sábado, 2 de janeiro de 2010

Bulgarians Welcome 2010 with 12 Million SMS Text Messages



Bulgarians greeted each other with over 12 million SMS Text Messages for New Year’s.
According to data provided by the three Bulgarian mobile phone operators – M-Tel, Globul, and Vivacom – some 12,1 million SMS Text Messages were sent in Bulgaria between 10 pm on December 31, 2009, and 12 am on January 1, 2010.
The subscribers of the largest Bulgarian mobile phone operator M-Tel sent a total of 7,7 million short messages for New Year’s, those of Globul – over 4,2 million, and the subscribers of Vivacom greeted one another with about 240 000 SMS and MMS messages.
Novinite

Super celestial New Year show over Brunei skies


By Hazarry bin Hj Ali Ahmad

A partially eclipsed moon above the minaret of Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddien mosque in the capital. - HAZARRY BIN HAJI ALI AHMAD

A rare partial eclipse of the moon greeted the New Year 2010 in many parts around the world.

In Brunei, the celestial phenomenon was clearly visible between 2.53 am until 3.53 am on January 1 with fairly cloudy skies.


Astronomically, the lunar eclipse was the result of a direct alignment of the cosmic bodies - the Sun, Earth and Moon - and the Moon passes into the cone of shadow cast by the Earth.


Interestingly, yesterday's spectacle was the first lunar eclipse to coincide on a New Year's Day in more than 350 years. The next similar concurrence visible over this country is expected in 19 years time, on January 01, 2029.


Borneo Bulletin

Augustine Paul dies


PETALING JAYA: Federal Court judge Datuk Seri S. Augustine Paul, who presided over former deputy prime minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s sodomy and corruption trials in 1998, has died. He was 66.
Augustine died at the Selayang Hospital at 2.45pm on Saturday after suffering from a chronic illness for awhile, said his son-in-law Robert Devan, 37.
He leaves behind wife Datin Seri Dr Mary Paul, daughter Dr Juliana Sharmini, 29, and son Alan John, 27.
The casket will leave No. 16, Lorong Taman Pantai 7, Bangsar, Kuala Lumpur on Sunday at 2pm to the Parish of St Peter, No. 441, Section 96A, Jalan Changkat Riong for the funeral service at 2.30pm.
Meanwhile, Bernama reported that Augustine, who obtained his Barrister-at-Law from Inner Temple, England, began his career in 1971 as Federal Counsel at the Attorney-General’s Chambers and later as a magistrate in Ipoh, Perak.
He also served as a Sessions Court judge in Temerloh, Pahang, Malacca and Penang and was chairman of a special committee on taxation before being appointed to the Kuala Lumpur High Court Bench in May, 1998.
He was confirmed as a High Court judge for less than six months when he presided over Anwar's sodomy and corruption cases which started in November, 1998, and for nearly six months his name kept popping up in the world’s news bulletins with his “irrelevant” rulings in the case.
Seven years later, Augustine was appointed Federal Court judge and he had several months to go before retiring at the time of his demise.
Chief Justice Tun Zaki Tun Azmi said Augustine was a hard working man.
“I have not known Augustine for a long time. However, for the short period that I came to know him, he was a very hard working man until the last moment... he was still working, he was always anxious about work than about himself,” he said.
Zaki also offered his condolences to the judge’s family.
Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Musa Hassan said Augustine was a very experienced judge.
"He was a committed person in all aspects of his work and knew the law to provide justice," he said.
Meanwhile, the late judge's secretary, Norhaniah Abdul Hanan, said Augustine was a good boss.
Norhaniah, 54, who served with Augustine since April 2008 said his passing was a big loss.
The Star Online

Death didn't stop this world traveler



Ralph B. White was a National Geographic cameraman who spent his life pursuing adventure. His friends have carried out his last wish, taking his ashes to every continent

By Christopher Reynolds

In the last 22 months, Ralph B. White's meticulously logged schedule shows trips to the mountains of Nepal, the Australian outback, the China-Mongolia border, a Rwandan volcano, Iceland, Benin and the waters off Zanzibar.

