Posts Tagged ‘Monday’

Paroled American Berenson leaves Peru

Saturday, January 7th, 2012

Paroled U.S. activist Lori Berenson sits in a migration office with her son, in stroller, in Lima, Peru, Monday Dec. 19, 2011. Peru’s anti-terrorism attorney Julio Galindo said Sunday he will seek misconduct charges against the three judges who granted Berenson permission to leave the country for the first time since her 1995 arrest. Galindo said he would ask prosecutors on Monday to charge the judges with violating anti-terrorism laws by clearing Berenson to travel to New York City with her toddler son to spend the holidays with her family. Despite the court’s approval, the 42-year-old Berenson was prevented from boarding a flight on Friday. Berenson, a former Massachusetts Institute of Technology student, was put on parole in 2010 while serving a 20-year sentence for aiding the leftist rebel Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement. (AP Photo/Carlos Contreras)

Paroled U.S. activist Lori Berenson sits in a migration office with her son, in stroller, in Lima, Peru, Monday Dec. 19, 2011. Peru’s anti-terrorism attorney Julio Galindo said Sunday he will seek misconduct charges against the three judges who granted Berenson permission to leave the country for the first time since her 1995 arrest. Galindo said he would ask prosecutors on Monday to charge the judges with violating anti-terrorism laws by clearing Berenson to travel to New York City with her toddler son to spend the holidays with her family. Despite the court’s approval, the 42-year-old Berenson was prevented from boarding a flight on Friday. Berenson, a former Massachusetts Institute of Technology student, was put on parole in 2010 while serving a 20-year sentence for aiding the leftist rebel Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement. (AP Photo/Carlos Contreras)

Paroled U.S. activist Lori Berenson, center, accompanied by her son Salvador Apari, walks at the international airport before leaving to U.S. in Lima, Peru, Monday Dec. 19, 2011. Peru’s anti-terrorism attorney Julio Galindo said Sunday he will seek misconduct charges against the three judges who granted Berenson permission to leave the country for the first time since her 1995 arrest. Galindo said he would ask prosecutors on Monday to charge the judges with violating anti-terrorism laws by clearing Berenson to travel to New York City with her toddler son to spend the holidays with her family. Despite the court’s approval, the 42-year-old Berenson was prevented from boarding a flight on Friday. Berenson, a former Massachusetts Institute of Technology student, was put on parole in 2010 while serving a 20-year sentence for aiding the leftist rebel Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

Paroled U.S. activist Lori Berenson, center, accompanied by her son Salvador Apari, walks at the international airport before leaving to U.S. in Lima, Peru, Monday Dec. 19, 2011. Peru’s anti-terrorism attorney Julio Galindo said Sunday he will seek misconduct charges against the three judges who granted Berenson permission to leave the country for the first time since her 1995 arrest. Galindo said he would ask prosecutors on Monday to charge the judges with violating anti-terrorism laws by clearing Berenson to travel to New York City with her toddler son to spend the holidays with her family. Despite the court’s approval, the 42-year-old Berenson was prevented from boarding a flight on Friday. Berenson, a former Massachusetts Institute of Technology student, was put on parole in 2010 while serving a 20-year sentence for aiding the leftist rebel Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

Paroled U.S. activist Lori Berenson, accompanied by her son Salvador Apari, waits at the international airport before boarding a plane to the U.S. in Lima, Peru, Monday Dec. 19, 2011. Three days after barring her exit, Peruvian migration officials gave paroled American Lori Berenson a document Monday clearing her to leave the country with her toddler son to spend the holidays with her family in New York City. Berenson, a former Massachusetts Institute of Technology student, was put on parole in 2010 while serving a 20-year sentence for aiding the leftist rebel Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement.(AP Photo/Frank Bajak)

Paroled U.S. activist Lori Berenson waits at the international airport before boarding a plane to the U.S. in Lima, Peru, Monday Dec. 19, 2011. Three days after barring her exit, Peruvian migration officials gave paroled American Lori Berenson a document Monday clearing her to leave the country with her toddler son to spend the holidays with her family in New York City. Berenson, a former Massachusetts Institute of Technology student, was put on parole in 2010 while serving a 20-year sentence for aiding the leftist rebel Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement.(AP Photo/Frank Bajak)

(AP) ? Paroled American Lori Berenson, who stirred international controversy after being convicted of aiding Peruvian guerrillas, was on her way back to the United States late Monday night for her first visit back home since Peruvian authorities arrested her in 1995.

