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  • Australia Maintains Sanctions Against Mugabe

    Australia Maintains Sanctions Against Mugabe

    {{Australia is maintaining sanctions against President Mugabe, the First Lady Amai Grace Mugabe and five service chiefs, the latest amended list from Canberra reveals.}}

    One entity, the Zimbabwe Defence Industries (PVT) Ltd, is still on the sanctions list.
    The amended list released by Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop showed that service chiefs namely Zimbabwe Defence Forces Commander General Constantine Chiwenga, Zimbabwe National Army Commander Phillip Valerio Sibanda, Air Force of Zimbabwe Commander Perrance Shiri, Central Intelligence Organisation Director General Rtd Major General Happyton Bonyongwe and police Commissioner General Augustine Chihuri were still embargoed.

    Australia, in a move described by analysts as deceptive, has been partially and conditionally removing the sanctions it imposed on Zimbabwe in 2002.
    In February last year, the list had 153 individuals and four entities, and prohibition of defence links.

    The number was trimmed down after the country successfully held the Constitutional referendum and harmonised elections that were won resoundingly by President Mugabe.

    Since 2002, Australia has implemented sanctions against “persons or entities who engage in, or have engaged in, activities that seriously undermine democracy, respect for human rights and the rule of law in Zimbabwe”.

    The new list by Australia comes after the European Union in February kept President Mugabe and Amai Mugabe on its embargoed list but removed service chiefs, politicians and war veterans.

    The sanctions were imposed on Zimbabwe in 2002 after Zimbabwe embarked on the fast-track land reform programme and in an attempt to influence that year’s Presidential elections, which President Mugabe won nonetheless.

    Relations have somewhat thawed in recent years despite the maintenance of sanctions, after President Mugabe dispatched a ministerial re-engagement committee to initiate dialogue with the EU.

    The 28-nation EU bloc is contemplating ways of directly working with Government, starting in 2015, rather than coming through NGOs.

    {herald}

  • Global Adultery Website Blocked

    Global Adultery Website Blocked

    {{South Korea has blocked the newly launched Korean version of the global adultery hook-up site Ashley Madison, saying on Wednesday that it threatened family values in a country where marital infidelity is a crime.}}

    The Korean site of the Canada-based company’s slogan: “Life is short. Have an affair” – went online in the middle of last month, garnering close to 50 000 subscribers in its first week.

    Under a 1953 statute that criminalises adultery, an unfaithful spouse in South Korea can receive a prison sentence of up to two years for conducting an affair.

    The Korea Communications Standards Commission (KCSC), a largely government-appointed body, said the website was an incitement to immorality.

    “In light of the legal spirit of relevant laws aimed to protect healthy sexual morals, marriage bonds and family life, KCSC decided to block access to the site which incites adultery,” the commission said in a statement.

    “There is a great danger of this site spreading bad behaviour and seriously undermining legal order by aiding or abetting in adultery,” it added.

    Universal activity

    South Korea is the second Asian country to block Ashley Madison after Singapore, which barred access in November for similar reasons.

    The website is no stranger to Asia, having already launched in Japan, India and Hong Kong.

    Ashley Madison CEO Noel Biderman believes the South Korean law is “hopelessly outdated” but still heeded legal advice not to attend the South Korea launch in person.

    He insists that his website simply facilitates an activity that is universal and crosses all social and geographical boundaries.

    “Infidelity is present in Asian culture, in the same way that it is present in every other culture in the world,” he said in a recent telephone interview from New York.

    South Korea’s adultery law is not much of a deterrent, and conviction usually results in a suspended sentence rather than actual jail time.

    As an offence, it can only be prosecuted on complaint, and any case is closed as soon as the plaintiff drops the charge.

    Whereas 216 people were given prison terms under the law in 2004, that figure had dropped to 42 by 2008.

    But it remains on the statute books, despite half a dozen referrals for review to the country’s Constitutional Court, and there is no great groundswell of opinion to have it removed.

    In 2011, a Christian pastor was jailed for 18 months for having a decade-long affair with a woman whose wedding he had officiated at, after her husband named them both in an adultery complaint.

