Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Dubai censors Hollywood thriller for profanity

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Moviegoers in the United Arab Emirates saw the screen turn black as frazzled officials broke up the screening of Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger's latest action flick after a character was heard cursing in Arabic in the movie.


The National, a state-backed newspaper, reported Monday that the Dubai Media Council asked theaters in the Emirates to halt the screening of the "Escape Plan."


Authorities quickly censored the profane words out of the film, and the revised version was back in theaters within hours.


The movie features Stallone and Schwarzenegger trying to escape from a futuristic, fortified prison.


Before movies debut in local theaters, Arab governments around the region censor films for content, often cutting out sexual scenes and kissing, as well as comments deemed blasphemous.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dubai-censors-hollywood-thriller-profanity-121732393.html
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Breakthrough




WASHINGTON - In a long-awaited breakthrough, Senate leaders closed in on a deal Monday to raise the federal debt ceiling and end a two-week-old government shutdown as Washington scrambled to avoid the nation's first default on its debt.


With leaders of both parties optimistic that they will soon come together to end the political crisis that has paralyzed Washington, details of the possible agreement began to emerge. It would raise the debt limit until Feb. 15 and fund federal agencies until Jan. 15, with the two sides holding budget talks before a new round of sequestration budget cuts take effect in January, according to people in the Senate familiar with the talks.


The deal would also make minor tweaks to the new health-care law, though nothing along the lines of what some conservative Republicans have been demanding. It would require additional safeguards to ensure that people who receive federal subsidies to purchase health insurance under the law are eligible to receive them, the people said.


In exchange for meeting that Republican condition, Democrats are seeking a delay of the law's "belly button tax" - a levy on existing policies that is set to add roughly $63 per covered person, including spouses and dependents - to the cost of health insurance next year. Under the emerging agreement, the tax would be delayed until 2015, sparing organized labor as well as major employers, the people said.




Negotiators, meanwhile, rejected a Republican proposal to delay a controversial 2.3 percent tax on medical devices that is also part of the Affordable Care Act.


With the talks continuing, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D., Nev.) recessed the Senate for the day and said that he and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) had made "tremendous progress ... but we are not there yet."


McConnell echoed Reid's remarks. "We've had a good day," he said. ". . . I think it's safe to say we've made substantial progress, and we look forward to making more progress."


Earlier, the Senate talks were far enough along that the White House postponed a 3 p.m. meeting with Democratic and Republican leaders of both houses to allow negotiations to proceed.


As the Senate convened for the day, Reid had said on the floor that he was "very optimistic" about what he called the "constructive, good-faith negotiations" aimed at avoiding the nation's first debt default. McConnell said he expected that "we're going to get a result that will be acceptable to both sides."


It was not immediately clear whether any agreement would win support in the Republican-led House, though a bipartisan deal would put immediate pressure on House Speaker John Boehner (R., Ohio).


As talks intensified, President Obama warned that if the standoff was not resolved by Thursday's deadline to raise the debt ceiling, "we stand a good chance of defaulting."


A bipartisan group of senators organized by Sen. Susan Collins (R., Maine) also met for two hours Monday morning. After briefing McConnell, Collins said that the group was making progress, but that the higher-level talks between Reid and McConnell were more significant in finding a way to resolve the standoff.


The entrenched dispute over government spending began with a battle over whether to link funding for the basic operations to changes in Obama's signature Affordable Care Act. It morphed last week into a fight over extending the debt ceiling, which is the government's ability to borrow money to pay for bills it has incurred.


Two weeks into the federal government shutdown, with a U.S. default looming, the disagreement expanded to include broader cuts in existing programs and changes to the mandatory curbs in spending, known as the sequester.


"I'm ashamed, and I want to apologize to the American people," Sen. Joe Manchin (D., W.Va.) told CNN's New Day, describing Congress' impasse. "This is not what I signed up for."


