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рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХाрд▓े рек рд╕рдп рекрел рд╕ेрдиाрд▓ाрдИ рдЗрд╕्рд▓ाрдоिрдХ рд╕्рдЯेрдЯ рд╡िрд░ुрдж्рдз рд▓рдб्рди рдЗрд░ाрдХ рдкрдаाрдЙрдиे |

рдХाрдардоाрдбौं, рднाрдж्рд░ реирем ।  рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХी рд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░рдкрддि рдмाрд░ाрдХ рдУрд╡ाрдоाрд▓े рд╕िрд░िрдпा рд░ рдЗрд░ाрдХрдХा рдЖрддंрдХрд╡ाрджी рд╕рдоूрд╣ рдЗрд╕्рд▓ाрдоिрдХ рд╕्рдЯेрдЯ рд╡िрд░ुрдж्рдз рдХाрд░рдмाрд╣ी рдЧрд░्рди рдЖрдлू рд░рдд्рддिрднрд░ рдирд╣рдЪ्рдХрдиे рдмрддाрдПрдХा рдЫрди् ।
 рд╕ो рд╕рдоूрд╣ рд╡िрд░ुрдж्рдз рдЖрдл्рдиो рд░рдгрдиीрддि рд╕ाрд░्рд╡рдЬрдиिрдХ рдЧрд░्рджै рдПрдХ рд╕рдо्рдмोрдзрдирдоाрд░्рдлрдд рдЙрдирд▓े рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХाрд▓ाрдИ рддрд░्рд╕ाрдЙрдиे рдХुрдиै рдкрдиि рд╕рдоूрд╣рд▓े рд╕्рд╡рд░्рдЧрдоा рдкрдиि рд╕ुрд░рдХ्рд╖िрдд рдмाрд╕ рдирдкाрдЙрдиे рдЪेрддाрд╡рдиी рджिрдП ।

рдУрдмाрдоाрд▓े рек рд╕рдп рекрел рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХी рд╕ेрдиा рдЗрд░ाрдХ рдкрдаाрдЙрдиे рдШोрд╖рдгा рдкрдиि рдЧрд░े । рдУрдмाрдоाрдХो рдпो рдШोрд╖рдгाрд╕ँрдЧै рдЖрддंрдХрд╡ाрджी рд╕рдоूрд╣рд▓े рд╕िрд░िрдпा рд░ рдЗрд░ाрдХрдХो рдзेрд░ै рднूрднाрдЧ рдиिрдпрди्рдд्рд░рдгрдоा рд▓िрдПрдХा рдЫрди् । рдЗрд╕्рд▓ाрдоिрдХ рд╕्рдЯेрдЯрдХा рд▓рдбाрдХुрд╣рд░ुрд▓े рджुрд╕्рдорди рд╕ेрдиा рд░ рдкрд╢्рдЪिрдоा рдкрдд्рд░рдХाрд░рд╣рд░ु рд╡िрд░ुрдж्рдз рдЖрдл्рдиो рдХ्рд░ूрд░рддाрд▓ाрдИ рдЕрдЭ рдмрдвाрдПрдХो рднिрдбिрдпो рд╕ाрд░्рд╡рдЬрдиिрдХ рднрдПрдХो рдЫ ।

рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХाрд▓े рдЖрддंрдХрд╡ाрджी рд╕рдоूрд╣ рд╡िрд░ुрдж्рдз рд▓рдб्рди рдЗрд░ाрдХрдоा рез рд╕рдп релреж рд╣рд╡ाрдИ рдЧрд╕्рддी рд╕ुрд░ु рдЧрд░ेрдХो рдЫ рднрдиे рдЗрд░ाрдХ рд░ рдХुрд░्рджिрд╕рд▓ाрдИ рд╕ैрди्рдп рд╕рд╣рдпोрдЧ рдк्рд░рджाрди рдЧрд░ेрдХो рдЫ ।

рдУрдмाрдоाрд▓े резрел рдоिрдиेрдЯрдХो рд╡рдХ्рддрд▓्рдпрдоा рдЖрддंрдХрд╡ाрджी рд╕рдоूрд╣рд▓ाрдИ рд╕рдоाрдк्рдд рдкाрд░्рди рд╡ृрд╣рдд рд╕ंрдпрди्рдд्рд░рдХो рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХाрд▓े рдиेрддृрдд्рд╡ рдЧрд░्рдиे рдЬाрдирдХाрд░ी рджिрдП  । рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХी рд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░рдкрддिрд▓े рд╕ो рдЖрддंрдХрд╡ाрджी рд╕рдоूрд╣ рд╡िрд░ुрдж्рдзрдХो рд▓рдбाрдИрдХा рд▓ाрдЧि рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХी рдХंрдЧ्рд░ेрд╕рд▓े рджिрдПрдХो рдЕрдиुрдорддिрдХो рд╕्рд╡ाрдЧрдд рдкрдиि рдЧрд░े ।

рдЫ рдЬрдиाрдХो рдоृрдд्рдпु рд╣ुрдиे рдЧрд░ि рдЗрд░ाрдХी рдЧृрд╣рдорди्рдд्рд░ाрд▓рдпрдоै рдмрдо рд╣рдорд▓ा,

рднрджौ рен, рдмрдЧ्рджाрдж  – рдЗрд░ाрдХी рдЧृрд╣ рдорди्рдд्рд░ाрд▓рдпрдоा Agust 23 рд╢рдиिрдмाрд░ рдЖрдд्рдордШाрддी рдмрдо рд╣рдорд▓ा рднрдПрдХो рд╕рдоाрдЪाрд░ рдЫ । рд╕ो рд╣рдорд▓ाрдоा рдкрд░ी рдХрдо्рддीрдоा рдкрдиि рдЫ рдЬрдиाрдХो рдЬ्рдпाрди рдЧрдПрдХो рдмрддाрдЗрдПрдХो рдЫ ।

рд╢рдиिрдмाрд░ рдЕрдкрд░ाрди्рд╣ рдПрдХрдЬрдиा рдЖрддрдордШाрддी рд╣рдорд▓ाрдХाрд░ीрд▓े рдмрдо рд╣рдорд▓ा рдЧрд░ेрдХा рдеिрдП । рд╕ो рд╣рдорд▓ाрдоा рдкрд░ी рдЫ рдЬрдиाрдХो рдЬ्рдпाрди рдЧрдПрдХो рд░ рдЕрд░ु рейреи рдЬрдиा рдШाрдЗрддे рднрдПрдХा рдЫрди् ।

рд╕ो рдорди्рдд्рд░ाрд▓рдпрдХो рдкрд░्рдЦाрд▓ рдЕрдд्рдпाрдзुрдиिрдХ рд╕ुрд░рдХ्рд╖ा рд╡्рдпрд╡рд╕्рдеाрдХा рд╕ाрде рдмрдиाрдЗрдПрдХो рд░ рдмाрд╣िрд░ рд╕ुрд░рдХ्рд╖ाрдоा рдмрд╕ेрдХा рд╕ुрд░рдХ्рд╖ाрдХрд░्рдоीрд╣рд░ुрд▓े рдкрдиि рдиिрдХै рдиै рд░рдХ्рд╖ाрдд्рдордХ рдЙрдкाрдпрдХा рд╕ाрде рдмрд╕ेрдХा рдмрддाрдЗрдПрдХो рдеिрдпो ।

рддрд░рдкрдиि рдЖрдд्рдордШाрддी рд╣рдорд▓ाрдХाрд░ीрд▓े рдЬрдмрд░्рдЬрд╕्рддी рдХाрд░्рдпाрд▓рдпрднिрдд्рд░ рдЫिрд░ी рдЖрдлैрдоाрдеि рдмрдо рдкрдб्рдХाрдПрдХा рдеिрдП ।

рдЙрдирд▓े рдмोрдХेрдХो рд╕ो рд╡िрд╕्рдлोрдЯрдХ рдкрджाрд░्рде рдиिрдХै рд╢рдХ्рддिрд╢ाрд▓ी рднрдПрдХोрд▓े рдаूрд▓ो рдХ्рд╖рддि рд╣ुрди рдкुрдЧेрдХो рдмрддाрдЗрдПрдХो рдЫ । рд░ाрд╕рд╕÷рдПрдПрдлрдкी

