Face masks should be worn in shops, says PM

Prime Minister Boris Johnson gives an elbow bump greeting as he visits headquarters of the London Ambulance Service NHS Trust, amid the spread of the coronavirus disease, in London yesterday.

Guardian News And Media/London: Boris Johnson has urged the public in England to wear masks in shops as “extra insurance” against the coronavirus, and hinted the government could be poised to make them mandatory.
Downing Street has also hinted that guidance encouraging employees to work from home where possible is under review, after Johnson suggested workers could return if effective protective measures were in place.
The prime minister said evidence “has been growing” on the effectiveness of wearing masks in public spaces, after coming under pressure to make the wearing of face coverings mandatory in England in line with the more stringent guidance in Scotland.
“The scientific evidence of face coverings, and the importance of stopping aerosol droplets; that’s been growing,” Johnson said. “So I do think that in shops it is very important to wear a face covering.”
He added: “Face coverings are an extra insurance we can all use to stop it coming back, and stop it getting out of control again.”
Asked specifically whether face coverings would be made mandatory in shops in England, as they already are on public transport, he said the government was considering what “tools of enforcement” would be used to increase compliance.
Johnson was photographed wearing a face covering for the first time on Friday, coinciding with an information campaign from the government to nudge people to wear masks in shops.
No 10 denied the government was lagging behind other countries in responding swiftly to new evidence on mask wearing. “We’ve always said we’ll keep it under review and so have the experts who advise the government,” Johnson’s spokesman said, pointing to new evidence on aerosol transmission.
The government had come under pressure to clarify the rules.
The prime minister had hinted on Friday of a stricter regime, but the cabinet office minister, Michael Gove, said on Sunday he thought masks should not be mandatory. “I don’t think mandatory, no, but I would encourage people to wear a face mask, where they are inside, in an environment where they are likely to be mixing with others and the ventilation may not be as good as it might,” Gove said. “It is basic good manners, courtesy and consideration to wear a face mask if, for example, you’re in a shop.”Source:https://www.gulf-times.comP
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Kate Moss: The model, millionaire, mother and muse


It's been 26 years since the skinny girl from south London was 'discovered' at JFK airport, but Kate Moss, who celebrated her 40th birthday this year, is still at the top of her game. Here's a look at how the millionaire supermodel became a one-off, and acquired a rockin'-cool image as well as the status of contemporary muse along the way.
16 January, 12:31 The British supermodel greeted the landmark birthday in typically rocking style by posing as a bunny girl for Playboy magazine in black stilettos and rabbit ears. She riled a few feminists but it was hard to deny that while the years may be rushing by, she's still got it. Moss has recently fronted campaigns by Versace and Rimmel and although catwalk appearances are now rare, barely a month goes by where her image is not on the front pages. Top earner: The Londoner is the fourth highest-paid model in the world, according to Forbes, earning $5.7 million, (4.2 million euros) between June 2012 and June 2013. Behind the cameras, Moss has a busy few months coming up as she makes her debut as contributing fashion editor at British Vogue, and in April launches an eagerly anticipated new collaboration with high-street fashion powerhouse Topshop. Mystique: Moss is everywhere, but her reticence to speak to the media means she remains something of a mystery -- the result of a strategy recommended by ex-boyfriend Johnny Depp. "He told me 'never complain, never explain'," she wrote in her 2012 book, Kate: The Kate Moss Book. "That's why I don't use Twitter and things like that. I don't want people to know what is true all the time and that's what keeps the mystery." This unknown element has only fuelled the curiosity, along with the rock'n'roll lifestyle -- Moss used to date tortured Libertines frontman Pete Doherty, and is currently married to Jamie Hince, guitarist for The Kills. She is rumoured to be planning an epic birthday party on Necker Island, tycoon Richard Branson's private retreat in the Caribbean -- possibly with a Playboy theme. Moss's birthday has been marked by a London exhibition of pictures taken from photographs throughout her career, and a biopic on French television, Looking for Kate. Her story: Moss is not just a clothes horse but also a muse, inspiring the painter Lucian Freud, sculptor Marc Quinn and designer John Galliano, who she famously supported through his fall-out with Dior. The daughter of a barmaid and a travel agent from Croydon, a famously drab suburb of south London,Moss has always lived on the edge of scandal. Early in her career, after she was spotted aged 14 at New York's JFK airport, the pale faced young model became the face of 1990s "heroin chic", a fashion trend blamed for glamorising drugs and anorexia. Moss was accused again of being a bad role model in 2009 when she quipped that "nothing feels as good as skinny feels". In 2005, she lost several major contracts after a video emerged apparently showing Moss taking cocaine, although she soon won them back. Every few years, a model comes along who is touted as the new Kate Moss, currently Cara Delevingne. But many believe there will never be a new Kate. At least, perhaps, until Moss' 11-year-old daughter Lila Grace or another member of her family comes of age -- her half-sister Lottie, 16, recently signed up to the same modelling agency, Storm. (AFP, VoR). Source: Voice Of Russia - UK EditionImage: flickr.com
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Burberry, Topshop and Tom Ford most tweeted LFW designers

