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Powerful quake causes devastation in New Zealand
09/04 | 23:17 GMT

©AFP / Greg Wood
A damaged building is shown in New Zealand's second largest city Christchurch. New Zealand's most destructive earthquake in nearly 80 years caused two billion dollars' worth of damage Saturday, felling buildings, tearing up roads and sending terrified residents fleeing into the streets.

©AFP / Greg Wood
A damaged building is shown in New Zealand's second largest city Christchurch
CHRISTCHURCH (AFP) - New Zealand's most destructive earthquake in nearly 80 years caused two billion dollars' worth of damage Saturday, felling buildings, tearing up roads and sending terrified residents fleeing into the streets.
Officials said it was "extremely lucky" no one was killed when the 7.0 magnitude quake shook the country's second-largest city Christchurch just before dawn.
Frightened residents fled from their homes to find streets covered in rubble and glass, but despite the extent of the damage only two people were seriously injured in the city of 340,000 people.
A state of emergency was declared in Christchurch and a 7:00 pm to 7:00 am curfew imposed in the city centre as initial estimates put the damage at up to two billion dollars (1.44 billion US).
Facts: Quake among New Zealand's worst
Christchurch mayor Bob Parker said he was "horrified by the amount of damage" which daylight showed was considerably worse than first thought.
"There would not be a house, there would not be a family in our city that has not in some way have damage done to their person, to their property," Parker said on national radio.

©AFP/Geoscience Australia
A handout image from Geoscience Australia shows a map of New Zealand's South Island
"I think it's like an iceberg; there is... below the visible line, significant structural damage."
Few people were on the streets as the quake hit but building facades crashed to the ground, crushing parked cars and showering the roads with shattered glass, while gas and water electricity supplies were cut.
Residents were warned to stay away from damaged buildings for fear of further collapses as severe aftershocks continued to rock the city.
"I think we've been extremely lucky as a nation that there's been no fatalities... we're blessed actually," Civil Defence Minister John Carter said after being briefed on the impact of the quake, which he described as a "significant disaster".
Prime Minister John Key flew to the city to survey the scene and support residents, many of whom described the quake as a terrifying experience.
"We are not going to let Christchurch suffer this great tragedy on its own," Key said.
The quake, initially recorded at a magnitude of 7.4, struck at 4:35 am (1635 GMT Friday) at a depth of five kilometres (three miles), 45 kilometres west of Christchurch, the US Geological Survey said.

©AFP / Greg Wood
A motor bike rider passes a damaged building
"Oh my God. There is a row of shops completely demolished right in front of me," resident Colleen Simpson told the Stuff website, adding that many people had run out onto the streets in fear.
Christchurch Hospital spokeswoman Michele Hider said two men in their 50s were seriously injured -- one was hit by a falling chimney and the other was cut by falling glass.
Police closed the centre of the city as looters targeted damaged shops, and brought in 80 extra officers from Auckland to enforce the curfew.
"There's considerable damage there, and we've already had reports of looting. Shop windows are broken and obviously it's easy pickings for displays and things," police Inspector Mike Coleman said.
The military was also mobilised, with troops assisting the police security efforts and a Royal New Zealand Air Force Hercules plane bringing urban rescue specialists with sniffer dogs to comb wreckage for anyone trapped in the rubble.
Related article: City 'wobbles like jelly' in powerful quake
Two air force helicopters were also called in to help with damage assessment.
In the hours immediately after the quake, roads in the seaside suburbs were packed with cars as residents moved inland, but there was no tsunami.

