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Tuesday, 9 December 2014

'A universe beneath our feet': Life in Beijing's underground


© Sim Chi Yin/VII

Twenty-one-year-old Liu Jing sits in her apartment two stories underground in Beijing, China. Her laundry hangs above her head because there's nowhere else to put her clothes.



In Beijing, even the tiniest apartment can cost a fortune - after all, with more than 21 million residents, space is limited and demand is high.

But it is possible to find more affordable housing. You'll just have to join an estimated 1 million of the city's residents and look underground.


Below the city's bustling streets, bomb shelters and storage basements are turned into illegal - but affordable - apartments.


Claustrophobic Living Quarters


Annette Kim, a professor at the University of Southern California who researches urbanization, spent last year in China's capital city studying the underground housing market.


"Part of why there's so much underground space is because it's the official building code to continue to build bomb shelters and basements," Kim says. "That's a lot of new, underground space that's increasing in supply all the time. They're everywhere."


She says apartments go one to three stories below ground. Residents have communal bathrooms and shared kitchens. The tiny, windowless rooms have just enough space to fit a bed.


"It's tight," Kim says. "But I also lived in Beijing for a year, and the city, in general, is tight."


With an average rent of $70 per month, she says, this is an affordable option for city-dwellers.


But living underground is illegal, Kim says, since housing laws changed in 2010.


And, in addition, there's a stigma to living in basements and bomb shelters, as Kim found when she interviewed residents above ground about their neighbors directly below.


"They weren't sure who was down there," Kim says. "There is actually very little contact between above ground and below ground, and so there's this fear of security."


In reality, she says, the underground residents are mostly young migrants who moved from the countryside looking for work in Beijing.


"They're all the service people in the city," she says. "They're your waitresses, store clerks, interior designers, tech workers, who just can't afford a place in the city."


Kim says there's a range of units, from the dark and dingy to the neatly decorated.


But it's rare to get a glimpse below. Property owners can be strict about whom they let in.



© Sim Chi Yin/VII

Zhuang Qiuli and her boyfriend Feng Tao sit on the bed in their basement apartment two floors below a posh condominium. Since this photo was taken, the couple has moved above ground.



The 'Rat Tribe'

Beijing-based photographer Chi Yin Sim found a way. She has documented life under the city in a collection called China's "Rat Tribe."


"I started to try and find ways to get down there because I was fascinated by the fact that there was a universe beneath our feet," Sim says.


The first basement-dweller she met was a young woman, a pedicurist at a salon, who lived with her boyfriend.


"I was just like, 'Can I come and visit?' And she was like, 'Sure, come and visit us,' " Sim says.


The couple lived two floors below a posh Beijing apartment complex.


Sim's photos show just how tiny these units really are. The couple sits on their bed, surrounded by clothes, boxes and a giant teddy bear. There's hardly any room to move around.


"The air is not so good, ventilation is not so good," Sim says. "And the main complaint that people have is not that they can't see the sun: It's that it's very humid in the summer. So everything that they put out in their rooms gets a bit moldy, because it's just very damp and dank underground."


Sim says residents adapt to the close quarters.


"At dinnertime you can hear people cooking, you can hear people chit-chatting in the next room, you can hear people watching television," she says. "It's really not so bad. I mean, you're spending almost all your day at work anyway. And you're coming back, and all you need is a clean and safe place to sleep in."



© Sim Chi Yin/VII

Xie Jinghui sometimes does some weightlifting in his basement room. Photographer Sim Chi Yin says people adapt to these close quarters.



Of course, it's not ideal. Sim met a number of people who were too embarrassed to have their photo taken.

Annette Kim from USC says it's especially hard for the older residents, some of whom have been down there for years.


"They're hoping that their next generation, their children, will be able to live above ground," Kim says. "It's this sense of longing and deferring a dream. And so it makes me wonder how long this dream can be deferred."


But despite the laws against living underground, and the discomfort and shame associated with it, Kim says it's still a very active market. For hundreds of thousands of people, it's the only viable option for living in, or under, Beijing.


Study finds ketogenic diet improves memory in adults with cognitive impairment

ketogenic

Recent findings suggest that a very low-carbohydrate diet may boost memory in older adults with mild cognitive impairment.

Under fairly extreme low-carb conditions, the body starts to use compounds called ketones, made from the metabolism of fat or protein, as a source of fuel. This state, ketosis, occurs naturally and is quite different from ketoacidosis which is a serious problem caused by severe metabolic disturbances.


