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Phoenix Car Crash: Girl, 6, Dies In Accident

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 31 Agustus 2013 | 00.48

A six-year-old girl has died after her eight-year-old brother crashed the family car in Arizona.

The girl was found dead in the passenger seat of the car, wearing her pyjamas, police said.

The boy suffered ankle injuries after the family's Hyundai Elantra hit a pole at the side of the road, one block from their home in south Phoenix.

Police had spotted the vehicle moments earlier and were attempting to pull it over when the accident happened.

It is understood the children's mother raised the alarm after believing they had been kidnapped at 10pm on Wednesday night.

A frantic 911 call records the mother pleading with officers to find her children after they disappeared. 

A tribute A blackboard tribute to the girl

She had previously bathed the children and put them to bed, said police sergeant Steve Martos, of the Phoenix Police Department.

"It's a tragic story, all the way round," said Mr Martos, who did not give the children's names.

Police said they started to get numerous 911 calls from around 10.15pm.

One caller said the car had struck a fence. Another, who followed the vehicle, reported that children were inside.

At around 10.30pm, when police tried to pull the vehicle over, it veered to the right and hit a pole, Mr Martos said.

"This was one of those situations when the officers believed they were trying to rescue kids from a possible kidnapper," the police officer added.

"When they ran up to the vehicle, they found an eight-year-old in the driver's seat, and a six-year-old in the passenger seat, severely injured."

Both the children were in their pyjamas and the girl was not wearing a seat belt. The air bags did not deploy.

The mother had walked to the scene and discovered that her children were in the car. Police said they did not know what prompted the boy to take the car.

They have not spoken to him, but no criminal complaints are expected to be filed because he is too young.


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Hot Car Baby Death: 'Joint-Smoking Dad' Charged

A father has been accused of leaving his baby to suffocate in a parked car in temperatures of 100F, as he smoked cannabis in a sports bar.

Daniel Bryant Gray has been charged with manslaughter and child abuse after leaving three-month-old Jamison Gray in a vehicle in Phoenix, Arizona.

Sergeant Tommy Thompson said Gray, 31, was being booked into jail.

Police said initially that Jamison died after his father had gone to a sports bar where he worked as a kitchen manager, at about noon on Wednesday.

It was thought Gray was distracted and forgot about the boy.

But Mr Thompson said police later came to suspect Gray was smoking cannabis with a work companion during the time his son was in the vehicle.

Outside temperatures were about 100 degrees, but interior car temperatures are frequently much higher.

A fund has been set up to help the boy's mother who is said to be distraught.


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Beneath Greenland's Ice Lies a Giant Canyon

A valley far longer than the Grand Canyon has been discovered beneath a mile-thick sheet of ice in Greenland.

A Nasa airborne mission to the island has revealed the previously unknown giant canyon which has the characteristics of a winding river, at least 460 miles long.

This means it is longer than the Grand Canyon in Arizona, in the US, which is 277 miles long.

The Greenland Canyon, which is as deep as 2,600 feet in some places, is thought to predate the ice sheet that has covered Greenland for the last few million years.

"One might assume that the landscape of the Earth has been fully explored and mapped," said Jonathan Bamber, the lead author of the study and professor of physical geography at the University of Bristol.

"Our research shows there's still a lot left to discover."

The scientists used thousands of miles of radar data, collected by Nasa and researchers from the UK and Germany over several decades, to piece together the landscape lying beneath the ice sheet.

They found that the canyon stretched from almost the centre of the island to beneath the Petermann Glacier fjord in northern Greenland.

Evidence suggests that as much as four million years ago water flowed in the canyon and that it was part of a major river system.

Much of the data was collected by Nasa's Operation Icebridge campaign, an airborne study of polar ice, which is expected to return to Greenland next March.


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CPS £1m Taxi Fraud: Lovers Jailed For Six Years

By Adele Robinson, Midlands Correspondent

Two former Crown Prosecution Service employees have been jailed for six years each for a £1m taxi fare scam.

Lisa Burrows, from Titford Road, Oldbury, and Tahir Mahmood, from Eastbourne Avenue, Birmingham, faked invoices for a fictitious taxi firm purporting to cater for witnesses between January 2008 and February 2013.

The pair, who pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit fraud by abuse of position, used the proceeds over five years to live a "lavish lifestyle".

Money was spent on designer clothing, handbags, jewellery and holidays to Dubai, New York and Spain.

Investigators have been unable to find out what happened to over £600,000 of the proceeds.

Burrows had been a finance manager for West Midlands CPS for 21 years and met Mahmood when he was a taxi driver after which they became lovers.

Mahmood, 50, was employed in the finance department as an admin officer of the CPS for nearly five months before his arrest.

Old Bailey Their crimes have been described as a "huge fraud on the public purse"

Suspicions were initially raised about Burrows when a CPS colleague questioned the amount of money being paid to B&M Taxi Services.

Auditors later uncovered illegible signatures on several invoices submitted by 42-year-old Burrows.

Officers from West Midlands Police were informed in February and an investigation was immediately launched by the force's Economic Crime Unit.

They identified Mahmood as a second suspect and enquiries later uncovered that the bank accounts on the taxi invoices actually belonged to him.

He had set up the account using a pseudonym and a driving licence in an alternative name.

In reality the taxi firm never existed and over a period of five years a total of £1,021,475 of public funds was transferred into Mahmood's account.

During sentencing at Birmingham Crown Court, Judge Williams Davis QC told Burrows that she had "grossly abused the trust" placed in her by the CPS.

"You knew how the system worked. You knew that the invoices were capable of deceiving the auditing system operated by your employer ... it is only by chance that the fraud was discovered when it was," he said.

He described Mahmood and Burrows' crimes as "a huge fraud on the public purse causing substantial losses to a department already under serious financial pressure ... where the proceeds can be traced they largely went on high living. The fraud was motivated purely by greed."

DC Mark Calvert, who led the inquiry, said: "What we uncovered was a prolonged and systematic fraud by two people who ironically were employed by an organisation which prosecutes those who break the law.

