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Whole Foods has ended up with egg on its face after first touting Ramadan, then running scared. The company decided to cash in on Ramadan and tout some of its foods for the Muslim holy month—then backed off inorganically fast when it was ripped by anti-Muslim bloggers. “Ramadan is…

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An Ohio woman apparently tripped and toppled head first into her recycling bin, where she suffocated. Shelia Decoster, 62, was discovered by her husband in the 65-gallon bin. “I shook her leg and called her name, and I knew she was gone,” he told the Toledo Blade . She was wearing…

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The Internal Revenue Service is refusing to recognize gay marriages, causing headaches for couples who have won the right to wed in their home states, BusinessWeek finds. The Obama administration has urged federal agencies to extend benefits as far as they can to same-sex couples under existing law, but analysts…

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Birmingham riots: intense anger after deaths of three young men

Community leaders appeal for calm after three British Asians rammed by carload of suspected looters in Winson Green Community leaders in Birmingham are working all-out to calm intense anger in the city’s British Asian community over the deaths of three young men who were rammed by a carload of suspected looters. Groups of residents in Winson Green, the inner-city area where the men were killed as they tried to protect local businesses in the early hours of Wednesday, openly warned of inter-communal violence if the murder inquiry launched by West Midlands police does not produce rapid results. Their anger was passed on by the local Labour MP for Ladywood, Shabana Mahmood, and the Bishop of Aston, Rt Rev Anthony Watson, who joined a meeting at Dudley Road mosque, which locals claimed was on looters’ hitlist of targets where money might be found. The victims, brothers Shazad and Munir Hussein, 32 and 30, and Haroon Chohan, 19, were among some 80 young men who turned out after a gang tried to ransack the nearby Jet petrol station on Monday night. The bishop warned of possible reprisals and events “potentially having an ugly race dimension”. Shortly after he spoke, a screaming and swearing African-Caribbean woman challenged a group of British Asians in a side street off Dudley Road, saying: “Your attitude is how riots start,” before a friend bundled her into a car and drove off. Another group of British Asian men said they had seen the fatal incident, which was over in seconds but saw the victims flung into the air as a black Audi rammed into them. One, who declined to give his name, said: “Of course it was deliberate. No way was it an accident. The driver went on to the pavement and rammed them. He knew what he was doing.” He said that four carloads of young African-Caribbeans had cruised down Dudley Road and there had been no doubt about what they were planning. He said that he had given evidence to the police. “These were bright young guys we’ve lost,” he said. “They knew the meaning of work and got themselves decent jobs. The brothers had a carwash which was another business which might have been targeted, and Haroon worked as a mechanic in a garage. “They were well-known round here. One of them only got married in March and his wife was expecting their first child in four months’ time.” The bishop said that extended families were part of a very strong network in the community – he had met Haroon’s uncle and older brother – which added to the strength of feelings. Haroon’s father Jahan joined appeals for calm, holding a photograph of his son in the doorway of his home at Winson Green. He said: “He was trying to help his community and he has been killed. “He was a very well-liked kid. I can’t describe to anybody what it feels like to lose a son. He was the youngest of three, and anything I ever wanted done, I would always ask Haroon to sort it out for me. “A day from now, maybe two days from now, the whole world will forget and nobody will care.” Calling for calm and no attempt at revenge, he said: “I don’t blame the government, I don’t blame the police, I don’t blame nobody. It was his destiny and his fate, and now he’s gone.” Long queues of friends and relatives waited outside the house to pay their respects as other family members spoke of the tragedy. Numbers increased in the early afternoon, in spite of the onset of rain which police hoped would deter a third night of violence. Sobia Nazia, a cousin to the brothers, said: “They were brothers to everybody. They used to look out for everyone. They were heroes. I heard people describing them on Facebook as brothers to one and all. “People who only just knew of them haven’t slept all night. It’s made a huge impact, more than we thought.” Another mourner embraced Sobia and the victims’ younger sister who was welcoming mourners into the house, and said in Urdu: “They died martyrs.” The sister was too upset to reply, but Sorbia said firmly: “We don’t want anything more to happen – just the culprits brought to justice. We don’t want other families to suffer. It’s the youth. They have no knowledge, they have no jobs and they are bored.” Feelings have also been inflamed by an alleged 20-minute delay before an ambulance arrived, with other locals saying that police riot vans had got in the way. Frantic efforts to resuscitate the men failed and two died at the scene. The third died shortly afterwards at the nearby City hospital. Other men said that they had been told by overstretched police to protect their own businesses. He said: “They were too busy looking after all the big places in the centre, chasing the mob all night rather than cracking down.” For the second day running, British Asian businesses in areas such as Soho Road, the bazaar-like mile of shops in Handsworth, were guarded by large numbers of men. The incident plunged England’s second city into fresh tension after a night which saw sporadic raids on shops but a much lower level of violence than on Monday night. A determined attempt by a fluid mob of some 200 looters to break into the iconic Bull Ring centre was quickly foiled, partly thanks to fences and four privately-hired dog teams. Over £500,000 damage was done on Monday to Emporio Armani in the Bull Ring while security men with fire extinguishers kept looters out of Harvey Nichols. More than 80 arrests were made on Tuesday and 19 men appeared in court in the city on Wednesday morning. UK riots Birmingham Crime Police Riazat Butt Martin Wainwright guardian.co.uk