A new study tested a ketogenic diet in people with mild cognitive impairment, sometimes a precursor to dementia. For six weeks, half of the 23 participants ate a ketogenic diet, with five to 10 percent of calories coming from carbohydrates, while the others ate a high-carbohydrate diet, 50 percent of calories from carbohydrates.


Those on the ketogenic diet showed significant improvements in verbal memory compared to the other group. The higher their ketone levels, measured in urine, the better their verbal memory.


Robert Krikorian, Ph.D., of the University of Cincinnati, Ohio, and colleagues believe that ketones provide ready fuel for the brain, and may enhance cognitive function.


They report in the journal that the ketosis group also saw significant benefits in terms of weight loss and waist circumference reduction, as well as reductions in fasting blood glucose and insulin levels.


"These findings indicate that very low carbohydrate consumption, even in the short term, can improve memory function in older adults with increased risk for Alzheimer's disease," they write.


"To our knowledge, these data demonstrate for the first time that carbohydrate restriction can produce memory enhancement in this at-risk population."


The experts point out that this effect may be partly due to a correction of hyperinsulinemia, or excess insulin in the blood, but that "other mechanisms associated with ketosis such as reduced inflammation and enhanced energy metabolism also may have contributed to improved neurocognitive function."


Finding new approaches to tackling mild cognitive impairment is crucial, they add, as there are currently 5.3 million cases of Alzheimer's disease in the United States. This figure is estimated to rise to 16 million by the year 2050, and there is no cure.


"Accordingly, prevention and mitigation of risk will be essential to reduce the impact of this ominous public health problem," said Krikorian and colleagues.


They explain that interventions begun in individuals with pre-dementia conditions such as mild cognitive impairment might halt progression of cognitive decline. It's also the case that rates of obesity and diabetes are reaching epidemic proportions.


"The co-occurrence of dementia and metabolic disease reflects the fact that metabolic disturbance is a fundamental factor contributing to neurodegeneration," said the authors.


Type II diabetes is known to increase the risk of dementia. Some studies suggest that 39 percent of Alzheimer's cases are due solely to excess insulin, which occurs in response to insulin resistance.


Overall, excess insulin in the blood can accelerate neurodegenerative processes via dysregulation of insulin receptors and pro-inflammatory molecules. Proper regulation of these pro-inflammatory molecules is essential to memory function, and to avoid the buildup of beta amyloid plaques in the brain.


"Dietary approaches to dementia prevention represent interesting and underutilized interventions," the team says.


Previous work indicates that a higher intake of fruits and vegetables may lower the risk of cognitive decline and dementia. This effect could be due in part to regulation of inflammation, as with the insulin-lowering ketosis diet.


They point out that the ketogenic diet has been used to suppress epileptic seizures since the 1920s, though it fell out of favor when pharmacological therapies were developed.


"There are indications that ketone metabolism may be beneficial in other clinical conditions," the team said, because it protects against neuronal damage and slows neurodegeneration, compared with glucose metabolism.


"As compared with glucose metabolism, central ketone metabolism generates lower levels of oxidative stress, which has also been identified as a fundamental factor contributing to neurodegeneration," they add.


The authors call for further investigation of this type of diet to measure its "preventive potential and mechanisms of action in the context of early neurodegeneration."


Discovering the mechanisms of neural action of the diet, including metabolic and neuroprotective factors in conjunction with neurocognitive effects, "will be of particular interest and should have implications for understanding the etiology of neurodegeneration," they write.


Finally, it is important to know whether the benefits of the diet persist once an individual returns to their normal diet.




"Should this approach prove to to have benefit beyond the period of intervention, it might be applied briefly and intermittently as a prophylactic strategy, an approach that would mitigate many concerns about chronic, severe carbohydrate restriction," they concluded.

Rare deep sea fish found on Mooloolaba Beach, Australia




Rare Angler Fish washes up at Mooloolaba



A rare fish species with an odd mating habit and a light dangling from an antenna on its head to attract prey has washed up from the depths at Mooloolaba Beach.

Thirteen-year-old Mia Cornwall discovered the Angler Fish, also known as a Black Sea Devil or a Melanocetus, during a morning walk.


Mia's grandfather Peter Beinssen, who shares her love of all things in nature, arranged for the specimen to be dropped at SeaLife from where it is destined for the Queensland Museum.


Mr Beinssen said the Angler Fish normally lives at depths of around 1600m.


He said the deep sea creature attracts prey with its light then sucks it into its cavernous mouth, which has mean-looking, inward-sloping teeth to stop its prey from escaping.


"This light-assisted way of feeding is rare but not unique," Mr Beinssen said.


"However its reproduction process is thought to be unique. The male can't survive unless it finds a female to attach itself to. It bites on and then merges to become an appendage on the female host, like a gonad, with the sole function of pumping out sperm."


