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Tuesday, August 10, 2010

5,000 flood-prone families need relocation: official

QUANG NAM — In the flood-prone central province of Quang Nam, a further 5,000-odd households need to be relocated to safe areas, an official said.
Nguyen Van Gap, head of the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development's Rural Development Division, said the province has several major rivers and streams which often flood in the rainy season, causing landslides and threatening lives and properties.
"Of the province's 18 districts and cities, 17 have had landslides or face the danger of landslides."
Since 1997 his division has joined local authorities to relocate more than 16,000 families at a cost of VND29 billion (US$1.5 million), he said.
The province has also spent tens of billions of dong on building embankments along rivers and 100 new residential areas for more than 4,000 relocated households, he said.
In Dai Loc District in the downstream of the Thu Bon and Vu Gia Rivers, they have relocated nearly 1,000 families from 700 spots where there have been river and mountain landslides since 2001.
"The district has [another] 400 households living in landslide-prone areas," Phan Duc Tinh, deputy chairman of its People's Committee, said.
In the district's Dai Hong Commune, which has a 16-km stretch of the Vu Gia River, around 100ha of farmlands have been lost due to riverbank erosion since 2001.
Dang Van Ky, chairman of the commune People's Committee, warned that without proper protective measures, Ngoc Thach and Dong Phuoc hamlets will lose 300ha of farmlands to erosion.
Nguyen Thi Van, whose house is near the Vu Gia River in Dai Lanh Commune's Ha Duc Dong Hamlet in the same district, said: "We heard that local authorities are planning to move households here to safe areas but the relocation has not been carried out yet."
According to the Rural Development Division, the amount the province needs for relocating all threatened families is VND10 billion ($520,000) a year. But since only VND3 billion is earmarked, priority is given to households in high-risk areas.
Besides, with the amount of available land being limited, it is becoming hard for authorities to allot enough land for the relocated people's housing and production needs. Many have got only 150-200sq.m, just enough for housing. — VNS
by http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/

Blue-ear reported in 17 provinces

HA NOI — Hau Giang, Vinh Long, Dak Lak and Khanh Hoa provinces have reported the outbreak of blue-ear pig disease within their provinces.
There are now 17 provinces that have pigs infected with the disease.
According to a report from the provincial departments of Animal Health, there are 211 pigs infected with the disease in Hau Giang, 161 in Vinh Long Province, about 200 in Dak Lak Province and 57 in Khanh Hoa Province.
These provinces have culled about 250 infected pigs.
Last week, HCM City culled nearly 200 suspected pigs. More than 2,430kg of pork were destroyed and 124 suckling pigs have been killed since July.
Figures from the Department of Animal Health showed that 56,810 pigs had contracted the disease, while 27,000 pigs had been culled this year.
Deputy head of the department Mai Van Hiep ordered localities to set up checkpoints in order to prevent the illegal transportation of pigs.
There is currently no effective medical treatment that can cure a pig that has been infected with the disease. — VNS
by http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/

Maths guru invited back to Viet Nam

HA NOI — Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Thien Nhan has invited renowned mathematician Professor Ngo Bao Chau to return and work in Viet Nam.
The professor who, at 33, was the first Vietnamese to win the prestigious Clay Mathematics Institute's yearly award in 2004 and proved what Time magazine described as one of the 10 most important scientific discoveries of 2009, is in Ha Noi to visit his family.
The invitation was for him to return to his homeland and participate in the Government's programme to make Viet Nam a nation recognised for its mathematics by 2020 with a vision to 2030, Nhan said.
It was made on behalf of the Government and the State Council for Professor Title.
Nhan, who is also the council Chairman, said the Party and State had and would always respect talented Vietnamese scientists and intellectuals who studied or worked abroad.
The Government would create the most favourable working and living conditions for talented mathematicians such as Professor Chau and reinforce their abilities and help Viet Nam match the best of modern science.
In response, Professor Chau and his family said they were willing to contribute to national construction and development.
Chau was born in Ha Noi in 1972.
His father was former Viet Nam Institute of Mechanics Chairman Professor Dr Ngo Huy Can and his mother, Associate Professor Tran Luu Van Hien.
The scholar won two gold medals at the international mathematics Olympiads when he was a high school student.
He has worked as a professor since he won his PhD from the Universite Paris Sud in 1997 and this includes the University of Advanced Study, Princeton.
Professor Chau has been invited to give report to the World Mathematics Conference in India next week and will give lectures at the University of Chicago in early September.
The State Council for Professor Title was established by a prime ministerial decision in 2001 to advise the prime minister on relevant policies. — VNS
by http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/

