Monday, 15 July 2013

The German settlers who left their mark on Palestine

By Raffi Berg BBC News, Jerusalem Kurt Eppinger's community of German Christians arrived in the Holy Land to carry out a messianic plan - but after less than a century its members were sent into exile, the vision of their founding fathers brought to an abrupt and unhappy end.The Germans were no longer welcome in what had been first a part of the Ottoman Empire, then British Mandate Palestine and would soon become Israel.On 3 September 1939, we were listening to the BBC and my father said: 'War has been declared' - and the next minute there was a knock at the door and a policeman came and took my father and all the men in the colony away."

Aged 14 at the time, Kurt was part of a Christian group called the Templers. He lived in a settlement in Jerusalem - the district still known as the German Colony today.Continue reading the main story  Breakaway movement founded in Ludwigsburg, Germany, in 1861 by clergyman Christoph HoffmannName derived from scriptural concept of Christians as temples embodying God on Earth Established Templer communities in the Holy Land hoping to hasten Second Coming of ChristSeven Templer colonies founded across Palestine from 1869-1906Reconstituted in Germany and Australia as Temple SocietyNo connection with Knights TemplarBy the late 1940s though, the entire Templer community of seven settlements across Palestine had been deported, never to return.They had landed two generations earlier, led by Christoph Hoffmann, a Protestant theologian from Ludwigsburg in Wuerttemberg, who believed the Second Coming of Christ could be hastened by building a spiritual Kingdom of God in the Holy Land.


Kurt's grandfather, Christian, was among several dozen people who joined Hoffmann in relocating from Germany to Haifa in Palestine in 1869.Hoffmann had split from the Lutheran Evangelical Church in 1861, taking his cue from New Testament concepts of Christians as "temples" embodying God's spirit, and as a community acting together to build God's "temple" among mankind.But building a community in what was then a neglected land was an immensely difficult endeavour. Much of the ground was swamp, malaria was rife and infant mortality was high.The Templers saw 'Zion' [Biblical synonym for Jerusalem and the Holy Land] as their second homeland," says David Kroyanker, author of The German Colony and Emek Refaim Street. "But it was like being on the moon - they came from a very developed country to nowhere."


In fact, the Templers arrived in Palestine more than a decade before the first large-scale immigration of Jewish Zionists, who fled there to escape destitution and pogroms in Russia - and in many ways they served as a model for the Jewish pioneers.Testimony. Christian Eppinger of Kornwestheim was instructed in the local Mission School for the Orient from 1 January 1859 until now and is to leave for Palestine during the month of March to work there for the spreading of the Gospel. This testifies. Kirschenhardthof 14 February 1860. Christoph Hoffmann, Principal of the Mission School" (Picture shows Christian and Babette Eppinger) Initially the Templers concentrated on farming - draining the swamps, planting fields, vineyards and orchards, and employing modern working techniques unfamiliar to Palestine (they were the first to market "Jaffa Oranges" - produce from their Sarona settlement near Jaffa).


They operated steam-powered oil presses and flour mills, opened the country's first hotels and European-style pharmacies, and manufactured essential commodities such as soap and cement - and beer.In his book The Settlements of the Wuerttemberg Templers in Palestine 1868-18, Prof Alex Carmel of Haifa University observes how the Templers "soon gained a reputation for their skills and their diligence. They built exemplary colonies and pretty houses surrounded by flower gardens - a piece of their homeland in the heart of Palestine"Symbols of their fervent religious beliefs are still evident in the Jerusalem neighbourhood where the Templers began to settle in 1873. They named the district Emek Refaim (Valley of Refaim) after a place in the Bible, and verses from the Scriptures, inscribed in Gothic lettering, survive on the lintels of their former homes.Most of the buildings, with their distinctive red-tiled roofs and green shutters, are intact (protected by a preservation order) and lend the district a continental elegance which has helped make it one of Jerusalem's most expensive areas.


"In the first years of Jewish immigration, in Palestine the know-how in terms of agricultural and industrial modernisation was in the hands of the Germans," notes Jakob Eisler, a Templer historian in Stuttgart. A Biblical verse on the lintel of a former Templer house in the German Colony, which reads: "Arise, shine, for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord rises upon you. Isaiah 60, 1"Although they were few in number, they had a very big impact on the whole of society, and especially on the Jews who came there," he says.Without the help of the Templers it would have been much more complicated for the Jewish settlers to establish so much.If you compare the modernity of Jewish colonies in the 1880s and '90s with the German colonies at that time, the Germans are leading."


While Palestine was worlds apart from Germany, the Templers remained fiercely patriotic, proudly retaining their German citizenship and even their Swabian dialect.When the German Kaiser Wilhelm II visited Jerusalem in 1898, the Templers turned out in their finest attire to cheer him, and their colony of Wilhelma, near Jaffa, was named in honour of King Wilhelm II of Wuerttemberg.With the advent of World War I, many Templers went to fight for Germany, dying on the battlefields of Europe and in Palestine, which was eventually conquered by the British.A memorial to 24 of their WWI dead stands in the Templers' well-tended cemetery, tucked away behind two large green gates on Emek Refaim street.Germany's defeat was disastrous for the Templers. Their German loyalties meant they were now considered enemy aliens by the British, and in 1918 850 of them - most of their population - were sent to internment camps in Egypt and their properties and livestock seized.

