Pages

Blogroll

Blogger news

jeudi 15 mars 2012

The president of Syria Bachar Al assad's Emails

The president of Syria Bachar Al assad's Emails




Bashar al-Assad took advice from Iran on how to handle the uprising against his rule, according to a cache of what appear to be several thousand emails received and sent by the Syrian leader and his wife.

jeudi 1 mars 2012

10-year-old girl dies in after school fight with 11-year-old

10-year-old girl dies in after school fight with 11-year-old

A 10-year-old girl in California has died following a pre-arranged after school fist fight with another girl a year older.

10-year-old girl dies in after school fight with 11-year-old
Image 1 of 2
Students and parents walk past a memorial for student Joanna Ramos outside Willard Elementary School Photo: AP
 
10-year-old girl dies in after school fight with 11-year-old
Image 2 of 2
Segments of the memorial Photo: AP

mercredi 29 février 2012

Sleeping pills linked to higher risk of cancer, death, study says



A new study suggests that the 6% to 10% of Americans who use prescription sleep medications such as zolpidem (Ambien), temazepam (Restoril), eszopiclone (Lunesta) and zaleplon (Sonata) are more likely to develop cancer, and far more likely to die prematurely, than those who take no sleep aids.

ICRC quit Homs as evacuation talks fail

DAMASCUS — Red Cross and Red Crescent rescuers left the Syrian rebel city of Homs on Tuesday after talks to evacuate trapped Western journalists foundered, spokesman for the two aid groups said.
“Our team returned to Damascus at around 2:30 P.M. (1230 GMT) after negotiations yesterday and today with a sheikh (religious official) who was serving as an intermediary,” to evacuate the journalists, Abdel Rahman Attar told AFP.
“He asked for food and medical supplies for the residents of Baba Amr and our team accepted. We asked in return to meet the journalists, but he refused,” Attar added.
The International Committee of the Red Cross in Damascus said its delegates had left Homs for the same reasons.
“The ICRC team has returned. The negotiations have been halted and the situation is very tense in Baba Amr,” the rebel stronghold of Homs where journalists are believed trapped, said ICRC spokesman Saleh Dabbakeh.
There are three Western reporters trapped in Baba Amr, a rebel stronghold of Homs, where a rocket attack last week on a makeshift media centre also killed two other journalists.
Attar confirmed that British photographer Paul Conroy was successfully smuggled out of Homs across the border with Lebanon, where the international NGO Avaaz earlier said he was “safe.”
But Attar said “this is not the case for Edith Bouvier” – a French journalist from the daily Le Figaro who was wounded last week in a rocket attack on a makeshift media centre in the Homs rebel stronghold of Baba Amr.
Conroy was also wounded in that attack which killed veteran US reporter Marie Colvin and French photographer Remi Ochlik.
Two other journalists trapped in Homs are William Daniels, a photographer who also was on assignment for Le Figaro, and Spaniard Javier Espinosa who works for the Spanish daily El Mundo.
“It’s a real shame but I have the impression that those inside Baba Amr are not being very clear with us,” he said. — AFP __

North Korea Agrees to Curb Nuclear Work; U.S. Offers Aid


WASHINGTON — North Korea agreed to suspend nuclear weapons tests and uranium enrichment and allow international inspectors to monitor activities at its main nuclear complex, the North’s official news agency and the State Department announced on Wednesday. The promises could end years of a standoff that has allowed the North’s nuclear program to continue with no international oversight and are part of a deal that included an American pledge to ship food aid to the isolated, impoverished nation.