Agent Orange victims get raw deal

Volunteer teachers instruct children at the centre for Agent Orange victims and underprivileged children in Da Nang City. — VNA/VNS Photo Duong Ngoc
Volunteer teachers instruct children at the centre for Agent Orange victims and underprivileged children in Da Nang City. — VNA/VNS Photo Duong Ngoc
 
HCM CITY – The struggle in support for Agent Orange victims has seen some progress but more efforts are required to deliver them justice, a seminar held in HCM City yesterday to mark Orange Day, August 10, heard.
Doctors, scientists, lawyers, and AO victims attended the seminar, Agent Orange – Message from the Heart, held ahead of the 49th anniversary of the day the US began a 10-year campaign to spray 80 million litres of the deadly dioxin on Viet Nam.
They discussed the responsibilities of the US Government and chemical companies that produced the AO that was used.
Nguyen Thi Ngoc Phuong, vice president of the Viet Nam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin (VAVA), who has returned after recently testifying in Washington, said there was an improvement in the US attitude, explaining it was the first time an AO victim was invited to speak at a hearing.
The US's tone had changed and it was speaking about co-operation between the two countries and has promised to help clean up the environment in Viet Nam and assist with rehabilitation of AO victims, she said.
"Inviting representatives of VAVA and AO victims this time means the US Government has changed its mindset over the relationship between AO and health."
Viet Nam has 28 spots where the chemical was stored that need to be detoxified and people living in their vicinity are still affected by the chemical.
"I was happy because the US Government has seen its responsibility to AO victims," Phuong said.
"But they still refuse legal liability."
The US has admitted than annual aid of $30 million for 10 years is not enough to resolve the problem, she said, adding she proposed $3 billion a year.
Every year the Vietnamese Government spends $100 million to assist victims and clean up the environment.
New village
Major General Tran Ngoc Tho, head of the Viet Nam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin in HCM City, said his organisation planned to build a village in the city to take care of victims and provide them jobs.
Paul Phillip, an Australian who has been working in Viet Nam for six years to support AO victims, said:
"I hope a huge ceremony will be held in Viet Nam by the UN to warn the world against producing chemical weapons and [make sure] none will be dropped anywhere in the world."
Individuals and both domestic and international organisations pledged VND8 billion (US$421,000) for Agent Orange-Dioxin victims during a television programme that was telecast throughout Viet Nam on Sunday.
The VAVA and Viet Nam Television for Victims of Agent Orange-Dioxin programme organised the show titled, "Justice and the Heart."
Leading figures
It was shown on both VTV-1 and the international channel VTV-4 and was held to mark the Day for Victims of Agent Orange-Dioxin that falls today.
Former Viet Nam Communist Party General Secretary Le Kha Phieu; former Vice President Nguyen Thi Binh; National Assembly and VAVA honorary Chairman Tong Thi Phong and Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Thien Nhan appeared on the programme.
Overcoming hardship
The Deputy Prime Minister praised the victims of the defoliant for their efforts to overcome their difficulties and contribute to the community.
He also thanked those who care for and provide child victims with vocational training at the Huu Nghi (Friendship) Centre and applauded the students for learning the skills necessary to employment.
They were fine examples for other victims and he hoped their example would be followed.
The Party, State, organisations and individuals within and without Viet Nam had and would continue to support the victims to overcome the consequences of Agent Orange, he said.
Viet Nam's international friends had provided much support to obtain justice for the victims.
Journey for justice
The Deputy Prime Minister said that ministries and sectors had proposed many new programmes and policies, including policies for victims of agent orange; a programme for the clearance of Agent Orange at 28 contaminated sites and the establishment of centres for victims across the country.
Agent Orange victim Pham The Minh, who has just completed a "Journey for Justice" in seven cities of the United States said the support of American veterans had helped him forget the pain and believe in the success of the effort.
The Vietnam News Agency (VNA) will open a representative office for its fund "For the pain of Agent Orange" in HCM City today when gifts will be presented to AO victims.
The Viet Nam Government has made August 10 ‘Agent Orange Day' because the first batch of the defoliant was sprayed on forests around Kon Tum Province, the Central Highlands, on August 10, 1961.
HCM City walk
On Sunday about 10,000 people walked in downtown HCM City to seek support for Agent Orange victims.
The walk organised by the Viet Nam Red Cross sought the community's support for AO victims, including disabled people.
The Red Cross in more than 30 provinces and cities donated VND30 billion ($1.6 million) to AO victims as well as 150 scholarships and 100 wheelchairs.
Music show
VAVA plans to hold a music show at the HCM City Opera House tonight to unveil a new fund for Agent Orange victims.
It has been established by the city People's Committee to mobilise support from the community to improve victims' lives. 
VAVA figures show that 4.8 million Vietnamese were exposed to AO-dioxin with 3 million victims. — VNS
by http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/

