Miyerkules, Pebrero 22, 2012

Minister wants new system

By Marieta Heidi Ilalio

The Customs division of the Ministry of Revenue is to ?redesign their system? and ensure banking is done daily to avoid a repeat of the events of last week. Describing it as ?a terrible week,? Minister of Revenue, Tuiloma Pule Lameko said he has ordered Customs' system to be ?redesigned as soon as possible.?

Speaking to Sunday Samoan yesterday, Tuiloma said the two incidents at Customs last week made him look deeper into ways to eliminate it in future.

Source: http://www.samoaobserver.ws/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=38145:minister-wants-new&catid=1:latest-news&Itemid=50

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Roberto Mancini says Carlos Tevez may make City return in two weeks

? Manchester City manager has 'no problem' with Tevez
? Argentinian has not played for club since September

Roberto Mancini has accepted Carlos Tevez's unreserved apology and will consider him for selection once the striker is back to fitness in March. Speaking after Manchester City defeated Porto 4-0 in second leg of the Europa League last-32 tie to progress 6-1 on aggregate, the manager also stated that he will meet Tevez before training for the first time since the Argentinian returned to the club.

"I accept his apology, I don't have any problem," Mancini said. "Tomorrow I will meet him before training and after that he can begin to work with us."

Asked whether Tevez would be considered for the side like any member of his squad the Italian said: "He needs maybe two or three weeks to find a good form and after that he will be OK. He can play. Like the other players."

With Manchester City leading the Premier League and hoping to progress in the next round of the Europa League ? where they meet Legia Warsaw or Sporting Lisbon ? their good form means Tevez faces a fight to regain a starting berth. He is not registered to play in Europe.

"I think Carlos knows the team very well but the team in this last six or seven months have played very well," Mancini said. "We are on the top of the Premier League. But we know Carlos very well ? he's a top striker. I think that it will be good if he can help us to do a good job in the next two months.

"Carlos can't play in the Europa League but we can have four strikers in the Premier League and that is very good. If we get through in Europe I think it will be important to have four strikers," he said of Tevez, Mario Balotelli, Sergio Ag�ero and Edin Dzeko.

The latter two scored on Wednesday night along with David Silva and David Pizarro. Of Ag�ero, who now has 20 goals for City this season, Mancini said: "Sergio is another top striker but he's young and needs to improve. He's a top striker, he has scored a lot of goals, he was important in this game and has been important during the season. It's important to have now in the last two months all the players, all the strikers available."

Asked whether City can complete a championship and Europa League double Mancini said: "We hope so. But it's not easy to win both competitions. We want to try and get to the final if possible. In the Premier League we are top. If we win the next 13 games we will be champions."

Regarding Micah Richards and Gareth Barry, who each took knocks, Mancini said: "Micah I think is OK, Gareth has a slight problem in his muscle but I don't think it is serious. We will see tomorrow."


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2012/feb/22/roberto-mancini-carlos-tevez-manchester-city

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Llanelli Star commented Deadly rat bug outbreak fears

AN epidemic of a rare bacterial infection — affecting both animals and humans — could be about to sweep the town, a...

Deadly rat bug outbreak fears



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Receipt dispute surfaces

By Taina Kami Enoka

The Ministry of Labour, Commerce and Industry (MCIL) has defended the differences in receipts available in Samoa?s supermarkets. There are two types. One is where receipts itemize purchased goods and the other, which categorizes the items as DEPT1, DEPT2 and so on.

The difference was raised by a frustrated customer who lodged a complaint with the Ministry of Commerce last year about receipts supplied by Allan Supermarket at Lalovaea.
In July 2011, Filipo Strickland, of Lalovaea, was running a catering company while his brother was away.

Source: http://www.samoaobserver.ws/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=38117:receipt-dispute-surfaces&catid=1:latest-news&Itemid=50

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Historical hall soon to be history

By Charlina Tone

The Apia Protestant Church hall will soon disappear taking with it a colourful history spanning more than a hundred years.  Reverend Nuuausala Siaosi Siutaia said the hall is now a safety hazard and needs to be taken down as soon as possible.

?Although we really want to preserve this piece of history, and we did what we could to save it, it is no longer safe and safety is our main concern,? he said.The hall which dates back to the mid 1880s, is the very place where Sunday School was first established in Samoa.

Source: http://www.samoaobserver.ws/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=38024:historical-hall-soon&catid=1:latest-news&Itemid=50

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20 killed as JTF pursues Boko Haram

The Joint Task Force in Borno State said it killed eight Boko Haram fighters in a shootout at the Baga Fish Market in Maiduguri yesterday.

But witnesses said many more people, most of them bystanders, were killed in the shooting. The gun duel was preceded by at least seven explosions in and around the market.

Trader Mohammed Sabiu said more than 20 people were killed in the shooting and that he had seen three Hilux trucks loaded with dead bodies moving out of the market.

?But the fact is, not all the people shot are Boko Haram members; I am sure there are civilians,? he said.