The visit of the Kaiser was an important event for the Templers in 1898 It would be another three years before they were all allowed back to rebuild their now dilapidated settlements. The returnees displayed the same drive as their predecessors half a century before but there was no longer such close collaboration between the Templers and Palestine's Jewish immigrants.In the 1920s the Jews didn't need any Germans for modernisation because the British were there, so the British Mandate authority was building the roads and planning the expansion of the cities and doing all those things which in the Ottoman time no-one was caring for," notes Dr Eisler.In the Mandate time Jews came to the land and were competing with the Germans so a lot of the Germans no longer saw themselves as helping development but rather they saw their own future under threat." After WWI, hundreds of Templers were expelled to Egypt, where they lived in internment camps

Nevertheless, relations between Templers and the Jewish community remained good, and despite increasing violence between Jews and Arabs in Palestine, life for the Templers was peaceful.Rosemarie Hahn, who was born in the Jerusalem colony in 1928, recalls the period with a deep sense of nostalgia.I have only happy memories," she says, her German accent, like Kurt's, still discernible. "For us as children it was like living in our own homeland - we didn't know anything else. We were friends with everybody - my best friends in kindergarten were a Jewish girl and an Arab girl. English, Jewish, Arab, Armenian - everybody was accepted into our school.But that changed after 1934. My Jewish friend was taken out of school, and my brother had a Jewish friend who never came back - because of the politics."

Rosemarie Hahn (circled near front) went to a Templer school in the German Colony in Jerusalem. Ludwig Buchhalter (circled, back row), head of the Nazi party in Jerusalem, was a teacher there By this time, the Nazi party had risen to power in Germany and the ripples had spread to expatriate communities, including in Palestine. A branch was established in Haifa by Templer Karl Ruff in 1933, and other Templer colonies followed, including Jerusalem.While National Socialism caught the imagination of many of the younger, less religious Templers, it met resistance from the older generation.The older Templers were afraid that the Fuehrer would overtake Jesus ideologically," says Mr Kroyanker.Many of the young people were easily influenced by Nazism - there were many young Templers who studied in Germany at the time... and when they came back they were very excited about Nazism.At the beginning there was some sort of disagreement between the older generation and the newer generation, and in the end the newer generation won the battle."

In Jerusalem, a teacher at one of the Templer schools, Ludwig Buchhalter, became the local party chief and led efforts to ensure Nazism permeated all aspects of German life there. The Nazi party gained a foothold in Templer communities across Palestine (Ludwig Buchhalter circled) The British Boy Scouts and Girl Guides which operated in the German Colony were replaced by the Hitler Youth and League of German Maidens. Workers joined the Nazi Labour Organisation and party members greeted each other in the street with "Heil Hitler" and a Nazi salute.Under pressure from Buchhalter, some Germans boycotted Jewish businesses in Jerusalem (while Jews did the same in return).David Kroyanker tells of a macabre turn of events when, in 1978, a box containing a uniform, dagger and other Nazi artefacts was discovered hidden in the roof-space of a house belonging to an 82-year-old Holocaust survivor in Emek Refaim.Buchhalter's house - now the site of a luxury apartment block - on Emmanuel Noah Street served as the Nazi party headquarters and Buchhalter himself drove with swastika pennants attached to his car. He later recalled how he once forgot to remove them while driving through a Jewish area and was stoned and shot at.

Continue reading the main story  Templers: 1,290 membersGerman-speaking Protestant Churches: Up to 500 members Catholic Church: Up to 180 members.The extent to which the Templers as a whole adopted Nazism is a matter of historical debate. While some were enthusiastic followers, others were less committed, and among others still there was defiance and resistance.You can find dozens of those who were really active and you can find those who were going with the stream and others who were afraid not to go into the party, exactly as you could find in Germany," says Dr Eisler.Figures vary, but according to Heidemarie Wawrzyn, whose book Nazis in the Holy Land 1933-1948 is due to be published next week, about 75% of Germans in Palestine who belonged to the Nazi party, or were in some way associated with it, were Templers.She says more than 42% of all Templers participated in Nazi activities in Palestine.Curiously, Nazi chief Adolf Eichmann, architect of the Final Solution, cultivated a legend that he was born in the Templer colony of Sarona just north of Jaffa - though this was untrue.

As war loomed in Europe, once again the position of the Templers in Palestine became insecure.In August 1939, all eligible Germans in Palestine received call-up papers from Germany, and by the end of the month some 249 had left to join the Wehrmacht.Continue reading the main story As a child I couldn't understand why we were being deported, but as it turned out, it was a blessing in disguise”End Quote Kurt Eppinger On 3 September 1939, when Britain (along with France) declared war on Germany, all Germans in Palestine were, for the second time, classed as enemy aliens and four Templer settlements were sealed off and turned into internment camps.Men of military age, including the fathers of Kurt and Rosemarie, were sent to a prison near Acre, while their families were ordered into the camps.For the next two years at least, the Templers were allowed to function as agricultural communities behind barbed wire and under guard, but it was the beginning of the end.


