Martes, Enero 31, 2012

Vaipouli College to shut

The government?s only boarding school in Savai?i, Vaipouli College, will soon be but a memory as government moves to gradually shut it down. Education Minister, Magele Mauiliu Magele told Parliament yesterday that the Ministry has made the decision to close the school after nearly 50 years of operation.

According to Magele, the closure is in line with a Ministry policy to ensure students do not have to travel and live way from home to get education.

Source: http://www.samoaobserver.ws/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=37776:vaipouli-college-to&catid=1:latest-news&Itemid=50

Amir Khan Mark Zuckerberg John Barnes Lee Carsley Tim Cahill England cricket team

South Wales Evening Post published Going extra mile for kids

Article


Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503366/s/1c46e4d0/l/0L0Sthisissouthwales0O0CGoing0Eextra0Emile0Ekids0Cstory0E150A866370Edetail0Cstory0Bhtml/story01.htm

Walking holidays Public sector cuts Credit cards Everton Lancashire Tobin tax

South Wales Evening Post commented Watermeyer aims to prove his worth

Article

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503366/s/1c481f87/l/0L0Sthisissouthwales0O0CWatermeyer0Eaims0Eprove0Eworth0Cstory0E150A8690A30Edetail0Cstory0Bhtml/story01.htm

Arsenal Dmitry Medvedev Vladimir Putin War crimes Joey Barton Petrol prices

Talking points from the midweek games

Ger McCarthy
 
You can never watch enough El Clasico’s
WEDNESDAY night’s Copa Del Ray quarter final second leg between Barcelona and Real Madrid at the Camp Nou delivered one of the most intense, high octane, action-packed and downright mad El Clasico’s of the season. Despite the final 4-3 aggregate score in favour of the Catalans, the two legs re-established Real Madrid as Barca’s only true competitor in domestic tournaments and probably the Champions League as well. Concern that the bitter rivals playing one another so often in the recent months might dilute the relevance of ‘El Clasico’ was dispelled following Wednesday night’s ultra-competitive encounter. More of the same in 2012 please.
 
Reaching a domestic final still matters
KENNY Dalglish has plenty of critics and didn’t endear himself to the football authorities or supporters of certain clubs outside of Liverpool with his handling of the Luis Suarez affair. Yet the tears shed by the Liverpool manager at full time in Wednesday night’s Carling Cup second-leg 2-2 draw with Manchester City were genuine and gave a momentary glimpse into the insane pressures endured by modern day football managers. The sheer relief at guiding Liverpool back to Wembley for the first time in 16 years was evident and Dalglish deserves credit for reaching a final despite Liverpool’s less than stellar league form this year. A man who has had to endure the horrors of Hillsborough and Heysel whilst both playing for and managing the club he loves deserved his moment of celebration.
 
Cardiff’s stock continues to rise
A penalty shoot-out victory over fellow Championship side Crystal Palace secured Cardiff’s place in the Carling League Cup final on Tuesday night. Malky Mackay’s side were full value for their win having struck the woodwork on three separate occasions before cementing their place in the decider against Liverpool. The Bluebirds success in reaching the latter stages of knockout competitions has overshadowed an inability to make the breakthrough from Championship to the Premier League in recent seasons. Mackay’s team are currently positioned just one point outside the automatic promotion places (behind Southampton and West Ham United) and must not let another Wembley appearance distract from the ultimate prize of gaining promotion to England’s top division.

Pressure is mounting on Roberto Mancini
A difficult week for the Premier League leaders saw Roberto Mancini’s brooding striker Mario Balotelli served with a four-match ban for lashing out at Scott Parker and Manchester City exit the Carling Cup at the semi-final stage. Worse still, the individual who orchestrated Liverpool’s two-legged victory was Craig Bellamy, a player Mancini allowed to leave Eastlands on a free transfer. Carlos Tevez and his agents refuse to go away and only serve as an annoying distraction to Mancini’s title ambitions. The Premier League crown is all that Mancini’s expensively assembled squad has left to contest. Although the club’s mega-rich owners publicly back their manager they are unlikely to tolerate another trophy less season only further adding to the pressure Mancini and his side will face in the title-run in with an experienced Manchester United.

