Tag: InternationalNews

  • Janet Jackson Marries Again

    {{Janet Jackson has moved to quash rumours that she is about to marry her Qatari billionaire boyfriend – by revealing that their nuptials happened last year.}}

    The 46-year-old singer became engaged and then married to businessman Wissam Al Mana, 37, but kept the news under wraps.

    Jackson, the younger sister of the late Michael Jackson, said in a statement: “Last year we were married in a quiet, private, and beautiful ceremony.”

    She gave no details of where or exactly when the wedding took place.
    The couple told the US TV show Entertainment Tonight: “The rumours regarding an extravagant wedding are simply not true.

    “Our wedding gifts to one another were contributions to our respective favourite children’s charities.”

    It is a third marriage for the American singer who is known for keeping her private life from the media, rarely speaking about her ex-husbands.

    She married soul singer James DeBarge in 1984, and the marriage was annulled a year later.

    Her 1991 marriage to music video director Rene Elizondo ended in divorce in 2000.

    Jackson’s revelation about her marriage comes days after her 16-year-old nephew, Prince Michael, carried out his first assignment as an Entertainment Tonight special correspondent.

    Michael Jackson’s son interviewed director Sam Raimi about his new film Oz The Great And Powerful which comes out in March.

    SKY News

  • MC Hammer Arrested in Northern California

    MC Hammer was arrested in Northern California on Thursday for allegedly obstructing an officer.

    The rapper made the arrest known on Saturday with a series of tweets suggesting that he was a victim of racial profiling.

    Hammer (who was born Stanley Kirk Burrell) was reportedly sitting in a car outside a shopping center in Dublin, a city east of Oakland, when he was approached by a police officer.

    “Chubby elvis looking dude was tapping on my car window, I rolled down the window and he said ‘Are you on parole or probation?’” Hammer recounted on Twitter.

    “While I was handing him my ID he reached in my car and tried to pull me out the car but forgot he was on a steady donut diet…. It was comical to me until he pulled out his guns, blew his whistle and yelled for help (MallCop) !!!

    But make no mistake he’s dangerous …. only thing more dangerous than a scared man with a gun, is a scared man with an agenda, a gun and a badge. I was citied for obstruction smh.”

    According to the Dublin Police, Hammer was in a vehicle with expired registration, and he was not the registered owner.

    “After asking Hammer who the registered owner was he became very argumentative and refused to answer the officer’s questions,” police spokesman Herb Walters said.

    Hammer was arrested on suspicion of resisting an officer and obstructing an officer in the performance of his duties; he was booked and released on bail from Santa Rita Jail, with a court date set for next month.

    Hammer concluded his tweeted account of the incident by describing it as a “teachable moment” and an “eye opener.”

    “I will now answer his question,” he wrote. “contrary to his personal beliefs, all people of color are not on parole or probation fat boy!!!”

    {MC Hammer in Action}

    wirestory

  • Qatari Poet Life Sentence Reduced to 15 years

    {{A Qatari poet sentenced to life in prison for inciting the overthrow of the government and insulting Qatar’s rulers has had his jail term cut.}}

    Mohammed al-Ajami’s sentence was reduced to 15 years, his lawyer said.

    The Supreme Court is due to make a final ruling on his sentence within the next 30 days.

    Human rights groups have condemned Mr Ajami’s conviction, saying his trial was marred by irregularities, with court sessions held in secret.

    The case against Mr Ajami is said to be based on a poem he wrote in 2010 which criticised the Emir, Sheikh Hamad al-Thani.

    But activists believe the authorities were angered by a 2011 poem he wrote about authoritarian rule in the region.

    In the poem Tunisian Jasmine, which he recited and then uploaded to the internet in January 2011, Mr Ajami expressed his support for the uprising in the North African state, saying: “We are all Tunisia in the face of the repressive elite.”

    He also denounced “all Arab governments” as “indiscriminate thieves”.

    read more…http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-21572072

  • India to Launch 7 Satellites into Space

    {{India is set to put into orbit seven satellites in a single mission, the country’s space agency says.}}

    They include a satellite built in collaboration with France which will study the world’s oceans.

