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Aspartame linked to cancer and premature birth

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Leading British expert Erik Millstone has called for an investigation into serious health concerns over the artificial sweetener aspartame – after the EU food watchdog insisted it was safe.

The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has published a draft scientific opinion effectively rubbishing more than 20 studies which have identified potential problems with aspartame, ranging from premature births to cancer.

The EFSA’s view will be welcomed by manufacturers who use aspartame and similar sweeteners in fizzy drinks such as Diet Coke, and diet foods consumed by millions of people every day.

But Erik Millstone, professor of science policy at the University of Sussex, has challenged the “biased” and “deeply flawed” EFSA opinion.

Prof. Erik Millstone has been a leading expert on food policy in the UK for many years and his lobbying was instrumental in the setting up of Britain’s Food Standards Agency (FSA).

The way the EFSA assessed the evidence on aspartame was “perverse and biased”, he claimed.

Erik Millstone added: “The panel could only have reached its conclusion that aspartame is safe by implicitly assuming that almost all studies indicating no adverse effects are entirely reliable – even though they have numerous weaknesses and were almost all commercially funded, while all the studies indicating that aspartame may be unsafe are deemed unreliable – even though they sometimes have particular methodological strengths and even though they have all been funded independently of vested commercial interests.”

Manufacturers use aspartame and similar sweeteners in fizzy drinks such as Diet Coke
Manufacturers use aspartame and similar sweeteners in fizzy drinks such as Diet Coke

He also suggested that the EFSA panel that carried out the assessment was dominated by experts linked to manufacturers or regulators that have previously supported aspartame.

Prof. Erik Millstone said: “Of the 17 members of the EFSA panel, seven have direct commercial conflicts of interest, and another five have institutional conflicts of interest, for example, because their employers have already announced that aspartame is safe.”

He pointed to several convincing studies that raise real questions about the safety of aspartame and justify the need for further research.

An EU-funded project published in 2010 found that pregnant women who drank fizzy drinks containing artificial sweeteners appear to be at greater risk of having a premature baby.

Erik Millstone also highlighted work by the independent Ramazzini Foundation in Italy.

Its scientists have published research suggesting aspartame caused several types of cancer in rats at doses very close to the current acceptable daily intake for humans.

Prof. Erik Millstone said the EFSA should discount the draft report and convene a new panel composed only of experts who are free of any conflicts of interest.

Next Pope election: Ten cardinals who could be Pope by next week

The process of electing a successor to Benedict XVI is under way and here are 10 of the candidates in the running to lead the Catholic Church.

Joao Braz de Aviz

  • Archbishop of Brasilia
  • Born 1947 in Santa Caterina, Brazil
  • As young priest, caught in a robbery’s cross-fire
  • Studied at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian and Lateran Universities
  • Made cardinal in 2012
  • Focuses on welfare of the poor

Timothy Dolan

  • Archbishop of New York
  • Born 1950 in St Louis, Missouri, US
  • PhD in Church history and was rector of Rome’s North American College
  • One of Time’s 100 most influential people for 2012

Marc Ouellet

  • Archbishop of Quebec, head of Congregation for Bishops
  • Born 1944 in La Motte, Quebec
  • Decided to become a priest as a teenager
  • Taught in seminaries in Colombia and Canada

Gianfranco Ravasi

  • President of the Pontifical Council for Culture
  • Born 1942 in Lecco, Italy
  • Chose priesthood over teaching Latin and Greek classics
  • Helped popularize scripture studies through Italian media

Leonardo Sandri

  • Head of Vatican dept for Eastern Churches
  • Born 1943 in Argentina to Italian parents
  • Became a papal diplomat after ordination
  • Served as Vatican’s chief-of-staff 2000-07
  • Speaks English, French, German, Italian and Spanish
The process of electing a successor to Benedict XVI is under way
The process of electing a successor to Benedict XVI is under way

Odilo Scherer

  • Archbishop of Sao Paulo
  • Born 1949 in Cerro Lago, Brazil, of German-Brazilian heritage
  • Doctorate in theology
  • Head of Church’s largest dioceses in world’s largest Catholic country

Christoph Schoenborn

  • Archbishop of Vienna
  • Born 1945, son of a Bohemian count
  • Seen as Benedict’s intellectual protégé
  • Respected by Jews, Muslims and Orthodox Christians
  • Embroiled in  open rebellion by hundreds of own priests in Austria
  • Has broken ranks to speak in favor of reform

Angelo Scola

  • Archbishop of Milan
  • Born 1941 in Milan, Italy
  • Son of a truck driver
  • Has doctorates in Christian philosophy and theology
  • Italian newspaper calls him “crown prince of Catholicism”

Luis Tagle

  • Archbishop of Manila
  • Born 1957 in the Philippines
  • Reputation as a man of the people
  • Media-savvy, frequent broadcaster
  • Served on International Theologian Commission
  • Made cardinal in November 2012

Peter Turkson

  • Archbishop of Cape Coast, general secretary of Synod for Africa
  • Born 1948 in western Ghana
  • Attended New York seminary
  • First-ever Ghanaian cardinal in 2003
  • Seen as a moderate

Jennifer Capriati facing arrest after beating ex-boyfriend Ivan Brannan at Palm Beach gym

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Former women’s tennis champion Jennifer Capriati is facing arrest in Florida after she allegedly struck her ex-boyfriend Ivan Brannan at a Palm Beach gym, according to a new report.

The arrest warrant is being sought by North Palm Beach County police, who are considering charges of battery and stalking in connection with the incident at Oxygen Health and Fitness gym, Gossip Extra has reported, citing a police report.

Jennifer Capriati, 36, is accused of getting into an argument with ex-boyfriend Ivan Brannan, a former Florida State University golfer, on February 14 near the men’s locker room of the gym.

She allegedly hit Ivan Brannan’s chest with her fists several times before a yoga instructor intervened. Ivan Brannan then ran into the men’s locker room and called 911.

Jennifer Capriati fled the scene in her car but was stopped by police a few miles away. They allowed her to go at the time.

She has hired lawyer Steve Sessa, who declined to comment on the story.

Ivan Brannan asked the Palm Beach County Circuit Court for a restraining order against Jennifer Capriati last year.

The judge declined the request.

Jennifer Capriati is accused of getting into an argument with ex-boyfriend Ivan Brannan on February 14 near the men's locker room of the gym
Jennifer Capriati is accused of getting into an argument with ex-boyfriend Ivan Brannan on February 14 near the men’s locker room of the gym

Ivan Brannan claims Jennifer Capriati called his work place more than 100 times in a single day last year.

He also says she sped through a security gate at his condo building in her Porsche after a guard declined her requests to be let in.

The North Palm Beach Police Department did not respond to a request for comment on this story.

