Thứ Năm, 28 tháng 2, 2013

Bride gives birth at wedding

pregnant bride

A bride in France only just made it through the ceremony before she gave birth. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

A BRIDE gave birth only minutes after tying the knot in France, making it more of a "big day" than anticipated.

"It did rather shake us up," admitted Jean-Robert Gachet, mayor of Jallais, after hearing that mother and baby were doing well.

Saturday's ceremony at 11am (7pm AEST) was nearly called off after the heavily pregnant bride had several false alarms, although her due date was July 14.

The bride was "definitely a bit worn out, but we put that down to the stress of the wedding. I tried to hurry it up a bit so that she didn't get too tired," said Mr Gachet.

But only moments after the happy couple said their vows and emerged outside to pose for the traditional photos, while the guests left for the reception, the bride suddenly felt unwell and went back into the town hall.

Emergency services were called, but her waters had already broken and she gave birth to a little boy on the spot at 12.15pm.

"The cry of the new born boy was an emotional moment! It was a first for us and for the emergency services," Mr Gachet said.
 


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Residents return to burnt homes

The US is in the grip of weather-related disasters from the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic Coast.

Colorado wildfires

Homes are destroyed by the Waldo Canyon fire in the Mountain Shadows area of Colorado Springs in the US. Source: AP

UPDATE: PEOPLE who fled the most destructive fire in Colorado's history have visited the most devastated neighbourhood, and many found their homes among the nearly 350 burned to the ground.

Two bodies were found in the ruins lifting the death toll to 17.

Residents marvelled at the random path of disaster.

Nothing remained of CJ Moore's home but the concrete, but the letters in her mailbox were unscathed.

''It's just unreal. Unreal,'' she said.

''Good Lord! I've never seen anything like this. And thank God there was nobody there.''

Nearby cars were burned to nothing but charred metal, but three neighbours' homes were untouched.

US-FIRE-COLORADO

Frank Baker visits the remains of his brother's home which was burnt to the ground in the High Park Fire, June 30, 2012 in Bellvue, Colorado west of Fort Collins. AFP PHOTO / ROBYN BECK Source: AFP

Melted bowling balls were scattered in Moore's front yard.

About 7000 people will be allowed to return to their homes for good on Sunday night local time.

That would leave about 3000 still evacuated, down from more than 30,000 at the peak of the Waldo Canyon fire in Colorado Springs.

The fire was 45 per cent contained late on Sunday night local time after a long week of shifting winds that frustrated firefighters.

It was one of many burning across the West, including eight in Utah and a fast-growing blaze in Montana that forced residents in several small communities to leave.

Authorities at the Colorado Springs fire said they are confident they have stopped flames from spreading.

US-FIRE-COLORADO

A destroyed home is viewed in a neighborhood affected by the Waldo Canyon fire on June 30, 2012 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Picture: Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP Source: AFP

''We're cautiously optimistic,'' incident commander Rich Harvey said on Sunday.

''We still remain focused on things that could go wrong.''

The two victims' names haven't been released.

Police Chief Pete Carey said on Saturday an estimated 10 people who had been unaccounted for had been located.

Investigators were still trying to determine the cause of the fire that broke out on June 23, and which so far has cost $US8.8 million ($A8.61 million) to battle.

Dangerous conditions had kept them from beginning their inquiry.

Meanwhile, more than three million people in the eastern US are facing a second day of 40 degree temperatures without electricity after storms ripped through the region.

US-FIRE-COLORADO

A burned truck is viewed in a neighborhood affected by the Waldo Canyon fire on June 30, 2012 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Picture: Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP Source: AFP

It could be several days before all power outages in Washington, DC, and elsewhere are restored, officials say and the National Weather Service says more thunderstorms are possible.

"Unlike a polite hurricane that gives you three days of warning, this storm gave us all the impact of a hurricane without any of the warning of a hurricane," Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley said.

Mobile phone and internet service remain affected, petrol stations were shut down and residents have been urged to conserve water. Some major online services also saw delays and disruptions.

