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Bathroom Spy Camera,

Bathroom Spy Camera,

Article by Gorge







16GB Charger Hidden Camera DVR Motion With Detection Function 1280×960

Description:

With the Charger DVR Power Adapter with built in VIdeo Camera you can Easily record and monitor room security while your away. Since the Video Recorder is built into the Power adapter it is directly powered. Add up to 8 GB Micro SD Card for hours of recording. The item comes with several power adapters to handle common plugins for many different countries. In US power adapter must be plugged in horizontally.

This charger camera unlike the first generation,it’s a remotion control and motion activated spy charger camera .with high capacity 1600mah rechargeable li-battery which can give you many years of service

Features

Dimension: 2.4″ (H) * 1.74″ (W) * 1.31″ (D)

Normal Charger look makes it ideal for a variety of surveillance uses.

It is great for use as a hidden camera, spy cam etc.

Real time recording 30 F/S in AVI video format (1280×960, avi)

Color video with voice lets you clearly see who is there & hear what they say.

There is no long cord for you to hide or Wireless frequency to detect.

Use micro SD card 16GB included

Playback video on cell phone or PC

Gadhafi’s grip on western Libya may be slipping ShareretweetEmailPrint AP – In this photo made on a government organized trip, Moammar Gadhafi supporters climb on the ruins of a … By KARIN LAUB, Associated Press Karin Laub, Associated Press – 10 mins agoTRIPOLI, Libya – Moammar Gadhafi has suffered military setbacks in recent days in western Libya, a sign that his grip may be slipping in the very region he needs to cling to power.

His loyalists were driven out of the city of Misrata, a key rebel stronghold in Gadhafi-controlled territory. A NATO airstrike turned parts of his Tripoli headquarters into smoldering rubble. And rebel fighters seized a border crossing, breaking open a supply line to besieged rebel towns in a remote western mountain area.

Front lines have shifted repeatedly in two months of fighting, and the poorly trained, ill-equipped rebels have given no evidence that they could defeat Gadhafi on the battlefield. The Libyan leader has deep pockets, including several billion dollars in gold reserves, that could keep him afloat for months.

Yet Gadhafi appears increasingly on the defensive. And some see the past week as a turning point in the fighting, citing mounting military and political pressure on Gadhafi.

Hundreds of coalition airstrikes over the past five weeks have steadily eroded his fighting power. NATO says it destroyed one-third of his military equipment, pinned down troops and cut off supply lines.

The introduction last week of armed Predator drones — agile low-flying aircraft better suited to urban combat than high-altitude warplanes — has made it harder for the army to hide his tanks and rocket launchers in civilian areas.

NATO appears increasingly willing to go beyond purely military targets and strike at symbols of the regime, such as the library and reception hall in Gadhafi’s residential complex badly damaged by two powerful bombs earlier this week.

At the same time, international sanctions and the exodus of hundreds of thousands of foreign workers have disrupted daily life on the home front, including in Tripoli, the Libyan capital and Gadhafi’s power base. Motorists wait in line for days to fill up their tanks. Prices are up, cash is in short supply and the economy is largely paralyzed.

Even if most Libyans were to blame NATO, the hardships send a strong message that life won’t return to normal so long as Gadhafi remains in power. It’s impossible to gauge the level of popular support for the regime because of government restrictions on reporting. But there are signs — hushed comments to reporters on the streets of Tripoli, for example — that the Libyan leader’s popularity is waning.

If government troops lose more ground in coming days, “we could be witnessing the beginning of the end” for the Gadhafi regime, said Riad Kahwaji of the Dubai-based Institute for Neareast and Gulf Military Analysis.

It might not necessarily be quick or play out on the battlefield.

Instead, the regime might collapse from within if military victory or hanging on to western Libya seems no longer possible. “The key to the next stage of this conflict will be the psychology of those still supporting the regime,” said Malcolm Chalmers of the Royal United Services Institute, a London-based think tank.

One turning point was the Libyan military’s withdrawal from Misrata, a city of 300,000 and the main rebel stronghold in western Libya. Over the weekend, Gadhafi’s troops pulled back to the edges of the city, with government officials claiming it was a voluntary redeployment to enable tribal leaders in the area to negotiate with the rebels.

