Sunday, August 31, 2014

China gives Microsoft 20 days to provide explanation in anti-trust probe



BEIJING (Reuters) – A Chinese anti-trust regulator said on Monday it has given Microsoft Corp 20 days to reply to queries on the compatability of its Windows operating system and Office software suite amid a probe into the world’s largest software company.


The State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) questioned Microsoft Vice President David Chen and gave the company a deadline to make an explanation, the agency said in a short statement on its website.


SAIC also repeated that it suspected the company has not fully disclosed issues relating to the compatability of the software and the operating system.


“[A] special investigation team conducted an anti-monopoly investigation inquiry with Microsoft Vice President Chen Shi (David Chen), and required that Microsoft make a written explanation within 20 days,” the SAIC said in a statement on its website.


In a statement, Microsoft said it was “serious about complying with China‘s laws and committed to addressing SAIC’s questions and concerns”.


Microsoft is one of at least 30 foreign companies that have come under scrutiny by China’s anti-monopoly regulators, as the government seeks to enforce its six-year old antitrust law. Critics say the law is being used to unfairly target overseas businesses, a charge the regulators deny.


Last month, a delegation from chipmaker Qualcomm Inc, led by company President Derek Aberle, met officials at the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) as part of that regulator’s investigation of the San Diego-based firm.


NDRC said earlier this year that the U.S. chipmaker is suspected of overcharging and abusing its market position in wireless communication standards.


Microsoft’s Satya Nadella is expected to make his first visit to China as chief executive later this month.


(Reporting by Michael Martina and Matthew Miller; Editing by Miral Fahmy)





China gives Microsoft 20 days to provide explanation in anti-trust probe

California Made in America show sizzles on day 2



LOS ANGELES (AP) — The second day of downtown Los Angeles’ inaugural outdoor music festival sizzled on Sunday as more than 34,000 concertgoers grooved to an eclectic mix of rock, hip-hop and electronic music under the blazing sun.


Police said the Budweiser Made in America concert in Grand Park went off with few problems.


By 5 p.m. authorities made five arrests — two of them for drug-related felonies — and cited more than a dozen others for alcohol-related offenses and other misdemeanors, Lt. Andy Neiman, a police spokesman, said. Eleven people were treated for alcohol-related problems and released, and two others were taken to a hospital for treatment, he added.


On Saturday, 29 people were arrested and seven were taken to nearby hospitals for unknown reasons.


The multi-stage show near City Hall was headlined by Rita Ora, John Mayer, Cypress Hill, Juanes and Weezer, and Kanye West.


Rap mogul Jay Z launched the two-day festival in Philadelphia in 2012 and announced its West Coast expansion this spring.


Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti championed the Made in America event, fast-tracking it through city approvals.


It’s the first time Grand Park, which opened two years ago, is being used for a large, ticketed event. The festival transformed Civic Center — usually quiet on a weekend — into the city’s party central, drawing food trucks, revelers and heavy car traffic.


Concert promoter Live Nation paid the city $500,000 to cover setup and security costs, Garcetti spokesman Yusef Robb said. It also promised to pay for cleanup and any property damage, he said.


Officials anticipate the festival to be an economic boon for the city, Robb said, citing a reported $10 million infusion in Philadelphia during past Made in America events.





California Made in America show sizzles on day 2

Japan confirms more dengue infections: officials



An outbreak of dengue fever in Japan — the first since World War II — could have affected up to 20 people, media reported Monday, as officials confirmed three more cases.


The new cases, who are in their teens or 20s, are all believed to have visited Tokyo’s Yoyogi Park, one of the major green lungs of the metropolis, which is popular with residents and tourists alike.


The park, one of the largest open spaces in central Tokyo, is believed to be the source of the mosquito-borne disease.


The first three sufferers had also visited the park, where Tokyo officials have now sprayed about 800 litres (210 US gallons) of pesticide in a bid to kill off the insect colony.


None of those found to have contracted dengue is in a life-threatening condition, officials have said.


TV Asahi reported that as many as 20 people could now have been infected.


The last domestic infection of dengue fever was in 1945, although there are around 200 cases annually among Japanese who have travelled abroad, mainly in Southeast Asia.


Dengue fever is not transmitted directly from person-to-person and symptoms range from mild fever to incapacitating high temperatures, according to the World Health Organization.


There is no vaccine or any specific medicine to treat dengue and patients should rest, drink plenty of fluids and reduce the fever using paracetamol, it says.


The disease is carried by the tiger mosquito, which is endemic to Japan.


Meanwhile, shares in home pesticide maker Fumakilla were up 20.00 percent at 420 yen on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. That follows a nearly 25 percent rise one day last week.





Japan confirms more dengue infections: officials

Head Of Sky News On Stand Up Be Counted



Today Sky News is launching an ambitious new campaign, Stand Up Be Counted.



:: Click here to visit the site



The project sees us launch a dynamic digital platform where young people aged between 16 and 25 can talk about the issues that affect them.



Anything from personal reflections on their lives, to their frustrations around the stereotypes the media turns them into, to their optimism about the future.



According to a Sky News poll , almost half of the young people in Britain are not engaged in politics, feel their voices are not heard and don’t believe that politicians are addressing their needs.



That makes for depressing reading.



We, the media, are partly to blame, often portraying young people as stereotypes, the victims or the agitators.



Indeed only 18% of young people say that traditional media is the best platform to reflect their views and concerns. I am determined to change this.



This is why we are launching Stand Up Be Counted .



Not only is it a place where young people can share their thoughts but it also means that we can help amplify their voices and make them a genuine part of our Sky News content.



We would like thousands of young people across the country, from every constituency, to share their thoughts with us, as they already do on their social networks.



Within just a few seconds video, blogs and comments can be uploaded and shared with fellow Stand Ups on our platform and across social media platforms including Twitter, Facebook, Google+, WhatsApp and Kik.



I am 52, it’s been a while since I was considered young, but when I talk to younger people now I am always bowled over about how creative, how deep thinking, and how motivated they are.



They just feel, quite rightly, disengaged from the Westminster bubble which decide the direction in what our country heads.



Likewise news organisations like Sky need to up their game, and help explain how policy decisions directly affect the lives of young people, and how they can influence those decisions via voting. We just need to avoid doing it in a preachy, patronising way.



There is a danger that young people could be sidelined, becoming so disengaged that they lose their voice – not necessarily amongst their peers – but with the establishment who contribute to shaping their future.



Long gone are the days of young people being seen and not heard, we need to do all we can to ensure their voices are received loud and clear, ensure they stand up and are counted.



:: Stand Up website: www.skynews.com/standupbecounted




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/head-sky-news-stand-counted-231354408.html



Head Of Sky News On Stand Up Be Counted

China's final HSBC PMI falls to 3-month low in August



BEIJING (Reuters) – Growth in China‘s large factory sector slipped to a three-month low in August as foreign and domestic demand cooled, a private survey showed on Monday, raising concerns that the economy is faltering after a bounce.


The final HSBC/Markit Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) retreated to 50.2 in August, roughly in line with a preliminary reading of 50.3 and only a shade above the 50-point mark that demarcates an expansion in activity from a contraction.


China’s official manufacturing PMI for August, reported on Monday, was 51.1, compared with 51.2 in a Reuters poll and July’s 51.7.


A breakdown of the official survey showed output, employment, new orders, delivery time and raw material inventory all fell across the board, with the labour market showing the most weakness.


China and Hong Kong stock markets rose slightly after the HSBC and official PMIs came out. Regional currencies did not move on the numbers.


In the HSBC survey, demand appeared to have softened across the board in August.


New orders and new export orders – proxies for domestic and foreign demand, respectively – fell to their lowest in two to three months, but managed to hold above the 50-point level.


The new orders sub-index was the worse performer of the two, shedding two full points to 51.3 from July.


The underwhelming performance may reinforce bets that China would further loosen fiscal and monetary policies to stoke growth in the world’s second-biggest economy.


“The economy still faces considerable downside risks to growth in the second-half of the year, which warrants further policy easing,” said Qu Hongbin, an economist at HSBC.


Firms had reported “subdued client demand” for new orders, especially for those selling investment goods, the PMI showed.


Lacklustre final demand weighed on the labour market, which shrank the most in three months in August as companies fired workers or declined to fill job vacancies as to reduce costs.


The broad cool down in activity caused production prices and final sales prices to fall, the survey showed, adding that a number of companies had cut spending on steel in particular.


ROCKY SPELL


China’s economy has had a rocky spell this year. Growth sunk to an 18-month low of 7.4 percent in the first quarter before edging up to 7.5 between April and June.


Yet hopes that the mild rebound may gain traction were scuttled last month when growth in retail sales and fixed asset investment slowed, while money injected into the economy unexpectedly tumbled to a near six-year low.


