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Anti-ballistic missile radars stopped 21 times in 3 years: data

SEOUL, Oct. 3 (Yonhap) -- Two anti-ballistic missile radars were found to have stopped 21 times in the past three years due to a glitch in their systems, defense ministry data showed Monday.
The data, which was submitted to Rep. Lee Chul-gyu of the ruling Saenuri Party ahead of a parliamentary audit, showed that of the two Green Pine radars stationed in South Chungcheong and North Chungcheong provinces, one had stopped 13 times in the period since July 2013, while the other had stopped eight times in the same period.
The radars, which are used as an early warning system for ballistic missiles, were out of operation for up to nine days at a time.
South Korea's military acknowledged the flaw, saying that it was caused by condensation forming inside the radars' antennae. It insisted, however, that the problem had not affected its monitoring of North Korea's missile programs, as there were other radars installed on its Aegis destroyers to carry out that work.
The Air Force has temporarily installed air conditioners on the machines to prevent moisture from condensing inside them.
"By next year, we plan to buy 'radomes' to cover the radars and permanently solve the condensation problem," said an Air Force official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The State Duma has no plans to introduce fines for downloading movies from pirate sites

MOSCOW, October 3rd. / TASS /. Chairman of the State Duma committee on information policy of the sixth convocation Leonid Levin said that the deputies did not plan to introduce fines for citizens for downloading pirated movies sites. According to him, the legislation in this area will be improved in terms of strengthening the fight against the resources on which illegal content hosted.
Earlier, media reported on Monday, citing unnamed sources, that Russia allegedly discussed the possibility of introducing a system of fines for those who illegally download movies. According to publications, violators will be determined by the IP-address.
"The State Duma will continue to fight against illegal content on the network, using the approaches that have been used previously," - said Tass Levin, who is expected to retain his post, and in the seventh convocation of the Chamber. "In particular, it is necessary to fight the pirate sites that broadcast illegal videos and earn it, violating copyrights, rather than with the users who are trying to gain access to that content, not always realizing that it they are granted illegally", - he explained .
The MP reminded that the relevant laws of blocking such sites taken, they have since been tightened. "Legislation will be improved in this direction", - he stressed.
Anti-piracy law prohibiting the placing of illegal content on the Internet, came into force on 1 August 2013. Initially, the law applied only to video, but later approved amendments that expanded from 1 May, 2015, this law to illegally posted online books, music and software. In addition, the current version of the anti-piracy law provides a procedure "for life" website blocking for repeated violations. With the requirement to delete pirated content rights holders can apply to the Moscow City Court.


Подробнее на ТАСС:
http://tass.ru/politika/3674640

Toyota has created a robot child for childless women


Robot Kirobo Mini Toyota Motor Company
. MOSCOW, Oct. 3 - RIA Novosti company Toyota Motor announced the creation of a child robot, dubbed Kirobo Mini; it is for childless women in Japan, where there is a record decline in the birth rate, according to Reuters .
A man with a smartphone
Inject robots: the most interesting gadgets for the smart home
According to the agency, Toyota invention is intended to mitigate the effects of negative demographic trend in Japan, the leader in population aging rates among developed countries.
"He was a little unsteady, thus simulating a seated child, who has not yet fully developed the skills of coordination", - quotes agency the words of the developer Fuminori Kataoka. According Kataoka, this feature "cause emotional connection" between the robot and its owner.
Reportedly, Toyota plans to begin selling Kirobo Mini next year. Price will be 39 800 yen (392 dollars).
Creating Kirobo Mini was an important step on the way to the invention of more advanced robots that can recognize and respond to human emotions, says the Toyota.
According to Reuters, the Toyota is not the only company that develops robots children. For example, Japanese Intelligent System Co Ltd previously released Paro robot, designed to alleviate mental disorders in older Japanese people, constituting approximately one quarter of the total population.

The UAE has arrested a gang of criminals who carried out bank fraud

The UAE has arrested a gang of criminals who carried out bank fraud

The suspect in the courtroom.  Archival photo
DUBAI, Oct. 3 -. RIA Novosti Police is part of the UAE emirate of Sharjah has detained a gang of international criminals, which specialized in bank fraud, according to a police report Sharjah management.
"Sharjah Police have arrested one of the most dangerous international criminal gangs who robbed bank customers through the machinations of international bank accounts and credit cards," - noted in the police report.
In addition, the suspects tried to persuade the director of one of the largest hotels in the United Arab Emirates to write non-existent account to the guests from different countries of Europe, to then withdraw the money from personal accounts of these people.