Updated import procedures criticised

The customs office in the northern border province of Lang Son has implemented online tax declaration procedures. However, customers are unhappy with the updated system for processing paperwork for certain imported goods.— VNA/VNS Photo Pham Hau
The customs office in the northern border province of Lang Son has implemented online tax declaration procedures. However, customers are unhappy with the updated system for processing paperwork for certain imported goods.— VNA/VNS Photo Pham Hau
 

HA NOI — A supposedly updated system for processing papers to license certain imported goods has already drawn much criticism from customers.
The system, publicised as being "automatic", was introduced only last month. It is based on importers completing import licensing forms and sending them off to the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MoIT).
It replaces the old office-based system where all the paper work was handed to officers at the ministry or its branches throughout the nation.
Not only is the new system at least two days slower than the former system - from five to seven days - it has also caused a few headaches because of documents "lost in the mail".
The seven-day period for responses from the ministry plus the uncertainty of the postal system has created problems for Matsu Electronics Company, which specialises in the distribution of air conditioners from Malaysia.
The company sent the relevant paper work to the ministry on July 23, but hadn't received a reply two weeks later.
"I don't know if there's anything wrong with the application. If it's considered incomplete by the ministry, we'll have to start the process all over again," said Long Quoc Trung, the company's director.
He said this would mean waiting for at least another seven working days.
Nguyen Ngoc Hoa, from Inco Import-Export Company, said although the ministry promised that applications would be approved or rejected within a week, it always took longer, even as much as 13 or 14 days.
Hoa was also concerned about the strong possibility of application forms being lost in the mail.
The ministry's automatic import licensing procedure is outlined in Circular 17 (the old method) and Circular 24 (the new method).
Circular 17 states that the processing time will be five business days. Circular 24 increases this to seven business days.
Trung also said that while the new circular required various receipts, applications and other documents, the biggest concern for importers was who was responsible if paperwork was lost in the mail.
The regulations only said that if applications were lost or damaged, enterprises must resend them with an explanation letter and ask for another import licence.
This could cost enterprises dearly in terms of longer storage fees for goods containers, Hoa said.
For enterprises importing food products, the cost was higher because of the need for refrigeration.
Deputy Minister Nguyen Thanh Bien said the new procedures would be improved.
He admitted that businesses had complained about some concerns and confusion on sending their applications through the post - and the extra time needed to process them.
The new procedure, regulated by Circular 24/2010/PT BC, mainly controls the imports of seafood, cacao, coffee, wine, iron and steel products.
It was part of measures to control imports and curb Viet Nam's large trade deficit, said Bien. – VNS

by http://vietnamnews.com.vn/

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Will Ferrell cop comedy collars box office crown

LOS ANGELES, Aug. 8, 2010 (Reuters) — Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg grabbed the box office crown from Leonardo DiCaprio on Sunday as their new cop comedy "The Other Guys" sold about $35.6 million worth of tickets, the film's distributor said.

