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Wednesday, December 31, 2014

2015 arrives with old challenges, new possibilities - CBS News


After a turbulent year marred by terror woes, Ebola outbreaks and a horrific series of airline disasters, many could be forgiven for saying good riddance to 2014 and gratefully ringing in a new year.



Across the globe, revelers looking for a respite from the gloom converged on the beaches of Brazil, the shores of Sydney harbor and New York's Times Square to welcome 2015. A look at how the world is celebrating:


___


New York, New York


About one million excited partygoers have braved the cold and packed themselves tightly into New York City's Times Square, listening to performances from artists such as Idina Menzel, O.A.R. and Meghan Trainor, and cheering as the the famed glittering ball dropped at midnight.


Thousands of revelers arrived early Wednesday morning at the Crossroads of the World to secure coveted spots with pristine views of the 11,875-pound Waterford crystal ball perched high atop 1 World Trade for the annual New Year's Eve celebration.


"This was on my bucket list," said MacKynze Slatinsky, 15, who traveled with her sister and best friend from Monroe, Michigan, to bring in 2015 in New York, arriving at 10:30 a.m. to land a spot with a view on 44th Street. "It's really crowded and cold but what a great experience."


Revelers eager to claim spots to ring in 2015 in Times Square arrived hours early on Wednesday, enduring freezing temperatures and a scarcity of restrooms before the glittering ball drop at midnight at the Crossroads of the World.


People packed into metal pens and set up all around Times Square. Once a pen filled up, it was closed off. Police began filling another until everyone was in place for the big ball drop, CBS New York reported.


"You get wanded; make sure there's no weapons, knives, and seems secure," said Tom Bridgman of Chicago.


Also, thousands of NYPD officers, including all of the new academy grads, were out in force in Times Square and all over the city.


___


Prayers in Indonesia


The loss of AirAsia Flight 8501 and a deadly landslide in Central Java muted celebrations in Indonesia. In the capital, the city conducted prayers for the victims of the tragedies, in addition to the annual Jakarta Night Festival.



Other Indonesian cities opted to cancel or tone down their celebrations. Surabaya's Mayor Tri Rismaharini banned any kind of new year entertainment in Indonesia's second-largest city, where most of the 162 people on the AirAsia flight that crashed Sunday were from. Hundreds of Surabaya residents, including young children, lit candles and braved a drizzle at a park to observe a minute of silence for crash victims.


"Let us pray for the grieving families of those on board the plane. Let us pray this will be the last tragedy for Surabaya," Rismaharini told the crowd.


___


Stampede in Shanghai


Thirty-five people were killed in a stampede during New Year's celebrations in downtown Shanghai, city officials said.


The deaths - the worst disaster to hit one of China's showcase cities in years - occurred at Shanghai's popular riverfront Bund area, which can be jammed with spectators for major events. A Shanghai government statement said early Thursday that another 43 people were injured amid the chaos about a half-hour before midnight.


Last week, the English-language Shanghai Daily reported that the annual New Year's Eve countdown on the Bund that normally attracts about 300,000 people had been cancelled, apparently because of crowd control issues. The report said a "toned-down" version of the event would be held instead but that it would not be open to the public.


___


Putin hails Crimea annexation


Russian President Vladimir Putin used his New Year's speech to hail his nation's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea Peninsula. He said Crimea's "return home" will "forever remain a landmark in the national history."



___


Breaking a Record in Dubai


The Gulf Arab emirate of Dubai was aiming to break the world record for the largest LED-illuminated facade with its spectacular display centered on the world's tallest building.


Some 70,000 LED panels around the 2,722-foot Burj Khalifa flashed colored lights and projected images of the country's leaders when clocks there struck midnight as a massive fireworks display erupted. The celebration draws throngs of thousands of spectators every New Year's Eve.


Emaar Properties said a team from Guinness World Records monitored the preparations. Last year, Dubai won the title for the world's largest firework display, according to Guinness.


___


Watching the Ball - or Whatever - Drop


The ball drop is a tradition that's being increasingly copied across the United States with twists celebrating local icons.



Among the items being dropped: a big chili in Las Cruces, New Mexico; a replica peach in Atlanta; a musical note in Nashville, Tennessee; a large pine cone in Flagstaff, Arizona; an oversized spurred cowboy boot in Prescott, Arizona; a 600-pound (270-kilogram) walleye made of wood and fiberglass in Port Clinton, Ohio; an 80-pound (36-kilogram) wedge of cheese in Plymouth, Wisconsin; and in Escanaba, in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, a replica of a pasty (pronounced PAS'-tee) - a baked pastry filled with meat and potatoes.


___


Trying to Celebrate in Baghdad


In Iraq's war-scarred capital, Baghdad authorities ordered a one-off lifting of the overnight curfew in force for more than a decade to allow the city's revelers to stay out late on the streets.


Traffic was unusually heavy starting shortly after sunset and authorities closed commercial streets to vehicles in the city's center as a precaution against possible suicide bombings by militants of the Islamic State terror group.


