Saturday, December 31, 2011

Cuban Jewish leaders meet with jailed American (AP)

HAVANA ? A leader of Cuba's small Jewish community who visited jailed American contractor Alan Gross and even released pictures of them celebrating the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah together said Wednesday that he was in good spirits and fine health. But her account was quickly disputed by the man's wife, who said he was increasingly frail and despondent.

Adela Dworin said that she and another Jewish leader spent nearly two hours Monday with Gross at the military hospital where he is being held. They lit candles, ate potato pancakes and passed around chocolate coins to celebrate Hanukkah.

Photographs taken during the meeting show a thin Gross wearing a light-blue guayabera shirt standing between Dworin and another Cuban Jewish leader, David Prinstein. Gross has a gray beard. They are believed to be the first photos released of Gross inside the military hospital.

"His health is very good," Dworin told The Associated Press ahead of the photos' release. "He has gained some weight. He's not fat, but he's not so thin anymore."

But that account was questioned by Gross's wife, Judy, who revealed that she had traveled to Cuba to visit her husband a few weeks ago, and said she speaks to him regularly on the phone.

"He is deteriorating more and more every day," she wrote in a statement. "He told me he is feeling very hopeless ... I truly do not know how much longer he can take this ordeal."

Judy Gross said her 62-year-old husband had recently cried for the first time while they spoke on the phone together, and said if he appeared cheerful in front of Dworin it was only to "put on a brave face."

"We continue to beg the Cuban authorities to let Alan come home to us," she wrote, adding that one look at the photos released by Dworin show a man who is weak and frail compared to the way he looked before his arrest.

Gross, who was portly, reportedly had lost 100 pounds (45 kilos) since he was arrested in December 2009.

Dworin said he told her he now weighs 161 pounds and walks five miles a day within the military hospital he is being held. She said he looked considerably better than on a previous visit she made to see him, and even made a muscle to show her his returning strength.

Dworin said Gross even told her he would like to return to Cuba for a visit after his release, noting he has seen the entire island except for the western province of Pinar del Rio.

Gross was working on a USAID-funded democracy-building program when he was arrested. His supporters say he was only trying to help the island's small Jewish community improve its Internet connection. Cuba says the USAID programs are aimed at bringing about regime change on the island.

Gross was sentenced to 15 years in jail earlier this year. His family and other prominent Americans have pleaded with Castro to release him on humanitarian grounds, noting that both his mother and daughter have been diagnosed with cancer since his incarceration.

Castro has voiced concern about Gross' condition, but the American was not included on a list of 2,900 prisoners the Cuban leader pardoned last week, most of them in jail for common crimes.

Gross' wife, Judy, said Saturday that her family was deeply distressed to hear that Gross was not included in the pardon.

"To receive news in the middle of Hanukkah that the Cuban authorities have once again overlooked an opportunity to release Alan on humanitarian grounds is devastating," she said.

Dworin said Gross was extremely anxious to get back home to his wife and family, but said he was upbeat during the visit.

She said they did not discuss Castro's prisoner amnesty at length during the Hanukkah celebration, but that Gross knew about it and was clearly disappointed not to be part of it.

"He wants to have hope," Dworin said. "We Jews always live with hope, or we would have disappeared from the earth long ago. A miracle could occur. After all it is Hanukkah, which is all about a miracle."

Hanukkah, which concluded Tuesday, is the Festival of Lights for Jews. The holiday commemorates the rededication of the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem in 164 B.C. According to tradition, a candelabra was lit with only enough oil for one day, but it miraculously burned for eight days.

___

Paul Haven can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/paulhaven/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/cb_cuba_imprisoned_american

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Reporting Egypt?s military propaganda

Egypt military attempts to play all political sides.

CAIRO: On the night of October 9, Egypt?s state television implored citizens to take to the streets to ?defend the armed forces? from attacks by Coptic Christians. The broadcasts went on to tell Egyptians that three soldiers had been killed in the violence.

Today, over two months on from what has been dubbed the ?Maspero Massacre? no evidence of any soldier being killed has been given, yet international media continues to report that three soldiers were killed in the violence that left 27 Coptic Christians dead after the military had opened fire and run over with armored vehicles the thousands marching for greater rights on that day.

The following month, in November, the military attacked a peaceful sit-in at Tahrir Square, sparking 6 days of clashes between protesters and police, with medical sources telling Bikyamasr.com that over 70 people were killed. The official number handed down by the ministry of health is around 40.

And earlier this month, clashes again broke out after the military attacked another peaceful sit-in at the Cabinet building. At least 17 people were killed in the most recent violence.

Bikyamasr.com reported early on during the most recent clashes a higher death toll than the ministry, and we were criticized by journalists for not waiting for ?reliable? sources such as the health ministry before reporting a rising death toll.

It is interesting that as journalists work in Egypt, the reliable sources are not the activists on the ground or the medical sources at morgues, but the government?s ministries and the armed forces itself. Are these not the same officials who spill lies to the public on national television, detail events that never happened? Manipulate the truth of what happened? At the end of the day, one must wonder if the media, especially the international media, are not complicit in detailing a false truth about the reality on the ground in Egypt?

