Happy news for New York City’s gay lovebirds: Officials believe every couple who wanted to get married this Sunday will be able to. Officials were initially worried demand would be too high on the first day same-sex marriages will be allowed, and established a lottery for the 764 available slots….
Continue reading …“Oh yes, she’s very tough,” said Rupert Murdoch prophetically about his protestor-smacking wife Wendi in an interview last month on Chinese TV. “Successful men need a critical wife, it brings him down to earth,” said the media mogul. Murdoch went on to give some rare insights into his personal life,…
Continue reading …An Arizona State professor wants his student to get smashed—and he’s willing to pay them to do it. That’s because William Corbin is researching the effects of alcohol on behavior, and ASU students are his subjects. Several nights a week, he converts his lab into a bar, complete with…
Continue reading …Hundreds of thousands demonstrate as security forces kill at least 11 people with president rumoured to call elections Hundreds of thousands of Syrians turned out for anti-regime demonstrations across the country on Friday with at least 11 people reported killed by security forces and tensions mounting in the runup to the Ramadan holiday. Casualty figures – collated by two Syrian human rights groups – were down on previous weeks but the numbers of demonstrators appeared to be some of the largest yet seen in the four-month uprising. In Aleppo, Syria’s second city, unarmed military cadets were seen marching with civilian protesters and calling for the overthrow of the regime and the departure of President Bashar al-Assad. Damascus was unusually quiet after large demonstrations closer to the city centre last week but protests were reported from Deir Ezzor in the east to Suweida in the south. All were called to express solidarity with the people of the central city of Homs – the focal point of recent unrest – where some 40 people have been killed in the last few days amid worries of rising sectarian tensions. Five of the latest casualties were killed there. Amateur video footage posted on the internet showed many thousands gathering after prayers on a day dubbed “Friday of the descendants of Khalid”, a reference to a disciple of the prophet Muhammad who unified the Arabian Peninsula in the seventh century and is buried in Homs. Nearby Hama, scene of a notorious 1982 massacre during the rule of Assad’s father Hafez, saw hundreds of thousands in central Assi Square. But there was no visible security presence in the city. Large protests were also reported for the first time from Aleppo, where one of Friday’s fatalities was killed. Syrian TV reported that a civilian had been killed by an “armed gang” – the regime’s habitual term for almost all protests. In Damascus there were signs of a more restrained approach, with security forces firing into the air or using tear gas to prevent trouble spreading. Activists reported checkpoints and a heavy security presence in Rukn ad-Deen, a largely Kurdish neighbourhood in the north-east of the city and the far eastern area of Qaboun where a mass funeral was held on Thursday. But protests went ahead as usual in Midan, a conservative district close to the old walled city. Live streaming and better-quality pictures have been emerging from Syria this week despite the government’s attempts to curb social media and temporarily block access to email services and Twitter. In Midan a video clip showed protesters clapping and shouting: “The people are free, Syria is free.” Footage from Aleppo showed a man drenched in blood being carried away. And in largely Kurdish Qamishli on the border with Turkey, teargas was fired to break up a protest. Expressions of solidarity with Homs – pinned down by troops and tanks on the streets – came at the end of a week when at least 40 people were killed there, some of them reportedly in sectarian clashes. But reports of sectarian strife have been hotly contested by activists and some analysts. “The protest movement does appear to be predominantly peaceful and non-sectarian but as state control weakens … people with other grievances may be taking advantage,” said a western diplomat in Damascus. That may be the case in Homs’ northern neighbourhoods where Alawites and Sunnis are segregated into adjacent neighbourhoods. Reports of revenge killings and violence on the part of “Shabiha” thugs allied with the government are multiplying. Some sources said state media reports of the targeting of a military bus near Rastan, north of Homs, on Thursday, killing two, may have been a case of a revenge attack. In Homs activists and residents reported a rise in defections, including eight military intelligence personnel who changed sides after a brutal crackdown. Activists said that several tank crews this week defected and joined protesters in the eastern town of Albu Kamal bordering Iraq’s tribal Sunni heartland. Footage from Aleppo showing unarmed army cadets marching with civilians was a striking novelty but it was difficult to judge its scale or wider significance. Syrian activists are warning protesters who imitate slogans from Egypt and Tunisia (where the army changed sides and helped overthrow