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  • 21
    Sep
    2012
    8:06am, EDT

    US soldier who refused to go back to Iraq arrested on return from Canada

    Aaron Vincent Elkaim / AP file

    Kimberly Rivera speaks at a news conference in Toronto on Aug. 31.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    The first female American soldier to seek refuge in Canada rather than return to duty in Iraq was arrested at the U.S. border Thursday after losing her appeal against deportation, according to an advocacy group that had campaigned on her behalf.

    Kimberly Rivera, a 30-year-old private who served three months in Iraq and came to Canada while on leave in 2007, was taken into custody at the Thousand Islands Bridge border station about 30 miles north of Watertown, N.Y., Reuters reported.

    The War Resisters Support Campaign said on its website that Rivera’s partner and four children crossed the border separately as “Kimberly did not want her children to have to see her detained by the U.S. military, as this would be traumatic for them.”

    “During a Federal Court hearing in Toronto on Monday, lawyers for the Department of Justice argued that Kimberly would not be detained when she crossed the border,” the War Resisters statement said.

    “… Just as the Rivera family’s lawyer argued in court and as was predicted by her Canadian supporters, Kimberly was detained immediately upon crossing the border into the United States of America,” it added. “Kimberly now awaits punishment for refusing to return to Iraq, a conflict which Kimberly and Canada determined was wrong.”


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    'Not genuine refugees'
    During the Vietnam War, Canada was a haven for tens of thousands of draft dodgers and deserters, but soldiers from Iraq, who were volunteers, have been met with little sympathy from the Canadian government.

    Canadian Immigration Minister Jason Kenney’s spokeswoman, Alexis Pavlich, told The Star newspaper in an emailed statement that U.S. military personnel who had moved to Canada to avoid being deployed to Iraq were “not genuine refugees under the internationally accepted meaning of the term.”

    “These unfounded claims clog up our system for genuine refugees who are actually fleeing persecution,” she added.

    The last 480 troops left Iraq early Sunday morning in high spirits, happy to be heading home for the holidays. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    State Department: No secret plan to invade Canada

    In an interview with The Star published Wednesday, Rivera said she had joined the army because she “wanted to fight for human rights and the safety of my country.”

    “I wanted to do something good … I grew up learning that our rights come from a soldier who gave his or her life so that we could have rights,” she added.

    'The war is over': Last US soldiers leave Iraq

    That view changed after three months in Iraq.

    “Citizens were being put on random lockdowns. We used city patrols, checkpoints and violence and intimidation against innocent civilians,” she told The Star. “We raided their houses without cause. I saw mothers and fathers and grandparents and children come to us asking for compensation for their dead loved ones. There was no good reason for their pain and suffering.”

    The paper said she described becoming a conscientious objector as “the most positive thing I’ve done.” 

    Tutu: Iraq war based on 'a lie'
    Nobel peace prize winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu, famous for campaigning against apartheid in South Africa, made a last-ditch plea for the Canadian authorities to allow Rivera to stay.

    “When the United States and Britain made the case in 2003 for the invasion of Iraq, it was on the basis of a lie. We were told that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction, and that these weapons posed an imminent threat to humanity,” he wrote in The Globe and Mail newspaper Monday.

    NBC's Richard Engel answers your questions about Iraq

    “But those who were called to fight this war believed what their leaders had told them. … U.S. soldiers such as Kimberly Rivera, through her own experience in Iraq, came to the conclusion that the invasion had nothing to do with weapons of mass destruction. Indeed, the presence of U.S. forces only created immense misery for civilians and soldiers alike,” he said.

    Read more international stories from NBC News

    “Those leaders to whom soldiers such as Kimberly Rivera looked for answers failed a supreme moral test. More than 110,000 Iraqis have died in the conflict since 2003, millions have been displaced and nearly 4,500 American soldiers have been killed,” he added.

    The Pentagon had no immediate comment, according to Reuters.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    1035 comments

    This is an easy one. She deserted in 2007. That's five years. Sentence her to five years in prison. Fine her the cost of extradition proceedings and a dishonorable discharge. Remember, you are the one that signed up and took the pledge.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, iraq, arrested, soldier, u-s, deportation, featured
  • 19
    Sep
    2012
    6:36am, EDT

    State Department: No secret plan to invade Canada

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    The U.S. and Mexico are not secretly planning to invade Canada, a State Department spokeswoman confirmed to laughter during a daily press briefing.

