web analytics

AFP

  • French teen finds 560,000 year-old tooth

    “A large adult tooth — we can’t say if it was from a male or female — was found during excavations of soil we know to be between 550,000 and 580,000 years old, because we used different dating methods,” paleoanthropologist Amelie Viallet told AFP.

    “This is a major discovery because we have very few human fossils from this period in Europe,” she said.

    The tooth was found in the Arago cave near the village of Tautavel, one of the world’s most important prehistoric sites which has been excavated for about 50 years.

    It is also the site of the discovery of over 140 fossils belonging to Tautavel Man, an early hominid that lived an estimated 450,000 years ago.

    Volunteer Camille, 16, was working with another young archaeologist when she found the tooth last Thursday.

    They were among the hundreds of young trainee archaeologists who come to work in the cave every year to study human ancestors during the lower Paleolithic era, when they first began to use tools.

    The owner of the tooth — a very worn lower incisor — lived during a cold, dry and windy period and according to archaeological finds in the cave, hunted horses, reindeer, bison and rhinoceros.

    For a long time the Heidelberg jaw — including the chin and full set of lower teeth — discovered in Germany in 1907 dating to around 600,000 years ago, was the oldest fossil of  human ancestors in western Europe.

    However some archaeological sites offered up evidence of stone tools dating back much earlier.

    This has left many questions and stirred debate about the life and presence of human ancestors in Europe before modern humans rose out of Africa and went on to conquer the planet.

    In 2013 the discovery of a fossil tooth in southeastern Spain that dated to about 1.4 million years ago shook up the timeline of the colonisation of Europe by modern humans.

    A piece of the puzzle

    Dr Matthew Skinner, a palaeoanthropologist from the University of Kent in Britain said that while the find was important as there are few human fossils from this period, “a single tooth, I wouldn’t say is a major discovery, unfortunately.”

    “If there’s something about its shape or its size that would suggest that it is different from the other fossils we have from that time period and perhaps belongs to a different species , then that would be of course very interesting.”

    He said the most obvious species to which the tooth would belong would be Homo heidelbergensis — owner of the German jaw — about whom little is known.

    “These are certainly different from modern humans, they existed before Neanderthals. They had quite large brains and fairly complex behaviour but weren’t modern in the way that we are.

    “They were quite robust, very stocky individuals, they had really massive skulls.”

    However he said most fossils available came from above the neck, making it difficult to understand the species.

    “What we need is for them to find a skeleton …We have lots of skulls of heidelbergensis but what we don’t have are arms and legs and ribs and pelvis not much, there’s a few pieces, but it’s really not very much.”

    Tony Chevalier, another paleoanthropologist from Tautavel, said the tooth would also shine a light on the current debate over Homo Heidelbergensis — owner of the German jaw and ancestor of Neanderthals.

    “Was Homo Heidelbergensis simply European or also African? It is a very important debate,” said Chevalier.

    While modern Homo sapiens is now the last man standing, in the past our ancestors shared the earth with several early human species at the same time.

    A plethora of archaeological finds in past decades continues to change the size and shape of humans’ family tree and the connections between the different branches.;

  • Android flaw lets hackers break in with a text message

    “Attackers only need your mobile number, using which they can remotely execute code via a specially crafted media file delivered via MMS (text message),” Zimperium Mobile Security said in a blog post.

    “A fully weaponized successful attack could even delete the message before you see it. You will only see the notification.”

    Android code dubbed “Stagefright” was at the heart of the problem, according to Zimperium.

    Stagefright automatically pre-loads video snippets attached to text messages to spare recipients from the annoyance of waiting to view clips.

    Hackers can hide malicious code in video files and it will be unleashed even if the smartphone user never opens it or reads the message, according to research by Zimperium’s Joshua Drake.

    “The targets for this kind of attack can be anyone,” the cyber security firm said, referring to Stagefright as the worst Android flaw discovered to date.