Jennifer Capriati was only 10 when she made her Sports Illustrated debut and by 13, she was on the cover.

Jennifer Capriati won Olympic gold in 1992 at age 16 and two years later, she was out of the game and into legal trouble when she was cited for shoplifting and arrested for marijuana possession.

New teeth grown from gum cells

According to British researchers, dentists may one day be able to replace missing teeth with ones newly grown from gum cells.

A research team from King’s College London took cells from adult human gum tissue and combined them with another type of cell from mice to grow a tooth.

They say using a readily available source of cells pushes the technology a step nearer to being available to patients.

But it is still likely to be many years before dentists can use the method.

Other work has focused on using embryonic stem cells to create “bioteeth”.

It proved it could be done but is expensive and impractical for use in the clinic, the researchers said.

In the latest study they took human epithelial cells from the gums of human patients, grew more of them in the lab and mixed them with mesenchyme cells from mice.

The mesenchyme cells were cultured to be “inducing” – they instruct the epithelial cells to start growing into a tooth.

Transplanting the cell combination into mice, researchers were able to grow hybrid human/mouse teeth that had viable roots, they reported in the Journal of Dental Research.

It has already been shown that small pellets of the right type of cells transplanted into the jaw can develop into functional teeth.

The next step will be to get an easily accessible source of human mesenchyme cells and grow enough of them for it to be a useful technique in the clinic.

A research team from King's College London took cells from adult human gum tissue and combined them with another type of cell from mice to grow a tooth
A research team from King’s College London took cells from adult human gum tissue and combined them with another type of cell from mice to grow a tooth

Study leader Prof. Paul Sharpe said mesenchyme cells could be found in the pulp of wisdom teeth, among other sources, but the difficulty had been in getting hold of enough of them.

“This advance here is we have identified a cell population you could envisage using in the clinic. We are now working to try and identify a simple way of getting mesenchyme.”

He added: “The next major challenge is to identify a way to culture adult human mesenchymal cells to be tooth-inducing, as at the moment we can only make embryonic mesenchymal cells do this.”

Prof. Paul Sharpe said the hope was that one day the technology could replace current dental implants, which cannot reproduce a natural root structure. Also friction from eating and other jaw movement can cause the bone around the implant to wear away.

“But if it’s going to work it has to be about the same price as a dental implant so we have to find a way to do it that is easy and cheap.”

Prof. Alastair Sloan, an expert in bone biology and tissue engineering at Cardiff University, said the work was significant but there remained many hurdles before it would be available to patients.

“They have used cells from the gum and the fact that it is developing a root is an exciting step forward.

“We are still some way from engineering a whole organ like a tooth but the knock-on effect of research like this is developing bio-fillings, so some aspects of the technology are feasible within the next 10 to 15 years.”

Maha Al-Sudairi: luxury goods worth $16 million seized from Saudi princess to pay her Paris shopping bills

Luxury goods worth more than $16 million are to be seized from Saudi Princess Maha Al-Sudairi to pay her shopping bills, a Paris judge ordered on Thursday.

Maha Al-Sudairi, who was once married to Saudi’s late Crown Prince Nayef bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, helped herself to millions of dollars worth of goods whenever she visited Paris.

As well as art works and jewellery, they included $8,500 worth of luxury chocolates, and $2.2 million on the hire of two Rolls Royce Phantoms and “around 30 chauffeurs” to take her shopping.

Last year, Maha Al-Sudairi took over an entire floor at the four star Shangri-la Hotel with 60 servants for six months, but failed to settle the $8.5 million bill.

When King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia refused to pay for her stay, the princess claimed diplomatic immunity and moved to the Royal Monceau Hotel nearby.

Princess Maha Al-Sudairi, 58, has now been sued by six creditors through a court in the suburb of Nanterre.

A judge ruled that three storage units registered to the princess should be opened, and their contents sold so as to pay off her debts.

Princess Maha Al-Sudairi, who is currently in Saudi Arabia, is the divorced wife of the late Saudi Crown Prince and interior minister, Nayef bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud. He died last June, just as Maha Al-Sudairi left the Shangri-la.

Luxury goods worth more than $16 million are to be seized from Saudi Princess Maha Al-Sudairi to pay her shopping bills in Paris
Luxury goods worth more than $16 million are to be seized from Saudi Princess Maha Al-Sudairi to pay her shopping bills in Paris

In 2009 Maha Al-Sudairi was urged to stay away from France after running up unpaid bills of $22 million.

She is known to have bought three storage units in central Paris, where she is believed to have stashed her wares from her shopping trips around Paris– said to include luxury leather goods, artworks, jewellery, and clothing worth up to $16 million.

A spokesman for the Shangri-La said the hotel was pleased at the judge’s ruling, but did not expect the bill to be settled soon.

“The princess’s belongings will need to be valued and then sold at auction, and even then we may need to take international legal action against the princess before we see any cash,” he said.

Maha Al-Sudairi’s fabulously wealthy credentials meant her IOU notes handed to shopkeepers reading “payment to follow” were usually accepted.

Over the past years, up to 30 of Paris’s most exclusive luxury goods retailers have fallen foul of her credit notes.

Jacky Giami, owner of Paris’s Key Largo leisure wear store, said the princess and her relatives pillaged his shop of more than $160,000 worth of stock three years ago.

He said he spent days loitering in the bar of the Georges V hotel hoping to confront her, only to learn she had fled to London.

In 1995, Princess Maha Al-Sudairi was accused of assaulting a servant in Orange County, Florida, whom she suspected of stealing $240, 000 from her. No charges were filed.

Uhuru Kenyatta wins Kenya presidential election after vote count

Kenyan Deputy PM Uhuru Kenyatta appears to have won the presidential election by the tightest of margins as the provisional results indicate.

After all the votes were counted Uhuru Kenyatta had polled 50.03% of the vote, 4,109 votes over the threshold required for outright victory.

However, the official result is not expected before 11:00 on Saturday.

Rival candidate Raila Odinga is set to file a legal challenge if he loses.

One of Raila Odinga’s aides said the candidate had “no intention” of conceding defeat.

Salim Lone told the Daily Nation newspaper: “The level of the failures in the system makes it very difficult to believe it was a credible result, and if Uhuru is declared president, Raila will go to court.”

Both candidates have complained of irregularities during the course of the count, since Monday’s election.

Uhuru Kenyatta won 6,173,433 votes out of a total of 12,338,667, well ahead of the prime minister, who polled 5,340,546 – or 43.28% of the vote.

Uhuru Kenyatta’s Jubilee Coalition party said it was “proud and honored for the trust” bestowed on it, adding that it had taken a message to the people and that “we are grateful to the people of Kenya for accepting this message”.

