terça-feira, 20 de abril de 2010

Mourinho's men stun Barca at San Siro


Internazionale 3 Barcelona 1
By Ben Gladwell, PA Sport

Internazionale sent reigning Champions League champions Barcelona to the brink of elimination following their victory in the first leg of their semi-final at the San Siro tonight.
It was the game billed as an early final, and if the eventual final in Madrid can live up to what this had to offer, then the 90,000 fans inside the Estadio Santiago Bernabeu will be in for a treat on May 22.
Pedro put Barcelona in front in the 19th minute, but Inter turned the game around thanks to goals from Wesley Sneijder on the half-hour mark, Maicon just three minutes into the second half and Diego Milito after an hour.
Inter will now travel to the Spain next week looking to wrap up their first ever Champions League final appearance.
Barca, who endured a 14-hour bus journey to Milan due to the volcanic ash, will have plenty of time to reflect on their display as they head back to Catalonia knowing they will need at least two goals to progress.
While Esteban Cambiasso was paying particularly close attention to Lionel Messi in the early exchanges, he took the threat of Maxwell a little less seriously as Barcelona went in front in the 19th minute.
Maxwell was allowed to make his way unchallenged to the goal line as Cambiasso stood and watched, and the former Inter full-back pulled his ball back, just behind Zlatan Ibrahimovic, but right into the path of Pedro who side-footed in from 15 yards.
Moments earlier, Inter had missed their first big chance of the match when Samuel Eto'o's shot from 25 yards was only parried by Victor Valdes, but Milito, who was following in, placed his shot across the face of goal
Milito got a little closer to the target in the 27th minute when he was again played clean through to the left of goal only to again place his shot wide of the far post, but Sneijder showed him how to finish just three minutes later as Inter levelled.
Milito appeared to steal Eto'o's cross off the toes of Goran Pandev, but the San Siro's groans at what looked like a missed opportunity soon turned to cheers as Milito picked out Sneijder to his left and the Dutchman provided the accomplished finish, placing his shot low past Valdes.
The second half started with a bang as Inter went in front in the 48th minute.
Milito was again left in far too much space by the Barcelona defence and, with Eto'o appearing to obstruct Carles Puyol as he tried to recover ground, the Argentinian forward was allowed time to pick out Maicon at the near post and he beat Valdes from close range.
Barca responded with Sergio Busquets' header saved well by Julio Cesar and then Maicon lifted the rebound away before Busquets could get in another header.
But Barca continued to leave gaping holes in their defence and Thiago Motta exploited one with his pass to Eto'o, whose cross was met by Sneijder with a poor header, but one which unintentionally picked out Milito in a possibly offside position to nod in Inter's third after an hour.
Messi had a free-kick saved in the 79th minute as the Blaugrana launched a late assault on the Inter goal.
Gerard Pique was sent up as an additional attacker and, although he caused plenty of confusion, he and Barca were unable to find a second away goal, leaving Inter in command of the tie ahead of the trip to the Nou Camp next week.
The Independent

