10/14/2010

They're all out: 33 miners raised safely in Chile


AP/Roberto Candia )



SAN JOSE MINE, Chile (KATAKAMI / AP)  –  The last of the Chilean miners, the foreman who held them together when they were feared lost, was raised from the depths of the earth Wednesday night — a joyous ending to a 69-day ordeal that riveted the world. No one has ever been trapped so long and survived.

Luis Urzua ascended smoothly through 2,000 feet of rock, completing a 22 1/2-hour rescue operation that unfolded with remarkable speed and flawless execution. Before a jubilant crowd of about 2,000 people, he became the 33rd miner to be rescued.

"We have done what the entire world was waiting for," he told Chilean President Sebastian Pinera immediately after his rescue. "The 70 days that we fought so hard were not in vain. We had strength, we had spirit, we wanted to fight, we wanted to fight for our families, and that was the greatest thing."

The president told him: "You are not the same, and the country is not the same after this. You were an inspiration. Go hug your wife and your daughter." With Urzua by his side, he led the crowd in singing the national anthem.

The rescue exceeded expectations every step of the way. Officials first said it might be four months before they could get the men out; it turned out to be 69 days and about 8 hours.

Once the escape tunnel was finished, they estimated it would take 36 to 48 hours to get all the miners to the surface. That got faster as the operation went along, and all the men were safely above ground in 22 hours, 37 minutes.

The rescue workers who talked the men through the final hours were being hoisted one at time to the surface.




AP/Hugo Infante, Chilean government


The crowd in "Camp Hope," down a hill from the escape shaft, set off confetti, released balloons and sprayed champagne as Urzua's capsule surfaced, joining in a rousing miners' cheer. In Chile's capital of Santiago, hundreds gathered in Plaza Italia, waving flags and chanting victory slogans in the miners' honor.

In nearby Copiapo, about 3,000 people gathered in the town square, where a huge screen broadcast live footage of the rescue. The exuberant crowd waved Chilean flags of all sizes and blew on red vuvuzelas as cars drove around the plaza honking their horns, their drivers yelling, "Long live Chile!"
"The miners are our heroes," said teary-eyed Copiapo resident Maria Guzman, 45.

One by one throughout the day, the men had emerged to the cheers of exuberant Chileans and before the eyes of a transfixed globe. While the operation picked up speed as the day went on, each miner was greeted with the same boisterous applause from rescuers.

"Welcome to life," Pinera told Victor Segovia, the 15th miner out. On a day of superlatives, it seemed no overstatement.

They rejoined a world intensely curious about their ordeal, and certain to offer fame and jobs. Previously unimaginable riches awaited men who had risked their lives going into the unstable gold and copper mine for about $1,600 a month.

The miners made the smooth ascent inside a capsule called Phoenix — 13 feet tall, barely wider than their shoulders and painted in the white, blue and red of the Chilean flag. It had a door that stuck occasionally, and some wheels had to be replaced, but it worked exactly as planned.

Beginning at midnight Tuesday, and sometimes as quickly as every 25 minutes, the pod was lowered the nearly half-mile to where 700,000 tons of rock collapsed Aug. 5 and entombed the men.
Then, after a quick pep talk from rescue workers who had descended into the mine, a miner would climb in, make the journey upward and emerge from a manhole into the blinding sun.

The rescue was planned with extreme care. The miners were monitored by video on the way up for any sign of panic. They had oxygen masks, dark glasses to protect their eyes from the unfamiliar sunlight and sweaters for the jarring transition from subterranean swelter to chilly desert air.

As they neared the surface, a camera attached to the top of the capsule showed a brilliant white piercing the darkness not unlike what accident survivors describe when they have near-death experiences.

The miners emerged looking healthier than many had expected and even clean-shaven. Several thrust their fists upwards like prizefighters, and Mario Sepulveda, the second to taste freedom, bounded out and led his rescuers in a rousing cheer. Franklin Lobos, who played for the Chilean national soccer team in the 1980s, briefly bounced a soccer ball on his foot and knee.

"We have prayed to San Lorenzo, the patron saint of miners, and to many other saints so that my brothers Florencio and Renan would come out of the mine all right. It is as if they had been born again," said Priscila Avalos. One of her brothers was the first miner rescued, and the other was due out later in the evening.

Health Minister Jaime Manalich said some of the miners probably will be able to leave the hospital Thursday — earlier than projected — but many had been unable to sleep, wanted to talk with families and were anxious. One was treated for pneumonia, and two needed dental work.

"They are not ready to have a moment's rest until the last of their colleagues is out," he said.
As it traveled down and up, down and up, the rescue capsule was not rotating as much inside the 2,041-foot escape shaft as officials expected, allowing for faster trips.
 
The first man out was Florencio Avalos, who emerged from the missile-like chamber and hugged his sobbing 7-year-old son, his wife and the Chilean president.

No one in recorded history has survived as long trapped underground. For the first 17 days, no one even knew whether they were alive. In the weeks that followed, the world was captivated by their endurance and unity.

News channels from North America to Europe and the Middle East carried live coverage of the rescue. Pope Benedict XVI said in Spanish that he "continues with hope to entrust to God's goodness" the fate of the men. Iran's state English-language Press TV followed events live for a time. Crews from Russia and Japan and North Korean state TV were at the mine.

The images beamed to the world were extraordinary: Grainy footage from beneath the earth showed each miner climbing into capsule, then disappearing upward through an opening. Then a camera showed the pod steadily rising through the dark, smooth-walled tunnel.

Among the first rescued was the youngest miner, Jimmy Sanchez, at 19 the father of a months-old baby. Two hours later came the oldest, Mario Gomez, 63, who suffers from a lung disease common to miners and had been on antibiotics inside the mine. He dropped to his knees after he emerged, bowed his head in prayer and clutched the Chilean flag.