рд░ाрд╣ुрд▓ рдЧाрди्рдзी ‘рдиेрдкाрд▓ी рдЬ्рд╡ाрдЗँ’ рдмрди्рджै

рдХाрдардоाрдбौ, рем рдоाрдШ। рднाрд░рддीрдп рдХांрдЧ्рд░ेрд╕ рдкाрд░्рдЯीрдХा рдорд╣ाрд╕рдЪिрд╡  рд░ाрд╣ुрд▓ рдЧाрди्рдзी рекреи рд╡рд░्рд╖рдХा рднрдП рддрд░ рдЙрдиी рдЕрд╡िрд╡ाрд╣िрдд рдиै рдЫрди् । рднाрд░рддрдоा рдЧाрди्рдзी рдкрд░िрд╡ाрд░рдХा рд░ाрдЬрдХुрдоाрд░ рднрдиेрд░ рд╕рдоेрдд рдкुрдХाрд░िрдиे рд░ाрд╣ुрд▓рд▓े рд╡िрд╡ाрд╣ рдЧрд░्рдиे рдмाрд░े рд╕्рдеाрдиीрдп рднाрд░рддीрдп рдоिрдбिрдпाрд▓े рдЪрд░्рдЪा рдЧрд░ेрдХा рдЫрди् । рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ुрдХा рдЕрдиुрд╕ाрд░ рдЧाрди्рдзीрдХो рдмिрд╡ाрд╣ рдХुрдиै рднाрд░рддीрдп рдШрд░ाрдиा,  рдкूрд░्рд╡рд░ाрдЬрдкрд░िрд╡ाрд░ рдпा рд╡्рдпाрдкाрд░ी рдЙрдж्рдпोрдЧрдкрддीрд╕ँрдЧ рдирднрдПрд░ рд╕рдЮ्рдЪाрд░рдХрд░्рдоीрд╕ँрдЧ рд╣ुрди рд▓ाрдЧेрдХो рд╣ो।
рдмрддाрдЗрдПрдЕрдиुрд╕ाрд░ рд░ाрд╣ुрд▓ рдЧाрди्рдзीрд▓े рд▓рдЧрди рдЧाँрдаो рдмाрдз्рдиे рдЪрд░्рдЪा рдЪрд▓िрд░рд╣ेрдХी рддि рд╕рдЮ्рдЪाрд░рдХрд░्рдоी рджिрд▓्рд▓ीрд╕्рдеिрдд рд╕िрдПрдирдПрдирдоा рдХाрд░्рдпрдХ्рд░рдо рдиिрд░्рдоाрддाрдХो рд░ुрдкрдоा рдХाрд░्рдпрд░рдд рдЫिрди्।  рдд्рдпोрднрди्рджा рдкрдиि рдорд╣рдд्рд╡рдкूрд░्рдг рдХुрд░ाрдЪाрд╣ि рдЧाрди्рдзीрд▓े рдмिрдмाрд╣ рдЧрд░्рди рд▓ाрдЧेрдХी рддि рдпूрд╡рддी рдиेрдкाрд▓ी рдоुрд▓рдХी рд░рд╣ेрдХी рдЫрди्। рдиेрдкाрд▓рдХो рдиेрд╡ाрд░ рдкрд░िрд╡ाрд░рдХी рддि рдпूрд╡рддीрд╕ँрдЧ рд░ाрд╣ुрд▓рдХो рдпрд╕ैрдмрд░्рд╖ рдмिрдмाрд╣ рд╣ुрдирд╕рдХ्рдиे рджाрд╡ी рдЧрд░िрдПрдХो рдЫ। рдпрдж्рдпрдкी рдмिрдмाрд╣рдмाрд░े рдЧाрди्рдзी рдкрд░िрд╡ाрд░рдХा рддрд░्рдлрдмाрдЯ рдХुрдиै рдЬाрдирдХाрд░ी рд╕ाрд░्рд╡рдЬрдиिрдХ рдЧрд░िрдПрдХो рдЫैрди। рд╕рдоाрдЪाрд░рдоा рдЬрдиाрдЗрдПрдЕрдиुрд╕ाрд░ рд░ाрд╣ुрд▓рдХा рд╣ुрдиेрд╡ाрд▓ा рд╕рд╕ुрд░ा рд╕ंрдпुрдХ्рдд рд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░ рд╕ँрдШрдХा рдкूрд░्рд╡рдЬाрдЧिрд░े рд╣ुрди।
рд╕рди् резрепренреж рдоा рдЬрди्рдоिрдПрдХा рекреи рдмрд░्рд╖िрдп рд░ाрд╣ुрд▓рдХा рдкिрддा рд░ाрдЬीрд╡ рдЧाрди्рдзीрд▓े рдЗрдЯाрд▓िрдХी рдиाрдЧрд░िрдХ рд╕ोрдиिрдпा рдЧाрди्рдзीрд╕ँрдЧ рдмिрдмाрд╣ рдЧрд░ेрдХा рдеिрдП। рдЙрдирдХी рдмрд╣िрдиी рдк्рд░िрдпрдЩрдХा рдЧाрди्рдзीрдХो рд░ोрд╡рд░्рдЯ рд╡ाрдб्рд░ाрд╕ँрдЧ рдмिрдмाрд╣ рднрдЗрд╕рдХेрдХो рдЫ।

рдЙрдкрдз्рдпрдХ्рд╖рдоा рдиिрдпुрдХ्рдд

рднाрд░рддрдоा рдХांрдЧ्рд░ेрд╕рд▓े рдпुрд╡ा рдиेрддा рд░ाрд╣ुрд▓ рдЧाрди्рдзीрд▓ाрдИ рдЙрдкाрдз्рдпрдХ्рд╖ рд╕рдоेрдд рдмрдиाрдПрдХो рдЫ । рдЙрдиी рд▓ोрдХрд╕рднा рдЪुрдиाрд╡рдХा рд▓ाрдЧि рдЧрдаिрдд рд╕рдорди्рд╡рдп рд╕рдоिрддिрдХा рдк्рд░рдоुрдЦ рдЫрди् । рдЙрдирд▓ाрдИ рднाрд░рддрдХो рдирдпाँ рдк्рд░рдзाрдирдорди्рдд्рд░ीрдХा рд░ुрдкрдоा рд╕рдоेрдд рд╣ेрд░िрди्рдЫ । рдЬрдпрдкुрд░рдоा реи рджिрдирджेрдЦि рдЬाрд░ी рдХांрдЧ्рд░ेрд╕рдХो рдЪिрди्рддрди рд╢िрд╡िрд░рд▓े рд░ाрд╣ुрд▓рд▓ाрдИ рдЙрдкाрдз्рдпрдХ्рд╖рдХो рдЬिрдо्рдоेрдмाрд░ी рджिрдиे рдиिрд░्рдгрдп рдЧрд░ेрдХो рднाрд░рддीрдп рд╕рдоाрдЪाрд░ рдПрдЬेрди्рд╕ीрд╣рд░ुрд▓े рдЬрдиाрдПрдХा рдЫрди् । рдЖрдЧाрдоी рд▓ोрдХрд╕рднрдоा рдиिрд░्рд╡ाрдЪрди, рд╕ंрдЧрдардирдХो рдПрдХрддा, рдЕрди्рддрд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░िрдп рд╕рдо्рд╡рди्рдз рд▓рдЧाрдпрддрдмाрд░े рдХांрдЧ्рд░ेрд╕рд▓े рдЖрдЗрддрдмाрд░ рдЬрдпрдкुрд░ рдШोрд╖рдгा рдкрдд्рд░ рдЬाрд░ी рдЧрд░्рдиे рдмрддाрдЗрдПрдХो рдЫ ।

Typhoon Haiyan: eight die in food stampede amid desperate wait for aid

Eight people have been killed in the typhoon-ravaged central Philippines after thousands of Haiyan survivors stormed a government-owned rice warehouse seeking food supplies.


The Philippines National Food Authority said police and soldiers stood by helpless as people streamed into the warehouse in Alangalang, Leyte province – an area where hunger and desperation are running high after Haiyan made landfall early on Friday morning, ravaging vast swaths of Leyte and Samar islands. The security forces could only watch as more than 100,000 sacks of rice were carried away.

The eight were crushed to death when a wall in the warehouse collapsed, spokesman Rex Estoperez told the Associated Press. Other rice warehouses were dotted around the region, he said, refusing to give their locations for security reasons.

The Philippines government has come under fire for failing to deliver aid adequately or quickly enough, with growing frustration in the hardest hit areas, such as Tacloban, the capital of Leyte province where dead bodies have piled up on the streets and residents have resorted to looting to find food.

A military official told the Guardian on Wednesday that the government was aiming to double its relief efforts within the next two days. Attempts to provide help were buoyed by the expected arrival of two extra US military C-130 planes and one additional Australian air force plane.

Three relief distribution points were being set up in the Leyte island towns of Tacloban, Guiuan and Ormoc, the official said, with the main aid effort operating out of neighbouring Cebu instead of Manila, the capital, which is 360 miles to the north.

More than 10,000 people are feared to have been killed in the Philippines due to Haiyan, most of them in Leyte province, with aid workers suggesting that number may rise significantly. As many as 29 municipalities have still not been reached due to impassable roads and downed telecommunications.

President Benigno Aquino III said on Tuesday that he believed the number killed to be far lower – around 2,500 – and told CNN that the 10,000 figure may have come from an "emotional" official, with government figures alleging that the death toll stands at 2,275. The UN has said more than 670,000 people have been displaced and a total of 11.3 million people directly affected by the super storm.

International relief efforts intensified with the launch of a UN appeal and the dispatch of American, British and Japanese troops to the affected regions. But minimal amounts of aid have reached the worst‑hit areas.

More than 3,000 people surged on to the tarmac of Tacloban airport on Tuesday morning in the hope of flying out on the two Philippine air force planes that had just arrived.

Babies and sick or elderly people were given priority but only a few hundred were able to leave. Others were held back by soldiers and police. Many had walked for hours and camped at the base overnight.

"I was pleading with the soldiers. I was kneeling and begging because I have diabetes," said Helen Cordial as she lay on a stretcher, shaking. "Do they want me to die in this airport? They are stone-hearted," she told the Associated Press.

Dean Smith, an Australian who has been living with his family near Palo, Leyte province, for the last five years, told the Guardian that he waited eight hours to be able to get one of the first commercial flights out of Tacloban to Cebu. On the way to the airport he said he saw "horrifying things that I know I have seen but my brain hasn't processed yet".

He described scenes of chaos in the city centre, where police were stealing money from the local cashpoints, people in cars were refusing to drive the injured to get help, and the bloated body of a man floating in dirty water was being gnawed at by a dog.

"What people have gone through, what they have seen – there is going to be a lot of post-traumatic stress after this event I assure you," he said shakily. "No one has ever seen anything like this."