    – AFP

  • South Sudanese Flood into Ethiopia

    South Sudanese Flood into Ethiopia

    {{Up to 1 000 refugees from war-torn South Sudan are fleeing to Ethiopia each day, many of them on the brink of death, the UN said on Tuesday.}}

    A massive 95% of the arrivals are also women and children, added the UN, citing witnesses saying that both boys and men have been forcibly recruited by armed men or killed along the way.

    Since fighting erupted in December, refugees have been “arriving at a rate of 800-1 000 per day, and they are arriving on their last legs,” Melissa Fleming, spokesperson for the UN refugee agency, told reporters in Geneva.

    If they had not received immediate help, “these people would be dead. They were really, really in bad shape,” she said, following a recent visit to the region.

    More than 95 000 South Sudanese refugees have crossed into Ethiopia since violence erupted in the world’s youngest nation last December between forces loyal to President Salva Kiir and fighters loosely allied to former vice president Riek Machar.

    Nearly 200 000 more have sought refuge in Sudan, Uganda and Kenya, while more than 800 000 are displaced inside South Sudan, according to UN figures.

    Some of those arriving in Ethiopia’s Gambella region had walked up to three weeks to reach the border, Fleming said, adding that most were “very hungry, [with] up to 37% malnourished and needing emergency attention.”

    More than 4 000 malnourished children were receiving nutrition supplements, as were at least 3 500 lactating mothers, said Fleming.

    {news24}

  • Beard Fashion is ‘Guided by Evolution’

    Beard Fashion is ‘Guided by Evolution’

    {{The flow of men’s beard fashions may be guided by Darwinian selection, according to a new study.

    The more beards there are, the less attractive they become – giving clean-shaven men a competitive advantage, say scientists in Sydney, Australia.}}

    They asked women and men to rate the appeal of different faces with “four standard levels of beardedness”.

    The team’s study has been published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.

    In the experiment, both beards and clean-shaven faces became more attractive when they were rare.

    The pattern mirrors an evolutionary phenomenon – “negative frequency-dependent sexual selection”, or to put it more simply “an advantage to rare traits”.

    The bright colours of male guppies vary by this force – which is driven by females’ changing preferences.

    Scientists at the University of New South Wales decided to test this hypothesis for men’s facial hair – recruiting volunteers on their Facebook site, The Sex Lab.

    “Big thick beards are back with an absolute vengeance and so we thought underlying this fashion, one of the dynamics that might be important is this idea of negative frequency dependence,” said Prof Rob Brooks, one of the study’s authors.

    “The idea is that perhaps people start copying the George Clooneys and the Joaquin Phoenixs and start wearing those beards, but then when more and more people get onto the band wagon the value of being on the bandwagon diminishes, so that might be why we’ve hit ‘peak beard’.”

    “Peak beard” was the climax of the trend for beards in professions not naturally associated with a bristly chin – bankers, film stars, and even footballers began sporting facial hair.

    ome argue the peak ended in January, when Jeremy Paxman, the BBC Newsnight presenter, shaved his beard off, saying “beards are SO 2013”.

    In the experiment, 1,453 women and 213 men were asked to rate the attractiveness of different samples of men’s faces.

    Some were shown mostly “full” beards. Others were shown mostly clean-shaven faces. A third group were shown an even mixture of all four varieties – clean-shaven, light stubble, heavy stubble and full beard.

    Both women and men judged heavy stubble and full beards more attractive when presented in treatments where beards were rare than when they were common.

    Likewise, clean-shaven faces were least attractive when common and more attractive when rare.

    “Negative frequency-dependent preferences may therefore play a role in maintaining variation in men’s beards and contributing to changing fashions,” the researchers conclude.

    They plan to continue their pogonophilic investigations and are looking for volunteers for their latest experiment testing how people like faces with varying levels of beardedness.

    {wirestory}

  • Burundi Opposition Chief Charged With Rebellion

    Burundi Opposition Chief Charged With Rebellion

    {{Burundi charged the leader of a key opposition party and 71 supporters with rebellion after violent clashes last week, a prosecutor said, amid worsening tensions in that country. }}

    Party leader Alexis Sinduhije, who is on the run from police, and the other activists face life in jail if found guilty.

    State prosecutor Arcade Nimubona told reporters the activists from the Movement for Solidarity and Development (MSD) party were arrested Saturday after large numbers took part in a “group jog” to the centre of the capital Bujumbura, where they were dispersed by riot police firing tear gas.

