June 18, 2013

Huge earthquake hits Iran, hundreds feared dead

498db0147e6a95855aae2eba900fbc24 Huge earthquake hits Iran, hundreds feared dead

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: declared in Saravan area, Iranian state media reports
At least 40 people feared dead, Iranian state media says, citing local reports
The quake’s is in near the border with Pakistan
The earthquake is preliminarily measured at 7.8 magnitude, the says

() — At least 40 people are feared dead in Iran after a powerful earthquake near its border with Pakistan, Iran’s state-run Press TV reported Tuesday, citing local reports.

The earthquake was preliminarily measured at 7.8 magnitude, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

The epicenter of the quake, which struck about 3:15 p.m. local time, was about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of the city of Saravan, the center said.

A state of emergency has been declared in the Saravan area, and rescue workers have been deployed from other provinces, the state-run IRNA news agency reported.

Carrieann Bedwell, a USGS seismologist, said a 7.8-magnitude earthquake was “a large event for any area” and could be expected to cause damage in inhabited places.

can be expected for days or weeks after a quake of that magnitude, she said.

The USGS placed the epicenter 53 miles east-southeast of the of Khash, 103 miles northeast of Iranshahr and 123 miles southeast of Zahedan.

Ahmed, an official with Pakistan’s meteorological department, told CNN the tremor, which he put at magnitude 7.9, struck inside southern Iran, near the border with Pakistan.

Tremors were felt in southern Pakistan, including the city of , and across Balochistan province from Gwadar on the southern coast to and the border with Iran.

Taghi Akhavan, an employee at Shaygan Hotel on the Iranian resort island of Kish, said he felt the quake around 3:30 p.m. local time.

He said several guests also reported feeling what they described as a mild tremor, but the hotel did not evacuate guests. He said he has not seen any damage.

Journalist Rabia Ali was among those to feel the quake in Karachi.

“I was at home. I was in my bed, and the bed started moving for a good 15 seconds,” she said. “We realized it was an earthquake and we started evacuating. Everyone came out onto the street and started praying. The children were crying.”

She said that she had not seen any damage in her neighborhood and that things have now calmed down.

The earthquake was felt as far away as Abu Dhabi, where buildings shook for 40 seconds or more, but it’s not yet clear what damage has been caused across the region.

It was measured at a preliminary depth of 15 kilometers (9.3 miles.)

The latest earthquake comes on the heels of another last week in southern Iran, which left at least 37 people dead.

That quake, centered near the city of Kaki, was measured at magnitude 6.3. It did not damage the Bushehr nuclear plant, just over 60 miles away, according to Iranian state media.

CNN’s Reza Sayah, Mitra Mobasherat, Nasir Habib, Leone Lakhani, Saima Mohsin and Christine Theodorou contributed to this report.

Egypt military, political parties in crisis talks

9256b2a4f539d0fda0370f8fd8f09e3b Egypt military, political parties in crisis talks

CAIRO (AP) – A swelling crowd of tens of thousands filled Cairo’s Tahrir Square Tuesday, answering the call for a million people to turn out and intensify pressure on Egypt’s to hand over power to a . The ruling military council held with political parties across the spectrum to try to defuse growing cries for a “second revolution.”

The military , Field Marshal Hussein , was expected to address the nation soon as protests in Cairo and other major cities carried on for a fourth day. Security forces stayed out of Tahrir itself to lower the temperature. But there were clashes on side streets leading to the square that was the of the uprising that ousted longtime authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak in February.

The new wave of protests and violence around the country has left 29 dead and has thrown Egypt’s politics into chaos less than a week before landmark parliamentary elections were to begin. Further confusing the situation, the military-backed civilian government on Monday submitted a mass resignation in response to the turmoil.

STORY: Egyptians expect to ‘see a lot of bloodshed’
PHOTOS: Clashes in Cairo’s Tahrir Square

In a sign it was struggling over how to respond to the fast-changing events, the of the Armed Forces — the that rules the country — still had not responded to the resignation offer by Tuesday. The council’s generals met Tuesday with leaders of all the various , apparently trying to find a replacement government.

