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Six die in Turkey village attack

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Three men have opened fire in a village in eastern Turkey, killing six people and wounding seven.

The assailants, reportedly a man and his two sons, walked through a village firing shotguns at random at their neighbours, the local governor said.

He said the motive was not clear, but that the men had previously threatened to kill the residents of the village, Karaali, in Elazig province.

All three men fled after the attack, but their family is being questioned.

Governor Muammer Musmal said investigators had been informed that the assailants had "some psychological problems".

In May, gunmen opened fire at a wedding party in south-east Turkey, killing 44 people, including the bride, the groom and six children.

The attack was the result of a long-running feud between two families, officials said. Several of those charged with the murders were members of an officially-sanctioned militia, the Village Guards.</p


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

Home vanishes in German landslide

Three people are missing and feared dead after a landslide swept away two homes in the central German village of Nachterstedt, south-west of Berlin.

Both homes – one of which collapsed completely – stood near a former open-cast coal mine that had been converted into a lake.

Officials said the missing included a couple and a man, all in their 50s.

There had been heavy rain in the area, but experts said mining activity had probably made the land unstable.

Local media said a stretch of land 350m (1,150 ft) long and 120m (390 ft) wide had collapsed into the lake.

Rescue efforts were hampered by the danger of further slides in the area.</p


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

Sink or swim in modern China

Chris Hogg heads to the small Chinese village of Zhushanxia, 200km east of Shanghai, to see how lives have been shaped by the economy under communist rule, the recession and the country’s economic recovery.

A farmer sells vegetables at a wholesale market on March 22, 2005 in Hefei of Anhui Province, China

Huang Jiao Ling lives at the end of a long dusty road.

Mobile phone numbers are daubed all over the walls of her home and those of her neighbours.

It is like a strange kind of mathematical graffiti, but the numbers are, in fact, advertisements for people offering goods and services.

In modern China, it seems everyone has something to sell.

Huang Jiao Ling, too, is an entrepreneur. She is in her 50s, but she looks younger.

In her front garden, where others might have planted vegetables, she has built a small workshop.

Inside, the walls are unfinished and the floor uneven, but there is just about enough room for a work-bench and a handful of basic machine tools.

Churning out widgets

On the floor are cardboard boxes filled with piles of tiny metal widgets.

They are simple to make – her husband sits at the bench turning them out rapidly by hand.

Fruit seller in China

A few feet away, his bicycle-taxi is parked just inside the front door of the house.

The machine work is a lot less tiring than pedalling passengers around, but he still keeps the bike.

It is useful, he says, to supplement their income in leaner times.

The Huangs sell the boxes of widgets to the factory where Huang Jiao Ling has a full-time job.

For a while this year they had to shut the workshop as demand dropped, but now the machines are humming again.

They have two children, because if you live in the country and your first child is a girl, you are allowed to have another one.

The girls go to very good schools, the best Huang Jiao Ling can afford.

She spends more than half her income on school fees.

"We have to think of their future," she tells me.

"It’s a Chinese tradition. Parents always think of their children, and when the parents get old, their children will look after them. It’s the same for every generation."

Yu Feng Guo is Huang Jiao Ling’s brother-in-law.

She is doing well for herself in China’s new modern market economy, but he has been left behind.

He used to work in a state-owned brick factory.

Different lifestyles

When the economic reforms began 30 years ago he watched as some of his co-workers left their jobs to start up their own small businesses, many of them selling prawns or fish by the side of the road.

He decided to do what he thought was the right thing, what the communist party would expect of a loyal worker in a state-owned enterprise – he stayed.

Eventually, the brick factory went bust and he was out of a job.

Rice paddy field

Now, dressed in a shabby khaki jacket, he works as a security guard in an open-air food market.

Those early entrepreneurs who had left his factory to try their luck in the fledgling market economy are now much richer than him and to his family this seems unfair.

"Thirty years ago everyone in the village was poor," his son tells me.

