2015年4月1日 星期三

WEEK4

TransAsia plane crashes into Taipei river



A TransAsia Airways flight with 58 on board, including five crew members, crash landed in a river in Taipei, Taiwan, on Wednesday.
Twenty people have yet to be accounted for and at least 23 people were killed, Reuters said, after the ATR-72 turboprop crashed three minutes after take off at 10:45 a.m. local time. The plane was en route from Taipei's Songshan Airport to the outlying island of Kinmen.
Television footage showed passengers wearing life jackets wading and swimming clear of the river. Emergency rescue officials in inflatable boats crowded around the partially submerged fuselage Flight GE235, lying on its side in the river, trying to help those on board.
About 16 people were rescued, civil aeronautics authorities told a media briefing. Some 31 mainland Chinese tourists were among those on board, Taiwan's tourism bureau said.
Dramatic images captured by motorists have been circulating on Twitter, showing the plane as it impacted the Keelung River.
TransAsia stock fell 7 percent Wednesday, hitting limit-down, on the news. The plane involved in Wednesday's mishap was among the first of the ATR 72-600s, the latest variant of the turboprop aircraft, that TransAsia received in 2014.
The crash is the second for TransAsia in less than a year. Last July, a separate TransAsia domestic flight crashed into buildings as it approached to land in bad weather at the Magong Airport at Penghu Island in Taiwan, killing 48 of the 58 on board.
Asian airlines have been plagued by a string of tragedies in the past year. In December, an AirAsia jet bound for Surabaya to Singapore crashed amid bad weather, killing all 162 people on board. Malaysia Airlines also lost two planes in separate incidents in March and then in July, losing a combined 539 lives.
— Reuters contributed to the story.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/102395047
 Structure of the Lead:
   WHO-people
   WHEN- 4 Feb 2015
   WHAT-plane cash
   WHY-many factors
   WHERE-Taipei
   HOW-plane problems

Keywords
   1. footage:畫面
   2.circulating  :流傳
   3. a string of :一連串
   4. inflatable boats :充汽艇
   5.Dramatic :戲劇性的




2015年3月11日 星期三

WEEK3

Paris attacks: Four arrests linked to gunman Coulibaly

9 March 2015 Last updated at 18:30

French police have detained four people over the Islamist attacks in Paris on a satirical magazine and a Jewish supermarket in which 17 people died.
A woman police officer and three others are believed to have had connections with Amedy Coulibaly, who was killed by police during the supermarket siege.
A suspect named as Amar has been in custody since January on drugs charges.
But investigators have used his phone data to place him not far from the supermarket just before the attack.
They think that Amar, said to have been close to Coulibaly, may have been watching the target.
All four suspects were placed under formal investigation on Monday.
Amar's girlfriend, a convert to Islam, is a policewoman who worked at a police intelligence centre in the Parisian suburbs.
She is believed to have looked at Amar's police file after the January attack and sent it on to him.
She has now been suspended.
Two other people known to Coulibaly are also being questioned by police.
So far, six other people are under judicial investigation under suspicion of providing help to Coulibaly and Said and Cherif Kouachi, the BBC's Hugh Schofield reports from Paris.
The French capital was traumatised by the attacks, which began on 7 January when the Kouachi brothers killed 12 people at the offices of Charlie Hebdo magazine.
Coulibaly shot dead a policewoman in the south of Paris the following day and on 9 January attacked the supermarket, killing four people before police shot him dead.
Police also besieged and killed the two brothers
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-31803331
 Structure of the Lead:
   WHO-people
   WHEN-9 March 2015
   WHAT-attack
   WHY-Religion
   WHERE-Paris
   HOW-attack

Keywords
   1.  suspend:暫停
   2. Islam:伊斯蘭
   3.  custody:保管
   4.  investigator:研究者
   5.besieged :圍攻




