Amsterdam struggles to evade ban on dope-smoking tourists

























AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – The mayor of Amsterdam may be unable to deliver on his promise to scrap the ban on tourists visiting the city’s marijuana-selling coffee shops, the Dutch justice ministry said on Friday.


Dope smokers were relieved this week when mayor Eberhard van der Laan said the coffee shops would remain open to foreigners.





















The conservative national government that lost power in September had pledged that only locals would be allowed to buy “weed” in coffee shops from the beginning of next year.


Amsterdam’s marijuana cafes and bars attract millions of tourists and the outgoing government‘s impending ban on foreigners met strong resistance from businesses.


“We understand that the policy of the central government is to have one policy for the entire country,” said a spokeswoman for the city.


“But Amsterdam’s situation is very different from the rest of the country’s, because we have so many tourists.”


The mayor’s promise has, however, ruffled feathers in The Hague, the seat of Dutch government, and the spat will determine whether decades of Dutch drug tolerance continue.


The two parties forming the Netherlands’ next government want to allow cities to circumvent the national ban implemented by the former government, which included the Christian Democrats.


But the justice ministry said there was no guarantee the law would change to accommodate Amsterdam’s concerns.


“The coalition agreement says that tourists will be banned from coffee shops in the whole country,” a spokeswoman said. “What accommodation there will be for local requirements has not yet been finalized.”


Last year’s ban followed government claims that cannabis had become stronger and more dangerous and that coffee shops had criminal links.


“The mayor knows that closing the coffee shops will lead to all kinds of problems,” said Laurens Buijs, a sociologist at the University of Amsterdam. “Mayors know that the government’s ideological approach is not really helping.”


For decades, the Netherlands has been known as a haven of tolerance for soft drugs, attracting tourists from around the world to its 700 coffee shops.


But that tolerance has drawn complaints from residents who say the influx of cannabis lovers brings congestion and crime.


Local authorities argue the ban will not only hit the economy, but will encourage illegal street dealers and push up crime rates.


(Reporting By Thomas Escritt; Editing by Anthony Deutsch and Robert Woodward)


Medications/Drugs News Headlines – Yahoo! News



Read More..

RBS sees PPI bill rise by £400m


























Royal Bank of Scotland has set aside a further £400m to cover the cost of claims for mis-sold payment protection insurance (PPI).





















It takes the bank’s total charges for PPI mis-selling to £1.7bn.


The figures were disclosed as RBS reported a pre-tax loss of £1.26bn for the three months to 30 September, against a £2bn profit a year earlier.


Despite the losses, chief executive Stephen Hester said that RBS was “making progress”.


The bank, which is 80%-owned by the UK government, has also set aside another £50m to cover the cost of compensation of the recent computer systems failure that hit customers.


The bank’s bill for the computer glitch, which locked many RBS, NatWest and Ulster Bank customers out of their accounts, now totals £175m.


On Wednesday, Lloyds Banking Group revealed a fresh £1bn provision for PPI claims. Along with the RBS provision, the bill for the big UK banks of the PPI scandal is now stands at £10.8bn. According to consumers’ association Which? the total figure including other financial firms, such as credit card companies, is now £12.7bn.


RBS also warned on Friday that it could be hit with stiff penalties over any involvement in the alleged manipulation of the Libor inter-bank lending rate.


The bank is being investigated by regulators in the UK, Asia and in the US, with the fraud division of the US Department of Justice also looking into the matter.


RBS bank said it expected to enter into negotiations to settle some Libor investigations in the “near term”, and that although the size of any fine was uncertain it could be big enough to have a “material” impact.


The mis-selling and other charges overshadowed underlying progress at the bank. RBS’s operating profits for the third quarter were £1bn, up from a £650m profit in the second quarter. Bad-debt losses fell by £159m from the second quarter to £1.2bn.


Staff costs were 5% lower than in the second quarter at £1.9bn, with headcount down by 9,900, or 7%, on a year earlier.