Cast members Will Ferrell (L-R), Eva Mendes, and Mark Wahlberg arrive with director Adam McKay (R) for the premiere of the film "The Other Guys" in New York August 2, 2010. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
The opening, which was in line with expectations, marks the second-highest of Ferrell's career and a big rebound from his 2009 summer bomb "Land of the Lost."
Wahlberg, making a rare foray into comedy, achieved his best opening since 2001's "Planet of the Apes" remake kicked off with $68.5 million.
In "The Other Guys," they play mismatched underdogs on the trail of a con artist played by English comic Steve Coogan. Reviews were strong for the $85 million film, which skewed to young men, said Sony Corp's Columbia Pictures.
Ferrell suffered disappointing openings for both "Land of the Lost" ($18.8 million) and 2008's "Semi-Pro" ($15.5 million), raising speculation that another flop could hurt his ability to get big-budget studio films green-lighted.
His best opening remains the 2006 comedy "Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby" with $47 million. "Talladega Nights," "The Other Guys," and Ferrell's 2007 hit "Blades of Glory" ($33 million opening) were directed by Adam McKay.
Ferrell and McKay are "one of the best comedy combinations in the industry," said Rory Bruer, president of worldwide distribution at Columbia.
"INCEPTION" RETAINS LEAD OVERSEAS
After three weekends at No. 1, DiCaprio's dreams thriller "Inception" slipped to No. 2 with $18.6 million, taking the total for the hit Warner Bros. release to $227.7 million after four weekends.
The film led the foreign box office for a second weekend after earning $46.6 million from 58 markets. Its overseas tally climbed to $250 million, with Britain ($39.4 million) and Japan ($23.7 million) leading the contributors.
Also new in North America was "Step Up 3D," the underperforming third release in the urban dance series. The Walt Disney Co release opened at No. 3 with $15.5 million, well below its predecessors even with the help of higher prices for 3D engagements. Disney partnered on the project with closely held studio Summit Entertainment.
The acclaimed comedy-drama "The Kids are All Right" finally cracked the top 10 in its fifth weekend, rising two places to the final spot with $2.6 million. The total for the Focus Features release, starring Annette Bening and Julianne Moore as a lesbian couple, rose to $14 million.
Rounding out the top five were Columbia's Angelina Jolie spy thriller "Salt" with $11.1 million, and Paramount's Steve Carell comedy "Dinner for Schmucks" with $10.5 million. Their respective totals rose to $92 million after three weekends, and $46.7 million after two.
Ominously for Carell, "Dinner For Schmucks" lost 55 percent of its audience, one of the biggest drops in the top 10, and far steeper than the 34 percent second-weekend dip earlier this year for his comedy "Date Night." That film, which opened in the same range as "Schmucks," ended up with $98.6 million.
The picture looks even bleaker for Zac Efron, whose female-skewing tearjerker "Charlie St. Cloud" tumbled 62 percent in its second round. The Universal Pictures release fell three places to No. 8 with $4.7 million, taking its 10-day total to $23.5 million. That's still less than the $23.7 million opening for his film "17 Again" last year.
Warner Bros. Pictures is a unit of Time Warner Inc. Paramount Pictures is a unit of Viacom Inc. Universal and Focus are units of General Electric Co's NBC Universal.
by http://www.newsdaily.com/

U.S. general eyes "first steps" toward Iraqi government


WASHINGTON, Aug. 8, 2010 (Reuters) — Iraqi political leaders are likely to make headway in forming a government ahead of a September 1 date for the United States to end combat operations in the country, the U.S. commander in Iraq said Sunday.

Iraq has been in political limbo since an inconclusive March 7 election as Shi'ite, Sunni and Kurdish political factions have failed to agree on a new government in five months since the vote.
"I think we'll see some first steps toward forming a government by 1 September," U.S. General Ray Odierno told ABC's "This Week" program without elaborating on what those steps might be.
Odierno also said he was confident that Iraqi forces, helped by 50,000 U.S. troops that will remain in Iraq after September 1, can overcome attacks by people trying to take advantage of the political stalemate.
U.S. troop levels in the drawdown of forces are not linked to the formation of an Iraqi government, Odierno said.
"Our numbers are linked to the capacity that the Iraqis -- of the Iraqi security forces being able to sustain stability -- and I think they are moving toward that capacity," he said.
The United States currently has just under 65,000 troops in Iraq. It had close to 150,000 at the height of the conflict.
Odierno credited the Iraqi security forces with staying "neutral" and "very professional" in conducting their duties while competing political factions struggle to put together a government.
The 50,000 U.S. troops that will stay in Iraq after September 1 will represent a "significant presence" to help the Iraqi military against militant forces, including al Qaeda in Iraq, whose capabilities have been worn down by the allies, he said.
"Their ability to surge and do this over a sustained period of time is limited, and that's due to a lot of the work of the Iraqi security forces, working with us to conduct these operations," Odierno said.
by http://www.newsdaily.com/

