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Spain's elBulli to sell wine cellar

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 01 Desember 2012 | 22.24

SPAIN'S famed chef Ferran Adria says the contents of the wine cellar of his former restaurant, elBulli, is to be auctioned off to raise funds for his new project.

ElBulli served its last supper and closed in July last year with Adria and business partner Juli Soler planning to establish "an experimental centre looking at the process of innovation and creativity".

Adria told The Associated Press on Saturday that the sale is to raise funds for the foundation. Sotheby's auction house says more than 8800 bottles from elBulli's cellar would be auctioned next year with a view to raising an estimated $US1.6 million ($A1.5 million).

El Bulli maintained an almost unattainable Michelin three-star status for over a decade and was rated the world's best restaurant five times by British magazine The Restaurant.


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Give back our money, Spaniards tell banks

Protesters and members of the Association of Users of Banks and Insurance of Spain take part in a protest to demand that the bailed-out lenders give their money back to customers, in Madrid. Picture: AFP/CESAR MANSO Source: AFP

FURIOUS Spaniards who say banks cheated them of their savings have taken to the streets demanding that the bailed-out lenders give them their money back.

"Thieves! Where is our money?" bellowed a crowd of some 1000 protesters, many of them elderly, outside the central bank in Madrid before marching on the offices of Bankia, the ruined finance giant.

The protesters say Bankia told them it was putting their money in secure savings products but actually sold them "preferential shares" as it scrambled to raise funds after the financial crisis started in 2008.

Now that Bankia and other lenders have collapsed and had to be rescued with funds from Spain's European partners, customers stand to lose a big chunk of their savings.

The banking consumers' group ADICAE, which has brought legal action against Bankia, planned similar demonstrations in more than 20 towns on Saturday.

Its president Manuel Pardos said in a statement the customers were "victims of a massive fraud" and were now being subjected to "illegal imposed losses".

The European Union on Wednesday gave a green light for the payment of the first slice of the rescue aid, some 37 billion euros ($A46 billion), for Bankia and three other Spanish banks.

To meet the conditions demanded by Brussels, Bankia said holders of the so-called "preferentials" would be repaid in shares worth only 61 per cent of the value of the money they put in the bank.

"They want to take away 40 per cent from us," said one protester, Paloma, 59, who put 25,000 ($A31,000) into preferential shares, being told she would get the money back after five years.

"I spent 25 years saving a little each day and now when I need it they won't give it to me," said Paloma, who asked not to be identified by her surname.

Spanish banks were brought low by the collapse of a construction boom in 2008 that threw millions into unemployment and poverty. Spain is deep in recession, with one in four workers unemployed.


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Suu Kyi to head probe into Chinese-backed mine

MYANMAR opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi will lead a probe into a crackdown on a protest against a Chinese-backed copper mine which will also assess the future of the disputed project, the president's office said on Saturday.

The 30-strong non-parliamentary commission will investigate the "social and environmental issues" behind the protests, some of the most serious since a reform-minded government took over last year.

The Nobel laureate sought on Friday to mediate an end to the stand-off at the mine in Monywa, northern Myanmar, which saw scores of villagers and monks injured in the toughest clampdown on demonstrators since President Thein Sein came to power.

The commission will "investigate the truth" of the pre-dawn raid by riot police and assess whether the "copper mining project is being implemented in accord with international norms", a statement on the presidential office website, signed by Thein Sein, said late on Saturday.

In addition to probing the crackdown the commission will advise whether "to continue the copper mining project and whether to stop foreign investment", the statement said, without providing further details.

Activists are calling for work at the mine -- a joint venture between Chinese firm Wanbao and military-owned Myanmar Economic Holdings -- to be suspended to allow impact studies amid allegations of mass evictions and pollution.

The commission will be made up of prominent activists, lawmakers and other officials.


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Syrian telecomms down for third day

SYRIAN Internet and mobile phone links remained cut for a third straight day on Saturday, an AFP correspondent in Damascus reported, amid US accusations the government is deliberately seeking to deprive the opposition of communications.

But activists and human rights monitors said that ordinary civilians were harder hit by the blackout than the opposition as they unable to use cellphones even to call for emergency assistance in the event of casualties from the persistent violence rocking the country.

"Many activists have satellite phones, but the average Syrian who needs to make a mobile phonecall to get help for an injured person, for instance, can no longer do so," said Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman.

"Internet was supposed to be restored on Friday, but it isn't back yet," Abdel Rahman told AFP.

He said activists without satellite connections had been forced to resort to landlines.

"We speak in code, because landlines are monitored by the government," said Abdel Rahman, whose Britain-based monitoring group relies on a network of medics and activists inside Syria for its reports.

An activist in a rebel-held area of Syria contacted by AFP from Beirut said that it was primarily people in areas still under government control who were affected by the blackout.

"While many activists in rebel-held areas have access to satellite phone and Internet devices, families in regime-held areas, who have been separated by the conflict, have been cut off from each other completely by this blackout," the activist said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The Syrian authorities have said the interruption to normal service is purely for maintenance but Washington has said the move is a deliberate ploy to impede communications among rebels and opposition activists.

State television, meanwhile, accused a US company it did not identify of blacking out the official SANA news agency's website, which has been down since Thursday.

The company "was acting under the pretext of (US) sanctions against Syria," the broadcaster said.

Google and Twitter have said that they have reactivated a voice-tweet program, last used in 2011 when the Internet was shut down in Egypt during its revolution, to allow Syrians affected by the shutdown to get messages out.


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Kuwait poll hit by opposition boycott

KUWAITIS have cast ballots for a second general election in 10 months, but turnout has been low after a boycott call by the opposition which argues the parliament has lost all its legitimacy.

The vote comes nearly two months after Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah dissolved a pro-government parliament following its reinstatement in June by a court ruling that also annulled an assembly elected in February.

Predominantly tribal constituencies led the way with the boycott on Saturday as voters appeared to heed the appeal by both their chiefs and the opposition to stay away from polling over a disputed electoral law.

More activity was seen in other districts, but the highest turnout was in districts populated by the Shi'ite minority, according to an AFP correspondent and witnesses.

The opposition, which held 36 of the 50 seats in the scrapped parliament, cannot win any in Saturday's election as it has not fielded candidates among the 306 hopefuls, which include 13 women.

Voter turnout is therefore being seen as the key test between the Islamist, nationalist and liberal opposition and the government led by the ruling Al-Sabah family.

And each side is already claiming success, although it is still too early to draw a conclusion.

"The Kuwaiti people have succeeded in bringing down (this) election by not taking part," opposition leader and former MP Mussallam al-Barrak said on Twitter.

