Monday, January 14, 2013

Mada Communications powers K-net ATM machines ... - AME Info

Mada Communications has installed and commissioned an intranet service for K-net's ATM machines that serves both the commercial and government sectors in the country.

Mada Communications General Manager, Mr. Ahmed Ibrahim, said, "This is a major milestone for our company and the wireless industry in Kuwait, a milestone that we were able to cross thanks to a solid wireless infrastructure that we built exclusively for K-net. We are very excited to have K-net as a client and we look forward to a long-term relationship with Kuwait's leading electronic banking network."

K-net is a national company providing electronic banking services to all the banks in Kuwait. Services include ATM service, POS service, and payment gateway.

K-net General Manager, Mr. Abdullah Al-Ajmi, said, "K-net is always committed in providing state-of-the-art technology in electronic banking, with solutions and services meeting the highest international standards. This agreement with Mada will enable us to rollout an advanced intranet network to support K-net's ATM services across Kuwait, with expanded coverage, top of the line service quality and high-speed connectivity."

Mada the first local wireless service provider, offering wireless broadband and communication service through the latest and most advanced technologies. Mada provides companies across Kuwait with high-speed, reliable intranet and internet services that best suits their needs.

Source: http://www.ameinfo.com/mada-communications-powers-k-net-atm-machines-325415

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

New year, new Apple products: 2013 predictions for the iPhone http://bit.ly/UVhs...


New year, new Apple products: 2013 predictions for the iPhone http://bit.ly/UVhsT5

As we enter the new year and achieve escape velocity from this week's CES in Vegas, it's a good time to start prognosticating in earnest about the likely Apple products of the near future.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151336209792509&set=a.261046322508.142916.30911162508&type=1

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Hundreds of French troops drive back Mali rebels

BAMAKO, Mali (AP) ? French airstrikes overnight in Mali drove back Islamist rebels from a key city and destroyed a militant command center, the French defense minister said Saturday, as West African nations authorized the immediate deployment of troops to the country.

The al-Qaida-linked militants, who have carved out their own territory in the lawless desert region of northern Mali over the past nine months, recently pressed closer to a major base of the Malian army, dramatically raising the stakes in the battle for the vast West African nation.

"The threat is a terrorist state at the doorstep of France and Europe," said French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian.

The French operation, which started Friday in the former French colony, came after an appeal for help from Mali's president. The fighting involved hundreds of French troops and overnight airstrikes on three rebel targets, said Le Drian. He said a rebel command center outside the key city of Konna was destroyed.

Adm. Edouard Guillaud said a French helicopter had been downed and that the pilot died of his wounds while he was being evacuated to safety.

A military official in Mali said Islamist militants were driven out of Konna, but that the city captured by the extremists earlier this week was not yet under government control.

"We are doing sweeps of the city to find any hidden Islamist extremist elements," said Lt. Col. Diarran Kone. "The full recovery of the city is too early to determine as we do not yet control the city, and we remain vigilant."

Sanda Abou Mohamed, spokesman for Islamist group Ansar Dine, told The Associated Press he could not confirm if his fighters were still in Konna. "I cannot tell you if our fighters are still in the city of Konna or if they are not, because since yesterday afternoon I have not had contact with them as the telephone network has been down in this zone," Mohamed said Saturday.

In a statement released Saturday, ECOWAS commission president Kadre Desire Ouedraogo said the bloc had authorized the immediate deployment of troops to Mali. He said they made the decision "in light of the urgency of the situation."

ECOWAS did not say how many troops would be sent to Mali or when they would arrive. It also did not specify which countries from the 15-nation bloc would be providing the forces.

ECOWAS has been talking for months about a military operation to oust the Islamists from northern Mali. While the U.N. approved a plan for deployment, it had not been expected until September.

Burkina Faso's Minister of Foreign Affairs Djibril Bassole said Saturday that his country would send 500 troops into neighboring Mali. He said the parliament will meet in the next couple of days to solidify the details.

Al-Qaida's affiliate in Africa has been a shadowy presence for years in the forests and deserts of Mali, a country hobbled by poverty and a relentless cycle of hunger. Most Malians adhere to a moderate form of Islam.

In recent months, however, the terrorist group and its allies have taken advantage of political instability, taking territory they are using to stock weapons and train forces.

