Cybersecurity

Commuting is back — but not as we knew it

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Opinion   来源:Business  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Mr Robilliard, who was was born and educated in Guernsey, has held various positions in the States including secretary to the bailiff and has 52 years of unbroken service on the Deanery Synod.

Mr Robilliard, who was was born and educated in Guernsey, has held various positions in the States including secretary to the bailiff and has 52 years of unbroken service on the Deanery Synod.

Analysis by BBC Verify of videos showing fighters boasting of a massacre and later mocking survivors has identified those responsible as apparently belonging to Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).The BBC has confirmed that at least 80 people died in the October attack on al-Seriha in Gezira state, with the UN reporting that the death toll could be as high as 124. An eyewitness told BBC Verify he saw unarmed civilians gunned down by fighters at close range as they tried to flee.

Commuting is back — but not as we knew it

The massacre appears to have been prompted by the defection of a senior RSF commander in Gezira state to the country's armed forces.In a statement to the BBC, an RSF spokesman denied its fighters were involved in the killings adding that "the Rapid Support Forces work to protect civilians and promote security and peace, and not to target them."The brutal conflict, a 20-month power struggle pitting Sudan's

Commuting is back — but not as we knew it

, has been condemned by human rights groups for widespread atrocities committed by both sides.On 20 October, the Sudanese military announced that Abu Aqla Keikal, a senior commander with the RSF in Gezira state,

Commuting is back — but not as we knew it

with a sizeable number of his forces.

Keikal's decision to return to the Sudanese army, where he'd served before the war, was hailed as a major propaganda success, and other RSF soldiers were urged to do the same as part of a wider amnesty offer.It is feared millions of them entered the sea - some individually or moulded together - when the ships caught fire.

"Obviously, we don't want plastic pollution on the beach, but the nurdles can be tainted with other chemicals which can be directly toxic," said Nick Acheson, a conservationist and wildlife ambassador for the Norfolk Wildlife Trust."This is certainly a very bad time of year because it's when [birds such as] oyster catchers and ringed plovers are nesting on our beaches, and when hundreds of thousands of migrating birds are moving along our coast going back to their arctic breeding grounds.

"Our African migrants will also be arriving any time now."The Maritime and Coastguard Agency said it was notified by the Royal National Lifeboat Institution on Sunday after a "sheen" of nurdles was spotted in the sea off The Wash.

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