Monday, March 11, 2013

EU bans animal-tested cosmetics

A complete ban on the sale of cosmetics developed through animal testing has taken effect in the EU.

The ban applies to all new cosmetics and their ingredients sold in the EU, regardless of where in the world testing on animals was carried out.

The 27 EU countries have had a ban on such tests in place since 2009. But the EU Commission is now asking the EU's trading partners to do the same.

Animal rights lobbyists said EU officials had "listened to the people".

The anti-vivisection group BUAV and the European Coalition to End Animal Experiments (ECEAE) said they had spent more than 20 years campaigning on the issue and had enlisted celebrities including Sir Paul McCartney, Morrissey and Sienna Miller to their cause. They congratulated the EU Commission for putting the ban into effect.

But BUAV says many countries in the world still test on animals for cosmetics and the group is now pressing for a global ban.

Mice and rats are used for more than half of all lab animal tests carried out in the EU.

Despite the EU's 2009 ban, cosmetics firms were allowed to continue testing on animals for the most complex human health effects, such as toxicity which might lead to cancer. However, those tests now come under the ban too.

The EU Commission says it is working with industry to develop more alternatives to animal testing, and that it allocated 238m euros (?208m; $310m) in 2007-2011 for such research.

Cosmetics firms are concerned that the ban could put Europe at a competitive disadvantage in a global market.

Cosmetics Europe chief Bertil Heerink, quoted by the Associated Press news agency, said that "by implementing the ban at this time, the European Union is jeopardising the industry's ability to innovate".

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-21740745#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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The insatiable scramble for luxury real estate in Ghana | Ghanamma ...

Feature Article of Monday, 11 March 2013

Columnist: Tsikata, Prosper Yao

That Ghana has become an attractive investment destination for foreign investors seeking fertile grounds for a healthy return on their investments is no longer in doubt.

Just pay a visit to Airport City, the latest enclave at the Kotoka International Airport (KIA) for luxury hotels, office complexes, a mall and mixed-use developments, and see for yourself the amount of construction going on. Or pay a visit to the popular hotels in Accra ? the Golden Tulip near the 37 Military Hospital, The Holiday Inn at Airport City, The Best Western Premier at the Airport Residential Area, The Movenpick Ambassador and the Novotel both in downtown Accra, the Labadi Beach and the La Palm Royal Beach hotels both in Labadi ? and see for yourself the hordes of foreigners crowded at the pool area, sipping martinis and munching on delicious kebabs, while listening to soothing Ghanaian and foreign music provided by a live-band in the background. If you are still in doubt, please pay a visit to the Ghana Investment Promotion Center (GIPC) and request for their database of foreign investors trooping into Ghana, looking for those sectors of the Ghanaian economy they could channel their investment resources into. It is an incredible and welcome development for our country and, if we can keep up the pace, Ghanaians coming back home from abroad will not recognize their country of origin anymore.

From their comfort zones in London, Paris, Tokyo, Shanghai, Rio de Janeiro, Mumbai, Dubai or Los Angeles, the typical foreign investor trooping into Ghana spends the first one or two months in any of the hotels mentioned above ? and that?s a $300 to $400 hotel bill per night, a whopping $12,000 per month just for accommodation! Compare that to the $3000 to $4000 per month they would spend on a luxury apartment in Cantonments or the Airport Residential area in Accra and it all starts looking like a bargain! No wonder these foreigners couldn?t wait to sneak out of their hotels into town to scramble for luxury apartments in prime areas of Accra.

And so from their hotel rooms in the nation?s capital, the typical foreigner coming to do business in Ghana looks for a safe and secure environment to perch both their business and residential accommodation. And they are looking for the fastest exit to the Kotoka International Airport where they can catch the next flight as quickly as possible should there be any trouble in Ghana. No wonder areas within a one mile radius of the KIA have become the hub of intense residential and commercial real estate activity over the last few years. So next time you see those long lines of red-plated ?CD? cars and SUVs meandering out of Cantonments and the Airport Residential Area, I hope this piece helps you understand what is really going on here.