    Spokeswoman Victoria Nuland was taking questions from journalists about its activities Tuesday, which included a meeting between Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Mexico Foreign Minister Patricia Espinosa.


    Follow Ian Johnston on Twitter

    She was asked about “a signing ceremony” with Espinosa – what was being signed and why was the ceremony not open to the press.

    “I think it’s an update on Merida, but I will get that for you,” Nuland reported, referring to the Merida Initiative to fight organized crime.

    The journalist asked, “This isn’t some secret thing … to invade Canada or something like that?”

    Amid laughter, Nuland replied: “No, no, no. It’s not anything classified.”

    The U.S. did draw up a secret plan to invade Canada in 1935, codenamed “War Plan Red,” some of which was accidentally published by mistake and reported by The New York Times.  

    A U.S. invasion of Canada also featured in the film, "Canadian Bacon," starring John Candy, Alan Alda and Rhea Perlman, and the movie South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, which included the song "Blame Canada."

    There is also a website called www.invadecanada.us, which lists reasons such as connecting the mainland U.S. with Alaska, “they’re just a little too proud,” and “they stole our basketball teams.” 

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    376 comments

    The State Department is not aware of the CIA's plans for Canada.

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    Explore related topics: us, canada, mexico, world, border, invasion, featured, invade
  • 3
    Sep
    2012
    9:53pm, EDT

    77-year-old Japanese man asks US mayor to look for items lost in tsunami

    Oregon Parks And Recreation Dept / AP file

    Mitch Vance, left, and Steve Rumrill, with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, inspect the bottom of a section of the Japanese dock that washed up on Agate Beach in Newport, Ore. in early August.

    By Isolde Raftery, NBC News

    The Japanese man’s request wasn’t unreasonable. After all, Japan’s tsunami had already swept a Harley-Davidson and a 66-foot concrete dock to U.S. and Canadian shores.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Still, the mayor of a small Washington state city told The Daily World newspaper that he was surprised when he received a postcard from a 77-year-old man in Japan asking him to look out for items he lost in the tsunami a year and a half ago.

    “This man felt compelled to write us, looking for what he lost,” Mayor Bill Simpson told The Daily World, based in Aberdeen, Wash. Aberdeen, a working-class coastal town known as the birthplace of Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain, welcomes visitors with a sign that reads, “Come As You Are.”


    The postcard was addressed simply, in impeccable cursive, to the mayor’s office in Aberdeen. The letter writer, named Mr. Saito, hails from the Sapporo ward, which is 300 miles north of the epicenter of the 8.9 earthquake that devastated parts of Japan in March 2011.

    Mr. Saito wrote the mayor that he had lost his “collected surveyed amounts’ library cards.”

    “To your seashore areas, have you been observing the floated materials?” Mr. Saito asked. “If you find some, please let me know any news.”

    Harley-Davidson motorcycle swept away by Japan tsunami to be preserved in museum

    In Washington state, the Department of Ecology estimates that 5 million tons of debris was swept into the Pacific Ocean -– 70 percent of which immediately sank.

    That still leaves 1.5 million tons, most of it mundane plastic, Styrofoam and junked refrigerators. The Daily World reported that garbage from one cleanup effort in June filled the beds of 70 pickup trucks.

    The Guardian of London reported that a research vessel that journeyed into the debris this summer returned predicting that it was bound for the West Coast. The garbage plume was dispersed and measured between 1,000 and 2,000 miles wide.

    Rachel La Corte / AP file

    Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire, right, listens as Lynn Albin of the Department of Health describes the Geiger counter readings she's getting from a piece of Styrofoam found on the beach in Ocean Shores, Wash. in June. Officials say that there has been no radiation detected from items that have washed ashore.

    There have been remarkable finds, such as a 20-foot fiberglass boat that washed ashore in Washington, the motorcycle still in its crate from the Miyagi prefecture, the ghost ship that appeared, unmanned and unmoored, off the coast of Alaska. A soccer ball belonging to a teenager whose family had lost everything arrived in Alaska. The ball, on which was written the 16-year-old’s name, had been a gift from his teacher and his classmates when he switched schools seven years ago.