"Using B&M Taxi Services, which we believe was simply short for 'Burrows and Mahmood', both of them cheated the public purse out of more than £1m.

"They naively thought they'd get away with it, but were caught as a result of their own greed.

"This was a gross breach of trust by two people who should have known better. They'll now have many years in prison to reflect on their actions."


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Soldier Dies During Training Exercise On Moor

A soldier recently returned from Afghanistan has died while on a moorland training exercise in North Yorkshire.

Private Michael Ihemere was on a three-mile run over rugged terrain when he collapsed.

The 26-year-old, from Umuodo, Nigeria, was a member of the 1st Battalion The Mercian Regiment, which returned from a tour of Afghanistan in April.

Emergency services were called to Barden Moor, near Leyburn, just before 9am on Wednesday following a report that a man serving in the military had collapsed on the Army-controlled Catterick ranges.

Despite the efforts of paramedics, the soldier was pronounced dead at the scene.

A North Yorkshire Police spokesman said: "Officers are working with the Army to establish the full circumstances."

A memorial service is held for Private Michale Ihemere A memorial service was held for the "talented and popular soldier"

He added that the death was not being treated as suspicious.

Private Ihemere's commanding officer paid tribute to the married soldier, who joined the British Army in November 2011.

Lieutenant Colonel Mark Ellwood MBE described him as "a reliable, talented and popular soldier" who had a "bright future" in the Army.

After successfully completing infantry training he was posted to the 1st Battalion, The Mercian Regiment (Cheshire) in September 2012.

He deployed to Afghanistan in October 2012 serving with C Company, based in the Nad-e Ali district of Helmand province.

His widow Blessing attended a memorial parade at Marne Barracks, Catterick Garrison, on Friday morning.

Map of Leyburn in North Yorkshire The soldier collapsed and died at Barden Moor, Leyburn, North Yorkshire

The soldier's collapse follows the deaths of three reservists in the Brecon Beacons in Wales in July. They were on an SAS selection training course in temperatures which reached 30C.

Corporal James Dunsby, Lance Corporal Craig Roberts and Trooper Eddie Maher were carrying heavy packs while attempting to cross the Pen y Fan mountain.

Conditions in North Yorkshire were much cooler on Wednesday, around 17C with a slight breeze.

It was not clear if the soldiers were carrying heavy loads.


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Kate's First Appearance Since Birth Of George

Looking slim and relaxed, the Duchess of Cambridge has appeared in public for the first time since giving birth to Prince George.

Ring O' Fire Anglesey Coastal Ultra Marathon

Kate joined William as he launches the gruelling, three-day annual "ultra" marathon run around the coast of the island of Anglesey, North Wales.

The Duke was attending one of his final public engagements on the island as his time there with the RAF comes to an end.

The couple met some of the runners and their families and volunteers before the start - but they did not take Prince George along.

Ring O' Fire Anglesey Coastal Ultra Marathon William and Kate chatted to locals at the race

Kate said her son was doing "very well" and that he was sleeping.

"Hopefully he'll be like that for a little bit longer," added the Duchess.

The Duke And Duchess Of Cambridge Start The Ring O'Fire Anglesey Coastal Ultra Marathon Kate accepts gifts from local children

She was also overheard telling well-wishers: "He's very sweet".

William was introduced to a child called George. "Hello, George," he said. "...much larger than our George."

Britain's Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge visits the Breakwater country park, to start the Ring O Fire ultra marathon, in Anglesey, north Wales Kate talks to well-wishers

The annual event - known as the Ring O' Fire - is a 135-mile foot race around the rugged coast, staged over three days and including 13,695 feet of ascent.

The presence of Kate was a surprise - it was revealed only on Friday morning that she would be joining her husband.

The Duke And Duchess Of Cambridge Start The Ring O'Fire Anglesey Coastal Ultra Marathon William starts the "ultra" marathon

A fortnight ago, William said a public goodbye to Wales as he confirmed his young family would be leaving their Anglesey home and moving "elsewhere" when his posting comes to an end this month, having completed his three-year tour of duty as an RAF search and rescue helicopter pilot based at RAF Valley.

He is widely expected to leave North Wales and return to London with Kate and their baby son to take on more royal duties rather than stay in the service.

At the Anglesey Show, he spoke movingly about his time on the island, saying he would miss living and working in the area "terribly" and joked about the demands of looking after a newborn baby with Kate.

Composite of Baby Cambridge Royal baby The couple presented Prince George to the world in July

With the birth of George last month, the Cambridges are now a family unit and their Kensington Palace apartment is expected to become their main home.


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Syria: Napalm-Like Burns After School Attack

People suffering from Napalm-like burns have been speaking of an attack in which a plane apparently dropped an incendiary bomb on students in Syria.

Video said to be from the town of Urum al Kubra, close to Aleppo, shows a man reported to be a school teacher, who says the students were attacked as they tried to escape from an attack nearby.

"The plane hit a residential area in Urum al Kubra," he explains.

"We tried to get out quickly so we don't get hurt, but it seems someone's fate caught up with them today.

"A gathering of students formed, which is normal as the students needed to leave under these circumstances, and the plane hit us."

'Teacher' after atatck The injuries were like those caused by Napalm, according to doctors

The video, posted on the internet, is said to have come from an account associated with a rebel group in Aleppo.

In another video filmed in the aftermath of the attack, a doctor reports seven deaths and 50 injuries - and says the burns resembled Napalm injuries.

However, the use of the substance has not been confirmed.

Separate footage showed other victims of the alleged attack and a features a woman who introduces herself as Dr Roula, from organisation 'Hand in Hand for Syria'.

She says: "There was an attack on a college in an area close to here.

"It seems to be a chemical attack similar to Napalm, which causes huge burns. There are seven people dead so far and around 50 wounded.

U.N. chemical weapons experts wearing gas masks carry samples collected from one of the sites of an alleged chemical weapons attack while escorted by Free Syrian Army fighters in the Ain Tarma neighbourhood of Damascus UN chemical weapons inspectors will end their Syria mission by the weekend

"What we can do here is give wounded people first aid. Most of the cases can be treated here so we keep them here, and we sent some cases to Turkey, I mean the dangerous ones. "

A BBC television crew who witnessed the bombing reported no shrapnel injuries and said the victims resembled "the walking dead".