Fisheries researcher and university lecturer Geoff Dews said the find may have been by-catch of a prawn trawler working at depth off the coast.





Deep Secrets: The Angler Fish which was found at Mooloolaba.



US: San Francisco expecting 'storm of the decade' - hurricane-force winds, torrential rain


© CBS



Winds above 74 miles per hour in hills above 2500 feet, and 80 miles per hour in the mountains are forecast for Thursday in what could be the storm of the decade according to Bay Area meteorologists.

The computer models are able to break down the exact time of highest danger. By mid-morning Thursday, models indicate winds peaking at 74 miles per hour sustained, not gusts, above 2500 feet. Above 5,000 feet the forecast is for 80 miles per hour. Along the coast, 60 mile per hour winds are forecasts, with higher gusts. The flatter areas around the bay will have widespread gusts from 40 to 50 miles per hour.


KPIX 5 chief meteorologist Paul Deanno said, "Given the long-term drought and short-term saturated ground, many trees will lose the battle with the wind on Thursday."


Deanno compares this week's storms to other significant events saying, "For those of us who have lived here for a while, the potential of this storm is comparable to the ones in January 2008 and February 1998, both of which caused widespread wind & flooding damage. As always, the forecast can change."


The National Weather Service has issued a whopping 15 separate warnings and advisories for the system including a Flash Flood Watch, Gale Warning, Hazardous Seas Advisory, and High Wind Watch.


Rainfall amounts above eight inches are forecast for the coastal ranges, triggering the Flash Flood Watch, an official notice to be looking for potential flooding. During the storm, these alerts will change from watches to warnings as actual floods begin occurring.


A hurricane, though only used to refer to tropical storms, is declared when sustained winds reach 74 miles per hour, and that level of wind is predicted for Thursday, along with rainfal amounts of over half an inch per hour, and if the storm slows, it could reach one inch per hour, causing serious flooding in the Bay Area.


Waves approaching 30 feet are predicted for certain surf breaks, and ocean swells will build to at least 20 feet by Wednesday, triggering the Small Craft Advisories and Hazardous Seas alerts.


Senate torture report: Brutality, psychopathy, lies

cia torture



Whoops! You missed a streak of blood and excrement there, guy!



An exhaustive, five-year Senate investigation of the CIA's secret interrogations of terrorism suspects renders a strikingly bleak verdict of a program launched in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, describing levels of brutality, dishonesty and seemingly arbitrary violence that at times brought even agency employees to moments of anguish.

The report by the Senate Intelligence Committee delivers new allegations of cruelty in a program whose severe tactics have been abundantly documented, revealing that agency medical personnel voiced alarm that waterboarding methods had deteriorated to "a series of near drownings" and that agency employees subjected detainees to "rectal rehydration" and other painful procedures that were never approved.


[Read: Senate Intelligence Committee's full report on the CIA program]


The 528-page document catalogues dozens of cases in which CIA officials allegedly deceived their superiors at the White House, members of Congress and even sometimes their own peers about how the interrogation program was being run and what it had achieved. In one case, an internal CIA memo relays instructions from the White House to keep the program secret from then-Secretary of State Colin Powell out of concern that he would "blow his stack if he were to be briefed on what's going on."


A declassified summary of the committee's work discloses for the first time a complete roster of all 119 prisoners held in CIA custody and indicates that at least 26 were held because of mistaken identities or bad intelligence. The publicly released summary is drawn from a longer, classified study that exceeds 6,000 pages.


View infographic: The 119 detainees who went through the agency''s secret prison system.


[View timeline: The CIA's use of harsh interrogation]


The report's central conclusion is that harsh interrogation measures, deemed torture by program critics including President Obama, didn't work. The panel desconstructs prominent claims about the value of the "enhanced" measures, including that they produced breakthrough intelligence in the hunt for Osama bin Laden, and dismisses them all as exaggerated if not utterly false - assertions that the CIA and former officers involved in the program vehemently dispute.




In a statement from the White House, President Obama said the Senate report "documents a troubling program" and "reinforces my long-held view that these harsh methods were not only inconsistent with our values as nation, they did not serve our broader counterterrorism efforts or our national security interests." Obama praised the CIA's work to degrade al-Qaeda over the past 13 years, but said its interrogation program "did significant damage to America's standing in the world and made it harder to pursue our interests with allies and partners."

The CIA is expected to release its own detailed rebuttal Tuesday, and Director John Brennan plans to speak to the CIA workforce.

In a statement, the agency said the committee's report had "too many flaws for it to stand as the official record of the program."