Although the Obama administration called the steps “important, if limited,” they signaled thatthe country’s new leader, Kim Jong-un, is willing to at least engage with the United States. Administration officials have been watching closely to see if he would resort to military provocations to establish his reputation following the death of his father, Kim Jong-il, late last year.
North Korea also agreed on a moratorium on launchings of long-range missiles, which have in the past raised military tensions with South Korea and Japan.
North Korea has agreed in the past to halt its nuclear program only to back out, demanding more concessions or accusing the United States of reneging on its obligations. And the statement Tuesday from the North’s official Korean Central News Agency appeared to give the country’s leaders wiggle room again this time, saying that Pyongyang would carry out the agreement “as long as talks proceed fruitfully.”
Still, North Korea’s agreement to allow inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency to return to the country appeared to be a significant concession. After years of negotiations, North Korea expelled inspectors and went on to test nuclear devices in 2006 and 2009. American intelligence officials believe the country has enough fuel already for six to eight weapons.
If the North lives up to its agreement to stop uranium enrichment, it could help ease some anxieties in Washington over the program at a time when the administration, in an election year, is consumed with halting Iran’s nuclear program before Israel decides to stage an attack.
For the relatively young and inexperienced Mr. Kim, the agreement could be crucial to solidifying his hold on power and the backing of the powerful military, analysts in South Korea said. He needs to show in the early months of his rule that he is improving people’s lives after years of food shortages and a devastating famine. Bringing in 240,000 metric tons of food aid from the United States will surely help.
The timing is also important for Mr. Kim, analysts said, because his father had declared this would be a breakout year for North Korea, when its economy would take off and the country would stage elaborate national celebrations. The celebrations will mark the 100-year anniversary of the birth of Kim Il-sung, the nation’s founder and Kim Jong-un’s grandfather.
Food aid — and better international relations that could lead to economic support — are considered critical for the country’s leaders to be able to stage the celebrations with the lavishness their people have come to expect.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, speaking at a House Appropriations Committee hearing, expressed cautious optimism.
“The United States, I will be quick to add, still has profound concerns,” she said. “But on the occasion of Kim Jong-Il’s death, I said that it is our hope that the new leadership will choose to guide their nation onto the path of peace by living up to its obligations. Today’s announcement represents a modest first step in the right direction.”
She added that the United States will be watching closely and judging North Korea’s new leaders by their actions.
Two days of talks in Beijing last week between the United States and North Korea initially appeared to have produced few concrete results. But after the North Korean negotiators returned home, the country’s leaders responded positively to American offers to resume international negotiations — and deliver the food aid — provided the country agreed to the steps announced on Wednesday.
In a statement, the State Department said that in exchange, the United States was “prepared to take steps to improve our bilateral relationship in the spirit of mutual respect for sovereignty and equality” and to allow cultural, educational and sports exchanges with North Korea.
Officially, the Obama administration has refused to link food aid directly to progress in talks, saying that should be decided purely on humanitarian grounds. But American officials said they relented after the North Koreans insisted on the aid being part of any agreement. The State Department’s announcement did not say when the moratorium would begin, when international inspectors would return to North Korea or when the so-called six-party talks would resume between North Korea, South Korea, the United States, China, Russia and Japan.
Wednesday’s agreement only sets a potential stage for restarting the six-nation talks. Much tougher negotiations lie ahead if and when the multilateral talks begin to discuss the terms of permanently ending the north’s nuclear programs.

Steven Lee Myers reported from Washington and Choe Sang-Hun from Seoul, South Korea.

International herald tribune 29-02-20012 

mardi 28 février 2012

ما قاله الشوباني عن مهرجان موازين

ما قاله الشوباني عن مهرجان موازين


إن على المهرجان أن لا يصرف في ميزانيته المال العام، و إذا كان هناك من يستطيع أن يجيش هؤلاء الفنانين ويقدم لهم المليارات والملايين من ماله الخاص ويؤدي فاتورة البث التلفزي ويؤدي أجور الأمن الخاص بدل استغلال الموارد البشرية لوزارة الداخلية لتأمين تجمعات ضخمة ولأيام متعددة دون تعويض، فليس لدي أدنى مشكلة".


موقفي صريح ومبدئي ويقوم على أنه لا يجب أن يصرف المال العام في مهرجان خاض بحكم علاقات خاصة واستثنائية، بالإضافة إلى استفادته من الدعم ومن البث المباشر لسهراته".


مهرجان موازين لا يمكن أن يظل خارج منطق الحكامة والمحاسبة"، وزمن حزب الدولة انتهى ويجب أن ينتهي معه زمن مهرجان الدولة، كما يجب أن ينتهي كل سلوك فوقي يشعر معه المواطنون بالاستعلاء والاستقواء برموز الدولة وإمكانياتها المادية والبشرية لأنها أمور غير قابلة للتحيز والخوصصة"



عن هسبريس

أن تكون طالبا في المغرب

أن تكون طالبا في المغرب...


أن تكون طالبا في المغرب..يعني أن تشرب من كأس الذل حتى الثمالة..فطلبك للعلم في عرف هذا المجتمع يجعلك إنسانا غريبا..مستقبله مجهول..كلامه غير مرغوب..وحاضره منبوذ

journaux du Maroc

 
JavaScript Free Code JavaScript Free Code