___


Wasting Away in BVI


Thousands of partiers arrived on speedboats, yachts and ferries to dance the night away on the tiny Caribbean island of Jost Van Dyke that has long hosted one of the region's biggest, most uninhibited New Year's Eve bashes.


In the British Virgin Islands, Jost Van Dyke balloons from about 300 full-time residents to roughly 5,000 people each New Year's Eve as throngs of barefoot, tipsy people groove to reggae bands on white sands and hop from bar to bar. The annual tradition started in the 1960s on the idyllic island - so small it didn't get electricity until 1992.


"Every year it just gets bigger and bigger. People from all over travel here to get drunk, fall down and just have as much fun as they can," said Tessa Callwood, who runs a world-famous beach bar with her husband, Foxy's Tamarind Bar & Restaurant.


___


At the Copa...Copacabana


More than 1 million people are expected to flock to the golden sands of Rio de Janeiro's Copacabana beach, where two dozen artists and DJs will perform on three stages. Tourists and locals routinely party until dawn on the beach, staying awake to watch the tropical sun rise for the first time in 2015.


A massive fireworks display that's blasted from boats on the Atlantic Ocean will light the sky over the crowd, which traditionally dresses in all white, a Brazilian tradition to bring purification and a peaceful year. Another tradition calls for partygoers to enter the sea up to their knees and jump over seven waves shortly after the New Year begins, for luck.


___


Police Protests in U.S.


Amid the celebration, some U.S. cities are on alert for New Year's Eve protests related to recent police killings of unarmed black men.



Activists in Boston staged a peaceful "die-in" during First Night, Boston's popular New Year's Eve celebration. Dozens of people participated in the brief protest in front of the Boston Public Library Wednesday evening while others held signs saying "black lives matter" and "a young black man is two times more likely to be shot dead by police than a white young man."


Police reported no arrests or disruptions to nearby festivities.


No plans for major protests were announced in New York, where the police department is still mourning two officers shot to death in a patrol car. But security will be tight, with more personnel than usual.



© 2015 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.








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2015 starts with stampede in Shanghai, 'die in' in Boston - USA TODAY

AP 11:30 p.m. EST December 31, 2014





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Revelers converged on the beaches of Brazil, the skyscrapers of Dubai and New York's Times Square to say good riddance to a turbulent 2014 marred by terror woes, Ebola outbreaks and a horrific series of airline disasters.


But tragedy struck in Shanghai, Baghdad was on edge and protesters in the United States planned a sobering reminder of one of the year's biggest stories.


A look around the world:


STAMPEDE IN SHANGHAI


Thirty-five people were killed in a stampede during New Year's celebrations in downtown Shanghai, city officials said.


The deaths — the worst disaster to hit one of China's showcase cities in years — occurred at Shanghai's popular riverfront Bund area, which can be jammed with spectators for major events. A Shanghai government statement said early Thursday that another 43 people were injured amid the chaos about a half-hour before midnight.


Last week, the English-language Shanghai Daily reported that the annual New Year's Eve countdown on the Bund that normally attracts about 300,000 people had been cancelled, apparently because of crowd control issues. The report said a "toned-down" version of the event would be held instead but that it would not be open to the public.


BREAKING A RECORD IN DUBAI





The Burj Khalifa tower in Dubai, United Arab Emirates was center stage for a New Year's fireworks display that wowed audiences below. VPC




The Gulf Arab emirate of Dubai was aiming to break the world record for the largest LED-illuminated facade with its spectacular display centered on the world's tallest building.


Some 70,000 LED panels around the 2,722-foot Burj Khalifa flashed colored lights and projected images of the country's leaders when clocks there struck midnight as a massive fireworks display erupted. The celebration draws throngs of thousands of spectators every New Year's Eve.


Emaar Properties said a team from Guinness World Records monitored the preparations. Last year, Dubai won the title for the world's largest firework display, according to Guinness.


NEW YORK, NEW YORK


About one million revelers have claimed spots to ring in 2015 in Times Square, some arriving early Wednesday and enduring freezing temperatures and a scarcity of restrooms before the glittering ball drops at midnight.


When the clock strikes and the ball drops, so will 1 ton of confetti containing well wishes for the upcoming year.


It's a once-in-a-lifetime experience," said 16-year-old Allie Casertino, who traveled to the city from nearby Glen Falls, New York, with her best friend Melanie Catone.


WATCHING THE BALL — OR WHATEVER — DROP


The ball drop is a tradition that's being increasingly copied across the United States with twists celebrating local icons.







Among the items being dropped: a big chili in Las Cruces, New Mexico; a replica peach in Atlanta; a musical note in Nashville, Tennessee; a large pine cone in Flagstaff, Arizona; an oversized spurred cowboy boot in Prescott, Arizona; a 600-pound (270-kilogram) walleye made of wood and fiberglass in Port Clinton, Ohio; an 80-pound (36-kilogram) wedge of cheese in Plymouth, Wisconsin; and in Escanaba, in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, a replica of a pasty (pronounced PAS'-tee) — a baked pastry filled with meat and potatoes.


TRYING TO CELEBRATE IN BAGHDAD


In Iraq's war-scarred capital, Baghdad authorities ordered a one-off lifting of the overnight curfew in force for more than a decade to allow the city's revelers to stay out late on the streets.


