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Rewilding Europe: Continent’s key animals recovering

A new European report suggests that some of the continent’s key animals have made a comeback over the past 50 years.

Conservationists say species such as bears, wolves, lynx, eagles and vultures have increased in numbers.

They believe that protection, curbs on hunting and people moving away from rural areas and into cities have helped Europe’s wildlife to recover.

The analysis was carried out by the Zoological Society of London, Birdlife and the European Bird Census Council.

The report was commissioned by the conservation group Rewilding Europe.

Frans Schepers, the organization’s director, said: “People have this general picture of Europe that we’ve lost all our nature and our wildlife.

“And I think what the rest of the world can learn from this is that conservation actually works. If we have the resources, a proper strategy, if we use our efforts, it actually works.”

Over the past few centuries, animals in Europe have not fared well. Hunting, habitat loss, and pollution have sent animals into decline.

But this report marks a reversal in fortunes.

The researchers looked at 18 mammals and 19 bird species found across Europe.

They found that all, apart from the Iberian lynx, had increased in abundance from the 1960s.

The largest increases were for the European bison, the Eurasian beaver, the white-headed duck, some populations of the pink-footed goose and the barnacle goose. These had all increased by more than 3,000% during the past five decades.

Europe’s key animals have made a comeback over the past 50 years
Europe’s key animals have made a comeback over the past 50 years

For top predators such as the brown bear, numbers have doubled. And for the grey wolf, which saw serious losses in the past, populations have climbed by 30%.

For mammals, the comeback was largest in the south and west of Europe, and their range had increased on average by about 30%. The average range of the birds remained stable.

Frans Schepers said: “The wildlife comeback actually started after World War II in the 1950s and 1960s. Compared to the numbers in the 1600s and 1700s, it’s still at a very low level, but it’s coming back.”

The researchers believe a combination of factors have been driving this return.

Legal protection in the EU, such as the birds directive and habitats directive, had helped to revive the fortunes of species, as had dedicated conservation schemes, said Frans Schepers.

And while some animals are still hunted in parts of Europe, there are often limits on the number that can be killed.

“It is also because people are leaving the countryside, which leaves more space for wildlife,” he said.

The recovery of some species, particularly large predators, has raised concerns. In France, for example, where wolves have recently returned, farmers are concerned that their livestock is at risk.

The report warns that this could be a growing problem, but suggests that governments should put in place compensation schemes to offset any losses for farmers. It also says that rural communities could benefit from more animals, as ecotourism could offer a boost to local economies.

The finding is surprising when seen in the global context, where biodiversity is in continuing decline.

Prof. Jonathan Baillie, director of conservation at the Zoological Society of London, said: “We’re trying to find success stories so we can learn from them, so we can see what works and scale that up across the conservation movement globally.

“And it is really important that we focus on success and where we are winning.

“But there are massive challenges out there globally. And we have to realize that the threats that Europe creates are not just within our borders, it’s internationally, and that we are having an impact on the 60% decline we’re seeing in low income countries around the world.”

He also warned that Europe’s wildlife was at a pivotal moment.

“We just have to be aware that into the future there will be increasing pressure for food production and so on within Europe,” Prof. Jonathan Baillie said.

“And for a lot of these species, where we have seen the gains, we might lose them again if we are not careful. So it’s our job to keep our eye on the ball.”

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Nutricia accused of bribery in China

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Danone food unit Nutricia has started an internal investigation into bribery claims in China.

A report in Chinese newspaper 21st Century Business Herald has alleged that Nutricia, maker of KariCare milk formula, bribed doctors to boost sales.

The report, which cited an unidentified person, claimed that the unit gave gifts and travel subsidies to more than 100 doctors in 14 hospitals in Beijing.

This is the second such allegation made against a Danone unit in recent weeks.

“At the moment we still don’t know the details,” Zhao Qinghua, a spokeswoman for Nutricia in China, was quoted as saying by the Reuters news agency.

“We need to wait to see the outcome of the investigation before we can make our next plans.”

A report in Chinese newspaper 21st Century Business Herald has alleged that Nutricia, maker of KariCare milk formula, bribed doctors to boost sales
A report in Chinese newspaper 21st Century Business Herald has alleged that Nutricia, maker of KariCare milk formula, bribed doctors to boost sales

Earlier this month a report on China Central Television alleged that Dumex, a baby food brand owned by Danone, bribed doctors to boost sales.

It was accused of giving “sponsorship fees” or payments of up to 10,000 yuan ($1,632) to hospital staff.

Dumex said it was “shocked” by the allegations and was investigating the claims.

The French food giant has also faced other problems in China this year.

Danone cut prices for its infant milk formula products by as much as 20% after China’s top economic planning body fined it in August for price-fixing.

The company also had to issue a precautionary recall of its milk formula products last month after one of its suppliers, Fonterra, said some items may have been contaminated.

Demand for foreign brands has surged in China, after tainted milk scandals in recent years led to a distrust of local producers.

According to some estimates, foreign brands now account for about half of all infant milk sales in the country.

However, foreign companies have come under scrutiny recently amid a government-led crackdown on corruption in the healthcare sector.

Their First Misunderstanding: Mary Pickford lost movie to be screened at Keene State in October

Their First Misunderstanding, a long-lost movie starring silent actress Mary Pickford, is to be restored and shown to the public.

Mary Pickford, known as “the girl with the golden curls”, received her first on-screen credit in Their First Misunderstanding, made in 1911. But the film was thought to have disappeared by historians who followed the performer’s career.

A solitary copy was discovered in a barn by carpenter Peter Massie in 2006.

The US Library of Congress is now funding a project to restore it.

Peter Massie found the film, along with six other vintage reels, in New Hampshire seven years ago.

They were languishing in a barn that had once been used as a summer camp for boys. It is believed the movies were shown to entertain the campers.

Not realizing the nitrate film was highly flammable, Peter Massie kept the reels in his truck where he regularly smoked cigarettes. He later stored them near his woodstove at home.

Eventually he donated the discoveries to the nearby Keene State College, where scholars have since been working to identify and restore them.

“This is the coolest thing I’ve ever found on any job,” said Peter Massie.

Their First Misunderstanding, a long-lost movie starring silent actress Mary Pickford, is to be restored and shown to the public
Their First Misunderstanding, a long-lost movie starring silent actress Mary Pickford, is to be restored and shown to the public

“It’s pretty fantastic, that’s what I think.

“They were seconds away from going into a dumpster.”

