Sunday, December 2, 2012

Congo M23 rebels quit Goma in boost for peace hopes

GOMA, Democratic Republic of Congo (Reuters) - Rebel fighters, singing and brandishing weapons, pulled out of Democratic Republic of Congo's eastern border city of Goma on Saturday, raising hopes regional peace efforts could advance negotiations to end the insurgency.

The rebel withdrawal from Goma on Lake Kivu, a strategic hub in the country's war-scarred eastern borderlands, was agreed in a deal brokered by presidents of the Great Lakes states under Uganda's leadership a week ago.

Goma's fall on November 20 to the Tutsi-led M23 rebel movement which routed United Nations-backed government forces triggered a diplomatic scramble to prevent a wider escalation of the eight-month-old rebellion in the conflict-prone region.

The rebels had said they would fight to topple Congo's President Joseph Kabila and march on the capital Kinshasa, 1,600 km (1,000 miles) to the west. U.N. experts accuse Rwanda and Uganda of supporting the revolt, a charge both strongly deny.

In the centre of Goma, blue-helmeted U.N. peacekeepers from Uruguay in white armored vehicles watched as camouflage-clad M23 fighters scrambled on to the back of flatbed trucks with battered suitcases and other belongings before driving off.

"We are leaving today," M23's military chief Colonel Sultani Makenga told reporters.

Residents lined the streets leading out of the city to watch as the truckloads of singing rebels drove out, heading for previously agreed positions 20 km (13 miles) north of Goma from where M23 launched its lightning offensive two weeks ago.

On the dusty road by the U.N.-controlled airport, about 100 rebels trudged out of town on foot. Some of the trucks leaving Goma carried crates of captured munitions and military supplies.

Makenga, who faces a U.N.-imposed assets freeze and travel ban for leading the revolt, said the M23 withdrawal was in response to a request from Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni.

"We are leaving for peace," Makenga said, following a brief ceremony in which a squad of around 40 M23 fighters, wearing mottled green camouflage uniforms, peaked caps and black gumboots, first paraded and then sang and danced.

If there are no hitches, a full rebel withdrawal from lakeside Goma, which lies in sight of the towering Mount Nyiragongo volcano, will provide breathing space for possible follow-up negotiations between the rebels and Kabila.

Humanitarian agencies say hundreds of people have been injured and thousands displaced by the recent fighting.

The Congolese president has said he is willing to listen to the rebels' grievances, but there is considerable mistrust between the two sides and Kabila faces pressure from within his own army to pursue a military solution rather than talks.

"If Kabila provokes us, we will come back," Makenga said. "If he wants peace there will be peace, if he wants war, there will be war," he added.

Uganda's junior foreign minister, Asuman Kiyingi, told Reuters Kampala would encourage the two sides to talk. "Now that M23 has withdrawn, it's important that the Kinshasa government also addresses the grievances of these people (M23)," he said

Goma lies at the heart of Congo's eastern borderlands which have suffered nearly two decades of conflict stoked by long-standing ethnic and political enmities and fighting over the region's rich resources of gold, tin, tungsten and coltan. The latter is a precious metal used to make mobile phones.

SOME JEERS

Some Goma residents jeered as the trucks carrying the departing rebels lurched through the dusty streets. Some of the vehicles stopped to fill up with petrol, while others were held up temporarily by teeming traffic.

A military observer from Rwanda, one of several defense representatives from neighboring states who watched the withdrawal, said it was going ahead without problems.

"It is all very smooth," he said, asking not to be named.

On Friday, the pullback plan appeared to run into problems, including a dispute over abandoned army supplies the insurgents wanted to take with them.

But this incident did not appear to impede the pullout, which U.N. officials expected would be completed on Saturday.

Congolese policemen who had been brought in to help keep order as the rebels left were also visible in the streets.

In the face of evidence supplied by U.N. experts about Rwandan involvement in the rebellion, a number of Western donors have frozen aid to Kigali. Rwandan President Paul Kagame has angrily rejected the charges against his government.

In the latest move, Britain, Rwanda's largest bilateral donor, said on Friday it was withholding 21 million pounds ($34 million) of budget support.

