Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Christians Flee After Nigeria Massacre

JOS, Nigeria: Christian villagers in Nigeria fled their homes following threats of new attacks in the aftermath of a massacre, despite the presence Tuesday of troops designed to restore calm to the region.

As mass burials for some of the 500 victims of an orgy of violence took place near the city of Jos, condemnation poured in from world leaders and Acting President Goodluck Jonathan sacked his chief security advisor.

But observers warned that the government must tackle deep-rooted poverty in order to combat the underlying causes of the ethnic tensions which have seen thousands killed in the region in recent years.

While troops patrolled the three villages where members of the mainly Muslim Fulani ethnic group embarked on their killing spree, residents of neighbouring villages said they had already received new threats.

With a six-month-old baby strapped to her back, Patricia Silas, 30, and her two neighbours turned her heels on her village of Tin-Tin, saying she would not hang around to become another statistic.

"We are fleeing our village because we are afraid we might be the next target of attack by these Fulani," she told AFP.

"They have been making phone calls warning they are going to attack. We take these threats seriously, we don't want to be caught off-guard," she added.

Silas said the threats came from Fulanis previously settled in the village but who left after violence in January in which at least 326 people died.

"They are saying they want to avenge their loss," said Silas.

Officials said more than 500 people from the mainly Christian Berom ethnic group were hacked to death with machetes, axes and daggers in three villages of Dogo Nahawa, Ratsat and Zot on Sunday morning.

Survivors say the authorities did nothing to prevent the butchery which came at a time when a curfew first imposed after January's bloodshed was meant to be in place. Related article: Survivors' pain as victims buried

Thousands have been killed in recent years in strife in and around Jos, which is on the dividing line between the mainly Muslim north and Christian dominated south.

UN chief Ban Ki-Moon was among those calling for calm while US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also urged "all parties to exercise restraint".

However as relatives of the dead attended funerals, talk of revenge hung heavily in the air.

As a group of men huddled in small groups at Dogo Nahawa, one was overheard saying "we will take revenge".

Raymond Gboum, a Christian clergy organising rescue operations in affected areas told AFP tension was mounting in the villages.

"The Beroms in the area are really aggrieved and now it's like they are on the attack," he told AFP.

The UN's human rights chief, Navi Pillay, said she was appalled by the massacre but said the government had to tackle festering poverty.

"Better security is clearly vital," Pillay said, "but it would be a mistake to paint this purely as sectarian or ethnic violence, and to treat it solely as a security issue.

"What is most needed is a concerted effort to tackle the underlying causes of the repeated outbreaks of ethnic and religious violence which Nigeria has witnessed in recent years, namely discrimination, poverty and disputes over land," she added.

Nigeria's main opposition Action Congress (AC) accused the federal government of "hypocrisy in its reaction" to the latest unrest.

"Concrete action to stop the cycle of impunity, rather than crocodile tears, will end the violence," it said.

The AC said perpetrators of violence in recent years in Jos and its environs have not been brought to justice.

The weekend violence was just the latest between rival ethnic and religious groups.

Locals said Sunday's attacks were the result of a feud which had been first ignited by a theft of cattle and then fuelled by deadly reprisals.

Rights activists also said the slaughter appeared to be revenge for the January attacks, in which mainly Muslims were killed.

How To Decline Facebook Friends


NEW YORK: A colleague I just met at work has invited me to be their friend on Facebook. I don't want to offend them, but nor do I want to share my candid photos and lousy Scrabble scores with someone I hardly know.

Can I ignore their invite?

"Can I be your friend?" might work as an ice-breaker among small children, but it's not a question you hear often between adults, at least not outside of Las Vegas.

Friendship, it is generally understood, is a relationship that evolves through shared interests, common experiences and a primeval need to share your neighbor's power tools.

Yet for many people, Facebook permits a return to the simplicity of the schoolyard.

