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Suicide Plane Crash 'Difficult To Predict'

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 28 Maret 2015 | 22.57

No amount of personality tests could necessarily have prevented co-pilot Andreas Lubitz from crashing a passenger plane in the French Alps, an expert has told Sky News.

Such "incredibly rare" events could not always be predicted, said aviation psychologist Professor Robert Bor.

He suggested in the Lubitz case, the 27-year-old's problems had gone "below the radar" and he was able to conceal his mental illness.

And this appears to be borne out following the revelation by German prosecutors that Lubitz had a sick note for the day of the crash, in which 150 died.

This was found torn-up along with medical documents during searches of Lubitz's flat in Dusseldorf and the home he shared with his parents in the town of Montabaur.

:: Click here for live updates of the Alps plane crash investigation

While it was not routine for pilots to undertake regular psychometric testing, Prof Bor said: "When we are looking at incredibly rare events such as this no amount of that kind of scrutiny will necessarily pick up every single person who is at risk or susceptible."

He also cautioned that tighter rules and tougher tests likely to be introduced in the wake of the disaster, will not necessarily improve safety.

"It will probably improve our sense of safety," he said.

"With very rare events we can't always predict them with 100% accuracy."

Prof Bor told Sky News: "It's incredibly rare and in fact the number of cases in the last 25 years involving commercial jets is probably no more than half a dozen."

The fact he took time off with depression while in pilot training back in 2009 did not necessarily indicate his future behaviour, he added.

"Many people in the general population, pilots as well, occasionally are going to have periods of low moods and anxiety and this may be temporary it may not be something that is lasting," Prof Bor said.

"On the other hand all of us can change.

"Within a matter of days, weeks, there could be a bad trigger event in our life."

A relationship break-up or a dispute at work may "have just tipped him over and turned somebody who might have a depressive illness into somebody who was very despairing and very angry".

"Because that's usually what can lead to or trigger a suicidal act in an individual," he said.

Prof Bor said: "Pilots as an occupational group are very closely scrutinised really from the time they enter flight school to really the last flight that they are on.

"At any moment they are being closely observed, their actions, their behaviour, their communication patterns and so on are being monitored in some kind of way.

"On top of that they undergo rigorous medical tests at least once a year, sometimes twice a year depending on the kind of aircraft they are flying.

"And of course each time they are flying they are being watched by their co-pilots, by the dispatcher when they leave the stand.

"And they are also subject to random drug and alcohol testing as well.

"So the chances of these sort of things happening are very rare.

"And one can only think in this particular case his problem went literally below the radar. He was able to conceal it in some kind of way.

"Unless it was, as we might come to discover, apparent to the airline that he was having some kind of difficulties but for whatever reason they were not implementing the standard cut-offs which are when pilots have significant psychological stress they definitely shouldn't be flying."


22.57 | 0 komentar | Read More

Andreas Lubitz: Profile Of Killer Co-Pilot

The co-pilot who deliberately crashed a plane in the French Alps with the loss of 150 lives had a history of depression, it has been reported.

The focus on Andreas Lubitz's mental health comes after a French prosecutor concluded the 27-year-old had deliberately flown the Germanwings Airbus 320 into the mountainside killing all those on board.

German prosecutors have said there are indications the co-pilot concealed an illness from his employer, hiding a sick note for the day of the crash.

However, they did not specify the nature of the illness.

Matthias Gebauer, chief correspondent for the online edition of German newspaper Der Spiegel, tweeted: "Schoolmates of co-pilot who crashed tell German reporters he took six-months break from flight training in 2009 due to burnout-syndrome."

The head of Lufthansa, the budget airline's parent company, has already admitted Lubitz had taken the lengthy break from training.

While chief executive Carsten Spohr did not give a reason for this interruption, German media reported he was suffering from "burnout or depression".

Mr Spohr said: "I cannot tell you anything about the reasons of this interruption, but anybody who interrupts the training has to do a lot of tests so the competence and fitness would be checked again."

According to Lufthansa, Germanwings pilots undergo medical tests once a year.

However, they are only required to undergo psychological tests once, before they are accepted as pilots.