‘Reputational issues’


RBS re-stated that its restructuring after a near-collapse during the global financial crisis was on track would be completed in the next 18 months.


Mr Hester said: “The extraordinary challenges which RBS faced following the financial crisis are being worked through successfully.


“The five year restructuring plan is now in its later stages with important work still to do, including an emphasis on dealing with reputational issues now that the bank’s safety and soundness has advanced so well.”


He said that RBS “too often came to be seen” as putting the short-term interests of shareholders and staff ahead of customers, and promised to reverse the balance.


Analyst Richard Hunter, head of equities at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “There is no doubting the immensity of the task RBS has faced in executing its turnaround plan, nor indeed the progress made so far.”


Despite the furore over bank lending to small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs), RBS maintained that its record was strong.


In the third quarter gross new lending increased by 3% compared with the second quarter. Overall gross new lending for the first nine months of 2012 was £62.9bn to UK businesses, of which £28.6bn was to SME customers.


However, RBS said there was a 25% fall in SME loan applications in the third quarter, compared with the same three months in 2011. This was due, the bank said, to uncertainty over UK economic growth and the effect of the Olympics.


RBS shares, which rose sharply on Thursday, were 1% lower in morning trading.


BBC News – Business



Read More..

Syrian rebels kill 28 soldiers, several executed

























BEIRUT (Reuters) – Anti-government rebels killed 28 soldiers on Thursday in attacks on three army checkpoints around Saraqeb, a town on Syria’s main north-south highway, a monitoring group said.


Some of the dead were shot after they had surrendered, according to video footage. Rebels berated them, calling them “Assad’s Dogs”, before firing round after round into their bodies as they lay on the ground.





















The highway linking the capital Damascus to the contested city of Aleppo, Syria’s commercial center, has been the scene of heavy fighting since rebels cut the road last month. Saraqeb lies about 40 km (25 miles) south of Aleppo


In other developments, China put forward a new initiative to resolve the 19-month-old conflict, including a phased, region-by-region ceasefire and the setting up of a transitional governing body.


A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said Beijing had made the proposal to international peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi – whose own call for a truce over the Muslim holiday of Eid was largely ignored by both sides.


The United States meanwhile has called for an overhaul of Syria’s opposition leadership, signaling a break with the largely foreign-based Syrian National Council to bring in more credible figures.


A meeting in Qatar next week of foreign powers backing the rebels will be an opportunity to broaden the coalition against President Bashar al-Assad, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in Zagreb on Wednesday.


The United States and its allies have struggled for months to craft a credible opposition coalition, while Assad has counted on the support of Russia, Iran and, to a lesser extent, China. International efforts to end the violence have all foundered.


More than 32,000 people have been killed since protests against Assad, an Alawite who succeeded his late father Hafez in ruling the mostly Sunni Muslim country, first broke out on city streets. The revolt has since degenerated into full-scale civil war, with the government forces relying heavily on artillery and air strikes to thwart the rebels.


CHECKPOINT ATTACKS


The army has lost swathes of land in Idlib and Aleppo provinces but is fighting to control towns along supply routes to Aleppo city, where its forces are fighting in many districts.


The head of the pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdelrahman, said two of the attacked checkpoints at Saraqeb were on the Damascus-Aleppo highway. The third was near a road linking Aleppo with Latakia, a port city still mostly controlled Assad’s forces.


“The rebels will not stay at the checkpoints for long as Syrian warplanes normally bomb positions after rebels move in,” Abdelrahman said.


Five rebels died in the fighting and at least 20 soldiers were killed at the third site, including those shot after surrendering, he said.


The video footage showed a group of petrified men, some bleeding, lying on the ground as rebels walked around, kicking and stamping on their captives.


One of the captured men says: “I swear I didn’t shoot anyone” to which a rebel responds: “Shut up you animal … Gather them for me.” Then the men are shot dead.


Reuters could not independently verify the footage.


The Observatory said the al Qaeda-inspired Jabhat al-Nusra rebel group was responsible for the executions.


