Tuesday, August 13, 2013

College friends of Boston bombing suspect plead not guilty



College friends of Boston bombing suspect plead not guilty

Two friends of Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev pleaded not guilty to charges that they tried to obstruct a federal investigation into the case. The two suspects Dias Kadyrbayev and Azamat Tazhayakov, both 19, denied that they tried to destroy evidence, when they went to Tsarnaev’s dormitory, taking his laptop computer and a backpack containing fireworks and Vaseline to make bombs. The deadly Boston Marathon bombing killed three people and injured more than 260 on April 15.

Israel's Iron Dome intercepts two rockets fired by Sinai militants

Israel's Iron Dome intercepts two rockets fired by Sinai militants

Israel’s Iron Dome intercepted two out of three rockets fired on the southern city of Eilat from Sinai early Tuesday, local media reported. The third rocket fell in a deserted area around 1am local time. No casualties or damages were reported. Sinai militant group Ansar Beit al-Maqdis claimed responsibility for the attack, according to Ahram Online. The attack was allegedly in retaliation for Israel’s Friday air strike in northern Sinai which killed five militants.

Russian man pleads not guilty in biggest US hacking case

Russian man pleads not guilty in biggest US hacking case

A Russian man accused of being part of the largest cybercrime ring ever prosecuted in the US has pleaded not guilty. Appearing in federal court in Newark, New Jersey on Monday, Dmitry Smilyanets, 29, from Moscow, said that he would contest irregularities in his arrest last year in the Netherlands, Reuters reported his lawyer as saying. Smilyanets is accused of conspiring with a team of hackers from Russia and Ukraine to steal more than 160 million credit card numbers in a series of breaches that cost companies more than $300 million.

‘Geneva-2’ Syria peace conference could be held in October – Russia



‘Geneva-2’ Syria peace conference could be held in October – Russia

A new Syria peace conference, dubbed ‘Geneva-2,’ could be organized as soon as October, Russia’s deputy foreign minister Gennady Gatilov said Tuesday. The conference is unlikely to take place in September, he told Interfax. Russia wants the peace conference to go ahead as soon as possible, but it is not clear if the US will agree to Iran taking part in the conference, Gatilov said. Russia has argued that Iran, as an important regional player, could be instrumental in finding a political solution to the Syrian conflict.

US urges Palestinians ‘not to react adversely’ to Israel’s approval of 1,200 new homes

US urges Palestinians ‘not to react adversely’ to Israel’s approval of 1,200 new homes

US Secretary of State John Kerry has urged Palestinians "not to react adversely" to Israel's approval of 1,200 new homes in “illegitimate” settlements just days before peace talks resume. Kerry added, however, that Sunday's move was “to some degree expected.” Palestinian-Israeli negotiators should get “to the table quickly,” the BBC quoted him as saying. Palestinian negotiators have accused Israel of trying to sabotage the talks, a charge Israel rejects. Separately, Israel published the names of 26 long-term Palestinian prisoners who will be freed Tuesday.

2 suspected Al-Qaeda militants killed in Yemen drone strike

2 suspected Al-Qaeda militants killed in Yemen drone strike

At least two suspected Islamist militants were killed in a drone missile strike in Yemen's southern Shabwa province late Monday, Reuters reported. The car the men were traveling in was completely destroyed in the strike, a local official said. At least 37 people have been killed in just over two weeks since Washington warned of possible terror attacks in the region, and launched a campaign targeting insurgents linked to Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

1,500 infected in cholera outbreak in northeast Afghanistan

1,500 infected in cholera outbreak in northeast Afghanistan

A cholera outbreak at a village in northeast Afghanistan has infected 1,492 people, killed a young woman and left another 100 in critical condition, local officials said Tuesday. The outbreak began three days ago and was restricted to one town that has been quarantined, Abdul Marouf Rasekh, a spokesman for the governor of Badakhshan province said. Thirty-six of the most serious cases have been taken to a hospital in the provincial capital of Faizabad. The source of the infection has been traced to a freshwater spring in the town of Chappa in the Darayen district.