Lubitz also underwent a regular security check on 27 January and nothing untoward was found, the local government in Dusseldorf said.

Previous security checks in 2008 and 2010 also revealed no problems.

Lubitz had grown up dreaming of becoming a pilot, gaining his glider's licence after training with LSC Westerwald flying club in his hometown of Montabaur.

Club member Peter Ruecker recalled Lubitz as "rather quiet but friendly" when he first joined the club as a teenager.

He added: "He was happy he had the job with Germanwings and he was doing well."

Lubitz had been employed as a flight attendant before training to be a pilot at the Lufthansa flight school in Bremen.

He also underwent training in Phoenix, Arizona.

Lubitz joined Germanwings in 2013 and had clocked up 630 flying hours before the disaster.

Lufthansa said he passed all the relevant examinations necessary to become a pilot and was deemed "100% airworthy".

Lubitz had also been included by the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on its database to show he had met or exceeded its pilot certification standards, which aim to "reduce pilot errors that lead to fatal crashes".

In Montabaur where Lubitz lived with his parents, neighbours reacted with disbelief when they heard of his involvement.

One man, who did not want to be named, said that he had known the pilot since childhood.

He told Sky News: "I cannot imagine that he has done it with intention.

"This does not fit in this picture I have of him. It is a very upright family, very helpful and I cannot understand what has happened.

"I knew the children when they were small boys."

Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin said Lubitz, who also had a flat in Dusseldorf, had never been flagged as a terrorist.

And when pressed over Lubitz's religion, he said: "I don't think this is where this lies. I don't think we will get any answers there."

Although rare, there have been previous instances of suspected pilot suicide.

The most infamous likely - but still disputed - cases of pilot suicide was the 1997 Silk Air crash in Indonesia, in which 104 people died.

A US-led investigation concluded it had been caused deliberately, probably by the captain who had serious personal problems.

A Mozambique Airlines plane crash that killed 33 people in Namibia in 2013 is also believed to have been a case of pilot suicide.


22.57 | 0 komentar | Read More

Drone-Style Systems Could Stop Future Crashes

Technology offers the hope that the Germanwings plane disaster will never happen again, experts have told Sky News.

Systems are already in place to fly unmanned planes from the ground, but they are currently only used in the military sphere.

French prosecutors have said that the captain of the Germanwings plane was locked out of the cockpit as Andreas Lupitz sent the Airbus A320 into a mountain in the French Alps.

In 2009, Honeywell was awarded a patent for a fly-by-wire system that could take control of a plane's cockpit controls and remotely pilot a commercial plane to prevent "unauthorised-flight" and maintain "stable flight".

It has been suggested that the system or others like it could have helped prevent not only the Germanwings disaster but also the disappearance of MH370 if there had been a way to alert ground staff to an on-board emergency.

Mischa Dohler, Head of King's College London's Centre for Telecommunications Research, told Sky News: "We have all the technology in place so the aircraft can talk to the ground directly or via the satellite link, so that is all possible. It's just a question of cost.

"At the end of the day, you just need to pay for the infrastructure or a data plan, in the same way as you might pay for your mobile phones.

"The airlines have to decide whether they are willing to invest that money to add that extra real-time safety to airplanes."

David Cummins, Head of Flight Operations at UMS Aerogroup and an expert on unmanned aircraft, said: "We not at the stage where we are talking about autonomous systems that will operate and look after the aircraft.

"We are talking about automated systems where ultimately man, an operator, will always be in the loop."

He told Sky News there are systems in existence that could keep a plane safer without requiring one to be controlled from the ground.

"We need a number of years (before) we will ever see the first unmanned commercial aircraft but there are checks and balances that can be put into play.

"You can look at collision avoidance - the Germanwings is an example - there is technology that exists and is in place that could help.

"There's also sense-and-avoid systems on aircraft that will also be the pilot's eyes on an aircraft. So there are a number of steps we can take.

"We are years away from doing it, but the technology exists and its about putting the time and effort and ultimately the finance.

"What the aviation industry is very good at is not knee-jerk reaction. You've got to remember that this is still an incredibly safe method of travel."


