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  • 13
    Apr
    2012
    10:19am, EDT

    Rogue bus driver takes Vietnam cop on wild ride

    Traffic police Second Lt. Nguyen Manh Phan ordered bus driver Phung Hong Phuong to pull over the 39-seat passenger coach Monday, but the driver allegedly refused to show his paperwork and tried to drive off, but Phan managed to leap onto the front of the bus.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Video footage of a Vietnamese traffic policeman clinging to the windshield wipers of a moving bus, whose driver was trying to avoid a ticket, has been released by cops in Hanoi.

    The bus travelled for more than half a mile at speeds of up to 31mph with Lt. Nguyen Manh Phan hanging on to the front, a police spokesman told the Associated Press.


    Follow @alastairjam

    It reported that the video was filmed by another officer.

    The driver, Phung Hong Phuong, allegedly refused to show his paperwork and drove off, but not before Phan leaped onto the front, the spokesman added.

    The driver was eventually pulled over after being chased by police and residents. He was arrested for allegedly acting against public officials, an offense that carries a maximum three-year prison sentence, the Associated Press said.

    It reported that Phuong previously served nearly four years in prison for a fatal traffic accident, and was released in 2010.

    The Associated Press report could not be independently verified with Hanoi police.

    32 comments

    The cop was crazy to jump on that bus! What the heck was he expecting to accomplish... Block the driver's vision?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: police, bus, video, windshield, vietnam, asia-pacific, traffic, hanoi
  • 5
    Apr
    2012
    11:05am, EDT

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

    Ed Jones / AFP - Getty Images

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

    By Marian Smith, msnbc.com and Eric Baculinao, NBC News

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

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

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


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

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

     

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

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

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

    Coup rumors spark China crackdown on social media websites

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

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

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    • With $10 million bounty on his head, militant openly taunts US
    • Reports: 23-year-old with $315K bar bill held in trading probe
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    • 'I've got snakes on a plane': Pilot makes emergency landing
    • PhotoBlog: Wife held at knifepoint for 6 hours

      Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    20 comments

    He is a brave man. Only through courageous and tenacious people like him will China force its government to stop limiting freedom of speech.

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  • 25
    Jan
    2012
    6:11pm, EST

    Wounded British servicemen row across Atlantic

    By NBC News

    A group of British servicemen completed an epic voyage across the Atlantic on Wednesday, landing in Barbados to enthusiastic cheers.

    The six-man row2recovery team included four men who lost limbs serving in Iraq or Afghanistan. The men took 51 days to cross from the Canary Islands, battling a number of setbacks, including a broken rudder and lack of fresh water.

    See their arrival below:

    It's taken 51 days to row 3,000 miles across the Atlantic, and they've suffered setback after setback. But finally, they did it. A team of injured British servicemen completed their epic row across the Atlantic. ITN's Nina Nanar reports.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • 3 years after US accident, boat washes up in Spain
    • American hostage in Somalia rescued by Navy SEALs
    • Witchcraft in London? Tragically, it happens
    • Report: Amanda Knox 'loves Italy' and might return

     

    3 comments

    And Mexicans are doing the same in the gulf of Mexico laden with drugs destined for a neighborhood near you.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: britain, military, video, itn, row2recovery
  • 19
    Jan
    2012
    6:35pm, EST

    Army investigates video of sheep beating in Afghanistan

    By msnbc.com staff

    Army officials are investigating a graphic video of a sheep being beaten with a baseball bat by what appears to be U.S. service members in Afghanistan, The Army Times reported Thursday.

    The report comes a week after another inflammatory video surfaced on the Internet that purports to depict four U.S. Marines urinating on the corpses of Taliban fighters — a clip that both Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai condemned as deplorable. An investigation is ongoing.


    In the 30-second video, a sheep with horns is dragged into a large room and is clubbed 10 times with a metal bat by a man in dark civilian clothes amid laughter and cheering. One person is seen in the background jumping up and down. No attempts are made to stop the beating.

