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International Kissing Day takes place on 6 July

July 6, 2013 By administrator

International Kissing Day takes place on 6 July in the UK. However, the day has now been adopted worldwide and is also known as National Kissing Day or Kissing Day.

g_image-Kissing dayWhen I think about it, the concept of a kiss is everywhere in society and has many meanings. A first kiss. A formal kiss. A passionate kiss. A kiss goodbye.

Kissing Day aims to make us appreciate a kiss in its own right. No conventions, no social norms, just a kiss. Across the globe we embrace the kiss by embracing someone else.

Competition to hold the record for the longest kiss is rife – on 6-7 July 2005 the record was set in the UK at 31 hours and 30 minutes. Then on Valentine’s Day 2009 Nikola Matovic and Kristina Reinhart from Germany set a new record of just over 32 hours.

On 13 February 2011, a Thai couple, husband and wife team Ekkachai and Laksana Tiranarat locked lips and began their quest to break the longest kiss record. After 46 hours and 24 minutes they claimed a new record for the longest kiss. Impressive!

Nonthawat Charoenkaesornsin and Thanakorn Sitthiamthong kissed their way to the title at an event in Pattaya, Thailand on 12-14 February 2012. But now the tables have turned and Ekkachai and Laksana Tiranarat successfully regained their crown on 12-14 February 2013 and the record for the longest kiss now stands at 58 hours, 35 minutes and 58 seconds – wow, that’s some kiss!

Perhaps you can get some kissing tips from a friend before puckering up. Or delve into one of the many kissing guides that proclaim to make you the world’s best kisser!

Think of your first kiss … was it all you expected and a treasured memory or were you too nervous to really care?

Think of your sweetest kiss … a kiss from your child? A thank you kiss from your closest friend? And think of all those supposedly meaningless kisses. Next time I kiss someone I will just think about how delightful it is and not about what it ‘means’.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: July 6 is International Kissing Day

Al-Azhar imam addresses Egypt: Violence and killing against Islam

July 6, 2013 By administrator

Al Arabiya

Violence or killing a person is prohibited in Islam, said grand imam of al-Azhar institution – which is Sunni Islam’s highest seat of learning – as the death toll in Egypt kept rising.

1Ahmed al-Tayeb, in a televised address to the nation – said that he hoped the Egyptian people will find a way out of “this ugly strife.”

At least 10 people were killed and 210 wounded in clashes between opponents of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Mursi and those who support him, a health ministry source said on Friday.

Before his TV address, Tayeb demanded the release of political prisoners after the arrests of several leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood following the army’s overthrow of Mursi.

He also called for the release of “prisoners of conscience” and political activists, Reuters reported the state news agency MENA as saying.

Earlier on Tuesday, Tayeb warned that “division will lead the country to a catastrophe, and it must end.”

“Unity of the Egyptian people is above all,” he added.

However, the grand mufti – whose moderate religious authority had previously accused the Muslim Brotherhood, from which Mursi hails, of humiliating it – called for “effective steps” to be taken to show “appreciation to the people’s voice.”

He said the “people have surprised and inspired the world through its elegant expression of their peaceful demands.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Al-Azhar imam addresses Egypt: Violence and killing against Islam

Turkish PM to hold urgent Egypt meeting in Istanbul (Will he be the next elected dictator to Go?)

July 4, 2013 By administrator

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will hold a meeting to assess the latest developments in the Egyptian crisis at 4 p.m. in his Istanbul office.
erdomorsi_headlinenew6
Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, Culture and Tourism Minister Ömer Çelik, Deputy Chairman of the ruling Justice and Ruling Party (AKP), Huseyin Çelik, and AKP lawmaker Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu will participate in the meeting.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Turkish PM to hold urgent Egypt meeting in Istanbul

NYT: Ambassador Becomes Focus of Egyptians’ Mistrust of U.S.

July 4, 2013 By administrator

By MARK LANDLER

WASHINGTON — Her image has been plastered on banners in Tahrir Square, crossed out with a blood-red X or distorted and smeared with insults. She is too cozy with Egypt’s deposed pr

alt-policy-articleInlineAnne W. Patterson, a press-shy career diplomat who has been American ambassador to Cairo since 2011, suddenly finds herself a target in a dangerous political upheaval, a symbol for angry young Egyptians of America’s meddlesome role in their country’s affairs.

With the Egyptian military ousting President Mohamed Morsi on Wednesday, Ms. Patterson will have to navigate a perilous course between Mr. Morsi’s opponents and his enraged Islamist supporters, both of whom have grievances with the United States.

That she has become such a lightning rod for American policy speaks to the legacy of American involvement in Egypt and to the comparatively low level of attention Egypt has received from the Obama administration since the ouster of Hosni Mubarak two and a half years ago — at least until this week’s turmoil.

As her bosses in Washington struggle to exert even modest influence over the events in Cairo, Ms. Patterson, 63, has been portrayed as a sinister force by pro- and antigovernment protesters alike: a defender of the status quo as well as a troublemaker who schemes with the opposition.

“She’s being lambasted because she’s the face of America,” said Vali Nasr, a former State Department official who worked with Ms. Patterson when she was ambassador to Pakistan. “But the fact that she’s being excoriated instead of the president only represents the fact that the rest of the American administration is absent.”

In his first reaction to Mr. Morsi’s ouster, Mr. Obama warned of the dangers of violence and tried to steer Egypt’s military toward a prompt resumption of democratic rule. But the flurry of White House meetings and phone calls on Wednesday served to underscore the lack of leverage the United States has over Egypt, once a crucial strategic ally in the Middle East but lately just another headache.