Mary Pickford was 18 when she made Their First Misunderstanding, a 10-minute film about a wife’s fight with her husband.

“We have a list of all of Mary Pickford’s films, but this was among the missing,” film historian Leonard Maltin told CBS News.

“It’s like finding an early song by George Gershwin, or an unpublished short story by Mark Twain.”

Their First Misunderstanding was initially identified by Larry Benaquist, who founded the film school at Keene State.

It took longer than usual, as the 35mm celluloid had degraded and stuck to itself.

Once a lab had separated the layers, Larry Benaquist asked Mary Pickford scholar Christal Schmidt to confirm his findings.

“I was really stunned, because a lot of those early films, you just figure they’re gone,” said Christal Schmidt.

“For that one to turn up was really exciting.”

Mary Pickford was born Gladys Louise Smith in 1892 in Toronto, Canada. She went to work in the theatre at the age of five after her father died from a brain haemorrhage.

She moved to Broadway when she was 15. There she formed a working partnership with pioneering film director DW Griffith, head of the Biograph studio.

Mary Pickford soon became known as the “Biograph girl” and made more than 40 short movies in 1909 alone.

After audiences first learned her name in Their First Misunderstanding, Mary Pickford became famous around the world.

She won two Oscars and later founded the United Artists film studio along with DW Griffith, Douglas Fairbanks – whom she married in 1920 – and Charlie Chaplin.

Mary Pickford retired from the screen in 1933 but continued to produce. She died in 1979.

Larry Benaquist said that while the first minute or so of Their First Misunderstanding had been destroyed, the rest was in remarkably good condition.

Their First Misunderstanding will be screened at Keene State in October.

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NSA spied on Martin Luther King and Muhammad Ali during Vietnam War protests

New declassified documents reveal the US National Security Agency spied on Martin Luther King and Muhammad Ali during the height of the Vietnam War protests.

The documents show the NSA also tracked journalists from the New York Times and the Washington Post and two senators.

Some NSA officials later described the programme as “disreputable if not outright illegal”, the documents show.

The operation, dubbed “Minaret”, was originally exposed in the 1970s.

However, the names of those on the phone-tapping “watch list” had been kept secret until now.

The secret papers were published after a government panel ruled in favor of researchers at George Washington University.

New declassified documents reveal the NSA spied on Martin Luther King and Muhammad Ali during the height of the Vietnam War protests
New declassified documents reveal the NSA spied on Martin Luther King and Muhammad Ali during the height of the Vietnam War protests

The university’s National Security Archive – a research institute that seeks to check government secrecy – described the names on the NSA’s watch-list as “eye-popping”.

The NSA eavesdropped on civil rights leaders Martin Luther King and Whitney Young as well as boxing champion Muhammad Ali, New York Times journalist Tom Wicker and Washington Post columnist Art Buchwald.

The agency also monitored the overseas phone calls of two prominent US senators – Democrat Frank Church and Republican Howard Baker.

Many of those targeted were considered to be critics of US involvement in the Vietnam War.

In 1967 the strength of the anti-war campaign led President Lyndon Johnson to ask US intelligence agencies to find out if some protests were being stoked by foreign governments.

The NSA worked with other spy agencies to draw up the “watch lists” of anti-war critics, tapping their phone calls.

The programme continued after President Richard Nixon entered the White House in 1969. US Attorney General Elliot Richardson shut down the NSA programme in 1973, just as the Nixon administration was engulfed in the Watergate scandal.

The latest revelations come as the NSA is embroiled in fresh controversy over its surveillance programmes.

US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden recently exposed far-reaching electronic surveillance of phone records and internet traffic by the agency.

Researchers Matthew Aid and William Burr, who published the documents on Wednesday, said the spying abuses during the Vietnam War era far surpassed any excesses of the current programme.

“As shocking as the recent revelations about the NSA’s domestic eavesdropping have been, there has been no evidence so far of today’s signal intelligence corps taking a step like this, to monitor the White House’s political enemies,” they wrote.

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Citigroup pays $395 million settlement to Freddie Mac

Citigroup has agreed to pay $395 million to Freddie Mac to settle claims of potential flaws in mortgages it sold to the firm.

The sum covers nearly 3.7 million loans sold to Freddie Mac between 2000 and 2012.

It is latest in a series of settlements by US banks with agencies Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae – bailed out by the government during the financial crisis.

The two have claimed that banks sold them toxic debts and as a result should be responsible for the losses on them.

“Today’s agreement with Freddie Mac marks another important milestone in successfully resolving Citi’s remaining legacy mortgage issues,” Jane Fraser, chief executive of CitiMortgage, said in a statement.

Tom Fitzgerald, spokesman for Freddie Mac said the agreement was an “equitable one” and “allows both companies to move forward”.

Citigroup has agreed to pay $395 million to Freddie Mac to settle claims of potential flaws in mortgages it sold to the firm
Citigroup has agreed to pay $395 million to Freddie Mac to settle claims of potential flaws in mortgages it sold to the firm

In the run-up to the financial crisis of 2007-08, the US witnessed a big boom in its housing market.

The boom saw banks grouping together home loans and selling them as investments, including to firms such as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.

But as the housing market collapsed and financial crisis spread many of the underlying mortgage holders were unable to repay their debts.

As a result, the investments plummeted in value, with disastrous consequences for banks all over the world.

Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae lost more than $30 billion, partly because of their investments in the subprime mortgages, and had to be bailed out by the US government.

Since then, banks have been under pressure to resolve claims on potentially faulty mortgages sold to the two firms.

Citigroup announced a deal in July to pay Fannie Mae $968 million for loans over a similar period.

In January, Bank of America agreed to pay Fannie Mae $11.6 billion to settle claims relating to residential home loans.

Richard Gere and Carey Lowell planning to file for divorce

Richard Gere and Carey Lowell have separated and are planning to file for divorce, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Richard Gere married Carey Lowell in 2002.

A source close to the couple told Page Six the couple has “been spending time apart for quite some time”.

Richard Gere and Carey Lowell have separated and are planning to file for divorce
Richard Gere and Carey Lowell have separated and are planning to file for divorce

Another source told Page Six Richard Gere, 64, and Carey Lowell, 52, have different lifestyles: “They have a place in Bedford, [N.Y.], and he likes it because it’s quiet and he likes the solitude. She likes being in North Haven in the limelight.”

Richard Gere was previously married to supermodel Cindy Crawford. Carey Lowell, meanwhile, was previously married to actor Griffin Dunne.