A Reuters poll in July showed economists were divided over whether the central bank would attempt to boost lending by reducing the amount of deposits that banks must set aside as reserves.


The poll showed half of 14 economists polled thought the central bank would reduce the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 50 basis points between October and March next year. Only one of 15 economists polled predicted a cut in interest rates.


Worried that the economy was cooling too quickly, Chinese authorities started loosening policy in modest steps from April by accelerating some construction projects, lowering the RRR for some banks, and relaxing property controls to boost a cooling housing market.


Just last week, the central bank said it was lowering its re-lending interest rates for agricultural loans by 100 basis points. The government in Hangzhou – one of the Chinese cities worst hit by an oversupply of homes – also said it will abolish all home purchase restrictions in the city.


(Reporting by Koh Gui Qing; Editing by Richard Borsuk)





China's final HSBC PMI falls to 3-month low in August

Peng beats Safarova to make US Open quarterfinals



NEW YORK (AP) — China’s Peng Shuai finally reached a Grand Slam quarterfinal in her sixth try.


The 39th-ranked Peng beat a seeded player for the third straight match at the U.S. Open, defeating No. 14 Lucie Safarova 6-3, 6-4 on Sunday.


Peng had been 0-5 in fourth-round matches at major tournaments. She becomes the third Chinese player to reach a Grand Slam quarterfinal after Li Na and Jie Zheng.


Safarova was coming off a semifinal run at Wimbledon.


Peng faced only one break point and had just seven unforced errors.





Peng beats Safarova to make US Open quarterfinals

Jennifer Lawrence, Kate Upton And More Allegedly Hacked In Nude Photo Leak


Jennifer Lawrence, Kate Upton And More Allegedly Hacked In Nude Photo Leak

Pupils 'must take core GCSEs'



Schools will face being penalised by the education watchdog unless pupils take a set of “core” academic GCSEs under Tory plans.


State schools will be urged to enrol all pupils for GCSEs in English, maths, science, a language and history or geography, with Ofsted banned from awarding its highest ratings to those which refuse.


The Sunday Telegraph said under the plans Ofsted would not be able to give a “good” or “outstanding” rating to schools which did not enrol pupils on the English baccalaureate subjects.


“We want students to be able to keep their options open for as long as possible in terms of what they are going to do after school or college,” Education Secretary Nicky Morgan told the newspaper.


“In selective schools or schools with a low proportion of free school meals, that is what they are already doing.


“But that is not always happening in less advantaged areas.”


She added: “These core academic subjects offer children great opportunities. They are what universities are looking for.”


Mrs Morgan, who replaced Michael Gove at the Department for Education in the reshuffle, said her job was to implement the sweeping changes made by the “great reforming secretary of state” who preceded her.


She said academies and free schools – championed by Mr Gove – were “a very important part of the programme, but they are a part, and there are still many maintained schools”.


“If schools want to convert (to academy status), we will support them and help them through the process. But what I want to get across is a recognition that there are still a significant number of maintained schools.”




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/pupils-must-core-gcses-180028957.html



Pupils 'must take core GCSEs'

Henley leads, McIlroy two behind at Deutsche Bank



(Reuters) – American Russell Henley took the lead but Rory McIlroy loomed large, just two strokes behind after the third round at the $8 million Deutsche Bank Championship in Norton, Massachusetts on Sunday.


Henley dominated the par-threes to card a six-under-par 65 and jump to the front at 12-under 201 on a day of low scoring in ideal conditions at the TPC Boston.


He edged one shot ahead of compatriot Billy Horschel (67), while world number one McIlroy made his presence felt with a sizzling 64 to join Australian Jason Day (69) and American Chris Kirk (64) in a tie for third at 10-under.


Northern Irishman McIlroy, seeking his fourth PGA Tour victory in five starts, almost holed out at the 15th and 16th holes, tapping in from inside a foot both times.


McIlroy, whose sizzling summer stretch has included major victories at the British Open and PGA Championship, was clearly back to his best after an average performance last week when he tied for 22nd in the opener of the PGA Tour’s lucrative four-event FedExCup playoff series.


Powering his drives well over 300 yards and taking dead aim at pin after pin, McIlroy compiled seven birdies to match the best round of the day.


“I hit a lot of iron shots close, put myself in position to do that, more so than the first couple of days (when) I didn’t hole anything,” McIlroy told NBC television after lipping out with a 10-foot birdie putt at the last.


Henley was also on his game, particularly on the par-threes where he picked up three of his seven birdies.


The 25-year-old has recorded two PGA Tour victories, most recently at the Honda Classic in March when he beat McIlroy and two others in a playoff.


IMPROVED ATTITUDE


His form has since tailed off – no top-25 finishes in his past nine starts – but he says an improved attitude has helped him this week.


“Any day you shoot 65 is a pretty good day,” said Henley, who is 62nd in the FedEx Cup standings.


“When you’re making putts and hitting it well, golf is a lot of fun. It’s such a tough game and we put so much pressure on ourselves out here and I’m just trying to have a good attitude this week.”


Day, meanwhile, started strongly to take the sole lead with three birdies in the first seven holes and was playing so well he looked capable of running away with it.


However, he made heavy weather of the back nine, running up successive bogeys at the 14th and 15th holes.


“When I made that (first) bogey it was pretty surprising, because it was such an easy up-and-down,” lamented Day, the world number seven who is playing his way back into form after a season interrupted by a thumb injury.


“And then I hooked my tee shot on the next hole. I played so good and yet didn’t shoot the score I expected.”


American Patrick Reed carded a shocking 82 to miss the 54-hole cut after starting the day only two strokes off the lead.


Reed made four double-bogeys in a five-hole stretch starting at the 10th.


The top 70 players on the FedExCup points list after the Deutsche Bank Championship advance to next week’s BMW Championship in Englewood, Colorado where the leading 30 will qualify for the Sep. 11-14 Tour Championship finale in Atlanta.


(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina; Editing by Mark Lamport-Stokes)





Henley leads, McIlroy two behind at Deutsche Bank

Status Quo strip down for album


Status Quo strip down for album

Bad weather shuts down concerts, delays flights



PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Severe thunderstorms across the Northeast on Sunday slowed operations at airports, wreaked havoc at outdoor sporting and musical events in New York and Philadelphia and sent people scurrying from a beach after three men were struck by lightning.


The men were injured at Orchard Beach on Pelham Bay in the Bronx on Sunday evening as bad storms rolled through the area, the Fire Department of New York said. The men were being treated at a hospital, and the extent of their injuries was unknown.


Torrential rain, thunder and lightning interrupted Labor Day weekend celebrations in Philadelphia, where a parkway hosting a music concert was evacuated for safety reasons. Organizers of the Made in America festival warned people to move quickly and calmly to the exits and to protected areas outside the downtown festival site until the bad weather passed.


Anne Beyens, of Scottsdale, Arizona, was among a group of five waterlogged friends who were told to leave the concert after watching deejay 3LAU and ended up at a bar a mile away. They said most of the headliners they wanted to see, including Pharrell Williams and Kings of Leon, were scheduled for later in the night so they were hoping to return.


“We knew it was going to rain,” Beyens said. “We didn’t know they were going to kick us out.”


Besides temporarily stopping the Made in America concert, the bad weather also forced the early end to the Electric Zoo musical festival on an island in New York’s East River and halted play for the first time at this year’s U.S. Open tennis tournament in Queens.


Former champion Maria Sharapova took notice of the screeching weather warnings on reporters’ cellphones as she answered questions about her loss to 10th-seeded Caroline Wozniacki just before the storm hit.


“Is that the flood warning? Darn it. If I was only there a little longer,” she said to laughter.


Electric Zoo spokesman Stefan Friedman said “the safety and security of all attendees, artists and staff” was the primary concern as people were told to leave. The decision was made about six hours before the festival was scheduled to end on Randall’s Island, where fans have to take ferries and shuttle buses.


Dozens of commercial flights into the city’s airports were delayed because of the severe weather.


The National Weather Service said it had reports of wind damage and flash flooding in East Orange, New Jersey, and reports of large tree branches down on Long Island. It said most of the damage was reported between 4:20 p.m. and 5:15 p.m., when the storms were intense.





Bad weather shuts down concerts, delays flights

Joan Rivers Update: In Serious Condition, Possibly On Life Support



After several days worth of reports that icon and comedian Joan Rivers was in stable condition following a vocal chord procedure gone awry, new details paint a slightly different picture as to the star’s health. TMZ is reporting that Rivers’ is currently on life support, though her family remains hopeful for signs of improvement.


This updated report comes after news that the comedian was in stable, and then critical, condition following what several outlets are reporting to be a cardiac arrest that occurred sometime during her vocal chord surgery last week. Other reports simply state that Rivers stopped breathing.