All of this has resulted in a scramble for prime real estate in the nation?s capital, Accra. Suburbs like the Airport Residential Area, Airport City, Cantonments, Labone, Ridge, East Airport and East Legon ? all within a one-mile radius of the KIA ? have now become the center of gravity for this scramble for prime real estate in Accra. Not to be outdone, Oxford Street in Osu, the Ghanaian version of New York City?s Time Square, is making a name for itself as the next destination for retail and mixed-use residential and commercial real estate development. Property owners in this area are being stampeded by foreign investors into giving up their old dilapidated family homes for lucrative joint venture partnerships for these real estate projects. In the midst of this melee, something definitely has to give. Ghanaians will be shocked to learn that a 100ft x 80ft plot of land in Cantonments or Airport Residential Area is currently selling for as high as $600,000. Yes, over half a million US dollars for a plot of land in Accra, Ghana! It is simply a demand and supply issue. Indeed, if God was making land anymore, I am sure landowners in these areas might be salivating and pleading with God to make more lands in these areas! Families who own land in these areas have become the beneficiaries of this windfall profit. Surprisingly, a good number of these family lands are under litigation for one reason or the other, as every member of these families wants a piece of what grandpa and grandma left them, thereby exacerbating the shortage of land in these very prime areas.

Truly, the demand for luxury real estate in these areas has become insatiable because these are the areas where most foreigners want to live. Chief executives of foreign firms and heads of diplomatic missions in Ghana all want to live in these areas, so do their senior personnel and closest friends. Chief Executive Officers of the most successful Ghanaian companies and their counterparts from Abuja and Lagos all want to live in these areas too. All the embassies in Ghana will shop for offices and residences in these areas first before considering anywhere else. In this whole scramble for prime real estate in Accra, it is obvious demand significantly outstrips supply; no wonder rents in these areas are sky-high and prices for land in these areas have become equally sky-high. This, indeed, is what is fuelling the demand for luxury real estate in Ghana today.

If you buy one acre of land in the Airport Residential Area for $2.5 million, how can you recoup your investment capital and also make a healthy return on your investment? The answer is you pack a good number of apartments into a high rise building, throw in a pool, a tennis court, a gym and lots of security and, voila!, you have a beehive for foreigners and the Ghanaian bourgeoisie seeking a comfortable residential accommodation. Then turn around and sell them from $400,000 to $600,000 as long as the demand is there and you are assured of a healthy return on your investment! This is precisely what is happening now in these prime areas of Accra. Trasacco?s Villagio Vista at Tetteh Quarshie Circle, Meridian Apartments, Primrose Place, Casa Bella and Astoria Palms, all at the Airport Residential Area, have figured out this formula for success and have become extremely good at building luxury apartments in these areas. A 2-bedroom apartment for rent in these areas goes for $2000 to $3000 per month and a 3-bedroom for $3000 to $4000 per month. Office space in these areas is anything from $30 to $40 per square meter. If you own a business in Ghana and your company is here to stay, why spend nearly $50,000 per year on rent when you can buy that same luxury apartment for $400,000 and it is completely paid for in 8 years? And your company will own that property pretty much forever and house your executive staff for as long as you want! Why not? So it is not surprising the moment the developers start digging the ground for those high-rise apartments, companies are now rushing to buy these units to house their senior staff.

As the economy of Ghana continues to grow, this trend is very likely to continue and Ghanaians should brace themselves for some of these astronomical prices in the real estate marketplace. As stated earlier, it is simply a demand and supply issue, and there is absolutely nothing the government can do to control these prices. Indeed, what is happening in Ghana today is a microcosm of the general scramble for foreign investment in the emerging economies of the African continent and that trend is simply going to continue, considering the very strong democratic credentials our country has chalked so far. For me as a Ghanaian, as long as all these developments bring lots and lots of jobs to my fellow Ghanaians, I am all for it. Let?s pray our country continues to enjoy the peace we are enjoying today and we are likely to see more glory days ahead.

Peter Atsu Tsikata

CEO, Millennium Properties Ltd

A full-service real estate and property management company. Tel: 026-655-7066

Source: http://www.ghanamma.com/2013/03/the-insatiable-scramble-for-luxury-real-estate-in-ghana/

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Justin Bieber Cancels Portugal Gig Due To 'Unforseen Circumstances'

After a rough week in London, pop star pulls out of the second of two shows at Pavilhao Atlantico
By Gil Kaufman


Justin Bieber
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1703358/justin-bieber-cancels-portugal-show.jhtml

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Sunday, March 10, 2013

Attack highlights how a corner of Afghanistan is falling apart

The ambush and killing of 16 Afghan soldiers last weekend is one of the worst setbacks for the country's military in years.

By Ben Arnoldy,?Staff writer / March 8, 2013

An Afghan firefighter man washes the scene of a suicide attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, in February.

Musadeq Sadeq/AP

Enlarge

Glance at a map of Afghanistan and the first thing you notice is the long finger of land jutting out of the country?s northeast ? the Wakkan Corridor. The government?s ability to reach that area just became more questionable after an attack this weekend that killed 16 Afghan soldiers on the one road that connects it to Afghanistan proper.