Ask White's buddies at the Adventurers' Club of Los Angeles and they'll tell you this itinerary could threaten the health of any other thrill-seeker. But White's stamina is not an issue. He died, at age 66, on Feb. 4, 2008.

It's his ashes that have been traveling since then, borne to the ends of the earth and the depths of the sea by his fiancee and fellow Adventurers. Thanks to them, tiny portions of White's remains, carefully measured out in plastic bags, have put in enough posthumous miles to rival King Tut. Instead of a bucket list, he's got an ash log. It's six pages long.

"Rather than have people mourn him, he wanted to give people incentive to go have adventures," said Rosaly Lopes, who was engaged to White when he died and is the keeper of the ashes.

Though White covered a lot of the Earth during his life, said Krista Few, his daughter, most of these scatterings have delivered his ashes to new territory. "The competition is what is the most bizarre place we can take Ralph?" 

To appreciate how well this afterlife suits White, you have to consider the life that came before, friends say. 

Born in San Bernardino in 1941, White grew up on the Big Island of Hawaii, served in the Marine Corps in Vietnam, founded a parachuting school in Lancaster and worked as a free-fall cameraman for the TV show "Ripcord." As a contract cameraman for National Geographic, he filmed horses, sharks and whales in the wild and searched for the Loch Ness Monster.

When a French American expedition found the Titanic on Sept. 1, 1985, White was there rolling tape. When director James Cameron made the film "Titanic," White worked as an expedition leader and second-unit cameraman. Though the Titanic wreckage lies 12,000 feet below the sea, White returned again and again on salvage efforts and other expeditions, marking hundreds of hours at the wreck. 

"I was born an adult in search of a childhood," White told the Las Vegas Review-Journal when an IMAX documentary on the Titanic wreck played there in 1998.

For nearly 30 years, White was a member of the Adventurers' Club, an old-school invitation-only outfit that dates back to 1921. Its 146 Los Angeles members (all men, including Cameron) are invited to convene weekly in an upstairs clubhouse on North Broadway that's crammed full of tokens from remote travels, including a stuffed polar bear that glowers by the door. 

Past members include astronaut Gordon Cooper, director Cecil B. DeMille and actor Buddy Ebsen. White's face can be found in the photo gallery of past club presidents. 

"Ralph had a very outgoing personality. His sense of humor was right on the edge," said Allan Smith, the current president. "He could toast with the best of them and joke with the best of them".

In 2007, when a friend asked White what he would want written on his tombstone, he e-mailed Lopes a copy of his answer. He preferred cremation, he wrote, and this epitaph:

"Ralph White is not here. He's scattered around the world".

Then he went back to life as usual. But in early February 2008, White suffered an aortic aneurysm. As he lay in Glendale Adventist Medical Center, prospects dimming, many of his loved ones waited outside the intensive care unit.

"There were about a dozen of us there," said Lopes, 52, who is a senior research scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge. "The doctor came in and told us he had passed away. A friend asked what his wishes were, and I remembered that e-mail".

It was, Lopes said, "like a ray of sunshine coming in the room".

The global distributions began just 20 days later. First up was Rory Golden, an Irish friend who scattered ashes at the Belfast shipyard where the Titanic was built. 

Six weeks after that, Lopes arrived in Vienna on a journey that White had planned to be part of. Early on "an absolutely beautiful sunny day," Lopes and a friend found their way to Prater Park and boarded its giant Ferris wheel.

There were three other people in the cabin, but Lopes and her companion had a window to themselves. When the wheel stopped as they reached the very top, 212 feet above ground, she reached for her purse and seized the moment.

"I scattered the ashes out of the window, only a few . . . And I could see a few grains lofting out, and the sunlight reflecting on them," Lopes said.

"When you lose someone who's close to you, it's a journey. It was, I think, good for all of us who were close to him, to feel like we had some kind of mission. It helped me".

