Friday, 20 September 2013

GTA V PC release date 22 November and PC screenshots

At least if it isn't a hoax. The UK based website GameSeek offers GTA V PC for pre-order with a release date on 22 November. Despite many rumors, the PC version was not yet announced with a specific date.

It remains a little unclear if GameSeek can actually deliver on that date as we have seen this stuff happening a lot with pre-orders, but rumors have been there for a long time now. The game is offers for £24.75 in preorder.


Next to that on Reddit some guy has posted some screenshots of the PC version of the game, he claims to be a Beta tester. I think they are fake. But who knows. Check out the screenshots.

This is what happens to your body when you drink a coke

Have you ever wondered why Coke comes with a smile? Because it gets you high even though they removed the cocaine years ago.

In the first 10 minutes: 10 teaspoons of sugar(or GMO high fructose corn syrup) hit your system. (100% of your recommended daily intake.) You don’t immediately vomit from the overwhelming sweetness because phosphoric acid cuts the flavor, allowing you to keep it down.

20 minutes: Your blood sugar spikes, causing an insulin burst. Your liver responds to this by turning any sugar it can get its hands on into fat. (And there’s plenty of that at this particular moment.)

40 minutes: Caffeine absorption is complete. Your pupils dilate; your blood pressure rises; as a response, your liver dumps more sugar into your bloodstream. The adenosine receptors in your brain are now blocked, preventing drowsiness.

45 minutes: Your body ups your dopamine production, stimulating the pleasure centers of your brain. This is physically the same way heroin works, by the way.

> 60 minutes: The phosphoric acid binds calcium, magnesium, and zinc in your lower intestine, providing a further boost in metabolism. This is compounded by high doses of sugar and artificial sweeteners also increasing the urinary excretion of calcium.

> 60 minutes: The caffeine’s diuretic properties come into play. (It makes you have to pee.) It is now assured that you’ll evacuate the bonded calcium, magnesium, and zinc that was headed to your bones as well as sodium, electrolytes, and water.

> 60 minutes: As the rave inside you dies down, you’ll start to have a sugar crash. You may become irritable and/or sluggish. You've also now literally pissed away all the water that was in the Coke. But not before infusing it with valuable nutrients your body could have used for things like hydrating your system, or building strong bones and teeth.

Saturday, 14 September 2013

Python strangles 60lb Siberian husky to death after slithering into back yard

WARNING GRAPHIC CONTENT: The 10ft long African rock python wrapped itself around the 60lb dog, named Duke, as the family watched in horror

A python slithered into a family's back yard and crushed their pet Husky to death as they watched in horror.
The 10ft long African rock python wrapped itself around the 60lb dog, named Duke, as it exercised in the garden in Florida.
The family desperately called 911 as they watched the horrific attack unfold in front of their eyes.
The owner, who refused to be named, said her son tried to wrestle the snake from the dog's neck and slashed at it with garden shears.

WARNING: Readers may find the following pictures distressing

Death grip: The python wraps itself round the dog's neck
Splash News
Attack: The blood is from the snake after the owner tried to cut it from the dog's body with garden scissors
Splash News

She told CBS Miami: "He tried to take [the snake] away from [Duke's] neck with his hands, his bare hands.
"It was so strong, he couldn't do it. He ran out inside, he got gardening scissors. He tried to cut it off. It didn't work."
Sadly the Husky died before emergency services arrived on the scene.
Last breath: The dog lies dead in the back yard
Splash News
It is not known when the python slid into the family's backyard, in an area southeast of Tamiami Trail and Krome Avenue in Miami where a colony of snakes had been breeding.
The snake was killed and is being sent to the University of Florida for a necropsy.
Now wildlife officials are expanding efforts to find and eradicate African rock pythons in Miami-Dade County after the shocking attack.

