Saturday 30 April 2016

7 dead, 121 rescued after a residential building collapsed in Nairobi due to heavy rain (photos)

At least seven people have been confirmed dead and 121 rescued so far after a residential building collapsed in Haruma, Kenyan capital Nairobi, late Friday night following a heavy downpour.

Rescuers including Kenyan Red Cross search and rescue team is leading efforts to find people feared trapped and possibly killed.


The Red Cross said they managed to pull three children and an adult from the remains of the six-story building, adding that 150 building units and adjacent homes were affected.

Live TV footage showed the National Youth Service and firefighters removing stones and a crowd cheering as a child was removed from the rubble.

Nairobi's Police Chief, Japheth Koome who confirmed the death toll said hours-long traffic jams caused by flooded roads delayed.

AP reports that man who said he lived in the house adjacent to the one that collapsed , said the building was constructed "shoddily" The building had been constructed in less than five months and the 126 single rooms were quickly occupied at a rent of $35 a month.

Area legislator Stephen Kariuki said this was the second building to collapse in a year. He blamed the county government of failing to follow through with demolitions of buildings that were identified as unfit for human occupation.

Meanwhile, President Uhuru Kenyatta just arrived at the scene of the incident.






Welbeck’s lone strike gives Arsenal joy amid fans protests



rsenal's English striker Danny Welbeck (R) celebrates with Arsenal's Chilean striker Alexis Sanchez (L) after scoring the opening goal during the English Premier League football game against Norwich. PHOTO: AFP/BEN STANSALL 

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger faced supporter protests before Danny Welbeck’s goal secured a 1-0 home victory over Norwich City on Saturday that moved his side up to third place.
Welbeck scored three minutes after appearing as a 56th-minute substitute to move Arsenal eight points clear of fifth place in the Premier League and strengthen their bid to qualify for the Champions League.
Defeat at the Emirates Stadium left Norwich second from bottom, two points from safety, but with a game in hand on fourth-bottom Newcastle United.
Victory brought relief to Wenger, whose decision to introduce Welbeck changed the game, and his players, who were booed off following a scoreless first half that was marked by a display of dissent from some home fans.
The protest occurred in the 12th minute, signifying the 12 years since the club last won the league, but provoked a mixed reaction, and then a more muted response when it was repeated 12 minutes from time.
A number of posters were held up around the ground declaring that it was “TIME FOR A CHANGE”, but the display was met with boos from other fans and chants of “There’s only one Arsene Wenger!”
It confirmed that the club’s supporters are divided in their views about the manager’s future, but they are unanimous in sharing a sense of frustration over their club’s failure to challenge for the title.
That feeling was underlined by club captain Mikel Arteta, who admitted in his match programme notes that Arsenal had passed up their best chance in five years to claim the title.
Some of the reasons for that failure were evident during a disjointed first-half display when Wenger’s side struggled to find any momentum against a Norwich team who created the better chances despite enjoying only limited possession.
Wenger acknowledged before the match that the only way to win round his critics is by delivering results on the pitch, although he did mount a spirited defence of his record in the decade since the club moved to the Emirates, pointing out the financial constraints he was forced to work under.
He also illustrated his loyalty to the club by stating that he had committed himself to the club to satisfy a demand for stability from the banks that funded the development of the new stadium.
– Redmond threatens –
But the Frenchman needs to deliver results now and until the introduction of Welbeck, it appeared as though an uncomfortable afternoon was likely to get even worse for him.
Arsenal were forced to rely on the reactions of goalkeeper Petr Cech to deny Nathan Redmond as early as the sixth minute.
And while the visitors were forced to defend in numbers for long periods during the first half, they were rarely troubled by a one-dimensional home attack.
Alexis Sanchez offered occasional moments of threat, but the real danger came at the other end, with Cech again called on to save from Redmond, who also fired wide with another dangerous effort.
The boos that greeted the half-time whistle provided yet another reminder of the discontent among the home supporters.
There were more signs of dissent at Wenger’s decision to withdraw Alex Iwobi and not Olivier Giroud, when Welbeck was introduced 11 minutes after the restart.
His decision was proved right, however, when Welbeck and Giroud combined for the winner, with the France international heading down Hector Bellerin’s cross for his team-mate to lash home.
Giroud immediately cupped his ear to the crowd, suggesting that he, too, felt vindicated.
Norwich remained positive and it took an excellent saving tackle from Gabriel — on for the injured Per Mertesacker — to prevent Dieumerci Mbokani connecting with Redmond’s low cross.
Arsenal, though, hung on and the risk of missing out on the Champions League receded, while Alex Neil’s Norwich have work to do if they are to avoid relegation.

Leicester show money isn’t everything – Ranieri

PHOTO: dreamteamfc.com
Leicester City’s surge to within touching distance of the Premier League title is proof that money does not always yield success, according to manager Claudio Ranieri.
Seven points clear of second-place Tottenham Hotspur, 5,000-1 outsiders Leicester will be crowned champions on Sunday if they win at Manchester United, who are fifth in the table despite a heavy pre-season outlay.
United spent £25 million ($36.5 million, 31.9 million euros) on Memphis Depay and an initial £36 million on Anthony Martial, while Leicester’s total spending was less than £30 million.
“Once in the life it can happen,” Ranieri said, in comments published by British newspapers on Saturday. “That is football. Once every 50 years a little team with less money can beat the biggest ones.
“If there are 20 teams who spend millions of pounds at the end of the season, one will win the title and three will go down.
“Now there are very special circumstances. The big teams don’t have the consistency and normal teams have the consistency during the season.
“From August to April and now it’s important to keep the same consistency in May. I’m waiting for next season. United at the top, Chelsea at the top, Liverpool, (Manchester) City and Arsenal, and we are fighting.”
While victory at Old Trafford will give Leicester the title, they will also be crowned champions if Tottenham do not better their result at Chelsea on Monday.

Townsend lifts Newcastle, Defoe saves Sunderland



Newcastle United's Andros Townsend celebrates after scoring during the English Premier League football match between Newcastle United and Crystal Palace at St James' Park in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, north east England on April 30, 2016. SCOTT HEPPELL / AFP

Andros Townsend scored a stunning free-kick as Newcastle United edged Crystal Palace 1-0 on Saturday and escaped the Premier League relegation zone at the expense of northeast rivals Sunderland.
Townsend netted with a sensational shot in the 58th minute and with Karl Darlow saving a penalty from ex-Newcastle player Yohan Cabaye, Rafael Benitez’s team claimed a potentially vital win.
Jermain Defoe scored a stoppage-time penalty to rescue a 1-1 draw at Stoke City for Sunderland and although Sam Allardyce’s side were left a point behind Newcastle in the bottom three, they retain a game in hand.
Both teams could yet end up in the relegation places at the end of the day, however, if Norwich City can contrive to win at Arsenal in the late kick-off.
A pivotal day at St James’ Park began with a minute’s applause to mark the verdicts of the new inquests into the 1989 Hillsborough disaster, which found police responsible for the deaths of 96 Liverpool fans.
Newcastle’s fans broke into a spontaneous rendition of ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’, the Liverpool club anthem, but singing quickly gave way to nail-biting as the home side struggled to make a breakthrough.
Townsend eventually made the breakthrough, the one-time England winger sending a free-kick from wide on the right whistling into the top-left corner.
Twelve minutes later, Cabaye had a chance to equalise, but the France international, who angered Newcastle fans by leaving for Paris Saint-Germain in 2014, saw his penalty brilliantly turned away by Darlow.
Sunderland could not follow Newcastle’s lead, but Defoe’s unerring 94th-minute penalty prevented them from suffering a damaging defeat.
– Noble double –
Stoke went ahead in the 50th minute through Marko Arnautovic, who was then forced off by injury, and Defoe earned his side a precious point by dispatching a spot-kick awarded for a foul on him by Geoff Cameron.
Elsewhere, West Ham United captain Mark Noble scored twice for the second game in succession as his side won 3-0 at West Bromwich Albion to replace Manchester United in fifth place.
Dimitri Payet crossed for Cheikhou Kouyate to head West Ham in front in the 34th minute and Kouyate set up Noble for his first goal before Andy Carroll crossed for the Englishman to volley in his second.
Leighton Baines scored the winner as Everton prevailed 2-1 at home to Bournemouth, after Tom Cleverley’s seventh-minute opener for the hosts had been swiftly cancelled out by Marc Pugh’s deflected strike.
But it remained an uncomfortable afternoon for Everton manager Roberto Martinez, with protesting supporters paying for a plane trailing the banner “TIME TO GO ROBERTO” to fly over Goodison Park during the game.
Meanwhile, skipper Troy Deeney scored a last-gasp brace as Watford twice came from behind to inflict a 3-2 defeat on already-relegated Aston Villa.
Villa led twice, through Ciaran Clark and Jordan Ayew, but Almen Abdi cancelled out Clark’s opener and after the hosts had lost Aly Cissokho to a red card for a last-man foul on Ikechi Anya, Deeney turned the game on its head.
Leaders Leicester City can become England’s first new top-flight title-winners since Nottingham Forest in 1978 if they win at Manchester United on Sunday.
Should they fail to win, they will still be crowned champions on Monday if second-place Tottenham Hotspur, who are seven points off the pace, cannot better their result when they visit Chelsea.

