Author: admin

  • Rihanna Asked to Leave Mosque

    Rihanna Asked to Leave Mosque

    {{Pop star Rihanna was asked to leave a famous Abu Dhabi mosque complex after posing outside the building for an unauthorised photo shoot.}}

    The singer tweeted pictures of herself in a black jumpsuit and headscarf on photo-sharing site Instagram.

    A statement from the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque Centre, said she was asked to leave after “inappropriate pictures” were taken.

    The photos “did not comply with terms and conditions” of organised visits.

    Rihanna performed live in the capital of the United Arab Emirates on Saturday.

    The mosque said Rihanna, 25, first arrived “at an entrance that was not designated for visitors”.

    “She was confronted by the mosque officials and directed to the appropriate entrance to the mosque, to carry out a visit under the normal conditions.”

    She was asked to leave after striking a series of poses for the photo shoot.

    The statement claimed Rihanna turned up at the mosque “without any previous co-ordination with the administration”.

    Several of the photos could be construed as suggestive, with one showing the pop star lying on her back in the mosque’s courtyard.

    The mosque is a major tourist attraction and had more than three million visitors last year.

    Rihanna’s publicity team have yet to make a comment.

    {agencies}

  • Raid ‘ends Mozambique Peace Accord’

    Raid ‘ends Mozambique Peace Accord’

    Mozambique’s opposition Renamo movement has ended a 1992 peace accord after government forces attacked the jungle base of its leader, Afonso Dhlakama.

    The government forces captured the Sathunjira base in central Mozambique, forcing Mr Dhlakama to flee.

    About a million people were killed in the civil war that raged in Mozambique after it achieved independence from Portugal in 1975.

    Mozambique’s economy has been booming since the civil war ended.

    Renamo spokesman Fernando Mazanga said that government soldiers had bombarded the Sathunjira base with heavy weapons before occupying it on Monday.

    “Peace is over in the country… The responsibility lies with the Frelimo government because they didn’t want to listen to Renamo’s grievances,” Mr Mazanga told media.

    The attack was aimed at assassinating Mr Dhlakama but he had managed to escape to an undisclosed location, Mr Mazanga said.

    In a statement, Renamo blamed President Armando Guebuza for the attack.

    “This irresponsible attitude of the commander-in-chief of the defence and security forces puts an end to the Rome peace deal,” it said.

    {wirestory}

  • Region’s Leaders Seek to Push Foreign Fighters from CAR

    Region’s Leaders Seek to Push Foreign Fighters from CAR

    Regional leaders on Monday authorized African troops deployed to Central African Republic to use force if necessary to drive foreign fighters out of the country, which has been plagued by violence.

    The Central African Republic, which is rich in minerals, has descended into chaos since mostly Muslim Seleka rebels ousted President Francois Bozize in March.

    Michel Djotodia, who swept to power at the head of the rebellion, has failed to control his former fighters, many of whom are mercenaries from Chad and Sudan, and the worsening violence has become sectarian in nature.

    An African Union force – soon to number 2,600 and made up of troops from neighboring states including Chad, Gabon, Congo Republic and Cameroon – has deployed as part of an eventual 3,600-strong mission.

    “(The heads of state) ask (the force) to proceed with the immediate disarmament and removal, voluntarily or by force, of all foreign armed elements,” read a statement issued at the end of a regional summit in Chad’s capital, N’Djamena.

    The regional leaders pledged more support for the mission, including air support, the statement read, though it gave no further details.

    Former colonial power France has urged world and regional powers not to ignore the conflict, which has already driven more than 400,000 people from their homes and has been marked by acts of violence such as murder and rape.

    With the African force’s resources limited, France is seeking a U.N. Security Council mandate that would turn the operation into a U.N. peacekeeping force ultimately supported by French troops.

    Paris is concerned by growing violence between Central African Republic’s Muslim and Christian communities and worries that the ungoverned nation – strategically located in the heart of Africa – could become a magnet for regional armed groups.

    In addition to Seleka’s mercenary fighters, Janjaweed Arab fighters from Darfur are also present, as are members of Uganda’s rebel Lord’s Resistance Army.

    reuters

  • Australian Capital Territory Legalises Same-sex Marriage

    Australian Capital Territory Legalises Same-sex Marriage

    The Australian Capital Territory has become the first part of Australia to legalise same-sex marriage.

    The ACT parliament passed a bill that will allow gay couples to marry, after a short debate on Tuesday.

    Celebrants will now be allowed to marry same-sex couples inside the ACT, regardless of which state they live in.

    Federal law, however, specified in 2004 that marriage was between a man and a woman, and the federal government is expected to challenge the move.

    The move was passed in the 17-member ACT Legislative Assembly, backed by Labor and the Greens, with the Liberals voting against.

    “There is no longer any excuse, if there ever was, to discriminate against same-sex couples in our community,” ACT Chief Minister Katy Gallagher told the parliament.

    “They are our children, our parents, our brothers, our sisters, our leaders, our business people, our mentors and our colleagues.”