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Another girl has vanished and the FBI called in again—this time to aid in the search for for a 3-year-old Missouri tyke who disappeared as she rode her pink bike outside her home. BreeAnn Rodriguez vanished when her 5-year-old brother went into their home in the small town of…

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The results of Wisconsin’s closely watched recall elections are in and the Democrats have failed to win control of the state Senate. Four of the six targeted Republican lawmakers have successfully defended their seats, while two seats have been picked up by Democrats, AP reports. The Democrats needed to flip…

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Vietnam blogger jailed for attempted subversion

Maths professor sentenced to three years for belonging to a pro-democracy group and publishing anti-communist blog A French-Vietnamese maths professor has been sentenced to three years in a Vietnamese prison for belonging to a banned pro-democracy group and publishing an anti-communist blog, his lawyer said. Pham Minh Hoang, 56, was found guilty of trying to overthrow the government by posting 33 articles against the one-party communist government, as well as of holding membership in the banned Viet Tan group and recruiting others to join it. It was the second high-profile dissident trial in just over a week. US-based Viet Tan says it is a nonviolent advocate of democracy, but Hanoi considers it a terror organisation – a claim US officials say they have found no evidence to support. Hoang told the court during the half-day trial in Ho Chi Minh City that he joined Viet Tan in France where it is not banned and that he did not do anything to oppose the government, according to defence lawyer Tran Vu Hai. Hoang, who was teaching maths at a Ho Chi Minh City university at the time of his arrest, said he returned to Vietnam in 2000 to contribute to the country and take care of his ailing parents, Hai said. The court convicted him on charges that included attending a Viet Tan-organised course in Malaysia and helping to recruit Vietnamese members, Hai said. The communist government does not tolerate dissent, and rights groups say it uses vague national security laws to imprison anyone who challenges its rule. Hanoi maintains that only lawbreakers are jailed, but there has been a wave of crackdowns since the country’s new government took over last month. Last week, an appeals court in Hanoi upheld a seven-year prison sentence for the dissident son of one of Vietnam’s founding revolutionaries, despite arguments that his support for a multiparty system did not mean he was against the Communist party. The ruling against Cu Huy Ha Vu drew immediate criticism from activists, the US government and the European Union. The Communist party newspaper Nhan Dan quoted foreign ministry spokeswoman Nguyen Phuong Nga as saying Hanoi rejected what it called “statements that interfere with its internal affairs.” Two weeks ago the US also called for the release of one of Vietnam’s best-known pro-democracy activists, a Roman Catholic priest suffering from a brain tumour. The Rev Thadeus Nguyen Van Ly, 65, was sent back to prison after receiving more than a year of medical leave. Vietnam Press freedom Blogging Digital media guardian.co.uk