Napalm is not classified as an outlawed chemical weapon although it can cause devastating burn injuries.

Infamously used in the Vietnam War - and the Second World War - the jelly-like substance sticks to skin and burns at very high temperatures.

A United Nations convention prohibits using incendiary weapons against civilians, or against military targets located near civilian populations.

The pictures of the school attack emerged after MPs voted against military action over alleged chemical weapons gas attacks by the Syrian regime.

Some have described the outcome as a "humiliation" for the Government and it means the US may have to go ahead alone with any military strikes.


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German Trucker Jailed For Fatal M25 Smash

By Emma Birchley, East of England Correspondent

A German lorry driver who smashed into stationary traffic on the M25 killing an elderly man and leaving two other people seriously injured has been sentenced to four and a half years.

Anton Maizen, 58, from Wixhausen, had been working for 23 hours and had driven for 15 of those without a proper break when he ploughed into the queuing traffic on the clockwise slip-road of Junction 30 at Aveley in Essex.

He crashed into the back of Carol Bolton's Mercedes A Class causing a knock-on impact that resulted in a BMW being propelled into fast moving traffic in the next lane and into the path of an articulated lorry.

Anton Maizen Maizen tried to hide the tachograph charts which recorded his journey

It was that lorry which careered into Ronald Moughton's Renault Clio, killing the 79-year-old from Ilford in Essex.

His son, Keith, 58, survived but with serious injuries. Carol Bolton, 47, was also badly hurt.

Maizen pleaded guilty to causing death by dangerous driving and two counts of causing serious injury by dangerous driving. He was sentenced at Basildon Crown Court.

The driver was unable to explain to police why he had hurtled into the traffic at 12.30pm on April 2 this year.

But he had hidden tachograph charts detailing his 840-mile journey from Frankfurt Airport - via south London and Lincolnshire - in his sock and behind his seat.

Wreckage of two vehicles The mangled wreckcage gives an indication of the severity of the incident

Four lorries and six cars were involved in the crash.

Unbelievably, a mother and her seven-year-old son walked from the crumpled wreckage of their BMW.

Police are still investigating whether European driver hours regulations may have been contravened by the owners of Maizen's lorry.


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Syria: Cameron Still Wants 'Robust Response'

David Cameron has vowed to keep pushing for a "robust response" against the Syrian regime despite his crushing Commons defeat.

The Prime Minister said it was a "regret" that he had been unable to rally support for military action in Syria after last week's chemical attack in Damascus.

But he promised to respect the will of Parliament and confirmed the involvement of UK troops was completely off the table because of MPs' strong opposition.

"I think it's important we have a robust response to the use of chemical weapons and there are a series of things we will continue to do," Mr Cameron said.

"We will continue to take a case to the United Nations, we will continue to work in all the organisations we are members of - whether the EU, or Nato, or the G8 or the G20 - to condemn what's happened in Syria.

"It's important we uphold the international taboo on the use of chemical weapons."

Explaining his decision to oppose the Government's motion, Labour leader Ed Miliband told Sky News: "What I wasn't willing to do was have a rush to war, a rush to conflict without clearly going through the right processes.

"Why is this important? because if you're going to engage in conflict you got to make sure it's done on a legitimate basis. We don't have to look far back in our history to understand that," he added.

"Iraq happened under my party. I'm determined we learn the lessons of Iraq."

U.N. chemical weapons experts, escorted by Free Syrian Army fighters, visit one of the sites of an alleged chemical weapons attack in the Ain Tarma neighbourhood of Damascus UN inspectors in Syria are wrapping up their investigation

In Washington, President Barack Obama has been meeting with his national security team to discuss the crisis,  US officials have also released intelligence on the chemical attack.

The intelligence report blamed Syria's government for the attack with "high confidence" and said it was "highly unlikely" the outrage was a ruse plotted by rebels, as the regime has claimed.

The report said that 1,429 people were killed in the atrocity including 426 children, adding the assessment was based on "multiple" streams of intelligence.

Amid some concern that the Commons vote might strain relations with the US, Mr Cameron was due to speak to Mr Obama before the end of the day.

The White House insisted Britain remained "one of our closest allies and friends" and promised the US would continue to communicate with No10 over Syria.

Asked about the relationship with the US, Mr Miliband said: "Should the British government take its own view about what is right? The answer is yes. Will that sometimes involve disagreeing with the United States? Yes, quite conceivably."

As UN inspectors finished their investigation into the alleged chemical attack, some nations voiced support for a military action.

The Turkish foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, said intelligence gathered in Ankara left "no doubt" that the Assad regime was responsible for the chemical attack. Turkey has said it would be ready to take part in any international action against Syria.

French president Francois Hollande also made clear he would be ready to go ahead without Britain as he insisted all options are still on the table.

Syria's President Bashar al-Assad speaks during an interview with Russian newspaper Izvestia Syrian leader Bashar Assad remains defiant

Stressing the need for "proportional and firm action", he said: "The chemical massacre of Damascus cannot and must not remain unpunished."

However, Vladimir Putin's aide Yuri Ushakov is reported to have said: "We wouldn't want, of course, for the situation to be getting close to when one country or a group of countries would indict, judge and execute a sentence all on its own accord."

In London, former Lib Dem leader Lord Ashdown suggested Mr Cameron had been left "broken-backed" by the Commons defeat and Britain was reduced as a country.

He told Sky News: "I fear as I wake up this morning that our country is a hugely, hugely diminished country.

"In more than 50 years of trying to serve my country in one form or another, I don't think I have ever felt more depressed or ashamed."

Chancellor George Osborne also admitted there would be "national soul-searching" about the UK's role on the world stage following the vote.

But Mr Cameron insisted Britain remained "deeply engaged" as he rejected the idea he would have to apologise to Mr Obama for not joining any future coalition.

Highlighting the UK's military power and diplomatic influence, he said: "We have great strengths as a country, we should continue to use those.