The plan being cobbled together by Collins' group focused on ending the shutdown and raising the $16.7 trillion debt limit. But Senate Democrats, emboldened by deep divisions among House Republicans and poll data showing the GOP bearing most of the blame for the impasse, rejected the initial proposal because it would allow a new round of sequester cuts to take effect in January.


Reid instead is seeking a quicker deadline on a temporary measure to fund federal agencies and reopen the government, and a longer deadline for raising the debt limit.


"The plan would be: Open up the government immediately for a period of time before the sequester hits [Jan. 15] and then have serious discussions where we might be able to undo the sequester," Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, the No. 3 Democrat in the Senate, said Sunday on CBS's Face the Nation.


Schumer noted that House Republicans had already offered to roll back the sequester cuts in a proposal that the White House rejected Friday. That plan would have immediately suspended enforcement of the debt limit and reopened the government in exchange for a plan to replace sequester savings in 2014 (and perhaps longer) with reductions to Social Security and Medicare proposed in Obama's budget.


"That was one place where the House Republicans and the president were not . . . at total loggerheads," Schumer said, suggesting a deal could be cut if Republicans consider new revenue along with cuts to entitlement programs.


The sequester cuts are part of $2.1 trillion in spending over 10 years included in the Budget Control Act, which raised the debt limit in 2011. Initially, Republicans wanted to replace the sequester, particularly the Pentagon portion. But since Obama won tax hikes on the wealthy as part of a year-end fight over the "fiscal cliff," McConnell has cast the sequester as a major GOP victory from which the party cannot retreat.


 



ELEMENTS OF A DEAL?


Proposals under discussion by the Senate's top two leaders included:


Legislation to raise the government's


debt limit until mid-February.


Appointment of House and Senate negotiators to seek


a deficit-reduction agreement that could ease or eliminate


a new round of automatic federal spending cuts scheduled to begin


in January.


A possible tightening in income-verification requirements for individuals who qualify for subsidies under the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare.


Repealing a fee the health-care law levies on companies that provide coverage. The cost is set at $63 per person covered for 2014 and is estimated to fall to about $40


by 2016 before


it disappears. - AP




MORE COVERAGE


An agreement with no changes to the Affordable Care Act could marginalize the tea party. A8.


Investors worried? "Doomsday


is nigh," one market analyst says, "and everyone shrugs." A9.


Harrisburg group plans to place posters outside the offices of area congressmen. B1.



Source: http://www.philly.com/r?19=961&43=166721&44=227757401&32=3796&7=195342&40=http://www.philly.com/inquirer/front_page/20131015_Breakthrough.html
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The WWII Memorial Protest: Sound and Fury Signifying Nothing (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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The suffering of 'dogs' _ Rohingya kids in Myanmar

In this Sept. 11, 2013 photo, a Muslim boy stands close to a barbed wire fence on the border of Myanmar and Bangladesh in Maungdaw, Rakhine state, Myanmar. Children are the biggest victims of policies that for decades have systematically discriminated against Rohingya Muslims. With little or no food security, poverty-stricken families often put kids to work instead of sending them to school. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)







In this Sept. 11, 2013 photo, a Muslim boy stands close to a barbed wire fence on the border of Myanmar and Bangladesh in Maungdaw, Rakhine state, Myanmar. Children are the biggest victims of policies that for decades have systematically discriminated against Rohingya Muslims. With little or no food security, poverty-stricken families often put kids to work instead of sending them to school. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)







In this Sept. 14, 2013 photo, Muslim boys collect gravel from a riverbed to use in road construction close to Lay Maing village, Maungdaw, Rakhine state, Myanmar. For many poverty-stricken Muslim families, even hard labor is a better option for their young boys than the badly broken education system. The government offers children a dollar a day to help with road repairs. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)







In this Sept. 12, 2013 photo, Muslim children carry bundles of sticks collected from a near by forest to sell as firewood close to Zay Di village, Maungdaw, Rakhine state, Myanmar. In this corner of Myanmar tens of thousands of Rohingya children born out of wedlock are “blacklisted” and do not exist in the government's eyes. They cannot go to public schools or get treatment in the state-run hospital without paying exorbitant bribes. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)