Carey Lowell and Richard Gere have a 13-year-old son, Homer.

Jack Lew: US will hit its debt ceiling by October 17

Treasury Secretary Jack Lew has warned that he US will hit its debt ceiling by October 17, leaving the government with half the money needed to pay its bills.

Jack Lew said that unless the US is allowed to extend its borrowing limit, the country will be left with about $30 billion to meet its commitments.

“Net expenditures on certain days can be as high as $60 billion,” he said.

The US government and Republicans are at stalemate over extending the credit limit needed to avoid default.

President Barack Obama and the Democrats have said they will not negotiate with Republicans over their demand that the government agrees budget cuts in return for backing a rise in the borrowing limit.

Jack Lew’s comments underline how close Washington is to running out of money. Failure to reach a deal would be “catastrophic” for the US economy, he said in a letter to House Speaker John Boehner.

“Treasury now estimates that extraordinary measures will be exhausted no later than October 17. We estimate that, at that point, Treasury would have only approximately $30 billion to meet our country’s commitments.

Jack Lew said that unless the US is allowed to extend its borrowing limit, the country will be left with about $30 billion to meet its commitments
Jack Lew said that unless the US is allowed to extend its borrowing limit, the country will be left with about $30 billion to meet its commitments

“If we have insufficient cash on hand, it would be impossible for the United States of America to meet all of its obligations for the first time in our history,” Jack Lew said.

Jack Lew urged Congress to “act immediately” and increase the borrowing ceiling, which has been limited at $16.7 trillion since May.

In return for supporting a rise in the ceiling, Republicans are pushing for a series of measures, including a delay by a year in the introduction of the Affordable Care Act, which would increase benefits under Barack Obama’s Medicare health programme.

A spokesman for John Boehner said Jack Lew’s letter was a reminder of the need for an agreement to raise the ceiling while at the same time cutting US debt.

But he added: “And it should remind President Obama that refusing to negotiate with Congress on solutions just isn’t an option.”

Washington faced a similar impasse over its debt ceiling in 2011. Republicans and the Democrats only reached a compromise on the day the government’s ability to borrow money were due to run out.

In his letter, Jack Lew reminded Congress that the 2011 battle “caused significant harm to the economy”.

That fight was resolved just hours before the country could have defaulted on its debt, but nevertheless led to ratings agency Standard & Poor’s downgrading the US for the first time ever.

The 2011 compromise included a series of automatic budget cuts known as the “sequester” which came into affect earlier this year.

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Navy Yard gunman Aaron Alexis caught on camera during attack

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A video footage of Washington DC Navy Yard gunman Aaron Alexis prowling the corridors of the complex as he hunts for victims has been released by the FBI.

During a press conference, an FBI spokeswoman said Aaron Alexis, 34, believed he was being controlled by extremely low frequency radio waves.

Aaron Alexis killed 12 people in the rampage on September 16 before he was shot by police in a running gun battle.

Officials say they believe he did not target any specific individuals.

Clear video footage taken from the Navy Yard’s gate and at locations on site shows Aaron Alexis calmly entering the complex.

Later clips show him stalking a corridor armed with a shotgun and checking if a room is empty, before running down a flight of stairs.

The agency also released images of a weapon Aaron Alexis used during the shooting.

He had written “my ELF weapon” – apparently referring to extremely low frequency waves – and “Better off this way!” on a Remington 870 shotgun.

Washington DC Navy Yard gunman Aaron Alexis prowling the corridors of the complex as he hunts for victims
Washington DC Navy Yard gunman Aaron Alexis prowling the corridors of the complex as he hunts for victims

A photo of his backpack, which he used to bring the weapon into the building and then left in a men’s toilet, was also published by the FBI.

Valerie Parlave, head of the FBI’s field office in Washington, said in Wednesday’s news conference that they were still investigating Aaron Alexis’ background and motivations.

But she noted the former Navy reservist had a well-documented history of mental health issues.

Valerie Parlave said: “At this point I can confirm that there are multiple indicators that Alexis held a delusional belief that he was being controlled or influenced by extremely low frequency, or ELF, electromagnetic waves.

“The etching… is believed to reference these electromagnetic waves.

“In addition, a document retrieved from the electronic media stated <<ELF attack is what I’ve been subject to for the last three months, and to be perfectly honest that is what has driven me to this>>.”

Valerie Parlave added: “ELF technology was a legitimate programme for naval subtonal submarine communications.

“However, conspiracy theories exist which misinterpret its application as the weaponisation of remote neural frequencies for government monitoring and manipulation of unsuspecting citizens.”

As an IT subcontractor, Aaron Alexis had an entry pass to the Navy Yard complex.

Investigators say he acted alone and died on the third floor of Naval Sea Systems Command headquarters after about an hour of exchanging gunfire with officials.

The shooting has led to questions about how Aaron Alexis received the security clearance necessary to be a contractor and enter the installation and prompted calls to review the government vetting process.

Also on Wednesday, Washington Police Chief Cathy Lanier told local media a Washington DC police officer was shot in the chest while responding the shootings but was saved by protective gear.

Another police officer was shot in the leg and is currently recovering in hospital.

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Pakistan earthquake death toll rises to 328 in Balochistan

Pakistan earthquake death toll raised to 328 while hundreds more are wounded in south-west province of Balochistan.

The 7.7-magnitude quake struck on Tuesday afternoon at a depth of 13 miles north-east of Awaran, the US Geological Survey said.

Many houses were flattened and thousands of people have spent the night in the open.

After the quake, an island appeared off the coast near the port of Gwadar.

People gathered on the beach to see the new island, which is reported to be about 656ft long, 300 ft wide and 60ft high, and scientists have been sent to survey it.

Officials say such land masses have appeared before in the area, and usually disappear again over time.

Pakistan earthquake death toll raised to 328 while hundreds more are wounded in south-west province of Balochistan
Pakistan earthquake death toll raised to 328 while hundreds more are wounded in south-west province of Balochistan

Tuesday’s quake was so powerful it was felt as far away as India’s capital, Delhi, and Dubai. Workers in Karachi had to evacuate their offices because of the strong tremors.

Balochistan is Pakistan’s largest but least populated province.

The military has a heavy presence in the area because it is fighting a long-running separatist Baloch insurgency, and so its troops were among the first to respond to the crisis.

More than 300,000 people have been affected over a total of six districts – Awaran, Kech, Gwadar, Panjgur, Chaghi and Khuzdar – Balochistan government spokesman Jan Muhammad Buledi said.