In Colorado, firefighters have contained about 45 per cent of the Waldo Canyon fire outside Colorado Springs, according to the Denver Post.

Temperatures shot back above 37C in many areas, prompting the US National Weather Service to warn of the prospect of severe thunderstorms including large hail and damaging winds.

"Cities from St. Louis, Missouri to Washington DC are forecast to approach or break daily record high temperatures for yet another day and there may be more all-time records broken," added AccuWeather, a private weather service.

A crew clears a fallen tree from row homes in Washington, DC

A crew clears a fallen tree felled by strong winds from a row of homes in Washington, DC after power cuts caused by a record breaking heatwave in the eastern USA. Pictures: AFP Source: AFP

Pepco, the utility that serves Washington and some of its suburbs, said it may be a full week before service is restored to all its customers by teams of linesmen that included reinforcements from as far as Oklahoma and Florida.

"The devastation is extensive and while we expect to have the vast majority of customers restored by the end of day Friday, restoration for some customers may extend into the weekend," Pepco regional president Thomas Graham said.

Local authorities in Washington put out a hyperthermia alert, saying the heat index - which is the thermometer reading adjusted to take humidity into account - in the afternoon was 101 degrees fahrenheit (38C).

"Cooling centers" remained opened in many urban areas as refuges for those - notably the elderly - unable to cope without air conditioning, and at least one major supermarket chain gave away free ice to all comers.

The District of Columbia's emergency management agency suggested going to a movie or a museum in order to beat the heat. "Bottom line is, stay (as) hydrated and cool as possible," it said on its Twitter feed.

Some 3.7 million homes lost power in Friday's storms and four states - Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia and Ohio - declared states of emergency.

"The power is slowly coming back on line," West Virginia Governor Earl Ray Tomlin told CNN on Sunday, adding however that "we still have over half a million people without power."

US-FIRE-COLORADO

Destroyed homes sit beside homeS left untouched by fire in a neighborhood affected by the Waldo Canyon fire on June 30, 2012 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Picture: Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP Source: AFP

"We just once again ask people to be patient," he said. "It's going to take a few days."

In Baltimore, Maryland, the local Baltimore Gas and Electric utility said it had deployed 1,000 trucks to restore power to 306,000 customers in and around the major port city.

Storm debris was gone from major highways in the region, but downed branches and trees still littered secondary routes.

Responsible for the extreme early-summer weather has been a high pressure area parked over the southeastern United States - the same slow-moving weather system blamed for a fatal wildfire in Colorado earlier in the week.

Firefighters supported by water bombers managed over the weekend to contain much of the Waldo Canyon inferno that killed three people, destroyed nearly 350 residences and left many hundreds homeless.

Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper, speaking Sunday on CNN, said it felt as if the worst was over. "But we also know that Mother Nature will be fickle out here," he added. "We're keeping ourselves very alert."

President Barack Obama visited Colorado on Friday to see the devastation first-hand and to praise "the courage and determination and professionalism" of those fighting the flames.

- with AP

US-FIRE-COLORADO

Smoke billows at sunrise from part of the Waldo Canyon fire on June 30, 2012 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Picture: Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP Source: AFP


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Thứ Tư, 27 tháng 2, 2013

That's not a croc, Australia ... THIS is a croc

Lolong

In a file picture taken on September 4, 2011 villagers look at the 6.17m saltwater crocodile caught in the town of Bunawan, Agusan del Sur province on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

  • Crocodile nicknamed "Lolong" measured 6.17 metres
  • Weighs more than a tonne; It was captured last November
  • Guinness World Records says it's the largest in captivity

GUINNESS World Records has declared that a huge crocodile blamed for deadly attacks in the southern Philippines is the largest in captivity in the world.

The giant reptile has brought pride, fear, tourism revenues and attention to the previously little-known town where it was captured last year.

Guinness spokeswoman Anne-Lise Rouse says the saltwater crocodile nicknamed "Lolong" measured 6.17 metres and weighed more than a tonne. It was captured last November in Bunawan town in Agusan del Sur province,

Bunawan Mayor Edwin Cox Elorde told The Associated Press today that he was notified by Guinness of the giant reptile's new distinction last month.

