Sunday, 18 December 2016
Customs court adjourns hearing of Ayyan Ali's currency smuggling case
Ayyan Ali finally appeared before customs court after five months in currency smuggling case, however, duty judge Shakeel Ahmsad adjourned hearing of the case till April 6, 2015 due to absence of of Judge Sheraz Kayani.
Earlier, customs court had expressed resenment over continuous absence of the accused. Ayyan Ali appeared in the customs court after the judge warned of stern action against her.
Ayyan, now out on bail, is facing a trial for trying to smuggle $506,800 after being caught in the act at Islamabad airport on March 14 last year.
Zsa Zsa Gabor, Actress Famous for Her Glamour (and Her Marriages), Dies at 99
Zsa Zsa Gabor, the Hungarian actress whose self-parodying glamour and revolving-door marriages to millionaires put a luster of American celebrity on a long but only modestly successful career in movies and television, died on Sunday in Los Angeles. She was 99.
The cause was heart failure, her longtime publicist Edward Lozzi said.
Married at least eight times, calling everyone “Dahlink,” flaunting a diamonds-and-furs lifestyle and abetted by gossip columnists and tabloid headline writers, Ms. Gabor played the coifed platinum femme fatale in plunging necklines in dozens of film and television roles, many of them cameos as herself. Her career, which began with the title Miss Hungary in 1936, was still going strong in the 1990s, outlasting those of her sisters, Eva and Magda, celebrities in their own right. She was the last surviving Gabor sister.
“A girl must marry for love, and keep on marrying until she finds it,” Ms. Gabor once said. Her husbands included a Turkish diplomat, the hotel heir Conrad Hilton, the actor George Sanders, an industrialist, an oil magnate, a toy designer, a divorce lawyer and a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony. Another marriage that nobody counted a case of bigamy at sea with a has-been Mexican actor lasted only a day and was annulled.
In 1989, she was arrested for slapping a police officer who had pulled her over for a traffic violation and found that her license had expired and that she had an open vodka bottle in her car, a Rolls-Royce Corniche convertible. Breezing into court, she took the stand and, by turns haughty, coquettish, weepy and coarse, spoke of Gestapo tactics in Beverly Hills. The judge gave her 72 hours in jail.Continue reading the main story
“You just cannot drive a Rolls-Royce in Beverly Hills anymore, because they have it in for you,” she said after things had blown over.Photo
From left, Zsa Zsa Gabor and her sisters, Magda and Eva, in 1955. CreditAssociated Press
Ms. Gabor appeared in more than 60 television movies and feature films, mostly American-made, although some were Italian, French, German and Australian. Critics said her best roles were early in her career, in “Moulin Rouge” (1952) and “Lili” (1953). She also appeared as a nightclub manager in Orson Welles’s 1958 classic “Touch of Evil” and, the same year, as a sexy alien in “Queen of Outer Space,” a camp favorite about virile American astronauts landing on a planet populated by scantily clad women.
From the 1950s into the ’90s, she was also on scores of television programs: talk shows, game shows, comedy specials, westerns, episodic dramas. On the 1960s series “Batman,” she played the gold-digging Minerva, whose mineral spa fleeced swells by extracting secrets from their brains. “A real vicked voman,” she described the character in her Hungarian accent.
Exploiting her naughty celebrity, Ms. Gabor, with the help of collaborators and ghost writers, published four books: “Zsa Zsa Gabor: My Story” (1960), “Zsa Zsa’s Complete Guide to Men” (1969), “How to Catch a Man, How to Keep a Man, How to Get Rid of a Man” (1970) and “One Lifetime Is Not Enough” (1991).
In addition to her steady appearances in movies and on television, Ms. Gabor operated a mail-order cosmetics company. She once offered $1 million to anyone who could prove she had had a face-lift.
In 1974, she bought a villa in Bel Air built by Howard Hughes and formerly owned by Elvis Presley. Her multitiered clothes closet — 30 feet long, 12 feet deep and 14 feet high — contained 5,000 garments that, except for favored gowns, were given to charities and replaced with a new wardrobe from time to time, according to her official fan site, zsazsagabor.org.
In early 2009, Ms. Gabor discovered that she had joined a long list of celebrities who were victimized by Bernard L. Madoff, the financial swindler whose worldwide Ponzi scheme that cost investors tens of billions. Her lawyer Chris Fields said she lost at least $7 million and possibly as much as $10 million.
Ms. Gabor had been in and out of hospitals for years. She suffered head and other injuries and was hospitalized for a month in 2002 after a car driven by her hairdresser struck a utility pole in West Hollywood. It left her in a wheelchair, and she retreated from the spotlight. She suffered a stroke in 2005 and had surgery for a blocked carotid artery. In 2007, she again underwent surgery to treat a leg infection and aftereffects of the stroke.
In July 2010, she underwent hip-replacement surgery after a fall at her home in which she also suffered a concussion. Released from the hospital in August, she was readmitted two days later for treatment of unspecified complications. In January 2011, her right leg was amputated above the knee after an infection proved resistant to antibiotics. Doctors said the operation was necessary to save her life.
Two months later, shock over the death of her friend Elizabeth Taylor sent her to the hospital with high blood pressure, and Ms. Gabor’s publicist, John Blanchette, quoted her as saying she feared she was next. In November 2011, she had emergency surgery after blood began flowing through a feeding tube inserted in her stomach.
Born Sari Gabor in Budapest in 1917 she always gave a birth date of Feb. 6 or 7, but not the year, though Mr. Lozzi confirmed on Sunday that it was 1917 Ms. Gabor grew up in relative prosperity, the second of three daughters of Vilmos and Jolie Gabor. Raised for stardom, the sisters attended private schools and were chauffeured to acting, dancing, music and fencing classes.Photo
Ms. Gabor in Budapest, Hungary, around 1940.CreditLaszlo Varkonyi/European Pressphoto Agency
On the eve of World War II, Ms. Gabor, her mother and her sisters emigrated to the United States, and by the 1950s the Gabor sisters had become as well known for their love lives as for their careers.
Magda, who acted on radio briefly and helped her mother operate a chain of jewelry boutiques, died in 1997, as did her mother. Eva, who was best known for her role on television’s “Green Acres” in the 1960s — and whom the public sometimes confused with Zsa Zsa died in 1995.
Zsa Zsa, who divorced seven of her eight husbands, was first married to Burhan Belge, a Turkish diplomat in Budapest, from 1937 to 1941. Her second marriage, to Mr. Hilton, lasted from 1942 to 1947. Their daughter, Francesca Hilton, an actress, was Ms. Gabor’s only child. She died in 2015.
Her other marriages were to Mr. Sanders (1949-54), who later married Magda Gabor; the investor-industrialist Herbert L. Hutner (1962-66); the oil magnate Joshua S. Cosden Jr. (1966-67); Jack Ryan, an inventor and toy designer who helped create the Barbie doll (1975-76); Michael O’Hara, a lawyer (1976-82); and Frédéric Prinz von Anhalt, whom she married in 1986.
Mr. Prinz von Anhalt, often described in the news media as a prince or the Duke of Saxony, was born Hans Robert Lichtenberg, the son of a police officer in Germany. He changed his name to include what sounded like a title after Princess Marie Auguste of Anhalt, the Duchess of Saxony, adopted him in 1980 as an adult. The adoption, widely reported to have been a business transaction, conferred only an illusion of nobility, reinforced by the name change.
Some biographies of Ms. Gabor also mention a 1983 marriage to Felipe de Alba, a lawyer who appeared in films in Mexico in the 1940s and ’50s, but Ms. Gabor said it lasted only a day. The ceremony was performed by a ship’s captain at sea but was probably illegal because the ship was not in international waters, and Ms. Gabor was technically not yet divorced from Mr. O’Hara. It was later annulled, just to make sure.
There were also notorious affairs with Porfirio Rubirosa, the Dominican playboy, and with Rafael Trujillo Jr., the son of the Dominican dictator.
Ms. Gabor is survived by her husband, Mr. Prinz von Anhalt.
Ms. Gabor’s many public appearances included a 1987 address to the American Bar Association convention in San Francisco, where she spoke to the family law section at a standing-room-only luncheon. “We’ve had enough of the routine speakers,” the chairman said, introducing Ms. Gabor as “an optimist who still believes in marriage.”
Telling her tales of marital joys and woes, Ms. Gabor confided, “I have learned that not diamonds but divorce lawyers are a girl’s best friend.”
Then, inviting questions, the chairman said, “Let’s keep it on direct, not on cross.”
“What does that mean?” she asked.
“That means they’ve got to be nice to you.”
The cause was heart failure, her longtime publicist Edward Lozzi said.
Married at least eight times, calling everyone “Dahlink,” flaunting a diamonds-and-furs lifestyle and abetted by gossip columnists and tabloid headline writers, Ms. Gabor played the coifed platinum femme fatale in plunging necklines in dozens of film and television roles, many of them cameos as herself. Her career, which began with the title Miss Hungary in 1936, was still going strong in the 1990s, outlasting those of her sisters, Eva and Magda, celebrities in their own right. She was the last surviving Gabor sister.
“A girl must marry for love, and keep on marrying until she finds it,” Ms. Gabor once said. Her husbands included a Turkish diplomat, the hotel heir Conrad Hilton, the actor George Sanders, an industrialist, an oil magnate, a toy designer, a divorce lawyer and a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony. Another marriage that nobody counted a case of bigamy at sea with a has-been Mexican actor lasted only a day and was annulled.