The death toll currently stood at 328 – 160 in Awaran town, 125 in other areas of Awaran district and 43 in Kech.

It is feared the death toll could rise once other areas are reached. The number of wounded is reportedly more than 440.

Awaran local government official Abdul Rasheed Baluch said about 90% of houses in the district had been destroyed.

Some 250 houses collapsed in the village of Dalbedi and villagers were clawing through debris for possessions, an AFP photographer at the scene said.

The army says it has sent more than 200 soldiers, medical teams and tents from the regional capital Quetta.

But the mountainous terrain and loss of communications is hampering the rescue operation.

Helicopters have been airlifting the most seriously injured to Karachi, while others are being cared for in neighboring districts.

The affected area is vast, impoverished and sparsely-populated. Awaran district reportedly has around 300,000 residents.

Most people live in easily-collapsible mud homes, and many are feared to be trapped under the rubble.

The region is prone to earthquakes, with at least 35 people killed in a 7.8-magnitude tremor that was centred in south-eastern Iran in April.

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Gwadar: Pakistan earthquake island emits gas

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Half an hour after Pakistan was hit by a major earthquake on Tuesday, people of coastal town of Gwadar had another shock when they saw a new island emerge in the sea, just over a mile from the shore.

A local journalist, Bahram Baloch, received the news via a text message from a friend.

“It said a hill has appeared outside my house,” Bahram Baloch said.

“I stepped out, and was flabbergasted. I could see this grey, dome-shaped body in the distance, like a giant whale swimming near the surface. Hundreds of people had gathered to watch it in disbelief.”

Bahram Baloch and some friends landed on the island on Wednesday morning to check it out and to take pictures.

“It’s an oval shaped island which is about 250ft to 300ft in length, and about 60 to 70ft above the water,” he said.

It has a rough surface, much of which is muddy and some parts are mostly made up of fine- to coarse-grained sand. One part of it is solid rock, and that is where Bahram Baloch and his friends landed.

Pakistani people of coastal town of Gwadar saw a new island emerging in the sea after the earthquake
Pakistani people of coastal town of Gwadar saw a new island emerging in the sea after the earthquake

“There were dead fish on the surface. And on one side we could hear the hissing sound of the escaping gas,” he said.

Though they couldn’t smell methane, they did put a match to the fissures from where the gas was oozing, and set it on fire.

“We put the fire out in the end, but it was quite a hassle. Not even the water could kill it, unless one poured buckets over it.”

The story now doing the rounds in Gwadar is that a similar hill had jutted out of the sea 60 or 70 years ago, and that the elders had then named it the Zalzala Koh, or the quake hill.

They say Tuesday’s earthquake has brought it back.

Their story is not entirely incorrect. However the quake hill that appeared in 1945 was not near Gwadar, but over 100km to the east, although it was along the same coastline, which is called the Makran coast.

About 430 miles from east to west, the Makran coast is characterized by high seismic activity, and is home to several hills called mud volcanoes, having craters at the top from which methane gas seeps.

These volcanoes are located inland, and have been there for a long time. But similar formations that emerge offshore are usually washed away by the sea.

Geologists say it is part of the continuing process of continental drift, or the drift of land mass across the oceans that brought the Indian sub-continent to collide with Eurasia and created the fault-lines, some of which run through the Makran coast.

Rashid Tabrez, the director-general of the Karachi-based National Institute of Oceanography, says the energy released by the seismic movements of these fault-lines activates inflammable gases in the seabed.

“The seabed near the Makran coast has vast deposits of gas hydrates, or frozen gas having a large methane content,” he explained.

“These deposits lay compressed under a sediment bed that is 300 m-800 m thick.”

“When the plates along the fault-lines move, they create heat and the expanding gas blasts through the fissures in the earth’s crust, propelling the entire sea floor to the surface.”

The island that popped up near Gwadar is the fourth in this region since 1945, and the third during the last 15 years, he said.

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French public deficit to hit record in 2014

The French government has revealed the country’s public debt will hit a record 95.1% of GDP in 2014, above previous estimates, and up from 93.4% in 2013.

The figure was revealed as the country unveiled its budget for next year.

The debt should fall back in 2015, and repeated its aim to bring the public deficit below 3% that year, the EU’s deadline for doing so.

The government also said there will be some tax increases for households, but other tax reductions for businesses.

In addition, the budget focuses on tightening public spending, with some 15 billion euros in savings planned, as part of a plan to cut some 18 billion euros off the deficit.

France public debt will hit a record 95.1 percent of GDP in 2014
France public debt will hit a record 95.1 percent of GDP in 2014

Debt servicing costs will rise to 46.7 billion euros, compared with 45 billion euros in 2013.

The 2014 budget is based on a growth forecast of 0.9%, lowered from a previous 1.2% forecast, with just 0.1% in growth forecast for this year.

But an economist has warned that next year’s growth figure was no cause for optimism.

“We can’t talk about a recovery as long as economic growth is around 1%,” said Eric Heyer, an economist with the French Observatory for Economic Forecasts.

“Since today, we produce less than five years ago, we are still in recession. That’s the real definition of a recession.

“The real rebound will be when we have a production level well above 2007 and when the economy has started to create jobs again. That’s not in the government’s scenario.”

In other measures, there will be a change in corporate tax policy, with a new levy being introduced based on operating profits.

The much-heralded 75% tax rate on salaries of more than 1 million euros a year will be introduced.

However, this tax will be paid by firms rather than employees.

France is the eurozone’s second largest economy after Germany.

Meanwhile, France will issue 174 billion euros in medium and long-term debt in 2014, compared with an estimated 169 billion euros this year.

Sugar gel protects premature babies against brain damage

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Rubbing a dose of sugar gel into the inside of the cheek of premature babies is a cheap and effective way to protect them against brain damage, say experts.

Dangerously low blood sugar affects about one in 10 babies born too early. Untreated, it can cause permanent harm.

Researchers from New Zealand tested the gel therapy in 242 babies under their care and, based on the results, say it should now be a first-line treatment.

Rubbing a dose of sugar gel into the inside of the cheek of premature babies is a cheap and effective way to protect them against brain damage
Rubbing a dose of sugar gel into the inside of the cheek of premature babies is a cheap and effective way to protect them against brain damage

The researcher’s work is published in The Lancet.

Dextrose gel treatment costs just over $1.5 per baby and is simpler to administer than glucose via a drip, say Prof. Jane Harding and her team at the University of Auckland.

