‘Combat codpiece’

Caroline WyattBy Caroline Wyatt

New body armourSome 45,000 pairs of the underpants have already been delivered to Afghanistan
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The latest piece of high-tech kit due to be issued to all British forces deploying to Helmand already has a nickname. It is known by the troops who have tested it as the “combat codpiece”.

The name may be irreverent, but the intention behind the new piece of body armour is deadly serious: to protect soldiers’ most important piece of personal kit from blast injuries to the pelvic area caused by the Taliban’s roadside bombs.

All those deploying to Helmand are already being issued with four pairs of special anti-blast underpants.

They look like black cycling shorts, but are made from special ballistic material crafted from silk and synthetics, which is ultra-lightweight but can stop or mitigate the effects of most small pieces of shrapnel and dirt travelling at high velocity after a blast.

Although no figures are available, many soldiers wounded by roadside bombs in Afghanistan have suffered severe injuries to the pelvic area, mainly thanks to the increased use of “victim-operated” roadside bombs, when the weight of a soldier or a vehicle triggers the explosion.

That means that much of the destructive force of the blast is aimed upwards, directly towards the groin and top of the legs.

The protective underpants are known as “tier 1” of the protective system, with the second layer, or “combat codpiece”, simply known as “tier 2” by the MoD’s equipment boffins.

Some 45,000 pairs of the underpants have already been delivered to Afghanistan, with another 15,000 ready to be issued to deploying troops – and more to be delivered early next year from their manufacturer in Northern Ireland, in an order worth £6m.

The “combat codpiece” comes in camouflage colours, and looks like a bulky pair of underpants which tie on at both sides, which is worn over the trousers.

It can be rolled up and clipped to a belt at the back of a pair of trousers with two velcro straps, and then – when needed on patrol – be pulled through the legs to clip together at the sides to form a protective pouch.

“The physical well-being of those most at risk always has to be a priority, so any measure that gives extra protection to our soldiers on the frontline is welcomed by us”

Robin Bacon ABF

The padding inside the front and back segments offers an extra layer of protection. These will be issued to troops in the early spring, with the contract for 25,000 sets worth £4m.

Col Peter Rafferty, personal combat equipment team leader at defence equipment and support, says that those researching and developing the equipment faced many challenges, not least in creating protection which still allows the soldiers and others in the field to do their jobs without impeding their mobility.

“We are constantly reviewing what we can do on protection for our forces – we never stop, and we’ll continue to examine what more we can do,” he said.

When out on patrol or outside the main bases in Afghanistan, British forces and others already wear body armour which shields the key areas of the heart, lungs, liver and kidneys, as well as a relatively heavy helmet to protect the head, and blast-proof goggles to shield the eyes from any blast.

However, key arteries flow through the groin area as well, which is an area prone to sweating, so both the blast-proof underwear and pouch had to be made of materials which allow sweat to pass through, rather than adding to the heat experienced by those patrolling in the Afghan summer heat.

The underpants are coated in an anti-microbial agent which protects against infections, and they come in a range of sizes, while the Tier 2 protection is a unisex one-size-fits-all. Both are washable, though forces will have to first remove the extra ballistic protection from inside Tier 2.

Alan Hepper, the principal engineer at the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, says many factors had to be taken into account when creating the materials.

“The way silk is woven makes it very strong, with a very high ballistic efficiency. It may sound like an extravagant material, but in ballistic protection terms, it is the best we’ve found,” he says.

Body armourThe armour has been through extensive trials

“The feedback from medical staff treating the injured suggests that it does make a noticeable difference.”

China and Japan used materials made out of silk for their forces’ body armour for at least 1,000 years, though it was last used in British protective kit by the RAF during WWII.

WO1 Lee Flitcroft, RSM at the infantry trials and development unit, gamely demonstrated Tier 2 at the MoD to journalists.