Gomez's wife, Lilianett Ramirez, pulled him up from the ground and embraced him. The couple had talked over video chat once a week, and she said that he had repeated the promise he made to her in his initial letter from inside the mine: He would marry her properly in a church wedding, followed by the honeymoon they never had.

The lone foreigner among them, Carlos Mamani of Bolivia, was visited at a nearby clinic by Pinera and Bolivian President Evo Morales. The miner could be heard telling the Chilean president how nice it was to breathe fresh air and see the stars.

Most of the men emerged clean-shaven. More than 300 people at the mine alone had worked on the rescue or to sustain them during their long wait by lowering rocket-shaped tubes dubbed "palomas," Spanish for carrier pigeons. Along with the food and medicine came razors and shaving cream.
Estimates for the rescue operation alone have soared beyond $22 million, though the government has repeatedly insisted that money is not a concern.

The men emerged in good health. But at the hospital in Copiapo, where miner after miner walked from the ambulance to a waiting wheelchair, it became clear that psychological issues would be as important to treat as physical ones.

Dr. Guillermo Swett said Sepulveda told him about an internal "fight with the devil" that he had inside the mine. He said Sanchez appeared to be having a hard time adjusting, and seemed depressed.
"He spoke very little and didn't seem to connect," the doctor said.

The entire rescue operation was meticulously choreographed. No expense was spared in bringing in topflight drillers and equipment — and boring three separate holes into the copper and gold mine. Only one has been finished — the one through which the miners exited.

Mining is Chile's lifeblood, providing 40 percent of state earnings, and Pinera put his mining minister and the operations chief of state-owned Codelco, the country's biggest company, in charge of the rescue.
It went so well that its managers abandoned a plan to restrict images of the rescue. A huge Chilean flag that was to obscure the hole from view was moved aside so the hundreds of cameras perched on a hill above could record images that state TV also fed live.

That included the surreal moment when the capsule dropped for the first time into the chamber, where the bare-chested miners, most stripped down to shorts because of the underground heat, mobbed the rescuer who emerged to serve as their guide to freedom.

"This rescue operation has been so marvelous, so clean, so emotional that there was no reason not to allow the eyes of the world — which have been watching this operation so closely — to see it," a a beaming Pinera told a news conference after the first miner safely surfaced.

The miners' vital signs were closely monitored throughout the ride. They were given a high-calorie liquid diet donated by NASA, designed to prevent nausea from any rotation of the capsule as it travels through curves in the 28-inch-diameter escape hole.

Engineers inserted steel piping at the top of the shaft, which is angled 11 degrees off vertical before plunging like a waterfall. Drillers had to curve the shaft to pass through "virgin" rock, narrowly avoiding collapsed areas and underground open spaces in the overexploited mine, which had operated since 1885.
U.S. President Barack Obama said the rescue had "inspired the world." The crews included many Americans, including a driller operator from Denver and a team from Center Rock Inc. of Berlin, Pa., that built and managed the piston-driven hammers that pounded the hole through rock laced with quartzite, some of the hardest and most abrasive rock.

Chile has promised that its care of the miners won't end for six months at least — not until they can be sure that each man has readjusted.

Psychiatrists and other experts in surviving extreme situations predict their lives will be anything but normal. Since Aug. 22, when a narrow bore hole broke through to their refuge and the miners stunned the world with a note, scrawled in red ink, disclosing their survival, their families have been exposed in ways they never imagined.

Miners had to describe their physical and mental health in detail with teams of doctors and psychologists. In some cases, when both wives and lovers claimed the same man, everyone involved had to face the consequences.

As trying as their time underground was, the miners now face challenges so bewildering that no amount of coaching can fully prepare them. Rejoining a world intensely curious about their ordeal, they have been invited to presidential palaces, to take all-expenses-paid vacations and to appear on countless TV shows. Book and movie deals are pending, along with job offers.

Sepulveda's performance exiting from the shaft appeared to confirm what many Chileans thought when they saw his engaging performances in videos sent up from below — that he could have a future as a TV personality.

But he tried to quash the idea as he spoke to viewers of Chile's state television channel while sitting with his wife and children shortly after his rescue.

"The only thing I'll ask of you is that you don't treat me as an artist or a journalist, but as a miner," he said. "I was born a miner and I'll die a miner."

Obama Salutes Chile and Rescue

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks during a Rose Garden event about the American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC) October 13, 2010 at the White House in Washington, DC. (Getty Images)


October 13, 2010 (KATAKAMI) — Following are comments of President Obama this afternoon in the Rose Garden, as he started a previously scheduled event about a tax credit for college education.


“This is obviously something that’s captivated the world’s attention and this rescue is a tribute not only to the determination of the rescue workers and the Chilean government, but also the unity and resolve of the Chilean people who have inspired the world. And I want to express the hopes of the American people that the miners who are still trapped underground will be returned home safely as soon as possible.

“Let me also commend so many people of goodwill, not only in Chile, but also from the United States and around the world, who are lending a hand in this rescue effort — from the NASA team that helped design the escape vehicle, to American companies that manufactured and delivered parts of the rescue drill, to the American engineer who flew in from Afghanistan to operate the drill.

“Last night, the whole world watched the scene at Camp Esperanza as the first miner was lifted out from under more than 2,000 feet of rock and then embraced by his young son and family.

And the tears they shed — after so much time apart — expressed not only their own relief, not only their own joy, but the joy of people everywhere. So it was a thrilling moment and we’re hopeful that those celebrations duplicate themselves throughout the rest of today.”


NYTimes

Last of Chilean miners is raised safely to surface

Miner Ariel Ticona Yanez, center, emerges from the capsule that lifted him to the surface after being rescued from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine where he had been trapped with 32 other miners for over two months near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday Oct. 13, 2010.



SAN JOSE MINE, Chile  (KATAKAMI)  — The last of the Chilean miners, the foreman who held them together when they were feared lost, was raised from the depths of the earth Wednesday night — a joyous ending to a 69-day ordeal that riveted the world. No one has ever been trapped so long and survived.