    According to The Army Times, military commanders in Afghanistan have condemned the incident, and an Army criminal investigation has been launched. The video reportedly first surfaced in November, but it's unclear when the incident occurred.

    "We are aware of a Live Leak video depicting the killing of a sheep," spokesman for the International Security Assistance Force told The Army Times in an email. "The actions of those involved are not condoned or supported in any way. We are currently assessing the situation to determine more information."

    PETA posted the video on its website and contacted Army officials, prompting an investigation. 

    "PETA did what it always does when someone blows the whistle on these incidents of gratuitous cruelty: We wrote to Secretary of the Army John McHugh and then, when no answer was forthcoming, to other high-ranking officers, including Chief of Public Affairs General Stephen Lanza and Commanding General of the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command David E. Quantock," the animal welfare agency stated on its website.  

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    102 comments

    If they are this cruel to a sheep, I can imagine what they will be like to other helpless victums, children and animals. A sadist regardles of the uniform.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: army, afghanistan, beating, video, peta, sheep
  • 28
    Dec
    2011
    1:17pm, EST

    This week, Samoa will skip Friday

    Rachel Maddow reports on a peculiar switch in the calendar for Samoa as they move to the other side of the International Date Line and lose a Friday in order to be better aligned with their trading partners.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Just this once, Samoa is making Dec. 30 disappear.

    It's the key step in the Pacific island nation's plan to move from the eastern to the western side of the International Date Line and mesh its work week with two of its primary trading partners, New Zealand and Australia. The New Zealand territory of Tokelau is making the switch as well.


    "In doing business with New Zealand and Australia, we're losing out on two working days a week," Stuff.co.nz quoted Samoan Prime Minister Tuila'epa Sailele as saying. "While it's Friday here, it's Saturday in New Zealand, and when we're at church Sunday, they're already conducting business in Sydney and Brisbane."

    Samoa will go directly from 11:59 p.m. Thursday, through midnight to 12:01 a.m. Saturday.

    "It hasn't been controversial," the editor of the Samoa Observer, Mata'afa Lesa, told me today. (Yes, definitely still today.) "People are realizing when they sleep tomorrow night, they'll wake up on Saturday."

    Hotel guests won't have to pay for an extra night, but employers will be required to pay workers for Friday. "For the business community, it's very difficult," Lesa said, "They'll be paying for a day that doesn't exist."

    As for folks born on Dec. 30 ... well, this year they're in the same boat as Feb. 29 birthday babies.

    MSNBC

    Samoa is on the eastern side of the International Date Line ... until Thursday night.

    American Samoa, 100 miles to the east, will not be making the switch. All this means that Samoa and Tokelau will be among the first places in the world to see each day's sunrise. (Stuff.co.nz says the "first light honors" will belong to Fakaofo in Tokelau, although Kiribati and Antarctica also have claims on the title.) Meanwhile, American Samoa will become known as the last place to see each day's sunset. And if you want to celebrate your birthday or anniversary (or New Year's Eve, for that matter) two days in a row, you can just make the hourlong flight from Samoa to American Samoa.

    This isn't the first step taken by the Samoan government to bring itself more in line with its bigger Pacific neighbors. Two years ago, drivers were ordered to switch from right-side to left-side driving — to reduce the cost of converting cars brought in from Australia and New Zealand.

    It's also not the first time Samoa has switched sides on the calendar: Back in 1892, Samoans gained an extra day when they went from the west side of the imaginary Date Line to the east side. The king made the switch to please U.S. traders — and to celebrate, he gave his subjects a double dose of the Fourth of July that year.

    NBC's Lester Holt reports on Samoa's date shift for "Nightly News."

    Update for 10:45 p.m. ET: Some of the comments suggest there's been a bit of confusion over how many Fridays will be dropped from the calendar because of Samoa's shift from one side of the International Date Line to the other. It's just one. I've rewritten the headline to make that clearer.

