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Topic: Algeria siege: Military operation under way |
Algeria siege: Military operation under way
BBC [UK], by Staff
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Original Article
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Posted By:Attercliffe, 1/17/2013 10:34:24 AM
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| An Algerian military operation is under way at a gas facility in eastern Algeria where hostages were being held, Algeria´s state news agency reports. Four foreign hostages were freed but the operation resulted in a number of "victims", APS agency said. Algerian soldiers had been surrounding the facility near In Amenas that kidnappers occupied on Wednesday, after killing a Briton and an Algerian. Reports quoting militants said at least 34 hostages and 14 kidnappers died. [Snip] Four foreign hostages - two from Scotland, one from France and one from Kenya - were freed during the operation, APS reported.
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Comments: Some reports are conflicting. As always in such situations, there are mistakes in early reports.
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Reply 1 - Posted by:
Attercliffe, 1/17/2013 10:39:07 AM (No. 9121954)
Live reporting--BBC seems best at the moment:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-21063558
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/algeria/9808174/Algeria-hostage-crisis-live.html
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Reply 2 - Posted by:
Jonr, 1/17/2013 10:49:23 AM (No. 9121984)
Expect more and more of this as Islamic terrorists know that they can get away with it thanks to Bengazi!
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Posted By: Attercliffe- 5/17/2013 9:40:17 AM
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A theater critic is unrepentant after he quite literally took the law into his own hands and smashed the cellphone of another patron who refused to stop using it during a performance on Wednesday night. Kevin Williamson, a writer for the National Review, was attending a performance of ´Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812,´ described as an ‘electro-pop opera’ based on ‘War and Peace’ and playing in New York at Kazino, a temporary structure beside The Standard Hotel. Writing about the incident on the National Review’s website, Williamson said he recommended the show but thought the audience
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Posted By: Attercliffe- 5/17/2013 8:15:30 AM
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Posted By: Attercliffe- 5/17/2013 7:55:54 AM
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The Ukip leader Nigel Farage has condemned the "fascist scum" who forced him to take refuge in an Edinburgh pub and hung up on a BBC Scotland interview over outrage at the "hatred" in its questioning. The leader of the UK Independence Party said the "excesses of Scottish nationalism" can be "pretty ugly" and "deeply unpleasant" after he was surrounded and hassled by hardline demonstrators yesterday. [Snip] Asked about how many elected representatives he has in Scotland, Mr Farage said: "Absolutely none, but rather more than the BBC. We could have had this interview in England a couple of years
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Posted By: Attercliffe- 5/17/2013 3:11:55 AM
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Posted By: Attercliffe- 5/16/2013 12:35:20 PM
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This has been a nightmare week for Barack Obama, without a doubt the worst of his presidency so far. [Snip] Holder was simply unable or unwilling to answer most key questions, and demonstrated a level of contempt for elected officials in Congress that was breathtaking. It was yet another public relations disaster for the Obama team. In addition the administration has come under heavy fire over the Justice Department’s monitoring of phone records belonging to Associated Press journalists. All this has combined to create a perfect storm in the first year of Obama’s second term, a wave of scandals
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Posted By: MissMolly- 5/16/2013 6:00:07 AM
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Posted By: Desert Fox- 5/16/2013 1:51:02 PM
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On Thursday´s NBC Today, in a desperate attempt to deflect from the scandals engulfing the Obama administration, co-host Savannah Guthrie wondered: "I read a headline yesterday that said Republicans see blood in the water. That they see a president who´s very vulnerable politically. Is there a danger that they will overreach?" Chief White House correspondent Chuck Todd agreed with the slanted premise: "There is. I mean, that´s what happened to Republicans in 1998 with Bill Clinton.
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Posted By: Pluperfect- 5/17/2013 4:52:42 AM
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President Obama’s press conference in the rain was not a success, if by success, his supporters would mean an event which convinces anyone who doesn’t work for him that he’s getting ahead of the scandal deluge. The sight of a Marine holding an umbrella over his head only added to the weirdness of the event. So what did we learn? 1. He has full confidence in Attorney General Eric Holder, the man who purportedly recused himself (whenever) without putting it in writing (whatever). When asked about the untrammeled snooping on Associated Press reporters and editors,
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