Luis Urzua ascended smoothly through 2,000 feet of rock, completing a 22 1/2-hour rescue operation that unfolded with remarkable speed and flawless execution. Before a jubilant crowd of about 2,000 people, he became the 33rd miner to be rescued.

"We have done what the entire world was waiting for," he told Chilean President Sebastian Pinera immediately after his rescue. "The 70 days that we fought so hard were not in vain. We had strength, we had spirit, we wanted to fight, we wanted to fight for our families, and that was the greatest thing."

The president told him: "You are not the same, and the country is not the same after this. You were an inspiration. Go hug your wife and your daughter." With Urzua by his side, he led the crowd in singing the national anthem.

The rescue exceeded expectations every step of the way. Officials first said it might be four months before they could get the men out; it turned out to be 69 days and about 8 hours.

Once the escape tunnel was finished, they estimated it would take 36 to 48 hours to get all the miners to the surface. That got faster as the operation went along, and all the men were safely above ground in 22 hours, 37 minutes.
The rescue workers who talked the men through the final hours still had to be hoisted to the surface.
In nearby Copiapo, about 3,000 people gathered in the town square, where a huge screen broadcast live footage of the rescue. The exuberant crowd waved Chilean flags of all sizes and blew on red vuvuzelas as cars drove around the plaza honking their horns, their drivers yelling, "Long live Chile!"
"The miners are our heroes," said teary-eyed Copiapo resident Maria Guzman, 45.

One by one throughout the day, the men had emerged to the cheers of exuberant Chileans and before the eyes of a transfixed globe. While the operation picked up speed as the day went on, each miner was greeted with the same boisterous applause from rescuers.

"Welcome to life," Pinera told Victor Segovia, the 15th miner out. On a day of superlatives, it seemed no overstatement.

They rejoined a world intensely curious about their ordeal, and certain to offer fame and jobs. Previously unimaginable riches awaited men who had risked their lives going into the unstable gold and copper mine for about $1,600 a month.

The miners made the smooth ascent inside a capsule called Phoenix — 13 feet tall, barely wider than their shoulders and painted in the white, blue and red of the Chilean flag. It had a door that stuck occasionally, and some wheels had to be replaced, but it worked exactly as planned.

Beginning at midnight Tuesday, and sometimes as quickly as every 25 minutes, the pod was lowered the nearly half-mile to where 700,000 tons of rock collapsed Aug. 5 and entombed the men.

Then, after a quick pep talk from rescue workers who had descended into the mine, a miner would climb in, make the journey upward and emerge from a manhole into the blinding sun.

The rescue was planned with extreme care. The miners were monitored by video on the way up for any sign of panic. They had oxygen masks, dark glasses to protect their eyes from the unfamiliar sunlight and sweaters for the jarring transition from subterranean swelter to chilly desert air.

As they neared the surface, a camera attached to the top of the capsule showed a brilliant white piercing the darkness not unlike what accident survivors describe when they have near-death experiences.
The miners emerged looking healthier than many had expected and even clean-shaven. Several thrust their fists upwards like prizefighters, and Mario Sepulveda, the second to taste freedom, bounded out and led his rescuers in a rousing cheer. Franklin Lobos, who played for the Chilean national soccer team in the 1980s, briefly bounced a soccer ball on his foot and knee.

"We have prayed to San Lorenzo, the patron saint of miners, and to many other saints so that my brothers Florencio and Renan would come out of the mine all right. It is as if they had been born again," said Priscila Avalos. One of her brothers was the first miner rescued, and the other was due out later in the evening.

Health Minister Jaime Manalich said some of the miners probably will be able to leave the hospital Thursday — earlier than projected — but many had been unable to sleep, wanted to talk with families and were anxious. One was treated for pneumonia, and two needed dental work.

"They are not ready to have a moment's rest until the last of their colleagues is out," he said.
As it traveled down and up, down and up, the rescue capsule was not rotating as much inside the 2,041-foot escape shaft as officials expected, allowing for faster trips.

The first man out was Florencio Avalos, who emerged from the missile-like chamber and hugged his sobbing 7-year-old son, his wife and the Chilean president.

No one in recorded history has survived as long trapped underground. For the first 17 days, no one even knew whether they were alive. In the weeks that followed, the world was captivated by their endurance and unity.

News channels from North America to Europe and the Middle East carried live coverage of the rescue. Pope Benedict XVI said in Spanish that he "continues with hope to entrust to God's goodness" the fate of the men. Iran's state English-language Press TV followed events live for a time. Crews from Russia and Japan and North Korean state TV were at the mine.

The images beamed to the world were extraordinary: Grainy footage from beneath the earth showed each miner climbing into capsule, then disappearing upward through an opening. Then a camera showed the pod steadily rising through the dark, smooth-walled tunnel.

Among the first rescued was the youngest miner, Jimmy Sanchez, at 19 the father of a months-old baby. Two hours later came the oldest, Mario Gomez, 63, who suffers from a lung disease common to miners and had been on antibiotics inside the mine. He dropped to his knees after he emerged, bowed his head in prayer and clutched the Chilean flag.

Gomez's wife, Lilianett Ramirez, pulled him up from the ground and embraced him. The couple had talked over video chat once a week, and she said that he had repeated the promise he made to her in his initial letter from inside the mine: He would marry her properly in a church wedding, followed by the honeymoon they never had.

The lone foreigner among them, Carlos Mamani of Bolivia, was visited at a nearby clinic by Pinera and Bolivian President Evo Morales. The miner could be heard telling the Chilean president how nice it was to breathe fresh air and see the stars.

Most of the men emerged clean-shaven. More than 300 people at the mine alone had worked on the rescue or to sustain them during their long wait by lowering rocket-shaped tubes dubbed "palomas," Spanish for carrier pigeons. Along with the food and medicine came razors and shaving cream.
Estimates for the rescue operation alone have soared beyond $22 million, though the government has repeatedly insisted that money is not a concern.