    More calendar considerations:

    • Is it time to overhaul the calendar?
    • Scramble the calendar for palindromes
    • Britain may consider time zone switch

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds. 

    195 comments

    Say what you want about Samoa, but they make one hell of a cookie!

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    Explore related topics: time, science, video, calendar, featured, samoa, dateline
  • 9
    Dec
    2011
    3:00am, EST

    'Please help me': Ex-FBI agent kidnapped in Iran says

    It was nearly five years ago that an American who was once an FBI agent vanished in Iran. An emotional video surfaced Friday, released by his family here in the United States. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    By Associated Press

    WASHINGTON -- Long after he vanished in Iran, retired FBI agent Robert Levinson reappeared in a video and a series of photographs sent to his family over the past year, transforming a mysterious disappearance into a hostage standoff with an unknown kidnapper, The Associated Press has learned.

    In the video emailed to his family in November 2010, Levinson pleaded with the U.S. government to meet the demands of his unidentified captors.


    "I have been treated well. But I need the help of the United States government to answer the requests of the group that has held me for three and a half years," Levinson says. "And please help me get home."

    Christine Levinson talks about the newly released video of her husband.

    The 54-second video showed Levinson looking haggard but unharmed, sitting in front of what appeared to be a concrete wall. He had lost considerable weight, particularly in his face, and his white shirt hung off him. There were no signs of recent mistreatment. But Levinson, who has a history of diabetes and high blood pressure, implored the U.S. to help him quickly.

    "I am not in very good health," he says. "I am running very quickly out of diabetes medicine."

    Desperate
    The AP saw the video and obtained a government transcript of Levinson's statement soon after it arrived last year but did not immediately report it because the U.S. government said doing so would complicate diplomatic efforts to bring Levinson home.

    Now, those efforts appear to have stalled, U.S. relations with Iran have worsened and Levinson's wife, Christine, of Coral Springs, Fla., is expected to release the video herself in a desperate attempt to make contact with whoever is holding her 63-year-old husband.

    AP file

    Robert Levinson is seen in this image provided by his wife, Christine.

    That represents a sharp change in strategy in a case that for years the United States treated as a diplomatic issue rather than a hostage situation. Christine Levinson has issued many public statements over the years, but she typically directed them to her missing husband or to the government of Iran.

    In the nearly five years that Levinson has been missing, the U.S. government has never had solid intelligence about what happened to him. Levinson had been retired from the FBI for years and was working as a private investigator when he traveled to the Iran in March 2007. His family has said an investigation into cigarette smuggling brought him to Kish, a resort island where Americans need no visa to visit.

    The prevailing U.S. government theory had been that Levinson was arrested by Iranian intelligence officials to be interrogated and used as a bargaining chip in negotiations with Washington. But as every lead fizzled and Iran repeatedly denied any involvement in his disappearance, many in the U.S. government believed Levinson was probably dead.

    The surprise arrival of the video and photographs quickly changed that view but did little to settle the question of his whereabouts. The video, in fact, contained tantalizing clues suggesting Levinson was not being held in Iran at all, but rather in Pakistan, hundreds of miles from where he disappeared. The photographs, which arrived a few months after the video, contained hints that Levinson might be in Afghanistan.

    Despite the lengthy investigation, several U.S. officials said, Washington still has no idea who is holding Levinson, where he is or who holds the key to bringing him home. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomatic discussions.

    'My beautiful, my loving' wife
    A father of seven, Levinson addressed his remarks to "my beautiful, my loving, my loyal wife, Christine," as well as his children and his grandson. He apparently did not know he also has a granddaughter, who was born in 2008. Family and friends confirmed that it was Levinson in the video, and authorities also compared his face with computer-generated images that estimate aging.

    The video prompted Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to announce publicly in March that Levinson was alive and urged the Iranians to help find him. Though the legacy of the 1979 hostage standoff with Iran looms over all relations between the two countries, Clinton did not refer to Levinson as a hostage in March and she softened the U.S. rhetoric toward Tehran.