Early on Saturday, small groups of Kenyatta supporters celebrated in Nairobi, hooting car horns and singing.

If Uhuru Kenyatta is confirmed by Kenya’s Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), he could face difficult relations with Western countries.

He faces trial at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague in July for crimes against humanity.

He is accused of fuelling communal violence after the 2007 election that saw more than 1,000 people killed and 600,000 forced from their homes.

Uhuru Kenyatta’s running mate, William Ruto, also faces similar charges.

Both men deny the accusations.

Kenyan Deputy PM Uhuru Kenyatta appears to have won the presidential election by the tightest of margins as the provisional results indicate
Kenyan Deputy PM Uhuru Kenyatta appears to have won the presidential election by the tightest of margins as the provisional results indicate

The ICC has agreed to postpone William Ruto’s trial by a month until May after his lawyers complained of not having enough time to prepare his defence.

Countries including the US and UK have hinted that his election as president would have consequences for their relations with the Nairobi government – comments which have been dismissed in Nairobi as unwanted foreign interference in domestic matters.

Kenya’s new electronic voting system was designed to eliminate the chance of vote-rigging and with it any risk of a repeat of the post-poll violence of 2007.

But the count has been plagued with technical glitches, including a programming error that led to the number of rejected votes being multiplied by a factor of eight. By Wednesday, the electronic system was abandoned and the count restarted by hand.

According to Kenya’s election rules, the winner needs to poll more than 50% of the vote to avoid a second round run-off next month.

If the election commission confirms that Uhuru Kenyatta has crossed the 50% threshold by such a narrow margin, then Raila Odinga’s officials say he will challenge the outcome.

The prime minister’s Cord alliance had earlier complained that votes from 11 constituencies were missing, in effect leaving him more than 250,000 votes short.

Both men passed a second condition needed for victory – at least 25% of the vote in more than half of the 47 counties.

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Nicolas Maduro sworn-in as Venezuela’s acting president

Vice-president Nicolas Maduro has been sworn in as acting president of Venezuela hours after the state funeral of Hugo Chavez.

The ceremony was led by National Assembly Speaker Diosdado Cabello in the capital, Caracas.

Hugo Chavez, who died on March 5 after a long battle with cancer, had named Nicolas Maduro as his chosen successor.

However, the main opposition coalition boycotted Nicolas Maduro’s swearing-in, saying that it was unconstitutional.

It argues that – under the constitution – the speaker of the National Assembly should be the one to take over as acting president.

The opposition leader, Henrique Capriles, called the move fraudulent.

After swearing in Nicolas Maduro, Diosdados Cabello said: “Venezuela will follow the route to socialism.”

As acting president, Nicolas Maduro is expected to call elections within 30 days.

Holding a copy of the Venezuelan constitution in his hand, Nicolas Maduro announced at the National Assembly: “I swear in the name of absolute loyalty to Comandante [commander] Hugo Chavez that we will obey and defend this Bolivarian Constitution with the hard hand of the free people.”

Vice-president Nicolas Maduro has been sworn in as acting president of Venezuela hours after the state funeral of Hugo Chavez
Vice-president Nicolas Maduro has been sworn in as acting president of Venezuela hours after the state funeral of Hugo Chavez

Fireworks exploded above Caracas as Nicolas Maduro was sworn in.

Earlier on Friday, Venezuelans paid an emotional farewell to Hugo Chavez.

Nicolas Maduro told mourners that Hugo Chavez, who led Venezuela for 14 years, remained “undefeated, pure, living for all time”.

The former vice-president began the funeral ceremony by presenting Hugo Chavez’s coffin with the sword of Simon Bolivar – the 19th-Century independence leader he claimed as his inspiration.

More than 30 world leaders attended the ceremony, including Cuban President Raul Castro, Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus.

A message was read out from Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Hugo Chavez, 58, was re-elected for a fourth term as president last October after saying he had recovered from his illness.

He named Nicolas Maduro as his preferred successor following the recurrence of his cancer.

Nicolas Maduro:

  • Born in Caracas in 1962
  • Former bus driver who began political career as a trade unionist
  • Campaigned for Hugo Chavez’s release from prison in 1994
  • Speaker of the National Assembly from 2005-2006
  • 2006 becomes foreign minister
  • 2012 appointed vice-president
  • Has long-standing ties with Cuba where he trained as a union organizer
  • Described as a wily operator and a skilled negotiator

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Noma restaurant, dubbed the world’s best eatery, sickens more than 60 people in Denmark

More than 60 people had food poisoning at Danish restaurant Noma, dubbed the world’s best eatery.

Health officials said diners at Copenhagen’s Noma restaurant fell sick over a five-day period in February, suffering from vomiting and diarrhoea.

It was not clear what caused the outbreak, but reports say the source may have been a sick kitchen employee.

Noma, which topped Restaurant Magazine’s list of the world’s 50 Best Restaurants in 2010-12, has apologized.

Officials from the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration revealed the results of their inspection on Friday.

Agency spokesman Morten Lisby was quoted as describing the outbreak as “massive”, according to the Associated Press news agency.

Noma restaurant – which opened in 2004 – prides itself for its attention to detail and relying on fresh locally sourced products.

Its chef Rene Redzepi has been described as “the standard bearer for the New Nordic movement”.

Noma charges up to 1,500 kroner ($260) for a menu without drinks, and reservations often must be made months in advance.

Health officials said diners at Copenhagen's Noma restaurant fell sick over a five-day period in February, suffering from vomiting and diarrhoea
Health officials said diners at Copenhagen’s Noma restaurant fell sick over a five-day period in February, suffering from vomiting and diarrhoea

South Dakota becomes first state to allow armed teachers in schools

South Dakota became the first state to enact a law allowing school districts to arm teachers and other school staff.

The law’s backers say it will prevent mass school shootings like a December massacre in Connecticut that killed 26.

Amid a push by the White House to strengthen gun laws, the bill reflects a growing divide in the US over whether more or fewer guns keep people safe.

The measure does not force school districts to arm teachers and will not require teachers to carry guns.

But it allows each school district to choose if staff could be armed. It takes effect in July.

South Dakota became the first state to enact a law allowing school districts to arm teachers and other school staff
South Dakota became the first state to enact a law allowing school districts to arm teachers and other school staff

Under the Republican-sponsored bill, school staff given permission to carry firearms on campus will be known as “school sentinels”. The state has given a law enforcement commission the task of establishing a training programme for the sentinels.

Several representatives of school boards, teachers and other staff spoke against the bill in legislative hearings, arguing guns would make schools more dangerous.

Sponsor Representative Scott Craig said this week had heard from a number of school officials who back it.

Scott Craig said rural districts do not have the money to hire full-time police officers.

