D Wednesday, October 7, 2009 METRO Order a free O2 sim... your access to priority tickets at The O2 Just text PALS with your name & address to 50308 and get your sim card to join O2, and you can buy priority tickets to The O2 for you and your friends. Offer available to anyone who replies with the keyword and their details to freetext 50308 by midnight 31/10/09. Fair use policy and terms and conditions apply, see o2.ie. O2 priority tickets are for O2 customers in ROI only and are subject to availability through ticketing outlet.Visit O2blueroom.ie for more details. Order a free O Camels drink water from a well in a village near Nairobi, Kenya. The World Food Programme estimates a shortfall of 700,000 tonnes of food for its operations in the Horn of Africa. The EU has provided 8million to help vulnerable rural communities and another 7million through its regional drought preparedness program Picture: AFP thirsty work Antioxidants link to diabetes risk TAKING too many antioxidants may increase the risk of diabetes. Molecules called reactive oxygen species (ROS) that damage cells and DNA and have been linked to heart disease and cancer are neutralised by antioxidants, but new research reported in the journal Cell Metabolism, suggests having a healthy number of ROS molecules in the body might protect against diabetes. Pirates paid 1m ransom for ship SOMALI pirates freed a Turkish ship on Monday after hijackers received a $1.5million (1million) ransom. A regional maritime official confirmed the bulk carrier, which was seized on July 8 with 23 Turkish crew on board, had been released. We accepted $1.5million to release the Turkish ship, said one of the pirates, who gave his name as Abshir. Ice sheet is under threat CLIMATE change could cause the giant Greenland ice sheet to melt past tipping points from which it could never fully recover, a report out today warns. Research has shown that the 1.7million sq km ice sheet could melt entirely over several thousand years if temperatures continue to rise unchecked. Now a study from the UKs Met Office found that if the sheet melted by more than 15 per cent, which could occur within 300 years, it would be locked into further decline from which it could only recover to about 80 per cent. ireland goes on sinking as sea levels set to rise 33%By ROD MINCHINIRELAND is continuing to sink, according to scien- tists who have produced a map plotting levels of land subsidence since the Ice Age. It reveals southern Ireland, as well as Wales and southern and eastern England, are continuing to sink. Scientists believe their findings mean projected sea levels could rise by another ten to 33 per cent as a result of global warming over the next century. A total of 80 sites were examined around the UK and Irish coasts and reflect the advance and retreat of the Scandinavian and the British and Irish Ice Sheets. These changes have produced a gravitation- al effect on the surface of the water in the planets oceans. One of the researchers at Durham University, in England, Prof Ian Shennan, said: When a huge mass of ice melts, the land readjusts over time but theres also a response in the earths mantle and this affects the shape of the surface of the oceans. Changes in our oceans and land uplift and subsid- ence will continue to have a significant effect on our coastlines this century. he added. Since the end of the last Ice Age 20,000 years ago, land and sea levels around Britain and Ireland have changed in response to the retreat of the ice sheets. As the ice melted, the release of its enor- mous weight resulted in the landmass slowly tilting back up in the north or down in the south. The new projections are less than previously esti- mated and could help local authorities save money on sea and flood defences through the targeting of resources to areas where sea level rises will be greatest, the report said. index.html2.html3.html4.html5.html6.html7.html8.html9.html10.html11.html12.html13.html14.html15.html16.html17.html18.html19.html20.html21.html22.html23.html