In Warsaw, 20 thousand people are protesting against the introduction of penalties for abortion


View of Warsaw
WARSAW, Oct. 3 -. RIA News About 20 thousand people are taking part in a mass protest at the Palace Square in Warsaw against tougher legislation on abortion, the correspondent of RIA Novosti.
The action started at about 15.00 (16.00 MSK), in spite of the rain. In the demonstration, many people came with their children, in a crowd of many elderly people.
Ramzan Kadyrov.  Archival photo
Kadyrov has supported abortion ban in Russia
In connection with the action in Warsaw blocked a number of the main streets, buses follow on the changed routes.Near Sigismund's column, which is set in the center of the square, kontrmanifestatsiyu staged several anti-abortion, their guards police action passes without incident.
Sejm of Poland to sent back for revision bill last week, which involves the introduction of penalties for abortion for doctors and for women, as well as the introduction of the classification of fruit as "conceived child", and abortion - as "prenatal murder."
In Poland, it adopted in 1993 a law prohibiting abortion except in a few situations, such as pregnancy termination is permitted in the case of health threats mothers, fetal abnormality, rape.

Moscow will continue to reduce their nuclear materials, in addition to plutonium


Containers with nuclear fuel
MOSCOW, Oct 3, -. RIA Novosti Moscow will not abandon its commitments in the field of nuclear disarmament, said Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, commenting signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin's decree to suspend the agreement with the US on plutonium disposition of hostile actions of Washington.
Plutonium in the package.  Archive
Russia may suspend the recycling of plutonium as early as this month
According to the decree, this decision due to "the emergence of the US as a result of hostile action threat to strategic stability in respect of the Russian Federation", as well as the inability of the United States to fulfill the commitments made at the disposition of surplus weapons-grade plutonium.
"I would like to emphasize that Russia does not abandon its commitments in the field of nuclear disarmament, including reduction of the number involved in the weapons programs of nuclear materials. Russian plutonium designated as no longer required for the purposes of defense, will remain outside the armory activities", - said in a a statement of the Russian Minister, published on the website of Russian MFA.

Russia's Putin suspends plutonium cleanup accord with U.S. because of 'unfriendly' acts

Russia's Putin suspends plutonium cleanup accord with U.S. because of 'unfriendly' acts


By Dmitry Solovyov | MOSCOW
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday suspended an agreement with the United States for disposal of weapons-grade plutonium because of "unfriendly" acts by Washington, the Kremlin said.
A Kremlin spokesman said Putin had signed a decree suspending the 2010 agreement under which each side committed to destroy tonnes of weapons-grade material because Washington had not been implementing it and because of current tensions in relations.
The two former Cold War adversaries are at loggerheads over a raft of issues including Ukraine, where Russia annexed Crimea in 2014 and supports pro-Moscow separatists, and the conflict in Syria.
The deal, signed in 2000 but which did not come into force until 2010, was being suspended due to "the emergence of a threat to strategic stability and as a result of unfriendly actions by the United States of America towards the Russian Federation", the preamble to the decree said.
It also said that Washington had failed "to ensure the implementation of its obligations to utilize surplus weapons-grade plutonium".
The 2010 agreement, signed by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and then-U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, called on each side to dispose of 34 tonnes of plutonium by burning in nuclear reactors.
Clinton said at the time that that was enough material to make almost 17,000 nuclear weapons. Both sides then viewed the deal as a sign of increased cooperation between the two former adversaries toward a joint goal of nuclear non-proliferation.
"For quite a long time, Russia had been implementing it (the agreement) unilaterally," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told a conference call with journalists on Monday.
"Now, taking into account this tension (in relations) in general ... the Russian side considers it impossible for the current state of things to last any longer."
Ties between Moscow and Washington plunged to freezing point over Crimea and Russian support for separatists in eastern Ukraine after protests in Kiev toppled pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovich.
Washington led a campaign to impose Western economic sanctions on Russia for its role in the Ukraine crisis.
Relations soured further last year when Russia deployed its warplanes to an air base in Syria to provide support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's troops fighting rebels.
The rift has widened in recent weeks, with Moscow accusing Washington of not delivering on its promise to separate units of moderate Syrian opposition from "terrorists".
Huge cost overruns have also long been another threat to the project originally estimated at a total of $5.7 billion.
(Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Richard Balmforth)

Suicide bombers hit Shi'ite gatherings in Baghdad, at least 11 dead: police

Suicide bombers attacked two Shi'ite Muslim processions in Baghdad on Monday, killing at least 11 people and wounding more than 40, police and medical sources said.
Islamic State claimed responsibility for the blasts at the Shi'ite events commemorating the slaying of Prophet Mohammad's grandson Hussein.
A bomber detonated his explosive vest in the middle of one Shi’ite procession in the Amil district of southern Baghdad, killing six and wounding 25, the sources said.
A similar attack hit a procession in the eastern Mashtal district, killing five and wounding 18, the sources added.