The news sparked celebrations in his town of 37,000 people and concerns that more giant crocodiles might be lurking nearby.


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Residents praise firefighters in Valley blaze

More than 70 firefighters have managed to contain a bushfire in Perth's north-east but urge residents not to return to their homes.

vines fire

THREAT: A Helitac water bomber fighting the fire near The Vines. Source: PerthNow

vines fire

ELLENBROOK: Fire is threatening homes near Ellenbook and The Vines in the Swan Valley. Source: PerthNow

Vines bushfire

PerthNow reader Rebecca Monahan sent in pictures of a bushfire in Upper Swan. Source: PerthNow

Upper Swan bushfire

Nine News reporter Andrew Nelson tweeted this aerial image of the Upper Swan bushfire. Source: PerthNow

Vines bushfire

A bushfire is threatening homes and lives in Upper Swan. Picture: Rebecca Monahan Source: PerthNow

REISDENTS of Swan Valley suburbs on Perth's northeastern fringes have praised firefighters for containing a fast-moving, out-of-control blaze that burnt 150 hectares of bushland.

The cause of the fire, which began in Upper Swan, is being investigated.

Residents of the golf-course suburb The Vines were called by emergency services with a watch and act warning just after midday, advising them a fire was approaching.

Less than half an hour later, the alert had jumped to emergency level in the northern part of the suburb and residents were told they needed to act immediately to survive, but that it was too late to leave.

Many were already evacuating as water bombers refilled from the golf course lakes amid fears the wind could help push the fire west to northern Ellenbrook.

The blaze was contained by nightfall but firefighters are still working to prevent it jumping containment lines.

One residents told talkback that the growing suburbs of Ellenbrook and The Vines, home to some 20,000 people, needed more access roads and would have been a ``deathtrap'' if a mass emergency had been required.

While the phone alert service worked well, the Department of Fire and Emergency Services website was overloaded with people also checking for alerts for Cyclone Rusty in the Pilbara, so redirected people to its Twitter account.

Send your fire pictures to PerthNow: readerpics@perthnow.com.au

The fire started at Upper Swan, between the intersection of Great Northern Highway and Apple Road at about 11.30am but it quickly escalated and an emergency was declared at 1pm.

A relocation point was set up at Altone Park Recreation Centre at 332 Benara Road, Beechboro but that has now been shut down and people are free to return to their homes.

Upper Swan bushfire

PerthNow reader Adam Zauch sen this image of the Upper Swan bushfire from the porch of his Ellenbrook home. Source: PerthNow

Earlier yesterday, one resident affected by the fire told PerthNow she had received an a call on her home phone just after 1pm, saying 'Emergency, emergency, all residents in The Vines and Ellenbrook evacuate immediately due to bushfire.'

Another resident of The Vines said the water bombers were an impressive sight, and said they took heart that there were plenty of lakes for them to draw from.


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Man charged over Hamilton Hill hit-run

A 20-year-old man has been charged over a hit and run in Hamilton Hill on Sunday, February 10.

Today, Major Crash Detectives charged the Munster man with failing to stop and give assistance and failing to report a crash.

An 18-year-old male pedestrian was on Rockingham Road near Packham Street at 1am, when he was hit by a car believed to be a black Holden Commodore.

The man received serious injuries and was taken to Fremantle Hospital for treatment before being transferred to Royal Perth Hospital.

Police will allege the 20-year-old man failed to stop after the crash.

He will appear in Fremantle Magistrates Court on March 15.


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Murder trial set over woman's death

pn police forensic

MURDER TRIAL: A man has been committed for trial over the death of his former partner, a 60-year-old Bullsbrook woman.   Source: PerthNow

A BULLSBROOK man charged with the murder of his former partner will go on trial in March.

Mark Charles Hill, 54, is accused of killing Roma Pollit in her Bullsbrook home in August last year.