In July 1941, more than 500 were deported to Australia, while between 1941 and 1944 400 more were repatriated to Germany by train as part of three exchanges with the Nazis for Jews held in ghettos and camps.A few hundred Templers remained in Palestine after the war but there was no chance of rebuilding their former communities. A Jewish insurgency was under way to force out the British and in 1946 the assassination by Jewish militants of the former Templer mayor of Sarona, Gotthilf Wagner, sent shockwaves through the depleted community.Contemporary reports say Wagner was targeted because he had been a prominent Nazi. Sieger Hahn, Wagner's foster son, says Wagner was killed because he was an "obstacle" to the purchase of land from the Germans.With the killing of two more Templers by members of the Haganah (Jewish fighting force) in 1948, the British authorities evacuated almost all the remaining members to an internment camp in Cyprus.


The last group of about 20-30 elderly and infirm people was given shelter in the Sisters of St Charles Borromeo convent in Jerusalem, but in 1949 some of them too were ordered to leave the country - now the State of Israel - accused of having belonged to the Nazi party. The last Templers left in April 1950.  Some of the last group of Templers, ordered out of the new State of Israel in 1949 The movement was reconstituted as the Temple Society in Germany and Australia, and in 1962 it was paid 54m Deutsch Marks by Israel for the loss of its properties - the equivalent of about $100m (£65m) in today's money. Of this, Ludgwig Buchhalter, who died in Germany in 2006 aged 96, reportedly received $60,000, the equivalent of currently just under $500,000.Both Kurt and Rosemarie, who still belong to the Temple Society in Victoria, are sanguine about the past and are not interested in recrimination.


"As a child I couldn't understand why we were being deported," says Kurt, "but as it turned out, it was a blessing in disguise.After the Second World War, there was no future for us in Palestine. Australia gave us the opportunity to start again.Archive images in the slideshow courtesy of David Kroyanker, Mona Halaby, Central Zionist Archive, Horst Blaich, Alfred Blaich Family Archive - Australia and Alfred Klink. Contemporary images by Noam Sharon. All images subject to copyright.


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The price of taking on the mafia

12 July 2013 Last updated at 23:15 GMT By Dany Mitzman Calabria, Italy  The Calabrian mafia, suspected of running Europe's biggest cocaine smuggling operation, controls its area of southern Italy with a mixture of bribery and corruption. But when Maria Carmela Lanzetta, the mayoress of one small town was attacked a year ago, she and the country said "enough". There is something uncomfortable about Calabria. It is like the embarrassing distant relative nobody likes to mention.Being down in the toes of Italy's boot I am struck by a gruesome metaphor. Calabria's woes are the country's neglected gangrene - so far away in the extremities that few further up the limb seem to care.But in April 2012 the nation woke up to a burning sensation in its diseased foot.

Perhaps from the fire in Maria Carmela Lanzetta's chemist shop, underneath her family's apartment? Or maybe it was the sting of the bullets shot at her car soon afterwards? Continue reading the main story Mafia organisation based in Calabria, at the southern "toe" of Italy, near Sicily"'Ndrangheta" comes from the Greek for courage or loyaltyFormed in 1860s by Sicilians exiled from islandLess famous than Cosa Nostra (Sicily) or Camorra (Naples) but thought to be most powerfulEstimated 160 cells, with about 6,000 membersGlobal reach with links to Argentina, Australia, Canada, and Colombia"If it were not part of Italy, Calabria would be a failed state. The 'Ndrangheta organized crime syndicate controls vast portions of its territory and economy, and accounts for at least 3% of Italy's GDP" - US Wikileaks cable (2008)


Source: FBI, Wikileaks Whatever the case, the mayoress of the tiny coastal town of Monasterace cried out in pain. And she was heard.After months of intimidation, most likely by the 'Ndrangheta - the Calabrian mafia - Maria Carmela Lanzetta's cry of "basta" ("enough") echoed nationwide. Her resignation became front-page news, prompting the national leader of her Democratic Party to travel down to Monasterace to beg her to reconsider.Other local mayors threatened to resign en masse and local people - who had helped clean up her fire-damaged pharmacy - held candle-lit processions for her.The unassuming mayor of a town with a population of 3,500 became a national symbol of the fight against the mob.The government gave her police protection and promised to help her achieve her goals.She conditionally agreed to take back her resignation, giving the state a three-month ultimatum to make the changes necessary for her to govern.

Continue reading the main story Insight and analysis from BBC correspondents, journalists and writers from around the worldBroadcast on Radio 4 and BBC World ServiceThat was a year ago. Now I had travelled to Monasterace to find out in person if anything had changed.No," she tells me despondently. "Or perhaps it has. It has got worse. This should have been the year of stability. Instead it's a mess.Maria Carmela is quick to stress that this is not simply about death threats and the mafia: it is about a crippling economic and bureaucratic vacuum that has left her powerless to see through any of her plans."We have no money; state funds have been frozen. We have had to declare the council bankrupt. I have got no resources, no prospects. I'm seriously thinking of giving up.I admit I am surprised. I have just finished reading Italy Down Here - Maria Carmela Lanzetta and the women against the 'Ndrangheta. Continue reading the main story 

Elisabetta Tripodi - Mayoress of Rosarno, Calabria, who lives under 24-hour police protection. Sued a local 'Ndrangheta boss and won settlement of 50m euros for the city, to be paid out of confiscated mafia funds.