Deadline has official word from Rivers’ daughter Melissa, who claimed nothing more than a “serious condition” status, adding that “[the family's] fingers are crossed.” The younger Rivers also thanked fans for the outpouring of thoughts, prayers, and support during this difficult time.


On Friday, Melissa Rivers released the following statement to Deadline:


“My mother would be so touched by the tributes and prayers that we have received from around the world. Her condition remains serious but she is receiving the best treatment and care possible. We ask that you continue to keep her in your thoughts as we pray for her recovery.”


By Saturday, neither Rivers’ family nor Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York had any official updates on her well-being, but various outlets claimed varying confirmation of her status. USA Today reported Rivers was in a medically-induced coma after going into cardiac arrest during surgery, whereas TMZ insisted the comedian was “completely reliant on machines to stay alive.”


We will have more updates as they become available. We’re sending our best wishes the Rivers family during this difficult period.






Joan Rivers Update: In Serious Condition, Possibly On Life Support

Ashya's Grandmother: Police Action 'Disgraceful'



The grandmother of Ashya King whose parents took him out of hospital without medical consent has condemned police for arresting the couple.



Patricia King told Sky News that Brett, 51, and Naghemeh, 45, are “brilliant parents, both of them. My daughter-in-law hasn’t left the hospital since he was admitted there.”



The pair, from Portsmouth, were arrested in Spain after taking Ashya out of hospital in Southampton  to seek specialist cancer treatment abroad.



Mrs King said she is “so upset” to learn her son and daughter-in-law are facing court action, accused of neglect.



The pair were handcuffed and taken to a court in Velez-Malaga on Sunday night.



A judge will decide whether they are to be sent to a high court in Madrid on Monday for further legal proceedings.



Mrs King heavily criticised Hampshire Police for launching a Europe-wide search for them.



“I think they (the police) have been absolutely disgraceful … I have nothing but condemnation for them,” she said.



Mrs King said her son took desperately-ill Ashya because the NHS said there was nothing more they could do for him.



She said he was selling his holiday home in Spain to pay for proton beam therapy , which she thought would cost £90,000.



“To be told that that’s it, that you can’t do any more for the child, of course Brett took alternative measures,” she said.



“Other people have done it (sought proton beam therapy), so why have they gone after my son like this?



“They’ve made him out to be a criminal.”



Officers in the Malaga area pulled over the family’s car on Saturday night and found Ashya and his parents inside after a tip-off.



Sky News sources say British police have arrived in the area to question his parents, who face extradition to the UK.



Ashya, who had surgery for a brain tumour last week at Southampton General Hospital, is thought to be in a stable condition at the Materno-Infantil hospital in Malaga.



His six brothers and sisters are still thought to be in the southern Spanish city.



Earlier, Assistant Chief Constable Chris Shead, of Hampshire Constabulary, defended his force’s actions.



He said: “Faced with the situation that we were, we had medical experts telling us Ashya was in grave danger… if he didn’t get the care that he needed there was a potential threat to his life.



“So I make no apologies for being as proactive in this investigation as we have been.”



He said it was too soon to say when Ashya would come back to the UK, but said Southampton General Hospital was liasing with doctors taking care of him in Spain.




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/grandmother-ashyas-treatment-disgraceful-172359327.html



Ashya's Grandmother: Police Action 'Disgraceful'

German anti-euro party enters 1st state assembly



BERLIN (AP) — A party that wants to ditch the euro currency in its current form was elected to one of Germany’s state assemblies for the first time Sunday.


Preliminary results showed the party, Alternative for Germany, receiving 10 percent of the vote in elections for the Saxony state parliament. This would be enough for it to clear the 5-percent hurdle needed to enter parliament.


The ruling Christian Democratic Union of Chancellor Angela Merkel received more than 39 percent of the vote, but their current coalition partner the Free Democratic Party was predicted to lose all its seats in Saxony, the last of Germany’s 16 states where it was still in government.


The Left party came second, with up to 19 percent, followed by the Social Democrats with about 12.3 percent. The Greens received about 5.5 percent of the vote, while the far-right National Democratic Party was on the cusp of re-election with 5 percent. An official result was expected later Sunday.


Alternative for Germany narrowly missed entering the national parliament and the Hesse state assembly last year, but won seven seats in the European Parliament this May.


The party, known by its German acronym AfD, has shaken up German politics since it was founded only last year. Led by an economics professor, Bernd Lucke, AfD has drawn supporters from all other parties but chiefly the Free Democrats.


Their disappearance at last year’s general election pushed Merkel into a “grand coalition” with the Social Democrats at the national level, an option now also being mooted for Saxony.


Some in Merkel’s party have suggested it should be open to a coalition with AfD, though the chancellor has spoken out against this.


Lucke told reporters in Berlin that he wouldn’t rule out any possible coalition.


But he reiterated his party’s line that the euro needs to be drastically reformed — a position no mainstream party in Germany advocates.


“We need to correct our course and change the euro,” Lucke told The Associated Press. “We need to have a smaller currency group or leave the euro and reintroduce the Deutschmark.”


Experts say AfD benefited from protest votes in a state that has been ruled by the Christian Democrats since German reunification in 1990. Fewer than half of Saxony’s 3.5 million voters turned out to cast ballots Sunday.


AfD could enter two more state parliaments in a fortnight, when the eastern states of Thuringia and Brandenburg hold elections.





German anti-euro party enters 1st state assembly

Hong Kong braces for protests as China rules out full democracy



By Michael Martina and James Pomfret


BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) – Pro-democracy activists vowed on Sunday to bring Hong Kong’s financial hub to a standstill after China‘s parliament rejected their demands for the right to freely choose the former British colony’s next leader in 2017.


The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC) endorsed a framework to let only two or three candidates run in the 2017 leadership vote. All candidates must first obtain majority backing from a nominating committee likely to be stacked with Beijing loyalists.


The relatively tough decision by the NPC – China’s final arbiter on the city’s democratic affairs – makes it almost impossible for opposition democrats to get on the ballot.


“This is a legal, fair and reasonable decision. It is a dignified, prudent decision, and its legal effect is beyond doubt,” Li Fei, deputy secretary general of the NPC standing committee, told reporters after the decision.


Hundreds of “Occupy Central” activists, who demand Beijing allow a real, free election, prepared to stage a small protest late on Sunday to formally launch a campaign of civil disobedience that will climax with a blockade at some time of the city’s important Central business district.


“Today is not only the darkest day in the history of Hong Kong’s democratic development, today is also the darkest day of one country, two systems,” said Benny Tai, a law professor and one of Occupy Central’s main leaders, referring to the formula under which capitalist Hong Kong, with a population of around 7.2 million, was returned to Communist Chinese rule in 1997.


The Occupy movement said in a statement that “all chances of dialogue have been exhausted and the occupation of Central will definitely happen.” It gave no timeframe for its action.


A spokesman for Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing <0388.HK>, which operates the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, said contingency planning was taken very seriously. “We have long had a specialist team that coordinates group response plans for scenarios that put at risk the continuing operation of the exchange or threaten the well-being or safety of our staff.”


Hong Kong’s current chief executive Leung Chun-ying said Beijing’s decision represented a major step forward in Hong Kong’s development. “Universal suffrage for the (chief executive) election through “one person, one vote” by Hong Kong people is not only a big step forward for Hong Kong, but also a historic milestone for our country,” he said, adding people should express their opinion through peaceful and legal methods.


Political reform has been a constant source of friction between Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement and the mainland since Britain returned the city to China 17 years ago.


In nearby Macau, another special administrative region, leader and sole candidate Fernando Chui was “re-elected” on Sunday by a select panel of 400 largely pro-China loyalists in the tiny but wealthy former Portuguese colony.


GIRDING FOR ACTION


Scores of police vehicles and hundreds of officers were deployed outside Hong Kong government headquarters as people began to gather late on Sunday, braving heavy rain at times, with some chanting slogans.


Key government buildings, including the Chief Executive’s office and a People’s Liberation Army barracks nearby, were also ringed by high fences and barricades.


“It (the NPC decision) leaves no room for us to fight for a genuinely democratic system, and we will begin our campaign for peaceful, non-violent struggle,” said Joseph Cheng, the convenor of the Alliance for True Democracy, a coalition of groups advocating universal suffrage in Hong Kong. “We want to tell the world we haven’t given up. We will continue to fight.”


On the surface, the NPC’s decision is a breakthrough that endorses the framework for the first direct vote by a Chinese city to choose its leader. Beijing is already hailing it as a milestone in democratic reform.


However, by tightly curbing nominations for the 2017 leadership poll, some democrats said Beijing was pushing a Chinese-style version of “fake” democracy.


