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'He would've eaten human flesh'

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 17 April 2013 | 23.18

Journey... Mr Jeong did not want his face to be identifiable. Source: news.com.au

  • Man tells all about his remarkable journey here
  • "He would have (had to eat) human flesh"  
  • First-hand look inside a destitute dictatorship 
  • On Twitter: @newscomauHQ @drpiotrowski

NEWS.COM.AU EXCLUSIVE: In a marketplace in Chongjin, a city at the tip of the North Korean coast, a shopkeeper is said to serve up a special dish for working men to eat with alcohol.

That dish is human flesh.

The thought he would one day have to eat a fellow human was what drove one Chongjin resident to escape from the nightmare state - to Australia - in a story so incredible it's almost made for TV.

In an exclusive interview with news.com.au via a translator, Sung Min Jeong, 44, has told of his tortuous journey from Chongjin to Cherrybrook NSW, and gave a rare and horrifying insight into a country that's always in the news, but which we know so little about.

"One of his strongest thoughts is…if he didn't take steps to leave North Korea, he would've become a North Korean who ate human flesh," Mr Jeong says through an interpreter.

Mr Jeong has today decided to tell his story because the clock is ticking on his stay in Australia. Despite his desperate circumstances, he is in danger of being deported by the Federal Government.

If Australia is the 'lucky country', you have to be extremely unlucky to have grown up in North Korea.

That's the case even if you are relatively well off, as Mr Jeong was, because his father was a soldier, originally from China. They lived in a modest one-storey house in the industrial city and grew vegetables like spinach and potatoes out the back.

To live in North Korea in the 1980s and '90s was to experience a series of nationwide depressions - both economic and emotional ones. Between 1995 and 1997, when the famine that killed at least one million North Koreans struck Chongjin, Mr Jeong would see bodies strewn across the streets of his city.

This followed a period of great grief. In his four years at primary school, Mr Jeong and his friends had been taught North Korea's founder, Kim Il-Sung, was a god-like figure.

Tensions have mounted on the Korean peninsula in recent months, as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un blusters. Picture: AFP

To live in North Korea is to live under an extraordinary kind of thought control. When he was a teenager, Mr Jeong grew worried when he wondered what it would be like if Il-Sung died.

"This was a thought I did not dare to voice, but now I wonder why and how I was able to think it," Mr Jeong says now.

When Il-Sung eventually died, the country shut down in mourning. North Koreans were encouraged to join public crying sessions, and despite Mr Jeong not feeling the same sympathies to the 'Dear Leader' as many of his friends, even he felt compelled to cry.

But because of his father's military background, he occasionally got to read foreign newspapers at the houses of wealthy boys, and out of curiosity he would listen to South Korean radio under his sheets. When he had grown up, he worked selling goods, like alcohol and tobacco, on the black market.

North Korea was not the place for an independent mind like his.

MR JEONG'S STORY OF ESCAPE

THERE IS a buzzing in Sung's ears today that makes it difficult to talk to him. He says that's from the torture he experienced at the hands of Chinese security forces.

Mr Jeong had nothing to lose. He had no family left. His parents were dead - his mother, of disease - and his sister, Sun Hwa Jeong, 7, died when he was one year old.

Journey.... Mr Jeong has come a long way - from Chongjing to Strathfield, in Sydney's west.

It is difficult to corroborate Mr Jeong's story beyond what other defectors have told about North Korea, but his story has been taken at face value by his lawyers and the Department of Immigration.

His escape from North Korea in 2003 is remarkable in its ordinariness. In some areas, one of the two rivers that makes up the China-Korea border, the Tumen, is little more than ten steps wide. All you have to do is run or swim over.

The border was dangerous in the wintertime and at night, with North Korean soldiers keeping a vigilant eye. But at other times of the year, when the sun was out, the troops manning the checkpoints were often just too busy stuffing around to notice the escapees.

So when Mr Jeong turned up to a guardpost at the border one morning, he was pleased to find nobody there. He sucked on a cigarette, waiting to see if any guards would show up. When they didn't, he stepped over the river.

It was that easy.

He was happy living in the Chinese border communities. There was a big community of North Korean expats who supported him and the locals didn't really care another one had joined them.

He even found love - for a while, before Chinese authorities are understood to have handed his girlfriend, Hee Lee Myung, over to the North Koreans.

Chinese authorities are none too happy about illegal immigrants from Korea, and Mr Jeong himself was in big trouble when they caught him on a train in 2004.

Famine... An emaciated brother & sister lie prone at Unsun kindergarten in South Pyongyang in 1997. Picture: World Food Program

Police stomped on his head, Mr Jeong says. They beat him with bats, daily, holding him in prison for more than 20 days. The security service interrogated him over whether if he had been in touch with any Christian missionaries, or if he was planning to go to South Korea. He'd receive a life sentence if he did.

Despite his protests, the Chinese handed him over to the North Koreans again, where he spent a month in a concentration camp. He was deployed to a worksite out in the country, and he and four friends escaped over the border at the same place he had previously - easily, again, he adds.

But not long after he got back to China, in 2005, the authorities caught him again on a bus. He knew he wouldn't be able to handle another stint in prison. He slit his wrists after a few days in prison and passed out. Mr Jeong's wrists still bear scars today.

He woke up on the third level of a Chinese hospital, shackled to his bed, his story goes. Guards monitoring him would change shifts every 12 hours, and he made friends with a security man on the night shift.

The security man fell asleep one night - he says, after having a couple of drinks with Mr Jeong - and he then used a hairpin left behind by a nurse to unlock his shackles. Mr Jeong says he broke the glass window and jumped down to the ground. He points to scars on the left side of his face and on the flesh connecting his index finger and thumb as evidence.

He managed to get 200m away from the hospital when he was caught again by security. Mr Jeong got on his knees and begged for his life.

"Please, consider me your younger brother," he told the security man, pleading that he would be beaten to death if he was taken in by the Chinese police for a third time.

The security man showed him mercy, Mr Jeong says, warning him never to return to the province. His saga with the Chinese police was over.

An emaciated four-year-old in hospital during the famine in 1997. Picture: WFP

WHERE TO FROM HERE?

'WELCOME TO SYDNEY', says a giant sign at arrivals at the city's international airport. It's aimed at residents and tourists, but each year it also greets thousands of refugees.

More than 6000 asylum seekers arrived by plane in 2011, and Mr Jeong was one them. In late March, he set foot in Australia at the Botany Bay airport for the first time.

The sheer chutzpah of Sung's journey here is breathtaking. Growing up in North Korea, Mr Jeong had never heard of Australia. He didn't even know it was a country.

But in one of the towns along the Chinese border where many Koreans lived he heard Australia was a place he could go, live in peace, and make money working as a welder.

Mr Jeong made friends with a wealthy local businessman who ran a big supermarket and was involved in the people smuggling trade.

They purchased a spot for him on a Chinese tour group's trip to Australia, buying a man's place, passport (which they got doctored) and all.

Mr Jeong ditched the tour group when he got here, and on his second day in Sydney, he headed to the Department of Immigration, near the city's Central Station transport hub.