Carolina Girasole - Ex-mayoress of Isola Capo Rizzuto received death threats and had her car burnt soon after her election, having vowed to clean up the Calabrian resort town. Lost re-election attempt in May.


Rita Borsellino (above) - Democratic Party MEP and activist who set up grassroots anti-mafia organisation Libera in 1995. Sister of pioneering anti-mafia magistrate Paolo Borsellino, killed in 1992.


Rita Atria - Born into a Sicilian mafia family, at 17 she became an important state witness in a major 1991 mafia investigation. Disowned by her mother, she committed suicide a week after her mentor Paolo Borsellino (see above) was killed.

In it, she comes across as a determined leader and a powerful mother figure. But right now, she feels more like Sisyphus. I'm tired and I've had enough." Her brown-flecked blue eyes bear no trace of self-pity, just a "that's-how-it-is" tone of wistful resignation. "I want my life back.Maria Carmela's life has definitely not been her own since last year. She has invited me to her home as she does not like to call out her police escort on a Sunday.It's like being in prison," I say, as we sip coffee on her terrace.Absolutely," she replies grimly, indicating the glistening sea just across the road. "I used to swim every day - at lunchtime or after work. I haven't been in the water for over a year.Why don't you ask the police to accompany you? They wouldn't mind."

She shakes her head. "Only for official business," she says. "But they're there to protect you personally," I protest. She shakes her head again. "I do miss popping to the shops, and going to the hairdresser.I tell her I think she is being bloody-minded. She says it is a matter of principle.Maria Carmela is undeniably a woman of steadfast principles. She plays by the rules and her rulebook is always the strictest version. But she wants everyone to play by them and that has just never been the Calabrian way.

Illegal and unfinished construction sites are common The magnificent coastline is pockmarked with eyesores - half-finished concrete monstrosities built without planning permission, and rotting rubbish on the streets. Continue reading the main story I didn't want any mafia connections. I've managed to keep all our contracts clean, but I don't have the resources to continue End Quote Maria Carmela Lanzetta Her high standards have put many backs up. She tells me: "Culturally, there is an absence of civic responsibility. Lots of my citizens don't see why they have to pay taxes for water and refuse collection."


She is self-critical too, telling me that she does not always communicate well with her citizens and that her rigid attitudes have led to frequent conflicts with other council members.I had no political experience. The only thing I knew was that I wanted to bring legality to Monasterace - I did not want any connections with the mob, and I have managed to keep all our contracts clean, but I don't have the resources to continue."And now she would just like to be the local chemist again. Mayors get a small salary but I don't draw mine, I do this as voluntary work. I'm paying others to do my job while I'm working for free. If you had to give up the source of your income, no matter how noble the cause, you'd struggle too."

Continue reading the main story Pursued by a newly determined police, the 'Ndranghetisti constructed an astonishing network of secret hiding places under the streets and houses.It is virtually a parallel city, an underworld where bunkers located behind sliding staircases, hidden trapdoors and even inside a pizza oven are linked by endless tunnels.Even the deepest and best-concealed bolt-holes have secret escape routes within them.Read full article and watch video from May 2013 hereShe wants her family life back too. "My husband's always supported me in this. My sons did too at first, but now they say, 'Mamma, who's forcing you to do this?'Fortunately, Maria Carmela has found great friendship and support in other Calabrian mayoresses, some of whom, like her, live under police protection.

In the book, she says she believes it is the women of Calabria who will bring about positive social change. "I still think that," she smiles wearily, "I just think we need a whole lot more women to be able to achieve it.Having said goodbye, I go to see the council building - a derelict former school with missing windows, stained walls and broken shutters. As I walk down to the beach to dip my feet into the evening tide, I pass the rubbish overflowing from the seafront bins.I wonder if this brave pharmacist will ever find the remedy for Calabria's literal and figurative decay.I had just finished writing this when I heard the news that she had resigned.From the end of July, Maria Carmela Lanzetta will no longer be mayoress of Monasterace. I phoned her. She sounded relieved. This time, she says, her "basta" is definitive.


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Thousands at Lee Rigby's funeral

12 July 2013 Last updated at 12:55 GMT  Thousands lined the streets of Bury and Middleton to pay their respects to Fusilier Rigby The prime minister and thousands of mourners have attended the military funeral of Fusilier Lee Rigby at Bury Parish Church in Greater Manchester.The 25-year-old soldier, from Middleton, was killed in Woolwich, south-east London, in May.His commanding officer Lt Col Jim Taylor said in a eulogy Lee had been "a true regimental character"After the service his body was driven along roads lined by mourners for a private burial at Middleton Cemetery.'Good people' The soldier's family were greeted by applause as they arrived with his son wearing a T-shirt showing the words 'My Daddy My Hero They have thanked people "across the world" for their "overwhelming support"Fusilier Rigby's wife Rebecca said: "There are so many kind and generous people out there.