Libya makes headlines for all the right reasons
AN unplayable, rain-sodden pitch couldn’t prevent Libya from securing one of the most historic results in the country’s football history at the Africa Cup of Nations earlier this week. A 2-2 draw with a Zambian side that had defeated the much-fancied Senegal in their group opener maintained the Libyan’s hopes of progressing to the knockout phase of the tournament. Ahmed Saad’s brace of goals earned his a point but the sight of the Libyan defenders heroically blocking a succession of late Zambian goal attempts underlined a side led by Brazilian Coach Marcos Paqueta’s determination to make their mark. Civil war has devastated Libya in the past 12 months but an opportunity to qualify for the quarter finals (as 35/1 outsiders) of the Africa Cup of Nations would lift the spirits of the war ravaged country.
 
Show me the money
NOT content with earning a one million dollar bonus for defeating Libya in their Africa Cup of Nations opening fixture, Equatorial Guinea went one better in their second Group A match on Wednesday night by knocking Senegal out of the tournament. The decision of President’s son Teodorin Obiang to lavish the co-host’s squad with outrageous bonuses has had the desired effect as Equatorial Guinea are now certain to make the knockout stages of the tournament following a famous 2-1 win. Moussa Sow appeared to have earned Senegal a point with a 90th minute equaliser until a marvellous long range effort from Kily won it for Equatorial Guinea to spark off wild celebrations and even a pitch invasion from the co-hosts delirious fans. Alan Pardew will be delighted with Senegal’s exit as it means an earlier than expected return for three of Newcastle United’s first team players Cheick Tiote, Demba Ba and Papiss Demba Cisse.

Follow Ger on Twitter: @offcentrecircle
 

Source: http://feeds.examiner.ie/~r/iesportsblog/~3/T-CaIzikdKg/post.aspx

Ryan Babel Endangered species Annuities Retail industry Discrimination at work Radio

Cold comfort as late winter holds milder weather at bay

Forecasters predict plummeting temperatures, snow showers and icy conditions until the weekend

The UK's delayed winter continues to play the "will it, won't it" game, with forecasts predicting plummeting temperatures in the next few days followed by milder weather over the weekend.

The country may face its longest spell of cold conditions from Tuesday night until Saturday, with a low of -6C (21.2F) expected overnight and early on Wednesday morning, possibly going down to -8C before the pattern shifts.

Emergency services, hospitals and gritting teams are on maximum alert, with the Meteorological Office abandoning its recent even-handed caution to predict "a 100% probability of severe conditions across most of England this week".

Daytime temperatures are not expected to rise beyond 3C anywhere on Wednesday and Thursday, falling to at least -2C after dark.

The colder spell follows the stalling of bands of rain from the Atlantic and the west. An area of high pressure over Scandinavia and western Russia has chilled them and started to push them back on easterly winds.

Clare Allen, forecaster with MeteoGroup, said: "The easterlies are bringing snow showers off the North Sea, and even London is likely to have a maximum temperature no higher than 4C, so it's going to be pretty cold."

The Met Office has issued severe weather warnings for ice, which are likely to stay in force until Saturday. Allen said: "If people aren't careful driving, then it could cause disruption. Anywhere that is wet, ice is expected to form."

The Met Office predicts that the struggle between the warmer Atlantic fronts and the easterlies will continue for up to a fortnight, bringing the possibility of regular snow showers on higher ground. The pattern may set in for the whole of February and early March, with above average rainfall also expected.

The country has reacted in its traditional way by shopping for cold weather equipment at the last minute.

The department store Debenhams has reported a 165% rise in sales of electric blankets with highest tog duvets up by 40%, thermal underwear 17% and slippers 49%. Like the forecasters over the winter so far, consumers are however backing both horses. The store has also recorded an 18% rise in demand for bikinis and swimwear.

A Department of Health spokesman appealed to people to keep an eye out for vulnerable neighbours. He said: "During this period of cold weather we would advise people to check local weather forecasts for the latest information on weather conditions and staying safe when outdoors.

"We are working closely with the NHS and local authorities to ensure vulnerable people stay well during cold weather and get the help they need within their communities."


guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2012/jan/31/cold-winter-weather-forecast-temperatures

Eric Cantona Mikel Arteta Carlos Tevez Ann Widdecombe Alastair Cook Food & drink

Costa Concordia passengers sue cruise company for $460m

Lawyers for six passengers file lawsuit in Florida against Costa Cruises, saying firm's ?11,000 compensation offer is 'insulting'

An American legal team working with lawyers from around the world has announced details of a $460m (�290m) civil suit filed in Florida seeking damages for passengers on board the Costa Concordia, as rescuers called off their search for victims of the shipwreck.