The border... A truck brings much needed flour into North Korea, crossing the same river Mr Jeong escaped over. Picture: World Food Program

He approached the reception desk and cried: "North Korea! North Korea! North Korea!", as he had been told to say by the people smuggler.

Officials granted Mr Jeong a bridging visa, which is a placeholder accreditation that allows people to stay in Australia while Immigration decides on their future. 

He did it rough, living in a Sydney hostel, even working as a welder in Horsley Park, in the city's far south-west.

But in November 2011 he received a letter which said his application for a refugee protection visa had been rejected.

Why? Because South Korea claims all North Koreans are their citizens too. And Australian law, reiterated by a High Court decision last year, says if a third country will give asylum seekers protection, then Australia will not allow them to stay.

Lawyers believe more than 70 North Korean asylum seekers were placed into legal limbo by the High Court decision, and several have been deported.

Mr Jeong does not want to go to South Korea. "The reality is, in South Korea, North Koreans are persecuted," his lawyer, Chris McArdle, says. He is also concerned about Northern spies.

There's hope for Mr Jeong, who now lives with a kind Korean-Australian family in their Cherrybrook apartment, in Sydney's north. A Federal court will hear his case on April 30, his 45th birthday.

More than one million people gather near images of North Korea's leaders Kim Il-Sung and son Kim Jong-Il, in 2000.

A spokeswoman for the Department of Immigration said: "As this person is before the court, arrangements for removal are not being made."

"It would be inappropriate to go into any more detail because it is before the court."

His lawyers will argue that he may have Chinese citizenship - his father was a Chinese military liason to North Korea - which could save him.

If the court rules against him, his only hope will be for the Immigration Minister to make the extraordinary move of granting him a visa.

But despite the poor state of his country, Mr Jeong says he would go back to North Korea one day, if the system changes.

He's lonely here, and even laments that the veggies here just aren't as fresh as those grown in the backyard of his Korean home.

"What human being cannot miss his hometown?" he says through an interpreter.

Ultimately, though, it's all about something else that Australia has in abundance. "He just wants to live in freedom and peace."

- With big thanks to Joanna Choi for translating | This reporter on Twitter: @drpiotrowski @newscomauHQ | Email Daniel.Piotrowski@news.com.au


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mourners farewell the Iron Lady

The Bearer Party made up of personnel from the three branches of the military carry the coffin of British former prime minister Margaret Thatcher during her ceremonial funeral in St Paul's Cathedral in central London on April 17, 2013. AFP PHOTO Source: AFP

HER legacy may last a lifetime but her passing was over in just 19 minutes, as the Union Jack draped coffin of Margaret Thatcher moved through the streets of the capital of the nation she loved and served.

Who went:

  • Baroness Thatcher was farewelled by more than 2300 guests
  • More than 4000 police have been on duty in London for the funeral to monitor crowds
  • 32 current Cabinet-level ministers and more than 30 from Baroness Thatcher's Cabinets between 1979-1990 attended
  • More than 50 guests associated with the Falklands, including veterans came
  • Two heads of state, 11 serving prime ministers and 17 serving foreign ministers attended
  • 170 countries were represented by dignitaries such as members of Royal Families, politicians etc

Her legacy may last a lifetime but her passing was over in just 19 minutes, as the Union Jack draped coffin of Margaret Thatcher moved through the streets of the capital of the nation she loved and served.

World leaders joined celebrities and ordinary well-wishers in mourning the passing of the 87-year-old leader, who grew up a greengrocer's daughter but went on to transform a nation socially, politically and economically.

An overhead view of guests attending the ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral in London, Wednesday April 17, 2013. (AP Photo/Dominic Lipinski, Pool) Source: AP


A close up view of the coffin and floral tribute during the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images


She meant many things to many people but to the thousands of people who lined up along the route of her ceremonial military cortege, she was just plain old Maggie, the no nonsense leader who broke the mould of British politics.

A brief look at some moments of the funeral of Margaret Thatcher. Courtesy: Sky

The Bearer Party made up of personnel from the three branches of the military carry the coffin of British former prime minister Margaret Thatcher during her ceremonial funeral in St Paul's Cathedral in central London on April 17, 2013. AFP PHOTO / POOL / BEN STANSALL Source: AFP


Carol Thatcher looks across at brother Mark as they attend the ceremonial funeral of his mother, British former prime minister Margaret Thatcher, in St Paul's Cathedral in central London on April 17, 2013. AFP PHOTO / POOL / CHRISTOPHER FURLONG Source: AFP


Her funeral began with the passing of her hearse, from the 13th Century crypt chapel St Mary of Undercroft, through Westminster where she fought her greatest battles, past Downing Street from where she served three terms and reshaped the nation and past Trafalgar Square where in one day in 1990 250,000 people protested her dreaded Poll Tax and violently clashed with police marking the beginning of the end of her reign.

Former Prime Minister Gordon Brown with his wife Sarah Brown attend the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

An Military band march past during the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher on Fleet Street on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

The hearse drove to silent applause from the crowds the RAF church of St Clement Danes where the coffin of Baroness Thatcher, who died last Monday of a stroke, was passed to the armed services in a ceremony that she herself designed several years ago.

Queen Elizabeth II leaves the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

An military band march past during the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Clement Dane's Church on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

LONDON, ENGLAND - APRIL 17: Wellwishers line the route during the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher on Fleet Street on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images


Wellwishers line the route during the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher on Fleet Street on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

From here the apparent anger and debate of her legacy that has dominated the headlines since her passing gave way to solemn pomp and ceremony as 300 members from the army, airforce, navy and marines lined the route from the RAF church to the steps of St Paul's Cathedral more than a kilometre away.

About 30 minutes later a further 400 members of her escort party - made up of the Royal Gurkha Rifles, Royal Engineers and the Parachute Regiment - hoisted the Union Jack flag draped coffin high as they mounted it on the 1.5 tonne World War I gun carriage being pulled by six black Irish draught horses. 

The Gun Carriage of The King's Troop Royal Horse Artillery carries the coffin of Former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher as it leaves St Clement Danes Church and travels onto St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

A policeman stands in the street opposite spectators outside St Paul's Cathedral ahead of the ceremonial funeral of British former prime minister Margaret Thatcher in central London on April 17, 2013. AFP PHOTO / GLYN KIRK

Pall bearers carry the coffin containing the body of Baroness Magaret Thatcher from the Palace of Westminster, where it rested overnight in the chapel of St Mary Undercroft, to her funeral service at St Paul's Cathedral, on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Steve Parsons - WPA Pool/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images


The King's Troop Royal Horse Artillery carriage then moved off toward St Paul's to the strains of Chopin's funeral march. With martial drums beating and bellowed orders, and at 70 steps per minute the procession lasted just 19 minutes.

Crowds watch as the coffin of former British prime minister, Baroness Margaret Thatcher, passes through the streets during her funeral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Warrick Page/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images


The chimes of Big Ben were silenced for the first time in almost 50 years in marked respect to Baroness Thatcher's death but canons beside the Tower of London fired out over the River Thames every minute during the 19-minute drizzling rain-soaked procession.

Spectators hold banners during the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at Ludgate Hill on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Clive Rose/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images


Protesters hold banners during the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at Clement Dane's Church on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images


Others held these signs.