"Many of the Study's charges that CIA misrepresented are based on the authors' flawed analysis of the value of the intelligence obtained from detainees," the statement said. "But whether Congress accepts their assessment or ours, we still must question a report that impugns the integrity of so many CIA officers when it implies - as it does clearly through the conclusions - that the Agency's assessments were willfully misrepresented in a calculated effort to manipulate."


The release of the report comes at an unnerving time in the country's conflict with al-Qaeda and its offshoots. The Islamic State has beheaded three Americans in recent months and seized control of territory across Iraq and Syria. Fears that the report could ignite new overseas violence against American interests prompted Secretary of State John F. Kerry to appeal to Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), the chairwoman of the Senate committee, to consider a delay. The report has also been at the center of intense bureaucratic and political fights that erupted earlier this year in accusations that the CIA surreptitiously monitored the computers used by committee aides involved in the investigation.


View infographic: The report lists 20 key findings.


Many of the most haunting sections of the Senate document are passages taken from internal CIA memos and e-mails as agency employees described their visceral reactions to searing interrogation scenes. At one point in 2002, CIA employees at a secret site in Thailand broke down emotionally after witnessing harrowing treatment of Abu Zubaida, a high-profile facilitator for al-Qaeda.


"Several on the team profoundly affected," one agency employee wrote at the time, "some to the point of tears and choking up." The passage is contrasted with closed-door testimony from high-ranking CIA officials, including then-CIA Director Michael V. Hayden, who when asked by a senator in 2007 whether agency personnel had expressed reservations replied: "I'm not aware of any. These guys are more experienced. No."




The investigation was conducted exclusively by the Senate committee's Democratic staff. Its release Tuesday is certain to stir new debate over a program that has been a source of contention since the first details about the CIA's secret prison network began to surface publicly a decade ago. Even so, the report is unlikely to lead to new sanctions or structural change.

The document names only a handful of high-ranking CIA employees and does not call for any further investigation of those involved or even offer any formal recommendations. It steers clear of scrutinizing the involvement of the White House and Justice Department, which two years ago ruled out the possibility that CIA employees would face prosecution.




Instead, the Senate text is largely aimed at shaping how the interrogation program will be regarded by history. The inquiry was driven by Feinstein and her frequently stated determination to foreclose any prospect that the United States might contemplate such tactics again. Rather than argue their morality, Feinstein set out to prove that they didn't work.

In her foreword to the report, Feinstein does not characterize the CIA's actions as torture, but said the trauma of Sept. 11 had prompted the agency to employ "brutal interrogation techniques in violation of U.S. law, treaty obligations and our values." The report should serve as "a warning for the future," she said. "We cannot again allow history to be forgotten and grievous past mistakes to be repeated."

The reaction to the report, however, only reinforced how polarizing the CIA program remains more than five years after it was ordered dismantled by Obama.


Over the past year, the CIA assembled a lengthy and detailed rebuttal to the committee's findings that argues that all but a few of the panel's conclusions are unfounded. Hayden and other agency veterans have for months been planning a similarly aggressive response.




The report also faced criticism from Republicans on the intelligence committee who submitted a response to the report that cited alleged inaccuracies and faulted the committee's decision to base its findings exclusively on CIA documents without interviewing any of the operatives involved. Democrats have said they did so to avoid interfering with a separate Justice Department inquiry.

At its height, the CIA program included secret prisons in countries including Afghanistan, Thailand, Romania, Lithuania and Poland - locations that are referred to only by color-themed codes in the report, such as "Cobalt," to preserve a veneer of secrecy.

The establishment of the "black sites" was part of a broader transformation of the CIA in which it rapidly morphed from an agency focused on intelligence gathering into a paramilitary force with new powers to capture prisoners, disrupt plots and assemble a fleet of armed drones to carry out targeted killings of al-Qaeda militants.


The report reveals the often haphazard ways in which the agency assumed these new roles. Within days of the Sept. 11 attacks, for example, President George W. Bush had signed a secret memorandum giving the CIA new authority to "undertake operations designed to capture and detain persons who pose a continuing, serious threat of violence or death to U.S. persons and interests."


But the memo made no reference to interrogations, providing no explicit authority for what would become an elaborately drawn list of harsh measures - including sleep deprivation, slams against cell walls and simulated drowning - to get detainees to talk. The Bush memo was a murky point of origin for a program that is portrayed as chaotically mismanaged throughout the report.


One of the most lengthy sections describes the interrogation of the CIA's first prisoner, Abu Zubaida, who was detained in Pakistan in March 2002. Zubaida, badly injured when he was captured, was largely cooperative when jointly questioned by the CIA and FBI but was then subjected to confusing and increasingly violent interrogation as the agency assumed control.