US woman sentenced to 100 years for cutting baby from stranger’s womb



Dynel Lane PHOTO: www.people.com

A judge in Colorado has sentenced a woman to 100 years in prison for cutting an eight-month-old baby from a stranger’s womb with kitchen knives, local media reported.
The sentence included the maximum penalties for attempted murder and unlawful termination of a pregnancy, which Judge Maria Berkenkotter said on Friday reflected the brutality of last year’s attack.
A jury in February found Dynel Lane guilty of attempting to kill Michelle Wilkins by beating, stabbing and choking her after luring her to her home by posting an advertisement for maternity clothes on Craigslist, the online classified listings service.
Prosecutors could not charge Lane with murdering the baby because a coroner found no evidence it had survived outside the womb.
Lane, 36, had faked a pregnancy for months, deceiving her husband David Ridley, whom she had told would be the baby’s father.
“You embrace your narcissistic fantasy to live the lie you created, and it was more important than my life and my daughter’s life,” the Times-Call quoted Wilkins as saying on the witness stand.
The court in Boulder heard that Lane had posted photos of herself online in which she had appeared pregnant and that she had sent Ridley ultrasound images she had downloaded from the Internet.
However, he had grown suspicious about her claims and pressured her to see a doctor, media reported.
Lane lured Wilkins, 26 at the time, to her house in the city of Longmont, north of Denver, in March 2015.
Prosecutors said that when Wilkins went into the basement to look at baby clothes, Lane hit her and tried to choke and smother her before cutting the baby from her womb, the Times-Call reported.
She left Wilkins on the floor unconscious while she took the baby to a hospital with Ridley — who lived with Lane and her two daughters — saying she had suffered a miscarriage, media reported.
Wilkins later regained consciousness and managed to call police. Reported to have been barely alive when she arrived at the hospital, she survived after an operation.
Lane has expressed no remorse for the attack. Asked in court if she wanted to speak, she said “no.”
However, her lawyer said she had been seriously affected by the death of her son in 2002, when he drowned in what was ruled to be an accident, the Times-Call reported.
Prosecutors’ inability to charge Lane with murdering Wilkins’ baby prompted Colorado Republicans to introduce legislation that would have allowed a murder charge.
However, Democrats rejected the bill, the third time the proposal failed in Colorado.
But 38 other states have made killing a fetus a homicide.

Bale winner puts Madrid on top of La Liga

Real Madrid's Welsh forward Gareth Bale (C) celebrates a goal next to Real Madrid's Brazilian defender Marcelo (L) and Real Madrid's defender Dani Carvajal (R) during the Spanish league football match Real Sociedad vs Real Real Madrid CF at the Anoeta stadium in San Sebastian on April 30, 2016. ANDER GILLENEA / AFP

Gareth Bale’s thunderous header 10 minutes from time moved an under-strength Real Madrid to the top of La Liga with a hard-fought 1-0 win at Real Sociedad on Saturday.
In the absence of the injured Cristiano Ronaldo and Karim Benzema, Bale stood out with a brilliant individual display capped by the winner to register Madrid’s 10th straight La Liga win.
Victory moves Real two points clear of Barcelona and Atletico Madrid, who are in action against Real Betis and Rayo Vallecano respectively later on Saturday.
As well as the absent Ronaldo and Benzema, Madrid boss Zinedine Zidane rested Marcelo, Dani Carvajal and Toni Kroos with one eye on the return leg of their Champions League semi-final against Manchester City on Wednesday.
Without the other two members of Madrid’s star ‘BBC’ frontline, Bale was charged with finding the goals and the Welshman did everything but score in a fine first-half display.
Bale pulled his first effort wide on his weaker right foot before James Rodriguez wasted the chance to open the scoring on a rare start in recent months as Geronimo Rulli turned away the Colombian’s effort at his near post.
Madrid then began to show their power from set-pieces as captain Sergio Ramos and Bale saw headers fly just wide from corners before another powerful Bale header from Rodriguez’s inch-perfect cross also fell just the wrong side of the post as Madrid completely dominated the hosts before the break.
The visitors continued to press after the break, but Rulli looked set to end their title hopes as the Argentine made brilliant save to deny Bale from another fine Rodriguez cross.
Jese Rodriguez replaced teenage striker Borja Mayoral 20 minutes from time, but also found Rulli on top form with two fierce efforts on target.
Yet, a week after leading Real back from a two-goal deficit at Rayo Vallecano, Bale made the difference again when he got across his marker to bullet home a header from Lucas Vazquez’s cross.
Sociedad had barely offered any threat on goal during the 90 minutes, but nearly snatched an equaliser in stoppage time as David Zurutuza headed a free-kick towards goal in stoppage time only to see Keylor Navas get down well to make his only significant save of the game.

84 migrants still missing after boat sinks off Libya



In this handout video capture released by the Italian Coast Guards on April 30, 2016, migrants arrive at the Lampedusa harbor after a rescue operation at sea, off the coast of Libya. Eighty-four migrants are still missing after an inflatable craft sank off the coast of Libya, according to survivors cited by the International Organization for Migrantion (IOM) on Saturday. Twenty-six people were rescued from the boat which sank yesterday, and were questioned overnight. "According to testimonies gathered by IOM in Lampedusa 84 people went missing," said IOM spokesman Flavio Di Giacomo on his Twitter feed. HO / AFP GUARDIA COSTIERA / AFP

Eighty-four migrants are still missing after an inflatable craft sank off the coast of Libya, according to survivors cited by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) on Saturday.
Twenty-six people were rescued from the boat which sank on Friday, and were questioned overnight. “According to testimonies gathered by IOM in Lampedusa 84 people went missing,” IOM spokesman in Italy Flavio Di Giacomo wrote on his Twitter feed.
Earlier Saturday Italy’s coastguard said an Italian cargo ship had rescued 26 migrants from a flimsy boat sinking off the coast of Libya but voiced fears that tens more could be missing.
The coastguard received a call from a satellite phone late Friday that helped locate the stricken inflatable and called on the merchant ship to make a detour to the area about four miles (seven kilometres) off the Libyan coast near Sabratha.
The nationalities of the rescued migrants, who were transferred to a coastguard vessel and taken to the Italian island of Lampedusa, were not immediately known.
More than 350,000 people fleeing conflict and poverty have reached Italy on boats from Libya since the start of 2014, as Europe battles its biggest migration crisis since World War II.

Russia will not ask Syrian regime to halt Aleppo raids



Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov (photo credit: AP/Mikhail Metzel)

Russia will not ask the Syrian regime to halt air raids on the war-ravaged city of Aleppo, as it believes they are helping to combat jihadist groups, Moscow’s foreign ministry said Saturday.
“No, we are not going to put pressure on (Damascus) because one must understand that the situation in Aleppo is part of this fight against the terrorist threat,” Foreign deputy foreign minister Gennady Gatilov told the Interfax news agency.
Aleppo, capital of the northern province of the same name, is a key battleground and of vital strategic significance to both sides in the Syrian civil war.
Despite a truce which came into force on February 27, what was once Syria’s economic powerhouse has become the scene of some of the worst fighting in a conflict which has killed more than 270,000 people in the past five years.
The past week has seen a spike in fighting which has left more than 200 people dead, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Dozens of civilians on the rebel-held side of Syria’s second city had to flee their homes early Saturday for fear of a ninth straight day of air raids by regime aircraft, an AFP reporter in Aleppo said.
Some 250 civilians have been killed in raids since they began on April 22 or else been caught in army and rebel crossfire, according to the Observatory.
US officials have accused Moscow of backing the attacks by a Damascus regime which Russia supports as the Syrian government gears up for an expected assault on Aleppo.
On Thursday, Washington appealed to Moscow to keep President Bashar al-Assad’s regime in check and the United States also expressed outrage over an air strike on an Aleppo hospital.
Secretary of State John Kerry said the strike matched a pattern of Syrian government attacks targeting health workers.
The Russian army responded by denying it was backing the regime strikes and indicated that no Russian war planes have flown over the city in recent days.
“Out army and the US army discuss the situation in Aleppo daily,” Gatilov said Saturday.