He has put the protective kit through its paces during the trials with soldiers, male and female, making them go on 6km runs, take up firing positions or scale a 5ft wall while wearing the kit to ensure that it does not interfere with their ability to work.

“It’s had very positive feedback, which was fantastic news,” he says.

ABF The Soldiers’ Charity, welcomed the new equipment. “The physical well-being of those most at risk always has to be a priority, so any measure that gives extra protection to our soldiers on the frontline is welcomed by us,” according to Robin Bacon.

MOD scientists and industry are still working on Tier 3 of the system, which is expected to be issued to those performing the most dangerous tasks such as bomb-detection and disposal. It will cover more of the upper leg and the wider abdominal region, with design trials due to take place early next year.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

7 days quiz

7 days quiz

It’s the Magazine’s 7 days, 7 questions quiz – an opportunity to prove to yourself and others that you are a news oracle. Failing that, you can always claim to have had better things to do during the past week than swot up on current affairs.

number 7

1.) Multiple Choice Question

Four celebrity backers of a cause. Who is the odd one out?

Jemima KhanJemima KhanColin FirthColin FirthStingStingJustin BieberJustin Bieber

Info

This week Ashtiani appeared on Iranian TV apparently re-enacting her alleged part in her husband’s murder. Robert de Niro, Robert Redford and Geri Halliwell are others who have called for her release.

Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani

2.) Multiple Choice Question

Time magazine’s Person of the Year is Mark Zuckerberg, 26, who becomes the youngest recipient since who?

Aviator Charles LindberghCharles LindberghSprinter Jesse OwensJesse OwensThe QueenQueen

3.) Multiple Choice Question

After weeks of drama, tears and some singing, Matt Cardle won The X Factor, and the weekly results revealed there was only one week when Cardle did NOT get the most votes. Who did on that occasion?

WagnerWagnerRebecca FergusonRebecca FergusonMary ByrneMary Byrne

Info

And here is the happy winner, with mentor Danni Minogue. He is now the strong favourite to occupy top slot in the charts at Christmas, with his version of Biffy Clyro’s Many of Horror. But anti-X Factor protest songs are lining up to take the crown.

Matt Cardle and Danni Minogue

4.) Missing Word Question

Vicar defends local * clubs

fightsexsatanic

5.) Multiple Choice Question

It’s panto season. “Oh no, it isn’t.” “Oh yes, it is.” “Oh no, it isn’t.” OK, you get the gist. Can you identify the pirate attacking Peggy – sorry, I mean Barbara Windsor?

Pantomime scene David HasselhoffNigel HaversJohn Barrowman

Info

And here is proof that it’s really David Hasselhoff. The man who rode Knight Rider and patrolled the Baywatch beach was this week helping to launch the panto season. “Oh no, he wasn’t…”

David Hasselhoff

6.) Multiple Choice Question

Larry King hosted his final CNN chatshow this week, after 25 years. He is pictured here with Donald Trump in 1999, but who was his first guest, in 1985?

Larry King and Donald Trump Soviet leader Mikhail GorbachevBoxer Mike TysonNew York governor Mario Cuomo

7.) Multiple Choice Question

“It’s one hell of a thing to live up to,” said who?

Dame Judi Dench, voted best stage actorDame Judi DenchStuart ‘The Brand’ Baggs, kicked off The ApprenticeStuart BaggsNewcastle’s new boss, Alan PardewAlan Pardew