Crypto-currency for NSA leaker: Snowden fund accepts Bitcoin

Crypto-currency for NSA leaker: Snowden fund accepts Bitcoin

AFP Photo / George Frey
AFP Photo / George Frey

US fugitive Edward Snowden’s defense fund, launched recently by WikiLeaks to raise money for the legal protection of the NSA leaker, has announced it now accepts donations in virtual currency Bitcoin.
The Journalistic Source Protection Defence Fund (JSPD) was set up on August 9 with the goal to provide legal as well as campaign aid to journalistic sources. Snowden, who is behind the biggest intelligence leak in the history of the US National Security Agency (NSA), has been selected the first such source.
Snowden was granted temporary asylum in Russia on August 1, after he spent more than five weeks in a transit zone at Sheremetyevo Airport in Moscow. He then slipped quietly out of the terminal for an undisclosed secure location. The whistleblower is charged in the US with espionage and other crimes.
So far the Snowden fund, which is governed by UK laws and administered by London-based Derek Rothera & Company Charted Accountants, has risen over US$ 9,300 from 160 contributors.
In addition to traditional payment methods such as credits cards, bank transfers and checks, Snowden’s defense fund also accepts donations by Bitcoin, WikiLeaks tweeted on Monday. 
Bitcoin, a decentralized digital currency, was first introduced in 2009 and has since then exploded in value. The virtual crypto-cash is gaining popularity around the globe as people become dissatisfied with the conventional banking system.
Last week, a federal judge in Texas ruled that Bitcoin is a legitimate currency. On the one hand, the ruling brought it a step closer to being recognized as real money. On the other, the decision opened up the possibility for the virtual cash to be soon regulated by government, which contradicts the very concept of Bitcoin – a peer-to-peer, relatively anonymous payment method that is free from centralized authority. 

Bradley Manning Nobel Peace Prize nod backed by 100k petition-signers

Bradley Manning Nobel Peace Prize nod backed by 100k petition-signers

US Army Private First Class Bradley Manning (AFP Photo / Saul Loeb)
US Army Private First Class Bradley Manning (AFP Photo / Saul Loeb)

The Nobel Prize committee has received a petition that endorses awarding the peace prize to US Army Private Bradley Manning, who is convicted of espionage and facing up to 90 years behind bars for leaking classified information to WikiLeaks.
US anti-war activist Normon Soloman, one of the organizers of the petition, gave the 5,000-page document to Nobel committee member Asle Toje on Monday.
However, Toje said the annually awarded US$1 million prize is "not a popularity contest," adding that such campaigns do not influence the Nobel Committee in its choice.
“Remaining in prison and facing relentless prosecution by the US government, no one is more in need of the Nobel Peace Prize,” states the petition, which garnered more than 100,000 signatures.
"No individual has done more to push back against what Martin Luther King Jr. called 'the madness of militarism' than Bradley Manning," the petition reads. 
A screenshot from act.rootsaction.org
A screenshot from act.rootsaction.org

US Army whistleblower Bradley Manning, 25, was found guilty on 20 of his 22 charges for sharing thousands of classified US documents with the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks in late 2009 and early 2010. Among other charges, he was found guilty of espionage, theft, and embezzlement of government property.
According to Solomon, awarding the soldier the Nobel Prize would underline the important role of whistleblowers in promoting peace and democracy.
"Unless we can speak the truth, then peace-making becomes a hollow exercise of rhetoric rather than reality," Solomon told reporters before submitting the petition.
Former Nobel Peace Prize winner Mairead Corrigan-Maguire formally nominated Manning in June, saying, “I can think of no one more deserving.”
She believes that his leaks “helped end the Iraq War” by hastening foreign troop withdrawals and “may have helped prevent further conflicts elsewhere.”
Solomon has also stated that Manning’s revelations on America’s views of the Iraq War “stiffened the resolve of Iraq's government to seek jurisdiction over American troops for criminal actions.”
In his article published by USA Today on July 30, Solomon wrote that “It's easy to insist that Bradley Manning must face the consequences of his actions. But we badly need whistleblowers like Manning because US government leaders do not face the consequences of their actions, including perpetual warfare abroad and assaults on civil liberties at home. No government should have the power to keep waging war while using secrecy to cloak policies that cannot stand the light of day.”
The Nobel Peace Prize winner will be announced on October 11, 2013 in Oslo.