"It's just horrible that it takes something such as this to make you see how many good people there are."Thousands applauded as a mark of respect as Lee Rigby's coffin was taken for a private burial, as Ed Thomas reports Fusilier Rigby's body was guarded overnight during a vigil at the church by 32 members of the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers.The funeral service, which was relayed to those gathered outside, began with a silent tribute from the crowds in the streets around the church at about 11:00 BST.Among those gathered were hundreds of serving and former soldiers in their regimental ties, blazers and caps, wearing their campaign medals.They applauded the arrival of David Cameron who was accompanied by London Mayor Boris Johnson.

'Lighten the mood' Inside the church, Fusilier Rigby was described as a "fantastic soldier" by his commanding officer.Continue reading the main story Outside Bury Parish Church the town was at a standstill, with most of the shops closed as mark of respect.The soldier's family were met with applause as they arrived, before the crowds fell silent as the funeral began.Many were carrying single roses and some wore T-shirts bearing messages of tribute to the drummer. One read "in memory of Lee Rigby never forgotten", while another simply had the phrase "Hero Lee" upon it. After the service, some of those on the streets broke into a rendition of God Save The Queen as the funeral car departed, while many more repeated their applause for the Rigby family.Lt Col Jim Taylor of the 2nd Battalion Royal Regiment of Fusiliers said Lee was "larger than life [and] was always at the centre of fun and mischief, but he was a true regimental character with real charisma and everybody fell under his spell".To be with Lee was to be where it was most fun - the centre of good times and much mischief," he said.

"People fell quickly under his spell. Whether it was in work or off duty, at a ceremonial engagement or on operations, Lee just knew how to lighten the mood.He could brighten a room within moments and, by all accounts, clear a dancefloor in seconds if a Whitney Houston track was playing.He added Fusilier Rigby had "a natural swagger and the confidence of someone truly comfortable in their own skin"He was always happy. His smile was infectious, as was his enthusiasm for soldiering and his passion for life.He also spoke of Fusilier Rigby's military service and said he had "proved himself to be dedicated, professional and incredibly brave"His courage was tested every day. He was not found wanting.The eulogy was met with applause inside and outside the church.Military chaplain the Reverend Clare Callanan spoke of the impact of the soldier's death on the "hearts and minds of family, of friends and of a nation".


She said it was an event which had caused "outrage, horror, anger" but had also shown "the courage of individuals" and brought faiths together.Happy memories'Asked before the funeral about how Fusilier Rigby would like to be remembered, Mrs Rigby said: "Lee always wanted his service to be a time that people would remember him and shed the tears, but then he always said a remembrance of his life Fusilier Rigby's stepfather said he had been a "fun-loving lad and that is how he should be remembered He wanted people to enjoy that and sit and talk about happy days and happy memories they have got of Lee and the things he used to do and say because he was always so full of life Stepfather Ian Rigby said: "I think today should be a celebration of Lee's life, what he has meant to us.Lee was a fun-loving lad and that is how he should be remembered.As the funeral began, soldiers gathered outside Woolwich Barracks where Fusilier Rigby was killed and the Last Post, a call traditionally performed at military funerals, was played by a bugler.


The regular morning summer train service between Fort William and Mallaig, hauled by the steam loco 45407 The Lancashire Fusilier, also paused for two minutes on the Glenfinnan Viaduct as a mark of respect.The engine is owned and run by Ian Riley, whose engineering works are on the East Lancs Railway in Bury.Members of the public lined the route from Bury to Middleton on police and council-designated "suitable roads.Michael Adebolajo, 28, from Romford, east London, and Michael Adebowale, 22, from Greenwich, south-east London, are accused of Fusilier Rigby's murder.Mr Adebolajo is also accused of the attempted murder of two police officers and possession of a firearm with intent to cause others to believe that violence would be used.Extract from army Padre Rev Clare Callanan's address



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Track fault 'caused French crash'

13 July 2013 Last updated at 12:54 GMT The train and station were busy for the start of a holiday weekend The train crash south of Paris which left six people dead was caused by a fault in the rail tracks, says the state rail company.SNCF said a metal bar connecting two rails had become detached close to Bretigny-sur-Orge station.Earlier, Transport Minister Frederic Cuvillier ruled out human error and praised the train driver for averting a worse accident.Thirty people were injured in the accident, eight of them seriously.The train had just left Paris on Friday afternoon and was heading for Limoges when it derailed at Bretigny-sur-Orge.

Giving its initial findings, SNCF management told reporters the connector had worked its way loose and become detached at points 200m from Bretigny station causing the train to derail.The inquiry is now expected to focus on how the piece of metal had become detached, and checks on these components are to be carried out on the whole of the network.Continue reading the main story 'Extraordinary reflexes' Six carriages derailed as the train passed through the station at 137km/h (85mph). The train's third and fourth carriages derailed first and the others followed. One mounted the station platform in the accident which happened at 17:14 (15:14 GMT).


Continue reading the main story Anna Holligan BBC News, Bretigny-sur-Orge On a tree-lined residential street in a quiet suburb just south of the capital, women in their sandals carry plastic grocery bags, bulging with thick, fresh French baguettes.Today they have to manoeuvre around reporters, TV satellite tracks and police security barriers. France's worst rail disaster for a quarter of a century struck at the top of their street The quiet hum of generators blurs with summer bird song. If it weren't for the emergency haulage trucks, staffed by men in orange and yellow vests, and the odd burst of a siren, it might be difficult to believe that such a devastating event happened here just yesterday.Blue cranes keep heaving chunks of crushed and curled metal off the tracks. Police watch, arms crossed. Hanging baskets shudder in the breeze. Aside from SNCF, investigations are being conducted by judicial authorities and France's BEA safety agency.


