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In Syria, a day recorded 51 ceasefire violations


Syrian army liberated territory from militants military school in Aleppo.  Archival photo
MOSCOW, Oct. 4 -. RIA Novosti During the day in Syria recorded 51 violation of the cessation of hostilities in the provinces of Aleppo, Damascus and Hama, according to the newsletter of the Russian Center for Reconciliation of the warring parties in Syria.
Syrian army liberated territory from militants military school in Aleppo.  Archival photo
The State Department experience "mixed feelings" because of the gap of cooperation with Russia
"During the day recorded 51 violation of the cessation of hostilities by illegal armed groups in the provinces of Aleppo (33), Damascus (12) and Hama (6)", - said in a statement posted on the Russian Defense Ministry website.
The seven-day deadline imposed in Syria ceasefire expired on 19 September.Package Russian-American agreements entered into force on 12th September.Russian Defense Ministry earlier said that the ceasefire on September 18 is observed only Syrian troops and fighters from the recorded violations.
The development of the situation - in a special project of RIA Novosti " The war in Syria " >>

In Russia, began the development of preliminary design of nuclear submarines of the fifth generation

In Russia, began the development of preliminary design of nuclear submarines of the fifth generation

Nuclear submarine.  Archival photo
MOSCOW, October 4 -. RIA Novosti Development of preliminary design of the fifth-generation Russian nuclear submarine has already begun, said Deputy Defense Minister of Russia Yury Borisov.
General Director of the St. Petersburg Marine Engineering Bureau Malachite Vladimir Dorofeev
Multi-purpose submarines 5 th generation will be developed until 2020
"If we talk on the newest submarines, that are currently under development pilot project promising fifth-generation nuclear-powered submarine, the results of which will decide on the date of its creation," - he said in an interview with the newspaper "Moskovsky Komsomolets" .
Earlier, the United Shipbuilding Corporation announced the start of work on the formation of appearance multipurpose nuclear submarines of the fifth generation "Husky" project, they will replace the submarine Project 885 "Ash", which are now being built and enter the combat strength of the Russian Navy.
So far we only know that the new multi-purpose submarine will be as unified with prospective strategic nuclear submarines, and on her arms will stand hypersonic missile "Zircon".

Science news-

The subglacial lake "East" in Antarctica have found an unknown bacterium

Research ship off the coast of Antarctica.  Archival photo
MOSCOW, Oct. 4 -. RIA Novosti is not known to science bacterium found in subglacial lake "East" in Antarctica, reported at the bottom of Science Head of Laboratory krioastrobiologii Peterburg University of Nuclear Physics named after Konstantinov Sergey Bulat.
So the artist imagined the process of analyzing the genomes of different creatures
Scientists from Russia have learned to quickly compare the DNA of different "sets" of microbes
"In the frozen water in the drill bit was found absolutely no bacteria known to us, it is called" w123-10 ", - Bulat told reporters.
According to him, the bacterium has 86% genetic similarity with known organisms, which, from the point of view of genetics, it is enough to speak about her absolute uniqueness.
"East" - a lake in Antarctica, which lies at a depth of four kilometers beneath the ice. Its existence was proved in 1994. Lake is a significant scientific value due to the fact that is the only one of its kind terrestrial analogue under-ice oceans on ice moons of Jupiter (Europa, Ganymede, Callisto) and Saturn (Enceladus).

Egypt police kill two Brotherhood leaders amid "anti-terror war"

CAIRO, Oct. 4 (Xinhua) -- The Egyptian police shot dead two leading members of the currently-outlawed Muslim Brotherhood group in a shootout earlier on Tuesday, the Interior Ministry said in a statement.
"Mohamed Kamal, a 61-year-old physician, one of the group's top leaders, and another leader Yasser Shehata, both were killed in the fire exchange," the ministry's statement said.
The police said the forces raided an apartment in Cairo's Bassateen neighborhood after learning it was used by the leaders as headquarters.
Kamal has been wanted over several charges including armed attacks and was twice sentenced to life in prison in absentia for establishing an armed group, the statement added, noting he has links with the assassination of the country's top prosecutor in mid-2015.
As for Shehata, he was also sentenced in absentia to 10 years in prison for assaulting a citizen and forcibly detaining him in the headquarters of the Freedom and Justice Party, the group's political wing, according to the statement.
The Brotherhood group has been designated as "a terrorist organization" in 2014, a year after the military ousted former Islamist president Mohamed Morsi and the police launched a massive crackdown on his loyalists that left about 1,000 of them killed and thousands more arrested.
Most of the group leaders, including Morsi himself and the group's top chief Mohamed Badie, are currently in custody over various charges including inciting violence to espionage.
Since Morsi's removal, growing anti-government attacks left hundreds of police and military men killed with a Sinai-based militant group loyal to the regional Islamic State (IS) group claiming responsibility for most of the attacks.
The liquidation of the two Brotherhood members came a few days after several anti-government attacks in the restive northern part of the Sinai Peninsula as well as the capital Cairo.
On Saturday, five police conscripts were shot dead by unknown gunmen while they were on their way back from vacation to their police central security department in Arish city of North Sinai province bordering Israel and the Gaza Strip.
A day later, also in Arish, four were killed and two others wounded in a blast that targeted an electricity company's vehicle, according to the Egyptian Interior Ministry.
Egypt's Deputy Prosecutor General Zakariya Abdel-Aziz survived an assassination attempt with a car bomb last Thursday in Cairo, and an emerging militant group calling itself "Hasm" claimed responsibility for the failed attempt in a statement circulated on social media.
Egyptian security forces have been launching massive anti-terror operations in North Sinai over the past three years, which killed about 1,000 militants so far and arrested a similar number of suspects.
The security raids in Sinai are part of the country's "war against terrorism" declared by then military chief and now President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi following the fall of Morsi. Enditem

