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  • 24
    Apr
    2013
    10:54am, EDT

    Donald Trump rebuked over advertisement for Scottish golf course

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

    Donald Trump waves to a crowd following an address to the Scottish Parliament on April 25, 2012. He spoke of his concerns about a proposed wind farm set to be built near his new GBP 1 billion golf resort, saying it would destroy tourism.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    Donald Trump has been given an embarrassing rebuke by U.K. officials who ruled that an advertisement linked to his new $1.1 billion golf resort in Scotland was "misleading."

    The country’s Advertising Standards Agency said the newspaper advertisement, which attacked plans for a nearby offshore wind energy plant and mentioned the release of the Lockerbie bomber, could not be substantiated.

    Trump has fought a long battle with authorities over the proposed wind farm, which he says will hurt Scottish tourism by spoiling the view from his Trump International Golf Club Scotland.

    The 640-foot turbines will be in the sea an estimated mile-and-a-half from Trump's resort.

    The first phase of the development, in Menie, Aberdeenshire, opened in 2012 and is marketed as one of the world’s leading links courses.

    The club ran an ad in two Scottish daily newspapers featuring a picture of a wind farm in California, with the tag lines: "Is this the future for Scotland?" and "Tourism will suffer and the beauty of your country is in jeopardy!"

    It also showed a picture of Scotland’s First Minister, Alex Salmond, with the caption: "This is the same mind that backed the release of terrorist al-Megrahi, 'for humane reasons' – after he ruthlessly killed 270 people on Pan-Am flight 103 over Lockerbie."

    The move attracted 21 formal complaints, including one from a member of the Scottish Parliament.

    The ASA said the reference to the 1988 terror attack was "distasteful" but did not breach U.K. advertising code of practice.

    However, it ruled that the claim a wind farm would harm tourism was "misleading" because it had not been substantiated with sufficient evidence, and said the advertisement should never again appear in its current form.

    New York-based Trump last month announced he was shelving the later phases of his development, including a prestige hotel, in protest at the decision to allow the wind farm to go ahead.

    He told The Scotsman newspaper: "This was a purely political decision. As dictated by Alex Salmond, a man whose obsession with obsolete wind technology will destroy the magnificence and beauty of Scotland. Likewise, tourism, Scotland's biggest industry, will be ruined."

    Related:

    • Trump Twitter mystery! Who hacked The Donald?
    • Donald Trump drops $5 million orangutan lawsuit against Bill Maher

    202 comments

    How dare they mar his view of an uninterrupted horizon? Such effrontery!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: energy, world, environment, donald-trump, scotland, uk, advert, featured, golf-course
  • 21
    Mar
    2013
    12:28pm, EDT

    Remember September: Scotland sets date to vote on independence from UK

    David Moir / Reuters

    A teacher and schoolgirl run in front of a sign indicating the date of Scotland's independence referendum outside the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh on Thursday.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    Scotland will hold an independence referendum on Sept. 18, 2014, its First Minister Alex Salmond said Thursday — a vote that could see it split from the rest of Britain.

    The announcement of the date was the latest step in the process toward possible independence for the nation’s 5 million citizens.

    Voters will be asked a single question: "Should Scotland be an independent country?"


    Scotland has a government, in Edinburgh, but remains under the ultimate authority of the United Kingdom. It elects lawmakers to both its own parliament, which handles most day-to-day matters, and the House of Commons in London, which controls defense, immigration and UK-wide taxation.

     

    David Moir / Reuters

    First Minister Alex Salmond answers questions at the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh, Scotland, on Thursday.

    Salmond's pro-independence Scottish National Party, or SNP, won a majority in the Scottish Parliament in May 2011 elections, providing what he called a "once-in-a-generation" chance for Edinburgh to break ties with London.

    His deputy, Nicola Sturgeon, said the event would be a "momentous day for Scotland."

    But the SNP faces an uphill battle to win the referendum, Reuters reported, with opinion polls putting support for independence at about 30 percent of the electorate in Scotland, while about 50 percent favor the status quo.

    Announcing the date as he unveiled the Scottish Independence Referendum Bill in the Scottish Parliament, Salmond said: “I believe it will be the day we take responsibility for our country, when we are able to speak with our own voice, choose our own direction and contribute in our distinct way,” the BBC reported.

    The vote is slightly earlier than had been expected and will take place slightly before the Ryder Cup golf tournament is staged at Gleneagles —one of the events that people had assumed would be used to build up a feel-good factor in the run-up to the plebiscite, The Scotsman newspaper reported.

    However, The Herald newspaper noted that having the vote earlier allowed independence supporters “to hope for a feelgood bounce” from Glasgow’s Commonwealth Games, which take place in July and August, as well as from the build-up to the Ryder Cup.

    The SNP complains that the British Parliament, where members representing Scotland are a small minority because England has a much bigger population of 53 million, does not have the particular interests of the Scottish people at heart.

    Reuters summarized the independence debate, shortened to 'indyref' on social media:

    The SNP argues that North Sea Oil revenues combined with the local farming, fishing and whisky industries would enable an independent Scotland to prosper.

    But other parties in Edinburgh and the London government say both Scotland and the rest of the United Kingdom would lose out.