Minister says army ready to dislodge Boko Haram from Sambisa

Defense Minister, Mansur Muhammad Dan-Ali

The Minister of Defence, Alhaji Mansur Dan’ali, on Saturday, said the Nigerian Army was set to destroy all camps and hideouts of members of the Boko Haram sect in Sambisa forest.
Dan’ali made the statement during an inspection tour of the construction site of a new army barrack in Gusau.
According to him, the Nigerian Army is now at the verge of entering the forest and will soon flush out the insurgents terrorising some states in the northeast of Nigeria.
He said since the beginning of the present administration, tremendous success had been recorded in the fight against Boko Haram as well as cattle rustling in the country.
”We have been working seriously, going round the world, collaborating with other countries in fighting terrorism at the national, regional and international levels,’’ the minister said.
Commenting on the barrack under construction, Dan’ ali said the project was expected to be completed within the next three months.
He said that the project was part of the present administration’s efforts to ensure the comfort of the military and other security agencies.
”You know, President Muhammadu Buhari is seriously concerned about the welfare of the Nigerian Army and other security agencies as we have noticed from the attention given to them lately,’’ the minister said.
Dan’ali urged the contractor handling the project to ensure its speedy completion and also to do quality work.

Boko Haram militants kill 30 Nigerian herdsmen in north massacre



Herdsmen
At least 30 ethnic Fulani herdsman were killed by Boko Haram militants in northern Nigerian last weekend when they raided the village of Alau in Borno state.
“One of the herdsmen escaped and confirmed to us that he is the only survivor,” Amadu Kusuri, the northeast coordinator of the Fulani Miyetti Allah Association, said Thursday. The Islamist insurgents also kidnapped women and children and stole livestock in the attack on April 24 , Babangida Ali, the brother of one of those killed in Alau, said by phone.
While Nigeria says it’s making progress in the battle against Boko Haram, which has waged a violent seven-year campaign to impose its version of Islamic law on Africa’s most populous nation, the group continues to carry out massacres in remote areas and suicide bombings in towns and cities.

Nine killed in Somalia mosque collapse



somalia
At least nine people were killed and dozens injured when a mosque they were building in Somalia collapsed, residents said Saturday.
Over 100 people were helping pour a concrete foundation to the mosque in Garasballey district close to the capital Mogadishu on Friday when the structure suddenly collapsed, leaving several trapped under the debris.
Sheikh Mohamed Hashi, imam of the mosque, said around 30 people were injured.
“Nine bodies were recovered under the collapsed building, some of them have had suffocated to death, others were hit by the falling concrete walls,” said witness Ali Muhidin.
“I saw several dead bodies that were discovered under the debris, they were had been working on its construction,” said Mohamed Yahye, another resident.

Malaysia deports 32 Taiwanese fraud suspects to China



Fraud suspects wearing masks are escorted by policemen as they arrive at Taiwan's Taoyuan Airport on Friday after Malaysia deported 20 Taiwanese implicated in a fraud scheme. | AFP-JIJI

Malaysia deported 32 Taiwanese fraud suspects to China Saturday, Taiwan authorities said, leaving the island’s government furious once more in the latest bout of cross-strait diplomatic sparring.
It comes after Taipei accused Beijing of “abducting” its citizens from Kenya earlier this month.
The deportations are seen by observers as a shot across the bows of Beijing-sceptic Tsai Ing-wen, who will be inaugurated as Taiwan’s president on May 20.
“The government has filed solemn protests and regrets the development,” presidential office spokesman Charles Chen said of the deportations Saturday.
Taiwan would send a delegation to the mainland “as soon as possible” Chen said.
The 32 suspects arrived in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou on Saturday night, Taiwan’s Central News Agency reported.
They were part of a group of 52 Taiwanese detained by Malaysian police last month during five raids linked to telecom fraud, which also led to the arrests of 65 mainland Chinese and two Malaysians.
Twenty of the Taiwanese were deported back to Taiwan two weeks ago, where they were initially allowed to go free.
After complaints in Chinese state media, which labelled Taiwan a “haven of frauds”, 18 of them were later arrested. They are currently in custody in Taiwan.
Questions had swirled over the fate of the other 32 suspects, with Taiwan saying it was negotiating with Malaysia for their return.
Taiwan’s justice ministry said Saturday that it had raised concerns with China Friday after hearing the deportations were to go ahead.
But the Chinese side informed Taiwan Saturday that the suspects were being deported to the mainland, the justice ministry said.
CNA reported China had invited Taiwanese officials to go to the mainland to jointly investigate the case.
Taipei blasted Beijing earlier in April for being “rude and violent” over the deportation of 45 of its citizens from Kenya to China where they face investigation for fraud.
It has also filed a suit against several top officials in Kenya for ignoring a court decision which cleared some of the suspects and “illegally cooperating” with China to deport the Taiwanese.
Taipei has been increasingly isolated on the diplomatic stage with just 22 states recognising it after Gambia last month resumed ties with Beijing.
China considers Taiwan to be one of its provinces awaiting reunification, by force if necessary, even though the island has ruled itself since 1949 following a civil war split.

Friday 29 April 2016

Blatter ‘happy’ to testify at Platini appeal



Former FIFA president Sepp Blatter arrives to the Court of Arbitration for Sport for the appleal of Michel Platini's against his six-year FIFA ban for ethics violations on April 29, 2016 in Lausanne. Platini has been sanctioned over an infamous two million Swiss franc ($2 million, 1.8 million euro) payment he received in 2011 from then-FIFA president Sepp Blatter. / AFP PHOTO / FABRICE COFFRINI

FIFA’s disgraced former president Sepp Blatter arrived at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on Friday to testify at Michel Platini’s appeal against his six-year ban from football over ethics violations. “I was asked to be a witness today in the case concerning Mr. Platini and I accepted,” Blatter told reporters as exited his car outside the court in Lausanne, Switzerland.
He added that he is “happy to be witness in this matter.”
Blatter is a key figure in the saga that saw Platini, the suspended head of European governing body UEFA, ousted from football.
In December, FIFA judges banned both men for eight years over a now infamous 2 million Swiss franc ($2 million, 1.8 million euros) payment that Blatter sent to Platini in 2011.
Blatter and Platini have claimed the funds were part of a legitimate oral contract in connection with consulting work that Platini did for FIFA between 1999 and 2002.
FIFA’s judges deemed that explanation unconvincing, but an appeals body at world football’s governing body reduced their bans to six years in February, citing mitigating circumstances.
Platini’s appeal at CAS, the world’s top body for disputes in sport, marks his final chance to overturn his suspension.
UEFA has said it will not replace Platini until all his appeals have been exhausted.
If successful at CAS, Platini could immediately reclaim his UEFA post and preside over the Euro 2016 tournament which opens in June and is being hosted in his native France.
“It will be nice to see Michel Platini again,” Blatter said before entering the court at roughly 10:40 am (0840 GMT). “It has been a while since I’ve seen him.”
UEFA vice president Angel Maria Villar, who will testify on Platini’s behalf, also entered the courthouse, without speaking to journalists.
The head of the Euro 2016 organising committee, Jacques Lambert, was also on hand to support Platini’s case.

Zidane hopeful of having Ronaldo and Benzema fit for City

Real Madrid's French coach Zinedine Zidane arrives for the UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match between Manchester City and Real Madrid at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, northwest England, on April 26, 2016. / AFP PHOTO / PAUL ELLIS

Real Madrid will be without Cristiano Ronaldo and Karim Benzema for Saturday’s trip to Real Sociedad in La Liga but coach Zinedine Zidane is hopeful of having both back to face Manchester City next week. Ronaldo has missed Madrid’s last two games, including the 0-0 draw away to City in the first leg of their Champions League semi-final on Tuesday, while Benzema came off in that match and his club later confirmed he was suffering from a thigh injury.
Zidane admitted it was not worth risking either player against Real Sociedad but indicated both could feature in the semi-final second leg against City at the Santiago Bernabeu on Wednesday.
“The most important thing for now is that they recover. We can’t take risks with Cristiano or Karim, or anybody. The idea is that they come back as soon as possible,” Zidane told a press conference on Friday ahead of Saturday’s game in San Sebastian.
“I can’t say how likely it is that they will play (against City). I hope both are back at 100 percent but I can’t say for certain.”
Ronaldo sat out last weekend’s 3-2 win at Rayo Vallecano with a thigh strain but Zidane said it was a different problem that kept him from playing at the Etihad Stadium.
Meanwhile, Zidane had said Benzema would be out for “seven or eight days”, leaving the Frenchman with a race against the clock to recover for the City showdown.
Madrid come into the weekend one point behind Barcelona and Atletico Madrid at the top of the table with three matches remaining.
Zidane’s side have won their last nine league games, but he is wary of the trip to Anoeta, where Barcelona lost recently.
“We know it will be a difficult match at a difficult venue, but as always we need to focus on ourselves,” he said.

