Thursday, 6 November 2014

Putin beats Obama again in Forbes power ranking


Putin tops Forbes "World's Most Powerful People" list, Obama in second

 Putin tops Forbes
New York (AFP) - For a second year in a row, Russian President Vladimir Putin has beaten Barack Obama to the title of world's most powerful leader as ranked by Forbes.
In a year in which Russia annexed Crimea, stoked a conflict in Ukraine and clinched a multi-billion-dollar gas pipeline deal with China that Forbes called the world's largest construction project, Putin remained on top.
It was the third time in Obama's presidency that he has lost top billing -- twice to Putin and once to Chinese leader Xi Jinping.
"So who's more powerful: the omnipotent head of (a) corroding but still feisty power or the handcuffed head of the most dominant country in the world?" Forbes asked.
"For the second year running, our votes went with the Russian president as the world's most powerful person, followed by US President Barack Obama."
The 2014 list of 72 powerbrokers was chosen to reflect one for every 100 million lesser mortals on Earth and the top five remained unchanged from last year.
Third prize went to Jinping, who is expected to rule for a decade in which China is set to eclipse the United States as the world's largest economy.
Pope Francis was number four and German Chancellor Angela Merkel number five.
Among 12 newcomers are Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, number 15; Alibaba founder—and China's richest man Jack Ma, number 30; and Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the self-proclaimed caliph of the Islamic State group, number 54.
While 26 on the list come from the United States, Asia Pacific made a strong showing with 19 from the region, including six from China.
The list includes 17 heads of state who run nations with a combined GDP of $48 trillion and 39 CEOs and chairs who control over $3.6 trillion in annual revenue.
Nine women made the cut -- but for the first time two women -- Merkel and US Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen -- reached the top 10.
The entire list can be seen at www.forbes.com/power

Amnesty: Israel committed war crimes in Gaza war


FILE - In this Wednesday, July 16, 2014, file photo, Palestinians mourn over the lifeless bodies of four boys from the same extended Bakr family, covered with yellow flags of Fatah movement, in the mosque during their funeral in Gaza City.A leading human rights group has accused Israel of committing war crimes during this summer's war in Gaza. Amnesty International says Israel displayed "callous indifference" in attacks on family homes in the densely populated coastal strip that in some cases amounted to war crimes. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • .
JERUSALEM (AP) — Amnesty International on Wednesday accused Israel of committing war crimes during the war in the Gaza Strip this summer, saying it displayed "callous indifference" in attacks on family homes in the densely populated coastal area.
The Gaza war left more than 2,100 Palestinians dead, including many civilians according to Palestinian and U.N. officials. Israel says the number of militants killed was much higher and accuses Hamas of using civilians as human shields. On the Israeli side, 66 soldiers and six civilians were killed.
Amnesty said in a report released Wednesday that "Israeli forces killed scores of Palestinian civilians in attacks targeting houses full of families, which in some cases have amounted to war crimes."
Israel's foreign ministry rejected the report's findings, saying the London-based rights group "ignores documented war crimes perpetrated by Hamas."
"The report does not mention the word terror in relation to Hamas or other armed Palestinian groups, nor mentions tunnels built by Hamas to infiltrate Israel and perpetrate terror attacks," the ministry said.
Israel launched the Gaza operation in early July in response to stepped-up rocket attacks on Israeli cities by the coastal area's militant Palestinian Hamas rulers.
The operation followed a crackdown by Israeli forces in the West Bank, where troops arrested scores of Hamas members, in response to the kidnapping and killings of three teenage Israelis in June by Hamas operatives.
Several weeks later, Jewish extremists kidnapped and burned to death a Palestinian teenager in east Jerusalem in an apparent revenge attack.
But the summer war was the fiercest conflict between the two sides in years.
"Israeli forces have brazenly flouted the laws of war by carrying out a series of attacks on civilian homes, displaying callous indifference to the carnage caused," said Philip Luther, Director of Amnesty's Middle East and North Africa program.
During the 50 days of fighting, Hamas fired thousands of rockets and mortars at Israeli towns and cities, including Tel Aviv, and used a sophisticated tunnel network to carry out attacks on Israeli military encampments in southern Israel, close to the Gaza border. Some of the tunnels also had exits abutting Israeli civilian communities, giving Hamas the ability to attack them as well.
For its part, Israeli forces carried out sustained aerial, artillery and infantry attacks in Gaza, many of which the Amnesty report found to be indiscriminate.
Israel says the military was as careful as possible to avoid civilian casualties citing its system of providing warning to civilians that strikes on their buildings were coming when possible.
It argues that the heavy civilian death toll is Hamas' fault, accusing the Islamic militant group of launching rockets — and drawing retaliation — from school yards, residential areas and mosques.
"The report exposes a pattern of attacks on civilian homes by Israeli forces which have shown a shocking disregard for the lives of Palestinian civilians, who were given no warning and had no chance to flee," Luther said.