"But on this specific issue, because of the huge concerns about this appalling Syrian conflict and people worrying about how we might get sucked into it, on that specific issue that trumped, as it were, the sense of outrage about the chemical weapons.

"I understand that, I get that."

David Cameron and Barack Obama David Cameron said he didn't feel he needed to apologise to Barack Obama

The Prime Minister recalled Parliament for an emergency debate and vote following the atrocity in Damascus, where more than 1,300 people are believed to have died.

Urging MPs to support possible military action against Bashar al Assad regime, he called the massacre "abhorrent" and the cause of "sickening human suffering".

Mr Cameron admitted it was not possible to be 100% certain the Assad regime was behind the attack in Damascus but said he had been convinced by the evidence available.

But he was left humiliated when 39 Tory rebels and nine Liberal Democrats joined with Labour to oppose the Government and won by 285 votes to 272.

The Prime Minister had already been forced to water down his position by Labour and promise direct British involvement would require a second vote.

Education Secretary Michael Gove was heard shouting "disgrace, you're a disgrace" at coalition rebels after the result was announced.

The Scottish National Party's Westminster leader Angus Robertson told Sky News he watched as the minister had to be "persuaded to calm down".

Mr Osborne insisted it was a testament to Mr Cameron that he had gone to Parliament to ask for its consent, rather than pushing ahead.

One of the Tory rebels, former minister Crispin Blunt, also brushed off the impact on the Prime Minister's reputation as a "temporary blip".

"He has done a huge amount to repair the reputation of the institution of Parliament, having learned the lessons from Tony Blair and the experience of 2003 and Iraq," he said.

"He exposed himself to the potential for defeat last night because of the way he manages Parliament. That is to his eternal credit."


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US: 'Syrian Regime Planned Attack For Days'

Syria: US Report On Gas Attack

Updated: 6:25pm UK, Friday 30 August 2013

The US released its assessment of the Syrian government's alleged involvement in the August 21 chemical weapons attack in Damascus. Here is the text.

The United States Government assesses with high confidence that the Syrian government carried out a chemical weapons attack in the Damascus suburbs on August 21, 2013. We further assess that the regime used a nerve agent in the attack.

These all-source assessments are based on human, signals, and geospatial intelligence as well as a significant body of open source reporting. Our classified assessments have been shared with the US Congress and key international partners. To protect sources and methods, we cannot publicly release all available intelligence - but what follows is an unclassified summary of the US Intelligence Community's analysis of what took place.

Syrian Government Use of Chemical Weapons on August 21 A large body of independent sources indicates that a chemical weapons attack took place in the Damascus suburbs on August 21.

In addition to US intelligence information, there are accounts from international and Syrian medical personnel; videos; witness accounts; thousands of social media reports from at least 12 different locations in the Damascus area; journalist accounts; and reports from highly credible nongovernmental organisations.

A preliminary US government assessment determined that 1,429 people were killed in the chemical weapons attack, including at least 426 children, though this assessment will certainly evolve as we obtain more information.

We assess with high confidence that the Syrian government carried out the chemical weapons attack against opposition elements in the Damascus suburbs on August 21. We assess that the scenario in which the opposition executed the attack on August 21 is highly unlikely.

The body of information used to make this assessment includes intelligence pertaining to the regime's preparations for this attack and its means of delivery, multiple streams of intelligence about the attack itself and its effect, our post-attack observations, and the differences between the capabilities of the regime and the opposition.

Our high confidence assessment is the strongest position that the US Intelligence Community can take short of confirmation. We will continue to seek additional information to close gaps in our understanding of what took place.

2 Background:

The Syrian regime maintains a stockpile of numerous chemical agents, including mustard, sarin, and VX and has thousands of munitions that can be used to deliver chemical warfare agents.

Syrian President Bashar al Assad is the ultimate decision maker for the chemical weapons program and members of the program are carefully vetted to ensure security and loyalty. The Syrian Scientific Studies and Research Centre (SSRC) - which is subordinate to the Syrian Ministry of Defence - manages Syria's chemical weapons program.

We assess with high confidence that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons on a small scale against the opposition multiple times in the last year, including in the Damascus suburbs.

This assessment is based on multiple streams of information including reporting of Syrian officials planning and executing chemical weapons attacks and laboratory analysis of physiological samples obtained from a number of individuals, which revealed exposure to sarin. We assess that the opposition has not used chemical weapons.

The Syrian regime has the types of munitions that we assess were used to carry out the attack on August 21, and has the ability to strike simultaneously in multiple locations. We have seen no indication that the opposition has carried out a large-scale, coordinated rocket and artillery attack like the one that occurred on August 21.

We assess that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons over the last year primarily to gain the upper hand or break a stalemate in areas where it has struggled to seize and hold strategically valuable territory. In this regard, we continue to judge that the Syrian regime views chemical weapons as one of many tools in its arsenal, including air power and ballistic missiles, which they indiscriminately use against the opposition.

The Syrian regime has initiated an effort to rid the Damascus suburbs of opposition forces using the area as a base to stage attacks against regime targets in the capital. The regime has failed to clear dozens of Damascus neighbourhoods of opposition elements, including neighbourhoods targeted on August 21, despite employing nearly all of its conventional weapons systems.

We assess that the regime's frustration with its inability to secure large portions of Damascus may have contributed to its decision to use chemical weapons on August 21.

3 Preparation:

We have intelligence that leads us to assess that Syrian chemical weapons personnel - including personnel assessed to be associated with the SSRC - were preparing chemical munitions prior to the attack. In the three days prior to the attack, we collected streams of human, signals and geospatial intelligence that reveal regime activities that we assess were associated with preparations for a chemical weapons attack.

Syrian chemical weapons personnel were operating in the Damascus suburb of 'Adra from Sunday, August 18 until early in the morning on Wednesday, August 21 near an area that the regime uses to mix chemical weapons, including sarin. On August 21, a Syrian regime element prepared for a chemical weapons attack in the Damascus area, including through the utilisation of gas masks.

Our intelligence sources in the Damascus area did not detect any indications in the days prior to the attack that opposition affiliates were planning to use chemical weapons.

