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A Syrian Chaldean Catholic bishop on Monday warned that an armed intervention in Syria could unleash a world war , while the Vatican s official newspaper called for more prudence from Western powers. If there is stanley cup an armed intervention, that would mean, I believe, a world war. That risk has returned, Monsignor Antoine Audo of Aleppo told Vatican radio. We hope that the pope s call for real dialogue between the warring parties to find a solution can be a stanley cup first step to stop the fighting, he said. Audo is also the head of the Syrian arm of the international Catholic charity Caritas and has repeatedly warned about the human cost of the war. The Vatican daily, L Os stanley cup servatore Romano, meanwhile criticised Western powers in an editorial. The drumbeat of an armed intervention by Western powers is becoming ever more insistent and ever less restrained by prudence, it said. Several representatives of these countries say they are convinced that the accusation that the Syrian army used chemical weapons is founded -- a question which the United Nations is investigating, he said. Pope Francis on Sunday called for the international community to help find a solution to the civil war. I launch an appeal to the international community to be more sensitive to this tragic situation and to commit itself to the maximum to help the dear Syrian nation find a solution to a war which spreads destruction and death, he said. Read breaking news, latest... See more Read Uenl US will fail in bullying Iran: Rafsanjani
Are these planets without orbits Astronomers have found 10 potential planets as massive as Jupiter wandering through a slice of the Milky Way galaxy, following either very wide orbits or no orbit at all. HT Image And scientists think they are more common than the stars. These mysterious bodies, apparently gaseous balls like the largest planets in our solar system, may help scientists understand how planets form. They re finding evidence for a lot of pretty big planets, said Alan Boss of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, who wasn t involved in the research. If they orbit stars, their sheer number suggests every star in the galaxy has one or two of them, which is astounding bec stanley cup ause that s five or 10 times the number of stars scientists had thought harbored such gas-giant planets, he said. And if instead they are wandering free, that would be really stunning because it s hard to explain how they stanley cup formed, he said. If that s the case, it would give a boost to some theories that say planets can be thrown out of orbit during formation, said Lisa Kaltenegger of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, another outside expert. Other scientists have reported free-wandering objects in star-forming regions of the cosmos, but the newfound objects appear to be different, said one author of the new study, physicist David Bennett of the University of Notre Dame. Bennett and colleagues f adidas campus rom Japan, New Zealand and elsewhere report the finding in Thursday s issue