The military has told the country that protesters are to blame for the recent clashes, accusing them of ?excessive force? and calling on ?honorable? citizens to conduct citizen arrests on ?suspicious behavior.? This, doubled with the rising number of journalists being detained, arrested and intimidated, it is shocking, almost appalling that the military junta remains a legitimate source to be quoted for any information whatsoever.

Certainly, it is the duty of a journalist to detail all sides of any conflict or story, but what do we do when one side delivers gross lies and misinformation? A CNN producer got it right earlier this month when he refused to attend the SCAF press conference following the Cabinet violence, saying on his personal Twitter account that he would not ?participate in lies.?

Nevertheless, his organization reported the military?s conference, as did we at Bikyamasr.com, but it begs the question if we should. Our duty as media is not necessarily to report whatever is being said, but to deliver the truth, as best we can, to our readers. In delivering the military?s lies as news stories, we are, in many ways, complicit with the propaganda being spewed by the military junta.

Any journalist who has spent time at length in Egypt understands the reality on the ground and has seen first-hand the abuse and violence from the military and police. While the vast Egyptian population believes the government and military story of how protesters attack security forces, the truth is different. In every single ?clash? in recent months, it was the military and not the protesters who began the violence, attacking unarmed civilians expressing their right to bring about change to the country.

Instead, reading international media, the protesters are put on the same level as the military, being accused of fomenting violence. The language being deployed by foreign articles may seem balanced, but in ?clashes? that are as unbalanced as ever ? the military has tear gas, rubber bullets, batons and live ammunition versus protesters with stones ? can it ever truly be balanced?

I believe that as the media attempts to deliver an ?unbiased? perspective on the events unfolding in Egypt they are playing directly into the hand of the military, telling their readers of unrest in the country that is partly the responsibility of the protesters. This is not the entire truth, in fact, it may not be the truth at all.

The reality is that when we, as media, report the military?s side of the story (lies) we are creating an understanding of a country that is not the facts on the ground. The facts on the ground are that the military junta has taken complete control of the country, reneging on their 6 month caretaker role and have become the new dictator in town.

It is time for the media to take a stand against the SCAF, who have for months censored reporting and delivered a story to the world that is far from reality.

We will unfortunately continue to report the military?s line on the events here, but if we do not do a better job of refuting their claims, the world will continue to see Egyptian activists as the problem and international leaders will continue to demand ?restraint on both sides.?

We can do a better job by reporting the truth. The truth is the military has co-opted the Egyptian revolution and run the country into the ground. American ally or not, it serves nobody?s purpose to report blatant lies as fact, on any level.

BM

Tags: featured, Propaganda, Reporting, SCAF

Section: Egypt, Op-ed

Source: http://bikyamasr.com/52259/reporting-egypts-military-propaganda/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Teamsters union elects three new leaders, spokesman says

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Teamsters union elects three new leaders, spokesman says ??



?????Wednesday 28th December, 2011??Source: Las Vegas Review Journal ??
THE ASSOCIATED PRESSThe Teamsters union in Las Vegas has elected three new leaders, a little more than a year after a threatened national union takeover amid board infighting and claims of misuse of funds.A spokesman said Tuesday that results of the Local 631 vote were tallied Friday and were being certified Tuesday by an arbitrator based in San Di...

Breaking News
Wednesday 28th December, 2011


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Source: http://feeds.bignewsnetwork.com/?rid=202196223&cat=1e0899715fbc2697

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Mexico official fired for saying poor smell bad (AP)

MEXICO CITY ? A Mexican anti-poverty official has been fired after posting a comment on social media sites suggesting that poor people smell bad.

Mexico's anti-poverty agency says Carlos Talavera has been fired as director of outreach brigades in the western city of Uruapan after a Facebook posting of his was re-tweeted on social media sites.

The original comment appears to describe an event attended by poor people and reads roughly "truth is this smells impressively bad, poor things."

The social development department said Tuesday that it "roundly condemns" Talavera's comment.

Talavera also apologized on his Facebook account, saying "I accept my error."

About 47 million of Mexico's 112 million people live in poverty.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_poverty_gaffe

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Foxconn to double its iPhone plant?s size, output (Appolicious)

AFP - Getty ImagesTaiwanese tech manufacturer Foxconn, one of the companies that assembles Apple?s iOS mobile devices, intends to double the size of one of its biggest plant. This could allow it to produce twice as many iPhones.

The plant is located in the Chinese city of Zhengzhou and is one which the company uses to assemble Apple?s iPhone line of smartphones, Apple Insider reported. In 2011, the plant hired 100,000 new employees, and Foxconn is working with Zhengzhou to do the same in 2012, nearly doubling the size of the plant (it currently house 130,000 workers).

According to a report from the China Daily, Foxconn?s Zhengzhou plant produces more than 200,000 iPhones every single day. The assumption is that if the plant doubles the number of workers it employs, it?ll double the output. That could seriously help Apple, which has dealt with some major supply problems with its devices in the last year. The Cupertino tech giant struggled to fill demand for the iPhone 4S after its launch earlier this year, for example, and had similar problems with the last iteration of its smartphone. Having one of Foxconn?s plants double its output could help a great deal with those issues.

