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• April 2003
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• UK to implement biometric chip passport by 2005: The chip would carry facial recognition data about the parameters of the passport holder’s face, such as the exact distance between their eyes and the distance between their nose and chin.
• Foreign Media Play up Epidemic: Indian Defense Minister: Mr Fernandes said he believes there is a "hidden'' agenda behind the "news noise of SARS.''
• Welcome to the Sars camp: 1,000 solitary, sterile, white rooms: The white, sterile rooms will soon become an enormous camp where the city's victims of Sars will be shut away.
• Mass drugging in Australia: New push to put fluoride in rural water: Most state water authorities have not introduced the chemical because of community opposition. Some opponents say fluoride is a poison that can affect the human nervous system.
• EU permanent presidency and constitution closer: Opponents of a European Constitution have stated that it will yet further erode the already weakened sovereignty of member states.
• N Korea nuclear claim 'hushed up': A "poisonous" row is brewing in Washington over allegations that diplomats knew for weeks that North Korea claimed to be reprocessing nuclear fuel rods but hushed the matter up for fear of derailing peace talks.
• Saddam link to al-Qaeda in doubt: British Intelligence officials have expressed doubt that Saddam Hussein established any working relationship with al-Qaeda despite the discovery of documents showing that an “envoy” for Osama bin Laden visited Baghdad in 1998.
• Fighting is over but the deaths go on: Unexploded ordnance and landmines littering northern Iraq have killed or maimed more people - many of them children - since the end of the war than during the fighting.
• SHAME OF U.S. TROOPS' IRAQI STREET JUSTICE: Stripped at gunpoint and publicly branded as thieves a gang of suspected Iraqi looters are humiliated by US troopers' street justice.
• SMOKING GUN STINKS OF SPOOKS: How fortunate! What a coincidence! And how convenient they should all be discovered by journalists working for papers that back Bush all the way.
• Randy Lavello: Of Course there are Forces of Global Government Undermining Us! Most decent people find it difficult to believe a person can be so hopelessly malevolent as these globalists are - that is because they are projecting their own thoughts and actions onto others.
• SARS HYSTERIA: SNEEZING COULD BECOME TERRORIST ACT IN PHILIPPINES: Asked by Locsin if sneezing in public can be considered a terrorist act, Libanan replied: “It depends on your intention. If you sneeze with the intent of creating common danger, terror, panic or chaos to the public or a segment thereof, then you can be charged as a terrorist.”
• UK Doctors may get new legal powers in war against Sars: The move would give doctors the power to quarantine suspected sufferers and destroy clothing that they think may be infected.
• U.S. media ignore children at Guantanamo story: The Washington Post ignored it. It never happened. Children are adults. Ignorance is strength. War is peace.
• Blair urges US, Europe to forge 'one polar power': "Others believe, and this is my notion, that we need one polar power which encompasses a strategic partnership between Europe and America."
• Another crackdown on homeschoolers? Proposed legislation that would have equated truancy with child abuse in California raised suspicions among homeschool advocates it represented a fresh attack on home-based education.
• NYC Tourist With SARS Symptoms Detained: The city's Health Department detained a foreign tourist against his will for a week after he went to a hospital with symptoms of SARS and refused to follow the department's 10-day isolation policy.
• Sars: 'Worst over' in several countries: The World Health Organisation says the worst of the Sars outbreak is over in Singapore, Hong Kong, Canada and Vietnam.
• Aziz says Saddam is alive - report: Iraq's former deputy prime minister, Tareq Aziz, has told U.S. interrogators that Saddam Hussein survived two airstrikes launched to kill the ousted Iraqi president
• Is protecting terrorists what US calls its anti-terrorism campaign? Instead of snaring the terrorists and proving to the world community that it is sincere in its anti-terrorism campaign, Washington has struck a deal with the most hated Iraq-based terrorist Mojahedin Khalq Organization (MKO) to remain stationed in Baghdad and continue their terrorist activities
• Kevin Newsom: The Corporate/Government Axis: The true problems begin when the greedy bureaucracy that makes new laws for the sake of staying in power starts to encroach on individual rights.
• Israeli troops mark Palestinians with numbers: Israeli soldiers have written numbers in ink on the hands of hundreds of Palestinians waiting at a crowded West Bank military checkpoint, several of the people marked said Monday.
• Israeli calls for "regime change" in Iran and Syria: The Israeli ambassador in Washington has called for "regime change" in Iran and Syria through diplomatic isolation, economic sanctions and what he calls "psychological pressure".
• U.S. Virus Experts Slam SARS Panic: People around the world are overreacting to SARS, creating a sense of panic that could overwhelm common-sense measures for containing the virus, top AIDS experts said on Monday.
• 'Global government must save us': Blair fears new Cold War over EU rift with US: Tony Blair issued a warning that the world would be plunged back into an era of insecurity and tension reminiscent of the Cold War unless Europe and America quickly repaired the transatlantic relationship.
• Back of the paper: Chemical find 'may be rocket fuel': Two mobile chemical laboratories found nearby might also have been used for mixing the fuel and not making banned weapons, the chief chemical weapons officer of the 4th Infantry Division added.
• Secret Service agent sparks airport chaos: The paper said it was unclear why the unidentified agent was carrying the device, but the Secret Service said he was on "official duty" and authorized to carry it.
• 125,000 US troops 'in Iraq for a year': Pentagon officials say at least 125,000 US troops will be needed in Iraq for a year while a new government is installed..
• Police Get Power to Check Prints On The Spot: Next month, more than a dozen officers will carry handheld devices on the street that will allow them to instantly verify a person's identity by analyzing their fingerprints.
• 'Even under Saddam pay was better than this': “This is cruelty,” Vahan Gregor, a civil engineer who used to have his own company, said. “The rate is not even enough to pay for the lift into work."