Egypt announces new oil discovery in Gulf of Suez, amid rising energy demands

An aerial view taken on March 27, 2021 from the porthole of a commercial plane shows stranded ships waiting in queue in the Gulf of Suez to cross the Suez Canal at its southern entrance near the Red Sea port city of Suez [MAHMOUD KHALED/AFP via Getty Images]
Egypt has made a new oil discovery in the Gulf of Suez region, giving it more energy reserves and drilling opportunities amid rising domestic and foreign demand. According to Egypt’s Petroleum Ministry today, the company, Cheiron, made the new oil discovery in the Geisum and Tawila West Concession in the Gulf of Suez through exploration well GNN-11. It is the fourth well to be completed in the area, with another three wells set to be drilled in order to continue the current exploration phase. The GNN field reportedly holds significant promise, with its total output reaching around 23,000 barrels per day, in comparison to the 4,000 barrels per day prior to the development of the field. Cheiron currently holds a 60 per cent working interest in the concession, with the Kuwait Foreign Petroleum Exploration Company (Kufpec) holding the remaining 40 per cent stake. According to Cheiron, the “new Nubia discovery confirms the exploration potential in the northern area of the concession”. It added that “the discovery also demonstrates that while the Gulf of Suez is a relatively mature hydrocarbon province, it still has significant remaining exploration potential.” The discovery comes at a time when Egypt has been seeking to boost its energy production and reserves, particularly the production of natural gas in order to meet the rising energy demands from the domestic front and for exports to Europe.Last year, the value of Egypt’s natural gas exports reached $8.4 billion, an increase of 171 per cent from the previous year. In December last year, Egypt also discovered a large gas field off its north-eastern Mediterranean coastline, possessing potential reserves of 3.5 trillion cubic feet of gas. Source: https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/
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Amazon unveils Fire TV

Amazon has revealed its much-anticipated TV streaming device – dubbed Amazon Fire TV – at an event in New York.The device has WiFi built in, and Amazon claims it has three times the performance and power of sector competitors AppleTV, Roku and Chromecast. It has 2 GB of RAM, which is designed to ensure applications and video will start more quickly. Amazon VP Peter Larson said the company wanted to “invent and simplify” as well as overcoming streaming performance issues with the device. “It’s tiny,incredibly powerful, and unbelievably simple,” he added. Users will be able to watch from Hulu, Netflix, YouTube, ESPN. Among launch partners, with more to come. “Tiny box, huge specs, tons of content, incredible price—people are going to love Fire TV,” said Jeff Bezos, Amazon.com Founder and CEO. “Voice search that actually works means no more typing on an alphabet grid. Our exclusive new ASAP feature predicts the shows you’ll want to watch and gets them ready to stream instantly. And our open approachjust  gives you not Amazon Instant Video and Prime Instant Video, but also Netflix, Hulu Plus, and more. On Fire TV you can watch Alpha House and House of Cards.” Fire TV is available immediately for $99. Eligible customers get a free 30-day trial of Netflix and Amazon Prime when they purchase Fire TV. Source: Article
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Retired life isn't so bad, Tendulkar assures Jacques Kallis


Sachin Tendulkar on Monday paid tribute to just-retired South African all-rounder Jacques Kallis, calling him a "true champion" who always played the game in the right spirit. Tendulkar, who called time on his own career in international cricket last month, tweeted: Kallis, one of the greatest all-rounders of the game, bid adieu to Test cricket after an illustrious 18-year career in a fairytale script as he hit a century in hisSubscribe.
swansong match in South Africa's 10-wicket thrashing of India in Durban. The script for Kallis' Test retirement could not have been better as he ended his career as the third highest run- getter in the longest format of the game, besides also bowing out with a win by his side. The 38-year-old 'King' Kallis ended his Test career on.13,289 runs from 166 Tests, only behind Tendulkar (15,921) and Ricky Ponting (13,378) in the all-time list. His batting average stood at an outstanding 55.37. He also took 292 wickets and 200 catches. His 45 tons in Test cricket is only second to Tendulkar's 51. Kallis will continue to play in the One-Dayers and he has so far scored 11,574 runs from 325 ODI matches and has taken 273 wickets at an average of 31.79. The burly South African made his Test debut against England in December 1995. Source: Hindustan TimesImage: https://upload.wikimedia.org/
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Cricketers And Their Exes