The 42-year-old boarded a Continental Airlines flight at Lima’s main airport under intense media scrutiny, as many in Peru wonder whether she will return to the country by the court-ordered deadline of Jan. 11.

Wearing a black turtleneck, black jeans and designer eyeglasses, Berenson told an Associated Press reporter while waiting for her flight that she intended to return to Peru. Berenson was accompanied by a U.S. Embassy employee.

“I just hope we don’t get caught in a snow storm,” she said, joking that such an occurrence in the U.S. would delay her return.

The AP reporter watched Berenson carry her 31-month-old son Salvador Apari to a seat in the back of the plane’s economy section. The plane’s doors were closed, and its wheels lifted off at 12:25 p.m. local time. It was scheduled to land at a New York area airport Tuesday morning.

Berenson’s departure capped three days of confusion after Peruvian authorities had prevented her from boarding a flight to New York on Friday despite a court approval allowing her to leave.

The authorities said Berenson, who had served 15 years on an accomplice to terrorism conviction before her parole last year, lacked an additional document.

Peruvian migration officials finally gave Berenson another document Monday clearing her to leave the country with her son to spend the holidays with her family in New York City.

Her father, Mark Berenson, said Monday that he was anxious to see her return.

“I’m just glad that they finally resolved the thing,” he told the AP by phone from New York.

Lori Berenson admitted helping the Tupac Amaru rebel group rent a safe house where authorities seized a cache of weapons after a shootout with the rebels. She insists she didn’t know guns were stored there and says she never joined the group.

In 1996, a military court of hooded judges convicted Berenson of treason and sentenced her to life in prison. After U.S. pressure, she was retried by a civilian court.

Mark Berenson said he went to sleep Friday night expecting to pick up his daughter and 31-month-old grandson, Salvador, the following morning.

Instead, he was awakened by news that she had been blocked from returning and spent the rest of the night angry and unable to sleep.

Lori Berenson and Salvador, accompanied by two officials who appeared to be from the U.S. Embassy, spent Monday morning at Peru’s main migration office in downtown Lima and left shortly after 1 p.m. in a dark SUV with diplomatic plates.

“What she was given was an exit order,” the assistant to the office’s director, Jose Luis Ubillus, told the AP.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Embassy, Mary Drake, said consular officials were assisting Berenson “as they would to any citizen.”

RPP radio quoted migration office director Edgard Reymundo as saying of Berenson: “I don’t know why she threatened to file suit and complain when there was no persecution, but only the need to obtain an exit order.”

It’s not clear whether Berenson’s delayed exit amounted to government harassment or whether she simply got caught between competing bureaucracies.

Political analyst Aldo Panfichi, a Catholic University professor, said he believed she was not the victim of a conspiracy.

“It is highly probable that this is a question of excess bureaucracy by mid-level functionaries or miscoordination and lack of clarity between state agencies,” he said.

The court ruled that Berenson was not a flight risk. Her father told the AP that his daughter has every intention of returning to Peru.

By law, she must remain in Peru until her full sentence lapses unless President Ollanta Humala decides to commute it.

State anti-terrorism attorney Julio Galindo said he filed an appeal on Friday seeking to nullify the court ruling that approved Berenson’s New York trip. He opposed Lori Berenson’s parole from the start, and succeeded last year in having her returned to prison on a technicality for 2 1/2 months until a court ordered her freed in November.

Peru remains deeply scarred from its 1980-2000 conflict, which claimed some 70,000 lives.

Its gaping inequalities drew the young Berenson to Peru from El Salvador, where she had worked for the country’s top rebel commander during negotiations that led to a 1992 peace accord.