Having arrived on Tuesday in Cebu, Smith was planning to stock up on food, medicine and water and take it back to his Palo home, where his wife, six children, a 92-year-old grandmother and a pregnant nanny were all desperately awaiting supplies. He departed for Tacloban early on Wednesday morning.

Domestic and international relief efforts were being hampered by wet weather, poor communications and damaged infrastructure, with aircraft only able to land in Tacloban during daylight hours because the air control tower had been destroyed by Haiyan. Unsubstantiated reports of aid convoys being attacked by hungry victims circulated, with the Telegraph reporting that communist rebels had been killed whilst trying to intercept a Red Cross convoy destined for the island of Samar.

Still, Corizon Soliman, secretary of the Philippine department of social welfare and development, said aid had so far reached a third of the city's 45,000 families.

However armed forces spokesman Ramon Zagala told the BBC that relief workers were struggling to deliver aid for a number of reasons.

"The area is very vast and the number of helicopters – although we have a lot of helicopters at the moment – it's really a challenge for us to bring [aid] to all the places and [bring] the number of goods that are needed."

The BBC quoted a Leyte official as saying that although relief goods like medicine and equipment were arriving into the province "it's just not reaching the people affected".

The UN released $25m (£15.7m) in emergency funds for shelter materials and household items, and for assistance with emergency health services, safe water supplies and sanitation.

The UN aid chief, Valerie Amos, launched an appeal for $300m as she arrived in Manila. "We have deployed specialist teams, vital logistics support and dispatched critical supplies but we have to do more and faster," she said.

The US, Britain, Japan, Australia and other nations have pledged tens of millions of dollars in immediate aid, and some businesses have also offered help: banking group HSBC announced a $1m (£630,000) cash donation.

In Tacloban shops were stripped of food and water by hungry residents. While some tents had arrived, the widespread damage left many people sleeping in the ruins of their homes or under shredded trees.

Military doctors at a makeshift clinic at the airport said they had treated about 1,000 people for cuts, bruises and deep wounds but did not have enough medical supplies.

"It's overwhelming," said Antonio Tamayo, an air force captain. "We need more medicine. We can't give anti-tetanus vaccine shots because we have none."

The typhoon flattened Basey, a seaside town in Samar province about six miles across a bay from Tacloban. About 2,000 people were missing there, its governor said. Rescue and relief workers were yet to reach many of the more remote areas.

"There are hundreds of other towns and villages stretched over thousands of kilometres that were in the path of the typhoon and with which all communication has been cut," said Natasha Reyes, emergency co-ordinator in the Philippines at M├йdecins Sans Fronti├иres. "No one knows what the situation is like in these more rural and remote places, and it's going to be some time before we have a full picture."

Damage to communications left the armed forces struggling to reach local authorities and many officials were dead, missing or trying to protect their own families.

"Basically the only branch of government that is working here is the military," Ruben Guinolbay, a Philippine army captain, told Reuters in Tacloban. "That is not good. We are not supposed to take over government."

The interior secretary, Manuel Roxas, said on Tuesday that only 20 of Tacloban's 293 police had arrived for work. But he added: "Today we have stabilised the situation. There are no longer reports of looting. The food supply is coming in. Up to 50,000 food packs are coming in every day, with each pack able to feed up to a family of five for three days."

A team of British medical experts and the first consignment of aid from the UK was leaving for the Philippines, David Cameron said on Tuesday.
 The UK surgical team, led by Anthony Redmond, Manchester University professor of international emergency medicine, includes three emergency physicians, two orthopaedic surgeons, a plastic surgeon, two accident and emergency nurses, a theatre nurse, two anaesthetists and one specialist physiotherapist.

The USS George Washington aircraft carrier, transporting about 5,000 sailors and more than 80 aircraft, plus four other US navy ships, should arrive in two to three days, the Pentagon said.

Britain's HMS Daring, a warship with equipment to make drinking water from seawater, and a military transport aircraft should arrive around the same time.

Japan is sending a team of 40 from its self-defence force.

Aquino has declared a state of national calamity, allowing the central government to release emergency funds more quickly and impose price controls.

Initial estimates of the cost of the damage vary widely, with a report from German-based CEDIM Forensic Disaster Analysis putting the total at anywhere from $8bn to $19bn.

Ghost in the Machine

Let's call her "Kaylee." Her Mom says that's OK. The young Texan chose the pseudonym herself, taking it from a character who talks to machines on Fox's "Firefly" science fiction series. But this Kaylee is not a fiction. And as this teen synesthete is underage and still living in a world that doesn't quite understand her trait, we've decided to protect her identity. It is also important to note that she didn't seek publicity. I sought her out after learning about her in the synesthesia community.

Kaylee just gave me an astonishing interview in which she described synesthesia related to machinery. Of the 60 or more types of synesthesias now identified, it seems to most correspond to mirror-touch in which someone literally feels the pain or emotion of another—but until now, that "other" was usually human. I recall talking with the gifted Russian psychologist, synesthesia researcher and coordinator of the website of the Russian synesthesia community,  Dr. Anton Sidoroff-Dorso, about how synesthesia seems to be evolving with technology. Of all our many cross-associations, it seems that we can blend senses with nearly any stimulus, including brand new ones. But frankly, Kaylee's case goes beyond anything I'd previously imagined.

Teen girl silhouette by Mike Baird

Kaylee has empathy for the inanimate. Image: Mike Baird.
"If this case can be verified, I will rank it most revealing about human nature! This is because of the degree that we can 'appropriate' the observable world, even to the extent of empathising with non-living things. Animation of non-living objects, the elements or natural phenomena, personification in rituals, emotional attachment to, repulsion from or even identification with robots and machinery can be found far and wide in fiction and anthropology. In psychology (and in Russian psychology in particular) the issue of tool use is interpreted as a phenomenological and functional incorporation of a certain instrument as part of one's body that leads to indiscriminate manipulation of the tool as (if) one's own limb and body scheme. The process occurs in stages, and the rubber hand illusion draws much on that (so, it is more than sensory integration). Recent neuroscientific studies have demonstrated that the human brain reacts very much similarly to maltreatment of a robot toy as it experiences abuse of a human - the same limbic areas light up.

"So, the case you are talking about can be contemplated as ultimate phenomenological and functional integration - that is, empathic or emotional integration. Generally, in humans it seems to happen for reasons of (re)adaptation when one embarks on charting a new and yet unbeknownst existential territory. As we know that synaesthetic reactions idiosyncratically supervenes on multifarious types of cognitive categorisation, it comes as little surprise that some synaesthetic individuals will evince their unusual perceptions in relation to gadgetry as well, because in the age of ubiquitous computing human beings are more and more beginning to see 'artificial' as 'natural' since one is knee-high, and, for this reason, this synaesthetic type of meaning making will start embracing animated electronic appliances and anthropomorphised robots from very early on. To stretch it a bit far, analysing the ways of enlivening the world synaesthetically, we can describe this case of empathy-based synaesthesia as bot-bond synaesthesia."

Kaylee's case raises so many interesting questions. While the current discussion is about when computers will achieve parity with humans, perhaps humans are evolving toward machines?

I thank this brave and fascinating young woman, and her caring mother, for shedding light on her experiences in the following Q&A:



Which machines do you feel an affinity for? Can you describe the touch and movement sensations?

I feel a connection to pretty much everything with some kind of mechanically-powered moving part.  This includes cars, robots, escalators, locks, levers, etc.

Since I was a kid, I’ve learned to “tune out” or ignore most machines and other synesthetic reactions to the best of my ability, both to appear normal and to reduce interrupting sensations.

The best analogy I can use to explain it is a radio. My senses are my radio, picking up stimulus and playing it back in my brain, and various machines are radio stations I can tune in on. For example, if I’m in a mall, surrounded by escalators, elevators, motor vehicles, clocks, and other junk, they’re too many stations for my “radio” to process. Unlike most forms of synesthesia, this doesn’t result in a sensory overload - in fact, it’s exactly the opposite. I feel no machine-touch reaction, like my senses are too overwhelmed to process anything. The only way I can “tune in” to a machine in this situation is by focusing on one thing in particular, and ignoring my surroundings. If there’s only one machine in my field of vision, then it’s automatically my focus.

The way I feel the movement of a machine depends mostly on where the machine is positioned in relation to my body. If it’s somewhere near me but not touching me, or if I’m touching it but not influenced by it, then it’s as if the machine is an extra limb, or an extension of me. I feel and am aware of my own body and the fact that I am not the machine; no part of the machine is analogous to a part of my body. It’s as if the machine and I are connected, and I can feel what it feels through that lens without actually “becoming” it. The more extreme the movement is, the stronger I feel it. For example, when watching cars crash in a movie, I feel them as they’re ripped and crush, and I usually have to turn away and cut myself off from the stimulus.

This is different, however, when I am in or on the machine, and directly influenced by its motion, like when I’m riding in a car or on a boat. Then, I am the machine, in a traditional mirror-touch experience. I feel accelerating as a shift of balance (the more rapid the acceleration, the more severe the shift) in my lower body/feet, as if I am standing and leaning forward, about to fall. When the car begins to brake, I feel as if my arms are extended in front of me, and my hands and wrist and flexing up.

What other forms of synesthesia do you have? Do any other members of your family experience it as well?

I have grapheme-color (associative), personality-color (associative), color-number (associative), sound-touch, sound-kinetic, and sometimes mirror-touch reactions to people, but not often. I don’t talk about synesthesia with my extended family much, so I’m not sure whether or not any of them have it. I know my stepmother used to have graphmeme-color syn, but it faded in her early twenties.

When did you realize you were a synesthete? What were your earliest synesthetic experiences?