It was revealed after Mr Hill was charged that Ms Pollit had taken out a Violence Restraining Order against her former partner, but the order had expired about a week before her death.

Mr Hill appeared today in the Stirling Gardens Magistrates Court via video link from Casuarina Prison, where a trial date was set for March 25.

If the trial does not go ahead on that day, he will reappear in Stirling Gardens on July 24.


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Truck fire closes Great Eastern Highway

pn fire truck

TRUCK FIRE: A truck which caught fire and burst into flames has closed Great Eastern Highway, Greenmount, early today.  Source: PerthNow

A TRUCK has caught fire on the Great Eastern Highway forcing a section of the major road to be closed.

The truck has caught fire between Old York Road and Waylen Road in Greenmount.

All eastbound lanes along the Great Eastern Highway between Old York Road and Waylen Road have been closed as a result.

Emergency services are on site attending to the fire and are directing traffic.

Motorists should seek alternative routes if possible or allow plenty of extra travel time.


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Labor launch rethink as venue cuts booking

WESTERN Australia's Labour Day holiday seemed like good timing for the opposition's general election launch, but the party has been left looking for a venue after its booking was cancelled.

WA Labor said on its Facebook page it had confirmed a booking with Catholic Fremantle university Notre Dame for March 4, but were advised yesterday that a mistake had been made.

The university said it had taken the booking in January, but later realised it was "inconsistent'' with its policies concerning the hosting of party-political events during election campaigns.

The ALP's Facebook entry was posted around the same time Opposition Leader Mark McGowan was taking part in a second debate with Premier Colin Barnett at an Australian Christian Lobby function, where the two leaders touched on weighty topics including abortion, prostitution, gay marriage and euthanasia.

Their views took up a little breakfast radio airtime today, but were overshadowed by the threat of the then-category four cyclone Rusty off the Pilbara coast, which was downgraded to a category three as it made landfall near the tiny community of Pardoo.

The afternoon airwaves were dominated by a fast-moving bushfire on Perth's northeastern fringes, and with Mr Barnett in the state's far south for much of the day, the politicians didn't get much of a look-in with local media.

Before flying to Albany - where he recently copped flak for using a government jet to attend events including a campaign "kick off'' for local Liberal candidate Trevor Cosh - Mr Barnett received some coverage for a planned $20 million expansion of Joondalup Arena in Perth's northern suburbs.

The Liberals also promised $5 million to refurbish and maintain Goldfields Art Centre in Kalgoorlie, which if implemented would ensure the world's third-largest mining conference, Diggers and Dealers, stayed in the Goldfields town.

The party also pledged a $12 million upgrade to Great Eastern Highway between Greenmount and Mundaring to improve safety on the deadly road.


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Protesters swamp Hong Kong streets

Hong Kong protests

Thousands of protesters take to the streets chanting slogans against new Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying in Hong Kong. Source: AFP

Leung Chun-ying

Hong Kong's Chief Executive-elect Leung Chun-ying, right, and his wife Regina. Source: AP

HONG Kong's biggest protest for nearly a decade has packed the former British colony's streets in a defiant reception for its new leader and a show of popular anger after 15 years of Chinese rule.

The rally came after Leung Chun-ying, a millionaire property consultant seen as close to China's communist authorities, was sworn in as chief executive in front of Chinese President Hu Jintao - who had his speech interrupted on Sunday.

Hu's visit and Leung's inauguration have become focal points for growing discontent towards Beijing, which has surged to a new post-handover high amid soaring housing costs, limited democracy and perceived meddling by China.

"Hong Kong has become much worse off," Eric Lai of the Civil Human Rights Front told the marchers. "Our rights are under serious threat."

Organisers put the crowd at 400,000, their largest claimed turnout for eight years.

Hong Kong protests

A poster with a picture of Hong Kong chief executive Leung Chun-ying reading "Guard the values of Hong Kong, tell Hong Kong people to say no to communist authority" is burnt by protesters. Source: AFP

In sweltering heat the last of the marchers reached their destination almost six hours after the first set out, and along the way they blocked streets far across the city, stranding buses and trams as they surrounded them.