Serena pulls out of Madrid Open with flu



Serena 2
World number one Serena Williams has pulled out of the Madrid Open, which begins this weekend, with flu, organisers announced on Friday.
“Unfortunately, I have to withdraw from Madrid because I’ve been battling the flu and I’m not at 100 percent. I look forward to returning soon,” said Williams in a statement released by organisers.
The 21-time Grand Slam champion, 34, is a two-time winner in Madrid having triumphed in the Spanish capital in 2012 and 2013.
Last year she reached the semi-finals before losing to eventual winner Petra Kvitova, of the Czech Republic.
In the absence of Williams, Poland’s Agnieszka Radwanska, who had been seeded two, will become the top seed.
Williams, who is the defending French Open champion, is now scheduled to open her clay-court season at the Italian Open in May.

Gunmen kill five in Burundi bar attack



PHOTO: www.africanews.com

Gunmen in trenchcoats burst into a bar firing at drinkers in Burundi’s capital Bujumbura killing five, police said Friday, the latest in a string of attacks in the troubled country. Four civilians and a soldier were killed and three others were wounded in the shooting late on Thursday.
“A group of four armed criminals wearing long coats entered … they started shooting at customers,” police spokesman Moise Nkurunziza said.
Hundreds have been killed and a quarter of a million people have fled Burundi since President Pierre Nkurunziza’s controversial decision last April to run for a third term, a vote he won amid opposition boycotts in July.
The latest efforts to hold talks between rival factions are due to open on Monday in the Tanzanian town of Arusha.

South Africa court rules Zuma should face almost 800 graft charges



South African President Jacob Zuma / AFP PHOTO / STRINGER

South African President Jacob Zuma should face almost 800 corruption charges that were dropped in 2009, a judge said Friday, piling further pressure on the embattled leader. The charges, relating to a multi-billion dollar arms deal, were dropped by the chief state prosecutor in a move that cleared the way for Zuma to be elected president.
“The decision… to discontinue the charges against Mr Zuma is irrational and should be reviewed,” Pretoria High Court judge Aubrey Ledwaba said.
“Mr Zuma should face the charges as applied.”
The prosecutor had justified dropping the charges by saying that tapped phone calls between senior officials in then-president Thabo Mbeki’s administration showed political interference in the case.
The recordings, which became known as the “spy tapes”, were kept secret but finally released in 2014 to the main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance (DA), after a five-year legal battle.
DA leader Mmusi Maimane said Friday’s court ruling was a major blow for the president, who has faced months of criticism over various corruption scandals and the country’s dire economic outlook.
“Today is a great victory for the rule of law. Ultimately Jacob Zuma must face prosecution,” Maimane said after attending the court hearing.
“We are deeply, deeply delighted. We believe it’s a significant judgement.
“Jacob Zuma must have… his day in court.”
The DA called for the National Prosecuting Authority to immediate revive the 783 charges of corruption dating back to 1999.
But the legal wrangling is set to continue, with the ruling likely to go to appeal.
– A weakened president? –
The president last month lost another major legal case when the country’s highest court found he violated the constitution over the use of public funds to upgrade his private residence.
The so-called “security upgrades”, which cost taxpayers $24 million, included a swimming pool, chicken run, cattle enclosure and an amphitheatre.
The DA and other opposition parties attempted to impeach him in parliament, but the ruling African National Congress (ANC) used its majority to easily defeat the motion.
Zuma has also been beset by allegations that a wealthy Indian migrant family had such influence over him that it could decide ministerial appointments.
Pressure on the president to be ousted or to resign has grown with several veteran leaders of the party that brought Nelson Mandela to power in 1994 calling for him to step down.
Zuma, 74, will have completed two terms in 2019 and is not eligible to run for president again, but the ANC — which is packed with his loyalists — could replace him ahead of the next election.
Last week, a commission he set up cleared all government officials of corruption over the 1999 arms deal.
Zuma himself was accused of having accepted bribes from international arms manufacturers.
His advisor, Schabir Shaik, was jailed for 15 years on related charges in 2005, with the judge saying there was “overwhelming” evidence of a corrupt relationship between the two.
Shaik was released on medical parole in 2009, the year Zuma was elected president.
Zuma’s competency was also questioned when he sacked two finance ministers within days in December, triggering a collapse in the rand and a major withdrawal of foreign investors.

Rapper Drake releases long-awaited album ‘Views’



TORONTO, CANADA - APRIL 26: Musician and Toronto Raptors Ambassador Drake gestures towards the bench of the Indiana Pacers in Game Five of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals during the 2016 NBA Playoffs on April 26, 2016 at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2016 NBAE   Dave Sandford/NBAE via Getty Images/AFP

Drake, one of the most successful rappers of the moment, on Friday released his long-awaited new album, “Views” — an ode to his hometown Toronto. “Views” — his fourth studio album, and the first since “Nothing Was the Same” in 2013 — is a 20-track opus that clocks in at nearly 90 minutes.
It was released exclusively at midnight on Apple Music and iTunes — further evidence of the power of the streaming market.
“The album is based around the change of the seasons in our city,” the 29-year-old Canadian rapper said in an interview late Thursday with Apple’s Internet radio station Beats 1. Fans got an early listen of the music before the midnight release.
“Winter to summer and then back to winter again. It’s just to show you the two extreme moods that we have. We’re very grateful for our summers but we also make our winters work … And they’re harsh.”
“It creates a different type of atmosphere, a different sound, a different type of person even. And I thought it was really important to make the album here during the winter,” he said.
Drake invited a few top names to collaborate with him: Rihanna — who previously paired with the rapper on “What’s My Name?” and “Work” — sings on “Too Good” and Kanye West produced “U With Me?”
“Views” also includes a few recently released songs including “Pop Style” — a track which initially featured West and Jay Z, but which Drake changed in the final edit to cut them — and the smash hit “Hotline Bling” as a bonus track.
“I’m really proud of the songwriting on this,” Drake said.
The album cover is a picture of the landmark CN Tower in Canada’s largest city — with the rapper Photoshopped into it so he appears to be perched on top of it.
– Power of streaming –
Drake first started discussing the album in 2014, and gave it a temporary title, “Views from the 6” — a reference to the fact that in 1998, Toronto incorporated six separate municipalities into one mega-city.
But in 2015, he instead released two separate mixtapes.
“If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late,” which Drake considered a mixtape and he initially released on Apple’s iTunes, was the sixth top selling “album” in the United States last year and was nominated for the Grammy for Best Rap Album.
The success of the mixtape propelled Drake to be one of the most sought-after performers last year and he headlined major festivals including Coachella in California.
Drake is set to tour in the United States and Canada this summer.
The release of “Views” comes less than a week after Beyonce dropped her surprise new album, “Lemonade” — also exclusively on a streaming platform, her husband Jay Z’s Tidal.
In 2015, recorded music revenue expanded by 3.2 percent worldwide to $15 billion, fueled by an extraordinary growth in subscriptions to streaming services, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry.
The growth was the first uptick in the music industry at a more than marginal level since 1998, when sales grew 4.8 percent year-on-year.
Apple Music now has 13 million users, Apple boss Tim Cook said this week.

Thursday 28 April 2016

US toddler shoots mother dead



police line
A toddler riding in the back of a car accidentally shot dead his mother with a gun that slid out from under the driver’s seat, US police said Wednesday.
The 26-year-old victim, Patrice Price, was pronounced dead at the scene following Tuesday’s incident in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the local sheriff’s office said.
The child, aged two and a half and identified by local media as a boy, fired the 40-caliber gun through the driver’s seat where his mother was at the wheel.
Local broadcaster WISN quoted the victim’s father as saying that she was a mother of three.
“This little girl right here meant everything in the world to me,” Andre Price told the station. “And I lost the other half of my heart.”
The weapon apparently belonged to the victim’s security guard boyfriend, with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel newspaper reporting that she was driving his car because hers had been stolen days earlier.
The sheriff’s office said that deputies found a security officer’s gun belt belonging to the boyfriend on the floor of the front passenger seat.
The firearm was recovered on the floor behind the driver’s seat. An investigation is under way.
Also in the vehicle was another of Price’s children, aged one, and the woman’s mother. Neither of the children was in a car seat.
Price’s mother told relatives that her daughter turned to her after a loud pop rang out and said: “Momma, don’t let me die,” WISN reported.
Following the shooting, fellow motorists stopped and pushed the car out of traffic before police arrived and performed CPR on Price while awaiting the arrival of emergency medical personnel.
Tuesday’s shooting comes on the heels of a similar accident, though not fatal, in Florida last month.
In that instance, a four-year-old boy accidentally shot his mother in the back while she was at the wheel, leaving the passionately pro-gun woman badly wounded.
Jamie Gilt, who had boasted online about her toddler’s shooting prowess, was cruising down a major thoroughfare with her son in the back when he shot her on March 8. The bullet went through the seat cushion.
The mother and boy were on their way to pick up a horse, said police, who rushed to Gilt’s aid after an officer checked to see why the vehicle had stopped.
The weapon was a .45-caliber handgun the boy found on the floor of the pickup truck Gilt was driving. Police said she legally owned the weapon.
According to Everytown for Gun Safety, a group aimed at reducing US gun violence, there have been at least 77 shootings this year during which a child or adolescent aged 17 or under unintentionally fired a gun and killed or injured someone.
Firearms claim the lives of some 30,000 people in the United States each year.