The men emerged in good health. But at the hospital in Copiapo, where miner after miner walked from the ambulance to a waiting wheelchair, it became clear that psychological issues would be as important to treat as physical ones.

Dr. Guillermo Swett said Sepulveda told him about an internal "fight with the devil" that he had inside the mine. He said Sanchez appeared to be having a hard time adjusting, and seemed depressed.
"He spoke very little and didn't seem to connect," the doctor said.

The entire rescue operation was meticulously choreographed. No expense was spared in bringing in topflight drillers and equipment — and boring three separate holes into the copper and gold mine. Only one has been finished — the one through which the miners exited.

Mining is Chile's lifeblood, providing 40 percent of state earnings, and Pinera put his mining minister and the operations chief of state-owned Codelco, the country's biggest company, in charge of the rescue.
It went so well that its managers abandoned a plan to restrict images of the rescue. A huge Chilean flag that was to obscure the hole from view was moved aside so the hundreds of cameras perched on a hill above could record images that state TV also fed live.

That included the surreal moment when the capsule dropped for the first time into the chamber, where the bare-chested miners, most stripped down to shorts because of the underground heat, mobbed the rescuer who emerged to serve as their guide to freedom.

"This rescue operation has been so marvelous, so clean, so emotional that there was no reason not to allow the eyes of the world — which have been watching this operation so closely — to see it," a a beaming Pinera told a news conference after the first miner safely surfaced.

The miners' vital signs were closely monitored throughout the ride. They were given a high-calorie liquid diet donated by NASA, designed to prevent nausea from any rotation of the capsule as it travels through curves in the 28-inch-diameter escape hole.

Engineers inserted steel piping at the top of the shaft, which is angled 11 degrees off vertical before plunging like a waterfall. Drillers had to curve the shaft to pass through "virgin" rock, narrowly avoiding collapsed areas and underground open spaces in the overexploited mine, which had operated since 1885.
U.S. President Barack Obama said the rescue had "inspired the world." The crews included many Americans, including a driller operator from Denver and a team from Center Rock Inc. of Berlin, Pa., that built and managed the piston-driven hammers that pounded the hole through rock laced with quartzite, some of the hardest and most abrasive rock.

Chile has promised that its care of the miners won't end for six months at least — not until they can be sure that each man has readjusted.

Psychiatrists and other experts in surviving extreme situations predict their lives will be anything but normal. Since Aug. 22, when a narrow bore hole broke through to their refuge and the miners stunned the world with a note, scrawled in red ink, disclosing their survival, their families have been exposed in ways they never imagined.

Miners had to describe their physical and mental health in detail with teams of doctors and psychologists. In some cases, when both wives and lovers claimed the same man, everyone involved had to face the consequences.

As trying as their time underground was, the miners now face challenges so bewildering that no amount of coaching can fully prepare them. Rejoining a world intensely curious about their ordeal, they have been invited to presidential palaces, to take all-expenses-paid vacations and to appear on countless TV shows. Book and movie deals are pending, along with job offers.

Sepulveda's performance exiting from the shaft appeared to confirm what many Chileans thought when they saw his engaging performances in videos sent up from below — that he could have a future as a TV personality.

But he tried to quash the idea as he spoke to viewers of Chile's state television channel while sitting with his wife and children shortly after his rescue.

"The only thing I'll ask of you is that you don't treat me as an artist or a journalist, but as a miner," he said. "I was born a miner and I'll die a miner."


CHRON.COM

Photostream : Chile Mine Rescue Efforts

In this photo released by the Chilean government, miner Esteban Rojas, 44, gets on his knees to pray after being rescued from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine, near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010. Rojas was the eighteenth of the 33 miners rescued from the mine after more than two months trapped underground
(AP Photo/Hugo Infante, Chilean government)
In this photo released by the Government of Chile, miner Omar Reygadas Rojas, holds a Bible after being rescued from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine, near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010. Reygadas was the seventeenth of 33 miners rescued from the mine after more than 2 months trapped underground.
(AP Photo/Hugo Infante, Government of Chile)
      
Trapped miner Omar Reygadas (in green) embraces his son after reaching the surface to become the 17th to be rescued from the San Jose mine in Copiapo October 13, 2010. Seventeen of 33 trapped miners have been rescued from the gold and copper mine in Chile's northern Atacama desert in a painstaking operation still under way. REUTERS/Hugo Infante/Government of Chile/Handout
In this photo released by the Government of Chile, miner Daniel Herrera Campos embraces his mother after being rescued from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine, near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010. Herrera was the sixteenth of 33 miners rescued from the mine after more than 2 months trapped underground.
(AP Photo/Hugo Infante, Government of Chile)
Trapped miner Victor Segovia (C) reaches the surface to become the 15th to be rescued from the San Jose mine in Copiapo October 13, 2010. Sixteen of Chile's 33 trapped miners were hoisted to safety in a cramped rescue capsule on Wednesday, punching the air and hugging their families in a triumphant end to their two-month ordeal. REUTERS/Hugo Infante/Government of Chile/Handout
In this photo released by the Chilean presidential press office, Chile's President Sebastian Pinera, back, greets miner Victor Zamora Bugueno after his rescue from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine, near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010.
(AP Photo/Jose Manuel de la Maza, Chilean Presidential Press Office)
In this photo released by the Chilean government, miner Carlos Barrios waves to the crowd while emerging from the capsule that brought him to the surface from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010. Barrios is the thirteenth of 33 miners who was rescued after more than 2 months trapped underground.
(AP Photo/Hugo Infante, Chilean government)
In this photo released by the Chilean government, Edison Pena, gestures as he is carried on a stretcher after being rescued at the San Jose mine, near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010. Pena was the twelfth of 33 miners rescued from the San Jose mine after more than 2 months trapped underground.
(AP Photo/Hugo Infante, Chilean government)
In this photo released by the Chilean government, Jorge Galleguillos, the eleventh miner rescued from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine waves to the crowd after been trapped with 32 other miners for over two months near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010
(AP Photo/Hugo Infante, Chilean government)
 