Former parliament speaker and opposition leader Ahmad al-Saadun said Friday's opposition march and the boycott had taken away "popular and political legitimacy" from the next parliament and government.

Waleed al-Tabtabai, a former Islamist MP, said on Twitter that turnout would not exceed 15 per cent. In the polls held in February, turnout was about 65 per cent.

No official figures have been released so far but Information Minister Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah al-Sabah told state television that "the turnout has so far been positive".


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One dead in Miami airport bus crash

OFFICIALS say a double-decker bus has hit an overpass at Miami International Airport, killing at least one person and injuring more than two-dozen people on board.

Airport spokesman Greg Chin says the bus, which was a cruise or tour bus, hit the overpass going into the airport's arrivals section on Saturday morning. The bus was going about 32km/h when it clipped the roof entrance.

Chin says 32 people were on the bus, and all have some sort of injuries. The arrival area remained blocked off by fire trucks and police cars Saturday morning.

Chin says buses are supposed to travel through the departure area, not the arrival section, because it has a higher clearance for large vehicles.
 


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Pythons sued over Spamalot royalties

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 30 November 2012 | 22.24

A PRODUCER of the film Monty Python and the Holy Grail is suing the comedy troupe over royalties from the hit stage musical Spamalot.

Producer Mark Forstater wants a bigger share of proceeds from the show, which is based on the 1975 movie spoof of the legend of King Arthur.

Python members Eric Idle, Michael Palin and Terry Jones are to give evidence during a five-day hearing that began at London's High Court.

Forstater is suing the trio and fellow Python members John Cleese and Terry Gilliam.

His lawyer, Tom Weisselberg, said under an agreement made when the film was produced, "for financial purposes Mr. Forstater was to be treated as the seventh Python."

But the lawyer said Forstater had not received his fair share of royalties.


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Kuwaitis march in election protest

TENS of thousands of supporters of the Kuwaiti opposition marched in the capital on the eve of election to urge voters to boycott the polls in protest against a change to the electoral law.

Chanting slogans "we are boycotting" and "the people want the repeal of the amendment", the demonstrators marched peacefully after authorities issued a permit unlike the previous protests which turned violent.

Large numbers of women, many of whom veiled, and children carrying Kuwaiti flags and orange colour banners, took part in the protest described by onlookers as one of the biggest in this oil-rich Gulf state.

Several leading opposition figures and former MPs like ex-speaker Ahmad al-Saadun, Mussallam al-Barrak, Faisal al-Muslim and others led the protest.

The Islamist, nationalist and liberal opposition says the poll boycott is in protest at the government's unilateral amendment of the electoral law, which it describes as a violation of the constitution.

The opposition claims the amendment allows the government to influence the outcome of the results and elect a rubber stamp parliament.

Under the previous law, Kuwaitis were able to vote for four of 10 MPs elected in each of the five constituencies, but that has now been reduced to only one.

Demonstrations held since October 21 have drawn tens of thousands of people, often turning violent when riot police used stun grenades and tear gas to disperse protesters. Around 150 people and 24 policemen have been wounded in the protests.

The opposition has also stepped up a campaign to urge voters to shun the ballot by holding a large number of gatherings on almost daily basis and mobilised the so-called Popular Committee for Boycotting Election.

All opposition groups and figures have refused to register candidates for the polls.

The election is the second this year and the fifth since mid-2006 as the emirate is rocked by ongoing political crises between parliament and the government led by the ruling Al-Sabah family.


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Fierce clashes near Damascus airport

FIERCE clashes have raged throughout the night near Damascus airport, with a shell slamming into a bus carrying airport workers, as internet and phone links in Syria remained cut for a second straight day.

Delegates from more than 60 countries, meanwhile, were gathering in Tokyo to find ways to step up the pressure on President Bashar al-Assad's regime.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the main road to Damascus from the airport, which was closed on Thursday due to the fighting, had reopened but said a bus carrying airport employees had been hit by a shell, killing two people.

A security source also reported the deaths, blaming rebels for the shelling, but SyrianAir director Ghida Abdellatif said the two employees were wounded and that the airport itself was not shelled.

An airport source told AFP air traffic and passenger boarding was normal on Friday, after EgyptAir and Emirates had on Thursday announced a suspension of flights because of the violence.

The airport informed foreign airlines to resume flight after "the restoration of security on the road" to the airport, he said.

Abdellatif told AFP a flight to Jeddah via Aleppo had already left, while flights to Khartoum and Cairo were planned.

The Local Coordination Committees, a network of activists on the ground, said that during the night rebels bombed the Harran al-Awamid military barracks, which is responsible for protecting the airport.

It also reported fierce fighting along stretches of the 27-kilometre road linking Damascus to the airport.

"After strong clashes, rebels were able to take control of a part of the airport road between the second and fourth bridge," it said.

State television had on Thursday night quoted the information ministry as saying that the Damascus airport road had been "secured" after military intervention.

A military source in Damascus said the army had taken control of the western side of the road leading to the airport and a small portion on the east by dawn, allowing travellers to move through.

"But the most difficult part is yet to come. The army wants to take control of the eastern side, where there are thousands of terrorists and this will take several days," he said, using the term regime officials use for rebel fighters.

The Observatory, which reported 108 deaths in violence across Syria on Thursday based on information from activists and medics on the ground, said most phones and internet networks were down for a second straight day on Friday.

"In some areas, it is possible to access the internet but with great difficulty," Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Britain-based Observatory, told AFP.

"It is also very difficult to reach people by phone. But we have received reports that it is possible to communicate between certain regions via fixed telephone lines," he added.

AFP correspondents noted that internet and telephone communications, including mobile phones, were cut in the capital.

On Thursday, activists accused the regime of preparing a "massacre" when the telephone lines and internet first went down, while the authorities explained the cut was due to "maintenance" work.

Washington branded it a desperate move on the part of the regime.

But State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said some 2000 communications sets supplied to opposition rebels over recent months as part of a US non-lethal assistance program were not affected by the blackout.

Washington was weighing what further help it can give the opposition, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Thursday, without spelling out if they would win full US recognition.

"We are going to carefully consider what more we can do," Clinton told a Washington forum. "I'm sure we will do more in the weeks ahead."

On Friday, delegates from more than 60 countries gathered in Tokyo, seeking to ramp up pressure on Assad.

Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba told the Friends of Syria group that the international community had to act together where the divided UN Security Council had failed.

"While the United Nations Security Council has been unable to assume its primary responsibility, it's increasingly important for the international community to act as one in order to deal with" the continuing violence, he said.


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High temperatures to hit NSW over weekend

SUMMER is here, and it's got the mercury buzzing.

With temperatures expected to hit the high 30s and low 40s in western NSW, western Sydney and the lower Blue Mountains over the weekend, emergency services are warning the public of a very high risk of bushfires.