    Rachel La Corte / AP

    Common marine debris from Japan's 2011 tsunami include plastic and Styrofoam.

    The National Oceanic Atmospheric Agency is collecting data on the debris; the agency website says that radiation experts do not believe the debris is radioactive.

    There’s more debris to come, according to The New York Times; oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer said he expects most of the debris to make landfall in October.

    What washes ashore may also serve as a grim reminder of the 3,000 people who went missing in the tsunami, Ebbesmeyer said at a symposium in Port Angeles, Wash., according to the Peninsula Daily News.

    “We’re expecting 100 sneakers with bones in them,” he said. “That may be the only remains that a Japanese family is ever going to have of their people that were lost.”

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    48 comments

    As I walk our beaches now the trash has a whole different meaning. So very sad, it's hard to imagine such a sudden and totally unexpected disaster.

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    Explore related topics: canada, japan, pacific, tsunami, environment, west-coast, commentid-canada
  • 27
    Jul
    2012
    5:16am, EDT

    Hiker dies after plunging off cliff into Alaska river

    By Reuters

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- A hiker has died after falling into a river in a remote part of northern Alaska,  the U.S. Coast Guard said Thursday. His companion was rescued by helicopter.

    The Coast Guard did not release the identity or nationality of the victim, who slipped off a cliff in the Brooks Range on Wednesday night. The companion, Olaf Schooll of Norway, was rescued, the Coast Guard said in a statement.


    The two men had been trying to hike across the northern part of Alaska, from the Canadian border to the Bering Sea, the statement said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The accident occurred at Atigun Gorge, a spot about 240 miles southeast of Barrow, it said.

    Schooll used a satellite telephone to call for help, the statement said. A Coast Guard air crew found him, hoisted him into a helicopter and flew him to Barrow.

    More Alaska coverage from NBC station KTUU in Anchorage

    Crew members found his dead companion about a mile downstream in the Atigun River, but terrain and water conditions prevented the recovery of the man's body at that time, the Coast Guard said. Searchers were attempting on Thursday to recover the body.

     

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    70 comments

    Possibly the hiking trip of a lifetime through some of the most beautiful country on the planet. Sadly, the last trip for man who fell and an ugly picture at the end for the other. Condolences to the loved ones and friends. (P.S. Not all Americans are hopelessly politically polarized.)

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    Explore related topics: canada, alaska, norway, coast-guard, hiker, featured, barrow, bering-sea, brooks-range, atigun-gorge
  • 19
    Jul
    2012
    6:15pm, EDT

    Yogurt truck causes chain-reaction crash, killing six in upstate New York

    By Louis Casiano, NBC News

    Six people were killed and one was injured Thursday morning when a tractor trailer carrying yogurt rear-ended a vehicle that had slowed for construction work, causing a chain reaction. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Five of the victims died when their SUV caught fire after being hit. Trooper Jack Keller told The Associated Press that the driver of the first vehicle struck died at a hospital.

    The tractor-trailer driver,  James A. Mills Jr. of Myerstown, Pa., was taken to a hospital for treatment, the AP said.


    The AP reported the tractor-trailer was heading down Route 11 in Antwerp, a town 90 miles north of Syracuse and a few miles from the Canadian border, when it hit the back of a vehicle causing it to collide with a Department of Transportation truck and the SUV.

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    State police told the AP the SUV was moving slowly or was stopped because of roadwork. 

    The road, a two-lane stretch of highway, had signs warning motorists that crews were conducting road work ahead.

    It is not known if the five occupants inside the SUV were all related, police told the AP.

    The AP reported a DOT spokesperson said a crew was repaving the road and that an agency employee had been airlifted to a hospital. His condition was not known. 

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    The tractor-trailer was carrying yogurt from a nearby plant to a neighboring county at the time of the accident, according to the AP. 

    Troopers told the AP reported  that Mills will be tested for drugs and that they were inspecting the trailer for mechanical problems. 

    The Jefferson County district attorney will determine if charges will be filed. 

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    149 comments

    Why do people joke about this? Sicko's.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, suv, dot, upstate-new-york, fort-drum, vehicle-accidents, trator-trailer
  • 16
    Jul
    2012
    11:00pm, EDT

    Bomb threat shuts crossing between Detroit and Canada -- again

    Elizabeth Conley / The Detroit News via AP

    Members of the Detroit Police Department patrol following a bomb threat that closed the Ambassador Bridge to Canada on Monday.