The batsman is famous for going aggro on the pitch, and apparently the same high voltage runs to his choice in women too: Virat was earlier rumored to be carrying on with sexy Brazilian model Isabella Leite and is these days spotted cozying up to Bollywood bombshell Anushka Sharma
Anushka Sharma kisses Virat Kohli?: Virat Kohli and actress Anushka Sharm: It seems something is cooking between "just friends" Virat Kohli and actress Anushka Sharma. If reports are to believed Virat stopped by at Anushka's residence to meet her before he left for South Africa. Quoting an eyewitness, a Mid-Day report says that around 10:45 pm, both, the cricketer and the actress left Anushka's place and stepped out of the lift on the second floor parking area of the building. Both were casually dressed and the actress gave him a quick kiss before he left in the car. Source: Times Of India
The 2011 World Cup Player of the Tournament and cancer survivor hasn't always been lucky in love. Yuvraj dated model and actress Kim Sharma for four years and they even came close to walking down the aisle together. The match wasn't to be and the couple parted ways. Kim went on to marry a Kenyan businessman of Indian origin. Yuvraj on the other hand has been paired with names like Deepika Padukone, who travelled to Sydney to cheer him on in a game and model Aanchal Kumar.
Zaheer Khan's relationship with dancer-actress Isha Sharvani was an on-again off-again affair for as many as eight years. The couple were constantly rumoured to have set a wedding date but finally called it quits for good in 2012. Distance was cited as the reason for the split. Isha had said at the time - "I don't want to talk about that... it is way too personal and something that should remain between two people. It is not right to wash dirty linen in public. We respect each other."
The match-fixing scandal and a subsequent ban from competitive cricket isn't the only thing that brought Azharuddin infamy. During his stint as India Captain, Azhar received flak from both the media and public when he divorced Naureen, his wife and the mother of his two sons, after falling in love with Sangeeta Bijlani. Bijlani, a model and small-time actress, was better known for being Salman Khan's ex. Her marriage to Azhar lasted 14 years before the couple separated in 2010. Azhar was then linked with badminton player Jwala Gutta and more recently Delhi-based American expat, Shannon Marie Talwar.
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Aussie speedster Brett Lee married Elizabeth Kemp in 2006. They have a son named Preston Charles, born the same year. However, after two years of marriage, in August 2008, Lee confirmed his separation from Kemp. They divorced in 2009. As soon as the split was announced, rumours emerged that Lee suspected his wife of having an affair with a rugby player whom she knew previously in Brisbane. This was later disputed, with extended periods of loneliness due to Lee's off-season commitments keeping him away from Kemp and his young son Preston given as the reason for the marriage breakdown.
No cricketer has had quite the kind of risqué love life as that of Shane Warne. The sheikh of tweak was married to Simon Callahan in 1995 and the couple divorced in 2006. In between there were three children and numerous sex scandals. Warne was accused of sending lewd text messages to a woman while on tour in South Africa. However, the woman who made the claims was subsequently charged with extortion. In 2000, he lost his Australian vice-captaincy after sending erotic text messages to a British nurse and in 2005 was dogged with allegations of further extramarital affair during The Ashes. In 2006, a tabloid published pictures of Warne standing in his underwear with a pair of 25-year-old models, as well as explicit text messages from Warne. In 2007, Warne and Callahan attempted to reconcile but the pair parted ways yet again after Warne accidentally sent a text message meant for another woman to his ex-wife's phone. Since 2010, Warne has been with English model and actress Elizabeth Hurley to whom he is now engaged.
Former Pakistan cricket captain, express fast bowler, current politician and quintessential ladies man. Imran Khan is often described by all of the above. The playboy cricketer settled down in 1995 with Jemima Goldsmith, a young heiress and the daughter of Lady Annabel and Sir James Goldsmith. Jemima even converted to Islam and moved to Pakistan to be with Imran, where they had two sons together. They divorced in 2004. At the time Imran stated that his political career had made it difficult for Jemima to adjust in Pakistan. Jemima later went on to date British actor Hugh Grant before ending the relationship in 2007. Khan on the other hand has steered away from any committed relationship.
Graeme Smith was made South Africa's cricket captain at the tender age of 22. The move made him hot property and he went on to date a string of girls. The relationship that garnered the most media attention was when he was courting the famous South Afican model Minki van der Westhuizen. Minki and Smith's partnership didn't last long enough and the Skipper is now married to Irish pop singer Morgan Deane. Minki meanwhile wed a businessman by the name of Constant Visser but that too didn't work out. She is now married to Rugby Player Ernst Joubert.
Jacques Kallis isn't considered to be the best all-rounder just for his batting and bowling skills alone. The South African legend has managed to attract more than his share of women and most of them have happened to be famous models. Kallis has been going steady with Sports Illustrated model Shamone Jardim for the past few years but prior to that he dated beauty queens Marisa Eggli and Cindy Nell. His liaison with Nell garnered much media attention and he was even engaged to the former Miss South Africa and Miss Universe runner-up. The love fizzled out and Nell is now expecting her second child with husband Clive Roberts.
If Kallis has a penchant for beauty queens then Sri Lanka's Sanath Jayasuriya hasn't hid his fascination for air hostesses. The 1996 World Cup star has been married thrice and all his wives have been flight attendants for Sri Lankan Airlines. Talk about having a type! Jayasuriya's marriage to first wife Sumudu Karunanayake lasted only 6 months. He then had a long-lasting union with Sandra De Silva with whom he has 3 children. In November 2012 he married Maleeka Sirisenage who has also forayed into acting. Let's hope that the Matara Mauler is third time lucky.
The cricket world's most famous split of recent years has to be that of Michael Clarke and Lara Bingle. Clarke was engaged to the Australian model and the high profile couple were almost always in the public eye . The pair broke up following the release of nude photo of Bingle during the Australian tour of New Zealand in March 2010. Clarke, then vice-captain, left the tour midway to return to Sydney and sort out 'personal issues'. Bingle gave a paid interview to a magazine and that was apparently the tipping point for the young Aussie. He ended his engagement and Bingle moved out of their plush Bondi beach home. In the process Clarke managed to resurrect his career and win back favour with Australian cricket administration. He was later appointed captain of Australia and has since married model and TV presenter Kyly Boldy.Source: Fun Duniya With Inputs.
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The Best Ever All Rounder, Kallis to retire after Durban Test

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Tribute To The Legends. (1) And the test cricketing world says goodbye to another legend,if not the greatest…Cheers Woogie! U will be missed, but gained 4 others!!! — mark boucher (@markb46) December 25, 2013 (2) And so after the boxing day test, come to end a test career of the#greatestcricketer the world has ever seen #certainlyinmyeyes #JHKallis— Alviro Petersen (@AlviroPetersen) December 25, 2013 (3) An amazin career from arguably South Africa’s greatest sportsman.Lookin forward to 1 last game in whites with this legend @jacqueskallis75— hashim amla (@amlahash) December 25, 2013 (4) Been an honour to share a changeroom with 1 of the gr8′s of the game,may we giv u the send off u thoroughly deserve @jacqueskallis75 #legend— JP Duminy (@jpduminy21) December 25, 2013 (5) It’s been emotional few days knowing JK retiring.all I can say what a privilege to have played with the great man!…..— Graeme Smith (@GraemeSmith49) December 25, 2013 (6) All the best with your last Test @jacqueskallis75 !!Get “Slaz Door” going for 1 big score to finish!!Going to miss you in whites #27 #38 #3— johan botha (@johan_botha) December 25, 2013 (7) Hopefully we can give him the send off he deserves over the next 5 days!gonna miss him immensely @jacqueskallis75 love you and grateful— Graeme Smith (@GraemeSmith49) December 25, 2013 (8) Jacques Kallis in international cricket: Runs: 25414 Wickets: 577 Catches: 335 #Legend— Mohandas Menon (@mohanstatsman) December 25, 2013 (9) Kallis=LEGEND. Congrats on a super contribution to the game and a wonderful career. @jacqueskallis75 All the very best!!— Mpumelelo Mbangwa (@mmbangwa) December 25, 2013 (10) Runs, wickets, catches…the Most Valuable Player ever calls it a day. #Kallis#legend— Aakash Chopra (@cricketaakash) December 25, 2013 (11) history will remember jacques kallis as one of the greatest to have played the game. the game is richer for him having played it. #kallis— Harsha Bhogle (@bhogleharsha) December 25, 2013 South African all-rounder Jacques Kallis to retire from Tests after India series: South Africa's legendary all-rounder Jacques Kallis will retire from Test cricket after the second Test against India starting  at Durban on Thursday. Kallis, 38, however, will be available for the shorter formats of the game. Commenting on his decision, the veteran of 165 Test matches said: "It's been an honour and a privilege to have been part of the South African Test team since making my debut 18 years ago. I have enjoyed every moment out in the middle but I just feel that the time is right to hang up my Test whites. "It wasn't an easy decision to come to, especially with Australia around the corner and the success this team is enjoying, but I feel that I have made my contribution in this format." Kallis made his Test debut as a young and humble 20 year-old, and finishes his Test career as one of the greatest cricketers to have played the game. His statistics speak volumes for the illustrious career - 13,174 runs, 292 wickets and 199 catches. "The last two years specifically have been a memorable journey with an exceptional group of cricketers," Kallis said. "I am fortunate enough to have ended my Test career amongst a group of talented cricketers but more importantly, friends whom I will cherish for years to come. "I don't see it as goodbye because I still have a lot of hunger  to push South Africa to that World Cup in 2015 if I am fit and performing. "Winning an IPL title with the Kolkata Knight Riders was a special achievement, and I am  still determined to taste that success with South Africa at an ICC event." Proteas coach, Russell Domingo, says the team will miss Kallis' presence in the dressing room. "The impact Jacques has made on South African cricket has been immense, not just as a player but as a human being. Im not sure we will ever see another player of that stature very soon. "Jacques' calmness, maturity and presence in the change room will sorely be missed and hopefully he will still be able to play a role in this team's success in the near future. "He has ambitions of playing in the 2015 World Cup and it will be important for us to manage him accordingly so that he is in prime form leading into the tournament." Cricket South Africa (CSA) CEO Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat commented: "Although we all knew the retirement of a great player like Jacques Kallis was going to happen sooner rather than later, his decision still comes as a blow when the reality dawns that South Africa's greatest ever player and arguably the world's best all-rounder, will be playing his last Test match in this last week of 2013." Source: Hindustan TimesImage: flickr.com
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Mandela one of the most monumental figures in politics, his name is inseparably linked to Africa's history - Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin has offered his condolences following the death of Nelson Mandela, South Africa's long-time leader and a prominent political figure, the Kremlin press service said. Mandela's name is inseparably linked with an entire epoch in Africa's modern history, which witnessed the victory over apartheid and the establishment of the Republic of South Africa as a democratic state, Putin said in his message. Despite the hardships, Mandela stayed true to the ideals of humanism and justice until the end of his life, the Russian president said. Putin once again applauded Mandela's role in promoting friendly relations between Russia and South Africa, which are strategic partners today. Putin's message is addressed to South African President Jacob Zuma and offers the words of sympathy and support to Mandela's family, the government and the people of South Africa. Voice of Russia. Source: Article
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2014 Brazil World Cup: 'Our group is the biggest surprise'