Hong Kong does not yet choose its leader by universal suffrage, and Leung was elected as chief executive in March by a committee stacked with pro-Beijing business elites.

A spokesman for the Hong Kong government said it "fully respected" freedom of expression and the right to "take part in processions", and would listen to the demonstrators' views "in a humble manner".

Earlier, as President Hu began his speech to around 2300 guests at Leung's inauguration, a protester inside the harbour-front venue repeatedly shouted "End one-party rule".

Hong Kong protests

A protester hits a cut-out picture of wolf which represents new Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying during a pro-democracy protest march in Hong Kong. Source: AFP

The man also referred to the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 in Beijing, and was rapidly bundled away by security personnel, while the audience drowned him out with extended applause for Hu.

Beijing's support for "one country, two systems" and the right of Hong Kongers to rule the territory was "unwavering", said Hu.

"We will follow the Basic Law ... to continue to advance democratic development in Hong Kong," said the president, who will step down as part of a once-in-a-decade leadership transition in Beijing starting later this year.

Late on Sunday some 300 protesters held a demonstration outside the Beijing representative office in Hong Kong, burning copies of the city's mini-constitution before dispersing around midnight.


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NATO personnel gunned down

A MAN in an Afghan police uniform has gunned down three NATO personnel in the war-torn country's troubled south, the latest so-called "green on blue" attack.

The deaths take the toll this year in "green-on-blue" killings -- in which Afghan forces turn their weapons against their Western allies -- to at least 26, in a total of 18 such incidents.

In keeping with its usual policy, NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) gave few details of Sunday's incident and did not reveal the nationality of the victims.

"An individual wearing an Afghan National Civil Order Police uniform turned his weapon against International Security Assistance Force service members in southern Afghanistan today, killing three service members," ISAF said in a statement.

An ISAF spokesman said the gunman was wounded and detained after the attack, which happened around 5pm (2230 AEST), and is now under investigation. The incident is not thought to have happened on an ISAF base, the spokesman said.

The spokesman added that ISAF was still investigating whether the attacker was a police officer or not.

The Afghan Civil Order Police was set up in 2006 as an elite riot control force.

The attack comes nearly two weeks after three men in Afghan police uniforms killed a soldier with the US-led force, also in the south.

An increasing number of Afghan troops have turned their weapons against NATO soldiers who are helping Kabul fight a decade-long insurgency by hardline Taliban Islamists.

Some of the assaults are claimed by the Taliban, who say they have infiltrated the ranks of Afghan security forces, but many are attributed to cultural differences and antagonism between the allied forces.

ISAF has taken several security measures in response to the shootings, including assigning "guardian angels" -- soldiers who watch over their comrades as they sleep.

NATO has around 130,000 soldiers fighting alongside some 350,000 Afghan security personnel against the Taliban-led insurgency, but they are due to pull out of the country in 2014.

The Western coalition is to hand over security to local forces by mid-2013 and will play a support role up to the final withdrawal by the end of the following year.


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Residents return to burnt homes

The US is in the grip of weather-related disasters from the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic Coast.

Colorado wildfires

Homes are destroyed by the Waldo Canyon fire in the Mountain Shadows area of Colorado Springs in the US. Source: AP

UPDATE: PEOPLE who fled the most destructive fire in Colorado's history have visited the most devastated neighbourhood, and many found their homes among the nearly 350 burned to the ground.

Two bodies were found in the ruins lifting the death toll to 17.

Residents marvelled at the random path of disaster.

Nothing remained of CJ Moore's home but the concrete, but the letters in her mailbox were unscathed.

''It's just unreal. Unreal,'' she said.

''Good Lord! I've never seen anything like this. And thank God there was nobody there.''

Nearby cars were burned to nothing but charred metal, but three neighbours' homes were untouched.

US-FIRE-COLORADO

Frank Baker visits the remains of his brother's home which was burnt to the ground in the High Park Fire, June 30, 2012 in Bellvue, Colorado west of Fort Collins. AFP PHOTO / ROBYN BECK Source: AFP

Melted bowling balls were scattered in Moore's front yard.