NY ‘stop & frisk’ policy violates minorities’ rights, US Constitution - judge

NY ‘stop & frisk’ policy violates minorities’ rights, US Constitution - judge

New York Police Department officers (AFP Photo / Mario Tama)
New York Police Department officers (AFP Photo / Mario Tama)

A US Federal Judge found that stop-and-search tactics used by the New York Police Department have violated the constitutional rights of tens of thousands of citizens and are racist, and called for a federal monitor to oversee reforms to the policy.
Judge Shira A. Scheindlin ruled that police officers have been systematically stopping innocent people in the street without any objective evidence that they had been committing an offence. Cops usually searched young black and Latino men for weapons or drugs before letting them go.
The ruling follows a more-than-two-month non-jury trial. The 195 page decision found that in 88 percent of ‘stop and frisks’ the police ended up letting the person go without an arrest or a ticket.
The judge said this percentage was so high it suggested there was no credible reason to suspect someone of criminality in the first place.
She found that the stop-and-frisk-episodes had demonstrated a widespread disregard for the Fourth Amendment, which protects against unreasonable searches and seizures by the government, and also violated the 14th Amendment, which addresses citizens’ equal rights and protection under the law, regardless of their race or ethnicity.
Scheindlin also ruled that she would designate an outside lawyer, Peter L. Zimroth, a former corporate counsel and prosecutor in the Manhattan district attorney’s office, to monitor the NYPD’s compliance with the Constitution.  This will leave the New York police under a degree of judicial control that will doubtless shape policing policies under the next mayor.
“Far too many people in New York city have been deprived of this basic freedom far too often. The NYPD’s practice of making stops that lack individualized reasonable suspicion has been so pervasive and persistent as to become not only part of the NYPD standard operating procedure, but a fact of daily life in some New York City neighborhoods,” she said.
She added that the plaintiffs who had instigated the case “readily established that the NYPD implements its policies regarding stop and frisk in a manner that intentionally discriminates based on race.”
The stop-and-frisk incidents are part of incumbent Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s tough crime-fighting legacy, and although the number of people searched has soared over the last decade, crime has continued to fall since the 1990s.
Scheindlin heard evidence from a dozen black, Latino or biracial people who had been stopped by police as well as from statistical experts who had examined police paper work detailing some 4.43 million stops between 2004 and the middle of 2012. A number of police officers and commanders also gave evidence; typically they defended their own actions saying they only made the stops when they thought criminal activity was occurring.
The judge found that the New York police had overstepped their authority to briefly stop and investigate people who are behaving suspiciously and that in effect they were watering down the legal minimum standard required to stop someone.
Legal experts said that this was the largest and broadest-sweeping case against the US’s largest police force, and that this ruling may have an effect on how other police departments conduct street stops.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has announced that he will appeal Judge Scheindlin's ruling.

Brazil may reject US fighter jet deal over NSA spying scandal

Brazil may reject US fighter jet deal over NSA spying scandal

An F-18 Hornet (AFP Photo / Adrian Dennis)
An F-18 Hornet (AFP Photo / Adrian Dennis)

