A young boy is comforted outside Sandy Hook Elementary School after a shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, December 14, 2012 (Reuters / Michelle McLoughlin)Dec. 14, 13:15 ET: A federal law enforcement official says the dead gunman was a 20-year-old local carrying two handguns.Dec. 14, 13:15 ET: As many as 18 children, up to 8 adults are dead in the Connecticut shooting – NBC News.Dec. 14, 13:11 ET: An entire classroom of students remains unaccounted for, reports the AP citing local sources.Dec. 14, 13:10 ET: “At least 100 rounds” being fired could be heard, a witness who was inside the school during the shooting tells CNN.Dec. 14, 13:09 ET: Two handguns have been recovered.Dec. 14, 13:08 ET:Photos from the scene show young students, some crying, others looking scared, being escorted by adults through a parking lot. The children were evacuated to a nearby firehouse where they could reunite with parents.Dec. 14, 13:01 ET: Reports suggest the gunman was the father of a student. Dec. 14, 12:59 ET: A gunman was shot to death by police. There are fears he might have had an accomplice.Dec. 14, 12:59 ET: Up to 18 children are among those killed, repo
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rts the Associated Press.Dec. 14, 12:53 ET: At least 27 people are dead, including several children, after a shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, outside of New York City. … Read More
Connecticut elementary school shooting: LIVE UPDATES
Painting with the dead: Holocaust victims’ ashes used in Swede’s painting
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Painting with the dead: Holocaust victims’ ashes used in Swede’s painting — RT
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Diary updated: Anne Frank’s Holocaust story remade for big screen, new info added
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Painting with the dead: Holocaust victims’ ashes used in Swede’s paintingGet short URL
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Published: 06 December, 2012, 21:14
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Police investigates burnt barracks of former Nazi death camp Majdanek in Lublin August 10, 2010.(Reuter / Agencja Gazeta)
It may be one of the most controversial artworks ever created. A Swedish artist has unveiled a painting he made using the ashes of Holocaust victims.
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The painting has been displayed in a Swedish art gallery. Artist Carl Michael von Hausswolff claims in a statement quoted on the Lund gallery’s website that he’d collected “some ashes from cremation ovens” during a visit to the Majdanek Nazi death camp in Poland in 1989, BBC reports.
The artist kept the ashes for years before deciding to mix it with water and create an artwork that would remind viewers of the horrors of genocide – “as if the ash contained energies or memories or ‘souls’ from people… people tortured, tormented and murdered by other people in one of the 20th Century’s most ruthless wars.” Hausswolff said the ashes were used to paint a series of grey strokes in the painting.
Officials from Majdanek, which today is a museum, believe there’s no way the artist could have come to possess the ashes legally. They expect local officials to establish whether the ashes of the genocide victims had been stolen and defaced. The artist’s alleged theft was dubbed an “unimaginably barbaric act,” and his artwork has been condemned as a result.
One of the leaders of Sweden’s Jewish community, Salomon Schulman, told Swedish television that the artwork was “repulsive in the extreme,” The Local website reports.
Soviet forces discovered Majdanek in Nazi-occupied Poland in 1944. About 80,000 people, most of them Jews, were murdered there.
Participants take part in the March of Life event at the Former Nazi Death Camp Majdanek in Lublin August 22, 2012.(Reuters / Agencja Gazeta)
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Dozens reported dead and wounded in car bomb blast in Homs, Syria
Dozens reported dead and wounded in car bomb blast in Homs, SyriaGet short URLLink copied to clipboardemail story to a friendprint versionPublished: 02 December, 2012, 15:52
Image from twitter user@ agrisarahAround 40 people are reported to be dead and injured in an explosion that rocked the Hamra district of Homs, Syria. The blasts happened near the Mosque of Omar and a nearby stadium.”);
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An activist has told Al Arabiya that there were two separate car bomb attacks.Ambulances are heading towards the scene of the blast, witnesses reported.There may have been refugee camps in the area, according to reports.Image from twitter user@alSibaai … Read More
At least 15 people dead and dozens wounded in car bomb blast in Homs, Syria
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At least 29 dead, scores injured in string of Iraq car bombings (PHOTOS)
At least 29 dead, scores injured in string of Iraq car bombings (PHOTOS)Get short URLLink copied to clipboardemail story to a friendprint versionPublished: 27 November, 2012, 21:08
TAGS:Conflict,
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Terrorism,
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Violence