Burberry tops LFW Twitter chart
Burberry has topped a list of the most tweeted designers at London Fashion Week, according to an analysis by Hotwire PR, which examined the key trends driving conversation around the shows. The study found that Burberry’s collection racked up more than 16,000 tweets on Monday, and around 22,000 in total, which was aided by the fashion label’s use of fashion technology as they teamed up with Twitter this season to trial its click-to-buy button. Coming in second was Topshop, with 9,108 tweets in total, under half of what Burberry received. However, the retailer did create a buzz before the show ever started with more than 7,600 tweets being posted about its SS15 collection before the models hit the catwalk, making it one of the most anticipated shows at this season’s fashion week. In third place was Tom Ford, closely followed by Marchesa and Julien MacDonald took fifth spot. The rest of the top 10 included Vivienne Westwood, Erdem, Temperley London, and Mary Katrantzou. There was also room for House of Holland, who secured ninth spot with 2,096 tweets, after partnering with virtual fitting room firm Metail to give fashion fans the ability to ‘try on’ clothes as soon as they appeared on the catwalk. Hunter who had Twitter in its sights with its partnership with Grabyo to tweet video clips in real-time, could only amass 1,700 tweets in total, making it the thirteenth most tweeted designer overall. Emma Hazan, deputy managing director at Hotwire PR, said: “For the first time, fashion week was more high tech than high fashion, with designers embracing the latest innovations on and off the catwalk. While many technologies are already being rolled out in-store and online, our research shows the huge potential that innovation in retail has to excite and entertain shoppers.“Fashion retailers must now follow suit, as technology plays an increasingly important role in influencing and enabling consumer purchases.” Hotwire conducted its research using its proprietary Listening Post tool to monitor tweets referencing the #LFW hashtag and the designer’s Twitter handle or brand name, from September 1-16. Image: Burberry Twitter, Source: Fashion United
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How London lost its financial crown to New York

NEW YORK has overtaken London as the world's leading financial centre for the first time since 2007, according to the influential Global Financial Centres Index. 
The Big Apple's lead is small, reports the FT. However, it reflects the fact that the City's reputation has been undermined by several problems, said Mark Yeandle of Z/Yen Group, which compiled the index. And he warned that these issues have now reached "tipping point". Political uncertainty: Many of the survey's 3,246 respondents were exercised by the question of Britain's place in Europe, ahead of a possible referendum, as well as the uncertainty posed by the Scottish independence vote. Both have heightened concerns about the long-term stability and structure of the UK. Scandals: London has been hit harder than
Political uncertainty in the UK, City scandals and restricted bonuses have all damaged the capital
other centres by the Libor and Forex rigging scandals because of its larger market share. Domestic imbroglios, like the combined £20bn compensation payouts made by UK banks for PPI mis-selling, have contributed to a damaging "drip-feed" effect. There are concerns that the resulting "regulatory creep" could stifle the City's entrepreneurialism. Bonuses: The continuing crackdown on bankers' bonuses is making financial centres like New York, Singapore and Hong Kong, where pay is less constrained, more attractive as places to work. A version of this article appears in the 22 March 2014 edition of The Week ·  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 UK
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BMW to offer first electric vehicle

Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, better known to most of us as BMW, will unveiled its first electric vehicle, the i3 compact, at simultaneous events in New York, London and Beijing on 29 July. The EV, which the Munich-based luxury-car maker will begin selling in Germany in November, will cost €34.950 ($46,000). Buyers in the US will also have to pay a $925 transport fee for the car. The company said the body of the i3 will be made from carbon-fiber-reinforced plastic, which will sit atop a chassis made of aluminum. According to BMW, the i3 is capable of 170BHP and is said to have a range between 80 and 100 miles from a single ,  Source: ArticleSource: Image
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Don’t the Royals have a right to genetic privacy, too?

