Your business:
Broadcasters
AFP’s in-depth reporting ensures complete coverage of general news from around the world: politics, diplomacy, business, social, environment, sport, people, science, culture, offbeat, entertainment, fashion, lifestyle, health...
Global coverage in real time 24 hours a day
Dozens dead as Syria regime pounds Homs: activists
02/08 | 10:12 GMT
DAMASCUS (AFP) - Syrian forces pressed a relentless assault on the protest city of Homs Wednesday, with dozens of civilians reported killed, hours after President Bashar al-Assad said he was committed to ending the bloodshed.
DAMASCUS (AFP) - Syrian forces pressed a relentless assault on the protest city of Homs Wednesday, with dozens of civilians reported killed, hours after President Bashar al-Assad said he was committed to ending the bloodshed.
The barrage of gunfire, mortars and shells came at daybreak and flattened many buildings in the flashpoint neighbourhood of Baba Amr, a stronghold of army defectors the regime is targeting for a fifth straight day.
Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said the overall toll amounted to around 50 dead, including three entire families slain overnight by regime forces and government-backed thugs known as Shabiha.
"We expect the death toll to rise ... given the fact that many victims remain under the rubble," Abdel Rahman told AFP.
All power and communications were cut off.
The three families were killed in the same neighbourhood and included at least three children aged five, seven and 15.
Activists in the besieged central city claimed the widespread shelling was a clear bid to pave the way for a ground assault.
"Since dawn the shelling has been extremely intense and they are using rockets and mortars," Omar Shaker, who was reached by satellite telephone from Beirut, told AFP.
"They have destroyed all infrastructure and bombed water tanks and electricity poles. The humanitarian situation is extremely dire and food is lacking.
"We are trying to set up a field hospital but we have no medical supplies."
Later in the morning, the shelling intensified as tanks moved toward the city from the capital Damascus, said Hadi Abdullah, another activist.
"We fear a new massacre," he told AFP by satphone.
The Britain-based Observatory has reported several hundred civilians killed since the onslaught on the protest hub was launched overnight Friday.
Related article: 'God help us': appeal from Syria's Homs
It said new clashes killed at least one person in northwestern Idlib province, and added that 18 soldiers defected in the southern region of Daraa, cradle of the popular uprising against Assad's 11 years of iron-fisted rule.
Rights groups estimate more than 6,000 people have died in nearly a year of upheaval in the Middle Eastern country, as Assad's hardline regime seeks to snuff out the revolt that began in March with peaceful protests amid the Arab Spring.
Western and Arab efforts to end the violence have met resistance from Russia, whose foreign minister said after meeting Assad in Damascus on Tuesday that the Syrian leader was "fully committed" to ending the bloodshed.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who flew into Damascus to a hero's welcome on Tuesday, said President Assad "assured (us) that he is fully committed to the task of a cessation of violence, from whatever source it comes."
The Arab League, which in January pulled its observers from Syria after just one month amid spiralling violence, has put forward a plan for Assad to hand power to his deputy and for the formation of a unity government ahead of polls.
The six Arab states of the Gulf went a step further on Tuesday, withdrawing their envoys from Damascus and expelling Syria's ambassadors from their own countries in protest over the "mass slaughter" of civilians.
That came after the United States closed its embassy in Damascus this week, and several European nations recalled their ambassadors to the Syrian capital.
Related article: Diplomatic moves against Syria
On Wednesday, Lavrov said in Moscow that said recalling envoys from Damascus did not help promote the Arab League's plan.
"I do not think that recalling ambassadors helps create conditions that would be favourable to the realisation of the Arab League's initiative," he said.
But he pointedly declined to say whether Moscow had asked the embattled leader to go during their talks on Tuesday, stressing that Syrians themselves should decide his fate.
"Any outcome of national dialogue should be the result of agreement between the Syrians themselves and should be acceptable to all Syrians," Lavrov told reporters.
Russia, which along with China over the weekend vetoed a UN resolution condemning the government crackdown, has staunchly stood by its last ally in the region, a key buyer of Moscow's military hardware that hosts a strategic Russian naval base.
Volume
5000 stories per day in six languages
Languages
Arabic, English, French, German, Portuguese, Spanish
Global coverage in real time 24 hours a day
Rich coverage
Reportage, investigation and interviews from AFP’s network of journalists and freelancers. News stories are sorted, verified and published according to their importance. Regional and global analysis.