Analysis: Republican feud threatens GOP fortunes


WASHINGTON — The plight of Florida's Charlie Crist — a Republican governor who apparently can't win his own party's Senate primary — underscores the divisions dogging an otherwise emboldened national GOP.
Races in all corners of the country raise the question of whether moderate candidates have a future in a party imposing ideological purity, and whether the GOP can attract moderate voters. In Senate races in Florida, Arizona, Utah, Kentucky and New Hampshire, conservatives backed by tea party activists are challenging more centrist candidates largely preferred by the party establishment in Washington.
Such bitter primaries are threatening the GOP's fortunes even though, by nearly every other measure, the political winds are blowing against Democrats ahead of this fall's midterm elections. And ramifications of the GOP family feud could extend beyond November, to the presidential election in 2012.
The Republican Party already is facing declining membership and a diminished geographic foothold as it has moved further to the right over the past few decades.
If the GOP ends up driving middle-of-the-road candidates from the party, how can it attract moderates and independents? Do those voters, already the most likely to be turned off by politics, simply stay home? Or do they turn out for independent candidates, making the two-party structure less relevant?
Neither result would be good for the Republicans.
Still, party politics is hardly the only issue likely to sway votes in the fall. The economy is at the top of most voters' lists.
And the Democrats face their own nasty Senate primary in Arkansas, where moderate Sen. Blanche Lincoln is trying to fend off union-backed Lt. Gov. Bill Halter. And in North Carolina, a labor group angry at moderate House Democrats over their health care votes has formed a third party although they are struggling to get candidates on the ballot.
But those largely are isolated cases.
The Republican moderate-conservative feuds have been fierce for quite a while, long before the emergence of the tea party movement. Last spring, moderate Sen. Arlen Specter bolted from the GOP as he faced a conservative challenge in Pennsylvania.
"I have found myself increasingly at odds with the Republican philosophy and more in line with the philosophy of the Democratic Party," Specter said when he switched. Joe Sestak is opposing him for the Democratic nomination in the May 18 primary.
No race epitomizes the GOP fracture more than the ugly Florida contest between Marco Rubio, the former state House speaker embraced by conservatives and tea party activists, and Crist, a moderate considered for the GOP presidential ticket in 2008.
Crist has dropped from favored Republican with a hefty lead in polls to GOP outcast with a double-digit deficit in a race that shows no signs of tightening. Polls suggest Crist could win as an independent in a three-way race. Rep. Kendrick Meek is the likely Democratic nominee.
Now Crist says he's being "very, very thoughtful and deliberate" as he considers an independent run.
National Republicans are pressuring him to quit rather than run as an independent. Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, the second-ranking Republican in the House, said Tuesday: "Marco Rubio is just the type of leader our country needs."
"The Republican Party, like the Democratic Party, goes through phases where it re-identifies itself and repositions itself somewhere on the conservative spectrum. Right now, this party is very conservative. And there's good reasons for this party to be conservative," said Sen. George LeMieux, R-Fla., Crist's former chief of staff. LeMieux was appointed by Crist to fill the seat until a successor was chosen.
In other Republican Senate primary campaigns:
_Arizona Sen. John McCain, a four-term senator with an independent streak who was the GOP presidential nominee just two years ago, is in a tough primary battle against former Rep. J.D. Hayworth, a conservative talk-radio host embraced by tea party activists.
_Utah Sen. Robert Bennett, one of the most conservative members of Congress, is facing a serious challenge from his right, with his vote for President George W. Bush's bank bailout drawing the wrath of conservatives.
_In Kentucky, outsider Rand Paul, the son of libertarian Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, is picking up endorsements and crucial support against Secretary of State Trey Grayson, causing consternation for the GOP establishment, especially Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.
_Former New Hampshire Attorney General Kelly Ayotte, who national Republicans trumpeted as a top recruit, is trying to beat back challenges from conservative Ovide Lamontagne and another candidate, Bill Binnie.
Republicans succeeded when they backed a moderate in Massachusetts earlier this year as Scott Brown captured Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's Senate seat.
But last November the intraparty split cost the GOP a House seat in New York that it had held for decades.
In New York's 23rd congressional district, the nominee hand-picked by GOP leaders, Dede Scozzafava, dropped out of the race after a fierce challenge by conservative Doug Hoffman. Both remained on the ballot and split the Republican vote, which allowed Democrat Bill Owens to narrowly win the upstate New York seat Republicans had held for decades.
In a further blow to party orthodoxy, South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint has started raising money and backing conservative Senate candidates running against the ones the National Republican Senatorial Committee wants. On Tuesday, DeMint endorsed Indiana state Sen. Marlin Stutzman even though the national GOP has persuaded former Sen. Dan Coats to run for the U.S. Senate there.
Democrats, too, have battle scars from past ideological party fights and years in the political wilderness, reflected by liberal George McGovern's failed presidential bid in 1972.
The 2006 midterms were a high-water mark for the Democrats' recognition of big tent politics.
The two leaders of the Democratic campaign efforts — Rahm Emanuel in the House and Chuck Schumer in the Senate — recruited conservative and moderate Democrats who better fit their constituents' viewpoints, such as Rep. Brad Ellsworth in Indiana, Sen. Jon Tester in Montana and Sen. Bob Casey in Pennsylvania.
Still, Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman was re-elected that year as an independent after losing the Democratic primary to liberal Ned Lamont. The race showed that the Democratic Party tug-of-war still can flare up, but it was largely an aberration.
Democrats seized control of the House and Senate, and in 2008, they added to their numbers for comfortable majorities.
This year, despite attempts by some liberals to challenge moderate Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand in New York, Democratic Party leaders and the White House successfully cleared the field to ensure the vulnerable senator wouldn't face a primary challenge.
After years of struggle, some Democrats have decided the cost of purity is just too high.
Come November, Republicans may be paying that price.
Associated Press writer Ann Sanner contributed to this report.
EDITOR'S NOTE — Liz Sidoti has covered national politics for The Associated Press since 2003.
Eds: CORRECTS reference to New Hampshire candidates; adds context
Associated Press