More than two weeks after the cruise liner capsized off the coast of Italy, killing 17 and leaving at least a dozen still missing, divers abandoned their search for victims as attention was turned to the process of seeking redress.

"We have definitively stopped the underwater search inside the ship," Luca Cari, a spokesman for the fire brigade on the island of Giglio, said.

Mitchell Proner, a New York personal injury lawyer, announced the lodging of the civil suit in Florida at a press conference in Genoa on Tuesday, saying that offers of compensation by the cruise company Costa Cruises were "insulting".

"They must be held responsible for what they did. They intentionally put the passengers at risk. We believe we can win in Florida and we are going to go forward, forward, forward without fear until they don't know what hit them ? sort of like the Concordia."

Proner, of law firm Proner & Proner, said he was working with a New York firm ? Napoli Bern Ripka Shkolnik ? noted for winning millions of pounds in compensation for Ground Zero workers who had health claims related to the 11 September 2001 attacks, and suits against BP for its oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Proner said he and a coalition of international lawyers were representing 500 clients, including passengers from Croatia, Brazil, Russia, France, Germany and the Dominican Republic.

The lawsuit has the backing of the Italian consumer protection agency Codacons. The group's president, Carlo Rienzi, said this week: "All those who were on board the ship are entitled to be compensated not only for material damage, but also to moral ones, such as fear and terror suffered, and the risks related to physical integrity."

Proner noted that Carnival Cruise Lines is based in Florida, but that the Italian affiliate company Costa Cruises is also registered in Hollywood, Florida, where it publicises and sells cruises.

The Florida suit is pushing for $10m in personal damages and $450m punitive damages on behalf of six passengers ? two American couples, Geoffrey and Nancy Scimone and Mario and Nancy Lofaro, and an Italian couple. The Italians are Ernesto Carusotti, 70, and Paola Falconi, 69, from Rome, who on Tuesday, their voices shaking, told their harrowing story of escaping after a lifeboat they were in became caught on the ship's side.

"You can't imagine the fear," said Carusotti. They managed to get into a lifeboat on the high side of the ship, but it became hung up on the ship's flank. After repeated failed efforts by the crew to untangle the lifeboat they were eventually told to get out and go to the other side of the listing ship. "These people had not been trained for emergencies. We lost 30 minutes messing around with that lifeboat, 30 minutes when I could have been trying to get safely to another part of the ship," said Carusotti.

The couple said they had to crawl across the slippery deck to the lower side of the ship, stopping to help carry a person in a wheelchair up a set of stairs. Once on the other side, they had to jump two metres on to another lifeboat.

They said passengers were given mixed signals during the evacuation.

"We kept hearing messages in code that we didn't understand," Carusotti said. "They were saying Charlie Charlie India Charlie."

Last week, the couple received a letter from Costa Cruises offering them ?11,000 (�9,000) compensation. "We knew we couldn't take on a company that big by ourselves," Carusotti said.

Proner said one of his bilingual clients heard conflicting instructions on the ship. Passengers were told "go back to your cabins" in English, while the instructions in Italian were to get on the lifeboats. A French lawyer said her clients were treated poorly afterwards, taken to a second-rate hotel while the Americans were put up in the Hilton, and not given clothes or money, while the French ambassador had to "fight" for a bus home.

Seventeen bodies have been recovered from the Costa Concordia, which partially sank off the coast of Giglio on 13 January. At least a dozen people are still missing, including a five-year-old girl and her father. On Monday, Italian authorities said the ship could take eight to 10 months to remove, triggering a wave of protest from Giglio residents, who fear the hulking half-sunk ship looming 150 metres off the port could ruin tourism on the island.


guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jan/31/costa-concordia-passengers-sue-company

Mervyn King Amir Khan Mark Zuckerberg John Barnes Lee Carsley Tim Cahill

South Wales Evening Post published Post's poppy seller appeal sows seeds of national drive

Article


Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503366/s/1c46e4dc/l/0L0Sthisissouthwales0O0CPost0Es0Epoppy0Eseller0Eappeal0Esows0Eseeds0Enational0Cstory0E150A870A0A20Edetail0Cstory0Bhtml/story01.htm

Peter Beardsley Cornwall Nuclear power Slovakia Employment law Local government

Vaipouli College to shut

The government?s only boarding school in Savai?i, Vaipouli College, will soon be but a memory as government moves to gradually shut it down. Education Minister, Magele Mauiliu Magele told Parliament yesterday that the Ministry has made the decision to close the school after nearly 50 years of operation.