But the military has been backed into a difficult corner. Protesters are demanding it surrender the reins of power — or at least set a firm date in the very near future for doing so soon. Without that, few civilian political leaders are likely to join a new government for fear of being tainted as facades for the generals, as many consider the current Cabinet.

The office of leading pro-reform activist ElBaradei said the Nobel Peace Laureate did not attend the crisis meeting but was in touch with the military. ElBaradei, the office said, prefers to continue to act as the link between the military council and the protesters until the crisis is resolved.

ElBaradei’s name has been mentioned by protesters as a suitable replacement for Prime Minister Essam Sharaf, who has come under intense criticism for the perceived inefficiency of his civilian government and for being beholden to the ruling generals.

Three American students at the American University of Cairo, which sits on Tahrir Square, were arrested outside the university’s campus Monday night, the AUC said.

University spokeswoman Rehab Saad told the Associated Press the three are on a study abroad program and the university is in touch with their families and the U.S. Embassy over the matter.

An Egyptian Interior Ministry official said the three were arrested while on the roof of one of the university’s buildings throwing firebombs at security forces who were fighting protesters in Tahrir Square.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because there was no authorization to speak to the media.

State television showed brief footage of the three students, males who appeared to be in their early 20s.

‘Occupy’ protesters ousted from Zuccotti Park

f824fd186149109d65172dfc49a3995a Occupy protesters ousted from Zuccotti Park

( News / ) — NEW YORK – Hundreds of police officers in evicted dozens of Occupy Wall Street from the park that has become the of the worldwide movement protesting corporate greed.

About 70 people were arrested, including some who chained themselves together, while officers cleared Zuccotti Park so that sanitation crews could clean it.

Police in riot gear filled the streets, car lights flashing and sirens blaring. Protesters, some of whom shouted angrily at police, began marching to two locations in where they planned to hold rallies.

PHOTOS: Occupy Oakland camp removed
VIDEO: Protester: ‘We’ve been preparing for something like this’
MORE: Full coverage of Occupy protests nationwide

Protesters at the two-month-old were told they could come back after the cleaning, but under new tougher rules, including no tents, or tarps, which would effectively put an end to the encampment if enforced.

said in a statement Tuesday that the evacuation was conducted in the middle of the night “to reduce the risk of confrontation in the park, and to minimize disruption to the surrounding neighborhood.”

He said after the cleaning, protesters would be allowed to return but “must follow all park rules.”

“The law that created Zuccotti Park required that it be open for the public to enjoy for passive recreation 24 hours a day,” Bloomberg said. “Ever since the occupation began, that law has not been complied with, as the park has been taken over by protesters, making it unavailable to anyone else.”

The National Lawyers Guild says it has obtained a court order that allows protesters to return to the park with tents. The guild says the injunction prevents the city from enforcing park rules on the protesters.

Bloomberg says the city knew about the court order but has not seen it. He says the city plans to go court immediately.

He says the city had planned to allow the protesters back in the park after it was cleaned. Under the city’s plans protesters allowed back into the park would not be allowed to use tents or sleeping bags.

Bill Buster, spokesman for the evicted protesters, said when he arrived at the park at 3 a.m. the protesters had “scattered like flies after the police came in and started arresting people.”

He said the eviction was illegal and that they would not would not end the movement.

“No matter what Bloomberg tries to do, this is not the end of occupy wall street,” Buster said.

Police and government officials have been clearing out Occupy camps around the country in response to reports of violence, vandalism, death and illness.

City officials say public safety needs to be balanced with those rights.

“The more evidence that we see of problems in the way of safety and health concerns, the more ammunition the government has to support enforcement of the curfew ordinances,” First Amendment attorney Lawrence Walters says.

In Portland, Ore., more than 50 people were arrested Sunday night after police officers in riot gear moved in to empty the parks. Portland then closed Lownsdale and Chapman Squares to the public in an attempt to combat safety, health and crime problems, Mayor Sam Adams says.

Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter has increased the uniformed police patrol near the city’s camp because of safety concerns including combustible structures, lack of an emergency fire lane and growing problems with litter, public urination, defecation and graffiti.

“These conditions are intolerable. Occupy Philly is not acting in good faith,” Nutter says.

In Oakland, Calif., “The situation has deteriorated to the point where we are no longer able to address public health and safety concerns,” says Karen Boyd, communications manager for the city of Oakland.

At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, New York City police handed out notices from Brookfield Office Properties, owner of Zuccotti Park, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return in several hours, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents.

Hundreds of former Zuccotti Park residents and their supporters were marching along Lower Manhattan before dawn Tuesday and threatened to block Broadway during the morning rush hour. Others gathered near Foley Square, just blocks from Zuccotti Park, where they can’t get arrested.

Paul Browne, a spokesman for the New York Police Department, said the park had been cleared by 4:30 a.m. and that about 70 people who’d been inside it had been arrested, including a group who chained themselves together. One person was taken to a local hospital for evaluation because of breathing problems.

Some protesters refused to leave the park, but many left peacefully.

Ben Hamilton, 29, said he was arrested “and I was just trying to get away” from the fray.

Rabbi Chaim Gruber, an Occupy Wall Street member, said police officers were clearing the streets near Zuccotti Park.

“The police are forming a human shield, and are pushing everyone away,” he said.

Hundreds of police officers surrounded the park in riot gear with plastic shields across their faces, holding plastic shields and batons which were used on some cases on protesters.

Police also came armed with klieg lights, which they used to flood the park, and bull horns to announce that everyone had to clear out.

Jake Rozak, another , said police “had their pepper spray out and were ready to use it.”

Notices given to the protesters said the park “poses an increasing health and fire safety hazard to those camped in the park, the city’s first responders and the surrounding community.”

It said that tents, sleeping bags and other items had to be removed because “the storage of these materials at this location is not allowed.” Anything left behind would be taken away, the notices said, giving an address at a sanitation department building where items could be picked up.

Alex Hall, 21, of Brooklyn, said police walked into the park “stepping on tents and ripping them out.”

Anti-Wall Street activists intend to converge at the University of California, Berkeley on Tuesday for a day of protests and another attempt to set up an Occupy Cal camp, less than a week after police arrested dozens of protesters who tried to pitch tents on campus.

The Berkeley protesters will be joined by Occupy Oakland activists who said they would march to the UC campus in the afternoon. Police cleared the tent city in front of Oakland City Hall before dawn Monday and arrested more than 50 people amid complaints about safety, sanitation and drug use.

Contributing: Rick Hampson, New York; Elizabeth Weise, Natalie DiBlasio, McLean, Va.; Associated Press.

Arab League suspends Syria

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burn a portrait of Syrian al-Assad outside the Arab League headquarters in Cairo on Saturday.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: Five people reported dead Saturday
NEW: push for U.N. sanctions
The league urges sanctions and a recall of ambassadors
The measures come after al-Assad’s failure to abide by a league proposal to end the violence

Cairo () — The Arab League announced Saturday that it is suspending Syria’s membership after its failure to stop the violence against its people.

The move takes effect Wednesday.

In an at its headquarters in Cairo, 18 of the Arab League’s 22 members voted for sanctions. Only two — Lebanon and Yemen — voted against the suspension. Iraq abstained and Syria was barred from voting.

The league also called for sanctions against President Bashar al-Assad’s regime but did not specify what those may be.

It called on member states to withdraw their ambassadors from Damascus, but that decision will be left up to each nation.

Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim read the league’s decisions at a news conference after the meeting of the foreign ministers.

He said the league is urging the to stop attacks on civilians and will hold a meeting with opposition groups in the next three days to discuss a transitional phase in Syria’s future.

The come after al-Assad’s failure to abide by an Arab League proposal earlier this month to halt all violence, release detainees, withdraw armed elements from populated areas and allow unfettered access to the nation by journalists and Arab League monitors.

But none of that has happened, according to daily reports streaming out of Syria.