The NPC statement said all nominations would be carried out according to “democratic procedures” and each candidate would need the endorsement of more than half of a nominating committee that will be similar in composition to an existing 1,200-person election committee stacked with Beijing loyalists.


The proposed electoral framework will still needs to be approved by two-thirds of Hong Kong’s 70-seat legislature. With pro-democracy lawmakers holding more than a third of the seats, the proposal will likely be shelved.


In that case, the next leader would likely again be chosen by a small election committee. Wang Zhenmin, a prominent legal scholar and adviser to the Chinese government, said recently that: “Less perfect universal suffrage is better than no universal suffrage,” adding that this window of opportunity in Hong Kong was an historical crossroads after “2,000 years of (Chinese) feudal history without any democracy.”


Senior Chinese officials have repeatedly warned activists against their “illegal” protests, and say they won’t back down.


Some key members of the pro-democracy movement, including media magnate Jimmy Lai, have also come under pressure in the run-up to the Chinese parliamentary decision.


China has also repeatedly warned against foreign interference, saying it will not tolerate the use of Hong Kong “as a bridgehead to subvert and infiltrate the mainland.”


The Occupy Central movement has not yet won broad support among Hong Kong’s middle class, who are concerned about antagonising China and disruptions to business. Any strong measures by China or the Hong Kong police could change that.


(Additional reporting by Pete Sweeney in SHANGHAI, Bobby Yip, Grace Li, Twinnie Siu, Dancy Zhang and Donny Kwok in HONG KONG; Editing by Paul Tait, Simon Cameron-Moore and Ian Geoghegan)





Hong Kong braces for protests as China rules out full democracy

U.S. Moviegoers Love ‘Guardians Of The Galaxy’ …Like A Lot



Guess that’s what happens when you have a raccoon named Rocket and a tree-thing named Groot: you become the highest grossing film of the year, domestically speaking.


Not that such a feat was EVER a sure thing (to put it mildly), but “Guardians of the Galaxy” has seated itself high above its other cinematic bedfellows, pulling the title of highest grossing film in the U.S. in 2014, even beating out “Captain America: The Winter Soldier.”


This proves once and for all the only things America loves more than America itself are chatty animals acting human and giant, lumbering trees (ha ha — see what we did there?) that say no more than 3 words. This is an especially big win considering this summer has been one of the worst for film industry sales since 1997!


As of Friday, “Guardians” was the number one film at the box office again this weekend, bringing its domestic total to $262.1 million, according to Box Office Mojo. A film once widely speculated to be the “first Marvel flop” is now on track to break the $300 million mark — and it would be the first film of the year to do so.


I guess sometimes all the world needs is a ragtag bunch to do the impossible. Even Iron Man himself thinks its the best movie the comic industry monolith has made thus far. Underdogs for the win!






U.S. Moviegoers Love ‘Guardians Of The Galaxy’ …Like A Lot

Cleveland welcomes growing field of server farms




CLEVELAND (AP) — Northeast Ohio is hardly ready to usurp Silicon Valley as a high-tech mecca, but a growing number of data centers are choosing to locate in and around Cleveland to take advantage of cheap power, an abundance of fiber-optic cable and one of the safest environments in the country for storing digital information.


BYTEGRID, which got its start in northern Virginia, is investing millions to convert a small data center near downtown Cleveland into a large one capable of using enough electricity to power around 20,000 homes. At least one other company is looking for a site in Cleveland, and several more have established sites in the city and its suburbs.


“One of the things that is attracting data centers to Cleveland is we have a lot of industries with a lot of data,” said Tracey Nichols, director of city’s Department of Economic Development.


Data centers do not create large numbers of jobs directly, Nichols said, but their existence is a big attraction to companies that use massive amounts of data. Hospitals and medical research centers such as the Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals, for example, are prime customers for data centers. Nichols hopes these data centers will help grow the city’s fledgling health tech corridor. Information technology companies like Rosetta and Brandmuscle have come to Cleveland, in part, because of its high-speed, fiber-optic data and Internet connections, Nichols and others said.


“We have a very robust fiber trunk that runs through Cleveland, which means excellent connectivity,” Nichols said.


Ken Parent, chief operating officer of BYTEGRID, said his company is spending millions to renovate and expand a data center on the edge of downtown because of that connectivity.


Connectivity is best described as the speed at which data flows. If copper wire, one of the means by which homes are connected with telephone, Internet and cable service, is a gentle stream, then fiber-optic cable is a raging river. Or think of it this way: It takes 33 tons of copper wire to transmit the same amount of data as one-quarter pound of fiber-optic cable, a single strand of which is thinner than a human hair.


It’s ironic that a Rust Belt city like Cleveland, once a manufacturing giant brought to its knees by disruptive technologies and business models, is so well-suited to the Internet age. The superhighways of the 19th and early 20th centuries — rail lines — have proven to be the ideal conduit for routing fiber-optic cable, much like the telegraph lines of old.


“It’s an infrastructure legacy,” said Kevin Goodman, managing director and a partner in BlueBridge Networks, which has a downtown data center near Playhouse Square and a larger facility in suburban Mayfield Heights.


Servers, like all computers, hew to Moore’s Law — computing power roughly doubles every two years. That means smaller and smaller computers that run faster and faster and are capable of holding even more data. But those smaller computers run hotter and require more electricity. At a data center, one kilowatt of electricity spent powering servers requires an equal amount of electricity to keep them cool.


And that is one of Cleveland’s biggest attractions. Parent says power can cost 13 to 16 cents per kilowatt in the Northwestern U.S. but only 5 or 6 cents in Cleveland.


Goodman said BlueBridge wants to reduce its carbon footprint, but he acknowledged that high electric use is unavoidable.


“Power is king,” he said.


Data centers, sometimes called server farms, perform a number of vital services to businesses, both high- and low-tech. They provide a secure environment for companies to put servers, which are computers loaded with applications and programs and hard drives for storing data. Companies lease servers from data centers and use them to create a cloud that allows them to operate without having to own or provide space for their own servers. And companies with their own servers also co-locate — lease server space to back up some or all of their data and to give themselves the means to operate should their own servers fail or should a catastrophic weather or seismic event occur.


In addition to connectivity, data centers sell security. The buildings in which server farms are located are typically thick, reinforced concrete and steel structures. Data center companies sell to potential clients the existence of generator farms that provide electricity in case of a power outage. But security in the data center world also means the promise of impenetrable firewalls and intrusion detection and protection programs to thwart hackers.


Hackers have always been the scourge of the Information Age, as Target Corp. discovered late last year when the credit card information of millions of its customers was stolen.





Cleveland welcomes growing field of server farms

VENICE WATCH: 'Star Wars' stars keep mum in Venice



VENICE, Italy (AP) — The Venice Film Festival is bringing 11 days of red carpet premieres, innovative movies and Hollywood glamour to the Italian city. Here’s what has been catching the eye of The Associated Press:


‘STAR WARS’ ACTORS KEEP MUM IN VENICE


The first rule of Venice is, you don’t talk about “Star Wars.”


Cast members of the forthcoming “Episode VII” who are in the Italian city for the Venice Film Festival are keeping mum about details of the ultra-anticipated movie.


British actress Gwendoline Christie, who plays Brienne of Tarth in “Game of Thrones” and Commander Lyme in two “Hunger Games” movies, joked at a Vanity Fair-sponsored party that “Star Wars” producers had gone to extraordinary lengths to maintain secrecy.


“There’s snipers trained on us right now,” she said at an event to celebrate a collaboration between celebrity photographer Rankin and Johnnie Walker whiskey aimed at capturing rising entertainment stars.


Adam Driver, in Venice with festival entry “Hungry Hearts,” was similarly terse when asked what it was like to walk onto the “Star Wars” set for the first time.


“I will say this — it’s surreal,” he said.


—By Louise Dixon


‘BOXTROLLS’ ANIMATOR SEES HIMSELF ONSCREEN


It’s not unusual for filmmakers to put themselves into their characters. But they’re usually not squat subterranean creatures dressed in recycled cardboard.


Stop-motion animated feature “The Boxtrolls” is about a community of underground creatures who scavenge trash from the humans above to build elaborate mechanical devices.


Producer and animator Travis Knight said the nocturnal Boxtrolls were a bit like their creators.


“They are these kind of shy, timid creatures who have questionable fashion sense and deplorable personal hygiene, who work in the dark and create little marvels of invention,” Knight told a Venice Film Festival news conference. “That’s what stop-motion animators do. So we are clearly Boxtrolls.”


The film, which screened out of competition at the festival on Sunday, is the latest work from Laika, the Portland, Oregon-based studio behind “Coraline” and “ParaNorman.”