Current treatment typically involves extra feeding and repeated blood tests to measure blood sugar levels.

But many babies are admitted to intensive care and given intravenous glucose because their blood sugar remains low – a condition doctors call hypoglycaemia.

The study assessed whether treatment with dextrose gel was more effective than feeding alone at reversing hypoglycaemia.

Miss Piggy and Kermit the Frog reunited in Washington’s Museum of American History

The Muppet Show, Sesame Street and Fraggle Rock’s puppets have been donated to the Museum of American History in Washington.

Miss Piggy has now joined her on-screen paramour Kermit the Frog and other 19 puppets created by Jim Henson in the Smithsonian Institution’s collection.

Cookie Monster, Bert, Ernie, Elmo and Fozzie Bear were also “inducted” during a special ceremony on Tuesday.

The event took place on what would have been Jim Henson’s 77th birthday.

Jim Henson died in 1990, while his wife and collaborator Jane died in April this year.

Their daughter Cheryl, who is president of the Jim Henson Foundation, said she was “so happy to have [her] father’s work be part of the cultural heritage of this country”.

“When you look at these different characters, you can hear their voices,” she said.

Miss Piggy has now joined her on-screen paramour Kermit the Frog and other 19 puppets created by Jim Henson in the Smithsonian Institution's collection
Miss Piggy has now joined her on-screen paramour Kermit the Frog and other 19 puppets created by Jim Henson in the Smithsonian Institution’s collection

“They are like living beings.”

The fame-seeking Miss Piggy will be on view within the museum’s American Stories exhibition, which starts in March 2014.

Several other Muppets and Sesame Street characters will be part of a broader puppetry display that will open this November.

“The Muppets are very much a touchstone to my childhood,” said museum director John Gray.

John Gray called comedy and variety programme The Muppet Show, which ran from 1976 to 1981, “the best example of American vaudeville”.

The donation also includes Scooter, the Swedish Chef, Grover and Count Von Count, as well as Boober Fraggle and Travelling Matt from Fraggle Rock.

Many of the puppets show the characters as they were first constructed.

These include Rowlf, a scruffy brown dog created for a dog food commercial in the early 1960s who later joined The Muppet Show as a pianist.

“Kermit was Jim’s alter-ego, but Rowlf was Jim’s alter-ego without the ambition,” said Karen Falk, an archivist with The Henson Corporation.

“He was Jim on the weekend, Jim in a hammock.”

The Museum of American History is already home to Oscar the Grouch, Kermit and the cast of Jim Henson’s early TV show Sam and Friends.

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Pink Star: Most valuable diamond up for sale at record $60 million in Geneva

Pink Star, a flawless 59.6-carat pink diamond will be auctioned in the Swiss city of Geneva at a record asking price of $60 million, Sotheby’s auction house says.

Sotheby’s says the oval-cut stone will become the most valuable diamond ever to be offered at auction.

Sotheby’s David Bennett says the diamond belongs in “the ranks of the earth’s greatest natural treasures”.

Pink Star is over twice the size of the 24.78-carat “Graff Pink” diamond that set the world auction record for $46.2 million.

Pink Star diamond will be auctioned in Geneva at a record asking price of $60 million
Pink Star diamond will be auctioned in Geneva at a record asking price of $60 million

The diamond, which was mined by De Beers in Africa in 1999, has received the highest possible color and clarity rating from the Gemological Institute of America (GIA).

Pink Star weighed 132.5 carats in the rough, and was cut and polished over a period of two years by Steinmetz Diamonds, the New York-based auction house said in a statement on Wednesday.

“I have had the privilege of examining some of the greatest gemstones in the world over the past 35 years, and I can say, without hesitation, that the Pink Star diamond is of immense importance,” said David Bennett, chairman of Sotheby’s jewellery division in Europe and the Middle East.

He said it was very rare to have vivid pink diamonds weighing only five carats, “so this 59.6-carat stone is simply off any scale”.

Pink Star, which was previously known as the “Steinmetz Pink”, was sold privately in 2007 but neither the price nor the owner was disclosed.

The auction is scheduled to take place on November 13.

Sotheby’s will also auction a white diamond and a blue diamond, valued at more than $28 million and $19 million respectively, in Hong Kong in October.

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Here Comes Honey Boo Boo Season 3 to premiere on January 1st, 2014

TLC has ordered twelve new episodes of Here Comes Honey Boo Boo, along with three specials for a third season, Variety has reported.

The new episodes of the reality series, which are being tacked on to Here Comes Honey Boo Boo Season 2, will premiere on January 1st, 2014.

TLC has ordered twelve new episodes of Here Comes Honey Boo Boo, along with three specials for a third season
TLC has ordered twelve new episodes of Here Comes Honey Boo Boo, along with three specials for a third season

“The world continues to be fascinated by the Boo Boo gang and their crazy hijinks,” TLC’s Howard Lee told the website.

“As Alana gets older, the dynamic between her parents and sisters is changing. Viewers can look forward to seeing a different side of the family as they embark on this exciting new chapter of their lives.”

Here Comes Honey Boo Boo recently drew its biggest audience yet on September 11, when 3.2 million viewers tuned in to watch June Shannon and Sugar Bear hold a commitment ceremony.

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Kenya declares three days of national mourning following Westgate mall attack

Kenya has declared three days of national mourning following the end of the four-day siege by Islamist militants on Nairobi’s Westgate shopping centre.

President Uhuru Kenyatta said 67 people died, including six security personnel.

Five militants were killed and 11 suspects arrested, he said.

Islamist group al-Shabab, which claimed responsibility for the attack, said 137 hostages had died. But the statement cannot be verified.

As the clearing of the mall continues, the death toll is expected to rise.

Several bodies, including those of some attackers, are thought to be trapped under rubble after three floors of the building collapsed following a blaze.

Kenya’s Standard newspaper reported that tens of bodies were removed from the building on Tuesday evening.

Correspondents say the shopping centre lay largely silent overnight and light smoke was still drifting from the building.

Journalists and onlookers were kept behind a security cordon but police let some people retrieve cars from the scene.

In his address, President Uhuru Kenyatta praised the response of ordinary Kenyans, calling it exemplary and overwhelming.

Kenya has declared three days of national mourning following the end of the four-day siege on Nairobi's Westgate shopping centre
Kenya has declared three days of national mourning following the end of the four-day siege on Nairobi’s Westgate shopping centre

“We have ashamed and defeated our attackers,” he said.