In this photo released by the Chilean government, miner Alex Vega gestures after being rescued from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine where he had been trapped with 32 other miners for over two months near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday Oct. 13, 2010.
(AP Photo/Hugo Infante, Chilean government)
Roxana Gomez, left, daughter of miner Mario Gomez, is comforted by Maria Segovia, sister of trapped miner Dario Segovia, as they watch on TV Gomez's rescue from the collapsed San Jose mine at the camp outside the mine near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday Oct. 13, 2010. Thirty-three miners became trapped when the gold and copper mine collapsed on Aug. 5.
(AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
In this photo released by the Chilean government, miner Florencio Avalos is carried away on a stretcher after being rescued from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine where he was trapped with 32 other miners for over two months near Copiapo, Chile, early Wed Oct. 13, 2010
(AP Photo/Hugo Infante, Chilean government)
In this photo released by the Chilean government, miner Claudio Yanez applauds as he is carried away in a stretcher after being rescued from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine where he had been trapped with 32 other miners for over two months near Copiapo, Chile, early Wed Oct. 13, 2010.
(AP Photo/Hugo Infante, Chilean government)
In this photo released by the Chilean government, miner Florencio Avalos, second left, hugs a relative after he was rescued from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine where he was trapped with 32 other miners for over two months near Copiapo, Chile, early Wed, Oct. 13, 2010.
(AP Photo/Hugo Infante, Chilean government)
Alfonso Avalos (right) father of Chilean miner Florencio Avalos and Wilson Avalos brother of Florencio embrace each other after Florencio was brought to the surface from the collapsed San Jose mine, near Copiapo. Rescue workers in Chile by had lifted to safety nearly a third of the 33 miners trapped deep underground, in an historic and complex operation carried off without a hitch.
(AFP/Hector Retamal)
Relatives of miner Carlos Barrios react while watching on a TV screen the rescue operation at the camp outside the San Jose mine near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010. Barrios was the thirteenth of 33 miners who was rescued from the collapsed gold and copper mine after more than 2 months trapped underground
(AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
Residents rally in support of the miners trapped in the San Jose mine, as they gather to watch the rescue on a large screen in a public square in Copiapo October 12, 2010. Chile's 33 trapped miners are set to travel nearly half a mile through solid rock in a shaft just wider than a man's shoulders on Tuesday night, as their two month ordeal after a cave-in draws to an end
REUTERS/Mariana Bazo

10/13/2010

Russia, India to hold joint antiterrorism drills

Russian-indian joint drills



October 13, 2010 (KATAKAMI) --- Russia and India will conduct joint antiterrorism exercises on Indian territory on October 15-24, the Russian Defense Ministry said on Wednesday.

Russia is sending more than 200 troops from its 34th mountain brigade, based in the North Caucasus, to join the Indian troops in the INDRA 2010 drills.

"During the upcoming exercise, the Russian and Indian military personnel will form a joint task force, and plan and carry out a series of mock antiterrorism missions in the mountains," the ministry said in a statement.

The Russian troops will be equipped with lightweight Permyachka Infantry Suits, which protect at least 80 percent of the body surface from small-caliber bullets and low-speed shrapnel.

The Russian and Indian military have been conducting joint INDRA exercises, including biannual antiterrorism drills, since 2003.


MOSCOW, October 13 (RIA Novosti)

Photostream : Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague in first visit to Russia


Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev (R) shakes hands with Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague as they meet at the Gorki presidential residence outside Moscow, October 13, 2010. Britain and Russia said on Wednesday they hoped for a thaw in frosty relations after years of disputes over the murder of a Kremlin critic in London with a rare radioactive isotope. ( Getty Images/ REUTERS/RIA Novosti/Kremlin/Mikhail Klimentyev )

Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev (R) meets with Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague at the Gorki presidential residence outside Moscow October 13, 2010. Britain and Russia said on Wednesday they hoped for a thaw in frosty relations after years of disputes over the murder of a Kremlin critic in London with a rare radioactive isotope. ( REUTERS/RIA Novosti/Kremlin/Mikhail Klimentyev )

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov (L) and British Foreign Secretary William Hague arrive for a meeting in Moscow on October 13, 2010. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov hosts British Foreign Secretary William Hague on a rare visit after saying it was up to Britain to take the initiative and help bring about a thaw in relations. (Getty Images/ AFP PHOTO / ALEXANDER NEMENOV)

Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (L) shows the way to Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague as they meet in Moscow October 13, 2010. ( REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin )

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, right listens to Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague during a joint press conference after their meeting in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010. Anglo-Russian relations have been tense amid controversy over issues including the fatal poisoning of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko in London in 2006 and the enforced exile of executives in British oil company BP PLC's Russian joint venture. (AP Photo/Misha Japaridze)

Photostream : Hillary Clinton in Serbia


Serbian President Boris Tadic and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton make their way to speak to the press following meetings at the Palace of Serbia in Belgrade, Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2010. (Getty Images)

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) meets with Serbian President Boris Tadic on October 12, 2010 at the presidential palace in Belgrade. Clinton is to discuss with Tadic the start of the EU-sponsored talks between Serbia and breakaway Kosovo. (Photo : MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) shakes hands with Serbia's President Boris Tadic after their joint statement following their meeting in Belgrade October 12, 2010. REUTERS/Ivan Milutinovic

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) takes part in a meeting with Serbian Minister of Foreign Affairs Vuk Jeremic ( 4th right) at the Palace of Serbia in Belgrade, Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2010. (Getty Images / AP Photo / Mandel Ngan, Pool)

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton poses with Serbian Defense Minister Dragan Sutanovac ahead of a meeting at the Palace of Serbia in Belgrade, Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2010. (Getty Images / AP Photo / Mandel Ngan, Pool)

Russian journalist Mikhail Fedotov appointed chief human rights advisor

Mikhail Fedotov appointed presidential adviser on human rights




October 13, 2010 (KATAKAMI) --- The secretary of Russia's Union of Journalists, Mikhail Fedotov, has been appointed head of the president's council on human rights.