Investigators find defects in crashed Bristow Helicopter flight recorders



Bristow
Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB) has released a preliminary report on a Bristow helicopter that crashed in February, finding defects in the helicopter’s two recording systems.
One of the faulty systems, Faerito image recorder, “is understood to be the first accident damaged recorder of this type”.Spokesperson for the AIB, Tunji Oketunbi, yesterday told The Guardian that the faulty recorder, however, had nothing to do with safety and operations of the ill-fated flight.
Oketunbi said investigators had retrieved all necessary information from the recorders and they would help in further investigations.While the actual cause of the accident is yet to be known, the investigators will carry out evaluation on the aircraft approved maintenance programme; determination of the helicopter maintenance history and detailed reconstruction of flight based on recorded data.
Others on the checklists are analysis of the helicopter performance in relation to cyclic, collective and yaw stabilization control; investigative testing of all Stabilization Augmentation System (SAS), Trim
Actuators; interview of relevant personnel of the operator and further physical observation and electrical continuity and insulation resistance checks on the cable looms of both auto-pilot, cyclic, collective and yaw control channels among others.
The helicopter, according to the investigators, was fitted with a Multi Purpose Flight Recorder (MPFR), which represents the Cockpit Voice Recorder/Flight Data Recorder (CVR/FDR).
However, a separate Faerito Avionics Recorder (Cockpit Image Recorder (CIR) was also installed in the helicopter to augment the CVR and FDR. The recorders were retrieved when the aircraft was recovered from the ocean in good condition and sent to Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB), United Kingdom (UK) and were successfully downloaded and are now being analyzed.
It would be recalled that the Sikorsky S-76C++ Helicopter, with registration number 5N BQJ, belonging to Bristow Helicopters Nigeria Limited crashed into the Atlantic Ocean on February 3, 2016. Emergency responders rescued onboard nine passengers and two crew members alive and without major injuries.
Preliminary findings confirmed that: “the flight crew were certified and qualified to conduct the flight in accordance with applicable Nigerian Civil Aviation Regulations (Nig. CARs).“The Captain and Co-pilot had 2497:45 and 852:00 hours on aircraft type, respectively.
The helicopter was maintained in accordance with approved maintenance schedule. “The helicopter was manufactured in 2007 with total Airframe Hours of 6,837:85 5. The flight departed from the ERHA FPSO (Floating Production Storage Off-loading) Oil Platform.’’

Syria ceasefire should be ‘revitalised’ before peace talks resume

UN Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Syria Staffan de Mistura (L) is seen seated prior a round of negotiations between the Syria's regime-tolerated opposition and the U.N., at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, on April 27, 2016. Russia has asked the United Nations to blacklist a major rebel group that is playing a key role in peace talks to end the Syrian civil war, its ambassador to the UN said. Mohammed Alloush, a leading figure in Jaish al-Islam (Army of Islam), is the chief negotiator for the High Negotiations Committee, the war-torn country's main opposition group, at UN-brokered peace talks in Geneva. / AFP PHOTO / POOL / MARTIAL TREZZINI

The UN’s Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said Thursday that he planned to hold another round of peace talks next month but called for a ceasefire to be “revitalised” before setting a date. He made the comments after briefing the United Nations Security Council on progress at the talks, which he said had made gains despite escalating violence on the ground that continued to threaten a fragile truce.
He highlighted that all parties at the Geneva-based talks now recognised the need for a new transitional government in Syria that should be tasked with drafting a new constitution, even if huge divides remain on the nature of that government.
As the latest round of negotiations went on recess, de Mistura said he wanted to open a fresh set “during the course of May”, to build on momentum earned so far.
He added however that he was holding off on fixing a date in hopes that world powers would use their leverage to strengthen the ceasefire, which needed to be “urgently revitalised.”
“How can you have substantial talks when you have only news about bombing and shelling?” de Mistura said.
The UN envoy specifically cited the United States, which supports some rebel groups, and regime-ally Russia as countries that needed to intervene, calling on Washington and Moscow to organise a high-level Syria meeting before negotiations resume.
The talks are focused on creating a transitional government capable of leading Syria out of a brutal civil war that has killed more than 270,000 people and displaced millions.
De Mistura insisted progress had been made on that key issue.
“No one is doubting anymore that there is an urgent need for a true and credible political transition,” he told reporters.
“There is a clear understanding that a political transition should be overseen by a new, I repeat new, credible and inclusive transitional government, which will be replacing the present governance arrangement,” he further said.
But the UN mediator declined to discuss the most daunting obstacle at the talks, which is the fate of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
The main opposition High Negotiations Committee (HNC) has insisted that Assad cannot be part of a transitional government and must agree to leave power as part of any peace deal.
Government negotiations have said Assad’s fate is not on the agenda at the negotiations.
The HNC, backed by Saudi Arabia and the West, officially withdrew from this round last week to protest escalating violence, but left technical experts in Geneva who continued to meet with UN mediators.

Zuckerberg tightens grip as Facebook profit soars



(FILES) This file photo taken on February 21, 2016 shows Chairman, chief executive, and co-founder of the social networking website Facebook Mark Zuckerberg speaks during a press conference presenting Samsung's new Galaxy 7 mobile device, on the eve of the official opening of the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. Facebook on April 27, 2016 reported that its quarterly profit tripled to $1.5 billion as the ranks of people using the leading social network continued to climb. Profit soared as revenue in the recently ended quarter jumped to $5.4 billion from $3.5 billion in the same period a year earlier. "We had a great start to the year," said Facebook co-founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg.  / AFP PHOTO / LLUIS GENE

Facebook on Wednesday fielded a plan to tighten Mark Zuckerberg’s grip on the helm as the booming social network reported stellar profit. Profit in the first quarter tripled from a year ago to $1.5 billion as revenue jumped to $5.4 billion from $3.5 billion in the same period a year earlier.
“We had a great start to the year,” said Facebook co-founder and chief executive Zuckerberg.
The key metric of monthly active users rose to 1.65 billion, up 15 percent from a year ago. And those using Facebook daily rose 16 percent to 1.09 billion, with strong gains in numbers of people using mobile devices.
The report shows Facebook is using its dominant position in social media to boost advertising revenues as it connects more people with new services such as live video.
Facebook also announced that its board of directors approved a plan to create a non-voting class of stock intended to raise capital while leaving Zuckerberg in control of the company’s vision and direction.
Shareholders will get to vote on the proposal at an annual stockholders meeting on June 20, according to Facebook.
The move aims to allow Zuckerberg to remain in charge even as he gives away the bulk of his holdings to charity as he announced last year with his wife.
“We are focused on the long-term, and that is the main reason for today’s proposal,” Zuckerberg said during an earnings call.
“Facebook has been built by a series of bold moves. And when I look out at the future, I see more bold moves ahead of us than behind us…I am committed to seeing this mission through.”
Zuckerberg noted that Facebook has always been a founder-led company, and that has allowed it to focus on long-term goals without succumbing to takeover offers or critics.
Facebook, like Google, went public in a way that kept control in the hands of founders instead of putting it in the grasp of shareholders.
“Today’s board proposal will allow us to do what we do well, and fund the Chan (Zuckerberg) Initiative,” he said.
The initiative takes aim at global challenges such as curing diseases, improving education, and protecting the environment from climate change, according to Zuckerberg.
“If you want to increase your control, now is the time to do it so people won’t fight you,” analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group said of the share structuring move.
“If you buy into Facebook, you are buying into Zuckerberg and his team; and they are executing very well right now.”
Facebook shares were up more than nine percent to $118.81 in after-market trades that followed release of the earnings report.
– New revenue streams –
Revenue that the California-based social network took in from advertising alone soared 57 percent in the quarter.
“Facebook just keeps getting stronger and stronger every quarter. Its share of digital advertising is continuing to grow, and it is steadily adding new revenue streams,” said eMarketer analyst Debra Aho Williamson.
“Two years after Facebook rolled out premium ads in the news feed, we see advertisers moving past the experimentation stage and beginning to craft advertising specifically for Facebook — rather than simply repurposing TV spots.”
The market tracker forecast that Facebook would capture $10.2 billion in display ad revenue in the United States this year to claim 31.2 percent of the money spent.
Mobile was expected to account for the bulk of Facebook’s digital ad revenue in the US this year, with Instagram and video formats aimed at smartphones or tablets driving growth.
Facebook has been cautiously optimistic about the potential for money-making advertising on its popular services such as Instagram, Messenger and Live real-time video streaming.
“As we expected, Facebook is putting a lot of emphasis on Messenger this year, and the announcements at f8 earlier this month show that it is on a path toward monetizing that service,” Williamson said, referring to the social network’s annual developers conference.
“Instagram remains popular with advertisers, and the ad rollout appears to be going smoothly among Instagram users.”
Facebook has moved beyond its role in social networking to ramp up its messaging platform, and has also moved into virtual reality with its Oculus headsets for which orders have begun.
“They are focused on business, and their side projects aren’t big enough to drag on profits,” analyst Enderle said of Facebook.
“A nicely run company with no big surprises.”
Zuckerberg’s long-range vision could help Facebook handle the danger faced by young Internet users leaving the social network for a hip new online scene, taking others with them, according to the analyst.