Lopes has scattered bits of White's remains on three continents, at sites that include the ruins of the Temple of Thor in Iceland and the Fairview Cemetery in Halifax, Nova Scotia, where 121 Titanic victims are buried.

But as her log of White's posthumous travels makes clear -- it's titled "Where has Ralph been?" -- others have carried White's remains even farther, deeper and higher. The waters of Lake Baikal in Russia. A lighthouse in Norway. A suspension bridge in British Columbia. Blue Nile Falls in Ethiopia.

In September 2009, Rory Golden carried a pinch of White's ashes on a harrowing climb of Mont Blanc in the French Alps -- "for no other reason than that it was there, it would take effort and they bore the same surname".

After struggling through nausea, hypothermia and freezing winds to reach the 15,781-foot summit, Golden wrote in an e-mail, he pulled off his insulated gloves to retrieve the ashes, let them fly and shouted, "Fair winds and following seas, my friend!"

The climb was "the toughest thing I've ever done, both physically and mentally," said Golden, 55. "Ralph helped me get there and back safely".

White's son, Randy Pixley of Atlanta, hasn't scattered any ashes yet. White's daughter, Few, has made deposits in China, Singapore and Japan, halfway up Mt. Fuji.

"I was pregnant with his granddaughter, so I could only take him up above the snow line," she said. 

When her daughter, Kaia Blair, gets to be 18, Few said, she'll get her chance to take her grandfather someplace interesting. In fact, she said, "I hope her grandfather's ashes will inspire her to become the explorer that he was".

More than two dozen traveling companions have escorted White's remains to various destinations so far, usually releasing "maybe a tenth of a teaspoon" of ashes, Lopes said.

It is possible that laws have been overlooked in the course of these travels. Rather than deal with red tape around the world, Lopes says, White's friends and family members have scattered his ashes informally or furtively (a few grains of ashes were tucked in a crack inside the Sistine Chapel).

On the other hand, some journeys have involved no scattering at all. In May 2009, a friend put about one gram of White's remains on a spacecraft operated in New Mexico by the firm Celestis, which, for a fee, offers "post-cremation memorial flights".

White's flight was to be a suborbital itinerary, but the launch went awry and the vessel drifted back to Earth, contents intact, chute deployed. White had done 2,997 parachute jumps, Lopes said, "so we figured, well, that's one more".

There is still one more place left on Earth where Lopes believes White would really want his remains to be -- the Titanic wreck, 12,000 feet down in the Atlantic.

Lopes has people working on that. But in the meantime, White's friends and family intend to keep him in motion. If all goes according to plan, they say, some ashes may soon find their way aboard a nuclear submarine. 

"I haven't weighed contents to see how much of Ralph has gone already, but there's enough for another 50 or 100 scatterings," Lopes said.

"Some people might think it's a grim task, but to me it isn't. Maybe it's because I'm a volcanologist. I'm used to dealing with ashes".

Los Angeles Times

Shanghai dairy shut



BEIJING - A SHANGHAI dairy has been closed and three of its executives arrested for selling milk powder tainted with melamine, the industrial chemical responsible for the death of six children in 2008, Xinhua news agency reported.


Xinhua said powder and flavouring products sold by the Shanghai Panda Dairy Company were found to contain illegally high traces of the toxic chemical, which is rich in nitrogen and enables producers to foil mandatory protein content tests.


The company's warehouses were sealed off and authorities were currently overseeing the recall of the company's products from seven other regions, Xinhua reported on Thursday.


In 2008, six children died and another 300,000 took ill after drinking melamine-tainted milk in a scandal that culminated in the bankruptcy of state-owned dairy Sanlu and the execution of two people.


The scandal, one of a series incidents which sparked product safety scares, stoked widespread public anger and forced the resignation of China's top food safety official, Li Changjiang.


Early last month, three people were detained in northwest China's Shaanxi province after being accused of selling 5.25 tonnes of milk powder laced with melamine, which is normally used in plastics and fertilisers and can cause kidney stones when ingested. -- REUTERS


The Straits Times

Over 400 arrests during New Year festivities


Over 400 people were arrested during last night's New Year celebrations and riot police were in action in the four big cities, but there were no major incidents, news agency ANP reports.