2015年3月9日 星期一

week2

In Brooklyn, Spotlight Recedes From Site of Fatal Ambush of 2 Officers

By VIVIAN YEEJAN

For years, the stretch of curb outside the back door of Mike’s Pizza, on the corner of Myrtle and Tompkins Avenues in Brooklyn, belonged, unofficially, to a man known to neighbors as Mr. Wallace. They knew he always parked his Cadillac there to keep his walk home to the Tompkins Houses across the street short.
For a few weeks in December, the gray curb became known beyond New York. It was where a man fatally shot two police officers as they sat in their patrol car on the Saturday before Christmas. It was where a field of bouquets, police patches, teddy bears, candles, holiday wreaths, signs, flags, bunting, menorahs and T-shirts with defiant slogans had flowered. It was an ordinary city corner that found itself the epicenter of an urban tragedy.
About two weeks ago, the Police Department carted the memorial away. It gave some of the tributes to the families of the slain officers, Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos, and added others to the memorial at the officers’ station house in Downtown Brooklyn.
The intervening days have sanded down the reminders of what happened at that concrete and metal corner in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood, the better for the business of living to resume.
The investigators and the out-of-town mourners, the mayor and the grieving families are no longer outside, spilling into the Myrt 99-cent store for fresh candles. They have receded to images on the TV playing Channel 12 in Mike’s Pizza. In recent days, the TV has shown memorials for a more recent tragedy, for the attack on Charlie Hebdo in Paris.
Those who live and work in the area prefer it that way, the city’s troubles kept at a remove. They are tired of being asked to make sense of a senseless act.
“Whatever happened out there, happened out there,” said Bernadette Cruz, 35, behind the counter at Mike’s one recent afternoon. “It didn’t happen in here.”
And so the traffic light changes. The B54 bus wheezes. People pass, with phones pressed to their ears, with children in tow, with groceries, smoking cigarettes. The doors of the bodega and the Chinese takeout place and the pizza joint swing close, behind successive waves of customers looking for sustenance, or maybe just for a chance to loiter in the warmth: the breakfast crowd, the lunch crowd, the families with little children and the teenagers who come by after school.
Above the bustle, a little, green sign clings to the traffic signal pole: Fallen Officers Way, it read.
Drips of blue, red and yellow wax from spilled candles blacken under a steady march of soles. The brick wall of Mike’s is bare except for a small American flag, taped above the cellar doors.
Just as well, a few of those who live around here say. They do not need a memorial to remember.
“I’ve seen it go from where Mr. Wallace used to park to where two police officers lost their lives for frivolous — I don’t know. This had no meaning,” said Kyson Hawkes, 27, who saw the gunman, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, shoot the officers and run away on Dec. 20. “There was no reason.”
Mr. Wallace, once Mr. Hawkes’s neighbor in the Tompkins Houses across the street, is long gone. Now the most regular visitor to the curb is Richard Clifford, 44, of FreeportN.Y., who delivers mozzarella and flour to Mike’s. He is parking his truck there again, instead of across the street like he had to when police officers blocked off a large swath of sidewalk for the memorial. Part of the street was closed too, until early January, prompting complaints from some residents.
Mr. Clifford’s grandfather was one of two black men killed by a police officer at the Freeport bus terminal in 1946, he said, as he taped a box of flour he had cut open by mistake. “It’s still the same,” he said, “from the ’40s to now.”
But inside the bodegas and the 99-cent store and the pizza joint, the proprietors mostly look away when you ask them about the shots that rang out that Saturday before Christmas, setting aflame tensions between Mayor Bill de Blasio and rank-and-file police officers.


 Structure of the Lead
   WHO-people
   WHEN-. 23, 2015
   WHAT-Racial discrimination
   WHY-shot
   WHERE-not given
   HOW-protesters gathered in Midtown Manhattan 

Keywords
   1.  tributes:物資
   2. concrete:混凝土的
   3. bodega :酒店
   4. loiter:閒逛
   5. linger:徘迴;縈繞

2015年2月25日 星期三

week1

AirAsia crash: 'Co-pilot was flying plane'
29 January 2015 Last updated at 12:48
The AirAsia plane that crashed into the Java Sea on 28 December was under the control of its co-pilot when it went down, Indonesian investigators say.
The flight data recorder, retrieved along with the cockpit voice recorder earlier this month, showed Frenchman Remi Plesel was at the controls.
Officials said it was common practice for the co-pilot to take charge.
The plane was carrying 162 people from Surabaya to Singapore when it crashed. So far, 73 bodies have been recovered.
Mardjono Siswosuwarno, head investigator of Indonesia's National Transportation Safety Committee (NTSB), said the flight data recorder had provided a "pretty clear picture" of what happened in the flight's last moments.
Capt Plesel was in charge from take-off until the cockpit voice recording ends, he said, adding that this was common practice.
Investigators said the plane ascended sharply before dropping, rising from 32,000ft (9,750m) to 37,400ft within 30 seconds, then dipping back to 32,000ft. The process took about three mMr Mardjono said the plane was "flying before the incident within the limits of its weight and balance envelope" and that the flight crew all had correct licences and medical certificates.
A preliminary report has been submitted to the International Civil Aviation Organization, but has not been made public. The full report is likely to take about seven months, said the committee's chief Tatang Kurniadi.
Earlier this week, the military announced it was stopping attempts to retrieve the fuselage from the seabed. Authorities had believed earlier that most of the missing bodies were still in the wreckage but now believe it is empty and too fragile to move.
The civilian National Search and Rescue Agency said on Wednesday that it would continue search operations but their efforts could also end by next week if no more bodies are found.
AirAsia announced on Thursday that a total of 73 bodies have been recovered from the sea. In the past two days, local fishermen found the remains of three bodies believed to be from the crashed airliner.
BBC Indonesian reported that the remains were found some 1,000km from where the plane was last in contact.inutes.