© Photo: Vesti.Ru
The eyes of the soccer fans are turned to Brazil - the world cup draw for the 2014 has just been held. 32 best teams have just found out the names of their opponents. The tournament kicks off in Brazil next year. Denis Kazansky, Russian sports analyst and soccer commentator, shares the first impressions about the draw. What's the biggest surprise of the draw so far? Our group is the biggest surprise because we hope it will be some easy choice for us and I think that we are in very good position. There is only one top quality team in our group. Who is us? Belgium, Algeria, South Korea and Russia. Belgium is a top quality team and I think they are the toughest to beat. But as for Algeria and South Korea, I suppose that Russian side can be good with them and I think we have lots of expectation from that group and we can gain some wins from there. How can you comment on the chances of the teams? In the group H I think we with the Belgium have to be qualified from the group. As for others, I can say that it is very tough competition in group D – Uruguay, Costa Rica, England and Italy, it will be very interesting - Italy and England. And as for group G, I think that the most important picture is Germany versus USA because the head coach of the USA Juergen Klinsmann is ex-coach of German national site and they will face each other - Joachim Low versus Klinsmann. So, it will be very interesting. I think that we don’t have so-called death group in this competition. What chance does America have to win it all? Zero because I think that the group G where USA is, Germany, Portugal, Ghana are too tough for them. They are very good but I think that Portugal and Germany could qualify from that group. As for USA I am not so sure about it. What about Russia? As I said, Russia has very good chances and I think along with Belgium National site we can qualify and be there in the playoff spot. England? It is tough to say but because of Italy, Uruguay and Costa Rica, I think they are open to beat and I think that England and Italy will qualify from that group. Source: Article
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Nobel Peace Prize: The Five Most Controversial Winners

If Vladimir Putin collects award today he'll be the latest in a long line of questionable winners
UPDATE: Since this story was published it has been announced that the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) has won the 2013 Nobel Peace Prize. IF VLADIMIR PUTIN wins the Nobel Peace today the decision will be hugely controversial. Then again, the $1.2m award - first handed out on 10 December, 1901 - is no stranger to controversy. The Russian president has been nominated by an advocacy group for his efforts to "maintain peace and tranquillity". The citation makes specific reference to Putin's efforts to dissuade the US from launching an attack on Syria in the aftermath of the 21 August chemical weapons attack on the Damascus suburbs. Critics of the Russian president are incredulous. They point out that the former KGB colonel has armed and aided the Bashar al-Assad Assad regime, says The Independent. They ask how the architect of a "ruthless and violent campaign" against separatists in Chechnya and Georgia, could possibly be considered as a candidate for the world's most prestigious peace prize. In reality, Putin is unlikely to win the prize today. The odds-on favourite is Malala Yousufzai, the 16-year-old Pakistani schoolgirl shot by the Taliban for speaking out about the education of young women. Yousufzai seems to be an unimpeachable candidate - she would join a long line of recipients who seek to achieve peace through human development, says Time. Here are five rather more controversial Nobel Peace Prize winners: Cordell Hull, 1945: Hull, a US politician, was given the prize for his role in establishing the
United Nations. He is a controversial winner, says Time, because of an incident in 1939 when he was President Roosevelt's Secretary of State. The President was amenable to helping 950 Jewish refugees aboard a ship called the SS St Louis settle in America. But Hull and a group of Democrats from the American South voiced "strong opposition", threatening to withdraw support for Roosevelt if he let the ship dock. The president buckled, the SS St Louis was turned around and many of its passengers became victims of the Holocaust. Henry Kissinger, 1973: When President Nixon's Secretary of State was handed
the prize in 1973, American satirist Tom Lehrer observed that political satire was dead. Kissinger was a joint winner of the prize alongside North Vietnamese leader Le Duc Tho. Both men had help broker a ceasefire in the Vietnam war, but Le Duc Tho turned the honour down saying peace had not yet been restored in South Vietnam. Kissinger accepted the award "with humility". Kissinger's critics point out that the US was still carpet-bombing Cambodia the year he picked up the prize. He's also been accused of war crimes, thanks, in part, to America's provision of arms and support to the South American dictators who carried out Operation Condor, an anti-communist campaign of repression and terror that claimed the lives of thousands of people. Yasser Arafat, 1994: One man's freedom fighter is another man's terrorist. Arafat,who led the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) for three decades, was handed the award alongside Israeli PM Yitzhak Rabin and his foreign minister Shimon Peres. The trio were cited for their work on the Oslo accords which created "opportunities for a new development toward fraternity in the Middle East". Supporters compared Arafat to Nelson Mandela, says Time. Opponents called him an "unrepentant terrorist with a long legacy of promoting violence". Wangari Maathai, 2004: The first African woman to win a Nobel
Peace prize died in 2011 at the age of 71. The New York Times describes her as an "environmentalist, feminist, politician, professor, rabble-rouser and human rights advocate" who created jobs for women and an organisation that planted trees across Kenya in a bid to fight erosion. The day before she was due to collect the peace prize in Stockholm, a story appeared in an African newspaper that claimed she had likened Aids to a "biological weapon" and told participants in an Aids workshop that the disease was "a tool" to control Africans "designed by some evil-minded scientists." Maathai confronted the storm of controversy by insisting her comments had been taken out of context. "I neither say nor believe that the virus was developed by white people or white powers in order to destroy the African people," she said in a statement released by the Nobel committee. "Such views are wicked and destructive." Barack Obama, 2009: Riding high on the goodwill sparked by his election victory the previous year, Obamawas a popular winner. At the time, America's first black president said he didn't deserve the award. Four years down the track, plenty of people seem to agree with him. In an article published by the Daily Beast last month, Kirsten Powers says it's time for Obama to give his Nobel Peace prize back. She cites his determination to attack Syria, with or without a UN Security Council resolution, as one reason; the escalation of a "pointless and failing" war in Afghanistan is another. But the main reason Obama should turn in his prize is his "five-year Middle East drone war" which has killed an estimated "500 to 800 innocents", writes Powers. For further concise, balanced comment and analysis on the week’s news, try The Week magazine. Subscribe today and get 6 issues completely free.Source: The Week UKSource: Image1-2-3-4-5
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Dole's 90-Year-Old CEO Offers to Take Company Private