The London Times splashed the genetic heritage of Prince Harry and Prince William across their front page recently. It claimed, based on genetic analysis of two of their distant cousins by a company called Britain’s DNA, that they have Indian ancestors. This was eagerly taken up by the media in Britain and India, as he will be the first monarch with Indian ancestry. But as Alex Hern, of the New Statesman, asks, shouldn’t the Royals have been consulted before violating their genetic privacy? “Our DNA is the most basic data we have. No-one should have to find out what it contains by looking at the front-page of a newspaper,” Hern pointed out.  “There is a wider issue at stake here, which is that the story reveals information about the genetic make-up of someone who has not consented to any DNA tests. Thanks to the fact that mtDNA is exclusively inherited along the maternal line, the company could test two other people with the same maternal heritage as William and Harry, and then run the story on them instead.”Source: Article
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Thatcher was a transformative figure: PM

Condoling the death of Britain's first woman prime minister Margaret Thatcher, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said she was a "transformative figure" under whom Britain registered important progress on the national and international arena. "I express my deepest sadness on the passing away of former British prime minister Baroness Margaret Thatcher," Manmohan Singh said in his message. Britain's first woman Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, known as the Iron Lady, on Monday passed away following a stroke at the age of 87. "It is with great sadness that Mark and Carol Thatcher announced that their mother Baroness Thatcher died peacefully following a stroke this morning", Lord Bell, her spokesperson said. Thatcher was Conservative Prime Minister from 1979 to 1990. "She was a transformative figure under whom the United Kingdom registered important progress on the national and international arena," PM Manmohan said. Thatcher, born as Margaret Roberts, became the Conservative MP for Finchley, north London in 1959, retiring from the Commons in 1992. Having been education secretary, she successfully challenged former prime minister Edward Heath for her party's leadership in 1975. "People of India join me in sending our sincerest condolences to the Thatcher family, the government and people of the United Kingdom," PM added. External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid described Thatcher as a "remarkable, remarkable person, a great leader, powerful leader" and "she will be mourned." "The knowledge she is no longer there is heart breaking and sad, and I would like to convey my condolence to her family and friends," he added. Thatcher won general elections in 1979, 1983 and 1987. Thatcher's government privatised several state-owned industries. She was also in power when the UK went to war with Argentina over the Falkland Islands in 1982. Source: News Bullet
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Hilary Mantel wins David Cohen Prize for Literature 2013

Author gives Clarissa Luard Award to young writer Katie Ward
The David Cohen Prize for Literature 2013 has been awarded to the English novelist, essayist and short story writer Hilary Mantel for a lifetime of achievement in literature. The prize, worth £40,000, was presented by the chair of judges Mark Lawson at a gala ceremony hosted at the British Library this evening. Since winning her first Man Booker Prize in 2009 for Wolf Hall Mantel has become one of the UK’s best known authors. Her books include Eight Months on Ghazzah Street (1988); Fludd (1989) winner of the Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize, the Cheltenham Prize and the Southern Arts Literature Prize; A Place of Greater Safety(1992), winner of the Sunday Express Book of the Year award; A Change of Climate (1994); An Experiment in Love (1995), winner of the 1996 Hawthornden Prize. Her memoir, Giving Up the Ghost (2003), was the MIND Book of the Year. Beyond Black (2005), was shortlisted for a 2006 Commonwealth Writers Prize and for the 2006 Orange Prize for Fiction and longlisted for the Man Booker Prize; Wolf Hall (2009), was winner of the Man Booker Prize and the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction; and Bring Up The Bodies (2012), her most recent novel, was winner of the Man Booker Prize, and Costa Book of the year 2012. In 2006 she was awarded a CBE. Mark Lawson, chair of judges, said of this year’s winner: ‘It seems paradoxical that giving a major literary prize – the British Nobel Prize, as I think of it – to one of the most generally-admired and well-liked people in the literary world will be, for some, controversial. This is because of a feeling – voiced by some pundits and perhaps secretly thought by authors who feel unrewarded – that Hilary Mantel has recently been given too much too quickly. That issue, however, was rapidly dismissed by the judges. Crucially, while the writer’s other recent prizes have been for two recent books, the David Cohen Prize assesses and rewards an entire career to date. In the case of Hilary Mantel, this means 28 years of work that has produced 13 books ranging across historical and contemporary novels, short stories and a memoir. ‘While the judges were as impressed as most readers by Wolf Hall and Bring up the Bodies, it is our particular hope that this prize for three decades of dedication to the possibilities of narrative imagination and English prose will direct attention to such earlier works as the novels Fludd, A Change of Climate and Beyond Blackand the autobiography Giving Up The Ghost. Consideration of this remarkable career soon led us to feel that we had had enough of anyone who will moan that Hilary Mantel has already had enough prizes. It would be ludicrous if a history of high achievement somehow disbarred a writer from the David Cohen Prize’s list of the highest literary achievers.’ On winning the Prize Hilary said: ‘I did at first find it a little bit hard to take in because my husband gave me the news and I said “Oh I think you mean I’ve been invited to the David Cohen awards”. It was not on my horizon, but of course, here I am and it’s a very wonderful place to be. 'There are some readers who think that I was born on the day Wolf Hall was published. This prize acknowledges that there are no overnight sensations in the creative arts. That’s not the way it works. The ground has to be prepared and I feel that this is recognition of the fact that for many many years I’ve been trying to perfect my craft…I want to assure the judges that much as there is a lifetime's worth of work behind me, there is still a lifetime's worth of work still to come...' Hilary Mantel was born in Derbyshire, England on 6 July 1952. She studied Law at the London School of Economics and Sheffield University. She was employed as a social worker, and lived in Botswana for five years, followed by four years in Saudi Arabia, before returning to Britain in the mid-1980s. The David Cohen Prize was established in 1992 by David and Veronica Cohen, and Arts Council England, and is recognised as one of Britain’s most distinguished literary honours. The Prize has in the past been awarded to novelists, dramatists, biographers, poets and essayists. The most recent recipient of the David Cohen Prize for Literature was Julian Barnes in 2011. He joined a distinguished list of winners, including V S Naipaul, Harold Pinter, Muriel Spark, William Trevor, Doris Lessing, Beryl Bainbridge and Thom Gunn (jointly), Michael Holroyd, Derek Mahon and Seamus Heaney. The John S Cohen Foundation, which was established in 1965 by David Cohen and his family funds the winner’s prize. The John S Cohen Foundation has supported education and the arts, helping composers, choreographers, dancers, biographers, poets, playwrights and actors, among others. The winner of the David Cohen Prize for Literature also chooses the recipient of the Clarissa Luard Award, which is worth £12,500. The award, funded by Arts Council England, is given to a literature organisation that supports young writers and readers or an individual writer under the age of 35. Hilary Mantel presented the 2013 award to Katie Ward. Katie Ward was born in Somerset in 1979. She has worked in the public and voluntary sectors, including at a women’s refuge and for a Member of Parliament. She took a career break to write her debut novel after coming across an article about a book of portraits of female readers. In 2007 Katie was introduced to Hilary Mantel through a colleague, and Hilary took a keen interest in her work. When Girl Reading was complete, Hilary recommended it to her agent who soon had a number of publishers bidding for it. Girl Reading was published in 2011 by Virago. Katie Ward said: ‘Hilary is a very special person to me. Not only is she a brilliant and perceptive author, she is also a kind and generous mentor. Over the years, she’s dedicated a great deal of time to supporting new writers. I for one will always be grateful for her guidance, friendship and belief. To be receiving the Clarissa Luard Award is lovely, and a little surreal. I take it as encouragement to keep writing. It means I can finish my second novel with confidence and begin to think ahead about what I want to tackle next.’Source: Beattie's Book Blog
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Prince Alwaleed bin Talal challenges Forbes rich list