    The video also helped initiate a series of discreet discussions between U.S. and Iranian officials, conversations that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in September were producing good results.

    Not long after Clinton's remarks, the Levinson family received a series of photos of Levinson dressed in an orange prison jumpsuit like the ones worn by detainees at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. In these photos, Levinson's hair and beard were much longer and he looked thinner.

    In each photo, he wore a different sign hung around his neck. One read, "Why you can not help me."

    Investigators determined that the video was routed through an Internet address in Pakistan, suggesting that Levinson might be held there. Also, Pashtun wedding music played faintly in the background, officials said. The Pashtun people live primarily in Pakistan and Afghanistan, just over Iran's eastern border.

    The photos, however, traced back to a different Internet address, this one in Afghanistan.

    Authorities don't know whether those clues mean Levinson was being held in Balochistan — a rugged, arid region that spans parts of Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan — or perhaps in the lawless tribal region along the border of Pakistan and Afghanistan. These areas are home to terrorists, militant groups and criminal organizations.

    None of these groups has a clear motive for picking up Levinson. But an American hostage, particularly one who used to work for the U.S. government, would be considered a valuable commodity to any of them.

    Release of prisoners demanded
    Some U.S. officials believe the Iranian government routed the video through Pakistan as a way to blame Levinson's disappearance on someone else — most likely the anti-Iran terrorist group Jundallah. But as with every other possibility, the U.S. has no proof.

    The video was accompanied by a demand that the U.S. release prisoners, but officials said the United States is not holding anyone matching the names on the list. It's possible some of them may have been held by the Pakistani government at one point, but officials say the demand doesn't offer any indication of who might be holding Levinson and there's been no more communication about it.

    U.S. authorities have repeatedly analyzed the video and the apparently scripted remarks Levinson made, looking for clues.

    For instance, Levinson said a "group" had held him for three and a half years, a word choice that could suggest a criminal organization or terrorist group, rather than a government. And he said he had been held "here" for that time, suggesting he had not been moved.

    Levinson's dire warning about his diabetes medication is perplexing. He vanished years ago. Whoever is holding him must have had access to diabetes medicine at one point. Was he running out of medication because he was moved somewhere else? Or was it simply intended to add even more urgency for the U.S.?

    Over the past year, the hopefulness that initially followed the arrival of the video has faded. The meetings with the Iranians have not provided a breakthrough, and U.S. officials said the government was no longer as optimistic about the future of those talks.

    There are indications that Robert Levinson, a former FBI agent who vanished four years ago, has been found alive off the coast of Iran.

    Relations with Iran, meanwhile, have worsened. The Justice Department recently accused Iranian intelligence agents of plotting to assassinate Saudi Arabia's ambassador in Washington. Then a United Nations watchdog released a report warning of Iran's nuclear ambitions, prompting the United States and its Western allies to issue new sanctions against Iran's financial system.

    Most recently, a high-tech, stealth CIA drone was captured by Iranian officials while on a surveillance mission over Iran. The embarrassing mishap put sophisticated technology in Iranian hands and provided public evidence of the kind of spying that's been long suspected.

    The one bright spot in Washington's relationship with Tehran was the release of two American hikers from an Iranian prison in September. The U.S. worked behind the scenes to secure that release but officials said Levinson was not part of those discussions.

    The Levinson family has not updated its website since June, when Christine Levinson wrote an open letter to her husband.

    "I am willing to do whatever is necessary to bring you home," she wrote. "At the same time I'm at a loss as to how I can do that."

    Associated Press writer Matthew Lee contributed to this report.

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

    323 comments

    Last week, this guy was an aid worker--now, he's former FBI. Translation---he's a member of our CIA.

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Science editor at msnbc.com, author of "The Case for Pluto," winner of the National Academies Communication Award for Cosmic Log in 2008. Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for msnbc.com. Check out Cosmic Log's archives by following the links below, and see Boyle's full biography at http://bit.ly/boyle-bio

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