Islamist rebel units are growing in prominence in the war – a cause for concern for international powers as they weigh up what kind of support to give the opposition.


U.S. President Barack Obama’s administration has said it is not providing arms to internal opponents of Assad and is limiting its aid to non-lethal humanitarian assistance. It concedes, however, that some of its allies are providing lethal assistance.


Russia and China have blocked three U.N. Security Council resolutions aimed at increasing pressure on the Assad government, leading the United States and its allies to say they could move beyond U.N. structures for their next steps.


China has been strongly criticized by some Arab countries for failing to take a stronger stance on the conflict. Beijing has urged the Assad government to talk to the opposition and take steps to meet demands for political change.


“More and more countries have come to realize that a military option offers no way out, and a political settlement has become an increasingly shared aspiration,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said in Beijing.


He said China’s new proposal was aimed at building international consensus and supporting peace envoy Brahimi’s mediation efforts.


(Additional reporting by Ayat Basma, Laila Bassam and Dominic Evans in Beirut and Terril Yue Jones in Beijing; Writing by Oliver Holmes; Editing by Angus MacSwan)


World News Headlines – Yahoo! News



Read More..

Researchers Predict Twitter Trends With 95% Accuracy [STUDY]

























Researchers at MIT say they’ve created an algorithm for Twitter that predicts trending topics better than the site’s existing equation.


[More from Mashable: Explore Obama and Romney’s Most Engaging Tweets With This Map]





















Associate Professor Devavrat Shah and student Stanislav Nikolov say their new algorithm predicts trending topics with 95% accuracy an average of 90 minutes faster than Twitter — sometimes, as early as five hours before.


[More from Mashable: Scared Twitless: Our Favorite 140-Character Halloween Stories]


The algorithm combs through a large sample of tweets — some that trended well, and some that didn’t — and compares the data to new information to see if there are any patterns. If new tweets look like older tweets that have trended, then there’s a chance a new trend is being formed. Simple.


The equation could be applied to anything that changes over time, the researchers say, like the stock market, movie ticket prices or the duration of a bus ride. For Twitter, the data could prove beneficial to advertisers looking to market a certain topic or trend.


Check out the video above to learn more. What other trends — on Twitter or otherwise — would you like to see better predicted? Tell us what you think.


Image courtesy of Flickr, shawncampbell.


This story originally published on Mashable here.


Social Media News Headlines – Yahoo! News



Read More..

Songwriter Bill Dees,”Oh, Pretty Woman” co-writer, dead at 73

























LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Singer-composer Bill Dees, best known for his songwriting collaboration with Roy Orbison on the hits “Oh, Pretty Woman” and “It’s Over,” has died at age 73 in Mountain Home, Arkansas, according to an obituary posted online by a local funeral home.


Dees, a Texas native who got his start in the 1950s with a high school band called the Five Bops, is credited with writing scores of songs in all, some recorded by such performers as Johnny Cash, Loretta Lynn and Glen Campbell.





















But Dees’ most fruitful collaboration was his work with fellow Texan Orbison, with whom he teamed up to write Orbison’s signature 1964 hit, “Oh, Pretty Woman.” which was featured years later in the soundtrack to the movie “Pretty Woman,” starring Julia Roberts and Richard Gere.


The band Van Halen also scored a hit with a cover version of “Oh, Pretty Woman.”


According to various accounts, the song’s refrain grew out of an offhand comment Dees made when Orbison’s wife, Claudette, walked into the room where the two men were writing together, and Orbison asked her if she needed any money.


Dees cracked, “Pretty woman never needs any money,” and the song took shape from there, with the bulk of the composition coming together in less than hour.


As recounted in one biography posted on Dees’ official website, Dees also contributed uncredited harmony vocals on the record.


“Oh, Pretty Woman” went to No. 1 in United States and topped the charts in Britain, as did the 1964 Orbison ballad co-written by Dees, “It’s Over,” a considerable achievement given the dominance of the Beatles and other British groups on both sides of the Atlantic at the time.