Witnesses said trouble started at about noon when an explosion rocked the market just when it was filled with people.

?There was a heavy blast behind the Baga Market, and many other blasts followed, and this caused commotion as traders and customers scattered,? Hannatu Abu, a fish seller, said.

Spokesman for the JTF, Lieutenant Colonel Hassan Mohammed, told journalists in a teleconference that some suspected Boko Haram members stormed the Baga Market and shot three civilians.

?The men of the JTF immediately came to the rescue and engaged the sect members. The three civilians did not die?we rushed them to a hospital for treatment,? Mohammed said.

?Our men succeeded in detonating 3 explosives at the market and killed 8 members of the sect. Large number of IEDs (improvised explosive devices) and other weapons has been recovered. The whole market has been cordoned off and we are currently searching the market to track down the fleeing members,? he said.

He added none of the members of the JTF was injured or killed.

The BBC Hausa reported on its website yesterday that up to 30 people were killed in the shooting.

Reuters news agency quoted a nurse at the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital saying at least 20 corpses from the fighting had been delivered there.

?I am not sure of the exact number but I saw more than 20 bodies,? he said, adding that most were wearing traditional Islamic Kaftans worn by men in the area. None were in military uniforms.

Source: http://dailytrust.com.ng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=155161:20-killed-as-jtf-pursues-boko-haram&catid=2:lead-stories&Itemid=8

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Cost of Glazers' takeover at Manchester United reaches �500m | David Conn

Despite seven years of success under the Glazers' rule, United have leaked half a billion to service the debt-laden ownership

For most normal souls outrage can only last so long, and at Manchester United, supporters' fury at the Glazer family's pillage of their club has been tempered by titles won, the glories of Wayne Rooney, Nani and the rest in full flow, as well as the passage of nearly seven years. The Glazers have sat across the Atlantic, not communicating with the club's fans, and ridden it out until battle weariness has consigned green and gold to the fringes. The release of impassive accounts for "MU Finance plc" has become a quarterly ritual, with the world pointed to the growth in the club's income, from TV deals which would have increased anyway, and commercial operations the Glazers have required to be sweated until the brand squeaks.

Yet the latest figures, covering the Glazers' financial machinations with United for the final three months of 2011, document a landmark. From October to December 2011, the cost of the Glazers' "leveraged buyout" of United, when they loaded their own �525m borrowings on to the club itself to repay, was �17.5m. The club paid �12.2m in interest and other financing charges, and �5.3m paying off some actual debt, which nevertheless remains over �400m. As documented with forensic anger by Andy Green in his "Love United, Hate Glazer" Andersred blog, the total drained out of United in interest, bank charges and other payments before these latest figures was �480m. So the total cash taken out of United, to pay for a takeover the fans and then board did not want, was �497.5m by 31 December. In round figures, and anyway now, with two months further interest from December, the Glazer family have been responsible for �500m going out of United.

Most United supporters know this and have never become reconciled to the damage done, only, slowly, to the frustration that there is nothing they can do about it. The Premier League, Football Association and government, after unrolling the red carpet for the Glazers in 2005, have ever since been silent.

There are a few contrary voices in support of the Glazers' record, so the tedious argument does have to be joined with the fact that United have continued to be successful under their rule, winning four Premier League titles since 2005 and one Champions League, in 2008. The three most straightforward answers to that are: United, who were hugely rich, had no debt, a great manager and squad of top players when the Glazers arrived, might have been even more successful, perhaps dominated in Europe as well as the Premier League, had �500m dead money not gone to bankers since.

Secondly, it is arguable that the Glazers' shrewdest move has been effectively to leave Old Trafford well alone, knowing that in Sir Alex Ferguson and David Gill, they had the partnership to maintain success, even given so much less money to play with.

Third, give the Glazers as much credit as you like, decide the playing success really is somehow all due to their absentee and debt-laden ownership, yet still no argument can be advanced for how leaking half a billion pounds out of the club, still to barely chip into the originally imposed debt, has been good for United.

The US owners of two of England's other biggest clubs, Arsenal and Liverpool, both motivated financially by the Premier League's global TV and commercial income, fly in this week. Stan Kroenke will contemplate the crumbling of quality at Arsenal and departure of several top players during his ownership, while ticket prices for fans were increased. John Henry will arrive for a Wembley final after a deeply ignominious episode in the club's history, the Luis Su�rez affair, the leadership at Liverpool furiously criticised by a coalition of anti-racism groups.

Henry has always expressed puzzlement with United fans' objections to the Glazers' debt-loading, given United's success. Kroenke, who paid Arsenal's selling English shareholders millions personally but has committed to not putting a cent into the club itself, in his only public address to date, memorably went out of his way to express admiration for what the Glazers have done. MU Finance plc is where those deeds are recorded, and even after so long, the running total should always be observed.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/david-conn-inside-sport-blog/2012/feb/22/manchester-united-glazers-debt

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