©AFP / Greg Wood
A workman uses a hose near a water main exposed by a large hole
Kevin O'Hanlon, from the Mairehau area of Christchurch, said: "Just unbelievable. I was awake to go to work and then just heard this massive noise and, boom, it was like the house got hit. It just started shaking. I've never felt anything like it."
Mayor Parker said he was in bed when the quake struck and he was "absolutely scared. I've never felt anything like it and I've experienced, like most Kiwis, a number of good shakes."
The quake, felt throughout the South Island and the southern part of the North Island, was the most destructive in New Zealand since the 1931 tremor in Hawke's Bay that killed 256 people.
It caused the temporary shutdown of Christchurch International Airport, forcing the diversion of inbound international flights to Auckland and Wellington until the airport reopened Saturday afternoon.
New Zealand sits on the so-called "Ring of Fire", on the boundary of the Australian and Pacific tectonic plates, and experiences up to 15,000 tremors a year. It averages at least one a day that is magnitude 4.0 or stronger.
Meanwhile, as residents took stock of the quake damage they also had an eye on looming bad weather, with destructive gale-force winds of up to 130 kilometres (80 miles) an hour predicted to arrive on Sunday.
"Winds of that speed can be damaging and with many buildings extensively damaged (by the earthquake) it could cause a major headache for emergency services," a weather service spokesman said.
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Wozniacki and Sharapova set for US Open showdown
09/04 | 22:00 GMT

©AFP / Don Emmert
Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark salutes the crowd after defeating Chan Yung-Jan of Taiwan in the third round of the US Open tennis tournament at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York. Wozniacki defeated Chan of Taiwan 6-1, 6-0.

©AFP / Don Emmert
Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark
NEW YORK (AFP) - Top seed Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark will play former champion Maria Sharapova of Russia in the fourth round of the US Open after both scored runaway straight set victories on Saturday.
Wozniacki defeated Chan Yung-Jan of Taiwan 6-1, 6-0 and has lost just three games in her three outings to date - the least at the US Open since Chris Evert dropped only two at the same stage in 1976.
It is also the fewest conceded in reaching the last 16 at any Grand Slam since Mary Pierce at Roland Garros in 1994. Pierce also dropped three games.
Sharapova, who won here in 2006, swatted aside American wildcard Beatrice Capra 6-0, 6-0 to underline her growing threat.
The 20-year-old Wozniacki and Sharapova, who is three years older, have played twice previously, each time in 2008, with Sharapova winning both in straight sets.
But since then, the Russian has struggled with injuries and Wozniacki has risen from top junior to being ranked second in the world behind Serena Williams.

©AFP / Stan Honda
Maria Sharapova
Wozniacki, who has won three of the last four WTA tournaments and is 17-1 in games since Wimbledon, made light of the windy conditions.
"It was tough for both of us as it was pretty windy, but I kind of thought it was fun. It was a little bit different," she said.
On playing Sharapova she said: "She is a good player, a tough match up. But I will take today and tomorrow off and we will see what happens on Monday."
Sharapova agreed the conditions had been "as tough as you can get."
"Experience definitely helps but when you play someone on a good run (Capra), coming up and eager, sometime they can be the most dangerous opponents."
Wozniacki, she said was "playing the best tennis of her career and has been a finalist here.
"It will be tough and I am looking forward to it."
But if Wozniacki and Sharapova lived up to their favorites' tags, the same could not be said of fourth seed Jelena Jankovic of Serbia, who screamed in frustration as the blustery conditions blew her normally solid game off course.
The Serb lost 6-2, 7-6 (7/1) to Kaia Kanepi of Estonia, the 31st seed who will next play Yanina Wickmayer of Belgium, who saved a match point in the final set tie-breaker before edging past Swiss veteran Patty Schnyder 7-6 (7/5), 3-6, 7-6 (8/6).
It was a crushing end to the tournament for Jankovic, runner-up here to Serena Williams in 2008 and a former world number one, but who has yet to win a Grand Slam title.