    “More than anything, they are our equals. The Marriage Equality Act puts this fundamental principle and human right into law,” the Australian Broadcasting Corporation quoted her as saying.

    Ms Gallagher said that the first weddings could take place by the end of the year.

    wirestory

  • Venezuela Shoots Down Two ‘Hostile’ Planes

    Venezuela Shoots Down Two ‘Hostile’ Planes

    {{Venezuela says two light aircraft have been shot down after entering the country’s airspace over the weekend.}}

    These were the first mid-air attacks by fighter jets since a bill authorising such action against illegal planes was approved earlier this month, the Bolivarian Armed Forces said.

    The aircraft were allegedly smuggling drugs from Central America and refused to follow the military pilots’ orders.

    Another 11 unauthorised planes have been disabled on the ground this year.

    Venezuelan security forces say more than 35 tonnes of drugs have been found this year.

    The head of Venezuela’s Strategic Operational Centre, General Vladimir Padrino Lopez, told the country’s state television that a plane had been targeted after “all other means of persuasion had been exhausted” in the early hours of Saturday.

    “This was the first plane shot mid-air in the country since the approval of the Law and Control Regulation for the Integral Defence of the National Airspace, following the orders of our commander-in-chief, President Nicolas Maduro,” Gen Padrino said.

    {agencies}

  • Bing win for Microsoft in Yahoo Dispute

    Bing win for Microsoft in Yahoo Dispute

    {{ A U.S. judge on Monday refused to let Yahoo Inc YHOO.O delay using Microsoft Corp’s Bing search capabilities in Taiwan and Hong Kong, affirming an arbitrator’s decision in favor of Microsoft.}}

    Yahoo Inc Chief Executive Marissa Mayer sought to slow the rollout of its search partnership arguing that Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer’s decision to retire had raised concerns, according to court documents.

    But U.S. District Judge Robert Patterson Jr upheld an arbitrator’s earlier ruling in favor of Microsoft.

    Yahoo and Microsoft began a 10-year search partnership in 2010, before Mayer took over as Yahoo’s CEO. The two companies hoped their combined efforts could mount a more competitive challenge to Google Inc, the world’s No.1 search engine.

    The partnership has not lived up to expectations. Google remains the dominant search engine, with roughly two thirds of the U.S. search market, while Microsoft and Yahoo’s combined share of the market is essentially unchanged.

    Yahoo said it wanted to pause the process until Mayer had a chance to discuss the partnership with Ballmer’s successor, according to a court filing. Microsoft said in August that Ballmer would retire within 12 months.

    Mayer has criticized the partnership in the past. “We need to see monetization working better because we know that it can and we’ve seen other competitors in the space illustrate how well it can work,” Mayer said at an investor conference in February.

    Microsoft and Yahoo were not immediately available for comment.

    wirestory

  • Israel’s Elections Ignite ‘Racism’

    Israel’s Elections Ignite ‘Racism’

    {{In some parts of Israel, voters in Tuesday’s elections will be casting a ballot not on how well their municipality is run but on how to stop “Arabs” moving in next door, how to prevent mosques being built in their community, or how to “save” Jewish women from the clutches of Arab men.}}

    While the far-right’s rise in Israeli national politics has made headlines, less attention has been paid to how this has played out in day-to-day relations between Israeli Jews and the country’s Palestinian-Arab minority, comprising a fifth of the population.

    According to analysts and residents, Israel’s local elections have brought a tide of ugly racism to the fore, especially in a handful of communities known as “mixed cities”, where Jewish and Palestinian citizens live in close proximity.

    Jewish parties, including local branches of the ruling Likud party, have adopted openly racist language and fear-mongering suggesting an imminent Muslim takeover of Jewish communities in a bid to win votes.

    “Israeli society has become more and more racist, and the candidates are simply reflecting this racism back to voters knowing that it will win them lots of support,” said Mohammed Zeidan, director of the Human Rights Association in Nazareth.

    Last week, as electioneering intensified, Salim Joubran, an Arab judge, stepped in to ban adverts by the Likud party of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the cities of Karmiel and Tel Aviv.

    Joubran, who is the first Arab in Israel’s history to chair the Central Elections Committee, which oversees elections, said the ads were “racist and almost certain to hurt the feelings of Arab Israelis and disrupt public order”.

    In doing so, Joubran overruled the advice of the attorney-general, Yehuda Weinstein, who had argued that the committee had no authority to regulate online ads and posters.

    aljazeera

  • Brazil Oil-Auction Protests Turn Violent

    Brazil Oil-Auction Protests Turn Violent

    Protesters have marched to the headquarters of Brazil’s state-run petroleum company Petrobras after it won the right to develop an offshore field that could contain 12 billion barrels of oil.

    A consortium that includes Petrobras, Shell, Total and two Chinese firms successfully bid for the rights at an auction, Brazil’s government announced on Monday.