Turbaned fighters control major towns in the north, carrying out amputations in public squares just as the Taliban did. And as in Afghanistan, they are flogging women for not covering up. Since taking control of Timbuktu, they have destroyed seven of the 16 mausoleums listed as world heritage sites.

French President Francois Hollande said the "terrorist groups, drug traffickers and extremists" in northern Mali "show a brutality that threatens us all." He vowed that the operation would last "as long as necessary."

France said it was taking the action in Mali at the request of President Dioncounda Traore, who declared a state of emergency because of the militants' advance.

Hollande has said the operation is aimed in part at protecting the 6,000 French citizens in Mali, where seven of them already are being held captive.

Separately, French commandoes attacked an Islamist base in Somalia in an unsuccessful attempt to rescue a French intelligence agent held hostage. The agent and a French soldier were killed, and a French soldier was missing, Le Drian said. But the man's Islamist kidnappers said the hostage was alive and that a French soldier had been captured as well.

The raid early Saturday in Somalia could have been aimed at preventing al-Shabab fighters from harming the kidnapped French security official in reprisal for the French military intervention in Mali. Le Drian said 17 Islamist fighters were killed in the failed raid.

An al-Shabab official confirmed the fighting and said the group held one dead French soldier. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

France has led a diplomatic push for international action in northern Mali, but efforts to get an African-led force together, or to train the weak Malian army, have dragged on.

The United Nations Security Council has condemned the capture of Konna and urged U.N. member states to assist Mali "in order to reduce the threat posed by terrorist organizations and associated groups."

Late last year, the 15 nations in West Africa, including Mali, agreed on a proposal for the military to take back the north, and sought backing from the U.N.

The Security Council authorized the intervention but imposed certain conditions. Those include the training of Mali's military, which has been accused of serious human rights abuses since a military coup last year sent the nation into disarray.

The fighting Wednesday and Thursday for Konna represents the first clashes between Malian government forces and the Islamists in nearly a year, since the militants seized the northern cities of Gao, Kidal and Timbuktu. Konna is just 45 miles (70 kilometers) north of the government-held town of Mopti, a strategic port city along the Niger River.

___

Keaten reported from Paris. Associated Press writers Lori Hinnant in Paris, Abdi Guled in Mogadishu, Somalia, and Brahima Ouedraogo in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hundreds-french-troops-drive-back-mali-rebels-110344652.html

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A trail of bullet casings leads from Africa's wars to Iran

By C.J. Chivers


New York Times

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jan 12, 2013

The first clues appeared in Kenya, Uganda and what is now South Sudan. A British arms researcher surveying ammunition used by government forces and civilian militias in 2006 found Kalashnikov rifle cartridges he had not seen before. The ammunition bore no factory code, suggesting that its manufacturer hoped to avoid detection.

Within two years other researchers were finding identical cartridges circulating through the ethnic violence in Darfur. Similar ammunition then turned up in 2009 in a stadium in Conakry, Guinea, where soldiers had fired on anti-government protesters, killing more than 150.

For six years, a group of independent arms-trafficking researchers worked to pin down the source of the mystery cartridges. Exchanging information from four continents, they concluded that someone had been quietly funneling rifle and machine-gun ammunition into regions of protracted conflict, and had managed to elude exposure for years. Their only goal was to solve the mystery, not implicate any specific nation.

When the investigators' breakthrough came, it carried a surprise. The manufacturer was not one of Africa's usual suspects. It was Iran.

Iran has a well-developed military manufacturing sector, but has not exported its weapons in quantities rivaling those of the heavyweights in the global arms trade, including the United States, Russia, China and several European states. But its export choices in this case were significant. While small-arms ammunition attracts less attention than strategic weapons or arms that have drawn international condemnation, like land mines and cluster bombs, it is a basic ingredient of organized violence, and involved each year and at each war in uncountable deaths and crimes.

And for the past several years, even as Iran faced intensive foreign scrutiny over its nuclear program and for supporting proxies across the Middle East, its state-manufactured ammunition was distributed through secretive networks to a long list of combatants, including in regions under U.N. arms embargoes.