    Critics of the SNP say oil reserves are dwindling and Scotland would lose the disproportionately generous share of taxpayer money raised across Britain that it currently receives.

    Scottish secession would pose serious challenges to the remainder of the United Kingdom, such as what to do about its Trident nuclear submarine fleet which is based in Scotland.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    214 comments

    Freeeeeeedooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooom~! - William Wallace

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    Explore related topics: europe, world, politics, news, scotland, uk, independence, featured
  • Updated
    25
    Feb
    2013
    2:12pm, EST

    Britain's top Catholic cleric resigns amid allegations of inappropriate behavior

    The leader of the Scottish Catholic Church, Cardinal Keith O'Brien, has resigned amid allegations of inappropriate behavior, involving four priests in the 1980s. The Cardinal used his resignation to apologize to those he'd offended.  ITV's Lewis Vaughan Jones report.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    LONDON — Britain’s most senior Roman Catholic cleric has resigned amid allegations of inappropriate behavior made by priests.

    The Vatican said Monday that Pope Benedict XVI had formally accepted the resignation of Cardinal Keith O’Brien, archbishop of St. Andrews and Edinburgh. The Observer newspaper reported Sunday that the Vatican had been notified of allegations of inappropriate behavior stretching back 30 years.


    Three priests in Scotland, as well as a former priest, have lodged complaints to the Vatican's ambassador to Britain and demanded O'Brien's immediate resignation, according to the newspaper.

    The 74-year-old cardinal has contested the claims and said he is taking legal advice.

    O’Brien had been prepared to resign, citing his age as the cause. He turns 75 on March 17, and the Vatican said the pope had in November accepted a resignation letter under the condition of “nunc pro tunc,” meaning “now for later.”

    The Vatican said Monday, however, that the pontiff had now accepted the resignation “definitively.”

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images, file

    The Vatican confirmed Monday that it had accepted the resignation of Cardinal Keith O'Brien, 74.

    It means O'Brien will not take part in the conclave to elect the pope's successor - a process that could begin earlier than March 15 after the rules governing the process were changed in a move announced Monday.

    O’Brien said in a statement that it was the pope himself who had decided his resignation would take effect immediately.

    “Approaching the age of 75 and at times in indifferent health, I tendered my resignation … some months ago,” he said. “The Holy Father has now decided that my resignation will take effect today.”

    O'Brien would have been Britain's only elector in the papal conclave that will gather to decide on a successor to Benedict XVI.

    "I will not join them for this conclave in person," O'Brien said. "I do not wish media attention in Rome to be focused on me -- but rather on Pope Benedict XVI and on his successor."

    A hint of O’Brien’s accelerated resignation was found Sunday in Edinburgh, when the cardinal did not appear as scheduled to lead a Mass at St. Mary’s Cathedral. Instead, Bishop Stephen Robson made a statement on O’Brien’s behalf.

    “A number of allegations of inappropriate behavior have been made against the cardinal,” the statement said. “The cardinal has sought legal advice, and it would be inappropriate to comment at this time. There will be further statements in due course.”

    Robson is an auxiliary prelate in the Edinburgh diocese.

    O'Brien's statement went on to say: "I have valued the opportunity of serving the people of Scotland and overseas in various ways since becoming a priest. Looking back over my years of ministry: For any good I have been able to do, I thank God. For any failures, I apologize to all whom I have offended."

    Controversy
    O’Brien had gained a reputation as a hard-line conservative and opponent of gay rights.

    In 2009, O’Brien urged the Scottish National Party to abandon plans to give gay couples the same foster-parenting rights as straight ones, calling the idea “misguided” and saying that gays were known for unstable relationships.

    Scandals are still on the minds of Catholics as Benedict's time as pope grows short. NBC's Ann Thompson reports.

    Last year, he wrote an editorial in the Daily Telegraph in which he urged people to stand up against a proposal to allow gay marriage, which he said was “madness.” He referred then to same-sex marriage as a “grotesque subversion of a universally accepted human right.”

    O’Brien’s stance and other comments led the gay rights group Stonewall UK last year to nominate him for its “Bigot of the Year” award.

    “Ten-thousand people overwhelmingly, decisively voted that he should be given that award,” said Colin MacFarlane, director of Stonewall Scotland. “We don’t call people a bigot because they disagree with us. We reserve that for people who use the kind of language the cardinal has used. He has gone out of his way. It has not been fair discourse. His language has been cruel, hurtful and pernicious.”

    The group's response to news of O'Brien's resignation was unsurprising.

    “We trust there will now be a full investigation into the serious allegations made against Cardinal O’Brien,” MacFarlane said. “We hope his successor will show a little more Christian charity towards openly gay people than the cardinal did himself.”

    Two weeks ago, the pope’s brother, the Rev. Georg Ratzinger, said scandals had troubled Benedict XVI and may have contributed to his decision to retire.

    He specifically mentioned that Benedict had been bothered by the "Vatileaks" scandal in which a butler leaked secret documents, as well as the "the relationship to the Pius Brotherhood."

    That organization, formally known as the Society of St. Pius X, fell into a harsh public spotlight in December when its leader, Bishop Bernard Fellay, said Jews were "the enemies of the church." His comment drew criticism from all corners of the church and from the public in general.

