Diaspora Tamils protest outside UNHRC

Posted by Unknown on Tuesday, September 16, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

1Hundreds of Tamils staged a protest outside the UN office in Geneva yesterday (Monday) where the UN Human Rights Council is currently meeting, the Tamil Guardian website reported.
The website said that Tamils came from across Europe to take part in the mass demonstration and rally demanding justice for the alleged genocide in Sri Lanka and a referendum on independence.
Carrying banners and placards decrying the ongoing military occupation of the North-East and stating “Our Homeland Tamil Eelam” and “Tamil sovereignty cannot be compromised!”, diaspora Tamils marched through the city, past the Palais des Nations where the UN Human Rights Council’s 27th session is currently taking place.

Ferrari will build more cars with Marchionne as chairman

Posted by Unknown on Thursday, September 11, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

MILAN (Bloomberg) -- Ferrari will build more cars than previously planned after Sergio Marchionne, CEO of parent Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, takes the top job at the supercar maker next month.
The plan contrasts with the strategy of Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, who announced his resignation as Ferrari chairman on Wednesday after 23 years following a clash with Marchionne. Montezemolo wanted to limit the company's volumes to 7,000 cars a year to safeguard its exclusivity. Marchionne indicated in May that the brand had the potential to sell about 10,000 vehicles annually.
Marchionne, who will become Ferrari chairman on Oct. 13, said he plans to gradually increase production of vehicles like the $1.3 Million LaFerrari to keep pace with growing numbers of ultra-wealthy consumers. "If that class increases, we should be able to follow them," Marchionne said today at an event in Balocco, Italy. Otherwise, "the waiting list will become too long, and people get tired."
Ferrari, based in Maranello, Italy, is 90 percent-owned by Fiat and a key component of Marchionne's plans to expand in luxury cars following the merger to create Fiat Chrysler Automobiles.
Montezemolo, who took charge of the unit in 1991, wanted to maintain Ferrari's autonomous status and not become a subsidiary like Volkswagen Group’s Lamborghini.
"People should not underestimate the importance of Ferrari for the group," said Marchionne. "Structurally, in terms who we are as carmaker, they have and will continue to define us."
Financial needs
Marchionne will take the top job at Ferrari on the same day that shares of the merged entity FCA are set to start trading in New York. The executive said today that while the group doesn't "technically" need to raise money to finance his 55 billion euro ($71 billion) expansion plan, FCA's new board will review options in late October.
Marchionne added that Fiat is on track to achieve its 2014 earnings goals, helped by the sales of Chrysler in North America. The Italian manufacturer is seeking to increase profit by as much as 18 percent this year.
To keep boosting earnings in the coming years, Fiat Chrysler plans to roll out more upscale models like the Maserati Ghibli sedan, which uses engines developed and built by Ferrari.
While Marchionne says there are no plans to sell shares in the supercar unit, it isn't critical to the group over the long term. "Do I think they are essential to the configuration of FCA forever? The answer is no," Marchionne said today. "But they represent the best of what a carmaker can be."

Europe should not judge Sri Lanka on human rights: Miss Earth – Air 2013

Posted by Unknown on Saturday, August 2, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

Katia Wagner, the title holder of Miss Earth – Air 2013, says that European nations should not judge Sri Lanka over its human rights situation and that she did not see “anything bad” during her visit to the Island nation. 

Asked about her opinion on the constant criticism of Sri Lanka’s human rights situation by European and Western nations, Wagner said: “I have to tell the Europeans that it’s not us to judge Asian countries and it’s not us to judge about human rights in Sri Lanka.” 

“Everyone has its own culture and probably Europeans have their own culture that maybe Sri Lankans don’t understand,” she told Ada Derana, in an interview.  

The beauty queen said she thinks Sri Lanka is a very nice country with very nice people and that she “didn’t see anything bad here in Sri Lanka.”

Miss Wagner stated that she will have a bond with Sri Lanka forever. 

