Rabu, 14 Ogos 2013

NST Online Business Times : latest

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FTSE Bursa Malaysia update: 9 a.m.

Posted: 14 Aug 2013 06:36 PM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR: At 9 a.m. today, there were 148 gainers, 168 losers and 195 counters traded unchanged on the Bursa Malaysia.

The FBM-KLCI was at 1,794.62 up 0.89 of a point, the FBMACE was at 5,422.15 up 5.01 points, and the FBMEmas was at 12,523.97 up 0.48 of a point.

Turnover was at 333.666 million shares valued at RM147.038 million. -- BERNAMA

Bursa rises on rotational play

Posted: 14 Aug 2013 07:22 PM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR: Share price on Bursa Malaysia opened marginally lower but rose thereafter lifted by rotational trading in lower liners, dealers said.

At 9.31 am, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) was up 0.66 of-a-point at 1,794.39, after opening 0.94 of-a-point lower at 1,92.79.

A dealer said while profit-taking should see blue chips checking recent gains, the strong buying momentum trend should boost rotational trading on lower liners.

"On the index, a convincing breakout above the 1,800 psychological level will meet the next hurdle at 1,814," he said.

On the scoreboard, the Plantation Index gained 29.82 points to 8,364.82, the Industrial Index lost 1.19 points to 3,030.7 and the Finance Index fell 5.609 points to 17,081.63.

The FBM Emas Index slipped 1.391 points to 12,522.1, the FBM100 Index dropped 1.01 points to 12,247.5 and the FBM 70 Index shed 23.84 points to 14,405.68.

Losers led gainers 175 to 149, with 195 counters unchanged, 1,054 untraded and 11 other were suspended.

Turnover totalled 348.1 million shares worth RM150.03 million.

Among actives, Astral Supreme added 1.5 sen to 28.5 sen, Sumatec Resources gained two sen to 61.5 sen, Flonic climbed half-a-sen to 19 sen but The Media Shoppe and MAS were both unchanged at 10.5 sen and 34 sen, respectively.

Heavyweights, CIMB garnered seven sen to RM8.16, Sime Darby added one sen to RM9.49, Maybank and Axiata dropped four sen each to RM10.46 and RM6.89, respectively, and Petronas Chemicals lost two sen to RM6.60. -- BERNAMA

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Egyptian security forces raid pro-Morsi camps in Cairo, while violence across ... - Fox News

Posted: 14 Aug 2013 09:06 AM PDT

Clashes between security forces and pro-Morsi protesters across Egypt have left more than 100 dead and hundreds injured Wednesday, the country's health ministry said, while police in riot gear and armored vehicles bulldozed two protest camps in Cairo.

Egypt's Health Ministry said 149 people were killed and the state news agency MENA quoted a spokesman saying 1,403 people were wounded, according to Reuters.

Khaled el-Khateeb, an Egyptian Health Ministry official, earlier told the Associated Press that at least 28 people were killed in Cairo, 25 in Minya province south of the capital and one each in the cities of Alexandria, Assiut and Ban Suef. Sky News cameraman Mick Deane and Gulf News reporter Habiba Ahmed Abd Elaziz were among the dead. 

The violence prompted Egypt's Interim President, Adly Mansour, to declare a month-long state of emergency and curfew on Cairo and 10 provinces, ordering the armed forces to support the police in efforts to restore law and order and protect state facilities.

The White House and several European leaders criticized the crackdown.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest, speaking at Martha's Vineyard, Mass., where President Obama is vacationing, said the world is watching what is happening in Egypt and it is "time for them to get back on a path of respecting the basic rights of their people."

The camps that were cleared Wednesday in Cairo had been the catalyst of protests since former President Mohammed Morsi was overthrown by Egypt's military on July 3, with thousands calling for his reinstatement.

The Muslim Brotherhood's political arm, which backs Morsi, claimed that more than 500 protesters were killed and some 9,000 wounded in the two camps, but those figures could not be confirmed and nothing in Associated Press footage or local TV networks suggested such a high death toll.