Rwanda has twice invaded its western neighbor Congo over the past two decades, at one point sparking a conflict dubbed "Africa's World War" that drew in several countries.

It has justified its interventions by arguing it was forced to act against hostile Rwandan Hutu fighters who fled to Congo after the 1994 Rwandan genocide that saw 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus killed by Hutu soldiers and militia.

The M23 rebels said they took up arms over what they cited as the government's failure to respect a March 23, 2009, peace agreement that envisaged their integration into the army.

They have since broadened the scope of their movement, which takes its name from the peace deal date, declaring their aim to "liberate" the entire Central African nation and oust Kabila.

Aid agencies say more than 5 million people have died from conflict, hunger or disease in Congo since 1998.

(Additional reporting by Elias Biryabarema in Kampala; Writing by Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Pravin Char)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/congo-m23-rebels-quit-goma-boost-peace-hopes-111056937.html

whitney houston cause of death marquette university marquette hilary duff michigan state michigan state city creek center

96% Sister

All Critics (49) | Top Critics (14) | Fresh (47) | Rotten (2)

French-born director and co-screenwriter Ursula Meier balances the scenario's bleak, wrenching aspects with a stirring confidence in the redemptive power of love.

Seydoux perfectly captures the anger and self-defeat of ill-educated, hedonistic, man-chasing young women who live on the fringes.

L?a Seydoux fulfills Louise, and Kacey Mottet Klein, as Simon, is one more to join the pantheon of film's excellent child actors.

Haunting and sad. And absolutely worth seeing.

The chemistry between the two leads is a razor's-edge dance: feral, childish, tender and always complex.

Movies about wayward kids are a European specialty. The new film "Sister" deepens the specialty.

The storytelling is exciting and the characters well-observed.

For the most part a distant film, Sister supplies a full behavioral experience that's riveting at times, with lead performances by Lea Seydoux and Kacey Mottet Klein communicating isolation in bravely vulnerable ways.

Emotionally engaging and impeccably crafted

Klein and Seydoux give such naturalistic performances that they're never overwhelmed by the spectacle.

"Sister" is loose and episodic, but held together with nicely sketched characters.

[A]voids bathos. . .reveals unexpected depth in a heartbreaking bond. . . Different classes conflict [in] adjacent spaces . . .in spare, realistic Dardennes' style.

Meier draws out wonderfully naturalistic performances from her young stars, with Mottet Klein particularly good as the young roustabout Simon ...

It comes over like a subtle short story and is well acted.

Meier's portrait of Simon ... is richly atmospheric and never sentimental.

An enigmatic, heartfelt account of a vulnerable young boy's yearning for a better life.

Most intriguing is how the writers and director have transformed what's essentially a rather dark, bleak story into something involving and emotionally resonant, all without ever turning sentimental.

It is an interesting and well-made movie, though with an uncertain ending.

Sister gradually reveals pattern in its tapestry of everyday life.

An expert piece of storytelling with a host of strong character turns and thematic depth to burn.

A healthy seam of mischief helps cut through the occasionally rote social comment.

An emotionally engaging, beautifully shot and impressively directed Dardennes-esque French drama with a superb script and excellent performances from Kacey Mottet Klein and L?a Seydoux.

No quotes approved yet for Sister. Logged in users can submit quotes.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/lenfant_den_haut/

fiat 500 abarth madonna halftime m i a mia super bowl tom coughlin wes welker eli manning

Vitamins May Be Alternative to HPV Vaccine | Care2 Healthy Living

The human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccine has been surrounded by controversy since it was first commercialized. This could be partly due to the fact that it has had no long term testing, is injected into female children, and there have been serious side effects and even deaths linked to its use. So when I came across a study that shows two vitamins may help prevent the HPV virus from spreading, I wanted to share this exciting research.

A team of scientists led by C. J. Piyathilake at the Department of Nutrition Sciences, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, attempted to determine whether supplementation with folate (vitamin B9) and vitamin B12 would have an effect on the human papilloma virus (HPV) and cervical cancer linked to this virus among women.