The Attack:

Multiple streams of intelligence indicate that the regime executed a rocket and artillery attack against the Damascus suburbs in the early hours of August 21.

Satellite detections corroborate that attacks from a regime-controlled area struck neighbourhoods where the chemical attacks reportedly occurred - including Kafr Batna, Jawbar, 'Ayn Tarma, Darayya, and Mu'addamiyah. This includes the detection of rocket launches from regime controlled territory early in the morning, approximately 90 minutes before the first report of a chemical attack appeared in social media. The lack of flight activity or missile launches also leads us to conclude that the regime used rockets in the attack.

Local social media reports of a chemical attack in the Damascus suburbs began at 2:30 a.m. local time on August 21. Within the next four hours there were thousands of social media reports on this attack from at least 12 different locations in the Damascus area. Multiple accounts described chemical-filled rockets impacting opposition-controlled areas.

Three hospitals in the Damascus area received approximately 3,600 patients displaying symptoms consistent with nerve agent exposure in less than three hours on the morning of August 21, according to a highly credible international humanitarian organisation.

The reported symptoms, and the epidemiological pattern of events - characterised by the massive influx of patients in a short period of time, the origin of the patients, and the contamination of medical and first aid workers - were consistent with mass exposure to a nerve agent. We also received reports from international and Syrian medical personnel on the ground.

4

We have identified one hundred videos attributed to the attack, many of which show large numbers of bodies exhibiting physical signs consistent with, but not unique to, nerve agent exposure. The reported symptoms of victims included unconsciousness, foaming from the nose and mouth, constricted pupils, rapid heartbeat, and difficulty breathing.

Several of the videos show what appear to be numerous fatalities with no visible injuries, which is consistent with death from chemical weapons, and inconsistent with death from small-arms, high-explosive munitions or blister agents. At least 12 locations are portrayed in the publicly available videos, and a sampling of those videos confirmed that some were shot at the general times and locations described in the footage.

We assess the Syrian opposition does not have the capability to fabricate all of the videos, physical symptoms verified by medical personnel and NGOs, and other information associated with this chemical attack.

We have a body of information, including past Syrian practice, that leads us to conclude that regime officials were witting of and directed the attack on August 21. We intercepted communications involving a senior official intimately familiar with the offensive who confirmed that chemical weapons were used by the regime on August 21 and was concerned with the UN inspectors obtaining evidence.

On the afternoon of August 21, we have intelligence that Syrian chemical weapons personnel were directed to cease operations. At the same time, the regime intensified the artillery barrage targeting many of the neighbourhoods where chemical attacks occurred. In the 24 hour period after the attack, we detected indications of artillery and rocket fire at a rate approximately four times higher than the ten preceding days.

We continued to see indications of sustained shelling in the neighbourhoods up until the morning of August 26.

To conclude, there is a substantial body of information that implicates the Syrian government's responsibility in the chemical weapons attack that took place on August 21. As indicated, there is additional intelligence that remains classified because of sources and methods concerns that is being provided to Congress and international partners.


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Peru: Plea Decision Looms For British Women

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 29 Agustus 2013 | 00.27

A lawyer for one of the British women accused of drug smugling in Peru says they will have to decide soon whether they are going to plead guilty or continue to maintain their innocence.

Peter Madden, who is representing Michaella McCollum, 20, from Northern Ireland, said she and co-accused Melissa Reid, also 20, from Scotland, are scared and confused but will have to decide within weeks what to plead.

"They are basically confident enough that what they have told the authorities will be eventually proved," Mr Madden said.

"The Peruvian system is still that they are innocent until proven guilty but in reality they have to try to prove that what they said happened to them did happen."

Peru Reid's father went to Peru to support his daughter

Mr Madden, a well-known human rights solicitor from Belfast who has acted for high-profile republicans, has just returned from South America.

He added: "They are frightened. They are unsure of their future. They are in a prison in which they are the only two foreigners."

Mr Madden said that, under new laws soon to take effect in Peru, they could be released after two years if they accept responsibility for their crime.

He added: "The position is that at some stage there will have to be a decision made by Michaella and Melissa as to whether or not, in our terms, they plead guilty, or plead not guilty and go to trial.

Melissa Reid and Michaella McCollum The women were found with 11kg of cocaine in their luggage

"That stage hasn't been reached yet."

Mr Madden told BBC Radio Ulster: "Anybody who is arrested and found in possession of drugs goes straight into prison. There is no bail.

"If they want to protest their innocence in a trial that may take up to or over two years, whereas if they accept their responsibility, as it is put, it could be over in six months.

"The law is changing so they could actually serve just over two years and be released.

"There is a new law going through the Peruvian Congress which states that any foreigner who has a sentence of less than seven years will get two-thirds remission and be removed from the country after a period of one third.

Lima is the capital of Peru The pair say they were forced to travel from Ibiza to Peru

"This is a fairly complex decision but at some stage they will have to make that decision."

The women were stopped with 11kg (24lb) of cocaine, with an estimated street value of £1.5m, hidden in food packets in their luggage while trying to board a flight to Spain earlier this month.

Officials said they had confessed to investigators that they knew there were drugs in their bags but that they had been threatened at gunpoint and forced to smuggle the cocaine by a criminal gang.


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China: Boy's Eyes Gouged Out By Woman

By Mark Stone, China Correspondent

A six-year-old boy is recovering in hospital after his eyes were gouged out in an horrific attack in China.

The child, who has been named as Guo Bin, went missing from his home in the country's Shanxi Province on Saturday evening.

He had failed to return home for dinner after playing outside.

Five hours later, the child was discovered by his parents with both eyes missing.

The young boy's mother said she found her son near their home.

His face was covered with blood but he was conscious and spoke to her, reportedly claiming that he had been attacked by a female who spoke with a strange accent.

Speaking from the hospital where he is being treated, the youngster's father explained what he said happened.

"[He was] walking down the street, then someone just carried him away. This is what my son told me. We asked him on the way [to hospital].

"He knew exactly what was happening. He said there was a person gouging his eyes with 'a thing', and he cried.

"The person then told him: 'Don't cry. If you stop crying I'll stop gouging your eyes'."