My senses have always been pretty screwed up, but I didn’t know I actually had synesthesia until I read an article about it from a science blog I follow on Tumblr. The earliest true synesthetic reaction I can remember having was in first grade, when my class was learning about the senses. The teacher was giving examples of sensations and asking us to identify what senses we perceived them with, and I tried to argue that people “feel” their dogs barking and scratching at the door.

How has it been for you describing synesthesia to other people? How do friends, family, teachers, react?

I haven’t had too much of a problem explaining synesthesia to people. With my family, I can usually cite times I had problems with my senses as a child, and explain that it’s actually a semi-common phenomenon. My friends think it’s a little weird, but they generally go with the flow and tend to enjoy quizzing me on the colors of various people, words, and numbers. I haven’t tried explaining synesthesia to my teachers, but I do remember a teacher in 8th grade telling a story about a synesthete she once taught.

What do you think synesthesia means? Is it useful to you?

My synesthesia is helpful when trying to remember long streams of numbers or words, and it also gives me a better understanding of physics and mechanical designs.

What would you like to do professionally one day? What are your hobbies?

Professionally, I’d prefer to do some kind of science or engineering. At the moment I favor mechanical engineering, but I’m a sophomore in high school so that’ll most likely change by the time I graduate. I enjoy reading, playing tennis, and graphic design. I’m also on a team that competes in FIRST robotics, an engineering competition for high school students.

I wonder what you think synesthesia means to human evolution? Why do you think we are like this?

Frankly, I don't think I've done enough research about synesthesia to provide a defensible scientific answer. I do believe that synesthesia gives people a unique perspective, which can be beneficial in any discussion, especially in today's society.

Please describe how you feel for a lock, a lever and other devices you mentioned besides cars.

Locks are very, very cool. They're very elegant in their design, and they serve their purpose well. When using a lock on a door, I feel aware of the pins rising and falling against the key as if I'm running my finger under them instead of a key. When watching or manipulating a lever in action, I feel and am aware of the forces acting on it. When on an escalator, I feel the movement of the steps on the conveyor as if they're the notches up my spine, and the arm rest as the skin at the top of my upper arm and shoulder. Clocks are so delicate and minute in their design and visible movement I barely feel them tickle the hair on my arms. Robots that have the typical rectangular drive train feel like cars, just smaller. Ironically, robots that have been designed to look like/mimic human bodies are stranger to connect to, because their similarity to my already-existing limbs is confusing.

рдлिрд▓िрдкिрди्рд╕ рдоा резрежрежрежреж рд╣рдЬाрд░ рднрди्рджा рдмрдбी рдоाрдиिрд╕ рдорд░्рдиे рдЧрд░ि рдЖрдПрдХो рддुрдлाрдирдХो рднिрдбिрдУ рд╣ेрд░्рдиुрд╣ोрд╕ !!

The powerful typhoon that swept across the Philippines on Friday, one of the strongest storms ever to make landfall, cut a path of destruction through several central islands, leaving the seaside city of Tacloban in ruins and leading to early, unconfirmed estimates of as many as 10,000 dead.  Wire reports quoted the city administrator of Tacloban suggesting that the death toll could reach 10,000 in his city alone. A police official gave an identical estimate, citing the governor of the area, who had spoken with officials in villages that had been hit, according to wire reports.

The government disaster agency said it could confirm only about 150 deaths so far from Typhoon Haiyan, although the president said he expected the number to rise significantly. The Red Cross in Manila said earlier on Saturday that its people on the ground were reporting an estimated 1,000 deaths on Leyte Island, where Tacloban is, and about 200 on the neighboring island of Samar.

“The local Red Cross chapter has seen many bodies,” Gwendolyn Pang, the secretary general of the Philippine Red Cross, said in a text message. “An actual body count has to be done to determine the exact number.”

The destruction, which has taken down phone service in many areas, made confirming any of the accounts difficult.

Some meteorologists said the storm, called Yolanda in the Philippines, hit land with sustained winds above 190 miles per hour, while others reported winds of 150 miles per hour. On Friday, some in the country thought the Philippines might have been spared high casualties because the storm had moved so quickly, but they did not know that it had caused a serious storm surge, at least in Tacloban.

Photos and television footage showed fierce winds ripping tin roofs off homes and sending waves crashing into wooden buildings that splintered under the force. Large ships were tossed on shore, and vehicles were shown piled up on top of one another. Video footage from Tacloban showed ocean water rushing through the streets of the city, which has an estimated population of 220,000.

Speaking to Reuters, the manager of the city’s airport, which is on a strip of land that juts into the sea, estimated that water there rose up to 13 feet. Reuters also quoted a spokesman for the national disaster agency saying many houses in Tacloban were destroyed.

A bicycle taxi driver who lives near the airport told The Associated Press that he and his family had taken refuge in a parked jeep, which was swept away in the roiling waters. The man, Sandy Torotoro, said that as the vehicle floated by, many people screamed for help as they were swept away, waving their hands above the water.

“But what can we do?” he said. “We also needed to be helped.”

The Social Welfare and Development Department said that the storm affected 4.28 million people in about 270 towns and cities spread across 36 provinces in the central Philippines.

President Benigno S. Aquino III said at a news briefing on Saturday evening in Manila that he expected there to be “substantially more” deaths than the government had confirmed. He arrived Sunday in Tacloban, according to a member of Parliament.

The government has been flying in military cargo planes carrying food, clothing and shelters, but blocked roads have made distribution difficult.

A United Nations disaster assessment team visited the area on Saturday.

“The last time I saw something of this scale was in the aftermath of the Indian Ocean tsunami,” Sebastian Rhodes Stampa, the head of the team, said in a statement, referring to the 2004 tsunami that devastated parts of Indonesia and other countries. “This is destruction on a massive scale. There are cars thrown like tumbleweed.”

Richard Gordon, the chairman of the Philippine Red Cross, said in an interview that most of the information about damage and casualties was coming out of Tacloban, where the news media and government officials were concentrated, and that he feared there would be “a lot of dead bodies” inland as well. He said there were also areas out of contact in northern Cebu and on the island of Panay, as well as parts of Palawan and Mindoro.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel directed the United States military’s Pacific Command to provide airborne and maritime search and rescue teams and other help, a Department of Defense statement on Saturday said.

According to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council, the deadliest storm in Philippine history was Tropical Storm Thelma, which killed more than 5,000 people.

рдлिрд▓िрдкिрди्рд╕ рдоा рддुрдлाрди рдХो рд╣ंрдЧाрдоा резреж,режрежреж рднрди्рджा рдмрдбी рдоाрдиिрд╕рдХो рдоिрд░्рддु, рд╣рдЬाрд░ौ рдШрд░рдмाрд░ рдмिрд╣िрди ! рд╣ेрд░्рдиुрд╣ोрд╕ рднिрдбिрдУ !

 
Philippines — Three days after one of the most powerful storms ever to buffet the Philippines, the scale of the devastation and the desperation of the survivors were slowly coming into view.  The living told stories of the dead or dying — the people swept away in a torrent of seawater, the corpses strewn among the wreckage. Photos from the hard-hit city of Tacloban showed vast stretches of land swept clean of homes, and reports emerged of people who were desperate for food and water raiding aid convoys and stripping the stores that were left standing.

As Monday dawned, it became increasingly clear that Typhoon Haiyan had ravaged cities, towns and fishing villages when it played a deadly form of hopscotch across the islands of the central Philippines on Friday. By some estimates, at least 10,000 people may have died in Tacloban alone, and with phone service out across stretches of the far-flung archipelago, it was difficult to know if the storm was as deadly in more remote areas.

Richard Gordon, the chairman of the Philippines Red Cross, said that a Red Cross aid convoy to Tacloban had to turn back on Sunday after it stopped at a collapsed bridge and was nearly hijacked by a crowd of hungry people. “There is very little food going in, and what food there was, was captured” by the crowd, Mr. Gordon said in a telephone interview on Monday morning.

As aid crews struggled to reach ravaged areas, the storm appeared to lay bare some of the perennial woes of the Philippines. The country’s roads and airports, long starved of money by corrupt and incompetent governments, are some of the worst in Southeast Asia and often make traveling long distances a trial. On Monday, clogged with debris from splintered buildings and shattered trees, the roads in the storm’s path were worse, slowing rescue teams.

The storm posed new challenges for President Benigno S. Aquino III, who just two months ago struggled to wrest back a major city in the south from insurgents. Mr. Aquino has won plaudits at home and abroad for his fight against corruption during his three and a half years in office, leading to increased foreign investment and an impressive growth rate. But he must still contend with Muslim separatists in the south and with provinces that have long been the domains of regional strongmen, resistant to government control.

Now add to that list a storm that looks to be one of the country’s worst disasters, at a time when emergency funds have been depleted by a series of other calamities, most notably an earthquake with a magnitude of 7.2 that struck the middle of the country four weeks ago. On Monday, after the reports of widespread raiding of stores and robberies and rising fears of a breakdown of law and order, the government said it was flying more police officers to the region.

Although deadly storms are not unusual in the Philippines, Typhoon Haiyan appears to stand apart, both in the ferocity of its winds, which some described as sounding like a freight train, and in its type of destruction. Most deaths from typhoons in the Philippines are caused by mudslides and rivers flooding from heavy rains.

So when Haiyan sped across the islands on Friday, some officials and weather experts in the Philippines thought they had witnessed something of a miracle. The storm that lit up social media for days with dire warnings was thought to have mostly spared the islands because it did not linger long enough to dump a deluge of rain.