“Kenya has stared down evil and triumphed.”

He did not confirm earlier reports that several of the attackers were American and British.

“Intelligence reports had suggested that a British woman and two or three American citizens may have been involved in the attack,” said Uhuru Kenyatta.

“We cannot confirm the details at present. Forensic experts are working to ascertain the nationalities of the terrorists.”

He added: “These cowards will meet justice, as will their accomplices and patrons, wherever they are.”

According to the UK Foreign Office, one British national had been arrested in Nairobi, without giving further details.

One of the people arrested is understood to have been in the shopping centre, though it is not clear whether they were armed, or among the 10-15 attackers that Kenyan authorities have spoken of.

At least 18 foreigners are among the dead. About 175 people were wounded, including 62 who remain in hospital.

Somali Islamist group al-Shabab said it had carried out the attack in retaliation for Kenyan army operations in Somalia.

The militants stormed the Westgate centre on Saturday, throwing grenades and firing indiscriminately on shoppers and staff.

Twitter posts from al-Shabab on Wednesday said it had held 137 people hostage, and claiming they died at the hands of the security forces at the end of stand-off.

Al-Shabab, which is linked to al-Qaeda, has repeatedly threatened attacks on Kenyan soil if Nairobi did not pull its troops out of Somalia.

There are about 4,000 Kenyan troops in the south of Somalia as part of an African Union force supporting Somali government forces.

Al-Shabab is fighting to create an Islamic state in Somalia.

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Willie Robertson talks about his biracial son Lil Will

Duck Dynasty’s Willie Robertson and his wife Korie are the proud parents of five children, both biological and adopted.

In a touching video footage, Willie Robertson talked about the adoption of their biracial son Lil Will.

Korie and Willie Robertson’s adopted son, Lil Will, has appeared in some episodes of Duck Dynasty. The couple, who have known each other since they were young children, are also raising daughter Rebecca as a foster child, after having hosted her initially as an exchange student. Willie and Korie Robertson’s biological children are John Luke, Sadie, and Bella.

Korie and Willie Robertson’s adopted son, Lil Will, has appeared in some episodes of Duck Dynasty
Korie and Willie Robertson’s adopted son, Lil Will, has appeared in some episodes of Duck Dynasty

In Korie Robertson’s Twitter bio she calls herself the “proud wife” of Willie, and touches on their unique family situation: “Mom to four awesome kids plus a sweet exchange student who became ours. Love my big family. Thankful. God is good.”

Though not originally from a hunting family, Korie fit in with the Robertsons right away.

As Willie Robertson’s wife and business partner, she helped him grow the company into an ever-expanding enterprise. She serves as the Duck Commander office manager and has to make her presence known in order to keep the workshop from turning into a funhouse.

Korie met Willie Robertson in third grade when he asked her to go on a moonlit hike at summer camp.

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Sadie Robertson produces I Am Different weekly video devotionals

Duck Dynasty’s Sadie Robertson is producing weekly video devotionals on Monday nights called I Am Different.

Sadie Robertson, 16, is also designing a clothing line in an effort to encourage modesty in a culture where fashion trends are often contrary to the ways of the Lord.

Willie Robertson’s daughter does not have a typical teenage lifestyle. The high school student from Monroe, Louisiana loves the Lord, is close with her family, and excels in sports – and she also happens to be a reality television star.

Sadie Robertson told TC Magazine that she realizes that God has given her fame in order for her to make a difference for Christ.

“When we were little and said our prayers at night, I would always say, <<God, please give me an opportunity to make a difference in this world>>. I mean, you always want to, but you never know how to do it. Now that God’s blessed us with this TV show, here’s that opportunity,” she said.

Even though the producers of A & E’s hit show Duck Dynasty edit out much of the Robertson’s faith-based lives, Sadie says that people have been positively impacted by even so much as the short prayer that patriarch Phil Robertson prays over the family meal at the end of each episode.

Sadie Robertson knows that her status as a television star will give her an opportunity to be a good example for other young women.

Sadie Robertson and her best friend, Kolby Koloff,  have created I Am Different, a weekly devotional video series on YouTube
Sadie Robertson and her best friend, Kolby Koloff, have created I Am Different, a weekly devotional video series on YouTube

“I think it’s awesome that people see something in me that’s different, but it’s really a challenge to me and my spiritual way and everything. If little girls are looking up to me, I’ve got to be the example they need. If I’m going to claim that I’m different from everybody else on TV, I’ve got to be different than everybody else. It’s encouraging to me and really helping me to be a better person,” she said.

Sadie Robertson and her best friend, Kolby Koloff,  have created I Am Different, a weekly devotional video series on YouTube.

“People think they need to be a part of the world to have fun. To see that we can have fun and still be Christian-based, that’s cool, that’s different,” she said.

Kolby Koloff and Sadie Robertson are hoping and praying that the devotions will expand peoples’ way of thinking.

“The world’s view is completely opposite from God’s view,” said Sadie Robertson in the introduction video.

The girls plan to release a YouTube video via their Twitter account, @_i_am_different, each Monday.

Sadie Robertson is also creating her own line of conservative prom dresses. The collection will be available in the spring of 2014.

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Obamacare: How Bill Clinton and Barack Obama promote healthcare law

Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton have joined forces to promote Obama’s healthcare initiative, known as Obamacare, just days before one of its major provisions takes effect.

In New York, they discussed the law’s progress and denounced Republican efforts to stymie its implementation.

Beginning on October 1st, Americans who lack health insurance will be able to buy policies in online market places.

Barack Obama said opponents were trying to “scare” people from signing up.

Even as conservative groups have undertaken a broad effort to undermine the law by persuading people to ignore it, Barack Obama said he was confident Americans would come to see its advantages.

“When people look and see that they can get high-quality, affordable healthcare for less than their cell phone bill, they’re going to sign up,” Barack Obama said.

The discussion, billed as an interview by Bill Clinton of Barack Obama took place on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York.

It was part of the Clinton Global Initiative, a conference featuring Bill Clinton that he has held regularly since leaving the White House in 2001.

Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton have joined forces to promote Obamacare
Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton have joined forces to promote Obamacare

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which Barack Obama’s Democratic Party passed in 2010 in the face of unified Republican opposition, has been the centrepiece of Obama’s domestic policy agenda.

Its provisions include a requirement, which takes effect in January, that individuals who do not have health insurance provided by their employers purchase it on the open market.

On October 1st, online health insurance marketplaces run by the US federal government or by the states will begin accepting customers.