Traffic was unusually heavy starting shortly after sunset and authorities closed commercial streets to vehicles in the city's center as a precaution against possible suicide bombings by militants of the Islamic State terror group.


WASTING AWAY IN BVI


Thousands of partiers arrived on speedboats, yachts and ferries to dance the night away on the tiny Caribbean island of Jost Van Dyke that has long hosted one of the region's biggest, most uninhibited New Year's Eve bashes.


In the British Virgin Islands, Jost Van Dyke balloons from about 300 full-time residents to roughly 5,000 people each New Year's Eve as throngs of barefoot, tipsy people groove to reggae bands on white sands and hop from bar to bar. The annual tradition started in the 1960s on the idyllic island — so small it didn't get electricity until 1992.


"Every year it just gets bigger and bigger. People from all over travel here to get drunk, fall down and just have as much fun as they can," said Tessa Callwood, who runs a world-famous beach bar with her husband, Foxy's Tamarind Bar & Restaurant.


AT THE COPA ... COPACABANA


More than 1 million people are expected to flock to the golden sands of Rio de Janeiro's Copacabana beach, where two dozen artists and DJs will perform on three stages. Tourists and locals routinely party until dawn on the beach, staying awake to watch the tropical sun rise for the first time in 2015.


A massive fireworks display that's blasted from boats on the Atlantic Ocean will light the sky over the crowd, which traditionally dresses in all white, a Brazilian tradition to bring purification and a peaceful year. Another tradition calls for partygoers to enter the sea up to their knees and jump over seven waves shortly after the New Year begins, for luck.


POLICE PROTESTS IN U.S.


Amid the celebration, some U.S. cities are on alert for New Year's Eve protests related to recent police killings of unarmed black men.


Activists in Boston staged a peaceful "die-in" during First Night, Boston's popular New Year's Eve celebration. Dozens of people participated in the brief protest in front of the Boston Public Library Wednesday evening while others held signs saying "black lives matter" and "a young black man is two times more likely to be shot dead by police than a white young man."


Police reported no arrests or disruptions to nearby festivities.


No plans for major protests were announced in New York, where the police department is still mourning two officers shot to death in a patrol car. But security will be tight, with more personnel than usual.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Spectacular Drone Video Captures Sydney New Year's Fireworks - ABC News




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Sydney was among the first to celebrate New Year's 2015 and its spectacular fireworks display was caught on video for the first time by a drone at 1,000 feet.


The eye-popping images take you inside what has become one of the world's most elaborate New Year's fireworks displays -- all taking place over Sydney Harbor.


"We are going to have drones flying around above the fireworks giving live broadcast as these amazing fireworks go off on our bridge, on our Opera House and of course on our barges," Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore said, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corp. "Those images will be beamed to a billion people around the world."









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WATCH LIVE: The Times Square New Year's Eve celebration - New York Daily News


Feel like watching the ball drop in Times Square on New Year's Eve, but don't want to deal with the 1 million people who will pack into urban corrals? Well, you'll be able to enjoy musical performances by American Authors and watch the countdown from the warm comfort of your own home all thanks to the Internet.


There will be a live, commercial-free webcast of the Times Square New Year's Eve celebration on the night of Dec. 31.


The New Year's Eve webcast will go live at 11 a.m. The coverage will then start at 6 p.m. with the ball raising and will end a few minutes past midnight after the countdown to 2015. The webcast will be streaming globally and it will also show live musical performances, behind-the-scenes stories and celebrity interviews.



People will be able to watch the Times Square New Year’s Eve celebration through a live, commercial-free webcast hosted by Times Square Alliance and Countdown Entertainment.Anadolu Agency/Getty Images People will be able to watch the Times Square New Year’s Eve celebration through a live, commercial-free webcast hosted by Times Square Alliance and Countdown Entertainment. To avoid the 1 million people gathering for the annual ball drop, a live webcast is available from the comfort of a couch or desk chair.Craig Ruttle/AP To avoid the 1 million people gathering for the annual ball drop, a live webcast is available from the comfort of a couch or desk chair. JUSTIN LANE/EPA The New Year's Eve coverage will start at 6 p.m. on Dec. 31 and end at 12:15 a.m. on Jan. 1.


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The webcast will be hosted by radio personality Allison Hagendorf. Other featured musical performances include rock band O.A.R and Mexican singer-songwriter Alejandra Guzman. The USO Show Troupe will also perform a Military Salute medley to honor the Armed Forces.


The webcast will be presented by Times Square Alliance and Countdown Entertainment. To watch the live webcast visit Ustream.



For other activities in Times Square visit TimesSquarenyc.org.


ON A MOBILE DEVICE? WATCH THE BALL DROP HERE.


Twitter:@MrAlexAlba


aalba@nydailynews.com









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Stampede at Shanghai New Year's celebration kills 35 - CNN





  • NEW: Witness tells Xinhua people were scrambling for dollar-shaped coupons

  • Stampede breaks out at a New Year's celebration in Shanghai

  • At least 35 people are killed, state media report

  • Authorities are investigating




Beijing (CNN) -- At least 35 people were killed in a stampede at a New Year's celebration in Shanghai, China, state media reported.