About 7000 people will be allowed to return to their homes for good on Sunday night local time.

That would leave about 3000 still evacuated, down from more than 30,000 at the peak of the Waldo Canyon fire in Colorado Springs.

The fire was 45 per cent contained late on Sunday night local time after a long week of shifting winds that frustrated firefighters.

It was one of many burning across the West, including eight in Utah and a fast-growing blaze in Montana that forced residents in several small communities to leave.

Authorities at the Colorado Springs fire said they are confident they have stopped flames from spreading.

US-FIRE-COLORADO

A destroyed home is viewed in a neighborhood affected by the Waldo Canyon fire on June 30, 2012 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Picture: Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP Source: AFP

''We're cautiously optimistic,'' incident commander Rich Harvey said on Sunday.

''We still remain focused on things that could go wrong.''

The two victims' names haven't been released.

Police Chief Pete Carey said on Saturday an estimated 10 people who had been unaccounted for had been located.

Investigators were still trying to determine the cause of the fire that broke out on June 23, and which so far has cost $US8.8 million ($A8.61 million) to battle.

Dangerous conditions had kept them from beginning their inquiry.

Meanwhile, more than three million people in the eastern US are facing a second day of 40 degree temperatures without electricity after storms ripped through the region.

US-FIRE-COLORADO

A burned truck is viewed in a neighborhood affected by the Waldo Canyon fire on June 30, 2012 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Picture: Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP Source: AFP

It could be several days before all power outages in Washington, DC, and elsewhere are restored, officials say and the National Weather Service says more thunderstorms are possible.

"Unlike a polite hurricane that gives you three days of warning, this storm gave us all the impact of a hurricane without any of the warning of a hurricane," Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley said.

Mobile phone and internet service remain affected, petrol stations were shut down and residents have been urged to conserve water. Some major online services also saw delays and disruptions.

In Colorado, firefighters have contained about 45 per cent of the Waldo Canyon fire outside Colorado Springs, according to the Denver Post.

Temperatures shot back above 37C in many areas, prompting the US National Weather Service to warn of the prospect of severe thunderstorms including large hail and damaging winds.

"Cities from St. Louis, Missouri to Washington DC are forecast to approach or break daily record high temperatures for yet another day and there may be more all-time records broken," added AccuWeather, a private weather service.

A crew clears a fallen tree from row homes in Washington, DC

A crew clears a fallen tree felled by strong winds from a row of homes in Washington, DC after power cuts caused by a record breaking heatwave in the eastern USA. Pictures: AFP Source: AFP

Pepco, the utility that serves Washington and some of its suburbs, said it may be a full week before service is restored to all its customers by teams of linesmen that included reinforcements from as far as Oklahoma and Florida.

"The devastation is extensive and while we expect to have the vast majority of customers restored by the end of day Friday, restoration for some customers may extend into the weekend," Pepco regional president Thomas Graham said.

Local authorities in Washington put out a hyperthermia alert, saying the heat index - which is the thermometer reading adjusted to take humidity into account - in the afternoon was 101 degrees fahrenheit (38C).

"Cooling centers" remained opened in many urban areas as refuges for those - notably the elderly - unable to cope without air conditioning, and at least one major supermarket chain gave away free ice to all comers.

The District of Columbia's emergency management agency suggested going to a movie or a museum in order to beat the heat. "Bottom line is, stay (as) hydrated and cool as possible," it said on its Twitter feed.

Some 3.7 million homes lost power in Friday's storms and four states - Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia and Ohio - declared states of emergency.

"The power is slowly coming back on line," West Virginia Governor Earl Ray Tomlin told CNN on Sunday, adding however that "we still have over half a million people without power."

US-FIRE-COLORADO

Destroyed homes sit beside homeS left untouched by fire in a neighborhood affected by the Waldo Canyon fire on June 30, 2012 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Picture: Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP Source: AFP

"We just once again ask people to be patient," he said. "It's going to take a few days."

