Nato Strike Kills At Least 21 Afghan Civilians – Update

A NATO airstrike in southern Afghanistan has killed at least 21 civilians, the Afghan Interior Ministry said Monday. NATO forces confirmed in a statement that its planes fired Sunday on a group of vehicles that it believed contained insurgents who were about to attack its forces, only to discover later that women and children were in the cars. NATO did not provide a figure of how many died or say if all those in the vehicles were civilians.... [more]

Cyber security tops IT priority list

Three-quarters of companies have suffered an attack in the past 12 months at an average cost of over £1m each, making cyber security the biggest concern for IT departments, according to a new wide-ranging survey from security giant Symantec released today. The vendor interviewed over 2,000 small, medium and large enterprises from various industries across the globe to compile its first State of Enterprise Security report. Some 42 per cent... [more]

British Airways will face a renewed threat of strikes by its cabin crew

British Airways will face a renewed threat of strikes by its cabin crew when the result of a ballot is announced. Around 12,000 members of Unite are expected to show strong support for industrial action. They have been voting again on whether to launch a campaign of action in a row over jobs, pay and working conditions, including cuts in crew numbers. The cabin crew were due to take 12 days of strike action over Christmas but British Airways... [more]

Today in History – 22nd FEB.

Today is Monday, Feb. 22, the 53rd day of 2010. There are 312 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Feb. 22, 1980, the “Miracle on Ice” occurred in Lake Placid, N.Y. as the United States Olympic hockey team upset the Soviets, 4-3. (The U.S. team went on to win the gold medal.) On this date: In 1732 (New Style date), the first president of the United States, George Washington, was born inWestmoreland... [more]

U.S. analyst unearth code writer ID’s behind Google attack

U.S. government analysts believe a Chinese man with government links wrote the key part of a spyware program used in hacker attacks on Google last year, the Financial Times reported Monday. The man, a security consultant in his 30s, posted sections of the program to a hacking forum where he described it as something he was “working on,” the paper said, quoting an unidentified researcher working for the U.S. government. The... [more]

LUFTHANSA pilots have begun a four-day strike

LUFTHANSA pilots have begun a four-day strike in a bitter dispute over job guarantees, grounding a predicted two-thirds of its 800 daily flights and causing chaos at German airports. The German flag carrier, already reeling from years of upheaval in the global airline sector, has estimated that its biggest walkout in nine years will cost it around €65 million ($98.43 million). Worst hit will be Lufthansa’s Frankfurt hub, Europe’s... [more]

A Eurostar train with 740 passengers on board has become stranded

A Eurostar train with 740 passengers on board has become stranded in the cross-channel firm’s latest service breakdown. The London bound train from the French capital broke down just outside Ashford in Kent. Eurostar blamed the stoppage on a “major technical problem”. A passenger told Sky News it first became clear there was a problem when the train came to a stop and the lights went out. Describing conditions on board,... [more]

Space shuttle Endeavour lands in Florida after two-week trip to International Space Station

Endeavour and its six astronauts returned safely to Earth on Sunday, making a rare nighttime landing to end a mission that resulted in the virtual completion of the International Space Station. The shuttle’s on-time arrival took some by surprise. All day, forecasters said rain and clouds probably would scuttle any touchdown attempts. But the rain stayed away and the sky cleared just in time. Mission Control waited until the last... [more]

Worries over the 172,000 jobs – the Japanese auto giant Toyota Corp. says

The US Congress this week takes aim at Toyota’s safety woes, an election-year probe tempered by worries over the 172,000 jobs the Japanese auto giant says are tied to its US operations. Already, elected officials in states where the world’s number one carmaker is an economic heavyweight have warned against a “rush to judgment” while underlining that consumer safety is their top priority. Toyota, in a multi-billion-dollar... [more]

President Rene Preval says Haiti death toll could reach 300,000

The death toll from last month’s devastating earthquake in Haiti could jump to 300,000 people, including the bodies buried under collapsed buildings in the capital, Haitian President Rene Preval said on Sunday. “You have seen the images you are familiar with the pictures. More than 200,000 bodies were collected on the streets without counting those that are still under the rubble,” Preval told a meeting of Latin American... [more]

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