In this Sept. 13, 2013 photo, Muslim children of Lay Maing village carrying donated blue school bags walk to school in Maungdaw, Rakhine state, Myanmar. In this one corner of the country that is Muslim majority, they are among the lucky ones. Tens of thousands born out of wedlock are not recognized by Buddhist authorities and don't have access to education at all. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)







In this Sept. 14, 2013 photo, Muslim women tend to their sick infants at a government-run hospital in Maungdaw, Rakhine state, Myanmar. With no accurate statistics for northern Rakhine, it's impossible to know how many children from tiny villages die before they ever make it to a hospital because their families cannot afford bribes demanded at checkpoints. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)







(AP) — The 10-year-old struggles up the hill, carrying buckets filled with rocks. Though he tries to keep a brave face in front of his friends, his eyes brim with tears. Every inch of his body aches, he says, and he feels sick and dizzy from the weight.

"I hate it," whispers Anwar Sardad. He has to help support his family, but he wishes there was a way other than working for the government construction agency.

He adds, "I wouldn't have to live this life if I wasn't a Muslim."

The lives of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya children like Anwar are growing more hopeless in Myanmar, even as the predominantly Buddhist nation of 60 million wins praise for ending decades of dictatorship.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE — This story is part of "Portraits of Change," a yearlong series by The Associated Press examining how the opening of Myanmar after decades of military rule is — and is not — changing life in the long-isolated Southeast Asian country.

___

The Muslim ethnic group has long suffered from discrimination that rights groups call among the worst in the world. But here in northern Rakhine state, home to 80 percent of the country's 1 million Rohingya, it is more difficult now for children to get adequate education, food or medical care than it had been in the days of the junta. They have few options beyond hard labor, for a dollar a day.

The Associated Press' visit to the area was a first for foreign reporters. Local officials responded with deep suspicion, bristling when Rohingya were interviewed. Police meetings were called, journalists were followed and people were intimidated after being interviewed, including children.

In a country torn by ethnic violence over the last 15 months, this is the one region where Muslim mobs killed Buddhists, rather than the other way around. And although only 10 of the 240 deaths occurred here, this is the only region where an entire population has been punished, through travel restrictions and other exclusionary policies.

Muslim schools known as madrassas have been shut down, leading to crowding in government schools, where Rohingya, who make up 90 percent of the population in this corner of the country, are taught by Buddhist teachers in a language many don't understand.

In the village of Ba Gone Nar, where a monk was killed in last year's violence, enrollment at a small public school has soared to 1,250. Kids ranging from preschoolers to eighth-graders are crammed so tightly on the floor it's nearly impossible to walk between them.

"Our teachers write a lot of things on the blackboard, but don't teach us how to read them," says 8-year-old Anwar Sjak. "It's very difficult to learn anything in this school."

There are only 11 government-appointed teachers — one for every 114 students. On a day reporters visit, they fail to show up — a common occurrence.

Rohingya volunteers try to maintain order. One man circles the room with a rattan cane, silencing the chatter by whacking the trash-strewn concrete floor.

Few kids have chairs or desks. Many are coughing. Others talk among themselves, flipping through empty notebooks. They look up at newcomers with dazed stares.

"If I could be anything, I'd be doctor when I grow up," Anwar says. "Because whenever someone in my family gets sick and we go to the hospital, the staff never takes care of us. I feel so bad about that.

"But I know that will never happen," the third-grader adds. "The government wouldn't allow it."

Rohingya are not allowed to study medicine in Myanmar. There are no universities in northern Rakhine, and Rohingya there have been barred from leaving the area for more than a decade. An exception that allowed a few Rohingya to study in Sittwe, the state capital, ended after last year's bloodshed.

"They don't want to teach us," says Soyed Alum, a 25-year-old from the coastal village of Myinn Hlut who holds private classes in his home for Rohingya kids.