    Five people were reported hurt as union workers opposed to the auctioning off of national assets to foreign companies clashed with police in Rio de Janeiro.

    More than 1,000 police were called in and responded with tear gas and rubber-coated steel bullets after about 200 protesters converged on the hotel hosting the action.

    The five firms won 35-year concessions, with Petrobras taking a 40 percent stake, more than the minimum required by the terms of Brazil’s offer, which has been controversial at home.

    Shell and Total both earned a 20 percent stake with CNOOC and CNPC securing 10 percent each.

    Their consortium was the only bid to offer the Brazilian state the minimum 41.65 percent of oil to be extracted from the Libra oil field, which holds an estimated eight to 12 billion barrels of oil.

    To put that into context, Brazil currently has 15.3 billion barrels of proven reserves and is already the second-largest in South America after Venezuela.

    {agencies}

  • US Drone Strikes Condemned in Rights Reports

    US Drone Strikes Condemned in Rights Reports

    Rights groups have demanded that the US launch an impartial investigation into its use of drone warfare and that the country publicly disclose any evidence of civilian casualties.

    In independent reports published on Tuesday, both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch said that the US must hold to account those responsible for civilian deaths and be more transparent about its drone programme.

    “As evidence emerges of civilian casualties in these strikes, it’s time for the US to stop covering its ears and starting taking action to ensure the programme is legal,” Letta Taylor, senior counterterrorism researcher at HRW told media.

    Two recently published UN reports are to be presented to the General Assembly on Friday. Taylor said that the release of the four reports in a brief period “underscores the mounting questions about the legality” of drones.

    All four reports demand that the US should provide a full legal rationale for targeted killings.

    Polly Truscott, Amnesty International’s deputy Asia-Pacific director, said that while its report focuses on Pakistan, and HRW’s on Yemen, the drones programme “raises the same questions about human rights violations all over the world”.

    “Both organisations are calling on the US Congress to fully investigate the cases the we have documented in our reports and other potentially unlawful deaths,” she told Al Jazeera, adding that the group hoped that the US would act immediately on their recommendations.

    HRW said that the Yemeni government, which is engaged in a conflict with al-Qaeda, had been “almost as silent” as the US on the death toll caused by air raids.

    Caitlin Hayden, a spokesman for the US National Security Council, said that President Barack Obama had outlined the US rational for drone strikes in a May 23 speech.

    “The president spoke at length about the policy and legal rationale for how the US takes action against al-Qaeda and its associated forces. As the president emphasised, the use of lethal force, including from remotely piloted aircraft, commands the highest level of attention and care.

    “Of particular note, before we take any counterterrorism strike, there must be near-certainty that no civilians will be killed or injured – the highest standard we can set.”

    She said the US was aware that this report had been released and were reviewing it carefully.

    {agencies}

  • Tanzania Tourism Sector Earns $1.56 billion

    Tanzania Tourism Sector Earns $1.56 billion

    {{For the second time in five years, Tanzania tourism sector earned $1.56 Billion surpassing Kenya’s $1.3 billion, a difference of $260 million local Tanzania media reported.}}

    This unveils the fact that Dar es Salaam has more of the world’s class tourist attractions compared to Nairobi.

    Not only have WB data pointed out that but also said that Tanzania received $1.3 billion in 2008 compared to Kenya’s $752 million during the same period, all accrued from tourism.

    {{It is understood that in 2008, the first time Dar surpassed Nairobi, Kenya was passing through a difficult period due to the post-election violence that left about 1,100 dead and over 600,000 others internally displaced, thus profoundly affecting tourism sector.}}

    But, in the year 2012, Dar es Salaam surpassed Nairobi at the time when the latter was enjoying very stable conditions politically and economically.

    However, this means that if Tanzania is to fully address the myriad challenges facing how it operates tourism sector, it would remain the dominant giant in the region.

    Tanzania has 31,365 hotel rooms as compared to Kenya’s 24, 354 and South Africa’s 61,417.

    There are about 390,000 hotel rooms in sub-Sahara Africa. Unbranded guest houses and lodges dominate accommodation facilities while only 10% or about 35,200 rooms meet international standards, according to data released by WB.

    South Africa has about half the region’s stock of international standard accommodation.

    Kenya, however, has 2,284 international standard rooms compared to Tanzania’s 1,588, while occupancy rate is 92 per cent for Kenya and 43 per cent for Tanzania.

    “We forecast that employment in travel and tourism in 2021 will be 463,800 for Tanzania and 273,500 for Kenya,” the WB report says.

    Currently, Tanzania is the second top tourist destination by accommodation, after South Africa, according to the report by WB.

    {{Challenging the myth}}

    These fresh data by WB challenge pre-conceived myth about Tanzania’s tourism indicating the great potential of the sector and how it can transform the country’s economy.

    The details that are included in a recent World Bank report shows that not only has Tanzania tourism earnings and arrivals surpassed Kenya’s but also that the proceeds from tourism brought back to the country several times higher than those from exported cash crops like coffee and cotton.