Tag: InternationalNews

  • Ukraine Sex Strike Against Russian Men

    Ukraine Sex Strike Against Russian Men

    {{A group of Ukrainian women have given recent sanctions against Russia a new twist, selling T-shirts with the slogan: “Don’t give it to a Russian,” in a call for refusing sex to Russian men.}}

    The campaign, organized by Ukrainian television and business news journalists, takes its cue from other sex strikes throughout history, and has inspired a range of interpretations – not all sexual – since it launched last week.

    “Each of our activists, who agreed to have their pictures taken in the patriotic T-shirt, had her own meaning in mind: Don’t give Crimea to a Russian, don’t give your land to a Russian occupation, don’t give money to a Russian, or don’t let Russians win,” a statement on the campaign’s Facebook page said.

    “Sex, funny as this may sound, was the last thing to occur,” the organizers said. “What will you have in mind when you wear this T-shirt?”

    The black-and-white T-shirt features an image of folded hand palms – as if in prayer or, according to some interpretations, as a symbolic representation of a vagina – and a line from a 1838 poem entitled “Kateryna” by Ukrainian national poet Taras Shevchenko: “Fall in love, dark-browed maiden, but not with the Moskals [Russians].”

    The organizers hope the call for celibacy in the name of peace will not inspire Ukrainian women alone.

    “Russian women, would you like to join us? Our [men] are still at home, but yours are already at war,” they said.

    Urging followers to “fight the enemy in any way,” the Facebook page cited various sex strike campaigns from past eras, including one featured in the Greek playwright Aristophanes’ anti-war comedy “Lysistrata.”

    The women in the play refused sex to their husbands to dissuade them from fighting in the Peloponnesian War and to secure peace.

    In more recent and real-life examples, women in Liberia staged a sex strike in 2003 and succeeded in establishing peace in the country after a 14-year civil war.

    In 2006 in Colombia, the wives and girlfriends of gang members started an action called “the strike of crossed legs” to stop gang violence that had killed more than 450 people in the region.

    Similar strikes also took place in Italy, the Philippines, Togo and Kenya.

    Since Russia moved in to annex Crimea early this month, other calls for boycotts have appeared in Ukraine.

    A Twitter user posted a photograph of a billboard on a highway between Kiev and Odessa, saying: “Don’t buy from the occupant! Boycott Russian goods.”

    The sex-strike campaign went viral on Russian social networks in a matter of days, with some commentators expressing support for the women, but most denouncing them.

    Nationalist online magazine “Sputnik and Pogrom” on its Facebook page called the women prostitutes, in an accusation that seemed reminiscent of an old Russian joke about two men discussing a woman who had refused sex to , and then end up calling her a prostitute for turning them down.

    The T-shirts sell for 250 hryvnia ($23), with the proceeds reportedly going toward supporting the Ukrainian army.

    The Ukrainian Defense Ministry recently set up a hotline asking for 5-hryvnia donations, and nearly 10 million hryvnia had been raised by mid-March, according to the ministry website.

    {Two Ukrainian women pose with the ‘Don’t Give it To a Russian’ campaign’s T-shirts.}
    {themoscowtimes}

  • Madonna To Direct Her Third Film

    Madonna To Direct Her Third Film

    {{Madonna is to direct her third film, an adaptation of Rebecca Walker’s debut novel Ade: A Love Story.}}

    It tells the story of an American student who falls in love with a young Muslim man on an idyllic island off the coast of Kenya before the clash of cultures complicates the relationship.

    Walker, daughter of The Color Purple author Alice, will co-produce the film.

    Madonna, whose previous films were WE and Filth and Wisdom, called the book “an incredible journey” last year.

    After it was published in October, the pop star posted a photo of the book cover and the message: “Read this book! An incredible journey! A beautiful LOVE story!”

    The romance will be co-produced by Bruce Cohen, who produced Silver Linings Playbook and American Beauty.

    Madonna and the producers are now searching for a screenwriter to adapt the book, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

    Madonna’s last film was WE, about the relationship between Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson, which opened to several one-star reviews in the UK in 2011.

    The Hollywood Reporter said WE grossed a relatively low $583,000 at the US box office. It failed to make the top 10 in the UK.

    Since WE, Madonna has concentrated on her music career, with a number one album MDNA and huge world tour. She was named the world’s top-earning celebrity by Forbes in 2013.

    The 55-year-old trumped the likes of Oprah Winfrey and Steven Spielberg to make an estimated $125m from a combination of music, clothing and her fragrance lines.

    The magazine said it was Madonna’s highest annual earnings since it began tracking earnings in 1999.