Based on Alan Snow’s children’s adventure novel “Here Be Monsters,” it features the voices of Ben Kingsley, Elle Fanning, Simon Pegg, Tracy Morgan and teenage “Game of Thrones” actor Isaac Hempstead Wright as Eggs, a human boy raised by the Boxtrolls.


Director Anthony Stacci said the film aimed to combine absurdist humor and social satire — “‘Oliver Twist’ if it was made by Monty Python.”


—By Jill Lawless, http://Twitter.com/JillLawless





VENICE WATCH: 'Star Wars' stars keep mum in Venice

Less meat 'key' to food security



Eating less meat is “essential” to ensure future demand for food can be met and “dangerous” climate change avoided, experts have warned.


A study by leading university researchers in Cambridge and Aberdeen found food production alone could exceed targets for greenhouse gas emissions in 2050 if current trends continue.


Population growth and the global shift towards “meat-heavy Western diets” has meant increasing agricultural yields will not meet projected food demands for the expected 9.6 billion world population, it said.


Increased deforestation, fertiliser use and livestock methane emissions are likely to cause greenhouse gas emissions from food production to rise by almost 80%, experts from the University of Cambridge and University of Aberdeen found.


Lead researcher Bojana Bajzelj, from the University of Cambridge’s department of engineering, said: “Agricultural practices are not necessarily at fault here – but our choice of food is.


“It is imperative to find ways to achieve global food security without expanding crop or pastureland.


“Food production is a main driver of biodiversity loss and a large contributor to climate change and pollution, so our food choices matter.”


He added: “Cutting food waste and moderating meat consumption in more balanced diets, are the essential ‘no-regrets’ options.”


According to the study in Nature Climate Change, current trends in food production will mean that by 2050 cropland will have expanded by 42% and fertiliser use increased by 45% over 2009 levels.


A further tenth of the world’s pristine tropical forests would disappear over the next 35 years, it said.


The study’s authors tested a scenario where all countries were assumed to have an “average” balanced diet – without excessive consumption of sugars, fats, and meat products.


The average balanced diet used in the study was a “relatively achievable goal”, the researchers said, which included two 85g portions of red meat and five eggs per week, as well as a portion of poultry a day.


“This significantly reduced the pressures on the environment even further,” they said.


Co-author Professor Pete Smith, from the University of Aberdeen, said: “Unless we make some serious changes in food consumption trends, we would have to completely de-carbonise the energy and industry sectors to stay within emissions budgets that avoid dangerous climate change.


“That is practically impossible – so, as well as encouraging sustainable agriculture, we need to re-think what we eat.”


Cambridge co-author Prof Keith Richards said: “This is not a radical vegetarian argument; it is an argument about eating meat in sensible amounts as part of healthy, balanced diets.


“Managing the demand better, for example by focusing on health education, would bring double benefits – maintaining healthy populations, and greatly reducing critical pressures on the environment.”




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/less-meat-key-food-security-170753590.html



Less meat 'key' to food security

Yes Campaign Accused Of 'Sinister' Mobbery



A Scotland referendum No campaigner has accused the Yes campaign of “sinister” street mobbery after his tour visits were disrupted by crowds.



Labour frontbencher Jim Murphy described the abuse as “sinister”.



He said his last 12 No campaign meetings had been disrupted by hundreds of “co-ordinated” individuals throwing eggs and hurling abuse.



Mr Murphy has been staging a tour of 100 towns in 100 days with weeks to go until the referendum vote takes place.



He told Sky News: “I don’t mind heckles, do you know what I don’t mind people throwing eggs, that’s just a dry cleaning bill that’s neither here nor there.



“Instead of turning up and crowds of people on all sides, I would turn up and there was an organised mob of yes supporters facilitated through the Yes Scotland organisations, through websites, through Facebook and other social media.



“This is co-ordinated, it’s sinister and there have been times, across the period, [there have been] hundreds of people involved in it.



“These are people intending to disrupt and silence undecided voters on street corners so they cannot have their say.”



But Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond hit back at the claims, and said there were “idiots” on both sides.



He said: “I condemn any egg throwing or any intimidation from any side.



“I don’t hold press conferences accusing Mr Murphy or the No campaign of orchestrating these events because I know that would be ridiculous to do so.



“If Mr Murphy comes bawling and shouting on a street corner near you anytime soon, keep doing your shopping go on with what you’re doing.



“It’s just like a guy with the ‘end is nigh’ around his neck, he’ll go away soon.



“Let the rest of us get on with the real story, and that is hundreds of thousands of people, never interested in politics in their lives before, are now engaged in the most engaging, participative and empowering debate in political history.”



On Saturday, Prime Minister David Cameron told the Scottish Daily Mail he was “emotional and nervous” over the independence referendum , but confident the Union would remain.



The vote takes place on September 18.



 





Yes Campaign Accused Of 'Sinister' Mobbery

Pakistan PM still surrounded by protesters after deadly clashes



By Syed Raza Hassan and Mehreen Zahra-Malik


ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – Pakistan‘s powerful army said on Sunday any further use of force to resolve an escalating political crisis would only worsen the situation, after weeks of protests demanding Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s resignation turned violent.


Peaceful anti-government demonstrations spilled over into deadly confrontation overnight after thousands of protesters tried to storm Sharif’s residence. Police responded with teargas and rubber bullets. At least three people were killed and more than 200 wounded, further angering protest leaders.


Activists demanding Sharif’s resignation have camped outside government offices for more than two weeks but it was the first time violence broke out as protesters, some armed with sticks and wearing gas masks, tried to break through police lines.


Army chiefs held an emergency meeting in the garrison city of Rawalpindi on Sunday night to discuss the crisis, prompting speculation that the military could take decisive action to end the crisis in a nation where power has usually changed hands via coups rather than elections.


But in a brief statement, the army reaffirmed its commitment to democracy and said the crisis had to be solved politically.


“Further use of force will only aggravate the problem. It was once again reiterated that the situation should be resolved politically without wasting any time and without recourse to violent means,” it said.


Small skirmishes continued into Sunday, with police occasionally firing teargas, but the crowd massing outside parliament appeared peaceful on Sunday night, with some dancing or sleeping on the grass.


Smaller protests were also reported in the city of Lahore, Sharif’s political power base, and other parts of Pakistan.


How the crisis ends and whether Sharif survives ultimately lies in the military’s hands in a country ruled by generals for half of its history.


With tensions rising, last week the army said it was asked by the government to help defuse the crisis but has so far not directly intervened. It was unclear how the deadlock could be resolved with the opposition flatly refusing to leave the streets until Sharif quits.


Sharif, who swept to office last year in Pakistan’s first democratic transition of power, has resisted calls to resign while agreeing to meet other demands such as an investigation into suspicions of fraud during last year’s election.


His office reiterated on Sunday evening that his resignation was out of the question.


“It was agreed that this undemocratic onslaught should be withdrawn and parties should come back to the negotiation table,” his press office said in a statement after Sharif chaired a meeting with his top officials.


ARMY’S ROLE


Protests led by Imran Khan, a renowned cricketer before entering politics, and fiery cleric Tahir ul-Qadri, erupted in the capital Islamabad on Aug. 15 and talks to find a negotiated solution have repeatedly failed.


“I am prepared to die here. I have learnt that government plans a major crackdown against us tonight,” Khan told his supporters. “I am here till my last breath.”


Khan told the cheering crowd to challenge security forces protecting the parliament and the prime minister’s house.


“The way you stood up last night, you have to stand up today also,” he said. “We will face them and make them run away this time.”


Despite his fiery rhetoric, there were no signs the crowd was preparing to march on government buildings again.


Ousted from an earlier stint in office in a coup in 1999, Sharif still has a difficult relationship with the army.


Even if he rides out of this crisis, Sharif is likely to remain significantly weakened for the rest of his tenure and sidelined on key issues such as foreign policy and security.


Qadri, who has rallied thousands of his own supporters alongside those of Imran Khan, said protests would not subside unless Sharif resigned.


“State atrocities have reached their peak,” he told his supporters, standing on top of a shipping container. “Imran Khan and Dr. Qadri are fighting this war together.”


(Additional reporting by Sheree Sardar and Mubasher Bukhari; Writing by Maria Golovnina; Editing by Rosalind Russell)





Pakistan PM still surrounded by protesters after deadly clashes

Miley Cyrus Says Elvis Was The Original Twerker



Looking to blame Miley Cyrus for all that twerking in which the youth of the world is now partaking? Don’t, because she wasn’t the first. According to the singer, it was actually the original controversy magnet, Elvis Presley, that started the sensation that is again sweeping the nation.


“Elvis, he wasn’t wearing the outfits I was wearing but he was coming out and he was doing like the OG twerking. Like, no one wants to admit that he was twerking, he was,” NME reports that Cyrus said in an interview with Australia’s “Sunday Night” TV show.