Skip to next paragraph Ben Arnoldy

Deputy International Editor

Ben Arnoldy is the Deputy International Editor at The Christian Science Monitor. He has served as the Monitor's bureau chief in India and Northern California.?

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I traveled that road in 2010. The area of the ambush ? claimed by the Taliban ? scared my driver then, who warned me that the next 15 minutes through the ominously-named Warduj district were going to be risky. Outside the windows of our jeep, we left a lightly-forested riparian village and struck east toward an open landscape ringed by the snowy mountains of the Pamir range, whose peaks form the roof of the world and whose slopes tumble into Pakistan, China, and Tajikistan.

Eyes in the jeep weren?t looking up but darting from rock to rock as the road twisted and turned through a giant uninhabited boulder field. The driver pointed out a scorch on the pavement from a recent attack on a police vehicle. The gunmen had hid behind the boulders to waylay the police, miles from any help.

Efforts at putting checkpoints around this area have gone badly, with the Taliban abducting 16 Afghan policemen and killing four others from one checkpoint in an incident last year a few months after German troops handed over security responsibility for the province.

This is Badakshan Province, one of the safest in Afghanistan ??safety being a relative metric. Even here, local thugs are carving off chunks of territory for drug profits and power, aided by missteps from the international community and Afghanistan?s pre-existing divisions. To the extent the central government exercises control, it's to decide who gets to profit illegally from government posts.?

Once out of the boulder field, prayers passed the lips of my driver and our eyes looked ahead towards Ishkashim, a city on the Afghan border with Tajikistan and gateway to the fabled Wakkan Corridor that juts out from Afghanistan?s borders like a stiletto. Ishkashim is one of two main border crossings that landlocked Afghanistan has with Tajikistan ? the other passing through the more violent province of Kunduz. As such, it?s a lifeline of trade and supplies, and a big conduit for illicit drugs.

The United Nations estimates that Afghan smugglers sent 80 tons of heroin and 20 tons of opium into Tajikistan in 2010. In recent years, turf wars have erupted over control of the road to Ishkashim.

Security analyst Thomas Ruttig detailed some of those fights in an alarming writeup last August. At the time, a short-lived armed rebellion had broke out across the border in Tajikistan, led by the commander of the Tajik border police post at Ishkashim ? a lucrative post if one is involved in smuggling. Mr. Ruttig argues the rebellion had its roots in the Afghan drug economy, as it appeared to touch off political infighting on the Afghanistan side which implied ?rearrangements in drug-trafficking networks.?

One of those rearrangements came when Afghan officials arrested a district police chief named Qari Wadud that summer. According to Ruttig, Mr. Wadud had drug processing factories and was moving a lot of product out to Tajikstan. Tajik officials convinced their Afghan counterparts that Wadud was also playing a role in the unrest on the Tajik side of the border.?

Uprooting such officials can touch off conflict for the Afghan government. During my visit to the province in 2010, I was woken one night in the city of Baharak by the steadily approaching sound of gunfire. Militants attacked the district government headquarters, destroying a portion of the building with a rocket. The source of the fighting might have been a disgruntled former official, according to a?2011 report from the Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit (AREU):

Recent security incidents in Baharak District were attributed to the replacement of the long-serving district police chief. In Baharak, the position is a lucrative one given its central position to trade in opium in the province, and the displaced chief is assumed by many to be behind the sudden rise in insecurity.

Baharak is the last major settlement on the road heading east to Ishkasham. Between lies the boulder field of Warduj, a district that has a significant number of insurgents. The pocket of fighters there is a?puzzling development considering that the entire province contains almost no ethnic Pashtuns, who make up the vast majority of the insurgency elsewhere, and Badakshan was a last redoubt for the Northern Alliance during their darkest hours fighting the former Taliban government in Kabul.?The insurgents in Warduj appear to be supporting themselves by infiltration routes from nearby Pakistan and possibly the drug trade that they allow to flow along the same road that they deny to police and army personnel.

From Ruttig?s report:

?the insurgents ? who, since November [2011], regularly seem to have been?positioning checkpoints on a key road leading from the provincial capital Faizabad to Baharak, Warduj and further on to Zebak, Ishkashem and Tajikistan ? are also cooperating in the safe passage for drug convoys coming from Darayem and Baharak, as a ?contribution to jehad?, namely by ?sending drugs to the enemies of Islam?.?

The gradual slide of Badakshan into a scrum for a piece of the poppy trade goes hand-in-hand with the return of poppy cultivation to the province. In the late 2000s, the province was considered nearly ?poppy-free? as the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) promised to bring development to the province.