©AFP / Stan Honda
Jelena Jankovic
She struggled past her first two rounds and was immediately out of sorts against Kanepi due to the gusting winds that swirled around Flushing Meadows in the wake of Hurricane Earl, which passed by on Friday.
Jankovic said that the conditions had been near to intolerable, but Kanepi countered that they had been the same for both players.
"I got a lot of points off Jelena because of the wind and she got a lot off me because of the wind. It was the same for both of us but it was very difficult to play in and I don't think it made for a nice match."
One player who went through to the last 16 and who was not bothered by the wind was Andrea Petkovic of Germany. Her opponent, China's last hope Peng Shuai, withdrew from the tournament with a right elbow injury.
Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia, meanwhile, swept past Lourdes Dominguez Lino of Spain 6-0, 6-1

Sports
Wozniacki and Sharapova set for US Open ...Agonising wait for Chile miners and their families
09/04 | 19:52 GMT

©AFPTV
An interminable wait has begun for the families of 33 miners trapped for the past four weeks in the San Jose mine of northern Chile. Official estimates are that it will take three to four months to extract the men from 700 metres below the earth's surface. They have been told salvation is more than two months away, but not given a precise date. Duration: 01:42
©AFPTV
An interminable wait has begun for the families of 33 miners trapped for the past four weeks in the San Jose mine of northern Chile. Official estimates are that it will take three to four months to extract the men from 700 metres below the earth's surface. They have been told salvation is more than two months away, but not given a precise date. Meanwhile their loved ones wait above ground, holding vigils at the mouth of the mine and praying for the rescue.

Video Gallery
Agonising wait for Chile miners and their ...Dublin pelt Blair at first book signing
09/04 | 19:36 GMT

©AFP/POOL / Niall Carson
Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair (R) poses with Eason bookstore manager Martin Black during a public book signing of his book "A Journey," an account of his decade in Downing Street from 1997 to 2007. Angry protestors hurled missiles at Blair as he arrived at the first public signing session to promote his memoirs in the Irish capital Dublin.

©AFP/POOL / Niall Carson
Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair (R) poses with Eason bookstore manager Martin Black
DUBLIN (AFP) - Angry protestors hurled plastic bottles and flip-flops at former British prime minister Tony Blair as he arrived at the first public signing of his memoirs in the Irish capital Dublin on Saturday.
More than 200 noisy demonstrators, many chanting slogans criticising Blair over the 2003 Iraq war, had gathered for the event and witnesses said plastic bottles and flip-flops were thrown at him as his motorcade arrived.
None of the objects -- also reported to include eggs and shoes -- landed near the former premier as protestors surged towards a security barrier separating them from him before being repelled by police.
Police said they arrested and charged four people with various public order offences. The men, two in their late teens and two in their 30s, were released on bail to appear in court later in the month.
One woman meanwhile said she tried to make a citizen's arrest on Blair once he was inside the bookshop where the event was taking place.
"After I went through airport-like security to get to Mr Blair, I told him I was there to make a citizen’s arrest on him for war crimes committed in Iraq," said Kate O'Sullivan, an activist with the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign.
"Mr. Blair looked down and I was immediately grabbed by five security men and dragged away."
Blair was signing copies of "A Journey", his account of a decade in Downing Street from 1997 to 2007, which was released earlier this week.

©AFP/File / Leon Neal
"A Journey" charts Blair's decade in Downing Street from 1997 to 2007
In the book, he said he "can't regret" the decision to go to war in Iraq alongside then US president George W. Bush but acknowledged that he did not foresee the "nightmare" which it unleashed.
He will hold another book signing in London Wednesday which anti-war activists are also pledging to target.
In Dublin, the demonstrators waved placards with slogans such as "Blair lied, millions died" and "Lock him up for genocide" and chanted amid a heavy police presence.
Part of the city's main thoroughfare, O'Connell Street, where the bookshop is located, was sealed off and access inside was tightly controlled.
Several hundred people braved pouring rain to queue at a back entrance to the store in the hope of getting their book signed by Blair.
Killian Kiely, a 21-year-old from south Dublin, was among those who got to meet him.
"I wanted to see him, he is one of the most important leaders of his generation though there is a lot I would disagree with about his policies," he said. "I just wanted to see him in the flesh."
But many hoping to meet Blair were left disappointed when he left after about an hour and a half of signing.
In his first live television interview promoting the book on Friday, Blair brushed off the criticism he still faces seven years after the Iraq invasion.