Structure of the Lead:
   WHO-people
   WHEN-January 2015
   WHAT-plane crash
   WHY- not given
   WHERE-Indonesia
   HOW-air crash

Keywords:
   1. Co-pilot :副駕駛
    2. Indonesia:印尼
   3. Java Sea爪哇海
   4. AirAsia:亞航
   5. preliminary:初步的

2014年12月24日 星期三

WEEK7

Rewind 2014: Ottawa shooting grips nation amid terrorism concerns

Showwei Chu
There are still visible reminders of the terror that gripped the nation’s capital on Oct. 22, and much debate about what motivated the gunman to kill a reservist and storm Parliament Hill.
“You can still see the bullet holes in the stone walls,” says CityNews political correspondent Cormac MacSweeney, who was caught in the mayhem that morning.
The bullet marks in MacSweeney’s chair and the other ones in the wood doors leading to the NDP and Conservative caucus rooms are stark reminders of just how close the gunman got to MPs and staff.
The attack began at 9:50 a.m. that Wednesday at the National War Museum, just steps from Parliament. The gunman fired two shots at Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, 24, killing the ceremonial honour guard from behind, while another bullet narrowly missed the second reservist standing by the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
Security footage showed Michael Zehaf Bibeau, 32, moments later pulling up to the front of Centre Block in a stolen car and running toward the entrance armed with a rifle.
Video taken by a Globe and Mail reporter captured the thunderous gunfire exchange of at least 30 shots that erupted between Zehaf Bibeau, security guards and Mounties before he was killed. House Sergeant-at-Arms Kevin Vickers was credited with delivering the fatal shots that brought Zehaf Bibeau down.
The shooting put the Hill and downtown Ottawa in lockdown for much of the day as police tried to determine if there were other gunmen on the loose.
The attack came just two days after two Canadian soldiers were run over — one of them fatally — in a suburb southeast of Montreal by a radicalized man with jihadist sympathies. He was killed later that same day by police.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper — who hid in a small closet in the Conservative caucus meeting room before being ushered to safety — emerged later that Wednesday evening to address the nation on TV, calling the Ottawa shooter a terrorist and saying the shootout on the Hill was an attack on all Canadians.
Harper said the tragic incident would strengthen Canada’s resolve to track down would-be terrorists at home and help Canada’s international allies rout terrorists in Iraq.
“This week’s events are a grim reminder that Canada is not immune to the types of terrorist attacks we have seen elsewhere around the world,” he said.
But another picture of the shooter emerged as the nation mourned and paid their respects to Cirillo whose casket would make its way down the Highway of Heroes bound for his hometown of Hamilton where he was laid to rest.
The day after the shooting, the RCMP commissioner said Zehaf Bibeau, who was a Canadian citizen with a lengthy drug and criminal record, had acted alone and that police had no information linking him to the attack near Montreal.

Bibeau had been in Ottawa since Oct. 2 to deal with a passport issue. Reports say he had hoped to go to Syria.
In another update, Paulson said Zehaf Bibeau made a video of himself prior to the shooting and that there was “persuasive evidence” the attack was driven by “ideological and political motives.”
That revelation came hours after a published report in which Zehaf Bibeau’s mother said her son acted in despair and expressed doubt he was radicalized.
In a letter published by Postmedia News, Susan Bibeau painted a picture of her son as an “unhappy person at odds with the world” and mentally unbalanced in his final days.
Two months later, security on the Hill has been beefed up with additional monitoring inside and outside the buildings. Public tours of Parliament on Wednesdays have been suspended. And MPs and staff have been going through a tough adjustment, CityNews political correspondent MacSweeney says.
“They didn’t realize the security threat that Parliament could face,” he  says. “A lot of people had to get therapy and counselling to try to come to terms with it.”
The separate investigations by Ottawa police, the RCMP and House security have yet to be completed. And there is still debate about how many bullets were exchanged, who delivered the fatal shot and whether it was a terrorist attack as Harper first claimed.
NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair believes Zehaf Bibeau was a criminal with a history of mental illness. His comments in the House were met with condemnation from the Conservatives and the Liberals, who believe they were acts of terrorism.
The issue could be settled with the release of the gunman’s video. The RCMP initially said it would be made public but later said a partial transcript could be disclosed.
With files from The Canadian Press