    “These vulnerabilities are extremely dangerous because they do not require that the victim take any action to be exploited.”

    Malicious code executed by hackers could take control of smartphones and plunder contents without owners knowing.

    Stagefright imperils some 95 percent, or an estimated 950 million, of Android phones, according to the security firm.

    Zimperium said that it reported the problem to Google and provided the California Internet firm with patches to prevent breaches.

    “Google acted promptly and applied the patches to internal code branches within 48 hours, but unfortunately that’s only the beginning of what will be a very lengthy process of update deployment,” Zimperium said.

    It did not appear as though hackers had taken advantage of the Stagefright vulnerability, according to Zimperium.

    Updating Android software powering mobile devices is controlled by hardware makers and sometimes telecommunication service carriers, not Google.

    While Apple controls the hardware and software in iPhones, iPads, and iPods powered by its mobile operating system, Google makes Android available free to device makers who customize the code and update it as they see fit.

    More about Drake’s research was to be disclosed at a Black Hat computer security conference taking place in Las Vegas early in August.

  • China escalator swallows toddler's mother: report

    Xiang Liujuan, 30, was holding her son in front of her as they went up the stairway on Saturday, the Wuhan Evening News said.

    Security camera footage of the incident posted online showed a panel in the floor giving way as Xiang stepped off the escalator. As she fell half-way through she pushed her son forward, and a nearby shop assistant dragged him to safety.

    But the escalator continued rolling, and several seconds later Xiang is seen disappearing downwards into the mechanism, despite one of the staff briefly grabbing her hand.

    It took firefighters more than four hours to cut open the machine and recover the woman, who showed “no signs of life”, the newspaper report said.

    The footage shows employees standing at the top of the escalator as the mother and child approach.

    Maintenance had just been carried out on theescalator at the Anliang department store in Jingzhou in the central province of Hubei, and workers forgot to screw the access cover back into place, the newspaper cited an unnamed source as saying.

    The accident was one of the top topics on China’s Twitter-like Sina Weibo on Monday with more than 6.6 million views.

    Most comments expressed fury at the shop management.

    “Why didn’t the staffers stop customers at the entrance to the machine or just turn it off?” wrote one. “The department store is definitely responsible.”

    Others were moved by the woman’s final actions.

    “I was appalled when I saw her sink and at the same time felt the greatness of maternal love — the mother wasted no time pushing the child out when it happened,” said one.

    China is prone to safety accidents as regulations and standards are often flouted and enforcement is lax, sometimes due to corruption.

    In 2012, a nine-year-old boy was killed after he got stuck in an escalator at a Beijing department store as horrified shoppers looked on.

    In July 2011, a 13-year-old boy was killed and more than 20 others injured when an escalator in a Beijing underground station suddenly reversed direction during the rush hour.

  • Gunfight kills at least 20 at Afghan wedding: officials

    The clash, which officials blamed on quarrels between guests, erupted late Sunday in Deh Salah district in the once-tranquil province of Baghlan.

    The province has recently been plagued by growing insecurity as the Taliban insurgency rapidly spreads north from its southern and eastern strongholds.

    “As a result of the clashes, 20 people were killed and 10 others were wounded,” provincial police spokesman Jawed Basharat told AFP, adding that the incident appeared to be the result of a local dispute.

    Armed men traded verbal barbs before the gunfight broke out and the victims were all male guests at the wedding aged between 14 and 60, said district police chief Gulistan Qusani.

    “A local security official fired in the air after the verbal exchange heated up… and then both sides started trading fire,” Qusani told AFP, giving a higher death toll of 21.

    Baghlan governor Sultan Mohammad Ebadi said an official delegation had been sent to the site — a Tajik-dominated area that is largely unaffected by the Taliban insurgency — to investigate and prevent any backlash from the relatives of the victims.

