2009년 3월 23일 월요일

4 charged in airport biker brawl in Australia

SYDNEY – Police defended security levels at Australia's largest airport Monday after a man was beaten to death in the terminal during a brawl by suspected rival biker gangs, but acknowledged they were taken by surprise when fighting broke out.

Four men were charged in connection with the violence that occurred midday Sunday in front of dozens of terrified travelers at Sydney Airport. Police said more arrests were expected.

Police said at least 15 men were involved in the violence, which rampaged from the ground floor up one level to the departures hall before most of the men fled. A police document said the man who died was repeatedly bludgeoned about the head by attackers wielding metal poles they grabbed from passenger barricades.

Police said they believed the man who died was 29-year-old Anthony Zervas, the brother of a well-known Sydney biker.

Sen. Bill Heffernan, a senior opposition lawmaker, said the fight suggested there were serious holes in Sydney Airport's security and aSenate committee should investigate.

"It doesn't say much for the millions of dollars we have spent on airport security, nor does it say much in the event of a (real) terrorist attack what would happen," Heffernan told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.

Australian Federal Police Commissioner Mick Keelty acknowledged the violence took them by surprise but said police officers responded quickly to emergency phone calls for help.

"The police can't be everywhere all the time and this is an event that could have happened anywhere in Australia," Keelty told reporters.

State authorities held urgent meetings Monday to consider introducing tougher laws against biker gangs, amid fears of an escalating gang warthat has included drive-by shootings and a blast outside a fortified Hell's Angel's clubhouse.

New South Wales Premier Nathan Rees announced the state police anti-gang squad would be boosted to 125 members from 50 in response and ordered it to focus on the rising biker violence.

The police document handed to the Sydney Local Court during a bail hearing for the arrested men said the fight erupted after two groups of heavily tattooed men — one believed to be connected to the Hell's Angels and the other to the Commancheros biker gangs — disembarked from the same flight from the southern city of Melbourne.

Authorities acknowledged at the hearing that they had yet to watch security camera footage of the brawl because police were having problems downloading it from the system.

The four suspects were arrested away from the airport. They were charged with fighting in a public place, but not with any crime connected to causing a death. An investigation was still under way to determine the cause of death of the man killed, police said.

The four were refused bail and ordered to reappear in court Wednesday.

Rees said he would consider new laws to crack down on biker gangs with measures such as banning clubhouses and meetings of more than two or three gang members. Officials likened the measures to counterterrorism laws.

"These people have got to understand that's not the sort of behavior we tolerate in Australia and we'll be doing whatever we can to give police whatever powers they need to be able to stamp this out," state Police MinisterTony Kelly said.

 

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090323/ap_on_re_as/as_australia_biker_brawl_12

Unidad de América Móvil dice sale Venezuela por crisis mundial

CARACAS (Reuters) - La unidad en Venezuela de la mexicana América Móvil decidió cerrar sus operaciones en el país sudamericano como consecuencia de la crisis económica mundial, según un comunicado de la empresa difundido el lunes.

Genesis Telecom es una pequeña firma que brinda acceso a internet y enlace de datos a través de tecnología LMDS a unos 500 clientes corporativos, en un mercado dominado ampliamente por la estatal CANTV.

"Es de amplio conocimiento público la crisis por la que está atravesando la economía mundial, de la cual formamos parte y, lamentablemente, nos ha obligado a finalizar nuestras operaciones en Venezuela", explicó la empresa.

Genesis agregó que la decisión obedece "a la imposibilidad de continuar prestando servicios bajo las condiciones técnicas y de calidad que se requieren para el óptimo funcionamiento, dentro del espectro actualmente asignado", sin aportar otros detalles.

La mayoría accionaria de Genesis Telecom está en manos de una filial de América Móvil, propiedad del magnate mexicano Carlos Slim. Una porción minoritaria está en manos de la sociedad holandesa de inversión Siracusa Investments.

La firma ganó en el año 2000 licencias para operar en todo el país con tecnología WLL (Wireless Local Loop) pero no pudo explotarla debido a problemas internos de su casa matriz de entonces, Bell Canada, y con el desarrollo de la tecnología.