A SAUDI PRINCE has "severed ties" with Forbes magazine saying it has undervalued his wealth by $9.6 billion in its annual rich list. As result, he is rated only the world's 26th richest man when in his view he should be 10th. Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, whose investment interests include Twitter, News Corp and London's Savoy Hotel, disputed the list after Forbes put his net wealth at $20 billion. Alwaleed estimates it is $29.6 billion. See The Business for The Week’s daily news round-up, He blasted the publication's "flawed" valuation methods, saying they "seemed designed to disadvantage Middle Eastern investors and institutions", the Financial Times notes.A statement from the tycoon's Kingdom Holding Company said he would longer cooperate with Forbes but would continue to work with those compiling the rival rich list - the Bloomberg Billionaires index, which ranks him as the world's 16th richest man. Alwaleed's placement isn't the only eyebrow-raiser on this year's Forbes list. Warren Buffett, the so-called 'Sage of Omaha', has dropped out of the top three for the first time in 13 years. The billionaire American investor, estimated to be worth $55.5 billion by Forbes, has been overtaken by Zara fashion chain founder Amancio Ortega, the richest man in Europe. Mexican business magnate Carlos Slim topped the list for the fourth time in a row with an estimated worth of $73 billion, followed by Bill Gates with $67 billion. The average age of the ten richest individuals was 74. According to Forbes, the dollar billionaires club welcomed 210 new members in the past year, taking the number up to a record 1,426. The top ten: 1. Carlos Slim $73bn, 2. Bill Gates, $67bn, 3. Amancio Ortega, $57bn, 4. Warren Buffett, $55.5bn, 5. Larry Ellison, $43bn, 6. Charles Koch, $34bn and David Koch, $34bn (joint entry), 8. Li Ka-shing, $31bn, 9. Liliane Bettencourt and family, $30bn, 10. Bernard Arnault and family, $29bn.Source: The Week UK
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I was Hitler's food taster, says woman