USAID would ultimately spend $60 million over four years, but spend it badly. Hydroelectric projects were left incomplete, newly-paved roads fell apart in months, and a pricey veterinary lab shut down when the government couldn?t keep paying salaries, according to an investigation I did for the Monitor.

Residents of Badakshan cite the failed promises as a reason for restarting the cultivation of poppy, according to the AREU report:

The informants in [Badakshan] were blunt about how far such efforts had fallen below their expectations.? [M]ost of the money that had been promised did not arrive, and the projects that did take place were not seen as bringing long-term benefits: ?we have given up our weapons, given up poppy but there is nothing for income, the government has done nothing.?

The report found other reason that residents returned to poppy: Their sons who joined the Afghan military and served in southern provinces like Helmand noticed that the Afghan government and the US Marines there openly allowed farmers to cultivate poppy. At the same time, the southern Pashtun-dominated provinces were getting more development aid.

Both gripes are absolutely true. On an embed to the US mission?s southernmost outpost in 2010, the Marines in Helmand explained to me that the counterinsurgency thinking in vogue at the time meant that their mission was to win over the support of local residents. Nothing angered farmers working that ditch-scarred desert more than eradicating their poppy crops, so the Marines said they wouldn?t do that.

Instead, the US showered development money on the insurgency-ridden southern regions in the hope of shoring up support for the US-backed government. In Helmand, too, the projects are incomplete: The US just announced it won?t finish work on restoring the Kajaki dam, a projected needed to power the south; instead, money will be given to the Afghans to finish it.

Can the Afghan government keep control over such corners of a difficult and drug-fueled country to take up the work of nation-building? The news out of Badakshan isn't encouraging.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/ZJuALSi_qFs/Attack-highlights-how-a-corner-of-Afghanistan-is-falling-apart

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Lisa Ling Gives Birth to a Girl!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/03/lisa-ling-gives-birth-to-a-girl/

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Chavez's body brought 'home' to military academy

A supporter of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez holds images of him while the coffin containing his body passes in the street, from the hospital where he died on Tuesday to a military academy where it will remain until his funeral in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, March 6, 2013. Seven days of mourning were declared, all schools were suspended for the week and friendly heads of state were expected for an elaborate funeral Friday. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

A supporter of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez holds images of him while the coffin containing his body passes in the street, from the hospital where he died on Tuesday to a military academy where it will remain until his funeral in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, March 6, 2013. Seven days of mourning were declared, all schools were suspended for the week and friendly heads of state were expected for an elaborate funeral Friday. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

Covered by objects placed by supporters, the coffin carrying the body of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez arrives to the military academy where his body will lie in state until his funeral in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, March 6, 2013. Seven days of mourning were declared, all schools were suspended for the week and friendly heads of state were expected for an elaborate funeral Friday. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A woman holds a picture of President Hugo Chavez against her face as she cries outside the military hospital where he died Tuesday in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, March 6, 2013. Seven days of mourning were declared, all school was suspended for the week and friendly heads of state were expected for an elaborate funeral Friday..(AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

In this photo released by Miraflores Press Office, Venezuela's interim President Nicolas Maduro, left, and Diosdado Cabello, President of Venezuela's National Assembly stand next to the flag-draped coffin containing the body of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez on display during his wake at a military academy where his body will lie in state until his funeral in in state in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, March 6, 2013. Seven days of mourning were declared, all schools were suspended for the week and friendly heads of state were expected for an elaborate funeral Friday. (AP Photo/Miraflores Presidential Press Office)

A woman holding a small image of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez stands in the street to watch Chavez's coffin be moved from the hospital where he died on Tuesday to a military academy where his body will lie in state until his funeral in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, March 6, 2013. Seven days of mourning were declared, all schools were suspended for the week and friendly heads of state were expected for an elaborate funeral Friday. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

(AP) ? Hugo Chavez has been carried back to the military academy where he started his army career, his flag-draped coffin lying in state in the echoing halls until Friday's funeral.

As a band played the hymn from his first battalion, a long ribbon of tearful mourners numbering in the hundreds of thousands bid farewell to the larger-than-life leader Wednesday after a procession carried his casket through Caracas.

With the entire government, including anointed successor Nicolas Maduro, caught up in the seven-hour procession, there were few answers to the most pressing question facing the country ? the timing of a presidential election that must be called within a month.

Generations of Venezuelans, many dressed in the red of Chavez's socialist party, filled the capital's streets to remember the man who dominated their country for 14 years before succumbing to cancer Tuesday afternoon.

Chavez's coffin made its way through the crowds atop an open hearse on an eight-kilometer (five-mile) journey that wound through the city's north and southeast, into many of the poorer neighborhoods where Chavez drew his political strength.