Rural Fire Service Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons said firefighters this year had already battled more than 3800 bush and grass fires and he is urging people to develop bushfire survival plans.

"This summer, complacency could kill, but preparation could save lives," he said.

A heatwave in Sydney in 2011 killed 96 people, NSW Health says.

Authorities are urging people to drink plenty of water, keep cool, take care of others and have a plan over the weekend.

Ahead of the expected sweltering days to come, police have reminded people of the dangers of leaving kids, the elderly and pets unattended in cars.

"There is one golden rule which should never be broken: never ever leave babies, children, the elderly or animals alone in a car even if the air-conditioner is on," deputy commissioner Mark Murdoch said in a statement.

"It doesn't take long for the temperature inside the car to soar, and for the effects of the heat to take hold."

Police also warned people to beware of the dangers of drinking and staying out in the sun in high temperatures.

"It's not a good mix," Mr Murdoch said.


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Pageant picks Brazil's best posterior

ALL eyes are on Brazil's annual Miss Bumbum pageant in Sao Paulo to select the nation's sexiest female rear end.

Fifteen curvy young ladies are competing in the grand finale being held in a Sao Paulo hotel late on Friday after surviving an online eliminatory round that drew representatives of the country's 26 states and the federal district Brasilia.

The popular contest is lifting spirits in this huge metropolis wracked by a murder spree that has claimed more than 300 lives in the past month.

The winner is to collect 5000 reais ($A2400), while second place will receive 3000 reais and third place 2000 reais.

The contestants worked hard to prepare for the final, including taking surfing and jungle training courses to tighten their buns.

The pageant sparked some jealous online comments.

Said Juliana Danyelle Stuart: "They are cute, but I think that I have a better booty than some of the contestants. Next year I will take part."

Last year, model Rosana Ferreira won the title.


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J&J CEO to replace retiring chairman

JOHNSON & Johnson says Bill Weldon will step down as chairman at the end of next month, and its board of directors picked new CEO Alex Gorsky to replace him.

The world's biggest maker of health products had named Gorsky as CEO earlier this year, replacing Weldon.

The New Brunswick, New Jersey, company says Mr Weldon will retire in the first quarter of 2013. Mr Gorsky takes over the added responsibilities as chairman on Dec. 28.

Mr Weldon stepped down as CEO in April after a decade in that role. Mr Gorsky had been responsible for J&J's medical devices business since 2009 before becoming CEO.

The maker of baby shampoo, artificial joints and drugs has been plagued by dozens of product recalls in recent years, including prescription and nonprescription medicines, contact lenses and defective hip implants.


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Mobile phone can monitor skin changes

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 29 November 2012 | 22.24

A MOBILE phone that monitors the user's skin condition, checking for blemishes and colour, has been unveiled in beauty-conscious Japan.

The "Hada Memori" (skin memory) program allows women to keep tabs on their complexion and track changes over time by storing records in the cloud.

Users can also share their data through social networking sites, says IT giant Fujitsu, which plans to use the information to target advertising of beauty products.

A spokeswoman said the skin system comes with a small card that has a 15 millimetre hole, which must be pressed to the cheek. The smartphone's camera then takes a picture of the skin and analyses the result.

The Hada Memori is the first of a series of devices that will measure users' stress levels, exercise habits and quality of sleep, helping the company gather a significant pool of health data which it can then sell.

"We will be able to offer the data to service providers eventually," said Hayuru Ito, senior manager of Fujitsu's strategic planning division.

Fujitsu is aiming to have one million users of the system in the next two years.


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UK 'needs independent press regulator'

A SENIOR British judge concluded that the country needs a new, independent media regulator to eliminate a subculture of unethical behaviour that infected segments of the country's press.

Lord Justice Brian Leveson says a new regulatory body should be established in law to prevent more people from being hurt by "press behaviour that, at times, can only be described as outrageous."

Lord Justice Leveson reported at the end of a year-long ethics inquiry triggered by revelations of tabloid phone hacking. His proposals will likely be welcomed by victims of press intrusion and some politicians who want to see the country's voracious reined in. But some editors and lawmakers fear any new regulator could curtail freedom of the press.

British Prime Minister David Cameron set up the inquiry after revelations of illegal eavesdropping by now-defunct News of the World tabloid sparked a criminal investigation and a wave of public revulsion.

Leveson criticised the cozy relationship between politicians, police and the press, but he insisted in his 2,000-page report that politicians and the government should play no role in regulating the press.

Parliament would have to approve any legal changes the report recommends, and Mr Cameron is under intense pressure from both sides. He is also tainted by his own ties to prominent figures in the scandal.

It erupted in 2011 when it was revealed that the News of the World had eavesdropped on the mobile phone voicemails of slain schoolgirl Milly Dowler while police were searching for the 13-year-old.

News Corporation shut down the 168-year-old newspaper in July 2011. News Corp's  U.K. newspaper company, News International, has paid millions in damages to dozens of hacking victims and faces lawsuits from dozens more.

Former News International editors and journalists subsequently charged with phone hacking, police bribery or other wrongdoing include Mr Cameron's former spokesman, Andy Coulson, and ex-News of the World editor Rebekah Brooks, a friend of the prime minister.

Mr Coulson and Ms Brooks were appearing in court today on charges of paying public officials for information.

Mr Cameron, who received a copy of Leveson's report a day early, is due to make a statement about it in the House of Commons later.

He and other senior politicians insist they will not curb Britain's long tradition of free speech.

"Everybody wants two things: firstly, a strong, independent, raucous press who can hold people in positions of power to account, and secondly to protect ordinary people - the vulnerable, the innocent - when the press overstep the mark," Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said.

"That's the balance that we are trying to strike and I am sure we will."


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Syria only state using landmines in 2012

THE Syrian regime was the only government in the world to lay new landmines this year, campaigners have revealed, as they issued an annual report on the use and effect of the devastating weapons.

Mark Hiznay, the editor of the report for the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL), said the finding was a significant change from last year, when four governments laid mines, and represents the lowest number since the Ottawa Mine Ban Treaty was signed in 1997.

"This represents a milestone for us: having only one country using antipersonnel mines," he told reporters in Geneva at the unveiling of the 2012 Landmine Monitor report on Thursday.

But even though only one government laid the lethal mines this year, the explosives were still used by non-state armed groups in six countries - Afghanistan, Colombia, Myanmar (Burma), Pakistan, Thailand and Yemen - up from four countries last year, the report said.

The ICBL's report hailed record high levels of funding for mine clearance and a dramatic reduction in the number of people killed by the explosive devices over the past decade.