After being transferred to a site in Thailand, Zubaida was placed in isolation for 47 days, a period during which the presumably important source on al-Qaeda faced no questions. Then, at 11:50 a.m. on Aug. 4, 2002, the CIA launched a round-the-clock interrogation assault - slamming Zubaida against walls, stuffing him into a coffin-sized box and waterboarding him until he coughed, vomited and had "involuntary spasms of the torso and extremities."


The treatment continued for 17 days. At one point, the waterboarding left Zubaida "completely unresponsive, with bubbles rising through his open, full mouth." CIA memos described employees who were distraught and concerned about the legality of what they had witnessed. One said that "two, perhaps three" were "likely to elect transfer."


The Senate report suggests top CIA officials at headquarters had little sympathy. When a cable from Thailand warned that the Zubaida interrogation was "approach[ing] the legal limit," Jose Rodriguez, then chief of the CIA's Counterterrorism Center, cautioned subordinates to refrain from such "speculative language as to the legality" of the interrogation. "Such language is not helpful."


Through a spokesman, Rodriguez told The Washington Post that he never instructed employees not to send cables about the legality of interrogations.


Zubaida was waterboarded 83 times and kept in cramped boxes for nearly 300 hours. In October 2002, Bush was informed in his daily intelligence briefing that Zubaida was still withholding "significant threat information," despite views from the black site that he had been truthful from the outset and was "compliant and cooperative," the report said.


The document provides a similarly detailed account of the interrogation of the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Khalid Sheik Mohammed, who fed his interrogators a stream of falsehoods and intelligence fragments. Waterboarding was supposed to simulate suffocation with a damp cloth and a trickle of liquid. But with Mohammed, CIA operatives used their hands to form a standing pool of water over his mouth. KSM, as he is known in agency documents, was ingesting "a LOT of water," a CIA medical officer wrote, saying that the application had been so altered that "we are basically doing a series of near drownings."


The CIA has maintained that only three prisoners were ever subjected to waterboarding, but the report alludes to evidence that it may have been used on others, including photographs of a well-worn waterboard at a black site where its use was never officially recorded. The committee said the agency could not explain the presence of the board and water-dousing equipment at the site, which is not named in the report, but is believed to be the "Salt Pit" in Afghanistan.




There are also references to other procedures, including the use of tubes to administer "rectal rehydration" and feeding. CIA documents describe a case in which a prisoner's lunch tray "consisting of hummus, pasta with sauce, nuts, and raisins was 'pureed' and rectally infused." At least five CIA detainees were subjected to "rectal rehydration" or rectal feeding without documented medical necessity.

At times, senior CIA operatives voiced deep misgivings. In early 2003, a CIA officer in the interrogation program described it as a "train [wreck] waiting to happen" and that "I intend to get the hell off the train before it happens." The officer, identified by former colleagues as Charlie Wise, subsequently retired and died in 2003. He had been picked for the job despite being reprimanded for his role in other troubled interrogation efforts in the 1980s in Beirut, former officials said.


The agency's records of the program were so riddled with errors, according to the report, that the CIA often offered conflicting counts of how many prisoners it had.


In 2007, then-CIA Director Hayden testified in a closed-door session with the Senate panel that "in the history of the program, we've had 97 detainees." In reality, the number was 119, according to the report, including 39 who had been subjected to harsh interrogation methods.




Two years later, when Hayden was preparing to deliver an early intelligence briefing for senior aides to newly elected President Obama, a subordinate noted that the actual count was significantly higher. Hayden "instructed me to keep the detainee number at 98," the employee wrote to himself in an e-mail. "Pick whatever date I needed to make that happen but the number is 98."

Hayden comes under particularly pointed scrutiny in the report, which includes a 38-page table comparing his statements to often conflicting agency documents. The section is listed as an "example of inaccurate CIA testimony."


In an e-mail to The Post, Hayden said the discrepancy in the prisoner numbers reflected the fact that detainees captured before the start of the interrogation program were counted separately from those held at the black sites. "This is a question of booking, not a question of deception," Hayden said. He also said he directed the analyst who had called the discrepancy to his attention to confirm the revised accounting and then inform incoming CIA Director Leon Panetta that there was a new number and that the figure should be corrected with Congress.


Hayden said he would have explained this to the committee if given the chance. "Maybe if the committee had talked to real people and accessed their notes we wouldn't have to have this conversation," he said, describing the matter as an "example of [committee] methodology. Take a stray 'fact' and claim its meaning to fit the desired narrative (mass deception)."