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Alps Crash Co-Pilot 'Planned Place In History'

Alps Crash Co-Pilot 'Planned Place In History'

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

A former girlfriend of the co-pilot accused of deliberately crashing a Germanwings plane is reported to have told how he suffered nightmares and once ominously woke up screaming: "We're going down!"

According to the Bild newspaper, the ex-lover of Andreas Lubitz, identified only as Mary W, said he had told her last year: "One day I will do something that will change the whole system, and then all will know my name and remember it."

She added: "I never knew what he meant, but now it makes sense."

The 26-year-old stewardess said Lubitz had been tormented by nightmares and his behaviour scared her.

"At night, he woke up and screamed: 'We're going down!', because he had nightmares. He knew how to hide from other people what was really going on inside," she told the paper.

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  1. Gallery: The Victims Of The Germanwings Crash

    American Emily Selke, a recent graduate, was on the plane with her mother Yvonne. Raymond Selke has described his wife and daughter as 'amazing people'. Pic: Facebook

Iranian sports journalist Hussein Javadi was on his way to Austria to cover a football match. A friend said he was 'a kind, loving, caring man'. Pic: Maysam Bizær/Hossein Javadi

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Argentinian Sebastian Greco was on board with his girlfriend. Pic: Facebook

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Argentinian Gabriela Maumus, 28, was the daughter of a firefighter. Pic: Facebook

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Spanish victim Carles Milla Masanas, 37. The businessman was on his way to a food industry fayre. Pic: Facebook

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Alps Crash Co-Pilot 'Planned Place In History'

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

A former girlfriend of the co-pilot accused of deliberately crashing a Germanwings plane is reported to have told how he suffered nightmares and once ominously woke up screaming: "We're going down!"

According to the Bild newspaper, the ex-lover of Andreas Lubitz, identified only as Mary W, said he had told her last year: "One day I will do something that will change the whole system, and then all will know my name and remember it."

She added: "I never knew what he meant, but now it makes sense."

The 26-year-old stewardess said Lubitz had been tormented by nightmares and his behaviour scared her.

"At night, he woke up and screamed: 'We're going down!', because he had nightmares. He knew how to hide from other people what was really going on inside," she told the paper.

1/16

  1. Gallery: The Victims Of The Germanwings Crash

    American Emily Selke, a recent graduate, was on the plane with her mother Yvonne. Raymond Selke has described his wife and daughter as 'amazing people'. Pic: Facebook

Iranian sports journalist Hussein Javadi was on his way to Austria to cover a football match. A friend said he was 'a kind, loving, caring man'. Pic: Maysam Bizær/Hossein Javadi

]]>

Argentinian Sebastian Greco was on board with his girlfriend. Pic: Facebook

]]>

Argentinian Gabriela Maumus, 28, was the daughter of a firefighter. Pic: Facebook

]]>

Spanish victim Carles Milla Masanas, 37. The businessman was on his way to a food industry fayre. Pic: Facebook

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22.57 | 0 komentar | Read More

UN Evacuates Staff As Warplanes Pound Yemen

UN Evacuates Staff As Warplanes Pound Yemen

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

The United Nations has evacuated its staff from the Yemeni capital Sanaa, as a Saudi-led air campaign pounds Shia rebel targets across the country.

Health officials said at least 54 people have died in the southern city Aden alone in the three-day bombardment by Saudi Arabia and its fellow Sunni-ruled allies.

A convoy of rebel fighters advancing on Aden was bombarded on Saturday, residents said.

Explosions at the city's biggest arms depot left at least nine badly injured, a health official said.

And warplanes targeted an airport in the rebel-held capital, according to residents and an official.

The air campaign is an attempt to restore President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who was ousted from Sanaa in September by the Shia rebels, known as the Houthis.

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  1. Gallery: Yemen: Aftermath Of Airstrikes By Saudi Arabia And Gulf Allies

    People search for survivors under the rubble of houses destroyed by an air strike near Sana'a Airport in Yemen. Continue through for more images

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UN Evacuates Staff As Warplanes Pound Yemen

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

The United Nations has evacuated its staff from the Yemeni capital Sanaa, as a Saudi-led air campaign pounds Shia rebel targets across the country.

