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Showing posts with label inside. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inside. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Just inside Syria, refugees from embattled town huddle in makeshift camp (The Christian Science Monitor)

Khirbet al-Jouz, Syria – Syrian tanks and military hardware continued their advance across northwestern Syria on Tuesday, pushing more refugees into Turkey – and more into a bleak makeshift camp just inside Syria.

Heavy rain poured overnight on the hundreds of Syrians huddled under plastic sheeting strung up between green plum trees, their mud-caked shoes set carefully at the edge of sodden blankets.

As the clouds break, one man stands beside a 10-year-old girl in a pink jacket, Sanaa.

a€?My daughter, she went out in a demonstration and just because she said the word freedom, she has given herself a death sentence,a€

His two sons are in Lebanon and can’t return, because their identity cards list their place of birth: the contested town of Jisr al-Shughur. If they show them at the border, the father says, “right away they would be detained, dead.”

RECOMMENDED: 'Syrian Army deserter: We were ordered to shoot on the people'

Forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad appear to be brutally asserting control over rebellious regions, even as pressure mounts on Syria to stop the carnage.

Today, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan lectured the Syrian leader in a phone call to begin reforms.

'Is this acceptable to anybody in this world?'In this encampment, a haphazard patchwork of blue and white tarpaulins in the shadow of a towering Turkish border post, there are more questions than answers.

“Why is our president killing us? [Why] is he bringing us to this war?” asks an English literature graduate who uses the pseudonym Nour.

Jammed into a minivan with more than a dozen other women and children, the 22-year-old woman, pregnant and wearing a head scarf, gives voice to the anger and fear that many Syrians today reserve only for their dictator.

Nour’s hands shake when she speaks. She knows of killings in her city of Latakia – including a lawyer gunned down as he went to visit his sister.

“I know that God created human beings to live in this world in a liberal way,” says Nour. “Why does only one man want to control all these people in Syria? More [than] 20 million people. Why?”

“Our president kills us … and forces us to leave our country and live in camps. Is it acceptable according to anybody in this world?” she adds.

Following the smugglers' routeThis patch of northwest Syria has become the focal point of the 12-week rebellion against Mr. Assad and his family’s 40-year rule in Syria.

But little has been heard from the Syrians most affected. Turkish authorities are physically preventing outsiders from speaking with Syrians who are crossing the border at a rate of more than 1,000 each day.

To circumvent those restrictions, a few Western journalists have followed steep smuggler trails past the Turkish military. Through a gap in a fence, they cross into Syria and follow another set of trails – strewn in places with debris from departing refugees – to get to this camp.

Turkish soldiers at one point shouted orders at this correspondent’s group to stop on Tuesday, but were too far away to stop them from running away.

Half a dozen Syrian and Turkish men carrying fresh loaves of bread and new tarps from Turkey were already being stopped and forced to the ground by those soldiers – a common occurrence, the refugees say, during the daily flow of aid.

Waiting for familyThe hundreds at this place are among thousands who are believed to have left their homes but reluctant to cross into Turkey. They are waiting for more family, want to keep an eye on homes and livestock, or don’t want to get trapped in Turkey’s well-made but isolated refugee camps.

So life has ground on for those choosing to be just a few steps from safety. Drinking water is drawn from a well – or gathered from rain in buckets – though dishes are washed and bowels emptied beside a single stream.

In one steaming canvas tent that grows hot when rain gives way to fierce afternoon sun, a pharmacist from Jisr al-Shughur has arranged most of the wares from his shop.

It is an impressive array, supplemented with two sets of donations from Turkey, but not enough. A child screams as Mohammed Meeri gives him a shot for a stomach problem.

The pharmacist admits that anything he provides is a stop-gap only, little more than “psychological medicine.”

'A place I don't even want to call my homeland'No one is ready to stay in this camp for long, where vehicles and tractors and wagons have all been doubling as shelter. One woman brings a broad tray of food for a circle of men; in her wagon, a cluster of kids cavort behind canvas.

Abu Saef, who carries a rifle to kill wild animals on his farm, laments "a rapist, murdering regime that believes it is the only ruler."

“More people are going to come, but if the Army comes, we’ve got God and Turkey only,” he says.

That won’t happen, thanks to the proximity of the Turkish military, which patrols the border road adjacent to the camp, on the other side of a low line of trees and foliage. Turkish soldiers on Tuesday looked into the encampment from the high turrets of their armored personnel carriers, which stopped from time to time.

“I don’t think the military will come this close to the border in tanks, but will use their vehicles to clear all villages,” says Musa, who returned 10 days ago from a construction job in Lebanon to his home town of Jisr al-Shughur, 12 miles away.

He watched the military advance, “creeping through the fields” three days ago to reclaim control of the town. Today, his shoes are soiled with mud and his right wrist scratched.

“I regret ever coming back to a place I don’t even want to call my homeland,” says Musa.

One man who asked not to be named used to go to demonstrations, then had to flee.