Opposition to the law, which is known to both sides of the debate as Obamacare, has become one of the central tenets of Republican and conservative politics, analysts say.

The House of Representatives, which is controlled by the Republican Party, has held dozens of votes on bills to repeal the law or strip it of funding. The bills have gone nowhere in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

The law has become a central point in the ongoing budget battle, with some Republicans pushing to shut down the operation of the US government by not passing a new budget if the Democrats refuse to defund the law.

On Friday, the House passed a bill that would prevent a government shutdown – but would strip the healthcare law of its funding. And on Tuesday, Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas undertook a marathon speech on the floor of the Senate to denounce the law and demand the government block its implementation.

“Those who have opposed the idea of universal healthcare in the first place and have fought this thing tooth and nail through Congress and through the courts and so forth have been trying to scare and discourage people from getting a good deal,” Barack Obama said.

On Monday, Bill Clinton asked Barack Obama why he had decided to tackle healthcare reform early in his first term, even as the economy was mired in one of the worst downturns since the Great Depression.

Barack Obama said healthcare was a “massive” part of the American economy, and noted the US was the only advanced industrialized nation that permitted “large numbers of its people to languish without health insurance”.

President Barack Obama also accused congressional Republicans of using the “pretty straightforward” issue as political capital as the government hurdles toward a shutdown on October 1st, when the law funding its operation expires.

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Last Man Standing Season 3 premieres with Duck Dynasty’s Willie and Si Robertson

ABC’s Last Man Standing Season 3 premiered last week-end by welcoming Duck Dynasty’s Willie and Si Robertson in the first episode, Back to School.

Willie and Si Robertson are visiting the sporting goods store in preparation for a man-versus-nature challenge.

 “We don’t want nature to have a chance,” as Uncle Si Robertson puts it.

Last Man Standing Season 3 premiered last week-end by welcoming Duck Dynasty’s Willie and Si Robertson in the first episode, Back to School
Last Man Standing Season 3 premiered last week-end by welcoming Duck Dynasty’s Willie and Si Robertson in the first episode, Back to School

There are also oddly juxtaposed jokes about wearing camouflage to church and studying philosophy.
Max Baxter (Tim Allen) and his family welcomed the Robertsons who were quipping about deer hunting and whatnot.

Willie and Si Robertson are also a little concerned about “Lady-beard”, aka Kyle (Christoph Sanders). It seems that Mandy broke his brain with all of her intellectual college talk.

Willie Robertson knows what to do though. Si Robertson, however, seems to be advocating murder as a more permanent solution to the problem.
Last Man Standing Season 3 premiered on Friday, September 20 at 8 p.m. on ABC.

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US house prices rise 12.4% over 12 months at the end of July 2013

According to the latest S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index, US house prices rose 12.4% over the 12 months to the end of July, the biggest annual increase since February 2006.

The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index measures single-family home prices across 20 cities, with 13 cities showing a rising annual growth rate.

Last week, the US Federal Reserve decided to maintain its effort to boost the economy, which involves buying $85 billion worth of assets every month.

That scheme, known as quantitative easing (QE), is credited with boosting the housing market last year by driving down mortgage rates to record lows.

However, David Blitzer from S&P Dow Jones Indices said that effect had worn off.

US house prices rose 12.4 percent over the 12 months to the end of July 2013
US house prices rose 12.4 percent over the 12 months to the end of July 2013

“Following the increase in mortgage rates beginning last May, applications for mortgages have dropped, suggesting that rising interest rates are affecting housing.

“The Fed’s announcement last week that QE3 bond buying will continue for the time being may have only a limited, though favorable, impact on housing,” he said.

Prices rose 0.6% on a seasonally adjusted basis in July compared with the month before, which was lower than analysts’ forecasts and down from June’s increase of 0.9%.

Las Vegas saw the biggest annual gain of 27.5%, while San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego all saw rises of more than 20%.

But the survey points out that house prices in those cities are still well below the peaks hit before the 2008 financial crisis.

Of the 20 cities surveyed, New York saw the lowest annual increase of 3.5%.

Detroit, which filed for bankruptcy in July, saw an annual growth rate of 16.9%. However, the report says that Detroit is the only city where house prices are still below the levels reached in January 2000.

Russia: Greenpeace activists detained in Murmansk over piracy

Thirty Greenpeace activists have been detained by Russian coastguards in the port of Murmansk.

Greenpeace says so far five of them have been questioned.

The activists, who were protesting against oil drilling in the Arctic, were towed for four days in their ship, the Arctic Sunrise.

Russia prosecutors have accused them of piracy after two activists climbed onto the side of an offshore oil platform.

The charge of piracy carries a prison sentence of up to 15 years in Russia, depending on the gravity of the offence, and a fine of up to 500,000 roubles ($15,000).

The activists were initially taken to the Murmansk headquarters of Russia’s Investigative Committee, modeled on the FBI.

On Wednesday morning, Greenpeace Russia tweeted that the activists were being detained for 48 hours and had been transferred to “different prisons in Murmansk and around”.

Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said on Tuesday that “all those who assaulted the platform, regardless of nationality, will be prosecuted”.

Thirty Greenpeace activists have been detained by Russian coastguards in the port of Murmansk.
Thirty Greenpeace activists have been detained by Russian coastguards in the port of Murmansk.

The campaigners were seized on September 19 along with their ship after two Greenpeace activists tried to climb onto a Gazprom offshore platform.

The ship was raided by armed Russian men in balaclavas who abseiled down from helicopters. The ship was seized in the Pechora Sea, near the rig.

Greenpeace said in a statement on Tuesday that its protest against “dangerous Arctic oil drilling” was peaceful and in line with its “strong principles”.

“Our activists did nothing to warrant the reaction we’ve seen from the Russian authorities,” it said.

The campaigners on the ship are from 18 countries, including Australia, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, France, New Zealand, Russia, the UK and the US, Greenpeace said.

Vladimir Markin described the protest as “an attempt to seize a drilling platform by storm” and said it raised “legitimate doubts about their intentions”. The ship “was loaded with electronics whose purpose was not clear”, he said.

“It’s hard to believe that the so-called activists did not know that the platform is an installation with a high hazard level, and any unauthorized actions on it can lead to an accident, which would not only endanger the people aboard it but also the ecology, which is being protected zealously,” he said.

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Pakistan earthquake: At least 238 people died in Balochistan

At least 238 people have been killed after a powerful earthquake hit Pakistan’s remote south-west province of Balochistan.