Daylight Saving Time 2013 starts Sunday, March 10. Spring Forward.

Daylight Saving Time in US will begin early tomorrow morning, so don’t forget to change your clocks.

While Americans in all but a few states will lose an hour of sleep tonight, they will gain an hour more of evening sunlight in the coming months.

Officially, the change starts Sunday, March 10, at 2 a.m., though most people are likely to reset their clocks before hitting the hay on Saturday night.

These days, making the change is less of a chore than it used to be as most people use clocks on cell phones, computers or radio clocks, which do it automatically.

However, there will undoubtedly still be victims of the time shift who will kick themselves come Sunday morning when they show up an hour late to their scheduled plans.

Authorities also use the clock change to remind people to put new batteries in warning devices such as smoke detectors and hazard warning radios.

Daylight Saving Time was established in the U.S., for states that chose to comply, during World War I.

The move came after the Germans shifted their work hours to the sun’s schedule, as a means to conserve energy resources during the war.

Daylight Saving Time will begin early tomorrow morning, so don't forget to change your clocks
Daylight Saving Time will begin early tomorrow morning, so don’t forget to change your clocks

In the late ‘60, the U.S. Congress began regulating time zones and decided to allow states to decide to comply with the change. The choice must impact the entire state, counties or localities cannot choose a separate time schedule.

Canada, most states in the U.S. and Mexico observe Daylight Saving Time but only a few countries in South America will shift their clocks.

Though the majority of the 50 states comply, Arizona, Hawaii and Puerto Rico, Guam and the Virgin Islands hold out and retain the normal time schedule.

The measure is now viewed primarily as an economic consideration, shifting the daylight period to the working hours – which is why it has earned the nickname “Daylight Slaving Time”.

Daylight Saving Time will end on November 3 when clocks change back and people gain an hour, signalling that winter is again approaching.

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Justin Bieber in foul-mouthed rant with a photographer outside London hotel

Justin Bieber has lashed out at a photographer in a foul-mouthed rant just hours after leaving hospital.

The altercation kicked off as Justin Bieber, 19, and his entourage moved a group of photographers out of the way as they left his central London hotel on Friday afternoon.

As he got into his waiting vehicle, the snappers protested that they had been “assaulted”, and labeled the teen idol a “little moron”.

After one of the group shouted that Justin Bieber should “f**k off back to America”, the Canadian singer lost his temper once and for all and launched into a foul-mouthed rant at the photographers.

Pushing his way out of the vehicle and shoving past members of his entourage, Justin Bieber fumed: “What the f**k you say? What d’you say? I’ll f**king beat the f**k out of you, man!”

With his face grimaced up in anger, Justin Bieber had to be held back by a member of his security team as he attempted to grab the camera from the photographer.

Justin Bieber was quickly bundled into the back of the car by his team, with the snappers left shouting: “Come back without your f**king bouncers.”

Justin Bieber has lashed out at a photographer in a foul-mouthed rant just hours after leaving hospital
Justin Bieber has lashed out at a photographer in a foul-mouthed rant just hours after leaving hospital

Shortly after the scuffle, Justin Bieber explained the situation to his 35.5 million Twitter followers, blaming the argument on the pressures of a “rough week”.

The star wrote: “Ahhhhh! Rough morning. Trying to feel better for this show tonight but let the paps get the best of me…

“Sometimes when people r shoving cameras in your face all day and yelling the worst thing possible at u…well I’m human. Rough week.

“Not gonna let them get the best of me again. Gonna get focused on this show tonight. Adrenaline is high now. Gonna put it on the stage. Only way someone can break u is if u let them.”

More than 100 fans were waiting outside the plush 45 Park Lane hotel on Friday afternoon in the hope of catching a glimpse of Justin Bieber in the flesh.

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Amazon stops selling SimCity latest version

Ongoing problems with the latest version of SimCity led Amazon to briefly stop selling the game.

Amazon stopped sales late on March 7 as players reported continued problems with the city building title.

The latest version of SimCity was launched on March 5 and, like many current games, demand players stay online as they play.

EA has also taken steps to fix login delays by turning off some features to lighten the load on game servers.

Prior to this latest release, SimCity was a stand-alone game, but EA has added the online element to infuse the title with more realism.

Now player cities exist as part of online regions and share some characteristics of those virtual environments such as pollution, crime and essential resources.

The online requirement is also seen as an attempt to curb piracy of the title as a web connection is required even if a player shuns the chance to connect their cities to others.

However, the requirement for all players of the game to be connected has led some to wait 30 minutes or more to play. The server problems have led to sluggish response times, crashes and other bugs.

Ongoing problems with the latest version of SimCity led Amazon to briefly stop selling the game
Ongoing problems with the latest version of SimCity led Amazon to briefly stop selling the game

Amazon’s sales suspension of the downloadable PC version of the game only lasted a few hours, but it has put a warning note on the product page about the “issues” with the game. These have contributed to the one-star score purchasers have given SimCity on Amazon.

In official discussion forums and on its Twitter feed EA has apologized for the trouble players have had.

In one of its latest messages, an EA spokeswoman said it had added server capacity and rolled out a quick fix to SimCity servers to speed up game play and get more people into the game.

To lighten the load on its back-end servers, EA turned off some features including leader boards and achievements. It has also removed the option to run the game at its fastest setting, known as “cheetah speed”. Instead, all cities will now run at the lower “llama speed”.

In a message posted to the official EA discussion forums, SimCity’s senior producer Kip Katsarelis said the launch week had been “challenging” for the company.

However, he added, there was a positive side to the delays.

“What we saw was that players were having such a good time they didn’t want to leave the game, which kept our servers packed and made it difficult for new players to join,” he wrote

North Korea – South Korea conflict: China appeals for calm on Korean peninsula

China has appealed for calm on the Korean peninsula, hours after North Korea said it had ended all non-aggression pacts with South Korea and threatened pre-emptive nuclear strikes.

China, North Korea’s only major ally, said all sides should continue to talk and avoid “further escalation”.

Pyongyang has reacted angrily to another round of sanctions imposed by the UN over its recent nuclear test.

The sanctions restrict luxury goods imports and banking activities.

Beijing provides fuel, food and diplomatic cover to Pyongyang.

It has repeatedly voted in favor of UN sanctions imposed over the nuclear programme, but enforcement of the measures in China is patchy.

Hua Chunying of China’s foreign ministry told a news conference on Friday: “China and North Korea have normal country relations. At the same time, we also oppose North Korea’s conducting of nuclear tests.

“China calls on the relevant parties to be calm and exercise restraint and avoid taking any further action that would cause any further escalations.”