In Baltimore, Maryland, the local Baltimore Gas and Electric utility said it had deployed 1,000 trucks to restore power to 306,000 customers in and around the major port city.

Storm debris was gone from major highways in the region, but downed branches and trees still littered secondary routes.

Responsible for the extreme early-summer weather has been a high pressure area parked over the southeastern United States - the same slow-moving weather system blamed for a fatal wildfire in Colorado earlier in the week.

Firefighters supported by water bombers managed over the weekend to contain much of the Waldo Canyon inferno that killed three people, destroyed nearly 350 residences and left many hundreds homeless.

Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper, speaking Sunday on CNN, said it felt as if the worst was over. "But we also know that Mother Nature will be fickle out here," he added. "We're keeping ourselves very alert."

President Barack Obama visited Colorado on Friday to see the devastation first-hand and to praise "the courage and determination and professionalism" of those fighting the flames.

- with AP

US-FIRE-COLORADO

Smoke billows at sunrise from part of the Waldo Canyon fire on June 30, 2012 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Picture: Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP Source: AFP


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Carles loses latest round in Buswell brawl

Adele Carles

Adele Carles has been told to keep quiet about her case against Troy Buswell. Source: The Sunday Times

Troy Buswell

Troy Buswell will be spared the embarrassment of a defamation trial in the week of the election. Source: PerthNow

WEST Australian MP Adele Carles has been warned by a judge to keep quiet about her legal battle with her ex-lover and State Treasurer Troy Buswell or face a contempt of court charge.

The two MPs will also be spared the embarrassment of their bitter personal dispute being aired in court in the week of the March 9 state election.

The former Greens MP and Mr Buswell are engaged in a defamation dispute over claims Ms Carles made late last year about the Treasurer's behaviour during their relationship.

The first main court hearing had been scheduled for just three days before the poll, but lawyers for Mr Buswell applied to have the date put back.

Mr Buswell had also applied to have the details of his claim against Ms Carles kept confidential, a move that Ms Carles had resisted.

In the Supreme Court today, Justice Rene Le Miere said Ms Carles, the Independent MP for Fremantle, was under a "substantive obligation'' not to make public Mr Buswell's statement of claim and could be in contempt of court if she did so.


Through her lawyers, Ms Carles said she would keep the details of the case under wraps as it proceeded.

In another blow, she was also ordered to pay Mr Buswell's costs, amounting to $2882.

Justice Le Miere said the matter would next be heard after March 21, not on March 6 as had been scheduled.


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That's not a croc, Australia ... THIS is a croc

Lolong

In a file picture taken on September 4, 2011 villagers look at the 6.17m saltwater crocodile caught in the town of Bunawan, Agusan del Sur province on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

  • Crocodile nicknamed "Lolong" measured 6.17 metres
  • Weighs more than a tonne; It was captured last November
  • Guinness World Records says it's the largest in captivity

GUINNESS World Records has declared that a huge crocodile blamed for deadly attacks in the southern Philippines is the largest in captivity in the world.

The giant reptile has brought pride, fear, tourism revenues and attention to the previously little-known town where it was captured last year.

Guinness spokeswoman Anne-Lise Rouse says the saltwater crocodile nicknamed "Lolong" measured 6.17 metres and weighed more than a tonne. It was captured last November in Bunawan town in Agusan del Sur province,

Bunawan Mayor Edwin Cox Elorde told The Associated Press today that he was notified by Guinness of the giant reptile's new distinction last month.

The news sparked celebrations in his town of 37,000 people and concerns that more giant crocodiles might be lurking nearby.


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Call to take asylum seekers to Tassie, boost economy

Tassie

There are calls for the Pontville detention centre to be reopened permanently, so Tasmania can process more asylum seekers in the community. Picture: Sean Fennessy Source: The Daily Telegraph

  • The Pontville detention centre closed in March
  • Call for it to reopen under a different operating model
  • "We should be telling the Government to send them here"

TASMANIA should be allowed to reopen its arms to asylum seekers, human rights advocates say.