    It will carry two climate tools developed for analysing ocean current and sea surface heights by the French space agency CNES, reports say.

    The satellites will be launched from Sriharikota in southern Andhra Pradesh state later on Monday.

    The six other satellites include two each from Canada and Austria and one each from Denmark and Britain.

    This is the 23rd mission for India’s Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) – a seven-storey-high, 230 tonne rocket.

    A rehearsal launch from Sriharikota island has been “completed satisfactorily”.

    India plans up to 10 space missions this year and announced plans for an unmanned voyage to Mars.

    In 2008 India successfully launched 10 satellites in a single mission, boosting its capabilities in space.

    The PSLV rocket has so far successfully launched over 50 satellites in space.

    Correspondents say India is emerging as a major player in the multi-billion dollar space market.

    BBC

  • Daniel Day-Lewis makes Hollywood History

    {{Daniel Day-Lewis has made Oscars history by becoming the first person to win the best actor prize three times.}}

    The British-born star, who had been the runaway favourite, was rewarded for his role in Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln.

    “I really don’t know how any of this happened. I do know I’ve received much more than my fair share of good fortune in my life,” he said.

    Ben Affleck’s Iran-set rescue thriller Argo beat Lincoln to the top prize for best picture.

    In a live broadcast from the White House, First Lady Michelle Obama joined Jack Nicholson to help present the best picture prize at the end of the night.

    Argo, directed by and starring Affleck, is the first best picture winner not to have also been nominated for best director since 1989’s Driving Miss Daisy.

    Oscars host Seth MacFarlane joked at the start of the ceremony: “Argo’s story is so top-secret that its director remains unknown to the Academy.”

    Accepting his award alongside fellow producers George Clooney and Grant Heslov, Affleck paid tribute to the “genius” Steven Spielberg, who lost out in the same category.

    Referring to his previous Oscar success with 1997’s Good Will Hunting, he said: “I never thought I would be back here and I am because of so many of you who are here tonight.

    “It doesn’t matter how you get knocked down in life, all that matters is that you get up.”

    Daniel Day-Lewis, who holds UK-Irish citizenship, previously won best actor for My Left Foot (in 1990) and There Will Be Blood (2008) and has a reputation for immersing himself in his roles.

    This year’s victory puts Day-Lewis ahead of Hollywood legends Jack Nicholson, Marlon Brando, Dustin Hoffman and Tom Hanks – who all have two best actor wins to their names.

    readmore….http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-21570004

  • S.Korea’s President Demands North to Drop Nuclear Plans

    {{South Korea’s new president Park Geun-hye urged North Korea on Monday to abandon its nuclear ambitions, and to stop wasting its scarce resources on arms, less than two weeks after the country carried out its third nuclear test.}}

    In her inauguration speech, the country’s first female president, also called on South Koreans to help revive the nation’s export-dependent economy whose trade is threatened by neighbouring Japan’s weak yen policy.

    Park, the 61-year-old daughter of South Korea’s former military ruler Park Chung-hee, met with the father of North Korea’s current ruler in 2002 and offered the impoverished and isolated neighbour aid and trade if it abandoned its nuclear programme.

    “I urge North Korea to abandon its nuclear ambitions without delay and embark on the path to peace and shared development,” Park said after being inaugurated on Monday.

    Park, usually an austere and demure figure in her public appearances, wore an olive-drab military style jacket and lavender scarf on Monday and smiled broadly and waved enthusiastically as a 70,000 strong crowd cheered her.

    Rap sensation Psy was one of the warm up acts on an early spring day outside the country’s parliament and performed his “Gagnam Style” hit, but without some of the raunchier actions.

    Park’s tough stance was supported by the partisan and largely older crowd at her inauguration.

    “I have trust in her as the first female president … She has to be more aggressive on North Korea,” said Jeong Byung-ok, 44, who was at the ceremony with her four-year-old daughter.