China has appealed for calm on the Korean peninsula, hours after North Korea said it had ended all non-aggression pacts with South Korea and threatened pre-emptive nuclear strikes
China has appealed for calm on the Korean peninsula, hours after North Korea said it had ended all non-aggression pacts with South Korea and threatened pre-emptive nuclear strikes

Chinese and US officials drafted the UN resolution passed on Thursday.

It contains similar measures to earlier resolutions, but the US said it had significantly strengthened the enforcement mechanisms.

In response, the North Korean regime published a message on the official KCNA news agency saying it had cancelled all non-aggression pacts with the South.

The two Koreas have signed a range of agreements over the years, including a 1991 pact on resolving disputes and avoiding military clashes.

However, analysts say the deals have had little practical effect.

The KCNA report detailed other measures including:

  • cutting off the North-South hotline, saying there was “nothing to talk to the puppet group of traitors about”
  • closing the main Panmunjom border crossing inside the Demilitarized Zone that separates the two countries
  • pulling out of the armistice that ended the Korean War.

The North also claimed it had a right to launch a pre-emptive nuclear strike against its enemies.

The threat drew an angry response from South Korea’s defence ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok, who said that the North would become “extinct from the Earth by the will of mankind” if it took such an action.

The US state department said such “extreme rhetoric” was not unusual, but said the US was well protected.

North Korea has breached agreements before and withdrawing from them does not necessarily mean war, but it does signal a more unpredictable and unstable situation.

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Next pope election to begin on March 12

Vatican announced today that Roman Catholic cardinals will begin electing a new pope on March 12 as 115 cardinals gathered for talks.

Pope Benedict XVI, 85, stepped down last month after nearly eight years in office, becoming the first pontiff to resign in 600 years.

The pontiff blamed his failing health for his inability to carry on.

Under the rules of the secret ballot, or conclave, cardinals will vote until one achieves a two-thirds majority.

Correspondents say no one candidate stands out as Benedict XVI’s likely successor.

The vote will be preceded by Mass on Tuesday morning, with the first ballot due in the afternoon, the Vatican press office said.

Roman Catholic cardinals will begin electing a new pope on March 12
Roman Catholic cardinals will begin electing a new pope on March 12

Vatican staff has been preparing the Sistine Chapel, where the conclave will take place, installing the two stoves that will produce white smoke from burnt ballot papers when a new pope is elected.

The last election in 2005 took three days, and correspondents say the number of meetings this time is being seen as a reflection of the many challenges facing the Church.

Despite the vows of secrecy, Italian newspapers have been publishing what they say are leaked details of debate among cardinals on problems faced by the Church.

Reform of the Vatican’s bureaucracy – known as the Curia – and the Vatican bank have both been on the agenda, the reports say.

Last year, European regulators said the bank was not doing enough to combat money laundering, while intrigue in the Vatican was revealed by documents leaked by Pope Benedict’s butler.

US Cardinal Timothy Dolan wrote on a blog that most of the discussions covered preaching and teaching the Catholic faith, tending to Catholic schools and hospitals, protecting families and the unborn, and supporting and recruiting priests.

“Those are the <<big issues>>,” he wrote.

“You may find that hard to believe, since the ‘word on the street’ is that all we talk about is corruption in the Vatican, sexual abuse, money. Do these topics come up? Yes! Do they dominate? No!”

During Benedict’s reign the Catholic Church was wracked by a worldwide scandal over the sexual abuse of children by priests.

There are also tensions between traditionalists and reformers over issues including priestly celibacy, gay rights and the role of women.

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Stompin’ Tom Connors dies of natural causes at the age of 77

Country-folk singer Tom Connors has died of natural causes age 77, his promoter has announced.

Known as Stompin’ Tom and one of Canada’s biggest cultural figures, Tom Connors embraced vibrant patriotic themes.

Tom Connors would often lament that other Canadian songwriters never seemed to sing about their country.

Three of his best-known songs – Sudbury Saturday Night, Bud the Spud and The Hockey Song – play at every home game of the Toronto Maple Leafs hockey team.

Tom Connors had been in declining health and in recent days he wrote on his website that Canada made him feel “inspired with its beauty, character and spirit”.

The singer earned the nickname Stompin’ Tom by his habit of thumping the stage with his left foot during performances.

In 2008, Tom Connors said: “I don’t know why I seem to be the only one, or almost the only one, writing about this country.

“This country is the most underwritten country in the world as far as songs are concerned. We starve. The people in this country are starving for songs about their homeland.”

Stompin’ Tom Connors has died of natural causes age 77
Stompin’ Tom Connors has died of natural causes age 77

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said on Twitter: “We have lost a true Canadian original. RIP Stompin’ Tom Connors. You played the best game that could be played.”

And the National Hockey League tweeted: “Sad to hear that legendary Canadian Stompin’ Tom Connors has passed. His legacy lives on in arenas every time The Hockey Song is played.”

Tom Connors was born on February 9, 1936, in Saint John, New Brunswick. His mother was an unmarried teenager and in an autobiography he describes hitch-hiking with her as a three-year-old and having to beg at age four.

Eventually he was placed in the care of a charity and was adopted by a family on Prince Edward Island, but he ran away four years later and criss-crossed the country, hitch-hiking.

At age 14, Tom Connors is said to have bought his first guitar. Later he did odd jobs in the towns he passed through – working as a grave digger, tobacco picker, fry cook, and on fishing boats.

His first job as a singer came at the Maple Leaf Hotel in Timmins, Ontario, when the barman agreed to give him a beer if he would play a few songs. Tom Connors quickly earned a 14-month contract to play regularly there.

Tom Connors’s first album followed three years later, featuring one of his hit songs, Bud the Spud. Many of his hundreds of subsequent songs were based on his experiences on the road as a teenager.

He was honored with the Order of Canada in 1996 and was featured on a postage stamp.

Tom Connors is survived by his wife, two daughters, two sons, and several grandchildren.

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Hilaria Baldwin pregnant with a baby girl

Hilaria Baldwin revealed on Thursday that she is expecting a girl – and couldn’t be happier.

“Alec and I are overjoyed that we are going to be welcoming a little girl into our lives,” Hilaria Baldwin said on Extra.

The baby will be a half-sister to Alec Baldwin’s daughter Ireland, 17, from his first marriage to Kim Basinger.

Alec Baldwin, 54, had rather obviously been hoping for a boy to balance things out.

Speaking on the Rachael Ray Show, Hilaria Baldwin said: “[Alec] had the idea for Massimo the other day. It’s a lovely name, I just don’t know.

“That’s a very big name for a very little baby.

“We have a different idea almost every single day.

“I think you actually have to look at it once it pops out and say, <<Who are you? What is your name?>>”

Hilaria Baldwin revealed on Thursday that she is expecting a girl
Hilaria Baldwin revealed on Thursday that she is expecting a girl

While Hilaria and Alec Baldwin planning on having a baby so soon after their June 2012 wedding, they cannot wait to welcome the latest addition to their family.