Iraq launches radio broadcast to Mosul residents ahead of offensive



BAGHDAD, Oct. 4 (Xinhua) -- Iraq launched a new radio station on Tuesday to help the residents of the city of Mosul to be safe during the upcoming major offensive aimed to free the city from Islamic State (IS) militants, the official television reported.
The radio station based in the town of Qayyara, some 55 km south of Mosul, will give instructions to the residents to guide them to safe zones and possible safe exit routes that will be decided by the security forces during the battles to free the city from the extremist IS militants, the state-run channel said.
The Radio of the Republic of Iraq will also provide emergency phone numbers for the residents to call if they need help, the channel said.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi inaugurated the new radio station and sent a message to the people of Mosul saying "be ready, the promise (of liberation) is coming closer. Today you are closer than ever to get rid of oppression and injustice and of Daesh (IS group)."
Abadi called on the residents of Mosul to cooperate with the security forces, like the residents of the other freed cities and towns did, according to a statement issued by his office.
Mosul, about 400 km north of the Iraqi capital of Baghdad, is the second largest city in Iraq. The city has been under IS control since June 2014, when Iraqi government forces abandoned their weapons and fled, enabling IS militants to take control of parts of Iraq's northern and western regions.

Ukraine extends visa-on-arrival policy for Chinese citizens



KIEV, Oct. 4 (Xinhua) -- The Ukrainian government said on Tuesday it decided to extend the visa-on-arrival policy for Chinese citizens, which expired on Sept. 30.
"This decision will contribute to a significant intensification of bilateral relations with China, which is currently one of the important trading partners of Ukraine," the government said in a statement.
The new travel regime, which took effect on Oct. 1, will boost Ukraine's tourism industry and help the East European country attract overseas investment, the statement said.
It, however, gave no details on the expiration date of the fresh eased visa issuing rules.
According to the new rules, Chinese visitors could be issued visa on arrival not only at the Boryspil International Airport in Kiev, but also at the airport of Ukraine's southern Black Sea resort of Odessa.
As before, Chinese citizens can obtain 15-day Ukrainian entry visas upon their arrival if they have a document confirming the business or tourist purpose of the visit. The visa fee is about 100 U.S. dollars.
Ukraine has launched a pilot project to issue visas on arrival for Chinese citizens at the Boryspil airport in June.

Oklahoma Supreme Court strikes down abortion law



By Joseph Ax
Oklahoma's highest court on Tuesday struck down a law imposing restrictions on abortion providers, including a requirement that they take samples of fetal tissue from patients younger than 14 and preserve them for state investigators.
The law also set new criminal penalties for providers found to have violated abortion-related statutes as well as for anyone found to have helped a minor evade the requirement to obtain parental consent. In addition, the bill created a new, stricter inspection and licensing system for abortion clinics.
Legislators had said the fetal tissue section was aimed at capturing child rapists and that the lawwould protect women's health. But the New York-based Center for Reproductive Rights, which challenged the law in court, said it unfairly targeted doctors and facilities that perform abortions.
In a unanimous opinion, the nine-member Oklahoma Supreme Court found the law violated the state constitution's requirement that each legislative bill must address only "one subject." The rule, the court said, is designed to prevent legislators from including provisions that would not normally pass in otherwise popular bills.
The state unsuccessfully asserted that each part of the law addressed a single subject: women's reproductive health.
"We reject defendants' arguments and find this legislation violates the single subject rule as each of these sections is so unrelated and misleading that a legislator voting on this matter could have been left with an unpalatable all-or-nothing choice," Justice Joseph Watt wrote for the court.
In a concurring opinion, four of the judges said they also would have struck down the law as an unconstitutional burden on a woman's right to have an abortion.
The state attorney general's office, which defended the law in court, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Center for Reproductive Rights President Nancy Northup said in a statement: "This law was nothing but a cynical attack on women's health and rights by unjustly targeting their trusted health care providers."
The law was passed in 2015, but the court had put it on hold while it considered the challenge.
Oklahoma's Republican-dominated government has been at the forefront of socially conservative states that have enacted abortion restrictions in recent years, most of which have been challenged in court.
In June, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a Texas law imposing strict regulations on doctors and facilities that perform abortions. A similar law is on hold in Oklahoma while the state Supreme Court considers its legality.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