Rebels, however, say they drove out Gadhafi’s men, who for nearly two months had controlled parts of the center of town with tanks and snipers’ nests on high-rise buildings. Even after the pullback, Libyan forces barraged Misrata with dozens of rockets every day, inflicting some of the heaviest casualties of the past two months.

It’s unclear if Gadhafi loyalists have abandoned efforts to recapture Misrata for good or are simply regrouping.

The army’s failure to control the city would likely close the door to a permanent partition of Libya into a Gadhafi-run west and a rebel-controlled east.

Other than an outright military victory by Gadhafi, now unlikely because of NATO’s shielding of the rebels, partition would be the only scenario in which Libya’s ruler of 42 years could expect to cling to power. Rebel leaders have said they will lay down their arms and negotiate a political solution only if Gadhafi and his family step aside.

If regaining Misrata is out of reach, even ardent Gadhafi supporters may lose faith, said Chalmers, the British analyst. “Increasing numbers of people in the regime are asking how does it all end and how can we come to a negotiated end of this conflict, which would inevitably involve the departure of Gadhafi and his family,” he said.

At the start of the uprising in mid-February, Gadhafi cracked down hard to suppress unrest in Tripoli, a city of more than 1 million, and opposition forces there remain largely underground. Gadhafi also recaptured western towns where rebels had taken control, including Zwara and Zawiya along the Mediterranean coast.

On a drive Saturday to Zwara, about 110 kilometers (70 miles) west of Tripoli, there were signs of a tight government clampdown, along with reminders of the previous heavy battles, including facades with bullet holes and scorch marks from burning tires on the road. Troops manning checkpoints along the main highway conducted spot checks of cars, especially those with several male passengers. Some drivers were asked to step out and open their trunks.

In Sabratha, 50 miles (75 kilometers) west of Tripoli, three pickup trucks with gunmen and machine guns mounted in the back were seen speeding through town. “There is no freedom,” said a 40-year-old resident, watching from the side of the road. He said he has a medical supply business, but would not give his name for fear of reprisals.

In Zwara, a town of 45,000 that had been under rebel control for more than 20 days, local leaders said the fighting has left the local economy in a shambles.

Fawzi Adiri, a local trader, said the fighting halted what he felt would have been a better future for the town, home to members of the ethnic Berber minority. He said that after years of neglect of the Berbers, the government had recently invested in Zwara, including building a university and arranging interest-free housing loans for the poor.

Adiri said the rebel takeover created chaos in Zwara, and local leaders participating in a government-sponsored tour by foreign journalists said they were relieved the army assumed control again.

However, Berber towns in Libya’s western Nafusa mountains have joined the rebellion. After days of fierce fighting, rebels in that area seized control of the Dhuheiba border crossing into Tunisia last week, establishing a vital supply line. Thousands of residents of the towns and villages in the area have fled to Tunisia as fighting continues there.

The Gadhafi regime is digging in.

Government forces continue to shell Misrata from their positions on the outskirts, even as mounting civilian casualties each day only deepen the regime’s isolation. Gadhafi’s son Seif al-Islam, once pegged as a possible successor, insisted this week that millions still support his father.

Such bluster and defiance may be part of an attempt to improve leverage when the time comes to negotiate an exit deal, including immunity and exile, said Mustafa Alani of the Gulf Research Center in Dubai.

The longer Gadhafi can sustain the fighting, the better will be his bargaining position, said Alani, adding that “the regime now understands that they have no chance to survive.”

Afghan forces recapture 71 from Kandahar jailbreak ShareretweetEmailPrint AP – An Afghan policeman checks the document of a car at a checkpoint searching for the missing Taliban insurgents … Slideshow:Taliban Prison Break Play Video Barack Obama Video:No Easter Message from Obama FOX News Play Video Barack Obama Video:Pawlenty: Why I Could Defeat Obama in 2012 FOX News By MIRWAIS KHAN and HEIDI VOGT, Associated Press Mirwais Khan And Heidi Vogt, Associated Press – 2 hrs 24 mins agoKANDAHAR, Afghanistan – The massive security breach that allowed the Taliban to spirit more than 480 Afghan inmates out southern Afghanistan’s largest prison must have involved inside collaborators, the Justice Ministry said Tuesday, as security forces worked to recapture the escaped convicts.