Hilaria Baldwin, who now works as Extra‘s lifestyle correspondent, found out she was expecting at Christmas.

She said: “It was something that we both wanted – I don’t want to say it was a surprise and we didn’t want it – we were very excited when we found out.

“But we just got married in June… so it was a really nice Christmas present.”

Yvette Prieto and Michael Jordan set to tie the knot

NBA legend Michael Jordan is set to tie the knot with Cuban-American model fiancée Yvette Prieto.

Michael Jordan, 50, appeared at the main Palm Beach County courthouse in Florida on Thursday morning to apply for a marriage licence, according to Kathy Burstein, a spokeswoman for the clerk’s office.

Applicants must apply in person and a licence is good for 60 days.

Michael Jordan got engaged to his longtime girlfriend, 33-year-old Yvette Prieto, in December 2011.

Yvette Prieto began dating in 2008 and live together in a modest three bedroom home in Florida.

She has modeled for designers such as Alexander Wang and once dated Julio Iglesias Jr., Enrique’s older brother.

Michael Jordan is set to tie the knot with Cuban-American model fiancée Yvette Prieto
Michael Jordan is set to tie the knot with Cuban-American model fiancée Yvette Prieto

It will be the second marriage for Michael Jordan. He married Juanita Vanoy in September 1989, and they split in 2006.

The end of the 17-year-marriage resulted in one of the most expensive divorce in history, costing him over $150 million in the settlement.

They have two sons, Jeffrey Michael and Marcus James, and a daughter, Jasmine.

Michael Jordan’s application for a marriage license comes just days after he asked a Georgia court to dismiss a paternity suit against him, calling it a “shameless, bad faith attempt to abuse the legal system”.

Poland: Viola plant halts production over rotten meat row

Polish food inspectors have stopped meat production at Viola plant following claims that it was adding rotten meat to its products.

The allegations were made in a TV programme that included secretly filmed footage from the Viola plant in the northern village of Lniano.

It purports to show meat returned by shops being re-used to make sausages and ham.

Viola – which exports to several EU countries – denies the allegations.

The claims come amid a widening horsemeat scandal in the EU.

Since the first horsemeat was discovered in frozen meals and burgers in the UK and Ireland in January, traces have been found in meat products across Europe.

Polish food inspectors have stopped meat production at Viola plant following claims that it was adding rotten meat to its products
Polish food inspectors have stopped meat production at Viola plant following claims that it was adding rotten meat to its products

In the programme on TVN24 channel, an undercover journalist is shown touring the plant, near the city of Bydgoszcz, and speaking with workers under the guise of applying for a job.

The footage then shows employees in storage rooms taking meat that had been returned from shops.

At one point, one worker holds up a sausage covered in green mould, saying it would be cleaned, dried and re-used.

Another worker says tonnes of old meat were recycled instead of being thrown away.

TVN24 also quotes a letter signed by the plant’s management, which reads: “There are no grounds for the allegations.”

Viola says it exports to the UK, Ireland, Germany and Lithuania.

This latest incident comes just over a week after inspectors found horse DNA in meat labeled as beef in three Polish meat-processing plants.

111 SKIN Celestial Black Diamond Cream: anti-ageing formula developed by NASA scientists

111 SKIN Celestial Black Diamond Cream is a potent anti-ageing concoction using rare diamond dust particles that has been developed by NASA scientists and tested on astronauts in outer space.

The anti-ageing cream, which is sold exclusively at luxury department store Harrods in London, doesn’t come cheap. Beauty aficionados desperate to turn back the clock must pay a staggering £599 ($955) for 50ml.

111 SKIN Celestial Black Diamond Cream claims to penetrate the deeper layers of skin in order to transport potent youth restoring ingredients including NAC Y2 formula, Collagen type I and III and Hyaluronic acid.

As you’d expect for a cream packed with diamond particles, it contains brightening agents to give skin a glowing appearance and a healthy complexion whilst diminishing signs of age spots and pigmentation.

The incorporation of black diamond particles is borrowed from medical research where they are used in cancer and rheumatism drugs as a delivery mechanism.

The 111 SKIN range, which this quirky new product is a part of, was founded and developed by plastic surgeon Dr. Y. Alexandrides MD of 111 Harley Street, London, in collaboration with space scientists.

From the very beginning the product was designed to stand up to extreme conditions – to protect against environmental damage at high altitude, varying temperatures and the polluted urban setting.

111 SKIN Celestial Black Diamond Cream is a potent anti-ageing concoction using rare diamond dust particles that has been developed by NASA scientists and tested on astronauts in outer space
111 SKIN Celestial Black Diamond Cream is a potent anti-ageing concoction using rare diamond dust particles that has been developed by NASA scientists and tested on astronauts in outer space

Key 111 SKIN ingredients were used by astronauts in extreme space conditions where accelerated ageing is known to occur.

As research developed, space science became the clear answer.

The first cream from the range was created in 2008 to help patients heal after surgery. In addition to the dramatic healing results, the creams also had potent anti-ageing and protecting benefits.

Dr. Y. Alexandrides said: “As a facial plastic and reconstructive surgeon, I deal with the most challenging problems of ageing and injury.

“I developed 111 SKIN through the inside out view that only a surgeon can master. Our products were tested in the most demanding situations: after cosmetic surgery and laser treatment, on scars and burns.

“Our science laboratory used the most advanced ingredients to maximize results. I am proud to offer my unique insight to my patients and now to everyone who wants to fight ageing.”

Hugo Chavez funeral attended by more than 30 heads of state

Leaders from Latin America and beyond are gathering in Caracas for the state funeral of Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez.

After the funeral, Hugo Chavez’s body will be taken to a military museum to lie in state for another seven days.

More than two million mourners have already filed past his body at a military academy.

Hugo Chavez’s body is to be embalmed and placed on permanent display, Vice-President Nicolas Maduro says.

Later on Friday, Nicolas Maduro is due to be sworn in as acting president. As such, he must call elections within 30 days.

Hugo Chavez, who led Venezuela for 14 years, died on Tuesday aged 58 after a long battle with cancer.

More than 30 heads of state are expected to attend Friday’s funeral including Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Cuban President Raul Castro and Belarussian leader Alexander Lukashenko.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has praised Hugo Chavez as a “martyr” and a “wise and revolutionary leader”.

Leaders from Latin America and beyond are gathering in Caracas for the state funeral of Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez
Leaders from Latin America and beyond are gathering in Caracas for the state funeral of Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez

Meanwhile, President Sebastian Pinera of Chile arrived at Simon Bolivar airport in Caracas early on Friday, telling reporters that the thoughts of Chile were with Venezuela at a difficult time.