Friday, 13 September 2013

In Germany, clothing is often optional

GLOWE, Germany — On a balmy summer day, the Schaabe looks like a slice of paradise.
The narrow spit of forest-covered land is fringed by a 6-mile beach of fine white sand lapped by the deep blue Baltic Sea.
Kids splash in the gentle surf, couples stroll hand-in-hand along the shore, families picnic on herring and beer, a naked guy stands in line at the ice-cream trolley.
In fact, there are naked people all over the place.
This is one of hundreds of FKK beaches across Germany that are open to followers of nudism, known here as Freikoerperkultur — Free Body Culture.
Other countries set aside remote spots for naturists to indulge in their love of stripping bare. In Germany, beaches along the Baltic coast tend to let them hang out alongside those who prefer to cover up with bermudas or bikinis.
"The beach is suitable for textile followers as well as FKK fans," says a local tourism website. "Don't be surprised if you run into nudies as you head along your way."
Naturism is big for Germans. Around 1 in 10 take a naked vacation at least once a year, according to Kurt Fischer, president of German Association for Free Body Culture.
Lately, however, nudism has been getting some additional exposure with the circulation of a photo purporting to show a young Angela Merkel and a couple of friends out for a waterside stroll in the buff.
The photo's authenticity is contested, but there’s no doubt that naturism was popular in East Germany when Merkel — who’s expected to stay on as chancellor after elections later this month — was growing up there in the 1960s and '70s.
Tolerated by the Communist authorities, stripping off became a way for East Germans to commune with nature and break with the regime’s conformity. The DDR Museum dedicated to showing daily life in East Germany in Berlin has exhibits illustrating the role nudism played there — with dioramas depicting naked sunbathing and volleyball.
Even today, naturism is more widespread in eastern resorts like Glowe, on the holiday island of Ruegen, which is part of the district Chancellor Merkel represents in parliament.
"It's famous here, so you know you are going to see naked people on the beach," says Benjamin Mueller, on vacation from Munich. "I'm not sure so many people from where I'm from would be happy with seeing the nudists, but they are more tolerant here."
Although Mueller isn’t a dedicated nudist, he and his companion decided it was more practical to have a non-textile day at the end of their vacation rather than get their swimming costumes wet and sandy before their long drive home.
In the years after Germany's reunification, some eastern Germans blamed priggish westerners for imposing restrictions on areas were nudism was allowed along the Baltic coast.
But even in western Germany, attitudes toward public nudity are more relaxed than in most countries. Polls show Germans bare all on vacation more than any other Europeans.
In relatively conservative Munich, naked sunbathers appear in parts of the city's famed Englischer Garten park on summer days, as in the Tiergarten in downtown Berlin, and green areas of other cities.
Foreign visitors are often surprised to discover that saunas in German hotels are co-ed and naked. Wearing trunks or swimsuits is considered unhygienic and prudish foreigners may be asked to take them off.
Although nudist tradition in Germany rejects any sexual connotations of nakedness, the FKK name has been hijacked by sex clubs that have sprung up since the legalization of prostitution in the country in 2002.
"Unfortunately, the word FKK was not protected by our movement," Fischer says. "Anybody can use the word for their own purpose. This has resulted in sex clubs, swinger clubs, sex orgies, prostitution — all being able to use the word FKK. For us naturists in Germany, this means we have to convince people that we are not part of this."
Germany's love of going au naturale dates back to the days of the Kaisers. In the late 19th century, when most of Europe was still shocked by the glimpse of an ankle, a back-to-nature movement growing up in Germany promoted the health benefits of running through forests and plunging into chilly lakes with nothing on.
The first nudist camp opened near Hamburg in 1903. The concept took hold and a flourishing naturist culture developed. The Nazis had an ambiguous approach, at times banning it as decadent, at others tolerating it as a celebration of the Aryan body.
Nudism took off again after World War II.
The Free Body Culture association now has around 45,000 members, but an estimated 12 million Germans get naked in public at least once a year.
"I am almost 50 years a naturist," says Fischer, the association's president. "But I'm not obsessive about nakedness at all times. For me, nudity is part of my free time and vacation planning. I'm naked in our nudist sports park, but rarely at home."
More from GlobalPost: Multicultural Motherland
German attitudes may be changing, however: the younger generation appears less enthusiastic about baring all on the beach. Fischer says membership is declining by about 2 percent a year.
Germany's declining birth rate — and a growing immigrant population, which is generally less keen on nudism — are also blamed for the decline.
As German nudists become more likely to be gray and wrinkled, Fischer blames the growth of materialism.
"Society has changed," he says. "People are now defined by their appearance and the concept that ‘naked we are all equal’ is hardly winning out." 