They attempted to identify any associations between serum concentrations of folate and vitamin B12 and high risk HPV infections by evaluating 724 women in a screening study in the state of Andhra Pradesh, India.

They found that women with the highest concentrations of serum folate and vitamin B12 had the lowest risk of being positive for high risk HPV compared to those with lower levels of serum folate and serum vitamin B12.

The scientists published their results in The International Journal of Women?s Health, and concluded that: ?These results demonstrated that improving folate and vitamin B12 status in Indian women may have a beneficial impact on the prevention of cervical cancer. Micronutrient based interventions for control of high-risk HPV infections may represent feasible alternatives to vaccine based approaches to HPV disease prevention??

Considering the controversy surrounding HPV vaccines and the likelihood that their results with Indian women are applicable to other women, the results suggest that supplementation with folate and vitamin B12 (or a single B-complex vitamin that includes both of folate and B12) may help prevent HPV and cervical cancer.

B-vitamins are essential nutrients that are involved in countless biochemical processes in the body.? Without sufficient amounts we become more susceptible to stress, depression, anxiety, or irritability.? B-complex vitamins are necessary for adequate energy, learning capacity, growth, immunity, reproduction, pain reduction or proper pain signals, wound healing, memory, and glandular or nervous system functions.

These nutrients are found in brown rice, root vegetables, pumpkin seeds, citrus fruits, strawberries, cantaloupe, kale, green vegetables, and beans. A typical supplementary dose is between 50 to 100 mcg of folate and B-12.

Related:
Top 5 Vitamins That Protect Against Cancer
The Safety & Ethics of the HPV Shot
What is HPV? An OB/GYN Explains

Source: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/vitamins-may-be-alternative-to-hpv-vaccine.html

amy chua iowa gop meteor shower tonight annie oakley edc paranormal activity 4 love and hip hop

Saturday, December 1, 2012

How to help your neighbors this holiday season

By Emily Fletcher

As we gear up for the holiday season, so, too, are local organizations and churches preparing to spread tidings of comfort and joy to those less fortunate in our community, and there are plenty of opportunities to help out.

Volunteer Opportunities

Most urgently, the Phinney Neighborhood Association, 6532 Phinney Ave. N., is looking for more volunteers for its annual Winter Festival and Crafts Fair on Dec. 1 and 2. Volunteers can view and sign up for shifts online.

As part of the Hot Meal Program, the PNA is also seeking donations of juice, cooked hams, and baked pies for its special holiday lunch on Dec. 19, and generous cooks can call 206-783-2244 to make food delivery arrangements. Volunteers are also needed to prepare and serve the meal.

Bishop Blanchet and Ballard High School students can also sign up to help with St. John?s Christmas tree sale to benefit the Noel House overflow shelter on Dec. 8 and 9 by calling the parish office at 206-782-2810.

Gift Donations

The PNA?s 15th annual giving tree is up, with tags available at the Greenwood Senior Center (525 N. 85th St.), the Phinney Center, and Umpqua Bank (7120 Greenwood Ave. N.). Community members can stop by to pick up a tag, purchase a gift, and return the wrapped present with the tag by Dec. 10.

St. John Catholic Church, 7916 1st Ave. NW, has a giving tree, and donations fulfilling the requests on the tree?s giving ornaments must be returned by Dec. 16.

Phinney Ridge Lutheran Church, 7500 Greenwood Ave. N., has a giving wreath in the church?s narthex. Gifts should be returned by Dec. 16, and volunteers can help assemble stockings for children that day, with each stocking including something fun, something personal, and something educational.

All Bartell Drug stores, including the Greenwood store at 120 N. 85th St, are teaming up with the Salvation Army to provide local children with toys this holiday season through their ninth annual ?Toy? ?N? Joy? drive. Donations of new, unwrapped toys will be accepted at all area Bartell Drugs locations through Dec. 14.

Food Donations

The Volunteers of America Food Bank of Greenwood has most of its volunteer positions filled for the holiday season but is always looking for food donations. All donations are appreciated, and the food bank could particularly use holiday meal main course items, such as turkeys and hams, which can be dropped off at the organization?s 9041 Greenwood Ave. N. location.