The trail of evidence uncovered by the investigation found Iranian cartridges in the possession of rebels in Ivory Coast, federal troops in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Taliban in Afghanistan and groups affiliated with al-Qaida in the Maghreb in Niger. The ammunition was linked to spectacular examples of state-sponsored violence and armed groups connected to terrorism ? all without drawing wide attention or leading back to its manufacturer.

The ammunition, matched to the world's most abundant firearms, has principally been documented in Africa, where the researchers concluded that untold quantities have been supplied to governments in Guinea, Kenya, Ivory Coast and, the evidence suggests, Sudan.

From there, it traveled to many of the continent's most volatile locales, becoming an instrument of violence in some of Africa's ugliest wars and for brutal regimes. And while the wide redistribution within Africa may be the work of African governments, the same ammunition has also been found elsewhere, including in an insurgent arms cache in Iraq and on a ship intercepted as it headed for the Gaza Strip.

Iran's role in providing arms to allies and to those who fight its enemies has long been broadly understood. Some of these practices were most recently reported in the transfer of Fajr-5 ground-to-ground rockets to Gaza. Its expanding footprint of small-arms ammunition exports has pushed questions about its roles in a shadowy ammunition trade high onto the list of research priorities for trafficking investigators.

"If you had asked me not too long ago what Iran's role in small-arms ammunition trafficking to Africa had been, I would have said, ?Not much,"' said James Bevan, a former U.N. investigator who since 2011 has been director of Conflict Armament Research, a private firm registered in England that identifies and tracks conventional weapons. "Our understanding of that is changing."

The independent investigation also demonstrated the relative ease with which weapons and munitions flow about the world, a characteristic of the arms trade that might partially explain how Iran sidestepped scrutiny of governments and international organizations, including the United Nations, that have tried to restrict its banking transactions and arms sales.

The United Nations, in a series of resolutions, has similarly tried to block arms transfers into Ivory Coast, Congo and Sudan ? all places where researchers found Iranian ammunition.

Ammunition from other sources, including China, Russia, Hungary, the Czech Republic and other former Soviet bloc states remain in circulation in Africa, along with production by African states. Why Iran has entered the market is not clear. Profit motives as well as an effort by Iran to gain influence in Africa might explain the exports, Bevan said. But much remains unknown.

Neither the government of Iran nor its military manufacturing conglomerate, the Defense Industries Organization, or DIO, replied to written queries submitted for this article.

The researchers involved in the investigation ? including several former experts for the United Nations and one from Amnesty International ? documented the expanding circulation of Iranian ammunition, not the means or the entities that have actually exported the stocks. They are not sure if the ammunition had been directly sold by the Iranian government or its security services, by a government- or military-controlled firm, or by front companies abroad.

But the long mysterious provenance of the ammunition appears beyond dispute. The cartridges were made, the researchers say, by the Ammunition and Metallurgy Industries Group, a subsidiary of DIO.

Matching the cartridges to the producer took time, in part because the ammunition had been packaged and marked in ways to dissuade tracing. Eventually the identifications were reached via data-pooling.

Much of the world's ammunitions bears numeric or logo markings, known as headstamps, that together declare the location and year of a cartridge's manufacture. Over the years, governments and private researchers have assembled encyclopedic headstamp keys that can make matching particular markings to particular factories a straightforward pursuit.

The ammunition in these cases included rounds for Kalashnikov assault rifles, for medium machine guns and sniper rifles and for heavy machine guns.

In each case, the cartridges carried headstamps not listed on the publicly available records. The stamps were simple caliber markings and, typically, two digits indicating the year of manufacture.

Similarly, neither the ammunition's wooden crates nor its packaging in green plastic carry bags or plain cardboard boxes, when these items were found with the ammunition, disclosed the place of manufacture.

All of the ammunition shared a unique combination of traits, including the caliber headstamp in a particular font, the alloy of the bullet jackets, and three indentations where primers attached to cartridge cases. The traits together suggested a common manufacturer.

Over the years, the researchers bided time and gathered data. They collected samples of used and unused ammunition at conflicts and recorded their characteristics. They collaborated with other specialists, exchanging their finds.

Some sources were confidential. Others were not. Mike Lewis, a former member of the United Nations Panel of Experts on the Sudan, documented the presence of the ammunition at the Conakry stadium crackdown while investigating for Amnesty International.