Speaking on RTL radio, Mr Cuvillier said the train driver had reacted quickly to the accident: "Fortunately, the driver of the locomotive had absolutely extraordinary reflexes in that he sounded the alarm immediately, preventing a collision with another train coming in the opposite direction and which would have hit the derailing carriages within seconds. So it is not a human problem.French transport routes were particularly busy at the time of the crash due to the run-up to a holiday weekend marking Sunday's Bastille Day. SNCF said 385 passengers were on board when the train crashed. The station platforms were crowded.British student Marvin Khareem Wone was on a train on another platform when the carriages of the intercity ploughed into the station.


The train went off the railway; it just went on the platform and kind of flew in the air for a second and went upside down," he told the BBC."The first and the second coach were completely destroyed. I really thought no-one could survive that because it was completely mashed up. Everyone was crying and running everywhere. A woman was crying for her daughter who was still on the train."Images of war' Continue reading the main story Francois Sergent in Liberation calls the accident a "a national tragedy" that "touches the hearts of all French people. All of us have been, at one time or another, passengers on the French rail network.Bertille Bayart in Le Figaro says the accident, which comes days after the government announced investments in the railways, will spark controversy over infrastructure that is "characterised by 'serious degradation', in the words of the transport minister".


Olivier Razemon in Le Monde contends that the crash "must not eclipse the fact that railways remain one of the least dangerous means of transport in the world, in terms of deaths per kilometres or hour travelled"Transport expert Alain Bonnafous on Atlantico website says it is impossible at this stage to know what caused the accident, but vandalism is always a possibility. "But few like to talk about it because it is so easy to disrupt the network," he adds.Because of the damage to the station, he said ambulances could not reach the platform and the lift was not working.Other media reports spoke of passengers being electrocuted and crushed.I saw many wounded women children trapped inside," Vianey Kalisa, who was waiting for his train from Bretigny to Paris, told AFP.


"People were screaming. A man had blood on his face. These are images of war," he said.Many people feel it was lucky that the accident was not a lot worse, given the violence of the impact and the fact that a packed train ploughed onto the platform at peak time, says the BBC's Hugh Schofield in Paris. Local media said a group of people had attempted to steal from the victims and rescuers shortly after the crash and threw stones at emergency workers as they tried to reach passengers.Journalist Olivier Ravanello was one of the first at the scene of the crashHowever later Mr Cuvilier said there had only been "isolated acts", including an attempt to steal a mobile phone - although small groups had given the rescuers a "somewhat rough welcomeLocal socialist MP Jerome Guedj tweeted that it was necessary "not to play things down (...) but not to exaggerate anything either".


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Trans-Dniester profile

31 May 2012 Last updated at 14:35 GMT The separatist region of Trans-Dniester - a narrow strip of land between the Dniester river and the Ukrainian border - proclaimed independence from Moldova in 1990, and is considered one of the post-Soviet space's "frozen conflicts".


The international community does not recognise its self-declared statehood, and the territory, which remains in a tense stand-off with Moldova, is often portrayed as a hotbed of crime.In a September 2006 referendum, unrecognised by Moldova and the international community, the region reasserted its demand for independence and also backed a plan eventually to join Russia. A billboard in Tiraspol reads: Union with Russia! We are not Moldova!In the post World War II carve-up of the region, Moscow created Moldova's forerunner, the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic, from two disparate elements: the mainly Russian-speaking Dniester region, formerly an autonomous part of Ukraine, and the neighbouring region of Bessarabia, which had been part of Romania from 1918-1940.But in the Soviet Union's dying days, alarm grew in the Dniester region over growing Moldovan nationalism and the possible reunification of Moldova with Romania. A 1989 law which made Moldovan an official language added to the tension, and Trans-Dniester proclaimed its secession in September 1990.

The breakaway territory's paramilitary forces took over Moldovan public institutions in the area in 1991. Fighting intensified, culminating in a battle on the right bank of the Dniester in June 1992. Up to 700 people were killed in the conflict.A ceasefire was signed in July 1992, and a 10-km demilitarised security zone was established. The settlement was enforced by the Russian 14th Army forces already stationed in Trans-Dniester.Russian presence The ongoing presence of Russian troops has been a stumbling block in peace talks and the West is concerned about the Soviet-era arsenal in the territory. A pull-out began in 2001 but was halted when Trans-Dniester blocked the dispatch of weapons. Subsequent agreements to resume failed to reach fruition.Long-running talks supervised by the OSCE, Russia and Ukraine have yet to yield a political solution. Attempts by Moldova to exert economic pressure on the Dniester authorities have failed to produce the desired result.

In 2004 a Russian-brokered plan, which would have made the presence of Russian troops permanent, sparked mass protests in Moldova and was shelved.Conflict resolution talks involving Moldova, Trans-Dniester, Russia, Ukraine and the OSCE resumed under Russian mediation in 2008, after being suspended in 2006.There are disputes over language issues. Though dominated by Russian-speakers, around 40% of the population in Trans-Dniester have Moldovan - which is virtually identical to Romanian - as a first language.