Health officials said at least 54 people have died in the southern city Aden alone in the three-day bombardment by Saudi Arabia and its fellow Sunni-ruled allies.

A convoy of rebel fighters advancing on Aden was bombarded on Saturday, residents said.

Explosions at the city's biggest arms depot left at least nine badly injured, a health official said.

And warplanes targeted an airport in the rebel-held capital, according to residents and an official.

The air campaign is an attempt to restore President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who was ousted from Sanaa in September by the Shia rebels, known as the Houthis.

1/15

  1. Gallery: Yemen: Aftermath Of Airstrikes By Saudi Arabia And Gulf Allies

    People search for survivors under the rubble of houses destroyed by an air strike near Sana'a Airport in Yemen. Continue through for more images

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22.57 | 0 komentar | Read More

Andreas Lubitz: Profile Of Killer Co-Pilot

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 Maret 2015 | 22.57

The co-pilot who deliberately crashed a plane in the French Alps with the loss of 150 lives had a history of depression, it has been reported.

The focus on Andreas Lubitz's mental health comes after a French prosecutor concluded the 27-year-old had deliberately flown the Germanwings Airbus 320 into the mountainside killing all those on board.

German prosecutors have said there are indications the co-pilot concealed an illness from his employer, hiding a sick note for the day of the crash.

However, they did not specify the nature of the illness.

Matthias Gebauer, chief correspondent for the online edition of German newspaper Der Spiegel, tweeted: "Schoolmates of co-pilot who crashed tell German reporters he took six-months break from flight training in 2009 due to burnout-syndrome."

The head of Lufthansa, the budget airline's parent company, has already admitted Lubitz had taken the lengthy break from training.

While chief executive Carsten Spohr did not give a reason for this interruption, German media reported he was suffering from "burnout or depression".

:: Click here for live updates of the Alps plane crash investigation

Mr Spohr said: "I cannot tell you anything about the reasons of this interruption, but anybody who interrupts the training has to do a lot of tests so the competence and fitness would be checked again."

According to Lufthansa, Germanwings pilots undergo medical tests once a year.

However, they are only required to undergo psychological tests once, before they are accepted as pilots.

Lubitz also underwent a regular security check on 27 January and nothing untoward was found, the local government in Dusseldorf said.

Previous security checks in 2008 and 2010 also revealed no problems.

Lubitz had grown up dreaming of becoming a pilot, gaining his glider's licence after training with LSC Westerwald flying club in his hometown of Montabaur.

Club member Peter Ruecker recalled Mr Lubitz as "rather quiet but friendly" when he first joined the club as a teenager.

He added: "He was happy he had the job with Germanwings and he was doing well."

Lubitz had been employed as a flight attendant before training to be a pilot at the Lufthansa flight school in Bremen.

He also underwent training in Phoenix, Arizona.

Lubitz joined Germanwings in 2013 and had clocked up 630 flying hours before the disaster.

Lufthansa said he passed all the relevant examinations necessary to become a pilot and was deemed "100% airworthy".

Mr Lubitz had also been included by the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on its database to show he had met or exceeded its pilot certification standards, which aim to "reduce pilot errors that lead to fatal crashes".

In Montabaur where Lubitz lived with his parents, neighbours reacted with disbelief when they heard of his involvement.

One man, who did not want to be named, said that he had known the pilot since childhood.

He told Sky News: "I cannot imagine that he has done it with intention.

"This does not fit in this picture I have of him. It is a very upright family, very helpful and I cannot understand what has happened.

"I knew the children when they were small boys."

Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin said Lubitz, who also had a flat in Dusseldorf, had never been flagged as a terrorist.

And when pressed over Mr Lubitz's religion, he said: "I don't think this is where this lies. I don't think we will get any answers there."

Although rare, there have been previous instances of suspected pilot suicide.

The most infamous likely - but still disputed - cases of pilot suicide was the 1997 Silk Air crash in Indonesia, in which 104 people died.

A US-led investigation concluded it had been caused deliberately, probably by the captain who had serious personal problems.

A Mozambique Airlines plane crash that killed 33 people in Namibia in 2013 is also believed to have been a case of pilot suicide.