In Utrecht one person is reported to have been killed after being run over by a car, according to local media reports. The person has not yet been formally identified, but it is thought he or she was attempting to set of fireworks in the road when the incident happened.


In Rotterdam 157 people were arrested, but the traditional celebrations on the Erasmus bridge in the city centre featuring Di-Rect and Esmee Denters passed off in an orderly fashion, mayor Ahmed Aboutaleb told an early morning news conference.


In the Hague, the arrest toll topped 100 and 17 cars were set on fire, well below last year's total of 52. Two police officers were injured when a firework went off in their van. Nevertheless, mayor Jozias van Aartsen described the festivities as 'manageable'.


Amsterdam was described as 'relatively peaceful', with some 80 arrests. Up to 45,000 people had crammed in to the city's Museum plein for a free concert by Marco Borsato, soprano Barbara Hannigan and the finalists of the Popstars tv talent show.


Security was strict, everyone was searched for glass and fireworks, and there were no incidents, ANP said.


Veen


The celebrations passed off peacefully in the Brabant village of Veen, where last year riot police were called in to break up a gang of some 100 youths who were setting cars on fire. This year there was a heavy police presence and army airborne surveillance equipment was brought in to keep an eye on troublemakers.


In central Netherlands there were some arrests, mostly for vandalism and setting off illegal fireworks. 'There were no major incidents,' a police spokesman told the Telegraaf.


Police were also brought in to restore order in Hoek van Holland and Capelle aan den IJssel.


Dutch News

President Hu inspects Hebei, underlines agriculture

(Xinhua)








LANGFANG, Hebei Province: President Hu Jintao on Friday urged Party committees and governments at all levels to make issues related to agriculture, rural areas and farmers top priority of their agenda and called for increased investment in these areas.
During a visit to villages in China's northern Hebei Province Friday, Hu called for efforts to develop modern agriculture by relying on the progress of science and technology and make sure that farmers have increasing incomes.
The president said this year's No. 1 document of the CPC Central Committee will include a batch of new policies to support agricultural development.
Hu spent time inquiring about the livelihood of local farmers and conveyed New Year greetings to them.
At a vegetable greenhouse of Liqizhuang Township of Sanhe City, which is close to Beijing, Hu inquired about sales and market price of vegetables and incomes of local farmers.

Hu urged local farmers to give full play to the area's geographic advantage and contribute to the development of local economy by raising the quantity and quality of vegetables.

At a grain and oil enterprise, Hu called for intensified efforts to improve product quality and lower production cost so asto provide consumers with more quality edible oil with a low price.
In another village of Liqizhuang Township, Hu encouraged village authorities to improve villagers' life quality by improving infrastructure and providing local people with more services.
After being told that 74-year-old villager Zhang Futai and his wife had moved into a two-storey building from a house made of mud and stone, Hu said he was happy to see the farmers' living conditions being improved.
China Daily

Intruder shot at home of Danish cartoonist

Kurt Westergaard's controversial cartoons of the prophet Muhammad sparked worldwide protests and forced him into hiding