Brazilian officials have expressed reluctance to purchasing dozens of military planes from the US after it was revealed that the NSA not only closely monitored Brazilian energy and military affairs, but also mined for commercial secrets.
The US had planned to sell Brazil - a country in the process of revitalizing its Air Force - 36 fighter jets in a deal worth more than US$4 billion. But when US Secretary of State John Kerry meets with Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff on Tuesday, the leaders will not discuss the deal, a source near to the situation told Reuters. 
Kerry traveled to Colombia before making his way to Brazil in an attempt to repair relations with Latin American nations after NSA leaker Edward Snowden disclosed documents showing that the US spied on communications related to the military, political and terror issues, and energy policies.
We cannot talk about the fighters now…You cannot give such a contract to a country that you do not trust,” the source said. 
Chicago-based Boeing Co. is competing for the $4 billion contract against France’s Rafale and Sweden’s Gripen, although the longer Brazil goes without choosing, the more likely it is that other competitors will enter the fray.  
Rousseff delayed a decision on the fighter jets because of budget woes and widespread demonstrations protesting austerity and government corruption. 
I don’t expect the president to decide on the fighter contract this year, and next year is an election year so it might have to wait until 2015,” a Brazilian government source said.  
Brazil’s Foreign Minister, Antonio Patriota, informed United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon of the nation’s situation as recently as last week. 
Tuesday’s visit will be Kerry’s first trip to Brazil as Secretary of State. 
But it’s not just Brazil that was reportedly upset over the NSA revelations. Even Colombia – one of Washington’s closest allies in the region – was unhappy about the information revealed. In Bogota, Kerry aimed to play down the rift during a press conference.
Frankly, we work on a huge number of issues and this was in fact a very small part of the overall conversation and one in which I’m confident I was able to explain precisely that this has received the support of all three branches of our government,” Kerry told reporters. “It has been completely conducted under our Constitution and the law…The president has taken great steps in the last few days…to reassure people of the US intentions here.” 
US Vice President Joe Biden has visited Brazil and Colombia, and President Barack Obama recently made a three-day trip to Mexico and Puerto Rico. Both trips have been portrayed as evidence of US politicking below the equator. 
During his visit to Brazil, Biden said that stronger trade ties should usher in a new era of relations between Washington and Brasília. 
How long that goodwill will last remains to be seen, according Carl Meacham, former Latin America adviser on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and director of the Americas Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
I think the tone of the visit will be a bit tense because of these issues raised by the surveillance [program] and I think Secretary Kerry will have to speak to that,” he told AP.

What's it like being called Messiah?

What's it like being called Messiah?

A Tennessee court has banned a couple from naming their son Messiah, saying that only Jesus Christ "earned" that name. So what's it like being called Messiah, asks Tom Geoghegan.
When the judge in Cocke County ordered the parents of seven-month-old Messiah DeShawn Martin to rename him Martin DeShawn McCullough, she argued it would put him "at odds with a lot of people" in a very Christian county.
That's not the experience of Messiah Rhodes, a 26-year-old documentary maker who was raised by his Methodist grandparents in Queens, New York.
"I went to church, not just on Sunday but also on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. I ran a Bible study group when I was 10 or 11. So the ironic thing here is that I grew up in a religious background but no-one was hostile to my name.
Messiah RhodesRhodes is one of thousands of Messiahs in the US, but there are only three on the UK electoral roll
"I wasn't treated special, I was like any other kid. And I really didn't think my name was a big deal until I heard the news from Tennessee. How can you force your faith or belief on somebody else? In Tennessee, the church and state are too close together."
Rhodes, who has a half-sister called Emma, says he doesn't know why his parents chose that name. There were moments when he wished they hadn't, but the jokes about being the "Chosen One" were usually good natured.
His Jewish dentist greets him with the words: "The Messiah is here and needs his cavities taken out." There was just one unpleasant incident, when a stranger launched a venomous rant on the subway, screaming at him that he wasn't the Messiah.

Oxford English Dictionary definition

Oxford English Dictionary
There were 762 American baby boys named Messiah last year, and that figure is growing. The Social Security Administration ranks it the fourth fastest-growing name for baby boys - it leapt from 633rd in 2011 to 387th in 2012. And it's not just a boy's name or a first name.
What makes this judge's intervention more surprising is that, unlike many other countries, the US does not have a list of banned baby names.
Indeed, some parents may regard an unconventional name as an important expression of their freedom of speech, enshrined in the US constitution, and off-beat names like Mustard, Post Office and Enamel have never troubled the authorities.