Google rapped over privacy issues by 10 nations


Canada's Privacy Commissioner Jennifer Stoddart has sent an open letter to Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt.
The letter raises concerns about privacy issues surrounding social network tool Google Buzz and Google Street View.
It calls for Google to adhere to a set of "fundamental privacy principles" when creating new services in future.
Ms Stoddart's counterparts in nine other countries, including the UK, France and Germany, have signed it too.
Ms Stoddart expressed concern that "the privacy rights of the world's citizens are being forgotten as Google rolls out new technological applications".
She cited the early controversy around Google Buzz, a social network service that, when launched, automatically connected people in public to those they had emailed via their Gmail accounts.
Privacy problems
Google enabled Buzz users to set their own privacy controls following user complaints, but the problems caused by making personal contacts public "should have been readily apparent" to the company, Ms Stoddard added.
"Launching a product in 'beta' form is not a substitute for ensuring that new services comply with fair information principles before they are introduced," the letter reads.
Ms Stoddardt also criticized Google Street View. There is "continuing concern" about the way in which the company publicises its intentions prior to capturing images, she said.
She called on Google to collect and process the minimum amount of personal information required for a service, to be clear about how it would be used and to ensure that privacy settings were default and easy to use.
She also requested a simple process for deleting user accounts at the discretion of the individual.
The letter has been co-signed by officials in privacy commissioner roles in France, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain and the UK.
The group requests a response from Google but in a statement the company said it had nothing to add.
"We try very hard to be upfront about the data we collect, and how we use it, as well as to build meaningful controls into our products," it said.
"Of course we do not get everything 100% right - that is why we acted so quickly on Buzz following the user feedback we received. We have discussed all these issues publicly many times before".
BBC News