A man holds up a banner before former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's ceremonial funeral procession on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Matt Dunham - WPA Pool/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

London's Metro Police detail preparations for the funeral ceremony of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. London Metropolitan Police


It may have been the largest funeral of its kind since the death of the Queen Mother and the first military send-off of its type since the death of Winston Churchill but with the procession lasting just 19 minutes it was considerably shorter than the two-hour funeral procession of Diana. The size of the crowds also greatly differed.

As her coffin arrived at St Paul's, soldiers reversed their rifles, muzzles to the ground and bowed their heads.

Falkland War veteran brothers 55-year-old Garrison Sergeant Major Bill Mott and his 49-year-old brother Nick Mott both from the Welsh Guards were at the head and read of her pall bearing procession. The brothers were on the landing ship RFA Sir Galahad when it was bombed by an Argentinian jet in the 1982 conflict killing 48 troops. The rest of the pall bearers were from other units involved in the conflict.

DEAD AT 87: Baroness Margaret Thatcher in Downing Street, London. Picture: Hulton Archive/Getty Images Source: Getty Images


The 2300 guests at St Paul's included two heads of state, 11 serving prime ministers and representatives from 170 countries.

The Queen and Prince Philip and Prime Minister David Cameron and his whole Cabinet sat amidst dozens of celebrities from Joan Collins to Shirley Bassey and even American talk show host Larry King.

Jeremy Clarkson and Andrew Lloyd Webber, Baron Lloyd-Webber  also attended.

A member of public reacts as the coffin containing the body of the former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher passes by during the ceremonial funeral in London, Wednesday April 17, 2013. (AP Photo/Carl Court, Pool)

Jeremy Clarkson and Andrew Lloyd Webber, Baron Lloyd-Webber attend the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip attend the ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral in London, Wednesday April 17, 2013. (AP Photo/Christopher Furlong, Pool) Source: AP

Former Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Cherie Blair attend the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York attends the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

Take a look back at the life and very turbulent times of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.

Wellwishers hang flags during the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

First Minister of Scotland Alex Salmond with his wife Moira attend the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

The Queen and Prince Philip arrived to the national anthem and cheers from the crowd. They were greeted by the Lord Mayor of London, who carried a mourning sword, and escorted them into the cathedral to meet the Bishop of London and the Archbishop of London.

Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York was one of the first to arrive followed by others including Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, Prime Minister of Canada Stephen Harper,  former Cabinet minister Leon Brittan, former Australia prime minister John Howard and many more.

With Queen Elizabeth II set to attend Margaret Thatcher's funeral there are concerns about security given the celebrations over the former prime minister's death.

Guests arrive prior to the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

Simon Weston (L) attends the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

Prime Minister of Canada Stephen Harper attends the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

Baroness Thatcher's grandchildren Michael Thatcher, 24, and his 19-year-old sister Amanda, who have lived in relative obscurity in the United States were thrust onto centre stage. Amanda was chosen to make a reading from St Paul's Letter to the Ephesians, followed a short reading from Mr Cameron. 

British Prime Minister David Cameron gives a reading during the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

Mr Carmeron read from John 14. 1-6. This reading was also requested by the Baroness, to be read by the Prime Minister.

"Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me.

"In my Father's house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you.

"And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also.

"And whither I go ye know, and the way ye know. Thomas saith unto him, Lord, we know not whither thou goest; and how can we know the way? Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me."

Margaret Thatcher and husband Denis cel;ebrate 10 years at 10 Downing Street in May 1989. AP/John Redman Source: AP


The Dean of St Paul's the Very Reverand Dr David Ison said the service was in the Christian tradition and despite the spectacular scenes outside, the funeral service was like any other and not in any way "triumphalist".

He said clearly the protests since her death showed what was going on in the 1980s is plugging into concerns in society today.

"Our society has not come to terms with them yet - we haven't worked through how we can reconstruct our financial system, what do we do about the deficit .. we are not at ease with ourselves and that is one of the things that the controversy of the funeral represents," he said.   

He opened the service with the following words:

"We come to this Cathedral today to remember before God Margaret Hilda Thatcher, to give thanks for her life and work, and to commend her into God's hands.

"We recall with great gratitude her leadership of this nation, her courage, her steadfastness, and her resolve to accomplish what she believed to be right for the common good.

"We remember the values by which she lived, the ideals she embraced, her dignity, her diligence, her courtesy, and her personal concern for the well-being of individuals.

"And as we remember, so we rejoice in the lifelong companionship she enjoyed with Denis, and we pray for her family and friends and for all who mourn her passing.

"We continue to pray for this nation, giving thanks for its traditions of freedom, for the rule of law and for parliamentary democracy; remembering the part we have played in peace and conflict over many centuries and in all parts of the world; praying for all today who suffer and sorrow in sickness, poverty, oppression or despair, that in harmony and truth we may seek to be channels of Christ's faith, hope and compassion to all the world; joining our prayers together as we say: The Lord's Prayer. "

Newspapers across Britain were emblazened with the face of the controversial leader. Source: Supplied


Yesterday it was revealed the plans and AUD$14 million cost for the funeral were designed years ago during the prime ministership of Tony Blair and then Gordon Brown both of whom approved the significant ceremony, the involvement of the Labour leaders debunking claims the spectacular funeral yesterday was a stunt by today's Tories.

Some shops closed along the route for the procession and removed valuables from window displays, fearing trouble from the expected protests while police warned others to remove garbage bins or tools that could be used as "weapons".

Across the capital, 17 major thoroughfares were closed from 7.30am as some 4000 police patrolled the city. There were three early arrests for criminal damage as some tried to spray paint slogans but the sort of violence some had feared was not seen. Some noisy people chanting and a few signs against the funeral cost but most of the protestors simply turned their backs as her coffin passed through the streets.

Baroness Margaret Thatcher with former Australian Prime Ministers Bob Hawke and Gough Whitlam during a reception for Australia's PM Howard in 2000. Picture: Michael Jones Source: News Limited


Crowds, in some parts 10 or 15 deep, broke into spontaneous applause as the funeral procession passed by, some threw long-stemmed flowers into its path, many recording the moment in history on their mobile phone cameras.
A few rows broke out between those supporting Thatcher and those against, each competing with cheers or boos at the cortege, but largely the event has gone peacefully so far.

Across the capital, flags flew at half mast.

Baroness Thatcher was to overnight be cremated and interned next to the ashes of her husband Denis at the Chelsea Royal Hospital infirmary wing that was named in her honour.

Former British Prime Minister Baroness Margaret Thatcher with her daughter Carol Jul 03, 2003, at the funeral of her husband Sir Denis who died 26/06/03. AP / John McHugh Source: AP

Armed service personnel prepare prior to the Ceremonial funeral of former British Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral on April 17, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

British police officers scuffle with people gathered in central London's Trafalgar square, Saturday, April 13, 2013, with a party to mark the death of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis) Source: AP

Thatcher Funeral: The coffin of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher rests in the Crypt Chapel of St Mary Undercroft beneath the Houses of Parliament on the eve of her funeral in London. Dignitaries from around the world will join Queen Elizabeth II as the UK pays tribute to the former PM. Photo: Leon Neal/Getty Images Source: Getty Images


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Guests visit Thatcher's coffin in crypt

London's Metro Police detail preparations for the funeral ceremony of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. London Metropolitan Police

MARGARET Thatcher's coffin started its final journey today to her beloved Palace of Westminster where visits are being made by family and close friends, including her maids and carers.

