Thursday, August 15, 2013

Deadly Lebanon blast in Beirut stronghold of Hezbollah


Jim Muir in Beirut: "This is the biggest and by far the most deadly attack so far"

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At least 16 people have been killed by a large blast in a southern suburb of the Lebanese capital, Beirut, with some 200 more reported wounded.
The area contains strongholds of the Shia militant movement Hezbollah.
The explosion happened in a densely populated part of the capital. Heavy damage was reported to nearby buildings and cars.
The blast is being linked to the conflict in Syria, which has worsened sectarian tensions in Lebanon.
Plumes of smoke rose over the area where the blast occurred, between the Bir Abed and Rweiss districts of the city.
Lebanese officials said that the blast was the result of a car bomb.
The site of the blast is close to the Sayyed al-Shuhada complex, where Hezbollah often holds mass rallies, although there does not seem to have been an obvious target.
The BBC's Jim Muir, at the scene of the blast, says the bomb appeared to have gone off between two residential buildings and he saw chaotic scenes, with fire engines and ambulances piling into a narrow road.
Smoke was still rising from nearby buildings more than two hours after the blast, our correspondent reports.

Lebanese citizens run past a burned cars and shops at the site of a car bomb explosionThis is a densely populated area of Beirut
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One injured man at the scene told Reuters news agency: "I don't know what happened. It's as if we were struck by an earthquake."
Lebanon's outgoing prime minister has declared Friday a day of mourning for the victims.
Few would doubt the blast was a consequence of Hezbollah's involvement in the conflict in Syria, our correspondent says.
Fighters from the militant group were instrumental in a strategic victory by Syrian government forces in Qusair, close to the border with Lebanon, in early June.
Hezbollah politicians denounced the latest bomb as a "terrorist attack" and called for restraint from their followers.
A previously unknown group called the Battalions of Ayesha said it carried out the attack. In a video message posted online, they also implied they had been behind another bomb blast in a nearby area last month which injured dozens.
The group threatened to carry out more attacks, referring to Hezbollah strongholds as "colonies of Iran".
Events in Syria are putting Lebanon's fragile peace in jeopardy,correspondents say, threatening the equilibrium which has held since the end of the civil war more than 20 years ago.

Wimbledon champion Marion Bartoli announces her retirement

Wimbledon champion Marion Bartoli is retiring from tennis just 40 days after winning her only Grand Slam title.

The 28-year-old Frenchwoman, ranked seventh in the world, said she was taking the decision with immediate effect because of persistent injuries.
She made the tearful announcement at a media conference following defeat by Simona Halep at the Western and Southern Open in Cincinnati.
"It's time for me to retire and to call it a career," she told reporters.

Most Grand Slam tournaments before first win

  • 47 - Marion Bartoli (2013 Wimbledon)
  • 45 - Jana Novotna (1998 Wimbledon)
  • 39 - Francesca Schiavone (2010 French Open)
  • 34 - Sam Stosur (2011 US Open)
  • 32 Amelie Mauresmo (2006 Australian Open)
"I feel it's time for me to walk away."
Bartoli, who beat Germany's Sabine Lisicki in the Wimbledon final in July, said her Achilles, shoulder, hip and lower back hurt continually when she plays.
She added: "It's never easy... but that was actually the last match of my career. I just can't do it anymore."
After her 6-1 6-4 win at Wimbledon, Bartoli hinted that the physical demands of the sport were taking their toll. "That was probably the last little bit of something that was left inside me," she said on Wednesday.
The 2007 Wimbledon runner-up had won her first Grand Slam at the 47th attempt - the longest wait in women's tennis before a maiden Grand Slam.
She had returned from her Wimbledon triumph to play in Toronto last week and was playing her first match in Cincinnati having received a first-round bye.
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Marion Bartoli
Wimbledon 2013: Bartoli wins Wimbledon title
However, the 3-6 6-4 6-1 loss to Halep appears to have been the last straw.
"It's been a tough decision to take," she added. "I've been a tennis player for a long time and I had the chance to make my biggest dream a reality.
"You know, everyone will remember my Wimbledon title. No-one will remember the last match I played here.
"I made my dream a reality and it will stay forever with me, but now my body just can't cope with everything."
WTA chairman and chief executive Stacey Allaster paid tribute to Bartoli's "long, successful career".
"She is an inspirational champion and a great ambassador for women's tennis who has dedicated her life to the sport and given so much back to the game," she said.
"I am so proud of her for who she is, her values and for fighting to realise her dream of winning Wimbledon."

Japan ministers in Yasukuni visit as PM Abe sends offering


Lawmakers' visits anger Japan's neighbours, who say they glorify militarism

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Two Japanese cabinet ministers and dozens of lawmakers have visited the Yasukuni shrine on the anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War II.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe sent a ritual offering but was expected to stay away, in an apparent move intended to avoid inflaming tensions with neighbours.
The shrine commemorates Japan's war dead but also honours several convicted war criminals.
China summoned the Japanese ambassador to protest.
The Chinese foreign ministry said the visit "seriously harms the feelings of the people in China".
China and South Korea see the shrine as a symbol of Japan's war-time aggression.
'General judgement'
Early on Thursday Mr Abe's ministers for internal affairs and the North Korea issue, Yoshitaka Shindo and Keiji Furuya, visited the shrine in central Tokyo to pay their respects.

Yasukuni Shrine

  • Built in 1869 under the Emperor Meiji
  • Venerates the souls of Japan's war dead
  • Those enshrined include war criminals
  • Japan's neighbours say it represents the country's past militarism
About 90 other lawmakers followed later in the day.
Mr Abe, who visited the shrine in October 2012 when he was the leader of the opposition, sent a ritual offering with an aide but was not expected in person.
"The leader wanted to pass along his prayers for the people who died in the war and apologise for not making a personal visit," Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) official Koichi Hagiuda said.
"He considered from various angles and made a general judgement not to come to pray today," the official, who made the offering on behalf of Mr Abe, added.
The shrine commemorates some 2.5 million Japanese men, women and children who died for their country in wars.
But the souls of 14 Class A convicted war criminals from World War II are also enshrined there, including Prime Minister General Hideki Tojo, who was executed for war crimes in 1948.
The shrine is also deeply political, reports the BBC's Rupert Wingfield-Hayes from Tokyo. Today its history museum continues to peddle a version of World War II history that either ignores or denies the crimes committed by Japan in Korea and China.
Visits to the shrine by lawmakers anger and offend Japan's neighbours, to whom the shrine represents Japan's past militarism, including the colonisation of the Korean peninsula and the invasion of China.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry, through spokesman Hong Lei, issued a statement condemning the visits which it said "fundamentally attempt to deny and gloss over Japan's history of invasion".
This year's anniversary comes with ties tense between Tokyo and governments in Beijing and Seoul. China and Japan remain locked in a bitter dispute over East China Sea islands that both claim.
South Korea and Japan, meanwhile, are involved in a row over an island midway between the two over which both say they have sovereignty.