China drug costs: The human price

China drug costs: The human price

China's drug industry is under scrutiny, as Martin Patience reports

At her home on the outskirts of Beijing, Yang Hongxia is busy preparing dinner. She makes noodles as her mother-in-law watches on.
For Hongxia, 39, life is pretty tough.
Her husband, Zhang Yansheng, 41, is in the room next door watching TV. He is suffering from a brain tumour and cannot walk or talk.
Like more than 95% of the population he has some form of government health insurance. But the schemes do not cover all the costs.
His wife works as a bus conductor. But she spends her entire salary, around $600 (£388), on paying for her husband's medication.
The family only survives with hand-outs from relatives.
"When my husband fell sick he was a young man," said Hongxia. "We didn't have a lot of savings. It's a huge burden for us."
Yang Hongxia and husband Zhang YanshengFor Zhang Yansheng and his wife Yang Hongxia, medical costs consume an entire salary
Bribes
As Beijing expands provisions for healthcare, government spending is soaring.
It was estimated at $385bn (£249bn) in 2011.
It is expected to more than double by the end of the decade, according to a report by the consultancy firm, McKinsey.
The government has made clear that reform is required to rein in costs. It is starting with the drugs industry - investigating possible price-fixing in up to 60 foreign and Chinese companies.
Last month a detained executive from the British firm GlaxoSmithKline confessed on state TV that his company paid bribes.
The firm has said it appears some of its local staff acted outside the company's "processes".
Five employees working for other foreign drugs firms have confirmed to the BBC that corruption is a problem.
One of the salesmen said his company paid about $1,000 (£647) to get its product back on the shelves at one hospital.
"I don't deny [giving money to doctors] happens in foreign companies," the sales representative said.
Drugs prescribed to Mr Zhang to treat his brain tumourMr Zhang's brain tumour drugs: Chinese families have to spend their savings when they get sick
"It is rare though and only very few people get it," he added.
In a system overwhelmed by patients, corruption is an open secret.
We filmed touts illegally selling appointments outside a Beijing hospital. They are so well established they even have business cards.
One tout told us if we paid him $50 (£32) he would get us appointment that afternoon. Otherwise you would have to wait for weeks.
'Unsustainable'
Families here spend a huge chunk of their savings when they get sick. By tackling corruption the authorities hope to make healthcare cheaper.
In doing so, Beijing hopes to boost domestic consumption.
"We've had the gold rush here and now the current economic model is unsustainable," says James McGregor, a business analyst.
"In order to build a consumption-driven economy, consumers need to be confident in the future, the government and their healthcare.
"And that may be why the government is going after all these pharmaceutical companies, because they've got to build confidence among the people.
"You can't order people to take money out of their pocket and spend it - you've got to lure them to do it because they're happy with the way things are."
Back at her home, Yang Hongxia and her family are finishing up dinner.
For Hongxia any thoughts about holidays or new furniture remain a distant dream.
Every penny she has goes on paying for her husband's medical bills. Until drugs get cheaper, the best they can hope for is to just scrape by.
Yang Hongxia making noodlesYang Hongxia works as a bus conductor and needs family help to meet the cost of her husband's medication

Alfredo Moser: Bottle light inventor proud to be poor

Alfredo Moser: Bottle light inventor proud to be poor

Alfredo in his workshop
Alfredo Moser is a modern-day Thomas Edison, whose invention is lighting up the world. In 2002, the Brazilian mechanic had his own light-bulb moment and came up with way of illuminating his house during the day without electricity - using nothing more than plastic bottles filled with water and a tiny bit of bleach.
In the last two years his idea has spread throughout the world. It is expected to be in one million homes by early next year.
So how does it work? Simple refraction of sunlight, explains Moser, as he fills an empty two-litre plastic bottle.
"Add two capfuls of bleach to protect the water so it doesn't turn green [with algae]. The cleaner the bottle, the better," he adds.
Wrapping his face in a cloth he makes a hole in a roof tile with a drill. Then, from the bottom upwards, he pushes the bottle into the newly-made hole.
"You fix the bottle in with polyester resin. Even when it rains, the roof never leaks - not one drop."
Moser's lamps - as seen from aboveThe lamps work best with a black cap - a film case can also be used
"An engineer came and measured the light," he says. "It depends on how strong the sun is but it's more or less 40 to 60 watts," he says.

What is refraction?