22.57 | 0 komentar | Read More

Suicide Plane Crash 'Difficult To Predict'

No amount of personality tests could necessarily have prevented co-pilot Andreas Lubitz from crashing a passenger plane in the French Alps, an expert has told Sky News.

Such "incredibly rare" events could not always be predicted, said aviation psychologist Professor Robert Bor.

He suggested in the Lubitz case, the 27-year-old's problems had gone "below the radar" and he was able to conceal his mental illness.

And this appears to be borne out following the revelation by German prosecutors that Lubitz had a sick note for the day of the crash, in which 150 died.

This was found torn-up along with medical documents during searches of Lubitz's flat in Dusseldorf and the home he shared with his parents in the town of Montabaur.

:: Click here for live updates of the Alps plane crash investigation

While it was not routine for pilots to undertake regular psychometric testing, Prof Bor said: "When we are looking at incredibly rare events such as this no amount of that kind of scrutiny will necessarily pick up every single person who is at risk or susceptible."

He also cautioned that tighter rules and tougher tests likely to be introduced in the wake of the disaster, will not necessarily improve safety.

"It will probably improve our sense of safety," he said.

"With very rare events we can't always predict them with 100% accuracy."

Prof Bor told Sky News: "It's incredibly rare and in fact the number of cases in the last 25 years involving commercial jets is probably no more than half a dozen."

The fact he took time off with depression while in pilot training back in 2009 did not necessarily indicate his future behaviour, he added.

"Many people in the general population, pilots as well, occasionally are going to have periods of low moods and anxiety and this may be temporary it may not be something that is lasting," Prof Bor said.

"On the other hand all of us can change.

"Within a matter of days, weeks, there could be a bad trigger event in our life."

A relationship break-up or a dispute at work may "have just tipped him over and turned somebody who might have a depressive illness into somebody who was very despairing and very angry".

"Because that's usually what can lead to or trigger a suicidal act in an individual," he said.

Prof Bor said: "Pilots as an occupational group are very closely scrutinised really from the time they enter flight school to really the last flight that they are on.

"At any moment they are being closely observed, their actions, their behaviour, their communication patterns and so on are being monitored in some kind of way.

"On top of that they undergo rigorous medical tests at least once a year, sometimes twice a year depending on the kind of aircraft they are flying.

"And of course each time they are flying they are being watched by their co-pilots, by the dispatcher when they leave the stand.

"And they are also subject to random drug and alcohol testing as well.

"So the chances of these sort of things happening are very rare.

"And one can only think in this particular case his problem went literally below the radar. He was able to conceal it in some kind of way.

"Unless it was, as we might come to discover, apparent to the airline that he was having some kind of difficulties but for whatever reason they were not implementing the standard cut-offs which are when pilots have significant psychological stress they definitely shouldn't be flying."


22.57 | 0 komentar | Read More

Co-Pilot 'Hid Sick Note On Day Of Alps Crash'

Co-Pilot 'Hid Sick Note On Day Of Alps Crash'

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

Prosecutors investigating the Germanwings plane crash have said there were indications the co-pilot hid his illness from his employers.

Andreas Lubitz has been accused of deliberately flying the aircraft into a mountainside in the French Alps shortly after preventing the captain from re-entering the cockpit.

All 150 people on board the aircraft died in Tuesday's crash. Police said 400-600 pieces of human remains have been retrieved from the site but no bodies were intact.

In a news conference, prosecutors said Lubitz had a sick note for the day the Airbus A320 crashed during a flight from Barcelona to Dusseldorf but never told the airline.

The sick note, which would have prevented him from flying, was among several found torn-up during searches of his flat in Dusseldorf and the home he shared with his parents in the town of Montabaur.