    By Isolde Raftery, NBCNews.com

    Authorities shut down one of the busiest bridge crossings between Canada and the United States on Monday evening after receiving a bomb threat, according to Dan Stamper, president of the Detroit International Bridge Company.

    “We take any threat very seriously, and set in motion the security measures the bridge has had in place since 9/11, staying in constant contact with first responders,” Stamper said in a statement. “We cannot confirm, but suspect, that this has something to do with Canada's disinvestment at the border by cutting back on customs' agents.”

    The bridge reopened around 1 a.m. Tuesday. No device was found, WDIV-TV reported.

    The bridge closing comes four days after a man called from a street pay phone, making a similar threat to a nearby commuter tunnel that also connects Detroit to Windsor, Ontario, in Canada, The Associated Press reported. No explosives were found and the call was determined to be a hoax, according to the Detroit Free-Press.


    Monday night’s bomb threat was called in around 7:20 p.m. Authorities immediately stopped traffic on the bridge. 

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    31 comments

    Canada cut back on border patrols, Mexico publishes a pamphlet instructing its people in the best ways and times of the year to actually get across our border..... We are not a leaky cauldron, we are a damn tunnel, open wide on both ends. We're fighting a "war on terror" on foreign lands while we ar …

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    Explore related topics: canada, bridge, border, detroit, bomb-threat
  • 14
    Jun
    2012
    7:04pm, EDT

    Canadian teacher who showed gore video fired

    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    A Canadian high school teacher who showed his students an 11-minute video of a man being stabbed and dismembered has lost his job, according to a statement issued Thursday by the school.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    “The teacher’s unacceptable (decision to show the video) demanded an unequivocal decision,” the statement said.

    The male teacher at École Cavelier-De Lasalle in Montreal was suspended on June 4 after showing the video during a history and citizenship class. In an online statement released Wednesday, the school said the teacher, who had apologized by email, would be allowed to tell his version of events.

    Jean-Michel Nahas, a spokesman for the school, said the teacher would not be identified.


    The video, titled "1 Lunatic 1 Ice Pick,” is believed to depict Luka Rocco Magnotta, a 29-year-old porn actor, killing Lin Jun, 33, with an ice pick and a kitchen knife and then dismembering him. Police have called the video horrific; they say they have obtained more complete footage that may show the suspect eating parts of the victim’s body. Police say they believe Magnotta posted the video online in late May.

    Magnotta was arrested on June 4, the same day the students watched the video, after being spotted at an Internet café in Berlin.

    Porn actor Luka Magnotta appears in German court over gore killing

    When students expressed interest in the video, the teacher apparently resisted but then put the decision to a vote, according to the Globe and Mail.

    All but two or three students voted to watch the video, according to the Globe and Mail. Those who voted against apparently watched the video anyway.   

    Within hours, the school brought in a crisis team of psychologists and counselors, according to the school’s online statement.

    Lin, a Chinese student who had been studying at Concordia University in Montreal, went missing in late May. Several days passed before police searched Magnotta’s apartment in Montreal, which was covered in blood. A suitcase in the apartment's back alley contained Lin’s torso.

    Police say that before fleeing, Magnotta mailed parts of Lin’s body to two political parties in Ottawa, Canada’s capital city, and to two schools in Vancouver, B.C.  

    Police: Body parts in Vancouver were from Montreal

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    114 comments

    Not sure what the teacher thought he was accomplishing other than giving Magnotta exactly what he wanted. There's plenty of evil, despicable things in the world, and whether people want to see it or not teachers don't need to be showing videos of it to their students.

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    Explore related topics: canada, murder, crime, luka-magnotta, lin-jun
  • 8
    Jun
    2012
    6:39am, EDT

    Did Canada's alleged cannibal killer Luka Magnotta strike in LA?

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    Police in Canada investigating the horrific murder and dismemberment of a student have been contacted by Los Angeles police officers about a similar slaying of a 66-year-old man, whose body was found under the famous Hollywood sign, according to reports.