©AFP / Peter Muhly
Protest posters are seen outside of Eason bookshop in Dublin
"One of the first things that you learn in politics is that those who shout most don't deserve necessarily to be listened to most," he told Irish state television RTE.
"Everyone should be listened to equally, irrespective of the volume of noise."
In a fresh sign of continuing opposition to the war, more than 2,500 people have joined a group on social networking website Facebook calling for shoppers to move Blair's book to the crime section in bookshops.
Blair, who reportedly received a 4.6 million pound advance for the book, will donate all proceeds to the Royal British Legion, a charity helping war veterans.
Despite continuing controversy over the Iraq conflict, Blair is particularly hailed by many in Ireland for his key role in the Northern Ireland peace process.

People
Dublin pelt Blair at first book ...Threat of new riots hits Mozambique
09/04 | 18:08 GMT

©AFP / Arthur Frayer
People walk along a street in Maputo. Mobile phone messages calling for new riots over food and fuel price hikes swirled around Mozambique's capital Maputo Saturday as it recovered from three days of violence that left 10 people dead.

©AFP / Arthur Frayer
People walk along a street in Maputo
MAPUTO (AFP) - Mobile phone messages calling for new riots over food and fuel price hikes swirled around Mozambique's capital Maputo Saturday as it recovered from three days of violence that left 10 people dead.
Calm returned to the city on Saturday with vendors back out on the streets, but a Red Cross spokeswoman said there could be more unrest in store.
"We do suspect the situation could change on Monday. More text messages were sent around calling on people to strike," said Americo Ubisse.
Maputo police also confirmed reports of new riots being planned for Monday, but could not establish the source of text messages.
"People say that the violence will return on Monday. We don't know if this is true," said police spokesman Arnaldo Chefo.
Mobile text messages were used to organise the demonstrations that left over 400 people injured earlier this week.
Related article: Mozambique's deadly riots linked to poverty
Ubisse said the Red Cross has its emergency teams standing by and ready to react to any new outbreaks of violence.

©AFP/File / Sergio Costa
A young Mozambican protester stands near a burning car on a street of Maputo
No new cases of unrest had been reported since Friday night, when three police officers were injured in clashes with demonstrators, Chefo said.
"Three police were injured when protesters threw stones at them. When we tried to stop them some people threw stones and other objects at police," said Chefo.
Ten people were killed and more than 440 injured in three days of rioting that started Wednesday sparked by spiralling food prices. Police fired rubber bullets and live ammunition to control demonstrators.
On Saturday, in markets around the city people went about their usual business, with shops re-opened and buzzing with customers.
"The strike made life difficult. There were no taxis to enter the city. People could not come to work," said Silveira Mabicka, who was visiting home from South Africa.
The impact of the riots was still evident everywhere in the city, with charred debris scattered across the streets and blockades being removed by the police.
The unrest interrupted fuel supplies in Maputo and long lines formed outside fuel stations, as people scrambled to fill up their cars.

©AFP/File / Arthur Frayer
A police woman at a scene of riots in Maputo
Price hikes for several essential foodstuffs including bread were implemented on September 1 and the government said this week the increases were "irreversible".
"It is not just bread. So many things have got too expensive here in Mozambique. Electricity went up, water and rice," said Joao Francisco Chirindze, a carpenter.
Chirindze said the cost of living was too high for many people. He said his household expenses amounted to between 5,000 and 7,000 meticals (140 and 190 dollars, 100 and 150 euros) a month, more than twice his salary.
He said he supplemented his wages by doing odd jobs on the side, helped by the money brought in by his wife from selling potatoes.
"The metical is down right now, it doesn't have the same value it used to. The dollar and the South African rand have gone up a lot. Everything is difficult to buy," he said.
According to the United Nations, more than half of Mozambique's 22 million people survive on less than one dollar a day.
"The customers are complaining, they do not want to accept the price of six meticals for bread. They say it is very expensive," said Alcido Manjate, a bread vendor from Benfica, a poor neighbourhood outside Maputo.
The violence was the worst in Mozambique since 2008, when six people were killed in protests against a public transport fare increase.
The southern African country which lies on the Indian Ocean coast relies on neighbouring South Africa for many goods, while a large number of Mozambicans work in South African mines.