His predecessor Ella Pamfilova, one of Russia's most senior human rights advocates, resigned amid increasing pressure from Kremlin insiders in July.

A colleague said Pamfilova had been under attack from the pro-Kremlin youth group Nashi (Ours), which she had criticized for hard-line populism.

She proposed economist Alexander Auzan as her successor, but was pleased at Fedotov's appointment on Tuesday.

"He speaks the same language as the others [in the council]," she told the Kommersant newspaper. "It would have been far worse if it had been someone from outside."

Fedotov was Press and Information Minister in the late Yegor Gaidar's cabinet in 1992-1993, and is the author of Russia's 1991 Media Law. He has shrugged off numerous attempts by the Kremlin to tamper with it.

MOSCOW, October 13 (RIA Novosti)

Kapolri Jenderal BHD : Dulu Saya Tidak Sangka Dapat Amanah Jadi Kapolri



Kapolri Jenderal Bambang Hendarso Danuri
WAWANCARA EKSKLUSIF

Jakarta 13/10/2010 (KATAKAMI) --- Tak terasa waktu berlalu begitu cepat. Jenderal Bambang Hendarso Danuri (BHD) yang merupakan Kapolri ke-19 akan segera memasuki masa purna bhaktinya ( pensiun ) per tanggal 1 November 2010 mendatang.

Tepat di hari ulangtahunnya yang ke-58 pada hari Minggu (10/10/2010) lalu di kediaman dinasnya di Jalan Pattimura Jakarta Selatan, Kapolri Jenderal Bambang Hendarso Danuri memberikan kesempatan khusus kepada KATAKAMI.COM untuk melakukan WAWANCARA EKSKLUSIF.

Ini sebuah kesempatan emas sebab kami memang meminta dan menunggu selama berbulan-bulan.
BHD adalah anak ke-4 dari 8 bersaudara dari pasangan Mayor CPM Haji R. Danuri dan  Mariam ( yang sebelumnya bekerja sebagai seorang bidan di bagian kesehatan lingkungan korps CPM ).

BHD dilahirkan di Bogor tanggal 10 Oktober 1952. Ia lulusan Akabri bidang Kepolisian tahun 1974.

Selama 2 tahun, ia telah bertugas sebagai Kapolri.

Dan ini WAWANCARA EKSKLUSIF kami dengan Kapolri Jenderal Bambang Hendarso Danuri :


Katakami (K): Apa kesan yang dirasakan dan dihadapi selama bertugas selama 2 tahun ini sebagai Kapolri ?

Bambang Hendarso Danuri (BHD) : Begini ya ... dalam perjalanan ini memang saya rasakan dinamikanya sangat tinggi. Dari mulai awal menghadapi persiapan sampai akhir penyelenggaraan Pemilu. Banyak tantangan yang saya hadapi, baik dari eksternal maupun internal. Namun ada pelajaran dan hikmah yang bisa diambil dari semua itu. Kita telah berusaha dengan konsep bagaimana kita melakukan percepatan di tubuh Kepolisian. Dengan berbagai tahapan, reformasi dan program-program ke dalam untuk pembenahan. Akhirnya Polri memang merasakan dalam 2 tahun terakhir ini bahwa harapan masyarakat sangat tinggi kepada Polri agar berubah. Ini betul-betul saya rasakan selama bertugas selama Kapolri. Polri harus berubah. Tapi jangan bilang bahwa Polri tidak pernah berubah. Polri sudah berubah.

(K) Apa hasil evaluasi dari internal Polri tentang dimana letak kelemahan Polri dalam memberikan pelayanan kepada masyarakat agar harapan yang tinggi itu bisa terpenuhi ?

(BHD) : Pelayanan yang masih sangat rendah dan memberatkan adalah Reserse. Itu makanya saya lakukan program "Ayo Keroyok Reserse".

( Keterangan : Untuk membenahi reserse, pada bulan April lalu Polri bakal menggelar pembinaan terhadap 5.000 penyidik polisi di seluruh Indonesia. Pembinaan termasuk upgrading kompetensi, pakta integritas, dan pendidikan lanjutan. Program ini juga dikaitkan dengan pengawasan organisasi yang semakin ketat terhadap perilaku penyidik. Redaksi ).

(K) : Kalau Polri menyadari sepenuhnya bahwa masyarakat ingin agar Polri berubah atau mereformasi dirinya, apakah harapan masyarakat itu sudah terpenuhi ?

(BHD) :  Dengan komitmen dan konsistensi pengganti saya, saya yakin Polri berubah. Tapi sekali lagi saya mohon, jangan bilang Polri belum berubah dan cuma jalan di tempat. Polri yakin sudah ada perubahan.

(K) : Apa yang harus dilakukan oleh Kapolri yang baru nanti ?

(BHD) : Yang paling penting dilakukan adalah harus terus mencari terobosan. Saya sudah melakukan beberapa terobosan, diantaranya ya propram "Ayo Keroyok Reserse" tadi.  Kemudian program Quick Wins.