Turkish government, army agree on top posts: report

ISTANBUL, Aug. 8, 2010 (Reuters) — The Turkish government appointed General Erdal Ceylanoglu as commander of the land forces on Sunday, CNN Turk reported, apparently defusing a row that was brewing between the government and military leadership.
Ceylanoglu's appointment paves the way for the current head of the army, General Isik Kosaner, to become the top commander of NATO's second-largest military, the broadcaster said, without saying how it obtained the information.
Both posts were left unfilled at the end of the annual Supreme Military Council on August 4 after the government, which traces its roots to an Islamist movement, and the secularist military clashed over who would lead ground forces.
Financial markets weakened last week due to concerns about Turkey's political stability after the Supreme Military Council, chaired by Prime Tayyip Erdogan but dominated by generals, failed to name the two top armed forces jobs after a four-day meeting that ended on August 4.
The promotions process in the secular military was thrown into disarray by investigations into alleged plots by top-ranking officers to undermine the government.
Earlier on Sunday Erdogan had said agreement had been reached with the military on the positions.
Outgoing Chief of General Staff Ilker Basbug and Defense Minister Vecdi Gonul are due to meet President Abdullah Gul, who must approve the appointments, later on Sunday, CNN Turk said.
A statement could be made after Gul gives his approval, or the appointments could be formalized in Monday's Official Gazette, NTV news channel reported.
UNCERTAINTY AND DELAY
Ceylanoglu, 65, had been appointed to the prestigious First Army Command at last week's council. Now, General Hayri Kivrikoglu will take that post, NTV said.
The government and military had broadly agreed on Kosaner's appointment, media reported last week, but it was delayed by uncertainty over who would replace him as head of ground forces.
Hasan Igsiz, had been in line, but he was one of 19 officers summoned last week to testify in an inquiry into a campaign to discredit the ruling AK Party and Islamic groups on the Internet.
That case is one of several criminal investigations into alleged military-linked schemes to force the AK Party out. Generals deny any involvement in such plots.
The military staged three coups between 1960 and 1980 and in 1997 pressured an Islamist-led government to resign.
The army sees itself as the guardian of Muslim Turkey's secular system, but the government has curbed its powers through reforms to support Turkey's bid to join the European Union.
Erdogan and several other AK Party leaders have pasts steeped in political Islam, and relations with the military have been tense ever since the party came to power in 2002.
The AK Party denies a secret Islamist agenda and depicts itself as a Muslim version of Europe's conservative Christian Democrat parties.
by http://www.newsdaily.com/

Mudslides devastate China town


BEIJING, Aug. 8, 2010 (Reuters) — Mudslides engulfed a town in northwest China on Sunday, killing at least 127 people and leaving nearly 1,300 residents missing as rescue teams dug out crushed homes and tried to blast away debris clogging a river.