Anil Dawar




Danish police have shot and wounded a man at the home of Kurt Westergaard, whose controversial cartoons of the prophet Muhammad sparked a storm of Muslim protest five years ago.
Danish media reported last night that Westergaard, 74, was at home near the city of Aarhus with his wife and grandchild when a 27-year-old Somalian man armed with a knife and axe tried to break in.
Chief superintendant Morten Jensen, from East Jutland police, said: "At 10pm a personal alarm was received from Mr Westergaard's house".
Officers found a man "armed with an axe and a knife in either hand," he said. "He broke a window of Mr Westergaard's house. He tried to attack one officer with an axe and he was shot in his right leg and his left arm." He said the man was not seriously injured and was now in custody.
In 2005 the Jyllands-Posten newspaper published a caricature by Westergaard depicting Muhammad wearing a turban shaped like a bomb with a fuse.
Islamic tradition says no image of the prophet should be produced or shown.
Danish embassies were attacked including the one in Damascus which was burned down in 2006 and death threats against Westergaard forced him into hiding.
In March 2008 Denmark's three main newspapers reprinted the cartoon after the arrest of three men for plotting to murder the artist.The three – a Dane of Moroccan origin and two Tunisians – were picked up in a dawn raid near Aarhus following a long surveillance operation by the country's intelligence services, the PET.
The Dane was eventually released without charge and one of the two Tunisians was deported. The other was sent to live in an asylum centre north of Copenhagen.
The Jyllands-Posten also carried a statement from the cartoonist revealing how he had feared for his life but then "turned fear into anger and indignation".
"It has made me angry that a perfectly normal everyday activity, which I used to do by the thousand, was abused to set off such madness," the statement added.
In today's Jyllands-Posten, Westergaard described the incident: "He threatened to kill me. I ran out to the bathroom where our security room is. I was worried for my grandchild. I was afraid.
"I knew that I could not match him. So I alerted the police. It was scary. It was really close. But we did it. It was good".
Westergaard was moved to a safe place last night but was unable to say what the attempted attack would mean for his future.
"It is too early to say. I must speak with PET and then we will see," he said.
The Guardian

Police appeal for help to identify man with amnesia


By Charlotte McCathie, Press Association 



A man suffering from amnesia who was found collapsed outside a school is desperate to work out who he is, police said today.



The mystery man, who was discovered in Langho, Lancashire, is not able to tell officers anything about his life or how he came to be found outside the school.

The dark-haired man appears to be aged between 25 and 35, is of slim build, is around 5'9 in height and has two tattoos and a pierced ear, police said.

He speaks fluent English, but sounds like he may be of Eastern European descent.

A passer-by discovered him near the Langho and Billington St Leonards Primary School, in Whalley Road, Langho, at 2.15pm on December 28.

Inspector Graham Ashcroft said: "This is a very rare case indeed. We are trying to identify him so that we can get as much information about his background as possible.

"We want to find out who he is so we can inform his family and friends." He is being kept at Royal Blackburn Hospital for treatment for his amnesia, and does not have any other injuries.

"We have checked with the hospital, the mental health teams and the immigration service. His fingerprints have been taken and put on the Police National Computer, which tells us he's not an offender," The inspector added. "We need to speak to his family to ensure his safety and make sure we, or the hospital, can give him the best possible care".

Anyone with information is asked to call Blackburn police on 01254 51212.
The Independent

Fragile Calm Holds in Darfur After Years of Mass Killings


By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN


EL FASHER, Sudan — The changes across the landscape here would have been hard to imagine just a few years ago.



The rebel groups that started the war in Darfur in 2003, catalyzing a conflict that has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives, almost seem to have gone into hibernation. So, too, have the infamous janjaweed, the marauding bandits who raped, killed and terrorized countless civilians.


And this planting season, for the first time since 2003,United Nations officials say that tens of thousands of farmers who had been seeking refuge in squalid displaced persons camps returned to their villages to plant crops, a journey many Darfurians would have considered suicide until recently.


“People need to update their perception of Darfur,” said Daniel Augstburger, the director of the African Union-United Nations humanitarian liaison office in Darfur. “It’s not like there are still janjaweed riding around, burning down villages”.


At El Fasher airport — which used to be crawling with pilots, soldiers, national security agents and dubious armed men — the fighter jets sit idle on the runway, cockpits covered in canvas. Occasionally they fly sorties, the camouflage-painted planes cutting across an impossibly bright sky. But there have been no major bombing campaigns for months, if not years, peacekeeping officials said.


“Frozen,” said Lt. Gen. Patrick Nyamvumba, the Rwandan commander of the 20,000 peacekeepers in Darfur. “That is a good word for the situation. It is calm, very calm at the moment, but it remains unpredictable”.