The stampede happened at about 11:35 p.m. Wednesday in a riverfront area known as the Bund, the state-run Xinhua news agency said. At least 42 people were injured, Xinhua reported.


Authorities are investigating the cause, Xinhua said.


A witness told the government-run news agency that people started scrambling after coupons that looked like dollar bills were thrown from the third floor of a building.





Police shut down Beijing NYE celebration

Reports of the stampede appeared on Twitter and China's Weibo social network, with posts describing a chaotic scene and rescue efforts.


Photos showed massive crowds packing a street near the river and emergency medical workers treating people on the ground.


Many of the dead were young students, CCTV America reported, citing Shanghai rescue authorities. Video from the Reuters news agency showed people sobbing in a hospital waiting room.


The famous promenade along the Huangpu River is a popular spot for New Year's Eve festivities in Shanghai, China's most-populous urban area.


But last week, Shanghai Daily reported that local officials had called off a popular New Year's Eve light show there, citing police concerns over crowd control. Last year, the event drew nearly 300,000 people and "dispersing the crowd became a massive administrative headache," the newspaper said.


Scaled-back celebrations had been planned in several parts of the city instead, according to the newspaper.


Officials canceled another New Year's celebration late Wednesday in front of Beijing's tallest skyscraper, citing safety concerns.


Even with the light show and official countdown called off, many revelers remained at the location and had their own countdown there.


CNN's Steven Jiang reported from Beijing. CNN's Catherine E. Shoichet wrote the story in Atlanta. CNN's Anna-Maja Rappard contributed









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Toddler who shot mom 'unzipped' special purse gun pocket - Chicago Tribune


Concealed weapons are part of everyday life in Idaho, and that's unlikely to change in the Mountain West state despite a shocking accident in which a 2-year-old boy reached into his mother's purse, got ahold of her gun and shot her in the head inside a Wal-Mart.


Veronica J. Rutledge, 29, was shopping Tuesday morning with her son and three nieces in Hayden, Idaho, when the small-caliber handgun discharged one time, killing her.


Terry Rutledge, Veronica's father-in-law, told The Spokesman-Review that the boy unzipped the special gun compartment in the woman's purse where the weapon was kept while she was looking at clothing.


Terry Rutledge said his daughter-in-law did not put the weapon "loosely into her purse."


Victoria Rutledge had a concealed weapons permit, and guns were a big part of Rutledge's life, her father-in-law said.


"She was not the least bit irresponsible," Terry Rutledge said in a brief interview with The Associated Press. He complained about people using the incident to attack his daughter-in-law.


Meanwhile, the Kootenai County Sheriff's Office on Wednesday afternoon released a few more details about the incident. The boy removed the 9mm semi-automatic handgun from his mother's purse and shot her once in the head, killing her instantly, the sheriff's office said.


The manager of the store, who was nearby when the shot was fired, stepped in and took the firearm from the child, the sheriff's office said. The manager and other employees secured the scene and evacuated customers.


The woman's purse was new and was designed to carry a concealed firearm, the sheriff's office said. Detectives continue to analyze video from the store, examine the weapon and interview witnesses, the sheriff's office added.


Terry Rutledge told The Washington Post that Veronica Rutledge and her husband practiced at shooting ranges and each had a concealed weapons permit. He said for Christmas this year, her husband gave her the purse with a special zippered pocket for a concealed weapon.


About 7 percent of adults in Idaho had concealed weapons permits at the end of 2012, according to the Crime Prevention Research Center in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. That ranked Idaho among the top third of states.


Kootenai County, which has about 140,000 residents, has issued close to 16,000 concealed weapons permits, Kootenai County sheriff's spokesman Stu Miller said Wednesday.


"It's very commonplace in northern Idaho for folks to have a concealed weapons permit," Miller said, and most businesses do not prohibit firearms.


Veronica Rutledge lived in Blackfoot, in southeastern Idaho, and her family had come to the Hayden area to visit relatives for Christmas.


She was an employee of the Idaho National Laboratory near Idaho Falls, Idaho, where she was a nuclear scientist. The laboratory supports the U.S. Department of Energy in nuclear and energy research and national defense.


"We're deeply saddened by this tragedy," said Nicole Stricker, a spokeswoman for the lab.


Rutledge graduated from high school in Harrison, a lakeside town in the Idaho Panhandle. She was the valedictorian of her class. She graduated from the University of Idaho with a degree in chemistry.


She had taken the children to Wal-Mart on Tuesday morning to spend their Christmas gift cards, family members said. Her young son, her only child, was in a shopping cart.


Responding deputies found Rutledge dead in the electronics section of the Wal-Mart in Hayden, a rural town of about 12,000 people 40 miles northeast of Spokane.


Colt Rutledge, 32, arrived at the store in Idaho's northern panhandle shortly after the shooting around 10:20 a.m. Tuesday, Miller said. All the children were taken to a relative's house.


Officers viewed surveillance video provided by the store to determine what happened, Miller said.