In 1989, she was arrested for slapping a police officer who had pulled her over for a traffic violation and found that her license had expired and that she had an open vodka bottle in her car, a Rolls-Royce Corniche convertible. Breezing into court, she took the stand and, by turns haughty, coquettish, weepy and coarse, spoke of Gestapo tactics in Beverly Hills. The judge gave her 72 hours in jail.Continue reading the main story
“You just cannot drive a Rolls-Royce in Beverly Hills anymore, because they have it in for you,” she said after things had blown over.Photo
From left, Zsa Zsa Gabor and her sisters, Magda and Eva, in 1955. CreditAssociated Press
Ms. Gabor appeared in more than 60 television movies and feature films, mostly American-made, although some were Italian, French, German and Australian. Critics said her best roles were early in her career, in “Moulin Rouge” (1952) and “Lili” (1953). She also appeared as a nightclub manager in Orson Welles’s 1958 classic “Touch of Evil” and, the same year, as a sexy alien in “Queen of Outer Space,” a camp favorite about virile American astronauts landing on a planet populated by scantily clad women.
From the 1950s into the ’90s, she was also on scores of television programs: talk shows, game shows, comedy specials, westerns, episodic dramas. On the 1960s series “Batman,” she played the gold-digging Minerva, whose mineral spa fleeced swells by extracting secrets from their brains. “A real vicked voman,” she described the character in her Hungarian accent.
Exploiting her naughty celebrity, Ms. Gabor, with the help of collaborators and ghost writers, published four books: “Zsa Zsa Gabor: My Story” (1960), “Zsa Zsa’s Complete Guide to Men” (1969), “How to Catch a Man, How to Keep a Man, How to Get Rid of a Man” (1970) and “One Lifetime Is Not Enough” (1991).
In addition to her steady appearances in movies and on television, Ms. Gabor operated a mail-order cosmetics company. She once offered $1 million to anyone who could prove she had had a face-lift.
In 1974, she bought a villa in Bel Air built by Howard Hughes and formerly owned by Elvis Presley. Her multitiered clothes closet — 30 feet long, 12 feet deep and 14 feet high — contained 5,000 garments that, except for favored gowns, were given to charities and replaced with a new wardrobe from time to time, according to her official fan site, zsazsagabor.org.
In early 2009, Ms. Gabor discovered that she had joined a long list of celebrities who were victimized by Bernard L. Madoff, the financial swindler whose worldwide Ponzi scheme that cost investors tens of billions. Her lawyer Chris Fields said she lost at least $7 million and possibly as much as $10 million.
Ms. Gabor had been in and out of hospitals for years. She suffered head and other injuries and was hospitalized for a month in 2002 after a car driven by her hairdresser struck a utility pole in West Hollywood. It left her in a wheelchair, and she retreated from the spotlight. She suffered a stroke in 2005 and had surgery for a blocked carotid artery. In 2007, she again underwent surgery to treat a leg infection and aftereffects of the stroke.
In July 2010, she underwent hip-replacement surgery after a fall at her home in which she also suffered a concussion. Released from the hospital in August, she was readmitted two days later for treatment of unspecified complications. In January 2011, her right leg was amputated above the knee after an infection proved resistant to antibiotics. Doctors said the operation was necessary to save her life.
Two months later, shock over the death of her friend Elizabeth Taylor sent her to the hospital with high blood pressure, and Ms. Gabor’s publicist, John Blanchette, quoted her as saying she feared she was next. In November 2011, she had emergency surgery after blood began flowing through a feeding tube inserted in her stomach.
Born Sari Gabor in Budapest in 1917 she always gave a birth date of Feb. 6 or 7, but not the year, though Mr. Lozzi confirmed on Sunday that it was 1917 Ms. Gabor grew up in relative prosperity, the second of three daughters of Vilmos and Jolie Gabor. Raised for stardom, the sisters attended private schools and were chauffeured to acting, dancing, music and fencing classes.Photo
Ms. Gabor in Budapest, Hungary, around 1940.CreditLaszlo Varkonyi/European Pressphoto Agency
On the eve of World War II, Ms. Gabor, her mother and her sisters emigrated to the United States, and by the 1950s the Gabor sisters had become as well known for their love lives as for their careers.
Magda, who acted on radio briefly and helped her mother operate a chain of jewelry boutiques, died in 1997, as did her mother. Eva, who was best known for her role on television’s “Green Acres” in the 1960s — and whom the public sometimes confused with Zsa Zsa died in 1995.
Zsa Zsa, who divorced seven of her eight husbands, was first married to Burhan Belge, a Turkish diplomat in Budapest, from 1937 to 1941. Her second marriage, to Mr. Hilton, lasted from 1942 to 1947. Their daughter, Francesca Hilton, an actress, was Ms. Gabor’s only child. She died in 2015.
Her other marriages were to Mr. Sanders (1949-54), who later married Magda Gabor; the investor-industrialist Herbert L. Hutner (1962-66); the oil magnate Joshua S. Cosden Jr. (1966-67); Jack Ryan, an inventor and toy designer who helped create the Barbie doll (1975-76); Michael O’Hara, a lawyer (1976-82); and Frédéric Prinz von Anhalt, whom she married in 1986.
Mr. Prinz von Anhalt, often described in the news media as a prince or the Duke of Saxony, was born Hans Robert Lichtenberg, the son of a police officer in Germany. He changed his name to include what sounded like a title after Princess Marie Auguste of Anhalt, the Duchess of Saxony, adopted him in 1980 as an adult. The adoption, widely reported to have been a business transaction, conferred only an illusion of nobility, reinforced by the name change.
Some biographies of Ms. Gabor also mention a 1983 marriage to Felipe de Alba, a lawyer who appeared in films in Mexico in the 1940s and ’50s, but Ms. Gabor said it lasted only a day. The ceremony was performed by a ship’s captain at sea but was probably illegal because the ship was not in international waters, and Ms. Gabor was technically not yet divorced from Mr. O’Hara. It was later annulled, just to make sure.
There were also notorious affairs with Porfirio Rubirosa, the Dominican playboy, and with Rafael Trujillo Jr., the son of the Dominican dictator.
Ms. Gabor is survived by her husband, Mr. Prinz von Anhalt.
Ms. Gabor’s many public appearances included a 1987 address to the American Bar Association convention in San Francisco, where she spoke to the family law section at a standing-room-only luncheon. “We’ve had enough of the routine speakers,” the chairman said, introducing Ms. Gabor as “an optimist who still believes in marriage.”
Telling her tales of marital joys and woes, Ms. Gabor confided, “I have learned that not diamonds but divorce lawyers are a girl’s best friend.”
Then, inviting questions, the chairman said, “Let’s keep it on direct, not on cross.”
“What does that mean?” she asked.
“That means they’ve got to be nice to you.”
The Chip Kelly NFL experiment isn't working and it might be coming to a close soon
There was presumably an opportunity a few weeks ago for Chip Kelly to go back to the University of Oregon.
And he probably should have gone. It seems like he might need a job soon.
Kelly’s NFL career could be ending its final days. His San Francisco 49ers were awful in a 41-13 loss to the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday. The score was 21-0 before the buzz from the early games on Sunday had worn off. If he doesn’t get fired after this season, he’ll enter next season with the hottest seat in the league.
When Kelly took the 49ers job, he was given one of the worst rosters you’ll see in the NFL. There are very few blue-chip players and not even many young players to build around. But Kelly hasn’t gotten anything extra out of the 49ers roster either.
His offense hasn’t performed any miracles. The defense is embarrassing. Pick a play from Sunday, either when Devonta Freeman ran right through three 49ers for a 5-yard touchdown or when Freeman ran through one of the biggest holes you’ll ever see in the NFL for a 34-yard touchdown. The 49ers allowed 550 yards. It’s hard for a defense on Kelly’s teams; the offense wants to run a lot of plays and that taxes the defense.
The 49ers won in Week 1 against an unprepared Los Angeles Rams team that eventually fired coach Jeff Fisher. They haven’t won since, and most games have been blowouts. With each loss, the calls for Kelly’s job have gotten louder from the Bay Area media.
Kelly started his pro coaching career well, with back-to-back 10-win seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles. He was an out-of-the-box hire for the Eagles, as a college offensive whiz with no pro experience. Then it turned bad. He was given personnel control and ruined the Eagles roster. He was fired before Week 17 after going 6-9 last season. This year, handed a shockingly thin roster, he has gone 1-13. Maybe no coach could have done better with this group, but it wouldn’t surprise anyone if he paid the price for one of the worst seasons in 49ers history.
Kelly probably had a chance to go back to Oregon, where he was a star. The Ducks had a vacancy and it’s hard to imagine they wouldn’t have taken him back. Everybody would have been happy. Oregon would have had its coach back, Kelly would presumably go back to being one of the more successful college coaches around, and the 49ers could have started over without having to fire another coach. But Kelly said he learned commitment from his father, who recently died, and he couldn’t leave the 49ers during the season. Oregon hired Willie Taggart from South Florida.
Maybe things miraculously turn around over the next two weeks or the 49ers find themselves unwilling to fire Kelly and start over with their fourth coach in four seasons next year. But it seems like the Chip Kelly NFL experiment is nearing its end.
And he probably should have gone. It seems like he might need a job soon.
Kelly’s NFL career could be ending its final days. His San Francisco 49ers were awful in a 41-13 loss to the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday. The score was 21-0 before the buzz from the early games on Sunday had worn off. If he doesn’t get fired after this season, he’ll enter next season with the hottest seat in the league.
When Kelly took the 49ers job, he was given one of the worst rosters you’ll see in the NFL. There are very few blue-chip players and not even many young players to build around. But Kelly hasn’t gotten anything extra out of the 49ers roster either.
His offense hasn’t performed any miracles. The defense is embarrassing. Pick a play from Sunday, either when Devonta Freeman ran right through three 49ers for a 5-yard touchdown or when Freeman ran through one of the biggest holes you’ll ever see in the NFL for a 34-yard touchdown. The 49ers allowed 550 yards. It’s hard for a defense on Kelly’s teams; the offense wants to run a lot of plays and that taxes the defense.
The 49ers won in Week 1 against an unprepared Los Angeles Rams team that eventually fired coach Jeff Fisher. They haven’t won since, and most games have been blowouts. With each loss, the calls for Kelly’s job have gotten louder from the Bay Area media.