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Number of NHS patients waiting over six weeks for tests quadruples

Ninefold increase in number of people waiting over 13 weeks for one of 15 key tests – such as MRI, CT and heart scans The number of people waiting more than six weeks for key NHS tests has almost quadrupled in one year, figures released show. In June, there were 12,521 people waiting more than six weeks for one of 15 key tests, including MRI, CT and heart scans, ultrasound, barium enemas and colonoscopies. This is up on the 3,510 waiting more than six weeks in June 2010. There has also been a nine-fold increase in the number of people waiting more than 13 weeks for one of the tests. In June, there were 1,763 people waiting more than 13 weeks, up from just 190 in June 2010. Last week, some foundation trusts warned they would struggle to meet commitments on treating people within set time limits, and said the four-hour target for people to be seen within A&E was under threat. Health secretary Andrew Lansley has relaxed some NHS targets on waiting times but he and the prime minister, David Cameron, have pledged to keep them low. The data published by the Department of Health also shows 595,500 people in total across England waiting for diagnostic tests in June – the highest number this year. Overall, the number of tests carried out between April 2010 and March 2011 has risen 2.8% on the previous year, from 37.7m to 38.8m. NHS Health policy Health Public services policy guardian.co.uk

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Number of NHS patients waiting over six weeks for tests quadruples

Ninefold increase in number of people waiting over 13 weeks for one of 15 key tests – such as MRI, CT and heart scans The number of people waiting more than six weeks for key NHS tests has almost quadrupled in one year, figures released show. In June, there were 12,521 people waiting more than six weeks for one of 15 key tests, including MRI, CT and heart scans, ultrasound, barium enemas and colonoscopies. This is up on the 3,510 waiting more than six weeks in June 2010. There has also been a nine-fold increase in the number of people waiting more than 13 weeks for one of the tests. In June, there were 1,763 people waiting more than 13 weeks, up from just 190 in June 2010. Last week, some foundation trusts warned they would struggle to meet commitments on treating people within set time limits, and said the four-hour target for people to be seen within A&E was under threat. Health secretary Andrew Lansley has relaxed some NHS targets on waiting times but he and the prime minister, David Cameron, have pledged to keep them low. The data published by the Department of Health also shows 595,500 people in total across England waiting for diagnostic tests in June – the highest number this year. Overall, the number of tests carried out between April 2010 and March 2011 has risen 2.8% on the previous year, from 37.7m to 38.8m. NHS Health policy Health Public services policy guardian.co.uk

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Number of NHS patients waiting over six weeks for tests quadruples

Ninefold increase in number of people waiting over 13 weeks for one of 15 key tests – such as MRI, CT and heart scans The number of people waiting more than six weeks for key NHS tests has almost quadrupled in one year, figures released show. In June, there were 12,521 people waiting more than six weeks for one of 15 key tests, including MRI, CT and heart scans, ultrasound, barium enemas and colonoscopies. This is up on the 3,510 waiting more than six weeks in June 2010. There has also been a nine-fold increase in the number of people waiting more than 13 weeks for one of the tests. In June, there were 1,763 people waiting more than 13 weeks, up from just 190 in June 2010. Last week, some foundation trusts warned they would struggle to meet commitments on treating people within set time limits, and said the four-hour target for people to be seen within A&E was under threat. Health secretary Andrew Lansley has relaxed some NHS targets on waiting times but he and the prime minister, David Cameron, have pledged to keep them low. The data published by the Department of Health also shows 595,500 people in total across England waiting for diagnostic tests in June – the highest number this year. Overall, the number of tests carried out between April 2010 and March 2011 has risen 2.8% on the previous year, from 37.7m to 38.8m. NHS Health policy Health Public services policy guardian.co.uk

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