( Keterangan : Quick Wins adalah salah satu program unggulan POLRI dalam masa kepemimpinan Kapolri Bambang Hendarso Danuri dalam rangka meraih keberhasilan. Agar tercapai tuntutan dan harapan masyarakat terhadap pelayanan Polri baik selaku pemelihara kamtibmas, pelindung, pengayom dan pelayan masyarakat serta penegakkan hokum. Polri telah mereformasi diri dan mempercepat proses birokrasi, salah satunya adalah melalui program dalam rangka meraih keberhasilan segera. Yang tercakup dalam Quick Wins adalah Quick Respon Patroli Samapta, Transparansi Penerbitan SIM, STNK DAN BPKB,  Transparansi Penyidikan Melalui Pemberian SP2HP atau Surat Pemberitahuan Perkemabangan Hasil Penyidikan dan Transparansi Rekrutmen Anggota Kepolisian yaitu AKPOL, PPSS DAN BINTARA.  Redaksi )




Dari Kiri ke Kanan (barisan terdepan) : Menkopolhukkam Djoko Suyanto, Presiden SBY, Kapolri BHD, Wakapolri Komjen Jusuf Manggabarani (duduk) & Irwasum Komjen Nanan Soekarna, disaksikan sejumlah perwira tinggi Polri


(K) : Semua program yang selama ini sudah dan sedang dilaksanakan, harus dilanjutkan oleh Kapolri yang baru ya ?

(BHD) :  Untuk perubahan culture ... kita berharap mudah-mudahan Pak Kapolri baru punya konsep dan terobosan untuk melakukan perubahan berikutnya di Kepolisian.

(K) : Menjelang peralihan kepemimpinan ini, apakah Polri tetap solid atau ada semacam resistensi terhadap calon Kapolri baru yaitu Komjen Timur Pradopo ?

(BHD) : Alhamdulilah, tidak ada samasekali resistensi terhadap beliau. Saya sudah tanamkan kepada anak-anak di lapangan, kepada para perwira tinggi, para Kombes dan AKBP, begitu juga purnawirawan. Saya sudah bicara kepada mereka. Mabes Polri sudah menyiapkan perwira tinggi terbaik. Dan kemudian ada proses yang menyerahkan segala sesuatunya kepada hak prerogratif Presiden yang dipayungi UU Nomor 2 Tahun 2002.

( Keterangan : Pasal 11 ayat 1 UU Nomor 2 Tahun 2002 berbunyi, "Kapolri diangkat dan diberhentikan oleh Presiden dengan persetujuan Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat". Ayat 2, "Usul pengangkatan dan pemberhentian Kapolri diajukan oleh Presiden kepada Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat disertai dengan alasannya".  Ayat 6, "Usul pengangkatan dan pemberhentian Kapolri diajukan oleh Presiden kepada Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat disertai dengan alasannya". Redaksi ).


Komjen Timur Pradopo ( kiri ) & Kapolri Bambang Hendarso Danuri

(K) : Artinya, pencalonan Komjen Timur Pradopo ini tidak bermasalah ya ?

(BHD ) :  Sesuai dengan UU kan, Kapolri dipilih oleh Presiden dengan persetujuan DPR. Dan kalau dari kacamata Presiden, hal-hal dari eksternal dan internal memang sangat mempengaruhi maka Presiden bisa meminta nama baru. Dan nama baru itu memang sudah dipersiapkan oleh kami di Mabes Polri. Jadi tidak ada resistensi atau gejolak di dalam Polri. Kan Polri juga memiliki sistem. Dari nama-nama yang kami proses, pasti ada yang disiapkan menjadi calon Kapolri. Dan kalau ternyata dari hasil penilaian Tim Kepresidenan,  dibutuhkan nama baru diluar dari nama-nama yang kami ajukan maka kami akan mengajukan nama baru yang dianggap memenuhi persyaratan.

(K) : Jadi penilaian terhadap figur Komjen Timur Pradopo memang dilakukan oleh beberapa pihak ?

(BHD ) :  Ya betul. Penilaian bahwa calon Kapolri itu memenuhi persyaratan atau tidak, datang dari Mabes Polri, Komisi Kepolisian Nasional ( Kompolnas) yang dipimpin Pak Djoko Suyanto, lalu Badan Intelijen Negara (BIN) dan Tim Kepresidenan. Ini yang memberikan penilaian secara keseluruhan. Dan yang terpenting, ini semua kan amanah dari Allah Swt. Kita sebagai manusia, tidak akan ada yang bisa mengetahui rahasia Allah. Saya pribadipun, dulu tidak pernah mengetahui atau menyangka akan menjadi Kapolri. Kalau tahun 2008 lalu, amanah dari Allah diberikan kepada saya untuk menjadi Kapolri. Maka sekarang yang akan mendapatkn amanah itu adalah Pak Timur Pradopo. Jadi menurut saya, sah-sah saja kalau Pak Timur yang diajukan oleh Bapak Presiden ke DPR..

(K) :  Apakah dalam rangka mengamankan pencalonan pak Timur Pradopo ini maka pada hari Jumat pekan lalu (8/10/2010), seluruh Kapolda dikumpulkan di Polda Metro Jaya untuk mendapatkan pengarahan dari Pak Kapolri ?

(BHD) : Mengenai pertemuan dengan seluruh Kapolda itu, pertama-tama untuk menghadapi perkembangan dinamika ke depan. Saya perlu menjelaskan dari aspek politis dan keamanan. Perlu tindakan yang cepat dari aparat kepolisian. Jadi jangan dianggap, Polri tidak memiliki sense of crisis. Dinamika di lapangan memang begitu cepat. Ada kasus Tarakan, kasus pembakaran, perkelahian antar kelompok, antar masyarakat. Ini memerlukan ketanggap-segeraan dari semua komponen. Tidak hanya dari kepolisian saja tetapi dari semua pihak. Dari Pemerintah Daerah sampai ke semua komponen yang ada. Sehingga embrio bahwa akan ada terjadi sesuatu di sekitar kita, bisa segera dimonitor dan dicegah oleh semua pihak. Sehingga embrio tindakan kekerasan itu tidak menjadi kerusuhan dalam skala yang begitu besar dan menimbulkan korban yang tidak diinginkan.

