Sunday, February 1, 2015

Germany's AfD founder reclaims control of eurosceptic party



By Erik Kirschbaum


BREMEN, Germany – The founder of the upstart Alternative for Germany (AfD)strengthened his control of the eurosceptic party that has been stealing votes from Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives with a withering attack on his co-leaders.


At a weekend party congress, Bernd Lucke also managed to end a power struggle at the top of the party, that has climbed to 7 percent in opinion polls. He persuaded a two-thirds majority of the 1,473 delegates to back his plan to dump his two co-leaders by December.


But his near-term victory in pushing aside rivals who have a strong appeal on the far right may cost the AfD in the long run, analysts said, because Lucke’s scholarly style and criticism of euro zone bailouts is often lost on right-wing voters.


“Lucke doesn’t represent both wings and won’t win over the national conservatives on the far right,” said Gero Neugebauer, a Berlin political scientist. “But the AfD seems to have stabilised itself for now and will remain a problem for Merkel.”


The strengths and weaknesses of the two-year-old AfD were on abundant display at the three-day congress ahead of an important regional election on Feb. 15 in Hamburg, where the AfD hopes to win seats in a western state assembly for the first time after triumphing with about 10 percent in three east states in 2014.


A party its opponents disparagingly refer to as a group of “grumpy old men”, the AfD spent hours squabbling about procedures and agenda before finally settling down to vote for Lucke’s plan to switch from three leaders to a single leader.


But not before Lucke blasted the AfD’s current “botched” leadership structure of part-timers: “We’re not a bowling club or a rabbit breeding society,” he said. He was criticised for that in testy debate and called a “narcissist” by one speaker.


Yet in Bremen the AfD managed to avoid fatal pitfalls that led to the demise of other upstart German parties. The AfD, whose ranks are filled with former CDU officials, matured here from a protest movement to a professionally led organisation.


“We put the AfD on a winning track,” said a beaming Lucke.


His co-leader Frauke Petry and Brandenburg leader Alexander Gauland, who wanted to push the AfD further to the right with a law and order focus, had attacked Lucke as a “control freak”. But they grudgingly went along with the changes.


(writing by Erik Kirschbaum; Additional reporting by Michelle Martin; Editing by Stephen Powell)





Germany's AfD founder reclaims control of eurosceptic party

Missing Mum: Body Suffered 'Violent Assault'



The body of a woman believed to be missing mother-of-four Samantha Henderson was violently attacked around the head and neck, a post-mortem examination has shown.



Detectives say they are “confident” the body, which was found in a lake at Ham Common in Poole, Dorset, on Friday , is that of Ms Henderson.



The 25-year-old, who has children aged six, four, two and one, was last seen leaving Corfe Castle Primary School on 21 January at 3pm.



She was reported missing the next morning.



Ms Henderson’s boyfriend Dominic Isom, 27, of Corfe Castle, has pleaded not guilty to her murder.



He has been remanded in custody and is due to stand trial in July.



Detective Inspector Neil Devoto, of Dorset Police’s major crime investigation team, said: “This afternoon a post mortem was carried out on the body recovered in Hamworthy.



“It confirmed that the victim had suffered a violent assault that appears to have been focused on her head and neck.



“Detectives are confident the body is that of Samantha Henderson, the 25-year-old mother-of-four from Corfe Castle missing since last week.



“The coroner is aware of the death and formal identification by her next of kin is expected to take place this weekend.



“Although we have recovered a body and a man is charged with murder, it is still vital that people come forward with any information that could help us build a picture of exactly what happened.”



Police still want to hear from anyone who saw Ms Henderson’s blue Peugeot 307 estate car with the registration HV04 ZFM in the Corfe Castle or Ham Common areas from 3pm on the day she was last seen.



Mr Devoto, who is leading the inquiry, said: “Samantha’s death has understandably shocked local people, who have rallied around her family, friends and neighbours in both Corfe Castle and her original home town of Poole.



“Her close family are being supported and regularly updated by specially trained family liaison officers.



“They have asked for privacy at this sad time.



“I would like to thank the public for their ongoing support to officers carrying out this investigation and their patience while we conduct searches.



“Their continued caution on social media is also appreciated and important, as inappropriate comments could cause further hurt to her family or potentially prejudice future criminal proceedings.”