One sample ? from Afghanistan ? was found by The , which was surveying ammunition used by the Taliban and provided an image of a then-unidentifiable cartridge's headstamp to Bevan in 2010.

Once the data was assembled, the breakthrough came in what a soon-to-be-released report by the researchers called "cross-case analysis" and by looking away from the ammunition to other sources.

In late 2011 Bevan obtained the bill of lading for 13 shipping containers seized by the authorities in Lagos, Nigeria, in 2010. The document showed that the containers originated in Iran and declared the contents to be "building materials."

But, as the researchers noted in their report, "concealed behind stone slabs and insulation materials" was a shipment of arms, including the same ammunition that they had been finding in the field.

The shipping company was based in Tehran, Iran's capital.

Declassified documents obtained via the Freedom of Information Act by Matthew Schroeder, an arms-trafficking analyst at the Federation of American Scientists, later showed that the U.S. military had identified ammunition packaged in the same materials as Iranian. Schroeder shared his documents with Bevan. This provided another link.

Ultimately, Bevan noticed that Iran had published limited technical details of its cartridges, including bullet weights. Some of these weights are atypical. Late in 2012 he had samples weighed on a jeweler's scale, confirming the match.

Bevan made clear in repeated interviews that he and his fellow researchers are not advocates for military action against Iran. When they began tracing the ammunition, they did not know or expect that the evidence would point to Tehran.

He also noted that while the ammunition is Iranian-made, it may not have been sent to directly by Iran to some of the combatants.

"In terms of prescription, if it was clear that there were repeated violations by Iran, I think we could come down more strongly about it," he said. "But a good portion of this, and in perhaps the majority of these cases, the ammunition was transferred around Africa by African states."

He added that while the original source of the ammunitions is now clear, many questions remain unanswered, including who organized the delivery to regions under embargo or enmeshed in ethnic conflicts.

Bevan and his fellow researchers said their findings pointed to a need for further research, to gather facts upon which policy decisions can be based.

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Source: http://www.staradvertiser.com/news/20130112_A_trail_of_bullet_casings_leads_from_Africas_wars_to_Iran.html

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A GOP Rep praised a gun store that was sued for failing to prevent its guns from...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/motherjones/posts/198083173664969

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Dixie State College

It is not at all unusual for a family, a community, a club or group of friends to use words, phrases and nicknames that have a special meaning within that circle but that might not be fully understood by outsiders. Words that, if heard by people who don?t belong to that group, could be embarrassing or even offensive.

Spouses can have intimate nicknames for one another. Siblings, terms of endearment that sound insulting. People of certain racial groups have been heard to throw around words that, if uttered by anyone else, would be considered a slur.

The Dixie State College Board of Trustees should keep this in mind Friday when they are scheduled to vote on whether to keep the "Dixie" part of the name as their institution evolves into a university. They should remember that the connotation the word has for them, current students, alumni and residents of the larger St. George community may be one thing, while the images it will conjure up in the minds of practically everyone else are likely to be something very different, and much less friendly.

To those with a passing knowledge of American history ? which is most of us ? Dixie is the informal moniker for the Confederate States of America, the states that seceded from the Union and fought a bloody war with their once and future brethren. Although the causes and motivations for that cataclysm were varied and complex, the basic summary boils down to slavery: Dixie wanted to keep it. The Yankees didn?t.

The application of the Dixie nickname to the St. George area is not, according to some scholars, meant as homage to the Confederacy. It is, they argue, a mere allusion to the fact that it is the southern part of this state, and that pioneers once attempted to grow cotton there. Without slaves.

Other experts find the etymology less innocent. Some of the settlers of the area were former slaveholders. And, in less politically correct times, Confederate images became part of the college?s culture. Most of those have been officially banished, including, recently, a large statue of two rebel soldiers.

But no matter how many yearbooks are renamed, how many statues are removed, how many alumni stand up for the honor of their alma mater, the one undeniable fact is that, to the world outside St. George, Dixie stands for the last defenders of America?s original sin. The fact that those others ? potential students, donors and employers of the school?s graduates ? may be mistaken simply does not matter.

Trustees should ask members of their own school?s faculty just how difficult it is to dislodge bad information from the brains of people who aren?t really listening.

It?s time for a new name, and a new image.


Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/opinion/55614579-82/dixie-sltrib-college-state.html.csp

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