"They call us 'kalar' (a derogatory word for Muslim). They say, 'You're not even citizens. . Why do you need an education?'"

Every year, thousands of Rohingya flee northern Rakhine and take perilous sea journeys in hopes of finding refuge in other countries. Because of the recent sectarian violence, in which 250,000 people, mostly Rohingya, were driven from their homes, right workers anticipate that one of the biggest exoduses ever will begin as soon as the monsoon season ends this month and seas in the region calm.

Some historians say Rohingyas have been in northern Rakhine for centuries, though some living there now migrated from neighboring Bangladesh more recently. All are denied citizenship, rendering them stateless.

"They are all illegal," state advocate general Hla Thein says flatly.

They remain barred from becoming citizens, or from working in civil-service jobs. No Rohingya birth certificates have been handed out since the mid-1990s. Rohingya children are "blacklisted" — denied even basic services — if their parents are not officially married or previously reached a two-child limit that is imposed exclusively on their ethnic group.

The official neglect commonly stretches into hatred.

A government minder assigned by the central government to facilitate the AP's trip asks why they are so eager to interview "dogs."

When young Rohingya girls peer into the open windows of the crew's vehicle, the minder bitterly mumbles crude sexual insults at them.

One thing the government does offer Rohingya kids is work, even if they are as young as 10. The Ministry of Construction, one of the bigger employers, offers them 1,000 kyat — a dollar — for eight hours of collecting and carrying rocks under the tropical sun.

Early in the morning, giant pickup trucks swing by villages to pick up dozens of sleepy-eyed boys — all of them Rohingya — and deliver them to riverbeds.

"See? They want to work," says U Hla Moe, the administrator of Lay Maing.

Later that day, he will summon children who were interviewed by reporters into his office — for the AP's security, he says. The children say he frightens them as he demands to know the questions they were asked and their answers.

Among the kids called in is Anwar Sardad, the 10-year-old stone carrier.

From 8 a.m. until dusk, he works alongside his twin brother and five or six other boys from their village, scooping up river rocks and briskly carrying them up a hill. They look more like little men than boys: No smiles. Each step sturdy and determined. Not an ounce of energy wasted.

Anwar is exhausted but works fast. He even stops to help friends when they struggle with their buckets.

Though the work is grueling, it will help the children and their families eat. The region has some of the country's highest chronic malnutrition rates, according to a report released last year by the European Commission Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection Department. That deprivation severely affects mental and physical development.

The work of humanitarian organizations has been greatly limited in northern Rakhine. A lack of vaccination coverage in the neglected area means they are exposed to almost every preventable childhood disease, says Vickie Hawkins, the deputy head of mission in Myanmar for Doctors Without Borders, which has worked in the area for 15 years.

If Rohingya children get critically ill, they might never make it to a hospital, either because their families cannot afford bribes demanded at checkpoints or because of the Sittwe travel ban.

Mohamad Toyoob, a 10-year-old Rohingya, has received medical care, but not the surgery that doctors have recommended.

He lifts up his shirt, pressing on the right side of his stomach, where he has felt sharp pain for the past three years. "I don't know what's wrong," he says. "It feels like there is something inside."

One diagnosis among the stack he has saved says "abdominal mass," followed by a series of question marks.

The doctors Mohamad saw at a limited-capacity public hospital are unable to perform the potentially life-saving surgery they recommended. To get it, he would have to go to Sittwe, which is off-limits, or Bangladesh. The latter is possible, if his family pays hefty bribes, but he may not be able to get back home.

Money is another obstacle: His family can't even afford his medication, let alone surgery.

He digs into a pocket and pulls out two little plastic bags filled with red, pink, yellow and light blue pills. They cost 200 kyat (20 cents) per day.

To get the money, Mohamad works with other village kids at the riverbank, struggling to lift rocks. Sometimes it makes the pain worse.

"My father lost his job after the violence," he says. "When he was working, we could afford it. But now we have nothing.

