Thursday, November 25, 2010

Asia News

Cambodian stampede: Phnom Penh counts the cost of water festival disaster
Cambodian authorities struggle to deal with aftermath of yesterday's water festival stampede which left hundreds dead

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As police pore over the scene for evidence and relatives wait for the answer that is now inevitable, still no one is quite sure why there were so many people on the Rainbow Bridge, on the banks of the Tonle Sap river in Phnom Penh last night.

The Cambodian capital today swirls with rumours about what caused the stampede which trapped thousands on the short, narrow suspension bridge. At least 395 people were killed in the panic, either suffocated in the crush or drown having fallen unconscious into the water. More than 500 were injured.

Prime Minister Hun Sen described the stampede as the biggest disaster the country had experienced since the mass killings of the Khmer Rouge regime. He declared Thursday a national day of mourning and ordered all government ministries to fly the Cambodian flag at half-mast.

Some at the scene yesterday said the crush started when speculation swept the tightly packed crowd that the bridge was about to collapse. Some have reported seeing the bridge bouncing under the weight of thousands of people.
Others said the panic was caused by the multi-coloured lights strung from the suspension ropes sparking, a rumour of food poisoning or a gang of youths robbing people in the crowd.

The bridge was supposed to be only one way for people to leave Diamond Island. Another bridge 200 metres away was for people going to the island, but the Rainbow Bridge was closer to the music and the festival on the cityside banks of the river.

Just before 10pm, when celebrations were in full swing, the panic began, with those trapped on the bridge fighting to find a way clear and shouting for help from those from the banks.

Those who fell or lost consciousness were crushed under hundreds of feet as people fought to find a way out of the crush.

Diamond Island, named for its shape, is a small sliver of land that sits close to the bank of the Tonle Sap. Previously just another nameless island in the wide, brown river, it has been developed in the past couple of years into a shopping and entertainment precinct.

Rainbow Bridge, is barely 40 metres long, and brand new. The suspension bridge was only built this year, and the public have only been allowed on it for the three days of water festival.

Monday was supposed to have been a happy night: Bon Om Touk, Cambodia's water festival, is the biggest party of the year here, when the normally sleepy city of Phnom Penh is swelled by more than a million visitors, international tourists coming for the parties and the boat races and Cambodian visitors arriving from the provinces to give thanks for the end of the rainy season.

The city was full, there were market stalls and music, vendors and partygoers crowding every available inch of space.

This morning, Cambodian time, Rainbow Bridge was still littered with thousands of shoes, shirts and hats, left behind in the panic that consumed those on the bridge.

Several thousand people are crowded around, on both sides of the river, held back by police tape and roadblocks manned by armed soldiers.

On the river's banks, family members of the victims make Buddhist offerings and pray for those lost.
At the nearby Calmette hospital, Cambodia's largest, a makeshift open-air morgue has been laid out in the hospital grounds.

Inside a large white tent, the bodies of those killed are laid out in lines on straw mats. Those identified are covered with a white sheet, while those unknown are left exposed as flies buzz constantly in Cambodia's stifling heat.

Family members who have found the body of a loved one sit by it, waiting for the paperwork to be completed so they can take their relative home.

Boupha Lak sits at her daughter's feet, gently stroking them.

"She went to the festival to see her friends, but she was alone on the bridge when it happened – her friends, I have seen today, they were on the other side. She was found on the bridge, crushed underneath all the other bodies. They told me she was on the bottom."

Crude coffins, lined with wallpaper begin arriving in army trucks. They will be given to the family members of victims, along with the offer of transport to take their loved ones home.
"Most of those killed were not from Phnom Penh, they were from the provinces," a policeman, who declines to give his name, tells the Guardian.

"They had not seen the bridge because it is new, they wanted to see it, and to walk on it.

"And they didn't know the river was not deep," he says, pointing to his hip to indicate the depth of the river. "The river was okay to stand, but they don't know about this because they are not from Phnom Penh, and they think it is a big river and they cannot swim."


Friday, November 12, 2010

Entertainment News





'Walking Dead' walks tall as a bizarre human drama

NEW YORK – If you missed "The Walking Dead" last week, you missed a top contender for the most deliciously gross scene in television history.

In a desperate ploy to escape undetected by the zombies crowding downtown Atlanta, Sheriff Rick Grimes decided to fool them with a deathly masquerade. He found a zombie carcass and chopped it up with an ax, then smeared hunks of these goopy remains on his clothing. But he did it with respect. Rick, a man of conscience, first took a moment to mourn the ordinary guy this monster used to be.

Rick's fellow refugee, Glenn, who used to deliver pizza, was no less aghast at Rick's plan than were the viewers.

"If bad ideas were an Olympic event," said Glenn, "this would take the gold."

But the ruse worked — at least, until a sudden rainstorm outed Rick and Glenn by rinsing off their guts-and-stench disguise. They had to make a run for it.