At the academy, Chavez's family and close advisers, as well as the presidents of Argentina, Bolivia and Uruguay, attended a funeral Mass around the president's glass-topped casket. The public then began filing past to peer at their longtime president, many of them coming closer to him than they had ever been while he was alive. Some placed their hand over their heart, others saluting or raising a fist in solidarity. The viewing lasted far into the night.

The head of Venezuela's presidential guard, Gen. Jose Ornella, told The Associated Press late Wednesday that Chavez died of a massive heart attack after great suffering.

"He couldn't speak but he said it with his lips ... 'I don't want to die. Please don't let me die,' because he loved his country, he sacrificed himself for his country," said Ornella, who said he was with the socialist president at the moment of his death Tuesday.

Set against the outpouring of grief was near-total official silence on where Venezuela is heading next, including when the election will take place. Even the exact time and place of Chavez's funeral Friday has not been announced, nor has it been revealed where he will be laid to rest.

During Chavez's nearly two-year health fight, the government never specified the exact location or type of cancer he had.

Opponents already have been stepping up criticism of the government's questionable moves after Chavez's death, including naming Maduro, the vice president, as interim president in apparent violation of the constitution, and the military's eagerness to choose political sides.

For a day, at least, Chavez's heartbroken supporters immersed themselves in emotion and sad farewells.

Maduro and Bolivian President Evo Morales, one of Chavez's staunchest allies, mingled with the crowd, and at one point both fell to the ground in the jostle of bodies pushing in every direction.

Military officers and Cabinet members ringed the president's coffin, stone-faced. Other mourners pumped their fists and held aloft images of the late president, amid countless yellow, blue and red Venezuelan flags.

"The fight goes on! Chavez lives!" the mourners shouted in unison, many through eyes red from crying for long hours.

Chavez's mother, Elena Frias de Chavez, leaned against her son's casket, while a priest read a prayer before the procession left the military hospital where Chavez died at age 58.

People who passed by the glass-topped coffin said Chavez's body was clad in the presidential sash and the military uniform and red beret of his days as a paratrooper.

Ricardo Tria, a social worker, said he waited nearly four hours to pass by the casket. Chavez looked "asleep, quiet, serious," he said.

"I feel so much pain. So much pain," said Yamile Gil, a 38-year-old housewife. "We never wanted to see our president like this. We will always love him."

Others who bitterly opposed Chavez's take-no-prisoners brand of socialism said they were sorry about his death, but hopeful it would usher in a less confrontational, more business-friendly era in this major oil-producing country.

"I am not happy that he has died, but I can't be sad either," said Delia Ramirez, a 32-year-old accountant who stayed away from the procession. "This man sowed hatred and division among Venezuelans."

The 1999 constitution that Chavez himself pushed through mandates that an election be called within 30 days to replace a president, but Chavez's top lieutenants have not always followed the law.

The charter clearly states that the speaker of the National Assembly, in this case Diosdado Cabello, should become interim president if a head of state is forced to leave office within three years of his election. Chavez was re-elected only in October.

But Chavez anointed Maduro for that role, and the vice president has assumed the mantle even as the government has named him as the ruling socialist party's candidate in the presidential vote.

The military also appears to be showing firm support for Maduro despite a constitutional mandate that it play no role in politics. In a tweet late Tuesday, state television said the defense minister, Adm. Diego Molero, had pledged military support for Maduro's candidacy against likely opposition candidate Henrique Capriles, raising concern among critics about the fairness of the vote.

Capriles, the 40-year-old governor of Miranda state who lost to Chavez in October, was conciliatory in a televised address after the president's death.

"This is not the moment to highlight what separates us," Capriles said. "This is not the hour for differences; it is the hour for union, it is the hour for peace."

Other opposition leaders were more critical of the military stance.

"When all Venezuela wants unity and peace, and a climate of respect between Venezuelans predominates, they're contrasted by what's unacceptable, the declarations of the minister of defense, that are, besides false, unconstitutional," said Ramon Guillermo Aveledo, executive secretary of the opposition coalition.

Cynthia Arnson, director of the Latin American Program at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, said Maduro won't be able to harness "Chavismo" as Chavez did so successfully, but she expects him to win any upcoming presidential vote.

"There's really no one who can step into those shoes," she said.

In addition to spiraling crime and shortages of basic goods, the next administration must also control a ballooning public debt that has quadrupled to $102 billion since Chavez took office in 1999, despite Venezuela's booming oil exports

Maduro's Jekyll-and-Hyde-like behavior Tuesday has stoked worries about a future government.