    Georg Ratzinger said he thought his brother had handled those problems well but that they had taken their toll.

    Related: 

    LA's Cardinal Mahony says he is a 'scapegoat'

    Inside the Vatican: The $8 billion global institution where nuns answer the phones

    Vatican history of 'cover-ups and disarray' will challenge new pope

    This story was originally published on Mon Feb 25, 2013 6:55 AM EST

    511 comments

    The Roman Catholic Church. The sanctuary for pedaphiles and sexual deviants.

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  • 31
    Dec
    2012
    3:04pm, EST

    World marks 2013 with fireworks, fanfare and -- for some -- new freedoms

    Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters

    People celebrate at Myanmar's first public New Year countdown celebration at the Myoma grounds in Yangon January 1, 2013.

    By NBC News and wire services

    Updated at 5:05 a.m. ET: As the clock struck midnight in each new timezone starting with in the Pacific Rim it was met with spectacular shows from Sydney to Beijing.

    In Myanmar, where citizens were holding their first public countdown, the jubilation was at least as heartfelt, even if set against a humbler backdrop. It signaled a new year, as well as a new era of expanding democracy after five decades of military rulers who discouraged or banned public gatherings.

    "We feel like we are in a different world," said Yu Thawda, a college student enjoying the festivities in Yangon, the capital.

    Not every celebration was imbued with the same degree of hopefulness.


    In Russia, Moscow's iconic Red Square was filled with spectators as fireworks exploded near the Kremlin. President Vladimir Putin gave an optimistic New Year's Eve address, making no reference to the anti-government protests that have occurred in his country in the past year.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Russians were marking their last New Year’s Eve with unfettered access to beer. New restrictions preventing sale of suds overnight or at street kiosks go into effect Jan. 1, part of a government effort to curb alcoholism.


    Beer now considered alcohol, not food, in Russia

    "You have to stock at home. And stocking beer is more problematic than stocking vodka," brewing industry official Isaac Sheps told London’s Daily Telegraph. "It’s bulky. It’s big."

    In austerity-hit Europe, the mood was also restrained as 2012 came to a close. The coming year is projected to be a sixth straight one of recession amid Greece's worst economic crisis since World War II. In fact, the new year was starting with a 24-hour strike by subway and train workers in Athens to protest salary cuts that are part of the government's austerity measures.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel's New Year's message warned her country to prepare for difficult economic times ahead. Nicosia, the capital of Cyprus, decided to cancel celebrations in light of the economic crisis.

    Slideshow: Celebrations as 2013 dawns

    Damian Shaw / EPA

    From Sydney to Siberia, revelers celebrate the arrival of a new year.

    Launch slideshow

    Celebrating New Year's Eve with a vespers service in St. Peter's Basilica, Pope Benedict XVI said that despite all the injustice in the world, goodness prevails. In Spain, where a recession has left unemployment at a staggering 25 percent, people are hoping for a better new year.

    In London, the chimes of the clock inside the Big Ben tower counted down the final seconds of 2012 and fireworks dazzled the sky above Parliament Square. Streamers shot out of the London Eye wheel and blazing rockets launched from the banks of the River Thames.

    One night of revelries wasn't enough for some people.

    Scotland launched the annual festival known as Hogmanay on Sunday night with thousands of torchbearers marching in Edinburgh, drawing inspiration from pagan traditions. The Scotsman newspaper estimated that 7,000 people participated in the "river of fire" through the city center.

    The fete was set to last until Wednesday and draw 80,000 revelers from around the world, according to the official Hogmanay website.

    New laws ban sex with prisoners, hound-hunting of bobcats, etc.

    First across the line to 2013
    The new year’s westward march across the globe began with Samoa ushering in 2013 a full day before the clock strikes midnight in neighboring American Samoa.

    It’s a quirk of the international dateline, which Samoa moved a year ago, giving it a jump on the jubilation that erupts as the earth bids farewell to one year and welcomes another, time zone by time zone.

    The celebration started small in places like Christmas Island, an Australian territory, and Kiribati, an equator-straddling chain of islands in the Pacific, at 5 a.m. ET Monday.

    An hour later, Auckland, New Zealand, became the first major city to begin a new calendar, with fireworks shot from the Sky Tower, the tallest structure in the Southern Hemisphere at 1,076 feet.

    The really big parties started, though, when the new year reached Australia at 8 a.m. ET. More than a million revelers gathered in Sydney’s harbor for a massive $6.9 million pyrotechnics party hosted by pop star Kylie Minogue.

    Slideshow: New Year's traditions

    Mariana Bazo / Reuters

    We may have different calendars, customs and beliefs, but most of us mark the arrival of a new year. Take a look at the ways cultures around the world celebrate and bring good luck for the year ahead.

    Launch slideshow

    Among those watching in person was Melissa Sjostedt, of Florida, who read about Sydney’s firework spectaculars in National Geographic a decade ago.

    "Ever since that, I've always wanted to see this for real, live, in person," she told the Associated Press.

    North Korea’s fireworks went off a day after another party, marking the one-year anniversary of Kim Jong Un's ascension to supreme commander. Hong Kong was hosting its biggest bash ever with a $1.6 million fireworks display. In Japan, bells at temples rang 108 times.