Like other Western states, gun rights are a big issue in Idaho. State lawmakers passed legislation earlier this year allowing concealed weapons on the state's public college and university campuses. Despite facing opposition from all eight of the state's university college presidents, lawmakers sided with gun-rights advocates who said the law would better uphold the Second Amendment.


Terry Rutledge told the AP that his daughter-in-law "was a beautiful, young, loving mother."


"She was taken much too soon," he said.


Associated Press


Copyright © 2014, Chicago Tribune







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Spectacular Drone Video Captures Sydney New Year's Fireworks - ABC News




Copy

Sydney was among the first to celebrate New Year's 2015 and its spectacular fireworks display was caught on video for the first time by a drone at 1,000 feet.


The eye-popping images take you inside what has become one of the world's most elaborate New Year's fireworks displays -- all taking place over Sydney Harbor.


"We are going to have drones flying around above the fireworks giving live broadcast as these amazing fireworks go off on our bridge, on our Opera House and of course on our barges," Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore said, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corp. "Those images will be beamed to a billion people around the world."









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New Year's stampede in Shanghai: 35 dead, 43 injured - USA TODAY

Michael Winter, USA TODAY 7:53 p.m. EST December 31, 2014




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New Year's revelers jammed along Shanghai's historic riverfront stampeded about a half hour before midnight Wednesday, killing at least 35 people and injuring 43 others, Chinese media reported.


City officials said they had not yet determined what triggered the stampede about 11:35 p.m. in Chen Yi Square on the Bund, the state-run Xinhua News Agency reported early Thursday. Many of the dead and injured were students.


A brief report on Xinhua's English-language site said celebrations "went astray" and "a stampede resulted in casualties."


A witness said people had scrambled to grab coupons resembling U.S. dollar bills that were being thrown from a third-floor window near the Bund.


It is the worst disaster in Shanghai in recent years.


The English-language Shanghai Daily noted that the stampede occurred near where a New Year countdown show was being held in the Bund Origin, a relatively enclosed area. Last week, officials canceled the scheduled 3-D laser show in an open area of the Bund because of crowd concerns.


Nearly 300,000 turned out for last year's laser show. Authorities relocated the New Year celebration to the smaller area and limited attendance to 2,000 invitation-only guests . The local government had said the show was relocated "to improve traffic flow."


The Bund -- meaning embankment -- runs along the Huangpu River and features buildings from the city's pre-revolution heyday, when it was a financial center for Asia.


Video from CCTV America, the U.S. version of state broadcaster China Central Television, showed piles of shoes amid the debris. Photographs showed bodies lying on the streets and attempts to revive victims.


Reuters reported that by dawn, workers were cleaning trash around the Bund and that there "was little sign of the mayhem that had broken out just hours earlier."


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New Year's stampede in Shanghai: 35 dead, 42 injured - USA TODAY

AP 6:17 p.m. EST December 31, 2014




303 1 LINKEDIN MORE

SHANGHAI (AP) — Thirty-five people died in a stampede during New Year's celebrations in downtown Shanghai, China's state-run Xinhua News Agency reported — the worst disaster to hit one of China's biggest cities in recent years.


The report early Thursday cited the Shanghai government in saying that another 42 people were injured amid the chaos about a half-hour before midnight.


The deaths and injuries occurred at Shanghai's popular riverfront Bund area, which can be jammed with spectators for major events.


CCTV America, the U.S. version of state broadcaster China Central Television, posted video of Shanghai streets after the stampede, showing piles of discarded shoes amid the debris.


One Xinhua photo from the scene showed at least one person doing chest compressions on a shirtless man while several other people lay on the ground nearby, amid debris. Another photo showed the area ringed by police.


The cause of the stampede remained under investigation, the Xinhua report said.


Last week, the English-language Shanghai Daily reported that the annual New Year's Eve countdown on the Bund that normally attracts about 300,000 people had been canceled, apparently because of crowd control issues. The report said a "toned-down" version of the event would be held instead, but it would not be open to the public.


The stampede appeared to be near that area.


Meanwhile, Xinhua's top story on its website was not the stampede but President Xi Jinping's New Year's message. Xinhua's story in Chinese remained just two paragraphs long hours after the disaster.


Shanghai's historic Bund riverfront runs along an area of narrow streets amid restored old buildings, shops and tourist attractions. The China Daily newspaper in February reported that the city's population was more than 24 million at the end of 2013.


303 1 LINKEDIN MORE

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Suicide note of transgender Ohio teen inspires call to help others - Reuters




AUSTIN, Texas Wed Dec 31, 2014 5:16pm EST




AUSTIN, Texas Dec 31 (Reuters) - A transgender Ohio teen walked in front of an oncoming truck and was crushed to death on Sunday morning, leaving behind a suicide note that has resonated around the world and led to calls for a federal law to protect other transgender adolescents.



Leelah Alcorn, born with the name Joshua, was 17 years old and said she had been forced to undergo conversion therapy, which seeks to change sexual orientation through counseling. The practice has been banned in two states on grounds it is medically unfounded and puts children in danger.