He used a speech just before Chavez's death to lash out at the United States and internal opponents he accused of plotting to destabilize the government. He pointed to shadowy forces as being behind the president's cancer and expelled two American military attaches he charged with spying.

Then, in a televised appearance to announce the death, a shaken and somber Maduro called for peace, love and reconciliation among all Venezuelans.

Venezuela and the United States have a complicated relationship, with Chavez's enemy to the north remaining the top buyer of Venezuelan oil. But Chavez's inner circle has long claimed the United States was behind a failed 2002 attempt to overthrow him, and he has frequently used anti-American rhetoric to stir up support. Venezuela has been without a U.S. ambassador since July 2010 and expelled a U.S. military officer in 2006.

In Washington, senior Obama administration officials said Wednesday they hoped to rebuild the U.S.-Venezuelan relationship, but acknowledged that a quick rapprochement was unlikely given the Latin American country's impending presidential election.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak publicly on the matter, expressed displeasure with the expulsion of the two U.S. military officials by Venezuela and Maduro's accusations that the U.S. was somehow responsible for Chavez's cancer.

"Yesterday's first press conference was not encouraging," a senior official said. "It disappointed us."

___

Associated Press writers Christopher Toothaker, Jorge Rueda and Fabiola Sanchez in Caracas and Bradley Klapper in Salt Lake City, Utah, contributed to this report.

___

Paul Haven on Twitter: www.twitter.com/paulhaven

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-07-Venezuela-Chavez/id-5841c990adc34e888f2cfcc6a8f4d5a9

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Cyclones Set for NCAA Championships

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Saturday signs contract to retire with Colts

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ? Indianapolis gave Jeff Saturday a chance to fulfill his NFL dream.

On Thursday, he came back to thank the town and the team that embraced his improbable journey from undrafted free agent to NFL star.

Moments after signing his final contract with the Colts, Indy's longtime center and a key figure in forging a settlement to the 2011 NFL lockout officially retired with the team that brought him into the league 14 years ago.

"This does not happen for many players, especially many offensive linemen," Saturday said. "I'm excited to retire as a Colt. I mean, this is my home. This is what we've supported for so many years. I was known, no matter what team I was playing for, as a Colt. So it's good to put that horseshoe on and go out that way."

Colts fans will always remember Saturday for his gritty play and down-to-earth attitude. Nationally, he will forever be known as the voice of reason during the contentious lockout negotiations. Saturday lobbied on behalf of the players he represented and constantly urged both sides to remember that they would be best served by reaching a settlement rather than losing the "golden goose."

After the two sides agreed to a 10-year collective bargaining agreement, Saturday's embrace of Patriots owner Robert Kraft became an memorable image of labor peace. Kraft had just finished speaking about his wife, Myra, who died during the negotiations, when Saturday put aside Indy's bitter rivalry with New England, hugged Kraft and then credited him for "saving football."

"I have a tremendous amount of respect for Jeff Saturday. For more than a decade, I considered Jeff a fiercely competitive rival. After working with him in 2011 during the NFL labor negotiations, I now consider Jeff a friend," Kraft said. "I admire him for the leadership and professionalism he showed throughout the negotiations and I thank him for the compassion he extended to me during a difficult time. I know that Jeff was a great leader on the field, but I witnessed the leadership he possesses in the board room, and I believe that will serve his next employer very well as he transitions to his next career. I wish him all the best."

Saturday also acknowledged that his appreciation for Colts football played a big role in reaching a compromise.

"This organization is what I hope all the NFL teams strive to be. In every negotiation I was involved with the PA (players association) and the NFL, I used us (the Colts) as an example of what you should strive to and I make no bones about it," he said. "This organization is the best in the business and it will continue."

Before playing in his sixth and final Pro Bowl last month, Saturday had already said he was retiring. He even made a cameo appearance with the AFC so he could snap the ball one more time to his close friend, former Colt and current Bronco Peyton Manning. Green Bay cut Saturday last month, a procedural move that made Thursday's festivities possible.

Ironically, though, the move came exactly one year to the day after team owner Jim Irsay and Manning, the four-time MVP, appeared in the same room to announce Manning's release. Both men spoke then in halting tones as they fought back tears.

This time, it was more celebratory. Saturday and Irsay smiled and even joked about the formality of the one-day deal.

"I'm going to sign this contract and let Jeff come up and sign his portion so we can make it official that Jeff is a Colt today, and this is not costing me anything," Irsay said, drawing laughter. "And that's rare, but Jeff did ask for a new pickup truck so I told him I would consider that. "

When Saturday stepped to the podium, he responded in kind.