London: Margot Woelk, now a 95-year-old woman, says she was the "food taster" of Adolf Hitler for more than two years, and had to taste the dictator's food to ensure it was not poisoned. Woelk ate fresh fruit and vegetables including asparagus, peppers and peas, and was one of a dozen women Hitler used to protect himself at his Eastern front headquarters, also known as the "Wolf's Lair", the Daily Mail reported. She was taken there in 1942 when evacuated from Berlin to Gross Partsch -- Parcz in modern-day Poland. Her husband had then gone for fighting. "Of course, I was afraid. If the food had been poisoned, I would not be here today. We were forced to eat it, we had no choice," she said. "Between 11 and 12 o'clock, we had to taste the food, and only after all 15 of us had tried it was it was driven to the headquarters by the SS." "It was all vegetarian, the most delicious fresh things, from asparagus to peppers and peas, served with rice, and salads. It was all arranged on one plate, just as it was served to him," she said. Woelk does not recall tasting any meat, fish or drinks. There was always an hour's delay before Hitler ate his meal so that effects of any poison in the food could be seen in the women. Woelk had to report every day, but was only used when Hitler's personal train was in the station. She lived with her mother-in-law outside the headquarters until an unsuccessful assassination attempt on Hitler's life by Claus von Stauffenberg in July 1944. She was then confined to a school building. When Hitler abandoned the lair in November 1944, an officer helped the woman escape to Berlin. Woelk said she believes the other tasters were shot by the advancing Russians. In 1946, she was reunited with her husband who she had presumed dead. The couple lived together until he died in 1990, the daily said. Source: News-Bullet
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Google to build £1bn London HQ

Google has completed a £1 billion (€1.2bn) property deal to move its UK headquarters to a site in London’s King’s Cross area. The US Internet giant and owner of YouTube has purchased a 2.4 acre site between King’s Cross and St Pancras stations and plans to build a seven and 11 storey complex due to be complete in 2016. Google already has two central London offices – one in Victoria and one on St Giles High Street – from where staff are expected to be relocated. Source: Advanced-Television
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Gerhard Richter painting sells for record £21m

An oil painting by the German artist Gerhard Richter has sold for £21m ($34m) - an auction record for a work by a living artist. Abstraktes Bild, painted in 1994 , which was owned by rock star Eric Clapton, has been described as a "masterpiece of calculated chaos". The artwork, expected to fetch £9-12m, was sold to an anonymous bidder at Sotheby's in London on Friday. A round of applause broke out as the painting went under the hammer. Gerhard Richter, 80, who lives in Cologne, is considered by some to be the world's greatest living painter. 'Unique opportunity' Sotheby's called Abstraktes Bild a "paradigm of Gerhard Richter's mature artistic and philosophical achievement". Before the sale, Alex Branczik, senior director of contemporary art at Sotheby's, said of the painting: "Abstraktes Bild is one of the great abstract masterpieces by Gerhard Richter. "Its appearance on the market presents collectors with the unique opportunity to acquire an outstanding work by one of the greatest living painters." A sister painting of the artwork is currently jointly owned by the Tate and the National Galleries of Scotland. Eric Clapton is a known art collector. Even before the sale, the Sunday Times Rich List estimated the Cream guitarist' s wealth at some £140m, making him the 17th-richest British musician. He has previously sold off part of his extensive guitar collection to raise money for his rehab clinic, which he founded in 1998 to help treat drug and alcohol addiction. Source: SAM Daily Times
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environmentalists will press issue at RIO 20 conference

RTSea; In June, the RIO+20 conference will be held in Rio de Janeiro. This conference name is more of a nickname, as it is officially the United Nations Conference on  Sustainable Development.Many of  the issues 
discussed revolve around land use and crop yields in addition to water usage and availability. The goal is to be able to provide for human populations in a responsible manner that can guarantee available resources for generations to come. None of this can be accomplished without considering the impact mankind is having on nature and wildlife in general. The BBC recently reported that environmentalists will be pressuring government leaders at the conference to make a more concerted effort to protect nature as a critical component of any sustainable development policy. "The Rio+20 conference is an opportunity for the world to get serious about the need for development to be made sustainable," said David Nussbaum, CEO of World Wildlife Fund-UK. "We need to elevate the sense of urgency, and I think this is ultimately not only about our lives but the legacy we leave for future generations."   Environmentalist will be doing more than just talking a good game. They will be arming themselves with new data to emphasize the importance of nature conservation. The Living Planet Report has recently issued need data based on analysis of trends seen in over 9,000 animal populations compiled by the Zoological Society of London. The report confirms an overall 30% decline in wildlife since 1970. Wildlife in tropical areas,
particularly in tropical lakes and rivers, showed the greatest decline of as much as 60%. The Global Footprint Network is also conducting analysis of our global footprint - our impact based on a composite measure of our use of fossil fuels, cropland for food production, wood consumption, and wild-caught fish. In areas of the world where there is high development in lands that harbor harsh environments, our impact is most noticeable. The Persian Gulf emerges as the region with the highest per-capita ecological footprint, with Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates topping the list of the least sustainable nations. But developed nations like the United States, Denmark, Belgium, and Australia are not far behind. However, there are some rays of hope. In Pakistan, a program has proved successful in reducing water consumption and pesticide and fertilizer use in growing cotton, while still producing the same yield. It just takes initiative and an understanding that it is a global issue, not confined to one nation or one region of the world. "We need to address this with the same urgency and determination with which we tackled the systemic financial crisis globally," said Nussbaum in describing how it is not too late to turn existing negative trends around. Source: RTSea
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The world’s longest bus seats 256 people