Kelly started his pro coaching career well, with back-to-back 10-win seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles. He was an out-of-the-box hire for the Eagles, as a college offensive whiz with no pro experience. Then it turned bad. He was given personnel control and ruined the Eagles roster. He was fired before Week 17 after going 6-9 last season. This year, handed a shockingly thin roster, he has gone 1-13. Maybe no coach could have done better with this group, but it wouldn’t surprise anyone if he paid the price for one of the worst seasons in 49ers history.
Kelly probably had a chance to go back to Oregon, where he was a star. The Ducks had a vacancy and it’s hard to imagine they wouldn’t have taken him back. Everybody would have been happy. Oregon would have had its coach back, Kelly would presumably go back to being one of the more successful college coaches around, and the 49ers could have started over without having to fire another coach. But Kelly said he learned commitment from his father, who recently died, and he couldn’t leave the 49ers during the season. Oregon hired Willie Taggart from South Florida.
Maybe things miraculously turn around over the next two weeks or the 49ers find themselves unwilling to fire Kelly and start over with their fourth coach in four seasons next year. But it seems like the Chip Kelly NFL experiment is nearing its end.
Wednesday, 7 December 2016
Determination of the speed of light: What's actually happening in Ole Roemer's Google Doodle
The little curly-haired cartoon that is wandering around Google's homepage seems to be spending a lot of his time waiting. And that's what the real Ole Roemer, who the image depicts, mostly did – right up until he made one of the most important discoveries in the history of science, and secured his place in Google's image.
Today's Google Doodle depicts the way that humanity learnt about one of the most fundamental pieces of information in the universe – how we determined not only the speed of light, but that light had a speed at all.
The Doodle shows the structure of our solar system, and also Roemer looking up at it through a big telescope while wandering around and timing himself. Which is a fairly accurate depiction of how Roemer made the calculations that would go on to shape our understanding of the universe in the most fundamental ways.
It's really the two Os in the word Google that matter. In the drawing, those become the Sun and Jupiter, which are in turn being orbited by the Earth and the moon Io, respectively. It was the relationship between those four bodies that Roemer used to find the speed of light, and he did so in a way that is hinted at in the Google Doodle.
Roemer needed to use those planets because the speed of light is just too quick to do it with anything smaller – something that Gallileo found when he tried to measure its speed by sending light between two people stood on a hill. It needs to be measured at such huge scale because it's just impossible for humans to see its speed at any smaller level.
Instead, Roemer looked up – just as he's shown doing in the Google Doodle. By looking at how eclipses of Jupiter's moon and noting how long they took and when they happened, he established not only that light took time to move through space, but also had a very good guess at how quickly it did so.
The method worked by watching for those eclipses. He found that the interval between the eclipses seemed to be about seven minutes longer when the earth was moving away from Jupiter than when we were getting close to it. On that basis, he worked out that the time was increasing because it took longer for the light to travel to reach the earth.
By combining that information with what he knew about the size of the Earth and how quickly it was travelling, Roemer was able to work out that what we were seeing was the result of the time taken for the light to get to us – and to do a remarkably good estimate of the speed of light itself.
Roemer's calculations were a little out, and would go on to be refined. His working suggested that light travels about 220,000 kilometres per second, and so his estimate was about 26 per cent below the actual speed of travel.
All of those different pieces of working come together in the Google Doodle. The diagram showing the objects in our universe depicts how Roemer would have known where they all were while observing them, for instance, and the swinging pendulum in the bottom-right corner depicts the kind of timepieces that were necessary to understand how long each observation took – the precision of which were central to his work.
Today's Google Doodle depicts the way that humanity learnt about one of the most fundamental pieces of information in the universe – how we determined not only the speed of light, but that light had a speed at all.
The Doodle shows the structure of our solar system, and also Roemer looking up at it through a big telescope while wandering around and timing himself. Which is a fairly accurate depiction of how Roemer made the calculations that would go on to shape our understanding of the universe in the most fundamental ways.
It's really the two Os in the word Google that matter. In the drawing, those become the Sun and Jupiter, which are in turn being orbited by the Earth and the moon Io, respectively. It was the relationship between those four bodies that Roemer used to find the speed of light, and he did so in a way that is hinted at in the Google Doodle.
Roemer needed to use those planets because the speed of light is just too quick to do it with anything smaller – something that Gallileo found when he tried to measure its speed by sending light between two people stood on a hill. It needs to be measured at such huge scale because it's just impossible for humans to see its speed at any smaller level.
Instead, Roemer looked up – just as he's shown doing in the Google Doodle. By looking at how eclipses of Jupiter's moon and noting how long they took and when they happened, he established not only that light took time to move through space, but also had a very good guess at how quickly it did so.
The method worked by watching for those eclipses. He found that the interval between the eclipses seemed to be about seven minutes longer when the earth was moving away from Jupiter than when we were getting close to it. On that basis, he worked out that the time was increasing because it took longer for the light to travel to reach the earth.
By combining that information with what he knew about the size of the Earth and how quickly it was travelling, Roemer was able to work out that what we were seeing was the result of the time taken for the light to get to us – and to do a remarkably good estimate of the speed of light itself.
Roemer's calculations were a little out, and would go on to be refined. His working suggested that light travels about 220,000 kilometres per second, and so his estimate was about 26 per cent below the actual speed of travel.
All of those different pieces of working come together in the Google Doodle. The diagram showing the objects in our universe depicts how Roemer would have known where they all were while observing them, for instance, and the swinging pendulum in the bottom-right corner depicts the kind of timepieces that were necessary to understand how long each observation took – the precision of which were central to his work.
Pop star Junaid Jamshed among 48 killed in Pakistan plane crash
Officials said there were no survivors on Pakistan International Airlines flight that crashed into a hillside north of Islamabad
Junaid Jamshed, a legendary figure in Pakistani pop music, was among the 48 people killed when a plane crashed into a hillside north of Islamabad, the latest episode in the country’s long history of aviation disasters.
The small turboprop ATR 42 operated by Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) was travelling from the mountainous region of Chitral on Wednesday when it crashed near the town of Havelian.
It was not clear what caused the crash, which happened on a fine day far from the high peaks of the Hindu Kush mountain range where Chitral is located.
However, one civil aviation official said the pilot made a distress call and reported engine failure, and witnesses said the plane plummeted out of the sky.
Photographs and videos taken by locals showed a blasted hillside covered with flames and debris scattered over a wide area.
Officials were quick to declare there was no chance of any survivors. “All of the bodies are burned beyond recognition,” said Taj Muhammad Khan, a government official.
Kurshid Tanoli, a police official in Havelian, said recovery work was hampered by a fire at the crash site and the hilly terrain. “The nearest village to the site is Batolani and is deep in the hills,” he said. “Vehicles and ambulances can only go to Batolani and then it is a 30-minute walk.”
Helicopters and about 500 troops were dispatched to the scene and the army later announced that 40 bodies had been recovered and sent to the nearby town of Abbottabad, where some were due to undergo DNA testing to identify them.
A manifest for flight PK661, obtained by local media, showed that in addition to five crew and a ground engineer there were 42 passengers on board, including Jamshed, a pop star turned evangelical Muslim cleric and fashion designer, who ran a successful chain of boutiques across Pakistan.
Social media tributes flooded in for Jamshed, who rose to fame in the 1980s and 1990s as part of the group Vital Signs, whose songs are still popular today.
Jamshed later abandoned his music career after becoming a follower of the Tableeghi Jamaat, a highly conservative, proselytising Islamic movement. Quaid-e-Azam, manager of the Hindukush Heights hotel in Chitral, said Jamshed had been in the town as part of a 15-day preaching tour.
Shortly before his death Jamshed posted pictures on social media of his trip to Chitral, a picturesque valley popular with tourists, which he described as “heaven on Earth”.
In 2014 Jamshed was accused of blasphemy, an extremely serious allegation in Pakistan, and fled to the UK after issuing an apology.
Also on board, according to the manifest, was Osama Warraich, the senior civilian bureaucrat for Chitral, who was travelling to Islamabad with his wife and son.
PIA said three foreigners were on board: two Austrians and one Chinese citizen.
Pakistan’s last major air disaster was in 2015 when a military helicopter crashed in a remote northern valley, killing eight people including the Norwegian, Philippine and Indonesian ambassadors and the wives of Malaysian and Indonesian envoys.
The country’s deadliest crash was in 2010, when an Airbus A321 operated by the private airline Airblue flying from Karachi crashed into hills outside Islamabad while preparing to land, killing all 152 people on board.
The deadliest accident involving PIA occurred in 1992 when an Airbus A300 crashed into a cloud-covered hillside after descending too early on approach to the Nepalese capital Kathmandu, killing 167 people.
Although PIA has been crash-free for 10 years, a 2014 analysis by US statistician Nate Silver based on data from 1985 to 2014 found the airline had a consistently high number of what he termed “near-misses” – an indicator of risk.
The government has vowed to privatise PIA, the national carrier, which has been losing money.
Junaid Jamshed, a legendary figure in Pakistani pop music, was among the 48 people killed when a plane crashed into a hillside north of Islamabad, the latest episode in the country’s long history of aviation disasters.
The small turboprop ATR 42 operated by Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) was travelling from the mountainous region of Chitral on Wednesday when it crashed near the town of Havelian.
It was not clear what caused the crash, which happened on a fine day far from the high peaks of the Hindu Kush mountain range where Chitral is located.
However, one civil aviation official said the pilot made a distress call and reported engine failure, and witnesses said the plane plummeted out of the sky.
Photographs and videos taken by locals showed a blasted hillside covered with flames and debris scattered over a wide area.
Officials were quick to declare there was no chance of any survivors. “All of the bodies are burned beyond recognition,” said Taj Muhammad Khan, a government official.
