the past. ... Marijuana has never harmed or killed a person ... STOP PROHIBITION .... Legalize Marijuana!

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