Flights resume in Europe but travel chaos not over


LONDON — Europe's busiest airport reopened Tuesday as air traffic across the continent lurched back to life. But the gridlock created by Iceland's volcanic ash plume was far from over: Officials said it would be weeks before all stranded travelers can be brought home.
Passengers wept with relief as flights took off from Paris' Charles de Gaulle Airport, Amsterdam and elsewhere. A jetliner from Vancouver, British Columbia, was the first to land at London's Heathrow airport, the continent's busiest, since the volcano erupted last week.
British Airways said it hoped 24 other flights from the United States, Africa and Asia would land at Heathrow later in the day.
Travelers cheered as the first flights took off.
Jenny Lynn Cohen, waiting at Charles de Gaulle to travel to San Francisco, had a boarding pass but could hardly believe she was going to fly.
"I am a little afraid — I am hopeful that the plane will take off, and that it won't meet with any volcanic ash," she said.
The Eurocontrol air traffic agency said it expected just under half of the 27,500 flights over Europe to go ahead Tuesday, a marked improvement over the last few days. The agency predicted close to normal takeoffs by Friday.
It was the first day since the April 14 eruption of Iceland's Eyjafjallajokull (ay-yah-FYAH-lah-yer-kuhl) volcano — dormant for nearly 200 years — that travelers were given a reason for hope.
"The situation today is much improved," said Brian Flynn, deputy head of operations at the Brussels-based agency.
Conditions changed fast. Airspace in Germany remained officially closed, but about 800 flights were allowed at low altitude.
Rita and Peter Meyer said they had to share a hotel room with two strangers in Singapore while waiting to find a way home to Germany. News that they could fly to Frankfurt airport came as they slept.
"Just after midnight — after an hour's sleep — the phone rang (and they said), 'Everyone downstairs, get in taxis to the airport,'" Rita Meyer said.
But with more than 95,000 flights canceled in the last week alone, airlines faced the enormous task of working through the backlog to get passengers where they want to go — a challenge that could take days or even weeks.
Passengers with current tickets were being given priority; those who had been stranded for days were told to either buy a new ticket or take their chances using the old one — a wait that could be days or weeks for the next available seat.
"Once your flight's canceled, you go to the back of the queue," said Laurie Price, director of aviation strategy at consultant Mott Macdonald, who was stranded in Halifax, Canada. "It seems intrinsically unfair".
The volcano that prompted the turmoil continued to rumble. Tremors could be heard and felt as far as 15 miles (25 kilometers) from the crater.
"It's like a shaking in the belly. People in the area are disturbed by this," said Kristin Vogfjord, a geologist at the Icelandic Met Office.
Scientists were worried that the eruption could trigger an even larger eruption at the nearby Katla volcano, which sits on the massive Myrdalsjokull icecap. Its last major eruption was in 1918.
"The activity of one volcano sometimes triggers the next one, and Katla has been active together with Eyjafjallajokull in the past," said Pall Einarsson, professor of geophysics at the Institute of Earth Sciences at the University of Iceland.
Volcano experts say that should such an eruption occur, air travelers might expect more disruptions, depending on prevailing winds. Of Iceland's eight volcanic eruptions in the last 40 years, only the recent one at Eyjafjallajokull was followed by winds blowing southeast toward northern Europe.
While seismic activity at the volcano had increased, the ash plume appeared to be shrinking — though it wasn't moving very fast.
Sarah Holland of Britain's Meteorological office said the plume was being held over Britain by a high pressure system that showed no signs of changing.
"The weather patterns are very static at the moment. It's unusual to have that for such a long period of time," she said. "Unfortunately, it looks like it's going to stay that way for the next couple of days, bringing the ash over the U.K.".
Early on Tuesday, a Eurocontrol volcanic ash map listed the airspace between Iceland and Britain and Ireland as a no-fly zone, along with much of the Baltic Sea and surrounding area.
Still, planes were allowed to fly above 20,000 feet (7,000 kilometers) in Britain, ahead of the reopening of airspace nationwide Tuesday evening.
Dozens of flights departed and arrived at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport as the government announced that flights could be carried out in darkness using instruments. Airports in Switzerland, central Europe and Scandinavia also reopened, and some flights took off from Asia headed for southern Europe, where air travel was not affected. Spain piled on extra buses, trains and ferries to handle an expected rush of passengers.
Polish aviation authorities said they planned to reopen the country's airspace Wednesday morning.
Even the U.S. Air Force was grounded. Capt. Alysia Harvey, the spokeswoman for the U.S. Air Force's 48th Fighter Wing at Lakenheath, said all sorties had been canceled there since last Thursday. Lakenheath is the largest U.S. air base in England, and the only one in Europe that has an F-15 fighter wing.
"Flying was canceled because it's difficult to predict exactly where the cloud is going to be or the effect it will have on aircraft engines," she said.
Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Britons sought a way home.
Britain's Foreign Office acknowledged the enormity of the problem, informing Britons abroad that it may take a "matter of weeks before everyone can be repatriated".
Tom and Natalie Smith and their children Ben and Joanne, from Bristol, England, found themselves stranded after spending a week on the Costa Brava in Spain.
"We should have returned to work this morning," Tom Smith said. "Natalie is a diabetic and so that is also a concern as she may run out of medication depending on how long it takes to get back".
The government advised Britons to remain in close contact with their airline. Those in Europe were told to make their way to the French port of Calais, other Channel ports or a northern European port.
Thousands converged on the coast from across Europe by car, train and bus, evoking memories for some of the evacuation of the British army from Nazi-occupied France through the port of Dunkirk in 1940.
"You could say it is a bit of Dunkirk spirit," said Stanley Johnson, father of London mayor Boris Johnson, who was among some 800 soldiers and civilians picked up in Spain by a Royal Navy warship, HMS Albion.
The aviation industry — facing losses of more than $1 billion — has sharply criticized European governments' handling of the disruption that grounded thousands of flights on the continent.
Some carriers were using bigger planes and more flights, while others were hiring buses to help get customers to their destinations.
British Airways, which canceled about 500 flights a day in the past five days, said it was trying to clear its backlog. It said travelers could either rebook online or claim a full refund; it also urged travelers with reservations this week to consider canceling their trips so that it could maximize space to fly stranded people home.
Associated Press writers Jill Lawless, David Stringer, Eric Talmadge and Sylvia Hui in London, Angela Doland in Paris, Slobodan Lekic in Brussels, Carlo Piovano in Reykajavik, Iceland, Alex Kennedy in Singapore, Megan Scott in New York, Jay Alabaster and Malcolm Foster in Tokyo, Tanalee Smith in Adelaide, Australia and Bradley Klapper in Geneva contributed to this report
Associated Press