These developments are "a testament to the achievements of the Mine Ban Treaty over the past 15 years and that's the good news", said Hiznay, who is also a senior arms researcher for Human Rights Watch.

Syria was also among the four countries singled out in last year's report, when the governments of Israel, Libya and Myanmar were found to have used landmines.

In Syria, at least 19 people were killed by the explosive devices in border-crossing areas during the first five months of the year, including a Landmine Monitor source who died while crossing a mine field in March, according to ICBL.

There had also been an incident in October, when Syrian troops abandoning a military position near the Turkish border had left behind up to 200 landmines, Hiznay said.

"Eventually, the villagers began finding them the hard way," he said.

The Syrian regime appeared to be using old stockpiles of the weapons produced by the Soviet Union in the 1980s, he said, adding "there was no indication of recent supplies".

While the number of countries laying new landmines might be low, 59 countries and six other areas were confirmed to have been affected by the deadly explosives this year, and mines were suspected in another 12 countries, the report said.

The ICBL said 4286 people were killed by landmines worldwide last year - or nearly 12 deaths a day, compared to 32 in 2001.

The organisation, which won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1997, said a growing number of governments were signing on to the treaty, which now counts 160 signatory states.

As for landmine production, only India, Myanmar, Pakistan and South Korea appeared to still be actively producing antipersonnel mines.

However, China, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Russia, Singapore, the United States and Vietnam reserve the right to produce them.


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Hunger Games author plans new book

THE Hunger Games novelist Suzanne Collins has a new book coming out next year.

Publisher Scholastic says the multimillion-selling author has a picture book scheduled for next fall.

The new book will be called Year of the Jungle, based on the time in Vietnam served by Collins' father. Year of the Jungle will be her first book since 2010's Mockingjay, the last of her Hunger Games trilogy.

Scholastic also announced that Collins' five-volume The Underland Chronicles will be reissued with new covers and that Catching Fire, the second of her Hunger Games books, will be released in paperback.


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Russia bans 'extremist' Pussy Riot videos

A RUSSIAN court has banned access on the internet to the videos of performances by the jailed feminist punk band Pussy Riot, ruling the films to be extremist.

A Moscow court declared the videos, including the infamous Punk Prayer in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, to be "extremist" and ordered internet providers to "restrict access" to the films, Russian news agencies reported.

The judge also listed as subject to restriction the official Pussy Riot web page and the band's popular Livejournal blog, the location of most of its manifestos and photos from other actions.

The ruling appears to impose a wholesale ban on accessing the videos inside Russia but it remains to be seen how this will be implemented.

Google representative Alla Zabrovskaya told AFP in an emailed comment the internet giant's video-sharing subsidiary YouTube needs to receive the written court decision listing the specific internet links before making its own decision on the matter.

The judge's decision pertains to a total of four videos from four different performances published on five different websites, court spokeswoman Yevgenia Pazukhina told Interfax.

The ruling supported the position of Moscow's prosecutors who told the court that linguistic experts found the clips offensive.

Materials officially branded "extremist" are put on a blacklist kept by the Russian justice ministry. Their dissemination can be considered a criminal offence.

Currently the list has about 1500 items, mostly related to banned religious and ultra-nationalist groups or those deemed to have a fascist ideology.

Two Pussy Riot band members are currently serving two-year prison sentences after their cathedral performance was ruled an act of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred.

The video of the February Punk Prayer has gone viral and been viewed on YouTube several million times. Its lyrics appeal to the Virgin Mary to "get rid of (President Vladimir) Putin".

Pussy Riot also sang a song Putin Got Scared on Red Square, and staged an illicit concert on the roof of a Moscow prison for those detained at a protest rally last December.

The band's Yekaterina Samutsevich, who has been convicted for the church stunt but freed with a suspended sentence, called Thursday's ruling a "direct recognition of artistic censorship" in Russia.

The case of Pussy Riot has polarised Russian society while their prosecution was seen as excessive by many Western countries, and global stars like Madonna pledged their support.

Putin, who returned to a third historic presidential term in the Kremlin in May, has overseen the passage of a series of laws restricting freedom of speech and internet.

This month, a new blacklist of internet sites went into effect that allows the government to block pages with banned content, including extremism.

Critics have said the new law's vague wording can be exploited, while observers say the blacklist is a clear step toward wide-ranging web restrictions similar to those in China.


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Concorde manslaughter conviction overturned

A FRENCH appeals court has overturned a manslaughter conviction against Continental Airlines for the July 2000 crash of an Air France Concorde that killed 113 people, ruling Thursday that mistakes by the company's mechanics were not enough to make it legally responsible for the deaths.

The crash hastened the end for the already-faltering supersonic Concorde, synonymous with high-tech luxury but a commercial failure. The program, jointly operated by Air France and British Airways, was taken out of service in 2003.

In the July 25, 2000, accident, the jet crashed into a hotel near Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport soon after taking off, killing all 109 people aboard and four on the ground. Most of the victims were Germans heading to a cruise in the Caribbean.

A French court initially convicted Continental Airlines Inc. and one of its mechanics in 2010 for the crash of the Air France Concorde, and imposed about 2 million euros ($2.5 million) in damages and fines on the carrier.

The lower court ruled that the mechanic fitted a metal strip on a Continental DC-10 that fell onto the runway, puncturing the Concorde's tyre. The burst tyre sent bits of rubber into the fuel tanks, which started the fire that brought down the plane.

"This was a tragic accident and we support the court's decision that Continental did not bear fault. We have long maintained that neither Continental nor its employees were responsible for this tragic event and are satisfied that this verdict was overturned," Megan McCarthy, a spokeswoman for Chicago-based United Continental Holdings, said in a written statement. Continental merged with United in 2010.

Parties including Air France and Continental compensated the families of most victims years ago, so financial claims were not the trial's focus - the main goal was to assign responsibility.

In the original trial, Continental and the mechanic, John Taylor, were also ordered to pay tens of thousands of euros in damages to families of a few victims in the case.

At the time, Continental lawyer Olivier Metzner argued that the U.S. airline was a convenient scapegoat and that there wasn't enough evidence of criminal wrongdoing.

In France, unlike in many other countries, plane crashes routinely lead to trials to assign criminal responsibility - cases that often drag on for years.

In the years it took French judicial investigators to work their way to trial, amassing 80,000 pages of court documents, the Concordes were revamped, retired and finally sent to museums.


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French lawyers exchange tweets in court

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 28 November 2012 | 22.24

TWO French prosecutors have landed themselves in hot water after being caught tweeting during a trial, judicial sources have revealed.

The pair are being investigated over a Twitter exchange which suggests they were frustrated with the pace of proceedings in an attempted murder case in a court in the Landes area of southwestern France.