    The Toronto Star reported that 29-year-old porn film actor Luka Rocco Magnotta, the man suspected of killing of Chinese student Jun Lin, may have lived in Los Angeles at one time. Montreal police told the paper that he had lived somewhere on the U.S. West Coast.


    In late January, the remains of a retired airline worker were found in Los Angeles. The body of Hervey Medellin, 66, had been found by dog walkers near the Hollywood sign after one of the dogs found a plastic bag containing his severed head.

    Victim identified in Hollywood severed head case

    "The body parts are the common denominator here," Los Angeles police spokesman Officer Lyle Knight said, according to the Star. "That's why our investigators want to talk to the Canadians. We want to know if his whereabouts included Hollywood because we understand he was in the acting field and Hollywood being the acting and movie mecca, we want to know."

    Los Angeles police told ABC News that Medellin was openly gay, and noted that Medellin's hands and feet had also been cut off.

    The similarities between the Los Angeles killing and the Canada murder four months later are striking. Lin, 33, who was studying computer science at Concordia University in Montreal, was killed in May. His hands and feet were sent in the mail to schools in Vancouver and political offices in Ottawa, while his torso was found in a suitcase in Montreal. His head has not been found.

    Canada police: Notes mailed with body parts

    Investigators say Magnotta, who was Lin's lover, videotaped the killing and dismemberment in his apartment and posted it online. The video also shows the suspect eating parts of the body, police said.

    After two Vancouver schools received packages in the mail containing body parts, authorities are investigating whether there is a connection with Luka Magnotta, the Canadian porn star arrested in Berlin for allegedly murdering and dismembering an acquaintance. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Magnotta was arrested in Berlin, Germany, on Monday in connection with Lin's murder and is expected to be extradited to Canada.

    Canadian police: Body parts delivered to Vancouver schools

     

    Dep. Chief Warren Lemcke provides details on the police investigation of human remains that were sent to two Vancouver, British Columbia schools.

     

     

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    351 comments

    Someone should have popped a cap on this sicko a long time ago.

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    Explore related topics: canada, murder, los-angeles, featured, cannibal, luka-rocco-magnotta, jun-lin, hervey-medellin
  • 25
    May
    2012
    10:13am, EDT

    Harley-Davidson motorcycle swept away by Japan tsunami to be preserved in museum

    Peter Mark / The Canadian Press via AP

    A rust-encrusted Harley-Davidson motorcycle that was swept away by the Japan tsunami in March 2011 was found by Peter Mark in April, washed up on an island off the coast of British Columbia. It's now headed to a Harley museum.

    By James Eng, NBC News

    A Japanese man’s Harley-Davidson motorcycle that washed up on the shores of western Canada more than a year after it was swept away by the devastating tsunami will be preserved in a Harley museum in the U.S.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The 2004 FXSTB Softail Night Train motorcycle will be permanently housed in the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee, Wis., as a memorial to the victims of the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, which swamped several coastal towns in northeastern Japan and left more than 15,000 people dead.


    “It is truly amazing that my Harley-Davidson motorcycle was recovered in Canada after drifting for more than a year,” said the bike’s owner, Ikuo Yokoyama, in a press release issued Friday by Deeley Harley-Davidson, the Canadian distributor of Harleys. “I would like to take this opportunity to express my heartfelt appreciation to Peter Mark, the finder of my motorcycle. Due to circumstances caused by the disaster, I have been so far unable to visit him in Canada to convey my gratitude.”

    Mark found the motorcycle, still bearing its Japanese license plate, while driving his ATV on an isolated beach on Graham Island on the west coast of British Columbia on April 18. The bike, along with several other items, was inside a rusted cargo van container that apparently drifted more than 4,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean.

    “You just never know what you’re going to stumble upon when you go for a drive, and lo and behold you just come across something that’s out of this world,” Mark told CBC at the time.

    The motorcycle was eventually traced to the 29-year-old Yokoyama.

    The tsunami destroyed Yokoyama’s home in Miyagi prefecture and also claimed the lives of three family members, according to Japanese media reports. Yokoyama currently lives in temporary housing in Miyagi prefecture.

    He said the motorcycle was being kept in a storage container behind his house when the tsunami struck.

    Deeley Harley-Davidson Canada

    The Harley will soon be transported to the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee.

    Harley-Davidson offered to return the rust-encrusted bike to him and to restore it to running condition but Yokoyama respectfully declined, the company said.