"I have to take care of myself."

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-15-Myanmar%20Portraits-Childhood%20Lost/id-2ae017caa6914f1d99544e5741bd97fe
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Monday, October 14, 2013

Tour Three Sites That Almost Gave Us A Very Different L.A.

Tour Three Sites That Almost Gave Us A Very Different L.A.

It would appear that, as a country, we're experiencing some serious regret (or relief?) in examining plans for our cities that never came to fruition. San Francisco looked at its Unbuilt SF, a similar show opened in Washington D.C.last year, and out here in L.A.—the land of broken promises and shattered dreams—there's Never Built Los Angeles.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ZhSOvWHZpNY/tour-three-sites-that-almost-gave-us-a-very-different-l-1444924466
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Sunday, October 13, 2013

Police: 5 shot at Hmong festival in Tulsa, Okla.

TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Police have arrested two Hmong suspects in an attack at a Hmong New Year's festival in Tulsa, Okla., in which five people were wounded.


Capt. Mike Williams says police don't know a motive for Saturday night's shooting at the Green Country Event Center.


He says a police helicopter that was in the area spotted a suspicious vehicle driving away with its headlights off. He says officers arrested the two suspects after pulling them over and recovered a semi-automatic handgun they believe was used in the attack.


All five victims are Hmong. Williams says two are being treated for torso wounds and the other three are being treated for arm or leg wounds. He says one victim is in critical condition and another may lose a leg.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-5-shot-hmong-festival-tulsa-okla-024341959.html
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

Rodriguez: Mexico have been careless

Rodriguez: Mexico have been careless

© FIFA.com

Wednesday 17 June 1970 may have been a working day but that was not going to stop Mr and Mrs Rodriguez and their 11-year-old son Jaime from heading down to the local shop in San Salvador to watch the FIFA World Cup™ semi-final between Italy and West Germany, broadcast live that day from Mexico.

As everyone knows, La Squadra Azzurra pulled out all the stops to beat their combative opponents 4-3 in a match that went down in history, one made even more memorable by the sight of Franz Beckenbauer challenging for every ball with his arm in a sling to protect his dislocated shoulder.

What very few people know, however, is that that classic showdown had a profound effect on the young Jaime, who turned to his parents at the end of the game and said: “One day I’m going to play in the World Cup too.”

Little Jaime was as good as his word, fulfilling his dream by running out for his country at the 1982 world finals in Spain and playing in leagues as far afield as Mexico, Germany, Finland and Japan.  

La Chelona has since moved into administration and is now his country’s Minister of Sport and a member of FIFA’s Football Committee, where he rubs shoulders with none other than Franz Beckenbauer, the imperious centre-half who inspired him all those years ago.

“It’s just incredible to be by his side. He was my hero,” said a smiling Rodriguez on his visit to Zurich last week. “I asked him to sign a Cosmos shirt he gave me at the end of a friendly we once played. Obviously I had it framed and it’s hanging up in my house.”

Taking the opportunity to chat to the former El Salvador international, FIFA.com asked Rodriguez about his playing career, the difficult situation Salvadoran football currently finds itself in and the final round of the CONCACAF qualifying competition for Brazil 2014, with Mexico’s travails catching his eye in particular.

FIFA.com: El Salvador has been in the news lately for all the wrong reasons, with 14 players receiving suspension for match-fixing. How has the news affected you?
Jaime Rodriguez: It’s been a massive blow for the game in our country. I just can’t get my head round the idea of people deliberately going out to lose a game. I feel very hurt by it. We’ve got a very tough job ahead of us. We’ve got to turn a whole generation around and work with the youngsters, get back to the cultural and educational basics of our game.

The national team failed to make it to last round of qualifying for Brazil 2014. Have you been following the competition?

Absolutely. I think Central American football has come on a lot, as Costa Rica, Honduras and Panama have shown. Nobody would ever have thought that Mexico would be struggling at this stage of the competition and needing to win a game at home. They’ve always been unbeatable at the Azteca, but teams have got better these days and they prepare for everything.