 

http://espanol.news.yahoo.com/s/reuters/090323/negocios/negocios_telecomunicaciones_venezuela_americamovil_1

Correa apoya a Paraguay en sus demandas a Brasil sobre Itaipú

Asunción, 23 mar (EFE).- El presidente de Ecuador, Rafael Correa, dijo hoy que Paraguay "tiene todo el derecho" de exigir a Brasil la revisión del tratado de construcción de la hidroeléctrica de Itaipú, la más potente del mundo en funcionamiento.

Desde la llegada del ex obispo Fernando Lugo al poder, el 15 de agosto de 2008, Paraguay insiste sobre una serie de reivindicaciones como el aumento del precio del excedente energético de Itaipú que cede al vecino país y la posibilidad de negociar con terceros países la energía.

"Creo que Paraguay tiene todo el derecho de que se revisen esos contratos. Alguna vez toqué tangencialmente el tema con el presidente (Luiz Inácio) Lula (da Silva) y creo que el es muy abierto", afirmó Correa en una rueda de prensa en la primera jornada de su visita oficial de dos días a este país.

El gobernante se expresó en esos términos al ser consultado sobre una similitud de la situación de Itaipú con la que su país afrontó con Brasil sobre la construcción de una hidroeléctrica por parte de la empresa brasileña Odebrecht.

"Hubo una medida exagerada por parte del Gobierno brasileño en base a informaciones equivocadas. Claro, en base a esa experiencia las conversaciones con Paraguay van a llevarse de la mejor manera", acotó Correa, al hacer hincapié que su país no tuvo ninguna crisis con Brasil y que si éste país en algún momento la tuvo "ya fue superada".

Añadió que el problema suscitado "fue por graves incumplimientos de una constructora brasileña", que fue expulsada de Ecuador.

La relación entre ambos países se deterioró a finales del año pasado después de que el Gobierno ecuatoriano anunciase que iba a ir a un arbitraje internacional para definir la legalidad de un préstamo otorgado a Ecuador por el Banco de Desarrollo (BNDES) de Brasil.

Ese crédito financió la construcción de la hidroeléctrica San Francisco, en el centro de Ecuador, a cargo de Odebrecht, que fue inaugurada a finales de 2007, pero que dejó de funcionar en junio de 2008 por fallos estructurales detectados en la ejecución de la obra.

Ecuador responsabilizó por los daños a Odebrecht, la expulsó del país y recurrió a la Corte Internacional de Arbitraje de la Cámara de Comercio Internacional, por sospechas de irregularidades en el manejo de ese crédito del BNDES.

 

http://espanol.news.yahoo.com/s/23032009/54/n-latam-correa-apoya-paraguay-demandas-brasil.html

Rugby : la France sauve l’honneur en Italie

Sébatsien Chabal, aux prises avec Carlos Nieto et Paul Griffen.
© REUTERS/ Giampiero Sposito

FRANCE INFO - 21 MARS 2009

Le XV de France a écrasé l’Italie sur son terrain, 50 à 8. Une belle victoire, pour cette dernière journée du Tournoi des six nations, qui ne suffit pas à oublier les contre-performances des dernières rencontres. Au classement, la France finit 3e.

Les Français avaient mangé du lion aujourd’hui. Faut-il qu’ils soient dos au mur pour se surpasser, comme ils l’ont fait face aux Italiens ? Toujours est-il que les Bleus ont marqué pas moins de sept essais - Sébastien Chabal, François Trinh-Duc, Maxime Médard (2), Cédric Heymans, Thomas Domingo, Julien Malzieu - trois transformations et trois pénalités de Morgan Parra.

http://www.france-info.com/spip.php?article268636&theme=27&sous_theme=385

Hervé Novelli vs France 3 Centre: "C'est la direction de France Télévisions qui a retiré le reportage du site"

Mais qu'y a-t-il dans ce reportage? Xavier Nayzet, journaliste à France 3 Centre, a enquêté sur le passé de militant d'extrême-droite d'Hervé Novelli, et évoque aussi une ancienne proximité du secrétaire d'Etat avec l'UIMM, l'Union des industries et métiers de la métallurgie, ébranlée par un scandale financier en 2008.