    A reporter said some 200 sought refuge at the party headquarters, taking two officers hostage, before police stormed the building.

    Clashes lasted for over an hour, with at least 20 activists and five policemen wounded.

    Nimubona said that 71 of those arrested after the clashes had been charged with “rebellion, insult and violence towards the custodians of public order, and the participation in an armed insurrection”.

    An arrest warrant has been issued for Sinduhije for his “participation in an armed insurrection as a leader of the movement,” said Nimubona, adding he hoped trials would begin as “quickly as possible”.

    Sinduhije, a former journalist and founder of one of the most listened to private radio stations RPA, only returned to Burundi last year after fleeing violence following elections in 2010.

    {{Decades of conflict }}

    His MSD party, founded in 2009, is supported largely by the youth, but like most of Burundi’s opposition parties, it boycotted the presidential and legislative elections of 2010.

    The United Nations in Burundi on Monday expressed concern about the “radicalisation” of both the opposition and government, calling for restraint and dialogue ahead of general elections scheduled for 2015, in which President Pierre Nkurunziza is expected to campaign for a third term in office.

    The US State Department has also condemned both the excessive use of force against the opposition and the taking of police officers as hostages by the activists.

    Tensions between the ruling party CNDD-FDD of President Pierre Nkurunziza and opposition parties have grown in recent weeks.

    Last month leaders of the opposition Uprona party were arrested, which threatened to upset a delicate power-sharing arrangement between Burundi’s majority Hutu and minority Tutsi communities, who are still struggling to reconcile after decades of conflict.

    Burundi’s history is marred by bitter ethnic killings and civil war.

    Tensions remain high, with rebel gunmen launching a series of attacks since the 2010 boycott of general elections.

    – AFP

  • 100 Girls Abducted From Nigeria School

    100 Girls Abducted From Nigeria School

    {{About 100 girls are thought to have been abducted in an attack on a school in north-east Nigeria, officials say.}}

    Gunmen reportedly arrived at the school in Chibok, Borno state, late last night, and ordered the hostel’s teenage residents on to lorries.

    The attackers are believed to be from the Islamist group, Boko Haram, whose militants frequently target schools.

    On Monday, bombings blamed on the group killed more than 70 people in the capital, Abuja.

    Boko Haram, whose name means “Western education is forbidden” in the local Hausa language, has been waging an armed campaign for an Islamic state in northern Nigeria.

    A government official in Borno state said about 100 girls were thought to have been abducted from the school.

    The exact number of missing students had yet to be established, as some of the girls had managed to return to their homes.

    {wirestory}

  • US Airways Tweets Porn Photo,Apologises

    US Airways Tweets Porn Photo,Apologises

    {{US Airways has apologised after an explicit photo was sent from its official Twitter account in response to a customer complaint.}}

    It said in a statement that it was trying to flag the image as inappropriate but instead mistakenly included it in a message.

    The tweet was deleted after approximately an hour but not before it had been retweeted hundreds of times.

    The airline said it regretted the error and was reviewing its processes.

    The image, which featured a naked woman and a toy plane, had originally been sent to the company’s Twitter account by another user, it said.

    It was then attached to a tweet that was sent to a US Airways customer who had taken to the social network to express her frustration that her flight was delayed.

    Once the mistake had been realised US Airways deleted the offending tweet and issued an apology.

    “We apologise for an inappropriate image recently shared as a link in one of our responses. We’ve removed the tweet and are investigating,” it said on its Twitter feed.

    The company has more than 420,000 followers on its Twitter account and has not tweeted since.

    BBC

  • EU Blacklist to Stop Spread of Alien Species

    EU Blacklist to Stop Spread of Alien Species

    {{The European Parliament is voting on a bill to draw up a blacklist to fight invasive alien species such as killer shrimp and Japanese knotweed spreading.}}

    There will be a ban on the possession, transport, selling or growing of species deemed as of “Union Concern”.

    The list was going to be restricted to 50, but will now have no limit. It is not clear which species will be banned.

    A deal between EU member states effectively means the bill will pass and become law within a few months.

    This comes as MPs slam current government policy on controlling alien species as “not fit for purpose”.