The mass of flood water, mud and rock hit Zhouqu County in Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Gansu province, a region dominated by steep and barren hills, after torrential rains late on Saturday, Xinhua news agency said, citing local officials.
Runoff from the downpour built up behind a landslide on the Bailong River, which runs through the main town in Zhouqu.
The clogged river in the narrow valley then spilled over its banks and caused flooding and mudslides that struck the town after midnight, smashed a small hydro station, and left at least 127 dead, according to Xinhua.
More heavy rain is forecast on the river on Tuesday.
"Many single-storey homes have been wiped out and now we're waiting to see how many people got out," one resident of Zhouqu, a merchant called Han Jiangping, told Reuters by phone. "We've had landslides before, but never anything this bad. People are trying to find their families and waiting for more rescuers."
The disaster follows flooding in Pakistan which has killed more than 1,600 people and in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir. Flash floods have also killed at least 132 people in the Himalayan region of Ladakh.
China's death toll could rise sharply and Premier Wen Jiabao rushed to the scene. There were 1,294 people missing, Xinhua reported late on Sunday, and it was unclear how many of them had fled and survived. That count was lower than an earlier estimate that nearly 2,000 were missing.
One village with 300 homes was "buried," said official news reports.
"It's very hard to locate the people washed away by floods. It's hard to say what their chances of survival are," He Youxin, a People's Armed Police officer organizing rescue efforts, told Xinhua. "Since excavators can't reach the site. We can only use spades and our hands to rescue the buried."
At one point, the flooding covered about half of the Zhouqu county seat, which has about 40,000 residents. The flood water reached up to three storeys high on some buildings, enveloping them in mud unlikely to yield many survivors.
About 2,800 troops and 100 medical workers rushed to help and 5,000 tents were being sent to the town, Xinhua said.
"Now the sludge has become the biggest problem to rescue operations. It's too thick to walk or drive through," said the head of the county, Diemujiangteng, according to Xinhua.
China's ruling Communist Party has become adept at showing its strength by mobilizing troops, aid and propaganda in the face of natural calamities, such as a massive earthquake in 2008. Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen told officials to "spare no efforts to save lives," said Xinhua.
HOMES HIT AS FAMILIES SLEPT
More than 1,400 people have been killed this year in floods that have devastated areas of central and southern China, according to the national disaster relief authority.
Pictures from Zhouqu showed mud and water covering town streets, motor vehicles being swept downstream and troops frantically digging through debris to hunt for victims, including a boy pulled from a shattered house. Xinhua said the mud dumped on the streets was up to two meters deep.
"There was thunder and huge rain, and then the landslides started coming down," said a resident of Zhouqu contacted by Reuters. He gave only his surname, Bai. "That was about midnight, so some people must have been in their homes, asleep and didn't know what was happening."
Many residents of Gannan are ethnic Tibetan herders and farmers and the rough terrain may hamper rescue efforts. Zhouqu County has 135,000 residents, about a third of them ethnic Tibetans, according to the county government.
Residents had rescued about 680 people by midday, and the water level in the town was falling, said Xinhua.
Troops prepared explosives to blast away the mud and rocks that have choked up the river and created a backlog of water 3 km (2 miles) long and 100 meters across, Xinhua said.
Wen, a geologist, told officials to develop a plan as soon as possible to unblock the river safely. About 19,000 people living in two town below the blockage were moved away, the reports said.
The Gannan meteorological bureau forecast heavy rains on the Bailong River from Tuesday.
by http://www.newsdaily.com/

Huge ice island calves off Greenland glacier

WASHINGTON, Aug. 8, 2010 (Reuters) — An ice island four times the size of Manhattan broke off from one of Greenland's two main glaciers, scientists said on Friday, in the biggest such event in the Arctic in nearly 50 years.
The new ice island, which broke off on Thursday, will enter a remote place called the Nares Strait, about 620 miles south of the North Pole between Greenland and Canada.
The ice island has an area of 100 square miles (260 square km) and a thickness up to half the height of the Empire State Building, said Andreas Muenchow, professor of ocean science and engineering at the University of Delaware.
Muenchow said he had expected an ice chunk to break off from the Petermann Glacier, one of the two largest remaining ones in Greenland, because it had been growing in size for seven or eight years. But he did not expect it to be so large.

"The freshwater stored in this ice island could keep the Delaware or Hudson Rivers flowing for more than two years," said Muenchow, whose research in the area is supported by the National Science Foundation.
"It could also keep all U.S. public tap water flowing for 120 days."
He said it was hard to judge whether the event occurred due to global warming because records on the sea water around the glacier have only been kept since 2003. The flow of sea water below the glaciers is one of the main causes of ice calvings off Greenland.
"Nobody can claim this was caused by global warming. On the other hand nobody can claim that it wasn't," Muenchow said.
Scientists have said the first six months of 2010 have been the hottest globally on record. The El Nino weather pattern has contributed to higher temperatures, but many scientists say elevated levels of man-made greenhouse gases are pushing temperatures higher.
The initial discovery of the calving was made by Trudy Wohlleben of the Canadian Ice Service.
The ice island could fuse to land, break up into smaller pieces, or slowly move south where it could block shipping, Muenchow said.
The last time such a large ice island formed was in 1962 when the Ward Hunt Ice Shelf calved an island. Smaller pieces of that chunk became lodged between real islands inside Nares Strait.
by http://www.newsdaily.com/