    “Since the motorcycle was recovered, I have discussed with many people about what to do with it. I would be delighted if it could be preserved in its current condition and exhibited to the many visitors to the Harley Davidson Museum as a memorial to a tragedy that claimed thousands of lives,” Yokoyama was quoted as saying in Friday’s press release.

    Harley-Davidson has offered to fly him to visit the museum and meet Marks, the Canadian who retrieved the bike. Yokoyama said he would like to do so “when things have calmed down.”

    “My heart really goes out to Ikuo Yokoyama and all the survivors of the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami for everything that was taken from them. I cannot even begin to comprehend the loss of family, friends, and community,” Mark was quoted by Harley-Davidson as saying. “I think it is fitting that the Harley, which was swept across the Pacific Ocean by the tsunami, will end up in the Harley-Davidson Museum as a memorial to that tragic event. It has an interesting and powerful story to convey preserved in its current state.”

    The motorcycle has since been transferred to a Harley dealership in Vancouver. Plans for its transportation to the Harley museum are being developed.

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    324 comments

    The grace, dignity, and kindness of Ikuo Yokoyama warms me. To suffer such losses is unimaginable to most of us. Wishing him future happiness and goodwill in his life.

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    Explore related topics: canada, japan, tsunami, harley-davidson, motorcycle
  • 10
    Apr
    2012
    11:10pm, EDT

    US fighters scrambled as 'credible bomb threat' diverts Korean Air jet to Canadian base

    NBC News

    A Korean Airlines Boeing 777 sits on the tarmac of Comox Airport after being diverted from Vancouver International Airport due to a bomb threat.

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 5:43 a.m. ET: Two U.S. F-15s were scrambled to escort a Korean Air passenger jet to a Canadian military base Tuesday after the carrier's call center received a "credible bomb threat," NBC News reported. The aircraft later made an emergency landing.

    Korean Air flight 72, which was en route from Vancouver to South Korean capital Seoul, diverted to the Comox base on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, the airline said.


    "The (Korean Air) U.S. call center received a call that there was a threat on board the aircraft," Korean Air said in a statement. The threat was received about 25 minutes after the flight took off, The Associated Press reported.

    NBC News reported that Canadian authorities had requested U.S. assistance to escort the flight back to Canada.

    Two Oregon National Guard F-15s, which took off from Portland, Ore., intercepted the plane and shadowed it until it landed at the Canadian base, NBC News reported.

    The plane, a Boeing 777, had 147 people including 134 passengers on board, the airline said.

    "The airline will decide about the continuation of the flight after discussion with the airport and related authorities," Korean Air said.

    Royal Canadian Mounted Police Inspector Brian Massey told NBC News early Wednesday that cargo and luggage was being screened.

    NBC News' Jim Miklaszewski and Courtney Kube, Reuters, The Associated Press and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    222 comments

    It would seem by some of the respondents to this article, some may not have a military background. However, as Christopher Mohr stated, it's just quite possible our response base was in a better location to respond quicker than our Canadian neighbors.

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  • 13
    Mar
    2012
    7:22pm, EDT

    Former Vice President Dick Cheney cancels trip to Canada, says it's too dangerous

    Mike Segar / AP

    Former Vice President Dick Cheney, right, listens to 9/11 Memorial President Joe Daniels, center, during a visit to the 9/11 memorial plaza in the World Trade Center site in New York last year.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Former Vice President Dick Cheney has canceled a speaking engagement in Toronto due to security fears sparked by his rough reception at an event in Vancouver last year, the promoter of the speech said.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Cheney, who along with former President George W. Bush remains unpopular in Canada, had been slated to talk about his time in office and the current U.S. political landscape on April 24 in Toronto.


    "Basically they felt that it would be a major security issue if Vice President Cheney came back to Canada," said Ryan Ruppert, president of Spectre Live Corp, which was promoting Cheney's speech.

    The upshot, Ruppert, told the Canadian Press, is that discussion over American policy on such issues as Guantanamo Bay or the Iraq war is being silenced.

    “You lost that conversation because you’re talking about a group of thugs,” Mr. Ruppert said.

    The Cheneys referenced an incident that took place in Vancouver last year for cancelling the engagement, according to Ruppert.