Dole Food, one of the world's largest producers and marketers of fruit and fresh vegetables, received an unsolicited buyout offer from 90-year-old Chief Executive David Murdock, valuing the company at just over $1 billion. Dole shares jumped more than 21 percent to $12.40, well over the offer price of $12 per share, suggesting that some investors expect a higher bid for the company that has posted losses for the last three quarters. The proposed deal is the latest in a string of management-led acquisition bids, topped by Michael Dell's $24 billion offer to take over the computer giant he founded. "We see this proposed offer as an attractive transaction that is likely to proceed at or relatively close to this price level, especially given Murdock's strong ownership position, CEO role, and apparently strong personal liquidity position," Jonathan Feeney of Janney Capital markets said. Murdock, who is also Dole's chairman as well as its biggest shareholder with a 40 percent stake, returned as CEO in February after David DeLorenzo left to run two businesses sold by Dole to Japan's Itochu Corp. Murdock is a high school dropout who ran the company as CEO from 1985 until 2007. As chairman he took Dole Foods public in 2009. The nonagenarian has said he wants to live to be 125, pinning his hopes on a strict diet, daily exercise and a lifestyle free of pills or supplements, according to his Forbes profile. The bid comes after Dole sold its packaged foods and Asia fresh produce businesses to Itochu last year for $1.7 billion, paring its size by a third. The company is now left with its fruit and fresh vegetables business in North America and its fruit businesses in Latin America, Europe and Africa. Dole, like rival Chiquita Brands, has been struggling with volatile demand and low prices for bananas, its biggest-selling product. The company, which traces its roots to pineapple plantations set up in Hawaii in mid-1800s, said it would establish a special committee of independent directors to consider the proposal. The offer has an enterprise value of $1.5 billion, Murdock said in a statement on Tuesday. It represents a premium of about 18 percent to the stock's close on Monday. The company's shares were trading at $12.38 Tuesday morning on the New York Stock Exchange. Prior to the bid, the stock had fallen 32.7 percent since touching a life-high of $15.16 in September, when it struck the deal with Itochu. Murdock said Deutsche Bank would advise on the transaction and that he had received a "highly confident" letter from the lender on the financing for the deal. Source: cnbc.com, Publication date: 6/12/2013, Author: Ben Littler, Copyright: www.freshplaza.com. Source: Article
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Chinese economy dangerously overheating - expert


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China’s inflation accelerated more than expected in June, driven up by rising food prices. Simultaneously, China’s industrial sector has been plagued by deepening deflation in a sign that the world’s economic powerhouse continues to lose steam. Meanwhile, the IMF is cutting its global growth outlook to below 3.3% because of what it says is a marked slowdown in the top emerging economies. Earlier, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde made clear that the global growth forecast for this year would be scaled back. She said that the emerging economies were to blame. VoR discussed the isssue with Peter Ferdinand, Associate Professor of Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick.
Why are the Chinese leaders reluctant to loosen their monetary policy?:  They were actually quite generous in terms of flooding the economy with credit in the past year or two because they were afraid that the global turndown would severely impact the growth and for a while they did keep the Chinese economy going pretty quickly but the trouble is that I think that the People Bank of China and the Ministry of Finance become concerned about the extent of the credit that has been building up and in particular the debts that have been built up by local governments in China rather than the central government and so they are trying to scale that down a bit in case they have some Chinese equivalent of subprime crisis in the US and which spread to Europe in 2007-2008. Do you think the government will be able to control inflation and reverse the slowdown or it will it fail? I think that they will be able to slowdown the inflation rate but I am not sure that they are going to be able to revive the growth rate to a kind of level that we saw around 2005-2006 or even 2009. What they will have to do is to accommodate themselves to a somewhat slower growth rate. But by Will standards to have a growth rate of 6 or 7% is still pretty good. However, what the government is aware of is that if the growth rate tails off quite considerably and fewer people seem to be benefiting from the increase in the national economy, then there will be greater dissatisfaction that manifests itself in unpredictable ways. Are there any factors in the world economy that can change the situation in a way that the government’s task becomes easier? Since China has become such a big international exporter, clearly one of the things that has benefited China over the past decade or more has been the enormous expansion in exports to the developed world. The US of course has been barely growing over the past few years, Europe is now generally in a position of stagnation at best. So, the demand for Chinese goods in the developed world has rather tailed off. What China had hoped is that they might be able to compensate by exporting to other parts of the world and certainly you can see increased Chinese exports to Africa and especially to Asia as well but the demand that has got to be observed by that isn’t enough to compensate for the losses that have been sustained from the developed world and lessened until global growth goes up quite a lot. It is difficult to see how China is going to be able to get back to anything like the level that it had before. Many analysts believe that the Chinese economy is overheating. Do you agree with that? And what are the signs of overheating in general? Yes, I think it is overheating and partly it is shown in increase of the inflation rate and partly in the nervousness in the People’s Bank of China at the end of last month and the beginning of this month which stopped making funds available for Chinese banks to lend to each other on a short term basis because they were afraid that the inflation rate was going to escalate to a non-sustainable level. So, it is that kind of thing which is the sign of concern about this but it is true that the Chinese economy is still significantly managed by the state and so the actual figures may be rather more difficult to pin down than you might expect in a more transparent market economy. Investors around the world are worried over the worsening economic situation in China? Is it time to stop to invest in China? It depends whether investors think that there is going to be some significant improvement in the economy in the foreseeable, shorter than medium future. I doubt that people are going to stop investing in China because one of the potent attractions for them has been the potential size of the Chinese market with the population of 1.3 billion people even if there is quite a lot of quite poor people, but still a lot bigger middle class now than there was and so demand for goods is growing. But whether the foreign investors are going to be able to extract profits from that is something which depends upon their relationship with the Chinese state and in any case there are a lot of rather energetic, rather competitive Chinese companies that are now seeking to take more of the domestic market shares themselves. So, it is becoming a more competitive environment and I imagine that there is going to be a number of investors, so we think where previously they depended upon low wages as a pre-condition for low manufacturing costs, in China that is no longer so attractive. Wage costs are rising and so companies, foreign companies are certainly looking to other countries, especially in Asia as alternative places where they could set up new manufacturing facilities. What could be the point when you think the investors could go to those other countries you’ve just mentioned? It has already started. You can see the ripple effect spreading out to Vietnam, to Thailand, to some extent even to the Philippines, which didn’t use to be thought of as being an attractive source of foreign direct investment and also to Indonesia. So, a lot of that is happening already. I am not sure whether the markets in those countries are large enough to sustain the same kind of size of investment to the Chinese market offered in the past that would depend upon some kind of reduction in tariffs between, say, the states in South East Asia or in Pacific Asia as a whole as a way of stimulating international trade between them. But there are obviously investors too who are looking to other parts of the world as alternatives. Some of the costs for instance for exporters from China to the US as I understand it, have now risen to a point where it is cheaper for some foreign investors to invest in Mexico to satisfy the American market rather than to invest in China and the economics of international trade are changing quite rapidly where transport costs compensate for wage rises or relatively high wages that appears in other parts of the world. Source: Voice Of Russia
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Most missing persons don't get media spotlight