UN inspectors will blame Assad for chemical attack, says report


A REPORT by United Nations inspectors will "point the finger of blame" at the Assad regime for the 21 August chemical weapons attack in the Damascus suburbs, The Times says.
The report, which is due to be published on Monday, will include a "wealth of evidence" that a chemical nerve agent was used and the Syrian government was responsible for unleashing it, the paper says. The evidence will include the discovery of "spent rocket casings" that point strongly to the involvement of the regime.
The inspectors' findings will put Russia's President Putin "on the back foot" because he has stated publicly his belief that Syrian rebels were responsible for the attack. In a letter published in the New York Times, Putin said they had most likely used the banned weapons to "provoke intervention by their powerful foreign patrons".
US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, will begin their second day of talks in Geneva today. US officials described the first day of talks as "comprehensive", but The BBC's Paul Adams says it is clear there are still "large disagreements" between the two sides.
It is understood that Kerry rejected yesterday a proposal by Syria that it would hand over its chemical weapons within 30 days. The timeline was considered "too lengthy".
"This is not a game," Kerry said at a press conference last night. "It [the disarmament plan] has to be real, it has to be comprehensive, it has to be verifiable, it has to be credible. Expectations are high and the Russians must deliver on that pressure."
The UN-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi - who has been "leading efforts to broker a political solution to the crisis" - will also attend today's meeting. The BBC says he will want to know if the talks about the handover of chemical weapons can be broadened into a wider discussion about ending Syria's bloody civil war.
The conflict has intensified in recent days, say sources inside Syria, as the Assad regime tries to capitalise on the "demoralisation" of the rebels in the wake of the US's stalled intervention. Activists told The Times that military aircraft had bombed one of the main hospitals in rebel-held northern Syria, killing at least 11 people including two doctors.
Here is a roundup of some of the key developments:
Elite unit is "scattering" chemical weapons: The Wall Street Journal says a "secretive Syrian military unit" has been distributing the regime's chemical weapons between as many as 50 sites.
The paper says the activity of Unit 450 could "complicate" any US attempt to destroy the weapons using cruise missiles or bombs. It also "raises questions" about the efficacy of a Russian plan to identify, seize and destroy the regime's banned weapons.
US officials told the paper they still know where most of the chemical weapons are being stored, but their intelligence is less accurate than it was six months ago.
UN investigates 'Jihadist massacre': The case of those arguing against a military intervention in Syria will be bolstered by claims that Jihadists killed "at least 30 people including women and children", The Times says. The UN says the massacre took place on 11 June in Hatla, near the eastern city of Deir el-Zour.
"Anti-government armed fighters conducted home invasions, killing and summarily executing (by shooting at close range) many Shia, including at least 30 civilians, among them children, women and elderly," a UN report says. "Fighters also set fire to civilian houses and a Shia mosque while shouting sectarian slogans."
The timing of the report is significant, says The Times. "Those opposed [to a military strike] claim that it will encourage the extremist elements in the opposition to stage revenge attacks on Assad supporters, or even make a grab for unguarded chemical weapons arsenals."
CIA steps up delivery of arms to rebels: The CIA has been sending light machine guns and other small arms to the Syrian rebels for several weeks, The Independent reports. The paper describes the deliveries as a "major escalation" of the US role in the civil war.
As well as guns, the US has arranged for the rebels to receive anti-tank weaponry such as rocket-propelled grenades "through a third party"

Al Qaeda calls for attacks inside United States

DUBAI (Reuters) - Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri urged small-scale attacks inside the United States to "bleed America economically", adding he hoped eventually to see a more significant strike, according to the SITE monitoring service.
In an audio speech released online a day after the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 strikes, Zawahri said attacks "by one brother or a few of the brothers" would weaken the U.S. economy by triggering big spending on security, SITE reported.
Western counter-terrorism chiefs have warned that radicalized "lone wolves" who might have had no direct contact with al Qaeda posed as great a risk as those who carried out complex plots like the 9/11 attacks.
"We should bleed America economically by provoking it to continue in its massive expenditure on its security, for the weak point of America is its economy, which has already begun to stagger due to the military and security expenditure," he said.
Keeping America in such a state of tension and anticipation only required a few disparate attacks "here and there", he said
"As we defeated it in the gang warfare in Somalia, Yemen, Iraq and Afghanistan, so we should follow it with ...war on its own land. These disparate strikes can be done by one brother or a few of the brothers."
At the same time, Muslims should seize any opportunity to land "a large strike" on the United States, even if this took years of patience.
The Sept 11, 2001 attacks, in which hijacked airliners were flown into New York's World Trade Center, the Pentagon in Washington and a Pennsylvania field, triggered a global fight against al Qaeda extremists and their affiliates. Almost 3,000 people were killed in the attacks.
In his audio speech, Zawahri said Muslims should refuse to buy goods from America and its allies, as such spending only helped to fund U.S. military action in Muslim lands. He added that Muslims should abandon the U.S. dollar and replace it with the currency of nations that did not attack Muslims.
Zawahri spoke approvingly of one of the worst attacks on U.S. soil since September 11, 2001, the bombing of the Boston Marathon in April, which U.S. authorities say was carried out by two ethnic Chechen Muslim brothers. The attack killed three people and injured 264.
Zawahri sought to paint the bombing as part of al Qaeda's violent transnational campaign of jihad or holy war against U.S. interests, even if it was relatively small-scale.
"The Boston incident confirms to the Americans ... that they are not facing individuals, organizations or groups, but they are facing an uprising Ummah (Muslim community), that rose in jihad to defend its soul, dignity and capabilities."
"What the American regime refuses to admit is that al Qaeda is a message before it was an organization," he said.
Zawahri, suspected by many security specialists to be living in the Pakistan-Afghanistan border area, added that the al Qaeda message simply was that if Muslims wanted to live in dignity and "be liberated", then they had to defend their dignity.

Witness to a Syrian Execution: “I Saw a Scene of Utter Cruelty”!