"Like he said, it cost him a lot more the last time than it did this time," Saturday said.

The only time Saturday choked up was when he thanked his wife, Karen, for allowing him to pursue a football career. He then turned toward reporters and explained he couldn't look at his wife because he would "lose it." She wiped her eyes, too.

Saturday also thanked his three children, seated behind him in blue No. 63 jerseys, Irsay, his head coaches and position coaches, ex-teammates and even the equipment managers and trainers, some of whom watched from the back of the room.

His improbable journey actually started in Baltimore in 1998. The Ravens signed him as an undrafted rookie but cut him before training camp opened.

One year later, the Colts took a low-risk gamble on someone who had spent the previous year selling electrical supplies in North Carolina and he wound up making the roster. By 2000, he had won the starting center's job, which he kept until leaving for Green Bay as a free agent last year.

With Indy, Saturday won two AFC titles, one Super Bowl ring, became a pillar in the community and made 170 starts with Manning behind him, an NFL record for a quarterback-center tandem.

"The relationship between a center and a quarterback is special. We loved each other but we could fight each other as well. We could bump heads and there was always a mutual respect," Saturday said. "It never got any further than that. It was always on the field. Off the field, we were friends. He's taken me to places and given me gifts and allowed me to do things that I would never have the opportunity to do."

Asked for his favorite football moment, Saturday didn't offer up the Super Bowl win.

"The AFC Championship game trumps them all for me," he said, referring to the Colts' second-half comeback against the Patriots in the 2006 playoffs. "Getting to recover a fumble for a touchdown, getting to slay the Patriots, all those things. That's the one for me, even above the Super Bowl."

Saturday said he will continue to make Indy his home and Irsay said Saturday will be inducted into the team's Ring of Honor. Irsay also has hired Saturday to work in the Colts' community relations and marketing department and said there could be a future for Saturday on the coaching staff or in the front office.

"Here's a man who came into the league, no one thought he was going to do much," Irsay said. "He wasn't a first-round draft pick and is an individual who literally took this town and this state over with his integrity, with his love for the community, with this performance on the field, just an absolutely incredible individual. Going through the lockout, how he played a huge role in getting that settled. It was just absolutely incredible how Jeff has made his mark in this league and for this franchise."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/saturday-signs-contract-retire-colts-210456377--nfl.html

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Superstorm Sandy battered the poor hardest, studies show

(Reuters) - Superstorm Sandy punished low-income people in New York and New Jersey, especially renters who are now at risk of being unable to find new homes, according to a pair of studies released on Wednesday said.

Forty-three percent of the 518,000 households in New York and New Jersey asking for federal aid after Superstorm Sandy reported annual incomes of less than $30,000, according to the study from the affordable housing financing firm Enterprise Community Partners.

Of those making claims to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) as of mid-February, 68 percent of renters and 24 percent of homeowners were low-income, the Enterprise study said.

Low-income renters were vulnerable to being left without affordable housing, according to another study from the Furman Center at New York University.

Sandy crashed ashore with a record sea surge on October 29, damaging or destroying hundreds of thousands of homes and commercial buildings, mostly in low-lying coastal areas of New York and New Jersey.

U.S. lawmakers approved a $50 billion federal aid package aimed at helping homeowners, businesses, states and cities. A full picture of the economic damage is still unfolding.

Floodwaters from the storm damaged 402 public housing buildings with more than 35,000 units in New York City, the Furman Center study found. That amounts to "more public housing units than the entire stock of any other public housing authority in the country" except Puerto Rico, it said.

The split of FEMA claims between New York and New Jersey residents was roughly equal. The number of homeowners with uninsured damage was 60 percent higher in New York, the Enterprise study said.

About a fifth of all FEMA claims were filed by households making more than $90,000 a year, Enterprise found.

(Reporting by Hilary Russ; Editing by Daniel Trotta and Phil Berlowitz)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/superstorm-sandy-battered-poor-hardest-studies-show-061205713.html

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Review: Rajiv Joseph's 'The North Pool' engrossing

NEW YORK (AP) ? Rajiv Joseph's play "The North Pool" opens with an 18-year-old high school student being sent to see the vice principal over what seems to be a skipped class.

Don't believe it. That's a red herring.

The real reason Khadim Asmaan has been asked to stop by Dr. Danielson's office is about why he left the cross-country team. No, that's not it either. Whether he knows anything about vandalism on campus? Or maybe his connection to the Middle East? Nope. Could it be about strange stuff in his locker? No, not that. Why he's even attending this sprawling public school in the first place? Keep looking.