A straw in a glass
  • Refraction is the bending of light, which is caused by a change in its speed
  • The speed of light is determined by the density of the substance through which it passes
  • So refraction occurs when light passes from one substance to another with a different density - eg from air to water
  • In the case of the "Moser lamp", sunlight is bent by the bottle of water and spread around the room
The inspiration for the "Moser lamp" came to him during one of the country's frequent electricity blackouts in 2002. "The only places that had energy were the factories - not people's houses," he says, talking about the city where he lives, Uberaba, in southern Brazil.
Moser and his friends began to wonder how they would raise the alarm, in case of an emergency, such as a small plane coming down, imagining a situation in which they had no matches.
His boss at the time suggested getting a discarded plastic bottle, filling it with water and using it as a lens to focus the sun's rays on dry grass. That way one could start a fire, as a signal to rescuers. This idea stuck in Moser's head - he started playing around, filling up bottles and making circles of refracted light.
Soon he had developed the lamp.
"I didn't make any design drawings," he says.
"It's a divine light. God gave the sun to everyone, and light is for everyone. Whoever wants it saves money. You can't get an electric shock from it, and it doesn't cost a penny."
Moser has installed the bottle lamps in neighbours' houses and the local supermarket.
Alfredo Moser with one of his bottle lights
While he does earn a few dollars installing them, it's obvious from his simple house and his 1974 car that his invention hasn't made him wealthy. What it has given him is a great sense of pride.

How much energy do the lamps save?

  • The plastic bottles are up-cycled in the local community, so no energy is needed to gather, shred, manufacture and ship new bottles
  • The carbon footprint of the manufacture of one incandescent bulb is 0.45kg CO2
  • A 50 Watt light bulb running for 14 hours a day for a year has a carbon footprint of nearly 200kg CO2
  • Moser lamps emit no CO2
"There was one man who installed the lights and within a month he had saved enough to pay for the essential things for his child, who was about to be born. Can you imagine?" he says.
Carmelinda, Moser's wife of 35 years, says her husband has always been very good at making things around the home, including some fine wooden beds and tables.
But she's not the only one who admires his lamp invention. Illac Angelo Diaz, executive director of the MyShelter Foundation in the Philippines, is another.
MyShelter specialises in alternative construction, creating houses using sustainable or recycled materials such as bamboo, tyre and paper.
"We had huge amounts of bottle donations," he says.
Watch: The lamps are changing lives in the Philippines
"So we filled them with mud and created walls, and filled them with water to make windows.
"When we were trying to add more, somebody said: 'Hey, somebody has also done that in Brazil. Alfredo Moser is putting them on roofs.'"

Find out more

Alfredo Moser spoke to Outlook on the BBC World Service
Following the Moser method, MyShelter started making the lamps in June 2011. They now train people to create and install the bottles, in order to earn a small income.
In the Philippines, where a quarter of the population lives below the poverty line, and electricity is unusually expensive, the idea has really taken off, with Moser lamps now fitted in 140,000 homes.
The idea has also caught on in about 15 other countries, including from India and Bangladesh, to Tanzania, Argentina and Fiji.
Bottle lights in Bangladesh
Diaz says you can find Moser lamps in some remote island communities. "They say, 'Well, we just saw it from our neighbour and it looked like a good idea.'"

Light to work in Bangladesh

Most homes and businesses in the slums of Dhaka have no power and no windows, so 80-90% of them hook up to electricity lines illegally - and fall back on candles or kerosene lamps during regular blackouts.
A voluntary organisation called Change began distributing the bottle light, or botul bati, earlier this year. It's helped hundreds of people - including sari makers and rickshaw repairers - whose livelihoods depend on having sufficient light.
There were teething problems. "Some people said they felt poorer after installing a bottle light," says Change founder Sajid Iqbal. The group counters this by stressing that each one helps tackle climate change.
Unlike some other charities, Change charges a small amount for the lights - roughly the price of 2-3kg of rice. "If you give the light for nothing, people don't maintain them," Iqbal says. "They don't understand their value."
People in poor areas are also able to grow food on small hydroponic farms, using the light provided by the bottle lamps, he says.
Overall, Diaz estimates, one million people will have benefited from the lamps by the start of next year.
"Alfredo Moser has changed the lives of a tremendous number of people, I think forever," he says.
"Whether or not he gets the Nobel Prize, we want him to know that there are a great number of people who admire what he is doing."
Did Moser himself imagine that his invention would have such an impact?
"I'd have never imagined it, No," says Moser, shaking with emotion.
"It gives you goose-bumps to think about it,"

