Archive for July 18th, 2010

Jul
18

Clinton raises pressure on Pakistan to fight militants

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Clinton raises pressure on Pakistan to fight militants

“All in all we are making progress but I don't want to oversell it, because every day I know how much more needs to be done,” she said.
“But there is openness and a level of candour that is more helpful in dealing with our ongoing challenges.”
Mrs Clinton has come to Islamabad, on her second visit as secretary of state, armed with 550m (360m) for water, agricultural and energy projects to chip away some more at the deep-seated mistrust of America in Pakistan.
Only 17% of Pakistanis have a positive view of the US, according to a poll last month by the Pew Research Center's Global attitudes project.
Pakistan is at the bottom of the list of countries with a favourable opinion of the US, along with Turkey and Egypt.
The 550m in funding will go to government conducted projects, as well as NGOs and the private sector.
The money comes from the Kerry Lugar Berman Bill, which was voted into law last year. It allocates 1.5bn a year over five years in aid money to Pakistan.
One of the key areas the US wants to help develop is the energy sector.
There are concerns in the US about accountability and oversight of how the money is spent in Pakistan, a country with a reputation for corruption and waste. Government offices and the army owe 2bn in unpaid electricity bills to a cash-strapped national power company.
Mrs Clinton's special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke, also acknowledged that while interaction with the government was getting better, public opinion polls didn't show much of a change.
Mrs Clinton herself faced a hostile public when she was in Pakistan in October.
During two townhall meetings, she fielded tough questions from students, who doubted whether the Americans were really their long-term friends.
Mrs Clinton will hold another townhall meeting on Monday – the tone of the questions then might be the best indicator of whether her people-to-people diplomacy is having any tangible impact in swaying Pakistanis.

Source:BBC

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Jul
18

BP pushes to keep new cap on well

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BP pushes to keep new cap on well

“Right now we don't have a target to return the well to flow,” he said, adding: “We're not seeing any problems at this point with the shut-in.”
Pressure within the well is continuing to rise, seen as a key indication that the cap is doing its job in containing the oil. Low pressure readings would indicate that oil was leaking elsewhere in the well.
The flow of oil was shut off at 1425 local time (1925 GMT) on Thursday and testing has continued since then.
Any move to keep the cap on would have to be approved by the US government.
US policy has been consistent since the oil flow was first stopped, with Adm Allen saying a seismic test on the well area would be required once initial testing was complete.
“We can go back then and put the system under pressure again. Once we are convinced we can certainly consider shutting in the well, that is always possible and we would certainly look to do that,” he said on Thursday.
The possibility of using the cap to close the well permanently was described as a “side-benefit” by the US commander.
Whatever happens will be a temporary solution, ahead of a relief well being used permanently to “kill” the original well with mud and cement.
Work on both of the relief wells is currently suspended because of the integrity test. One of the relief wells is within 4-5ft horizontally and 100ft vertically of intersecting.
The Gulf of Mexico spill has been described as the worst environmental disaster the US has seen.
Eleven workers were killed when the Deepwater Horizon rig blew up on 20 April.
The subsequent spill has affected hundreds of miles of Gulf coastline since April, with serious economic damage to the region as tourists have avoided Gulf Coast beaches and fishing grounds have remained closed.
BP has put the costs of dealing with the disaster at over 3.5bn (2.3bn).
It has already paid out more than 200m to 32,000 claimants.
The company is evaluating a further 17,000 for payment and is seeking more information on 61,000 other claims.
In June, BP placed a cap, known as an LMRP cap, over the top of the Deepwater Horizon well so oil could be collected at the surface. However, this continued to leak oil and has now been replaced with a better fitting device.
When engineers removed the LMRP cap on 10 July, oil began to freely flow from the top of the blowout preventer once more. However, the Q4000 containment system continued to take some oil to the surface.
Engineers then bolted on a new capping stack onto the blowout preventer (BOP). This allowed them to conduct a series of tests to see if the flow of oil could be stopped using the newly installed equipment.
During the test the three ram capping stack has been closed and all sub-sea containment systems collecting the oil temporarily suspended, effectively blocking the flow of oil from the well.
Once the tests have been successfully completed, BP will resume collecting oil. The Helix Producer ship was recently connected to the BOP to provide another collection route in addition to the Q4000 rig.