“The security in the area – they're not used to demonstrations,” he says. “They don't fire tear gas, they fire live bullets. That's all they have and know.”

Those who took part were deliberately targeted, says the 30-year-old. Agents watched from street corners and filmed the demonstrations.

A common refrain in the camp is that President Assad behaves as if he were a god, to be worshiped. And obedience alone is prized.

“When the Syrian Army says the people of one town are asking for ‘security,’ you can be sure it will be finished,” says one refugee from Jisr al-Shughur called Mohammed, his white baseball cap out of place in this frontier orchard.

“We didn’t love him, and we want him to go,” says Mohammed. “He stays for 40 years, he and his father. We want change now. And we will stay here for 40 years more, until he goes. Maybe he will make his son president in the future – it’s a bad dream for us.”

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Yahoo! News

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Intel's 'Hybrid Cloud' Is a Cloud Server Inside Your Office (PC Magazine)

On Tuesday, Intel announced a cloud-based hosted applications service that actually runs on a local, on-premises server to protect data.

Formally, Intel's initiative is known as the AppUp Small Business Service, running on the Intel Hybrid Cloud. It's a fancy name for a small server that a small business can keep in its office, with applications that would otherwise be hosted in the cloud as a service, or else running locally on an individual PC.

The key, however, is that it allows customers to store their data locally, while taking advantage of some of the pricing cloud-based services offer. "Having their data on premise is absolutely the advantage," for SMBs, said Bridget Karlin, general manager of the Intel Hybrid Cloud.

How does it work?

Small businesses can't buy the service directly from Intel. Instead, managed service providers will need to register at IntelHybridCloud and then start offering the solutions to their customers. SMBs wll then sign up for a three-year lease with the MSP.

The hardware will be installed on site. Users will be able to access the apps as they would from a true off-site cloud, with the pay-per-use pricing. But data will be stored locally, providing additional security for healthcare providers and others concerned about their data being exposed in an offsite cloud.

The requests and software transactions will be handled by Intel, via its cloud server manager middleware.

Lenovo and white-box OEMs will be manufacturing the first servers, based on a one-socket Xeon design that Intel developed. This summer, Acer and NEC will take part, with two-socket servers added to the mix. The hardware runs the Intel hybrid cloud server manager, on top of which will sit the AppUp small business service catalog, a collection of apps from Microsoft, Intuit, Symantec, Vembu, and others, optimized and priced for small business on a pay-per-use basis.

"This is something new, with options that we haven't seen in the marketplace yet," said Boyd Davis, general manager of the Intel Server Group.

For a small business, there are two benefits: the security of on-premise data, and the lower cost that pay-per-use software can entail, which will be spread over months of use, rather than a one-time up-front fee. Davis said that Intel encourages customers to buy their own infrastructure and install packaged apps, but that it might not be cheaper over the long haul. He described what Intel is doing - taking packaged apps, and distributing them on a pay-per-use model, "as kind of a unique offering".

Users could pay as little as a "few dollars per month," Karlin said, although the total cost will depend on the number of applications and users.

Software providers will be able to offer solutions like ERP, security, and backup as a service, Intel executives said. The Intel AppUp Small Business Service features a mix of local and cloud software with an Intel Xeon-based server that comes pre-loaded with tools for remote management, firewall, VoIP/PBX and backup, app vendors added.

Applications vendors can apply for approval and appear on the site in about a week's time, Karlin said.


Yahoo! News


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Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Secret memo suggests FBI had a mole inside ABC News in 1990s

SharePrintBy Michael Winter, USA TODAYComment

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Update at 5:56 p.m. ET: Gawker claims it knows who the mole was: Christopher Isham, now the Washington bureau chief for CBS News and a network vice president. He declined to comment, and a CBS spokeswoman said, "This is a matter for ABC News."

Read Gawker's report to see how it deduced the informant's ID -- and how CBS responded to the initial report.

By Douglas Stanglin
USA TODAY

Original post: A once-secret memo shows that the FBI treated a senior ABC News journalist as a potential confidential informant in the 1990s, beginning with information the reporter supplied at the time of the Oklahoma City bombing, The Center for Public Integrity reports.

The journalist's name is not disclosed in the document, which is labeled "secret."

But it shows that the journalist not only cooperated with the FBI in the 1995-96 period, but provided the bureau with the identity of a confidential source in what the center calls a possible breach of journalist ethics.

The center quotes one journalism professor as saying that the fact that the journalist was given an informant number and had contributed information in the past indicates he or she was sharing the information in the public good.

ABC News tells CPI that it is not certain about the identity of the journalist, but does not believe he or she still works for the network.

Spokesman Jeffrey Schneider tells the center, however, that the FBI description of its interactions with the reporter raises serious concerns about intrusions on the First Amendment.

The memo was recently discovered by a Utah lawyer who found it -- unredacted and still marked 'secret' -- in a box of documents gathered by attorneys for Terry Nichols, a defendant in the Oklahoma City bombings.

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