Ivorians say goodbye to Papa Wemba with all-night tribute



A'Salfo, the lead vocal singer for the Ivorian group Magic System sings during a concert in tribute to Papa Wemba on April 27, 2016 at the Palace of Culture in Abidjan. The flamboyant star Papa Wemba died at the age of 66 after collapsing on stage at a music festival in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, on April 24, but the cause of death is not yet known. The remains of the "Congolese king of rumba"  will be flown to his homeland Ivorian musician and festival promoter Salif Traore, known as A'Salfo said. / AFP PHOTO / SIA KAMBOU

Mourning Ivorian fans were performing an all-night musical tribute to honour legendary Congolese rumba star Papa Wemba, who died after collapsing on stage during a festival in Abidjan this week. Ivorian Prime Minister Daniel Kablan Duncan and Papa Wemba’s widow were among the high-profile mourners who began the evening’s ceremonies by paying their respects in front of the artist’s white coffin at a funeral parlour in Abidjan.
The singer’s body is to be repatriated to the Democratic Republic of Congo on Thursday.
Crowds at the funeral home, many of them from the Congolese community in Ivory Coast, broke into applause as one of Papa Wemba’s tunes filled the room.
His widow Marie Rose, better known as Maman Amazon, was supported by several family members.
“An artist never dies. In death, an artist becomes even greater. Papa Wemba is dead, and now even greater than before,” said Ivorian minister of culture Maurice Bandaman in front of a poster reading “Papa Wemba, legend.”
The flamboyant star died at the age of 66 after collapsing on stage at a music festival in Abidjan on Sunday, but the cause of his death is not yet known.
A pioneer of the fusion of Cuban and electronic rock in the 1970s, Papa Wemba found world renown as African music grew in popularity in Europe and the United States over the following decades.
The Congolese minister of culture had earlier urged mourners in the country not to allow their tributes to take on a “political” aspect.
“We want this period of mourning to be strictly a cultural event, not a political one,” Banza Mukalay said.
The political situation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has been strained for months, as suspicions grow that President Joseph Kabila will seek to extend his 15-year rule by postponing elections set for November.

California cops in spotlight over racist messages



police car
Police in Los Angeles and San Francisco have come under fire after authorities uncovered racist and homophobic text messages and emails in which minorities were referred to as “barbarians” and “wild animals.”
Three officers in San Francisco have already left the police department after the messages were discovered and a fourth is facing disciplinary measures, officials said.
On Tuesday, authorities released details of text messages exchanged between the three former officers in which they used the N-word to refer to black people, and described Arabs as “rag heads.”
The messages could affect at least 207 criminal cases, including three for murder, San Francisco public defender Jeff Adachi told reporters.
He said the slurs were discovered as part of a separate probe over rape accusations against Jason Lai, one of the former officers.
In one of the text messages Lai compares black people to “barbarians” and a “pack of wild animals on the loose.”
“It is chilling how casually former officer Lai dehumanizes the citizens he was sworn to serve,” Adachi said. “He wished violence upon the very people he was being paid to protect and none of his colleagues turned him in.”
In Los Angeles, the county sheriff’s chief of staff, Tom Angel, has also come under the spotlight for emails he forwarded in 2012 and 2013 mocking Muslims, blacks, Latinos and women.
Angel at the time was a top police official in the city of Burbank, near Los Angeles.
According to the Los Angeles Times, which obtained a copy of the emails, one message forwarded by Angel on January 7, 2012, lists a series of terrorist attacks attributed to “devout Muslim male extremists” and says “Muslims, gotta love em can’t punish em …….?”
Officials at the sheriff’s office in Burbank could not be reached for comment but Angel told the Times he did not mean to embarrass or demean anyone and that it was unfortunate his work emails had not been kept private.
“Anybody in the workplace unfortunately forwards emails from time to time that they probably shouldn’t have forwarded,” Angel told the Times. “I apologize if I offended anybody, but the intent was not for the public to have seen these jokes.”

Leicester holds its breath for footballing miracle



Leicester City's English defender Wes Morgan (L) celebrates after scoring during the English Premier League football match between Leicester City and Southampton at King Power Stadium in Leicester, central England on April 3, 2016. BEN STANSALL / AFP

A collective euphoria has gripped Leicester’s humdrum streets as the often-overlooked English city stands at the cusp of achieving global sporting immortality by winning football’s most coveted league title. Many in the medium-sized Midlands city will not talk about the possibility of one of sporting history’s most unlikely triumphs for fear of jinxing their heroes.
“If you look at all the fans, the people, the city, it’s an incredible, incredible time,” said Ian Smith, while readjusting his Leicester City scarf.
“It means the world to them. A once in a lifetime experience.”
But the impossible dream will become a reality if the Foxes win at Manchester United on Sunday.
The club, who started the season as one of the relegation favourites and 5000/1 shots to finish top, would still have two more matches to seal arguably the most unlikely league title in English football history if they were to lose at Old Trafford.
Sitting between the powerhouses of Birmingham, Sheffield and Manchester, Leicester has a population of around 330,000.
Locals pride themselves on their hospitality, welcoming strangers with open arms and using the affectionate greeting “m’duck”.
For a city instilled with restraint and discretion, the current emotional eruption is unprecedented.
“It’s an unbelievable buzz everywhere, there are… blue items just everywhere,” said Anna Hulewicz-Brown, adding that the city was almost unrecognisable from the one where she had spent her whole life.
– On the global map –
The temperature will ramp up a notch on Friday when the city’s landmarks, houses and shops will be illuminated and draped in blue until the end of the season.
Fans nervous about Sunday’s big match will be able to calm their nerves in the city’s pubs with a “Vardy bomb”, a cocktail invented in honour of star striker Jamie Vardy.
Others are seeking divine intervention, with a city-centre street preacher now using football to begin his sermon while singing the praises of “Saint Vardy”.
Even fans of the town’s successful rugby club Leicester Tigers are on board, having Vardy’s name emblazoned on the back of their shirts.
“Every time I go out in the street, everybody wants to talk about football,” said mayor Peter Soulsby, who has been swamped with international media requests to explain the miracle.
“It’s a wonderful thing for the city, with Richard III being reinterred last year and Leicester winning the Premier League,… we couldn’t hope for anything better,” added die-hard fan Sandra Baum.
The last Plantagenet king was buried at the city’s cathedral last year following the sensational discovery of his remains underneath a council car park, 500 years after his death.
The story shone a rare spotlight on the city, but fans say the city’s footballing fairy tale eclipses everything.
“It puts Leicester City on the map,” said Prami Singh, a regular at the team’s King Power Stadium.
His friend Asif Sheikh lauded the city’s cosmopolitanism and the authentic atmosphere inside the stadium.
“Manchester United, Chelsea fans are from different cities, but the fans here are all born and bred here,” he said.
– No ‘big-time Charlies’ –
Fruit and vegetable seller Scott Lee, 43, epitomises the city’s familiarity, working on the stall that used to be run by the family of Gary Lineker.
The former England international is revered in Leicester and his family name still appears above the stall.
The ardent fan, now a presenter, promised last December that he would host BBC’s flagship football show in his underpants if the team won the title.
Lee revealed that the current players can wander around town free from hassle, and said the absence of “big time Charlies” in the squad was a key part of their success.
“Manchester United spent 270 million ($395 million, 350 million euros) and have got nothing. We’ve got a team like Leicester, they play together and are friends.
“(Japanese striker) Shinji Okazaki was around town last week. I talked to him, didn’t understand him, but a lovely man. You wouldn’t see that at Chelsea.”
He is in no doubt that the country is behind them, and that they will have the world’s support when they tackle Europe’s elite in next season’s Champions League.
“The world likes it, it’s the underdog story. We’ll beat them, we’ve got a team, not just individual players,” he said.