INDIANAPOLIS— The disappearance of Indiana University student Lauren Spierer has drawn extensive media attention, but that's the exception rather than the rule in missing persons cases. The Indianapolis Star reported Sunday that most of the hundreds of thousands who go missing each year vanish without a peep of publicity. Only a fraction are missing for more than a few days, but their cases compete for attention from the media and the public and the limited time of overworked police. The Star says relatives who want to find their loved ones often discover that what makes the news can depend on race, class and social status. For most missing persons' families, the void of attention makes their disappearance a private ordeal. "Some of these families just don't know the steps, and they face roadblocks when they try to get a response from the media," said Gaétane Borders, president of Peas in Their Pods, a group that tracks missing black children and adults. WTHR news director Keith Connors said the deciding factor in coverage of missing people is the amount of community interest and involvement. "In the Spierer case, we are talking about huge search parties, divers and a large amount of involvement by the community," said Connors, who assigned reporters to the story around the clock for two weeks after Spierer disappeared in downtown Bloomington. "It is the largest university in Indiana, and a lot of parents of a lot of kids down there wanted to know what's going on." Jonathan Rossing, an assistant professor at IUPUI, said connections, determination and organization help get media coverage. But he said there are other factors, too. "It has to be a compelling story," Rossing said. "There is a bias toward stories that are unexpected. Where the audience says, `How can that happen in my neighborhood?' A missing person of color from an impoverished area is not as exciting for a large portion of the audience to hear about, nor do they want to hear about it. "But it doesn't mean we are all racists, and saying only pretty white girls get coverage is simplistic," he said. "But it does mean we have a bias toward race and class and privilege." The family of 23-year-old Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis student Molly Dattilo launched a media blitz when she disappeared in 2004. She is still missing. "It is up to the family to keep pushing," said Keri Dattilo, 37, Molly's cousin. "You have to keep coming up with new ideas to keep it in the news, anything to get another story out and keep their face in the news." Neatrice Billingsly, whose son Jason Thomas Ellis went missing in Indianapolis in 2006 at the age of 20 amid a lack of coverage, said race and class have a lot to do with media coverage. "Unfortunately, people stigmatize each other according to where you are from, what you are and your nationality," said Billingsly, an African-American who lives in Gary. "It's just another black child missing a lot of the time." Source: American Crime
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Want to be a US diplomat? Got a million dollars? Call Obama

If it happened in Russia or any other country the U.S. Government and the western mass media would be screaming corruption, foul, nepotism, cronyism, bribes, and transparency! What I am talking about is the “selling” of top diplomatic posts by none other than the U.S. president. Although the U.S. does not “sell” such postings openly, “wink-wink,” two respected researches at the University of Pennsylvania have very carefully compiled a “price list” for diplomatic postings.
By John Robles: In their report titled: “What Price the Court of St. James’s? Political Influences on Ambassadorial Postings of the United States of America” the authors of the study, Johannes W. Fedderke and Dennis C. Jett, looked into the issues surrounding the appointment of career diplomats as opposed to political appointees to ambassadorial positions worldwide. Their conclusion is that the price for obtaining the juiciest postings, such as London U.K. or “The Court of St. James,” in terms of political “campaign” contributions is between a whopping $650,000 and a staggering $2.3 million. Other than the facts that selling diplomatic positions is an obvious act of cronyism and bribery is supposed to be illegal, the main problem here is that for the over 30% of such diplomatic postings held by current and past political appointees chosen in this manner, no experience was, nor is, necessary. That’s right. You don’t have to have had one day of diplomatic training to be the head of a US mission abroad, as long as you are a “political” appointee chosen by the president: which might explain a lot about people who are in such posts worldwide, including here. The American mass media has reported on the findings of the reports but are reporting it as if it just another normal occurrence and par-for-the-course rather than expressing outrage and calling for an investigation. According to most US mass media, this is pretty much normal and has been done by all “modern presidents before Obama”, this said the New York Times. In the report the authors state that they did not have access to all US Presidential Campaign contributions, but, and this is an important “but,” they did have access to the campaign contributions of all political appointees to diplomatic posts. It was on this data that they formed the basis for their findings. The authors stated that they could not formulate figures on over all correlations between contributions and postings, something which is worthy of further research due to this lack of “all” data. The researchers hypothesize that political campaign contributors and those who contribute “political” capital, in exchange for their support, demand a return on their investment. I think we can agree with them that it would be foolish to believe otherwise. For the individual, one such reward might be a diplomatic posting whereas for corporations for example, it might be legislation. The authors suggest the US State Department carry out oversight on the qualifications and training of such appointees, however this is unlikely to take place. As we also know many of these overseas posts are not only filled by political appointees but by CIA undercover operatives and the like as well. Something that career Foreign Service employees must find insulting and demeaning as well. According to the authors of the report the most sought after posts are in Western Europe and in the Caribbean and most of these are filled by presidential appointees. We could then assume that other postings, in countries of strategic or military interest, or “hot spots” if you will (such as Russia), are filled by CIA or other intelligence or military specialists, leaving those qualified, dedicated, trained and experienced foreign service personnel, who have worked most of their lives to obtain high level positions, to bake in places in Sub-Saharan Africa or South Asia or any other God-forsaken-hell-hole no one else would want to be posted in. Not to say certain places on Earth are hell holes, every place is wonderful in its own way, but there are places one might prefer over others. The authors argue that “standard models of rational institutional design posit that appointments to public administrative office should be on the basis of merit related to the deliverables associated with the post,” something that I am sure the American taxpayer would want as well, especially in places such as Moscow, where people have been posted who have had “no” diplomatic experience or training whatsoever. However Russia is not a location the authors would consider attractive. The report is very well laid out and the rationale behind the conclusion is very well thought out, researched and backed up with solid data and analysis. In conclusion the authors state that “… political appointees are more likely to obtain posts in high- income countries that are members of The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), that popular tourist destinations, are located in Western Europe, and that carry lower hardship allowances, than are career diplomats. We have also shown that the greater t he personal or bundled campaign contributions to a presidential campaign, the more lucrative the posting the contributor can expect in terms of per capita GDP, tourist volumes, hardship allowances, and the more likely the posting will be in Western Europe, and the less likely it will be in Central and South Asia or Sub- Saharan Africa. Finally, we have established an implicit price list for a range of ambassadorial postings. The price for the Court of St. James appears to lie between $650,000 and $2.3 million.” If this were to be said of any other country in the world the international outrage would be profound, but in America, hypocrisy is par-for-the-course and every office, including that of the President is for sale, if the price is right. The views and opinions expressed above are my own. I can be reached at robles@ruvr.ru. Source: Voice of Russia
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Football is more than a game