Rather than inviting someone to be our Facebook friend only after we've become friends in the real world, many of us are using Facebook as a short-cut around all that time-consuming relationship building.

Why bother asking someone you've just met questions about their family, interests and ability to run a farm or aquarium, when you can simply send them a friend request and read the answers in your Facebook news feed? And so we think little of receiving friend requests after we meet someone for the first time at, say, a dinner party.

If you like the person, perhaps because they brought an excellent bottle of wine to the party, then you can accept the request in the hope of further opportunities to sample the contents of their cellar.

If you didn't get to taste the wine because they accidentally spilled the bottle over your brand new party dress, then etiquette experts would probably agree that you can decline the friend request, send them a dry-cleaning bill and humiliate them in a derisory posting to your real Facebook friends.

In the workplace, however, the dynamic is very different. The consequences of offending someone by ignoring their friend request are greater with a colleague you see every day than with a careless dining companion you may never meet again.

So why are people you work with increasingly offering to share their Facebook output?

Joan Morris DiMicco, an IBM researcher who studies social software in the workplace, said it's partly because some people just don't anticipate the ramifications of sharing their personal life with colleagues.

But it's also a function of the Facebook interface, which recommends other people for you to friend.

"Once you've connected to one person you work with you get recommendations to connect to others that you work with," she said.

Of course, many people don't have a problem with being Facebook friends with colleagues, especially those they know well. But for those who would rather keep their work and private lives separate, there are options other than ignoring an unwanted friend request.

One is to accept the invitation and then use Facebook's privacy settings to limit the flow of information between you and your new "friend." To do this, you can create a "colleagues" list from the Friends menu and then add to it your new friend. Then navigate to the privacy settings and use the "Profile Information" section to control what information people on the "colleagues" list can see.

An alternative, says workplace etiquette expert Barbara Pachter, is to suggest to the colleague that you connect instead on LinkedIn, a social network for professional relationships.

"You can just go ahead and ask them to join you on LinkedIn and hope they forget they sent you a Facebook friend request," said Pachter, the author of New Rules @ Work.

"Or you can say, Thanks for asking me. I'm keeping Facebook for my family and friends. I'm asking you to join me on my professional network instead.'"

Pachter said that whatever you do, it's important not to offend your colleague -- and that's not just because politeness is good etiquette.

"The person you offend might end up being your boss next year," she said.

Got a question about the etiquette of email, social networks and other workplace technologies? Send them to richard.baum@reuters.com or via Twitter to @rbaum.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Killer Wave Hitting Cruise Ship


The Maltese-flagged Greek Cypriot-owned Mv Louis Majesty cruise liner docked at Barcelona's harbour on March 4. Terrified passengers told Thursday how three giant rogue waves smashed through the front windows of the Mv Louis Majesty, killing two people and causing mass panic on the liner.




A general view of the "Louis Majesty" cruise ship at Barcelona's harbour March 4, 2010


People work near broken windows of the "Louis Majesty" cruise ship, at Barcelona's harbour March 4, 2010. Two people have been killed and seven injured by a large wave which struck a cruise ship in the Mediterranean Sea near Spain, coast guard officials said on Wednesday. A coastguard spokesman added that the Maltese-registered "Louis Majesty" was heading for Genoa when it ran into rough seas off the northeast Spanish coast.

A woman stands onboard the "Louis Majesty" cruise ship at Barcelona's harbour March 4, 2010. Two people have been killed and seven injured by a large wave which struck a cruise ship in the Mediterranean Sea near Spain, coast guard officials said on Wednesday. A coastguard spokesman added that the Maltese-registered "Louis Majesty" was heading for Genoa when it ran into rough seas off the northeast Spanish coast


Mediterranean: Killer 8-metre high waves caught on video. A dramatic video of deadly 8-metre high waves smashing into a cruise liner has been released. Killing 2 people.
http://sg.video.yahoo.com/watch/7090579
News Break Thru...



http://sg.video.yahoo.com/watch/7089151/18453526
Video taken by Passenger on board



Waves Hits Cruise Ship And Kills 2 People 3/3/10

Friday, March 5, 2010

Wild Deer Hits Car On Highway


SINGAPORE: A wild deer was injured along an expressway after it dashed onto oncoming traffic and hit a car Wednesday morning.