Trans-Dniester contains most of Moldova's industrial infrastructure, but its economic potential is limited by its international isolation. It has its own currency, constitution, parliament, flag and anthem. One of the last bastions of Soviet-style rhetoric, the territory has nonethless privatised some of its industrial enterprises.Russia shores up the region with financial assistance and funds a monthly payment to the region's pensioners.The region is plagued by corruption, organised crime and smuggling. It has been accused of conducting illegal arms sales and of money laundering. Poverty is widespread. Trans-Dniester has plenty of Soviet symbols, including this soaring statue of Lenin in Tiraspol


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Turkey country profile

5 June 2013 Last updated at 10:14 GMT Once the centre of the Ottoman Empire, the modern secular republic was established in the 1920s by nationalist leader Kemal Ataturk.Straddling the continents of Europe and Asia, Turkey's strategically important location has given it major influence in the region - and control over the entrance to the Black Sea. Turkey's progress towards democracy and a market economy was halting in the decades following the death of President Ataturk in 1938. The army saw itself as the guarantor of the constitution, and ousted governments on a number of occasions when it thought they were challenging secular values.Efforts to reduce state control over the economy also faced many obstacles. After years of mounting difficulties which brought the country close to economic collapse, a tough recovery programme was agreed with the IMF in 2002.

The austerity measures imposed then meant that by the time the global financial crisis came round in 2008, Turkey was in a better position to weather the storm than many other countries. Turkey is a member of Nato and aspires to being part of the European Union Continue reading the main story Politics: Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of the Islamist AKP began his third term in 2011. He has dealt ruthlessly with alleged challenges from the powerful, secularist military Economy: The economy has enjoyed strong growth, fuelled by trade and foreign investment. Tourism, agriculture and manufacturing are key sectors International: EU accession negotiations have been tortuous, bedevilled by disputes with Greece over Cyprus. Former close ties with Israel have deteriorated, while Turkey's constitutional model is frequently cited as a model by reformers throughout the Arab region


Country profiles compiled by BBC Monitoring The level of public debt was already relatively low, and although the effects of the recession were still felt, by 2010 the Turkish economy had started to bounce back - to the extent that by the beginning of 2011, concerns were being raised over whether the boom was sustainable.Rise of AKP Concerns over the potential for conflict between a secular establishment backed by the military and a traditional society deeply rooted in Islam resurfaced with the landslide election victory of the Islamist-based Justice and Development Party (AKP) in 2002.The secularist opposition has on several occasions since then challenged the constitutional right of the AKP to be the party of government. In March 2008 the Constitutional Court narrowly rejected a petition by the chief prosecutor to ban the AKP and 71 of its officials, including President Abdullah Gul and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, for allegedly seeking to establish an Islamic state.


The government has accused military officers of plotting to overthrow it through an alleged secret organisation called Ergenekon (Sledgehammer), which led to the jailing of three generals for 20 years and lesser sentences against more than 300 other officers in 2012, as well as dividing public opinion. The officers involved accuse the government of a show trial to neutralise the anti-Islamist influence of the armed forces in politics.The chiefs of staff resigned in the summer of 2011 in protests at the arrests of officers, and the government rather than the military appointed their successors for the first time. The government has not had everything its own way. Concerns at creeping Islamisation spilled over into mass protests in various cities in the summer of 2013, to which the police responded with violence and the government with a confusion of bluster and apology. For the first time in his decade in power, Prime Minister Erdogan began to look politically vulnerable.

Foreign relations Turkey became an EU candidate country in 1999 and, in line with EU requirements, went on to introduce substantial human rights and economic reforms. The death penalty was abolished, tougher measures were brought in against torture and the penal code was overhauled.Reforms were introduced in the areas of women's rights and Kurdish culture, language, education and broadcasting. Women's rights activists have said the reforms do not go far enough and have accused the government of lacking full commitment to equality and of acting only under EU pressure.

After intense bargaining, EU membership talks were launched in October 2005. Accession negotiations are expected to take about 10 years. So far, the going has not been easy.Turkey has long been at odds with its close neighbour, Greece, over the divided island of Cyprus and territorial disputes in the Aegean.The breakthrough in its EU membership talks came just weeks after Turkey agreed to recognise Cyprus as an EU member - though it qualified this conciliatory step by declaring that it was not tantamount to full diplomatic recognition.Several European countries continue to have serious misgivings over Turkey's EU membership, and Germany and France have called for it to have a "privileged partnership" with the EU instead of full membership.


Turkey long saw itself as the eastern bulwark of the Nato alliance, and underlined this by having close ties with Israel. But under Mr Erdogan Turkey has taken an openly confrontational approach to Israel, counting on its new prestige in Arab countries to boost its regional standing as a power broker.The outbreak of civil war in neighbouring Syria has seen Turkey's stance move from detente with the Assad government to open support for the rebels, albeit stopping short of military assistance. This has left Turkey exposed within the Nato alliance, which continues to keep the Syrian conflict at arms length, but has further enhanced Turkey's prestige in Arab public opinion.

