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Monday, January 6, 2014

Fire outside Time Life building creates panic in New York City

Emergency services personnel cordoned off the streets as the fire burned. Picture: Arthur Tsao / Twitter

Underground explosion in NY0:12

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An underground explosion and subsequent fire outside the Time Life building has created panic in NYC. Courtesy Igor Dukhnovskyi Photography
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Emergency services personnel cordoned off the streets as the fire burned. Picture: Arthur Tsao / Twitter
An underground fire outside the Time Life building in New York City has created panic and injured at least one person.
The fire, which was visible on the street through an open manhole, produced thick clouds of black smoke outside the building on the corner of 51st St and Seventh Ave.
The first floors of the building was evacuated.
Twitter sources suggested the explosion was due to an electrical fault.
Fire creates panic in New York City
The fire outside the Time Life building on the corner of 51st St and Seventh Ave. Picture: arthur Tsao / Twitter Source:Supplied

US braces for record deep freeze as 'polar vortex' pushes temperatures down

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IS this the North Pole's climate change counterstrike? An icy piece of the Arctic is drifting deep over the United States bringing it the coldest temperatures in decades to more than half the nation.
The bitter-cold weather is being produced by what is called a "polar vortex", a deep low pressure system drawing down cold air direct from the Arctic.
The whirlpool of sub-zero air is sweeping over the US central and eastern states after spearing down over the Great Lakes, causing the cancellation of 14,000 flights, chaos on the roads and even frostbite.
Normally, the swirling mass of frigid air orbits over the North Pole. Something has sent the system spinning southward over Canada and the United States.
When wind-chill is included, temperatures in places such as the Midwest and Plains will feel as though they are -45C, the Weather Channel asserts. Warnings are being urgently broadcast in several states that exposed skin will freeze "within in minutes".
"This winter storm will be one for the record books and we want to make sure everyone stays safe and warm until it passes," Illinois Governor Pat Quinn warned his people.
Deep Freeze Ohio
Sharon Scott waits for a bus in a bus stop after running erands in Mayfield Heights, Ohio. (Tony Dejak)
And it's not only the US that is copping an Arctic ice-lashing. Britain is taking a beating, too.
Waves up to 8 meters high are slamming into Britain's southwestern coast , as lashing winds and heavy rain batter parts of the UK and coastal residents braced for another round of flooding. The monster waves were recorded at Land's End, the southwestern tip of the UK.
Icy whirlpool's wide-spread chill
 As a "polar vortex" usually spins in one place over the ice, the air it has trapped gets colder and colder. This air becomes so dense that, even when expelled from its Arctic chiller, it can travel a great distance without any noticeable warming.
Today is expected to be the most bone-chilling day of the snap with freezing temperatures forecast for all 48 continental US states.
Britain Storms
People watch and photograph enormous waves as they break, on Porthcawl harbour, South Wale,. At least three people have died in a wave of stormy weather that has battered Britain since last week, including a man killed when his mobility scooter fell into a river in Oxford, southern England. ( Ben Birchall)
Yes, that includes Texas and Florida.
It's the coldest Arctic outbreak since the early 1990s.
One train on the route from Detroit to Chicago has already disabled for up to nine hours after its engine froze solid.
One person was killed when a private jet skidded on the ice on a runway in Aspen, Colorado.
US Airline officials said de-icing fluid was freezing solid inside aircraft, fuel was pumping sluggishly, and ramp workers were having difficulty loading and unloading luggage.
Graphic
Britain battens down
Britain's month-long bout of harsh weather is also taking its toll.
In Aberystwyth in Wales, seafront homes, businesses and student residence halls were evacuated as high tides hit the Welsh coast.
The Met Office, Britain's weather forecasting body, warned of wind gusts up to 70 mph (113 kph) and exceptionally large waves along the coasts of Wales, southwest England and Northern Ireland.
At least seven people have died in a wave of stormy weather that has battered Britain since December, including a man killed when his mobility scooter fell into a river in Oxford, southern England.
Deep Freeze Missouri
Jerome Harris is bundled up against the weather as wind blows up his scarf in St. Louis. After the area was blanketed by snow on the weekend, dangerous cold settled across Missouri today amid warnings that even a few minutes of exposure for people and pets could be deadly. (Jeff Roberson)
The Environment Agency issued three severe flood warnings Monday - meaning there is a threat to life and property - for the county of Dorset in southwestern England, as well as more than 300 less serious flood alerts.
Polar relief
The United States' "polar vortex" is currently sitting over Hudson Bay. It is not expected to start dissipating until Thursday.
"It's just a dangerous cold," said National Weather Service meteorologist Butch Dye.
It hasn't been this cold for almost two decades in many parts of the country. Frostbite and hypothermia can set in within minutes.
US braces for record deep freeze
New York... Pedestrians cross Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. Picture: John Minchillo/AP
"I have seen frostbite occur through clothing," said Douglas Brunette, an emergency room doctor in Minneapolis. "It's not enough just to be covered. You need clothes made for the elements. You need to repel the wind."
The forecast is extreme: -35 Celsius in North Dakota, and -26 Celsius in Minneapolis, Indianapolis and Chicago. Wind chills - what it feels like when high winds are factored into the temperature - could drop into the -45 to -51 Celsius range.
In New York City, the temperature was expected to drop sharply from about 11 Celsius to about 10 -12 Celsius overnight as the arctic air moved in.
Temperatures
Current temperatures across the continental United States. Source: Supplied
The Indianapolis mayor upgraded the city's travel emergency level to "red," making it illegal for anyone to drive except for emergencies or seeking shelter. The last time the city issued such a travel warning was 1978.
APTOPIX Winter Weather Massachusetts
Michael Stanton walks between houses covered in ice from sea spray along the shore in Scituate, Massachusetts.
Accounts of life with the ice
Elnur Toktombetov, a Chicago taxi driver, said that an hour into his shift, his Toyota's windows were still coated with ice on the inside
Many cities came to a virtual standstill. School was called offon Monday for the state of Minnesota. Government offices and courts in several states closed.
Southern states were bracing for possible record cold temperatures, too. With two freezing nights ahead, Louisiana citrus farmers could lose any fruit they cannot pick in time.
Between a heater that barely works and the drafty windows that invite the cold air inside his home, Jeffery Davis decided he'd be better off sitting in a doughnut shop for three hours Monday until it was time to go to work in downtown Chicago.
Deep Freeze
A commuter walks past warming lamps to an exit on Chicago's El tracks with temperatures well below zero. (Charles Rex Arbogast)
So he threw on two pairs of pants, two t-shirts, "at least three jackets," two hats, a pair of gloves, the "thickest socks you'd probably ever find" and boots, and trudged to the train stop in his South Side neighborhood that took him to within a few blocks of the library where he works.
"I never remember it ever being this cold," said Davis, 51. "I'm flabbergasted."
One after another, people came into the shop, some to buy coffee, others, like Davis, to just sit and wait.
Giovannni Lucero, a 29-year-old painter, said he was prepared for the storm. To keep his pipes from freezing, he'd left the faucet running and opened the kitchen and bathroom cabinet doors to let the warm air in his house reach the pipes.
"We stocked up yesterday on groceries because you never know," Lucero said.
US braces for record deep freeze
Workout... A man uses his cross-country skis on Manhattan's 58th Street during his morning commute. Picture: John Minchillo/AP