1/16

  1. Gallery: The Victims Of The Germanwings Crash

    American Emily Selke, a recent graduate, was on the plane with her mother Yvonne. Raymond Selke has described his wife and daughter as 'amazing people'. Pic: Facebook

Iranian sports journalist Hussein Javadi was on his way to Austria to cover a football match. A friend said he was 'a kind, loving, caring man'. Pic: Maysam Bizær/Hossein Javadi

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Argentinian Sebastian Greco was on board with his girlfriend. Pic: Facebook

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Argentinian Gabriela Maumus, 28, was the daughter of a firefighter. Pic: Facebook

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Spanish victim Carles Milla Masanas, 37. The businessman was on his way to a food industry fayre. Pic: Facebook

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Co-Pilot 'Hid Sick Note On Day Of Alps Crash'

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

Prosecutors investigating the Germanwings plane crash have said there were indications the co-pilot hid his illness from his employers.

Andreas Lubitz has been accused of deliberately flying the aircraft into a mountainside in the French Alps shortly after preventing the captain from re-entering the cockpit.

All 150 people on board the aircraft died in Tuesday's crash. Police said 400-600 pieces of human remains have been retrieved from the site but no bodies were intact.

In a news conference, prosecutors said Lubitz had a sick note for the day the Airbus A320 crashed during a flight from Barcelona to Dusseldorf but never told the airline.

The sick note, which would have prevented him from flying, was among several found torn-up during searches of his flat in Dusseldorf and the home he shared with his parents in the town of Montabaur.

1/16

  1. Gallery: The Victims Of The Germanwings Crash

    American Emily Selke, a recent graduate, was on the plane with her mother Yvonne. Raymond Selke has described his wife and daughter as 'amazing people'. Pic: Facebook

Iranian sports journalist Hussein Javadi was on his way to Austria to cover a football match. A friend said he was 'a kind, loving, caring man'. Pic: Maysam Bizær/Hossein Javadi

]]>

Argentinian Sebastian Greco was on board with his girlfriend. Pic: Facebook

]]>

Argentinian Gabriela Maumus, 28, was the daughter of a firefighter. Pic: Facebook

]]>

Spanish victim Carles Milla Masanas, 37. The businessman was on his way to a food industry fayre. Pic: Facebook

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22.57 | 0 komentar | Read More

Daughter: Siblings In Freezer Killed By Mum

By Sky News US Team

A Detroit mother killed two of her children and ordered her daughter to entomb one victim in a freezer on top of the other body, says a court filing.

Mitchelle Blair, 35, appeared in court on Thursday, two days after nine-year-old son Stephen Berry and daughter Stoni Blair, 13, were discovered dead.

"The charges in this matter are so heinous," said magistrate Renee McDuffe, as she set bail at $1m.

Documents filed in Wayne County Juvenile Court allege the children suffered years of horrific abuse.

For the past two years, the two other children, an eight-year-old boy and a 17-year-old girl, lived at the low-rent apartment on the city's east side next to their siblings' bodies.

The 17-year-old has told investigators she and her surviving brother were regularly beaten with an extension cord and plank and burned with irons.

The documents say: "Blair tortured Stephen for approximately two weeks prior to his death by tying a belt around his neck, throwing hot water on him while in the shower and putting a plastic bag over his head."

After Stephen's death in August 2012, Blair allegedly wrapped his body in a bed sheet and put him in the freezer.

Nine months later, Blair became "enraged" when Stoni said she did not like her surviving siblings, according to the court documents.

She allegedly strangled the girl with a T-shirt and suffocated her with a black rubbish bag.

Blair then made the teenager place her sister's body in the deep freezer, say investigators.

The picture painted in the court filing belies the doting maternal image Blair projected on Facebook.

She posted a picture with the message: "There is no greater blessing than being called Mom."

The teenager said neither she nor her siblings had attended school for years.

Authorities investigated allegations of abuse in 2002 and 2005, but Blair was allowed to keep custody of the children and referred to counselling.

The state says the two fathers of Blair's surviving children are unfit to care for them.

Blair is charged with child abuse, but she may face murder charges once the bodies are thawed out enough for post-mortem examinations to be performed on Friday, prosecutors said.


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Boko Haram 'Capital' Retaken By The Military

The northeast Nigerian town that Boko Haram declared their headquarters has been retaken by government forces, the country's military said.

Gwoza in Borno state was initially seized by the Islamist group in July 2014, causing some 3,000 residents to flee the fighting.

Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau declared in August last year that Gwoza was "part of the Islamic caliphate," suggesting the group were imitating the Islamic State group.