World's longest bus: Debuted in Germany, the megabus AutoTram Extra Grand is nearly 101ft long and can carry 256 passengers.
There are buses and then there is the AutoTram Extra Grand which debuted in Germany this week as the longest of its breed in the world. Developed by the boffins of the Fraunhofer Institute for Traffic and Infrastructure Systems, the bus is nearly 101 feet long, has four steering axles and can carry 256 passengers. The big bendy bus premiered in the eastern city of Dresden this week where it will soon roll into service with the local transportation authority on trial runs as Beijing and Shanghai placed their orders for the vehicle which costs about $10million (almost £6.3million) per bus.
Unsafe and unreliable: Bendy buses on several routes in London were banned in 2009 amid claims they were unsafe, unreliable and encourage fare-dodgers.
The good news for environmentalists is that it can run for long stretches on electric power. Matthias Klingner, the institute's director said: 'There is a lot of know-how invested in it. It's computer is highly efficient. 'The innovation of the AutoTram lies not only in its length, but most of all in its ability to be manoeuvred like a conventional 12 metre (39ft) city bus. 'There's no problem with the manoeuvrability and stability, but we have to see how such a long bus affects normal city traffic.' 
Already orders: Made in Germany, the new bendy bus has already been ordered by Chinese cities Shanghai and Beijing.
German trial: This week the vehicle debuted in Dresden and will be part of the local transport on a trial basis. It combines the passenger capacity of a small train with the manouverability of a bus and runs on a hybrid engine that kicks in when the electric batteries run down, charging them as it propels the vehicle. Bus drivers will not require a special licence to drive the long, bendy bus thanks to a unique computer steering system which keeps the length of the bus precisely in line with the front carriage. The system is less expensive to run and cheaper to put into operation than a rail commuter system, prompting other cities to inquire about the super-sized buses. Dr Klinger said: 'The AutoTram has a considerable advantage compared to light rail systems.' While it is the longest bus in the world, the bus with the largest capacity is China's New Liner Series which has 300 seats on a 82ft bus.
Combines transport: The bus combines the passenger capacity of a small train and the maneouverability of a bus.  Bendy buses in London were banned on several routes in 2009 after they were found to be responsible for many accidents. London's mayor Boris Johnson struggled to sell the 31 vehicles amid claims they were unsafe, unreliable and encourage fare-dodgers. They were taken out of service temporarily in 2005 after three caught on fire. Many were eventually sold to Malta in 2011. According to The Guardian Mr Johnson said at the time: 'These bulky and ungainly monstrosities were always more suitable for the wide open vistas of a Scandinavian airport than for London.  'I am glad to see the back of them.' Source: The Way I See It
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They are the champions