Yahoo secretly scanned customer emails for U.S. intelligence - sources

2016. REUTERS/Mike Blake1/2

By Joseph Menn | SAN FRANCISCO
Yahoo Inc last year secretly built a custom software program to search all of its customers' incoming emails for specific information provided by U.S. intelligence officials, according to people familiar with the matter.
The company complied with a classified U.S. government directive, scanning hundreds of millions of Yahoo Mail accounts at the behest of the National Security Agency or FBI, said two former employees and a third person apprised of the events.
Some surveillance experts said this represents the first case to surface of a U.S. Internet company agreeing to a spy agency's demand by searching all arriving messages, as opposed to examining stored messages or scanning a small number of accounts in real time.
It is not known what information intelligence officials were looking for, only that they wanted Yahoo to search for a set of characters. That could mean a phrase in an email or an attachment, said the sources, who did not want to be identified.
Reuters was unable to determine what data Yahoo may have handed over, if any, and if intelligence officials had approached other email providers besides Yahoo with this kind of request.
According to the two former employees, Yahoo Chief Executive Marissa Mayer's decision to obey the directive roiled some senior executives and led to the June 2015 departure of Chief Information Security Officer Alex Stamos, who now holds the top security job at Facebook Inc."Yahoo is a law abiding company, and complies with the laws of the United States," the company said in a brief statement in response to Reuters questions about the demand. Yahoo declined any further comment.
Through a Facebook spokesman, Stamos declined a request for an interview.
The NSA referred questions to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which declined to comment.
The demand to search Yahoo Mail accounts came in the form of a classified directive sent to the company's legal team, according to the three people familiar with the matter.
U.S. phone and Internet companies are known to have handed over bulk customer data to intelligence agencies. But some former government officials and private surveillance experts said they had not previously seen either such a broad directive for real-time Web collection or one that required the creation of a new computer program.
"I've never seen that, a wiretap in real time on a 'selector,'" said Albert Gidari, a lawyer who represented phone and Internet companies on surveillance issues for 20 years before moving to Stanford University this year. A selector refers to a type of search term used to zero in on specific information.
"It would be really difficult for a provider to do that," he added.
Experts said it was likely that the NSA or FBI had approached other Internet companies with the same demand, since they evidently did not know what email accounts were being used by the target. The NSA usually makes requests for domestic surveillance through the FBI, so it is hard to know which agency is seeking the information.
Reuters was unable to confirm whether the 2015 demand went to other companies, or if any complied.
Alphabet Inc's Google and Microsoft Corp, two major U.S. email service providers, did not respond to requests for comment.
CHALLENGING THE NSA
Under laws including the 2008 amendments to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, intelligence agencies can ask U.S. phone and Internet companies to provide customer data to aid foreign intelligence-gathering efforts for a variety of reasons, including prevention of terrorist attacks.
Disclosures by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden and others have exposed the extent of electronic surveillance and led U.S. authorities to modestly scale back some of the programs, in part to protect privacy rights.
Companies including Yahoo have challenged some classified surveillance before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, a secret tribunal.
Some FISA experts said Yahoo could have tried to fight last year's directive on at least two grounds: the breadth of the demand and the necessity of writing a special program to search all customers' emails in transit.
Apple Inc made a similar argument earlier this year when it refused to create a special program to break into an encrypted iPhone used in the 2015 San Bernardino massacre. The FBI dropped the case after it unlocked the phone with the help of a third party, so no precedent was set.
Other FISA experts defended Yahoo's decision to comply, saying nothing prohibited the surveillance court from ordering a search for a specific term instead of a specific account. So-called "upstream" bulk collection from phone carriers based on content was found to be legal, they said, and the same logic could apply to Web companies' mail.
As tech companies become better at encrypting data, they are likely to face more such requests from spy agencies.
Former NSA General Counsel Stewart Baker said email providers "have the power to encrypt it all, and with that comes added responsibility to do some of the work that had been done by the intelligence agencies."
SECRET SIPHONING PROGRAM
Mayer and other executives ultimately decided to comply with the directive last year rather than fight it, in part because they thought they would lose, said the people familiar with the matter.
Yahoo in 2007 had fought a FISA demand that it conduct searches on specific email accounts without a court-approved warrant. Details of the case remain sealed, but a partially redacted published opinion showed Yahoo's challenge was unsuccessful.
Some Yahoo employees were upset about the decision not to contest the more recent directive and thought the company could have prevailed, the sources said.
They were also upset that Mayer and Yahoo General Counsel Ron Bell did not involve the company's security team in the process, instead asking Yahoo's email engineers to write a program to siphon off messages containing the character string the spies sought and store them for remote retrieval, according to the sources.
The sources said the program was discovered by Yahoo's security team in May 2015, within weeks of its installation. The security team initially thought hackers had broken in.
When Stamos found out that Mayer had authorized the program, he resigned as chief information security officer and told his subordinates that he had been left out of a decision that hurt users' security, the sources said. Due to a programming flaw, he told them hackers could have accessed the stored emails.
Stamos's announcement in June 2015 that he had joined Facebook did not mention any problems with Yahoo. (bit.ly/2dL003k)
In a separate incident, Yahoo last month said "state-sponsored" hackers had gained access to 500 million customer accounts in 2014. The revelations have brought new scrutiny to Yahoo's security practices as the company tries to complete a deal to sell its core business to Verizon Communications Inc for $4.8 billion.
(Reporting by Joseph Menn; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Tiffany Wu)

