Blog Archive

Thursday, 8 September 2016

A river in one city in Russia Mysteriously turned blood red


A local  river in Startled, Russia mysteriously turned blood red. Startled Residents have been posting photos of the local river that has strangely turned blood red.

Photos published on Russian social media appear to the show the Daldykan River near the city of Norilsk flowing vivid burgundy. Russian authorities have yet to establish a reason for the river’s unusual appearance, but local people quickly linked it to a giant metals plant upstream. Russia's Environment Ministry said it was investigating a plant leak as the likely cause.

Norilsk is known as one of the most polluted cities on earth, built around factories mostly belonging to the vast metals company Norilsk Nickel. Some Norilsk residents wrote in a local social media group that they believed the river’s biblical shade is linked to runoff from a nearby smelting plant.

Some suggested the color was being produced by wastewater mixed with mineral ore leaking into the river from the Hope Metals Plant.

The posts prompted Russia's Environment Ministry to respond, issuing a statement announcing that it is investigating and that preliminary information suggests the cause was a leak from waste pipes belonging to Norilsk Nickel. A company subsidiary denied the pollution was caused by an accident involving the Hope factory, according to the statement. The ministry said it is still working to locate the pollution's source.

Reached by ABC News, the factory declined to comment.

Area residents on social media and a local indigenous group said they were sure the colour was coming from the area's metals plants, noting that it was not the first time they contaminated the region's water.

A user named Evgeny Belikov, who claimed to have worked at the Hope plant, said that workers referred to a reservoir connected to it as the "red sea" on account of its colour, produced by ore runoff.

Other users posted older photos seeming to show the reservoir a similar colour in an area that has large pipes running into it.

"In winter, the snow's also red," Belikov wrote on the social media group. "On the one hand, it's beautiful, but on the other, it's chemical."

Grigory Dukarev of the Association of the Indigenous Peoples of the Taimir Peninsula, which represents native communities in the area, told ABC News that he was preparing to submit a formal complaint to regional authorities asking them to investigate and was travelling to the river to record the pollution.

He said he was previously told that the runoff from the factories was not harmful and would cause minimal ecological damage. But he said he was skeptical.

"I'm going to ask the representative from the company to drink this water," Dukarev said. "Will they drink this water? I doubt that."

President Obama urges Americans to challenge Trump's wacky ideas


President Barack Obama responded to Donald Trump's latest critique of his administration with a chuckle on Thursday and appealed for voters to challenge the Republican nominee's "wacky ideas."

Trump said that Russian leader Vladimir Putin had "been a leader, far more than our president has been a leader" while slamming Obama during Wednesday's Commander-in-Chief Forum.
During his final press conference at the summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), Obama was asked whether he would "defend" his legacy following Trump's  remarks.

"Do I care to defend...? OK, OK, respond," he said, laughing.

"As far as Mr. Trump, I think I've already offered my opinion," Obama said. "I don't think the guy is qualified to be president of the United States."

Obama urged the public and press "to just listen to what he says and follow up and ask questions about what appear to be either contradictory or uninformed or outright wacky ideas."

He added: "There is this process that seems to take place over the course of an election season where somehow behavior that in normal times we would consider completely unacceptable and outrageous becomes normalized. But I can tell you from the interactions I've had over the last eight or nine days with foreign leaders that this is serious business and you actually have to know what you're talking about."

Trump: "Obama has reduced US generals to rubble's, I will sack many of them, if I win presidency"


Republican nominee Donald Trump has said that he will sack some of America's generals, if he wins the presidency in November election. Trump said that on Wednesday night that Obama has reduced  many of those generals to rubbles  because he represent a weak president, he suggested and mean it that he will fire almost all of them, if elected presidency in up coming election in November.
Trump's comment came during a televised national security forum where he and Democratic rival Hillary Clinton each were fielded with 30 minutes of questions about their experience and judgement to be commander in chief.Both of them never appeared on stage together. It was back to back sessions to serve as a preview of sorts for their upcoming debates.
Hillary Clinton took the stage first and quickly found herself responding at length to questions about her years in government. She accepted that she had made a mistakes in relying on a personal email account and private server as a secretary of state and also voting for the 2003 invasion of Iraq as a senator.  But she defended her support for U.S. military intervention to help oust a dictator in Libya, despite the chaotic aftermath.
"I'm asking to be judged on the totality of my record." Said Clinton.

Clinton vowed to not send American ground troops into Iraq or Syria to fight the Islamic State group. And she pledged to hold weekly Oval Office meetings with representatives from the Pentagon and Department of Veterans Affairs to stay abreast of health care for veterans.She said that during discussion on her foreign policy.
On Trump's foreign policy. He claimed that he has a private blueprint for defeating the extremist group and that he would demand a plan from military leaders within 30 days of taking office. He was asked whether the military leaders are going to be the crop of generals in Pentagon at the moment, Trump simply replied by saying that they will probably be different generals.