Answers

It’s Colin Firth, who withdrew his support for the Liberal Democrats over tuition fees. The others added their support – Khan to Wikileaks, Sting to the freedom of Iranian woman Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, while Bieber joined animal rights group Peta. It’s Lindbergh, who graced the magazine’s first end-of-year cover in 1927, aged 25. The Queen earned the title in 1952, aged 26, while Owens never did. The year he won four Olympic gold medals, in 1936, Time picked the Duchess of Windsor, Wallis Simpson. It was Tesco cashier Mary Byrne, from Dublin. In the final, Ferguson was runner-up and boy band One Direction third. It’s sex. Rev Paul Turp told his local council in east London that it was wrongly trying to impose its own moral code on people by banning such establishments. It’s The Hoff, who plays Captain Hook at the New Wimbledon Theatre. Havers is King Rat, opposite Joan Collins, in Dick Whittington in Birmingham. And Barrowman is Aladdin in Glasgow. It was Cuomo, and there was speculation that he would be invited back for the final show on Thursday. King is to be replaced by Piers Morgan. It’s Dame Judi, who was named the greatest stage actor of all time in a poll compiled by industry newspaper, The Stage. Baggs was told to pack his by Lord Sugar and Pardew won his first match.

Your Score

0 – 3 : Ham actor

4 – 6 : Polite applause

7 – 7 : Bring the house down

For past quizzes including our weekly news quiz, 7 days 7 questions, expand the grey drop-down below – also available on the Magazine page (and scroll down). You can also do this quiz on your mobile device.

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The One Ronnie

Rob Brydon, Ronnie Corbett, Matt lucas, David Walliams and Harry EnfieldRonnie Corbett stars with Rob Brydon, Matt Lucas, David Walliams and Harry Enfield in The One Ronnie
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Ronnie Corbett has admitted he felt “slightly disloyal” working on a new Christmas show without his late comedy partner Ronnie Barker.

Corbett has teamed up with younger comedians for his new Christmas day show The One Ronnie.

Barker and Corbett’s show The Two Ronnies was a staple of festive TV schedules since it began in the 1970s.

The comedy duo last appeared on TV together in The Two Ronnies Christmas Sketchbook in 2005.

The show was screened after Barker’s death in October that year.

In a special interview with Mark Lawson for BBC Radio Four’s Front Row, Corbett admitted to divided loyalties while making The One Ronnie.

“I suppose a bit of me every now and again felt slightly disloyal doing it with other folk but I enjoyed it very much.”

Ronnie CorbettRonnie Corbett’s monologue, which features a long and rambling story, is returning

The show was commissioned to celebrate Ronnie Corbett’s 80th birthday and was produced by Little Britain stars Matt Lucas and David Walliams.

Ronnie confessed he felt emotional making a Christmas show without Barker.

“It was really quite touching and at the end it was difficult for me not to be saying, ‘And it’s goodnight from me and it’s goodnight from him’. So yes it really was quite touching.”

The show’s structure is very similar to The Two Ronnies and features Ronnie Corbett’s chair monologue and ends with a musical number.

Among Ronnie Corbett’s co-stars are Harry Enfield, Catherine Tate, James Corden, Rob Brydon, Matt Lucas and David Walliams.

Corbett revealed the show was the Little Britain stars’ idea: “I have done bits with them and it was their idea to collect together as many people in today’s world who would be willing to have a go with me which was very exciting really.”

The One Ronnie sees the return of Corbett's monologue

It is the second time Corbett has worked with Walliams and Lucas. He appeared as himself in Little Britain Abroad in 2006. The comic has become good friends with the Little Britain stars, attending Walliams wedding to model Lara Stone in 2010.

He also counts Corden and Brydon as friends and disputed newspaper reports that said he was not a fan of younger comedians.

“There was a story saying I didn’t like contemporary comedians but it’s completely untrue, a lot of them are very dear friends of mine,” he said.

“My memory is pretty good but if I go somewhere now and have to do 50 minutes of comedy I might lose my way a bit and somebody might say ‘you already told us that one’ ”

Ronnie Corbett on turning 80

Corbett had been quoted as saying younger comedians were crude and vulgar but he says that is not the case: “No I don’t think that, one or two of them maybe, but I don’t think that.”

He said he is a regular visitor to the Edinburgh Fringe festival, with his grandson Tom, to watch new comedians.