Army troops did not take part in the two Cairo operations, but provided security. Police and army helicopters hovered over both sites as plumes of smoke rose over the city skyline hours after the police launched the simultaneous actions shortly after 7 a.m. local time.

"At 7 a.m. they came. Helicopters from the top and bulldozers from below. They smashed through our walls. Police and soldiers, they fired tear gas at children," Saleh Abdulaziz, a 39-year-old teacher, told Reuters."They continued to fire at protesters even when we begged them to stop."

A Reuters correspondent said pools of blood were everywhere, with dozens of people lying in the street after suffering bullet and birdshot wounds.

The smaller of the two camps was cleared of protesters by late morning, with most of them taking refuge in the nearby Orman botanical gardens, inside the sprawling campus of Cairo University and the zoo.

An Associated Press reporter at the scene said security forces were chasing the protesters inside the zoo. At one point, a dozen protesters, mostly men with beards wearing traditional Islamist garb, were seen handcuffed and sitting on a sidewalk under guard outside the university campus. The private ONTV network showed firearms and rounds of ammunition allegedly seized from protesters there.

Security forces later stormed the larger camp in the eastern Cairo district of Nasr City.

An Associated Press television video journalist there said he could hear the screams of women as a cloud of white smoke hung over the protest encampment. He said a bulldozer was removing mounds of sand bags and brick walls built earlier by the protesters as a defense line in their camp.

An alliance of pro-Morsi groups said the 17-year-old daughter of senior Muslim Brotherhood Mohammed el-Beltagy, Asmaa Mohammed el-Beltagy, was killed in the Nasr City raid. 

Islam Tawfiq, a Brotherhood member at the Nasr City sit-in, said that the camp's medical center was filled with dead bodies and that the injured included children.

"No one can leave and those who do are either arrested or beaten up," he told the Associated Press.

The pro-Morsi Anti-Coup alliance claimed that security forces used live ammunition in the raid, but the Interior Ministry, which is in charge of the police, said its forces only used tear gas and that they came under fire from protesters.

The Anti-Coup Alliance also said in a statement that 25 were killed at the Nasr City site, while the Muslim Brotherhood claims that 30 people had died there.

The Interior Ministry warned that forces would deal firmly with protesters who were acting "irresponsibly," suggesting that it would respond in kind if its men are fired upon. It said it would guarantee safe passage to all who want to leave the Nasr City site but would arrest those wanted for questioning by prosecutors.

Elsewhere in Cairo, police fired tear gas to disperse Morsi supporters who wanted to join the Nasr City camp after it came under attack. State TV also reported that a police captain had been abducted by pro-Morsi protesters in the area, but there was no official statement about that.

El-Beltagy called on the police and army troops to mutiny against their commanders and on Egyptians to take to the streets to show their disapproval of the raids.

"Oh, Egyptian people, your brothers are in the square ... Are you going to remain silent until the genocide is completed?" said el-Beltagy, who was arrested after Egyptian police cleared an area around the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque, security officials told Reuters.

Regional television networks were showing images of collapsed tents and burning tires at both sites, with ambulances on standby. They were also showing protesters being arrested and led away by black-clad policemen.

A security official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said a total of 200 protesters have been arrested from both sites.

Other clashes broke out between Morsi supporters and security forces in the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria, the Nile Delta provinces of Beheira, Sharqiya and Gharbiyah and in the oasis region of Fayoum southwest of Cairo.

In the town of Marsa Maturh, along Egypt's northwest coast, police fired tear gas to break up hundreds of stone-throwing protesters in front of the regional government's headquarters, Reuters reports.

Churches belonging to Egypt's minority Coptic Christians were torched in three southern provinces — Minya, Assiut and Sohag. In the city of Bani Suef south of Cairo, protesters set three police cars on fire. Farther south in the Islamist stronghold of Assiut, police used tear gas to disperse thousands of Morsi supporters gathered in the city center.