Wednesday 27 April 2016

Niguez stunner hands Atletico slender lead over Bayern

Atletico Madrid's players acknowlege the crowd after the UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match Club Atletico de Madrid vs Bayern Munich at the Vicente Calderon stadium in Madrid on April 27, 2016.  CESAR MANSO / AFP

A sensational solo effort from Saul Niguez handed Atletico Madrid a precious 1-0 advantage over Bayern Munich from the first leg of their Champions League semi-final at the Vicente Calderon on Wednesday.
The Spanish under-21 international skipped past four Bayern players before firing into the far corner to give Atletico the perfect start after 11 minutes.
Bayern dominated for long spells thereafter, but the closest they came to a vital away goal was a thunderous long-range effort from David Alaba that came back off the crossbar.
Atletico will travel to Bavaria for the return next Tuesday looking to complete the job to reach their second final in three years and exact revenge for their defeat to Bayern in the 1974 final.
Bayern lost the first legs of their semi-finals in Spain in the previous two seasons to Real Madrid and Barcelona on their way out of the competition.
And they couldn’t have made a worse start once more in the Spanish capital as, roared on by a vociferous support, Atletico flew out of the blocks early on.
Niguez had already had a long-range effort saved by Manuel Neuer before he opened the scoring in stunning style.
The 21-year-old picked the ball up near halfway and skipped past four half-hearted Bayern challenges before curling a left-footed shot in off the inside of the far post.
Atletico nearly gifted Bayern an equaliser immediately as Jose Maria Gimenez’s miscued clearance pinballed around the area before the Uruguayan atoned for his initial error by clearing off the line.
Bayern were dominant in possession, but struggled to create clear-cut chances against an Atletico side that now hasn’t conceded at home in their last seven Champions League knockout ties.
Alaba shot wide from distance, while Douglas Costa’s free-kick nearly caught out Jan Oblak at his near post.
Yet, it was Atletico who squandered a big chance to make it 2-0 before the break when Antoine Griezmann’s shot from a narrow angle was turned behind by Neuer.
Bayern were completely dominant after the break as Atletico tired and dropped deeper towards their own goal.
Alaba smashed a wonder strike off the underside of the bar from fully 35 yards before Javi Martinez’s powerful header from Costa’s corner was gratefully grasped by Oblak low to his right.
Guardiola had controversially left Thomas Mueller on the bench despite his 31 goals in all competitions this season.
The future Manchester City boss eventually called upon the German World Cup winner and Franck Ribery in search of a vital away goal.
Costa came close again seconds after Mueller’s arrival as his attempted lob over Oblak dipped just over the bar.
Oblak was called into action again to parry an Arturo Vidal piledriver from distance.
Yet, once more Atletico had the best chance to put the tie beyond the German champions in the final stages as Fernando Torres hit the post from Griezmann’s fine through ball and Neuer saved Koke’s follow-up effort.
Oblak made simple saves from Mehdi Benatia and Vidal in stoppage time as Atletico held out to record their 33rd clean sheet of the season.

27 Yemeni soldiers killed in Mukalla offensive

Yemeni pro-government forces, loyal to fugitive President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, gather at the military base of Nehm, in the Sanaa province east of the Yemeni capital, the frontline with the Marib region on April 7, 2016. Pro-government forces, backed by a Saudi-led coalition battling the Shiite Huthi rebels for more than a year, have retaken most of the eastern Marib province from the Huthi insurgents and their allies. However, the rebels still control northern and western parts of the oil-rich Marib province east of the capital Sanaa, which has been held by the Huthis since September 2014. / AFP PHOTO / NABIL HASSAN

At least 27 Yemeni soldiers were killed in a government offensive — backed by Saudi-led forces, which drove Al-Qaeda militants out of a key southeastern city, military officials and medics said Wednesday.
Life, meanwhile, was returning to normal in the port city, residents said.
More than 60 other soldiers were wounded in the operations that began at the weekend and saw government forces recapture Mukalla, the provincial capital of Hadramawt, the officials said.
The city had been held by Al-Qaeda militants for over a year.
Recapturing Mukalla was part of a wider counter-offensive against the Sunni extremists launched by pro-government forces last month after a year in which they had focused their firepower on Shiite Huthi rebels who control the capital.
Government troops were backed by special forces from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, as well as coalition air strikes, the Arab coalition said, claiming 800 militants were killed in the offensive.
Life began to return to normal Wednesday in Mukalla, a city of some 200,000 people, as shops and government offices reopened, residents said.
Staff at Mukalla airport and its port also returned to work for the first time since April last year, when militants of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) took over, officials in the city said.
During its year-long rule, AQAP imposed its strict interpretation of sharia law forbidding consumption of the mild narcotic qat, a mainstay of Yemeni social life, and demolishing the tombs of revered Sufi mystics.
On Tuesday, a US drone rocketed the car of an Al-Qaeda chief in Zinjibar, in neighbouring Abyan province, Ali al-Shanna, killing his driver but he was not in the vehicle, security sources said.
Washington has been waging a drone war against AQAP since November 2002, when it killed the suspected mastermind of an October 2000 bombing of a US destroyer that killed 17 sailors in the southern port of Aden.

‘Panama Papers’ to go public May 9



Panama's President Juan Carlos Varela arrives at Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's official residence in Tokyo on April 20, 2016.  The President of Panama is currently on a five-day visit to Japan. / AFP PHOTO / POOL / FRANCK ROBICHON

The “Panama Papers” trove of leaked documents revealing the vast extent of global tax evasion will be made available to the public on May 9, the organization behind the leak said Wednesday. The searchable database will include information about more than 200,000 secret companies, trusts and foundations based in 21 tax havens “from Hong Kong to Nevada in the United States,” said the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ).
Since early April, the ICIJ-coordinated limited release through roughly 100 media outlets of the “Panama Papers” have become a worldwide scandal, spurring numerous investigations and the resignation of Iceland’s prime minister and a Spanish minister.
About 11.5 million leaked documents of the Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, reveal the large-scale use of offshore entities to conceal assets from tax authorities.
In its statement, the ICIJ said that the public release next month “is the next step in our ongoing year-long investigation” and that it will continue to publish more stories in the coming weeks and months.

Klopp seeks brave Liverpool against Villarreal

Liverpool's German manager Jurgen Klopp celebrates on the pitch after the English Premier League football match between Crystal Palace and Liverpool at Selhurst Park in south London on March 6, 2016. Liverpool won the game 2-1. / AFP / GLYN KIRK / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or 'live' services. Online in-match use limited to 75 images, no video emulation. No use in betting, games or single club/league/player publications.  /

