Author: Publisher

  • Drogba a Lonely Man Upfront – Mourinho

    Drogba a Lonely Man Upfront – Mourinho

    {{Chelsea became the first English side to reach the Champions League last eight after beating a limp Galatasaray.}}

    Having drawn 1-1 in the first leg, former Blues striker Didier Drogba could not inspire the Turkish team, who fell behind early on when Samuel Eto’o fired past Fernando Muslera.

    Gary Cahill made it 3-1 on aggregate when he thumped home after John Terry’s header was saved.

    Galatasaray’s night was summed up by Drogba’s stoppage-time miss.
    After Arsenal and Manchester City were knocked out last week Chelsea won this game at a canter.

    And the result means that Galatasaray boss Roberto Mancini has yet to beat Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho in six European attempts.

    Unlike the first leg, where the visitors recovered from a poor start in Istanbul, Galatasaray did not look like troubling the Premier League leaders, who responded well to Saturday’s surprise defeat by Aston Villa.

    Mourinho, who is aiming to win a third Champions League trophy with a different team, said in the build-up to the game that Drogba was still one of the world’s best strikers.

    But there was to be no fairytale return to Stamford Bridge for the Ivorian striker. Eto’o, whose age was recently doubted by Mourinho, took centre stage.

    The Cameroon forward, three years younger than the 36-year-old Drogba, looked sharp from the start and he put Chelsea ahead after four minutes with his 30th Champions League goal when he latched on to Oscar’s diagonal pass to beat Uruguayan international Muslera.

    Chelsea, who remain on course to win their third consecutive European trophy, showed far more impetus in the first half with Frank Lampard and Willian wasting good chances after excellent build-up play from Eden Hazard and Oscar.

    Felipe Melo’s tame shot was Galatasaray’s only real effort towards Petr Cech’s goal. Drogba’s free-kick ended up in the top tier of the Chelsea stand and they did not muster a shot on target all game.

    Added to their lifelessness in attack the visitors showed little desire to mark Terry at set-pieces and after the Chelsea captain volleyed over from a free-kick, he was free to head goalwards from a corner, with Cahill smashing home the rebound from close range.

    Prior to this encounter, Galatasaray had failed to beat English opposition in eight attempts and once they had gone two goals behind they rarely looked like changing the game’s course.

    With Hazard again the creative force, Oscar, Willian and Lampard all had chances to extend the lead after the break.

    Hazard also drew a late save from Muslera, who is likely to face England in the group stage of the 2014 World Cup.

    But despite Mancini’s best attempts to give his team a boost with three second-half substitutions, they could not make an impression and Chelsea set themselves up perfectly for Saturday’s game against Arsenal with a comfortable victory.

    BBCsport

  • IMF Chief to Be Guestioned in Court

    IMF Chief to Be Guestioned in Court

    {{International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde arrived Wednesday at a Paris court to face more questions over her role in a 2008 arbitration that awarded a massive state payout to controversial businessman Bernard Tapie.}}

    It is Lagarde’s third visit to the Court of Justice of the Republic, which is empowered to investigate and prosecute crimes committed by ministers in the exercise of their official duties.

    The former finance minister was last questioned in May, when she avoided being charged and was instead given the less compromising statues of “assisted witness” in what has become known in France as the “Tapie Affair”.

    The case revolves around a controversial €400 million state payout ordered by an arbitration panel in 2008 for Bernard Tapie, a former politician and businessman, over his sale of sportswear company Adidas.

    The arbitration panel upheld Tapie’s claim that the Crédit Lyonnais bank had defrauded him by intentionally undervaluing Adidas at the time of the sale and that the state – as the bank’s principal shareholder – should compensate him.

    It was Lagarde who, in her role as French finance minister at the time, ordered the case to be heard by an arbitration panel instead of proceeding through the regular courts.

    Critics argue that the state should not have paid compensation to a convicted criminal who was bankrupt at the time and would not have been able to pursue the case in court. Tapie spent six months in prison in 1997 for match-fixing during his time as president of France’s biggest football club, Olympique Marseille.

    They say that Lagarde ensured Tapie received preferential treatment by referring the matter to arbitration due to his financial support for former French president Nicolas Sarkozy – Lagarde’s boss at the time – in his 2007 presidential bid.