According to the International Federation of Football Associations, FIFA, the beautiful game of football is played by more than 250 million people in the world and almost 2 million clubs are registered officially. Today, December 10 is World Football Day. According to the International Federation of Football Associations, FIFA, the beautiful game of football is played by more than 250 million people in the world and almost 2 million clubs are registered officially.The fact that a majority of UN members are members of FIFA is evidence that football is indeed a global phenomenon. Perhaps the ancient Chinese, the Egyptians and the ancient Romans, believed to be the originators of football, or indeed the Englishmen who set down the rules of football in the middle of the 19th century probably couldn’t have thought that the game will one day become a global event. Today, television coverage of football matches is watched by several millions of lovers, and international football tournaments earn huge sums of money for the organizers.. Leading footballers earn millions of dollars, prompting millions of children in the world to dream about emulating the frontline players. Much has been written about the game of football, and writers of articles have been trying to find out the secret of the spherical object , which attracts people like a magnet. Football has long transcended just a form of sport, says Nikita Simonyan, a former legendary footballer and author of the book “Football-only a game?”. Football is both politics and art, and possibly the interaction of the peoples of the world, who are seeking to make friends. Perhaps that is why there is such uncompromising competition over the right to host World football championships, said Simonyan. Football has become a national ideology. When the Russian national team played well at the European competition, millions of people took to the streets to celebrate; they were proud to be Russians. No other sport has the power to unite people like the game of football, Simonyan says. Russia is hosting the 2018 World football championships; 16 new stadiums are to be constructed in 13 cities where matches are to be played. The championships will give a boost to the development of football in Russia, said Simonyan. “I look with optimism at the future of football in Russia”, he says. After getting the right to stage the World competition in 2018, we must train a new generation of players , and a new national team should now be selected, advises Simonyan. The coaches of the youth team should take note. They should look for latent talent players, who are morally strong and ready to defend the dignity and honour of the country, says Simonyan. Chiefs of the Russian Football Union have put before the players an ambitious task of winning the gold medal in 2018 on home soil. Source; Voice of Russia
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New Pope – Italian, African or Canadian?