He also enjoys the special treatment he receives as an elder statesman of comedy, where he is ushered in to shows first ahead of the crowds.

He recalled comedian Ed Byrne’s shock when the Irish comic went out on stage to look at the venue and Corbett and his grandson were the only people in the audience: “It was a funny moment to see him catch my eye in the empty auditorium seeing my little face.”

Corbett said it was “fascinating” to spend so long with Walliams and Lucas. But while he enjoyed working with the younger comedians Corbett said he never thought of forming another double act after Ronnie Barker retired:

“I avoided thoughts of it because it had been such a happy and supportive collaboration that we had, that I would miss his advice and his touch.

Ronnie CorbettSketches in The One Ronnie include a superannuated super-hero and a stage-struck dog

“The people who used to write for us I thought would feel that they were working on a slightly damaged idea, as half was not there and I felt probably a bit of that myself.”

But he said this show is not the start of a new run of comedy shows.

“I couldn’t bare the strain of looking for so much more material,” he said.

He is not retiring completely and has not ruled out more TV appearances if the BBC ask: “I might say well I wouldn’t mind contemplating a half hour of some sort but we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it.”

Hear the full interview on Front Row on BBC Radio 4 on Friday 17 December at 1915 GMT or listen again on BBC iPlayer.

The One Ronnie will be broadcast on BBC One on Saturday 25 December at 1710 GMT.

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US man executed using animal drug

A table used for lethal injectionsA shortage of sodium thiopental in the US has forced Oklahoma to use pentobarbital instead
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A prisoner on death row in the US state of Oklahoma for killing his cellmate in 2001 is due to be executed using a drug cocktail that includes a sedative typically used to euthanize animals.

John David Duty, 58, is set to become the first US inmate to be executed using the sedative pentobarbital.

He is scheduled to die at 1800 local time (0000 GMT) at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in the town of McAlester.

A shortage of sodium thiopental in the US forced the state make the change.

A judge’s ruling to allow Oklahoma to substitute pentobarbital for sodium thiopental was upheld by a federal appeals court this week.

Sodium thiopental, an anaesthetic, is usually used in the state’s lethal injection formula, which also includes drugs that paralyse muscles and stop the heart.

Lawyers representing Duty and two other death-row inmates argued during a court hearing in November that use of the sedative could be inhumane and that inmates could be conscious but paralysed when the other drugs were administered.

“No-one who has been put to death has come back and testified about what it felt like,” said lawyer Jim Rowan, a board member of the Oklahoma Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.

Several of the 35 US states that use lethal injections are hunting for alternatives to sodium thiopental after Hospira, the sole US manufacturer of the drug, said new batches would not be available until early 2011.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

NI braced for more severe weather

SnowWintry weather is returning to Northern Ireland
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Northern Ireland is braced for another spell of severe wintry weather, with heavy snow forecast to fall right across the country on Friday.

The Met Office has issued a weather warning which will be in force from noon on Thursday until 1800 on Friday.

More heavy snow showers are expected over the weekend.

Northern Ireland has seen some of the most severe December weather for many years with more than 700 schools forced to close because of snow.

BBC NI weather presenter Barra Best said Wednesday night’s cold front will be followed by bitter Arctic winds which will cause temperatures to fall.

Although the thermometer will read 2 or 3C, the wind chill factor means it will feel more like -9 or -10C in places.

Temperatures will fall to below freezing over Friday night, but added wind chill during the early hours of Saturday will cause it to feel like -15C.

Regional Development Minister, Conor Murphy, has advised motorists to plan their journeys and check the latest travel advice.

Around 300 Road Service staff with 120 gritters and 11 snowblowers will be working to ensure main roads are salted.

Mr Murphy said that around 3,500 salt bins and 39,000 grit piles were stocked for use by members of the public to help prevent the formation of snow and ice on pavements and untreated roads.