    Lagarde has always denied any wrongdoing.

    Tapie was placed under formal investigation for committing fraud as part of an organised gang in late June of last year.

    Orange telecoms CEO Stéphane Richard, who was Lagarde’s chief-of-staff at the time of the payout, was also placed under formal investigation for fraud in the matter last June.

    {france24}

  • Jeb Bush Considers Run for White House

    Jeb Bush Considers Run for White House

    {{Jeb Bush({right}), Brother to former US President George W Bush({center}) and also son to former US President George H.W. Bush({Left}) is expected to compete in the 2016 Presidential race.}}

    Mr. Jeb gets the question at just about every public appearance these days: Will you run for president?

    The former Florida governor gives a well-worn answer: ”I can honestly tell you that I don’t know what I’m going to do.” It’s an answer that won’t satisfy the GOP faithful for much longer.

    The scion of the Bush political dynasty will likely be asked the question many times in the coming weeks as he raises his profile with appearances in Tennessee, New Mexico, Nevada and Texas — where he’ll bump into another possible 2016 presidential candidate, Hillary Rodham Clinton.

    Bush’s ”yes” or ”no” is one of the most significant factors looming over the 2016 Republican presidential contest. A White House bid by the brother and son of presidents would shake up a wide-open GOP field, attract a legion of big-money donors and set up a showdown with the influential tea party movement. Bush has said he’ll consult with his family this summer and make a decision by the end of the year.

    With New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie facing multiple investigations in a political retribution probe, many Republicans see Bush as a potent alternative: a two-term GOP governor who thrived in the nation’s largest swing-voting state and could make the party more inclusive.

    Friends and advisers say he is seriously considering a presidential run. His busy schedule will do little to quiet speculation.

    This month, Bush is expected to visit New Mexico and Nevada to campaign for Republican governors there, even though both incumbents are widely expected to cruise to re-election. In Las Vegas, he’ll address leaders of the Republican Jewish Coalition, an influential political group backed by casino magnate and GOP mega-donor Sheldon Adelson.

    And in Dallas next week, Bush is scheduled to co-host an education conference where Clinton is also set to appear.

    With no clear frontrunner for the GOP nomination, Bush’s standing is rising in early presidential polls and among donors. His popularity with wealthy insiders was on display last month at a Republican fundraiser in the gilded ballroom of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Palm Beach estate. The night’s keynote speaker was a tea party firebrand, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, but a short video message from Bush received far more applause.

    ”Jeb is striking a chord amongst many thoughtful donors,” said Fred Malek, finance chairman of the Republican Governors Association.

    ”He’s a proven conservative,” Malek said. ”But at the same time, he is not viewed as extreme or an ideologue and therefore can appeal to the moderate element of the party as well.”

    Bush would carry both the benefits and the baggage of one of America’s most prominent political dynasties. Its patriarch, George H.W. Bush, was elected to one term in 1988; his son, George W. Bush, served two presidential terms beginning in 2001. The family’s vast fundraising network and political connections, in addition to Jeb Bush’s own constellation of donors and advisers, could fuel a formidable campaign. A senior adviser at the financial firm Barclays, Jeb Bush remains a favorite of the Wall Street set.

    But the shadow of his older brother’s controversial presidency still looms. The family’s matriarch, former first lady Barbara Bush, has repeatedly spoken of the potential for Bush fatigue, saying, ”If we can’t find more than two or three families to run for high office, that’s silly.”

    A Washington Post-ABC News poll this month signaled head winds Jeb Bush could face: nearly half of all Americans, and 50 percent of registered voters, said they ”definitely would not” vote for him for president.

    Nevertheless, friends and advisers say, he is mulling a bid and reaching out to influential donors.

    ”He is seriously considering this, but he is not following the timeline that the pundits or the press would like him to follow,” said Sally Bradshaw, Bush’s former chief of staff.

    Bush briefly considered a presidential campaign in 2012 but declined to run.

    ”It’s much more serious this time,” said Slater Bayliss, a lobbyist and former Bush aide. ”The question for him is whether he’s willing to make the sacrifices that he’s seen his brother and his dad make at a time in his life when he’s having an impact on policy issues he cares about.”