    {madonna sings on stage}

    {wirestory}

  • Europe Starts Mars Site Selection

    Europe Starts Mars Site Selection

    {{The European Space Agency (Esa) has published the “longlist” of eight sites it is considering as a destination for the ExoMars rover.}}

    The 300kg vehicle will be put on the surface of the Red Planet in January 2019 to search for evidence of past or present life.

    It should operate for at least seven months and will carry a drill to probe up to 2m underground.

    The sites are generally clustered in a relatively tight zone close to the equator. They are: Hypanis Vallis, Simud Vallis, Mawrth, Oxia Planum (x2), Coogoon Valles, Oxia Palus and Southern Isidis.

    The ExoMars Landing Site Selection Working Group is meeting now in Madrid to begin the process of downselection.

    The teams that proposed these locations will make their case during the Spanish gathering (two, virtually identical proposals were received for Mawrth).

    It is hoped to have a shortlist of no more than four locations in June or July. These will then be intensively studied, calling on new high-resolution pictures and mineralogical data acquired by satellites in orbit at Mars.

    A final decision is likely to be announced in 2017. This will probably take the form of a first choice and a back-up.

    We’ve been talking about ExoMars for a long time. The project has had several ups and downs, but it is now moving positively in the right direction.

    The venture is a joint undertaking with the Russians, who, as well as providing the launch rocket in May 2018, and some of the instrumentation, will also build the landing system.

    This will see the rover enter the Martian atmosphere in 2019 in a protective shell, deploying parachutes and retro-rockets to reduce the descent velocity.

    The robotic vehicle will arrive at the surface on a legged lander, driving down a ramp to begin its grand traverse.

    Everything hinges on a safe touchdown, of course. However, scientifically, it’s vital ExoMars goes to the right place.

    I have used two maps on this page to help explain how the final decision will be made.

  • Liverpool 2-1 Sunderland

    Liverpool 2-1 Sunderland

    {{Liverpool continued their Premier League title charge, overcoming Sunderland after suffering a scare.}}

    With the Reds thwarted early on, Santiago Vergini was fortunate to stay on the pitch after fouling Luis Suarez.

    But Steven Gerrard drew the full reward from the free-kick, finding the top corner from 23 yards.

    Daniel Sturridge curled in his 20th league goal but, after Ki Sung-Yueng’s header, the hosts held on to move above Manchester City into second place.

    The Merseyside team, who are chasing their first top-flight title since 1990, earned their seventh consecutive win and are now just a point behind leaders Chelsea, who they welcome to Anfield on 27 April.

    They also host Tottenham and City before then and, though those teams may ask more questions than Gus Poyet’s struggling side, it was still a well-earned victory against a team which had more of an attacking threat after going two goals behind.

    The Black Cats are mired in the relegation zone, three points from safety, so were expected to be cautious.

    But once they introduced substitutes Ki and Adam Johnson, they caused some nervy moments among the Anfield crowd with John O’Shea missing the target with a header from six yards out late on.

    Poyet’s decision to play three centre-backs largely paid off in the first half as Sturridge and Luis Suarez were denied the time and space that has allowed them to be so prolific this season.

    Both strikers hit efforts over the bar but, crucially, Sunderland’s defence in numbers stopped them breaking on the counter-attack.

    The Liverpool supporters, who had escorted the team bus on its way into Anfield, were subdued but sparked to life when Philippe Coutinho dispossessed Lee Cattermole in midfield. He played in Suarez, who was brought down by Vergini 25 yards from goal.

    With the Uruguayan striker seemingly clean through, the incident looked like it merited a red card for the Sunderland defender but referee Kevin Friend opted for yellow.

    BBCsport

  • Ukraine Gas Price Hiked  to 50%

    Ukraine Gas Price Hiked to 50%

    {{Ukraine’s interim government says it will raise gas prices for domestic consumers by 50% in an effort to secure an International Monetary Fund (IMF) aid package.}}

    An official at Ukraine’s Naftogaz state energy company said the price rise would take effect on 1 May, and further rises would be scheduled until 2018.

    Ukrainians are accustomed to buying gas at heavily subsidised rates.

    But the IMF has made subsidy reform a condition of its deal.

    Ukraine currently buys more than half of its natural gas from Russia’s Gazprom, and then sells it on to consumers at below market prices.

    Yury Kolbushkin, budget and planning director at Naftogaz, told reporters that gas prices for district heating companies would also rise by 40% from 1 July.

    IMF negotiators are still in Kiev to negotiate a package of measures worth billions of dollars to help Ukraine’s interim government plug its budget deficit and meet foreign loan repayments.

    {{Deal expected}}

    The IMF is also asking Ukraine to crack down on corruption and end central bank support for the Ukrainian currency.

    On Tuesday, Ukraine’s finance minister Olexander Shlapak said the country was seeking $15-20bn from the IMF.

