Ένα υπερθέαμα που κόβει την ανάσα - Δείτε τις εντυπωσιακές φωτογραφίες
Ένα μοναδικό υπερθέαμα από πάγο θα απολαύσουν από κοντά οι κάτοικοι και
οι επισκέπτες του Wisconsin, των ΗΠΑ, αφού λόγω του βαρύ φετινού χειμώνα
έχουν δημιουργηθεί εντυπωσιακές σπηλιές από πάγο και μάλιστα
προσβάσιμες με τα πόδια.
Χιλιάδες
άνθρωποι περπάτησαν περισσότερο από ένα μίλι πάνω από την παγωμένη
λίμνη Superior για να φτάσουν στις σπηλιές, που είναι σκαλισμένες από
ψαμμίτη. Η Superior είναι η μεγαλύτερη λίμνη γλυκού νερού στον κόσμο.
Οι
παγωμένες δίνες επέτρεψαν στα σπήλαια πάγου να παραμείνουν ανοιχτή για
τους επισκέπτες, αφού η λίμνη έχει παγώσει αρκετά, ώστε να μπορεί να
συγκρατήσει το βάρος των ανθρώπων, που περπατούν πάνω της.
Suspected Islamist militants kill dozens of students in Nigeria
Associated Press
DAMATURU, Nigeria – Suspected
Islamic militants killed dozens of students in a pre-dawn attack Tuesday
on a northeast Nigerian college, survivors said, setting ablaze a
locked hostel and shooting and slitting the throats of those who escaped
through windows. Some were burned alive. Adamu Garba said he and other teachers who ran away through the bush
estimate 40 students died in the assault that began around 2 a.m.
Tuesday at the Federal Government College at Buni Yadi. It is a co-ed
school about 45 miles south of Damaturu, the capital of Yobe state, and
difficult to communicate with because extremists last year destroyed the
cell phone tower there. Soldiers still are gathering corpses so he could not give an exact number of dead, said military spokesman Capt. Eli Lazarus. Garba, who teaches at a secondary school attached to the college,
said the attackers first set ablaze the college administrative block,
then moved to the hostels, where they locked students in and started
firebombing the buildings. At one hostel, he said, "students were trying to climb out of the
windows and they were slaughtered like sheep by the terrorists who slit
their throats. Others who ran were gunned down." He said students who
could not escape were burned alive. He spoke to The Associated Press in Damaturu, where he and several other teachers had made their way. Tuesday's attack brings the toll from attacks blamed on Boko Haram to more than 300 civilians killed this month alone. It is the first reported in Yobe state and the first school attack
reported this year by suspected fighters of the terrorist network of
Boko Haram -- the nickname that means Western education is forbidden. President Goodluck Jonathan told a news conference Monday night that
the Boko Haram attacks were "quite worrisome" but that he was sure "We
will get over it." Thousands of Nigerians have lost family members, houses, businesses,
their belongings and livelihoods in the 4-year-old rebellion. And it likely will anger regional officials who charge the military
is losing its war to halt the Islamic uprising in the northeast of
Africa's biggest oil producer. The military has said recent attacks are
being perpetrated by militants who have escaped a sustained aerial
bombardment and ground assaults on forest hideouts along the border with
Cameroon. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Monday condemned the
"unspeakable violence and acts of terror" and said the United States is
helping Nigerian authorities to develop a comprehensive approach "to
combat the threat posed by Boko Haram while protecting civilians and
ensuring respect for human rights." But survivors and local officials charge they get no protection. And
refugees who have fled to neighboring states have said that they are
fleeing the extremists as much as the fallout from a military campaign
in which soldiers are accused of gross human rights abuses including
executions of people suspected of helping Boko Haram. "Everybody is living in fear," local government chairman Maina
Ularamu told the AP after Izghe village was attacked twice in a week
this month -- with militants first killing 106 and burning hundreds of
thatched huts, then returning to kill another three people and setting
ablaze what little remained of the settlement in neighboring Adamawa
state. "There is no protection. We cannot predict where and when they are
going to attack. People can't sleep with their eyes closed," Ularamu
said.
CARACAS:
Venezuela, which has been at odds with the United States for years and
announced the expulsion of three US diplomats last week, will nominate
an ambassador to Washington Tuesday, President Nicolas Maduro said on
Monday. Foreign Minister Elias Jaua will announce the ambassador designate on Tuesday, Maduro said in an event broadcast on state TV. Venezuela
and the United States have not had ambassadors in each others'
countries since 2010. Venezuela has denounced the US as a meddling
capitalist empire and Washington has been wary of the leftist government
of the late Hugo Chavez and his successor, Maduro, and its ties with
countries such as Cuba and Iran. The two sides started talking last year about resuming full blown relations, but the negotiations fell apart in September. Maduro's
announcement came as Venezuela has been roiling with almost daily
protests for nearly three weeks by students and opposition members angry
over Maduro's government and living conditions marked by rampant street
crime, runaway inflation and other economic woes. The three US
diplomats whose expulsion was announced were accused of conspiring with
student demonstration leaders. The weeks of demos have left at least 14
people dead. Maduro said he was naming a new ambassador because
"Americans think we are killing each other" and he wants to improve
dialogue with the US. But even as he seemed to extend an olive
branch, Maduro lashed out at comments by White House spokesman Jay
Carney, who on Monday urged him to concentrate on dialogue with the
opposition and free detained demonstrators immediately. "Are you
the Venezuelan Supreme Court? Does the United States wield judicial
power in Venezuela to decide who is guilty and who should go free?",
Maduro exclaimed.