Foxconn, and Apple manufacturers in general, have something of a troubled past, however. Foxconn?s Zhengzhou plant saw several employees commit suicide during the past two years, raising serious concerns about working conditions. At the plant another Taiwanese iOS manufacturer, Pegatron, an explosion on Dec. 17 injured 61 workers after the aluminum dust used to polish iPads ignited, Bloomberg Businessweek reported. Back in May, a Foxconn plant suffered a similar incident, which resulted in the deaths of three workers and 15 others were injured. Working conditions in these plants have been a point of controversy for Apple, but outsourcing those manufacturing jobs to China has also been part of the iOS success story.

The plans for Foxconn?s Zhengzhou plant will put a $1.1 billion addition on the facility. Revenue from the huge plant ? it?ll be the largest in the world ? is projected to bring in $20 billion in sales revenue in 2012 alone. The company employs more than 1 million people and provides electronics to several device makers, of which Apple is just one.

And while the addition to Foxconn?s plant will likely be good news for Apple and iOS device owners, somehow it doesn?t seem likely to be an improvement for workers. The controversy over the conditions under which our technological devices are produced is likely to continue into the next year, along with their popularity.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_appolicious_com_articles10594_foxconn_to_double_its_iphone_plants_size_output/44011911/SIG=130oltvu0/*http%3A//www.appolicious.com/tech/articles/10594-foxconn-to-double-its-iphone-plants-size-output

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Video: US won?t tolerate Iran disruption



>>> there is a new threat tonight from iran to block a critical supply route for oil. the strait of hormuz linking the persian gulf to the world sea-lan sea-lanes. tonight the u.s. navy is warning iran don't try it. more on this from our chief foreign affairs correspondent andrea mitchell in the washington bureau. andrea.

>> iran has made these threats before, but the pentagon issued that stern rebuttal because some worried this time it could be more than just bluser. they're staging military exercises near the strait possibly in response to a recent senate amendment imposing the toughest sanctions ever on iran 's banking system and oil trade. the obama administration opposed that senate voting wanting to phase in more targeted sanctions because the strait of hormuz is the key passageway for one-sixth of the oil. the crisis could add $25 a barrel at least to oil prices , hitting the world's economy and, of course, stalling the american recovery right here just as its recovering. another big concern is also that these new sanctions will hurt a key u.s. ally, japan, which relies heavily on iranian oil. the senate voted unanimously, 100 votes in favor. now the president is boxed in. if he tries to get around the sanctions, he's accused of being soft on iran and if he doesn't he risks higher oil prices and stalling the economic recovery at home in an election year.

>> andrea, while we have you here news out of syria. arab league are witnessing the uprising and the government crackdown first hand. what are they finding?

>> it's very troubling so far to u.s. officials because the arab league monitors have been on the ground for two days and they have not pushed back against restrictions that the regime has imposed on their inspections, and neez are the first outside monitors that syria has permitted in. they have blocked their access to key areas where atroscities are reported. the u.s. is withholding any formal criticism because they hope this mission can succeed. in these two days the monitors have not gotten in and activists are reporting six more killings and opposition leaders are calling this arab league effort a farce. lester.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45809882/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Mary J. Blige Takes On Pat Benatar, Journey In 'Rock Of Ages'

Queen of Hip-Hop Soul tells MTV News her character in the big-screen '80s musical is 'a light in a dark place.'
By Jocelyn Vena


Mary J. Blige
Photo: MTV News

Mary J. Blige is already one of the biggest divas in the music industry, but she's gearing up to set the big screen on fire in 2012 with the movie version of the hit Broadway show "Rock of Ages."

"In the movie 'Rock of Ages,' I play a gentleman's club owner and her name is Justice Charlier and she has to try to be a light in a dark place. ... [My role is] to make these chicks feel better about their lives and move past the strip club," she told MTV News at "VH1 Divas Celebrates Soul," where she took the stage alongside Jennifer Hudson, Kelly Clarkson and Jill Scott.

But the movie's not sad all the time. The singer noted that, much like the stage spectacle the film is based on, there are good times to be had. And for anyone who loved the Broadway show or has watched the "Rock of Ages" trailer, it's clear that '80s nostalgia and merriment will be celebrated in abundance. "[It's] a lot of '80s classic rock that I'm singing: Pat Benatar, Journey even," she said. "It's fun."

Directed by Adam Shankman, the film drops next summer and co-stars Tom Cruise, Julianne Hough, Catherine Zeta-Jones and Alec Baldwin.

Blige also was just nominated for a Golden Globe for her song from "The Help" soundtrack. Blige's "The Living Proof" also landed on the Oscars short list for Best Original Song. So, 2012 could be the year that Mary J. takes La La Land by storm.

"I'm excited about all of the success because I work really hard," she explained. "I put time in. I'm the type of artist that doesn't get anything for free. I have to bust my tail for everything, and I did exactly that."

Check out everything we've got on "Rock of Ages."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1676314/mary-j-blige-rock-of-ages.jhtml

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