Belarus says ousted Kyrgyz president in Minsk


MINSK, Belarus — Kyrgyzstan's ousted president was in exile in Belarus on Tuesday, as the interim authorities controlling the Kyrgyz capital warned he would be imprisoned if he tried to return to the Central Asian country.
Kurmanbek Bakiyev, who fled the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek after an April 7 protest rally that exploded into gunfire and left 85 people dead, had taken refuge last week in neighboring Kazakhstan, then left Monday for an unannounced destination.
Belarus' authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko said Tuesday that "Bakiyev and his family are in Minsk under the protection of our state and me personally".
His presence, however, could exacerbate Belarus' tensions with both the West and neighboring Russia, as well as with Kyrgyzstan itself.
"We have a mutual obligation to extradite criminals," said Edil Baisalov, chief of staff for interim Kyrgyz leader Roza Otunbayeva. "We expect Belarus to provide protection and security for Bakiyev until he faces justice in Kyrgyzstan for his bloody crimes".
He accused Bakiyev of being responsible for the Bishkek bloodshed.
The shaky interim coalition, which is set to run the former Soviet country for six months, is struggling to restore stability. The efforts are being watched with concern by Russia and the United States, both of which have military bases there.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday told Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov to take measures to increase security at Russian facilities in Kyrgyzstan and to protect Russian citizens there. A Kremlin statement announcing the order did not specify what the measures might be.
Deadly clashes have broken out between mobs of ethnic Kyrgyz and ethnic Meskhetian Turks in a village on the outskirts of the capital, while Bakiyev's supporters in his southern stronghold have managed to maintain control of the region by imposing their own interim governor.
The mood was tense Tuesday in Mayevka village, outside Bishkek, a day after hundreds of young ethnic Kyrgyz men armed with sticks and metal bars beat residents while burning houses and cars. At least five people were killed, the Interior Ministry said.
The rampage appears to have been motivated by an attempt by squatters to seize arable land. Mayevka is populated largely by Meskhetian Turks, descendants of an ethnic group deported from Soviet Georgia in 1944.
"When we learned that there was a claim out on our field, we urgently evacuated women and children from the village," said Alik Aliyev, an ethnic Meskhetian Turk inhabitant of Mayevka. "Toward the evening, around 1,000 young Kyrgyz men, some of them drunk, came down our street and started to smash windows of homes and cars".
Aliyev said local residents were forced to flee under attack from the squatters, but later returned to find their homes had been looted and set on fire, and that their cattle had been stolen.
Hundreds of squatters assembled for a rally Tuesday morning a short distance from Mayevka, demanding the release of jailed rioters and that they be allocated land.
About 500 police officers armed with shields and batons blocked the entrance into the village, leading to an hourlong standoff, after which the squatters dispersed.
Meanwhile, Bakiyev supporters in the southern town of Jalal-Abad have been occupying government offices for several days, and have imposed their candidate as head of the regional police department.
Under pressure from some 20 Bakiyev supporters — mostly elderly women — officers agreed Tuesday to work under their appointee.
Lukashenko's move to give refuge to Bakiyev appeared to be an open challenge to Russia, which he accuses of trying to absorb or crush his country. Many observers suggest that Russia supported or even aided Bakiyev's ouster, angered by his reneging on a promise last year to evict the U.S. base.
"Lukashenko received Bakiyev in order to show the Kremlin 'Look, I'm totally not afraid of you and will do what I want,'" said independent Belarusian analyst Alexander Klaskovsky.
Associated Press Writer Leila Saralayeva in Bishkek contributed to this report
Associated Press

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