"Now the difference in lifestyle between the rich and the poor in our village is huge."

There is an implicit bargain in modern Chinese society between the leaders and the led.

Beijing tells its people "we will give you opportunities" – to earn more, to enjoy a better standard of living than your parents did.

But you, in return, will behave yourself.

Back on track

In Zhushanxia village quite a few cars can be seen bumping along past the fields, something you would not have seen 30 years ago.

If you have got used to having more, whether it’s a car, or a bigger house, or a more expensive school for your child, you have more to lose when times get tough.

That is why it is so important for the government to get the economy back on track.

When it first faltered, when factories started laying off workers, there was a risk that they would start to feel the government was no longer keeping to its side of the deal, so why should they

So in Beijing, of course, there will be relief that a recovery appears to be under way.

But the next challenge for the government will be to do more to try to ensure that everyone shares the benefits.

Huang Jiao Ling is happy her workshop is busy again, but still nervous about the future.

So she, like most other Chinese, is saving as much of her income as she can.

Her brother-in-law Yu Feng Guo, has no idea how he will be able to save enough to secure a state pension on his meagre wages from his unstable job.

He and others like him will be looking to their leaders for reassurance that they will be cared for as they approach old age.

But that will costly and complicated. Fixing the economy may prove to have been the easy part.

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

Witness recalls 1991 Krajina murders

A witness has recalled the murder of ten civilians by Krajina police in the village of Bruška in 1991, at the trial of Jovica Stanišić and Franko Simatović. Stanišić, the former head of Serbian state security, and his former deputy Simatović are accused of war crimes against non-Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia between 1991and 1995.

K. Serb’s life not in danger, say doctors

A Kosovo Serb, Radoš Magić, who was attacked in the village of Grabac near Klina, suffered a fractured skull, but is conscious. “After a scan and an analysis in our casualty department, it was established that the patient had suffered a skull fracture, and that he had a number of broken ribs. He was found to have blood in his urine and bruises on his body,“ said the duty doctor in Priština hospital Dafina Pasholli.

The Carbon Neutral Town

One community that is trying to become the first zero carbon village in England is Ashton Hayes, Cheshire.

Serb returnee assaulted in Kosovo

A Serb returnee has been injured in an attack near the village of Grabac, near Klina, where he lived. The Serb sources in the village identified the man as Radoš Magić.

Eclipse fever

Students of a school in Taregna

An obscure village in the eastern Indian state of Bihar has suddenly shot into limelight as the best place in India to watch a total solar eclipse on 22 July. Amarnath Tewary travels to Taregna to discover the excitement among locals.

In Taregna, a science teacher is busy teaching her students about solar eclipses and how they can be viewed safely.

The students of St Mary School are being told that viewing the Sun’s harsh light should only be done through proper solar telescopes or glasses.

Astro-physicists and scientists have marked the village as the "epicentre" of the eclipse.

The name Taregna, incidentally, means counting stars in Hindi.

‘Astro-tourist’ influx

Total solar eclipses usually take place about once every 18 months, and always at new Moon – when the lunar body sits directly between the Sun and the Earth.

So, all of a sudden Taregna, some 35km (22 miles) from the state capital, Patna, has shot into limelight – some 20,000 "astro-tourists" and scientists from all over the world are expected to congregate here on the day of the eclipse.

"We do not wish to miss this rare opportunity"

Suraj Kumar

Suraj Kumar

Local authorities are excited by Taregna’s new-found status. Bihar’s Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has said he will be visiting the town on the day of the eclipse.

"I have already instructed the officials to make proper arrangement for visitors at Taregna," says Mr Kumar.

Authorities have chosen three to four locations in Taregna from where people can view the eclipse.

St Mary School is one of them.

"We are very excited that Taregna has been chosen as the place for the best view of the solar eclipse. So we are teaching our school students about eclipses and how to view them after taking precautions," science teacher Ms Mamata says.