    The Financial Times has reported that a rescue package worth about $15bn is close to being agreed, and could be announced as early as Thursday.

    An agreement with the IMF is necessary to unlock further financial support from the EU and US.

    {agencies}

  • 3 Venezuelan Generals Arrested for Plotting Coup

    3 Venezuelan Generals Arrested for Plotting Coup

    {{Venezuelan officials arrested three air force generals ‘in contact with the opposition’ on charges of plotting a coup, President Nicolas Maduro said on Tuesday.}}

    Maduro told a meeting of South American foreign ministers that the three generals, who were not identified, “were trying to rise up against the legitimately constituted government.”

    “This group that was captured has direct links with sectors of the opposition and they were saying that this week was the decisive week,” Maduro said.

    He said the generals had already been summoned before a court martial, adding that the plot was discovered because other officers had come forward to say they were being recruited.

    Maduro has routinely accused opponents of plotting a coup like the one that briefly ousted his predecessor, former president Hugo Chavez, in 2002. He has rarely given details and few arrests have been reported.

    His latest disclosure comes amid a broadening government crackdown against Maduro’s opponents after weeks of street protests that have left at least 34 dead.

    On Monday, National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello announced that a prominent opposition deputy, Maria Corina Machado, had lost her seat and parliamentary immunity, and could be arrested at any moment.

    At a news conference in Lima, a defiant Machado said she would return to Caracas on Wednesday, adding she feared she would be arrested on her arrival.

    She said she was returning “because I am a Venezuelan deputy and I will enter Venezuela as such to continue fighting in the streets without rest until we achieve democracy and freedom.”

    Machado angered the government by going before the Organization of American States last week as a guest of Panama to discuss the crisis in Venezuela.

    Panama’s representative to the OAS, Arturo Vallarino, said the move to take away Machado’s seat was “proof of the arbitrary acts being committed in Venezuela.”

    Last week, two opposition mayors were also arrested, and another prominent opposition leader has been in jailed for a month, accused of inciting violence.

    france24

  • North Korea Fires Missiles into Sea of Japan

    North Korea Fires Missiles into Sea of Japan

    {{North Korea test-fired two medium-range missiles on Wednesday as US President Barack Obama hosted talks with Japan and South Korea, pledging “unwavering commitment” to Tokyo and Seoul in the face of Pyongyang’s nuclear threat.}}

    A US State Department statement said officials were closely coordinating with allies and partners, including in the UN Security Council, “to take the appropriate measures in response” to the test, which it said was a violation of UNSC resolutions and represented “a troubling and provocative escalation”.

    South Korea’s defence ministry said both ballistic missiles flew 650 kilometres (400 miles) into the Sea of Japan, upping the ante after a series of shorter-range launches by Pyongyang in recent weeks.

    Defence ministry spokesman Kim Min-Seok said the speed and range suggested they were Rodong-class missiles with a maximum range of between 1,000-1,500 kilometres.

    “This missile is capable of hitting not only most of Japan but also Russia and China. So it is a fairly dangerous missile,” Kim said, adding that the missiles appeared to have been fired from mobile launchers near the capital.

    ‘Attention seeking’

    UN Security Council resolutions prohibit North Korea from conducting any ballistic missile tests.

    North Korea last tested a Rodong missile, also known as Nodong, in July 2009, following UN condemnation of its second nuclear test in May of the same year.

    Kim said the tests were clearly timed to coincide with the summit in The Hague between Obama, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and South Korean President Park Geun-Hye.

    “The North is boasting its military capability to grab the attention of the international community,” Kim said.

    Japanese media quoted a foreign ministry official saying on Tuesday that despite the tests, upcoming talks between Tokyo and Pyongyang over North Korea’s nuclear and missile programmes would go ahead.

    Separately, Japanese media reported that Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida told a parliamentary committee that the Japanese government had protested against the missile launches through its embassy in Beijing.

    agencies

  • 3 Secrete Service Agents Dropped from Obama Security

    3 Secrete Service Agents Dropped from Obama Security

    {{Three Secret Service agents have been removed from US President Barack Obama’s security detail after reportedly going out for a night of drinking in Amsterdam.}}

    Secret Service spokesman Brian Leary confirmed on Tuesday that the three had been sent back to the United States for disciplinary reasons, but declined to give any further details.

    The agents were removed from their detail after going out for a night of drinking, according to the Washington Post. One of the agents was found passed out drunk in a hotel hallway a day before the president arrived in Europe, the Post reported, citing three people familiar with the incident.

    None of the agents were supervisors, a Secret Service source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    The incident comes despite the agency’s efforts to restore its reputation after a scandal in 2012 involving prostitutes in Cartagena, Colombia.