UK Tornado fighter jets successfully fly using 3D printed parts

A Royal Air Force Tornado aircraft taxis to it hanger after landing at RAF Marham, in Norfolk. British A Tornado jet has cond...
A Royal Air Force Tornado aircraft taxis to it hanger after landing at RAF Marham, in Norfolk. British A Tornado jet has conducted a successful test flight using 3D printed components. Picture: Gavin Fogg Source: AFP
UK fighter jets have flown for the first time with parts made using 3D printing technology.
BAE Systems said the metal components were successfully used on board Tornado aircraft which flew from the defence firm's airfield at Warton, Lancashire late last month.
The company said its engineers are using 3D technology to design and produce parts which could cut the Royal Air Force's maintenance and service bill by over STG1.2 million ($A2.23 million) over the next four years.
BAE Systems is working at RAF Marham, Norfolk to engineer ready-made parts for four squadrons of Tornado GR4 aircraft, including protective covers for cockpit radios and guards for power take-off shafts. Some of the parts cost less than 100.
Mike Murray, head of airframe integration at BAE Systems, said: ``You are suddenly not fixed in terms of where you have to manufacture these things. You can manufacture the products at whatever base you want, providing you can get a machine there, which means you can also start to support other platforms such as ships and aircraft carriers.
``And if it's feasible to get machines out on the front line, it also gives improved capability where we wouldn't traditionally have any manufacturing support.''