The village is being spruced up to receive all the tourists and scientists.

Approach roads are being repaired, drains are being cleaned and faulty electric wires are being replaced.

Many hotels in Patna have been booked in advance by people coming into town for the eclipse.

Special flights

From Taregna, the solar eclipse should be visible for at least three minutes and 38 seconds, says a Nasa bulletin.

However, the maximum duration of the eclipse will be six minutes 38 seconds in the Pacific Ocean.

In India, the eclipse will commence soon after sunrise. Surat in Gujarat and Patna in Bihar are also expected to be excellent locations for good views.

Taregna railway station

Legend has it that it was at Taregna that India’s famous astronomer and mathematician Aryabhatta studied stars and planets during the Vedic age.

"We do not wish to miss this rare opportunity, especially when people from across the country are thronging here to witness the eclipse," say school students Ranjit Kumar and Suraj Kumar.

Tour operators have also made special arrangements to cash in on the occasion

Some of them have chartered planes to fly in eclipse watchers from other cities.

One of the planes will have 21 seats facing the Sun ("Sun-side seats") and 21 seats facing the Earth ("Earth-side seats"), says a tour operator.

"Sun-side seats, which will have a direct view of the eclipse, cost about 79,000 rupees [$1,618]," he says.</p


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

Diary from Swat

Police officers stop displaces people for checks i nShergarh, near Mardan, Pakistan, 13/07/2009

Munir (not his real name), an administrator in the Swat region of Pakistan, whose family fled the conflict there in early May, spent the last two months living in the outskirts of Mardan. After hearing positive stories from relatives and friends back home, he is now preparing to return to his village hoping for a new beginning.


"Yesterday, on the main road that leads to Swat I saw many people and vehicles preparing to leave. People were saying good bye and were thanking their Mardan hosts for their hospitality.

We will go back to Swat very soon, probably in about 20 days. First we want to make sure it’s safe. My father will go on his own in a couple of days to see how things are in our village.

See a map of the region

We are already getting many reports from our villagers and friends back in Swat. Life is still difficult, but things are getting better.

We were told that 45 houses belonging to militants in our village have been destroyed. Our house, which is in the centre of the village, is apparently fine.

I spoke on the phone to someone from our village, who couldn’t manage to escape because of the curfew. Because there were militants in our village his family moved to another one, not far from Mingora.

He told me that the peace committee, which is made up of local elders, is not distributing the aid donated by NGOs to the poor people. Instead it ends up in the hands of the families of the members.

When I spoke to my uncle a few days ago, he said that the biggest problem there is that it is very expensive. The prices of daily necessities are double compared to those in the rest of Pakistan. People are really struggling. Those are poor villagers, they don’t have money. God knows how they survive and what they eat.

A villager from our area came last week to Mardan. He told me that there are some militants in that village and that the army is not taking action against them because there are many innocent people and they don’t want to inflict casualties. Villagers are still not feeling secure because of the presence of militants.

‘Taliban defeated’

I’ve got a friend who works for the police, he is now in Mingora. I bumped into him by chance a few days ago. He had come here to Mardan seven days ago to see his family and went back to Mingora two days later. We talked at length.

He said that the security situation had improved. The army there said that the only way they can defeat the militants is with the support of the ordinary people. So there’s a lot less fear and people feel much more confident.

"In one year’s time, many militants will be killed – not by the army, but by the people of Swat"

He told me that he went to Saidu Sharif one day. The army issued an invitation through loud speakers to residents to go to houses known to belong to militants and help themselves to anything useful they could find there. So people went and took all kinds of things – washing machines and other household items. In the end, the army destroyed those houses.

A different story: someone was arrested in Mingora, accused of being a militant. The army took him to his village and asked three local people to confirm whether he is indeed a militant. Three people confirmed. They shot him on the spot. People were very happy.

People are confident now and they have learnt a lot from their experiences. They know that they need to be more united against the militants. They won’t allow the militants to return again.