    David Moir / Reuters

    Up Helly Aa vikings from the Shetland Islands march in the torchlight procession to mark the start of Hogmanay (New Year) celebrations in Edinburgh on Dec. 30.

    In India, outrage over the fatal gang-rape of a young woman tempered celebrations. 

    "The Indian army, air force and navy have decided to cancel all the parties planned to welcome the new year," a senior official told Agence France Presse. "They want to dedicate the last day of the year to the gang-rape victim."

    Ashish Gupta, 35, an accountant, said it would be too difficult to enjoy the traditional revelry.

    "This New Year is not going to be the same for me and many of my friends," he said.

    The Associated Press and NBC News' Stacy Connor contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Body of India rape victim cremated in New Delhi
    • Pakistan militants kill 40 in mass execution, attack on Shiites
    • Statue of Hitler praying is displayed in former Warsaw ghetto to controversy
    • Putin signs law banning American adoptions
    • Video: Elephants play soccer at Nepal festival
    • US sailors sue Japan's TEPCO for post-quake radiation exposure

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    65 comments

    It is wonderful to be alive and welcome in another year.So many who were loved did not make it this far. We have before us the beginning of a whole year.Each day like a present, filled with 24 hours, clean, fresh and full of endless possibilities. Remember, there are only two things in life you …

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    Explore related topics: australia, new-zealand, scotland, celebration, new-year, featured, 2013, hogmanay
  • 6
    Nov
    2012
    5:22pm, EST

    Scotland crowd flees 'freak accident' when fireworks show rockets all go off at once

    November 5th Fireworks 2012 display, Oxgangs, Edinburgh

    Watch on YouTube
    By NBC News staff

    A fireworks rocket misfired and ricocheted into boxes of undetonated fireworks, setting the rest of the $3,200 display in Scotland off at once, scattering the audience and injuring one girl, the BBC and other UK media reported Tuesday.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The Monday night fireworks display organizers, Pentland Community Centre of Oxgangs Brae in Edinburgh, issued an apology Tuesday:

    "This was a freak accident, and most regrettable, but this is the first incident we have had in 10 years of holding this popular community event, and we extend our apologies to everyone who was alarmed," it said.


    The organizers said they would review safety protocols.

    A girl suffered a burn to the side of her face and was taken to Edinburgh's Royal Hospital for Sick Children, the BBC reported.

    Footage of the fireworks eruption was posted on YouTube.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

    The Scotsman newspaper reported that the fireworks display was part of the annual Bonfire Night show.

    Susan Ross, a local resident at the display, was quoted by the BBC:

    "My friend and her daughters were standing at the side of the post office and the showers of fireworks were coming over them and they had to jump over the girls to stop the sparks landing on their jackets.

    "The next thing I heard was several bangs and then a massive explosion. "I turned around and everybody was just scattering and running across the road away from it. I saw people lifting buggies up off the ground because people had their brakes on the buggies and they were physically lifting their kids by the arms to get away.

    "My heart was going along with everybody else. Some of the kids were crying because they did get a fright.”

    Earlier this year in San Diego, Calif., a computer glitch was blamed when the Big Bay Boom show went bust on Independence Day as a sudden burst of hundreds of fireworks shot into the air about five minutes before the scheduled start of the show.

    August Santore, co-owner of Garden State Fireworks, the next day apologized on television stations "to all the residents and all the people who missed their fireworks."

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

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    5 comments

    At least keep the guy setting off the fireworks sober!!

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    Explore related topics: scotland, fireworks, edinburgh, freak-accident
  • 6
    Oct
    2012
    2:28pm, EDT

    Undeterred by jail time, 'The Naked Rambler' is back on the trail

     

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

    Stephen Gough makes his way south through Peebles in the Scottish Borders, on Oct. 6, following his release the day before from Saughton Prison. The rambler has 18 convictions and has been in and out of prison since 2006 for offenses ranging from not wearing clothes in front of the sheriff, breach of the peace and contempt of court.

    Stephen Gough, known as 'The Naked Rambler,' has spent more than six years in Scottish prisons for refusing to put his clothes on. He was released from prison Friday after serving his latest sentence for public nudity. He has twice traversed the island of Great Britain wearing only boots, socks, a backpack and sometimes a hat.

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

    Stephen Gough maeks his way south through Peebles in the Scottish Borders on Oct. 6.

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

    Stephen Gough chats with a man he encountered on the road as he makes his way south through Peebles in the Scottish Borders.

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

     

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

    Stephen Gough ends his walk for the day near Peebles in the Scottish Borders.

    More odd stories from Britain on PhotoBlog:

    • We're gonna golf like it's 1935! The World Hickory Open tees off in Scotland
    • There's nothing worse than a wet wig: Judges in London try to stay dry in the rain
    • A kid's worst nightmare? Giant vegetables compete for top prize
    • The last stag hunt: 45 years of stalking deer in Scotland

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    64 comments

    It is wonderful how nudity brings out the 9-year old in all of us. Who cares if he is naked? He would not be wandering naked for long, up here in Alaska. Nude hiking is possible a few days a year, but between the mosquitoes and the long, cold, winters, he would need a new hobby.