Kurshid Tanoli, a police official in Havelian, said recovery work was hampered by a fire at the crash site and the hilly terrain. “The nearest village to the site is Batolani and is deep in the hills,” he said. “Vehicles and ambulances can only go to Batolani and then it is a 30-minute walk.”
Helicopters and about 500 troops were dispatched to the scene and the army later announced that 40 bodies had been recovered and sent to the nearby town of Abbottabad, where some were due to undergo DNA testing to identify them.
A manifest for flight PK661, obtained by local media, showed that in addition to five crew and a ground engineer there were 42 passengers on board, including Jamshed, a pop star turned evangelical Muslim cleric and fashion designer, who ran a successful chain of boutiques across Pakistan.
Social media tributes flooded in for Jamshed, who rose to fame in the 1980s and 1990s as part of the group Vital Signs, whose songs are still popular today.
Jamshed later abandoned his music career after becoming a follower of the Tableeghi Jamaat, a highly conservative, proselytising Islamic movement. Quaid-e-Azam, manager of the Hindukush Heights hotel in Chitral, said Jamshed had been in the town as part of a 15-day preaching tour.
Shortly before his death Jamshed posted pictures on social media of his trip to Chitral, a picturesque valley popular with tourists, which he described as “heaven on Earth”.
In 2014 Jamshed was accused of blasphemy, an extremely serious allegation in Pakistan, and fled to the UK after issuing an apology.
Also on board, according to the manifest, was Osama Warraich, the senior civilian bureaucrat for Chitral, who was travelling to Islamabad with his wife and son.
PIA said three foreigners were on board: two Austrians and one Chinese citizen.
Pakistan’s last major air disaster was in 2015 when a military helicopter crashed in a remote northern valley, killing eight people including the Norwegian, Philippine and Indonesian ambassadors and the wives of Malaysian and Indonesian envoys.
The country’s deadliest crash was in 2010, when an Airbus A321 operated by the private airline Airblue flying from Karachi crashed into hills outside Islamabad while preparing to land, killing all 152 people on board.
The deadliest accident involving PIA occurred in 1992 when an Airbus A300 crashed into a cloud-covered hillside after descending too early on approach to the Nepalese capital Kathmandu, killing 167 people.
Although PIA has been crash-free for 10 years, a 2014 analysis by US statistician Nate Silver based on data from 1985 to 2014 found the airline had a consistently high number of what he termed “near-misses” – an indicator of risk.
The government has vowed to privatise PIA, the national carrier, which has been losing money.
Monday, 5 December 2016
What’s coming to Netflix, Stan and Foxtel this December
IF you are someone who loves binge-watching film and TV, the Christmas holidays is a great opportunity to sink your teeth into some content.
To help you make the most of your viewing, we have compiled a list of the content heading to Netflix, Stan and Foxtel this December.
To help you make the most of your viewing, we have compiled a list of the content heading to Netflix, Stan and Foxtel this December.
NETFLIX
AS expected, Netflix is dropping its own original content and some fantastic movies.
The biggest original to drop this month is the December 9 release of Fuller Houseseason 2 — the spin-off series of television series Full House.
In terms of other highlights, Zooey Deschanel’s cynical romantic comedy 500 Days of Summer and Ridely Scott’s Academy Award winning Black Hawk Down are bound to be popular.
Here is the full list of what to expect:
Original Series
Fuller House: Season 2 (9 December)
White Rabbit Project: Season 1 (9 December)
Club De Cuervos: Season 2 (9 December)
Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency: Season 1 (11 December)
Nobel: Season 1 (13 December)
Crazyhead: Season 1 (16 December)
No Second Chance: Season 1 (16 December)
Van Helsing: Season 1 (17 December)
Ten Percent: Season 1 (20 December)
Travelers: Season 1 (23 December)
Chasing Cameron: Season 1 (27 December)
Ajin: Season 2 (27 December)
Original Movies
Spectral (9 December)
Barry (10 December)
Comedy
Reggie Watts: Spatial (6 December)
Ricardo O’Farrell (12 December)
Gabriel Igelsias: Sorry For What I Said When I Was Hungry (20 December)
Documentaries
The Cuba Libre Story: Season 1 (8 December)
Captive: Season 1 (9 December)
Movies
Blue Jay (7 December)
Other People (8 December)
500 Days Of Summer (15 December)
The Finest Hours (20 December)
Matilda (21 December)
Black Hawk Down (28 December)
The Recruit (28 December)
The Homesman (31 December)
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend: Season 1 (31 December)
STAN
Topping the list of content available on Stan this month is the Australian-exclusive of Preacher — a supernatural action-comedy about a small-town Texas preacher who gains a magic power.
Other than AMC’s Preacher, Will Smith’s 2016 film Concussion and new episodes of Ash vs Evil Dead are set to be popular among viewers.
Here is the full list of what to expect:
Series
Ash Vs Evil Dead: Season 2 Episode 9 (5 December)
Blunt Talk: Season 2 Episode 9 (5 December)
The Elegant Gentleman’s Guide to Knife Fighting: Season 1 (6 December)
Good Behaviour: Season 1 Episode 5 (7 December)
Younger: Season 3 Episode 10 (8 December)
The Last Panthers: Season 1 (9 December)
Mozart In The Jungle: Season 3 (10 December)
Ash Vs Evil Dead: Season 2 Episode 10 (12 December)
Blunt Talk: Season 2 Episode 10 (12 December)
Good Behaviour: Season 1 Episode 6 (14 December)
Younger: Season 3 Episode 11 + 12 (15 December)
Acquitted: Season 2 (20 December)
Good Behaviour: Season 1 Episode 7 (21 December)
Doctor Who: Last Christmas (26 December)
Doctor Who: The Husbands of River Song (26 December)
Penny Dreadful: Season 2 (27 December)
Good Behaviour: Season 1 Episode 8 (28 December)
Movies
Masculin Feminin (6 December)
The Student (7 December)
Melancholia (8 December)
A Pigeon Sat On A Branch Reflecting On Existance (8 December)
Deathgasm (9 December)
A Second Chance (11 December)
Two or Three Things I Know About Her (12 December)
Jimi: All Is By My Side (13 December)
Glassland (13 December)
The Loved Ones (14 December)
Concussion (2016) (15 December)
The Green Prince (16 December)
The Exterminating Angels (16 December)
Frank (17 December)
Annie (17 December)
Banksy Does New York (18 December)
How I Live Now (19 December)
Haemoo (19 December)
Halal Love (And Sex) (19 December)
Therese Desqueyroux (20 December)
Office (21 December)
Fire in Babylon (22 December)
Jew Suss: Rise And Fall (22 December)
The Double — 23 December
Francis: Pray For Me (23 December)
The Summit (24 December)
Joe (25 December)
Lolo (28 December)
Short Term 12 (29 December)
Sleeping with Other People (29 December)
Dirty Wars (30 December)
Triad (30 December)
The Hunter (31 December)
FOXTEL
Leading the way for Foxtel’s content this December is the first season of HBO’s Westworld — an American science fiction western thriller television series based on a 1973 film of the same name.
Series
Westworld, Season 1
Insecure, Season 1
Dickensian, Season 1
Australia’s Next Top Model, Season 10
Just for Laugh’s Australia, Season 1-3
The Musketeers, Season 1-3
Home and Away: Revenge
Wentworth, Season 1-4
The Great Australian Bake Off, Sseason 1
Mariah’s World, Season 1
Movies
101 Dalmatians
102 Dalmatians
Absolutely Anything
Anger Management
Annie
Anomalisa
Balls Of Fury
The Bank Job
Basic Instinct
Batman vs. Robin
Batman: Assault On Arkham!
Batman: The Killing Joke
Best Laid Plans
The Big Chill
Black Mask
Blue Crush
Bounce
By The Sea
The Cable Guy
Cape Fear
Chain Reaction
The Choice
Cleanskin
The Commitments
Concussion
The Danish Girl
Daughter Of God
Deck The Halls
The Dictator
Donnie Darko (Director’s Cut)
Dreamgirls
Duplex
Ella Enchanted
Even Lambs Have Teeth
Everybody’s Fine
The Family Stone
Final Destination
Final Destination 2
Final Destination 3
Final Destination 5
The Final Destination
Finding Neverland
The Finest Hours
Four Holidays
Frailty
Gangs Of New York
Garfield
Ghost Rider
Gossip
Grand Canyon
Hitchcock
Home Alone
I Am Wrath
The Incredibles
Jackass 3
Jackass Number Two
Home Alone 2: Lost In New York
The Hurricane
Jackass: The Movie
Jerked
Juno
Krampus
Kung Fu Panda 3
Lady And The Tramp
The Legend Of Bagger Vance
Lemony Snicket’s A Series Of Unfortunate Events
The Mask Of Zorro
Material Girls
Miracle On 34th Street
A Month Of Sundays
My Big Fat Greek Wedding
My Super Ex-Girlfriend
Nina Forever
No Reservations
The Notebook
Ocean’s Eleven
Ocean’s Thirteen
Ocean’s Twelve
Once Upon A Time In America
One Hundred And One Dalmatians
The Other Side Of The Door
Parental Guidance
Peter Pan
Postcards From The Edge
The Pursuit Of Happyness
Rat Race
Ratatouille
Red Planet
Ripley’s Game
The River Wild
Room
Rumour Has It
Santa Buddies
Scooby-Doo! Moon Monster Madness
See Spot Run
Semi-Pro
Sherpa
Sleepers
Snow Buddies
Space Buddies
Spotlight
Steel Magnolias
Steve Jobs
Tale Of Tales
Titanic
Unindian
Vanilla Sky
A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas
View From The Top
Whip It
Wolf Creek
Zoolander 2
AS expected, Netflix is dropping its own original content and some fantastic movies.
The biggest original to drop this month is the December 9 release of Fuller Houseseason 2 — the spin-off series of television series Full House.