There have been reports of in the last few days and Saturday was no exception. The Syrian Revolution General Commission, an umbrella , said five people were killed, including four in Homs, the restive restive city that has emerged as the of the uprising.

Syria’s representative to the league, Yousef Ahmad, blasted the league’s decision as illegal.

He said it was “a eulogy for Arab common action and a blatant announcement that its administration is subordinate to U.S.-Western agendas,” according to the state-run Syrian Arab News Agency.

Earlier Ahmad had reiterated the government’s claim that terrorist gangs were behind the violence and said Syria “made strides” in quelling the violence “despite armed groups’ attempts to foil the plan since it was announced.”

Human rights activists have been pushing for weeks for the United Nations to take action and Amnesty International said Saturday that the Arab League’s decision should pave the way for the Security Council.

“Now that the Arab League has taken decisive action, it is time for the U.N. Security Council to finally step up to the plate and deliver an effective international response to Syria’s human rights crisis,” said Philip Luther, the monitoring group’s Middle East and North Africa director.

Human Rights Watch has also urged the Security Council to impose sanctions.

It published a damning 63-page report Friday, based on interviews with victims and witnesses in Homs, that said al-Assad regime’s “systematic” crackdown on civilians amounted to crimes against humanity.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights said earlier this week that more than 3,500 people have been killed in the brutal suppression of dissent since the Syrian uprising began eight months ago.

Concern about food, fuel in wake of Japan disasters

85fba4ab82329341122df88e0127632b Concern about food, fuel in wake of Japan disasters

Sendai, Japan () -- Long lines at and gas stations along with continued and power outages greeted many in Japan on Sunday morning, nearly two days after the and tsunami that left hundreds dead and missing.

Supplies of food and gas were running out in Sendai, the northern close to the of Friday's quake. Those who survived the earthquake and chose to remain in the city were enduring two-hour waits at the supermarket, according to a CNN iReporter in Sendai with the username joeyjenkins.

"They have waited for I don't even know how long to get gas, as the manually pumps the gas since there is no electricity," joeyjenkins wrote, adding they were without power until early Sunday.

Schools and hospitals and Sendai have been turned into shelters, and volunteers were handing out bottles of water, CNN correspondent Kyung Lah reported from the city.

Fears of power outages in Tokyo, about 200 miles south, sparked a run on , said iReporter Jessica Tekawa, 26.

"I think last night, there must have been something on the news about a power outage," she told CNN, "because when we went, with my friend, we were trying to get flashlights and they were sold out everywhere."

Water, too, was sold out in every store she went to after similar reports of possible water contamination, she said.

Kenneth Cukier, the Japan correspondent for The Economist magazine, said the government announced managed power cuts will start Monday in certain regions of the country -- including suburban areas of Tokyo -- to give businesses enough power to operate.

A seemingly endless barrage of aftershocks from Friday's 8.9- was still rattling nerves Sunday. The U.S. Geological Survey reported more than 140 such quakes -- magnitude 4.5 and higher, with the strongest coming at a 6.4 -- in, near, or off the east coast of the Japanese island.

There have been "many aftershocks," said Yasue Schumaker, a Sendai native who now lives in Hawaii, but was visiting her mother in a Sendai hospital when the quake struck.

"The day it happened, it was constantly aftershock, and last night was better, but still we are having quite big ones," Schumaker said.

The aftershocks are a "constant reminder of what's happened, and what could happen in the future," Wall Street Journal reporter Yoree Koh told CNN from Tokyo.

Such aftershocks are also producing tremendous anxiety for earthquake survivors, reported CNN's Gary Tuchman, driving from the western coastal city of Shonai to Sendai in the east.

"People are wondering, could there be an aftershock that's greater than the original earthquake?" Tuchman said. "Each time you feel it, there's an element of fear."

The Japanese military was working in at least one neighborhood of Sendai on Sunday morning to search for anyone trapped in the rubble. "A few hundred" people were still unaccounted for in one part of town Sunday, Lah reported.

Search-and-rescue helicopters buzzed over Sendai as workers walked through the muddy streets wearing hard hats and carrying shovels. At least one person was winched by chopper from a damaged house.