    Expensive and lavish weddings have become common since the Taliban were toppled in 2001, in contrast to their time in power when musical revelry and dancing were banned.

    But fatal gunfights and celebratory gunfire are woefully common at the ceremonies in a country battered by nearly 40 years of war.

    The killings also highlight the lure of the gun culture in Afghanistan, especially across the insecurity-plagued countryside where owning firearms for personal safety is common among Afghan households.

    – Growing insecurity –

    Afghan soldiers mistakenly fired mortars at a wedding party in late December in the southern province of Helmand, killing 17 women and children.

    Some witnesses said the army attack was triggered when wedding guests fired celebratory gunshots into the air as the bride was brought to the groom’s house.

    In July 2012 a suicide bomber killed a prominent Afghan lawmaker and 16 other people at his daughter’s wedding party in the north of the country.

    And in June 2011 gunmen stormed a wedding party in eastern Afghanistan, killing the groom and eight other people in an attack blamed on Taliban-linked insurgents.

    The Afghan government conducted its first face-to-face talks with Taliban cadres on July 7 in a Pakistani hill station, aimed at ending the 14-year insurgency.

    Afghan officials said Friday they would meet insurgents this week for a second round of talks, pledging to press for a ceasefire in negotiations likely to be held in China.

    But despite the willingness to engage in talks there has been no let-up in militant attacks, which are taking a heavy toll on civilians.

    A suicide bomber on Wednesday killed 19 people including women and children in a crowded market in the northern province of Faryab, as insurgents intensify their annual summer offensive launched in late April.

    Almost 1,000 civilians were killed in the conflict during the first four months of this year, a sharp jump from the same period last year, according to the United Nations.

    President Ashraf Ghani’s government has drawn criticism for failing to end growing insurgent attacks, which critics partly blame on political infighting and a protracted delay in appointing a candidate for the crucial post of defence minister.

  • Australian woman who had baby with 12-year-old boy is jailed

    The Melbourne mother-of-three, who cannot be named to protect the boy and the baby’s identity, was 36 when she began driving her daughter and her friend to school in 2011.

    The Victoria County Court heard that she admitted developing feelings for the child and began a relationship with him, with the pair having sex without using condoms.

    The Melbourne Age newspaper reported that the abuse went on for two years and she became pregnant, giving birth to a girl in May last year when the boy was 14.

    When the victim’s parents found out about the relationship, they confronted the woman and reported her to police. A DNA test confirmed he was the baby’s father.

    “You failed to recognise that your feelings for the boy were completely inappropriate,” Judge Jane Patrick said. “You commenced and continued an abusive sexual relationship.”

    In a victim impact statement the boy’s mother said the woman’s actions had affected her entire family.

    “She has described how you have taken away his childhood and the difficulties he has had adjusting to fatherhood and what has happened to him,” the judge said, adding that the woman was supposed to be taking care of the boy and had breached his trust.

    The woman was sentenced to a maximum of six years in jail after pleading guilty to the persistent sexual abuse of a child under the age of 16. She must serve at least three years and six months.

  • India take cue from Pakistan, pick Mishra for Sri Lanka tour

    Mishra, 32, who has taken 43 wickets in 13 matches, last played a Test at the Oval during the England tour in 2011.

    But the success of Pakistani leg-spinner Yasir Shah during the recent series in Sri Lanka, where he claimed 24 wickets to lead his team to a 2-1 win, prompted the selectors to go with Mishra.

    “Having seen how the Sri Lankan batsmen fared against Pakistan, our preference was for Mishra who has also done well in domestic cricket,” chairman of selectors Sandeep Patil told reporters in New Delhi.

    Mishra will partner two off-spinners — Harbhajan Singh and Ravichandran Ashwin — in India’s first Test-series in the island nation since 2010, when the three-match series ended in a 1-1 draw.

    Mishra replaces injured leg-spinner Karn Sharma in the only change to the 15-man squad selected for the rain-ruined drawn Test in Bangladesh in June.