According to Magele, the closure is in line with a Ministry policy to ensure students do not have to travel and live way from home to get education.

Source: http://www.samoaobserver.ws/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=37776:vaipouli-college-to&catid=1:latest-news&Itemid=50

Nuclear waste Human rights Sir Alex Ferguson Ukraine Sepp Blatter David Beckham

Leicester Mercury commented Police set routes to separate protesters in Leicester marches

Article

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503348/s/1c4777b1/l/0L0Sthisisleicestershire0O0CPolice0Eset0Eroutes0Eseparate0Eprotesters0ELeicester0Cstory0E150A8730A50Edetail0Cstory0Bhtml/story01.htm

United Nations Arsène Wenger Financial crisis Manufacturing data Entertainment US Congress

Sky Sports signs four-year England cricket deal

Broadcaster to screen all home Test, one-day and T20 matches as well as at least 60 days of domestic cricket

Sky Sports has signed a new four-year deal for exclusive UK television rights to domestic England international cricket fixtures until the end of 2017.

The agreement with the England and Wales Cricket Board announced on Tuesday includes all England's home Test, one-day and T20 matches as well as at least 60 days of domestic cricket.

Sky will also show some England Lions and women's matches. The deal also covers TV, mobile and online.

Tuesday's agreement extends Sky's current deal, which was due to end in 2013, with an option for a further two years taking it to 2019.

Sky has had exclusive live rights to England's home Test and one-day matches since the end of the Ashes series in 2005 which was broadcast on Channel 4, the last to be screened on free-to-air TV.

England's upcoming home Test matches include three Ashes series in 2013, 2015 and 2019.

This follows last week's announcement that the BBC had secured radio coverage of England's home cricket internationals until 2019.

The ECB chairman, Giles Clarke, said Sky Sports had "raised the bar for all live television broadcasters with its innovative, informed and comprehensive coverage of cricket".

He added: "No one should be in any doubt that our partnership with Sky has been of immense benefit to the wider game.

"World-class support structures for our successful England teams, major ground improvements at county level, a flourishing coach education programme and [an] increase in participation at our 'Focus' clubs are all byproducts of this relationship."

Sky first showed live coverage of the England cricket team in 1990 with the team's tour of the Caribbean, the first-ever live ball-by-ball coverage of an overseas series.

The broadcaster's capture of exclusive home cricket rights after the 2005 Ashes victory, to go with the overseas tours it has traditionally broadcast live, led to a furious response from some cricket fans angry that they would have to pay to watch live cricket.

Cricket highlights have since been shown on Channel 5, with highlights of last year's cricket World Cup on the BBC.

The Sky Sports managing director, Barney Francis, said: "This is good news for cricket and good news for viewers. Our viewers will enjoy a breadth of live coverage, at domestic and international level, and the ECB extends a partnership that has proved good for the game.

"Cricket is flourishing in England and Wales, with increased participation, record attendances and success for England's men and women. Through extending our partnership, the ECB can invest on and off the pitch and the game can continue to grow."

? To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly "for publication".

? To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook.


guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/jan/31/sky-sports-england-cricket-deal

Dance music Iain Chambers Roy Hodgson Liberal-Conservative coalition Debit cards Wolverhampton Wanderers

Leicester Mercury published Police set routes to separate protesters in Leicester marches

Article

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503348/s/1c4777b1/l/0L0Sthisisleicestershire0O0CPolice0Eset0Eroutes0Eseparate0Eprotesters0ELeicester0Cstory0E150A8730A50Edetail0Cstory0Bhtml/story01.htm

West Bromwich Albion Tony Cottee The FA Rape Chamonix Restaurants

Six Nations 2012 preview: Robert Kitson on France's chances ? video

Can world class players such as Dimitri Yachvili, Imanol Harinordoquy and captain Thierry Dusautoir inspire France to improve on last year's second position?



Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/video/2012/jan/30/six-nations-preview-france-video

The far right World Cup 2018 Beach holidays US healthcare Redrow Property

Lunes, Enero 30, 2012

Machetes in family dispute

By Marieta Heidi Ilalio

A conflict between members of one family at the village of Malie saw two men treated in hospital, last Saturday. The incident, according to a source, was a dispute within the family, which got out of hand and ended with machetes being used.

?Police at Afega were called to assist but when they arrived, two men were critically injured from the fight,? the source said. The men suffered machete cuts to their backs, arms and chests. Assistant Police Commissioner, Le?aupepe Fatu Pula was not available to comment on the matter.

Source: http://www.samoaobserver.ws/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=37804:machetes-in-family&catid=1:latest-news&Itemid=50

Children Social care Belarus The US embassy cables Andrew Cole Liverpool

Judgment Day: Court says Al-Mustapha to die by hanging

After 13 years, a Lagos High Court� this afternoon ruled that Major Hamza Al-Mustapha, the former chief security officer to late General Sani Abacha must die by hanging for the 1996 murder of Hajia Kudirat Abiola, the wife of the late business mogul and winner of the June 12 election, late Bashorun MKO Abiola.

Also sentenced to death by hanging alongside Al-Mustapha is Lateef Shofolahan said to have been the protocol officer to the late Kudirat Abiola.
Al-Mustapha's counsel Olalekan Ojo has said he would appeal the verdict.

Kudirat, a leading voice for the release of her then detained husband, was shot dead on June 4, 1996 along the Lagos/ Ibadan Expressway, Lagos toll gate, opposite Cargo Vision, Ikeja in Lagos.

The court said the duo were guilty of conspiracy and murder. Trial Judge Justice Mojisola Dada said it was not true that Al-Mustapha was prosecuted because based on the video in his possession.

She also said the Sofolahan was a 'willing tool.'


Friends and sympathisers of Major Hamza Al-Mustapha, had endured for over 8 hours in the sun awaiting the court's judgment.

Security around the court premises were increased today and Al-Mustapha himself came in through the exit gate rather than the entry gate where friends, sympathisers, the press and the general public had all been waiting for him.

Justice Mojisola Ayoka Dada of a Lagos High Court had on November 10, 2011 fixed today, January 30, 2012 for judgment for Al-Mustapha and Lateef Shofolahan.

Justice Dada fixed the date after the submission of written addresses by counsel to the parties. Counsel to the defendants, Mr. Olalekan Ojo, leading five other lawyers, submitted a written address, urging the court to free the accused.

Addressing the court in November, Ojo had hinged the defence of his clients on five key issues which he wants the court to determine.

First, he pleaded with the court to dismiss the evidence of the prosecution witnesses, saying they were unreliable. He explained that the two key prosecution witnesses, Sergeant Barnabas Mshelia, alias Rogers and Mohammed Abdul, alias Katako, denied their evidence-in-chief while being cross examined.

{pullquote}he pleaded with the court to dismiss the evidence of the prosecution witnesses, saying they were unreliable{/pullquote}

Ojo also described the statements made by the witnesses as extra judicial; stressing that Rogers while being cross-examined said the whole case was ?arrangee.?

Ojo also averred that the statements of the two witnesses have no evidential value as they are extra judicial statements, saying: ?Therefore, they cannot be referred to as evidence of truth.?

He said the third witness; a police officer did not conclude his evidence. Therefore, he was not cross-examined.

In his own presentation on the same day, the prosecuting counsel, Mr. Lawal Pedro (SAN) urged the court to consider the long time taken by the matter and convict the accused as charged.

He told the court that many of the witnesses vital to the case were either dead, retired or are not forthcoming.

Pedro also asked the court to determine the case based on whether the accused committed the offence or not and whether the evidence is credible or not. He contended that conspiracy does not necessarily mean meeting physically but that it could be determined by inference.

Source: http://dailytrust.com.ng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=153465:judgment-day-court-says-al-mustapha-to-die-by-hanging&catid=2:lead-stories&Itemid=8

Nuclear weapons European football Premier League Executive pay and bonuses Scotland Asia

Fran�ois Hollande to woo City on London visit

Exclusive: French presidential frontrunner Fran�ois Hollande to use visit to try to allay fears caused by his manifesto launch

French presidential frontrunner Fran�ois Hollande will seek to reassure the City of London during a visit to London next month after being accused of "political vindictiveness" towards Britain's financial heart.