The minister also gave advice to those wishing to help clear footpaths of snow or ice and said: “There is no law stopping you from clearing snow and ice on the pavement outside your home or business.

“I know this has been a concern and I want to reassure people that provided they clear snow and ice carefully they are unlikely to be held liable – this has been confirmed by the Attorney General.”

For further advice on clearing snow and ice visit: http://www.nidirect.gov.uk/iceandsnow

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

EU agrees on eurozone rescue fund

German Chancellor Angela Merkel talks to Romanian President Traian Basescu, 16 Dec 10The German chancellor (left) does not want to pour more euros into the current EU rescue fund

EU leaders have agreed to set up a permanent mechanism to bail out any member state whose debt problems threaten the 16-nation eurozone.

The eurozone stability mechanism will require a change to the EU’s Lisbon Treaty – but the wording has now been agreed, diplomats say.

As the UK uses the pound it will not have to contribute to the fund, UK Prime Minister David Cameron has said.

This year Greece and the Irish Republic have received emergency EU bail-outs.

The 27 leaders, meeting in Brussels on Thursday, agreed that in 2013 the permanent mechanism would succeed the eurozone’s 750bn-euro (£637bn; $1tn) temporary bail-out fund, the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF).

The agreement says “member states whose currency is the euro may establish a stability mechanism, to be activated if indispensable to safeguard the stability of the euro as a whole”.

But any eurozone country requiring such an injection of emergency aid must act to tackle its debt or deficit, the statement adds.

“The granting of any required financial assistance under the mechanism will be made subject to strict conditionality,” the text says.

Diplomats said the agreed wording – two sentences – would be inserted into the Lisbon Treaty.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Liam Fox postpones Sri Lanka trip

William Hague and Liam FoxThe Guardian reported that Mr Hague had been annoyed by the trip
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Defence Secretary Liam Fox has postponed a visit to Sri Lanka, following reported Foreign Office concerns about the trip.

A spokesman said the postponement was due to “an extension to his scheduled official visit to the Gulf” and it would go ahead next year.

The Guardian reported that Foreign Secretary William Hague was annoyed about the trip.

Sri Lanka denies war crimes during its defeat of the Tamil Tigers last year.

Both the Tamil Tigers and Sri Lanka’s government have been accused by human rights groups of committing crimes against humanity during the last year of their 26-year conflict.

Earlier this month demonstrators tried to storm the British high commission in Sri Lanka’s capital Colombo, after a speech to the Oxford Union by Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa was cancelled, following Tamil protests in the UK.

Dr Fox has had an interest in Sri Lanka since his efforts to broker a ceasefire in the conflict when he was a junior Foreign Office minister in 1996. He met President Rajapaksa during his UK visit.

The Guardian reported that Dr Fox had accepted an invitation to deliver the Lakshman Kadirgamar memorial lecture, made by the widow of the former foreign minister Mr Kadirgamar, who was shot dead in 2005.

“Who is in charge of policy on Sri Lanka, the foreign secretary or the defence secretary?”

Yvette Cooper Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary

The paper reported Foreign Office sources as having said Foreign Secretary William Hague was “appalled” by the decision.

Questioned about Dr Fox’s trip earlier, the prime minister’s spokesman stressed it was a “private visit”, not a government one, and Dr Fox had “a long-term private interest in Sri Lanka”.

Later it was announced the trip would not go ahead this weekend.

A spokesman said: “Dr Fox has postponed his private visit to Sri Lanka due to an extension to his scheduled official visit to the Gulf.

“He intends to carry out an official visit to Sri Lanka next year during which he proposes to fulfil the speaking engagement that he had planned.”

For Labour, Yvette Cooper said it was an example of “chaotic diplomacy” and raised questions about Dr Fox’s judgement.

She said: “William Hague must be spitting mad. This is a sensitive area of foreign policy. Who is in charge of policy on Sri Lanka, the foreign secretary or the defence secretary?”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Bad weather hits airport flights

Keith Brown at control centreKeith Brown spent the night at Transport Scotland’s control centre
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Scotland is bracing itself for more Arctic weather as cold air moves south across the country.