Longoria heading to politics

 LOS ANGELES: Actress Eva Longoria is reportedly keen to move into politics and wants to run for mayor in Texas.

“Eva wants to start small, maybe on a city council in her native Texas, or as mayor of San Antonio or Corpus Christi. Her two-year plan is to run for senate,” contactmusic.com quoted a source as saying. The 38-year-old is said to have been asking for help from her good friend and fellow actor, George Clooney.

“George has been coaching Eva on how to operate in Washington versus Hollywood, she wants to be taken seriously on the political scene,” the source added.

Longoria has previously been very involved in the Democratic National Convention.

Mysterious India-born investor Suhail Rizvi gains big from Twitter IPO

Suhail Rizvi, an enigmatic India- born investor, has emerged as one of the biggest gainers from Twitter's high-profile public debut with his 15.6 per cent stake in the micro-blogging site worth a whopping USD 3.8 billion.

Rizvi is the "non-boldface name of the moment", a report in the New York Times said, describing him as a "strategic power broker who prefers to operate behind the scenes".

The 47-year-old has remained a mystery in the Silicon Valley despite his significant tech investments in recent years.

He runs a private investment company Rizvi Traverse Management, the largest outside investor in the micro-blogging site with a 15.6 per cent stake worth USD 3.8 billion at the end of trading on Twitter NYSE debut yesterday.

"Twitter's public offering represents a coming-out party for Rizvi, who remains largely a mystery in Silicon Valley despite his growing number of tech investments.

"In Silicon Valley, and even at Twitter's San Francisco headquarters, prominent investors and executives said they had not heard his name until it popped up in public disclosures by the company last month," the report said yesterday.

"Rizvi's rise illustrates how a new tech investor class with deep Wall Street connections is carving new paths into the unfamiliar and insular terrain of Silicon Valley," it said.

Despite a stellar rise, Rizvi has managed to stay almost entirely out of the spotlight.

Born in India and raised in Iowa, Rizvi is known as a quiet man who has built a "powerful and diverse" group of friends, including Virgin Group founder Richard Branson and chief executive of YouTube Salar Kamangar.

"Rizvi has been seen partying atop Eric Schmidt's yacht, the Oasis, at Cannes.

"Some Twitter investors said at one point when they saw the mysterious Rizvi's stake in the company was growing, they jokingly considered whether a criminal-background check was warranted," the report said.

Rizvi's Twitter profile is private, and the photo associated with it is that of a peacock.

Turkey gets first online Islamic sex shop

 An online Islamic sex shop selling condoms, massage oils and perfumes has been launched in Turkey, becoming the first of its kind in the predominantly Muslim country.

The "Halal Sex Shop" website presents its products as being "entirely safe," and in compliance with Islamic norms.

Internet users who enter the site find two different links directing them to separate sections for male and female products.

Other sections of the website are designed to discuss sex in the context of Islam under various headings: "Oral sex according to Islam", " Sex manners in Islam" and "Sexual life in Islam."

The anonymous founders of the website said they believed the online shop would help correct prejudices against Islam which they claimed is perceived as "against sex."

"The religion of Islam has praised sex under certain circumstances," they wrote on the site.

"The use of every product on sale is in compliance with Islam." Turkey does have so-called "erotic shops" in its streets, however Islamic conservative Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan suggested last year they rename themselves "love shops."

Obama wants to know about your sex life: get ready to spread the news


No, it's not a joke. Get ready to spread your sex life news when you visit the doctor, and it doesn't matter what kind of doctor it is, any doctor from dentist to dermatologists to podiatrist. Under his new health law, all doctors will be required to ask these questions or face penalties. Did you think under your Constitutional amendments you had the right to privacy? Wrong, and now it's going to be milked. Why this urge in interest?

On your next dentist appointment when your laying down in his chair having your teeth checked, tell him all about your past sex partners and if your currently doing the boogie woogie with anyone and if it's more than one partner and if it's with same-sex or opposite-sex partners.

And that's not all, your whole history and any information given will be in an electronic database for access, talk about more of spreading it.

    Doctors are being turned into government agents, where they're pressured financially to ask questions they consider inappropriate and unnecessary and violate their Hippocratic Oath to keep patients' records confidential.

    This is the road to totalitarian domination. Privacy will soon be an obsolete concept.

рдб्рд░ाрдЗрднिрдЩ рдЧрд░्рдиे рдорд╣िрд▓ाрд╡िрд░ुрдж्рдз рд╕ाрдЙрджी рд╕рд░рдХाрд░ рдХрдаोрд░, ремреж рдорд╣िрд▓ाрд▓ाрдИ рдЬрд░िрд╡ाрдиा

рд╕ाрдЙрджी рдЕрд░рдмрдоा ремреж рдЬрдиा рдорд╣िрд▓ाрд▓ाрдИ рдб्рд░ाрдЗрднिрдЩ рдЧрд░ेрдХो рднिрдбिрдпो рдЗрди्рдЯрд░рдиेрдЯрдоा рд▓ोрдб рдЧрд░्рдиु рдШाрддрдХ рд╕ाрд╡िрдд рднрдПрдХो рдЫ । рдб्рд░ाрдЗрднिрдЩ рдЧрд░ेрдХा рдХाрд░рдг рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ुрд▓ाрдИ рдк्рд░рд╣рд░ीрд▓े реореж рдбрд▓рд░ рдЬрд░िрд╡ाрдиा рдЧрд░ेрдХो рдЫ ।

рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ुрд▓ाрдИ рдлेрд░ि рдб्рд░ाрдЗрднिрдЩ рдирдЧрд░्рди рдЪेрддाрд╡рдиी рджिрдЗрдПрдХो рдЫ рднрдиे рдЧाрдбीрдХो рд╕ाँрдЪो рдШрд░рдХा рдкुрд░ुрд╖рд▓ाрдИ рджिрдЗрдПрдХो рдЫ । рд╕ाрдЙрджीрдоा резрепрепреж рдмाрдЯ рдорд╣िрд▓ाрд▓ाрдИ рдб्рд░ाрдЗрднिрдЩрдоा рд░ोрдХ рд▓рдЧाрдЗрдПрдХो рдЫ । рд╢рдиिрдмाрд░ рдорд╣िрд▓ाрд╣рд░ुрд▓े рдд्рдпрд╕рдХो рд╡िрд░ोрдз рдЧрд░्рджै рдЧाрдбी рдЪрд▓ाрдПрдХो рднिрдбिрдпो рдЗрди्рдЯрд░рдиेрдЯрдоा рдЕрдкрд▓ोрдб рдЧрд░ेрдХा рдеिрдП ।

рд░ाрдЬрдзाрдиी рд░िрдпाрджрдХा рдоाрдиिрд╕рд╣рд░ुрд▓े рд╕рдоेрдд рдорд╣िрд▓ाрд▓े рдЧाрдбी рдЪрд▓ाрдПрдХोрдоा рд╡िрд░ोрдз рдЧрд░ेрдХा рдеिрдП । рд╕ाрдЙрджी рдЕрд░рдмрдоा рдорд╣िрд▓ाрд╣рд░ुрд▓ाрдИ рдб्рд░ाрдЗрднिрдЩ рдЧрд░्рди рджिрдиु рдкрд░्рдиे рдоाрдЧ рд▓ाрдоो рд╕рдордпрджेрдЦि рдЙрда्рджै рдЖрдПрдХो рдЫ । рддрд░, рд╕ाрдЙрджी рдЕрд░рдм рдк्рд░рд╢ाрд╕рди рд░ рд╕рдоाрдЬ рдпрд╕рдХा рд▓ाрдЧि рддрдпाрд░ рджेрдЦिрдПрдХो рдЫैрди ।

Australia bushfires live: fears Blue Mountains fires will join together

RFS chief warns three major fires could join together, endangering entire Blue Mountains, as NSW premier calls a state of emergency to deal with more than 50 fires burning across the state

An aerial image shows a fire-fighting helicopter over a smoke cloud, after a devastating bushfire passed through at Yellow Rock in the Blue Mountains, west of Sydney, Australia. An aerial image shows a fire-fighting helicopter over a smoke cloud, after a devastating bushfire passed through at Yellow Rock in the Blue Mountains, west of Sydney, Australia. Photograph:

6.26pm AEST

Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione: all of the arsonists arrested so far have been "young people"

    Today, there has been two arrests with regards to a significant fire which caused about 5,000 hectares of damage. There has been an 11-year-old male taken into custody, has been charged and put before a court, his bail refused by the court.

    We currently have a 15-year-old male in our custody assisting us with similar enquiries, not yet charged but certainly at this stage the intention is he will be before the courts as soon as we can get him there.

    It's very disturbing, all of the arrests we have made with regard to arson attacks since this current crisis have been young people.


6.10pm AEST

RFS Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons says forecasted windy conditions will cause problems in the next 48 hours:

    The weather forecast continues to firm up as being problematic over the next 48 hrs with a continuance of similar conditions to today, albeit with a marginal reduction in temperatures for tomorrow before we see those elevated wind strengths dominate much of the fire affected areas, but also more broadly right up through the Hunter, central ranges, metropolitan and Illawarra regions. We can expect to see most of those areas with widespread severe fire danger ratings.

5.59pm AEST

RFS Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons has just given an update to the media.

He says the conditions are continuing to make things unpredictable, and "as the fire grounds continue to change, we continue to see flare-ups and erratic behaviour".

There is some good news with the previously mentioned Hall Road fire being downgraded.

He says there's a "developing amount of fire activity near the community of Bilpin and Berambing, and we're seeing spot fires and spot fire activity in that local area".