Boy has eyes gouged The boy says his eyes were removed by a woman with a strange accent

An initial suggestion in the Chinese media claimed the child's eyes were found nearby with the cornea missing.

Uncorroborated reports said that the attack may have been connected to China's illegal trafficking of human organs.

However, local police have now said they do not believe the attack was in any way related to organ trafficking and that while the eyes were found near the boy, the cornea had not been removed.

It remains possible that authorities are denying the link to trafficking in order to cover-up an embarrassing problem.

The director of Shanxi Eye Hospital, where the boy is being treated, has said that the child is now making a recovery but that his sight will never be recovered.

"The boy's general condition is stable. We conducted a three-hour check on his eyes yesterday, mainly on the trauma his eyes suffered," Yang Caizhen said.

"Our hospital established a treatment group for this case, and it's been confirmed that the boy is definitely going to be blind.

"His eyeballs are gone. Current medical technology has no means to help a patient whose eyeballs are gone by installing artificial eyes. There is no such technology in the world yet."

A local police chief, named only as Liu, said that he could not speculate on a motive for the attack.

"We are sparing no efforts trying to solve this case," he added.

A reward of RMB100,000 (£10,000) has been offered to anyone with information about the attack.


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La Tomatina Festival: Spain Town Charges

Thousands of revellers have pelted tomatoes in an annual Spanish food fight - but for the first time they paid for the pleasure.

Some 20,000 people from around the world joined Wednesday's hour-long street party, known as La Tomatina, in a square in Brunol.

The World's Biggest Tomato Fight At Tomatina Festival 2013

This time round, participants paid a minimum of 10 euros (£8.50) to take part, but 5,000 free tickets were set aside for the eastern Spanish town's residents.

Tomatina

It was also the first time in the history of the festival, inspired by a children's food fight in 1945, that it rained as the tomatoes were pelted.

The weather conditions or the entry cost did not appear to spoil anyone's fun however.

Tomatina

Many wore shower caps and goggles to protect their eyes from the acidic juice of the tomatoes, which must be squashed before they are hurled at fellow participants.

Tomatina

"It is one of the most famous festivals in western Europe and it is safer than running with a bull," said 22-year-old Brad Fisher, from Sydney, who came with a group of 700 people.

Tomatina

"One hundred and thirty tonnes of tomatoes is a lot but it's still better than a 500-kilo bull."

Tomatina

English participant Becky Charlton said: "This is our first time here, it's amazing, it's crazy, crazy, crazy. It's really good. I will come again next year."

Tomatina

Some 130 tonnes of tomatoes were thrown in the fight, although this year the city council reduced the number of people taking part from 45,000 to 20,000 due to safety concerns.

After the fight, many of the revellers traditionally head to a local river to wash off the pulp. But in this year's rain, that was not necessary.

Tomatina

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Mosque Arson Attempt Suspects Caught On CCTV

Police have released CCTV footage of three men apparently spraying highly flammable insulation foam under the door and window shutters of a mosque in Essex.

The Harlow Islamic Centre was targeted in an apparent arson attack early on Monday and the attempt was discovered by mosque leaders as they arrived for morning prayers.

Security footage showed three men approaching the building on Paringdon Road, Harlow at 1:24am.

Mosque attack in Harlow, Essex The suspected attacker were caught on the centre's CCTV cameras

One of the men can be seen holding a drill and another what police believe to be a canister of insulation foam.

Later, the men leave carrying their tools away with them.

"It is clear from the CCTV footage this was a premeditated, deliberate attempt to cause serious damage to the Islamic centre," Essex Police Superintendent Trevor Roe said.

"The three men come equipped to carry out the damage and also take everything they brought with them away again."

No-one was hurt in the attack but there was some damage to doors and walls.

Suspected arson attempt at mosque in Harlow, Essex The attack damaged doors and windows at the Islamic centre

Police have asked anyone who can identify the men to come forward.

Anyone with information is asked to contact police at Harlow CID on 101 or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

The mosque was set up 18 years ago when the Muslim community in Harlow grew in numbers and now serves a 2,000-strong community, according to the centre's website.


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River Cam Death: Tributes To Andrew Collings

A 12-year-old boy found dead after going into the River Cam near Cambridge has been named as Andrew Collings.

Cambridgeshire Police confirmed his body was recovered at around 3am following a major search operation.

Witnesses had reported seeing him enter the water on Tuesday evening.

Police and other emergency services began searching after reports the boy did not resurface after going into the river at Lammas Land, the Fen Causeway, at about 6pm.

Body of Andrew Collings pulled from the River Cam Two boys look at flowers left at the scene at Lammas Land

Andrew attended the Cambridge's Netherall School. His headteacher spoke of her sorrow at his death after his body was discovered.

Principal Caroline McKenney said: "The school extends its deepest condolences to Andy's family. When the time is right we will speaking to his family and students at the school to find a suitable way of remembering him."

According to the Cambridge News, the boy's family watched as officers, paramedics, fire crews and a police helicopter searched the water. Rescue teams were seen dredging the river bed.

One witness told the paper: "The police helicopter was up and the firefighters were everywhere. They were going up and down the river looking for a child.

"We heard that four boys had gone into the river but only three came out and one didn't."

Donna Frost said her son Charlie had been playing with Andrew and others earlier in the evening.

She said: "Apparently two or three of them jumped in and one managed to get hold of him but couldn't save him.

"Charlie feels terrible because he had been playing with him but came home for his tea.

"He thinks if he'd stayed he may have been able to save him but perhaps he would have got in trouble himself."

"Kids always jump in the river here but it's not dredged and there are no life rings. We're all cut up about it, he was such a lovely lad."

School friends have left flowers on a bench near the river bank.

A spokesman for East of England Ambulance Service said: "We received the call at 6.11pm to an incident involving a 12-year-old boy in water.

"We sent three ambulances, a rapid response vehicle and a land crew from East Anglia Air Ambulance."


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Dromore Police Review Fourth Woman's Death

Police investigating the deaths of three women in Dromore, Co Down, are to probe the death of a fourth woman in the town.