Dès le lendemain, le 19/20 du 18 mars a été retiré du site internet par la direction de France Télévisions.

L'oeil du Post l'a toutefois retrouvé.

Ce reportage n'aura pas en tout cas empêché Hervé Novelli de gagner les primaires UMP dans la région Centre avec plus de 72, 60% des voix.

Sur Le Post, Xavier Nayzet, le journaliste qui a enquêté sur Hervé Novelli, assume son reportage.

Le reportage ayant été diffusé jeudi soir sur France 3 Centre, avez-vous reçu une plainte d'Hervé Novelli à ce jour (lundi, ndlr)?

"Non, nous n'avons rien reçu. Un de mes confrères m'indiquait ce midi qu'Hervé Novelli avait toujours la ferme intention de porter plainte mais pour cela il faut que Rachida Dati se saisisse du dossier et elle décidera ou pas d'engager des poursuites."

Quand avez-vous commencé à travailler sur le sujet?

"Dès que nous avons su qu'Hervé Novelli se présentait pour les primaires de l'UMP. J'ai commencé à chercher des éléments dès octobre. Mais je m'y suis vraiment attaqué en février, quand Serge Lepeltier a évoqué le passé politique d'Hervé Novelli. Il fallait bien expliquer ses propos aux gens."

Vous attendiez-vous à cette réaction d'Hervé Novelli?

"Non, mais je savais que c'était une possibilité. Il avait envoyé une lettre de mise en garde par l'intermédiaire de son avocat en parlant d''un reportage à charge'. Il savait qu'on préparait un sujet sur son client puisque nous avions demandé une interview de lui. D'ailleurs, c'est sa réponse à notre demande qui a retardé la diffusion du reportage car nous attendions, et finalement, nous avons reçu une lettre à la place".

Des proches d'Hervé Novelli ont dénoncé une "opération purement politique"...

"La veille, un reportage sur Serge Lepeltier a été diffusé, effectivement, il n'était pas du même registre mais ce n'est pas moi qui l'ai réalisé."

Pourquoi avoir supprimé le journal du site de France 3?

"Cette suppression a été faite par la direction de France Télévisions". (une information confirmée au Post par la direction de France Télévisions, ndlr)

Sur Le Post, Dominique Delhoume, le rédacteur en chef de France 3 Centre, Dominique Delhoume assume pleinement: "J'assume la validation du sujet, et la diffusion du sujet à l'antenne. J'ai tout simplement fait mon travail de rédacteur en chef. J'ai donné mon feu vert pour ce reportage quand Serge Lepeltier a parlé du passé d'Hervé Novelli le 3 février".

Et d'ajouter: "Ce que j'ai su, c'est que cette tentative d'intimidation d'Hervé Novelli a provoqué beaucoup d'inquiétudes à la direction de France Télévisions".

 

http://fr.news.yahoo.com/63/20090323/tpl-herv-novelli-vs-france-3-centre-c-es-5cc6428.html

Sweden Says No to Saving Saab

Saab Automobile may be just another crisis-ridden car company in an industry full of them. But just as the fortunes of Flint, Mich., are permanently entangled with General Motors, so it is impossible to find anyone in the city of Trollhattan in southwest Sweden who is not somehow connected to Saab, The New York Times’s Sarah Lyall writes.

Which makes it all the more wrenching that the Swedish government has responded to Saab’s desperate financial situation by saying, essentially, tough luck. Or, as the enterprise minister, Maud Olofsson, put it recently, “The Swedish state is not prepared to own car factories.”

Such a view might seem jarring, coming as it does from a country with a reputation for a paternalistic view of workers and companies. The “Swedish model” for dealing with a banking crisis — nationalizing the banks, recapitalizing them and selling them — has been much debated lately in the United States, with free-market defenders warning of a slippery slope of Nordic socialism.

But Sweden has a right-leaning government, elected in 2006 after a long period of Social Democratic rule, that prefers market forces to state intervention and ownership. That fact has made the workers of Trollhattan wish the old socialist model were more in evidence.

“I don’t think the government knows the situation in this town, how many people depend on Saab,” Therese Doeij, 25, a clerk at a photo shop who has several friends who work at the company, told The Times. “To them it’s just a factory. They don’t see the people behind it.”