  • Iran says it has Downed Foreign Spy Drone

    {{Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have brought down a foreign surveillance drone during a military exercise, the official Islamic Republic News Agency said on Saturday.}}

    “We have managed to bring down a drone of the enemy. This has happened before in our country,” the agency quoted war games spokesman General Hamid Sarkheli as saying in Kerman, southeast Iran, where the military exercise is taking place.

    The agency gave no details on who the drone belonged to.

    In Washington, a Pentagon spokesman said he had seen the reports. He noted that the Iranians did not specifically claim that the drone was American.

    In the past, there have been incidents of Iran claiming to have seized U.S. drones.

    In early January Iranian media said Iran had captured two miniature U.S.-made surveillance drones over the past 17 months.

    Several drone incidents over the past year or so have highlighted tension in the Gulf as Iran and the United States flex their military capabilities in a standoff over Iran’s disputed nuclear programme.

    Iran said in January that lightweight RQ11 Raven drones were brought down by Iranian air defence units in separate incidents in August 2011 and November 2012.

  • Russias Ruling Party in Wave of Resignations

    {{The resignation of senior United Russia lawmaker Vladimir Pekhtin following accusations from opposition leader Alexei Navalny that he owned undeclared property in the U.S. triggered speculation that more lawmakers would quit their seats, throwing the ruling party into crisis.}}

    Pundits said Thursday that with lawmakers facing an increasing barrage of incriminating evidence from opposition activists, the Kremlin would try to clean up United Russia — before reputational damage could affect the country’s top leadership.

    On Friday the Duma will consider a resignation claim from United Russia Deputy Anatoly Lomakin, who announced his decision to leave the Duma a few hours after Pekhtin’s speech.

    Lomakin may become the fourth United Russia deputy to recently quit the Duma after Pekhtin, Vasily Tolstopytov, who quit Tuesday, and Alexei Knyshov, who left in October.

    “Sooner or later the Kremlin will have to do away with United Russia because it has turned into a burden,” said Yury Korgunyuk, an analyst with the INDEM think tank. “It used to be an instrument of control, and now it’s an instrument of discreditation and shame and the Kremlin understands that,” he said.

    Federation Council Vice Speaker Svetlana Orlova said Thursday that Pekhtin’s resignation symbolized a policy of self-clarification of the ruling party.

    “President Vladimir Putin is gradually implementing the goals that he stated during his campaign. The recent events and criminal cases on embezzlement in the Defense Ministry, as well as a number of other high-profile corruption cases, demonstrate the authorities’ tough position on this issue,” she told Interfax.

    Orlova added that the resignation was a systemic work not a single-step attack. She did not exclude that such a policy would reach the Federation Council. The Kremlin is ready to oust everyone who could discredit it, she said.

    A Just Russia party leader Sergei Mironov told Interfax on Wednesday that the current Duma would set a record for the number of deputies resigning.

    Alexei Navalny said in an interview with Moskovsky Komsomolets on Thursday that he possessed information about three more Duma deputies who had undeclared property abroad, one of whom was not a United Russia member.

    He also also said lots of people volunteered to find such information.

    Two of them are apparently Vladislav Tretyak, who has property in Miami, and Andrei Isayev, who owns property in Germany.

    Isayev, though, told RIA-Novosti that he had no intention to leave the Duma.

    Vedomosti reported on Thursday, citing a source in the presidential administration, that six United Russia deputies may resign on the same grounds that Pekhtin did.

    Meanwhile, the mysterious blogger Doctor Z, who gave Navalny the purported evidence on Pekhtin, disclosed his true identity: Andrei Zayakin, a Russian-born physics professor at Spain’s Universidade de Santiago de Compostela.

    Maria Lipman, an expert within the Carnegie Moscow Center, said by phone that more people would be involved in the activity of finding information on deputies who violate law.

    “There is a growing excitement among ordinary people to expose Duma deputies,” she said.

    Speculation has swirled that Kremlin discontent with United Russia may be a sign that in the future a new ruling party may be formed.

    “There is no sign that United Russia has become pertinent in the political environment, and its leader Dmitry Medvedev in no way shows participation in its work, as well as Putin himself,” Lipman said.