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/missing-mum-body-suffered-violent-assault-023225994.html



Missing Mum: Body Suffered 'Violent Assault'

Joanne Froggatt looks for evil role



Actress Joanne Froggatt, who plays kind-hearted maid Anna Bates in Downton Abbey, wants to get her teeth in to an evil character.


Fresh from her Golden Globe win for playing the hard-working servant, Froggatt , 34, told the Mail on Sunday Event magazine: “I’d like to work on a big-budget US film, ideally playing the total opposite of Anna Bates, someone really evil.


‘It would be nice to do lots of different roles and swap between TV, film and theatre like Judi Dench and Helen Mirren do. That’s the perfect mix.”


Froggatt, 34, and her husband James Cannon are set to spend six months living in Los Angeles after she finishes filming the next series of Downton Abbey.


Her assault on Hollywood may come even though she senses she may not fit in.


“I’m not a big-budget Hollywood type. They want the model type, classically beautiful, and I’m not,” she said.


Asked whether this was due to sexism, she said that there are more interesting character roles for men.


She added: “Also there are more actresses than actors so there is more competition. But things are getting better for women, particularly on TV.”


Her plain-looking character in Downton Abbey has been raped and accused of murder and is far from the glamour of Hollywood.


She said: “The weird thing is that I wouldn’t leave the house like that on a day-to-day basis. I don’t go to the gym without mascara and foundation on, and yet I’m quite happy for millions of people to see me looking absolutely terrible on screen.


“I don’t have any vanity when I’m acting as long as it’s right for the role. It just so happens that Anna Bates in Downton or my film roles have not been very glamorous.”




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/joanne-froggatt-looks-evil-role-111753516.html



Joanne Froggatt looks for evil role

Bafta head denies Selma racist snub



The lack of a Bafta nomination for Martin Luther King Jr biopic Selma was not a “racist snub”, the head of the academy has said.


Amanda Berry said she was “upset” critics had claimed the film, which stars British talent David Oyelowo, was the victim of a snub by the organisation, even though its American equivalent the Oscars nominated it for two awards.


In an interview with the Observer she insisted it was because its release was too late to make the shortlist for the awards, which will be handed out at a ceremony next weekend.


Oyelowo, 38, plays Martin Luther King Jr in the film which charts the American civil rights leader’s three month campaign in Selma, Alabama, in 1965 to persuade President Lyndon B Johnson to introduce the Voting Rights Act, protecting African-Americans’ right to vote. This culminated in the historic march from Selma to Montgomery, and this year marks its 50th anniversary.


Oyelowo said “it would have been nice” if the film was nominated, while on the red carpet at the Curzon Mayfair in London for Selma’s premier last week.


But Ms Berry, Bafta’s chief executive, said: “I get quite upset when people say it was a racist snub. The film wasn’t delivered until the end of November and there were only three screenings before the voting started. Last year we flew David in to present and we absolutely recognised his talent.”


Selma has been well received by critics but as well as being overlooked in this year’s Bafta nominations it only earned two Oscar nods, for Best Picture and Best Original Song.


Asked how he felt about the lack of recognition, Oyelowo said: “You’re going to have to ask Bafta about that. I don’t know, it would have been nice.


“But the fact of the matter is the film is really resonating with audiences. It’s great to be back here in the UK premiering the film.


“I did my bit.”


Ms Berry also told the paper the film industry should be as diverse as possible amid an ongoing debate about opportunities for actors from ethnic and working class backgrounds.


“It is essential the industry is open to all. The industry we work in has to reflect the society we live in. That is really important,” she said.


“There is a perception that if you are from an ethnic background you have no chance. Our new Breakthrough Brits talent event allows anyone to nominate a star of the future and then we give them a year of mentoring.”




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/bafta-head-denies-selma-racist-snub-075541060.html



Bafta head denies Selma racist snub

Slipknot Mark Summer's Last Stand Tour With 'Custer' Live Video



Slipknot recently wrapped up their joint Prepare for Hell tour with Korn but the masked metal act will continue to support their “devastating” new record .5: The Gray Chapter with a North American trek called Summer’s Last Stand, where Corey Taylor and company will hit the nation’s amphitheaters with Lamb of God and Bullet for My Valentine in tow. To celebrate their just-announced tour, Slipknot shared a live video of .5‘s “Custer” filmed live from their Knotfest this past October.