Joseph's engrossing play, which opened Wednesday at The Vineyard Theatre, has more false clues than an Agatha Christie novel. It's a two-character mystery spread out over 85 minutes of real time in which both characters slowly drop their pretenses and reveal their common hurt.

"There's so much stuff about you that I just don't know," Dr. Danielson tells the nonplussed student early on. "We're onions. You and me. Everyone. Onions."

Babak Tafti makes an auspicious New York stage debut as Khadim, a transfer student from Syria whose initial pleasant and respectful demeanor masks a lot of anger. He's got the sarcasm and boiling hostility of a teen down cold.

Stephen Barker Turner plays the fussy, seriously uncool school bureaucrat who has turned the initial meeting between the two ? the last day of classes before spring break 2007 ? into an interrogation. He's prepared in his ill-fitting Dockers and fondness for clipboards, a perfect fit for Donyale Werle's shabby gray cinderblocked set that will instantly remind anyone of high school.

Giovanna Sardelli, who also has directed Joseph's "Animals Out of Paper," has helmed this one not by steadily increasing the temperature but more like building a roller coaster, with sharp spikes of tension followed by slackness. That tips the play into more melodrama than outright thriller.

Joseph's other credits include the fine off-Broadway "Gruesome Playground Injuries," which tells a love story through lovers' scars, and Broadway's "Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo," a Pulitzer Prize finalist in drama about the Iraq war starring Robin Williams.

In this play, which has been seen before in Palo Alto, Calif., and the Barrington Stage Company in Pittsfield, Mass., Joseph briefly explores racial profiling, reverse racism, Cold War ghosts, sex tapes, class divisions and forgiveness, among other topics.

There are some abrupt transitions, some themes are picked up and then dropped awkwardly, and the windup takes too long while the second half seems rushed, but the ultimate payoff is splendid and moving. Just avoid the red herrings piling up.

___

Online: http://www.vineyardtheatre.org

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/review-rajiv-josephs-north-pool-engrossing-004441913.html

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Senators seek tougher gun background checks for mentally ill

CHARLESTON, South Carolina (Reuters) - A Republican senator introduced bipartisan gun background check legislation on Wednesday that would make it harder for mentally ill people who are considered to be dangerous to buy a firearm.

The legislation proposed by Lindsey Graham would require reporting of certain mental illness treatments and legal proceedings to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, the clearinghouse for all new gun purchases.

Those cases would include anyone found not guilty of a crime by reason of insanity or anyone who received involuntary outpatient treatment from a psychiatric hospital.

Graham cited a recent case in his state of South Carolina as a key example of the failures of the current background check system and the need for reform.

Last month, a woman who had previously pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity after being indicted in 2005 for threatening to kill President George W. Bush tried to fire a gun at faculty members at a private girls school in Charleston.

Alice Boland, 28, was allowed to buy the gun even though a court in the 2005 case declared her legally insane and a substantial risk to others and ordered anti-psychotic drugs and long-term psychiatric care, which she received, Graham said.

Boland, who has paranoid schizophrenia, aimed the gun at faculty members at Ashley Hall School and repeatedly pulled the trigger, authorities have said. Although it was loaded, the gun did not fire.

President Bush's mother, Barbara Bush, attended Ashley Hall.

Boland has been charged with attempted murder and possession of a weapon during a violent crime. She is due in court for a preliminary hearing on March 14 and has not entered a plea.

"The Alice Boland case is ?Exhibit A' of a broken background check system," Graham said on Wednesday. "An individual who pleads not guilty by reason of insanity should not be able to pass a federal background check and legally purchase a gun. As astonishing as it sounds, that actually happened."

Graham said the legislation would ensure that those who have been declared an imminent danger to themselves or others cannot legally obtain a firearm.

"There is a lot of emotion around the gun violence issue, but I am hopeful this is one area where we can find tremendous bipartisan support to fix what I think is a gaping gap in our law," Graham said.

The Senate is considering several other gun-control bills, including a controversial proposal that seeks to revive the federal ban on the sale of assault weapons that was in effect for a decade before expiring in 2004.

Another bill would require criminal and mental health background checks of all gun buyers. The debate over gun control has heated up since a gunman killed 20 children and six adults at a Connecticut elementary school in December.

The legislation introduced by Graham is co-sponsored by Republican Jeff Flake of Arizona and Democrats Mark Begich of Alaska and Mark Pryor of Arkansas.

The four senators said their proposal contains provisions to allow people who have recovered from their mental illness to have their Second Amendment rights restored.

The bill "strengthens the background check system while protecting both gun and mental health rights," Begich said.

(Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Andrew Hay)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/senators-seek-tougher-gun-background-checks-mentally-ill-010354773.html

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