Radiohead is rolling out new album The King of Limbs this Saturday in digital format, the Telegraph reports, and it’s once again forgoing a trifling thing like a record label. (The band notably self-released 2007′s In Rainbows.) Fans eager to hear the album ASAP will have to take advantage…
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The culprit behind the dozens of people sickened after a party at Playboy Mansion? Officials think it’s Pontiac Fever, a milder form of Legionnaires’ disease that’s known as legionellosis. The bacterium that causes legionellosis lives inside warm water and can take root in ventilation systems; some suspect that a fog…
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Whoopi Goldberg has lashed out at the New York Times for an article on how no black actors are being considered for Academy Awards this year. While Goldberg can sympathize with the article’s main thrust, it’s the fact that the authors—movie critics AO Scott and Manohla Dargis—seem to…
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An Ecuadorean judge ruled today that Chevron was responsible for oil contamination in a wide swath of Ecuador’s northern jungle and fined it at least $8 billion, the plaintiffs’ lead attorney says. Chevron said it would appeal and called the ruling “illegitimate and unenforceable” in a news release. The plaintiffs’…
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There are bad days at the office, and then there is getting tossed around like a ragdoll by one ton of bloody, raging male cow. French bullfighting phenom Sebastian Castella had both over the weekend, reports the Huffington Post, breaking his collarbone after ending up on the wrong side of…
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About 500 Chinese people are said to live in Sulaimaniyah, Iraqi Kurdistan’s second city. Many work in the new Kawa Mall where Chinese flags, lucky cats and paper lanterns present an incongruous scene on the Kurdish landscape. Such immigration and foreign investment is becomming more prominent in the semi-autonomous area run by the Kurdistan Regional Government. Al Jazeera’s Rhodri Davies reports.
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Valentine’s Day may seem awash in saccharine, wine, and roses, but its origins are darker than its modern-day Hallmark reality—they lie partially in the pagan Roman celebration of Lupercalia, a fertility festival wherein bachelors sacrificed a goat and dog, ripped the skin off, and whipped women with them. Women…
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Following Egypt’s request to freeze assets of Hosni Mubarak and his cabinet, Soca will investigate UK-based bank accounts Officers from Britain’s Serious Organised Crime Agency are expected to begin tracing the bank accounts of Hosni Mubarak’s cabinet after the Egyptian government made a formal request for a freeze on the assets of the ousted president and his former colleagues. The foreign secretary, William Hague, said Soca would take charge of the hunt for accounts in London, though the timing and extent of the investigation would be decided by EU finance ministers following discussions in Brussels. Hague said UK rules prevented the police from freezing bank accounts without “evidence of illegality or misuse of state assets”. He stressed that if evidence became available the government would take “firm and prompt action”. His stance disappointed opposition MPs, who argued the government should move more quickly to support the new Egyptian government in its efforts to repatriate illicit funds sent overseas. The shadow foreign secretary, Douglas Alexander, demanded to know why the government had failed to authorise an immediate investigation to prevent funds leaving the UK for less regulated offshore tax havens. He said the government needed to move quickly to prevent Mubarak, his family and cronies who benefited from the corrupt regime from avoiding scrutiny. The Egyptian government demand follows reports that the former president used his position as leader over 30 years to amass a fortune in cash, gold bars and other assets inside Egypt and overseas. It is understood Mubarak and his sons, Gamal and Alaa, are each billionaires with properties in London, Paris, the US and the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh. Protesters in Cairo and Alexandria have demanded the return of assets they believe were the result of corrupt deals between the Mubaraks and foreign investors. To impose an asset freeze on an outgoing leader, the EU needs the backing of all 27 member states and usually co-ordinates its actions with the incoming government. Last week, the bloc announced a freeze on the assets of 48 ex-Tunisian officials, including former president Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali and his wife. Switzerland said it would freeze that assets of Mubarak family members in a statement over the weekend. Swiss bank accounts are a favourite with disgraced dictators as they have provided security and secrecy from investigations by foreign governments. It is not known if the Swiss authorities have any records of accounts held by the family, which are more likely to be in impenetrable trusts or in the names of obscure companies. The Foreign Office is expected to notify the Soca of the identities of the named Egyptian officials over the next 24 hours, according to police. Soca would then circulate their names amongst banks and financial institutions and would notify City of London police or the Serious Fraud Office of any possible offences. Gamal Mubarak, 47, has lived for many years in a £6m house in Wilton Place, Knightsbridge, west London, according to neighbours. The house is ultimately owned by the Duke of Westminster. Last week, builders could be seen working on the property’s basement. Friends of the Mubaraks have claimed that the family have lived in a number of desirable properties in Mayfair, central London, which were owned by offshore companies. Gamal was a director of the London based medical firm Medinvest Associates for seven years until 2001, according to Companies House. Egypt Hosni Mubarak Middle East Crime Phillip Inman Rajeev Syal guardian.co.uk
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In the west, we tie shoes to the cars of newly married couples. But in the Middle East, they lob them at their enemies Shoe-waving as a form of protest first grabbed the attention of a wider public in 2008, when Iraqi reporter Muntazer al-Zaidi famously lobbed a pair of black lace-ups at President George Bush during a
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A NASA spacecraft is about to make a massive comet its valentine. If all goes as planned, the Stardust spacecraft will get up close and personal today with a comet half the size of Manhattan that’s hurtling through space at 24,000 miles per hour, the Washington Post reports. The…
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