5.35pm AEST

The Wollondilly fire near Hall Road has been downgraded to 'watch and act' by the RFS, and Picton Road has been reopened.



5.04pm AEST

Police have confirmed the second arrest in relation to the Heatherbrae fire in a short statement:

    A 15-year-old boy has been arrested over the large bushfire that started in Heatherbrae last week.

    He’s currently at Raymond Terrace Police Station where he is expected to be charged.

    An 11-year-old boy was charged over the fire earlier today.

    No further details are available at this stage.

4.47pm AEST

Police have arrested a second boy over the Heatherbrae fire, according to the Newcastle Herald's police reporter Dan Proudman:

   
4.40pm AEST


Guardian Australia's political editor, Lenore Taylor, on the political debate around climate change policies and the bushfires:

    According to a creeping conservative political correctness, it is allegedly improper to discuss the link between climate change and the increased risk of devastating bushfires like the ones still burning across New South Wales.

    Columnists start by attacking suggestions such as those made in an article written for the Guardian by the Greens deputy leader, Adam Bandt, that by repealing the carbon tax, Tony Abbott is failing to protect the Australian people from climate change risk. Then they move quickly to the accusation that it amounts to politicising a disaster to discuss the connection between climate change and bushfire at all.

    But report after report has pointed to climate change increasing the likelihood of conditions that pose the greatest risk for fire.

Read the full article here.

4.18pm AEST
Two fires likely to merge, "can't rule out" three

Fitzsimmons said they "can't rule out" that the three fires will join together, but at this stage it is likelier to be two of them — the large state mine fire at Lithgow and the Mt Victoria fire.

"North of Bells Line Of Road, the fire out of Lithgow heading towards Bilpin, will join the fire near Mt York and Mt Victoria," somewhere in the Grose Valley, he predicted, saying backburning efforts have had an impact.



4.14pm AEST

In his latest update on the bushfire crisis, RFS NSW Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons has warned residents of Wilton to take shelter as embers travel kilometres ahead of the fire front. Firefighters are tasked to assist people in the area.

“The fire is well and truly heading towards Wilton," he said.

He also said they were "acutely aware" of the natural gas plant near Wilton. Extra services have been tasked to protect it.

Fitzsimmons blamed weather for the Springwood/Faulconbridge flare up where "dozens of homes" have been lost along Grose Road. It's not entirely clear if the houses have gone in the last few hours or if they are part of earlier assessments.

Both of these fires were upgraded to emergency warnings again just this afternoon. “The last hour or so reminds us to remain vigilant," said Fitzsimmons. "The fire grounds remain dynamic and challenging to firefighters."

Photo of blonde girl found in Greece triggers thousands of inquiries

Parents of missing children round the world call charity after seeing photo of blonde, blue-eyed girl found in Roma camp
The charity said it had been contacted by people in the USA, Canada, Australia, Scandinavia, South Africa and the UK. Photograph: www.hamogelo.gr/Rex

A Greek charity said yesterday that it was pursuing at least 10 "promising leads" – many from parents whose children had gone missing – following a worldwide appeal to help identify a blonde, blue-eyed girl found living in a Roma camp in the country.

Less than two days after launching the international campaign, the philanthropic organisation Smile of the Child announced that it had been bombarded with more than 10,000 calls and emails from around the world.

"Through our hotline we've been contacted by thousands of people in the US, Canada, Australia, Scandinavia, South Africa and the UK," Panaghiotis Partalis, the charity's international communications officer, told the Guardian.

"A lot of emails have come through from families whose own children went missing years ago. Based on pictures that we have also received, there are around 10 cases of children who bear a resemblance to the little girl and we are following them up to see if there is any link."

The girl, who is thought to be about four years old and answers to the name Maria, was discovered last Wednesday when Greek police raided a Roma settlement near Farsala in Larissa, 170 miles north of Athens, in search of weapons and drugs.

Officers were said to be taken aback when the pale-skinned child appeared in the home of a couple with 13 other offspring who were all dark-skinned. Unable to communicate in Greek, the girl could barely talk. What little she did say was conducted in the Roma dialect.

In a bid to unearth her identity, Partalis said the charity was also looking for specialists, including an anthropologist, who might be able to determine the child's origins and age.

"There is still mystery surrounding her age," he said. "We are looking for experts who can examine her teeth and other features to find out exactly how old she is and what her origin may be."

The charity has also compiled a "profile" of pictures of lookalike children. "We've put together a montage with Maria at the centre that we have passed to the police," he said. "There seems to be a lot of hope in the Swedish press that she is Scandinavian."

The girl is expected to be released from hospital on Monday, the same day the couple found raising her are due to appear in court on charges of abducting a minor. Police said it was likely they would be imprisoned pending trial. "The father already has a criminal record," said one officer in Thessaly, the region where the child was found.

DNA tests have proved conclusively that the little girl is not related to the couple – a 40-year-old woman and 39-year-old man.

Although the suspects have vehemently denied accusations of child smuggling, they have given a range of conflicting stories, telling investigators at first that the girl was found in a blanket at birth, before insisting her biological father was Canadian. Suspicions were further raised when the mother was discovered to have two identities and to have claimed to have given birth to six of her children in the same year. Costas Giannopoulos, who founded Smile of the Child after the death of his own son, said the discovery of the girl had not only shone a light on child trafficking in Greece, but revealed the parlous state of birth registrations with municipal authorities in the crisis-hit nation.

"There is a huge gap that allows anyone to claim a child as their own," he said.

On Friday, the parents of Madeleine McCann, the toddler who went missing in Portugal in 2007, said the case was a sign that children who had disappeared could still be found.

Authorities hope that the discovery of the girl will also help crack the mystery of Ben Needham, the Sheffield boy who went missing at the age of 21 months on the Aegean island of Kos 22 years ago. Ben's mother, Kerry Needham, told ITV: "My family and I are extremely delighted at the news that a four-year-old girl has been found in a gypsy camp in Larissa, Greece. We have always believed that Ben's abduction was gypsy-related and have a long ongoing inquiry in Larissa. We hope that the investigation into Ben's disappearance will now be looked at again."

Francois Hollande's intervention in Roma deportation case sparks a

French president's offer to allow deported teenage immigrant back into France to study without her family backfires

The teenager at the centre of the row, herself condemned the French president as 'having no heart' for suggesting she return without her family. Photograph: Rex Features

The French president, Fran├зois Hollande, was widely criticised on Sunday for offering to allow a deported teenage immigrant back into France without her family.

Hollande waded into the row on Saturday when he offered Leonarda Dibrani, a 15-year-old of Roma origin who was ordered off a school bus and deported to Kosovo, the chance to return to France to finish her studies, but only if she did so alone.

The proposal drew angry condemnation, including from Leonarda, who said she would not return alone, exposing Hollande to fresh attacks on his leadership.

"What do 80% of the French think about this?" asked Fran├зois Bayrou, who ran against Hollande in the first round of the 2012 presidential election, on the digital news channel iTele. "They think the state has totally lost its compass, deciding one thing and then deciding its exact opposite one minute later … Hollande's authority is significantly weakened here."

Leonarda's expulsion after her family failed to obtain political asylum has tested Hollande's ability to handle the issue of illegal migration, a source of increasing public frustration in France.

Students protested to demand the schoolgirl be allowed back, but opinion polls showed that most French did not want the family to return. Opponents from the centre-right UMP party accused Hollande of being so obsessed with satisfying his Socialist base that he had betrayed the will of the public. Even members of his own party appeared dissatisfied with the president's attempt at a compromise.

Minutes after Hollande's TV appearance, in which he said police had followed rules but lacked tact in doing so, the Socialist party leader, Harlem D├йsir, appeared on a different channel saying Leonarda's family should be let back into France.

"I am going to talk to the president and the government about this," he said, adding that he wanted "all the children of Leonarda's family to be able to finish their studies in France, accompanied by their mother".

The Dibrani family suffered a further crisis on Sunday when Leonarda's mother Dzemila Dibrani was beaten and briefly treated in hospital in Kosovo.

She and Leonarda's father Resat Dibrani were accosted by another Roma couple in downtown Mitrovica, and she sustained unspecified injuries when the Roma man inquired about the fate of a child from their past romance, a Kosovo official said on condition of anonymity. Both couples are being questioned by police.

A poll in the weekly JDD newspaper showed Hollande's approval rating had sunk to 23%, the lowest level in his presidency and beating record low popularity ratings set by his predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy.

But while Hollande wilts under grim economic data and attacks on his authority, his tough-talking interior minister, Manuel Valls, has become France's most popular minister.

A JDD poll published this month showed Valls had the support of 61% of the public, far ahead of any other minister. By emphasising a tough stance on Leonarda's family rather than the offer to allow her back, he appears to have come out of the affair unscathed.

"Nothing will make me deviate from my path," Valls told JDD in an interview published on Sunday. "The law must be applied and this family must not come back to France."

Valls has toughened his rhetoric against illegal migration and makeshift Roma camps as the far-right National Front party has surged in popularity ahead of municipal and European elections next year.

Leonarda, who was born in Italy, and her five brothers and sisters attended school in France, where they arrived in 2009. But an official report showed their attendance record was patchy and said the family's attempts to assimilate were disappointing.

Repeated requests for asylum by her father, Reshat, who is from Kosovo, were undermined by the fact that he lied about their nationality.

Leonarda, speaking in French from a house in the Kosovo city of Mitrovica, criticised Hollande as "having no heart" and said her family would return to France anyway.