On February 28, Benedict XVI, who was the 265th Pope of Rome, resigned. This is the first case within several centuries that a Pope leaves his post while he is alive. Now, the world is trying to guess who will be the next Pope.
Theoretically, any Roman Catholic, if he is a man and is not married, may become the Pope of Rome. However, within the last several centuries, only cardinals were elected popes. Who will be the next pope? Candidates review (PHOTO), Voice of Russia presents a biography review of the candidates:
Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson (born 11 October 1948) is a Ghanaian cardinal of the Catholic Church. He is the president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace since his appointment by Pope Benedict XVI on 24 October 2009. He had served as Archbishop of Cape Coast. He was elevated to the cardinalate by Pope John Paul II in 2003, and is widely regarded as papabile. Immediately following the announcement on 11 February 2013 of the impending resignation of Pope Benedict XVI, at least two bookmakers, Paddy Power and Ladbrokes, made Turkson the favourite to be elected as the new pope, with Paddy Power giving 2/1 odds. Turkson has also been mentioned in regards to St. Malachy's apocalyptic list Prophecy of the Popes, given that its final Pope is named Peter. Odds of 4/1 are given.
Marc Ouellet, PSS (born June 8, 1944) is a Canadian Cardinal of the Catholic Church. He is the present prefect of the Congregation for Bishops and concurrently president of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America since his appointment by Pope Benedict XVI on 30 June 2010. Previously, he was archbishop of Quebec and primate of Canada. He was elevated to the cardinalate by Pope John Paul II, on 21 October 2003. He is the present prefect of the Congregation for Bishops and president of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America since his appointment by Pope Benedict XVI on 30 June 2010. He succeeded Giovanni Battista Re, who had reached the age limit.
Francis Arinze (born 1 November 1932) is an Igbo Nigerian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He is Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, having served as prefect from 2002 to 2008. He is the current Cardinal Bishop of Velletri-Segni (succeeding Joseph Ratzinger, who became Pope Benedict XVI) since 2005. Arinze was one of the principal advisors to Pope John Paul II, and was considered papabile before the2005 papal conclave, which elected Benedict XVI.
Tarcisio Pietro Evasio Bertone, S.D.B. (born 2 December 1934) is an Italian prelate and a Vatican diplomat. A cardinal of the Catholic Church, he currently serves as Cardinal Secretary of State and Camerlengo, having previously served as Archbishop of Vercelli from 1991 to 1995, as Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, when Cardinal Ratzinger, the future Pope Benedict XVI, was Prefect, and Archbishop of Genoa from 2002 to 2006. Bertone was elevated to the cardinalate in 2003. On 10 May 2008, he was named Cardinal-Bishop of Frascati. Besides his native Italian, Bertone speaks fluent French, Spanish, German and Portuguese. He has some knowledge of English, although he is not fluent, and he can read Polish, Latin, Greek and Hebrew.
Angelo Scola (born 7 November 1941) is an Italian Cardinal of the Catholic Church, philosopher and theologian. He was appointed Archbishop of Milan by Pope Benedict XVI on 28 June 2011. He had served as Patriarch of Venice since 2002. He was elevated to the cardinalate in 2003. He is considered a contender to succeed Pope Benedict XVI, who has announced his resignation effective 28 February 2013
João Braz de Aviz (born 24 April 1947) is the current prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life since his appointment by Pope Benedict XVI on 4 January 2011. On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI announced that he will resign on 28 February 2013. Braz de Aviz is cited as one of the Papabili or potential popes. Voice of Russia, Wikipedia: At present, there are more than 200 cardinals in the entire Roman Catholic Church, and it is very hard to guess who of them will be elected the next pontiff. However, quite a few people find it very likely that the next Pope will be an Italian. Before the two last Popes, Pole John Paul II and German Benedict XVI, the papal throne had been occupied by Italians within many years, and now, Italian clergymen will probably try to revive this tradition, some people suppose. In an interview with the Voice of Russia, Executive Director of the Franciscan publishing house in Moscow Igor Baranov said: “It is very likely that the next Pope will be an Italian. The new Pope will be elected from a conclave of 117 cardinals. Out of them, 60 are Europeans, and out of these 60, the majority are Italians.” “One of the candidates who has good chances to win the elections is Angelo Scola, the 71-year-old archbishop of Milan,” Igor Baranov continues. “His Eminence Angelo has large experience in establishing public relations between the Church, on the one side, and politicians and journalists, on the other. Besides, Angelo Scola has initiated, and now heads, an organization that is trying to establish closer relations between Christians and Muslims. I believe that the decision to create such an organization was very timely.” The Voice of Russia has also interviewed Krzysztof Tomasik from the Polish Catholic Information Agency, and he said: “It is hard to predict with a 100% certainty who will be the next Pope. However, many of my colleague journalists say that if they had the right to vote, they would have voted for Milan’s Cardinal Angelo Scola. But there is also a big chance that the new Pope will be a non-European.” The next Pope may even be an African. There are two cardinals from Africa among the candidates, who, as experts say, have good chances to be elected - Francis Arinze from Nigeria and Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson from Ghana. “Both Cardinal Arinze and Cardinal Turkson are very worthy people,” Igor Baranov says. “At present, the number of Roman Catholics in Africa is rapidly growing. Meanwhile, in Europe, the number of Catholics is decreasing, and in the US and Latin America, it is staying at the same level.” Another non-European who is often mentioned among the candidates with good chances to win is the 68-year-old Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet, who is the prefect of the Congregation for Bishops. His Eminence Marc has a reputation of a traditionalist. For example, he is radically against abortions. At the same time, Cardinal Ouellet believes that the old ban for Roman Catholic clergymen to be married should be abolished. Russian Orthodox priests, of course, have no right to vote for or against a new Pope of Rome or give any orders to Roman Catholics. However, they have the right to say whom they would prefer to see as the new head of the Roman Catholic Church. Archpriest Dmitry Sizonenko from the Russian Patriarch’s Office says: “There are many friends of Russia among the current candidates for the papal throne – for example, Italian Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, who knows Russian culture and Russian Christian traditions very well and loves them. His Eminence Gianfranco has met several times with Metropolitan Illarion, who is responsible in the Russian Church for ties with other Christian denominations. If Gianfranco Ravasi becomes the Pope of Rome, this would be very beneficial for the relations between the Russian Church and the Roman Catholic Church.”Source: Voice of Russia
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Murder suspect, Oscar Pistorius, granted bail

The blade runner was granted bail by a South African court this afternoon after a judge ruled he was not a flight risk. He will be free to go home until the start of his trial for shooting dead girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp on Thursday February 14th. His bail was set at one million rand, with one hundred thousand rand paid immediately. He's also not allowed to drink alcohol or return to the home were he killed Reeva. Bail conditions include a ban on leaving Pretoria. The next hearing in the case has been set for 4 June. Source: Linda-Ikeji
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Oscar Pistorius charged with girlfriend's shooting murder

SOUTH AFRICA'S Paralympic champion Oscar Pistorius has been arrested and charged with murder after allegedly shooting dead his girlfriend, fashion model Reeva Steenkamp. Earlier reports suggested the 26-year-old athlete may have mistaken the 30-year-old for an intruder when she sprang a Valentine's Day surprise on him at his home in a gated-community in Eastern Pretoria. But police have said they are "treating the incident as murder" and are "surprised" by the intruder theory, which did not come from them. Police spokeswoman Denise Beukes confirmed that Pistorius and Steenkamp were the only people in the house at the time of the shooting. She said neighbours had reported "shouting and screaming" coming from the residence earlier in the evening and revealed there had been previous incidents at the address including "allegations of a domestic nature". Pistorius, who is nicknamed the 'Blade Runner' because of the high-tech prosthetics he uses for competitive running, has been arrested and taken to a hospital for a medical examination, Sky News reports. He is expected to appear in a Pretoria court today. Beukes said the double-amputee, who holds 200 and  400 metre world Paralympic records, was being treated like "anyone else". "He will be bringing a bail application and we will be opposing bail," said Beukes, adding that there were no other suspects in the case. The Guardian understands that Steenkamp was shot four times. Earlier in the day, the South African model who had been dating Pistorius since November, tweeted about her hopes for Valentine's Day writing: "What do you have up your sleeve for your love tomorrow???" In one of her last tweets she told a follower who was making a card for her husband: "That sounds amazing! Wow that's what it's all about! It should be a day of love for everyone." In an interview with South African newspaper The Sunday Times, Steenkamp, a law graduate from Port Elizabeth, described Pistorius as "an impeccable man" who always had "her best interests at heart". News of Pistorius's arrest sent shockwaves through the international sporting community, with many atheletes taking to Twitter to express their shock. Britain's Paralympic 100 metre gold medallist, Jonnie Peacock, simply said: "Can not believe it." Source: The Week UK
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US aviation watchdog orders review of Boeing 787s