Darfur, Sudan’s enormous western region that has become virtually synonymous with conflict, seems to be stuck between war and peace. There is still violence, a lot of it, with five Rwandan peacekeepers recently killed and aid workers kidnapped and routinely carjacked. Heavily armed bandits — possibly castoffs from the earlier days of more organized warfare — have become ubiquitous. Partly because of that, the flow of people out of the camps is just a trickle compared with the 2.7 million still stuck in them, afraid to go home.


But the rebel groups have been quiet in the past year, hobbled by endless fragmentation and no clear political agenda. At the same time, the Sudanese government seems encouraged by the Obama administration’s talk of engaging with the nation, rather than isolating it, and United Nations officials say there is little evidence the government is sponsoring ethnic violence here, as it was accused of doing not so long ago.


Even some of the most outspoken activists on Darfur, who helped keep this conflict on the world’s front pages for the past five years, drawing more attention to Darfur than just about any other African war in recent memory, do not automatically recoil anymore at statements like, “The war is over.” That was essentially what the former peacekeeping commander said in August, provoking a protracted controversy.


“There is no doubt that violence has diminished significantly in the past two or three years — and many, including myself, have been slow to recognize how significant this reduction has been,” said Eric Reeves, a professor at Smith College and one of the leading academic voices on Darfur.


But, he added, civilians were still being attacked and, “The anger, frustration and despair simply cannot be overstated”.


That said, few of the cataclysmic predictions of the past few years have come true — not the big Sudanese government offensives that many feared would take place in 2006 and 2007, or the expected attacks by thousands of janjaweed against refugee camps. Even the widespread death and disease that United Nations officials and many aid workers worried would be the consequence of the Sudanese government’s expulsion of 13 foreign aid organizations last year were largely averted.


“People were crying wolf,” Mr. Augstburger said. “The crisis within the crisis never happened”.


The hybrid African Union-United Nations peacekeeping mission, the most expensive in the world at $1.6 billion per year, which took years of negotiation to put in place, is also going much better than expected, the peacekeepers say.


“Yes, we have obstructions from time to time,” General Nyamvumba said. “But it’s not as bad as I thought it would be”.


All this seems to add up to a single question, asked from the sprawling refugee camps to the inner circles of the Sudanese government: now what?


In the camps, the transient life of the refugee is becoming permanent. Most people hate living here. The crowded huts, the waiting for food handouts, the idleness are steadily taking their toll.


“I am uncomfortable and depressed,” said Abbas Abdallah Mohamed, a farmer who fled his village four years ago. But like many others, he was not ready to venture home.


“If we go back, maybe there will be tribal war,” he said, referring to one of the biggest problems today in Darfur, the fighting between different ethnic groups over shrinking grazing land.


Some camp dwellers have begun taking jobs in nearby towns making bricks the biblical way, out of mud and straw, building solid homes for others while they themselves live in temporary shelters often constructed from twigs and plastic bags.


“The possibility is that they could be here forever,” said Mohamed B. Yonis, a top United Nations official in Darfur.


In El Fasher’s market, shopkeepers in white prayer hats sit cross-legged behind pyramids of spices and dates. Young men with strong voices belt out the price of beef. The streets are clogged not with armed pickups but with horse-drawn carts pulling blocks of soap.


The focus in Sudan seems to be steadily shifting to the south. Rebels in southern Sudan fought a separatist war for decades, and the region is scheduled to vote on its independence next year. But as the south edges toward nationhood, ethnic violence is building, with more than 2,000 people killed in 2009, many more than in Darfur, according to United Nations officials.


The root cause of both rebellions, in the south and in Darfur, is the same: marginalization. Sudan has a history of concentrating power and wealth in the center of the country, at the expense of the periphery. Until that is addressed, analysts say, Darfur will most likely remain tense, even if that tension is not expressed in mass killings or scorched villages.


But one glimmer of hope is that camp elders, religious figures and women’s leaders are being given prominent roles in peace talks for the first time.


“Will it be the big breakthrough?” Mr. Augstburger said. “I don’t know. But the movements are starting to get concerned. It’s a brand-new dynamic”.


The New York Times

luishipolito@outlook.com

Carregando...