The move came as mourners including former Australian Prime Minister John Howard arrived in London for her public funeral procession and St Paul's Cathedral service Wednesday at 11am (9pm AEST). The procession will begin an hour before the service.

The private service was held in the ancient royal crypt chapel of St Mary Undercroft, deep below the Houses of Parliament.

About 100 guests were invited to the 13th Century chapel to pay their respects including a number of senior members of the House of Commons led by Speaker John Bercow. Leader of the House Andrew Lansley and Chief Whip Sir George Young also attended with their Labour counterparts.

Private mourners were led by her twin children Sir Mark and Carol with other family and Lady Thatcher's former spokesman Mark Worthington. After the short service led by the Dean of Westminster, MPs, Lords and parliamentary staff were invited to pay their private respects.

Daughter carol had tears in her eyes following the brief but emotional private funeral at the chapel. A large bouquet of white roses with a hand written note from her and her brother Mark was inscribed in hand writing "Beloved Mother – Always in our Hearts".

As she left the 15 minute service – featuring prayers and psalms and led by the Dean of Westminster Dr John Hall – she paused to wipe away tears and be comforted by her brother.

The coffin of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher rests in the Crypt Chapel of St Mary Undercroft beneath the Houses of Parliament. Picture: Leon Neal

Work and Pensions Secretary and former Conservative Party leader Iain Duncan Smith, who was one of the most senior political figures to attend the ceremony, said: "It was very moving, short but moving, very sombre. "It's different from tomorrow, because this event was personal. Lots of people were there for personal reasons - each of us summing up what you owe her."

Close Thatcher friend and confidante Tory MP Conor Burns said it was fitting the service was held at Westminster where the "legend" of Thatcher began.

"It was very small, very intimate, very personal, and it was the first time I think since last Monday that the focus has come onto Margaret Thatcher the human being, Margaret Thatcher the person of Christian faith," Mr Burns told the BBC.

The Speaker's chaplain Reverand Rose Hudson-Wilkin is to keep vigil in the chapel throughout the night ahead of Lady Thatcher's Union Jack draped coffin beginning its public procession to the St Paul's service.

As Lady Thatcher's body lay at rest in the crypt, above her MPs took part in a bitter debate in the Commons over the move to suspend Question Time tomorrow so that the Prime Minister David Cameron and other MPs can attend her funeral service at St Paul's Cathedral.

The debate was sparked by Left wing maverick MP George Galloway who along with a Labour MP objected to the suspension in a bid to generate the debate and raise their objection to the "canonisation" of Lady Thatcher with her $14 million tax payer funded ceremonial funeral.

Former Australian Prime Minister John Howard and wife Janette signing the condolence book for Margaret Thatcher at Lancaster House in London ahead of attending her funeral tomorrow. Picture: Charles Miranda

The day of drama came as the US confirmed it was sending a delegation of representatives but no currently serving figures from the White House administration. The US will be represented by former secretaries of state George Schultz and James Baker. Former US vice president Dick Cheney and ex secretary of state Henry Kissinger will also be attending.

Argentina's ambassador to the UK Alicia Castro rejected an invitation to attend after her President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner was not invited. The snub highlights the tensions still simmering between the two countries over the Falkland Islands.

Meanwhile, Mr Howard described Lady Thatcher as having had an indelible mark on Britain's history and the world.

"I admire Margaret Thatcher and she changed this country for the better and along with Ronald Reagan and (pop) John Paul II brought about the downfall of the Soviet Union which is the single most transformative event in my lifetime," he said.

"So she was a remarkable person. We have very similar views but she was prime minister of Great Britain between 1979 and 1989 and I was prime minster somewhat later but I respected her enormously. The great thing about her was you knew what she stood for, love her or loathe her, people knew what Margaret Thatcher believed in what she stood for and that is a lessen for the ages for all politicians.

"The worst thing in the world in politics is people have no idea what you believe in. you never had that problem with Margaret Thatcher."

The coffin of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher arrives with a police escort at the Houses of Parliament. Picture: Oli Scarff

Mr Howard said she had had an affinity toward Australia that saw her visit the country more times than any British prime minister before or after her.

About 4000 police will be on duty for Lady Thatcher's funeral procession amid continuing fears protestors will attempt to disrupt proceedings.

The coffin of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher is conveyed to the Chapel Of St Mary Undercroft. Picture: Jeff J Mitchell

Sir Mark Thatcher and Carol Thatcher, the son and daughter of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, leave a private service at the Houses of Parliament. Picture: Jeff J Mitchell

Wife of former Australian prime minister Janette Howard signs the condolence book for Margaret Thatcher at Lancaster House in London. Picture: Charles Miranda


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Huge quake kills 34 near Iran border

A powerful earthquake in Iran has hit hundreds of homes, killing more than 40 people.

A POWERFUL earthquake struck southeastern Iran on Tuesday, killing at least 34 people across the border in Pakistan and shaking buildings as far away as the Gulf and New Delhi.

The quake, measured at magnitude 7.8 by the US Geological Survey, damaged hundreds of mud-built buildings in remote southwestern Pakistan and comes a week after another struck near Iran's Gulf port city of Bushehr, killing at least 30 people.

Crisis management authorities have declared a state of emergency in the quake-hit area, Iran's official news agency IRNA said, but so far there have been no confirmed deaths on the Iranian side.

In Pakistan, the military has mobilised to help the relief effort after the quake brought down homes in the Mashkail area in Baluchistan province.

Two military helicopters carrying medical teams have been sent to the area, which lies just a few kilometres from the Iranian border, while paramilitary troops were being moved to supplement the relief efforts.


"At least 34 people have been killed and 80 others wounded in Mashkail," a local government official told AFP.

"The bodies are at the hospital and injured are being treated by army doctors. Paramilitary forces are busy in rescue work."

Tremors were felt across Pakistan, shaking buildings in Islamabad and prompting many to flee into the streets of the biggest city Karachi in terror.

A local health official in Iran told the Fars news agency that more than 20 villages were probably "severely damaged", based on initial reports.

At least 27 people were hurt in Iran on Tuesday, according to a local governor speaking to IRNA, but there was no immediate confirmation of any deaths.

The head of Iran's Red Crescent rescue corps, Mahmoud Mozafar, said communications to the stricken areas have been cut.

The quake struck at 3.14 pm Iranian time (8.30pm AEST) with its epicentre around 80 kilometres east of the Iranian city of Khash, in the province of Sistan Baluchistan, USGS said, at a depth of 82 kilometres.

There have been conflicting reports of the precise magnitude. Iran's Seismological Centre measured it as 7.5 and gave the depth as 95 kilometres.

Iran sits astride several major fault lines and is prone to frequent earthquakes, some of which have been devastating.