I see players today who throw themselves on the ground and complain, but I kicked Diego over and over and he never said anything.

Jaime Rodriguez on Diego Maradona

You know Mexican football inside out and you’re a contemporary of some of their recent coaches. How do you explain the situation Mexico are in?
I think they’ve got careless and underestimated the importance of the penalty box. They’ve got talent but they don’t have leaders on the pitch. The last role model they had was Cuauhtemoc Blanco, and now they’ve had to recall Rafa Marquez for a crucial game, which just shows that they don’t have any leaders. I played there for ten years. I know their football very well and I follow their league closely. Central American sides aren’t scared when they go to the Azteca now. They’re not frightened by the altitude or the prospect of playing in front of 100,000 fans. That’s been lost now.

Will they qualify?
It’s going to be difficult for them. The Mexican press are already thinking about New Zealand and they haven’t even played Panama yet. That’s a huge mistake. The Panamanians are brimming with enthusiasm and the Dely Valdes brothers are doing a great job coaching their new generation. I wouldn’t like to say who’ll win. It’s a high-risk match.

Staying on the subject of the World Cup, is it true you covered up an injury because you were worried about not making the squad in 1982?

Yes. I fractured my ankle playing in Germany on 4 February. I remember the date clearly. The World Cup was in June and I couldn’t reveal the problems I was having. I kept quiet and carried on working. I was hurting deep down but the World Cup was my dream. I started playing again on 4 April.

The lack of information in El Salvador worked in your favour obviously.

Of course! In those days a photo taken on a Sunday wouldn’t be in the paper until Wednesday. The World Cup was a dream I’d had since I was a boy, since I saw Beckenbauer. How was I going to miss it? We were drawn in the same group as Argentina too. They were the world champions and they had [Diego] Maradona. I simply had to be there.

What was it like to play against Maradona?

He’s the greatest player I’ve ever seen, one of my biggest idols. I played against him four times. I see players today who throw themselves on the ground and complain, but I kicked Diego over and over and he never said anything. He’d just look at me, I’d help him up and that was that. A true great.

Is there any memory that stands out in particular?

I kicked him a lot! (laughs) The last time was in the Showbol [an indoor tournament held in Argentina] a little while ago. He laughed and said to me: “You again! You don’t leave me alone even in friendlies!” He’s up there with the best I’ve faced in my life.

Where does Magico Gonzalez fit in?

Magico was one of the greats and we’re pals. He was quick and could go past people just like that. He was a genius who came alive on the pitch and always showed up when things got tough. Maradona said he was the best he’d ever seen. When I watch videos of Johan Cruyff I feel like I’m watching Magico.

And what kind of player were you?

In pretty much the same mould as Jorge Bermudez or Carles Puyol. Very committed. It goes without saying that it’s easier to destroy in football than create, and we all worked for Magico.

You went to Japan in the early 1990s for the launch of the J-League. What was that like?

If I hadn’t gone to Germany or Finland first, I don’t know if I’d have stuck it out in Japan. It was hard. Everything’s different there: the culture, religion, food, discipline, training times and the language. I remember saying hello to people in English and them not answering or even looking at me. The coach spoke English, but not to me. He said I had to learn the language and adapt because I was the foreigner. I stuck at it, though. They’ve changed their mindset and they’re a major power in Asia now, most of which is down to Zico if you ask me.

One last question. You’ve always seemed to achieve all your goals. Is there any dream you still want to see fulfilled?

I want El Salvador to reach the World Cup again and for other young players to do what I did. There’s nothing that’s impossible in life. We qualified in the middle of a war and now we’re going through tough times with the gangs. I want kids to look at [Lionel] Messi, Neymar and [Cristiano] Ronaldo and say: ‘I’ll be there one day’. It can be done. 

Source: http://www.fifa.com/newscentre/news/newsid=2193273/index.html?cid=rssfeed&att=
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