US Congressman Gregory Meeks and former Congressman William Delahunt will represent the United States at the funeral of Hugo Chavez, a fierce critic of Washington.

Nicolas Maduro said that Hugo Chavez’s body would be embalmed “like Lenin and Mao Zedong”, and put on display for at least another seven days.

The body will be moved to the Caracas military museum where in 1992 Hugo Chavez – as an army officer – was captured after leading a failed coup.

Nicolas Maduro said the building would be converted into a new “museum of the revolution”.

Hugo Chavez’s supporters want him eventually interred in Venezuela’s national Pantheon alongside Simon Bolivar, the 19th Century independence leader the late president claimed as his political inspiration.

However, Venezuela’s constitution says people can only be admitted to the Pantheon 25 years after their death.

Hugo Chavez named Nicolas Maduro as his preferred successor following the recurrence of his cancer.

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North Korea scraps all non-aggression pacts with South Korea

North Korea has announced it is scrapping all non-aggression pacts with South Korea, closing its hotline with Seoul and shutting their shared border point.

The announcement follows a fresh round of UN sanctions punishing Pyongyang for its nuclear test last month.

Earlier, Pyongyang said it had a right to carry out a pre-emptive nuclear strike and was pulling out of the armistice which ended the Korean War.

The US said “extreme rhetoric” was not unusual for Pyongyang.

South Korea’s President Park Geun-hye said the current security situation was “very grave” but that she would “deal strongly” with provocation from the North.

Park Geun-hye also said she was ready to talk to Pyongyang if it “comes out on the path toward change”.

The North Korean announcement, carried on the KCNA state news agency, said the North was cancelling all non-aggression pacts with the South and closing the main Panmunjom border crossing inside the Demilitarized Zone.

It also said it was notifying the South that it was “immediately” cutting off the North-South hotline, saying there was “nothing to talk to the puppet group of traitors about”.

The hotline, installed in 1971, is intended as a means of direct communication at a time of high tension, but is also used to co-ordinate the passage of people and goods through the heavily-fortified Demilitarized Zone.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un also visited front-line military units that were involved in the shelling of a South Korean island in 2010, KCNA reports.

The reports said he had urged soldiers to keep themselves ready to “annihilate the enemy” at any time.

It appears the North is trying to build a sense of crisis domestically, with a large rally staged in Pyongyang on Friday and reports of camouflage netting on public transport.

North Korea has breached agreements before and withdrawing from them does not necessarily mean war, our correspondent says, but it does signal a more unpredictable and unstable situation.

Shutting down the hotline will leave both more exposed to misunderstandings, she adds.

Seoul’s defence ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said that if the North were to carry out a nuclear attack on South Korea it would become “extinct from the Earth by the will of mankind”.

Kim Min-seok also warned that in response to any provocation from the North, Seoul would “immediately” turn the US-South Korean military drills currently being conducted “into a punishment mode to respond to it as planned”.

North Korea has announced it is scrapping all non-aggression pacts with South Korea, closing its hotline with Seoul and shutting their shared border point
North Korea has announced it is scrapping all non-aggression pacts with South Korea, closing its hotline with Seoul and shutting their shared border point

The US, the main focus of North Korean ire, said it was capable of protecting itself and its allies from any attacks.

“One has to take what any government says seriously,” State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said of the nuclear threat.

“It is for that reason that I repeat here that we are fully capable of defending the United States. But I would also say that this kind of extreme rhetoric has not been unusual for this regime, unfortunately.”

The North Korean declaration came after the UN Security Council in New York unanimously backed Resolution 2094, imposing the fourth set of sanctions.

The resolution targets North Korean diplomats, cash transfers and access to luxury goods.

It imposes asset freezes and travel bans on three individuals and two firms linked to North Korea’s military.

South Korea’s ambassador to the UN, Kim Sook, said it was time for North Korea to “wake up from its delusion” of becoming a nuclear state.

“It can either take the right path toward a bright future and prosperity, or it can take a bad road toward further and deeper isolation and eventual self-destruction,” he said.

US ambassador to the UN Susan Rice said the sanctions would “further constrain” North Korea’s ability to develop its nuclear programme.

Susan Rice warned that the UN would “take further significant actions” if Pyongyang were to carry out another nuclear test.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang issued a statement supporting the UN resolution and describing it as a “moderate response”.

Qin Gang said China – North Korea’s sole ally – urged “relevant parties” to stay calm and said the main priority was to “defuse the tensions, bring down heat” and restart negotiations with Pyongyang.

Resolution 2094:

  • Strongly condemns North Korea’s ongoing nuclear activities, including its uranium enrichment programme
  • Imposes new sanctions to block financial transactions and bulk cash transfers in support of illicit activity
  • Strengthens states’ authority to inspect suspicious cargo
  • Requires states to deny port access to any North Korean vessel that refuses to be inspected
  • Calls on states to deny permission to any aircraft to take off, land in or overfly their territory if the aircraft is suspected of transporting prohibited items
  • Enables stronger enforcement of existing sanctions by UN member states
  • Sanctions new individuals and entities

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Kelly Osbourne hospitalized after collapsing on the set of Fashion Police

Kelly Osbourne has been rushed to hospital after collapsing on the set of Fashion Police on Thursday.

Kelly Osbourne’s publicist had early tried to play down the incident after dramatic images emerged of the 28-year-old being carried off set to an ambulance.

The star cleared up all doubt when she took to Twitter to explain to well-wishing fans what had happened.

She wrote: “Thank U all 4 UR beautiful well wishes yes I did have a seizure they are just trying to figure out why?”

Kelly Osbourne, the daughter of Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne collapsed while filming her E! show Fashion Police, and was taken to a Los Angeles based hospital where she was expected to stay overnight.

She was recording the latest episode of the style programme alongside Joan and Melissa Rivers, who has been covering for usual panelist Giuliana Rancic.

Kelly Osbourne has been rushed to hospital after collapsing on the set of Fashion Police on Thursday
Kelly Osbourne has been rushed to hospital after collapsing on the set of Fashion Police on Thursday

Kelly Osbourne reportedly turned to the star and told her she didn’t feel well, before she fell out of her chair shaking.

An audience member happened to be a doctor and reportedly fled to her aid.

Kelly Osbourne came around a few moments after the seizure, but her team wanted her to go to hospital for tests and supervision.

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Demi Moore seeks spousal support and attorney fees from Ashton Kutcher

Demi Moore is reportedly seeking spousal support and attorney fees from Ashton Kutcher in their divorce battle.

The news comes more than a year after Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher split and three months after the actor filed papers to legally sever their six-year marriage.