In addition to donating directly to the food bank during their open donation hours (Tuesday and Thursday, 8:30-4 p.m., and Wednesday, 8:30-6 p.m.), donation barrels can be found at the following locations:

  • Ken?s Market,7231 Greenwood Ave. N.
  • Chase Bank, 8701 Greenwood Ave. N.
  • The Green Bean Coffeehouse, 8515 Greenwood Ave. N. (in the Sanctuary Reformed Christian Church office)
  • Windermere Real Estate, 315 N. 85th St. and 12250 Greenwood Ave. N.

Phinney Ridge Lutheran Church will also be assembling food boxes and will have a special food bank Christmas distribution on Dec. 21 from 12-3 p.m.

Let us know of any other giving or volunteer opportunities in the neighborhood this holiday season!

(Emily Fletcher is a Phinney Ridge resident and Dartmouth College journalism student)

Source: http://www.phinneywood.com/2012/11/30/how-to-help-your-neighbors-this-holiday-season/

Honey Baked Ham hostess israel channing tatum AMA Carly Rae Jepsen BCS Standings 2012

US struggles to get Israel, Palestinians to talks

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Obama administration sought Friday to direct Israel and the Palestinians back toward direct peace talks, even as the two sides and much of the world seemed to be ignoring the U.S. attempts at leadership on a Mideast peace strategy.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met senior Israeli and Palestinian officials Friday, with each side locked in a pattern of actions that the United States had expressly warned against: the Palestinians winning U.N. recognition of their claim to a state on Thursday and the Israelis retaliating Friday by approving 3,000 new homes on Israeli-occupied territory.

The administration has campaigned for nearly two years to prevent the Palestinian action at the United Nations, fearful it would anger Israel so much that the resumption of direct talks between the Jewish state and Palestinians would be impossible. The administration remains concerned as well that statehood could mean International Criminal Court action against Israeli soldiers for their conduct in Palestinian or disputed territory ? a scenario Washington believes would greatly debilitate peace hopes.

"We have to convince Palestinians that direct negotiations with Israel represent not just the best but the only path to the independent state they deserve," Clinton said Friday night in a speech at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy in Washington. "America supports the goal of a Palestinian state, living side by side in peace and security with Israel. But this week's vote at the U.N. won't bring Palestinians any closer, and it may bring new challenges for the United Nations system and for Israel."

Most of the world's governments brushed aside Israeli and American concerns, with U.N. member states voting 138-9 to recognize Palestine as a nonmember observer state and grant it the most significant upgrade in diplomatic status in its more than six-decades of conflict with Israel. The United States insists that the result has changed nothing on the ground, but it is struggling to shift the focus to where it believes progress on an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal is possible.

Clinton said Israel, too, needed to reach out to moderate Palestinians and "help those committed to peace to deliver for their people in the here and now" at a time when the U.S. is hoping that a fragile cease-fire Egypt sealed last week between the Jewish state and Hamas will prove durable. On Israel's settlement announcement Friday, she said "these activities set back the cause of a negotiated peace."

The Obama administration has almost nothing to show for four years of mediation efforts. Israeli-Palestinian talks have been mostly dormant since the failure of the last high-level U.S. engagement to produce an agreement, when President George W. Bush brought leaders to Annapolis, Md., with the goal of a treaty by the end of 2008. After a two-year hiatus, talks begun under the Obama administration's guidance in 2010 quickly fizzled out.

The rough contours of any agreement are clear. The two sides would have borders based on Israel's boundaries before the 1967 Mideast war, with agreed land swaps for Israeli security, to take into account population movements on the ground and ensure that Palestinian lands are connected. The two sides would also have to reach long-sought understandings on water supplies, Palestinian refugees and Jerusalem ? which both Jews and Muslims consider to be their holy cities and which both sides claim as their capital.

But American efforts have been continuously stymied. The Palestinians won't enter direct talks until Israel halts the construction of new Jewish homes on lands they claim for their state; Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government says there can be no preconditions on negotiations. And despite repeated pleas from Washington, both sides have pressed on with actions that have only made peace less likely and arguably strengthened the position of hardliners on both sides.