    Show more
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  • 3
    Sep
    2012
    6:34am, EDT

    Stranded whales rescued after dozens beached in Scotland

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

    Volunteers and animal welfare workers attempt to rescue a large number of pilot whales beached near St Andrews in Scotland, Sunday.

    By NBC News staff

    Ten pilot whales were rescued and refloated Monday after they became stranded on a Scottish beach, according to reports.

    The 20-foot whales were kept alive by vets and led out to deeper waters but 16 others could not be saved and died on the beach in Fife, on the east coast just south of St Andrews, Fife, The Scotsman newspaper reported.


    It said volunteers joined the local coastguard, Fire Brigade, British Divers Marine Life Rescue, animal welfare charities and local vets during the rescue attempt.

    21 whales beach selves in Florida, at least two die


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Coastguard officials were alerted to the beaching, between Anstruther and Pittenweem, at 7 a.m. local time (1 a.m. ET) on Sunday, the BBC reported.  It said three of the whales that died were calves.

    David Galloway, a fish filleter from Anstruther, told The Scotsman: “I went down to the beach at about 12 p.m. and I could see all the whales. It was horrible. I have never seen anything like it in my life.

    “We were told we couldn’t go down on to the beach, but we could see rescuers beside the whales, they were trying to take care of them, trying to keep them moist. They were waiting for the tide to come in. It was just horrible.”

    A coastguard spokeswoman said: “It is a very rare occurrence in Scotland and very sad.

    “The usual scenario would be that the whale that is leading the group has become ill, or has lost its way, and gets beached and the rest will follow on. Although we do not know for sure if that is what has happened.”

    The poor beached whales anstruther. So sad 🐳 twitter.com/amalloy_/statu…

    — Alison Malloy (@amalloy_) September 2, 2012

    Witnesses posted pictures of the rescue scene via social media, including Twitter.

    It came after 21 short-finned pilot whales beached themselves along Florida's Atlantic coast on Saturday, leaving at least two whales dead.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Sun Myung Moon, founder of Unification Church, dies at 92
    • Girl accused of blasphemy in Pakistan may have been framed by Muslim cleric
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    • Assad stays cool amid reports of bread-line slaughter
    • Ex-Marine on her journey from homelessness to the Paralympics

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

    74 comments

    Thanks to all the rescuers who worked to save as many as they could. Thanks to the volunteers who stepped out of their comfortable lives and put in effort to try and save them. Thanks to everyone who saw these whales as lives that needed to be saved. While the whales can't thank you, I sure can on t …

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    Explore related topics: europe, environment, wildlife, stranded, scotland, marine, featured, uk-whales
  • 6
    Jun
    2012
    6:43am, EDT

    1 dead, 15 critically ill after Legionnaires' disease outbreak in Scotland

    NBC News partner ITV News reports on the outbreak of Legionnaires' disease in Scotland.

    Watch on YouTube
    By msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson and ITV News

    LONDON -- One man has died and 15 other people were listed in critical condition on Wednesday following an outbreak of Legionnaires' disease in Edinburgh, Scotland. Authorities believe the disease may have been spread by industrial cooling towers, potentially including some at a whisky distillery.

    Public health officials were investigating a further 15 suspected cases of the disease and say more cases could emerge in the coming days.


    The victim was a man aged in his 50s, who had underlying health problems, while 13 men and two women aged between 33 and 74 were in critical condition, according to The Scotsman newspaper.

    The source of the outbreak is still being investigated.

    The disease is contracted by breathing in small droplets of contaminated water, and is often traced to artificial water systems such as air conditioning units or cooling towers.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    All the cases so far are linked to the Gorgie, Saughton and Dalry areas in the south-west of the city. Britain’s Sky News reported that samples have been taken from 16 cooling towers at four industrial sites in those areas. However, it will be days before any firm link can be established.

    Shortbread cookie link?
    Sky News said one of the cooling towers being investigated was at a Scotch whisky plant while another was a shortbread cookie factory. There is no evidence either site is linked to the outbreak.

    The first case was identified on May 28. Sky News said health officials believe infected droplets may have been in the air on May 20 when thousands gathered to watch a victory parade by local soccer team Heart of Midlothian. The club won the Scottish Cup the previous day.

    The disease is named after its first recognized outbreak, which occurred among people attending a state convention of the American Legion in Philadelphia in 1976. That remains the world’s deadliest case, with 34 victims, and was traced to a hotel air conditioning system cooling tower.

    According to the World Health Organization website, Legionnaires' disease is not contagious and can take up to two weeks to develop.

    Symptoms include mild headaches and muscle pain, escalating to a high fever, persistent cough and sometimes vomiting, diarrhea and confusion.

    Read more on this story from Britain's ITV News

    It is treatable in the majority cases, but can be fatal in those with weakened immune systems or underlying health problems such as poor lungs.

    'Very, very severe'
    Professor Hugh Pennington, one of the world's leading bacteriology experts, told ITV News: “Essentially it is a preventable disease. Industrial water cooling towers are quite a common source of the bug. The bug lives in warm, fresh water. Basically what should be done is disinfectant should be put in the water to basically stop the bug growing. Well, clearly that hasn't happened and the aerosol of water that comes out of these cooling towers contains the bug, people breathe it in and then they get Legionnaires' disease which is essentially a very, very severe pneumonia.