"Here's a jurisprudence question for you: a prosecutor who strangles the judge in the middle of a case, how long would he get?" read the opening tweet, to which his colleague replied: "I'll stand as a character witness!"

The banter continued in a similar vein and was picked up and published by local newspaper Sud Ouest. It could not be accessed on Wednesday as the two Twitter accounts involved had been deleted since the end of the trial last week.

The two prosecutors have not been suspended pending the outcome of the investigation.


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BP banned from US government contracts

BRITISH oil giant BP has been temporarily banned by the US Environmental Protection Agency from US government contracts due to its behaviour in the April 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil disaster.

"EPA is taking this action due to BP's lack of business integrity as demonstrated by the company's conduct with regard to the Deepwater Horizon blowout, explosion, oil spill, and response," the agency said.

The EPA cited BP's admission of guilt two weeks ago to Justice Department charges in the disaster, which left 11 people dead and spewed some 4.9 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico and blackened beaches in five states.

On November 15, BP signed a plea agreement acknowledging guilt on 11 counts of manslaughter, one count of felony obstruction of Congress and two environmental violations.

The EPA said the ban on BP and affiliates from receiving government contracts applied "until the company can provide sufficient evidence to EPA demonstrating that it meets federal business standards."


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150 wounded in Tunisia clashes

MORE than 150 people were wounded in a second day of clashes between Tunisian security forces and thousands of protesters in a poor southwestern town, a hospital source told AFP.

A doctor at the hospital in Siliana said more than 150 people were being treated for different types of injury, with four of them transferred to Tunis.

The emergency services in Siliana, some 120 kilometres south of Tunis, were visibly overwhelmed, as relatives of the victims gathered and vented their anger, according to an AFP reporter at the scene.

"We will burn the town!" shouted a man whose son was among those injured.

Several armoured vehicles belonging to the national guard were deployed, while protesters erected barricades in the streets.

By early afternoon the clashes were ongoing, between stone-throwing protesters and police, with thick clouds of tear gas visible in the town.

The interior ministry declined to comment on the unrest.

But the prime minister's office said it was concerned about "the protests in public places in the Siliana prefecture," in its first reaction to the unrest.

It also said it regretted "the use of violence against the security forces, aggression at the headquarters of sovereignty, and attempts to damage public property."

Several thousand protesters had gathered at 0900 GMT in front of the prefecture in Siliana demanding the departure of the regional governor, trade union official Nejib Sebti told AFP earlier.

The security forces then began firing warning shots and tear gas, before using a "strange" type of shot to disperse the crowd, he said.

Similar clashes took place on Tuesday, with the police then using rubber bullets to scatter the protesters.

"The people of Siliana most affected by poverty will never go down on their knees," Mr Sebti said, warning that they were "ready to die for their rights."

The protesters are demanding the liberation of 14 people detained during violent unrest in April 2011 and funds to boost economic development in the impoverished region, as well as the governor's resignation.

Investment in the poor farming region fell by 44.5 per cent from January to October, compared with the same period last year.

Much of Tunisia's interior suffers from a chronic lack of development, and has seen growing social unrest, including protests that often turn violent, amid rising discontent over the Islamist-led government's failure to improve living standards.


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UK to abstain on UN Palestinian vote

BRITAIN says it will abstain on a vote for upgraded Palestinian status at the United Nations unless the Palestinians commit to an immediate return to negotiations with Israel.

Foreign Secretary William Hague said Britain would only support Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas in the vote on Thursday if he agreed to talks over a lasting two-state deal with Israel.

To secure Britain's vote, Hague said the Palestinians would also have to drop their pursuit of International Criminal Court (ICC) jurisdiction over the Occupied Territories and confirm that the UN resolution would not apply retrospectively.

"Up until the time of the vote itself, we will remain open to voting in favour of the resolution if we see public assurances by the Palestinians on these points," Hague told parliament.

"However, in the absence of these assurances the United Kingdom would abstain on the vote."

He added that the assurances could be made either in the text of the Palestinian resolution, or in accompanying statements.

Abbas is to submit a formal application to the UN General Assembly in New York on Thursday to obtain an upgraded role from an observer entity to that of a non-member observer state.

A growing number of European countries have pledged to vote in favour of the motion, among them France, Spain, Norway, Denmark and Switzerland, but the move is strongly opposed by the United States and Israel.

Australia will also abstain from voting.

If the request is approved by the 193 member states of the General Assembly, it will give the Palestinians access to a range of UN agencies and also potentially to the ICC.


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Church to vote again on women bishops

THE Church of England is to relaunch the bid to admit women bishops at the earliest opportunity in July next year, it says in a statement.

The 19-strong Archbishops' Council said it wanted to resolve the situation "as a matter of urgency" after the General Synod, the governing body of England's state church, failed to pass the legislation on November 20.

"As part of their reflections, many council members commented on the deep degree of sadness and shock that they had felt as a result of the vote," said the statement issued following a two-day meeting of the Synod's standing committee.

"The council decided that a process to admit women to the episcopate needed to be restarted at the next meeting of the General Synod in July 2013.

"There was agreement that the Church of England had to resolve this matter through its own processes as a matter of urgency."

The Church of England narrowly rejected the appointment of women bishops last week, triggering turmoil and setting back efforts to modernise the mother church of 85 million Anglicans worldwide.

In its biggest decision since backing the introduction of women priests 20 years ago, just enough lay members of the church voted against the measure to bring it down, following years of wrangling between traditionalists and liberals.


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British team hunts for WWII Spitfires

A BRITISH team preparing to dig for a rumoured hoard of World War II Spitfire planes in Myanmar (Burma) says it would be one of the most fascinating discoveries in aviation archaeology if they were found.

The team believe there could be 36 of the iconic single-seat British fighter aircraft buried in sealed crates up to 10 metres beneath Yangon International Airport, a wartime airfield, with more at two other sites in Myanmar.

Britain, the former colonial power in what was then Burma, is thought to have buried the brand new planes in 1945 as they were surplus by the time they arrived by sea.

The dig, set to start in early January, has excited military history and aviation enthusiasts around the world.

There are thought to be fewer than 50 airworthy Spitfires left in the world and the digs could potentially double their number if they remain in pristine condition.

"Eyewitnesses talk about 36 being buried in this particular spot, though we do have evidence that there might be more," project leader David Cundall told a pre-dig briefing at the Imperial War Museum in London.

"They are buried at eight to 10 metres. There's no oxygen down there so we don't think they've corroded.

"It's like opening a can of beans at 67 years old: it's not going to be at its best but if you're hungry, you're going to eat it."

The leaders of the expedition admit that the entire project could end up being a wild goose chase, with no physical evidence that the rare Mark XIV Spitfires exist.