A double earthquake, one measuring 6.2 and the other 6.0, struck the country's northwest last August, killing more than 300 people and injuring 3000.

In December 2003, a massive quake struck the southern city of Bam. It killed more than 26,000 people - about a quarter of the population - and destroyed the city's ancient mud-built citadel.

Dr David Rothery, chair of the volcanoes, earthquakes and tsunamis course at Britain's Open University, said the depth of Tuesday's quake would have lessened its impact.

But he added that the area "is mountainous, and damage can be expected from landslides as well as because of poorly constructed buildings".

Across the Gulf the quake shook buildings in Abu Dhabi and Dubai and was also felt in the Saudi capital Riyadh and in Oman.

In Dubai, residential and office buildings were evacuated and thousands of people gathered outside skyscrapers.

"Everybody's on the streets. There's a state of panic," said the director of an insurance company in the city centre who identified himself only as Rami.

The grandiose Dubai Mall was completely evacuated, according to employees who said people were also cleared from towers in Downtown Dubai, home to the world's tallest building.

The quake was also strongly felt in Kuwait, particularly in coastal areas, and in the Bahraini capital Manama, where buildings in the central financial district were evacuated.

In the Indian capital New Delhi tremors rattled buildings and led many office workers to run into the street as a precaution.

"We felt the jerks," said SC Basu, a retired government engineer who lives in the east of the city. "Our beds shook and crockery rattled. Many people left for outside."

There were no immediate reports of any damage or casualties in India, but concern remains high just 10 days after the collapse of a building in Mumbai killed 72 people.

Pakistan was hit by a 7.6-magnitude earthquake on October 8, 2005, that killed more than 73,000 people and left about 3.5 million homeless, mainly in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir and parts of northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Iranian state media initially said at least 46 people died, but later Iranian reports offered a far milder picture.

The discrepancies and apparent backtracking in the Iranian reports could not be immediately reconciled, but Iran has faced two large quakes in less than week and authorities could seek to downplay casualties.

Iran's state-run Press TV initially said at least 40 people were killed on the Iranian side, but later removed the figure from its website and news scroll. Other state-controlled outlets, including the official IRNA news agency, mentioned no deaths and only injuries, quoting a local official.

with AP

People evacuate buildings and gather on a road in Karachi, Pakistan, where tremors from the powerful Iran quake were felt. Picture: AP Photo/Shakil Adil

Employees gather outside their high-rise offices in Dubai following a powerful earthquake that hit southeastern Iran and was felt in the United Arab Emirates. Picture: AFP/Karim Sahib

People evacuate buildings in Karachi, after the strongest to hit Iran in more than half a century flattened homes and offices near Iran's border with Pakistan. Picture: AP/Shakil Adil


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Expert blames right-wing terrorists

U.S. President Barack Obama says the FBI is investigating the Boston bombings as an "act of terror" -- the day after the attack killed 3 people and sent 176 to area hospitals. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).

THE fatal explosions at the Boston Marathon have hints of a right-wing terrorist attack rather than al-Qaeda-inspired extremism, according to one of the world's leading experts on counter-terrorism.

Richard Barrett, the former United Nations co-ordinator for the al-Qaeda and Taliban monitoring team, said it was too early to say who was to blame for the blasts.

But Barrett, who has served with MI5, MI6 and the British Foreign Office, said the timing of the attack on Patriots' Day and the relatively small size of the devices suggested the work of a domestic extremist.

Barrett, who is now senior director at the Qatar International Academy for Security Studies (QIASS), said: "At the moment it looks more likely that it was a right-wing terrorist incident, rather than an al Qaeda attack because of the size of the devices."

He added: "This happened on Patriots' Day, it is also the day Americans are supposed to have their taxes in, and Boston is quite a symbolic city. These are all little indicators."

Professor Greg Barton from Monash University's Centre for Islam and the Modern World said there were "two big possibilities" of who was behind the attacks.

"There's been at least 50 attempted terror plots since 9/11 in the US, almost all of them have been jihadi groups, but the fact that no-one's claiming responsibility for this attack, which took place on Patriots' Day - the day that marks the beginning of the American revolution in Boston - and the nature of the device means that the possibility of a home-grown group, somebody like Timothy McVeigh the Oklahoma City bomber who also detonated on Patriots' Day in April 1995, is a strong possibility," he told 3AW Radio in Melbourne.

Prof Barton said the bombs were "essentially homemade grenades".

Destruction and injured people at the site of the one of the explosions that went off near the finish line of the 117th Boston Marathon. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

"The pressure vessels to contain the gases from the explosion make it as intense as possible," he said.

"Then it forms part of the shrapnel, along with the nails and the ball bearings."

Prof Barton said someone with military training, a jihadi group, or a right-wing extremist group could make the bombs.

"There's plenty of instruction manuals online unfortunately and if somebody has some technical confidence, this is not that hard to do," he said.

His comments came after US supercop Bill Bratton, a former head of Boston police who is now based in London, warned there are "no shortage of potential suspects" behind the explosions.

Barrett, who is also a former member of a UN task force for promoting global counter-terrorism strategy, said behind the scenes a "very intense" investigation will be unfolding.

"In addition, security arrangements for other events will be quickly reviewed," he said.

The first blast at the finish line of the Boston Marathon. Picture: Twitter

"There is Margaret Thatcher's funeral tomorrow and the London Marathon on Sunday. However, there are thousands of these events coming up all the time."

Barrett said the number of right-wing extremist incidents in the US since the September 11 attacks was quite high.

From 2002 to 2007, nine right-wing extremists were indicted for their roles in politically motivated murders.

But between 2008 and 2012, the number mushroomed to 53, according to figures by the New America Foundation.

Before this period, domestic terrorist Eric Rudolph attacked a number of sites including the Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta in the name of an anti-abortion and anti-gay agenda.

And in 1995, Timothy McVeigh detonated a truck bomb in front of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people and injuring more than 800.

Barrett said al-Qaeda attacks normally involve terrorists who have trained using instructions from the internet or at a training camp, which usually helps identify them.

In contrast, domestic terrorists operate in isolation or through a small number of acquaintances and often have smaller targets in mind.

"That's why many al-Qaeda terrorists have been thwarted - they're too ambitious," he said.


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American Airlines flights grounded

Passengers are using social media to flood American Airlines with complaints after an outage caused the company to ground the fleet. Picture: Joe Raedle Source: Getty Images

  • Issue with staff accessing reservation system
  • Refunds have been offered and reservation changes won't accrue fees
  • Apologised to customers for the inconvenience


AMERICAN Airlines said Tuesday it had grounded all its aircraft due to problems with its reservation system.

"American's network system is experiencing intermittent outages," AA said.

"We are on a system-wide ground delay that will last until 4pm CST (7am AEST) as we work to resolve this issue as quickly as we can," the company said, apologising to customers for "any inconvenience."

In a Twitter message, AA said: "The issue is w/ our ability to access our res system & not w/@SabreNews. We apologise to Sabre & customers for confusion.

In an earlier tweet, AA had said the Sabre reservation and booking tool was offline.

The number of flights held on the ground and passengers affected were not immediately available.


American said there would be no charge to customers wanting to change their reservations and the airline would provide "full refunds" if their travel plans were not flexible.