Okay, so maybe this one’s a bit more philosophical than literal — we’ll have to wait for the full interview with the show’s host, Chris Bath, to really know. Still, Cyrus compared Elvis’ sexually charged arrival on the scene in the 1950s to her twerking days of now.


“He was like sex,” Miley said. “He was a symbol of sex but no one would have ever called Elvis a shit because he wasn’t a girl. It’s that double standard and I think I’m doing something for the double standard.”


Amen to that! As for those who criticize her for sending a “bad message” to kids? Miley thinks all the concerned parents need to remember that everyone has the choice to live their life however it makes them happy, and she asserts that she is a symbol of freedom.


“The only thing I’m an example of is freedom, especially in this time where the energy of the world is shifting from male energy to female energy. I think a lot of that was started by these girls that get to watch my show and see young people just being themselves and representing freedom,” she said.


As usual, she’s just bein’ Miley. Watch a clip from the interview below.







Miley Cyrus Says Elvis Was The Original Twerker

Billy Corgan Continues His Rise at a Rare Acoustic Show



By |

August 31, 2014

For much of the early 2000s, Billy Corgan had trouble embracing his legacy as a grunge god: The Smashing Pumpkins frontman regularly railed against his own fans, tangled with the press and made no secret of his disdain for trotting out his old band’s biggest hits. But in making 2012′s Oceania, his views began to shift. “Something’s happening,” he told Rolling Stone at the time. “I’ve played a lot of shows and you know when it’s going up and you know when it’s going down and you know when it’s going nowhere. It’s definitely going up.”





Related





It was with this rejuvenated, lively spirit that the 47-year-old singer played a rare Saturday evening solo show at the Ravinia Festival in the leafy Chicago suburb of Highland Park – his only scheduled gig of 2014. Wearing a blazer and occasionally accompanied by Pumpkins’ guitarist Jeff Schroeder – Corgan crossed his career with a 27-song set that included songs from Zwan, his solo years and that band he played in with Jeff.



Corgan, his voice solidly preserved, debuted a piano tribute to Chicago at the outset of the evening. Popular Siamese Dream fare like “Today” and “Disarm” were both re-imagined as gentle, tempered acoustic charmers, and solo records such as the arpeggio-laden “Prairie Song” and the Future Embrace cut “Now (And Then)” were played for the first time since 2005. Likewise, the thrashing Machina/The Machines of Gods cut “The Crying Tree of Mercury” was brought out for the first time since 1999, and “Burnt Orange Black,” a fiery new solo track featuring a rare (and tasteful) guitar solo, had never been played at all.



The night’s unquestioned centerpiece, though, was a nine-song suite dedicated exclusively to the Pumpkins’ 1995 Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness. This portion of the show included never-before-performed Mellon Collie outtake “Methusela” – the ode to his father, Corgan explained, was once too personal to even demo for producers Alan Moulder and Flood – and reserved yet emotionally jarring acoustic takes on “Muzzle” and “Galapagos” and “Tonight Tonight.” The gorgeous “1979,” boosted by a backing drum track, felt tinny and flat by comparison 



“You guys are too kind,” Corgan told the crowd several times throughout the night, brimming with satisfaction and delight. For a man who moped his way through much of the Nineties and once seemed at risk of fading entirely from the spotlight, one couldn’t help but appreciate Corgan’s magnificent smile.





Billy Corgan Continues His Rise at a Rare Acoustic Show

Telecom It weighs all options to boost Brazil unit - chairman to Corriere



MILAN (Reuters) – Telecom Italia will consider all options to bolster its Brazilian unit, Tim Partecipacoes , after it lost a battle to buy Brazilian broadband business GVT, Telecom Italia Chairman Giuseppe Recchi told Corriere della Sera.


The company may also look at a commercial tie-up with Mediaset as a way to share content and technology with the Italian broadcaster, which is controlled by former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, Recchi told the newspaper on Sunday.


“Our duty (on Tim Partecipacoes) is to invest and also to take into account extraordinary operations if an opportunity arises,” Recchi was quoted as saying. No concrete plan was on the table at the moment, he said.


Bankers and investors on Friday said that Telecom Italia needed a plan B after French group Vivendi preferred Spanish group Telefonica’s offer for its unit GVT to the bid by the Italian company.


Telecom Italia and Telefonica compete in Brazil as owners of number-two mobile carrier Tim Participacoes and number one Vivo respectively.


Vivendi’s choice ended Telecom Italia’s ambitions to combine Tim Partecipacoes with GVT to strengthen its position in the South American country, which is the world’s fourth-largest telecoms market.


“We already had the green light from the board to raise our bid (on GVT) much higher, but we refrained from doing it because we thought that … an increased offer would not have created value for the company,” Recchi said, denying the company lost the battle with Telefonica due to lack of financial resources.


(Reporting by Francesca Landini; Editing by Larry King)





Telecom It weighs all options to boost Brazil unit - chairman to Corriere

Philippine troops pull 'greatest escape' in Golan



BEIRUT (AP) — Under cover of darkness, 40 Filipino peacekeepers escaped their besieged outpost in the Golan Heights after a seven-hour gunbattle with Syrian rebels, Philippine officials said Sunday. Al-Qaida-linked insurgents still hold captive 44 Fijian troops.


The getaway, combined with the departure of another entrapped group of Filipino troops, marked a major step forward in a crisis that erupted on Thursday when Syrian rebels began targeting the peacekeeping forces. The United Nations Security Council has condemned the assaults on the international troops monitoring the Syrian-Israeli frontier, and has demanded the unconditional release of those still in captivity.


The crisis began after Syrian rebels overran the Quneitra crossing — located on the de facto border between Syrian- and Israeli-controlled parts of the Golan Heights — on Wednesday. A day later, insurgents from the al-Qaida-affiliated Nusra Front seized the Fijian peacekeepers and surrounded their Filipino colleagues, demanding they surrender.


The Filipinos, occupying two U.N. encampments, refused and fought the rebels Saturday. The first group of 35 peacekeepers was then successfully escorted out of a U.N. encampment in Breiqa by Irish and Filipino forces on board armored vehicles.


The remaining 40 peacekeepers were besieged at the second encampment, called Rwihana, by more than 100 gunmen who rammed the camp’s gates with their trucks and fired mortar rounds. The Filipinos returned fire in self-defense, Philippine military officials said.


At one point, Syrian government forces fired artillery rounds from a distance to prevent the Filipino peacekeepers from being overwhelmed, said Col. Roberto Ancan, a Philippine military official who helped monitor the tense standoff from the Philippine capital, Manila, and mobilize support for the besieged troops.


“Although they were surrounded and outnumbered, they held their ground for seven hours,” Philippine military chief Gen. Gregorio Pio Catapang said, adding that there were no Filipino casualties. “We commend our soldiers for exhibiting resolve even while under heavy fire.”


As night fell and a cease-fire took hold, the 40 Filipinos fled with their weapons, traveling across the chilly hills for nearly two hours before meeting up with other U.N. forces, who escorted them to safety early Sunday, Philippine officials said.


“We may call it the greatest escape,” Catapang told reporters in Manila.


The Syrian and Israeli governments, along with the United States and Qatar, provided support, the Philippine military said without elaborating.


In New York, the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force, or UNDOF, whose mission is to monitor a 1974 disengagement in the Golan Heights between Israel and Syria, reported that shortly after midnight local time, during a cease-fire agreed with the armed elements, all 40 Filipino peacekeepers left their position and “arrived in a safe location one hour later.”


With the Filipinos now safe, full attention turned to the Fijians who remain in captivity.


U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon spoke with the Prime Minister of Fiji by telephone Sunday, and promised that the United Nations was “doing its utmost to obtain the unconditional and immediate release” of the Fijian peacekeepers, Ban’s office said.


The Fiji Times Online reported that Fiji’s military commander expressed concern that the exact locations of the Fijian peacekeepers remain unconfirmed.


Military Commander Brig. Gen. Mosese Tikoitoga also told reporters in the South Pacific island nation on Sunday that contacts on the ground in the Golan Heights have assured the military of the captured soldiers’ well-being, the report said.


He said a U.N. negotiation team and Fijians in Syria were working toward the peacekeepers’ release.


The Nusra Front, meanwhile, confirmed that it had seized the Fijians. In a statement posted online, the group published a photo showing what it said were the captured Fijians in their military uniforms along with 45 identification cards. The group said the men “are in a safe place and in good health, and everything they need in terms of food and medicine is given to them.”


It was unclear why the number of detained peacekeepers differed from the 44 figure provided by the United Nations.


The statement mentioned no demands or conditions for the peacekeepers’ release.