Governments all over the world are confronting the disintegration of the global automobile market in different ways, with loans, bailouts and takeovers.

But Sweden’s approach has been particularly hard-nosed, and particularly unequivocal.

Why is the government apparently dead set against helping Saab, an iconic brand that stands as a global symbol of Sweden, with Ikea, Volvo and Abba?

That is what Paul Akerlund, the local chairman of the automobile workers’ union, wonders.

“I’m a little surprised,” he told The Times. “They say the market should help itself, but the market has collapsed around the whole world. It’s an extraordinary situation.”

He added, with a note of accusation in his voice, “In Germany, France and England, the government is going in to help the car manufacturers.”

Swedish officials have condemned what they see as protectionism by other European countries that have pledged to prop up their own failing car industries. They have also been scathing about General Motors, Saab’s owner, and the last thing they want is to seem to be bailing out a despised foreign company.

Struggling for its own survival, G.M. has said it will completely pull out of Saab by the end of 2009, a course that Ms. Olofsson, the enterprise minister, described as tantamount to declaring “that they wash their hands of Saab and drop it into the laps of the Swedish taxpayers.”

She told The Times: “We are very disappointed in G.M., but we are not prepared to risk taxpayers’ money. This is not a game of Monopoly.”

Saab lost about $343 million last year. It is now going through a Swedish process known as reorganization, a step short of bankruptcy, as it tries to persuade its creditors to prop it up while it looks for a buyer. Joe Oliver, a spokesman, told The Times in an interview that “around six serious investors,” from Sweden and abroad, had expressed interest.

Time is running out.

But the prospect of failure is too awful for Trollhattan’s mayor, Gert-Inge Andersson, to even contemplate. In a city of about 54,000 people, Saab employs 4,000.

“I’m being optimistic, because I can’t envision a time when Saab doesn’t exist,” Mr. Andersson told The Times in an interview in City Hall.

His son worked at Saab for a decade; his daughter’s boyfriend works there now. “Saab is our identity,” he told The Times. “We have lived with it for many years, and it’s very important to all of us.”

Saab was always known for its innovative engineering. But analysts say that in recent years, with General Motors’ emphasis on volume rather than individuality, it has lost its edge.

“Under G.M.’s ownership, they denuded the intellectual content behind the brand,” Peter Wells, who teaches at Cardiff Business School in Wales and specializes in the automotive industry, told The Times. “Its products are not exciting enough, and Saab doesn’t have a strong brand identity anymore.”

The numbers speak all too loudly. Saab sold just 93,295 vehicles worldwide last year, 21,383 of them in the United States. As global demand plummets, the expectations for this year are even more dire. The company announced this month that it planned to lay off 750 workers in Trollhattan.

This is not a rich city. Besides Saab, the largest employer is the municipal government. The houses run mostly to modest wooden two-story structures and low-rise brick apartment buildings. But about 40 percent of the people here drive Saabs, Mayor Andersson said. On a cold evening last month, 3,000 people held a torchlight ceremony to show their support for the company.

Leave the tourist office and you come immediately to the Saab Museum. A shining, sparkling valentine to a company and an industry, it features treasures like the groundbreaking turbo engine unveiled at the 1977 Frankfurt automobile show, and the prototype of the very first Saab car, from 1947 — Ur-Saab, its license plate says proudly. All the cars here, even the rarest and most precious, are still driven from time to time by enthusiasts.

Some 50,000 tourists visit each year, said Ola Bolander, who works at the museum. Saab sponsors a festival for its fans every other year; 20,000 came to the last one, in 2007. “Saab has always been a bit different, a bit more interesting,” Mr. Bolander told The Times. “It’s gone its own way, and it’s in the heart of the Swedish people.”

Sweden has nine million people. Labor leaders say Saab’s collapse would disproportionately affect southwest Sweden, an industrial belt that is also home to Volvo. But it would reverberate through the rest of the economy, which depends heavily on industrial exports, jeopardizing perhaps tens of thousands of jobs.