Chaos breaks out in London as Russell Brand joins thousands of masked Guy Fawkes protesters in dramatic Bonfire Night demonstration


Russell Brand and Vivienne Westwood joined thousands of masked anti-capitalist demonstrators who descended on Westminster for a Bonfire Night protest, bringing chaos to the capital.
Scores of riot police were on stand-by amid threats from campaign group Anonymous that the demonstration would create a blockade throughout London.
Officers were forced to draw their batons as missiles, plastic cones and road signs were launched along the Mall, while fireworks were left off in Trafalgar Square.
The masked demonstrators - some as young as 14 - also kicked and dragged over security railings while chanting 'one solution, revolution', as others daubed graffiti on riot vans.
Scroll down for videos
Russell Brand took part in a protest outside Parliament which was orchestrated by activists who said they intend to cause chaos throughout London
Russell Brand took part in a protest outside Parliament which was orchestrated by activists who said they intend to cause chaos throughout London
The protest, organised in hundreds of cities around the world, saw the activists wear masks depicting the sinister face of Guy Fawkes - a mask made famous in the film V for Vendetta
The protest, organised in hundreds of cities around the world, saw the activists wear masks depicting the sinister face of Guy Fawkes - a mask made famous in the film V for Vendetta
Russell Brand criticises Boris Johnson at Million Mask March
 
Barricades erected in anticipation of the protest were lifted by demonstrators as police attempted to control scenes in Parliament Square
Barricades erected in anticipation of the protest were lifted by demonstrators as police attempted to control scenes in Parliament Square
Demonstrators kicked and dragged over security railings while chanting 'one solution, revolution'
Demonstrators kicked and dragged over security railings while chanting 'one solution, revolution'
Officers were forced to draw their batons as missiles, plastic cones and road signs were launched
Officers were forced to draw their batons as missiles, plastic cones and road signs were launched
A police officer ducks to avoid the pushing and shoving which surged through the crowd during the protest before climbing on to the base of Nelson's Column and letting off fireworks.  
They then moved onto Buckingham Palace before hundreds of protesters made their way through central London, going to Piccadilly Circus, Regent Street and Oxford Circus.
They then marched to the BBC's headquarters at Broadcasting House on nearby Portland Place and going along Oxford Street to Hyde Park and Park Lane. 
As of around midnight, ten people had been arrested, including three on suspicion of assaulting police officers, one of a firework offence, three for public order crimes and one of attempted GBH. 
British fashion designer Vivienne Westwood was also spotted at the march in central London 
British fashion designer Vivienne Westwood was also spotted at the march in central London 
Police arrested a man on suspicion of headbutting a woman police officer outside Buckingham Palace during the protest
Police arrested a man on suspicion of headbutting a woman police officer outside Buckingham Palace during the protest
Officers were forced to draw their batons as missiles, plastic cones and road signs were launched along the Mall 
Officers were forced to draw their batons as missiles, plastic cones and road signs were launched along the Mall 
The heightened security measures come as the Metropolitan Police attempted to contact Anonymous, but no one came forward with any details
The heightened security measures come as the Metropolitan Police attempted to contact Anonymous, but no one came forward with any details
Protesters argued with riot police as they formed human barriers against the huge crowd of demonstrators 
Protesters argued with riot police as they formed human barriers against the huge crowd of demonstrators 
Riot police were put on high alert after warnings from the protest group that it would cause chaos in London
Riot police were put on high alert after warnings from the protest group that it would cause chaos in London
'WHOSE STREETS? OUR STREETS!' Protestors chant in London
 