All wars are vicious, but the civil war in Syria seems every day to set new standards for brutality. As the fighting rages in its third year, increasing numbers of atrocities are committed by soldiers and fighters from forces loyal to the regime of President Bashar Assad, as well as armed rebels and Islamic militants from the numerous, loosely aligned groups opposing Assad. The violence is frequently sectarian in nature, with fighters claiming they act in defense of their faith, be it Sunni, Alawite, Shiite or any of the other sects that contribute to Syria’s religious landscape.
The perpetrators of atrocities themselves often use digital cameras or smartphones to photograph or film their acts of torture and murder, uploading the images to the Internet. These images and videos are used for propaganda, and their authenticity is often impossible to verify. It is very rare that a group of fighters from either side gives a professional photojournalist from a country outside Syria full and unfettered access to chronicle an atrocity as it unfolds.
What follows is a harrowing series of photographs of Islamic militants publicly executing, by decapitation, a young Syrian in the town of Keferghan, near Aleppo, on August 31, 2013.
Because of the danger in reporting inside Syria, it was not possible to confirm the identity or political affiliation of the victim. Nor are we certain about the motivation of his killers. One eyewitness who lives in the area and was contacted by TIME a week after the beheadings said that the executioners were from ISIS, an Al-Qaeda franchise operating in Syria and Iraq.
TIME obtained the images exclusively from a photographer who was recently in Syria. This decapitation was the last of four executions he documented that day. TIME has agreed not to publish the photographer’s name,  to protect him from repercussions when he returns to Syria. What follows is an edited account of his experience:
The man was brought in to the square. His eyes were blindfolded. I began shooting pictures, one after the other. It was to be the fourth execution that day I would photograph. I was feeling awful; several times I had been on the verge of throwing up. But I kept it under control because as a journalist I knew I had to document this, as I had the three previous beheadings I had photographed that day, in three other locations outside Aleppo.
The crowd began cheering. Everyone was happy. I knew that if I tried to intervene I would be taken away, and that the executions would go ahead. I knew that I wouldn’t be able to change what was happening and I might put myself in danger.
I saw a scene of utter cruelty: a human being treated in a way that no human being should ever be treated. But it seems to me that in two and a half years, the war has degraded people’s humanity. On this day the people at the execution had no control over their feelings, their desires, their anger. It was impossible to stop them.
I don’t know how old the victim was but he was young. He was forced to his knees. The rebels around him read out his crimes from a sheet of paper. They stood around him. The young man was on his knees on the ground, his hands tied. He seemed frozen.
Two rebels whispered something into his ear and the young man replied in an innocent and sad manner, but I couldn’t understand what he said because I don’t speak Arabic.
At the moment of execution the rebels grasped his throat. The young man put up a struggle. Three or four rebels pinned him down. The man tried to protect his throat with his hands, which were still tied together. He tried to resist but they were stronger than he was and they cut his throat. They raised his head into the air. People waved their guns and cheered. Everyone was happy that the execution had gone ahead.
That scene in Syria, that moment, was like a scene from the Middle Ages, the kind of thing you read about in history books. The war in Syria has reached the point where a person can be mercilessly killed in front of hundreds of people—who enjoy the spectacle.
As a human being I would never have wished to see what I saw. But as a journalist I have a camera and a responsibility. I have a responsibility to share what I saw that day. That’s why I am making this statement and that’s why I took the photographs. I will close this chapter soon and try never to remember it.

Nine men cleared of sex offences after Twitter evidence

Nine men accused of a range of sexual offences against a teenage girl have walked free from court after the cases against them were dropped.
The cases were dropped after new evidence was gleaned from Twitter.
The men, aged between 21 and 30, all from London, had been charged with 28 offences, including several rapes.
The prosecution told the Old Bailey there would be no evidence presented against them after a Twitter account used by the complainant was examined.
Prosecutor Samantha Cohen told the old Twitter account used by the complainant - a then-14-year-old girl - had been examined at "the highest level" of the Crown Prosecution Service and the police.
'Finally over'
The men - Desmond Agyei, 23, Edward Kofi Edunya, 23, Perry Murray, 24, David Sarpong, 23, Adedeji Atitebi, 21, Austin Odisi, 24, Justin Maynard, 23, Olanrewaju Sonde, 24 and Thamsanqa Sibanda, 30 - remained silent as Judge John Bevan recorded not guilty verdicts.
Speaking as he left the courtroom, Mr Sonde said: "It's just a relief that this is finally over."
Ms Cohen told the court there was "no longer a realistic prospect of conviction" after evidence "came to light through a side-wind" when they discovered that the complainant had an old Twitter account that she had not disclosed.
"The content of the archive tweets - which were not publicly available - is such as to render this a case where there is no realistic prospect of conviction," she said.
The complainant, who is now 15, had been "spoken to" and that "she understands the position" of the case, Ms Cohen said.
"Our view is that it would not be fair to the complainant in this case to say that she had failed to disclose the evidence of the account," she added.
"It is unfortunate that it has happened so late (in the case)," the judge added.
"But these are very serious matters and these have to be gone into."