The report cites other cases in which CIA officials are alleged to have obscured facts about the program. In 2003, when David Addington, a lawyer who worked for Vice President Dick Cheney, asked whether the CIA had videotaped interrogations of Zubaida, CIA General Counsel Scott Muller informed agency colleagues that he had "told him that tapes were not being made." Muller apparently did not mention that the CIA had recorded dozens of interrogation sessions or that some in the agency were eager to have them destroyed.


The tapes were destroyed in 2006 at the behest of Rodriguez, a move that triggered a Justice Department investigation. The committee also revealed that a 21-hour section of recordings - which depicted the waterboarding of Zubaida - had gone missing years earlier when then-CIA Inspector General John Helgerson's office sought to review them as part of an inquiry into the interrogation program.


Helgerson would go on to find substantial problems with the program. But, in contrast to the Senate panel, his report concluded that the agency's "interrogation of terrorists has provided intelligence that has enabled the identification and apprehension of other terrorists and warned of terrorist plots planned for the United States and around the world."


A prominent section of the Senate report is devoted to high-profile claims that the interrogation program produced "unique" and otherwise unobtainable intelligence that helped thwart plots or led to the capture of senior al-Qaeda operatives.




Senate investigators said none of the claims held up under scrutiny, with some unraveling because information was erroneously attributed to detainees subjected to harsh interrogations, others because the CIA already had information from other sources. In some cases, according to the panel, there was no viable terror plot to disrupt.

A document prepared for Cheney before a March 8, 2005, National Security Council meeting noted in a section titled "Interrogation Results" that "operatives Jose Padilla and Binyam Mohammed planned to build and detonate a 'dirty bomb' in the Washington D.C. area."


But according to an April 2003 CIA e-mail, Padilla and Mohammed had apparently taken seriously a "ludicrous and humorous" article about building a dirty bomb in a kitchen by swinging buckets of uranium to enrich it.


KSM dismissed the idea, as did a government assessment of the proposed plot: "CIA and Lawrence Livermore National Lab have assessed that the article is filled with countless technical inaccuracies which would likely result in the death of anyone attempting to follow the instructions, and definitely would not result in a nuclear explosion," noted another CIA e-mail in April 2003. The agency nonetheless continued to directly cite the "dirty bomb" plot while defending the interrogation program until at least 2007, the report notes.


The report also deconstructs the timeline leading to the identification of Padilla and his alleged accomplice. It notes in April 2002, that Pakistani authorities, who detained Padilla, suspected he was an al-Qaeda member. A few days later, Abu Zubaida described two individuals who were pursuing what was described as a "cockamamie" dirty bomb plot. The connection was made by the CIA immediately, months before the use of harsh interrogation on Zubaida.


Some within CIA were derisive of the continuing exploitation of the dirty bomb plot by the agency. "We'll never be able to successfully expunge Padilla and the 'dirty bomb' plot from the lore of disruption, but once again I'd like to go on the record that Padilla admitted that the only reason he came up with so-called 'dirty bomb' was that he wanted to get out of Afghanistan and figured that if he came up with something spectacular, they'd finance him," wrote the head of the Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear group at the CIA Counterterrorism Center. "Even KSM says Padilla had a screw loose."


In another high-profile case, the CIA credited the interrogation program with the capture of Hambali, a senior member of Jemaah Islamiah and the suspected mastermind of the 2002 Bali bombing that killed more than 200 people. In a briefing for the president's chief of staff, for instance, the CIA wrote that "during KSM's interrogation we acquired information that led to the capture of Hambali." But the Senate found that information from KSM played no role in Hambali's capture and, in fact, intelligence leading to his detention came from signals intelligence, a CIA source, and investigations by the Thai authorities.


Similarly, the CIA said the interrogation program led to the discovery of the "Second Wave" attacks, a plan by KSM to employ non-Arabs to use airplanes to hit targets on the West Coast. Associated with this in CIA reporting was the identification of al-Ghuraba, a cell of the Southeast Asian militant group Jemaah Islamiah.


In a November 2007 briefing for Bush on "Plots Discovered as a Result of EITs," the CIA said it "learned" about the Second Wave and al-Ghuraba "after applying the waterboard along with interrogation techniques." But the Senate report says the plot was disrupted by a series of arrests and interrogations that had nothing to do with the CIA program.


Even the hunt for bin Laden was accompanied by exaggerations of the role of brutal interrogation techniques, according to the report. In particular, the committee found that the interrogations played no meaningful role in the identification of a courier, Abu Ahmad al-Kuwaiti, who would lead the agency to bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.