"The only way I will rest in peace is if one day transgender people aren't treated the way I was, they're treated like humans, with valid feelings and human rights," Alcorn wrote in the note that was posted on Tumblr.



Alcorn, from Kings Mills, near Cincinnati, said that since the age of 4, she felt like a girl trapped in a boy's body and cried with happiness when she found out at 14 what transgender meant.



"After 10 years of confusion I finally understood who I was," Alcorn wrote, telling of her battle with her deeply religious Christian parents as she struggled to find her identity.



Alcorn's parents were not immediately available for comment.



Since Alcorn's death, groups supporting transgenders have called for a national "Leelah's Law" to end conversion therapy, calling it "psychological torture." Nearly 80,000 people have signed a petition on Change.org supporting the proposal.



The American Psychological Association has dismissed the idea that sexual orientation is a mental disorder and said mental health professionals should avoid telling clients they can change their sexual orientation through therapy or other treatments.



Supporters of the practice say it is an effective way to counsel troubled youths.



Transgender adults took to Twitter after Alcorn's death, offering encouragement to transgender teens with the hashtag #RealLiveTransAdult.



"I didn't think I'd live to be 30  Don't give up," one person wrote.



Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender teenagers are about twice as likely to have attempted suicide than their heterosexual peers, said a paper on the website for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.



"Her story is not unique," said Allison Woolbert, executive director of the Transgender Human Rights Institute.



"People see a 17-year-old who has struggled for several years, desperately trying to be herself. They are seeing a real-life instance of what this is like for a teen," Woolbert said.



(Additional reporting by Lisa Maria Garza in Dallas and Laila Kearney in New York; Editing by Peter Cooney)











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Boy, 2, Accidentally Shoots and Kills Mom at Idaho Walmart - NBCNews.com





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The family of a woman who was fatally shot by her two-year-old son in an Idaho Walmart Tuesday said she was a responsible gun owner and a "wonderful mother" who was "taken much too soon."


Veronica Rutledge, 29, was killed after her son was able to grab a concealed handgun in her purse during a shopping trip at the store in Hayden, a town about 40 miles east of Spokane, authorities said.


"A tragic, tragic accident," Kootenai sheriff's Lt. Stu Miller told reporters after the 10:20 a.m. shooting. Rutledge, a research scientist at the Idaho National Laboratory, was a responsible gun owner, family members told NBC News, and stored the gun in a purse specifically designed to hold a concealed handgun, which she had gotten for Christmas.


The child was in the shopping cart next to the purse when he was able to access the gun, Miller said. Rutledge's three young nieces were also present during the shooting.


Rutledge had a legal permit to carry a concealed weapon, Miller said, but "all the precautionary measures weren't taken to ensure the safety of that weapon."


First published December 30 2014, 12:53 PM










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35 killed in New Year's celebration stampede in Shanghai - CNN





  • Stampede breaks out at a New Year's celebration in Shanghai

  • At least 35 people are killed, state media report

  • Authorities are investigating




Beijing (CNN) -- At least 35 people were killed in a stampede at a New Year's celebration in Shanghai, China, state media reported.


The stampede happened around 11:35 p.m. Wednesday in a riverfront area known as the Bund, the state-run Xinhua news agency said. At least 42 people were injured, Xinhua reported.


Reports of the stampede appeared on Twitter, with posts describing a chaotic scene and rescue efforts.


Photos showed massive crowds packing a street near the river and emergency medical workers treating people on the ground.


Authorities are investigating the cause, Xinhua said.


The famous riverfront promenade is a popular spot for New Year's Eve festivities.


Just before midnight, officials canceled another New Year's celebration in front of Beijing's tallest skyscraper, citing safety concerns.


Even with the light show and official countdown called off, many revelers remained at the location and had their own countdown there.


CNN's Steven Jiang reported from Beijing. CNN's Catherine E. Shoichet wrote the story in Atlanta.









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Abbas signs onto International Criminal Court after UN loss - Reuters




RAMALLAH, West Bank Wed Dec 31, 2014 4:50pm EST



Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas listens to a question during a media briefing at the Union Building in Pretoria November 26, 2014. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas listens to a question during a media briefing at the Union Building in Pretoria November 26, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Siphiwe Sibeko





RAMALLAH, West Bank (Reuters) - Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas signed on to 20 international agreements on Wednesday, including the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), a day after a bid for independence by 2017 failed at the United Nations Security Council.



The move, which angered Israel and the United States, paves the way for the court to take jurisdiction over crimes committed in Palestinian lands and investigate the conduct of Israeli and Palestinian leaders over more than a decade of bloody conflict.



"They attack us and our land every day, to whom are we to complain? The Security Council let us down -- where are we to go?" Abbas told a gathering of Palestinian leaders in remarks broadcast on official television.



In the months leading up to Tuesday's failed U.N. bid, Sweden recognized Palestinian statehood and the parliaments of France, Britain and Ireland passed non-binding motions urging their governments to do the same.



Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Abbas's action would expose the Palestinians to prosecution over support for what he called the terrorist Hamas Islamist group, and vowed to take steps to rebuff any potential moves against Israel.



Israel and Hamas fought a July-August war in which more than 2,100 Palestinians, 67 Israeli soldiers and six civilians in Israel were killed.