Sweden is famous for its generous unemployment provisions, which include retraining for laid-off workers. But unemployment is quickly rising. Tomas Eneroth, a member of Parliament and the spokesman for industry and trade for the opposition Social Democrats, said the government’s tough line was foolish.

“The fact that they are so passive,” he told The Times, “is every day now making it worse and jeopardizing the possibility of having Saab still in Sweden.”

Around the corner from City Hall, Johann Riden, a sales clerk in an electronics store, said about half his customers worked either at Saab or at companies that do business with Saab.

“I have friends there, my colleagues have family there, and my friends have family there,” Mr. Riden, 32, told The Times. “If you look around, you see Saab everywhere.”

 

http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/23/sweden-says-no-to-saving-saab/

Manitoba RCMP make drug bust in Norway House

RCMP in Norway House seized more than a half-kilogram of marijuana and 125 grams of cocaine and crack cocaine on the weekend.

"This seizure was significant because it represents approximately 1,300 individual dose units, which would have been sold in the community of Norway House," stated an RCMP news release.

The community, about 450 kilometres north of Winnipeg, has a population of approximately 6,500 people.

The seizure was made during a routine check stop. A man and a woman, both 19 and both from Norway House, were arrested and charged with possession for the purpose of trafficking.

They are scheduled to appear in provincial court in Thompson, 190 kilometres north of Norway House, on Tuesday.

 

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/manitoba/story/2009/03/23/mb-drug-bust.html?ref=rss

Suncor to buy Petro-Canada for $15 billion

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CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) – Suncor Energy Inc said on Monday it will buy rival Petro-Canada to create Canada's biggest oil company, dominant in the Alberta oil sands and able to slash costs as it looks to weather a period of low oil prices.

Suncor is offering C$18.43 billion ($15.1 billion) for Petro-Canada in an all-share deal. That makes it the largest Canadian oil and gas takeover ever, according to Thomson Reuters data, and the biggest takeover of a Canadian company since 2007, when Rio Tinto bought aluminum producer Alcan for $43 billion.

The deal targets C$1.3 billion in annual savings for the combined company in an environment in which plummeting oil prices have made it hard to turn a profit from squeezing crude out of the oil sands in northern Alberta, the world's biggest reserves outside the Middle East.

The merger will create a company with 100 years worth of reserves, four refineries in Canada and the United States, a chain of retail gasoline stations and more than 680,000 barrels a day of oil and gas production.

"We now have a new integrated national champion," said Dom Grestoni, managing partner at IG Investment Management, which holds about 6 million Petro-Canada shares and 11 million Suncor shares.

The deal comes after a period of missed earnings targets and project delays at Petro-Canada, which has been under pressure from shareholders to boost its lagging share price, which had been trading at 2003 levels.

Suncor will be able to use its new heft to further cut costs at its oil sands operations, adding Petro-Canada's oil sands properties -- including the planned Fort Hills project -- and keep growing despite low oil prices.

"We had two options," Rick George, Suncor's chief executive, said on a conference call. "We could pull back ... or do something that would really strengthen our position and allow us to take a look at investing and coming out of this cycle even stronger than ever."

The merger may also let the two companies breathe new life into projects that stalled when oil prices plunged.

Suncor, the No. 2 oil sands company behind Syncrude Canada Ltd, has delayed a 200,000 barrel per day expansion of its oil sands operations, while soaring costs have pushed Petro-Canada to delay Fort Hills as it sought to cut the project's cost.

Ron Brenneman, Petro-Canada's chief executive, said the merger could bring down the price at Fort Hills, letting the company scale back a planned pipeline for the project and use Suncor's upgraders to convert the mined bitumen into refinery-ready synthetic crude instead of building a stand-alone facility.

"It was a real eye opener for me to see the number and quality and quantity of the opportunities we saw in putting the two companies together, particularly in the oil sands area," Brenneman said.

Suncor's bid may also spark rivals to consolidate operations, looking to gain some of the costs savings that the new company will enjoy.

"This highlights that there are some real efficiencies to be had when you put together big entities like this," said Garey Aitken, chief investment officer at Bisset Investment Management, which controls 3 million Petro-Canada shares and 2 million Suncor shares. "Maybe it will have people sharpen their minds to this."