Demi Moore, 50, finally responded on Thursday by lodging her own application at the Los Angeles Superior Court.

The actress cites “irreconcilable differences” as the reason for the split, stating the date of marriage as September 24th, 2005 and the date of separation as November 17 , 2011 – two months after Ashton Kutcher’s alleged one-night stand with party girl Sara Leal.

While the couple have no children together, the financial stakes are high.

Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher are jointly worth a reputed $285 million and in the last year alone Ashton Kutcher earned $24 million from the CBS show Two And A Half Men.

On Wednesday it was reported how talks between the couple have broken down over money.

The pair could now be facing a courtroom showdown to resolve their differences.

Ashton Kutcher, 35, is said to have become “hostile” whilst Demi Moore has supposedly “had enough” of his refusal to budge.

Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher split in 2011 after six years together and since then there has been much speculation about why they have not formally divorced.

Demi Moore is reportedly seeking spousal support and attorney fees from Ashton Kutcher in their divorce battle
Demi Moore is reportedly seeking spousal support and attorney fees from Ashton Kutcher in their divorce battle

A source told the New York Post that money could well be the issue as Ashton Kutcher is the highest paid actor in US TV.

Ashton Kutcher’s personal fortune is estimated at $135 million whilst Demi Moore’s is thought to be around $150 million thanks to her hit films in the 1980s and 90s.

A source told the New York Post: “Ashton made a lot of money after marrying Demi – a lot more than she made – but despite him becoming just as famous through her, he believes he doesn’t owe her that much.

“Ashton has been very difficult during the talks. You could even say he has been hostile.

“After over a year of attempting to reach a settlement, Demi is definitely ready to move on. It’s hoped lawyers for both sides can reach a settlement this spring, otherwise the divorce will go into litigation and trial.”

Both parties have called in heavyweight lawyers and Demi Moore is being represented by New York-based William Beslow, who recently won a large settlement for Linda Evangelista against French businessman François-Henri Pinault over their five-year-old daughter.

Ashton Kutcher has hired Los Angeles celebrity lawyer Laura Wasser.

Demi Moore’s marriage to Ashton Kutcher raised eyebrows not only because of the 15-year age gap, but also because he was not that much older than her own three daughters from her previous marriage to Bruce Willis, 57.

In the wake of the breakup there were also fears for her wellbeing after she appeared in public looking extremely thin and was rushed to hospital after suffering an apparent seizure.

Justin Bieber collapses backstage at London O2 concert

Justin Bieber had to halt his show at London’s O2 on Thursday night after collapsing and “experiencing breathing difficulties” on stage.

Justin Bieber, 19, who has had a controversial run at the concert venue this week, reportedly had to rush off stage and was looked at by doctors… but 15 minutes later he was back finishing the show in front of his fans.

And his manager Scooter Braun revealed while Justin Bieber was missing from the stage that doctors had asked him to get looked at properly, but he insisted on coming out to finish the set regardless, before then heading to a hospital.

In a move that some fans are cynically suggesting could have been a PR move for the singer, Scooter Braun told the audience: “Justin got quite light of breath. The whole show he’s been complaining, he’s backstage with the doctor.

“They’re telling him that they want him to go see somebody and see what’s going on with his lungs.

“[But] He has just told me that if it’s okay with you guys he’s going to come out and finish the show. Alright?”

Justin Bieber posted a picture of himself from his hospital bed in recovery
Justin Bieber posted a picture of himself from his hospital bed in recovery

Following the concert Justin Bieber was reportedly taken to hospital to get checked but left in high spirits.

Shortly after 1a.m. he wrote to his fans on Twitter: “Getting better. thanks for everyone pulling me thru tonight. best fans in the world. figuring out what happened. thanks for the love.”

Justin Bieber then posted a picture of himself from his hospital bed in recovery, as well as a picture of the hospital corridor he labeled “creepy”.

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Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, Osama Bin Laden’s spokesman, to be tried in New York

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Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, who was described as a spokesman for Osama Bin Laden, has been arrested and will be tried in New York City, the US has confirmed.

Sulaiman Abu Ghaith was captured within the last week in Jordan, Congressman Peter King said on Thursday.

He is Osama Bin Laden’s son-in-law and played a role in plotting the attacks of 9/11, US officials said.

Osama Bin Laden was killed in a May 2011 raid on his hideout in Pakistan by a team of US commandos.

Sulaiman Abu Ghaith is scheduled to appear in a federal court on Friday on charges of conspiracy to kill United States nationals.

“Sulaiman Abu Ghaith held a key position in al-Qaeda, comparable to the consigliere in a mob family or propaganda minister in a totalitarian regime,” said FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge George Venizelos in a statement.

“He used his position to threaten the United States and incite its enemies.”

A teacher and mosque preacher in Kuwait, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith was stripped of his Kuwaiti citizenship after 9/11.

Justice department officials say Sulaiman Abu Ghaith served alongside Osama Bin Laden from May 2001 to 2002, speaking on behalf of al-Qaeda and warning that attacks similar to 9/11 would continue.

Specifically, on September 12, 2001, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith appeared with Osama Bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri to warn the US that a “great army is gathering against you” and called upon “the nation of Islam” to do battle against “the Jews, the Christians and the Americans,” according to court records.

Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, who was described as a spokesman for Osama Bin Laden, has been arrested and will be tried in New York City
Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, who was described as a spokesman for Osama Bin Laden, has been arrested and will be tried in New York City

Sulaiman Abu Ghaith was reportedly smuggled to Iran sometime in 2002.

A Jordanian security official told the Associated Press that Sulaiman Abu Ghaith was handed over last week to US officials under both countries’ extradition treaties.

Peter King called the arrest a “very significant victory” in the fight against al-Qaeda.

“One by one, we are getting the top echelons of al-Qaeda,” the Republican congressman said.

 “I give the administration credit for this. It’s steady and it’s unrelenting and it’s very successful.”

Sulaiman Abu Ghaith’s trial will mark one of the first prosecutions of senior al-Qaeda leaders on US soil.

Since 9/11, 67 foreign terror suspects have been convicted in US federal courts, according to data obtained by the group Human Rights First.

Some US lawmakers disagreed with the decision to try Sulaiman Abu Ghaith in New York.

“When we find somebody like this, this close to Bin Laden and the senior al-Qaeda leadership, the last thing in the world we want to do, in my opinion, is put them in a civilian court,” said Republican Senator Lindsey Graham on Thursday.

“This man should be in Guantanamo Bay,” he said.

A senior administration official said that Barack Obama’s national security team “unanimously agreed” that prosecution of Sulaiman Abu Ghaith in federal court was in the US’ national security interests.

“The administration is seeking to close Guantanamo, not add to its population,” the official said.

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