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Missiles on standby to protect London Olympics: ministry
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) July 3, 2012


Surface-to-air missile defence systems will be deployed at six sites in London during the Olympics as a "powerful deterrent" against attack, Britain's Ministry of Defence confirmed Tuesday.

The news came despite angry protests from residents at two locations where missiles are being deployed on top of blocks of flats. One residents' group is taking legal action to try and stop the missile deployment.

Other steps being taken to protect the Olympics include mooring a helicopter carrier in the River Thames and stationing RAF Typhoon jets and Puma helicopters on the outskirts of London.

The ministry announced plans last year to deploy high-speed missile systems to protect the Olympic Park from aerial threats, as part of a mammoth security operation for the Games.

It placed the unarmed equipment at six sites in east London for nine days in May during a military exercise to test its air security plan.

Rapier and high velocity missile systems will be installed at those locations from mid-July and will remain there throughout the Games, the ministry said in a statement confirming the plans.

"Collectively, the systems include a range of air defence capabilities, including radar and detection equipment as well as weapons which will provide a powerful deterrent and protection against the threat of an attack from the air," the statement said.

It added that similar systems had been deployed at all recent Olympic Games.

Britain's biggest-ever peacetime security force of more than 40,000, backed by a huge intelligence operation, will also guard venues, athletes and the millions of visitors expected to throng the British capital.

Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said: "Whilst there is no reported threat to the London Olympics, the public expects that we put in place a range of measures aimed at ensuring the safety and security of this once-in-a-generation event.

"Ground-based air defence systems will form just one part of a comprehensive, multi-layered air security plan which, I believe, will provide both reassurance and a powerful deterrent."

Tenants living near the Olympic Park in Stratford, east London, launched legal action last week over proposals to station missile systems on the roof of their block of 100 local-authority owned flats.

Lawyers for residents of the Fred Wigg Tower in Leytonstone lodged papers at the Royal Courts of Justice, seeking an injunction to stop the systems being based there, claiming the plans breached tenants' human rights.

Hammond said the MoD "will defend these proceedings vigorously and is confident of defeating them."

The MoD has said the missiles would only be used in the event of "specific orders from the highest levels of government in response to a confirmed and extreme security threat."

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China wants 'spirit' of Syria deal followed
Beijing (AFP) July 4, 2012 - China said Wednesday its position on plans for a transition of power in Syria remained firm, and that it wanted the "spirit" of a weekend agreement by world powers to be followed.

The plan for a transition in Syria to end the violence there was agreed Sunday, but divisions emerged immediately with Western countries saying President Bashar al-Assad should be excluded from a new unity government.

Russia and China insisted then that Syrians must decide how the transition should be carried out, rather than allow others to dictate their fate, and did not rule out Assad remaining in power in some form.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said Wednesday that China's position on the issue was "unchanged".

"China believes that the urgent task is that the spirit of the communique of the action group on the Syrian issue should be implemented," he said.

Liu indicated China may not attend a "Friends of Syria" meeting in Paris on Friday aimed at coordinating Western and Arab efforts to stop the violence in the Middle East country.

"I haven't heard of the information that China will attend the meeting," Liu said, when asked about the gathering, without commenting further.

China did not attend the previous two "Friends of Syria" meetings in Tunis and Istanbul this year.

Russia, a long-time ally of Assad's government, has already said it will not attend the meeting.

Fighting in Syria has intensified in recent weeks as government and opposition forces have received more weapons from their foreign backers.

Monitors say the conflict has killed more than 16,500 people since March last year.



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TERROR WARS
China says plane hijack attempt thwarted
Beijing (AFP) June 29, 2012
Six members of China's Uighur minority tried to hijack a plane flying from a restive city in the far-western Xinjiang region on Friday but crew members and passengers thwarted them, authorities said. The plane returned safely to the airport in Hotan city - which has seen a spate of violent clashes between mainly Muslim Uighurs and police due to simmering ethnic tensions - and the suspects ... read more


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