Tupac Amaru was a lesser player in Peru’s conflict and Berenson sought it out, she told the AP in an interview last year, because it was similar to other revolutionary movements in Latin America.

The group never set off car bombs or engaged in the merciless slaughter of thousands as Shining Path rebels did, but it did engage in kidnappings and selective killings.

In the 1980s, it was known for hijacking grocery trucks and distributing food to the poor.

The group most famously raided the Japanese embassy in Peru in 1996 during a party and held 72 hostages for more than four months. A government raid killed all the rebel hostage takers.

Berenson was arrested leaving Peru’s Congress and accused of helping plan its armed takeover, which never happened.

She was initially unrepentant, but harsh prison life softened her. She was praised as a model prisoner in the report that supported her parole.

Some Peruvians still consider her a terrorist. She had been insulted in the street, and news media have repeatedly hounded and mobbed her.

___

Associated Press writer Martin Villena contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-20-LT-Peru-Lori-Berenson/id-52d30ccdd1864addac2c6caaf7a1c3a9

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Deadly snowstorm halts travel across Great Plains (AP)

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. ? A late-autumn snowstorm lumbered into the Great Plains on Monday, unleashing snow and fierce winds that turned roads to ice, reduced visibility to zero and jeopardized thousands of holiday motorists’ travel plans just two days before the official start of winter.

The storm was blamed for at least two deaths in Colorado. A guard and an inmate were killed after a prison van lost control on an icy highway five miles east of Limon on Colorado’s plains. Eight other inmates and a prison employee were hospitalized with moderate to serious injuries, the Colorado State Patrol said.

From northern New Mexico and the Texas Panhandle through Oklahoma and northwestern Kansas, blizzard conditions put state road crews on alert and had motorists taking refuge and early exits off major roads.

In northern New Mexico, snow and ice forced the closure of all roads from the town of Raton to the Texas and Oklahoma borders about 90 miles away. Hotels in Clayton, N.M., just east of where the three states touch, were nearly full.

Linda Pape, general manager of the Clayton Super 8 motel said it was packed with unhappy skiers who had been headed to lodges in Colorado and elsewhere in New Mexico.

“They lost a day or two of skiing, and they had budgeted an amount of money they were going to spend, and now they have to spend more staying somewhere else,” she said.

Pape said it’s not uncommon for skiers to get stuck in Clayton during the winter, and she keeps two freezers and a refrigerator stocked in case roads are closed.

“They are not happy, but we are not letting them go hungry,” she said.

The storm came after much of the country had a relatively mild fall. With the exception of the October snowstorm blamed for 29 deaths on the East Coast, there’s been little rain or snow. Many of the areas hit Monday enjoyed relatively balmy 60-degree temperatures just 24 hours earlier.

The snow moved into the Oklahoma Panhandle early Monday morning, and 1.5 inches accumulated in about an hour, said Vicki Roberts, who owns the Black Mesa Bed and Breakfast in Kenton. Her inn sits at the base of the 4,973-foot-tall Black Mesa, the highest point in Oklahoma. Looking out her window, she couldn’t see it.

“I have a mail route and I’m not going,” Roberts said. “You just don’t get out in this. We’ll be socked in here. If we lose power, we’ll just read a book in front of the fireplace.”

Travel throughout the region was difficult. New Mexico shut down a portion of Interstate 25, the major route heading northeast of Santa Fe into Colorado, closed, and Clayton police dispatcher Cindy Blackwell said her phones were “ringing off the hook” with calls from numerous motorists stuck on rural roads.

Bill Cook, who works at the Best Western in Clayton, said he hadn’t seen such a storm since the 1970s, when cattle had to be airlifted with helicopters and the National Guard was called in to help out. His hotel was packed Monday with people “happy they have a room,” and some of the children were playing outside in the snow.

Keith Barras, the owner of the Eklund Hotel, a landmark in Clayton since the 1890s, said guests were happily milling around the lobby and he expected to be full by nightfall.

“We have lots of board games, one of our customers has a guitar, we have a piano, so there’ll be a party tonight,” Barras said.