A firefighter hoses down a destroyed vehicle at the site of a bomb attack in Kirkuk, some 250 kms (155 miles) north of Baghdad, November 27, 2012 (Reuters / Stringer)At least 29 people have been killed and 126 others wounded after eight car bombs hit Shiite and Kurdish areas across Iraq.In Baghdad, three blasts took the lives of at least 19 people and injured 72 others, an interior ministry official told AFP. Bombs went off almost simultaneously shortly after nightfall outside mosques in the Shulla, Sbaa-Abkar and Hurriya neighborhoods. Dozens of Shiites gathered there for the Day of Ashura, which marks the climax of the mourning for the martyrdom of Husayn ibn Ali, the grandson of Prophet Mohammad.“The scene was horrific, with people screaming for help. Such attacks bring back memories of the darkest days of sectarian strife that took place several years ago in Iraq,” an eyewitness told the Associated Press.Violence reigned in other sites in the country’s north leading to the deaths of several more people in various bombing and shooting incidents.No one has yet claimed responsibility for the attacks, but the use of car bombs indicate Sunni insurgents may be behind the violence, known for often carrying out attacks against Iraq’s Shiite majority. Other reports suggest al-Qaeda in Iraq might be behind the bombings.The attacks come a day after Iraq’s top security officials and Kurdistan’s regional government agreed to form committees to find a solution to the recent crisis over Kirkuk. Kirkuk, 290 km north of Baghdad, is home to a mix of Arabs, Kurds and Turkomen,
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who all have competing claims to the oil-rich area. The Kurds want to incorporate it into their self-ruled region in Iraq’s north, but Arabs and Turkomen are opposed. Ten days ago the tensions escalated to a full-scale stand-off between the Kurdish forces and the Iraqi army.On Monday, the office of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Maliki promised an end to the crisis as the parties to the conflict appear to have reached a deal to pull their forces back from Kirkuk and other disputed areas to previous positions.Security personnel inspect the site of a car bomb attack in Kirkuk, 250 kms (155 miles) north of Baghdad, November 27, 2012 (Reuters / Stringer)A firefighter hoses down a destroyed vehicle at the site of a bomb attack in Kirkuk, some 250 kms (155 miles) north of Baghdad, November 27, 2012 (Reuters / Stringer)”);
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The car bombs rocked the northern city of Kirkuk, as well as several sites inside and outside Baghdad. One of the three blasts in Kirkuk destroyed the local offices of the Kurdistan Democratic Party and all of them targeted two Kurdish residential areas in the center of the oil-rich city. Five people, including a Kurdish security guard, were killed and 58 others wounded, police sources told AP.A few minutes later, two bombs exploded in a market in the Sunni-dominated town of Hawija west of Kirkuk, killing two civilians and wounding five others. Five Iraqi army soldiers were also wounded when bombs were detonated near their houses in the nearby town of Tuz Khortmato.A Kurdish security officer stands guard next to the destroyed headquarters of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (PDK) after a bomb attack in Kirkuk, some 250 kms (155 miles) north of Baghdad, November 27, 2012 (Reuters / Stringer)In Baghdad, three blasts took the lives of at least 19 people and injured 72 others, an interior ministry official told AFP. Bombs went off almost simultaneously shortly after nightfall outside mosques in the Shulla, Sbaa-Abkar and Hurriya neighborhoods. Dozens of Shiites gathered there for the Day of Ashura, which marks the climax of the mourning for the martyrdom of Husayn ibn Ali, the grandson of Prophet Mohammad.“The scene was horrific, with people screaming for help. Such attacks bring back memories of the darkest days of sectarian strife that took place several years ago in Iraq,” an eyewitness told the Associated Press.Violence reigned in other sites in the country’s north leading to the deaths of several more people in various bombing and shooting incidents.No one has yet claimed responsibility for the attacks, but the use of car bombs indicate Sunni insurgents may be behind
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the violence, known for often carrying out attacks against Iraq’s Shiite majority. Other reports suggest al-Qaeda in Iraq might be behind the bombings.The attacks come a day after Iraq’s top security officials and Kurdistan’s regional government agreed to form committees to find a solution to the recent crisis over Kirkuk. Kirkuk, 290 km north of Baghdad, is home to a mix of Arabs, Kurds and Turkomen, who all have competing claims to the oil-rich area. The Kurds want to incorporate it into their self-ruled region in Iraq’s north, but Arabs and Turkomen are opposed. Ten days ago the tensions escalated to a full-scale stand-off between the Kurdish forces and the Iraqi army.On Monday, the office of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Maliki promised an end to the crisis as the parties to the conflict appear to have reached a deal to pull their forces back from Kirkuk and other disputed areas to previous positions.Security personnel inspect the site of a car bomb attack in Kirkuk, 250 kms (155 miles) north of Baghdad, November 27, 2012 (Reuters / Stringer)A firefighter hoses down a destroyed vehicle at the site of a bomb attack in Kirkuk, some 250 kms (155 miles) north of Baghdad, November 27, 2012 (Reuters / Stringer) … Read More