But the government claims to have taken control of the town again following what Nigeria's national security spokesman Mike Omeri said was the "final onslaught" against Boko Haram.

Nigeria's defence department in Abuja said in a statement on Twitter: "Troops this morning captured Gwoza destroying the headquarters of the terrorist's self-styled Caliphate.

"Several terrorists died while many are captured. Mopping up of entire Gwoza and her suburbs is ongoing," it added.

Two weeks ago Boko Haram members had gathered en masse in the town in preparation for an expected showdown with international forces.

The group had urged civilians to leave the area to avoid being killed in crossfire during the anticipated battle, and the hostilities put a stop to national elections due to be held in February.

If confirmed, the retaking of Gwoza will be a major coup for the campaign of President Goodluck Jonathan for re-election in ballots that will now be held on Saturday.

In a televised broadcast, the President hailed troops for having "successfully stemmed the seizure of Nigerian territories".

"I heartily commend the very courageous men and women of our Armed Forces for the immense sacrifices which they continue to make in defending the nation and protecting its citizens," he said.

Safety has come at a heavy price for tens of thousands of Nigerians who have fled the insurgency and are sheltering in neighbouring Cameroon.

After Gwoza was recaptured, one man who said he was forced to join the militants, claimed the Boko Haram leader personally ordered women to be killed in the town.  

"On Sunday March 15, Shekau assembled his men including us, the new recruits, and addressed us. He said they should go back to Gwoza and kill all of their women they left behind," Usman Ali said. 

"He said if they didn't kill them they would not join them in paradise. They took us along to Gwoza where we witnessed the carnage."

A four-nation coalition of Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon has claimed a number of successes since the turn of the year to end the fighting which has claimed more than 13,000 lives since 2009.


22.57 | 0 komentar | Read More

Alps Plane Crash: The Lines Of Investigation

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 25 Maret 2015 | 22.57

Alps Plane Crash: The Lines Of Investigation

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

Air crash investigators are working around the clock to establish what caused the Germanwings A320 plane to crash in the Alps, killing all 150 people on board. Here are some of their likely lines of inquiry.

The Black Box

The black box – which records cockpit conversations and flight data – was recovered between Barcelonnette and Digne in the French Alps.

French interior minister Bernard Cazaneuve said that the box is damaged but still "useable", and should shed light on what happened in the moments before the plane plummeted.

Investigators are reportedly taking the box to Paris to extract the data.

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  1. Gallery: Rescue Teams Resume Search After Plane Crash

    German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier (3R) arrives near the crash site of Germanwings Airbus A320 near Seyne-les-Alpes, France

Gendarmerie and French mountain rescue teams fly in a helicopter near the site of the Germanwings plane crash near the French Alps

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Television news satellite vehicles are seen in front of the mountains

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Search and rescue operations restarted the day after a Germanwings Airbus A320 smashed into the French Alps, killing all 150 people on board.

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Gendarmerie and French mountain rescue teams arrive near the site of the Germanwings plane crash

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Alps Plane Crash: The Lines Of Investigation

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

Air crash investigators are working around the clock to establish what caused the Germanwings A320 plane to crash in the Alps, killing all 150 people on board. Here are some of their likely lines of inquiry.

The Black Box

The black box – which records cockpit conversations and flight data – was recovered between Barcelonnette and Digne in the French Alps.

French interior minister Bernard Cazaneuve said that the box is damaged but still "useable", and should shed light on what happened in the moments before the plane plummeted.

Investigators are reportedly taking the box to Paris to extract the data.

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  1. Gallery: Rescue Teams Resume Search After Plane Crash

    German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier (3R) arrives near the crash site of Germanwings Airbus A320 near Seyne-les-Alpes, France

Gendarmerie and French mountain rescue teams fly in a helicopter near the site of the Germanwings plane crash near the French Alps

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Television news satellite vehicles are seen in front of the mountains

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Search and rescue operations restarted the day after a Germanwings Airbus A320 smashed into the French Alps, killing all 150 people on board.

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Gendarmerie and French mountain rescue teams arrive near the site of the Germanwings plane crash

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