The Kurdish issue The issue of Turkey's minority Kurds has troubled the country for decades Turkey is home to a sizeable Kurdish minority, which by some estimates constitutes up to a fifth of the population. The Kurds have long complained that the Turkish government was trying to destroy their identity and that they suffer from economic disadvantage and human rights violations.The Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), the best known and most radical of the Kurdish movements, launched a guerrilla campaign in 1984 for a homeland in the Kurdish heartland in the southeast. Thousands died and hundreds of thousands became refugees in the ensuing conflict with the PKK, which Turkey, the US and the European Union deem a terrorist organisation.Kurdish guerrilla attacks briefly subsided after the 1999 capture of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, but soon began to increase again.Partly in a bid to improve its chances of EU membership, the government began to ease restrictions on the use of the Kurdish language from 2003 onwards. As part of a new "Kurdish initiative" launched in 2009, it pledged to extend linguistic and cultural rights and to reduce the military presence in the mainly Kurdish southeast of the country.

Although fighting continued, the PKK signalled its readiness to cease fire in 2010. After months of talks, Abdullah Ocalan ordered his fighters to stop attacking Turkey and withdraw from the country from May 2013, effectively ending the insurgency.East meets west in Turkey's second city Istanbul, which straddles Europe and Asia


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UK issues Greece jellyfish warning

12 July 2013 Last updated at 08:27 GMT By Mark Kinver Environment reporter, BBC News  Vast blooms of jellyfish can clog fishing nets as well as deter people from swimming in the sea The UK Foreign Office has updated its travel advice for Greece, warning that jellyfish blooms have been reported and for people to heed local advice.Officials have already issued warnings about jellyfish in Mediterranean coastal waters for France and Italy.But local marine biologists said this year's increase was "no different" from other years and that the blooms consisted of non-stinging species.

They added that they were monitoring the situation very closely.A Foreign Office spokeswoman told BBC News: "We have been alerted to large numbers of jellyfish in the Mediterranean this summer, especially in a number of key holiday destinations for UK tourists. We have updated our travel advice for a number of Mediterranean countries to reflect this issue.She added that the Foreign Office aimed to keep its advice "as informative and useful for visitors as possible"Global problem However, Stefano Piraino - project co-ordinator of the Mediterranean JellyRisk programme - said there was no need for tourists to be unduly concerned.Of course, as in any other ocean or sea in the world, there might be some problems," he said.


"In the Mediterranean, we are lucky and do not have deadly [jellyfish].Jellyfish blooms also affected UK beaches But he did acknowledge: "We are experiencing, as in many other places around the world, an increase in jellyfish.Prof Piraino, a marine biologist at the University of Salento in southern Italy, said the JellyRisk programme - also involving researchers from Spain, Tunisia and Malta - was set up because there was growing concern about the impact of increasing number of jellyfish on human activities in the region, such as fishing as well as tourism.He told BBC News that the programme's main focus was on a citizen science campaign"This is a very important tool," Prof Piraino observed.We have, since 2009, used this approach where we are asking tourists, sailors, fishermen, divers - all the people that are in the sea - to send information about the presence of jellyfish."


The team have developed a smartphone application that not only allows people to send information, but also receive details about the abundance of jellyfish in their area.The app also provides scientifically sound information about how to treat stings because the venom of jellyfish varies according to the species that inflicted the injury"We have collated scientific evidence and results from clinical trials, which we have reviewed so we can now, through the app and printed material, offer advice on the treatment of stings," he explained. The UK's Foreign Office has issued jellyfish warnings for a number of Mediterranean countries The team will also install anti-jellyfish nets at a number of popular beaches in order to assess their effectiveness.Prof Piraino said it was difficult to pinpoint a single cause for the increase in the abundance of jellyfish.


"This is a result of many different causes. These can be different from site to site," he said.Generally, there is evidence that there is an increased abundance because of an increase in sea surface temperature. This is coupled with other things, such as the fact that we are changing the coastal marine environment.One example he cited was the construction of artificial reefs for flood defences, which used a material favoured by jellyfish.He added that this has been observed more often in other European bodies of water, such as the North Sea.This places a hard substrate in the sea, which is the preferred substrate for the larvae stage of jellyfish.


'Vicious cycle Overfishing was another contributing factor, he added.We are overfishing the oceans, which means we are catching all the big fish so the fish population is being reduced and we eliminate competitors and leave more food for the jellyfish.A recent report published by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) concluded that the increasing number of jellyfish was creating a "vicious cycle" because the jellyfish were also feeding on the eggs and larvae of commercially important fish species.In June, marine researchers gathered in Japan for the fourth International Jellyfish Bloom Symposium to share research on the global problem.According to the FAO report, some experts have warned that, if the trend continued unabated, jellyfish could supplant fish in the world's oceans, triggering a "global regime shift from a fish to a jellyfish ocean".


Prof Piraino offered a solution, saying that people had to "learn to love jellyfish"The Chinese have been eating jellyfish for millennia," he said.Now there is documented evidence that non-stinging jellyfish in the Mediterranean can be eaten - they are full of antioxidants and they provide molecules that can be used in the pharmaceutical or cosmetic industries.Therefore the creatures should be viewed as a resource rather than a pest."


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