Belarus-based strategy game developer Wargaming.net is underwriting the cost of the project, estimated at STG1 million ($A1.54 million) at present.


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Facebook nixes copyright shift rumours

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 27 November 2012 | 22.24

FACEBOOK is telling its users to ignore rumours spreading on the social network that they need to post a statement to protect their copyrights of their comments and other materials.

"There is a rumour circulating that Facebook is making a change related to ownership of users' information or the content they post to the site," Facebook said in a "fact check" notice on its website Monday.

"This is false. Anyone who uses Facebook owns and controls the content and information they post, as stated in our terms. They control how that content and information is shared. That is our policy, and it always has been."

The notice came after the copyright notice went viral - suggesting that a posted statement was needed to protect copyrights on Facebook. The hoax had been around in the past but resurfaced after Facebook announced changes to its privacy policies last week.

Users began repeating these posts, which stated, "In response to the new Facebook guidelines I hereby declare that my copyright is attached to all of my personal details, illustrations, comics, paintings, professional photos and videos, etc... This will place them under protection of copyright laws."

Warnings about the so-called "chain letter hoax" were issued as far back as June from the security firm Sophos and others.

And noted technology blogger Robert Scoble poured scorn Monday on those falling for the trick, saying on his Facebook page: "If you are posting about copyright on Facebook and you haven't done your research you are an idiot."


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Qantas cuts ties with Tourism Australia

A 40-YEAR partnership with Tourism Australia has been abandoned by Qantas amid allegations of sabotage.

Qantas has suspended a $50 million marketing deal with the tourism body, claiming its boss Geoff Dixon was leading a consortium trying to remove current Qantas management and buy the company out, The Daily Telegraph reports.

Qantas boss Alan Joyce reportedly wrote to Tourism Minister Martin Ferguson on Tuesday, telling him the national carrier was suspending all future dealings with Tourism Australia.

It is believed Mr Joyce warned the government Qantas would refuse to have any further dealings with Tourism Australia while Mr Dixon - a former Qantas CEO - was chairman.


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Israel's ex-FM Livni returns to politics

ISRAEL'S former Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni has announced she is returning to politics and has told supporters she is forming a new party to run in January parliamentary elections.

Ms Livni told a news conference in Tel Aviv that her new party, called "The Movement," would aggressively pursue peace with the Palestinians.

She harshly criticised Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's hardline government for the past four years of deadlock in peace efforts.

She says she "decided to give an answer to people who don't have anyone to vote for."

Ms Livni's return adds another name to what already is a fractured centrist opposition.

She served as foreign minister and chief peace negotiator from 2006 to 2009. She left politics this year after she was ousted as leader of the Kadima Party.


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France to vote for Palestinian state

THE French foreign minister says France plans to vote in favour of recognition of a Palestinian state at the U.N. General Assembly this week.

Laurent Fabius has told parliament that France has long supported Palestinian ambitions for statehood and "will respond 'yes'" when the issue comes up for a vote "out of a concern for coherency."

With the announcement, France - a permanent member of the Security Council - becomes the first major European country to come out in favour. It amounts to a setback for Israel.

The Palestinians say the assembly is likely to vote Thursday on a resolution raising their status at the United Nations from an observer to a nonmember observer state, a move they believe is an important step toward a two-state solution with Israel.


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Portuguese MPs clear austerity budget

BAILED-OUT Portugal's MPs have given final approval to a 2013 budget imposing an unprecedented austerity squeeze even as protesters massed outside.

The budget, aimed at saving 5.3 billion euros ($A6.63 billion), passed easily with the support of the centre-right government, which has an absolute majority.

The government says the plan, which relies on higher taxes for 80 per cent of the savings, is vital to Portugal's recovery.

"The state budget for 2013 is a determined step on the road to recovery," Finance Minister Vitor Gaspar said. But "the risks and uncertainties surrounding the 2013 budget year are great."

Portugal's new budget stipulates a broad rise in income tax to 14.5 per cent for the most vulnerable and 48 per cent for the most wealthy. It also reduces the number of tax brackets from eight to five, with the tax rate in each band raised by 3.5 percentage points.

Unemployment benefits are sliced by five per cent and sickness payments by six per cent.

"We have to finish with this policy before it finishes with us!" declared one banner unfurled at a rally outside parliament called by the main union, the General Federation of Portuguese Workers.

Protesters aimed their fire at the "troika" of creditors behind Portugal's 78 billion euro bailout: the International Monetary Fund, European Union and European Central Bank.

"We say no to the troika and its policies!" said one banner carried by activists, while others declared: "It's robbery, it is the people who pay!" and "Salaries frozen, future mortgaged!"

The tight-fisted budget has sparked multiple street protests including one on November 14 that degenerated into clashes between baton-wielding police and stone-throwing demonstrators.

The main opposition Socialist Party has opposed the budget, saying the austerity policies are "exaggerated", even though it was in power when Lisbon sought the rescue in May 2011.

While recognising the enormous sacrifices by his compatriots, Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho says austerity policies are the only path to economic recovery.

With its draconian budget, the government expects to trim the annual budget deficit to the equivalent of 4.5 per cent of gross domestic product next year from a target of 5.0 per cent in 2012.

The budget-trimming efforts come as the economy is expected to shrink three per cent in 2012, with a jobless rate already nearing 16 per cent.


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US stocks open lower despite Greek deal

US stocks have opened lower after Greece secured a revised bailout deal that will help it again avert a default on its huge debt load.

Doubts remained about the new deal, which allows Athens to trim its debt load through bond buybacks and reduced rates and promises new rescue loan instalments of 43.7 billion euros ($A54.63 billion) through March.

Five minutes into trade the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 27.19 points (0.21 per cent) at 12,940.18.

The broad-market S&P 500 lost 2.37 (0.17 per cent) at 1403.92, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped 4.26 (0.14 per cent) to 2972.52.

European markets were mostly higher after the deal, but critics said the European Union and the International Monetary Fund had again "kicked the can down the road" with the new arrangement.

"We think that Greece will eventually need a much larger debt relief, but any agreement on this is unlikely to happen before German elections next fall," said Tullia Bucco of UniCredit Research.


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Pedophile 'treasure' tag dreadful: Brother

Written By Unknown on Senin, 26 November 2012 | 22.24

THE description of a convicted pedophile by his religious order's newsletter as a "treasure" is shattering, the head of the Patrician Brothers says.

Brother Philip Mulhall said Brother Thomas Grealy, who was convicted and jailed for the rape of boys in western Sydney in 1997, said featuring a photo of Br Grealy in the order's newsletter was a dreadful mistake.

Br Mulhall said the contributor should have picked up the inclusion and he himself should have.