The Met Office has issued a severe weather warning of icy roads, particularly during the rush hour, as temperatures drop below freezing.

There are widespread snow showers in northern Scotland but no reports of serious disruption on the roads.

All Shetland schools have been closed and some rail services suspended in the Highlands and the west of Scotland and

Heavy snow showers coupled with high winds on Shetland are making driving conditions difficult.

Temperatures in much of the central belt are still well above freezing but they are falling fast, especially in the east.

The temperature in Edinburgh dropped from 6.1C at 0500 GMT to 2.6C at 0600 GMT and is forecast to continue falling.

Local authorities have had gritting teams working through the night to keep the roads open.

Scotland’s new transport minister, Keith Brown, spent the night at Transport Scotland’s control centre in Glasgow, along with police and transport officials.

His predecessor Stewart Stevenson quit the job at the weekend after blizzards brought gridlock to roads, leaving hundreds of motorists stranded overnight in their cars.

On Tuesday the new transport minister published a six-point plan aimed at keeping the country moving if the severe weather strikes again.

Measures include storing salt and grit at key locations on the road network for quicker access, and the possibility of removing central barriers on roads to allow easy access to vehicles that are blocking the carriageway.

He said: “We can assure Scotland that every effort is being made to prepare our transport network for the forecast impending heavy snowfall, and that all operations – thousands of people across multiple agencies including police, operating companies and government bodies – are working around the clock to mitigate weather impact.”

Schools in the Stirling Council area will not open until 1000 GMT and there will be no school transport, while staff at the local authority’s offices are being given more time to get to work.

ScotRail has been fitting hot air blowers on trains in a bid to remove snow and ice from undercarriages more quickly, and has brought in extra staff to keep stations and trains clear.

Police are advising people to listen to weather forecasts and check travel websites before they venture out.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Deaths rise in Ivory Coast unrest

Troops and protesters clash in Abidjan, 16/12The army surrounded the TV station and clashed with supporters of Alassane Ouattara
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Soldiers loyal to Laurent Gbagbo, one of Ivory Coast’s would-be presidents, have fired on protesters trying to take control of state TV and killed at least three people, reports say.

Violence has spread throughout Abidjan, with witnesses reporting gun battles near the hotel of Alassane Ouattara, who also claims to be president.

Mr Ouattara’s spokesman said the hotel was under attack.

The army earlier accused protesters of inciting confrontation.

Mr Ouattara and Mr Gbagbo both claim to have won last month’s election, and each has declared himself president.

The UN, which backs Mr Ouattara’s claim, has urged calm.

The BBC’s John James in Abidjan says there is high security around the television station, with tanks blocking the main boulevards.

He says shops and offices are closed, with only protesters and security forces out on the streets.

Mr Ouattara’s supporters had planned to march on the offices of state TV, which has been broadcasting reports praising Mr Gbagbo since the disputed election.

But his supporters clashed with security forces in the north of Abidjan early on Thursday.

Map

International news agencies reported at least three protesters were killed after police opened fire on the crowds.

AFP news agency also said at least one protester had been killed in another part of the city.

Separately, in the south of the city, gun battles erupted between soldiers who control the area and former rebels who are guarding the hotel where Mr Ouattara has been based since the election.

Mr Ouattara’s supporters, including his nominated prime minister Guillaume Soro, were trying to leave the hotel compound and march to the TV station when fighting broke out.

A spokesman for Mr Ouattara told the BBC that they were coming under attack.

Earlier in the day, international prosecutors said they would bring legal proceedings against anyone accused of causing deaths.

And UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s spokesman warned that “those who incite or perpetrate violence, and those who use the media for that purpose… will be held accountable for their actions”.

He reiterated that the UN wanted Mr Gbagbo to stand down.