Other Orbison singles Dees co-wrote included “Born on the Wind,” “Crawling Back,” “Communication Breakdown,” “Walk On,” “Windsurfer” and “So This Is Love.”


Dees died last week, on October 24, at Mountain Home, where he had lived since 1989, according to an announcement posted on the website of the Kirby & Family Funeral Home, where a memorial service is scheduled for Saturday, November 3.


(Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Eric Walsh and W Simon)


Celebrity News Headlines – Yahoo! News



Read More..

Floods render NYC hospitals powerless

























NEW YORK (AP) — There are few places in the U.S. where hospitals have put as much thought and money into disaster planning as New York. And yet two of the city’s busiest, most important medical centers failed a fundamental test of readiness during Superstorm Sandy this week: They lost power.


Their backup generators failed, or proved inadequate. Nearly 1,000 patients had to be evacuated.





















The closures led to dramatic scenes of doctors carrying patients down dark stairwells, nurses operating respirators by hand, and a bucket brigade of National Guard troops hauling fuel to rooftop generators in a vain attempt to keep the electricity on.


Both hospitals, NYU Langone Medical Center and Bellevue Hospital Center, were still trying to figure out exactly what led to the power failures Thursday, but the culprit appeared to be the most common type of flood damage there is: water in the basement.


While both hospitals put their generators on high floors where they could be protected in a flood, other critical components of the backup power system, such as fuel pumps and tanks, remained in basements just a block from the East River.


Both hospitals had fortified that equipment against floods within the past few years, but the water — which rushed with tremendous force — found a way in.


“This reveals to me that we have to be much more imaginative and detail-oriented in our planning to make sure hospitals are as resilient as they need to be,” said Irwin Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health.


The problem of unreliable backup electricity at hospitals is nothing new.


Over the first six months of the year, 23 percent of the hospitals inspected by the Joint Commission, a health care facility accreditation group, were found to be out of compliance with standards for backup power and lighting, according to a spokesman.


Power failures crippled New Orleans hospitals after Hurricane Katrina. The backup generator failed at a hospital in Stafford Springs, Conn., after the remnants of Hurricane Irene blew through the state in 2011. Hospitals in Houston were crippled when Tropical Storm Allison flooded their basements and knocked out electrical equipment in 2001.


When the Northeast was hit with a crippling blackout in 2003, the backup power at several of New York City’s hospitals failed or performed poorly. Generators malfunctioned or overheated. Fuel ran out too quickly. Even where the backup systems worked, they provided electricity to only some parts of the hospital and left others in the dark.


Afterward, a mayoral task force recommended upgrading testing standards for generators and requiring backup plans for blood banks and health care facilities that provide dialysis treatment.


Alan Aviles, president of New York City’s Health and Hospitals Corp., which operates Bellevue, said that after a scare last summer when Hurricane Irene threatened to cause flooding, Bellevue put its basement-level fuel pumps in flood-resistant chambers.


It still isn’t clear whether water breached those defenses, but when an estimated 17 million gallons of water rushed through loading docks and into the hospital’s 1-million-square-foot basement, the fuel feed to the generators stopped working. The floodwaters also knocked out the hospital’s elevators.


For two days, National Guardsmen carried fuel to the generators, but conditions inside the hospital for patients and staff deteriorated anyway. The generators were designed to supply only 30 percent of the usual electrical load at the hospital, leaving a lot of equipment and labs hobbled. The hospital also lost all water pressure on Tuesday. Nearly 700 patients had been evacuated by Thursday afternoon.


“The precautions we had taken to date had served us well,” Aviles said. “But Mother Nature can always up the stakes.”


NYU Langone Medical Center had also tried to armor itself against floods.


All seven of the generators providing backup power to the parts of the hospital involved in patient care are only a few years old and are on higher floors. The fuel tank is in a watertight vault. New fuel pumps were installed just this year in a pump house upgraded to withstand a high flood, said the hospital’s vice president of facilities operation, Richard Cohen.