As politicians in Canberra squabble over the best way to deal with the asylum seeker crisis, advocates say Tasmania is the perfect place to process them.

The tragic drowning of asylum seekers during the past week has intensified calls for the Pontville detention centre to be reopened permanently, so Tasmania can process more asylum seekers in the community. 

Brighton Mayor Tony Foster yesterday called for the centre, which closed in March after six months, to open again under a different operating model.

"Let's make it a processing centre with people coming and going as they please, returning at night," Mr Foster said.

"Let's look at a new way for the future and let Pontville show we can do it in a whole new way."

Unions Tasmania boss Kevin Harkins said yesterday asylum seekers should be brought to the state to help boost the economy and offer a safe, humane processing option for hundreds of boat people seeking refuge in Australia.

"We should be telling the Federal Government to send them here, have them processed in a reasonable amount of time and those that don't meet the criteria can be sent back," he said.

Read more at themercury.com.au
 


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Man charged after lie stripped bare

Jesus Mata Jr

Jesus Mata Jr spent $1000 at a strip club and did not want his wife to know so he staged a robbery. Source: Supplied

A MARRIED man spent $1000 at a strip club, but rather than tell his wife, he told police he was robbed at gunpoint.

Jesus Mata Jr, 23, called co-workers to report that he had been robbed, rather than admit visiting the Whispers strip club, KRGV reported.

He concocted a tale about how six gunmen in two trucks robbed him at gunpoint with assault weapons and stole his tax refund, The Denver Channel reported.

"We followed a wild goose chase and ended up with no one. We followed a couple of leads that led us nowhere," La Feria Police Chief Don Garcia said.

"Our main priority was to take care of the citizens of La Feria."

He said the investigation revealed inconsistencies in the story. Mata Jr was called back for a follow up interview and he eventually confessed that he fabricated the crime.

"I started drinking some Bud Lights and I got a couple of lap dances. ... I was there until they closed at 2am," Mata's confession stated.

Mata Jr was arrested and charged with filing a false report. Additional misdemeanor charges could be laid.


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Three police shot dead at Mexico City airport

THREE federal police officers were shot and killed overnight when they tried to arrest drug trafficking suspects at Mexico City's international airport.

Airport spokesman Jorge Andres Gomez said the incident took place around 8:50 am (local time) in the fast-food area of the airport's Terminal 2. The identity and location of the suspects was not immediately clear.

"Finding themselves surrounded," the alleged traffickers "opened fire with their weapons against the federal police," the Public Security ministry said.

Two federal police officers died at the airport while another died of wounds in the hospital.

Federal and local police cordoned off the area and used airport signs to cover the food court windows.

People at the busy airport area hit the ground and rushed to hide in the bathrooms when the shooting broke out. At least 14 shots were fired, Milenio TV reported.

Some witnesses said that police officers had fired on their colleagues. But at least one witness contradicted that report.

"We threw ourselves on the ground - there were four civilians shooting at the police," a female witness who refused to give her name told radio Formato21.

Another female witness said it took five to 10 minutes for police reinforcements to arrive.

The Ministry of Communications and Transportation issued a brief statement denouncing the "quarrel in an area of open access" of the airport's Terminal 2.

Airline operations "are carrying on normally and this situation does not in any way affect operations," the note said, omitting references to any people killed.

Police patrols have increased across the country ahead of Sunday's presidential election.

Benito Juarez International Airport is located within Mexico City. Terminal 2 opened five years ago, a hub for Aeromexico, Chile's LAN and Panama's Copa Airlines.


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Wake up to the laughing rooster

Wake up to the laughing rooster

Laughing rooster

Source: Supplied

IT'S hump day and we know getting up can be no laughing matter, but to help you we present to you the ideal alarm call.

Video of the cackling cock, from China,  has gone viral the past 24 hours.

We think it's an ideal way to kickstart what can be - apart from Monday - one of the more difficult days to get up and going.

So, enjoy.

Oh, and we found some screaming goats too.

Goats sounding like humans goes viral with 5 million hits


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