Wagner, here on a special invitation by TV Derana, will crown the next Derana Veet Miss Sri Lanka for the Miss Earth 2014 beauty pageant, scheduled to be held on the 02nd of August at CITRUS, Waskaduwa.

25 year old Katia Wagner represented Austria at the Miss Earth 2013 pageant which was held in the in Philippines last year. At the final coronation, she was awarded the title Miss Earth Air 2013, given to the first runner-up at the pageant. 

The radiant and humble beauty queen from Austria thus made her country proud by the achievement in one of the most prestigoius pageants of the world last year. 

The multi-talented Katia is fluent in German, English, French, Russian, and Bahasa Indonesia and has also studied Latin. She is accompanied by Ms. Peachy O Veneracion  who is the Vice president & project director of Miss Earth Organization. 

Fear of Ebola virus in Asia and Europe

Posted by Unknown on Thursday, July 31, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

Countries in Asia and Europe are on alert following fears that the Ebola virus could get out of control. This is in the wake of serious outbreaks in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, although suspect cases reported outside of these countries have thus far tested negative for the virus.
International medical aid group Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has reported more than 1,000 cases and more than 600 deaths in the west African region.
“While the number of cases in Guinea has declined significantly, in neighbouring Sierra Leone and Liberia more and more people are being infected with the virus,” said MSF. “With resources already stretched, health authorities and international organisations are struggling to bring the outbreak under control.”
In Asia, Hong Kong has announced quarantine measures for suspected cases. It received one case arriving from Africa with possible symptoms, but eventually tested negative for the virus.
Other countries such as Britain have regarded the threat seriously – with one suspect case also testing negative – and have taken necessary precautions, while others have seen medical professionals who have worked in the affected regions quarantining themselves.
For now, the virus seems to be contained in west Africa, although MSF raised concerns that countries might not be able to deal with an outbreak should the virus spread.
An international spread of the virus could lead to restrictions on air travel, although no plans are currently considered.

Information from the World Health Organisation website
About the virus
Ebola virus disease (formerly known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever) is a severe, often fatal illness, with a death rate of up to 90%. The illness affects humans and non-human primates (monkeys, gorillas, and chimpanzees).
The origin of the virus is unknown but fruit bats are considered the likely host of the Ebola virus, based on available evidence.
Ebola is introduced into the human population through close contact with the blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected animals. In Africa, infection has occurred through the handling of infected chimpanzees, gorillas, fruit bats, monkeys, forest antelope and porcupines found ill or dead or in the rainforest.
Currently there is no licensed vaccine for Ebola virus disease. Several vaccines are being tested, but none are available for clinical use right now. Raising awareness of the risk factors and measures people can take to protect themselves are the only ways to reduce illness and deaths.
Transmission
Once a person comes into contact with an animal that has Ebola, it can spread within the community from human to human. Infection occurs from direct contact (through broken skin or mucous membranes) with the blood, or other bodily fluids or secretions (stool, urine, saliva, semen) of infected people. Infection can also occur if broken skin or mucous membranes of a healthy person come into contact with environments that have become contaminated with an Ebola patient’s infectious fluids such as soiled clothing, bed linen, or used needles.
Health workers have frequently been exposed to the virus when caring for Ebola patients. This happens because they are not wearing personal protection equipment, such as gloves, when caring for the patients.
Groups with higher risk of infection in an outbreak - health workers; family members or others in close contact with infected people; mourners who have direct contact with the bodies of the deceased as part of burial ceremonies; and hunters in the rain forest who come into contact with dead animals found lying in the forest.
Symptoms: Onset of fever, intense weakness, muscle pain, headache and sore throat are typical signs and symptoms. This is followed by vomiting, diarrhoea, rash, impaired kidney and liver function, and in some cases, both internal and external bleeding.
The incubation period, or the time interval from infection to onset of symptoms, is from 2 to 21 days. The patients become contagious once they begin to show symptoms. They are not contagious during the incubation period.
Detection and treatment
Ebola virus disease infections can only be confirmed through laboratory testing.
If a person has been in an area known to have Ebola virus disease or in contact with a person known or suspected to have Ebola and they begin to have symptoms, they should seek medical care immediately.
Any cases of persons who are suspected to have the disease should be reported to the nearest health unit without delay. Prompt medical care is essential to improving the rate of survival from the disease. It is also important to control spread of the disease and infection control procedures need to be started immediately.
To help control further spread of the virus, people that are suspected or confirmed to have the disease should be isolated from other patients and treated by health workers using strict infection control precautions.

