Thursday, 16 October 2014

Ebola‬ patient was on a flight with 132 people

‪#‎BREAKING‬: The CDC confirms that the new ‪#‎Ebola‬ patient was on a flight with 132 people the day before her diagnosis. It was a Frontier Airlines flight from Cleveland to Dallas. ANYONE who was on that flight is asked to call 1 (800)-CDC-INFO. Please get the word out. Here's the latest:

EBOLA LATEST:

EBOLA LATEST: The plane that transported an Ebola-infected nurse from Cleveland to Dallas was cleaned and put back into service the next day, according to Frontier Airlines

HTC launches ‘selfie’ smartphone, new camera

Manila airport tops world's worst airport list

Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia) of Manila has yet again made it to the top of the 10 worst airports list, according to a US website.

Enhanced Ebola screening begins at London airport

Officials at London’s Heathrow International Airport are beginning to screening passengers who are arriving from west African nations for symptoms of the deadly virus, Time Magazine reports
The move comes on the heels of a similar decision to launch extra Ebola checks at five major U.S. airports last week in the face of concern among airline passengers about the possibility of catching the disease during a commercial flight. 
Like its U.S. counterparts, London’s Heathrow airport will require check the temperature of passengers who are arriving from west African nations and require them to complete questionnaires about their travel histories, according to the report. 
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The checks are an attempt to reassure passengers about the safety of flying without ban flights to west Africa entirely, which has been suggested by several lawmakers in Washington. 
Health officials in the U.S. and internationally have said that a travel ban would stunt relief efforts in the west African region, and airline officials have label such a move “draconian.” 

In glorious sunshine, the Goodwood Revival opened in 2011 with an array of pre-1966 Jaguars.

Russia pitches undersea gas pipeline to Japan

TAKAYUKI TANAKA, Nikkei staff writer
MOSCOW -- Russia has proposed building a pipeline to transport natural gas to Japan, an offer apparently aimed at strengthening economic ties between the two countries amid stiff economic sanctions imposed on Moscow by the West. 
     The plan to connect the gas-rich Russian island of Sakhalin with the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido was presented last month, according to diplomatic sources. This would mark the first pipeline between Japan and another country.
     Russian President Vladimir Putin and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe could discuss the proposal when they meet on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Beijing on Nov. 10 and Nov. 11.
     By dangling low-priced Russian gas to Japan, Russia seems to be trying to drive a wedge between Group of Seven members as they turn up the pressure on Moscow over Ukraine.
     But some in the Japanese government are cautious about entering into a new energy deal with Russia as relations continue to worsen between Moscow and Washington, a key ally of Tokyo.
     "Construction of a pipeline will depend on the Ukraine issue and negotiations over the Northern Territories," a senior official in the Japanese foreign ministry said, referring to the Russian-controlled islands claimed by Japan.

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A body has been found in a Lufthansa A340’s landing gear at Frankfurt airport

  A dead body has been found in the undercarriage of a Lufthansa aircraft that arrived at #Frankfurt airport from Tehran. German newspaper B...