While we hail Mary Kom, spare a thought for the unsung women athletes in India struggling for two minutes of fame. While we shower petals on Saina Nehwal, spare a thought for the girls at sport camps powerless before coaches and officials. And while we celebrate India's Olympic medal haul, do consider that two of the six were won by the 23 women who made up India's 81-strong contingent. Yet, India's women athletes continue to be less than equal, says senior sports writer Sharda Ugra. All athletes, regardless of gender, face enormous challenges: official and public indifference, lack of funding and pathetic training facilities. But women athletes also fight gender discrimination, sometimes referred to as India's 'dirty little secret'. When two women boxers (one of them a world championship medallist) are asked to serve tea at the National Institute of Sport, when the BCCI disburses Rs. 70 crore to 160 former players and there's not one woman on its list or when 31 women hockey players level sexual harassment charges against their coach, then that dirty little secret is in the open. Everyone listens when Sania Mirza slams the All India Tennis Association's decision to pair her with Leander Paes in the mixed doubles at London without her consent. Everyone listens when Jwala Gutta confirms discrimination against women athletes. But did anyone hear the four teenage girls from the junior wrestling team level sexual harassment charges against their coach in June this year? "We are looking into the matter," was what Sports Authority of India director general Desh Deepak Verma said. And that was that. Who speaks for Asian Games gold medallist Pinki Pramanik who spent 25 days in a male ward in jail following trumped up rape charges? How do we begin to restore her dignity after an MMS of her inconclusive gender test goes viral? Pinki later said she had been given testosterone injections that made her more masculine. Who gave her those injections? We don't even ask. We see the same official abandonment when four women relay players are stripped off their Asian Games gold after failing a dope test. Who gave them the dope? "They have no safety net," says Ugra. Discrimination against women in sport is admittedly worse in Saudi Arabia which prohibits women from competing and sent two women to the Olympics only after threats to ban the kingdom. Even in the West, women earn less, find fewer sponsors and get less media coverage. Mary Kom's own sport, boxing has been a male Olympic preserve until this year in London. To this day, women athletes are asked by federations to wear tighter shorts or skirts to present a more 'aesthetic' appeal. In India, the problem stems from the inordinate power officials wield over athletes, who come mostly from poor families. The coach decides which athlete gets picked for a national training camp or receives a government sponsorship or gets quota allotments in the sports category. It's a power that makes women doubly vulnerable to exploitation. For every high-profile revelation, there are countless unreported stories because the women have no choice but to remain silent, or leave. And washing the coach's dirty clothes, as revealed by Ashwini Nachappa, is often the least of their daily humiliations. But focusing on women is a winning strategy, and not just because there is a connection between women, sport, health, leadership and self-esteem, as pointed out by a UN 2007 report, Women, Gender Equality and Sport. In China, says Minxin Pei in The Indian Express, women have won 60% of all international championships in the last 30 years. In the US, women account for 66% of medals won this Olympics. In India, Saina and Mary have emerged as role models not just because of the bronze in their suitcase but because of their overcoming of adversity. How many of us even knew that Mary, the mother of twin boys, was a five-time world champion? Sania comes from a state that has one of the worst sex ratios and has spoken of how 'lucky' she was to play. It doesn't matter that Tintu Luka returns without a medal, we need to tell our daughters about her remarkable journey - from walking five km a day to go to school to running alongside Caster Semenya and Alysia Johnson Montano. These are women who have overcome challenges of deprivation and of gender. We need to sing their stories not as Olympic champions but as champions for women's rights across the country. Today if thousands of girls can dream of taking ownership of their destinies, they have these pioneers to thank. Namita Bhandare is a Delhi-based writer The views expressed by the author are personal. Source: Hindustan Times
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Goldenballs David Beckham gets transformed into a chiseled silver statue for new H&M underwear campaign

Larger than life: A silver statue of David Beckham has been erected in New York to promote hisnew underwear line for H&M
His nickname may be Goldenballs, but David Beckham was given a silver touch as part of a new campaign for H&M. Huge statues of the football player wearing just his pants were erected in various locations around New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco, proving he truly is a larger than life star. The unveiling coincided with the release of new black and white shots which showcase his new range for the chain.
Man of steel: The LA Galaxy star revealed his cheeky side
The father-of-four shows off his toned physique, as well as his many tattoos, in the pictures that were shot in L.A. by photographer Alasdair McLellan. Posting the pictures on his Facebook page this morning, Beckham wrote: 'Hey everyone, here are a few shots from my new Bodywear range for H&M. Hope you like them.' Fans responded in their thousands by 'liking' the pictures and commenting on how 'hot' and 'handsome' the
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Bikinis at the Olympics...is this a real issue?

By Mark Sappenfield: In one women's beach volleyball semifinal amid a driving rain at the London 2012 Olympics Tuesday, neither team wore just their bikinis. What women wear has been a big issue here. The Christian Science Monitor:  Kerri Walsh and Misty May-Treanor will try for their third consecutive gold medal in beach volleyball Wednesday when they face fellow Americans April Ross and Jen Kessy in the final at the London 2012 Olympics. Now that that's out of the way, can we talk about what they were wearing? In the semifinal between Ross/Kessy and Brazilians Larissa and Juliana, neither team wore just their bikinis on a cold London night with driving rain, prompting International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge to promise a full investigation. "This is clearly not in the Olympic spirit," he said. OK, he didn't say that, and there is no inquiry. But in the sometimes alternate universe of beach volleyball, that it often what it feels like. From head scarves to skirts, there has been a lot of talk at the London Olympics about what not to wear for women, but nowhere more so than at beach volleyball, where the decision earler this year to allow women not to wear bikinis has been met with relief by women's rights groups, dismay by some casual fans, and a gigantic shrug by the players themselves. It is the flip side to another and rather more momentous first at London 2012: Each competing nation has brought at least one woman athlete. To reach that goal, which the IOC made a high priority, the federations that govern Olympic
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Nissan Eyeing London Black Cab Market with New NV200 Taxi