    "It particularly affects people who already have weakened lungs through previous disease or immune-suppressed or elderly, so because it's aerosol it can spread on the wind and that's one of the reasons why it's quite difficult to track down a particular source."

    ITV News is the British partner of NBC News.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    8 comments

    I hope everyone to get well soon.

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  • 5
    Jun
    2012
    6:27am, EDT

    Dull, Scotland, seeks civic link with Boring, Oregon

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    The Scottish village of Dull is hoping to persuade Boring, Oregon, to become “sister” communities, according to reports.

    Boring’s Community Planning Organization is due to vote on the idea at a meeting Tuesday, The Gresham Outlook reported.


    Meanwhile, excitement is building in rural Perthshire.

    Dull community councillor Marjorie Keddie told BBC News that, "everyone has been smiling at the prospect of the very eye-catching road sign this will inevitably require."

    The BBC said Elizabeth Leighton, from Perthshire, came up with the idea after a cycling vacation in Oregon when she visited Boring.

    Boring - population more than 12,000 - was named after William H. Boring, who fought on the Union side in the American civil war.

    Dull, numbering less than 90, is thought to have got its name from the Gaelic words for a meadow or possibly a snare, the BBC said.

    There is, inevitably, already a Dull & Boring Facebook page.

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    28 comments

    Bob, too funny. That reminds me of an actual headline in a local Minnesota paper years ago: "Fertile woman dies in Climax". (Fertile, MN and Climax, MN are about 30 miles apart--one can only imagine what slogans they share when their sports teams play each other!)

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  • 25
    May
    2012
    4:26pm, EDT

    With support from Sean Connery, Scotland launches independence campaign

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

    Alex Salmond, Scotland's first minister and leader of the Scottish National Party attends a campaign for Scottish independence with supporters at Cineworld on May 25, 2012 in Edinburgh, Scotland.

    By Reuters

    With rousing speeches, patriotic music and support from actor Sean Connery, supporters of independence for Scotland launched a campaign on Friday that they hope will lead to the demise of a 305-year-old union with England and the breakup of Britain.

    "This is the beginning of something really special - the beginning of the campaign to restore nationhood to Scotland," Alex Salmond, leader of the Scottish National Party (SNP), told hundreds of supporters in a hall in the capital Edinburgh.

    "We want a Scotland that is fairer and more prosperous."


    The campaign hopes to tap into a blend of historical rivalry, different political tastes, and a perception that the British parliament in London does not safeguard Scotland's interests to win a referendum in 2014, which would pave the way for full independence two years later.

    If successful, the drive could create serious problems for Britain, which comprises England, Scotland and Wales (Britain is in turn part of the United Kingdom, which also includes Northern Ireland).

    Bates College student dies after going swimming at Scottish beach

    With its kilts and tartans, bagpipes and whiskey, Scotland has a distinctive, if romanticized, culture. It also has a darker history of poverty, violence and ill health, notably concentrated in the largest city Glasgow, once an engine of the British Empire.

    Scotland already has many of the trappings of an independent nation such as its own flag, sports teams, and a history of achievements in science and literature.

    Britain's current government, a coalition between the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrat Party, is opposed to Scottish independence, as is the opposition Labour Party. Britain is stronger as a union, they argue, and an independent Scotland might struggle on Europe's fringes.

    The SNP's Salmond, speaking in front of a giant screen showing a cloud-flecked blue sky, had no such doubts.

    He said his aim was to get one million Scots to sign the "Yes Declaration" before the referendum.

    Support from Sean Connery
    Under a devolved system of government, the Scottish parliament created in 1999 controls health, education and prisons, while the British government in London controls everything else, including foreign policy and defense.

    "If the parliament can run education, why can't we run the economy? And if we can protect our old people why can't we protect ourselves without the obscenity of nuclear weapons?" Salmond told the audience.

    The launch event drew on rousing patriotic music and a film showing the country's stunning Highland landscapes, fishermen, universities, and, inevitably, leaping kilt-clad dancers.

    It also relied on celebrity endorsement. A message of support was read out from actor Sean Connery, an Edinburgh milkman before he found fame as secret agent James Bond.

    Hollywood actor Brian Cox called Scotland's current predicament "centralized servitude" and related how, like many Scots, he had become disenchanted by previous Labour governments led by former prime ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.

    "The parliament at Westminster can see no further than the end of its own bridge," he said.

    Scotland's national poet Liz Lochhead read out a poem focused on English-Scottish rivalry in the 16th century.

    Opinion polls show that around 40 percent of Scottish people are sympathetic to independence, with around 10 percent undecided and the remaining 50 percent opposed. South of the border in England, polls show people are largely apathetic.

    Author Harry Reid said the referendum's success may hinge on whether the Labour Party, traditionally popular in Scotland, can revive its fortunes.

    Scotland is more inclined to vote for the left, whereas English voters have voted in much larger numbers for the right, underscoring a political fault line between north and south.

    Although the Conservative Party won more votes than any other party at the last British general election in 2010, it won only one parliamentary seat in Scotland.