"However, we are unable to make changes to current travel plans until we have resolved this issue."

American Airlines is a codeshare with Qantas, potentially affecting some Australian travellers.

American, whose parent AMR Corporation is struggling to emerge from bankruptcy, plans to merge with US Airways to create the largest US airline.

It would also help lift AMR from bankruptcy reorganisation, where it has been since November 2011.

The deal won US bankruptcy court approval in mid-February. Following other approvals required, the merger is expected to be completed by the third quarter of 2013.

The combined airline, to keep the American Airlines name, is to be led by current US Airways chief executive Doug Parker.


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Ricin poison attack on US Senate

Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., speaks during a news conference at the Capitol in Washington. Source: AP

A LETTER tainted with the deadly poison ricin has been sent to the United States Senate building.

The envelope addressed to a Mississippi senator twice tested positive for ricin, a potentially fatal poison, congressional officials said, heightening concerns about terrorism a day after a bombing killed three people and left more than 170 injured at the Boston Marathon.

One senator, Democrat Claire McCaskill, said authorities have a suspect in the fast-moving case, but she did not say if an arrest had been made. She added the letter was from an individual who frequently writes lawmakers.

The FBI and US Capitol Police are both investigating. Both declined to comment.

Terrance W. Gainer, the Senate sergeant-at-arms, said in an emailed message to Senate offices that the envelope sent to Republican Sen. Roger Wicker had no obviously suspicious outside markings and lacked a return address. It bore a postmark from Memphis, Tennessee, where mail from parts of northern Mississippi has long been processed.

Gainer added that there was "no indication that there are other suspect mailings." Yet he urged caution, and also said the Senate off-site mail facility where the initial tests were performed on the letter will be closed for a few days while the investigation continues.

A Capitol Police Officer walks through the rotunda of the Capitol Building on Capitol Hill December 14, 2010 in Washington, DC.

The letter was discovered at a mail processing plant in Prince George's County in suburban Maryland, according to Sen. Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Senate Democrat.

Wicker's office issued a statement saying "any inquiries regarding member security must be directed to the United States Capitol Police."

But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid told reporters of the letter, and other lawmakers said they had been provided information by the office of the Senate sergeant-at-arms.

The 61-year-old Wicker was appointed to the Senate in 2007 and won election to a full term two years ago. He previously served a dozen years in the House of Representatives.

He has a solidly conservative voting record, so much so that he drew notice last week when he voted to allow debate to begin on controversial gun control legislation in the Senate..

Milt Leitenberg, a University of Maryland bioterrorism expert, said ricin is a poison derived from the same bean that makes castor oil. He said it must be ingested to be fatal.

"Luckily, this was discovered at the processing center off premises," Durbin said. He said all mail to senators is "roasted, toasted, sliced and opened" before it ever gets to them.

One law enforcement official said evidence of ricin appeared on two preliminary field tests of the letter, although such results are not deemed conclusive without further testing. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation remains active.

The discovery evoked memories of the days after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, when mail laced with anthrax began appearing in post offices, newsrooms and congressional offices.

That included letters sent to Democratic Sen. Tom Daschle, who was Senate majority leader, and Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy. Two Senate office buildings were closed during that investigation.

Overall, five people died and 17 others became ill. The FBI attributed the attack to a government scientist who committed suicide in 2008.

More immediately, though, the discovery came as lawmakers were demanding answers to the attacks in Boston a day earlier.

There was no evidence of a connection between the bombings and the letter addressed to Wicker, a Mississippi Republican.


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Fears after large quake rocks PNG

A 6.8 magnitude quake has struck PNG. Source: The Australian

A STRONG 6.8-magnitude earthquake has rocked Papua New Guinea's north.

Seismologists warn there could be considerable damage in Aitape, where a giant tsunami in 1998 killed more than 2000 people.

The shallow quake, at a depth of just seven kilometres, hit 19km east of the small town of Aitape on the Pacific nation's north coast at 8.55am AEST.

No destructive tsunami warning was issued by the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre but it said earthquakes of this size could sometimes generate local tsunami waves within 100km of the epicentre.

"Authorities in the region should be aware of this possibility and take appropriate action," it said.

It comes as a 7.8 magnitude quake struck Iran, killing 34 people in neighbouring Pakistan.

Geoscience Australia measured the PNG quake at a depth of 20km and 30km from Aitape and said about 60,000 people would be in the exposure zone.

"This would include outlying local villages," seismologist Steve Tatham told AFP.

"There is the possibility of considerable damage. It certainly could bring buildings down."

A giant tsunami in 1998, with waves up to 10 metres, killed more than 2000 people near Aitape following an earthquake off the coast.

In that disaster, churches, schools and other buildings were swept away.

The PNG Natural Disaster Centre said today it had no concrete information so far. Police, ambulance and church officials in Aitape could not be reached by AFP.

Personnel at Wewak Hospital, about 150km from the coastal epicentre, said they felt the tremor but there was no damage to the building or any immediate reports of damage in the town of Wewak.

Hospital spokesman Morris Iuandu said there had been no news from Aitape and no casualties had presented to the emergency department in Wewak as yet.

"It was a strong one. This is a solid building... and it was shaking," Iuandu told AFP.

He estimated the swaying had lasted at least three minutes.

Quakes of such magnitude are common in impoverished PNG, which sits on the so-called Pacific "Ring of Fire", a hotspot for seismic activity due to friction between tectonic plates.

A 6.6-magnitude quake struck the country's Bougainville Island on Sunday but there were no reports of damage or injuries.


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Bombs show signs of 'lone wolf'

Pressure cookers may have been used in marathon attack. Fox News

THE FBI has confirmed the Boston Marathon bombs may have been made from pressure cookers after recovering fragments of dark nylon, BBs and nails from the scene.

FBI special agent-in-charge Rick Deslauriers told a media conference that both explosives were placed inside black nylon bags or backpacks.

LIVE UPDATE. ALL TIMES ARE AEST

5.48pm: More than 2000 tips have been received following a public appeal by the FBI to help solve the Boston Marathon bombings.

5.30pm: The Tribeca Film Festival was born out of the 9/11 terror attacks and celebrities attending an annual Vanity Fair gala in New York City to kick off this year's event were mindful of the shadow cast by the explosions at the Boston Marathon.

Two men in hazardous materials suits put numbers on the shattered glass and debris as they investigate the scene at the first bombing.

Police and security guards were visible at the festival on Tuesday night, where there was an outdoor metal detector for arriving guests.

Whoopi Goldberg said she understood if some people were apprehensive about going out in crowded, public areas.

''I say that's alright. We're out for you,'' she said.

''Stay until you feel better. But we're out here and we got your back.''

Fox News has released an image of what appears to be an exploded backpack at the scene of the Boston bombings.

Aida Turturro, best known for her role on TV's The Sopranos, said it's important to live your life and not be scared.

''You never know. I mean you can die by crossing the street or you can get hit by a car. . . . I think the best thing is to continue life because if you don't they're winning,'' she said.

''If they keep you from living your life then they've won. They've taken your life away from you right there.''