    Young batsman Lokesh Rahul, who missed the Bangladesh trip due to dengue fever, was back as one of the seven specialist batsmen.

    The squad includes four seamers in Ishant Sharma, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Umesh Yadav and Varun Aaron to perform on wickets that usually assist early bounce and seam movement.

    The series will mark the end of the international career of Sri Lankan batting great Kumar Sangakkara, who will retire after playing the first two Tests.

    The 37-year-old left-hander is Test cricket’s leading scorer among players who are still active, with 12,305 runs from 132 matches at an average of 58.04 with 38 centuries.

    With the Indian board still to name a successor to coach Duncan Fletcher, whose term ended after the World Cup in February-March, former Test captain Ravi Shastri will head the squad as team director.

    Shastri will be assisted by three assistant coaches in Sanjay Bangar (batting), Bharat Arun (bowling) and Ramakrishnan Sridhar (fielding).

    India’s tour opens with a three-day warm-up match select team at the Premadasa stadium in Colombo from August 6 before the first Test gets under way in Galle on August 12.

    The remaining two Tests will be played in Colombo, at the P. Sara Oval from August 20 and the Sinhalese Sports Club from August 28.

    The tour does not feature any one-day or Twenty20 matches.

    India squad:

    Virat Kohli (captain), Murali Vijay, Shikhar Dhawan, Lokesh Rahul, Cheteshwar Pujara, Ajinkya Rahane, Rohit Sharma, Wriddhiman Saha, Ravichandran Ashwin, Harbhajan Singh, Amit Mishra, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Umesh Yadav, Varun Aaron and Ishant Sharma.

  • Saudi family decimated in camel-car crash

    The accident took place in the southwestern region of Jazan, Red Crescent spokesman Bishi al-Sarkhi said in a statement carried by SPA state news agency.

    A father, mother and their two daughters died on the spot, while their three sons suffered serious injuries, it said.

    A picture published by SPA showed a dead camel lying in a pool of blood in the middle of a road blocked by police vehicles.

    Legal experts have called for penalising owners of camels that cause road accidents, Arab News reported in March.

  • 14 soldiers killed in US air strike: Afghan officials

    “At 6:00 am today, two US helicopters attacked a checkpoint in Baraki Barak district of Logar province,” district governor Mohammad Rahim Amin told AFP.

    “The checkpoint caught fire… and 14 Afghan army soldiers were killed,” he added.

    An American military official said he was “aware of an incident involving US forces in Logar province this morning”.

    “This incident is under investigation,” he added.

    Din Mohammad Darwesh, the Logar provincial governor’s spokesman, confirmed the strike and gave a similar death toll.

    Amin said the targeted checkpoint was “not a suspicious area”.

    “The Afghan flag was waving at the checkpoint in Baraki Barak when the Americans launched their attack,” he said.

    Civilian deaths in air strikes have been one of the most emotive and high-profile issues of the 13-year Afghan war.

    A Nato air strike in December killed five civilians and wounded six others in the same district of Baraki Barak.

    Nato ended its combat mission in Afghanistan in December, leaving local forces to battle the Taliban alone, but a residual force remains for training and counter-terrorism operations.

  • Return of Iranian oil may cause more OPEC tensions

    Tehran and major powers — Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States — clinched a historic agreement in Vienna on Tuesday aimed at ensuring Iran does not obtain a nuclear bomb, and which paves the way for the removal of sanctions and the gradual return of Iranian oil to the global market next year.

    The accord puts strict limits on Iran’s nuclear activities for at least a decade. In return, sanctions that have slashed the oil exports of OPEC’s fifth-largest producer will be lifted and billions of dollars in frozen assets unblocked.

    The Islamic republic’s exports could reach a potential 2.4 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2016, from 1.6 million bpd in 2014, according to data from economist Charles Robertson at investment bank Renaissance Capital.