In terms of other highlights, Zooey Deschanel’s cynical romantic comedy 500 Days of Summer and Ridely Scott’s Academy Award winning Black Hawk Down are bound to be popular.
Here is the full list of what to expect:
Original Series
Fuller House: Season 2 (9 December)
White Rabbit Project: Season 1 (9 December)
Club De Cuervos: Season 2 (9 December)
Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency: Season 1 (11 December)
Nobel: Season 1 (13 December)
Crazyhead: Season 1 (16 December)
No Second Chance: Season 1 (16 December)
Van Helsing: Season 1 (17 December)
Ten Percent: Season 1 (20 December)
Travelers: Season 1 (23 December)
Chasing Cameron: Season 1 (27 December)
Ajin: Season 2 (27 December)
Original Movies
Spectral (9 December)
Barry (10 December)
Comedy
Reggie Watts: Spatial (6 December)
Ricardo O’Farrell (12 December)
Gabriel Igelsias: Sorry For What I Said When I Was Hungry (20 December)
Documentaries
The Cuba Libre Story: Season 1 (8 December)
Captive: Season 1 (9 December)
Movies
Blue Jay (7 December)
Other People (8 December)
500 Days Of Summer (15 December)
The Finest Hours (20 December)
Matilda (21 December)
Black Hawk Down (28 December)
The Recruit (28 December)
The Homesman (31 December)
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend: Season 1 (31 December)
STAN
Topping the list of content available on Stan this month is the Australian-exclusive of Preacher — a supernatural action-comedy about a small-town Texas preacher who gains a magic power.
Other than AMC’s Preacher, Will Smith’s 2016 film Concussion and new episodes of Ash vs Evil Dead are set to be popular among viewers.
Here is the full list of what to expect:
Series
Ash Vs Evil Dead: Season 2 Episode 9 (5 December)
Blunt Talk: Season 2 Episode 9 (5 December)
The Elegant Gentleman’s Guide to Knife Fighting: Season 1 (6 December)
Good Behaviour: Season 1 Episode 5 (7 December)
Younger: Season 3 Episode 10 (8 December)
The Last Panthers: Season 1 (9 December)
Mozart In The Jungle: Season 3 (10 December)
Ash Vs Evil Dead: Season 2 Episode 10 (12 December)
Blunt Talk: Season 2 Episode 10 (12 December)
Good Behaviour: Season 1 Episode 6 (14 December)
Younger: Season 3 Episode 11 + 12 (15 December)
Acquitted: Season 2 (20 December)
Good Behaviour: Season 1 Episode 7 (21 December)
Doctor Who: Last Christmas (26 December)
Doctor Who: The Husbands of River Song (26 December)
Penny Dreadful: Season 2 (27 December)
Good Behaviour: Season 1 Episode 8 (28 December)
Movies
Masculin Feminin (6 December)
The Student (7 December)
Melancholia (8 December)
A Pigeon Sat On A Branch Reflecting On Existance (8 December)
Deathgasm (9 December)
A Second Chance (11 December)
Two or Three Things I Know About Her (12 December)
Jimi: All Is By My Side (13 December)
Glassland (13 December)
The Loved Ones (14 December)
Concussion (2016) (15 December)
The Green Prince (16 December)
The Exterminating Angels (16 December)
Frank (17 December)
Annie (17 December)
Banksy Does New York (18 December)
How I Live Now (19 December)
Haemoo (19 December)
Halal Love (And Sex) (19 December)
Therese Desqueyroux (20 December)
Office (21 December)
Fire in Babylon (22 December)
Jew Suss: Rise And Fall (22 December)
The Double — 23 December
Francis: Pray For Me (23 December)
The Summit (24 December)
Joe (25 December)
Lolo (28 December)
Short Term 12 (29 December)
Sleeping with Other People (29 December)
Dirty Wars (30 December)
Triad (30 December)
The Hunter (31 December)
FOXTEL
Leading the way for Foxtel’s content this December is the first season of HBO’s Westworld — an American science fiction western thriller television series based on a 1973 film of the same name.
Series
Westworld, Season 1
Insecure, Season 1
Dickensian, Season 1
Australia’s Next Top Model, Season 10
Just for Laugh’s Australia, Season 1-3
The Musketeers, Season 1-3
Home and Away: Revenge
Wentworth, Season 1-4
The Great Australian Bake Off, Sseason 1
Mariah’s World, Season 1
Movies
101 Dalmatians
102 Dalmatians
Absolutely Anything
Anger Management
Annie
Anomalisa
Balls Of Fury
The Bank Job
Basic Instinct
Batman vs. Robin
Batman: Assault On Arkham!
Batman: The Killing Joke
Best Laid Plans
The Big Chill
Black Mask
Blue Crush
Bounce
By The Sea
The Cable Guy
Cape Fear
Chain Reaction
The Choice
Cleanskin
The Commitments
Concussion
The Danish Girl
Daughter Of God
Deck The Halls
The Dictator
Donnie Darko (Director’s Cut)
Dreamgirls
Duplex
Ella Enchanted
Even Lambs Have Teeth
Everybody’s Fine
The Family Stone
Final Destination
Final Destination 2
Final Destination 3
Final Destination 5
The Final Destination
Finding Neverland
The Finest Hours
Four Holidays
Frailty
Gangs Of New York
Garfield
Ghost Rider
Gossip
Grand Canyon
Hitchcock
Home Alone
I Am Wrath
The Incredibles
Jackass 3
Jackass Number Two
Home Alone 2: Lost In New York
The Hurricane
Jackass: The Movie
Jerked
Juno
Krampus
Kung Fu Panda 3
Lady And The Tramp
The Legend Of Bagger Vance
Lemony Snicket’s A Series Of Unfortunate Events
The Mask Of Zorro
Material Girls
Miracle On 34th Street
A Month Of Sundays
My Big Fat Greek Wedding
My Super Ex-Girlfriend
Nina Forever
No Reservations
The Notebook
Ocean’s Eleven
Ocean’s Thirteen
Ocean’s Twelve
Once Upon A Time In America
One Hundred And One Dalmatians
The Other Side Of The Door
Parental Guidance
Peter Pan
Postcards From The Edge
The Pursuit Of Happyness
Rat Race
Ratatouille
Red Planet
Ripley’s Game
The River Wild
Room
Rumour Has It
Santa Buddies
Scooby-Doo! Moon Monster Madness
See Spot Run
Semi-Pro
Sherpa
Sleepers
Snow Buddies
Space Buddies
Spotlight
Steel Magnolias
Steve Jobs
Tale Of Tales
Titanic
Unindian
Vanilla Sky
A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas
View From The Top
Whip It
Wolf Creek
Zoolander 2
Saturday, 3 December 2016
Officials fear up to 40 dead in fire during concert at Oakland warehouse
Authorities said they would work through the night to recover more victims of a deadly fire that raced through a converted warehouse crowded with people attending a Friday night concert in Oakland.
Nine bodies have been recovered, but Alameda County sheriff’s Sgt. Ray Kelly said officials were prepared for up to 40 fatalities. He said many of those inside the warehouse were young, some from foreign countries.
At an evening news conference, Kelly said that about two dozen people believed missing have been found. But at least two dozen remain missing, and officials believe the death toll will increase considerably as searchers make their way through the remains of the building. The building’s roof caved in, and debris will make the search effort difficult.
There is no known cause of the fire. While arson is not suspected, Kelly said investigators are on scene and nothing has been ruled out. The warehouse isn’t currently considered a crime scene.
Officials believe there likely are more fatalities because there are friends and family who still have not heard from some people who attended the concert. Kelly said there were relatively few injuries among those who escaped.
“This is just a tragedy, and there are no easy answers,” Kelly said. “This is not an easy task.”
He said it could take two days to complete to search for victims. Officials are bringing in cranes, bulldozers and excavating equipment to access the west side of the building. Cadaver dogs may also be used.
Officials are fingerprinting people, and four of the nine bodies have been removed.
Witnesses described a horrific fight for survival as people tried to flee the flames.
Al Garcia, who owns a store next to the warehouse, said he talked to two people who said they were 17 and 18 years old who got out of the building.
“They said that black, billowing smoke was coming down the stairs,” said Garcia, 62. “They couldn’t see anything in front of them, anything behind them. The only reason they got out was they heard voices outside. The voices directed them to where they were going.”
The teens said they paid $10 to get into the warehouse party, which they found online, Garcia said.
The fire is likely to be the deadliest in several years in California and the most destructive in the East Bay since the great 1991 Oakland Hills fire, which killed 25 people and injured more than 100 others.
City records cited allegations of at least three code violations at the building this year. In one complaint, city inspectors said there was complaint of an illegal building on the property as well as piles of trash.
“This property is a storage [facility], but the owner turned it into a trash recycling center. The yard became a trash collection site, and the main building was [remodeled] for residential,” according to city records.
City building and safety officials said Saturday afternoon that there was an open investigation into the warehouse and that inspectors had found evidence of blight. The building was permitted for use as a warehouse, not for housing.
They said that a party or concert at the property would have required a permit, which had not been granted. They also said there was no evidence of fire sprinklers or alarms in the building.
Oakland City Councilman Noel Gallo, who represents the district where the fire broke out, said neighbors have regularly complained about the building — particularly the fact that it had piles of trash and debris outside.
“We would complain to the manager that they had all that nonsense outside of his building, blocking sidewalks, blocking streets. And … he always had an attitude,” he said.
Gallo said he did not know whether people were living inside the warehouse. Asked whether the building had residential permits, he said: “Absolutely not.”
“The reality is, there are many facilities being occupied without permits,” he said. “They’re occurring on Oakland’s streets, especially in neighborhoods like mine.”
The property is one of several owned by Chor N. Ng, according to her daughter, Eva Ng, 36. She said the warehouse was leased as studio space for an art collective and not used as a dwelling.