Chile investigates unexplained Andean condor deaths

Chile investigates unexplained Andean condor deaths

Footage of the birds, who experts say are showing "signs of intoxication"'
Health authorities are trying to find out what poisoned at least 20 condors in the Andes mountain range between Chile and Argentina.
The huge endangered birds, with a wingspan of up to 3m, were found near the town of Los Andes, about 80km east of the Chilean capital, Santiago.
The authorities say two birds died, but 18 are recovering at a clinic.
They suspect the damage may have been caused by eating carcasses of poisoned cattle, fox or puma.
Witnesses alerted the authorities on Sunday after seeing the condors, known for their effortless gliding at high altitudes, flying low and crashing into rocks.
'Phosphorous compounds'
Once on the ground, they were not able to take off again and walked apparently dizzily and foaming from the beak, authorities say.
Andean condorThe birds were taken to a veterinary facility and are said to be recovering
1/5
Two of the birds were reportedly found dead, as well as two foxes.
"[The poisoning] seems to have been caused by the ingestion of an ill animal or one that ate another being with some phosphorate compound," the regional director of the Chilean Farming and Cattle Service, Pablo Vergara, told the Argentine newspaper Clarin.
The chemical compound can be found in herbicides and poison used to kill animals considered to be pests.
The poisoned condors were taken to a veterinary clinic, given an antidote and are said to be recovering.
The possibility of finding more animals with the same symptoms has not been ruled out.
The Andean condor is one of the world's biggest bird species and is considered a symbol of the region.
Scientists estimate less than 10,000 condors live in the wild.

Elon Musk unveils San Francisco-LA 'Hyperloop' idea

Elon Musk unveils San Francisco-LA 'Hyperloop' idea

Passengers would undergo forces of gravity similar to an aeroplane, Mr Musk said
US-based entrepreneur Elon Musk has unveiled his proposed near-supersonic "Hyperloop" transport concept to link Los Angeles and San Francisco.
The SpaceX, Tesla and PayPal founder envisions using magnets and fans to shoot capsules floating on a cushion of air through a long tube.
If the Hyperloop is ever built, a trip on it between the two California cities would last about 30 minutes, he said.
But Mr Musk says he is currently too busy to develop the project himself.
In a paper outlining the Hyperloop proposal, Mr Musk suggested the solar-powered system would be a faster, safer, less costly, and more efficient mode of transport between Los Angeles and San Francisco than the high-speed train currently under development.
"Short of figuring out real teleportation, which would of course be awesome... the only option for superfast travel is to build a tube over or under the ground that contains a special environment," he wrote.
'$20 a ticket'
Whatever Mr Musk proposes, people are sure to sit up and take notice.
The entrepreneur made his fortune with the internet payment system PayPal before switching his skills into developing the new Falcon rocket system for Nasa and the Tesla electric car. He is also a big investor in solar energy in California.
But the pre-announcement hype that surrounds Hyperloop is reminiscent of the speculation that ran ahead of the unveiling of the Segway scooter in 2001.
Back then, the media was full of stories about a project that could "revolutionise personal transportation". The two-wheeled, self-balancing device was certainly innovative and found an eager market, but it has remained a niche product.
Mr Musk estimated the system linking the two cities, which are 380 miles (610km) apart, would cost $6bn (£3.9bn).
Capsules could depart as often as every 30 seconds and could also carry cars, travelling at up to 760mph (1,220 km/h), nearly the speed of sound.
Passengers seated in cabins inside the capsules would experience slightly more than the force of gravity, more like on an aeroplane than a roller coaster, he said on a conference call.
He said he would likely build a prototype of the concept, but not immediately, as he is busy with his commercial space project SpaceX.
A demonstration model would take up to four years to complete, he said.
He said the concept would best work between cities closer than 1,000 miles, because beyond that supersonic air travel would be preferable.
But for the shorter distance, his new concept would beat the plane, he argues, because it would not waste time ascending and descending.
The San Francisco to Los Angeles route would be elevated alongside a current California motorway, which would enable it to be constructed with minimal disputes over land rights, Mr Musk said. The tube and supporting columns would be designed to withstand earthquakes.
He estimated a trip would cost $20 (£13).