The identification of al-Kuwaiti relied on pieces of intelligence from multiple sources, including a critical clue from a detainee captured in Iraq named Hassan Ghul.


Ghul's revelation came before he was subjected to harsh measures, according to the report. In an interview with the CIA inspector general's office, a CIA officer familiar with Ghul's case said that he "sang like a tweetie bird. He opened up right away and was cooperative from the outset."


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India suspends controversial U.S. taxi contractor, Uber, after driver sexually assaults female passenger


© Hindustan Times/Getty Images

A candlelit vigil during a New Delhi protest against the rape of a female taxi passenger.



India ordered state governments to halt the operations of all unregistered, web-based taxi companies on Tuesday after a female passenger reported she was raped in New Delhi by a driver contracted to U.S. cab company Uber.

The case has caused uproar in India after it emerged that the suspect had previously been charged for rape but had obtained a character reference signed by a police officer that was forged.


It has also revealed a failure to regulate the booming market for app-based taxi services in India. The Delhi transport department said it ordered Uber to cease operations on Monday by post.


[embedded content]




"Such service providers which are not licensed ... are prohibited to operate till they get themselves registered," Home Minister Rajnath Singh told parliament, where several lawmakers grilled him over the lack of women's safety in the capital.

"The Delhi Police is also exploring the issue of possible legal liability of the taxi service Uber in the crime committed," he said.


Singh's comments came after New Delhi's transport division banned Uber and other similar web-based taxi providers that are unregistered. A public notice on Tuesday stated only six radio taxi companies will operate in New Delhi.


Piling pressure on Uber, Thai transport authorities on Tuesday ordered the company to cease operations.


Thailand's Department of Land Transport said drivers picking up fare-paying passengers via Uber were neither registered nor insured to drive commercial vehicles, and that Uber's credit-card payment system did not comply with regulations.


Taxi booking apps have irked drivers at traditional taxi firms across the globe. Consumers are increasingly using the smartphone software to find people willing to drive them, rather than booking a cab by phone.


Uber was blacklisted in New Delhi on Monday after police said it had failed to run background checks on the driver, who was held three years ago on suspicion of rape but later acquitted.


The arrested driver, Shiv Kumar Yadav, appeared in court on Monday and was remanded in custody for three days. Yadav had obtained a reference from the Delhi Police, but the deputy commissioner of police for north Delhi Madhur Verma told Reuters it was forged.


Verma also said the police has registered "a case against Uber for cheating its customers and violating government orders".


The Uber case has reignited a debate about the safety of women in Asia's third-largest economy, especially New Delhi, which is often dubbed India's rape capital.


In 2012, a fatal gang rape of a young woman taking public transport in the city led to nationwide protests and forced the government to enact new laws imposing stricter penalties and formation of fast-track courts.


Uber was valued at $40 billion last week after its latest funding round ahead of an expected initial public offering. In India, Uber's second-largest market after the United States by number of cities covered, the company has been operating in 11 cities.


India's central bank had earlier rapped Uber for violating the country's credit card payment system by using a so-called one-step authorization process while the regulator requires a two-step procedure. Uber later complied, calling the requirement "unnecessary and burdensome".


The U.S. company has also been dogged by controversy surrounding its aggressive approach to local governments and traditional taxi services.


On Monday, the U.S. West Coast city of Portland sued Uber to bar it from operating in the city. The company started operating in Portland on Friday without consent from authorities or any agreement over how it would be regulated.


UBER STILL ON


A representative for Uber said the company had not been officially notified of any ban in New Delhi and would issue a statement later on Tuesday. It was still possible to hail an Uber taxi in Delhi using the company's smartphone application.


Uber driver Satish Kumar, who has been associated with the company for 11 months, told Reuters he works for another travel company that is enrolled with Uber. He was unaware of the ban.


"We will only consider a ban once our app stops working," said Kumar, whose company pays 20 percent of the fare to Uber.


"If it is banned, we will suffer losses. It is up to the authorities to do the checks. Why blame the company and make others suffer?" he asked.


Before joining Uber, Kumar said he was trained for two days on basic etiquette and using the mobile app. He only submitted a copy of his driving license and identity card to the company. He was not interviewed.


Uber taxis were also violating norms by plying within the city despite having an all-India tourist permit that mandates only inter-state travel, a government official said.


"They have not made any efforts to get themselves registered. They have just tried to use the loopholes in the system to run a service and gain commercially," said a Delhi transport department official on condition of anonymity.


Uber didn't immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.