    A report by the US Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general released in December urged tougher management and disciplinary standards, recommending that the Secret Service monitor and address excessive alcohol consumption and personal conduct within its workforce.

    The agency was also urged to strengthen and clarify its policies for dealing with misconduct and disciplining employees.

    Following the scandal in Colombia, Obama appointed Julia Pierson as the Secret Service’s first woman director in March 2013.

    {agencies}

  • Brazil’s anti-spy Internet Bill Clears Lower House Vote

    Brazil’s anti-spy Internet Bill Clears Lower House Vote

    {{Brazil’s lower chamber of Congress approved groundbreaking legislation on Tuesday aimed at guaranteeing equal access to the Internet and protecting the privacy of its users in the wake of U.S. spying revelations.}}

    To ensure passage of the bill, the government had to drop a contentious provision that would have forced global Internet companies to store data on Brazilian servers inside the country.

    The rule was added last year to proposed Internet governance legislation after revelations that the U.S. National Security Agency had spied on the personal communications of Brazilians, including those of President Dilma Rousseff.

    Instead, the bill says companies such as Google Inc and Facebook Inc are subject to Brazilian laws and courts in cases involving information on Brazilians, even if the data is stored on servers abroad.

    The government refused to drop another a key provision on net neutrality that was opposed by telecom companies because it bars them from charging higher prices for different content, such as video streaming and voice services such as Skype.

    The legislation dubbed Brazil’s “Internet Constitution” protects freedom of expression and sets limits to the gathering and use of metadata about Internet users.

    Experts, such as World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee, have praised the bill for balancing the rights and duties of individuals, governments and corporations, while ensuring the Internet continues to be an open and decentralized network.

    Following the spying revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, including allegations that the NSA secretly collected data stored on servers by Internet companies such as Google and Yahoo Inc, Brazil sought to force them to store data on Brazilian servers in the country.

    Internet companies complained that would push up their costs and create barriers to the free flow of information.

    reuters

  • Facebook to Buy Oculus for $2 billion

    Facebook to Buy Oculus for $2 billion

    {{Facebook Inc will acquire two-year-old Oculus VR Inc, a maker of virtual-reality glasses for gaming, for $2 billion, buying its way into the fast-growing wearable devices arena with its first-ever hardware deal.}}

    The acquisition, which comes hot on the heels of its $19 billion deal for messaging service WhatsApp, marks a big bet by Facebook to anticipate the next shift in an evolving technology industry, at a time when consumers are increasingly abandoning their PCs for smartphones.

    The world’s largest social network was deemed late to recognize the shift to mobile devices and the company’s revenue has only recently begun to recover from the late start.

    Many in the industry believe that wearable devices could represent the next big platform shift. Google Inc has been testing Google Glass, a stamp-sized electronic screen mounted to a pair of eyeglasses for several years. Last week, it introduced an effort to develop computerized wristwatches.

    On Tuesday, Facebook said virtual-reality technology could emerge as the next social and communications platform.

    “The history of our industry is that every 10 or 15 years there’s a new major computing platform, whether it’s the PC, the Web or now mobile,” Facebook co-founder and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said in a conference call with analysts and media on Tuesday to discuss the acquisition.

    “We’re making a long-term bet that immersive, virtual and augmented reality will become a part of people’s daily life,” the 29-year-old Zuckerberg said, noting that wearing the Oculus goggles was “different than anything I’ve ever experienced in my life.”

    Zuckerberg said Facebook was not interested in becoming a hardware company and did not intend to try to make a profit from sales of the devices over the long term. Instead, he said Facebook’s software and services would continue to serve as the company’s underlying business, potentially generating revenue on Oculus devices through everything from advertising to sales of virtual goods.

    While Oculus will operate as an independent company, Zuckerberg stressed that Facebook’s plans for Oculus extended well beyond games.

    “Imagine enjoying a court side seat at a game, studying in a classroom of students and teachers all over the world or consulting with a doctor face-to-face – just by putting on goggles in your home,” he said.

    In addition to game makers, Oculus has garnered some interest from developers keen on creating apps in areas like architecture, automobiles, marketing and education, the company has said.

    Shares of Facebook, which have risen 25 percent in the past six months, were down nearly 1 percent at $64.36 in late trading on Tuesday.

    Facebook’s recent spate of acquisitions is somewhat concerning, RBC Capital Markets analyst Mark Mahaney wrote in a note to investors on Tuesday. But he said that for a company of Facebook’s size, the deal did not seem “irrational.”

    “The question this time is whether Facebook is too early or simply betting on the wrong platform. This won’t be known for some time. But if it gets the platform right, we’re relatively confident that Facebook will develop an effective monetization strategy for it, thus boosting its overall financial growth,” Mahaney said.

    {reuters}