The 7.7-magnitude quake struck on Tuesday afternoon at a depth of 13 miles north-east of Awaran, the US Geological Survey said.

Many houses were flattened and thousands of people have spent the night in the open.

After the quake, a small island appeared off the coast near the port of Gwadar, witnesses reported.

People gathered on the beach to see the new island, which is about 30ft high and 300ft long, Gwadar Police Chief Pervez Umrani said.

Balochistan is Pakistan’s largest but least populated province.

The region is prone to earthquakes, with at least 35 people killed in a 7.8-magnitude tremor that was centred in south-eastern Iran in April.

The latest quake was so powerful it was felt as far away as Karachi, Hyderabad, and India’s capital, Delhi.

At least 238 people have been killed after a powerful earthquake hit Pakistan's remote south-west province of Balochistan
At least 238 people have been killed after a powerful earthquake hit Pakistan’s remote south-west province of Balochistan

Entire villages are reported to have been flattened in the impoverished and sparsely-populated district of Awaran.

Balochistan government spokesman Jan Buledi put the death toll at 238, more than 200 of the fatalities in Awaran town and the surrounding villages. He has warned that it could rise. At least 340 people have been injured.

“We are seriously lacking medical facilities and there is no space to treat injured people in the local hospitals,” Jan Buledi said.

He said helicopters were airlifting the most seriously injured to Karachi while others were being cared for in neighboring districts.

Pakistan’s military was among the first to respond to the crisis, having a heavy presence in the area already because it is fighting a long-running separatist Baloch insurgency.

The army said it had sent more than 200 soldiers, medical teams and tents from the regional capital Quetta, but the mountainous terrain is said to be hampering the rescue operation.

Awaran local government official Abdul Rasheed Baluch said around 90% of houses in the district had been destroyed.

“Almost all the mud houses have collapsed. We have been busy in rescue efforts for the whole night and fear we will recover more dead bodies from under the rubble during daylight,” he said.

Many of the casualties are said to be from Labach, on the northern outskirts of Awaran town.

Houses are also reported to have caved in the district of Khuzdar.

An emergency has been declared in Awaran and another earthquake-affected district, Chagai.

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UN General Assembly 2013: Dilma Rousseff criticizes US over electronic espionage claims

Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff has criticized the US over allegations it carried out electronic espionage.

Speaking at the opening of this year’s UN General Assembly, Dilma Rousseff said Brazil would adopt legislation and technology to protect itself from illegal intercepts.

She called Washington’s argument that spying on Brazil was to protect nations from terrorists “untenable”.

Earlier this month, the Brazilian president cancelled a planned visit to Washington.

Dilma Rousseff told the assembled leaders that Brazil had been a target of intrusions and intercepts carried out by a “global network of electronic espionage”.

She said that “corporate information – often of high economic and even strategic value – was at the centre of espionage activities”.

Dilma Rousseff said such tampering with another country’s affairs was an “affront to the principles that must guide the relations among friendly nations”.

Her speech came a week after she called off a high-profile visit to the United States after a string of allegations about the extent of the US spying programme emerged.

Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff has criticized the US over allegations it carried out electronic espionage
Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff has criticized the US over allegations it carried out electronic espionage

Dilma Rousseff rejected arguments put forward by the US that the illegal interception of information was aimed at protecting nations against terrorism.

“Brazil, Mr. President, knows how to protect itself,” she said.

“We face, Mr. President, a situation of a grave violation of human rights and civil liberties; of invasion and capture of confidential information concerning corporate activities, and especially of disrespect to national sovereignty,” Dioma Rousseff added.

The allegations of widespread espionage against Brazilian citizens were first published in July by Rio de Janeiro-based journalist Glenn Greenwald, a reporter for the British Guardian newspaper.

Glenn Greenwald alleged that the NSA accessed all internet content that Dilma Rousseff had visited online.

Earlier this month, another report by Glenn Greenwald alleged that the NSA had also illegally accessed data from Brazil’s state oil company, Petrobras.

Petrobras is due next month to carry out an important auction for exploration rights of an oil field off the Rio de Janeiro state coast.

Dilma Rousseff said that her government would “do everything within its reach to defend the human rights of all Brazilians and to protect the fruits borne from the ingenuity of our workers and our companies”.

Brazil’s leader asked the UN to play a leading role in regulating electronic technology and said Brazil would present proposals for a “civilian multilateral framework” for the governance and use of the internet and to protect web-based data.

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Pope Emeritus Benedict denies abuse cover-up in letter to Piergiorgio Odifreddi

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI has denied any role in covering up child abuse by priests, in his first public comments since retirement.

The former Pope addressed the issue in a detailed letter to a prominent atheist, which also covered many other matters.

It is thought to be the first time that Benedict has publicly rejected personal responsibility for covering up abuse.

Some critics say he must have known of efforts to protect abusive priests.

Benedict’s letter, to the professor of mathematics Piergiorgio Odifreddi, was published in La Repubblica newspaper after the professor sought the former Pope’s permission.

His comments are the first to be released publicly since he left office, saying he would retreat to a life of prayer. He was apparently concerned not to have a public role that might impinge on his successor, Pope Francis.

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI has denied any role in covering up child abuse by priests, in his first public comments since retirement
Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI has denied any role in covering up child abuse by priests, in his first public comments since retirement

Regarding the repeated allegations of abuse which arose during his pontificate, Benedict denied he had suppressed investigation of paedophile priests.

He wrote: “I never tried to cover up these things. That the power of evil penetrates to such a point in the interior world of the faith is, for us, a source of suffering.

“On the one hand we must accept that suffering, and on the other, at the same time, we must do everything possible so that such cases aren’t repeated.

“It’s also not a motive for comfort to know that, according to sociological research, the percentage of priests guilty of these crimes is no higher than in other comparable professional categories.

“In any event, one must not stubbornly present this deviance as if it were a nastiness specific to Catholicism.”

Benedict’s comments were a direct response to points made in Prof. Piergiorgio Odifreddi’s 2011 book Dear Pope, I’m Writing to You, which in turn was a response to Benedict’s Introduction to Christianity.

Benedict also responds to several other criticisms made by the Italian, including whether theology can be considered a science, and what can be known about Jesus as an historical figure.

Prof. Piergiorgio Odifreddi said he appreciated the tone of his dialogue with Benedict, and that, while they might disagree on almost everything, they at least had one aim in common: “The search for the truth, with a capital <<T>>.”

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