By turns macabre, suspenseful, poignant and horribly funny, "The Walking Dead" is TV in a class by itself. So maybe it's no wonder that this AMC drama was an instant hit with its premiere Halloween night, drawing more than 5.3 million viewers, followed the next week by an audience nearly as large.

(The six-episode series, already given a green light for a second season, continues to air Sundays at 10 p.m. EST. And this Sunday the first two episodes — "Days Gone Bye" and the aptly titled "Guts" — will be repeated beginning at 8 p.m. EST.)



Based on the popular comic book of the same name, "The Walking Dead" depicts the aftermath of a zombie apocalypse confronted by a tattered group of survivors just outside Atlanta. Principal among them is Rick (played by series star Andrew Lincoln), who, in the series premiere, woke alone in a hospital from a gunshot-wound-induced coma to find the world flipped upside down. His wife and young son were among the missing. He fears they have died.

Now Rick and a band of other humans who survived the invasion must defend themselves against these so-called walkers, creatures always hungry for something — like a human — to feed on.

Happily, "The Walking Dead" not only defies horror-movie cliches, but also charts its own course in dramatizing a hideous plague and a shattered society.

As one counterintuitive twist, this series must be one of the quietest TV shows on record. Long, meditative stretches target characters trying to make sense of what's befallen them in such a soundless fashion you may think your TV is on the fritz. Even the zombies, unless provoked, don't make much racket — mostly plaintive hisses and whimperings that can make you ache for them as much as recoil.

"I'm sorry this happened to you," Rick said to one of them, a wretch whose lower half was gone, as she dragged her ruined torso across the ground with gnarled arms. Rick's single shot put her out of her misery. But there are always more.

The series is beautifully styled and photographed, whether in the ravaged bleakness of downtown Atlanta, which has fallen to the zombies, or the piney-woods retreat, where, on high alert for a zombie attack, a number of survivors are hiding out.

"I feel like I've been ripped out of my life and put somewhere else," says Rick on Sunday's new episode, whimsically titled "Tell It to the Frogs."

A bit less graphic than the two that preceded it, that episode catches up with Rick as he successfully flees Atlanta. But then he decides he's got unfinished business there. He dropped a bag of guns in the street as he fled. He needs to go back and retrieve them.

Besides Andrew Lincoln, the cast of "The Walking Dead" includes Jon Bernthal, Sarah Wayne Callies, Laurie Holden, Jeffrey DeMunn, Emma Bell, Chandler Riggs, and Steven Yeun ("The Big Bang Theory") as Glenn.

It takes its place as AMC's fourth original drama series, joining established hits "Mad Men" and "Breaking Bad," as well as "Rubicon," which recently concluded its first season.

The not-so-common denominator among AMC's portfolio of series continues to hold true with this latest entry: They're all splendid, strikingly distinctive from one another, and come full of surprises.

One big surprise for viewers who thought they knew the zombie-film genre: an across-the-board humanity resonating in the "Walking Dead" saga.

"There are sequences where zombies are actually humanized," notes Joel Stillerman, AMC's head of original programming. "The series has an empathetic point of view that isn't just about the survivors but about the zombies, too.

"Transcending gore for gore's sake was very important to us," he says.

Adds AMC president Charlie Collier, "It's a character drama about survival, where the characters are faced with decisions of 'What would you do, given this adversity? Who would you be? Would you stay or go? Lead or follow?' These are universal themes."

Consider any blood and guts a fringe benefit.



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AMC is owned by Rainbow Media Holdings LLC, a subsidiary of Cablevision Systems Corp.

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Online:

http://www.amctv.com

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EDITOR'S NOTE — Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

World News


LONDON (AFP) - – Scores of British iPhone 4 users said they were late for work on Monday after a software bug meant the alarm on the Apple device failed to adjust when the country's clocks changed.

Hundreds of angry comments were posted on microblogging website Twitter about the apparent glitch, which happened even though the rest of the phone's features updated the time automatically.

"Well done Apple -- you've made me decide I need to use a proper alarm clock rather than relying on my iPhone," one user tweeted.

"Stupid iPhone alarm clock went off an hour late. What a great start to the week," said another.

Britain put its clocks back by one hour on Sunday from British Summer Time to Greenwich Mean Time.

There was no immediate response from Apple.

But the tech giant said last month that a software patch was being developed when Australian iPhone users had similar problems -- though their alarms went off an hour early as the country was switching to daylight saving time.

The latest fault can apparently be avoided by using one-off alarms instead of pre-set daily wake-up calls.

The iPhone 4 suffered a turbulent launch after problems with its antenna, while the launch of the white version was recently postponed again until next year.

But Apple has described the iPhone 4 as its most successful product launch ever, with more than three million sold in the first three weeks after its debut.

Apple said last week that it sold 14.1 million iPhones during the latest quarter, up 91 percent from a year ago.