The Nusra Front accused the U.N. of doing nothing to help the Syrian people since the uprising against President Bashar Assad began in March 2011. It said the Fijians were seized in retaliation for the U.N.’s ignoring “the daily shedding of the Muslims’ blood in Syria” and even colluding with Assad’s army “to facilitate its movement to strike the vulnerable Muslims” through a buffer zone in the Golan Heights.


The Nusra Front has recently seized hostages to exchange for prisoners detained in Syria and Lebanon.


Charles Lister, a visiting fellow at the Brookings Doha Center, said the abductions also may signal an expansion of Nusra’s kidnapping operations to make up for a loss revenues from oil resources in eastern Syria and a reduction in private funding from Gulf-based sources.


“This money shortage comes amid a period of wider suffering for Nusra, as its image is being overwhelmingly trumped by the Islamic State, leading to sustained numbers of localized defections in areas of Syria,” he said.


The U.N. mission in the Golan Heights has 1,223 troops from six countries: Fiji, India, Ireland, Nepal, Netherlands and the Philippines. A number of countries have withdrawn their peacekeepers due to the escalating violence.


Philippine officials said Filipino forces would remain in Golan until their mission ends in October and not withdraw prematurely.


Both U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council strongly condemned Saturday’s attack on the peacekeepers’ positions and the ongoing detention of the Fijian peacekeepers.


___


Gomez reported from Manila, Philippines. Oliver Teves in Manila, Maamoun Youssef in Cairo, Rod McGuirk in Canberra, Australia and Peter Enav in Jerusalem contributed to this report.





Philippine troops pull 'greatest escape' in Golan

Lesotho's deputy premier in charge after PM flees 'coup'



By Marafaela Mohloboli and John Mkhize


MASERU (Reuters) – Lesotho Prime Minister Thomas Thabane accused Deputy Prime Minister Mothetjoa Metsing of helping to plan a coup by the army that forced the prime minister to flee the country.


Metsing took charge of the government once Thabane had fled the country for neighbouring South Africa. Thabane left on Saturday, after the army surrounded his residence and police stations in Lesotho’s capital, Maseru.


Gunshots were heard in Maseru on Saturday, where one policeman was shot dead and four others wounded, said senior police superintendent Mofokeng Kolo. But the army denied trying to force out Thabane, saying it had moved against police suspected of planning to arm a political faction in the small southern African kingdom.


Diplomats in Maseru told Reuters the army was largely seen as loyal to the deputy prime minister and the police force mostly supported the prime minister.


Regional power South Africa condemned the army’s actions and invited the deputy prime minister to talks there on Sunday, Lesotho’s Minister of Communications, Science and Technology, Selibe Mochoboroane, told Reuters. He did not specify who the talks would be with.


“Constitutionally, in the absence of the prime minister, the deputy prime minister takes the reins,” said Mochoboroane, who is also spokesman for Metsing’s party.


“For now there hasn’t been any arrangement, but it goes without saying the deputy prime minister will still oversee other issues that need to be taken care of until the prime minister returns,” he added. On Saturday, Mochoboroane echoed the army’s assurance that no coup had taken place.


FRACTIOUS COALITION


The prime minister, who expected to be back in Maseru in two days time, said he believed his deputy was behind the plans for a coup. The two would not be holding talks in South Africa, he said.


“I have no much reason to absolve him from blame,” Thabane told Reuters. “Looking from a distance, he is very active in this show.”


Relations have been stormy between Thabane’s All Basotho Convention party and Metsing’s Lesotho Congress for Democsracy (LCD) group, which formed a coalition with another party after elections in 2012.


Thabane dissolved parliament in June to avoid a no-confidence vote against him amid feuding among the ruling parties. Metsing later said he would form a new coalition that would oust Thabane.


The African Union said on Sunday it would not tolerate any illegal seizure of power.


Thabane told Reuters on Saturday he had fired an army commander, Lieutenant-General Kennedy Tlali Kamoli, and appointed Brigadier Maaparankoe Mahao to replace him. But on Sunday Kamoli said he was still in charge of the military.


“I haven’t gotten any formal letter from anybody and that is to say that I am still the commander of the Lesotho Defence Force,” Kamoli told Reuters.


Lesotho, a mountainous state of two million people encircled by South Africa, has undergone a number of military coups since independence from Britain in 1966. At least 58 locals and eight South African soldiers died during a political stand-off and subsequent fighting in 1998.


Besides textile exports and a slice of regional customs receipts, Lesotho’s other big earner is hydropower. The power is exported to South Africa from the massive mountain ranges that have made it a favourite of trivia fans as “the world’s highest country” – its lowest point is 1,380 metres (4,528 feet) above sea level.


(Refiled to add time element in third paragraph)


(Additional reporting by Aaron Maasho in Addis Ababa; Writing by Helen Nyambura; Editing by Andrew Heavens, Larry King)





Lesotho's deputy premier in charge after PM flees 'coup'

UK Police In Spain To Question Ashya's Parents



The parents of Ashya King, who was taken out of hospital against medical advice, face being extradited to the UK after being arrested in Spain.



Officers in the Malaga area pulled over the family’s car at 9pm UK time on Saturday and found the five-year-old and his parents inside after a tip-off from a staff member at the hotel where they were staying.



Sky News sources say British police have arrived in the area to question Ashya’s parents – Brett King, 51, and Naghemeh King, 45.



The boy from Portsmouth, who underwent “extensive surgery” during an operation on his brain tumour seven days ago at Southampton General Hospital, was taken to a hospital in the local area.



He was in a stable condition, and there is no prospect of him being transferred to another hospital, say Sky sources.



Assistant Chief Constable Chris Shead, of Hampshire Constabulary, said his parents were in custody after being arrested on a European arrest warrant.



In response to criticism about the force’s actions, he said: “Faced with the situation that we were, we had medical experts telling us Ashya was in grave danger… if he didn’t get the care that he needed there was a potential threat to his life.



“So I make no apologies for being as proactive in this investigation as we have been.



“There are no winners in this situation. I’ve said all along that this must be a terribly distressing time for Ashya’s family.”



He said it was too soon to say when Ashya would come back to the UK, but said Southampton General Hospital was liaising with doctors taking care of him in Spain.



Mr Shead said proceedings to extradite Mr and Mrs King to the UK are expected to start on Monday.



The arrests came as footage emerged on YouTube of Ashya’s father, a Jehovah’s Witness, insisting they had taken him from hospital to seek a cancer treatment not available on the NHS.



“We were much disturbed today to find that his face is all over the internet and newspapers and we’ve been labelled as kidnappers, putting his life at risk, neglect,” he said.



“As you can see, there’s nothing wrong with him. He’s very happy actually, since we took him out of hospital.”



He said he had spoken to specialists after Ashya’s surgery and had requested proton beam treatment, which was not available on the NHS.



“We pleaded with them for proton beam treatment. They looked at me straight in the face and said with his cancer – which is called medulloblastoma – it would have no benefit whatsoever,” he said.



“I went straight back to my room and looked it up and the American sites and French sites and Switzerland sites where they have proton beam said the opposite, it would be very beneficial for him.”



A spokesman for University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust said it had offered the family access to a second opinion, as well as assistance with organising treatment abroad.



A spokesperson for NHS England said: “Where doctors recommend it, the NHS does fund Proton Beam Therapy including supporting 99 children last year to travel abroad for treatment.”



In a Facebook message, Naveed King said a fundraising campaign for his brother Ashya had been launched and asked those wishing to contribute to send their donations to a PayPal account at naveedgamer@gmail.com.



Jehovah’s Witnesses refuse blood transfusions on religious grounds but are open to other medical procedures.




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/ashyas-parents-held-seriously-ill-boy-found-221955598.html



UK Police In Spain To Question Ashya's Parents

Ashya's Parents Wanted Proton Beam Treatment



The parents of Ashya King have said they removed him from a Southampton hospital because they were unable to get a specialist treatment on the NHS.



In a YouTube video, Brett King said they were hoping to get to the Czech Republic to seek proton beam radiotherapy for their five-year-old son.



The treatment is currently only available to treat eye conditions on the NHS in the UK, but is already being used by European countries and in the US for a range of cancers in adults and children.



It differs from X-ray methods by focusing proton beams more precisely at cancer cells, with doses aimed directly at the tumour, and spares the healthy tissue and organs behind it.



Speaking in the video, Mr King said: “It zones in on the area, whereby normal radiation passes through his head and comes out the other side and destroys everything in his head.



“We pleaded with them (in Southampton) for proton beam treatment. They looked at me straight in the face and said with his cancer – which is called medulloblastoma – it would have no benefit whatsoever.”



Ros Barnes, whose son Alex went to the US after he was unable to get beam therapy in the UK for his brain tumour, said she would do the same thing as Ashya’s family.