Petro-Canada shareholders will receive 1.28 common shares of the merged company for each Petro-Canada share, while Suncor shareholders will get one common share of the merged company for each Suncor share.

The offer represents a premium of about 28 percent to the C$29.65 closing price of Petro-Canada shares on Friday, assuming there were 484.4 million Petro-Canada shares outstanding as of December 31, 2008.

Petro-Canada's shares jumped C$6.05, or 20 percent, to C$35.70 on the Toronto Stock Exchange, while Suncor slid 16 Canadian cents to C$30.74.

On completion of the deal, Suncor's shareholders will own about 60 percent of the merged company, the companies said, and they expect to achieve annual operating expenditure reductions of C$300 million.

They also expect to achieve annual capital efficiencies of about C$1 billion through the elimination of redundant spending and by focusing capital spending on high-return, near-term projects.

Petro-Canada had been protected from a hostile takeover by Canadian legislation that prohibited anyone from holding more than 20 percent of the former government-owned company.

Brenneman said he expects that because of the structure of the agreement, the existing legislation will now apply to the new company, which will retain the Suncor name

($1=$1.22 Canadian)

(Additional reporting by Bhaswati Mukhopadhyay, David Ljunggren, Euan Rocha and Tom Bergin; Editing by Peter Galloway and Rob Wilson)

 

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090323/bs_nm/us_petrocanada_suncor_8

Scientists Drill Into Greenland Ice for Climate-Change Clues

Scientists are to dig up ice dating back more than 100,000 years in an attempt to shed light on how global warming will change the world over the next century.

The ice, at the bottom of the Greenland ice sheet, was laid down at a time when temperatures were 3 top 5 degrees Celsius (5 to 9 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than they are today.

With temperatures forecast to rise by up to 7 degrees Celsius in the next 100 years, the ice, more than 8,000 feet (2,400 meters) below the surface, is thought by researchers to hold valuable clues to how much of the ice sheet will melt.

Drilling will start in northern Greenland during the summer in an international project involving researchers from 18 countries to extract ice cores covering the Eemian interglacial stage.

The Eemian began 130,000 years ago, ending 15,000 years later, and is the most recent time in the Earth's past when temperatures resembled those that can be expected if greenhouse gas emissions are not brought under control.

 

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,510155,00.html

Polling to end early in Orissa's troubled areas

The Election Commission Monday announced that voting would end an hour earlier in some areas of Orissa in the first phase April 16.
The constituencies where polling would end an hour early - at 3 p.m. - come under Nabrangpur, Berhampur, Koraput and Kandhamal Lok Sabha areas, the office of the chief electoral officer Orissa said in a statement.
Although no reason was given, the areas where polling ends early are considered troubled areas and known for Maoist activities.
Orissa will go to polls in two phases - April 16 and April 23 - to elect 147 members to the state assembly and 21 members to Lok Sabha. During the first phase, polling will be held in 10 Lok Sabha and 70 assembly segments.
The change of timing will be effective in 19 assembly constituencies, the statement said. Voting in other places would however take place from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.

 

http://www.calcuttanews.net/story/481270

Thailand energy company expands

hailand's top energy firm has said it will look for more acquisitions in the Asia-Pacific region.
PTT has said it will look beyond its core gas and oil businesses in Thailand for more foreign businesses.
The company has already said it will buy part of Australian miner Straits Resources, as a means of launching itself into coal and salt assets.
Last December, it also bought Australia’s Coogee Resources for $170 million.

 

http://www.calcuttanews.net/story/481289

Friendly finishes goalless

Saudi Arabia and Iraq played out a goalless draw in a friendly match at the King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh.

The match was a part of Saudi Arabia's preparations for their game against Iran in a 2010 World Cup qualifier in Tehran later this week.

Newly appointed coach Jorge Peseiro aimed to test his squad in his first match with the team, who need to beat Iran in order to keep alive their qualification hopes.

All 24 Saudi players featured in the game but failed to score with their best chance coming late on when Naif Hazazi's close-range shot was denied by the Iraqi goalkeeper.

Striker Yasser Al-Qahtani, who is suspended for the match in Tehran, missed the game while his teammate Malek Al-Hawsawi also was absent through injury.