Source:BBC

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Jul
18

Moonshine 'tempts new generation'

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Moonshine 'tempts new generation'

“There's been a huge increase in the number of people making moonshine,” says Max Watman, whose book, Chasing the White Dog, chronicles moonshine's colourful history.
He says that in recent years, the image of moonshine “has changed dramatically”.
“The stigma has gone. It's become cool.”
Moonshine has occupied a place in America's folk memory since Prohibition – the period between 1920 and 1933 when the production, sale and transporting of alcohol for consumption were banned across the US.
The term moonshine usually refers to whisky but it's a catch-all term for any spirit that is untaxed and illegally distilled.
'High-end mixologists'
Getting a distilling license can run into the tens of thousands of dollars.
But anyone found guilty of making spirits without a license faces a fine of up to 15,000 (9,750) and up to five years' imprisonment.
Today's moonshiners are a diverse bunch. They include home distillers, high-end “mixologists”, small businesses making cheap liquor to sell locally and bigger operations which sell across state lines.
Though most prosecutions continue to be in the south, many of today's new moonshiners are hipster kids, foodie enthusiasts and hobbyists on America's coasts, making booze in their kitchens and bathrooms.
One Brooklyn resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity, makes moonshine to her father's recipe.
She says: “Growing up, me and my brothers watched our dad make moonshine in the bathtub. Now we do it.”
In her 20s and an aspiring musician, she is typical of the new breed of moonshiners. Rigged up in her kitchen is a gleaming copper still which she bought over the internet for several hundred dollars.
By day she works in a museum where many of her colleagues know about her illicit hobby.
“You've got to be careful about who you tell. I wouldn't go blabbing about it to someone I'd just met,” she says.
Private individuals distilling small amounts at home for their own consumption are unlikely to get caught, although police say they take all tip-offs seriously. “If someone is producing illegally distilled spirits and not paying tax then we'll go after them,” says Arthur Resnick, spokesman forthe Federal Government's Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau.
A number of distillers have set up websites and blogs where they anonymously answer questions and give advice to first-timers or anyone having problems.
Colonel Vaughn Wilson is one of America's best known builders of copper stills. He has seen demand double for his stills in recent years.
“I can't keep up with my orders,” say Col Wilson, who lives in Arkansas and whose stills range from 300 to 11,000 in price. “I've shipped stills to every state in the US.”
Because prosecutions tend to be made on a state rather than federal basis, there is no record of the number of moonshine convictions made in America annually. But arrests have been made in Kentucky, Georgia and Arkansas in the past month.
A man in Bell County, Kentucky, was arrested in June after police discovered 100 gallons of moonshine (378 litres) and 500 gallons of mash on his property.
Police said it was part of an ongoing investigation and added that they hoped to make more arrests.
“It will be a relentless pursuit until the end,” said Doug Jordan, of the Bell County Sheriff's Department.
A number of states have set up special moonshine task forces to combat the problem.
Arrests are usually made following tip-offs from neighbours or from local stores who report sales of unusually large quantities of sugar, a key ingredient, to the police.
Nathan Jones, of the Kentucky Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, says: “We get cases every month or so. The ones that come to our attention are the big ones.”
Though cases of moonshine causing blindness are mostly a thing of the past, health officials warn of the dangers of drinking contaminated spirits.
“You do hear stories of people blowing themselves up but if you've read the basics and are using good quality products then it's hard to poison yourself,” says Mr Watman.
The biggest moonshine bust in the United States occurred not during Prohibition but in 2001.
Dubbed “Operation Lightning Strike”, it resulted in the arrest of 26 people in an operation that stretched from North Carolina to Philadelphia.
The group had dodged 20m in taxes on 1.5 million gallons of alcohol.
For many of today's moonshiners, the appeal lies in the pastime's illegality.
Col Wilson's website includes a section entitled “Beat the law”.
He says: “The authorities will never stop moonshine. They are wasting their time trying.”

Source:BBC

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Jul
18

Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor is taken to hspital after fall

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Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor is taken to hspital after fall

Veteran actress Zsa Zsa Gabor has been taken to hospital after falling out of bed and breaking several bones, her publicist has said.
John Blanchette is quoted by AP news agency as saying the Hollywood star was watching television in her California home when the accident happened.
Gabor's husband then called an ambulance and she was taken to Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.
The condition of the Hungarian-born star, who is 93, is not known.
Gabor is partially paralysed and uses a wheelchair following a car accident in 2002.
She also suffered a stroke five years ago.
Gabor starred in films such as Moulin Rouge, Lili and Touch of Evil.

Source:BBC

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