5.15pm: A Chinese newspaper has named a person they say is the third victim of the Boston Marathon bombings.

Images from the Department of Homeland Security show improvised explosive devices using pressure cookers.

The person has been identified as a Boston University graduate student.

Officials refused to name the third victim at the request of the family.

It was earlier reported that a Chinese student named Lingzi Lu was missing following the Boston Marathon bombings.

Earlier another Chinese student was incorrrectly identified by the Huffington Post as dying. The website later apologised. 

Hundreds of mourners gather at Boston Common for a candelight vigil.

4.40pm: The Boston Marathon blasts are typical of the ''lone wolf'', a source with knowledge of the investigations has told CNN.

The source was referring to a lone terrorist who builds a bomb on their own by following a widely available formula.

In this case, the formula has been likened to one that al-Qaeda has recommended to its supporters around the world.

The threat of the "lone wolf" alarms the intelligence community.

The two bombs that exploded at the Boston Marathon have raised fresh alarms about terrorism in the US.

"This is what you worry about the most," the source told CNN.

4.15pm:  Spam emails have been reported to the ACMA containing links to webpages associated with the recent Boston explosions.

These emails contain links to potentially malicious content that may damage your computer.

If you get one of these emails the ACMA advises that you should delete it immediately. 

3.42pm: With no claim of responsibility for the marathon attack and police not committing to blaming foreign or domestic militants, Boston harbors widespread questions about the perpetrators as the city and the nation paid tribute to the dead, AFP reports.

US authorities have thrown virtually every investigation agency into the hunt with more than 1,000 officers working in Boston alone, said Rick DesLauriers, head of the FBI's Boston office.

"This will be a worldwide investigation," DesLauriers told reporters. "We will go to the ends of the Earth to identify the subject or subjects responsible for this despicable crime," he added.

These images show the devastation caused by the bombing - and the massive emergency services operation as authorities scrambled to help the injured and search for more devices.

3.20pm: Broadcaster Alan Jones' claim that the tragic bombings were the work of left-wing radical students in Boston and that Australia should seriously look at its intake of overseas students as result, is totally inaccurate according to our own Ian McPhedran.

His disturbing conspiracy theory shows just how ignorant he is about terrorism and hate crimes, as our defence correspondent points out.

3.05pm: While all eyes are on the tragic events in Boston, a US drone has fired two missiles on a Taliban base in Pakistan, killing five militants.

The Taliban and al-Qaeda have denied links to yesterday's bombings, but the US campaign against terrorists continues.

People in hazardous materials suits investigate the scene at the first bombing on Boylston Street in Boston.

Authorities investigating the double bombing in Boston are keen to also point out that the Saudi student who is in hospital with burns, is a witness not a suspect, according to The Washington Post.

3.00pm: China's Internet users on Wednesday mourned a Chinese national killed in the Boston marathon bombing as others attacked the exposure of the victim's name despite a family request for anonymity, AFP reports.

Thousands posted messages online after the consulate in New York said a Chinese citizen was among three people killed in the explosions in the US city yesterday.

"Terrorism has no national limits, the victims have no national limits. Together we condemn, together we mourn," one user of Sina Weibo, a social networking site similar to Twitter, wrote.

U.S. President Barack Obama says the FBI is investigating the Boston bombings as an "act of terror" -- the day after the attack killed 3 people and sent 176 to area hospitals. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).

"Poor child, go peacefully," wrote another.

2.40pm: MUSLIMS in the US are watching closely as the investigation into the Boston bombings unfolds, fearing a backlash like after 9/11 if an Islamist link is confirmed to the deadly attack, AFP reports.

Several Muslim groups issued statements within hours of the double bombing, strenuously condemning the attacks which killed three and injured more than 100 people.

A spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), Ibrahim Hooper, said the Muslim group had already received "the usual hate calls," but nothing major as yet - and underlined its main message was condemnation.

Amateur video shot from a reviewing stand shows the aftermath of two explosions near the finish line of the Boston Marathon. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).

"You don't want to create the impression that you're more concerned about vandalism at a mosque, or something like that, than you are about a violent attack that takes the lives of individuals and injures many more," he said.

But he  also said: "In any of these cases that's something that's in the back of our mind, that there's a possibility of a backlash. We'll just have to see how the investigation develops."

The number of FBI-designated hate crimes against Muslims and Arabs in America shot up dramatically after the September 11, 2001 attacks, which were quickly attributed to Al-Qaeda and a team of mostly Saudi hijackers.

2.10pm: While Bostonians continue to mourn and police search for more clues into who was behind the bombings, here is a visual look at some of the more poignant details emerging from this tragedy.

Humvees and debris could be seen in downtown Boston, the morning after the worst bombing attack on U.S. soil since the September 11th attacks. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).

1.50pm: Hundreds of residents in the tight-knit suburb of Dorchester - the area where eight-year-old victim Martin Richard lived -  have  gathered at a local park, reflecting on the randomness of the deaths and injuries.

At hospitals throughout the day, families of survivors and physicians recounted the scenes that continued to haunt them. Surgeons told of wheeling badly injured patients directly into the operating room after they had lost so much blood that their organs were in danger of failing and amputating what was left of their legs on the spot.

"We just finished the job that the bomb did - their limbs were completely mangled, some hanging by a shred,'' said George Velmahos, chief trauma surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital.

1.30pm: The official Chinese news agency Xinhua says relatives have requested that the third victim of the Boston bombings, a Boston University graduate student, not be identified.

London's Telegraph reports that Phoenix Satellite Television Holdings, a Hong Kong-based broadcaster with ties to the Chinese government, said the woman from the northeastern Chinese city of Shenyang .

1.10pm: In another tragic twist, the family of Jeff Bauman, the young man who lost his legs in the bombings, learned of his fate from an image of their son being tended to by Carlos Arredondo, the heroic man in the cowboy hat, the New York Times says.

When the bombs went off, Jeff Bauman called his son's mobile repeatedly - but got no answer. His son was there to cheer on his girlfriend, Erin Hurley, who was running her first Boston Marathon.

He learned of his son's fate after his stepdaughter called, asking him if he'd seen "the picture", which he then found on Facebook. By the time he got to the hospital, the surgery had been done - both Jeff's legs had been amputated at the knee.

12.58pm: Britain's Prince Harry will honour a commitment to appear at the London Marathon this weekend, despite security concerns following the horrific bombings at the Boston Marathon.

12.46pm: Emergency officials are doing a sweep of the Hollywood lot, where KTLA TV is based, which also includes other syndicated shows.

12.42pm: The New York Yankees paid tribute to victims of the Boston Marathon bombings by playing the Fenway Park favorite Sweet Caroline at Yankee Stadium. The popular sing-along song has been featured at Boston Red Sox home games since 2002.

"Thank you NY Yankees for playing 'Sweet Caroline' for the people of Boston," singer Neil Diamond wrote on his Twitter page. "You scored a home run in my heart. With respect, Neil #OneBoston."

12.30pm: KTLA TV in Los Angeles is being evacuated after a threat was called in to the station.

11.29am: Boston Marathon organisers say next year's race will go ahead as planned and that they are co-operating with law enforcement officials to find those responsible for the deadly blasts.