Hoping to steer the diplomacy back toward a path to peace talks, and away from the world spotlight of the U.N., Clinton met with Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman, and Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad in Washington on Friday. She also spoke to Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh, a key mediator.

Clinton reiterated strong U.S. support for Israel, while also reassuring the Palestinians that Washington remains engaged in peace efforts. The Obama administration doesn't want to shut out the Western-backed government of President Mahmoud Abbas despite its disagreements, especially after Hamas gained wider legitimacy in the Arab world after its recent weeklong war with the Jewish state.

Unlike Hamas, Abbas' government publicly supports a two-state agreement with Israel. Hamas and other groups in the Gaza Strip have fired thousands of rockets at Israel in recent years.

"A lasting ceasefire is essential for the people of Israel, whose communities lie in the path of these rockets," Clinton said. But she added that Gazans deserve better, too. "Just as Israel cannot accept the threat of rockets, none of us can be satisfied with a situation that condemns people on both sides to conflict every few years. Those who fire the rockets are responsible for the violence that follows, but all parties in the region have a role to play in keeping the peace."

Clinton called on Egypt, specifically, to prevent new weapons from being smuggled into Gaza. And she demanded that U.S. allies that have grown closer to Hamas, such as Turkey and Qatar, make clear to Gaza's rulers that confrontation is no one's interest.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-struggles-israel-palestinians-talks-224649113.html

brooke burke jennifer lawrence Alexa Vega Bram Stoker books Paula Broadwell Photos Veterans Day 2012 News

The Evolution of Remote Desktop Software | Personal Technology ...

The technology behind remote desktop software enables applications to be displayed locally even though they are run remotely on a server. That is, this kind of software acts as a kind of ?remote control? of computers, connecting a laptop or computer to another device via the internet or yet another network, and permitting desktops to be taken over and controlled by outside administration.

?

Sponsored Links

Affiliate Banner

As broadband internet connections became increasingly offered across the world, the require and desire for remote access technology arose. With this software, men and women became able to control any personal computer at any location in the world, as long as they had been connected with this technology.

?

Windows invented remote desktop protocol in 1999-2000 and, beginning with Windows XP, each and every Windows version has included remote desktop protocol. The require for remote desktop software arose with the transition from in-individual services to long-distance, frequently outsourced services. Remote control software was originally utilised at IT help and consumer service desks so that professionals could control customers? computers and support them with any technical difficulties.

?

Right now, remote desktop software program is not only utilized by tech experts, but is also used by the average computer user for file sharing, by businesspeople for working on documents outside of the office, and by educational institutions to permit communication between quite a few students across the world.

?

As broadband world wide web access becomes even a lot more readily accessible across the world, and as individuals grow to be far more dependent upon computer communications, pc remote access software program will likely play an even larger role in the world, and open up endless opportunities for communication, education, efficiency, and productivity.

Source: http://www.psani.org/the-evolution-of-remote-desktop-software.html

S B H c mitt romney mark zuckerberg mark zuckerberg

After ballot box wins, gay marriage battle heads back to courts

People line up for early voting in Silver Spring, Md., Oct. 27, 2012. (Reuters/Gary Cameron)People line up for early voting in Silver Spring, Md., Oct. 27, 2012. (Reuters/Gary Cameron)

As the U.S. Supreme Court meets on Friday to consider whether to wade into the issue of gay marriage, the justices face a reality not even a month old: For the first time, voters have chosen to legalize same-sex nuptials.

The shift that took place on Election Day has energized gay marriage advocates, who believe the expressions of support for their cause in four states will influence the Supreme Court's decision making.

At a private conference on Friday, the justices will consider whether to hear several cases dealing with the rights of gay couples who are married, want to get married or are in domestic partnerships. They could announce as soon as Friday which, if any, of the cases they'll accept.

On Nov. 6, voters approved ballot measures that legalized gay marriage in Maine, Maryland and Washington state and defeated a ballot measure in Minnesota that would have added an amendment to the state's Constitution banning same sex nuptials. It was a remarkable breakthrough for gay rights advocates, since until this year voters had rejected same-sex marriage in 32 states that held popular votes on the issue.