    Bush has spent much of his post-governorship studying education policy and advocating for the kinds of changes he pioneered in Florida, including publicly-funded private school vouchers and stricter accountability standards for teachers and students. At the same time, he has promoted overhauling the nation’s immigration system and providing a path to citizenship for millions of immigrants who are here illegally, an intensely personal effort. His wife, Columba, grew up in Mexico. The two met while Bush was an exchange student there; she is now an American citizen. Bush speaks fluent Spanish.

    His personal story and immigration advocacy could help him connect with Latinos, a group that Republicans have long struggled to court.

    ”He needs no briefing sheets when it comes to what’s important to Hispanics,” said Ana Navarro, a Bush friend and GOP strategist.

    But the former Florida governor’s education and immigration efforts would likely put him at odds with conservative activists.

    Bush has been a champion of so-called ”Common Core” academic standards, which were developed by a bipartisan group of governors and state school officials and later promoted by the Obama administration. Many conservatives see them as a federal takeover of local classrooms. Likewise, anti-immigration activists have battled Bush-backed immigration legislation in Congress that they consider ”amnesty” for lawbreakers.

    ”We’re seeing from Jeb Bush’s actions that he likes having a government that has much more say in people’s lives,” said Jenny Beth Martin, co-founder of Tea Party Patriots.

    Over the past two years, in speeches and public appearances, Bush has chafed at what he calls ”purity tests” inside the GOP, saying both his father and former President Ronald Reagan would struggle in the tea party era.

    Citing a scheduling conflict, he declined an invitation to speak this month at the Conservative Political Action Conference, the country’s largest annual gathering of conservative activists.

    ”I’m a conservative and I’m a practicing one, not a talk-about-it one,” Bush said last year.

    In Florida, Bush slashed billions of dollars in taxes, toughened crime laws and revamped the state’s education system. But he has refused to sign the anti-tax pledge that many activists now consider sacrosanct. He has told Republicans the party needs to shed the perception that it’s ”anti-everything.”

    Allies and adversaries alike question whether Bush, a policy wonk who often talks about ”big, hairy, audacious goals,” could stomach the hyper-partisanship and gridlock in Washington.

    ”He’s accustomed to moving an agenda,” said Dan Gelber, a former state senator and Democratic leader who often tussled with Bush in Tallahassee, ”and I think he’s got to be wondering how he would do that.”

    {Jeb Bush is also former Governor of Texas state}

    {telegram}

  • Amnesty International Awards Cameroonian Gay Rights Lawyer

    Amnesty International Awards Cameroonian Gay Rights Lawyer

    {{A lawyer in Cameroon has been recognised for her work to promote gay rights in Africa with an award from Amnesty International.}}

    Alice Nkom has spent a decade defending people accused of practising homosexuality.

    Homosexual acts are illegal in Cameroon and carry a five-year prison term.

    Ms Nkom described the award, which she received from the German branch of Amnesty International in Berlin on Tuesday, as a “prize of hope”.

    “Being gay in Cameroon is like being in hell,” she told reporters.

    “Permanent jail, permanent harassment, permanent violence and discrimination. From your family to the workplace to everywhere.”

    The 69-year-old lawyer became the first black woman to be called to the bar in Cameroon in 1969.

    She vowed to continue her work despite being sent death threats and warnings from government officials that she could face imprisonment.

    The campaign for gay rights in Africa has been hit in recent weeks by a new law in Uganda which allows life imprisonment for acts of “aggravated homosexuality” and also criminalises the “promotion of homosexuality”.

    Africa remains the continent with the toughest anti-gay laws, with homosexual acts punishable by death in Mauritania and South Sudan and parts of Nigeria and Somalia.

    BBC

  • New £1 Coin Most Secure in the World

    New £1 Coin Most Secure in the World

    {{A new £1 coin, designed to be the “most secure in the world”, is set to be introduced in 2017.}}

    It comes amid concerns about the 30-year old coin’s vulnerability to counterfeiting, with an estimated 45 million forgeries in circulation.

    The new coin is based on the design of the old 3d (three penny) piece, or threepenny bit, a 12-sided coin in circulation between 1937 and 1971.

    A competition will be held to decide the image on one side of the coin.