"I'm shattered by that," he told ABC television.

Asked why Br Grealy was allowed back into the order after his release from jail, Br Mulhall said the policy at the time was to take responsibility for the members of the order.

"He's our member, he's our problem and we have a responsibility to see that he's not a problem for other people.

"That was the rationale.

"He wasn't brought back into the order, he never really left it."

Br Mulhall said he thought the approach should be re-examined but it was the correct decision at the time.

Lawyer Jason Parkinson is representing five other men who allege they were assaulted by Br Grealy when he was a school principal.

"He should have been shunned, he should have been sent away, he shouldn't have been allowed to stay in the order," Mr Parkinson said.

Br Mulhall said he was very open to the federal government's royal commission into sexual abuse.

"I certainly will co-operate with it completely, even if that means criticism of myself or criticism of my colleagues or criticism of people that I know, so that something really good can be learnt for the future."


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Garment workers protest 'deathtraps'

People protest outside the garment-factory where a fire killed more than 110 people on Saturday. Survivors told AFP that the factory did not have proper fire exits. Source: AP

THE builders of the nine-storey factory in which 110 workers died in Bangladesh's worst textile industry fire had only been granted permission for a three-floor construction, an official said Monday.

"We gave them permission to build a three-storey factory. But they expanded the building without any approval from us," Habibul Islam, the government's chief inspector of factories, told AFP.

Mr Islam's comments came as the government and police launched separate probes into the fire on Saturday at Tazreen Fashion that left at least 110 workers dead as many struggled to escape from upper floors.

Survivors told AFP that the factory, built outside Dhaka in 2009, did not have proper fire exits.
Bangladeshi law does not allow expansion of any factory without approval by the Office of the Chief Inspector of Factories.

Dozens of workplace fires have killed more than 600 employees in Bangladesh's booming garment industry since 2006, but none of the owners have been prosecuted for poor safety conditions.

Bangladeshi officials inspect the garment-factory. A police investigation is trying to establish if the owners were to blame for the fire.

The revelations came as garment workers staged mass protests on Monday to demand an end to "deathtrap" labour conditions after the new blaze sparked fresh panic and terror.

Ahead of the first of a series of mass funerals for the 110 victims, survivors of Saturday night's blaze joined several thousand colleagues to block a highway and march in the manufacturing hub of Ashulia.

"Workers from several factories have left work and joined the protest. They want exemplary punishment for Tazreen's owners," said Dhaka police chief Habibur Rahman, referring to a plant near the capital where the blaze broke out late Saturday.

A man takes photographs inside the blackened garment-factory.

Police said Ashulia's more than 500 factories who make apparel for top global retailers such as Walmart, H&M and Tesco declared a wild-cat "holiday", fearing that the protests could worsen and turn into large-scale unrest.

"Most workers are in shock. They want to see safety improvements to these deathtrap factories," Babul Akter, head of a garment union, told AFP.

The protesters chanted a series of slogans, including a demand for Tazreen's bosses to be brought to justice.

Firefighters and workers try to douse another fire at a garment-factory in Dhaka, two days after a similar incident killed more than 110 people.

Local police chief Badrul Alam said officers had opened a murder investigation as a result of criminal negligence. Two government inquiries and the police investigation are trying to establish if the owners were to blame for the fire.

"We won't spare anyone," Mr Alam promised as the Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina announced a day of mourning for the dead, many of whom stitched clothes for international brands. All factories will also be closed on Tuesday.

Dozens of workplace fires have killed more than 600 employees in Bangladesh's booming garment industry since 2006, but none of the owners have so far faced prosecution for poor safety conditions.

Firefighters battled for several hours to contain the weekend blaze, which broke out on the ground floor of the nine-storey Tazreen Fashion plant 30 kilometres north of Dhaka, trapping more than 1000 workers.

Witnesses told how panicked staff, most of them women, cried for help and several leaped to their deaths from upper floors as they tried to escape.

Preparations have been made for the mass burial of the bodies of 59 workers who cannot be identified.

Their remains, most of which were burnt beyond recognition, will be laid to rest at a state graveyard in a southern suburb of Dhaka.

"We are keeping the DNA samples of the dead workers so that we can identify their relatives for compensation," said Dhaka district police commissioner Yusuf Harun who said the death toll was now 110.

Even before the first burials, a new blaze at a 12-storey building housing four factories sparked new scenes of panic as workers rushed to safety.

The latest fire caused widespread damage at the plant on the outskirts of Dhaka, but no casualties were reported after rescue teams searched the building for workers feared to have suffocated in toxic black fumes.

"Most workers broke grilles in the upper floor and escaped to a safe location at an adjacent building," Dhaka district deputy commissioner of police Nisharul Arif told AFP.

Bangladesh has emerged as the world's second-largest clothes exporter with overseas garment sales topping $US19 billion ($18 billion) last year, or 80 per cent of national exports.

The sector is the mainstay of the poverty-stricken country's economy, employing 40 per cent of its industrial workforce, but work conditions are often basic and safety standards low.


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Bieber booed by football fans

JUSTIN Bieber has had a hostile homecoming during his half-time performance at Canada's football Grey Cup, facing boos and jeers.

The Toronto crowd booed when the 18-year-old pop star's face popped up on the JumboTron screen. They booed when a host spoke his name. And they booed as he took the stage and throughout his medley of the chart-topper Boyfriend and the disco-inflected Beauty and a Beat.

If Bieber was bothered, it didn't show.

"Thank you so much Canada," Bieber said. "I love you."

Earlier in the week, Bieber was presented with a Diamond Jubilee Medal by Prime Minister Stephen Harper and caused a scene by wearing overalls, unbuttoned on one shoulder, over a white T-shirt, with a backwards baseball cap.

There was sufficient uproar that Harper even weighed in on Twitter.

"In fairness to (Bieber)," Harper tweeted, "I told him I would be wearing my overalls too."

The Canadian Football League may have been hoping to court Bieber's army of tween followers on Sunday. But recent Grey Cup half-time performers have skewed toward the comparatively heavy likes of Nickelback and Lenny Kravitz.

"J-Biebs doesn't scream football, you know? Neither does Carly Rae Jepsen," said Calgary's Ryan Prisque, 22.

The 27-year-old Jepsen also received a mixed reaction at first on Sunday but won the crowd over during an enthusiastic medley of her latest single, This Kiss, and her infectious hit Call Me Maybe.


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Thousands at funeral for Egypt activist

THOUSANDS of Egyptians have turned out for the funeral of an activist who died overnight after he was critically injured in clashes near Cairo's Tahrir Square last week.

Gaber Salah, a member of the April 6 movement known by his nickname "Jika", was hurt in confrontations between police and protesters on Mohammed Mahmud street where protesters had been marking the first anniversary of deadly clashes.