The group said in its manifesto that it fights against mass surveillance, austerity and infringement of human rights.
Russell Brand also joined the London arm of the worldwide Million Mask March last year. 
During that march, energy bills were burned, fireworks were shot at Buckingham Palace and there were 15 arrests, following scuffles with police. 
He later wrote an article saying that riots are sparked 'when dialogue fails, when they feel unrepresented and bored by the illusion'. 
Today, it seemed the group were hoping for a similar result. On its website before the march, one of the group members wrote: 'What I'd like to see is a MASSIVE Anonymous blockade of London City.
'Complete physical GRIDLOCK. Only thing that gets through are Fire & Rescue and ambulances. NOTHING ELSE MOVES.'   
Alamy Live News. EA2A8P
Fireworks and smoke were seen rising out of Trafalgar Square as the protest got underway this evening 
The crowd tried its best to carry out the wishes of the organisers, which asked for a massive blockade of London City
The crowd tried its best to carry out the wishes of the organisers, which asked for a massive blockade of London City
The group - which uses the Guy Fawkes masks as its trademark - said it fights against mass surveillance, austerity and infringement of human rights
The group - which uses the Guy Fawkes masks as its trademark - said it fights against mass surveillance, austerity and infringement of human rights
The protest was held on the night of Britain's Guy Fawkes Night, and many of the marchers wore the white masks of the man who plotted to blow up parliament in 1605
The protest was held on the night of Britain's Guy Fawkes Night, and many of the marchers wore the white masks of the man who plotted to blow up parliament in 1605
Protesters chanted anti-establishment slogans as they milled around, while others climbed on to the base of Nelson's Column let off fireworks
Protesters chanted anti-establishment slogans as they milled around, while others climbed on to the base of Nelson's Column let off fireworks
Million Mask March protestors speak about why they get involved
 
The group also warned it would have 'bigger banners, louder voices, more people and a louder system'. 
The London march is part of a day of global demonstrations, which include rallies across Europe, the Americas and Asia. 
The protest has led to officers from the Metropolitan Police, British Transport Police and the City of London Police Force being on stand-by.
The heightened security measures came as the Metropolitan Police attempted to contact Anonymous, but no one came forward with any details. 
In a statement, the Metropolitan Police said they had attempted to contact organisers of the event 'without success'. 
Graffiti was daubed on a police van, while a masked protester stood nearby waving a placard
Graffiti was daubed on a police van, while a masked protester stood nearby waving a placard
Most people protested peacefully, but some ten arrests were made, Metropolitan Police said 
Most people protested peacefully, but some ten arrests were made, Metropolitan Police said 
The group warned it would have 'bigger banners, louder voices, more people and a louder system' than last year's protest
The group warned it would have 'bigger banners, louder voices, more people and a louder system' than last year's protest
Writing on its website before the march, the group said: 'What I'd like to see is a MASSIVE Anonymous blockade of London City
Writing on its website before the march, the group said: 'What I'd like to see is a MASSIVE Anonymous blockade of London City'. Protesters waved banners and placards during the march 
The protesters came up with a number of creative ways to express their messages of discontent 
The protesters came up with a number of creative ways to express their messages of discontent 
The group said in its manifesto that it fights again mass surveillance, austerity and infringement of human rights
The group said in its manifesto that it fights again mass surveillance, austerity and infringement of human rights
Anti-capitalist protesters held up signs saying 'Expect Us' 'We Are Anonymous' and 'We Are Everyone'
Anti-capitalist protesters held up signs saying 'Expect Us' 'We Are Anonymous' and 'We Are Everyone'
Rather than communicate directly with local authorities, Anonymous sent a message to the government
Rather than communicate directly with local authorities, Anonymous sent a message to the government
The protesters made their way through central London, going to Piccadilly Circus, Regent Street and Oxford Circus
The protesters made their way through central London, going to Piccadilly Circus, Regent Street and Oxford Circus
And it added that they have imposed Section 60AA of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 across Westminster between 5pm today and 2am tomorrow, which provides powers to remove masks when police fear a crime will be committed.
Scotland Yard said: 'The Met Police deals with around 4,500 protests and events every year. These can range from a single protester to hundreds of thousands of people walking through the capital's streets.
'Officers work with organisers to ensure that people are able to carry out their right to peaceful protest whilst ensuring Londoners can go about their daily business.' 
Last year’s London march saw more than 2,500 protesters take to the streets, in a rally which saw fireworks thrown at Buckingham Palace and a total of 15 arrests.  
Rather than communicate directly with local authorities, Anonymous sent a message to the government, and to global world leaders: 'To oppressive governments, we say this: we do not expect our campaign to be completed in a short time frame. However, you will not prevail against the angry masses of the body politic.'