The men were initially arrested in a series of dawn raids in March.

Vladimir Putin, The Next Nobel Peace Prize Winner?

The ex-KGB agent – known for his bare-chested, gun-wielding antics and a persona similar to that of a lumberjack warrior – has narrowly averted World War Three, the President of the Russian Foundation for Education and Fox News has said.
putin gun
The potential new Nobel Peace Prize nominee 
Sergei Komkov has sent a letter proposing Putin's candidacy to the Nobel Committee for one of the most prestigious international prizes awarded for outstanding scientific research, revolutionary inventions, or major contributions to culture or society.
Previous winners include Martin Luther King, Mother Teresa, Nelson Mandela and Theodore Roosevelt.
“Vladimir Putin has proved his adherence to the cause of peace,” said Komkov, in his letter to the Norwegian Nobel Committee.
“As the head of one of the leading countries of the world, he has made every effort to maintain peace and tranquility in his own state and has actively contributed to peaceful settlement of any conflicts arising on the planet.”
The letter is not formal nomination as Komkov does not qualify to nominate candidates for the prize, an official of the Foundation explained. It is merely a request.
However, perhaps worryingly, the idea appears to be a popular one – winning surprising support from Rupert Murdoch's monolithic media powerhouse Fox News.
“The world knows that Vladimir Putin is the one who really deserves that Nobel Peace Prize,” said Kathleen Troia McFarland, a Fox News national security analyst who had served in national security posts in the Nixon, Ford and Reagan administrations.
She lauded Putin’s “give peace a chance” proposal to avert U.S. strikes against Syria.
“Whereas Mr. Obama made a sincere commitment to starting a war with Syria, engaging our military in unwanted conflict, and doing so without the support of his people we resolve that Mr. Obama should deliver the Nobel Peace prize given to him in 2009 to a man of Peace, the President of Russia, Mr. Putin,” said the petition posted on Wednesday.
Another petition has been launched in France to strip Obama of his prize and award it to Putin – in two days the petition with such request was signed by 808 people.
“Russian President Putin Deserves Nobel Peace Prize,” agreed author Michael Collins Piper of the American Free Press weekly.