News Agenda
Regional news agendas on the following day’s big news stories. An international monthly news agenda is produced each week. Updated news agendas are produced several times each day.
Here are some examples
Redknapp cleared in tax evasion trial
02/08 | 11:48 GMT
LONDON (AFP) - Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp was found not guilty of tax evasion on Wednesday following a three-week trial into allegations he stashed hundred of thousands of dollars in an offshore bank account.
LONDON (AFP) - Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp was found not guilty of tax evasion on Wednesday following a three-week trial into allegations he stashed hundred of thousands of dollars in an offshore bank account.
Redknapp's co-accused Milan Mandaric was also acquitted of charges in dramatic scenes at a packed Southwark Crown Court.
Redknapp and Mandaric hugged each other in the dock following the conclusion of a two-and-a-half-week trial which had seen both men's reputations at stake.
Redknapp, 64, and Mandaric, 73, had denied two counts of cheating the public revenue by failing to declare £189,000 stashed in a Monaco bank account.
Prosecutors alleged the money was paid to Redknapp by Mandaric when the two men were manager and owner of Portsmouth respectively as part of a bonus arising from the sale of striker Peter Crouch.
But Redknapp said the money was paid by Mandaric to help with investments in the United States, and that he believed any taxes owing on the amount had already been paid by his chairman.
Redknapp's defence barrister John Kelsey-Fry QC had argued the case against the Spurs boss was "repugnant to all our basic instincts of fairness."
Addressing jurors in his closing remarks on Monday, Kelsey-Fry said there was an "inherent absurdity" in the prosecution's reliance on "primarily despicable" evidence gathered by a News of the World reporter.
Lawyers for Mandaric meanwhile argued the prosecution's claim that the money paid into the Monaco account was a bonus "simply doesn't make sense."
"We say the evidence against him is hopelessly weak," Mandaric's barrister Lord MacDonald told the court.
"In Milan Mandaric's mind this was not money for Crouch, this was Milan Mandaric coming through on money he had promised months before - for a portfolio," the barrister said.
UK News
Redknapp cleared in tax evasion ...The heroes of India's quest to wipe out polio
02/08 | 05:06 GMT
NEW DELHI (AFP) - Later this month, India will be removed from a dwindling list of countries where polio is considered endemic, a huge achievement made possible by people like Madara, a 76-year-old street hawker.
NEW DELHI (AFP) - Later this month, India will be removed from a dwindling list of countries where polio is considered endemic, a huge achievement made possible by people like Madara, a 76-year-old street hawker.
At a temporary immunisation camp in a slum in the northern district of Ghaziabad, 23 kilometres (14 miles) from New Delhi, he is busy at work shepherding boisterous children into queues.
All around, social workers break open tiny bottles containing a polio vaccine, selecting children from the thronging crowd of toddlers and babies and squirting two drops into their mouths.
Madara, a stick-thin resident from a nearby slum, says he began volunteering to help with the vaccination efforts six years ago when he realised he could use his authority as an elderly figure to encourage participation.
"I decided to get involved because I wanted to do something for the future of our children here," Madara told AFP.
Most of the youngsters, whose parents are often rag-pickers or hawkers, live in the nearby tarpaulin-covered homes, a cramped zone of shanties where sanitation and awareness about hygiene is poor.
Polio, which can be deadly and also causes deformed limbs, spreads via the fecal matter of victims, making slums particularly high-risk areas.
Lured by the offer of bright plastic whistles and paper masks, children were keen to leave their homes, forming a disorderly crowd around the vaccinators as they dispensed the drops to infants and under-fives.
India last reported a fresh polio case more than 12 months ago after monumental efforts by millions of social workers and volunteers who have administered 900 million doses of the vaccine in the last year alone.
If all pending lab tests for the virus return negative as expected, the World Health Organisation will remove India from its list of "polio endemic" countries this month, leaving just Afghanistan, Pakistan and Nigeria in this category.
As well as polio camps like this one in Ghaziabad, teams have travelled door-to-door, educating families about the illness and delivering the vaccine.
They have put up makeshift booths in crowded public areas such as train stations, bus stands and markets, and in other locations, including construction sites where they can catch migrant workers and their children.
A "vaccination on wheels" service was rolled out across the north Indian state of Bihar in which social workers jumped on trains and vaccinated all the children onboard.
In 2008, when floods devastated the state, vaccinators were even sent out in boats.
"We had to make a very detailed, dynamic map of the area and send workers in boats to try and get across to stranded families," Lieven Desomer, head of the polio unit at UN children's agency UNICEF in India, told AFP.