SOTT EXCLUSIVE: 'Shut your trap, Frau Merkel!' EU walls are cracking



© Burki (24 Heures)



In her bid for reelection as leader of the Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel was interviewed by on Dec. 7, 2014. In that interview she once again condemns Russia:

In an interview with , Merkel reproached Russian President Vladimir Putin for standing in the way of East European countries that would like to join the EU or strengthen relations with it. Merkel said "Russia created difficulties" for Moldova, Georgia and Ukraine, which had "on their own sovereign decisions, signed association agreements with the EU."


Merkel told the center-right German daily's Sunday edition that "I am convinced that the collective European response to Russia is the right answer." The chancellor added that the fact "that Russia had broken its guarantees in the Budapest Memorandum of 1994 guaranteeing the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine must not be without consequences."



That interview probably did the trick as she was reelected with a staggering 97.7 percent for the eighth consecutive time.

More of her interview has sent ripples through the EU:



Merkel criticized fiscal policies in Italy and France after the two countries won more time from the EU to put their public finances in order. Deep divisions have emerged at the European Commission over how to handle the failures of France and Italy to bring their books in order, with German officials preaching harsh austerity and leading the call for the two to meet their commitments.


The Commission had "drawn up a calendar according to which France and Italy are due to present additional measures," Merkel said. "That's justified because both countries are in the process of carrying out reforms," she added. "But the Commission has also said in a clear manner that what is on the table to date is still insufficient," she said. "That's something that I agree with."


Last month, the EU gave France, Italy and Belgium three extra months to fix their budgets. The Commission, the EU's executive arm, singled out France for special criticism, citing its "limited progress" in reducing fiscal red ink. The country's deficit could top 4 percent of GDP in 2015, above the EU-allowed ceiling of 3 percent.



Ooh la la, France was not happy with Merkel! The French MEP, Jean-Luc Melanchon, Tweeted his displeasure: 'Shut your trap, Frau Merkel! France is free.' He further told the 'frau' (woman) to concentrate instead on her own country's poverty and crumbling infrastructure:



France's Finance Minister condemned Melanchon's Tweet:

Michel Sapin called Mélenchon's words "rude, insulting and stupid" and said that Germany's concerns about delayed financial reforms in a number of EU members are understandable, as countries promise to carry out necessary transformations and then don't stick to their obligations.


"Germany is in a better position now because of the reforms it did a decade ago," Sapin said, cited by Reuters. According to him, the budget deficit of France will be reduced to 4.1% in 2015, in comparison to a previous target of 4,4% thanks to additional savings, which France announced last week, Reuters reports.



He further made remarks supporting France's initiatives and rejecting Merkel's assessment:

"We are making reforms in France not to please one European leader or another, but because they are necessary for France," Sapin said in response to questions on French television.


He said Germany had its own problems, from crumbling roads to a low birth rate.


"In Germany the population is decreasing every year," Sapin said. "In 10 or 20 years because of this we will be in a better position. Germany is in a better position now because of the reforms it did a decade ago."



Italy also wasn't happy with Frau Merkel. The undersecretary for EU affairs Sandro Gozistating stated:

"The Italian government has never permitted itself to hand out marks to a European Union member country and we ask Germany for the same respect," he said, adding that Germany has outstanding contributions to the European cause, such as investing more and fixing the balance-of-payment imbalances, that "Europe has been waiting on Berlin to make for a long time, and which so far has not happened."



But Germany's finance minister, Wolfgang Shauble, had a more praising tone with regard to France and Italy's recent activities in that sector:

"If you look at the news and what has been done in the countries over the past weeks, then you see that Italy, for example, has passed a remarkable reform to its labor market in its legislative assemblies, and France has been taking additional measures all the time."



Merkel has also been accused of being an "American puppet" by Germany's Deputy Head of the Bundestag, Sahra Wagenknecht:

"Ms. Merkel, there is something that you consider to be more important than the interests of German business: that is the interests of the American government and American business."



As we can see, all is not well in the EU with sparks flying everywhere and cracks beginning to form. Bear in mind that Germany and France are the core of the EU.

There doesn't seem to be a consensus in the EU on how do deal with the economy, let alone how to respond to Russia. And Hollande just had a short visit with Putin in Russia where Putin seemed to be "all smiles". So not only is the EU having troubles, NATO seems to be having some rifts opening amongst its allies as well.


Is a major shift in Europe about to be born? Only time will tell.




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William Barbe (Profile)


William joined the SOTT news team in 2014. A 30-year veteran of the semiconductor industry, in 2007 he began being interested and paying more attention to world events and living a healthier lifestyle. Hobbies and interests include hiking, photography and reading non-fiction books on history, economics, psychology, science, unexplained anomalies and politics.