Italy's first black minister: I had bananas thrown at me but I'm here to stay

Three mannequins stained with fake blood were dumped last week outside a town hall where Cécile Kyenge was due to make a speech, the latest in a stream of racist protests and insults aimed by furious Italians at the country's first black government minister.
After being likened to an orangutan by a former government minister and having bananas thrown at her while on a podium, it is getting tougher for Congo-born Kyenge, 49, to keep up her oft-repeated mantra that Italy is a tolerant country – but she is trying hard.
"I have never said Italy is racist, every country needs to start building awareness of immigration and Italy has simply arrived very late," she said on the day the mannequins were discovered.
Judging by the venom directed at Kyenge since she was named minister for integration in April, Italy needs to do some fast catching up as the ranks of foreign residents in the country swell to around four million, about 7% of the population.
But from her office in Rome, Kyenge insisted that children growing up in Italy's burgeoning melting pot are free from the prejudices of their parents. "It's easier for the young who have grown up with a different mentality, who have come across people from other places," she said. "If you ask a child in a class who is their friend, it is more likely he will say 'the one with the green jumper' rather than 'the black one'."
That is not quite how Forza Nuova, the far-right party that left the Ku Klux Klan-style mannequins at the town hall, sees things. Kyenge's work on behalf of immigrants, said party member Pablo de Luca, was aimed at "the destruction of the national identity".
Such views are keenly shared by members of the Northern League, Italy's anti-immigrant party, which propped up Silvio Berlusconi's government until it collapsed in 2011.
MEP Mario Borghezio set the ball rolling in May by claiming that Kyenge would impose "tribal conditions" on Italy and help form a "bongo-bongo" administration. Africans, he added for good measure, had "not produced great genes".
In June, a local councillor for the party called for Kyenge to be raped, while in July Roberto Calderoli, a party member and former Berlusconi minister, compared her to an orangutan before bananas were lobbed at her as she made a speech.
To top a vituperative summer, a rightwing deputy mayor in Liguria compared Kyenge on his Facebook page to the prostitutes – often African – who line a local road, while a well-known Italian winemaker, Fulvio Bressan, shocked wine lovers by reportedly calling Kyenge a "dirty black monkey".
It has been a tough reception for a woman who moved to Italy to work as a home help while she trained to become an ophthalmologist, marrying an Italian man and plunging into local politics in Modena to push for greater rights for immigrants before winning a seat in parliament in February.
"When I arrived in 1983, I was one of the few; I was a curiosity. Then, in the 1990s, when mass immigration started, immigrants began to be seen as a threat," she said, recalling patients who had refused to be visited by her. "The process needed to be accompanied by more information in the media, in schools, better laws."
A shock survey in 2008 found that when people were asked who they found "barely likeable or not likeable at all", 81% of Italians mentioned Gypsies, 61% said Arabs, 64% said Romanians and 74% opted for Albanians.
Then came the crippling economic downturn, which sliced 15% off Italy's manufacturing sector, pushed the unemployment rate up to 12% and further hardened perceptions of "job-stealing" migrants.
What is really upsetting the Northern League is Kyenge's work to overhaul Italy's citizenship law, which currently forces the children of migrants born in Italy to wait until they are 18 before they can apply to become Italians, leaving a generation of children growing up feeling like Italians, talking local dialects like Italians, but unable to be Italian.
It has been dubbed the "Balotelli generation", after black footballer Mario Balotelli – who was born to Ghanaian parents in Sicily and is now a mainstay in the Italian national team, but has faced stadium chants of "a negro cannot be Italian".
Kyenge points out that she is not pushing for a US-style law that hands a passport to anyone born in the country, but for a toned-down version that would require the child's parents to have spent some time in Italy or to have taken integration courses.
Meanwhile, she has backed new measures simplifying the bureaucratic nightmare faced by the children of immigrants, who have one year to complete a blizzard of paperwork needed to gain a passport when they turn 18. "You have from the age of 18 to 19 to apply and requests are often turned down due to a few missing documents," she said.
It is just part of an ambitious programme to which the soft-spoken Kyenge has committed herself, stretching from working on housing issues for nomad families to inter-religious dialogue designed to make it easier for Italians to adopt overseas.
Her key task, she said, is convincing a country that has no shortage of culture – from its food to its art – that there is always room for more. "Diversity, sharing something you don't have, offers a huge amount," she said.
Turning to her own field, medicine, she said: "There are small examples of foreign customs which are being adopted by hospitals, like carrying your baby on your back, which can help children with ankle ailments as well as increasing physical contact with the parent while helping the posture of the parent."
Critics have rounded on the fact that Kyenge's father was polygamous, fathering 38 children by numerous wives, a custom she said she would not trying to encourage in Italy. "Let's be clear," she said, laughing, "this is a form of marriage I don't agree with."
Rather than threatening Italian traditions, Kyenge said the asylum-seekers now heading for Italy from sub-Saharan Africa and Syria could be taught to revive trades now being abandoned by Italians, especially if they were allowed to set up shop in the medieval hilltop villages that are rapidly being abandoned up and down the country.
Take, for example, the Calabrian town of Riace, which has reversed depopulation by welcoming the migrants landing on rickety boats after a perilous Mediterranean crossing and setting them up in trades such as dressmaking, joinery, pottery or glass-blowing.
"This is a good practice, using depopulated villages where there are many empty houses, where old farms, shops and workshops can be reopened," said Kyenge, who visited Riace in August. "It offers a welcome to migrants, it's good for the national economy and good for saving trades that risk disappearing."
Back in Rome, as she works to get her message across, Kyenge is getting ready to dodge the next bunch of bananas as she continues to insist that Italy is not a racist country, just learning fast.
"Balotelli and I are both opening new paths in our fields," she said, "and anyone who does that will face huge difficulties."

Peace hopes of Oslo Accords unfulfilled 20 years on


Musa Jaber was just a year old when the Oslo Accords were signed, marking the first time Israelis and Palestinians officially acknowledged each other's right to exist.
That was 20 years ago this week.
Once seen as the cornerstone of an imminent peace settlement, the accords have done little to improve conditions on the ground, according to people like Jaber, a farmer in Hebron, a Palestinian city in the West Bank.
“I want to build a new house but that’s forbidden,” Jaber told AFP. “Meanwhile, [Israelis] are building on our land however they want. But we do not have the right. If we build new homes, the bulldozers will come destroy them.”
ust a few hundred metres from Jaber’s farm, nearly 8,000 Israelis live in the Jewish settlement of Kiryat Arba.
Like Jaber, many of them are disillusioned with the outcome of the Oslo Accords, which paved the way for the formation of the Palestinian Authority and a future Palestinian state based on borders from before the Six Day War of 1967.
“I remember running in the street, protesting against Oslo, holding posters saying ‘Don’t give them guns, don’t give them a state,’” Israeli settler Itamar Ben Gvir told AFP. “Look what happened: they were given guns, and they shot at us. I think there’s no doubt the agreement is a failure.”
The obstacles
Officials on both sides offer differing reasons to explain why the Oslo Accords did not pave the way for greater progress. Interviewed on FRANCE 24, former Israeli diplomat Freddy Eytan said that “lack of security” resulting from Palestinian suicide bombings and rocket fire from Gaza has “rendered Israeli society more distrustful” of Palestinians. He also pointed to the “rise of Hamas as a saboteur of peace”.
Meanwhile, Leila Shahid, the Palestinian Authority’s EU delegate, said that responsibility also lies with “the international community and the eight Israeli administrations that used negotiations as a cover to annex more Palestinian land”.
The number of Israeli settlers has doubled since the accords.
Still, Shahid also said it was unfair to say the Oslo Accords were a total failure.
“Something fundamental changed in 1993,” she told FRANCE 24. “Palestine was recognised as a reality, as a potential future state.”
As for the current talks, brokered by the US, Eytan sounded a note of cautious optimism: “These talks might actually work because we have no alternative.”