Though some drivers were inconvenienced, farmers and meteorologists said the storm was bringing much needed moisture ? first rain, then snow as temperatures dropped ? to areas of Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas that had been parched by a drought that started in the summer of 2010.

Virginia Kepley, 73, spent Monday afternoon baking pumpkin bread to give as Christmas gifts while snow fell on her farm near Ulysses, Kan.

“I decided to try to get as much done today in case the electricity goes off and I can’t make it tomorrow,” she said.

Kepley was grateful for the snow after some of her family’s wheat never got enough moisture to sprout last season. A new crop had been planted in the fall for harvest next summer.

“It is wonderful for the wheat,” Kepley said. “At least we have wheat we can see this year.”

Amarillo had rain Monday morning, and snow was supposed to start in the afternoon with several inches of accumulation by Tuesday morning.

Long haul truck driver Frank Pringle stopped at a Love’s Travel Stop in Amarillo but said he intended to go as far west as road conditions would allow Monday. His biggest worry was with four-wheel-drive cars because “they will shoot past you and cut you off and you have to hit your brakes. And hitting brakes in the snow is not a good thing.”

___

Hegeman reported from Wichita, Kan. Associated Press writers Jeri Clausing in Albuquerque, N.M.; Juan Carlos Llorca in El Paso, Texas; and Tim Talley in Oklahoma City contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_re_us/us_winter_weather

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Stricken New Zealand ship may break apart or sink (AP)

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

WELLINGTON, New Zealand ? Salvage crews raced Monday to pump oil from a stricken ship teetering on a reef off the New Zealand coast, while also preparing for the worst: Authorities believe the vessel will break apart or sink soon.

The salvage work resumed late Sunday after a halt of about a week due to severe weather. Progress has been limited ? just 82 tons of oil have been removed while an estimated 1,400 tons of fuel remains aboard.

The Rena grounded Oct. 5 on the Astrolabe reef 14 miles (22 kilometers) from Tauranga Harbour on New Zealand’s North Island, setting off what officials have called the country’s worst maritime environmental disaster. An estimated 350 tons of oil have spilled into the sea near beaches on New Zealand’s North Island, killing more than a thousand sea birds.

And with the weather expected to worsen again late Monday, New Zealand’s transportation minister Steven Joyce said he didn’t think there was much chance of getting off all the oil before the ship fell apart or sank.

“I think it’s a case of getting everything off that you can,” Joyce said Monday.

The ship has major structural cracks and experts say it could break apart or slip from the reef at any time.

Joyce said only the bow of the ship is jammed onto the reef while the stern remains in the water, held there by its natural flotation.

“So it’s variable and very dangerous,” he said, adding that should salvage crews be evacuated from the ship, they would try to put caps on the tanks and close valves to minimize future oil spillage. Joyce said that if the vessel came apart, crews might be able to maneuver the pieces closer to shore to make subsequent oil recovery easier.

Crews first began pumping oil from the ship Oct. 9 but quickly abandoned that effort due to bad weather.

The latest attempt has proved more complicated because of the ship’s deteriorating condition ? a crack now extends the width of the ship ? and steeper lean ? the ship now has a list of 21 degrees.

Preparations took several days, with crews needing first to construct four wooden platforms on the side of the ship to provide a level base for pumping.

“This is a hugely challenging and risky operation even in full daylight,” Bruce Anderson, who is heading the salvage operation, said in a news release. “These are incredibly brave and dedicated people.”

Maritime New Zealand, the agency heading the response, estimates about 1,290 sea bird have died in the spill. Another 207 oiled birds and three New Zealand fur seals are being treated at a wildlife center.

The Rena is owned by Greek-based Costamare Inc. Both the captain and an officer on the ship have been charged under New Zealand maritime laws with operating a ship in a dangerous or risky manner. If found guilty, the men, whose names have been suppressed under New Zealand law, face up to a year in jail or a fine of ten thousand New Zealand dollars ($8,000).

The New Zealand weather agency MetService is forecasting strengthening Northerly winds for the Tauranga area late Monday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oceania/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111017/ap_on_re_as/as_new_zealand_grounded_ship

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