The Egyptian Central Bank instructed commercial banks to close branches in areas affected by the chaos, a sign of alarm that the violence could spiral out of control. 

An official who declined to be named told Reuters that the banks and the Egypt's stock exchange will remain closed on Thursday.

Morsi, Egypt's first freely elected president, had just completed one year in office when he was toppled. He has largely been held incommunicado, but was visited by the European Union's foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and an African delegation. Ashton reported that he was well and had access to television and newspapers.

Several bids by the United States, the European Union and Gulf Arab states to reconcile the two sides in Egypt in an inclusive political process have failed, with the Brotherhood insisting that Morsi must first be freed along with several of the group's leaders who have been detained in connection with incitement of violence.

The trial of the Brotherhood's leader, Mohammed Badie, and his powerful deputy Khairat el-Shater on charges of conspiring to kill protesters is due to start later this month. Badie is on the run, but el-Shater is in detention. Four others are standing trial with them on the same charges.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Officials: UPS cargo jet crashes in Ala.; 2 killed - Boston.com

Posted: 14 Aug 2013 08:18 AM PDT

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — A UPS cargo plane crashed and burned Wednesday morning on the outskirts of an Alabama airport, killing two crew members and scattering boxes and charred debris across the grassy field, officials said.

The pilot and co-pilot of the jet were pronounced dead at the scene, said Birmingham Fire Chief Ivor Brooks. The crash site had been burning, but the blaze was extinguished by late morning, Brooks said.

The plane crashed in an open field on the outskirts of Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport, said Toni Herrera-Bast, a spokeswoman for the city's airport authority. The crash had not affected airport operations, though it did appear to topple a tree and a utility pole.

The top was broken out of the tree and there are pieces of a utility pole and limbs in the road. Nearby, grass was blackened near the bottom of a hill. A piece of the fuselage and an engine are visible on the crest of the hill. White smoke was pouring from the other side of the hill.

It was not immediately known what the plane was carrying; UPS spokesman Jeff Wafford said only that the plane was carrying a variety of cargo.

Sharon Wilson, who lives near the airport, said she was in bed before dawn when she heard what sounded like engines sputtering as the plane went over her house.

''It sounded like an airplane had given out of fuel. We thought it was trying to make it to the airport. But a few minutes later we heard a loud 'boom,''' she said.

Another resident, Jerome Sanders, lives directly across from the runway. He said he heard a plane just before dawn and could see flames seconds before it crashed.

''It was on fire before it hit,'' Sanders said.

At 7 a.m. Wednesday, conditions in the area were rainy with low clouds. About 45 minutes later, smoke was still rising from the scene, where a piece of the plane's white fuselage lay near a blackened area on the ground.

''The plane is in several sections,'' said Birmingham Mayor William Bell, who was briefed on the situation by the city's fire chief. ''There were two to three small explosions, but we think that was related to the aviation fuel.''

''As we work through this difficult situation, we ask for your patience, and that you keep those involved in your thoughts and prayers,'' Atlanta-based UPS said in a statement.

Previously, a UPS cargo plane crashed on Sept. 3, 2010, in the United Arab Emirates, just outside Dubai. Both pilots were killed. Authorities there blamed the crash on its load of between 80,000 to 90,000 lithium batteries, which are sensitive to temperature. Investigators found that a fire on board likely began in the cargo containing the batteries.

The Airbus A300 that had taken off from Louisville, Ky., crashed around 5 a.m. CDT about a half-mile from the runway, said Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen said.

Airbus said in a news release that the plane was built in 2003 and had logged about 11,000 flight hours over 6,800 flights.

The A300 was Airbus' first plane, and the type first flew in 1972. American Airlines retired its last A300 in 2009, and no U.S. passenger airlines have flown it since then. Airbus quit building them in 2007 after making a total of 816 A300 and A310s.

___

Associated Press writers Becky Yonker and Bruce Schreiner in Louisville, Ky., Jeff Martin in Atlanta and Josh Freed in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

© Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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