During a Prepare for Hell performance at London’s Wembley Arena this January, Korn were joined onstage by members of Slipknot for a surprise cover of Beastie Boys’ Ill Communication single “Sabotage.” In a Q&A session with fans after announcing Summer’s Last Stand, Taylor discussed how the Beasties cover happened.



“Well, me and Jonathan [Davis] did not come up with that idea, actually. That was [Korn bassist] Fieldy’s idea,” Taylor told fans (via Blabbermouth). “We had been kinda joking about doing something together at one of the shows, and Fieldy was, like, ‘Why don’t we just do ‘Sabotage’?’ We all kinda dug it, we got together, we jammed it out, and the rest is history.”



The Summer’s Last Stand tour will kick off July 24th at West Palm Beach, Florida’s Cruzan Amphitheater and loop around the country before concluding September 5th at Dallas’ Gexa Energy Pavilion. Tickets for the tour are on sale now.



Summer’s Last Stand
July 24 – West Palm Beach, FL @ Cruzan Amphitheater
July 25 – Tampa, FL @ MidFlorida Credit Union Amphitheater
July 26 – Atlanta, GA @ Aaron’s Amphitheater at Lakewood
July 28 – Detroit, MI @ DTE Energy Music Theatre
July 29 – Darien, NY @ Darien Lake Performing Arts Center
July 31 – Saratoga Springs, NY @ Saratoga Performing Arts Center
August 1 – Wantagh, NY @ Nikon at Jones Beach Theater
August 2 – Hartford, CT @ Xfinity Theatre
August 4 – Boston, MA @ Xfinity Center
August 5 – Holmdel, NJ @ PNC Bank Arts Center
August 6 – Pittsburgh, PA @ First Niagara Pavilion
August 8 – Toronto, ON @ Molson Amphitheater
August 11 – Washington, DC @ Jiffy Lube Live
August 12 – Virginia Beach, VA @ Farm Bureau Live
August 14 – Indianapolis, IN @ Klipsch Music Center
August 15 – Chicago, IL @ First Midwest Bank Amphitheater
August 16 – St. Louis, MO @ Hollywood Casino Amphitheater
August 19 – Denver, CO @ Red Rocks Amphitheater
August 21 – Salt Lake City, UT @ USANA Amphitheater
August 24 – Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena
August 26 – Concord, CA @ Concord Pavilion
August 28 – Las Vegas, NV @ MGM Resort Festival Lot
August 29 – Phoenix, AZ @ Ak-Chin Pavilion
August 30 – Albuquerque, NM @ Isleta Amphitheater
September 2 – Austin, TX @ Austin 360 Amphitheater
September 4 – Houston, TX @ Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
September 5 – Dallas, TX @ Gexa Energy Pavilion





Slipknot Mark Summer's Last Stand Tour With 'Custer' Live Video

Islamic finance looks to outgrow bad habits as it expands



By Bernardo Vizcaino


(Reuters) – After a year of landmark deals which are opening new markets for Islamic finance, the industry is under fresh pressure to address some of its shortcomings and prove that it is not just an imitation of conventional finance.


Born in its modern form during the 1970s, Islamic finance has boomed in the last few years on the back of strong economic growth in its core markets, the Gulf and southeast Asia.


Over the past 12 months it has shown signs of going global, as even non-Muslim countries have promoted it in the hope of luring cash-rich Islamic funds. Britain, Hong Kong and South Africa issued debut sovereign Islamic bonds; the industry’s worldwide assets are now estimated to total over $2 trillion.


But with this success have come doubts over whether Islamic finance is living up to all of its principles. After all, it was launched not merely to make money, but to promote Muslim values such as equity, risk-sharing and social inclusion.


Those values may sometimes be getting lost as financial institutions engineer products which obey the letter of Islamic law – for example, a ban on interest payments – while mimicking conventional finance in many ways.


Top industry bodies such as the Jeddah-based Islamic Deveopment Bank, a multilateral lending institution with 56 member countries, are leading calls for Islamic banks to strengthen their moral foundations and promote real economic activity instead of monetary speculation.


This will require the sector to go back to the drawing board and develop genuine Islamic finance products that are not only profitable but support socioeconomic development, IDB president Ahmad Mohamed Ali said in a speech in Jakarta in November.


“The potential of Islamic finance is not fully realized and in practice most financing is concentrated on a few modes.”