The Socialist party candidate will begin a cross-Channel charm offensive aimed at calming growing tensions and re-establishing entente cordiale amid accusations that he has it in for Britain's banks and financial institutions.

The 24-hour visit is pencilled in for the end of February, and although details have not yet been finalised, Hollande's advisors say he will "almost certainly" meet Ed Miliband and that he also hopes to talk to David Cameron.

"Fran�ois Hollande is certainly not the bogeyman who has the City of London in his sights," a member of his campaign team said.

"I suspect this is some chicanery from the right to misconstrue his proposals, because there is no anti-City crusade in what he is proposing. He has said he wants financial institutions to be better regulated, but he is only saying what others, including Barack Obama and the Financial Times are saying ? that having saved the banks in 2008 they should not be speculating on countries and stopping them from getting back on their feet."

The advisor, who did not wish to be named, added: "The world of finance has to go back to its primary role which should be to finance the real economy and not speculate. Even some great capitalists and fans of the free market agree with this."

Hollande sparked concern in Britain with the launch his 60-point manifesto last week, when he said he was prepared to tear up and rewrite the EU fiscal treaty to impose more financial rigour on member states. He said its emphasis on austerity would aggravate the economic crisis.

He also said he wanted to increase taxes on bank profits, ban banks operating in tax havens, and end "toxic" investments and stock options. French banks, he said, would be forced to separate their retail from their "speculative operations".

.

London mayor Boris Johnson told the Times: "I don't want to interfere in French domestic politics, but we want to prevent the French making a mistake that would damage the UK economy. It is important that a vital part of the UK services industry should not be damaged by reason of short-term political vindictiveness."

As the spat was relayed in the French press - "Hollande angers the City", "The City of London very upset by Fran�ois Hollande" - members of his campaign team were keen to allay fears that their candidate had Britain's financial institutions in his sights.

"Even City of London people agree with his idea of separating banks private and speculative investment operations," said another member of Hollande's campaign team.

Unveiling his election manifesto, Hollande, who is currently leading the opinion polls for the two-round presidential election in April and May, also said would defend the EU's common agricultural policy to protect French farmers - another sticky point between Britain and France.

During his planned visit Hollande will also attempt to win over the estimated 400,000 French voters living in London, who have leaned to the right in the past. For the first time French people in the UK, Ireland, Scandinavia and the Baltic states have been given their own northern Europe constituency.

With so many French residents, London is considered France's sixth largest city and has been nicknamed Paris-on-Thames. During his 2007 presidential election campaign, Nicolas Sarkozy staged an unprecedented rally in London in which he urged people to return home.

"France is still your country even if you are disappointed by it," he told them.

Hollande's campaign advisor said the Socialist party candidate hoped to improve relations between France and Britain.

"Sadly Franco-British relations have been damaged by tensions between David Cameron and Nicolas Sarkozy," he said.

"Fran�ois Hollande wants to go to London because the UK is an important partner in the construction of Europe ? and even if your newspapers are a bit quick to jump and be hard on him, I think maybe the British would like to see him, non?"


guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/jan/30/francois-hollande-city-london-visit

Gordon Brown European debt crisis Nepal Poland Sheffield United Regulators

Caution rules ahead of EU Summit, Greek deal

The euro edged back from six-week highs and global stocks were lower.

|||

The euro edged back from six-week highs and global stocks were lower on Monday as investors turned cautious after US growth figures on Friday that fell just short of expectations and ahead of more crisis talks among EU leaders.

The lack of concrete progress in Greek debt talks, which officials have said are on the verge of a deal, kept markets on edge and for the single currency there was an element of profit-taking after its strongest week in more than three months.

The Greek deal is needed before agreement can be reached on a second bailout package which Greece needs to meet a 14.5 billion euro repayment on its debt due in mid-March. Otherwise Athens faces a messy default that could reverberate through European and world markets.

“It is all pretty negative, Greece is still trying to get a deal and there are worries about contagion,” said Joe Rundle, head of trading at ETX Capital.

“Euro zone leaders still need to come up with a solution and all the negative news is not good for consumer confidence and could lead to a snowball effect, spending could slow down and hit company earnings.”