The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has ordered a review of electrical systems in Boeing's new 787 Dreamliner in the wake of a series of incidents such as a battery fire involving a Japanese airline earlier this week in Boston. A year after the FAA completed evaluation of the technologically advanced aircraft, the authority today said it would now review on the 787's design, manufacturing and assembly to examine critical electrical systems as well as other quality-control issues. ''We are concerned about recent events involving the Boeing 787,'' Ray LaHood, the transportation secretary, told a press conference in Washington. ''We will look for the root causes of the recent events and do everything we can to ensure these events don't happen again.'' FAA administrator Michael P Huerta said the review would focus on the electrical systems of the airplane, including the batteries and power distribution systems. The news comes after airlines eager to fly an airplane that promises significant fuel savings waited for years and have now started operating the aircraft. Boeing has delivered 50 of the airplanes since November 2011 and eight airlines, including All Nippon Airways and Japan Airlines, Air India, Ethiopian Airlines, Chile's LAN Airlines, Poland's LOT, Qatar Airways and United Airlines, are flying the 787s. This week's incidents involving battery and electrical connections comes on top of last month's inspection of the 787's fuel lines by FAA and has given rise to doubts that a combination of electrical and fuel line faults could cause serious problems. In December, the FAA ordered inspection of fuel line connectors on all 787s, warning of a risk of fuel leaks and fires. That coincided with the failure of one of the six electric generators of a United Airlines 787, forcing it to divert the Houston to Newark flight to New Orleans at mid-night. FAA said the review would not require the grounding of the 787 fleet. In a statement released today, Boeing expressed confidence in the design and performance of the 787. ''It is a safe and efficient airplane that brings tremendous value to our customers and an improved flying experience to their passengers. ''The airplane has logged 50,000 hours of flight and there are more than 150 flights occurring daily. Its in-service performance is on par with the industry's best-ever introduction into service – the Boeing 777. Like the 777, at 15 months of service, we are seeing the 787's fleet wide dispatch reliability well above 90 per cent,'' the company said. Boeing said the 787 completed the most robust and rigorous certification process in the history of the FAA over a year ago. ''We remain fully confident in the airplane's design and production system. Regular reviews of program and technical progress are an important part of the validation and oversight process that has created today's safe and efficient air transportation system. However, Boeing said: ''While the 787's reliability is on par with the best in class, we have experienced in-service issues in recent months and we are never satisfied while there is room for improvement. For that reason, today we jointly announced with the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) the start of a review of the 787's recent issues and critical systems.'' ''Just as we are confident in the airplane, we are equally confident in the regulatory process that has been applied to the 787 since its design inception. With this airplane, the FAA conducted its most robust certification process ever. We expect that this review will complement that effort,'' it added. Source: Domain-B
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Ten Schools Funded By Madonna To Open In Malawi

Madonna is celebrating after learning 10 schools she funded in Malawi are set to open at the start of the New Year. The Material Girl has been a major supporter of the poverty-stricken country, where she adopted her children David and Mercy, and in 2006 she founded Raising Malawi to provide aid to the African nation's growing population of orphans. Earlier this year Madonna's organisation announced a plan to build a handful of primary schools, which would serve over 4,000 children, and now builders have completed the facilities six months ahead of schedule, with all 10 slated to be up and running by the end of the holiday break. The pop star says, "I am overjoyed that my commitment along with (pro-literacy foundation) buildOn's to help educate the children of Malawi has come to fruition. In a country where girls have little opportunity for education, it's additionally inspiring to know that more than half the students attending will be young girls. "The fact that more than 4,800 children in Malawi will get to go to school next year is a tremendous step forward for their individual growth and the growth of Malawi."Source: Starpulse.com
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Dozens sickened with mystery virus after paying $350 for exclusive African safari at Disney World

Dozens of tourists who shelled out hundreds of dollars for an exclusive African safari at Walt Disney World were sickened with a debilitating stomach virus that left them vomiting for days. Health officials in Orlando, Florida, are working to track down the source of the mysterious bug, but they have not been able to determine what has made so many people ill. The tourists were on the 'Wild Africa Trek,' a VIP tour of Disney's Animal Kingdom wildlife park that allows VIP guests to see hippopotamuses, crocodiles and other exotic animals up close as they sample food from Africa. Disney has responded to the outbreak by making sure its employees are washing their hands more often and giving the tour a 'deep clean' -- scrubbing down any surfaces guests are likely to touch. The park is also encouraging them to wash their hands and use hand sanitizer, the Orlando Sentinel reports. The Wild Africa Trek is a pricy tour Disney added 18 months ago to give some guests the opportunity to have a more personalized view of the Animal Kingdom. Source; The Coming Crisis
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Bodycare, targets Rs 200 cr turnover in 2-3 years

Bodycare International, India’s largest manufacturer of intimate apparels for men, women and children recently forayed into infant wear with the launch of ‘Bodycare First’. Targeting a turnover of Rs 200 crores in the next two to three years, the brand also launched a new thermal campaign emphasizing the use of ‘quilt knit technology’. “The campaign is to reach out to millions of existing and potential consumers across the world and India,” says Mithun Gupta, Director, Marketing, Bodycare International. The company will soon kick off its print and electronic ads and promotional activities in-store branding along with outdoor campaigns. The campaign targeted at modern men, women and children successfully brings thermal wear out of the closet and makes it a trendy, stylish affair. Breaking away from the predictable category of being a mere necessity, the ad goes a step further by introducing Bodycare Insider as the new uber cool winter wear. It stems from concept that thermal wear need not essentially be bland or boring. Their new launch for this winter is a collection in flattering styles, designs and colors in fine fabrics, sitting pretty under a polo neck jumper or a sweater. Infusing the classic line of thermal clothing with contemporary and stylish designs, the new collection is filled with ingenuity and truly personifies warmth. Having used the pioneering Quilt Knit Technology, Bodycare Thermals are designed to trap air, lock the cold out and transfer heat into the clothing. Going beyond the bulk and bland designs usually associated with thermals, new Bodycare thermal collection becomes the new uber cool winter wear, adding a dash of glamour to the monotonous winter wear. The product line showcases almost 40 styles in both basic and premium range. Poised to be a perfect winter solution for the complete family, the products are available in soft, fine, smooth, stretchable and comfortable fabric, exclusive style, designs and colors ranging from off white to darker tones. Having consolidated its position in the domestic market, Bodycare has also established a strong foothold in places like UAE, Russia, Africa et al. Founded in 1992, Bodycare is a well-recognized brand in inner wear. As Gupta says, “Bodycare today has become synonymous with providing contemporary, stylish products to fashion savvy customer who also values money and aspires for quality products. With an extremely professional and well managed system, it has for years, served its valuable clients with a wide and extensive distribution network. Currently, the company has presence in over 10,000 MBOs across the country.” The infant wear collection is an ingenious blend of soft pastels, mesmerizing designs and vibrant hues. The fashionable line, comprising of regular inner wear and fashion outer wear captures the spirit of childhood and sweet bonhomie of early years. The new line includes a complete range of basic and hi-fashion apparels for newborns to two years old. Commenting on the expectation from forthcoming winter season, Gupta says, “We are expecting reasonable bookings and sales. It needs to be done in a strategic and manageable manner. We expect a better season than last year.”Source: Fashion United
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