Detectives from the PSNI's serious crime branch are looking into the death of Margaret Stronge, 58, who was found dead at Moss Lane in Dromore in July 1982.

Detective Chief Inspector Richard Harkness said: "My officers have advised the Stronge family of this development. I believe it is an appropriate and necessary step, given our current understanding of events in the town.

"We will progress the review as quickly as possible. I would like to repeat my appeal to the community in Dromore for information about all these deaths.

"My officers are keen to speak with anyone who may have any information which could assist our inquiries."

Leslie Ross, 66, has been charged with murdering two of his girlfriends in the market town with a population of 5,000.

He appeared in court last week accused of murdering 47-year-old Michelle Bickerstaff in April last year and 50-year-old Margaret Weiss in August 2007.

A file on the third death, that of 52-year-old Lily McKee, who died in December 2002, has been referred to the Public Prosecution Service.

Mr Ross has also been charged with indecently assaulting a woman between January 1979 and June 1990, committing an act of gross indecency with a child and indecently assaulting a female child between July 1979 and June 1990.

A lawyer for Mr Ross said he had "categorically and vehemently" denied the charges during three days of questioning.

Mr Ross is due to appear at Banbridge Magistrates' Court on September 19.


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Syria: Phone Calls 'Prove' Regime Behind Attack

Syria: How Crisis Has Developed

Updated: 12:51pm UK, Wednesday 28 August 2013

:: March 2011 - as protesters stage demonstrations in Damascus, security forces in Daraa shoot dead several campaigners, leading to unrest and violence.

:: May - the Syrian military deploys tanks in a bid to quash demonstrations.

:: July 19 - the UK freezes £100m of Syrian assets.

:: August 18 - US President Barack Obama calls on Bashar al Assad to step down. The US freezes all assets of the Syrian government.

:: November 16 - the Free Syrian Army attacks a military base near Damascus.

:: February 4, 2012 - a UN Security Council resolution on Syria is rejected for a second time by Russia and China.

:: March 1 - government troops seize the Baba Amr district of Homs after an intense battle lasting for several weeks.

:: April 12 - a UN-brokered ceasefire comes into force after fierce fighting in the country.

:: May 23 - dozens of people, many of them women and children, die in Houla, near Homs. Foreign Secretary William Hague says they were "massacred at the hands of Syrian forces". The UN later accuses the Syrian military of committing war crimes.

:: August - Mr Obama says the use of chemical weapons against civilians would represent the crossing of a "red line".

:: March 6, 2013 - Foreign Secretary William Hague says Britain will provide opposition forces with "non-lethal equipment for the protection of civilians".

:: April-May - Britain says there is credible evidence to suggest Syrian forces have used chemical weapons in Adra, Darayya and Saraqiq and calls for an investigation by the UN.

:: April 29 - Syrian prime minister Wael Nader al Halqi survives an assassination attempt as a car bomb explodes in Damascus.

:: May 14 - footage of a Syrian rebel commander apparently cutting out a soldier's heart is condemned by the country's National Coalition.

:: June 6 - Syrian forces, backed by Hizbollah fighters, recapture the strategic border town of Qusair.

:: June 6 - Human Rights Watch releases footage which it claims shows Syrian troops shelling school buildings.

:: July 25 - the UN says the number of people killed in the civil war has reached 100,000.

:: August 21 - an alleged chemical attack in Damascus kills 1,300 people, according to the opposition. Doctors Without Borders says 335 people died from "neurotoxic" symptoms.

:: August 25 - Foreign Secretary William Hague says a chemical attack by the Syrian government is the only "plausible explanation" for the deaths.

:: August 26 - UN inspectors brave sniper fire to gather "valuable" evidence from one site of the alleged chemical attack, as the US Secretary of State John Kerry says the Assad regime would face action over the "moral obscenity".

:: August 27 - the UK recalls Parliament to hold a vote on August 29 on the use of chemical weapons in Syria. Prime Minister David Cameron and Mr Obama agree there is "no doubt" the Assad regime is responsible for the alleged attack.

:: August 28 - a draft UN resolution condemning the alleged attack and "authorising all necessary measures" is due to be put forward at a meeting of the UN Security Council in New York.


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Syria: Father Reunited With His 'Dead' Son

A Syrian father's nightmare is over after he learned the son he thought had been killed in a chemical weapons attack is alive.

Video has emerged of the moment the pair are reunited in a suburb of Zamalka, surround by friends and relatives.

The heart-warming film uploaded to YouTube shows the boy first being handed over to someone who appears to be a relative before his relieved father is given the news his son is alive.

Father reunited with son The little boy is reunited with his father

As they are about to be reunited he is so overcome with joy and shock that his legs buckle and he bursts into tears.

Those around him shout "Allahu akbar" (God is great).

The man is so distraught and emotional his son has to be momentarily taken away from him while he composes himself.

Later in the video the boy is seen in his father's arms as he is kissed and hugged.

Some 1,300 Syrians are reported to have been killed in the attack in Damascus, with a further 3,600 treated for neurotoxic symptoms.


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Syria: Labour To Vote Against Government Motion

Labour will oppose the government's motion on Syria unless an amendment is passed that insists on waiting for UN inspectors' report, senior party sources have said.

Foreign Secretary William Hague previously said "all the evidence" pointed to Bashar al Assad's regime being behind the chemical weapon attack that allegedly killed more than 1,300. 

He said a response would be discussed at a meeting of the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council - but that the UK may act whether or not a consensus was reached.

"We believe that it's time the United Nations Security Council shouldered its responsibilities on Syria, which for the last two and a half years it has failed to do," he said.

"We're clear that if there isn't agreement at the United Nations, we and other nations still have a responsibility on chemical weapons.

"We have to confront something that is a crime against humanity. If we don't do so we will have to confront even bigger war crimes in the future.

David Cameron Returns Early From Holiday To Deal With The Escalating Syrian Crisis David Cameron cut short his holiday to return for the talks

He repeated David Cameron's statement that the National Security Council (NSC) had "agreed unanimously that the use of chemical weapons by Assad was unacceptable - and the world should not stand by".