“Nobody lived there,” she told The Times, adding, “It was an art collective.”
She said she had asked her leaseholders about the issue and had been reassured that nobody lived in the building. “They confirmed multiple times. They said sometimes some people worked through the night, but that is all,” she said.
The second floor had two exits, both wooden stairs, she said, adding that she believes the building also had smoke detectors. She was not familiar with comments by fire officials that the makeshift stairs consisted of packing crates.
Ng added that her mother felt terrible about the tragedy.
Kevin Longton, who lives at the Vulcan Lofts, less than a mile from where the fire took place, said the warehouse was well-known for holding rave-style dance parties. He went to one about a year ago, never saw any sprinklers and felt the place was an accident waiting to happen.
Inside, he said, were two floors with a huge open space on the first floor with lots of nooks and crannies. People had cordoned off loft-style sections on the first floor and decorated them with fabrics and curtains. More than a two dozen old pianos were strewn about the floor.
“There were people living there,” Longton said. “I’m sure of that."
People who previously lived there recalled a building that lacked fire sprinklers and had a staircase partly made of wooden pallets. Partygoers recalled a rabbit warren of rooms crammed with belongings — pianos, organs, antique furniture, doors and half-finished sculptures.
“It was a tinderbox,” said Brooke Rollo, 30, who lives less than a mile from the scene and had gone to parties there.
Photos on the warehouse’s Tumblr page show a maze of rooms, with walls and dividers made from pianos, boxes, salvaged doors and other materials. Wooden rafters were adorned with hanging lanterns, holiday lights, bicycles, stereo equipment and exposed wiring.
Ben Brandrett, a mental health researcher living in San Francisco, attended a performance at the warehouse and noticed that a staircase didn’t have a banister. “I remember thinking, ‘This seems sketchy.’”
Firefighters who responded to the Friday’s three-alarm blaze described the interior as a labyrinth. And officials said organizers of the warehouse concert never obtained a permit for the event, preventing city workers from inspecting exits, fire extinguishers and other vital safety features.
The building was the site of a concert Friday night called the Golden Donna 100% Silk 2016 West Coast Tour, according to a concert Facebook page.
Organizers of the concert posted a statement describing the fire as an “unbelievable tragedy, a nightmare scenario. ... We are a very tight community of artists and we are all praying, sending love and condolences to everyone involved and their families.”
Witnesses said the warehouse, known locally as the Oakland Ghost Ship, was a collective where artists lived and worked.
Through the early-morning hours, people used the Facebook page to seek information about friends and loved ones who attended the concert. Some frantically listed the names of missing people and posted their photos, hoping to learn their fates.
“Making a new post with the names we currently have missing at the Sheriff’s office. PLEASE comment if you know 100% if any of these people are safe,” one person wrote.
“The police have asked for missing people’s photos and identifying features. Piercings, tattoos, clothing they were wearing, weight, birthday, hair color etc. they asked to post on this Facebook event. Please post info here,” wrote another.
At 10 a.m. Saturday, firefighters were dismantling one of the doors to the blackened building, which was covered with graffiti and had the word “GhostShip” painted outside. Sidewalks in front of the building were strewn with couches, window frames and other debris, and a charred smell permeated the air.
Rolando Jacobo, 41, the owner of nearby memorial headstone store Oakland Monuments, opened at 10 a.m. but had spent most of his morning standing outside his store, watching firefighters pull debris from the burned-out warehouse.
“I saw the fire when I was passing on the freeway last night, and I didn’t know if it was my building on fire,” he said.
Lee Leon, 50, a custodian at the Native American Health Center, got a call at 2 a.m. from a friend who also was driving on the freeway and saw the fire. Leon arrived at the Health Center, about a block away from the fire, shortly after. He took photos and called his boss to let him know that the Health Center was fine.
Both Leon and Jacobo said neighbors knew that the warehouse was used as an art studio and that people lived there. The warehouse often held private events “such as art shows,” but Leon, who has worked at the center for 17 years, said the residents were “low key.”
Seung Lee arrived to the warehouse about 11 p.m. to catch the concert with two friends.
They walked through the building’s maze-like first floor before heading upstairs where as many as 30 concertgoers were listening to live music, Lee said. One suggested they get some alcohol, so they headed to a nearby liquor store around 11:15 p.m.
Less than 10 minutes later, they returned to find thick, black smoke pouring out of the first floor windows of the warehouse and flames shooting out of the back of the building, he said.
“I froze in disbelief,” said Lee, who immediately called 911. “The hardest thing I’m having trouble processing are the people on the second floor. I saw them dancing and having a fun time and 10 minutes later they are trapped in this inferno.”
Lee, a freelance journalist, said the only way up to the second floor was by climbing a wooden staircase. He said he didn’t notice any other exits on the second floor. There were about 60 to 70 people in the warehouse, Lee said.
Anyone with information about survivors is urged to call (510) 382-3000.
Nine bodies have been recovered, but Alameda County sheriff’s Sgt. Ray Kelly said officials were prepared for up to 40 fatalities. He said many of those inside the warehouse were young, some from foreign countries.
At an evening news conference, Kelly said that about two dozen people believed missing have been found. But at least two dozen remain missing, and officials believe the death toll will increase considerably as searchers make their way through the remains of the building. The building’s roof caved in, and debris will make the search effort difficult.
There is no known cause of the fire. While arson is not suspected, Kelly said investigators are on scene and nothing has been ruled out. The warehouse isn’t currently considered a crime scene.
Officials believe there likely are more fatalities because there are friends and family who still have not heard from some people who attended the concert. Kelly said there were relatively few injuries among those who escaped.
“This is just a tragedy, and there are no easy answers,” Kelly said. “This is not an easy task.”
He said it could take two days to complete to search for victims. Officials are bringing in cranes, bulldozers and excavating equipment to access the west side of the building. Cadaver dogs may also be used.
Officials are fingerprinting people, and four of the nine bodies have been removed.
Witnesses described a horrific fight for survival as people tried to flee the flames.
Al Garcia, who owns a store next to the warehouse, said he talked to two people who said they were 17 and 18 years old who got out of the building.
“They said that black, billowing smoke was coming down the stairs,” said Garcia, 62. “They couldn’t see anything in front of them, anything behind them. The only reason they got out was they heard voices outside. The voices directed them to where they were going.”
The teens said they paid $10 to get into the warehouse party, which they found online, Garcia said.
The fire is likely to be the deadliest in several years in California and the most destructive in the East Bay since the great 1991 Oakland Hills fire, which killed 25 people and injured more than 100 others.
City records cited allegations of at least three code violations at the building this year. In one complaint, city inspectors said there was complaint of an illegal building on the property as well as piles of trash.
“This property is a storage [facility], but the owner turned it into a trash recycling center. The yard became a trash collection site, and the main building was [remodeled] for residential,” according to city records.
City building and safety officials said Saturday afternoon that there was an open investigation into the warehouse and that inspectors had found evidence of blight. The building was permitted for use as a warehouse, not for housing.
They said that a party or concert at the property would have required a permit, which had not been granted. They also said there was no evidence of fire sprinklers or alarms in the building.
Oakland City Councilman Noel Gallo, who represents the district where the fire broke out, said neighbors have regularly complained about the building — particularly the fact that it had piles of trash and debris outside.
“We would complain to the manager that they had all that nonsense outside of his building, blocking sidewalks, blocking streets. And … he always had an attitude,” he said.
Gallo said he did not know whether people were living inside the warehouse. Asked whether the building had residential permits, he said: “Absolutely not.”
“The reality is, there are many facilities being occupied without permits,” he said. “They’re occurring on Oakland’s streets, especially in neighborhoods like mine.”
The property is one of several owned by Chor N. Ng, according to her daughter, Eva Ng, 36. She said the warehouse was leased as studio space for an art collective and not used as a dwelling.
“Nobody lived there,” she told The Times, adding, “It was an art collective.”
She said she had asked her leaseholders about the issue and had been reassured that nobody lived in the building. “They confirmed multiple times. They said sometimes some people worked through the night, but that is all,” she said.
The second floor had two exits, both wooden stairs, she said, adding that she believes the building also had smoke detectors. She was not familiar with comments by fire officials that the makeshift stairs consisted of packing crates.
Ng added that her mother felt terrible about the tragedy.
Kevin Longton, who lives at the Vulcan Lofts, less than a mile from where the fire took place, said the warehouse was well-known for holding rave-style dance parties. He went to one about a year ago, never saw any sprinklers and felt the place was an accident waiting to happen.
Inside, he said, were two floors with a huge open space on the first floor with lots of nooks and crannies. People had cordoned off loft-style sections on the first floor and decorated them with fabrics and curtains. More than a two dozen old pianos were strewn about the floor.
“There were people living there,” Longton said. “I’m sure of that."
People who previously lived there recalled a building that lacked fire sprinklers and had a staircase partly made of wooden pallets. Partygoers recalled a rabbit warren of rooms crammed with belongings — pianos, organs, antique furniture, doors and half-finished sculptures.
“It was a tinderbox,” said Brooke Rollo, 30, who lives less than a mile from the scene and had gone to parties there.
Photos on the warehouse’s Tumblr page show a maze of rooms, with walls and dividers made from pianos, boxes, salvaged doors and other materials. Wooden rafters were adorned with hanging lanterns, holiday lights, bicycles, stereo equipment and exposed wiring.
Ben Brandrett, a mental health researcher living in San Francisco, attended a performance at the warehouse and noticed that a staircase didn’t have a banister. “I remember thinking, ‘This seems sketchy.’”
Firefighters who responded to the Friday’s three-alarm blaze described the interior as a labyrinth. And officials said organizers of the warehouse concert never obtained a permit for the event, preventing city workers from inspecting exits, fire extinguishers and other vital safety features.
The building was the site of a concert Friday night called the Golden Donna 100% Silk 2016 West Coast Tour, according to a concert Facebook page.