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp called for bravery from his players if they are to overcome Villarreal to reach the Europa League final and maintain their hopes of Champions League football next season. Klopp’s men produced a sensational second-half comeback from 3-1 down to beat his old side Borussia Dortmund 4-3 at Anfield to reach the last four.
However, the German warned against complacency as, despite their lack of European pedigree compared to the English giants, Villarreal are enjoying a great season.
They sit fourth in La Liga behind perennial powerhouses Barcelona, Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid.
“We have to play brave football,” Klopp told UEFA.com.
“We are now in the semi-finals. We got there because we deserved it, and now we have to show we are strong enough to go through.
“They are having a wonderful season, they are a wonderful club in a small city.
“It is clear there are a lot of smart people behind their success.”
Klopp will be without a number of players crucial to Liverpool’s upturn in fortunes over recent weeks.
French defender Mamadou Sakho didn’t travel to Spain on Wednesday as he awaits the result of a UEFA investigation into an alleged failed doping test.
Emre Can, Divock Origi and captain Jordan Henderson are also sidelined by injury.
The build-up to the game has been overshadowed by the ruling that the 96 Liverpool fans that died at the Hillsborough tragedy 27 years ago were unlawfully killed in the biggest inquest in English legal history.
Villarreal have announced they will mark the decision with a tribute to the victims before the game.
However, once the action gets underway, the Yellow Submarine are intent on causing an upset to reach their first ever Cup final.
“Maybe Liverpool could be considered favourites because of their history as a club,” said Villarreal coach Marcelino.
“But we don’t consider ourselves in any way inferior to them and we think we can beat a team as legendary as Liverpool.”
It is 10 years since Villarreal came excruciatingly close to reaching the Champions League final against English opposition as Jens Lehmann saved Juan Roman Riquelme’s last-minute penalty to send Arsenal to the final 1-0 on aggregate.
However, Marcelino believes having almost sealed their place in next season’s Champions League already through La Liga, his players have no pressure on them to reach the final.
“The context is similar (to 10 years ago), but we are convinced that we can eliminate Liverpool,” he added.
“It is a privilege to play this semi-final. There was much more pressure in the previous ties and now we have a great chance to make history in this club.”
– Good memories –
Sevilla continue their quest to win a third consecutive Europa League in the other semi-final when they travel to face Shakhtar Donetsk in the first leg in Ukraine.
The match will be played in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv as Shakhtar have defied their exile from war-torn Donetsk to reach the last four.
“We fully respect them and we know the difficulties they will pose,” said Sevilla midfielder Vicente Iborra.
“They are an experienced team with a mixture of Ukrainians and Brazilians, they are quick and have the quality to surprise us.”
Sevilla have good memories of facing Shakhtar as an amazing stoppage-time equaliser from goalkeeper Andres Palop sent their last-16 tie into extra time before the Spaniards went on to win the competition in 2007.
“Hopefully, the luck that helped Sevilla in 2007 will be on our side this time,” said Shakhtar boss Mircea Lucescu.
Europa League semi-final, first leg fixtures on Thursday (1905 GMT)
At Lviv, Ukraine
Shakhtar Donetsk (UKR) v Sevilla (ESP)
At Vila-real, Spain
Villarreal (ESP) v Liverpool (ENG)

Obama to visit water crisis-hit Flint

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President Barack Obama will next week travel to Flint, Michigan, where a crisis over tainted water has become a focus of the 2016 election campaign, the White House said Wednesday.
Responding to a letter from eight-year-old Flint resident Mari Copeny, Obama said he would visit the majority African American northern city on May 4.
“I want to make sure people like you and your family are receiving the help you need and deserve,” Obama wrote.
Republican and Democratic presidential candidates have used the Flint crisis to trade barbs about the size, role and failings of local and federal governments.
More than 8,000 children are believed to have drunk water that contained harmful levels of lead.
The tainted water stemmed from a decision to shift Flint’s water source from the Detroit River to the Flint River as part of cost-cutting measures ordered by state Governor Rick Snyder, a Republican who has consistently resisted calls to quit.
Experts believe the chemical-laced Flint River water corroded lead pipes, allowing large amounts of the chemical element to leach into the city’s water.
The state attorney general has filed criminal charges against a city official and two state regulators for allegedly falsifying tests and tampering with evidence.
In the heart of America’s rustbelt, Flint is at the crossroads of many of the issues that have dominated the 2016 election cycle — foreign trade, environmental standards, the economy and the gap between rich and poor.
Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders even held a presidential debate in Flint ahead of the Michigan primary in March.
Sanders’ strident message on the need to address income inequality narrowly won the day in the Democratic primary.
But the state is set to be a battle ground in the general election.
Donald Trump’s populist message targeting disaffected white voters propelled him to win Michigan’s Republican primary.
Obama is likely to use the trip to show Flint residents that the federal government is listening to them, and implicitly or explicitly, that the fault lies elsewhere.
A presidential visit will also energize his supporters ahead of the November 8.

Greece’s debt crisis returns



Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg (R) speak with  Greek Prime minister Alexis Tsipras prior to their meeting in Athens on April 22, 2016.  / AFP PHOTO / LOUISA GOULIAMAKI

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras unexpectedly on Wednesday demanded a European summit to bridge sudden rifts that emerged in negotiations over Greece’s massive bailout, its third in six years. After nearly a year of relative calm, Tsipras is angered by a fresh set of reforms demanded by Greece’s creditors that he says breaks the terms of its 86-billion-euro ($90 billion) bailout, agreed in July 2015.
But Athens needs to complete the so-called first review of its bailout soon to unlock funds so that it can meet a huge European Central Bank payment this July — a virtual repeat of last summer’s drama.
Here are key facts about the roller-coaster bailout crisis.
– GOOD START –
Until this week’s sudden setback, negotiations between Greece and its creditors progressed far more amiably than what seemed possible after six months of bitter talks that led up to the bailout deal of July 13, 2015.
Greece verged dangerously near a humiliating eviction from the euro single currency, but in the end eurozone leaders agreed to again save Athens.
Since then, Greece has received 26 billion euros from the bailout after delivering on reforms largely to the satisfaction of its creditors.
– EXTRA MEASURES –
The new stumbling block arose from a row over economic data between the two main overseers of the bailout: the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, and the International Monetary of Fund.
The squabble delayed the completion of the bailout’s first review, which was originally planned for last autumn and remains unfinished.
Once the review is passed, Greece unlocks about 5.4 billion euros ($6 billion) in more loans — and crucially, wins negotiations on debt relief.
To complete the review, Greek reforms must be forecast to deliver a government budget surplus in 2018 of 3.5 percent of the economy’s annual output, not counting the cost of borrowing.
The EU believes the reform commitments on the table pretty much deliver on that promise, but the IMF says they fall far short and is demanding Athens deliver more reforms, especially on pensions.
To resolve the fight, the two institutions agreed to demand so-called contingency measures from Greece to bridge the difference.
These are pre-agreed reforms that will only kick-in if the IMF’s more bleak assessment should prove the right one.
Athens was caught by surprise with the demand and Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras asked EU President Donald Tusk for a eurozone summit to resolve the issue, though his request is for now denied.
– DEBT RELIEF –
In one of the few concessions handed to Greece last summer, eurozone leaders agreed to discuss ways of easing Greece’s debt burden “if necessary” once key reform pledges were met.
Debt relief is also a key demand of the IMF.
Eurogroup chief Jeroen Dijsselbloem on Friday said the contingency reforms were a condition to trigger debt relief negotiations.
Greece’s debt stood at 177 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2015 — almost twice the country’s entire economic output in one year.
IMF chief Christine Lagarde called the issue “crucially important”.
But German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaueble, the eurozone’s most influential official, has publically repeated that no debt relief for Athens is necessary.
Luckily for Athens, however, Schaueble also wants the IMF to remain on board in the bailout, as Berlin does not trust the commission to manage the programme alone.
– DEADLINES –
As ever with the Greek debt crisis, debt deadlines are key to developments.
The crisis last summer reached its climax when Athens defaulted on the IMF, the first developed country in history to do so.
This year all eyes are on July 20, when Greece must repay about 2.3 billion euros to the European Central Bank.
But Klaus Regling, the head of the European Stability Mechanism that manages Greece’s bailout payments, warned on Friday that the “liquidity situation is becoming tight” in Athens.

Sweden sees migrant influx slowing to 60,000 this year



Migrants wait to cross the Slovenian-Austrian border in Gornja Radgona last September. Photo: Jure Makovec/AFP

Sweden said Wednesday it expected around 60,000 asylum seekers in 2016, far fewer than the 100,000 forecast in February, as border controls across Europe make it harder for migrants to reach the Scandinavian country. “We see every day how people are making their way from Turkey to Greece or across the sea to Italy, but they’re not making it to Sweden right now,” the Migration Agency’s operative chief Mikael Ribbenvik said in a statement.
Last year, Sweden received 163,000 asylum applications, making it one of the EU states with the highest proportion of asylum seekers per capita.
The agency said it was now expecting anywhere between 40,000 and 100,000 migrants to arrive this year, but was working with a “planning scenario” of 60,000.
In February, its 2016 forecast was for between 70,000 and 140,000, with a planning scenario of 100,000.
The influx to Sweden has plummeted since January 4, when Stockholm introduced systematic photo identification checks on train, bus and ferry passengers entering via Denmark.
At a peak in October, Sweden received around 10,000 asylum requests a week, compared to around 500 now.
“What’s making it so hard for asylum seekers to travel through Europe is primarily that the western Balkan route is completely closed, and the EU’s new agreement with Turkey,” Ribbenvik said, referring to a deal to return migrants arriving on Greek shores to Turkey.
He said the forecast of 60,000 was based on the probability that Europe would open up “somewhat” in the second half of 2016, “and that asylum seekers will probably choose other routes than the western Balkan route.”
The agency noted that while the acute strain on Sweden’s capacities — primarily overcrowded asylum housing centres — had subsided since last autumn, “municipalities, authorities and the rest of society face immense challenges ahead” to cope with asylum seekers allowed to stay in Sweden as well as those whose applications are rejected and may be appealed.