Bombs, bloodshed and Osama bin Laden's ghost: The rise of the new al-Qaeda

'Hero' to jihadists ... Osama bin Laden in a tape released in 2001. ...
'Hero' to jihadists ... Osama bin Laden in a tape released in 2001. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied
A gunman caught on camera in Fallujah during a battle between Iraqi soldiers and al-Qaeda militants. Picture: AP
A gunman caught on camera in Fallujah during a battle between Iraqi soldiers and al-Qaeda militants. Picture: APSource: AP
WHEN Osama bin Laden's forehead was blasted open by elite US soldiers nearly three years ago, many hoped it would also signal the death of al-Qaeda.
But his terror group is widely considered to be on the rise again.
The jihadist organisation has once again made itself known through bloodshed, just as al-Qaeda death squads made the world pay attention after they ploughed airliners into the World Trade Centre on September 11, 2001.
Masked gunman captured two major Iraqi cities from authorities last week. A suicide bombing caused carnage in Beirut - killing at least 23. And the carnage continues in Syria, most of it unreported.
Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility of each of these attacks.
"There has been a resurgence in al-Qaeda related violence," said Clive Williams, a former Australian intelligence officer and a visiting national security professor at the Australian National University.
OK, so who are these people?
A man believed to be a militant shows off the V-sign for victory near Fallujah. Picture: AFP
A man believed to be a militant shows off the V-sign for victory near Fallujah. Picture: AFP Source: AFP
The terror group affiliate is known as ISIS, which stands for the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria. In the past it has been known as al-Qaeda in Iraq, or AQI.
Last week, brigades of ISIS gunmen seized two major Iraqi cities from authorities in a bloody battle: Ramadi, 110km west of Baghdad, and Fallujah, also known as "the city of mosques".
Fallujah has been in the headlines before. It's the same city that was home to one of the bloodiest battles after the US invaded Iraq in 2003.
As much as 60 per cent of the city - businesses, homes, mosques - were destroyed in air strikes and gun battles between insurgents and the so-called Coalition of the Willing.
ISIS is considered such a threat as it's not limited to the one country. It operates in Iraq and Syria, neighbouring countries, where it battles for both the Syrian opposition and against the Iraqi government.
Ironically, al-Qaeda in Iraq was formed in response to the American-led invasion of that country in 2003, according to a former CIA intelligence analyst.
"It was founded by foreign al-Qaeda operatives who entered Iraq in the wake of the US invasion to kill both Americans and Shi'a," Kenneth Pollack, former CIA intelligence analyst and expert on Middle East politics and military affairs, told the US Congress last year.
Hang on, why didn't al-Qaeda die with Bin Laden?
Famous scene ... the US National Security Council keep track of the progress of the mission to kill Bin Laden. Picture: The W...
Famous scene ... the US National Security Council keep track of the progress of the mission to kill Bin Laden. Picture: The White House Source: Supplied
The core organisation which carried out the 9/11 attacks has largely been destroyed by intelligence agencies and military forces, according to Western security officials.
But it has never been a centralised group. World leaders, including US President Barack Obama, compare the group to cancer.
"The core al-Qaeda is on its heels ... decimated," Obama said at a press conference in September last year. The main 'tumour' was destroyed by the military forces that took out Bin Laden and at least 22 of the group's 30 leaders.
But, the president said, "al-Qaeda and other extremists have metastasised (like tumours) into regional groups that can pose significant dangers".
And that's what the world is seeing now, particularly in countries such as Iraq and Syria, as well as Libya and the region known as the Horn of Africa.
So what do ISIS believe in?
Protesters burn tires to block one of the main highways outside Fallujah, Iraq. Picture: AP
Protesters burn tires to block one of the main highways outside Fallujah, Iraq. Picture: AP Source: AP
Much the same as al-Qaeda's traditional goals. It wishes to establish, through violent means, a "caliphate" - an Islamic state led by a caliph, a successor to the Prophet Muhammad.
"They are there for a political reason: to lay the groundwork for a caliphate," Charles Lister, an analyst of the Syrian rebellion, told The New York Review of Books .
ISIS is led by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, an Iraqi extremist who has overseen relentless attacks in Iraq, causing civilian casualties and who ordered the group to expand into Syria.
It is unknown whether he follows the directives of al-Qaeda high command.
Why do these different groups all call themselves al-Qaeda?
You're not wrong if you think sometimes it sounds as if every group that goes around toting powerful assault weapons and shouting fundamentalist Islamic phrases claims to be "linked to al-Qaeda".
There's a clever reason for this, Prof Williams explains. Marketing. In a world of brands, al-Qaeda's the top name in terrorism.
"They're exploiting the name of al-Qaeda," Prof Williams said. "It's a respected brand, which is good for recruiting and financing and establishing links with similar groups."
Can they be stopped?
A US Navy MH-60R Seahawk fires a Hellfire missile. Picture: AFP
A US Navy MH-60R Seahawk fires a Hellfire missile. Picture: AFP Source: AFP
We don't know - but it's happened before, in Iraq at least.
Many Iraqi tribes, communities and rebels turned their backs on AQI during the American occupation last decade, bringing a short peace to the region.
The US military has deployed dozens of Hellfire missiles and small, unarmed surveillance drone aircraft in recent weeks, but they won't be putting troops on the ground.
"We're not contemplating putting boots on the ground. This is their fight, but we're going to help them in their fight," Secretary of State John Kerry said.
Australia, too, has no plans to intervene. And it's difficult to say things are looking up.
Violence even struck the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, on Sunday.
Three car bombs and two roadside bombs exploded in several areas, killing at least 18 people and wounding dozens.