Organizers of the concert posted a statement describing the fire as an “unbelievable tragedy, a nightmare scenario. ... We are a very tight community of artists and we are all praying, sending love and condolences to everyone involved and their families.”
Witnesses said the warehouse, known locally as the Oakland Ghost Ship, was a collective where artists lived and worked.
Through the early-morning hours, people used the Facebook page to seek information about friends and loved ones who attended the concert. Some frantically listed the names of missing people and posted their photos, hoping to learn their fates.
“Making a new post with the names we currently have missing at the Sheriff’s office. PLEASE comment if you know 100% if any of these people are safe,” one person wrote.
“The police have asked for missing people’s photos and identifying features. Piercings, tattoos, clothing they were wearing, weight, birthday, hair color etc. they asked to post on this Facebook event. Please post info here,” wrote another.
At 10 a.m. Saturday, firefighters were dismantling one of the doors to the blackened building, which was covered with graffiti and had the word “GhostShip” painted outside. Sidewalks in front of the building were strewn with couches, window frames and other debris, and a charred smell permeated the air.
Rolando Jacobo, 41, the owner of nearby memorial headstone store Oakland Monuments, opened at 10 a.m. but had spent most of his morning standing outside his store, watching firefighters pull debris from the burned-out warehouse.
“I saw the fire when I was passing on the freeway last night, and I didn’t know if it was my building on fire,” he said.
Lee Leon, 50, a custodian at the Native American Health Center, got a call at 2 a.m. from a friend who also was driving on the freeway and saw the fire. Leon arrived at the Health Center, about a block away from the fire, shortly after. He took photos and called his boss to let him know that the Health Center was fine.
Both Leon and Jacobo said neighbors knew that the warehouse was used as an art studio and that people lived there. The warehouse often held private events “such as art shows,” but Leon, who has worked at the center for 17 years, said the residents were “low key.”
Seung Lee arrived to the warehouse about 11 p.m. to catch the concert with two friends.
They walked through the building’s maze-like first floor before heading upstairs where as many as 30 concertgoers were listening to live music, Lee said. One suggested they get some alcohol, so they headed to a nearby liquor store around 11:15 p.m.
Less than 10 minutes later, they returned to find thick, black smoke pouring out of the first floor windows of the warehouse and flames shooting out of the back of the building, he said.
“I froze in disbelief,” said Lee, who immediately called 911. “The hardest thing I’m having trouble processing are the people on the second floor. I saw them dancing and having a fun time and 10 minutes later they are trapped in this inferno.”
Lee, a freelance journalist, said the only way up to the second floor was by climbing a wooden staircase. He said he didn’t notice any other exits on the second floor. There were about 60 to 70 people in the warehouse, Lee said.
Anyone with information about survivors is urged to call (510) 382-3000.
Friday, 2 December 2016
Thursday, 1 December 2016
French Quarter arrests show volatile atmosphere before Bourbon Street shooting
Most of the people swarming the French Quarter for the Thanksgiving weekend were simply out to have a good time.
But New Orleans police said they also found 11 men who were ready for a fight. None of the 11 men arrested on gun charges are accused of taking part in the Sunday morning shootout on Bourbon Street that wounded nine and killed one, but their arrests provide a window into the volatile atmosphere that preceded the shooting.
Eleven people in total were arrested on counts of illegal possession of a firearm, according to the New Orleans Police Department. Arrest reports for four of them show that drug use or a fist fight preceded some of the arrests.
Late on Friday night, for instance, police said that three plainclothes officers spotted a man rolling a marijuana cigar in the 100 block of Royal Street.
As they approached Jamal Falls, the 29-year-old New Orleans man dropped the cigar and tried to grind it into the concrete. As the officers patted Falls down, they said, they found a black, semi-automatic Ruger .380 in his right rear pocket. Falls, who already had two drug convictions on his record, was booked on possession of a firearm by a felon and possession of marijuana.
Another cigar full of weed led to the arrest of Ty'aaron Robinson, 22, in the 700 block of Canal Street just after midnight on Saturday, according to police. Plainclothes officers said they found a Smith & Wesson 9mm in Robinson’s waistband when they patted him down.
Then at about 2:30 a.m. Saturday, a “concerned citizen” told police that a man in an orange shirt had a gun on Bourbon Street. Police said they found Alton Whittey, 25, nearby on Canal Street with a handgun in his waistband. He also had a plastic bag with marijuana inside, police allege.
Even after the shooting occurred the arrests continued, police said. Officers breaking up a fist fight in the 600 block of Canal Street took one of the men involved into custody, according to an arrest report. Police said that Naqueal Tucker, 37, tried to drop a Glock .40 caliber to the ground. Officers arrested the man and booked him on illegal possession of a stolen gun, among other counts, an arrest report said.
Tucker was arrested at about 2:30 a.m. Sunday — just an hour after the shooting on Bourbon Street.
But New Orleans police said they also found 11 men who were ready for a fight. None of the 11 men arrested on gun charges are accused of taking part in the Sunday morning shootout on Bourbon Street that wounded nine and killed one, but their arrests provide a window into the volatile atmosphere that preceded the shooting.
Eleven people in total were arrested on counts of illegal possession of a firearm, according to the New Orleans Police Department. Arrest reports for four of them show that drug use or a fist fight preceded some of the arrests.
Late on Friday night, for instance, police said that three plainclothes officers spotted a man rolling a marijuana cigar in the 100 block of Royal Street.
As they approached Jamal Falls, the 29-year-old New Orleans man dropped the cigar and tried to grind it into the concrete. As the officers patted Falls down, they said, they found a black, semi-automatic Ruger .380 in his right rear pocket. Falls, who already had two drug convictions on his record, was booked on possession of a firearm by a felon and possession of marijuana.
Another cigar full of weed led to the arrest of Ty'aaron Robinson, 22, in the 700 block of Canal Street just after midnight on Saturday, according to police. Plainclothes officers said they found a Smith & Wesson 9mm in Robinson’s waistband when they patted him down.
Then at about 2:30 a.m. Saturday, a “concerned citizen” told police that a man in an orange shirt had a gun on Bourbon Street. Police said they found Alton Whittey, 25, nearby on Canal Street with a handgun in his waistband. He also had a plastic bag with marijuana inside, police allege.
Even after the shooting occurred the arrests continued, police said. Officers breaking up a fist fight in the 600 block of Canal Street took one of the men involved into custody, according to an arrest report. Police said that Naqueal Tucker, 37, tried to drop a Glock .40 caliber to the ground. Officers arrested the man and booked him on illegal possession of a stolen gun, among other counts, an arrest report said.
Tucker was arrested at about 2:30 a.m. Sunday — just an hour after the shooting on Bourbon Street.
Man accused of killing Joe McKnight is 'a gentle giant,' sister says, shocked to hear news
'I just can't believe it happened,' she says
Joe McKnight's relatives were shocked Thursday afternoon when they heard that the football player, a local prep legend and ex-NFL player, had been gunned down on a busy street in Terrytown.Just as shocked was a close relative of the man accused of killing McKnight, Ronald Gasser.
During a phone interview Thursday night, Gasser's sister, Sharon Gasser Weileman, called her brother "a gentle giant."
"I just can't believe it happened," she said.
She called her brother "the most generous person. Low-key."
Jefferson Parish Sheriff Newell Normand said at the scene of the shooting that detectives were interviewing Gasser, 54, of Gretna.
Normand said Gasser's and McKnight's vehicles pulled up side by side at the corner of Behrman Highway and Holmes Boulevard.
Moments later, the 28-year-old McKnight lay dead on the pavement. Gasser stayed at the scene and surrendered a weapon to deputies who responded to reports of the shooting.
As tributes and memorials to McKnight poured in on social media and elsewhere, Gasser's sister said she was having difficulty grasping the circumstances surrounding the shooting, which she said she first heard about when she got home from work and turned on the news.
Weileman said that brother worked in computers and she did not know why he would have been driving on Behrman Highway on Thursday afternoon. By Thursday night, she had not been able to speak to her brother and did not know whether he had retained an attorney.
Gasser has one daughter, his sister said. He is the registered owner of a telecommunications firm and a real estate business, according to state records.
Jefferson Parish court records indicate that he was cited for simple battery in February 2006; the count was later dismissed.
Weileman said she didn't know what happened when her brother was arrested 10 years ago or why he might have been carrying a gun Thursday.
"I've never seen (the gun), so I couldn't tell you," she said.
HISTORY OF ISLAM
Islam: 7th century
In the 7th century Arabia becomes the cradle of the world's third great monotheistic religion. All three have begun within a small area of southwest Asia. First Judaism, somewhere in the region stretching up from the Red Sea to Palestine; then Christianityat the northern end of this area; and finally Islam to the south, in Mecca, close to the Red Sea.
Each of the later arrivals in this close family of religions claims to build upon the message of its predecessors, bringing a better and more up-to-date version of the truth about the one God - in this case as revealed to the Messenger of God, Muhammad. Islam means 'surrender' (to God), and from the same root anyone who follows Islam is a Muslim.
It is on Mount Hira, according to tradition, that the archangel Gabriel appears to Muhammad. He describes later how he seemed to be grasped by the throat by a luminous being, who commanded him to repeat the words of God. On other occasions Muhammad often has similar experiences (though there are barren times, and periods of self doubt, when he is sustained only by his wife Khadija's unswerving faith in him).
From about 613 Muhammad preaches in Mecca the message which he has received.
Muhammad's message is essentially the existence of one God, all-powerful but also merciful, and he freely acknowledges that other prophets - in particular Abraham, Moses and Jesus - have preached the same truth in the past.
But monotheism is not a popular creed with those whose livelihood depends on idols. Muhammad, once he begins to win converts to the new creed, makes enemies among the traders of Mecca. In 622 there is a plot to assassinate him. He escapes to the town of Yathrib, about 300 kilometres to the north.