“The medical center invested quite a bit of money to upgrade the facility,” he said.


The pump house remained “bone dry,” Cohen said. But water shoved aside plastic and plywood defenses and infiltrated the fuel vault, where sensors detected the potentially damaging liquid and shut the generators down. “The force of the surge that came in was unbelievable. It dislodged our additional protection and caused a breach of the vault as well,” Cohen said.


The power at NYU went out in a flash, leaving the staff scrambling to evacuate 300 patients with no notice.


Dr. Robert Berg, an obstetrician, said that when he lost power in his apartment, he went to the hospital to charge his cellphone and was stunned to find it in chaos.


“It didn’t really occur to me that the hospital was going to be in trouble,” he said. Even after finding the lobby dark, “I thought, ‘We’ll have power upstairs. We’re an operating room.’”


He wound up carrying two patients down flights of stairs on a “med sled.”


“There was a Category 1 outside and a Category 4 inside,” he said. “I can’t say that they were very well prepared for it.”


That has left only one hospital, Beth Israel Medical Center, functioning in the southern third of Manhattan. It is also on backup power, but brought in two huge new generators Thursday, just in case.


Aviles said Bellevue might be out of commission for at least two more weeks. NYU Langone’s generators are operating again, but the hospital is waiting for Consolidated Edison to restore its power before it starts taking patients again. That could happen in a matter of days.


Flooding may pose less of a danger to the hospital’s power supply in the future. Construction is under way on a new power plant, at a cost of more than $ 200 million, that will run on natural gas and supply all the hospital’s power needs.


“It’s a tremendous facility, with a lot of hardening built into it,” Cohen said.


___


AP Medical Writer Mike Stobbe contributed to this report.


Health News Headlines – Yahoo! News



Read More..

Shell CFO says weak Europe economy “all around us”

























LONDON (Reuters) – Europe‘s top oil company Royal Dutch Shell is seeing signs of a weak European economy “all around us,” the company’s finance director Simon Henry said during a third-quarter results conference call on Thursday.


He was making the comment in the context of strong refining margins in the quarter, which he said were more the result of supply disruptions than any strength in actual demand.





















(Reporting by Andrew Callus; Editing by David Goodman)


Economy News Headlines – Yahoo! News



Read More..

Mexico’s Day of Dead brings memories of missing

























MEXICO CITY (AP) — Maria Elena Salazar refuses to set out plates of her missing son’s favorite foods or orange flowers as offerings for the deceased on Mexico‘s Day of the Dead, even though she hasn’t seen him in three-and-a-half years.


The 50-year-old former teacher is convinced that Hugo Gonzalez Salazar, a university graduate in marketing who worked for a telephone company, is still alive and being forced to work for a drug cartel because of his skills.





















“The government, the authorities, they know it, that the gangs took them away to use as forced labor,” said Salazar of her then 24-year-old son, who disappeared in the northern city of Torreon in July 2009.


The Day of the Dead — when Mexicans traditionally visit the graves of dead relatives and leave offerings of flowers, food and candy skulls — is a difficult time for the families of the thousands of Mexicans who have disappeared amid a wave of drug-fueled violence.


With what activists call a mix of denial, hope and desperation, they refuse to dedicate altars on the Nov. 1-2 holiday to people often missing for years. They won’t accept any but the most certain proof of death, and sometimes reject even that.


Numbers vary on just how many people have disappeared in recent years. Mexico’s National Human Rights Commission says 24,000 people have been reported missing between 2000 and mid-2012, and that nearly 16,000 bodies remain unidentified.


But one thing is clear: just as there are households without Day of the Dead altars, there are thousands of graves of the unidentified dead scattered across the country, with no one to remember them.


An investigation conducted by the newspaper Milenio this week, involving hundreds of information requests to state and municipal governments, indicates that 24,102 unidentified bodies were buried in paupers’ or common graves in Mexican cemeteries since 2006. The number is almost certainly incomplete, since some local governments refused to provide figures, Milenio reported.