    {{Biodiversity loss}}

    The economic and ecological damage caused by non-native species such as the so-called killer shrimp and demon shrimp originally from the Black Sea, the Asian Harlequin ladybird or Japanese knotweed are estimated to cost Europe some 12bn euros every year.

    In the UK the bill is at least £1.7bn.

    Experts say such insects, plants and animals are one of the major causes of biodiversity loss and species extinction.

    They can also spread disease and cause health problems such as asthma, dermatitis and allergies.

    The new law will require member states to analyse how troublesome species enter the country and to improve surveillance systems.

    Official checks at EU borders will be stepped up. Action plans on how to manage established invasive species also have to be developed.

    MEP Pavel Poc, who is guiding the legislation through the European Parliament, said: “Efforts are very often not effective simply because those species do not respect geographical boundaries. Co-operation between member states is therefore crucial.”

    BBC

  • Injured Ronaldo Out of Cup Final

    Injured Ronaldo Out of Cup Final

    {{Real Madrid forward Cristiano Ronaldo will miss his side’s Copa del Rey final against rivals Barcelona on Wednesday.

    Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti confirmed that Ronaldo, 29, would not play in Valencia because of a hamstring injury.}}

    “Cristiano is not available because we don’t want to take risks and we have other very important games to come this season,” said Ancelotti.

    Madrid face holders Bayern Munich in the first leg of their Champions League semi-final on Wednesday, 23 April.

    Ronaldo has missed Real’s last three games with the injury but Ancelotti believes his side will be able to cope in the final, having lost just one of the 10 games the World Player of the Year has missed this season.

    “We are going to lose a player with an incredible quality, but his absence has provided motivation for the team to run more and play more as a team,” added Ancelotti.

    Madrid have lost twice to Barcelona in their league meetings this season but those results have been high points in a disappointing campaign for the Catalans.

    Barcelona are third in La Liga – behind Real and leaders Atletico Madrid – following a shock defeat by Granada last weekend and last week went out of the Champions League to Atletico.

    That was the first time in seven seasons Barcelona, who have also been hit by a transfer ban by Fifa, had failed to reach the Champions League semi-finals but midfielder Andres Iniesta is hoping to to add to their record tally of 26 Copa del Rey wins.

    “We would all like to live in a world of roses where everything is wonderful, but reality is not like that,” said the Spain international.

    “This is a title, it is something for the fans and us to cheer.”

    Barcelona coach Gerardo Martino has defensive problems with Gerard Pique, Marc Bartra and Carles Puyol all serious doubts.

    As well as Ronaldo, Madrid are likely to be without Brazilian full-back Marcelo but central defender Sergio Ramos is expected to play after recovering from a neck injury.

    {sportsnews}

  • Euro Zone Inflation Stuck in ‘Danger Zone’

    Euro Zone Inflation Stuck in ‘Danger Zone’

    {{A shock drop in March euro zone inflation to its lowest level since November 2009 was confirmed on Wednesday, keeping pressure on the European Central Bank to intervene should prices not rebound.}}

    The year-on-year inflation rate in the 18 countries sharing the euro was 0.5 percent in March against 0.7 percent in February, the European Union’s statistics office Eurostat said.

    The biggest rise in prices was observed for tobacco, restaurants and bars as well as milk, cheese and eggs, while lower prices were recorded for heating oil, telecommunications and fuel.

    There was a stark disparity across the euro zone with countries such as Greece (-1.5 pct) and Cyprus (-0.9 pct) seeing their prices fall compared to last year.

    Inflation rates in Austria (+1.4 pct), Malta (+1.4 pct) and Germany (+0.9 pct) were nearer to the ECB’s target of close to but below 2 percent.

    Inflation has now been in the ECB’s “danger zone” of below 1 percent for six consecutive months, fuelling speculation that the ECB will need to take further action.

    ECB policy makers said the bank stood ready to deploy unconventional measures to ensure that inflation did not stay low for too long.

    ECB’s President Mario Draghi expressed concerns at the euro’s strength on Saturday in Washington, trying to talk down the currency, which influences domestic prices.

    The strength of the single currency against the dollar makes imports cheaper and pushes down the prices Europeans pay for goods and services.

    While this can give households more purchasing power in the short run, the ECB wants to avoid a drop in inflation expectations.