Muhammad and the Muslim era: from622
The people of Yathrib, a prosperous oasis, welcome Muhammad and his followers. As a result, the move from Mecca in 622 comes to seem the beginning of Islam.
The Muslim era dates from the Hegira - Arabic for 'emigration', meaning Muhammad's departure from Mecca. In the Muslim calendarthis event marks the beginning of year 1.
Yathrib is renamed Madinat al Nabi, the 'city of the prophet', and thus becomes known as Medina. Here Muhammad steadily acquires a stronger following. He is now essentially a religious, political and even military leader rather than a merchant (Khadija has died in 619).
He continues to preach and recite the words which God reveals to him. It is these passages, together with the earlier revelations at Mecca, which are written down in the Arabic script by his followers and are collected to become the Qur'an - a word (often transliterated as Koran) with its roots in the idea of 'recital', reflecting the oral origin of the text. The final and definitive text of the Qur'an is established under the third caliph, Othman, in about 650.
The Muslims and Mecca: 624-630
Relations with Mecca deteriorate to the point of pitched battles between the two sides, with Muhammad leading his troops in the field. But in the end it is his diplomacy which wins the day.
He persuades the Meccans to allow his followers back into the city, in 629, to make a pilgrimage to the Ka'ba and the Black Stone.
On this first Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca, Muhammad's followers impress the local citizens both by their show of strength and by their self-control, departing peacefully after the agreed three days. But the following year the Meccans break a truce, provoking the Muslims to march on the city.
They take Mecca almost without resistance. The inhabitants accept Islam. And Muhammad sweeps the idols out of the Ka'ba, leaving only the sacred Black Stone.
An important element in Mecca's peaceful acceptance of the change has been Muhammad's promise that pilgrimage to the Ka'ba will remain a central feature of the new religion.
So Mecca becomes, as it has remained ever since, the holy city of Islam. But Medina is by now where Muhammad and his most trusted followers live. And for the next few decades Medina will be the political centre of the developing Muslim state.
Muhammad lives only two years after the peaceful reconciliation with Mecca. He has no son. His only surviving children are daughters by Khadija, though since her death he has married several younger women, among whom his favourite is A'isha.
Muhammad and the caliphate: from632-656
There is no clear successor to Muhammad among his followers. The likely candidates include Abu Bakr (the father of Muhammad's wife A'isha) and Ali (a cousin of Muhammad and the husband of Muhammad's daughter Fatima). Abu Bakr is elected, and takes the title 'khalifat rasul-Allah'.
The Arabic phrase means 'successor of the Messenger of God'. It will introduce a new word, caliph, to the other languages of the world.
Abu Bakr, the first caliph, lives no more than two years after the death of Muhammad. Even so, within thisBRIEFtime Muslim armies have begun their astonishing expansion, subduing the whole of Arabia and striking as far north as Palestine.
Abu Bakr is succeeded in 634 by Omar (another father-in-law of Muhammad), who in 638 captures Jerusalem. Six years later Omar is stabbed and killed in the mosque at Medina - for personal reasons, it seems, by a Persian craftsman living in Kufa.
Othman, chosen as the third caliph, is a son-in-law of Muhammad. By the end of his reign, in 656, Arabs have conquered as far afield as north Africa, Turkey and Afghanistan.
Othman, like his predecessor, is assassinated - but this time by rebellious Muslims. They choose ali, another son-in-law of Muhammad, as the fourth caliph. For the first time within the Muslim community the selected caliph is the choice of just one faction. Ali's caliphate eventually provokes the only major sectarian split in the history of Islam, between Sunni and Shi'a
Ali: 656-661
Raised to the position of caliph by rebels, Ali spends most of his reign in conflict with other Muslims. He wins the first battle, near Basra in 656, against an army fighting in support of Muhammad's widow, A'isha. She is herself in the fray, riding a camel, with the result that the event is remembered as the 'battle of the camel'.
But it is Ali's last success. The governor of Syria, Mu'awiya, wages a prolonged campaign against him to avenge the murder of the caliph Othman, his kinsman. Other opponents succeed in assassinating Ali, in 661, outside the mosque in Kufa - a Muslim garrison town to which he has moved the capital from Medina
Read more:http://www.historyworld.net/wrldhis/PlainTextHistories.asp?historyid=aa56#ixzz4RZh287u1
In the 7th century Arabia becomes the cradle of the world's third great monotheistic religion. All three have begun within a small area of southwest Asia. First Judaism, somewhere in the region stretching up from the Red Sea to Palestine; then Christianityat the northern end of this area; and finally Islam to the south, in Mecca, close to the Red Sea.
Each of the later arrivals in this close family of religions claims to build upon the message of its predecessors, bringing a better and more up-to-date version of the truth about the one God - in this case as revealed to the Messenger of God, Muhammad. Islam means 'surrender' (to God), and from the same root anyone who follows Islam is a Muslim.
It is on Mount Hira, according to tradition, that the archangel Gabriel appears to Muhammad. He describes later how he seemed to be grasped by the throat by a luminous being, who commanded him to repeat the words of God. On other occasions Muhammad often has similar experiences (though there are barren times, and periods of self doubt, when he is sustained only by his wife Khadija's unswerving faith in him).
From about 613 Muhammad preaches in Mecca the message which he has received.
Muhammad's message is essentially the existence of one God, all-powerful but also merciful, and he freely acknowledges that other prophets - in particular Abraham, Moses and Jesus - have preached the same truth in the past.
But monotheism is not a popular creed with those whose livelihood depends on idols. Muhammad, once he begins to win converts to the new creed, makes enemies among the traders of Mecca. In 622 there is a plot to assassinate him. He escapes to the town of Yathrib, about 300 kilometres to the north.
Muhammad and the Muslim era: from622
The people of Yathrib, a prosperous oasis, welcome Muhammad and his followers. As a result, the move from Mecca in 622 comes to seem the beginning of Islam.
The Muslim era dates from the Hegira - Arabic for 'emigration', meaning Muhammad's departure from Mecca. In the Muslim calendarthis event marks the beginning of year 1.
Yathrib is renamed Madinat al Nabi, the 'city of the prophet', and thus becomes known as Medina. Here Muhammad steadily acquires a stronger following. He is now essentially a religious, political and even military leader rather than a merchant (Khadija has died in 619).
He continues to preach and recite the words which God reveals to him. It is these passages, together with the earlier revelations at Mecca, which are written down in the Arabic script by his followers and are collected to become the Qur'an - a word (often transliterated as Koran) with its roots in the idea of 'recital', reflecting the oral origin of the text. The final and definitive text of the Qur'an is established under the third caliph, Othman, in about 650.
The Muslims and Mecca: 624-630
Relations with Mecca deteriorate to the point of pitched battles between the two sides, with Muhammad leading his troops in the field. But in the end it is his diplomacy which wins the day.
He persuades the Meccans to allow his followers back into the city, in 629, to make a pilgrimage to the Ka'ba and the Black Stone.
On this first Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca, Muhammad's followers impress the local citizens both by their show of strength and by their self-control, departing peacefully after the agreed three days. But the following year the Meccans break a truce, provoking the Muslims to march on the city.
They take Mecca almost without resistance. The inhabitants accept Islam. And Muhammad sweeps the idols out of the Ka'ba, leaving only the sacred Black Stone.
An important element in Mecca's peaceful acceptance of the change has been Muhammad's promise that pilgrimage to the Ka'ba will remain a central feature of the new religion.
So Mecca becomes, as it has remained ever since, the holy city of Islam. But Medina is by now where Muhammad and his most trusted followers live. And for the next few decades Medina will be the political centre of the developing Muslim state.
Muhammad lives only two years after the peaceful reconciliation with Mecca. He has no son. His only surviving children are daughters by Khadija, though since her death he has married several younger women, among whom his favourite is A'isha.
Muhammad and the caliphate: from632-656
There is no clear successor to Muhammad among his followers. The likely candidates include Abu Bakr (the father of Muhammad's wife A'isha) and Ali (a cousin of Muhammad and the husband of Muhammad's daughter Fatima). Abu Bakr is elected, and takes the title 'khalifat rasul-Allah'.
The Arabic phrase means 'successor of the Messenger of God'. It will introduce a new word, caliph, to the other languages of the world.
Abu Bakr, the first caliph, lives no more than two years after the death of Muhammad. Even so, within thisBRIEFtime Muslim armies have begun their astonishing expansion, subduing the whole of Arabia and striking as far north as Palestine.
Abu Bakr is succeeded in 634 by Omar (another father-in-law of Muhammad), who in 638 captures Jerusalem. Six years later Omar is stabbed and killed in the mosque at Medina - for personal reasons, it seems, by a Persian craftsman living in Kufa.
Othman, chosen as the third caliph, is a son-in-law of Muhammad. By the end of his reign, in 656, Arabs have conquered as far afield as north Africa, Turkey and Afghanistan.
Othman, like his predecessor, is assassinated - but this time by rebellious Muslims. They choose ali, another son-in-law of Muhammad, as the fourth caliph. For the first time within the Muslim community the selected caliph is the choice of just one faction. Ali's caliphate eventually provokes the only major sectarian split in the history of Islam, between Sunni and Shi'a
Ali: 656-661
Raised to the position of caliph by rebels, Ali spends most of his reign in conflict with other Muslims. He wins the first battle, near Basra in 656, against an army fighting in support of Muhammad's widow, A'isha. She is herself in the fray, riding a camel, with the result that the event is remembered as the 'battle of the camel'.
But it is Ali's last success. The governor of Syria, Mu'awiya, wages a prolonged campaign against him to avenge the murder of the caliph Othman, his kinsman. Other opponents succeed in assassinating Ali, in 661, outside the mosque in Kufa - a Muslim garrison town to which he has moved the capital from Medina
Read more:http://www.historyworld.net/wrldhis/PlainTextHistories.asp?historyid=aa56#ixzz4RZh287u1
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