Police said they received a call at about 5.30am, saying that an injured deer was lying along the Seletar Expressway, near Mandai Zoo.

Eyewitnesses told MediaCorp that the deer was so big that it blocked an entire lane, causing a traffic jam.

A caller to the MediaCorp Hotline, Teo Ah Chong, said he stopped his car when he saw the deer on the expressway.

Mr Teo said the deer appeared to be "panicking" and ran into his car.

The Wildlife Reserves Singapore was alerted and it picked up the animal.

It told MediaCorp that the deer was badly injured and had to be put to sleep.

It had a deep gash on its hip and was bleeding from the nose.

Its antlers were also broken.

The Wildlife Reserves Singapore said the deer was a wild animal, aged between three and four.

Quake Rocks Taiwan

TAIPEI: A STRONG 6.4-magnitude earthquake hit eastern Taiwan on Saturday, the US Geological Survey said, the biggest tremor to strike the island so far this year.

The epicentre of the quake, which occurred at 9.02pm (1302 GMT) was 25 kilometres (15 miles) south-east of the eastern city of Hualien, according to the USGS.

Buildings were shaking for about 20 seconds as far away as the capital Taipei in the northern part of the island. The quake was at a depth of 44.6 kilometres (27.7 miles), according to the USGS.

In the city of Hualien a number of minor incidents were reported in the minutes after the quake. 'There were gas leaks and minor fires and people trapped in elevators,' an official at the Hualien fire department told AFP by telephone.

The fire department also said three people had sought medical help after feeling unwell due to the leakage of an unidentified substance.

Local TV reported that a high-speed railway linking Taipei to the southern city of Kaohsiung had been suspended as a safety precaution. There were also TV reports of interruptions in the power supply in a northern district of Taipei.

Singapore Sticks To Ban On Chewing Gum

SINGAPORE: Singapore on Thursday stuck to its 18-year ban on the import and sale of chewing gum, which has become an international symbol of the city-state's image as a strict society.

"The government stands by its decision to ban chewing gum," Maliki Osman, parliamentary secretary at the Ministry of National Development, told parliament.

"Chewing gum has not been a significant problem since that ban took effect. There have been concerns that lifting the ban on chewing gum could result in chewing gum litter and undermine ongoing efforts to curb littering," he said.

Osman said as the reason for the imposition of the ban is still valid, "the government's position is that the ban shall remain."

He was responding to a question in parliament from a fellow member of the ruling People's Action Party who asked when the ban would be lifted, arguing it had been used by Singapore's detractors to criticise its tough governance laws.

Singapore, known worldwide for its squeaky clean image, banned the import and sale of chewing gum in 1992 in a bid to eradicate the problem of people sticking the gum on chairs, tables, lifts and other public areas.

One of the key reasons for the ban had been the disruption of services on Singapore's subway train system because of chewing gum being stuck on the doors and causing delays.

Singapore partially lifted the ban in 2004 by allowing the sale of chewing gum for therapeutic purposes after the conclusion of a US-Singapore Free Trade Agreement.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Chile Quake Moved Earth's Axis



WASHINGTON: The powerful earthquake that shook Chile on Saturday probably shifted the Earth's axis and made days slightly shorter, a NASA scientist said.

Richard Gross, a research scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, calculated that the planet's axis would have shifted by eight centimeters (three inches) during the 8.8 magnitude quake, NASA said in a statement.

Earth days are 24 hours long because that's the amount of time it takes the planet to make one full rotation on its axis, so shifting the axis would affect rotation.

