2014年12月24日 星期三

Week 7-Ottawa suspect made video: police

Ottawa suspect made video: police

Tue, Oct 28, 2014
Reuters, TORONTO

The man suspected of killing a Canadian soldier and attacking the country’s Parliament building last week made a video of himself beforehand, evidence he was driven by ideological and political motives, police said on Sunday.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said in a statement that they were conducting a detailed analysis of the video reportedly made by Michael Zehaf-Bibeau and could not release it.
Zehaf-Bibeau, 32, allegedly stormed into the Parliament building with a rifle on Wednesday last week after shooting and killing Canadian Army Reserve Corporal Nathan Cirillo at a nearby monument to Canada’s war dead, police said. Zehaf-Bibeau was shot dead in the building.
The Canadian federal police force said on Sunday that it believed a knife carried by Zehaf-Bibeau was taken from his aunt’s property, but added it was still looking into the origin of the gun he used.
“It is an old and uncommon gun. We suspect that he could have similarly hidden the gun on the property, but our inquiries continue,” the statement said.
The RCMP also said the suspect had worked in Alberta’s oil fields and used the money he made to finance his activities in the days leading up to the attack. He had been living in an Ottawa homeless shelter just before the shooting.
The police were still investigating Zehaf-Bibeau’s interactions with numerous people in the days before the attack to find out whether these could have contributed to or facilitated his crime.
Security has been tighter since the shooting. Two days earlier, another man described by police as radicalized reportedly drove over two soldiers in Quebec with a car, killing one.
The suspected attacker, 25-year-old Martin Rouleau, was shot and killed by police.
The incidents, which police said were the work of Canadian citizens who were recent converts to Islam, came during the same week that Canada sent additional jet fighters to the Middle East to take part in airstrikes against Islamic State militants.
Canadian officials vowed to keep up their involvement in the military campaign against the group formerly known as the Islamic State of Syria and the Levant despite the incidents and planned to reopen the Parliament building to the public yesterday, though they said they would begin locking the doors overnight.
In a letter to Canadian news agency Postmedia, Zehaf-Bibeau’s mother denied an RCMP statement that she had told them her son had intended to travel to Syria.
Her son, who came to Ottawa from Vancouver seeking a passport, had wanted to travel to Saudi Arabia to study the Koran, Susan Bibeau said in the letter.
The nation also prepared for two funerals, with Cirillo to be laid to rest in his hometown of Hamilton, Ontario, today. A funeral for 53-year-old Canadian Armed Forces Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent was set for Saturday in Quebec.
On Sunday, about 100 police, firefighters and other emergency workers held a disaster-response drill in downtown Toronto.
The drill had been long planned and was not a reaction to the twin attacks, though some acknowledged it took on a more urgent tone in the wake of the incidents.
“We had to be very specific with our strategic briefing after what happened in Ottawa,” Toronto Police Department Staff Sergeant Daniel Martin said.

Structure of the Lead
   WHO-police 
   WHEN-Sunday
   WHAT-The man suspected of killing a Canadian soldier and attacking the country’s Parliament building last week made a video of himself beforehand, evidence he was driven by ideological and political motives.
   WHERE-Parliament building
  
Keywords
   1.ideological 思想
   2. allegedly 據稱
   3. stormed 衝
   4.radicalize 激進
   5.airstrike 空襲
   6.reopen 重開