    Vyacheslav Lysakov, a Duma deputy and member of the Putin-created All-Russia People’s Front, said by phone that Putin had earlier announced that the question of making a party from the Front was not on the agenda.

    “We have not still registered as a civil movement,” he said. “This issue will be decided at our meeting in June. That is why we’re now choosing the leader and forming committees.”

    Duma Deputy Dmitry Gudkov, a member of A Just Russia, told Gazeta.ru that Pekhtin’s resignation might signal the beginning of a split in the ruling elite.

    “Inside of United Russia there are people who feel an advantage to ratting out someone — for example, the All-Russia People’s Front, which can be strengthened if United Russia weakens,” Gudkov said.

    The prospect of party members leaving the Duma also fueled speculation that this could give more weight to the All-Russia People’s Front while weakening United Russia.

    The Front was created by Putin two years ago amid sagging support for the ruling party, whose leadership he subsequently handed over to Medvedev.

    The Front enabled Putin-loyalists to enter the parliament on United Russia’s ticket in the December 2011 Duma elections without joining the party. The 238-strong United Russia faction currently contains 82 People’s Front members.

    Vladimir Gutenyov, a senior Front figure and Duma deputy, said Thursday that the movement would use the situation to boost its presence in the parliament.

    “Now we have a serious opportunity to increase the number of our supporters in the Duma,” Gutenyov told reporters.

    He said that Pekhtin could be replaced by Nikolai Kalistratov, a former director of the Sevmash nuclear submarine plant.

    Kalistratov was fired by then-President Medvedev in 2011 amid criticism that the military-industrial complex was not working efficiently.

    Gutenyov, who is first deputy head of the Duma’s Industry Committee, was speaking at the sidelines of a meeting of the All-Russia Machinery Union, a powerful industrial lobby headed by Putin ally Sergei Chemezov.

    Kalistratov currently heads the Federal Arctic University’s Arkhangelsk branch, which was the Arctic region that Pekhtin represented in the Duma.

    Chemezov told Thursday’s meeting that bringing more Machinery Union members into regional and federal assemblies remained a No. 1 priority. “Our central task is to work within lawmaking bodies,” he said.

    With Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin and Deputy Defense Minister Dmitry Borisov among its allies, the All-Russia Machinery Union is seen as the most powerful part of the People’s Front, which consists of some 50 public organizations.

  • U.S. Nuclear Waste Tanks ‘Leaking’

    {{Six underground storage tanks at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation along the Columbia River in the US state of Washington have been found to be leaking radioactive waste, but there is no immediate risk to human health, state and federal officials said.}}

    “There is no immediate or near-term health risk associated with these newly discovered leaks, which are more than five miles (8km) from the Columbia River,” Governor Jay Inslee said in a statement released by his office on Saturday.

    “But nonetheless this is disturbing news for all Washingtonians,” he added.

    The seeping waste adds to decades of soil contamination caused by leaking storage tanks at Hanford in the past and threatens to further taint groundwater below the site but poses no near-term danger of polluting the Columbia River, officials said.

    “This certainly raises serious questions about the integrity of all 149 single-shell tanks with radioactive liquid and sludge at Hanford,” Inslee said.

    wirestory

  • Italy Votes

    {{Italians have begun voting in general elections seen as crucial for the country’s effort to tackle its economic problems, as well as for the eurozone.}}

    Estimates published before a ban on polls two weeks ago gave a lead to Pier Luigi Bersani’s centre-left alliance.

    It was thought to be a few points ahead of the centre-right bloc led by ex-Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

    On Saturday, Mr Berlusconi gave a TV interview – in what his opponents said was a breach of the campaigning ban.

    However, Mr Berlusconi’s office later said the interview had been granted only with the explicit agreement that it would be broadcast after polls close on Monday.

    A centrist coalition led by outgoing Prime Minister Mario Monti is also running in the election, held on Sunday and Monday.

    And opinion polls suggested there would be a strong turnout for popular comedian Beppe Grillo’s anti-establishment movement.

    The election was called two months ahead of schedule, after Mr Berlusconi’s party withdrew its support for Mr Monti’s technocratic government.

    BBC