Trump further renew his praise of Russian President Vladimir Putin for having a great control over Russian Federation. He stood by a previous comment that appeared to blame military sexual assaults on men and women serving together, but added he would not seek to remove women from the military. And for the first time, he opened the door to granting legal status to people living in the U.S. illegally who join the military.

"I think that when you serve in the armed forces, that's a very special situation, and I could see myself working that out." Trump said.
With just two months until Election Day, national security has emerged as a centrepiece issue in the White House race. Both candidates believe they have the upper hand, with Clinton contrasting her experience with Trump's unpredictability and the Republican arguing that Americans worried about their safety will be left with more of the same if they elect Obama's former secretary of state.

While GOP candidates are often seen by voters as having an advantage on military and national security issues, Trump is far from a traditional Republican. He has no military experience and has repeatedly criticized the skill of the armed forces lool.

PHOTOS: US and Russia plan Syria talks as Aleppo bombing continues to escalate, killing mostly the civillians


Accordging to reports from Syria, an air strike near the suspected gas attack in Syria has killed more than 10 civillians on Wednesday.
Report says that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov have agreed to meet this week for extend discussions on how the 5 years civil war will come to an end.
As we know that Russia a key ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad, has been carrying out airstrikes to bolster his forces for nearly a year. The United States supports rebels fighting to overthrow Assad and has called on him several times to step down.
U.S. president Barack Obama and Russian president Vladimir Putin both met on the sidlines of the G-20 summit in China to negotiate a settlement about Syrians war, but they failed to reach agreement or settlement. Obama acknowledged that gaps of trust between them led to failed settlement following months of negotiation between John Kerry and Minister Sergey Lavrov.
The Russian Foreign Ministry said Lavrov and Kerry would meet Thursday and Friday in Geneva to work out the remaining details of a possible deal, following a phone call between the two. But U.S. officials indicated the earliest the talks could happen is Friday.



"Kerry would not be making another attempt with Lavrov if there were no prospects for success, but we're a long way from getting there." U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said in London.

Moscow also warned that Turkey's incursion into northern Syria was complicating peace efforts, underscoring that the operation has not been sanctioned by the U.N. Security Council or the Syrian government. Turkey's actions "could further complicate the military and political situation in Syria, which is dire as it is" and jeopardize international efforts to reach a peace deal, it added.

Turkey pushed into northern Syria two weeks ago to expel the Islamic State group from its border and halt a northward advance by Syrian Kurdish forces, which Ankara sees as an extension of an outlawed Kurdish separatist group inside its own borders.
Deputy Prime Minister Nurettin Canikli said Turkey would like to create a no-fly zone over the area to repatriate Syrian refugees.


The airstrike Wednesday devastated the al-Sukkari neighborhood in the divided city of Aleppo. Video from the local branch of the Syrian Civil Defense search-and-rescue organization showed residents yelling for help as first responders dug victims out of the rubble. At least half a block appeared to be destroyed.

Medical workers said the opposition-controlled neighborhood was hit Tuesday with chlorine gas, though the report could not be independently verified. They said they treated at least 70 people for breathing difficulties. A 13-year-old girl and a 29-year-old man died from further complications Wednesday.

Mohammed Abu Jaafar, head of a forensic department in the rebel-held part of Aleppo, said the teenager had died of suffocation and respiratory burns.



Chlorine gas is a crude weapon that can be fatal in high concentrations. In lower doses, it can damage lungs or cause severe breathing difficulties and other symptoms, including vomiting and nausea. International inspectors determined in August that the Syrian government and Islamic State militants were responsible for chemical attacks in 2014 and 2015.

The Civil Defense put the casualty toll from Wednesday's airstrike at 20 dead and more than 40 wounded. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 10 civilians were killed, including a child. Conflicting casualty counts are common in the aftermath of airstrikes.

The long-suffering northern city is one of the chief battlegrounds of the grinding war, with rebels and pro-government forces trading indiscriminate fire across populated neighborhoods. The Russian and the Syrian air forces are the only two operating over Aleppo.


Meanwhile, the U.N.'s humanitarian agency said the fighting in central Hama province has displaced 100,000 people in eight days between late August and early September. Rebels last week advanced in Hama, prompting fierce clashes with government forces.

Rebels surprised government troops earlier this month, dislodging them from areas around the provincial capital, also called Hama, including a military base and towns and villages near the highway leading to Damascus.

The offensive, led by an ultraconservative Islamic group, Jund al-Aqsa, and also involving several factions from the Western-backed Free Syrian Army, drew an intense government bombing campaign that has killed dozens.


The fighting sent tens of thousands fleeing in the latest wave, part of a pattern that has displaced nearly half of Syria's population since the war began in 2011.

The U.N. agency, OCHA, said about half of the displaced from Hama have sought refuge in the province's government-controlled capital, while the rest fled to neighboring rebel-held Idlib province.

A shortage of shelter means many displaced families are sleeping outdoors in parks, the U.N. agency said.