The city was still littered with debris and standing water from the tsunami. Two to three miles inland, houses were destroyed or simply gone, cars were stacked on top of each other, and brown mud covered the ground, Lah said.

An iReporter with the username xeynon, who described himself as an American living and working in Sendai, said "there are still many friends and acquaintances living along the coast we have not been able to contact."

Schumaker, her voice quivering, said those people should be the priority.

"People who lost their homes, or the people who are still needing help, they are the ones who need help," she said. "We don't have any electric, water, gas, and the city just announced it could take 30 days to get gas set up for everybody. But we definitely need water and food, but please help the people who lost their homes and still ... on top of the buildings asking for help."

Japan tsunami grazes Americas but impact light

c9e9d14f7be819de2b94d0c57a826cd2 Japan tsunami grazes Americas but impact light

(Reuters) – Tsunamis triggered by Japan’s devastating earthquake that prompted thousands to flee the Pacific coast of North and South America caused flooding as far away as Chile on Saturday, but damage was limited.

The tsunami lost much of its energy as it moved thousands of miles (km) across the Pacific Ocean, although governments took no chances and ordered large-scale of , ports and .

Despite the power of Japan’s biggest-ever quake that killed at least 1,300 people, the tsunami waves were relatively benign as they rolled into the Americas, causing only isolated flooding, and fears of a catastrophe proved unfounded.

The tsunami swept past Chile’s remote Easter Island in the South Pacific, generating swells but no major waves, and there was little impact when they made on Chile’s coast.

But the sea later flooded as far as 330 feet inland in Dichato and Talcahuano, some 310 miles south of the capital Santiago and near the of the massive 8.8 that struck Chile in February 2010.

“We call on people to stay on high ground and keep away from coastal areas,” Rodrigo Hinzpeter said. “There have been a series of (flooding) incidents along the coast.”

Strong waves also lashed northern Chile, but the government had lifted a for Easter Island, he said.

Ecuador’s Galapagos Islands, a wildlife sanctuary and popular tourist spot, suffered some damage to infrastructure, and several harbors in California were hit.

Peru, which evacuated thousands, was largely unaffected.

U.S. HARBORS SMASHED

About 35 boats and most of the harbor docks were damaged in near the California border with Oregon, where waves were more than 6 feet. Santa Cruz south of San Francisco sustained about $2 million in damages to docks and vessels, said.

Rescue services were searching for a 25-year-old man who was swept out to sea while standing on a sandbar at the mouth of the Klamath River in California.

The port of Brookings-Harbor, the busiest recreation port on the Oregon coast, was largely destroyed, said operations manager Chris Cantwell. “Right now we are in the middle of a big mess,” he said. “The surge pulled some (boats) out to sea, about a dozen sank and we’ve got boats everywhere sitting on top of one another and all over the place.”

In Hawaii, 3,800 miles from Japan, the main airports on at least three of the major islands — Maui, Kauai and the Big Island of Hawaii — were shut down as a precaution on Friday, when the U.S. Navy ordered all warships in Pearl Harbor to remain in port to support rescue missions as needed.

No injuries or property damage were reported after a series of four tsunami waves hit the Hawaiian island of Oahu, said John Cummings, a spokesman for emergency management in Honolulu. The tsunami warning for Hawaii was later lifted.

Ecuador took extreme precautions after President Rafael Correa declared a across the Andean nation on national television and urged residents to move inland.

Oil firm Petroecuador also halted production, but navy officials said on Friday night that the risk of danger had passed.

Many ports along Mexico’s western coast closed, including Los Cabos and Salina Cruz in southern Oaxaca, the only oil-exporting terminal on the country’s Pacific side.

Mexican officials said high waves had hit the northwestern Pacific coast but there were no reports of damage.

Authorities in Canada’s British Columbia advised residents to evacuate marinas, beaches and low-lying areas. Officials there said the waves were minimal.

(Reporting by Reuters correspondents in the Americas; writing by Ross Colvin and Robin Emmott; editing by Simon Gardner)