If, indeed, the planet's axis did shift by eight centimeters during the Chilean quake, days would have shortened by 1.26 microseconds, Gross calculated.

A microsecond is one-millionth of a second, so no need to adjust watches just yet.

The Chilean quake shifted the Earth's axis by even more than the 9.1-magnitude temblor off Indonesia that set off the deadly tsunami in Asia in 2004, Gross worked out.

That's partly because the faultline responsible for the earthquake in Chile "dips into Earth at a slightly steeper angle than does the fault responsible for the 2004 Sumatran earthquake" and is more effective at moving Earth's mass vertically and shifting the planet's axis.

The 2004 quake in Asia caused the Earth to move by around seven centimeters and chopped an estimated 6.8 microseconds off the length of a day, NASA said.

APPLE Sues HTC

WASHINGTON: Apple announced Tuesday that it had filed a lawsuit against HTC, maker of the Nexus One smartphone from Google, accusing the Taiwan company of infringing on 20 iPhone patents.

"We can sit by and watch competitors steal our patented inventions, or we can do something about it," Apple chief executive Steve Jobs said in a statement.

"We've decided to do something about it. We think competition is healthy, but competitors should create their own original technology, not steal ours," Jobs said.

Apple accused HTC of infringing on 20 Apple patents related to the "user interface, underlying architecture and hardware" of the iPhone.

The company, based in Cupertino, California, said the lawsuit was filed in a US District Court in the state of Delaware and with the US International Trade Commission.

Apple has sold more than 40 million iPhones since introducing the smartphone in 2007.

HTC makes handsets for a number of leading companies and is the manufacturer of the Nexus One unveiled by Apple rival Google in January.

Apple is currently being sued by Nokia for patent infringement and has countersued the Finnish mobile phone giant .

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Separuh Jiwaku Pergi - Anang Hermansyah


Separuh Jiwaku Pergi
Memang indah semua
Tapi berakhir luka
Bermain hati dengan sadarmu
Kau tinggal aku ...

Reff:
Benar ku mencintaimu
Tapi tak begini
Kau khianati hati ini
Kau curangi aku

Kau bilang tak pernah bahagia
Selama dengan aku
Itu ucap bibirmu
Kau dustakan semua
Yang kita bina
Kau hancurkan semua

Monday, March 1, 2010

Happiness Helps Ward Off Cardiac Disease


PARIS: People with a sunny outlook on life are less likely to develop heart disease than those who are less happy or outright glum, according to a study published on Thursday.

Its authors say it is the first investigation to give objective data to support the belief that high morale also helps a strong heart.

Publishing in the European Heart Journal, the Canadian team followed 1,739 men and women over 10 years who were enrolled in a health-monitoring project in Nova Scotia.

At the start of the study, trained nurses gave an assessment of the participants' risk of heart and disease.

Using both self-reporting and clinical assessment, the observers rated symptoms of depression, hostility and anxiety as well as "positive" counterparts -- joy, happiness, enthusiasm and contentment -- on a five-point scale.

Taking age, sex and cardiovascular risk factors into account, the researchers found that over the 10 years, "increased positive affect" lessened the risk of heart disease by 22 percent for each point on the scale.

"Participants with no positive affect were at a 22-percent higher risk of ischaemic heart disease (heart attack or angina) than those with a little positive affect, who were themselves at 22 percent higher risk than those with moderate positive affect," explained Karina Davidson, director of the Center for Behavioral Cardiovascular Health, New York.

She added: "We also found that if someone who was usually positive had some depressive symptoms at the time of the survey, this did not affect their overall lower risk of heart disease."

The investigators offer up several theories to explain the phenomenon.

One is that people with "positive affect" may have longer periods of rest and relaxation and recover more quickly from stress.

They caution, though, that clinical trials are needed to explore the heart-happiness link before doctors can issue any recommendations on how to prevent cardiac disease by enhancing positive emotions.