Many of those fleeing feared a violent government response to the rebel advance, according to Ahmad al-Ahmad, an activist from Hama. "Wherever the regime is driven out of an area, it ends up destroying it," he said in a text to The Associated Press.

In at least one airstrike last week, government warplanes struck a van carrying displaced people fleeing Suran, a town north of the city of Hama, activists said. The government at the time said it targeted "terrorists."

An estimated 11 million Syrians have fled their homes since the war began in 2011. Of those, 4.8 million are refugees outside of Syria, with nearly 7 million displaced inside the country.

Syrian opposition leaders unveiled a plan in London for a political transition designed to end the war. It called for Assad's departure after six months and for elections to be held under the auspices of a transitional government after two years.


British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson backed the proposal by the High Negotiations Committee in a column Wednesday in The Times newspaper, saying Assad could have no part in a future government and bore "overwhelming responsibility" for the massive loss of life in Syria.

Associated Press writers Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow, Jamey Keaten in Geneva, Menelaos Hadjicostis in Nicosia, Cyprus, Robert Burns and Greg Katz in London, Bradley Klapper in Washington contributed, and Olusola publishing at Olusola planet blog Mariupol State University, Ukraine also contributed.

Wednesday, 7 September 2016

Breaking News: Apple just unveils iphone 7 and iphone 7 plus


Apple just unveiled the next generation of iphone.
It’s “the best iPhone we’ve ever created,” CEO Tim Cook said on stage.

The iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus comes with 10 major new features, as senior vice president of hardware engineering Phil Schiller put it.

1. Slick new design

The new phone has a high-gloss finish, with seamless lines all around. The camera is more smoothly enclosed and protected.

2. The home button has changed

The home button has changed in a major way: it is no longer a button you click, which is what you’re used to. The home button is now “force-sensitive, solid-state” and runs on a “taptic engine.” It feels more like the trackpad on a laptop. This change was widely rumored ahead of time.

3. Smoother, stronger phone enclosure

The iPhone is now water and dust-resistant. To illustrate, Apple showed a photograph of a kid falling into a pool, holding his iPhone.

4. It’s all about the camera

The camera, Schiller said, “is perhaps the most beloved feature” of iPhone for many customers, and it’s why this part got more time than any other.

The iPhone 7 camera is a “huge advancement in photography for cell phones,” Schiller said. The new camera has: an optical image stabilizer that steadies shaky hands; a wider, six-element lens to allow more light to the sensor; a 12-megapixel sensor that is 30% more energy-efficient; the flash now has 4 LEDs and puts out 50% more light for taking a photo in dark environments. The new camera also uses machine learning to detect people and faces.

The new camera “can take a beautiful selfie,” Schiller said. “We are not saying to throw out all your DSLRs…. but we are saying this is the best camera ever on any phone.”

5. The retina HD display

The display is 25% brighter than the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, and displays cinema standard “wide color gamut” range of colors. To demonstrate the significance of the new color range, Instagram’s head of design Ian Spalter came on stage in a colorful shirt and had someone snap a photo of him, live, and convert it to a GIF-style Instagram boomerang.

6. The speakers are stereo-quality

The new speakers are of much higher quality, with one at top and one at bottom. They have an increased range and, Schiller said, “will really blow you away.”

7. The headphone jack is gone; earbuds connect through the USB port

As was rumored, Apple removed the headphone jack, and will connect its earbuds over its lightning USB port. Schiller acknowledged that many people have headphones that connect through a headphone jack, so Apple is offering an adapter.

Removing the headphone jack, Schiller said, really comes down to “courage,” a statement many critics of removing the jack might pick apart.

We are continuing to update this post as the event continues as we get more update from yahoo source.

Blogger allegedly arrested by SSS in Akwa Ibom state has been released

                                  
38-year-old blogger and publisher of an online news medium, Abia Facts, Mr. Iroegbu Emenike, who was allegedly arrested by the State Security Service (SSS) in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State at about 1:00 pm on Tuesday, Sept 6, 2016, has been released.

            
Lawyer/Human Rights Activist Inibehe Effiong stated that according to the wife of the blogger, Mrs. Ekaette Iroegbu, Emenike was arrested by three (3) SSS operatives who invaded their Uyo residence in a black jeep. The operatives took away the two phones of Mrs. Emenike; the bloggers' phones and laptop, etc. After ransacking their apartment, they whisked the blogger away without disclosing the reason for his arrest and their destination. (Read more here)

He has now been released. Inibehe Effiong confirmed this development, stating that Emenike was released this afternoon from SSS custody.
Sources Linda Ikeji's Blog.

Amazon just accidentally revealed the iphone 7 before Apple. Shop here at Olusola's Amazon


Amazon have accidentally revealed the iphone 7 before official reveal by Apple company.
You can shop for iphone 7 cases and accessories at Olusola's Amazon online retail. Shop now.

   

Use HotelCombine online to search for your favourite hotel or holiday inn around the world

Take a break from work and use  HotelsCombined to search for your favourite hotel or holiday inn around the world. All you need to do i...