And while the number of unidentified dead probably includes some indigents, Central American migrants or dead unrelated to the drug war, it is clear that cities worst hit by the drug conflict also usually showed a corresponding bulge in the number of unidentified cadavers. For example, Mexico City, which has been relatively unscathed by drug violence, listed about one-third as many unidentified burials as the city of Veracruz, despite the fact that Mexico City’s population is about 15 times larger.


Consuelo Morales , who works with dozens of families of disappeared in the northern city of Monterrey, said that “holidays like this, that are family affairs and are very close to our culture, stir a lot of things up” for the families. But many refuse to accept the deaths of their loved ones, sometimes even after DNA testing confirms a match with a cadaver.


“They’ll say to you, ‘I’m not going to put up an altar, because they’re not dead,” Martinez noted. “Their thinking is that ‘until they prove to me that my child is dead, he is alive.”


Martinez says one family she works with at the Citizens in Support of Human Rights center had refused to accept their son was dead, even after three rounds of DNA testing and the exhumation of the remains.


“It was their son, he was very young, and he had been burned alive,” Martinez said by way of explanation.


The refusal to accept what appears inevitable may be a matter of desperation. Martinez said some families in Monterrey also believe their missing relatives are being held as virtual slaves for the cartels, even though federal prosecutors say they have never uncovered any kind of drug cartel forced-labor camp, in the six years since Mexico launched an offensive against the cartels.


But many people like Salazar believe it must be true. “Organized crime is a business, but it can’t advertise for employees openly, so it has to take them by force,” Salazar said.


While she refuses to erect an altar-like offering for her son, she does perform other rituals that mirror the Day of the Dead customs, like the one that involves scattering a trail of flower petals to the doorsteps of houses to guide spirits of the departed back home once a year.


Salazar and her family still live in the same home in Torreon, though they’d like to move, in the hopes that Hugo will return there. They pray three times a day for God to guide him home.


“We live in the same place, and we try to do the same things we used to,” said Salazar, “because he is going to come back to his place, his home, and we have to be waiting for him.”


Mistrust of officials has risen to such a point that some families may never get an answer they’ll accept.


The problem is that, with forensics procedures often sadly lacking in Mexican police forces, the dead my never be connected with the living, which is the whole point of the Mexican traditions.


“As long as the authorities don’t prove the opposite, for us they’re still alive,” Salazar said. “Let them prove it, but let us have some certainty, not just the authorities saying ‘here he is.’ We don’t the government to just give us bodies that aren’t theirs, and that has happened.”


Latin America News Headlines – Yahoo! News



Read More..

“The Details” Review: airless all-star comedy is devilishly dull

























LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – The devil is in “The Details,” but only in that this smug and airless comedy feels like 91 minutes in hell. The first few minutes promise a Rube Goldberg whirligig of bad behavior, unhappy coincidences and plain old rotten luck, but all writer-director Jacob Aaron Estes (“Mean Creek”) can deliver is a group of jerks acting like jerks.


If there were any recognizable human beings on screen, this might have delivered the sort of squirmy, uncomfortable laughs that have sustained “Curb Your Enthusiasm” through multiple seasons, but the perpetrators and victims here are all such smug, dull caricatures that none of the intended satirical barbs have anywhere to land.





















Tobey Maguire stars as Jeff, a doctor who’s seemingly got the perfect house and perfect nuclear family with his wife Nealy (Elizabeth Banks) and their young son. Unfortunately, their newly-sodded backyard attracts the attention of (metaphor alert!) raccoons. Things get worse when the couple tries expanding the house to accommodate a new child, since the noise, dust and code violations all stoke the mania of their crazy-cat-lady neighbor Lila (Laura Linney).