The euro was down about 0.4 percent to $1.3160, after climbing to $1.3235 on Friday - its highest level since mid-December. But new data showed currency speculators have raised their net euro short positions - bets on the currency falling - to a fifth straight record high in the week ended Jan. 24.

European stocks opened down around 0.4 percent 1036.06 though they remain up over three percent for the year to date on hopes an economic slowdown will be milder than expected. Financial stocks were among the early losers with Europe STOXX 600 bank index down around 1.5 percent.

In a further reminder of the euro zone's problems, Fitch downgraded the sovereign credit ratings of Italy, Belgium, Cyprus, Slovenia and Spain on Friday, indicating there was a 1-in-2 chance of further cuts in the next two years.

Against this backdrop, Italy will auction up to 8 billion euros of debt in the five and 10-year sectors, the first significant test of demand for these longer-dated securities this year.

Italy needs foreign investors to help it refinance some 90 billion euros of bonds falling due between February and April.

Its 10-year bond yields have been falling, in part due to the extra liquidity provided to the banking system by the European Central Bank, and are currently under six percent

German government bond futures, used by investors as a safe haven in the crisis, were up slightly awaiting the outcome of the EU leaders' summit with the front month contract up 39 ticks on the day at 139.28. - Reuters

Source: http://www.iol.co.za/caution-rules-ahead-of-eu-summit-greek-deal-1.1223012

Property Energy efficiency Stephen Carr France Japan Canary Islands

Six Nations 2012 preview: Robert Kitson on France's chances ? video

Can world class players such as Dimitri Yachvili, Imanol Harinordoquy and captain Thierry Dusautoir inspire France to improve on last year's second position?



Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/video/2012/jan/30/six-nations-preview-france-video

Lake District Financial sector Strictly Come Dancing Italy Soap opera Rob Brydon

Bolton and Crystal Palace 'way apart in valuation' of Wilfried Zaha

? Owen Coyle confirms Bolton have had offer rejected
? 19-year-old winger has impressed for Palace this season

A verbal offer from Bolton Wanderers for Crystal Palace's highly rated winger Wilfried Zaha has been rejected out of hand by the Championship club.

The Bolton manager, Owen Coyle, confirmed on Monday that a bid had been lodged that he deemed to be "fair" for the 19-year-old, who has scored five goals in 32 appearances this term and impressed as Palace reached the semi-finals of the Carling Cup.

Yet Zaha, a product of the London club's academy who has also attracted interest from Liverpool and Newcastle United, recently signed a new long-term contract at Selhurst Park and, under no financial pressure to sell, Palace considered the amount on offer derisory.

"We have made an offer, but I don't think it is to the value that the Crystal Palace [co-] chairman [Steve Parish] wants," Coyle said. "We felt it was fair for where a very talented young player is at the moment. I always put what I think is a fair value on a player and if we get to it, great. If we don't, then we have to accept that we are not going to pay what we would believe would be over the odds.

"But he is such a talented young player and he will get better. There is scope for improvement. He has got pace and unbelievable quality and natural attributes. We would love for that to come to fruition, but at the moment it looks as if we are a way apart in terms of valuation."


guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2012/jan/30/bolton-crystal-palace-wilfried-zaha

International criminal justice Local politics Documentary Folk music Doctor Who Australia

Leicester Mercury commented Sean St Ledger determined to hold onto first-team place

Article

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503348/s/1c3eff54/l/0L0Sthisisleicestershire0O0CSean0ESt0ELedger0Edetermined0Ehold0Eteam0Eplace0Cstory0E150A776580Edetail0Cstory0Bhtml/story01.htm

Lisa Allardice Energy bills Clint Eastwood Frank Lampard Niclas Alexandersson Blackburn Rovers

To pay or not to pay?

By Lanuola Tusani Tupufia

Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sa'ilele Malielegaoi last week suggested that small kindergarten teachers should offer their service ?for free?.

He was responding in Parliament to a question from Falealupo, MP and deputy opposition leader A?e?au Peniamina Leavaise?eta, why kindergarten teachers in his constituencies ?were working for free.? ?They are working day to day for free,? said the former Speaker.

Source: http://www.samoaobserver.ws/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=37754:to-pay-or&catid=1:latest-news&Itemid=50

Entertainment US Congress Arsenal Dmitry Medvedev Vladimir Putin War crimes

Chinese developers demolish home of revered architects

Demolition of house where Liang Sicheng and his wife Lin Huiyin once worked has horrified heritage experts

Their appreciation of China's ancient buildings and their devotion to preserving its heritage made them two of the country's most revered architects.