рдмिрдиाрдХрд╕ुрд░ рд╕ाрдЙрджीрдоा рдЬेрд▓ рдкрд░ेрдХा рдиेрдкाрд▓ीрд▓ाрдИ рджुрддाрд╡ाрд╕рд▓े рд╡ाрд╕्рддै рдирдЧрд░ेрдХो рдЧुрдиाрд╕ो

реирео рднрджौ, рдХाрдардоाрдг्рдбौं । рд╡ैрджेрд╢िрдХ рд░ोрдЬрдЧाрд░ीрдХा рд▓ाрдЧि рд╕ाрдЙрджी рдЕрд░ेрдмिрдпा рдкुрдЧेрдХा резрео рдЬрдиा рдиेрдкाрд▓ी рдиौ рдорд╣िрдиाрджेрдЦि рдмिрдиाрдХрд╕ुрд░ рдЬेрд▓рдоा рдмрд╕िрд░рд╣े рдкрдиि рдд्рдпрд╣ाँрд╕्рдеिрдд рдиेрдкाрд▓ी рджुрддाрд╡ाрд╕рд▓े рдЙрдж्рджाрд░рдХा рд▓ाрдЧि рдкрд╣рд▓ рдЧрд░ेрдХो рдЫैрди् ।
 рдЬेрд▓рдоा рдкрд░ेрдХा рдиेрдкाрд▓ीрд▓े рдЖрдлूрд╣рд░ुрдХो рдЬीрд╡рди рдХрд╖्рдЯрдкूрд░्рдг рд░рд╣ेрдХो рддрд░ рдЙрдж्рджाрд░рдХा рд▓ाрдЧि рджूрддाрд╡ाрд╕рд▓े рдХुрдиै рдк्рд░рдпाрд╕ рдирдЧрд░ेрдХो рднрди्рджै рджुрдИрдорд╣िрдиाрдЕрдШि рдкрд░рд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░ рдорди्рдд्рд░ाрд▓рдп рдХрди्рд╕ुрд▓рд░ рд╢ाрдЦाрдоा рдЙрдЬुрд░ी рджिрдПрдХा рдеिрдП । рдд्рдпрд╕рдоा рдкрдиि рдЕрд╣िрд▓ेрд╕рдо्рдо рд╕ुрдиुрд╡ाрдИ рднрдПрдХो рдЫैрди् । рдЙрдж्рджाрд░рдХा рд▓ाрдЧि рджूрддाрд╡ाрд╕рд▓े рдкрд╣рд▓ рдирдЧрд░ेрдХो рднрди्рджै рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ुрд▓े рджрд╡ाрд╡ рджिрди рдПрдХ рд╕ाрддाрд╕рдо्рдо рдЬेрд▓рдоै рднोрдХрд╣рдб्рддाрд▓ рдкрдиि рдЧрд░ेрдХा рдеिрдП । рддрд░ рдЬेрд▓ рдк्рд░рд╢ाрд╕рдирд▓े рднोрдХрд╣рдб्рддाрд▓ рддोрдбाрдпो । рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ुрдордз्рдпे рдкाँрдЪрдЬрдиा рдмिрд░ाрдоी рдкрд░ेрдХा рдЫрди् । рдпрд╕рдмाрд░े рдкीрдбिрддрдХा рдкрд░िрд╡ाрд░рд▓े рдкрд░рд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░ рдорди्рдд्рд░ाрд▓рдп, рдХрди्рд╕ुрд▓рд░ рд╢ाрдЦा, рд╢्рд░рдо рд╡िрднाрдЧ рд░ рд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░рдкрддि рдХाрд░्рдпाрд▓рдпрдоा рдЙрдЬुрд░ी рдкрдиि рджिрдПрдХो рдЕрди्рдирдкूрд░्рдг рдкोрд╕्рдЯрдоा рдЦрдмрд░ рдЫ । рдкрдЯрдХ рдкрдЯрдХ рдЖрдЧ्рд░рд╣ рд░ рдЙрдЬुрд░ी рдЧрд░्рджा рдкрдиि рд╕ुрдиुрд╡ाрдИ рдирднрдПрдкрдЫि рдкीрдбिрддрдХा рдиेрдкाрд▓рд╕्рдеिрдд рдЖрдлрди्рддрд▓े рдЖрди्рджोрд▓рди рдЧрд░्рдиे рднрдПрдХा рдЫрди् । рдкीрдбिрддрдХा рдЖрдлрди्рдд рдзрд░ाрдирдХा рднुрд╡рди рдХाрдл्рд▓ेрд▓े рд╕ाрдЙрджी рдЬेрд▓рдоा рд░рд╣ेрдХा рдиिрд░्рджोрд╖ рдиेрдкाрд▓ी рд╢ुрдХ्рд░рдмाрд░рд╕рдо्рдо рдоुрдХ्рдд рдирднрдП рдЖрди्рджोрд▓рди рдЧрд░्рдиे рдЪेрддाрд╡рдиी рджिрдП । рд░рдХ्рд╕ी рдЦाрдПрд░ рд╣ोрд╣рд▓्рд▓ा рдЧрд░ेрдХो рдЖрд░ोрдкрдоा рдд्рдпрд╣ाँрд╕्рдеिрдд рдЕрджाрд▓рддрд▓े рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ुрд▓ाрдИ рддीрди рдорд╣िрдиा рдЬेрд▓ рд╕рдЬाрдп рддोрдХेрдХो рдеिрдпो । рджूрддाрд╡ाрд╕рдХो рд▓ाрдкрд░рдмाрд╣ीрдХा рдХाрд░рдг рдиौ рдорд╣िрдиा рдмिрдд्рджा рдкрдиि рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ु рдоुрдХ्рдд рд╣ुрди рд╕рдХेрдХा рдЫैрдирди् ।
                        рднिрдбिрдпो рд╣ेрд░्рди рддрд▓ рдмрдХ्рд╕рдоा рдХ्рд▓िрдХ рдЧрд░्рдиुрд╣ोрд╕्

In Afghan, U.S. soldier murder trial declines to withdraw guilty plea

 U.S. army soldier who in June admitted the slaughter of 17 Afghan civilians declined to withdraw his guilty plea in a military court on Monday.

U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales made his decision in advance of legal arguments set to begin Tuesday that will determine whether his life sentence will come with the possibility of parole.

The judge, Army Colonel Jeffery Nance, asked Bales whether he wanted to withdraw the guilty plea in light of possible misinformation about the length of time before he could be eligible for parole.

Bales pleaded guilty in June to walking off his base in Afghanistan's Kandahar province before dawn on March 11, 2012, and killing 16 unarmed civilians, most of them women and children, in attacks on their family compounds.

The slayings marked the worst case of civilian slaughter blamed on a single, rogue U.S. soldier since the Vietnam War and further strained U.S.-Afghan relations after more than a decade of conflict in that country.

Lawyers for both sides on Monday signaled the arguments that they would make when the sentencing hearing begins.

But prosecutors hope to show that he engaged in a pattern of bad behavior that predated his multiple deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan.
Bales' attorneys said they would argue that post-traumatic stress disorder and a brain injury were factors in the killings.

Prosecutors also said they intended to play for jurors taped phone conversations between an incarcerated Bales and his wife Kari laughing about the charges leveled against him and discussing a possible book deal for her.

Bales' lawyers argued against playing just snippets of the conversation, saying that the recordings needed to be heard in context. As a result, Nance ruled that the full phone conversations, totaling over two hours, would be played.

The defense also objected to the prosecution calling as an expert witness an Afghan man who has interviewed survivors of the rampage and family members of victims.

Nance said he would permit the expert to testify in general terms about how traumatic events and their aftermaths are dealt with in Pashtun culture but would allow 'no speculation about the specific impact on these specific victims.'
Several survivors are scheduled to speak during the proceedings this week.

Bales, a decorated veteran of four combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, acknowledged the killings upon pleading guilty in June and told the court there was "not a good reason in this world" for his actions.

For house arrest, Mubarak of Egypt's to leave jail

Egypt's Hosni Mubarak is expected to leave jail on Thursday after a court ordered him released pending trial, but he will immediately be placed under house arrest.

The court order for Hosni Mubarak's conditional release came on Wednesday, but was quickly followed by a government announcement that he would be placed under house arrest if released.
 
It was unclear when Hosni Mubarak might leave Cairo's Tora prison, or where he would be taken, with sources telling state media that two military hospitals where he has been treated in the past were possible candidates.

Interim prime minister Hazem el-Beblawi, in his capacity as deputy military ruler under Egypt's current state of emergency, ordered Mubarak held, the cabinet said.

"In the framework of the emergency law, the deputy military ruler ordered Mubarak to be placed under house arrest," a statement said.

Mubarak still faces trial on charges including corruption and complicity in the deaths of some of the 850 people who died in the 2011 uprising against him.

His next court session is on Sunday, though he has not always attended hearings in the cases against him in the past.

State news agency MENA said Hosni Mubarak's file would be sent to the prosecutor general on Thursday morning for confirmation that there was no basis for his continued pre-trial detention.

If the prosecutor confirms that, and no new charges are filed, the ex-president will then be flown by military helicopter to house arrest, MENA said.

Beblawi will have the final word on where Mubarak will be held, the agency said.

The decision to grant Mubarak pre-trial release added a volatile new element to the political turmoil that has gripped Egypt since the army ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi on July 3 following massive protests against him.

More than 1,000 people have been killed in the past week in violence following the forcible break-up of two pro-Morsi camps in the capital.

Authorities have arrested dozens of members of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, including its supreme guide Mohamed Badie -- the first time the group's chief has been arrested since 1981.

Morsi himself is being held at a secret location and faces charges related to his 2011 escape from prison and inciting the death and torture of protesters.