    Move over, Al Roker! Prince Charles becomes TV weatherman

    One joke doing the rounds since two Chinese pandas took up residence in Edinburgh Zoo notes that there are now more pandas in Scotland than Conservative MPs.

    Diminished role?
    Scotland's preference for a more center-left brand of politics that favors egalitarianism over the free market is reflected in education policy. In England, students have to pay large tuition fees to attend university, whereas in Scotland such education remains free for Scots.

    Reid said disenchanted Labour voters who switched to the SNP in disgust at Labour's support for U.S. foreign policy in Iraq and Afghanistan may yet return to the fold. If they do, Scotland's dreams of independence could evaporate, he said.

    "If we're going to get a decent Labour government back in 2015 people might wonder whether they really need independence."

    Despite its relatively small population of just over five million, compared to England's population of just over 52 million, there are also fears that a "yes" vote would diminish Britain's voice on the world stage.

    "The rest of the world would be surprised and shocked that the UK was unable to hold together," Professor John Curtice of the University of Strathclyde told Reuters in a phone interview.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Total plugs gas leak off Scotland's coast after 7 weeks

    Britain would find it harder to maintain its voice within international bodies such as at the U.N. Security Council or the European Union.

    There are also questions about whether Britain would be able to keep its nuclear submarine fleet in Scotland, where it's now based. Also, revenues from Scottish North Sea oil remain important to its coffers.

    But history runs deep and, symbolically, the independence referendum will be held on the 700th anniversary of the 1314 Battle of Bannockburn, when an army commanded by England's King Edward II was defeated by a smaller force led by Robert the Bruce, a source of enduring pride for Scottish patriots.

    Scotland and England have shared a monarch since 1603 and have been ruled by one single parliament in London since 1707. The SNP's Salmond has said an independent Scotland would retain Queen Elizabeth II as its monarch.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    104 comments

    Laddies, the best of luck. You sure really don't need England to tell ya what to do! We yanks figured it out a few years ago...

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    Explore related topics: britain, scotland, sean-connery, uk, independence, alex-salmond
  • 21
    May
    2012
    7:36am, EDT

    Bates College student dies after going swimming at Scottish beach

    By F. Brinley Bruton, msnbc.com

    LONDON -- An American teenager collapsed and died after going swimming at a Scottish beach, officials said.

    Evan Dube, a first-year student at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, was working at an archaeological research project in the Shetland Islands, police said.


    Dube, from Plaistow, N.H., was with a group of 10 students from Bates College who went to a beach in Lerwick for a barbecue on Saturday night, police said in a statement.  

     

     

    "Shortly afterwards Evan went into the water and after coming ashore appears to have collapsed," police said.

    Dube, 19, was airlifted to the local hospital, but attempts to revive him were unsuccessful, according to police. 

    While there did not appear to be any suspicious circumstances surrounding his death, an autopsy was planned for Monday, a police spokeswoman told msnbc.com.


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    Dube's family had been informed of his death, police said. 

    "Bates College has been shaken and deeply saddened to learn that first-year student Evan Dube died," the liberal arts college said in a statement. "At this time we have no other information about the incident to offer -- simply that we have lost a member of our Bates community long before his time. Evan's fellow students in Scotland are receiving grief counseling and will return to Boston on Tuesday."

    A memorial service was held at Bates on Sunday. A spokesman for the college was not immediately available for comment. 

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    84 comments

    And this is news-why. People die everyday from unusual occurrences.

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    Explore related topics: maine, scotland, bates, featured, shetland, lewiston, bates-college, dube, brinley-bruton
  • 21
    May
    2012
    5:41am, EDT

    Death of Lockerbie bomber al-Megrahi 'doesn't close the book'

    Ismail Zitouny / Reuters

    Men prepare to bury the body of Abdel Baset al-Megrahi at a cemetery in Janzour, near Tripoli, on Monday.

    By msnbc.com staff, ITV News and news services

    NEW YORK -- The death of the only man convicted in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing has left some victims' relatives relieved and others raising questions about his guilt and whether others went unpunished.

    Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, a former Libyan intelligence official, died Sunday of cancer, his family said. His death renewed pleas from some victims' relatives for further investigation of the bombing.

    "It closes a chapter but it doesn't close the book. We know he wasn't the only person involved," Frank Dugan, president of the group Victims of Pan Am Flight 103, said from Alexandria, Va.


    Al-Megrahi was convicted of blowing up Pan Am Flight 103 over the Scottish town of Lockerbie on Dec. 21, 1988. The bombing killed 270 people, including 189 Americans. Syracuse University in central New York was particularly hard hit: 35 students on the way home for Christmas break died in the bombing.

    Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, the man convicted of blowing up Pan Am Flight 103 over Scotland, died after a long illness.  NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    $2.7 billion in compensation
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi handed over al-Megrahi and a second suspect to Scottish authorities after years of punishing U.N. sanctions. In 2003, Gadhafi acknowledged responsibility, though not guilt, for the bombing and paid compensation of about $2.7 billion to victims' families.

    Some relatives attended al-Megrahi's trial in the Netherlands. When he was released to Libya from a Scottish prison in 2009 on humanitarian grounds — he was supposedly close to death — they were outraged when al-Megrahi returned to a hero's welcome from Gadhafi and then lived far longer than the few months the doctors had predicted.