EXCLUSIVE - Navy SEAL who killed bin Laden revealed: Rob O'Neill named as SEAL Team Six hero who shot 9/11 mastermind three times in head - and has already inspired series of Hollywood films


The Navy SEAL who shot Osama bin Laden dead in the special force's most famous operation can be named today.
The Navy hero is set to give a full interview to Fox News later this month and waive his anonymity but MailOnline has established that he is Rob O'Neill, a highly-decorated veteran who quit after 16 years service.
In an exclusive interview Rob's father, Tom O'Neill, tells MailOnline, 'People are asking if we are worried that ISIS will come and get us because Rob is going public. I say I'll paint a big target on my front door and say come and get us.'
Rob O'Neill, 38, is a former member of SEAL Team Six who has been portrayed on screen in Zero Dark Thirty, Captain Phillips and Lone Survivor.
 Scroll down for videos
In action: A rare picture of O'Neill as a serviceman shows him in uniform in Liberia, where the Navy was involved in operation to stabilize the war-torn country
In action: A rare picture of O'Neill as a serviceman shows him in uniform in Liberia, where the Navy was involved in operation to stabilize the war-torn country
Hometown boy: Rob O'Neill is a native of Butte, Montana, and joined up after he was jilted by a sweetheart. He remains proud of his roots in the West
Hometown boy: Rob O'Neill is a native of Butte, Montana, and joined up after he was jilted by a sweetheart. He remains proud of his roots in the West
New role: O'Neill is now a regular motivational speaker and spells out a message about planning and training meaning it is possible to execute 
New role: O'Neill is now a regular motivational speaker and spells out a message about planning and training meaning it is possible to execute 
He is one of the most distinguished members ever of the elite force - but now faces being frozen out of its circles for revealing its most closely-held secrets. 
O'Neill was personally congratulated for killing bin Laden - in his account at close range with three shots to his forehead - during the SEAL raid on Abbottobad, in Pakistan, on 2 May 2011. 
Questions have previously been raised over the exact narrative of how bin laden came to die, although the dispute centers on an alternative account which claims O'Neill shot him once, leaving him mortally-wounded and the terrorist was killed by two other SEALs with further shots to the chest rather than forehead. 
O'Neill's decision to speak out was prompted by losing some of his military benefits by quitting the SEALs after 16 years rather than staying for a full 20 years of service. 
Today details of his extraordinary military record can be disclosed.
O'Neill grew up in Butte, Montana, a former copper mining boomtown that has now fallen on hard times.
Tom O'Neill lives in a single story home with a garage full of stuffed animals — including a bear, moose, caribou, big horn sheep and several deer — shot by the two men. A full stuffed kodiak bear has place of pride in his living room.
O'Neill has said the basic reason he became a SEAL was a teenage romance gone wrong. At 19 he went to a Navy recruiter's office in an attempt to get over his lost love.
But his father gave a different story in his exclusive interview with MailOnline. 'We were going hunting and a friend asked us to take a guy who was a Navy SEAL with us,' said Tom O'Neill, 65. 'We were expecting someone who was 6 ft. 8 in. who could lift a house with his bare hands, but he was this normal guy. And Rob said if this guy could be a SEAL, then so could he.' 
In total he was deployed on more than a dozen tours of duty in active combat, in four different warzones, including Iraq and Afghanistan.
In the course of those tours he undertook more than 400 separate combat missions.