"We are committed to continuing that tradition with the running of the 118th Boston Marathon in 2014," said Thomas Grilk, executive director of the Boston Athletic Association.

"We are co-operating with the city of Boston, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and all federal law enforcement officials in the investigation and the effort to bring those responsible for this tragedy to justice, so we are limited in what information we can provide.

"Boston is strong. Boston is resilient. Boston is our home. And Boston has made us enormously proud in the past 24 hours. The Boston Marathon is a deeply held tradition, an integral part of the fabric and history of our community."

11.20am: US President Barack Obama will visit Boston on Thursday. Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick says Obama will be attending an interfaith service at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross to "help us all heal".

11am: The Boston Red Sox hope their return to the field will help their wounded city heal. The clubhouse mood was sombre as the team prepared for a three-game series with the Indians.

Boston outfielder Jonny Gomes says the players have "heavy hearts" as they get ready to play while their city recovers. Pitcher Jon Lester says the tragedy "really hits home. Boston's my home, just like everybody in this clubhouse."

The Red Sox and Indians will wear black armbands to honour the victims. A moment of silence will be observed before the first pitch.

10.48am: The bombs that tore through a crowd of spectators at the Boston Marathon could have cost as little as $100 to build and were made of the most ordinary ingredients - so ordinary, in fact, that investigators could face a gargantuan challenge in attempting to use bomb forensics to find the culprit, the Washington Post says.

The bomb's simplicity complicates the task of determining whether the maker was an international terrorist, a homegrown extremist or a local citizen with a grudge, investigators and experts say.

10.17am: A partial circuit board recovered by the FBI from the Boston bomb site has been sent to Quantico for analysis.

10.06am: A US food website has been forced to apologise after using the Boston bombings to try to spruik its scones.

New York-based Epicurious tweeted: "In honour of Boston and New England, may we suggest: whole-grain cranberry scones!"

Social media users were quick to criticise, accusing Epicurious of badly misjudging the public mood.

9.52am: A Chinese student is the third person killed in the Boston Marathon blasts, the Chinese Consulate in New York says.

An official at the consulate's press section, said that one student was injured and another died in the blasts.

Boston University said on its website that the victim, a graduate, was among a trio of students who had gone to watch the race at the finish line.

9.45am: At least 13 of the 183 people injured in Boston terror attack have had amputations, CNN reports.

9.30am: In a tragic hospital mix-up, the family of Boston bombing victim Krystle Campbell were told their daughter had survived and was being operated on in hospital - only to find out later she was dead.

The 29-year-old's parents were first told by doctors that she had survived, but that her friend, Karen Rand, had died.

When William and Patty Campbell were finally allowed in to see the patient, they realised it was not their daughter, Boston news channel WCBV reported.

9.21am: Reports of a suspicious package have closed College Road on Ohio State University's campus.

9.20am: Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood has condemned the Boston bombings, calling the blasts "criminal".

9.10am: Hundreds have gathered on Boston Common to honour the victims of the bombings.

9am: Fox News has obtained exclusive photographs of bomb fragments from the crime scene of the Boston blasts.

Fox News has released images it claims are bomb fragments from the scene of the Boston Marathon blasts. Source: Supplied

8.50am: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has confirmed the ricin attack, saying the letter was addressed to Senator Wicker, a Republican from the state of Mississippi.

The letter was tested at the Senate building's mail office where preliminary tests found it to contain poison. Ricin is a toxic protein that can kill an adult who inhales even a small amount.

8.28am: Fox is pulling from websites a recent episode of Family Guy that depicts mass deaths at the Boston Marathon and has no immediate plans to air it again. Fox spokeswoman Gaude Paez says the episode has been removed from Fox.com and Hulu.com.

8.15am: In breaking news, an envelope sent to the office of Senator Roger Wicker  has tested positive for the deadly poison ricin at the US Capitol's off-site mail facility in Washington DC.

8.10am: Boston University says a graduate student at the school was the  third victim killed in the Boston Marathon bombing.

--------------------------------------------------------------------

Earlier, it was reported how similar pressure-cooker explosives have been used in Afghanistan, India, Nepal and Pakistan, according to a July 2010 intelligence report by the FBI and Homeland Security.

Deslauriers said the forensic evidence recovery was being carried out "methodically, carefully, yet with a sense of urgency".

The bombs killed three people and injured at least 176 when they were detonated near the finish line of the Boston Marathon.

DesLauriers said yesterday's focus of rescue and saving lives was now fully focused on finding the Boston Marathon bombers.

It is not yet clear what kind of explosive was used, he said.

Pressure-cooker bombs are a preferred weapon of al-Qaeda and listed as the "most effective" weapon of jihad, according to an English-language terror magazine called Inspire, in an article entitled 'How to Build a Bomb in the Kitchen of Your Mom', the Mail Online reports.

Investigators in the Boston Marathon probe have also found pieces of an electronic circuit board, which could indicate a timer was used in the detonation.

Also, one of the three devices used in the May 2010 Times Square attempted bombing was a pressure cooker, the report said.

"Placed carefully, such devices provide little or no indication of an impending attack," the report said.

Investigators also found pieces of an electronic circuit board possibly indicating a timer was used in the detonation of the bomb.

Another article in Inspire detailed "the most important enemy targets" for jihadists in America, CNS NEWS reported.

The aim should be to target "human crowds in order to inflict maximum human losses," a terrorist known as Abu Musab al-Suri wrote.

"This is very easy since there are numerous such targets such as crowded sports arenas, annual social events, large international exhibitions etc."

Details of the explosive devices came as authorities identified a  second victim killed in the blasts as as 29-year-old Krystle Campbell, from Arlington, Massachusetts.

Eight-year-old Martin Richard, who was waiting at the finish line with his father, mother and brother and little sister, was among those killed when the bombs detonated at the sports event. His mother has undergone brain surgery and his six-year-old sister lost a leg.

FBI agents are leading a massive manhunt for those responsible for the twin blasts. 

Investigators do not know of a motive for the bombings, nor do they have a specific suspect or anyone in custody.

Amid the chaos yesterday, it was reported that officials had arrested a Saudi national, who is being treated for burns and shrapnel wounds, in connection to the bombings after a civilian saw him acting suspiciously at the scene.

But now officials have confirmed the man, Abdulrahman Ali Alharbi, 22, is being regarded as a witness, rather than a suspect, the Washington Post reported.

It comes after 20 police and federal officials raided his home  in the Boston suburb of Revere on Monday night, but the search turned up nothing.

A doctor treating the wounded said one of the victims was maimed by what looked like ball bearings or BBs.

Federal investigators said no one had claimed responsibility for the bombings, which took place on one of the city's biggest civic holidays, Patriots Day.

President Obama said the bombings were an act of terrorism, but investigators do not know if they were carried out by an international organisation, domestic group or a "malevolent individual". He said, "the American people refuse to be terrorised".

US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel called the bombings "a cruel act of terror" and said "a thorough investigation will have to determine whether it was planned or carried out by a terror group, foreign or domestic".

Across the US, from Washington to Los Angeles, police tightened security, monitoring landmarks, government buildings, transit hubs and sporting events.


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