    The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries — whose 12 members including Iran pump one third of global oil — is mindful that Iranian oil could worsen a global supply glut and depress oil prices further.

    OPEC decided at its last meeting in Vienna in June to maintain output levels, extending its Saudi-backed strategy to preserve market share and fend off competition from booming US shale.

    Oil prices sank last week, hit by the Iran nuclear deal and the strong dollar, raising jitters among some OPEC members who next meet on December 4.

    London Brent oil slid to about $56 per barrel and New York’s West Texas Intermediate dropped to around $52 a barrel.

    Divisions in cartel 

    Poorer OPEC members Angola, Algeria and Venezuela — whose budgets are heavily reliant on oil revenues — may again argue for less output to support prices, analysts say.

    Richer Gulf producers, led by OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia, remain eager for the cartel to preserve valuable market share and force out high-cost US shale producers with lower oil price levels.

    “Clearly there is a divide between the countries on this new policy of seeking new market share,” Ann-Louise Hittle at consultancy Wood Mackenzie told AFP.

    “So it could be a contentious (OPEC) meeting and there could be pressure for an emergency meeting before December.”

    Faced with stubbornly low prices, Algeria’s energy minister Salah Khabri indicated to state news agency APS last week that an emergency OPEC meet could be needed.

    “The real problem starts when OPEC members begin to fight for quotas amid oversupply and market share disputes,” said Jassem al-Saadun, head of Kuwait’s Al-Shall Economic Consultants.

    “If Iran, Venezuela, Algeria and Libya — all of which need to pump more — enter into a dispute with the Gulf producers, then it could be the end for OPEC,” he warned.

    Danske Bank analyst Jens Naervig Pedersen said such countries had been “really hit” by low oil prices.

    But he added: “Their collective power is probably not great enough to turn the mind of Saudi Arabia and the core members of OPEC in the Middle East.”

    Global demand key 

    In June, OPEC’s collective output ceiling was left at 30 million bpd — where it has stood for three and a half years — despite an oil price collapse between June 2014 and January that slashed precious revenues.

    The organisation appeared to shrug off calls from some members, including Iran, for a “reasonable” oil price of between $75 and $80 per barrel.

    Oil is forecast to languish at an average of just above $62 per barrel next year, according to French bank Natixis.

    Hittle cautioned that low price levels could slow down US shale energy production and make room for returning supplies from Iran — provided that global energy demand does not falter.

    “When we look at fundamentals (of supply and demand) in the next year, with prices at this level we do expect to see a much slower growth in US oil supply,” she said.

    “So there might actually be some room for Iranian production to start up, as long as oil demand growth holds up and continues.”

  • Thai man arrested for electrocuting three elephants

    The three pachyderms — one male and two females — were found dead on Wednesday near a village pond outside Kaeng Krachan national park in Prachuap Khiri Khan province.

    Police initially thought they had been poisoned by eating pesticide-sprayed crops but they now believe the animals were electrocuted.

    Local farmer Sompong Yapakdi, 46, has confessed to putting electrified wire around the village pond to stop the elephants accessing the water.

    “He said he used wire to circle the reservoir to prevent the elephants from jumping into the pond,” Major Naruepanat Nujui of Ban Nong Plub police told AFP by telephone.

    “He faces charges of killing an endangered or protected animal which carried up to four years jail terms or a 40,000 baht ($1,170) fine,” he added.

    Police gave the elephant ages as 10, 5 and 2.

    Thailand has roughly 2,500 wild and 4,000 domesticated elephants.

    Those in the wild are usually found in national parks but clashes with locals outside those sanctuaries are not uncommon with impoverished farmers keen to protect their crops.

    Much of the country is currently experiencing one of the worst droughts in living memory with water for agricultural use restricted.

    Last month a domesticated elephant killed a 28-year-old man and injured his colleague as they were eating dinner at a beachside restaurant in the country’s east. – AFP