But now the home where Liang Sicheng and his wife Lin Huiyin once worked lies in rubble ? having fallen prey to the development they feared would destroy their city's ancient streets.

The demolition has horrified heritage experts. Liang is known as the father of modern Chinese architecture, and much of his and Lin's most important work was carried out while they were living in the courtyard house in Beizongbu Hutong in the 1930s.

It was knocked down by developers over the lunar New Year, despite the fact it is rare for labourers to work during the festival, raising suspicions that the company hoped to avoid publicity.

A Beijing official told state news agency Xinhua the firm wanted to prevent the residence being harmed during last week's holiday, apparently referring to the fireworks which are let off.

Other Chinese media quoted an unidentified developer as saying that the demolition was "in preparation for maintaining the heritage site" because the buildings were in bad condition.

But heritage protection activist Zeng Yizhi ? who alerted city officials to the demolition ? said they should have repaired the buildings.

"Liang and Lin made such a great contribution to the protection of Chinese ancient buildings. If their home can be torn down, then developers can do the same thing to hundreds of other ancient houses in the country," he told China Daily.

He Shuzhong, founder of the Beijing Cultural Heritage centre, said the early 20th century building was the intersection between the study and preservation of cultural relics, as pioneered by the couple, and the dangers posed by rapid urban development.

Last year, China's top cultural heritage official warned that high speed development had been a disaster for conservation.

Experts and campaigners are also angry because they hoped they had staved off the threat to Liang and Lin's home in 2009, when the district government approved its destruction and it was partially knocked down.

Following a public outcry, the state administration of cultural heritage intervened and the site was designated a permanent cultural relic, meaning official approval was required for demolition.

He said the one positive aspect of the affair was that it had roused an unprecedented level of public interest, debate and civic participation.

Liang and Lin wrote a seminal work on Chinese architecture, listed relics in need of protection during wartime, designed the national emblem of the People's Republic of China and worked on the Monument to the People's Heroes in Tiananmen Square.

Liang and his colleague Chen Zhanxiang urged the Communist government to build an entirely new city when it decided to make Beijing the capital of the new republic. He believed it was the best way to preserve its ancient buildings.

But officials rejected that plan and most of the old city has vanished forever.

According to journalist and heritage expert Wang Jun, China had 7,000 hutong ? lanes of old-fashioned low-rise homes ? in 1949 and 3,000 in the 1980s. Since the late 1990s they have vanished at a rate of around 600 a year.

Chinese media named the developers of the Beizongbu site as Fuheng Real Estate, a subsidiary of state-owned China Resources.

An employee at the China Resources Group said it was a holding company and the matter should be raised with the China Resources Land Company. A staff member at the subsidiary said she would call back but did not do so.

The city administration of cultural heritage said it would not comment as the Dongcheng district cultural committee was responsible for the case. Officials there did not answer calls.

But district heritage officials admitted that the demolition had not been approved by the city-level authorities, Xinhua reported.

Dongcheng officials told reporters they had ordered developers to rebuild the house ? a measure dismissed by campaigners as meaningless.

"Building a replica only makes things worse. So I suggest that the government build a monument or a park on the original site in memory of Liang and Lin," Chen Zhihua, a professor at Tsinghua University's school of architecture and a former student of the couple, told China Daily.

Lin died in 1955 after an illness. Liang was persecuted during the Cultural Revolution and died in 1972.

His second wife Lin Zhu said she was very sorry to hear of the demolition.

"I don't think his contribution and work is being properly valued and respected," she said, adding that Liang's later home on the Tsinghua University campus was also worth preserving but was in poor condition at present.

Additional research by Han Cheng


guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jan/30/chinese-developers-demolish-home-architect

Lloyds Banking Group Hacking Laws of football Dance music Iain Chambers Roy Hodgson

Leicester Mercury published Wanted: Suspect in murder

Article


Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/32715/f/503348/s/1c3e64aa/l/0L0Sthisisleicestershire0O0CWanted0ESuspect0Emurder0Cstory0E150A7780A70Edetail0Cstory0Bhtml/story01.htm

Lee Carsley Tim Cahill England cricket team US constitution and civil liberties Mafia La Liga