"We came to win and to prepare the team for Tehran clash and it was also a chance for me to know more about some players" Peseiro said after the game.

"I am sure we have a lot to do when we face Iran."

Saudi Arabia play Iran on March 28 before hosting UAE April 1.

 

http://soccernet.espn.go.com/report?id=264248&campaign=rss&source=soccernet&&cc=4716

Egypt reports new human case of bird flu: WHO


Egypt reports new human case of bird flu: WHO
AFP/File – Chickens at a farm near Jamasa city, north of Cairo. A 38-year-old woman has been hospitalised after …

GENEVA, March 23, 2009 (AFP) – A 38-year-old woman has been hospitalised after contracting bird flu in Egypt, where some 23 people have been killed by the disease since 2006, the World Health Organization said Monday.

"The Ministry of Health and Population, Egypt has reported a new confirmed human case of avian influenza," said the WHO in a statement on its website.

The victim from the Elfath district in central Egypt showed symptoms of fever and headache on March 14, and was admitted to hospital on the same day.

"Infection with H5N1 avian influenza was confirmed on March 18 by the Egyptian Central Public Health Laboratory," the WHO said.

She has been given treatment and was "in a stable condition," added the WHO.

"Investigations into the source of her infection indicate a history of close contact with dead and sick poultry prior to becoming ill," said the WHO.

Some 59 people have contracted the disease in Egypt since it was first detected there three years ago, according to the WHO.

The H5N1 flu virus has killed 250 people worldwide since 2003, with most lives claimed in southeast Asia.

The virus typically spreads from birds to humans via direct contact, but experts fear it could mutate into a form easily transmissible between humans, with the potential to kill millions in a pandemic.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090323/wl_mideast_afp/egyptwhohealthflu_20090323175617

WBC final primer: Korea vs. Japan

It's fitting that the second World Baseball Classic has come down to a final between Japan and Korea, as the rivalry between those two nations has dominated the tournament both this year and in 2006. In the inaugural tournament, Korea beat Japan twice in pool play (by scores of 3-2 and 2-1) only to lose to them 6-0 in the semifinals. This year, they were the only two teams from the '06 semifinals to return to the final four, and they meet in the final having already faced off four times in pool play.

Japan and Korea not only enter tonight's final with identical 6-2 records, but each is the only team to have beaten the other, as they split their previous four matchups 2-2. The Japanese won the first confrontation, shocking everyone by mercying their rivals 14-2 in seven innings in Round 1 to clinch a berth in Round 2. Korea then answered back in the Round 1 seeding game, beating Japan 1-0 thanks in large part to 5 1/3 scoreless innings from starter and former Atlanta Braves lefty Jung Keun Bong. Bong threw another 5 1/3 solid innings against Japan in Round 2, as Korea clinched its semifinal berth with a 4-1 win. In that round, it was Japan that returned serve with a seeding-game victory, beating Korea 6-2.

Not surprisingly, Korea will start Bong again tonight. His combined line from his two previous victories over Japan in this tournament is 10 2/3 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 3 BB, 3 K. All three of those hits were singles, two of which didn't leave the infield. Pitching on five day's rest with a 100-pitch limit, Bong could very well pitch his team to the title. Then again, seeing him for the third-time in two weeks could give Japan an edge it didn't have in its previous two confrontations with Bong.

Bong's advantage over Japan is in no small part due to the hand he throws with. Japan has a heavily left-handed offense, as second baseman Akinori Iwamuraand the entire Japanese outfield (including the reserves) swing southpaw. In fact, nine of the 15 non-pitchers on the Japanese roster bat exclusively left-handed. Catcher Kenji Johjima, who is both right-handed and Japan's leading hitter in the tournament (.400/.393/.560 after a trio of sacrifices last night), has three of Japan's six hits against Bong in this tournament, and there is little doubt that managerTatsunori Hara will attempt to work as many other righty bats into his lineup tonight as he can. Unfortunately for Hara, of the six right-handed hitters on his roster, one is his third-string catcher.This means he'll have a minimum of four left-handed bats in his lineup, including Iwamura, the struggling Ichiro Suzuki(.211/.211/.289 with just one stolen base) and center fielder Kosuke Fukudome, who has seven walks but just four hits in the tournament. Against the U.S. Sunday night, Hara had seven left-handed bats in his lineup and his team managed just two singles while striking out six times in 3 1/3 innings against the U.S.'s left-handed relievers. Korea has four left-handed pitchers with whom it can follow Bong.