She told Sky News: “We were told the same thing, that Alex’s tumour wasn’t suitable for proton therapy by the NHS here in this country.



“The alternative here was radiotherapy, and he was only four years old at the time it would have caused extreme brain damage and probably wouldn’t have worked either. So yes, I would have done the same as this family.



“They wanted us to have the operation here and for him to have radiotherapy, but he would have been blind, brain damaged and in a wheelchair, if he survived, and his prognosis was terrible.”



David Langton-Gilks died in 2012 aged 16 from the same medulloblastoma after receiving treatment at the same Southampton General Hospital.



His mother Sacha said more research was desperately needed into the disease.



She said: “I did not want to hear what they had to say, often, and I wanted to run away. You could hear the planes going over the hospital from the airport behind you could see the ferries leaving from the children’s cancer ward.



“And it’s like – ‘get us out of here, this just can’t be right for children, surely there’s a better way?’



“Unfortunately, the only better way is research… we’ve got to get better treatments for these children because what’s available now is limited, it has horrendous side effects and I’m so sorry for the Kings.”



Professor Justin Stebbing, consultant oncologist at Imperial College in London, told Sky News trials on proton beam treatment had yet to be completed.



A Department of Health spokesperson said: “Decisions on treatment for individual patients are made by doctors who are best placed to know what their patient needs.



“We are investing £250m in new proton beam therapy facilities, in Manchester and in London, and more people are being funded to go overseas until facilities are available in the UK.”



A spokesperson for NHS England added the NHS supported 99 children to travel abroad last year for proton beam therapy. The treatment costs an average £100,000 per patient, it added.



The only current proton beam facility is in Clatterbridge Centre for Cancer NHS Foundation Trust in Liverpool.



Ashya’s parents are facing extradition to the UK after they were arrested in Malaga at 9pm UK time on Saturday.




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/ashyas-parents-wanted-proton-beam-treatment-091140544.html



Ashya's Parents Wanted Proton Beam Treatment

Chefs, breeders pair up to produce tastier veggies



VERONA, Wis. (AP) — There’s a good chance that many of the suddenly trendy vegetables that foodies latch on to in the next decade will benefit from research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.


While plant breeders at many public universities focus on improving field corn, soybeans and other crops used in food manufacturing or livestock feed, those in Madison want to produce better-tasting vegetables.


The university has long had ties to the vegetable processing industry, as Wisconsin is among the top two or three states in producing canned or frozen sweet corn, green beans and peas. But vegetable breeders say the local food movement has created additional opportunities with a boom in organic farms, farmers markets and farm-to-table restaurants. The challenge is coming up with varieties consumers like, even if they can’t always articulate what makes one ear of corn better than another.


“Apples are almost the only fruit or vegetable that when you go to the grocery store, you see 30 different apples all by name,” said Bill Tracy, a sweet corn breeder who chairs the university’s Department of Agronomy. “We could do the same thing for corn, and I’m not saying we need 30, but we could have a corn that’s perfect for roasting, or soup use.”


Horticulture professor Julie Dawson is leading a project in which vegetable breeders work with local farmers and chefs to figure out what makes vegetables taste great and then produce easy-to-grow varieties with outstanding flavor. Participating chefs receive weekly deliveries of produce that they evaluate on a 5-point scale for qualities like sweetness and texture.


Dan Bonanno, the chef at A Pig in a Fur Coat, estimated he’s tasted 80 varieties of tomatoes — “I never knew there were so many different tomatoes” — since mid-July. For him, the big find has been a sweet corn bred to have a less sugary taste and firmer texture than most popular varieties.


“I ripped open the husk, took a bite, and it was like eating a pear,” Bonanno said. “It was so juicy … I’m like, wow, you can make a very nice sauce or gelato with it because it’s already naturally sweet and buttery and it had so much water.”


Very sweet corn, which most Americans have become accustomed to, becomes mushy when stirred into a dish like risotto, Tracy said, and the sugary taste may conflict with other ingredients.


“If we understand what chefs want, we can produce it,” he said. And, Tracy is confident chefs will be able to sell those new varieties to the public, given how they have popularized ramps, broccolini and other once-obscure fruits and vegetables.


On Wednesday, chefs, farmers and members of the public sampled and rated Tracy’s corn, along with multiple varieties of tomatoes, peppers and melon at a university farm in Verona. Dawson will use the information to see how closely the chefs’ opinions match that of regular eaters and develop an evaluation system that can be used early in the breeding process to select the best-tasting prospects from hundreds of cultivars.


“The flavor is much harder to fix at the end,” she said. “If you have the flavor, the other things are easier to fix.”


That’s where farmers come in.


Mark Voss has been testing five varieties of tomatoes at his urban farm, which supplies Madison restaurants. He looks for resistance to disease and good production, but taste and aesthetics are important, too.


The varieties include a few big tomatoes with bold flavor as well as some smaller, cocktail tomatoes that he’s “not so passionate about” because they “take a long time to pick.” He prefers bigger fruit with thin skins and a lot of flesh — characteristics that make tomatoes more likely to bruise during shipping but aren’t a problem when he’s selling locally.


“I think there’s an inverse relationship between bruise-ability and flavor,” Voss said.


That’s the kind of feedback Dawson is seeking. “Because really,” she said, “it has to work for farmers as well as chefs.”


___


If You Go …


Two more public tastings are scheduled from 3 to 5 p.m. on Sept. 22 and Oct. 24 at the UW West Madison Agricultural Research Station, 8502 Mineral Point Road, Verona, Wisconsin; 608-262-2257; http://www.news.wisc.edu/23065.


___


Follow M.L. Johnson on Twitter at https://twitter.com/MLJohnsonOnline.





Chefs, breeders pair up to produce tastier veggies

Sony Xperia Z3 Image and Specs Leaked in TENAA Certification



Sony‘s highly-anticipated flagship smartphone, the Xperia Z3, returns to the spotlight as some interesting specification (specs) details and product images have leaked online via China’s TENAA certification website (Google translated).


China’s TENAA certification is said to be equivalent to the FCC in United States as all smartphones being tested for quality get a stamp of approval from the concerned Telecommunication Equipment Certification Centre.


As far as specifications are concerned, rumours hint that Sony might just overlook the Snapdragon 805 processor upgrade for the Xperia Z3 and instead retain a slightly over-clocked 2.5GHz Snapdragon 801 CPU from its predecessor, the Xperia Z2.


The other key rumoured specifications for the Z3 include 5.2in IPS LCD display with 1080 x 1920 pixel resolution, 3GB of RAM and 16GB of internal memory with a microSD expansion slot.


On the camera front, the Z3 is expected to pack a 20.7MP rear camera with Sony Exmor sensor and a 2MP front camera capable of full HD video recording.


Given the water-resistant capabilities of the Xperia Z2, Sony is likely to incorporate a similar IP58 certification for the Z3 with the ability to resist up to five feet of water for 30 minutes.


With the Xperia Z3 set for an IFA launch on 3 September in Berlin, we are just a few days away from getting a glimpse of some of the best smartphones proposed for release this year.


Prospective buyers of Xperia Z3 will be able to choose among black, white and amber variants of the handset, if the leak turns out true.


Check out the leaked images of the Xperia Z3 in black and white variants (below):





Sony Xperia Z3 Image and Specs Leaked in TENAA Certification

ALS Ice Bucket Challenge arrives in North Korea



PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) — It’s pretty hard to find a novel way to do the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge by now, but two-time Grammy-winning rapper Pras Michel, a founding member of the Fugees, has done it — getting his dousing in the center of North Korea’s capital on Sunday.


Pras had two buckets of ice water dumped on his head along Pyongyang’s Taedong River, much to the surprise and bewilderment — and laughter — of North Koreans out for a stroll or some fishing on their day off.


The American rapper and documentary filmmaker said he wanted to join in the immensely popular charity challenge and thought Pyongyang — where the ice bucket craze is unknown — would be the perfect place to do it.


“I thought I’d put a little twist to it,” he told The Associated Press. “When we go to places, my crew, we stick out. You can tell instantly these guys aren’t from this neck of the woods. But the people have been good to us.”


He said he passed on the challenge to four people, including former bandmate Lauryn Hill and Britain’s Prince Harry.


More than 3 million people around the world have joined in the challenge, which has raised more than $100 million for the ALS Association. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, better known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, is a progressive illness that hits the nerves and the brain and can lead to paralysis and death. There is no cure, though a treatment now available can extend the life expectancy for its sufferers.


Pras, in North Korea to watch a pro wrestling exhibition and “explore,” said he is currently working on several projects, including “Sweet Mickey for Prezidan,” a documentary about Haiti’s presidential election that is due out by the end of the year.





ALS Ice Bucket Challenge arrives in North Korea