"We will take steps in response and defend Israel's soldiers," Netanyahu said in a statement.



The United States said the was of deep concern and unhelpful to peace efforts in the region.



"It is an escalatory step that will not achieve any of the outcomes most Palestinians have long hoped to see for their people," State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke said in a statement. "Actions like this are not the answer."



Palestinians seek a state in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem - lands Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East War.



Momentum to recognize a Palestine has built up since Abbas succeeded in a bid for de facto recognition of Palestinian statehood at the U.N. General Assembly in 2012, which made Palestinians eligible to join the ICC.



U.S. OBJECTIONS



Palestinian officials said on Tuesday American opposition made inevitable the defeat of a Security Council resolution calling for the establishment of a Palestinian state by late 2017 after no more than a year of peace negotiations.



The United States and Australia voted against the bid, while eight countries voted yes and another five abstained. The Palestinians were unable to achieve a hoped-for nine votes which would have forced the U.S. to exercise its veto as one of the council's five permanent members.



Peace talks mediated by the United States collapsed in April in a dispute over Israeli settlement-building and a prisoner release deal, as well as Abbas's decision to sign on to over a dozen previous international texts Israel saw as a unilateral move the contravened the negotiations.



"We've been playing Mr. Nice Guy with negotiations since 1991, meanwhile the possibility of a two-state solution erodes," Hanan Ashrawi, a senior Palestinian diplomat, told Reuters.



She added that there were no immediate plans to lodge a formal complaint at the ICC, but that Abbas's move is "a clear signal to Israel and the international community that Israel must cease and desist its war crimes, especially settlements."



Other agreements approved by Abbas included several articles on the court's jurisdiction, commitments against banned weapons and cluster munitions along with less controversial pledges on the political rights of women, navigation and the environment.



(Additional reporting by Dan Williams and Allyn Fisher-Ilan; editing by Ralph Boulton and Andrew Heavens)











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Idaho Woman Shot by Son at Walmart Remembered as Scientist, Loving Mom - ABC News




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The young woman who was accidentally shot and killed by her 2-year-old son with her own gun is remembered as a loving mom and a scientist who was a star student at her rural high school in Idaho.


Veronica Rutledge, who police say died after her toddler removed a concealed handgun from her purse at Walmart and shot her, worked at the Idaho National Laboratory. She was also a responsible gun owner, her father-in-law said.


Terry Rutledge described the 29-year-old woman as a "beautiful, young, loving mother" in an interview with The Associated Press.



"She was not the least bit irresponsible," he said. "She was taken much too soon."


Rutledge, who lived in Blackfoot, Idaho, died at the Hayden store Tuesday. She grew up about an hour away in St. Maries, where she was the valedictorian of her class at Kootenai High School, according to ABC affiliate KXLY. She graduated from North Idaho College with a chemistry degree in 2010, according to a commencement program, and has since been listed as a researcher or author on multiple scientific papers.


"The lab is very saddened by this tragic event and we offer our deepest sympathies to the family," Nicole Stricker of the Idaho National Laboratory told ABC News in a statement.


Rutledge and her husband, Colt Rutledge, married in 2009. Facebook photos show her in hunting gear or posing outside or with her son, as friends and family members post mournful messages.


Police said her son was sitting in a shopping cart in the electronics section of the Walmart when he removed the gun from her purse and fired the weapon just once, killing his mother instantly.


Walmart called the woman's death a "very sad and tragic incident" and said it is working with the Kootenai County Sheriff's Office to investigate the incident.









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NSW Police thank revellers for partying safely despite fireworks accidents and ... - ABC Online


Posted January 01, 2015 08:31:07


Police and paramedics have praised the behaviour of New Year's Eve revellers across New South Wales, despite 31 arrests and two fireworks accidents that left people critically hurt.


NSW Police Assistant Commissioner Mick Fuller said incidents and arrests in Sydney were "significantly down" on last year.


"We saw well over a million people come into the city and jam into the best seats in the house quite early during the course of the day and celebrate what was one of the safest New Year's Eves we've ever had," he said.


Huge crowds flocked to harbourside vantage points to see three fireworks shows, with a large light bulb display on the Sydney Harbour Bridge central to the midnight spectacle.


Thousands of revellers continued partying well into the morning, with venue lock-out laws in the CBD and Kings Cross relaxed to allow patrons to enter pubs and clubs after the usual 1:30am cut-off time.


Assistant Commissioner Fuller apologised to partygoers who were physically pushed out of some CBD streets by officers to allow council clean-up efforts to begin about 2:00am.


"Unfortunately we deal with people who are intoxicated and who often refuse directions and some of those people have to be physically moved out of the way," he said.


"So whilst I apologise to those people, they [the police] had an important job to do."


He said most of the arrests were for minor incidents.


Two men, aged 37 and 32, were charged with assaulting police in St Clair after one officer was allegedly struck in the head and another sustained knee injuries.


Knuckle dusters were allegedly seized from a 16-year-old boy at Coogee in an incident that remains under investigation.