Britain to 'step up' military presence in Iraq with extra troops to help local forces in fight against ISIS


Extra British troops are to be sent to Iraq to help in the battle against ISIS extremists, the government announced today.
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon said the UK was 'stepping up' its military presence after a 'small specialist' team was sent to instruct Peshmerga in the northern city of Erbil last month.
UK forces will offer further training to Iraqi soldiers and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, Mr Fallon said during a visit to Iraq today.
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon announced UK forces will offer further training to Iraqi soldiers and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon announced UK forces will offer further training to Iraqi soldiers and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters
The government stressed that combat troops were not being deployed to take on ISIS across large parts of Syria and Iraq. 
During his first visit to Iraq, Mr Fallon told the BBC: 'We are going to be stepping up our training effort. I can't give you precise numbers. I'm here to evaluate training needs and there are areas of expertise, particularly in counter-IED, roadside car bombs, where we can help from our experience in Afghanistan.
'So we will be putting in more training people to help at the training centres across the country, not just in the Kurdish areas.'
Mr Fallon, who visited British army trainers teaching Peshmerga fighters how to use heavy machine guns given by the UK, insisted the Government remains clear that no combat troops will be deployed to Iraq.
Under the expansion of the training mission, UK troops will teach Kurds infantry skills such as sharp-shooting and first aid, and more equipment will be provided. The UK will also send advisory personnel to Iraqi headquarters.
Pressure has been growing to provide more assistance to new Iraqi prime minister Haider al-Abadi as his country's forces struggle to reclaim territory in the north and west.
The UK troops will teach Kurdish fighters skills such as sharp-shooting and first aid, and more equipment will be provided
The UK troops will teach Kurdish fighters skills such as sharp-shooting and first aid, and more equipment will be provided
Mr Fallon held talks in Baghdad with the premier as well as Iraqi security advisers before flying north to Erbil to met the President of the Kurdistan regional government Masoud Barzani and prime minister Nechirvan Barzani.
He added: 'The need is now. It's a very immediate challenge from Isil. As they start to push Isil back out of the villages and towns that Isil have gone into they are going to need this kind of assistance with roadside bombs, particularly to counter the terror tactics that Isil have been using.
'So, we are looking very urgently now how we can get more training help to them in the next few weeks.'
There are areas of expertise, particularly in counter-IED, roadside car bombs, where we can help from our experience in Afghanistan
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon 
Asked about concerns of mission creep, he replied: 'This is a very limited mission. The Prime Minister's made it very, very clear we are not going to recommit combat troops to Iraq. We've been there, we've done that.
'What we are going to do is to help the new government of Iraq and its own army take the fight to Isil through the aircraft we have deployed in the sky, through intelligence gathering, and through specialist training.'
British troops were part of the invasion of Iraq in March 2003 that overthrew Saddam Hussein, and later took responsibility for Basra and the south of the country.
The last combat troops with Operation Telic, as it was called, left in April 2009, with a small number staying on to train Iraqi forces until 2011.
RAF Tornado fighter-bombers have been taking part in US-led bombing raids on IS.
But Prime Minister David Cameron has dismissed the prospect of sending in ground troops to fight the Islamist group, which controls swathes of Iraq and neighbouring Syria.