2014年12月17日 星期三

Week 6-Volcanic eruption strands 250 in Japan

Volcanic eruption strands 250 in Japan

Sun, Sep 28, 2014
Reuters, TOKYO

A Japanese volcano erupted yesterday, spewing ash and small rocks into the air and leaving seven people unconscious, eight seriously injured and more than 250 stranded on the mountain, officials and media said.
A thick, rolling, gray cloud of ash rose into the sky above Mount Ontake close to where TV footage showed hikers taking pictures. Trekkers and residents were warned of falling rock and ash within a 4km radius.
“It was like thunder,” a woman told broadcaster NHK of the first eruption at the volcano in seven years. “I heard ‘boom, boom,’ then everything went dark.”
Japan’s Meteorological Agency said the volcano, which straddles Nagano and Gifu prefectures 200km west of Tokyo, erupted just before midday and sent ash pouring down the mountain’s south slope for more than 3km.
There was no sign of lava from the TV footage.
The eruption forced aircraft to divert their routes, but officials at Tokyo’s Haneda airport and Japan Airlines said there were no disruptions to flights in and out of the capital.
NHK quoted a Nagano prefectural official as telling a government meeting that seven people were unconscious and eight others seriously wounded.
Police said that more than 250 hikers were stranded on the mountain, which is 3,067m high and last erupted in 2007.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who returned from the US yesterday, said he had issued instructions to mobilize the military to help in the rescue effort.
“Nearly 200 people are in the process of descending the mountain, but we are still trying to figure out details. I instructed to do all we can to rescue the people affected and secure the safety of the trekkers,” Abe told reporters.
Nagano police sent a team of 80 to the mountain to assist the climbers who were making their way down, while Kiso Prefectural Hospital, near the mountain, said it had dispatched a medical emergency team.
“We expect a lot of injured people so we are now getting ready for their arrival,” an official at the hospital said.
More than five hours after the initial eruption, the thick ash cloud showed no signs of abating, NHK TV showed.
“It’s all white outside, looks like it has snowed. There is very bad visibility and we can’t see the top of the mountain,” Mari Tezuka, who works at a mountain hut for trekkers, told reporters. “All we can do now is shut up the hut and then we are planning on coming down.”

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2014/09/28/2003600775

Structure of the Lead
   WHO-officials and media,seven people unconscious, eight seriously injured and more than 250 stranded,A Japanese volcano
   WHEN-yesterday
   WHAT-A Japanese volcano erupted yesterday
  
Keywords
   1.spew 噴出
   2. Trekker 跋涉者
   3. radius 半徑
   4.straddle橫跨 
   5.slope 傾斜
   6. prefectura 縣的  
 

Week 5-Ferguson shooter resigned without severance: mayor

Ferguson shooter resigned without severance: mayor

Tue, Dec 02, 2014
Reuters, FERGUSON, Missouri

The white police officer who shot and killed an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, Missouri, in August received no severance deal when he resigned from the force, the mayor of the St Louis suburb said on Sunday.
The officer, Darren Wilson, announced his resignation late on Saturday, saying he feared for his own safety and that of his fellow police officers after a grand jury decided not to indict him in the fatal Aug. 9 shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown.
“There will be no severance or extension of benefits for Darren Wilson following his resignation,” Ferguson Mayor James Knowles told a news conference.
Knowles also outlined new incentives to bring more African-Americans into the Ferguson police force.
Brown’s death galvanized critics of the way police and the criminal justice system treat African-Americans and other minority groups.
Protests in Ferguson have taken place for months and erupted into violence when the grand jury decided on Monday last week not to charge Wilson. The protests have spread around the country. Over the past week, there have been demonstrations in more than 100 cities, on public roadways, in shopping malls and government buildings.
On Sunday, demonstrators temporarily shut down part of the busy Interstate 395 highway that runs through Washington, police said. The protest lasted less than an hour while people formed a human chain to block traffic in both directions.
Anger spilled onto the playing field when the NFL’s St Louis Rams played Oakland at home on Sunday. Some of the Rams entered the stadium with their hands raised overhead in a show of solidarity with Brown, who some witnesses say had his hands in the air when Wilson fired the fatal shots.
The St Louis Police Officers Association said in a statement it was “profoundly disappointed” by the act.
“[They] chose to ignore the mountains of evidence released from the ... grand jury this week and engage in a display that police officers around the nation found tasteless, offensive and inflammatory,” the statement said of the Rams players.
About 40 or 50 protesters briefly blocked a street outside Edward Jones Dome in downtown St Louis after the game and later marched through the surrounding streets chanting: “Black lives matter.”
Many Rams fans, mostly white men, applauded riot police as they followed the demonstrators. A handful of demonstrators were seen being taken into custody.
Wilson, who said he was acting in self-defense and that his conscience is clear, had been on administrative leave and in seclusion since the incident.
Ferguson’s mayor said he had not asked for Wilson’s resignation, but Knowles wanted the city to turn a page, even though the officer had expressed an interest “in a future here.”
During the news conference on Sunday, Ferguson Police Chief Tom Jackson said he had no plans to resign.
The mayor said no changes in the department’s leadership were in the works.
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2014/12/02/2003605818


Structure of the Lead
   WHO-The white police office.an unarmed black teenager
   WHEN- in August
   WHAT-The white police officer who shot and killed an unarmed black teenagerhe resigned from the force
   WHY- shot and killed an unarmed black teenager
   WHERE- Ferguson, Missouri

Keywords
   1. severance 離職金
   2. galvanized 鍍鋅的
   3. Interstate 洲際公路
   4. tasteless 粗俗的
   5. inflammatory 煽動性的
   6. custody 監禁
   7.seclusion  隱居