(K) : Jadi seluruh Kapolda dikumpulkan untuk mendapat pengarahan mengantisipasi kerusuhan-kerusuhan berskala besar di daerah ?

(BHD) : Ya betul itu tujuannya. Sehingga dapat dihindari kegamangan bahwa seolah-olah Polri tidak bisa melakukan apapun terhadap orang-orang membawa senjata api dan senjata tajam. Itu sebabnya Polri mengeluarkan Protap baru yaitu Protap 1 Tahun 2010 Tentang Penanganan Tindak Anarkis yang tujuannya untuk penanggulangan tindakan  anarkisme. Protap baru ini tidak perlu menunggu eskalasi. Protal yang lalu harus menunggu eskalasi dan izin sesuai UU Nomor 9 Tahun 1998 Tentang Kemerdekaan Menyampaikan Pendapat Di Muka Umum Dengan Rahmat  Tuhan Yang Maha Esa.

(K) : Jadi maksudnya, Protap baru ini dikeluarkan oleh Polri untuk adanya kepastian hukum ?

Begini ... dengan adanya Protap baru ini, Polri bisa bertindak tegas jika ada kelompok maupun perorangan yang membawa senjata tajam untuk melakukan tindakan kekerasan. Protap baru ini sudah mengatur tahapan-tahapan yang terukur dan dapat dipertanggungjawabkan.
Jadi kami harap, tidak akan ada lagi warga yang membuat orang takut, cemas, keamanan orang lain terganggu, bahkan nyawa orang lain sekalipun karena tindakan brutal. Sekarang kan harus ada kepastian hukum yang menjamin bahwa Polri punya satu protap yang terukur, bisa dijadikan pedoman para kapolda malam ini, direktur intelijen, reserse, kapolsek, kapolres dan jajaran Polri.
Dan satu lagi, sebelum protap ini kami sahkan dan dikeluarkan, kami sudah melakukan berbagai pertimbangan dan mendapatkan juga masukan-masukan dari masyarakat dan pihak terkait lainnya. Protap ini sudah dibahas bersama dengan Kontras (Komisi untuk Orang Hilang dan Korban Tindak Kekerasan (Kontras), Komnas HAM (Komisi Nasional Hak Asasi Manusia), Kompolnas (Komisi Kepolisian Nasional).


Kapolri Jenderal Bambang Hendarso Danuri



(K) :  Di akhir masa kepemimpinan sebagai Kapolri, apa pesan yang ingin disampaikan kepada masyrakat di Indonesia ?

(BHD) :  Selama ini, kita sudah melihat ada kejadian perkelahian antar kampung, antar kelompok, ada tindakan anarkisme, terorisme, jadi yang pertama saya berpesan agar masyarakat jangan mudah terprovokasi. Kedua, mari stick holder yang ada saling bersinergi untuk membangun wilayahnya, terutama masalah keamanan agar tetap kondusif. Jangan cepat melakukan tindakan kekerasan. Cari dulu akar permasalahan dari setiap permasalahan. Selesaikan dulu di tingkat bawah. Jadi setiap permasalahan, jangan lantas diselesaikan lewat tindakan-tindakan kekerasan. Sebab nanti orang tidak mau melakukan investasi di Indonesia kalau tidak ada jaminan keamanan.

(K) : Baik, terimakasih Pak Kapolri untuk wawancara eksklusif ini.


(MS)

Photostream : Behind the scenes pictures of Prime Minister David Cameron


The Prime Minister David Cameron has a piece of toast and checks the web on an iPad in his hotel room at the Conservative Party Conference in Birmingham, Tuesday October 5, 2010. Photo By Andrew Parsons

The Prime Minister David Cameron feeding his baby daughter Florence in his hotel room, before delivering his speech to the Conservative Party Conference in Birmingham, Wednesday October 6, 2010. Photo By Andrew Parsons

The Prime Minister David Cameron in the Green room with his wife Samantha and his baby daughter Florence, after delivering his speech to the Conservative Party Conference in Birmingham, Wednesday October 6, 2010. Photo By Andrew Parsons

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( FLICKR )  CONSERVATIVE PARTY PHOTOSTREAM

10/12/2010

Medvedev urges to develop various trends of Russia-Germany coop


Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (2nd R), his wife Svetlana (L) meet with German President Christian Wulff (2nd L) and his wife Bettina (R) at the Kremlin, in Moscow, on October 12, 2010. Wulff is on his state visit to Russia. (Getty Images)


MOSCOW, October 12 (KATAKAMI / Itar-Tass) - Russian President Dmitry Medvedev hopes that the negotiations with his German counterpart Christian Wulff will be fruitful and interesting. Medvedev stated about it Tuesday opening a narrow-format meeting with his German counterpart. Before the negotiations both leaders with their spouses were participating in an official welcome ceremony of the German high guest, who is on a state visit in Russia.

“I hope for interesting and fruitful negotiations,” Medvedev stated.

“The scale of your visit notes broad and diversified relations between Germany and Russia,” Medvedev said. “Our relations are strategic, partnership and highly developed,” he pointed out. “Germany is our major partner in the European Union,” the Russian president remarked. “We have highly developed economic ties and we also have special relations between political structures, regions, parties, civil society institutions; all this is making the essence of relations,” the president underlined.

“We should develop various trends of cooperation,” Medvedev urged, noting humanitarian contacts in this respect.

The German president agreed with his Russian counterpart that his visit will contribute to the development of bilateral relations. “I hope that we will have an opportunity to discuss all issues we are interested in,” Wulff said.

“Germany and Russia have a long common changeable history and we take your friendship as a great gift to the German people,” he said. “Our mutual sympathy and interests confirm how close our peoples are,” the German president added.

“We are following with a keen interest the situation in your country and consider ourselves as natural partners in promoting the modernization in Russia,” Wulff said. “We are seeking to intensify relations with your country, which is passing the stage of reforms, and to expand relations not only in economy, but also in education, legal protection, public institutions and culture,” he added.