Skip work, have sex: Russians celebrate 'day of conception' as sporting community continues to criticise Putin's anti-gay legislation


Russia is celebrating its eighth annual ‘day of conception’ as couples in the eastern region of Ulyanovsk are being advised to stay at home to procreate.

Governor of the region Sergey Morozov has urged bosses to allow men and women the 12th of September off work in order to try and reproduce.
In past years prizes have been awarded to couples who give birth in exactly nine months from the unofficial public holiday. In 2012 the winning pair were presented with an apartment, while in 2011 the award was a Jeep.
The regional celebration is part of a gesture to increase Russia’s struggling birth rate.
In 2006, during his televised State of the Nation address, President Vladimir Putin said the most urgent crisis facing Russia was its demographic crisis. At the time, the country’s population was declining by at least 700,000 people a year.
Russia’s demographic looks to have improved, though, with figures released by one of the country’s demographic indicators showing its population consistently increasing from 2006 to 2012, and its external mortality rate dropping by 40% in the last decade.
Fertility campaigns have, however, remained on the Russian agenda despite apparent improvements in the country’s demographic.
In January 2013 the Moscow Times reported that President Putin invited R&B group Boys II Men to perform in Moscow on the coming St. Valentine ’s Day, in a bid to up the libido of Russian couples. The performance did not, ultimately, go ahead.
Meanwhile, Russia’s recently passed anti-gay legislation continues to come under fire from the international sporting community ahead of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
US snowboarder Seth Wescott, a two-time Olympic gold-medal winner, is the latest to denounce the law signed by President Putin making it illegal to spread information about homosexuality to anyone under 18.
“The human rights stuff that's going on, there's a potential for it to be an incredibly negatively-overshadowed Olympics,” he said.
Wescott said he had female friends in snowboarding who he believed should not be discriminated against during the games.
“They're wonderful human beings, and I think for them to be discriminated against is a crime,” he said. “They should be able to be who they are and compete proudly. They represent our country incredibly well and they don't need to be the object of that kind of criticism and negativity.”
The new Russian law prohibits the promotion of “nontraditional” sexual relations, imposing hefty fines on those found guilty and imprisoning non-nationals for up to 15 days.

Malawi sells jet to avert food crisis

Presidency sells plane for $15m to feed poor and grow crops to fight malnutrition in southern African country.


Malawi will use $15m from the sale of the country's presidential jet to feed the poor and grow crops to
fight malnutrition, an official has said.

"It was a collective government decision that the money realised from the sale of the jet will be used to purchase maize locally and some for legume production," said Nations Msowoya, a spokesman for the Ministry of Finance.

Food experts have said 10 percent of the country's 13 million citizens face food shortages this year.

President Joyce Banda decided last year to sell the jet, bought by her predecessor Bingu wa Mutharika for $22m, due to the cost of running it.

Former colonial power Britain, Malawi's main bilateral donor, reduced its aid to Malawi by $4.7m after the 14-passenger aircraft was purchased.

Mutharika, who died last year from heart attack, often defended the buying of the jet, saying it was cheap to run and a status symbol for the poor southern African nation.
'Looming food crisis'
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In July, the United Kingdom said it would provide Malawi with $20m to alleviate  the "looming food crisis" in southern Africa.
Lynne Featherstone, the UK's international development minister, said the funds would "save countless lives".
Malawi, which was a net exporter of maize just a few years ago, has now seen stocks depleted to a quarter of its annual average after the worst harvest in seven years
Price hikes and unpredictable weather have left food stocks dangerously low in the region, the government said.
Since taking office, Banda has introduced a host of cost-cutting measures and uses commercial airlines to travel outside the country.
The presidential aircraft was auctioned off to a Virgin Islands company, Bohnox Enterprise Ltd and the deal was announced in May.

The luxury jet cost Malawi about $300,000 a year in maintenance and insurance, a government official revealed.