both presidents) such as “the people and the army are one hand!” that they should not count on the military changing sides. “This is a very different situation here and we know that,” said one Damascus activist. Delegations from Brazil, India and Turkey were reported to be in the capital to meet Assad amid reports that he will soon deliver his fourth speech since the uprising began. It is understood he will offer to abrogate article eight of the Syrian constitution, which provides for a leading role for the ruling Ba’ath party. Assad is also rumoured to be considering calling presidential elections – overseen by delegations from abroad – several months after a new political parties law is put into effect. “This could be the only peaceful way out of the situation,” said one analyst. “But I am not sure the street will accept it at this stage.” In other developments, protesters destroyed a statue of Hafez al-Assad in Hasaka, prompting security forces to open fire, al-Arabiya TV reported. Hundreds more marched in the southern town of Suweida while demonstrations took place in the north-western province of Idlib. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 1,419 civilians and 352 members of the security forces have been killed since 15 March, while more than 1,300 people have been arrested. Nour Ali is a pseudonym for a journalist in Damascus Syria Bashar Al-Assad Arab and Middle East unrest Protest Turkey Iraq Ian Black guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A loud explosion has shattered windows and led to evacuations of office buildings near the government headquarters in downtown Oslo. An AP reporter says newspaper offices in the area are also damaged and smoke is drifting in the streets. He saw a young man with a bleeding leg being helped…
Continue reading …Tiger Woods’ freshly fired caddie is apparently rather miffed at his sudden sacking by the golf great . After 12 years, 250 tournaments, and 72 wins together, Steve Williams says he was “extremely disappointed” by the surprising turn of events. “I’ve wasted the last two years of my life because he’s…
Continue reading …Top officials from North and South Korea today met in what was the countries’ first high-level meeting since 2008, holding productive nuclear talks in Indonesia, Reuters reports. “I had very constructive and useful conversations with my counterpart,” said South Korea’s nuclear envoy. “We agreed to continue to make joint efforts…
Continue reading …A new twist in the increasingly bizarre case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn: His second wife may sue Anne Mansouret for defamation following Mansouret’s recent claim that she had “brutal sex” with Strauss-Kahn . Brigitte Guillemette, in addition to often being called a friend of Mansouret’s in news stories about the case, is…
Continue reading …An overloaded double-decker bus burst into flames on a highway in central China early today, killing 41 people on board. The official Xinhua News Agency says six passengers managed to escape the blaze in Henan province’s Xinyang city and were all hospitalized, with one in critical condition. The sleeper coach…
Continue reading …President engaged in talks with Republican leader to negotiate deal, which would mean $3tn cuts in federal spending Barack Obama has warned of drastic consequences if America does not reach a deal on the debt crisis facing the country, saying: “If we do not solve it, every American will suffer.” With only 10 days left until the deadline, Obama and the Republican leader in the House, John Boehner, have been engaged in behind-the-scenes talks trying to negotiate a compromise. But a deal is still in doubt, facing fierce resistance from diehard Republicans in Congress – elected last year with the help of the Tea Party movement – and from left-leaning Democrats. Speaking at a public meeting in Maryland on Friday, Obama said defaulting on its debt was not an option. “We have never defaulted on our debt and we are not going to do it now,” he said. A default would be a major embarrassment to the US, with some economists warning it could trigger a new worldwide recession. The US chamber of commerce expressed nervousness over the prospect of America’s credit rating being downgraded. A deal would see more than $3 trillion slashed from federal spending over the next decade, including farm subsidies, military spending, social security and basic medical insurance. Federal payments to state governments could also be hit. State governors are laying down emergency plans, with California, among others, looking for alternative sources of borrowing to tide it over. Banks and businesses are also working feverishly preparing for worst-case scenarios. The crisis is the biggest test of wills yet between Obama and hardline Republicans endorsed by the Tea Party movement. It dwarfs the stand-off earlier this year when the federal government faced shutdown. Republicans want huge spending cuts to reduce the country’s massive national debt but oppose any tax rises. Democrats have agreed to spending cuts but want to protect the poorest and to ensure that any package includes tax rises. The US is closer to the brink than the 2
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