Syria's deputy foreign minister claimed Britain, the US and France helped "terrorists" use chemical weapons in Damascus.

"The terrorist groups are the ones who used them with American, British and French encouragement. This encouragement should stop," said Faisal Al-Miqdad.

But military commanders in the NSC, which held talks chaired by the Prime Minister at Downing Street, have been helping draw up plans for missile strikes against Syria.

The council also "agreed unanimously on a recommendation" to be considered by the Cabinet tomorrow, while the UN Security Council in New York today has been looking at Britain's draft resolution condemning the attack and "authorising all necessary measures".

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has urged all sides to prioritise a diplomatic solution and said his team needs until Sunday to establish the full facts of the alleged chemical attack.

U.N. chemical weapons experts visit wounded people affected by an apparent gas attack, at a hospital in the southwestern Damascus suburb of Mouadamiya A UN weapons inspector visits wounded Syrians after the alleged gas attack

This afternoon's NSC meeting discussed intelligence gathered by UN inspectors from their initial visit to Mouadamiya, the site of last week's suspected chemical weapons attack.

General Sir Nick Houghton, chief of the defence staff, was also expected to outline a series of options for targeted attacks.

It is understood the most likely military response would be a strike launched from US Navy warships against targets such as command and control bunkers.

The US Navy is repositioning several vessels in the eastern Mediterranean, including four cruise missile-carrying destroyers and a missile-firing submarine.

Defence analyst Francis Tusa told Sky News: "I'm not necessarily sure it puts any particular pressure on the regime to change its behaviour.

"Losing the odd bit of hardware that the Russians will replace for free doesn't seem to be that much of value."

Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has also responded to the rising tensions, reportedly saying that US military intervention would be "a disaster for the region".

"The region is like a gunpowder store and the future cannot be predicted," Iran's ISNA agency quoted him as saying.

Syrian activists inspect the bodies of people they say were killed by nerve gas in the Ghouta region, in the Duma neighbourhood of Damascus More than 1,300 are said to have died as the result of the alleged attack

Turkey and Iraq both say they have placed their military on high alert.

Mr Cameron and US President Barack Obama have agreed that "all the information available confirmed a chemical weapons attack had taken place", a Downing Street spokesperson said on Wednesday morning.

"They both agreed they were in no doubt that the Assad regime was responsible," said Number 10.

Nato has also given its support for tough action against Syria, "condemning in the strongest possible terms these outrageous attacks".

"Those responsible must be held accountable," it added.

Parliament will be recalled on Thursday for a final vote on what action the UK should take.

Sky sources say a government motion is expected to call for "appropriate measures" but will not contain a timetable for action.

Speaking yesterday, Mr Cameron said action must be "proportionate, have to be legal, would have to specifically be about deterring the use of chemical weapons".

Decisions about British involvement have not been taken, he said on Tuesday, adding Parliament was the "right place to set out all of the arguments".

"We shouldn't stand by when we see this massive use of chemical weapons and appalling levels of suffering," he said.

"But I would say this to people - there is never 100% certainty, there is never one piece or several pieces of intelligence that give you absolute certainty.

Alleged Chemical Attack In Syria A child is treated after the alleged chemcial attack

"But what we know is this regime has huge stocks of chemical weapons. We know they have used them on at least 10 occasions prior to this last widescale use."

Labour leader Ed Miliband has indicated that his party would consider supporting international action if it was legal and had "clear and achievable goals".

While political momentum towards intervention mounts, the British public has yet to be persuaded.

A YouGov survey for The Sun revealed that nearly three-quarters of people oppose the deployment of British troops to Syria.

And a majority of 3-1 believe the Government should be bound by Parliament's vote tomorrow.

UN weapons inspectors arrived at the site of the alleged attacks on Wednesday morning, a day after suspending their mission over safety concerns.

The inspectors came under sniper fire when they began their operation on Monday.

Russia has confirmed it has started to pull its citizens out of Syria as the likelihood of military action increases.

It flew 89 people out of the country on Tuesday night and 28 more on Wednesday morning.

Russia and China both strongly oppose the intervention, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov believing it would seriously destabilise the region.


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Zeta-Jones And Douglas 'Taking Time Apart'

Hollywood couple Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Douglas are "taking some time apart" after 13 years of marriage.

The actress, who married Douglas in 2000 and has two children with him, shot to fame in Britain in the early 1990s, playing fresh-faced Mariette Larkin in the television series The Darling Buds Of May.

A spokeswoman for Zeta-Jones said: "Catherine and Michael are taking some time apart to evaluate and work on their marriage. There will be no further comment."

People magazine reported Douglas and Zeta-Jones - both Oscar winners and one of Hollywood's most high-profile couples - have had holidays apart in recent months and appeared at red carpet events without each other.

Douglas, 68, and Zeta-Jones, 43, have also both struggled with health issues.

He battled throat cancer in 2010 and made headlines this summer when he spoke out about one potential cause, oral sex.

And in April, the Welsh actress said she was seeking help for type two bipolar disorder.

​It was her second known trip to a healthcare facility for the condition since 2011.

US actor Michael Douglas (L) kisses his newly wed The couple married in 2000

She has previously said of having bipolar: "This is a disorder that affects millions of people and I am one of them.

"If my revelation of having bipolar two has encouraged one person to seek help, then it is worth it.

"There is no need to suffer silently and there is no shame in seeking help."

The pair met in 1998 at the Deauville Film Festival in France, got engaged on New Year's Eve in 1999 and starred together in the 2000 Oscar-winning film Traffic.

Zeta-Jones won her best supporting actress Oscar for her performance in 2002's Chicago as vampish killer Velma Kelly. She was made a CBE in 2011.

Douglas has won Oscars as a producer of the 1975 best picture film One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest and as best actor in 1987's Wall Street.

Jenny Priestly, editor of Entertainment News, told Sky News: "We haven't seen them as a couple on the red carpet together since April.

"Catherine didn't support Michael when he was in Cannes back in May for the premiere of the feature film Behind The Candelabra which is very unusual, they've always been a very supportive couple.

"It's important to stress that neither party has filed for divorce or legal separation at the moment."


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