As was signaled by Hara's use of Yu Darvish to close Sunday night's game, Japan will counter Bong with right-handed starter Hisashi Iwakuma. Iwakuma dominated the Pacific League for the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles last year, going 21-4 in just 28 starts and posting a 1.87 ERA, 0.98 WHIP and 4.42 K/BB ratio. It was Iwakuma who dueled with Bong in Korea's 1-0 Round 1 seeding win, allowing one run on two singles and three walks while striking out five. In Round 2, Iwakuma threw six scoreless innings against Cuba and Japan went on to eliminate its 2006 final opponent and clinch another semifinal berth. Iwakuma's combined line from those two starts is 11 1/3, 7 H, 1 R, 4 BB, 6 K. First baseman Tae Kyun Kim, Korea's cleanup hitter (.385/.515/.769 with a tournament-best three homers and 11 RBIs), singled in the only run Iwakuma has allowed in the tournament.

Given the presence of Bong and Iwakuma, tonight's final looks to be another tense, low scoring ballgame. It could come down to the bullpens, in which case it will be all hands on deck. The only reliever on either team to throw 30 pitches in the semifinals -- thereby disqualifying himself from tonight's game -- was Japanese righty Takahiro Mahara, who gave up two runs in the eighth inning against the U.S. Darvish threw 21 pitches in the ninth last night, but remains eligible tonight.

That's not to slight the two offenses. Korea and Japan scored a combined 19 runs in the two semifinal games, each winning easily. Rather, when the two get together, things tend to tighten up. Indeed, if Japan to repeats as WBC champions tonight, they'll affirm their place as the dominant team in the tournament's brief history, but they'd still have only split their eight WBC contests against Korea.

 

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/cliff_corcoran/03/23/korea.japan/index.html?eref=si_mlb

75TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE START OF A SOVIET-ERA FAMINE THAT KILLED MILLIONS

The anniversary of Holodomor - or Death by Hunger as it is known here - is traditionally marked in late November, when the food shortages began. The famine was orchestrated by dictator Josef Stalin to force peasants to give up their land and join collective farms and Ukraine, known as the breadbasket of the Soviet Union, suffered the most. (Photos by Yaroslav Debelyi, AP, Mykhaylo Markiv)

http://www.kyivpost.com/gallery/433

VITALI KLITSCHKO STOPS JUAN CARLOS GOMEZ TO RETAIN WBC HEAVYWEIGHT TITLE

Ukraine's boxer Vitali Klitschko, left, punches Cuba's boxer Juan Carlos Gomez, right, during the WBC heavyweight Championship fight in Stuttgart, Germany, on Saturday, March 21. Klitschko retained his WBC heavyweight title by beating Juan Carlos Gomez on a technical knockout in the ninth round on Saturday.

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Ukraine's gas pipelines cannot be upgraded without Russia, Moscow tells Kyiv, Brussels

Moscow - Russian Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko doubts the Ukrainian gas transportation system can be upgraded without Russia.

"We were puzzled by a clearly bilateral format of the agreements expected to be signed after this conference, and already signed by the European Union and Ukraine," Shmatko said in an interview with NTV television on Monday.

"We are going to issue a relevant statement right now and we'll try to persuade our European and Ukrainian colleagues to cooperate in a trilateral format on a problem of such importance for Russia, Ukraine and Europe," Shmatko said on the sidelines of an international conference on gas transportation system modernization in Brussels.

"The problem of upgrading the Ukrainian gas transportation system does exist and the European Union is concerned," Russia's EU ambassador Vladimir Chizhov told NTV television.

"I see a trilateral format of cooperation between Russia, Ukraine and the EU as the only way to resolve the whole set of these problems effectively - naturally with international financial institutions involved," Chizhov said.

 

http://www.kyivpost.com/world/38043