Prison officials discovered early Monday morning that the inmates_ nearly all of them Taliban militants — were missing from their cells, and then found the tunnel through which they appeared to have made their getaway.

The Taliban said the prison break was five months in the making, with diggers starting the tunnel from under a nearby house while they arranged for inmates to get keys so that they could open their cells on the night of the escape.

Government officials started to piece through the details of the escape Tuesday and place blame. Justice Minister Habibullah Ghalib sent a formal letter to President Hamid Karzai acknowledging that prison officials or guards likely acted as accomplices but also saying that Afghan and international security forces should have detected the plot.

“The escape of all the prisoners from one tunnel … shows that collaborators inside the prison somehow provided an opportunity,” Ghalib said in the letter.

However, he also noted that Afghan police searched the compound from which the tunnel originated about two and a half months before the prison break and he said that Canadian and American forces have been responsible for security improvements to the prison. A full investigation is under way.

An intelligence officer who is involved in the investigation, Gen. Tahir Mohmand, said that they had warned prison officials a number of times recently that they had reports that the Taliban were planning some sort of operation involving the prison.

“We had some clues that the Taliban were busy in some kind of plan to get their prisoners out,” he said.

More details came from those who had been caught.

Samiullah Jan, who had served 13 months of a 14 month sentence, said he was woken up at midnight and escorted to the tunnel, which was lighted and even had a pipe running through it that they were told was pushing out oxygen to help them breathe.

“When we got out of the tunnel they let us go and said ‘Now you can go home. Go wherever you want.’ I moved around a bit but I didn’t have any place to go, and then the soldiers found me,” Jan said. He spoke from his cell at the intelligence agency’s detention center in Kandahar.

The Kandahar provincial governor’s office said troops have already caught 71 of those who escaped and killed two who tried to resist. Authorities have biometric data on each prisoner, which aids in their identification, the governor’s office said.

But even if a sizable number of the convicts are recaptured, the already weak provincial government is still reeling from the blow to its image.

The prison break also came less than two weeks after the Kandahar police chief was killed by a suicide bomber inside his heavily defended office compound.

“How can we trust or rely on a government that can’t protect the police chief inside the police headquarters and can’t keep prisoners in the prison?” asked Islamullah Agha Bashir, who sells washing machines and other appliances in Kandahar city. “Last night while we were eating dinner I told my two sons not to go out as much because I am afraid that now when the morale of the Taliban is high, they will attack more.”

Kandahar Gov. Tooryalai Wesa said that residents should not be worried.

“The security situation in Kandahar will not get worse. I have confidence in my intelligence officers and our supporters,” Wesa said.

Kandahar city has been a major focus of the international troop surge over the past year, with NATO officials saying that establishing security there will be key to securing the region. Last summer, Afghan forces created a ring of checkpoints around the city and started pushing out into Taliban areas to establish the government’s authority before the rise in attacks that usually comes in the spring.

The Taliban have responding by starting off the spring fighting season with a string of operations apparently designed to undermine trust in the capabilities of the Afghan government. Within the past two weeks, Taliban agents have also launched deadly attacks from inside the Defense Ministry and a shared Afghan-U.S. military base in eastern Laghman province.

The attacks cast doubt on the readiness of the Afghan government to take over security for parts of the country as planned, threatening the exit strategy for the country’s allies eager to bring troops home.

NATO does continue to have tactical successes, announcing Tuesday that it had killed a key al-Qaida operative in Afghanistan in an airstrike.

NATO identified the man killed in the April 13 airstrike in Dangam district of eastern Kunar province as Abu Hafs al-Najdi, also known as Abdul Ghani. The alliance said he was a regional commander in charge of suicide bombings and cash flow. The strike also killed a number of other insurgents, including another al-Qaida leader known as Waqas.

But Afghans tend to focus on the continuing danger they face in their daily lives — either as government workers who may be targeted or just that they could be a bystander when a suicide bomb goes off.

In eastern Paktia province on Tuesday, the provincial governor narrowly escaped an apparent assassination attempt by insurgents. A roadside bomb exploded just behind a vehicle taking Gov. Juma Khan Hamdard to his office, said Rohallah Samon, a spokesman.

Hamdard was not hurt, but three policemen who were in a chase vehicle were slightly injured, Samon said.



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