    Cheney's appearance at a $500-a-plate book club dinner in Vancouver last September was marred by protesters who blocked the entrance to the venue and scuffled with police. Cheney was forced to remain inside while police dispersed the demonstrators.

    One man was arrested for choking a club staff member, according to the Canadian Press.

    Cheney was Bush's vice president from 2001 to 2009.

    Cheney critics accuse him of endorsing what some have deemed torture – waterboarding and sleep deprivation – against detainees in Bush’s war on terrorism.

    Before the Vancouver event, the group Human Rights Watch had urged the federal government to bring criminal charges against Cheney, accusing him of playing a role in the torture of detainees.

    Cheney has defended the interrogation techniques on the grounds they saved lives.

    Cheney has visited dangerous places before, including Iraq in 2008.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    1283 comments

    MSNBC, stop referring to it as, "what some have deemed to be torture"! You're the press, right? You're supposed to report on facts, right? Ok. Then review international treaties and UN resolutions pertaining to torture.

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    Explore related topics: canada, cheney, dick-cheney, featured
  • 29
    Feb
    2012
    7:31pm, EST

    Online store CafePress clobbered for racist merchandise

    CafePress.com

    If, for whatever reason, you feel the need to diss the Canadians (or any other nationality or ethnicity), CafePress has the shirt for you,

    By M. Alex Johnson, msnbc.com

    CafePress, the online store where independent artists and merchants can sell T-shirts, mugs and other collectibles, has removed pages promoting anti-Mexican products after Latino bloggers and news sites brought them to public light this week.

    It's not the first time CafePress — one of the biggest online retailers in the world — has wandered into critics' cross-hairs for selling merchandise that would generally be considered racist or otherwise offensive, and given the way the site works, it won't be the last.

    First, some background:

    CafePress this week pulled down 10 pages offering merchandise with explicitly anti-Mexican themes after Latino media outlets picked up posts by the blogs Tex(t)Mex and Latino Rebels, which noted that CafePress had an "Anti-Mexican Gifts" section.


    "Looking for the right funny gift to express your hate and racism towards Mexicans? Well, CafePress has got the goods for you," Latino Rebels observed.

    CafePress removed the pages, as well as pages in a second section called "Anti-Mexico." It said it regretted "any problems or concerns caused by the images in question."


    M. Alex Johnson

    M. Alex Johnson is a reporter for msnbc.com. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.


    Case closed, right?

    Wrong.

    Quick searches of CafePress on Thursday evening showed hundreds of pages offering merchandise explicitly labeled "Anti-French," "Anti-Arab," "Anti-African" and so on. And there's still plenty of anti-Mexican merchandise on CafePress, like this bumper sticker:

    CafePress.com

    So what's going on?

    What CafePress did was to disable the specific search terms "Anti-Mexican" and "Anti-Mexico" in response to this week's publicity. Much of the merchandise is still there. 

    The same sort of controversy came up before, for example in October, when CafePress removed merchandise that appeared to promote violence against illegal immigrants.

    And it will keep popping up, because CafePress is largely an automated site. There never was a dedicated "Anti-Mexican" section. What there was was a search results page for the term "Anti-Mexican," generated dynamically by its computers when someone asked for it.

    You can test it yourself. On the CafePress homepage, plug in any keyword you want plus "anti" into the search field and you will get back a page generated on the fly from CafePress' database of products. 

    For example, try "Anti Canada." Among the many T-shirts, bumper stickers, mugs and so on is the T-shirt at the top of this post.

    CafePress confirmed in a statement that it doesn't pre-review what merchandise sellers sell there:

    The range of user-designed products varies widely in topic, taste and political opinion. CafePress' independent design community spans the globe, with users representing multicultural and multinational ideals and sentiments. As such, users may upload designs that some find distasteful or offensive, but are nevertheless consistent with our policies for expressions and content on our website.

    The company said customers could notify it of objectionable content at cup@cafepress.com. "We review all requests for content review, measure user-uploaded images against our policies and determine a plan of action if any is appropriate."

    Adrian Carrasquillo of NBC Latino contributed to this report.

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    214 comments

    I'm super Liberal, but I admit. I laughed at that bumper sticker.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, mexico, race, featured, illegal-immigration, cafepress, m-alex-johnson
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