    The Royal Mint, which believes 3% of existing £1 coins are fake, said the move would increase “public confidence” in the UK’s currency and reduce costs for banks and other businesses.

    {{‘Resilient £1 coin’}}

    The announcement comes as Chancellor George Osborne prepares to deliver his fifth Budget on Wednesday.

    He tweeted this picture of the £1 coin next to the Budget Box, captioned: “Today I will deliver a Budget for a resilient economy – starting with a resilient pound coin.”

    The current £1 coin was introduced in 1983 as part of the phasing out of the one pound note, which was withdrawn five years later.

    Of the 1.5 billion coins estimated to be in circulation, as many as two million counterfeit ones are removed every year.

    The government said the existing coin had been in existence longer than most others and its technology was no longer suitable to combat increasingly sophisticated counterfeiting techniques.

    The proposed new coin will be roughly the same size as the current one and will be based on the three pence piece that disappeared after decimalisation in the early 1970s.

    The new coin will be made in two colours and will incorporate state-of-the-art technology to ensure it can be authenticated at all points.

    While the Queen’s head will be on the obverse side of the coin, as it is on all legal tender in the UK, the Treasury has said there will be a public competition to decide the image on the other side.

    Government sources said the time was right to “retire” the existing £1 coin and using the threepenny bit as inspiration for its replacement was a “fitting tribute” to such an iconic design.

    “With advances in technology making high value coins like the £1 ever more vulnerable to counterfeiters, it’s vital that we keep several paces ahead of the criminals to maintain the integrity of our currency,” they said.

    Adam Lawrence, chief executive of the Royal Mint, which is based in Llantrisant, south Wales, said the process could change the way coins were made in the future.

    “It is our aim to identify and produce a pioneering new coin which helps to reduce the opportunities for counterfeiting, helping to boost public confidence in the UK’s currency in the process.”

    The Bank of England, which earlier this year announced banknotes would be made out of plastic rather than cotton from 2016, said the move would “enhance the security and integrity of the currency”.

    BBC

  • Somali Militants Kill AMISOM Troops

    Somali Militants Kill AMISOM Troops

    {{An al Shabaab suicide bomber rammed a car into the gates of a hotel used by African Union peacekeepers in central Somalia before gunmen sprayed the building with bullets, killing many, the al Qaeda-linked militant group and residents said.}}

    The night-time attack happened in Bulobarde, abandoned by al Shabaab last week as African troops advanced on the town in a new offensive aimed to flush the militants from the area. Bulobarde’s streets were mostly deserted on Tuesday.

    Local elder Hassan Nur said his nephew, the military commander of Hiran province, and a local government official were among the dead.

    “Most of the troops and civilians inside the hotel died or were wounded. We couldn’t count how many died because AU and Somali forces swarmed all over the place,” Nur told media.

    AMISOM, said it stood with “the fallen soldiers” but did not say how many had been killed. AMISOM launched this month a new push to drive al Shabaab from southern and central Somalia.

    The militants, who seek to impose their version of Islamic law, were driven out of bases in the capital more than two years ago, but have continued to control swathes of countryside and smaller towns, which they use as launchpads to carry out attacks at home and abroad.

    An al Shabaab spokesman said two gunmen sprayed the hotel with bullets immediately after the initial explosion, killing at least 32 soldiers. In the past, al Shabaab has often exaggerated death tolls while government officials have downplayed losses.

    Nur reported hearing a prolonged gun battle and later seeing the bodies of five militant fighters being dragged through a street early on Tuesday, indicating more rebels were involved in the raid. Other residents confirmed hearing sustained gunfire.

    Tuesday’s strike by al Shabaab followed an attack on Monday on a military convoy near the capital Mogadishu, which killed four Somali soldiers, according to an army captain.

    {agencies}

  • Migrants storm Africa’s Spanish Enclave

    Migrants storm Africa’s Spanish Enclave

    {{ More than 500 people forced their way into Spain’s North African enclave of Melilla on Tuesday, Spanish officials said, the largest number to storm the border in almost a decade as increasing naval patrols discourage entry by sea.}}

    Spain has two enclaves in Morocco, Ceuta and Melilla, and migrants from all over Africa regularly try to reach them, mostly by climbing the triple barriers that separate them from Morocco. Deaths and injuries are common.