Wildlife filmmaker to be EATEN ALIVE by anaconda using snake-proof suit as cameras record it all


  • Naturalist Paul Rosolie will document what it's like to be swallowed whole by a serpent for a Discovery Channel special to air December 7
A naturalist who created a snake-proof suit will allow himself to be swallowed alive by an anaconda for an upcoming television special.
In Eaten Alive, filmmaker Paul Rosolie intends to don the bulky suit and then willingly feed himself the Amazonian serpent, the largest of which can measure 30 feet long.
The Discovery Channel special, which won't air until December 7, has already drawn the ire of animal lovers who call the stunt an act of 'animal abuse to the highest degree.'
Scroll down for video... 
Belly of the beast: In Eaten Alive, filmmaker Paul Rosolie intends to don the bulky suit and then willingly feed himself the Amazonian serpent, the largest of which can measure 30 feet long
Belly of the beast: In Eaten Alive, filmmaker Paul Rosolie intends to don the bulky suit and then willingly feed himself the Amazonian serpent, the largest of which can measure 30 feet long
Rosolie's custom snake suit, seen here briefly in a Discovery Channel video, is designed to protect the naturalist as he's 
Rosolie's custom snake suit, seen here briefly in a Discovery Channel video, is designed to protect the naturalist as he's 
Not surprising, 26-year-old Rosolie disagrees.
'If u know me - I would never hurt a living thing,' Rosolie tweeted. But you'll have to watch to find out how it goes down!'
Rosolie, who's been dubbed the 'Indiana Jones of the Amazon,' specializes in the Amazon and his website bio says his experience also covers 'locations in India, Indonesia, Brazil and Peru.'
Experienced or not, some have called for Discovery to cancel Rosolie's show altogether.
A Change.org petition to that effect sprung up and is close to its goal of 500 signatures. 
'This is animal abuse to the highest degree and absolutely disgusting, and could kill the snake - an adult green anaconda cannot fit the width of an adult man's shoulders into it's body,' reads the petition.

One man's mission to be Eaten Alive by an anaconda
 
New Jersey native Rosolie, who first ventured into the Amazon jungles of Peru at just 18, claims he's an advocate of conservation and not, it appears, just a shill for television ratings
New Jersey native Rosolie, who first ventured into the Amazon jungles of Peru at just 18, claims he's an advocate of conservation and not, it appears, just a shill for television ratings
Constrictors like anacondas and pythons crush their meals to death before swallowing them. While there are many unverified accounts of the snakes killing humans, it's unlikely a full-grown man could so easily be swallowed by one of the snakes
Constrictors like anacondas and pythons crush their meals to death before swallowing them. While there are many unverified accounts of the snakes killing humans, it's unlikely a full-grown man could so easily be swallowed by one of the snakes
Something to snack on? Anacondas usually eat wild pigs, deer, capybaras and caiman
Something to snack on? Anacondas usually eat wild pigs, deer, capybaras and caiman
Anacondas usually eat wild pigs, deer, capybaras and caiman. 
Constrictors like anacondas and pythons crush their meals to death before swallowing them. While there are many unverified accounts of the snakes killing humans, it's unlikely a full-grown man could so easily be swallowed by one of the snakes.
New Jersey native Rosolie, who first ventured into the Amazon jungles of Peru at just 18, claims he's an advocate of conservation and not, it appears, just a shill for television ratings.
'Within the first five minutes of being in the forest, I realized that all the hype I had absorbed as a kid about rainforests was nothing compared to the reality. I knew that the jungle was where I belonged,' he wrote in his memoir.
'Within the first five minutes of being in the forest, I realized that all the hype I had absorbed as a kid about rainforests was nothing compared to the reality. I knew that the jungle was where I belonged,' Rosolie wrote in his memoir