Badie and several other Brotherhood leaders are also accused of inciting the deaths of protesters, and are also expected in court Sunday.

Overnight, arrests of Brotherhood leaders continued with authorities detaining Ahmed Aref, a spokesman for the group, in Cairo.

Despite the pressure, a Brotherhood-led coalition has defiantly called for mass rallies on Friday, in a test of its remaining strength as members are arrested.

Egypt has experienced unprecedented political bloodletting since August 14, when security forces stormed two pro-Morsi protest camps in the capital.

The crackdown and resulting violence across the country killed nearly 600 people in a single day, the bloodiest in Egypt's recent history.

Islamists have torched and attacked dozens of Christian churches, schools, businesses and homes -- mostly in the rural south accusing Egypt's sizable Coptic minority of backing Morsi's ouster.

The unrest has prompted international criticism, and EU foreign ministers agreed at an emergency meeting Wednesday to suspend the sale of arms and security equipment to Cairo in response to the mounting violence.

But they expressed concern over the economic situation and said 'assistance in the socio-economic sector and to civil society will continue.'
They issued a statement calling recent operations by Egyptian security forces "disproportionate", while also condemning "acts of terrorism" in the Sinai and attacks on churches blamed on the Muslim Brotherhood.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said., 'We must keep faith with the majority of the people of Egypt who want a stable, democratic and prosperous country for themselves and that means we mustn't do anything that hurts them or that cuts off support to them,'
Washington has also criticised the violence, as well as Badie's arrest, and announced the cancellation of joint military exercises.

But it has stopped short of halting its $1.3 billion annual defence aid package to Egypt, and denied reports it was withholding aid.

Oil-rich Saudi Arabia, which backs the army-installed interim government, has said it would step in with other Arab nations to fill any funding gap if Washington halts aid.

from Saudi Arabia, 25,000 Nepalis return

Almost 25,000 Nepali, working illegally in Saudi Arabia, have returned home under the amnesty programme introduced by the Saudi Arabia government, according to the Nepali Embassy in Riyadh.

The government introduced a three-month amnesty programme in May. The duration was later extended by four months until November 3
The embassy has said nearly 32,000 others have secured travel documents and are looking forward to leaving the country. The undocumented migrants still have nearly two months to either leave the country, or apply for legal status and keep working there.

According to the Saudi government estimates, there are around two million illegal migrants in the country, around 71,000 of whom are said to be Nepalis.
'So far we have issued 280 temporary passports for those wishing to stay and continue working by changing employment sponsorship. A majority of Nepalis living in the country illegally have decided to leave,' said Nepali Ambassador Uday Raj Pandey.

Some of the Nepalis, meanwhile, are having problems leaving the country, though they already received exit permit. The embassy said such cases are associated with the people involved in litigation or facing criminal charges.

''рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХा рдЫिрд░्рди рдЦोрдЬ्рдиे резреж рдиेрдкाрд▓ी рдоेрдХ्рд╕िрдХोрдоा рдкрдХ्рд░ाрдЙ''

''рд╕ाрдЙрди, реп  рдХाрдардоाрдг्рдбौ - рдЕрдмैрдзрд░ुрдкрдоा рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХा рдЫिрд░्рди рдЦोрдЬ्рдиे резреж рдЬрдиा рдиेрдкाрд▓ी рдоेрдХ्рд╕िрдХो рдЪिрдпाрдкाрд╕ рд░ाрдЬ्рдпрдмाрдЯ рдкрдХ्рд░ाрдЙ рдкрд░ेрдХा рдЫрди् ।''

рдЯ्рд░рдХрдоा рд▓ुрдХेрд░ рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХा рдЫिрд░्рди рдЦोрдЬेрдХा рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ुрд▓ाрдИ рдоेрдХ्рд╕िрдХो рдк्рд░рд╣рд░ीрд▓े рд╕ोрдордмाрд░ рд░ाрддि рдкрдХ्рд░ाрдЙ рдЧрд░ेрдХो рдЕрди्рддрд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░िрдп рд╕рдоाрдЪाрд░ рд╕ंрд╕्рдеा рд░ोрдпрдЯрд░्рд╕рд▓े рдЬрдиाрдПрдХो рдЫ ।'

рдиेрдкाрд▓ीрд╕ँрдЧै реп рдЬрдиा рдмंрдЧрд▓ाрджेрд╢ीрд╕рд╣िрдд репрек рдЬрдиा рдЕрдмैрдз рдЖрдк्рд░рд╡ाрд╕ीрд▓ाрдИ рдкрдХ्рд░ाрдЙ рдЧрд░िрдПрдХोрдоा рд╕рдоाрдЪाрд░рдоा рдЙрд▓्рд▓ेрдЦ рдЫ । рддी рдордз्рдпे резреп рдЬрдиा рдПрд╕िрдпाрд▓ी рдоुрд▓ुрдХрдХा рд░ рдЕрди्рдп рд╕рд╡ै рдЧ्рд╡ाрдЯेрдоाрд▓ा, рдПрд▓ рд╕ाрд▓्рднाрдбोрд░ рд░ рд╣ोрдг्рдбुрд░рд╕ рд▓рдЧाрдпрддрдХा рдоुрд▓ुрдХрдХा рд░рд╣ेрдХो рдмрддाрдЗрдПрдХो рдЫ । рдЕрдз्рдпाрдЧрдордирдоा рд░ाрдЦिрдПрдХो рд╕्рдХाрди рдоेрд╕िрдирдХो рд╕рд╣рдпोрдЧрд▓े рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ु рдЯ्рд░рдХрдоा рд▓ुрдХेрдХो рдлेрд▓ा рдкрд░ेрдХो рдмрддाрдЗрдПрдХो рдЫ ।''

''рдЯ्рд░рдХрднिрдд्рд░ рд▓ुрдХिрд░рд╣ेрдХा рдиेрдкाрд▓ीрд╕рд╣िрдд рдЕрдмैрдз рдЖрдк्рд░рд╡ाрд╕ीрд╣рд░ु рдоेрдХ्рд╕िрдХोрдХो рдЪिрдпाрдкाрд╕ рдк्рд░рд╣рд░ीрдХो рд╕्рдХाрди рдоेрд╕िрдирдоा рдпрд╕рд░ी рджेрдЦिрдП । рддрд╕्рд╡ीрд░ рд╕ौрдЬрди्рдпः рдорд╣ाрди्рдпाрдпाрдзीрд╡рдХ्рддाрдХो рдХाрд░्рдпाрд▓рдп/рдЪिрдпाрдкाрд╕''

''рдЕрдзिрдХाрд░ीрд╣рд░ुрд▓े рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ु рдиिрдХै рдЕрдоाрдирд╡ीрдп рдЕрдмрд╕्рдеाрдоा рдЯ्рд░рдХрдоा рд▓ुрдХेрд░ рдЬाрди рд▓ाрдЧेрдХो рдЕрдмрд╕्рдеाрдоा рднेрдЯिрдПрдХो рдЬрдиाрдПрдХा рдЫрди् । рдЧ्рд╡ाрдЯेрдоाрд▓ाрдмाрдЯ рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХाрддिрд░ рд▓ाрдЧेрдХा рдЙрдиीрд╣рд░ुрд▓ाрдИ рд▓ैрдЬाрдиे рдЯ्рд░рдХ рдб्рд░ाрднрдЗрд░рд▓ाрдИ рдк्рд░рд╣рд░ीрд▓े рдкрдХ्рд░ाрдЙ рдЧрд░ेрдХो рдЫ ।''

''рдЯ्рд░рдХрдоा рдЕрдоाрдирд╡ीрдп рд░ рдпाрддрдиाрдкूрд░्рдг рддрд░िрдХाрд▓े рдмрд╕ेрдХाрд▓े рдзेрд░ै рдЬрд╕ोрдХो рд╣ाрдд рд░ рдЦुрдЯ्рдЯाрдоा рдЪोрдЯ рд▓ाрдЧेрдХो рд░ рд╢्рд╡ाрд╕рдк्рд░рд╢्рд╡ाрд╕рдоा рд╕рдорд╕्рдпा рднрдПрдХा рдХाрд░рдг рдХрддिрдкрдп рдмिрд░ाрдоी рдЕрдмрд╕्рдеाрдоा рднेрдЯिрдПрдХो рдоेрдХ्рд╕िрдХोрдХो рдиेрд╕рдирд▓ рдоाрдЗрдЧ्рд░ेрд╕рди рдЗрди्рд╕्рдЯिрдЪ्рдпूрдЯрд▓े рдЬрдиाрдПрдХो рдЫ ।''

''рдиेрдкाрд▓ीрд╣рд░ु рднाрд░рддीрдп рдмाрдЯो рд╣ुँрджै рджрд▓ाрд▓рд▓ाрдИ рдмिрд╕ौं рд▓ाрдЦ рд░ुрдкैрдпाँ рдмुрдЭाрдПрд░ рдЕрдмैрдз рддрд░िрдХाрд▓े рджрдХ्рд╖िрдгी рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХी рдоुрд▓ुрдХ рд╣ुँрджै рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХा рдк्рд░рд╡ेрд╢ рдЧрд░्рдиे рддрдпाрд░ीрдоा рдеिрдП । рдпрд╕рдЕрдШि рдкрдиि рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХाрдоा рдЫिрд░्рди рдЦोрдЬ्рдиे рдиेрдкाрд▓ीрд╣рд░ु рдоेрдХ्рд╕िрдХोрдоा рдкрдХ्рд░ाрдЙ рдкрд░ेрдХा рдЫрди् ।'onlainkhabar
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