After winning the hearts and minds of New York City officials with the NV200 Yellow Cab, Nissan is aiming to do the same in the city of London. While athletes from all over the world compete in the 2012 London Olympic Games, Nissan presented its vision for the city's black cab of the future aptly named the 'NV200 London Taxi'. You may have noticed from the pictures that the 'black cab' version of the NV200 features a visibly wider front track (200mm to be precise) than the NYC model with blistered wheel arches as well as  new side steps. This is because Nissan had to re-engineer the NV200 in order to conform with the regulations set in the TfL London Taxi Conditions of Fitness and which include being able to accommodate a wheelchair passenger and achieve a 25ft (7.6m) turning-circle. The NV200 London Taxi comes equipped with sliding passenger doors and can seat five adults excluding the driver: three on the rear bench and two on rear-facing, fold-down seats. Nissan removed the front passenger seat to create space for luggage. Whereas the NYC Yellow Cab model is powered by a 2.0-liter four-cylinder petrol engine, the Black Cab version of the NV200 is fitted with a 1.5-liter turbo-charged diesel available with two power outputs: 89hp and 110hp. Versions fitted with the 89hp engine feature a five-speed manual gearbox, while 110hp variants benefit from a six-speed unit. Both powerplants are fully compliant with the latest EuroV emissions regulations. The 89hp engine returns a combined fuel economy of 53.3mpg UK (44.1mpg US or 5.3lt/100km) with CO2 emissions that start from 139g/km. Nissan claims that the NV200 offers 50 percent better fuel economy than the most efficient London black cab today "Fuel costs account for around 10 percent of taxi driver overheads," says Nissan. "Over the course of a year, NV200 London Taxi drivers would spend around 50% less - about £700 - on fuel than TX4 drivers," the company added. According to the Japanese automaker, the diesel version of the NV200 London Taxi is expected to be competitively priced below the new TX4, the London Taxi Company's current model. "As a relevant simulation, if all of London's licensed taxis were replaced with the NV200 London Taxi, there would be a CO2 reduction across London of 37,970 metric tonnes each year - the equivalent of planting 10,000 acres, or two Congestion Charge zones, of trees every 12 months," the Japanese company said. Pending testing, which includes a crash-test, the diesel-powered NV200 aims to receive full London Taxi certification later this year and go on sale during the course of 2013. Aside from the diesel model, Nissan is also developing an all-electric version named e-NV200 London Taxi. "With running costs estimated to be around one fifth of a conventional, diesel-powered Hackney Carriage [another name for the London Black Cab] it is likely to be popular with drivers too," said Nissan. 
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Olympic scandals rattle London

By Pershkina Anastasiya, Ukraine may go to Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne to dispute the results of the final 16 boxing tournament in which Britain’s Anthony Ogogo was unlawfully awarded victory over Ukraine’s Yevgeny Khytrov. This referee scandal, though the most high-profile at the moment, is not the only cheats scandal that has marred the first week of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. During the gymnastics team scoring competitions the judges offended the Japanese by awarding a low score to the team’s leader. Japan immediately contested the score. As a result, the judges re-jiggered the scores and Japan won the silver medal. That knocked Ukraine to fourth position causing the team’s anger. In the final 16 boxing match the judges declared Britain’s Anthony Ogogo the winner, even though his score was the same as his Ukrainian opponent Yevgeny Khytrov’s and his performance was less spectacular. During a semifinal epee fencing bout the German fencer hit her South Korean opponent four times in the last minute. Even though the unfairness of this was evident, the judges did not bother to mend it. Eurosport.ru observer Igor Zelenitsyn says that these scandals occurred through the judges’ fault. Source: Voice of Russia
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Blind archer sets first world records of London Games

LONDON — Legally blind archer Im Dong Hyun set the first world records of the London Olympics, breaking his own record in the 72-arrow mark and helping South Korea set a team record during Friday's ranking round. Im broke the 72-arrow record he had set in Turkey in May by three points with a score of 699, hours before the 2012 Games official Opening Ceremony. Despite the success, Im was modest in his reaction. "This is just the first round, so I will not get too excited by it," he said. He combined with Kim Bub Min and Oh Jin Hyek, smashing the record for 216 arrows with a total 2,087. That was 18 better than the mark South Korea set in May. Team coach Jang Young Sool said the team would rest up for the remainder of the day and prepare for Saturday. Im, 26, won gold medals in the team event in both the Beijing and Athens Olympics. He has only 10 percent vision in his left eye, and 20 percent in his right, meaning he is considered legally blind. He has said that when he looks at the targets, he sees colors with blurred lines between them. He does not wear glasses in competition, saying he relies on being able to distinguish between the bright colors of the target. Any spectators hoping to catch a glimpse of the action left angry and confused after being turned away from Lord's cricket ground where archery is being held. Preliminary rounds were listed as non-ticketed and several thousand spectators showed up at the venue expecting to get in for free. A spokeswoman for the London Games organizing committee said tickets were not advertised or sold for the qualifying events and "we have always made it clear" that the early competitions were not open for spectators.Source: The Japan Times Online
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