    Making the most of dense fog to sneak up to the crossing and climb the high wire fence, a total of 1,100 people, according to Spanish figures, and about 600, according to Morocco, made a rush across the border throughout the night and morning.

    Nearly 300 were arrested and at least 28 were injured, the Moroccan Interior Ministry said.

    “There’s been a mass rush (which was) unfortunately violent, which has become the norm. On the Moroccan side they threw stones, sticks and other objects at the security forces,” Melilla governor Melilla, Abdelmalik El Barkani, told reporters.

    Twenty nine migrants were being treated by emergency services in Melilla, according to the Spanish government.

    Migrants, throwing sticks and stones, ignored warnings of security forces on the scene and injured five police officers by throwing stones, the Moroccan Interior Ministry said. In a dawn rush, about 120 migrants were arrested, including 28 who were injured and hospitalized in the Moroccan city of Nador, it said.

    {Would-be immigrants react from behind the fence of a temporary immigrant holding center after crossing the border from Morocco to Spain’s north African enclave of Melilla March 18, 2014.}

    wirestory

  • China to Buy 150 Airbus Passenger Jets worth $20Billion

    China to Buy 150 Airbus Passenger Jets worth $20Billion

    {{China is in talks to buy at least 150 Airbus passenger jets potentially worth $20 billion when Xi Jinping pays his first visit to Europe as president at the end of this month, people familiar with the matter said.}}

    In a broad-ranging deal that could help reset trade relations between China and Europe after a bumpy year, the deal could include an agreement to buy more A330 passenger jets in exchange for a deal to open Airbus’s second plant in the country.

    The “cabin completion” plant for A330s would bolster Airbus’s presence, five years after the opening of its first final assembly plant outside Europe in the Chinese port city of Tianjin, where local workers piece together complete A320 jets.

    The deal could also involve a decision to unfreeze the purchase of 27 A330s blocked by China during a recent row with the European Union over environmental policies.

    A package to be announced during French and German stages of the trip could also include some A320 and A350 aircraft, the people familiar with the matter said.

    However, the final outcome depends on negotiations that could continue up to the last minute.

    A spokesman for Airbus, a subsidiary of Airbus Group (AIR.PA), previously known as EADS, declined to comment. The people declined to be identified as they are not authorized to speak to the media due to the confidentiality of the matter.

    reuters

  • Hunger Strike Against Missing Malaysian Jet

    Hunger Strike Against Missing Malaysian Jet

    {{Relatives of the Chinese passengers on the missing Malaysia Airlines flight have threatened a hunger strike if the Malaysian authorities fail to provide more accurate information.}}

    Families vented their anger at a meeting with the airline in Beijing.

    Officials in Malaysia say they are trying to narrow the search area, which now covers about 2.24m square nautical miles (7.68m sq km).

    Flight MH370 went missing on 8 March with 239 people on board.

    Some 25 countries are involved in looking for the plane.

    A total of 153 Chinese nationals were on board the missing aircraft, which was flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

    China’s state media has been criticising the Malaysian operation.

    {{‘Political fight’}}

    Some Chinese relatives have said they believe the Malaysian authorities are holding information back and have demanded more clarity.

    After a meeting with officials from Malaysia Airlines on Tuesday, families held a vote on organising a hunger strike.

    “What we want is the truth,” said one woman.

    “Don’t let the passengers become the victims of a political fight.”

  • Mugabe Demands Pay Rise

    Mugabe Demands Pay Rise

    {{President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe is reported to be seeking pay rise next month.Mugabe’s Monthly salary is estimated at around £5,000.}}

    However, earlier this month, Mr. Mugabe is alleged to have spent £3 million on his daughter’s wedding.

    ‘I was talking to [Public Service Commission chairman] Mariyawanda Nzuwah who is close to Mr Chinamasa and he assured me that we would be paid. Even the President is also a worker – 1st of April don’t fool us,’ he said.

    He told public sector workers at a lunch event last week that he was told that pay increases would come into fruition next month, announced he said by finance minister Patrick Chinamasa, and warned the treasury against pulling an April Fool’s joke on him.

    President Mugabe has ruled Zimbabwe since leading the country to independence from Britain in 1980.