Bagel illustrates Nobel-prize winning work in physics

By Niklas Pollard and Ben Hirschler | STOCKHOLM/LONDON
Three British-born scientists won the 2016 Nobel Prize in Physics on Tuesday for revealing unusual states of matter, leading to advances in electronics and potentially helping work on future quantum computers.
David Thouless, Duncan Haldane and Michael Kosterlitz, who all work at U.S. universities, share the prize for their discoveries on abrupt changes in the properties, or phases, of ultra-thin materials.
Their research centers on topology, a branch of mathematics involving step-wise changes like making a series of holes in an object. The difficult-to-grasp concept was illustrated by Nobel Committee member Thors Hans Hansson at a news conference using a cinnamon bun, a bagel and a pretzel.
Phases are obvious when matter goes from solid to liquid to gas, but materials can also undergo topological step changes that affect their electrical properties. One example is a superconductor, which at low temperatures conducts electricity without resistance.
"Thanks to their pioneering work, the hunt is now on for new and exotic phases of matter," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in awarding the 8 million Swedish crown ($937,000) prize.
"Many people are hopeful of future applications in both materials science and electronics."
Thouless, of the University of Washington in Seattle, was awarded half the prize, with the other half divided between Haldane, of Princeton University, and Kosterlitz, of Brown University.
"We really haven't understood ... the full amount of marvelous things that quantum mechanics can do," Haldane told Reuters in an interview at his home in Princeton, New Jersey. "It does things which we never dreamed of and could actually be tremendously useful for all kinds of new technologies."
'LONG OVERDUE'
Kosterlitz's colleague at Brown, Professor See Chen Ying, said he considered the award long overdue.
"You never know, because there are exciting discoveries everywhere, so every year we start thinking is this the year," Ying said in an interview on Brown's campus in Providence, Rhode Island. "Personally, I think it's long overdue."
Andy Schofield, a professor of theoretical physics at the University of Birmingham, where Kosterlitz and Thouless carried out their early work in the 1970s, said the new understanding of phase states was particularly promising in computing.
"One of the most exciting technological implications is in insulators that don't carry electricity normally but can be forced to carry electrical current at the surface," he told Reuters. "That's a very robust state, which gives a stability that is essential to quantum computing."
Superfast quantum computers, one of the holy grails of science, should be able to test multiple solutions to a problem at once and could in theory solve in seconds problems that take today's fastest machines years to crack.
Traditional computers use binary bits of information to store data while quantum computers use "qubits" that can simultaneously be 0 and 1, making them ultra-fast but unstable.
Physics is the second of this year's crop of Nobels and comes after Japan's Yoshinori Ohsumi was awarded the prize for medicine on Monday.
There had been speculation this year's prize might be awarded for the first detection of gravitational waves, the ripples in the fabric of space-time first predicted a century ago by Albert Einstein. The breakthrough, announced by international researchers in February, may have come too late for the Nobel Committee.
The three researchers join the ranks of some of the greatest names in science, including Einstein, Niels Bohr and Marie Curie.
The prizes were first awarded in 1901 to honor achievements in science, literature and peace in accordance with the will of the Swedish dynamite inventor and business tycoon Alfred Nobel, who left much of his wealth to establish the award.
For a graphic on Nobel laureates, click on: tmsnrt.rs/1jLPeM7
($1 = 8.5364 Swedish crowns)

(Additional reporting by Bart Noonan, Andrew Hofstetter, Elly Park, Anna Ringstrom, Bjorn Rundstrom, Simon Johnson, Johan Ahlander and Scott Malone; Editing by Mark Trevelyan and David Gregorio)

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