13 planes mysteriously disappear from radars in heart of Europe

Posted by Unknown on Sunday, June 15, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

A total of 13 planes suddenly vanished off radars for about 25 minutes on two occasions over Austria and neighboring countries, Austria's flight safety monitor said, calling for an EU probe into the “unprecedented” incidents.

The flights vanished from air traffic controllers’ screens in Austria on June 5 and June 10 for 25 minutes each time, Marcus Pohanka of Austro Control – Austria’s flight safety organization – said Thursday.

Air traffic control in neighboring regions of Germany and the Czech Republic also reported similar problems.

Pohanka said the location, height, and identity of the 13 aircraft vanished over Austria both times, in what he called “unprecedented” incidents, AP reported.

He added that some neighboring countries had experienced similar problems. The daily Kurier, based in Vienna, elaborated that similar problems were experienced by flight controllers in Munich and Karlsruhe in Germany and in Prague, Czech Republic.

Poahanka declined to say which airlines and planes were involved, but suggested that some may have been passenger jets, which fly at high altitudes. The EU’s Eurocontrol and European Aviation Safety Agency will investigate the incidents.

Poahanka stressed that at no time were any of the planes in danger, as extra air traffic controllers were immediately called to their posts and emergency measures were brought in, which included immediately establishing voice contact with the pilots and the widening of flight corridors.

The Kurier cited an unnamed expert as saying that the problem was most likely to do with interference between the aircraft transponders and the ground.

Barak Obama finds economical weapons against Russia

Posted by Unknown on Friday, June 6, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

A report has revealed that in his tour to Europe Barak Obama will try to make economical weapons against Russia.
It is said that Obama will leave for Europe to uplift the corporation of NATO governments against the behaviour of Russia in front of Ukraine crisis.
Several media reports that the Russian President will direct the attention away from Obama’s lectures.
If Putin does not change his stand point about Ukraine, Obama has stated that there will be more sanctions against Moscow ruling.

‘Wikilicious’ law professor publishes nude calendar in aid of whistleblowers (PHOTOS)

Posted by Unknown on Saturday, November 23, 2013 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

An Irish legal expert has shot a “political” glamour calendar to draw attention to the work of whistleblowers. The proceeds will help fund WikiLeaks and other activist organizations.
Dr Roslyn Fuller, who specializes in international law, explained why she decided that a selection of provocative photos would do more to help Assange, Manning and others than her direct area of expertise.
“Whistleblowing is not some stuffy, intellectual issue that we can only discuss in the rarefied atmosphere of academia,” Fuller, who has lectured at the National University of Ireland in Maynooth, told RT.
“Selflessly revealing information that benefits all people and uncovers the severe abuses of power that occur in our current system is about as hot as you can get.”
But doesn’t a fun-loving calendar trivialize the ordeals of whistleblowers?

Chelsea Manning faces 35 years in prison, Julian Assange has spent more than a year living in a room in the Ecuadorean embassy, and NSA leaker Edward Snowden is unlikely to return to his homeland, staying in a secret location in Russia. 
“Trivialization was something I thought about long and hard, and I realize that people may feel differently about this,” says 33-year-old Fuller, who was born in Canada.

“But I am trying to integrate whistleblowing into mainstream culture because we aren't going to win this battle unless we can get the majority of people behind us.”

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