The UN, which has about 10,000 peacekeepers in the country, is guarding Mr Ouattara’s hotel alongside fighters from Mr Soro’s former rebel group the New Forces (FN).

The FN still controls the north of the country, which was split into two after a civil war in 2002.

The trouble stems from last month’s run-off election, which the Electoral Commission said Mr Ouattara won by 54.1% to 45.9%.

Mr Gbagbo refused to admit defeat, and the Constitutional Council then annulled some results from the north and declared Mr Gbagbo the winner.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Lebanon ‘Israeli spy device’ find

Alleged Israeli spying device in Sannine (Lebanese Army, 15 December) The devices were concealed in fake rocks
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The Lebanese army says it has dismantled two sophisticated Israeli spy systems planted in the mountains above Beirut.

The military said it was alerted to the long-range spying devices by the Shia militant and political group Hezbollah.

Meanwhile, an explosion in the Lebanese port city of Sidon late on Wednesday sparked media reports of a possible Israeli attempt to destroy a third device planted there.

Israel has denied any involvement.

The Israeli army issued a statement saying there was “no unusual [military] activity in the area”.

On Wednesday, the Lebanese Armed Forces released a statement saying they had located two sophisticated Israeli-made surveillance devices in the mountains of Sannine and Barouk, north and south of the capital Beirut.

Pictures on the army website showed devices concealed inside large fake rocks on the slopes of the mountains.

Alleged Israeli spying device in Barouk (Lebanese Army, 15 December) The device found in Barouk was “more complicated”

The system found in Sannine included a camera, a device to send images and a third to receive signals, the army said.

The device found in Barouk was “more complicated”, it said.

The system was placed at a height of 1,715m and overlooked the towns of the western and central Bekaa Valley, a number of towns in southern Lebanon, and parts of Syria. It had the ability to communicate with wireless transmission stations in Lebanon and the Palestinian territories, the army said.

More than 100 people in Lebanon have been arrested since last year on suspicion of collaborating with Israel.

In a speech late on Wednesday, Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah said underground Israeli spy radars were sending pictures “day and night”.

He told supporters that Hezbollah was ready to fight any Israeli attack on Lebanese sovereignty, despite internal divisions over a UN-backed tribunal investigating the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

Hezbollah fought a 34-day war against Israel in 2006 that left 1,200 Lebanese and 160 Israelis dead. Lebanon and Israel remain officially in a state of war.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Mexico drug war dead above 30,000

Relatives mourn a police officer killed in Ciudad Juarez on 4 December 2010The fight against drugs is exacting a heavy toll

More than 30,000 people have died in drug-related violence in Mexico since President Felipe Calderon took office four years ago, the government says.

Almost 12,500 have been killed so far this year, a sharp increase on 2009.

Mexico’s attorney-general said the number of deaths was “regrettable”, but showed that the security forces were having success in their fight against the drugs gangs.

President Calderon has sent thousands of troops to battle the cartels.

The latest figures were announced by the attorney-general, Arturo Chavez.

He said 12,456 people had been registered killed in drug-related violence so far this year, compared to 9,600 in 2009, bringing the total to 30,196 since President Calderon took office in December 2006.

But he said the figures reflected the “desperation” of the cartels in the face of pressure from the security forces.

Mr Chavez said the government had seized record quantities of arms and drugs and captured or killed 10 of the 24 most wanted drug traffickers.

The Mexican government says many of the deaths are the result of fighting between rival gangs over territory and smuggling routes into the US.

Most of the killings are concentrated in certain regions, particularly the northern border states.

The border city of Ciudad Juarez alone has seen 3,000 killings so far this year, ten times more than in 2007.

Critics of Mr Calderon’s policies say they have increased the level of violence without reducing the flow of cocaine and other drugs into the US.

Human rights groups have also raised concerns that using the military has exposed civilians to possible abuse.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.