As well as the problems of access, the government and international agencies behind the immunisation drive faced problems of ignorance and prejudice.
Vaccinators were attacked, anxious parents would hide their babies from social workers, and there was particular resistance from the Muslim communities in the north of the country.
"There was a general perception that the vaccine was not clean or safe because it came from the West, and that somehow, taking it would make their women and children infertile," UNICEF's Desomer said.
India's crushing summer heat also caused difficulties because vaccines have to be kept at a low temperature to prevent them expiring.
Five years ago, campaigners decided to ensure that vials were only carried in special carriers equipped with ice packs.
Desomer credited "the dogged persistence" of the Indian government for the fall in infections, and said that in 2011 alone, the state contributed 80 percent of the $264 million committed to the fight against polio.
The results of years of innovation, human endeavour, as well as planning and spending, are reflected in the number of infections.
In 2009, India accounted for half of all cases in the world, but infections plummeted to 42 in 2010 and none in the last 12 months.
"It is an amazing achievement. I sometimes feel like I have to pinch myself to make sure I am not dreaming it," Desomer said, while cautioning against premature celebrations.
"We have to remain vigilant and continue immunisations. Complacency at this stage would be a huge mistake," he said.
India will only be judged to have eradicated the disease if it stays polio-free for another two years.
Health/Medicine
The heroes of India's quest to wipe out ...Redknapp cleared in tax evasion trial
02/08 | 12:52 GMT
LONDON (AFP) - Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp was found not guilty of tax evasion on Wednesday following a three-week trial into allegations he stashed hundreds of thousands of dollars in an offshore bank account.
LONDON (AFP) - Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp was found not guilty of tax evasion on Wednesday following a three-week trial into allegations he stashed hundreds of thousands of dollars in an offshore bank account.
Redknapp's co-accused Milan Mandaric was also unanimously acquitted of all charges in dramatic scenes at a packed Southwark Crown Court.
Redknapp and Mandaric hugged each other in the dock following the conclusion of a two-and-a-half-week trial which had seen both men's reputations at stake.
After his acquittal, Redknapp said his case should never have been brought to court, describing his prosecution as a five-year "nightmare."
"I'm looking forward to getting home, and getting away from all this," Redknapp said outside court. "It really has been a nightmare, I've got to be honest. It's been five years and it should never have come to court.
"It's unbelievable really. It was horrendous. But it was unanimous, there was no case to answer. I'm pleased that I can go home."
The most successful English manager currently working in football, Redknapp is regarded as the favourite to replace England boss Fabio Capello later this year with his Spurs side currently third in the Premier League table.
Any guilty verdict against Redknapp would have effectively ended his chances of becoming England boss, a job he has previously said he would be unable to turn down if offered to him.
But Wednesday's acquittal leaves Redknapp free to pursue his dream of managing England. Bookmakers immediately slashed their odds on him taking over from Capello following the verdict.
"These unfounded allegations should never have been brought to court," Mandaric said in a statement outside court amid a scrum of media.
"I need to go and find somewhere to wake up from this horrible dream."
Redknapp, 64, and Mandaric, 73, had denied two counts of cheating the public revenue by failing to declare £189,000 kept in a Monaco bank account.
Prosecutors alleged the money was paid to Redknapp by Mandaric when the two men were manager and owner of Portsmouth respectively as part of a bonus arising from the sale of striker Peter Crouch.
But Redknapp said the money was paid by Mandaric to help with investments in the United States, and that he believed any taxes owing on the amount had already been paid by his chairman.
Redknapp's defence barrister John Kelsey-Fry QC had argued the case against the Spurs boss was "repugnant to all our basic instincts of fairness."
Addressing jurors in his closing remarks on Monday, Kelsey-Fry said there was an "inherent absurdity" in the prosecution's reliance on "primarily despicable" evidence gathered by a News of the World reporter.
Lawyers for Mandaric meanwhile argued the prosecution's claim that the money paid into the Monaco account was a bonus "simply doesn't make sense."
"We say the evidence against him is hopelessly weak," Mandaric's barrister Lord MacDonald told the court.
"In Milan Mandaric's mind this was not money for Crouch, this was Milan Mandaric coming through on money he had promised months before - for a portfolio," the barrister said.
After the acquittal, reporting restrictions on an earlier tax evasion case involving Mandaric and former Portsmouth chief Peter Storrie were lifted. Both men were acquitted.