They’ll chase them out themselves, they’ll shoot them, they won’t wait for the army to do that. People will take revenge for all the bad things that have happened.

One militant commander was chased by the people here in Mardan. I witnessed the chase. He managed to escaped this time. But what I am saying is that people are taking things into their own hands.

In one year’s time, many militants will be killed – not by the army, but by the people of Swat. The Taliban are defeated. They are not going to come back.

We are very confident. My family are already talking about arranging my wedding within one or two months after our return to Swat. I myself see a wedding in November.

"

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

Excavation of Gnjilane grave complete

Kosovo police say that the excavation of a mass grave in the village of Dobrčane, in the municipality of Gnjilane, is complete. Kosovo Police Service (KPS) spokesman Arben Beka told Radio KiM that the remains of victims of various ages had been found, though no numbers were given.

Bombed out

Pakistan’s government has begun to return home some two million people displaced by the conflict in the Swat valley. The BBC’s Jill McGivering reports on the scene that lay in wait for those who returned to nearby Buner.

Sultan Wass

The small village of Sultan Wass lies on a steep hillside in the shadow of the rugged mountains of Swat’s Buner district.

During the recent military offensive here against the insurgents, the village was considered a Taliban stronghold.

There was fierce fighting.

In the end, Pakistan’s military took the ground after calling for air strikes. About half the houses were destroyed.

I needed a military escort to visit the village. Maj Rasheed of the Frontier Corps led me through, pointing out piles of rubble.

One had been a commercial building, he said. Another had been the local madrassa (religious school). A few concrete pillars stuck out of the piles of broken mud bricks.

Destroyed

The Taliban converted every house into a bunker or ammunition cache, he told me, and fought from the houses. By then, most of the local people had already fled.

See a map of the region
Further on, the major pointed out a bomb crater. An elderly man was standing nearby, wearing a traditional cap and a long shirt streaked with dirt.

Burden of the hosts

Taleban member in Buner

His name was Badshagay, he said, and a bomb had fallen on his house. He took me to meet his family, gathered in the one room that was still intact.

Inside, the women of the family gathered round me, eager to tell their story. A daughter said her house had also been destroyed. Another relative said her husband was missing.

Badshagay’s wife was tearful. They couldn’t afford to rebuild their house, she said, and they didn’t have enough money to start again anywhere else. They had salvaged what they could from the rubble but most of their possessions were broken or ruined.

Bustling market

"If our children get sick, there’s no medicine," she said. "We don’t have clothes, there’s no electricity. Who would like to have such a life"

Sultan Wass

The government has promised to give a cash handout to every family which fled the fighting and is now returning.

It has also offered extra payments for damaged property. But the stories I have heard on the ground suggest the process of accessing these payments is proving complicated. This family, for example, had no idea they might be entitled to anything.

Down the road from Sultan Wass, I visited Swarai bazaar. It was the most bustling market I saw as I drove through the district. Small shops, selling clothing and kitchen utensils were open. Stalls were piled high with all sorts of fruits and vegetables – tomatoes, cucumbers and plump mangoes.

I spoke to a middle-aged man who was buying fruit. How far, I asked, were things starting to return to normal

"Life is getting back to normal in many parts of the district," he said. "People are returning. The shops are starting to open again. But there are other places which the army hasn’t reached and the Taliban is there. I’m worried about the Taliban. They may come back."

That is a fear I have heard expressed many times. People who fled the fighting are now living in government-run camps or, more commonly, in the homes of local families. Many are enduring cramped conditions and poor sanitation facilities in sweltering heat.

Every displaced family I ha ve spoken to said they were desperate to go back home. But they wanted to be sure first that fighting in their home town or village had really stopped. The government says that many Taliban fighters have been killed and insists they are not still in the area.

But some local people fear the fighters have merely been displaced and, if they are hiding out in the rough mountainous terrain, they are anxious that the Taliban may indeed come back, once the presence of the security forces is scaled down.

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