A survey by consultancy PWC, published last October, found only 52 percent of Islamic banking customers in the Gulf region believed their bank lived up to their religious values.


Ashruff Jamal, PWC’s global Islamic financial services leader, said Islamic banks were “at a crossroads” as growth was slowing and to maintain expansion, they would need to convince increasingly sophisticated customers that they were different from conventional banks.


REGULATORS


One area of controversy is the structures which Islamic banks used for funding. In Asia and parts of the Gulf, for example, murabaha – a cost-plus-profit deal where one party buys merchandise for another – is popular. But scholars criticize it for its resemblance to a conventional loan, with the pricing of a murabaha contract effectively acting as an interest payment.


Structures with stronger risk- and profit-sharing elements such as musharaka, a partnership in which two or more parties agree to provide capital, are rarer.


In some jurisdictions, regulators are moving to change this, but it remains to be seen whether they can shift entrenched behavior among the banks.


In Pakistan, central bank governor Ashraf Wathra warned Islamic banks last week to develop ways to reward their customers in line with a rise in the sector’s profitability, or face unspecified regulatory action.


In Malaysia, the government plans to roll out an investment platform this year to spur wider use of risk-sharing and equity-based contracts by Islamic banks.


The result of such initiatives could be to push Islamic banks beyond their longstanding role as credit providers to become investment intermediaries – a shift that would bring them closer to the spirit of Islamic finance, some analysts feel.


“Banks will become more of a full-service, asset manager-type of organization versus just banking services,” said Khalid Howladar, Moody’s global head of Islamic finance.


Also controversial are the “Islamic windows” of banks and insurers, which let them operate conventional and sharia-compliant businesses side by side. Funding of the two sides is supposed to be completely separate, but the arrangement can lead to doubts.


Although Islamic windows are common, they can make it hard for Islamic institutions to distinguish themselves from conventional ones in the eyes of consumers, PWC’s Jamal said.


There are signs of a gradual regulatory backlash against the practice. Qatar banned it in 2011, and when Oman introduced Islamic banking rules in 2012, it required Islamic windows to operate out of physically separate branches. In Indonesia, a new law requires insurers to spin off their Islamic windows by 2024.


SOCIAL IMPACT


It may be harder, though, to ensure Islamic finance lives up to the principle that it should promote social welfare by giving needy people better access to funds.


Tens of millions of people in the Muslim world lack bank accounts because of poverty, poor education and lack of infrastructure. In theory, Islamic banks could help to change this by attracting customers who are not served by conventional banks. But outside a few areas, such as rural Afghanistan, there is little evidence of them doing this on a large scale.


“At the moment this has been neglected, so there is a void – this is not in line with Islamic teaching,” said Abdul Halim Ismail, who in 1983 founded Malaysia’s Bank Islam, the country’s first full-fledged Islamic lender.


Ismail is prompting the idea of an institution that would channel charitable funds into projects to help the poor and needy, with such investments managed by Islamic banks to burnish their social credentials.


But few Islamic banks – perhaps inevitably, given pressure from shareholders and financial markets – are embracing the social dimension and making substantial efforts to offer products such as sharia-compliant microfinance.


Excluding some efforts in Indonesia and Pakistan, “I fear there is not much to tell regarding an attempt by bigger Islamic finance institutions to become active in microfinance,” said Matthias Range, advisor at the German government’s international development agency GIZ, which supports such efforts.


(Editing by Andrew Torchia)





Islamic finance looks to outgrow bad habits as it expands

Val Kilmer in hospital for tests



Val Kilmer has confirmed he is in hospital awaiting medical results, but said he does not have a tumour and has not had surgery.


In a message on his Facebook page, the 55-year-old Hollywood star said he was in UCLA Medical Centre’s intensive care for a “complication”.


“We are waiting for x ray results and will stay close to my doctors advising, my family and Christian Science practitioner when all the facts are in,” he said. “Then I’ll do what’s best and be back at it sooner than u can shake a gossip column at an out of work actor.”


Earlier his publicist, Liz Rosenberg, said the tests were for a possible tumour and that his two adult children were caring for him in hospital.


Kilmer thanked fans for their support and told them not to worry.


Kilmer is known for roles in movies including Top Gun, Heat and Tombstone.





Val Kilmer in hospital for tests