Over the course of the film, Jeff commits horrible acts (including cheating on his wife with two different women and accidentally poisoning one of Lila’s cats) and generous ones (donating a kidney to a friend in need), and Estes delights in showing the universe punishing and rewarding Jeff purely at random, with no connection to either his sins or his good deeds.


Estes fails, however, to write any real characters, so we have a cast of talented performers trying to breathe life into people with all the depth of chess pieces. Besides Maguire (whose tendency to recede into himself is in full effect here), Banks and Linney, there’s also Kerry Washington, Dennis Haysbert and Ray Liotta trying valiantly to be more than pegs in this plot (which is less elaborate than we’re led to believe) but ultimately they are given nothing to play, nothing to do, no one to inhabit.


Ultimately, “The Details” feels frenetic when it wants to be fast-paced, and facile when it aims for some grand statement about the randomness of existence and the bitter irony of the good falling short while the evil flourish. Rarely funny, never deep and consistently exasperating, it’ll have you cheering for the raccoons.


Movies News Headlines – Yahoo! News



Read More..

Republican candidate calls aborting rapist’s child ‘more violence on woman’s body’

























OLYMPIA, Washington (Reuters) – Tea Party politician John Koster, the Republican nominee for a hotly contested congressional seat in Washington state, says he opposes abortions, even in cases of “the rape thing,” because it is tantamount to inflicting “more violence onto a woman’s body.”


The Snohomish County councilman made the comments during a weekend fundraising appearance in the Puget Sound city of Everett, north of Seattle, that was captured in a recording released on Wednesday by the liberal activist group Fuse Washington.





















Long known as an opponent of abortion, even in cases of rape or incest, Koster was asked if there were any circumstances under which he would approve of terminating a pregnancy.


“When a mother’s life is in danger … I’m not going to make that decision,” he replied, before going on to talk about incest and rape.


“Incest is so rare, I mean, it’s so rare. But the rape thing, you know, I know a woman who was raped and kept her child, gave it up for adoption. She doesn’t regret it. In fact, she is a big pro-life proponent,” he said in the recording.


He continued by asking a rhetorical question: “But on the rape thing, it’s like, how does putting more violence onto a woman’s body and taking the life of an innocent child that’s a consequence of this crime, how does that make it better?”


The remarks drew sharp criticism from the campaign of his Democratic foe, former Microsoft executive and state revenue director Suzan DelBene – a spokesman said it showed Koster to be “out of touch” – and from abortion-rights supporters.


“There are far too many extreme politicians out there that are trying to be involved in a woman’s personal medical decisions about her pregnancy,” Sara Kiesler of Planned Parenthood Votes Northwest told the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.


The flap marked the latest instance of a Republican congressional candidate stirring controversy with comments about abortion and rape.


Richard Mourdock, the Republican nominee for a U.S. Senate seat in Indiana, said during a debate last Tuesday that pregnancy from rape was “something that God intended to happen.” And Missouri U.S. Senate candidate Todd Akin in August caused an uproar by saying women have natural defenses against pregnancy from “legitimate rape.”


In a statement posted on its website on Wednesday, Koster’s campaign accused DelBene supporters of engaging in “dirty tricks” by circulating the recording of his remarks, and suggested his words were taken out of context.


“The recording was done secretly, then edited to suit DelBene’s agenda,” campaign manager Larry Stickney said. “The insinuation that John Koster is in some way ‘callous or ‘cavalier’ when it comes to the subject of rape is another example of the vicious and desperate tactics … employed to slander the good name of John Koster.”


During his term as a state lawmaker, Koster sponsored tough “two strikes, you’re out” legislation to lock up violent sex offenders permanently, his website said.


The race between Koster and DelBene for Washington state’s newly drawn first congressional district seat, vacated by Democrat Jay Inslee when he resigned to run for governor, is considered a tossup.


Koster, a former dairy farmer with close affiliations with and support from the Tea Party movement, has lost two previous bids for the U.S. House of Representatives.


(Additional reporting and writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Eric Walsh)


Health News Headlines – Yahoo! News



Read More..