Advocates say such electoral victories are unlikely to be repeated anytime soon. The action will instead revert to legislative chambers and the courts, where all gay marriage victories were achieved prior to Election Day 2012.

"It's almost hard to find the right adjective to describe the monumental victory we had winning all four states," said Michael Cole-Schwartz, director of communication for the Human Rights Campaign, a gay rights group. "Marriage equality nationwide is not a question of if but when. It's up to us to accelerate our efforts."

Activists are looking to state legislatures in Colorado, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Minnesota, New Jersey and Rhode Island as the next places where the legalization of gay marriage or civil unions will be debated.

Right now, Oregon stands the best chance of being the next state to legalize gay marriage by popular vote, advocates say.

Jeana Frazzini, executive director of Basic Rights Oregon, said her group is aiming to make a decision early next year about whether to push for a ballot initiative in 2014 that would overturn the state's constitutional amendment banning same sex marriage, which passed in 2004.

"It's still very, very difficult to win a ballot measure," Evan Wolfson, founder and president of Freedom to Marry, said.

But Wolfson pointed to three factors that helped gay marriage go 4-0 on Election Day this year after so many previous losses: more "engagement" with voters; the increased visibility of gay marriage in the years since it has been legal in a handful of states; and better campaigns around the ballot measures.

President Barack Obama also has influenced the debate, advocates say. In May, Obama announced his support for gay marriage the day after voters in North Carolina overwhelmingly passed a constitutional amendment banning such nuptials.

Still, opponents of same sex nuptials don't see the string of victories as evidence of the inevitable.

Frank Schubert of the National Organization for Marriage said his group and others that promote traditional marriage were outspent in the battles this year. He also noted that the four states that expressed support for gay marriage this year were all traditionally Democratic and supported Obama in the presidential contest.

Schubert called the results "very disappointing" but said, "I don't think it signals a change in the mood of the country as a whole."

NOM does expect to be on the defensive "in the very short term" fighting state legislatures' attempts to legalize gay marriage, Schubert said. But his group and others hope to play offense again in two years?in Indiana, where the legislature already has taken steps to put a state constitutional amendment on the ballot that would ban same sex nuptials.

Schubert suggested the Supreme Court will have an impact on what happens in 2014 when it comes to one of the cases being considered on Friday: whether Proposition 8, California's 2008 voter-enacted ban on gay marriage, ?violates the U.S. Constitution.

The case was brought on behalf of two gay California couples who want to get married but can't because of the ban. The case originally had the potential to establish a right to same-sex marriage nationwide, but as it's framed now after a trip through the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, it only applies to California.

If the high court decides to accept the case and ultimately upholds Prop. 8, Schubert said he thinks there will be another ballot battle over gay marriage in California in 2014, with supporters trying to make gay marriage legal.

The justices could also decline to hear the Prop. 8 case, which would make gay marriage legal by default in California because of the 9th Circuit's ruling. Or they could decide to hear the case and strike down Prop. 8.

Also before the justices on Friday are cases relating to the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), the federal law that bars the U.S. government from recognizing same-sex marriage. Another deals with an Arizona law that denies benefits to state employees' domestic partners.

Many court watchers think it's likely the justices will accept one or more of the DOMA cases. Arguments would be held in the first half of 2013, and a ruling would be issued by June. If the court strikes down DOMA, it would give more rights to gay couples who are already married in states where it's legal, but it wouldn't expand gay marriage to more states.

Despite the all the potential action at the high court, Wolfson of Freedom to Marry says gay rights advocates' state-by-state strategy?of continuing to foster a groundswell of support through "persuasion and conversations"? doesn't change.

"If they do take one of those cases, then it even adds to the urgency of winning more states and growing the majority as much as we can while the court ponders," he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/ballot-box-victories-gay-marriage-battle-heads-back-145856047.html

megamillions drawing olbermann mega millions march 30 lucky numbers odds of winning mega millions mary mary sag aftra merger