Structure of the Lead
   WHO-people
   WHEN-Dec 24
   WHAT- shooting
   WHY-many factors 
   WHERE-Ottawa
   HOW-many ways


Keywords
1.-Ottawa 渥太華
2.  terrorism  恐怖主義
3. bullet 子彈
4. security 安全
5. Parliament  國會









2014年12月17日 星期三

week 6

Scottish referendum: Scotland votes 'No' to independence

19 September 2014 Last updated at 14:51


Scotland has voted to stay in the United Kingdom after voters decisively rejected independence.Scottish referendum results in detail

The prime minister also acknowledged that the people of England, Wales and Northern Ireland must have a bigger say over their affairs.
And he promised a solution to the West Lothian question - the fact that Scottish MPs can vote on English issues at Westminster, and not the other way round.
With the results in from all 32 council areas, the "No" side won with 2,001,926 votes over 1,617,989 for "Yes".
Scotland's First Minister Alex Salmond called for unity and urged the unionist parties to deliver on more powers.
Prime Minister David Cameron said he was delighted the UK would remain together and that commitments on extra powers would be honoured "in full".
Mr Cameron said the three main unionist parties at Westminster would now follow through with their pledge of more powers for the Scottish Parliament.
He announced that Lord Smith of Kelvin, who led Glasgow's staging of the Commonwealth Games, would oversee the process to take forward the commitments, with new powers over tax, spending and welfare to be agreed by November, and draft legislation published by January.

Scottish referendum results in detail
The prime minister also acknowledged that the people of England, Wales and Northern Ireland must have a bigger say over their affairs.
And he promised a solution to the West Lothian question - the fact that Scottish MPs can vote on English issues at Westminster, and not the other way round.


Structure of the Lead
   WHO-people
   WHEN-19 September
   WHAT- Scotland referendum
   WHY-want to independence
   WHEREScotland
   HOW-vote


Keywords
1.-Scotland   愛爾蘭
2.  independence  獨立
3. decisively 果斷地
4. delighted 高興的

2014年12月10日 星期三

week5

Dozens dead as Taiwan gas explosions tear up streets

(CNN) -- A downtown district of the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung was ripped apart just before midnight Thursday by a series of explosions that killed at least 26 people and injured hundreds more, state news agency CNA reported.

The blasts, which were triggered by underground gas leaks, tore trenches through main roads, overturned cars and trucks, and sent flames leaping into the air in the city's Cianjhen district.

Witnesses said they saw vehicles flung into the air by the force of the explosions; one car was found on the roof of a three-story building.

Zong Han-Li was driving when the explosion happened directly in front of him, and his dashboard camera caught the moment the gas ignited.

Two people were blown to the roof of a four-story building, where emergency workers found them and took them to the hospital, CNA reported.

Firefighters from neighboring cities rushed to Kaohsiung to help battle several fires, which had been mostly contained by Friday morning.

At least 26 people were killed, including four firefighters. Twenty-two emergency workers were among 267 people injured, officials said. A number of people were still missing, including a senior fire official who went to investigate reports of a gas leak.

As daylight broke, the extent of the damage became clear, with wrecked cars and motorcycles strewn across the cratered streets.

Dave Flynn, an English expatriate who has lived in the city for several years, visited the site of the explosions Friday morning. He said a huge trench had been gouged along the length of a main thoroughfare for several kilometers, and the pavement had been thrown to the side of the road, damaging vehicles.

Schools and offices in the Cianjhen district, as well as in the neighboring Lingya district, were closed Friday to facilitate rescue efforts, Mayor Chen Chu said. Several schools and a cultural center are being used as emergency shelters.

Authorities suspect ethylene, propane or butane in the explosions. There are several petrochemical factories in the region.

The government called up hundreds of soldiers to assist in search and rescue efforts.

Structure of the Lead
   WHO-people
   WHEN-7/31
   WHAT-Gas explosion
   WHY- many factors
   WHERE-Taiwan
    HOW- many factors


Keywords

   1.dashboard 擋泥板   2. ethylene乙烯   3. emergency shelters. 緊急避難所