    Susan Cohen of Cape May Court House, N.J., whose daughter was among the Syracuse University students on the flight, said al-Megrahi deserved no compassion.

    "The fact that he was able to get out and live with his family these past few years is an appalling miscarriage of justice. There was no excuse for that," Cohen said Sunday. "He should have died in the Scottish prison. He should have been tried in the United States and faced capital punishment."

    Dec. 21, 1988: Pan Am Flight 103, exploded over Lockerbie Scotland killing all 259 people on board as well as 11 on the ground. It was not immediately known a bomb exploded on board. NBC's Tom Brokaw, Peter Kent and Robert Hager report.


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    The views of other victims' families on al-Megrahi's role in the bombing vary widely.

    "Megrahi is the 271st victim of Lockerbie," said David Ben-Ayreah, who represents some British families of victims. He attended the trial and still believes al-Megrahi was not responsible for the bombing.

    'Very happy'
    But Eileen Walsh, a Glen Rock, N.J., resident whose father, brother and sister died in the explosion, said she was "very happy" to hear about al-Megrahi's death. She had just attended Mass on Sunday when she received numerous text messages.

    "I'm glad he's gone, but there's no real closure. There's nothing but a bad taste in my mouth," she said.

    "My mother died of cancer in 2004, and because of him, three of the most important people in her life weren't there to help her in her time of need," Walsh said.

    Al-Megrahi was found guilty under Scottish law of secretly loading a suitcase bomb onto a plane at Malta's Luqa Airport, where he was head of operations for Libyan Arab Airlines in December 1988.

    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.

    The suitcase was transferred at Frankfurt to another flight and then onto New York-bound Pan Am Flight 103 at London's Heathrow airport, concluded Scottish judges sitting at a converted Dutch military base selected as a neutral trial venue.

    Al-Megrahi, who was handed over by Gadhafi under a U.N.-brokered deal, always insisted he was merely an airline executive, not a Libyan intelligence agent as prosecutors charged.

    Miscarriage of justice?
    Al-Megrahi's co-defendant was acquitted of all charges. Al-Megrahi insisted he also had nothing to do with the bombing. Those who believed him got a boost in 2007 when a three-year investigation by a Scottish tribunal found that new evidence — and old evidence withheld from trial — suggested that al-Megrahi "may have suffered a miscarriage of justice." Its 800-page report prompted an appeal on al-Megrahi's behalf, but by then his fate was in the hands of politicians in London, Tripoli and Edinburgh, all of whom jockeyed for position as Libya rebuilt its ties with Britain and al-Megrahi's health deteriorated.

    Still protesting his innocence, al-Megrahi dropped the appeal in a bid to clear the path for his release on compassionate grounds. 

    Al-Megrahi's death should not be an excuse to stop trying to find out who was behind the bombing, Cohen said. She called on U.S. and British officials to "dig even deeper" into the case.

    The Scottish government said Sunday that it will continue investigating the Lockerbie bombing.

    U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron, visiting the United States on Sunday, said that al-Megrahi should never have been freed.

    However, Britain's ITV News reported that Cameron dismissed calls for a new inquiry into al-Megrahi's conviction, saying the court case was "properly run and properly dealt with."

    Read more coverage from Britain's ITV News

    Bert Ammerman of River Vale, N.J., lost his brother in the bombing. He blames the U.S. and Britain for failing to track all leads in the case and noted that Gadhafi's former spy chief was arrested in March in Mauritania.

    "He holds the key to what actually took place in Pan Am 103," Ammerman said. "He knows what other individuals were involved and, more importantly, what other countries were involved."

    After Gadhafi's fall, Britain asked Libya's new rulers to help fully investigate but they put off any probe.

    "Ironically, 24 years later, I now have more confidence in the new Libyan government than the British or American governments to find the truth because I believe Libya would like the truth to come out to show that they were not the only country involved," Ammerman said.

    Jim Swire, whose 19-year-old daughter, Flora, died in the bombing, is a leading voice for some of the British families who believe al-Megrahi was innocent. Swire, who attended the trial in the Netherlands, asked for further inquiry from the Scottish government.

    ''I've been satisfied for some years that this man had nothing to do with the murder of my daughter and I grit my teeth every time I hear newscasters say 'Lockerbie bomber has died,'" Swire told the BBC on Sunday. ''This is a sad day."

    'Smelled of a deal for oil'
    Al-Megrahi's brother Mohammed told Reuters that a funeral would take place on Monday.

    "My brother was surrounded by his wife, children and his mother as he took his last breath. He was too sick to utter anything on his deathbed," his brother Abdulhakim added. "We will always tell the world that my brother was innocent."

    Senator Charles Schumer of New York, who wanted the Libyan government that took over after Gadhafi's ouster and killing by rebels to take al-Megrahi into custody, said his return to Libya was a major injustice.

    "The whole deal smelled of a deal for oil for this man's freedom and that was almost blasphemy given what a horrible person he was and the terrible destruction and tragedy that he caused," Schumer said. "I don't know if we'll ever get to the bottom of it now."

    Msnbc.com staff, ITV News, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    97 comments

    good ridance may you burn in hell with the rest of your radical muslim brthers

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