'The Other Guantanamo': Report Shows Impact of Indefinite Detention

A new report by a Pakistani legal organization that represents detainees at Bagram Air Force base in Afghanistan details the effects indefinite detention has on the detainees, as well as their families and loved ones, including emotional and financial hardship. The report, Closing Bagram: The Other Guantanamo, was issued by Justice Project Pakistan (JPP), which represents 11 of the about 60 individuals the U.S. government is holding without charge or trial at Bagram (officially known as the Detention Facility at Parwan). Testimonials from detainees' family members can also be viewed online.
Sarah Belal, the director of JPP, says the debate about America's detention policies is almost always focused on legal questions or national security concerns – both of which shift attention away from the identities of the individuals actually being held. "The detention system and U.S. narrative surrounding it is intentionally dehumanizing and seeks to erase the humanity and histories and individualities of the victims of such policies," says Belal. "By focusing on the accounts of the families of the detainees, we are challenging the U.S. narrative (which is largely based on classified evidence, hearsay, etc.) of these guys being 'bad men' and terrorists by tracing out their histories, gathering their family histories and compiling accounts of their lives."
The United States transferred control of the Bagram facility to the Afghan government in March 2013, after months of delays cause by tensions between the two countries. Despite handing over control, however, the U.S. has continued to hold around 60 individuals under a stated law of war authority – the same legal rationale that applies to the detainees at Guantanamo. All of the U.S.-held detainees at Bagram are non-Afghans, and about two-thirds of them are Pakistani. 
Detainee review boards (known as DRBs) were established in 2009 to determine whether these individuals should continue to be held, though the process is done by an administrative body composed entirely of U.S. officials, not a court. Detainees don't have independent access to lawyers, a fact that the JPP report is critical of. And even if the review board clears a detainee for transfer, several obstacles remain, such as ensuring that their home country won't torture them upon return. 
In the report, Ayaz, a young man held for six years at Bagram, says: "The DRBs were a joke, another way to humiliate us." He adds: "The only evidence they had against me is what they first forced me to sign at [a U.S. military base in] Paktika [province]."
Detention causes significant financial hardship to the families of detainees. "For all the families interviewed, their relative’s detention meant they are robbed of someone who provided substantial financial support, and was often the family’s primary breadwinner," the report states. Other reports on the effects of drone strikes have reported similar findings on the economic hardship caused when heads of households are killed in drone strikes.
Little is known about the day-to-day conditions of the facility in the years before the transfer to the Afghan government, but interviews with several people familiar with the facility help shed some light on it. One former Bagram prison guard, whose deployment ended months prior to the transfer this March, chose to speak to Rolling Stone to correct misperceptions that date back to the Bush years. "It's not really what you think," says the former guard, repeatedly stressing that torture does not take place at Bagram – "Abu Ghraib is over." (This source requested anonymity because guards are not allowed to speak publicly about their time at Bagram.)
The former guard says not all of the detainees were hardened jihadis, though some certainly were. As the former guard understood it, "a lot [of the detainees] were not that important." Some were detained "maybe [because of] a phone call" to the wrong person, while others "might be there for a false passport." Prison guards at Bagram do not have direct access to intelligence files, and much of the former guard's knowledge of the reasons for detention is second-hand.
According to the former guard, detainees were kept in group cells that held about 30 individuals each. Each housing unit contained around 14 to 16 group cells, which the guard says were generally grouped by nationality or ethnicity, which meant captured Pakistanis were not kept in the same group cell as captured Afghans. According to the guard, there are about 13 housing units at Bagram, including a medical unit and a Security Housing Unit (SHU). The guard didn't describe the SHU, but in federal prisons SHUs are used to isolate prisoners in effective solitary confinement, often for disciplinary purposes. It's not clear to what extent any of these conditions continue now that the facility is run by the Afghan government, with the exception of the 60-some detainees held by the U.S.
Belal says she can't confirm the number of housing units at Bagram, but she has "heard similar things from Pakistani embassy officials in Kabul and ex-detainees – that the detainees are kept in huge cages holding up to 30 people divided by ethnicity with the Pakistani detainees in one cage and others (such as Arabs) grouped together in a separate cage." She adds that the roughly 3,000 Afghan prisoners at Bagram are in a separate section now that they've been transferred to Afghan control.
The idea of detainees being held for a reason like having a fake passport rings true to Belal. "I would believe that to be more likely than the charges that the U.S. authorities are purporting to hold them on," she says. "That is why most of the Pakistani ex-detainees released from Bagram have been released without any request for continued detention, and in fact the Pakistani Ministry of Interior has informed us that the ones that have been returned are not found to be in violation of any law except crossing the border without the proper paperwork."
A U.S. Department of Defense official, speaking anonymously because he wasn't authorized to comment publicly on the subject, would not say whether Afghans, Pakistanis and Arabs are separated at Bagram, but says he is "confident" that there must have been a SHU when U.S. forces controlled the facility. Regarding the group cells, he says that "in the early days, that could possibly be right" but couldn't confirm whether or not it happened later on. The official says he "cannot imagine" that detainees would've been held in 2012 or early 2013 for an infringement like having a fake passport – though he acknowledges that until mid-2009 or so, it "was likely" someone could have been detained for that reason.


Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-other-guantanamo-report-shows-impact-of-indefinite-detention-20130911#ixzz2en9mWHcx 
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