(Reporting by Karem Raheem and Ahmed Rasheed; Writing by Maher Chmaytelli; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

At least six killed, 35 wounded in Afghanistan market blast

At least six people were killed and 35 wounded on Monday, when an improvised explosive device tore into a crowded marketplace in a northern Afghan province on the border with Turkmenistan, officials said.
The bomb, hidden on a bicycle, exploded as farmers gathered in Darzab district of the province of Jawzjan on market day, but there was no immediate word on who was responsible.
"People usually come from surrounding villages on Monday to do their shopping in the city," said Reza Ghafoori, a spokesman for the provincial governor.
"Enemies of the people of Afghanistan put an improvised explosive device on a bicycle and targeted our innocent countrymen who were there to buy their needs."

(Reporting by Bashir Ansari; Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Japanese scientist wins Nobel medicine prize for work on 'self-eating' cell mechanism

By Niklas Pollard and Kate Kelland | STOCKHOLM/LONDON
Japan's Yoshinori Ohsumi won the 2016 Nobel prize for medicine for ground-breaking experiments with yeast which exposed a key mechanism in the body's defenses where cells degrade and recycle their components.
Understanding the science behind the process, called "autophagy" or "self-eating", has led to a better understanding of diseases such as cancer, Parkinson's and type 2 diabetes, the prize committee said in its statement on Monday.
"Ohsumi's discoveries led to a new paradigm in our understanding of how the cell recycles its content," it said.
The Physiology or Medicine prize, the first of the Nobel prizes awarded each year, is worth 8 million Swedish crowns ($933,000).
Ohsumi, born in 1945 in Fukuoka, Japan, has been a professor at the Tokyo Institute of Technology since 2009. He told Kyodo News agency he was "extremely honored" to get the prize.
In a separate interview with broadcaster NHK, he said he had "always wanted to do something that other people wouldn’t do".
"I thought the breakdown (of cells) would be interesting, and that was my start," he said.
Ohsumi's work - carried out in the 1990s and described by commentators as "paradigm-shifting" and "pioneering" - included locating the genes that regulate autophagy. This is important for medicine because it helps show why errors in these genes can contribute to a range of diseases.
David Rubinsztein, deputy director of Cambridge University's Institute for Medical Research, said Ohsumi had provided scientists around the world with "critical tools" to help them understand how disrupted autophagy can contribute to illnesses including infectious diseases, cancers and neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington’s and Parkinson’s.
Chister Hoog, a professor at Sweden's Karolinska Institute, told Reuters the work helped explain crucial processes in human development, from growing up, to aging to succumbing to disease.
"In the very early stages (of a human’s development) your organs and your whole body is constantly being made over again – you are growing. So you need to get rid of the old stuff and generate new structures," he said.
"When you undergo aging, you have structures that have to be taken away and this – autophagy – is the principle that gets rid of them.
"If you affect this system – the genes and proteins involved in autophagy – you no longer can take care of the waste, and once it accumulates you will get some type of disease."
This year, the Karolinska Institute, which awards the Nobel medicine prize, has been immersed in a scandal over the hiring of a controversial surgeon. The Swedish government dismissed several members of the board in September.
Prizes for achievements in science, literature and peace were first awarded in 1901 in accordance with the will of dynamite inventor and businessman Alfred Nobel. ($1 = 8.5776 Swedish crowns)
(This version of the story fixes the typo in the name of the Karolinska professor)

(Additional reporting by Stockholm Newsroom and by Minami Funakoshi in Tokyo; Editing by Alistair Scrutton and Robin Pomeroy)

Spanish coast guards save 121 immigrants in Mediterranean

MADRID, Oct. 3 (Xinhua) -- Spanish Maritime Rescue Services saved 121 immigrants from an area of the Mediterranean Sea known as the Sea of Alboran on Sunday night, Spanish media reported on Monday.
The immigrants, consisting of 110 men and 11 women, were picked up from four inflatable dinghies.
The operation commenced after a warning to the coast guard that a dinghy containing 31 sub-Saharan immigrants had sailed from the coast of Morocco. This prompted the dispatch of an observation plane and a rescue ship which discovered the dinghy off the Isle of Alboran, roughly midway between Morocco and Spain.
The rescue vessel proceeded to a second dinghy, in northeast of the island, rescuing a further 53 people, before receiving a message from a boat of a further dinghy containing five Moroccans, who were also taken aboard.
The rescue ship returned to the Spanish port of Motril with the 89 people it had rescued on board, while a further 32 immigrants were saved by the Salvamar Hamal ship, also based in Motril.
Calm weather before the arrival of rougher seas in the autumn is one of the main reasons that many are attempting to make the hazardous crossing of the Mediterranean.
It has been estimated by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) that the first five months of 2016 saw 2,510 people lose their lives attempting to make the crossing, compared with 1,855 in the first five months of 2015.

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