Some wept, others chanted for justice as Jika's white coffin was carried from Omar Makram mosque in Tahrir Square - where activists have been camping out to protest President Mohamed Morsi's assumption of sweeping powers - towards Mohammed Mahmud street, where violence has been brewing for the past week.

Mourners comforted his devastated mother, as one protester carried a sign that read "Glory for Gaber".

"It isn't acceptable to have such killings now. We refuse all sorts of violence," said long-time activist George Ishak who attended the funeral.

"What is happening is a warning to Morsi that the country is in danger," he said.

The funeral comes on the eve of rival mass rallies in response to a decree granting Morsi broad powers that are immune from judicial review and threaten to deepen the country's divisions.


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Voters apathetic about Vic leaders: poll

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 25 November 2012 | 22.24

VICTORIA'S political leaders might be suffering from attention deficiency because a large number of voters don't know or don't care who they are, according to a new poll.

A JWS Research poll in Monday's Herald Sun found that despite being premier for the past two years, 40 per cent of voters say they have no particular view of Ted Baillieu.

And it gets worse for Opposition Leader Daniel Andrews, with 50 per cent of Victorians having no view of him, while 13 per cent have never heard of him.

While 32 per cent said they preferred Mr Baillieu as premier with 16 per cent favouring Mr Andrews, a whopping 52 per cent of voters either preferred neither or could not decide between them.

The poll found there has been a 3.8 per cent swing to the government statewide since the November 2010 election with the coalition now at 48 per cent and Labor on 38 per cent.

On a a two-party preferred basis, the government leads 52.1 per cent to Labor's 47.9 per cent.

However, the the government has lost ground in a number of critical Labor-held marginal seats including Eltham, Macedon, Ivanhoe, Cranbourne, Albert Park, Geelong, Essendon and Oakleigh.

There has also been a small swing against the coalition in its own marginals including Burwood, Prahran, South Barwon, Mitcham, Mordialloc and Bentleigh.

JWS Research director John Scales said the Baillieu government had not consolidated its first-term incumbency, but nor had Labor made any headway.

Only 24 per cent of voters rated the government's performance as good or very good, while 39 per cent thought it was average, and 36 per cent thought it poor or very poor.

The poll of 1391 voters was conducted last Wednesday, and included 27 key marginal seats that are held by six per cent or less.


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Man charged with attempted murder, rape

A MAN has been charged with attempted murder, torture and rape after an incident on the Gold Coast on Saturday.

It is alleged about 11.15pm the man assaulted a woman at a Tallai home. The man and woman were known to each other, police said.

The 29-year-old man was also charged with deprivation of liberty and wilful damage.

He will appear in the Southport Magistrates Court on Monday.


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Blast rocks Nigerian army barracks church

AT least one explosion has ripped through a church in a military barracks in northern Nigeria, the army says, with reports that a number of people have been wounded.

"There was a blast today in a church inside the military barracks in Jaji (in Kaduna state). It happened after the church service," military spokesman Colonel Sani Usman told AFP on Sunday.

The state-run National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said "rescuers have been alerted to an explosion at a military formation in Kaduna state today and likely at a worship centre".

A military officer who did not want to be named said the Protestant church was hit by two explosions.

"The first blast caused no casualties and curious worshippers gathered around the scene looking at the debris ... and that was when the second blast happened," he said. "Many people were injured but I have not received report of any deaths at the moment."

Jaji is some 30 kilometres from the state capital Kaduna city, which has been hit in the past by deadly attacks blamed on the Islamist group Boko Haram, which has often targeted churches in its bloody insurgency.


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NAPLAN stress causes vomiting, insomnia

STRESS-RELATED vomiting and insomnia are affecting children in the lead-up to the National Assessment Program - Literacy and Numeracy (NAPLAN), a new study shows.

In the landmark University of Melbourne study, for which 8353 teachers and principals were surveyed, concerns about the "unintended side effects" of NAPLAN were raised.

These concerns included teaching to the test and a negative effect on student health and teacher morale, Fairfax reported.

About half the teachers surveyed said NAPLAN practive tests were held once a week in the five months leading up to the test.

About 90 per cent said some students felt stressed before the test, leading to crying, vomiting, insomnia and absenteeism.


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Violation of Gaza truce a sin: cleric

A LEADING Islamic cleric in the Gaza Strip has ruled it a sin to violate the recent ceasefire between Israel and the Hamas militant group that governs the Palestinian territory - according a religious legitimacy to the truce and giving the Gaza government strong backing to enforce it.

The fatwa, or religious edict, was issued late Saturday by Suleiman al-Daya, a cleric respected by both ultra-conservative Salafis and Hamas. Salafi groups oppose political accommodations with Israel.

"Honouring the truce, which was sponsored by our Egyptian brethren, is the duty of each and every one of us. Violating it shall constitute a sin," the fatwa read.

The truce, which was struck on Wednesday to bring an end to an eight-day Israeli offensive against Gaza militants who fired rockets into Israel, remains fragile, however, and details beyond the initial ceasefire have not yet been worked out.

The spokesman for Gaza's Hamas government, Taher al-Nunu, told reporters on Sunday that Hamas is committed to the truce.

"The government reaffirmed its blessing to the agreement sponsored by Cairo and emphasised that it will work to the internal Palestinian consensus and the supreme national interest," he said, following a government meeting.

Hamas demands that Israel and Egypt lift all restrictions on the movement of goods and people in and out of the Palestinian territory. The restrictions have been imposed since the Islamists seized the territory in 2007.

Israel has eased its full-fledged blockade in recent years, and some goods enter Gaza through smuggling tunnels under the border with Egypt. But Israel has continued to impose strict restrictions on exports and the import of construction materials, which has severely hampered the development of Gaza's battered economy.

Israel is expected to link a significant easing of the blockade to Hamas's willingness to stop smuggling weapons into Gaza and producing them there. A top Hamas official said on Saturday that the group wouldn't stop arming itself, suggesting that talks on a new border deal would not go smoothly.


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Driver dies as bus carrying US band flips

SWISS police say a bus carrying the Marcus Miller Band, an American jazz group, has overturned - killing the driver and injuring several musicians.

Police in the central canton (state) of Uri said the German-registered private bus tipped over on Sunday as it drove into a bend and came to a rest on its side.

A police statement said the bus was carrying 13 people: two drivers and 11 members of the band, who were on their way from Monte Carlo to the Dutch town of Hengelo.

One of the drivers suffered fatal injuries. Several people were injured and taken to hospitals; police say none of them have life-threatening injuries.

The cause wasn't immediately clear. It appears no other vehicles were involved.


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