Police are also reviewing CCTV footage after a man, 23, sustained a head injury during a brawl between two groups outside the Newtown Hotel in Sydney's inner-west.


At Sans Souci, in Sydney's south, a 29-year-old man was critically injured after he attempted to light fireworks on a beach.


He was taken to St George Hospital with head and facial injuries.


A 22-year-old man was also critically injured in a similar incident at Shelly Beach on the state's central coast.


He was flown to the Royal North Shore Hospital.


"Both patients have suffered significant burn injuries as a result of the fireworks explosions," NSW Ambulance Senior Assistant Commissioner David Dutton said.


Topics: carnivals-and-festivals, police, sydney-2000, shelly-beach-2261, nsw









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How Often Kids Kill - The Atlantic

A 2-year-old accidentally shot his mother Tuesday in Idaho, but no one knows how common such deaths are.




A man shows a girl how to hold an airsoft gun during the NRA Youth Day at the National Rifle Association's annual meeting in Houston, Texas on May 5, 2013. (Adrees Latif/Reuters/The Atlantic)



It isn't often that a shooting death captures national attention these days. As projects over the last two years by Slate and Joe Nocera demonstrated, there are dozens of gun deaths that go mostly unremarked every day. Even mass shootings fly under the radar of a desensitized nation.


Occasionally, though, a death can genuinely take Americans' collective breath away. One of those happened Tuesday in Hayden, Idaho, where a 2-year-old accidentally fired his mother's concealed pistol in a Walmart, killing her. There are many reasons this particular killing might get such attention: It's the holiday season; the news is slow; the victim, Veronica Rutledge, was a young mother, just 29; it happened at a Walmart, a place with which nearly every American is familiar.


But the obvious difference is the horror of a 2-year-old who, according to news reports, wasn't even aware of what had happened, accidentally killing his own mother. How could such a thing happen? How often does it happen? The answer, as with so many questions about gun violence, is that we simply don't know. There aren't reliable statistics on gun incidents involving kids.


“It’s pretty common around here—a lot of people carry loaded guns.”

Let's start with Idaho. As The New York Times notes, reporters asked a sheriff's deputy why she would have brought a firearm to shop. “It’s pretty common around here—a lot of people carry loaded guns,” he said. That's at least relatively true: Idaho has one of the highest gun-ownership rates in the nation. Rutledge had a concealed-carry permit, and a report by an anti-gun-control group in July found that the state is near the top for percentage of residents with permits. It's unclear what sort of gun was used or what exactly happened, though police said safety measures were followed. Rutledge's father-in-law said the gun was kept inside a zippered pouch, but the child managed to open it.


Yet it's unclear how often children accidentally shoot people. The Washington Post looked into the question earlier in 2014, after a 9-year-old at a shooting range in Arizona lost control of an Uzi and killed her instructor. Mark Berman found that no agency could give him a clear answer on the matter. While there are often media reports about such deaths, there's no comprehensive database. One can track the number of victims of accidental shootings younger than 18 with some confidence, but it's tougher to track them by who's pulling the trigger.


So, for example, the CDC was able to tell The Post that across 17 states for which they had data, in 2011, there were 11 deaths with a shooter younger than 14. That's something, but it's not especially useful for getting a national picture of anything. For example: Are those numbers from states with high or low gun-ownership rates? How about strict or loose gun-control laws? How many are under 10? What about incidents involving teenagers 14 to 18 years old?


In 2013, The Times took a harrowing look at shootings deaths of children by children and found a similar problem:



A New York Times review of hundreds of child firearm deaths found that accidental shootings occurred roughly twice as often as the records indicate, because of idiosyncrasies in how such deaths are classified by the authorities. [Three killings discussed in the story], for instance, were not recorded as accidents. Nor were more than half of the 259 accidental firearm deaths of children under age 15 identified by The Times in eight states where records were available.


As a result, scores of accidental killings are not reflected in the official statistics that have framed the debate over how to protect children from guns.



Research for more than a decade has found that accidental shooting deaths are consistently undercounted.


The upshot of all this is that it's hard to learn any policy lessons from Rutledge's death—in addition to the impossibility of making sense of it on any emotional level. Is the story any more horrible if it's part of a long run of such killings? Or does repetition blur the matter, smudging a personal tragedy into nothing more than a tear-stained statistic?









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Liberman: The only ones guilty of war crimes here are the Palestinians - Jerusalem Post



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    Netanyahu: The Palestinians have more to fear from the ICC than Israel



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    Israeli Navy arrests three Gaza fisherman



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    Abbas signs Rome Statute, paving way for possible war crimes probe against Israel at ICC



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    Meretz MK Horowitz announces he won't run in upcoming election



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    Bosnian indicted over recruiting militants for Syria and Iraq



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    East Jerusalem resident arrested for allegedly threatening life of Likud MK



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    US-led forces launch 10 air strikes in Syria, Iraq



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    Monitor: Syria Kurds control 70 percent of besieged Kobani



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    IDF convicts Hamas mastermind of June kidnap, murder of 3 Israeli teens



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    Hamas reiterates condemnation of PA over failed UN gambit



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    Iran: New US sanctions violate spirit of nuclear talks











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