Ms. Patterson’s problems started on June 18 when she was invited, at a time of mushrooming demonstrations against Mr. Morsi’s government, to speak to an audience in Cairo about the United States’ relationship with the Muslim Brotherhood. It was, she said, a welcome chance to “set the record straight.”

Read more on NYT

esident and the Muslim Brotherhood, the signs say, and should leave the country.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Ambassador Becomes Focus of Egyptians’ Mistrust of U.S.

Dictatorship by Election

July 3, 2013 By administrator

In the past few weeks, in both Egypt, Turkey and Iraqi Kurdistan region, arguably the three most culturally deferent but religiously smiler  the Muslim Middle East, has mass erdomorsi_headlinenew1demonstrations against elected governments have taken place. For sure, the situation in Egypt is much more tense and volatile. The army has just issued an ultimatum against Mohamed Morsi, the country’s elected president, while millions demonstrated against him on the street. In Turkey, the Army have completely been cleanse and infiltrated by Tayyip Erdoğan political party and Gulen Movement.

A more careful observance of these societies would reveal a much more complex picture, though. First of all, while the authoritarian tendencies of the Islamists are undeniably clear, the secularists who oppose them are hardly any different. In Egypt, the major concern with Morsi is that he will become “the new Mubarak,” who used to be one of the most secular rulers in the Middle East. In Turkey, everything that Tayyip Erdoğan is criticized for – nepotism, imposing a “way of life,” or silencing opponents –

In Iraqi Kurdistan region For the last few months the dispute over the expiration of Masud Barzani’s presidential term has put the Kurdistan region though a major political crisis with much wrestling between the three main parties: between the ruling Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and Gorran on one side, and the ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the PUK on the other.
Erbil has become the capital of Kurdistan and today Erbil is a symbol, not of democracy, but of surrender by the Kurdistan parliament to the forces of dictatorship.

the root cause of the problem to be authoritarianism. Where you fail, is in seeing that Islam is prone to turn into authoritarianism, with or without an Islamist in charge. If people can’t enjoy a cool glass of beer on a hot summers day, if they can’t kiss in public, if they can’t watch TV serials because they contradict with someone’s religious ideology, what else is it but authoritarianism?

Wally Sarkeesian

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Dictatorship by Election

Despite Lavish Public Praise, U.S. is Deeply Troubled by Erdogan

July 3, 2013 By administrator

BY HARUT SASSOUNIAN

Some months ago I wrote a column titled “Obama is Exploiting Turkish Leaders’ Craving for Flattery,” explaining that the U.S. President is able to persuade Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to do his bidding by taking advantage of his weakness for lavish praise!

harurt12Those aware of Erdogan’s authoritarian streak — on full display during the recent brutal attacks on protesters in Istanbul and other Turkish cities — have been deeply troubled by U.S. officials’ repeated mischaracterization of the Prime Minister’s dictatorial regime as “a role model for the Islamic world.”

The insincerity of such assessments was exposed when WikiLeaks made public thousands of confidential diplomatic cables from the U.S. Embassy in Ankara, indicating that American officials’ real opinion about Erdogan is the exact opposite of what they have been stating in public.

The Embassy dispatches, published by the German magazine Der Spiegel, described the Turkish Prime Minister “as a power-hungry Islamist surrounded by corrupt and incompetent ministers.” In a May 2005 cable, the U.S. Embassy surmised that Erdogan never had a realistic view of the world and believes he was chosen by God to lead Turkey. A knowledgeable source told American officials that “Tayyip believes in God … but does not trust him.”

U.S. diplomats report that the Prime Minister gets almost all his information from Islamist-leaning newspapers, ignoring the input of his own ministers. The Turkish military and intelligence services no longer share with him some of their reports. He trusts no one completely, surrounding himself with “an iron ring of sycophantic (but contemptuous) advisors.” Despite Erdogan’s macho behavior, he is reportedly terrified of losing his grip on power.

Although the Turkish leader declared war on corruption when he first assumed office, informants told U.S. Embassy officials that corruption exists at all levels, even within the Erdogan family. A senior government advisor confidentially told a journalist that the Prime Minister enriched himself from the privatization of a state oil refinery. An Energy Ministry official alleged that Erdogan asked Iranians to sign a gas pipeline deal with a Turkish company owned by an old schoolmate. Furthermore, two American sources claimed that the Prime Minister had eight Swiss bank accounts. Erdogan has denied all such allegations, insisting that his wealth is mostly derived from gifts received at his son’s wedding, and acknowledging that an anonymous Turkish businessman has been paying the expenses of his four children to study in the United States. Such explanations are viewed by the American Embassy as “lame.”

The Embassy’s cables contain many other startling accusations against Erdogan. Informants have told U.S. officials that when his political party’s candidate lost the Trabzon mayoral race, the Prime Minister allegedly funneled millions of dollars from a secret government account to his close friend Faruk Nafiz Ozak whom he had named as head of the local Trabzonspor football club. The money was for hiring top players so that the soccer team’s victories would overshadow the accomplishments of the elected mayor.

According to a cable sent by former U.S. Ambassador Eric Edelman, Erdogan’s appointees lacked “technocratic depth.” While some “appear to be capable of learning on the job, others are incompetent or seem to be pursuing private … interests.” High-ranking Turkish officials have informed the American Embassy in Ankara that they are appalled by the Prime Minister’s staff. Erdogan reportedly appointed as his undersecretary a man exhibiting “incompetence, prejudices and ignorance.” The Women’s Minister Nimet Cubukcu, an advocate of criminalizing adultery, obtained her position because she happened to be a friend of the Prime Minister’s wife. Another minister is accused of “nepotism, links to heroin smuggling, and a predilection for underage girls.”

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, highly-praised by U.S. officials in public, also comes under private scrutiny and criticism. According to confidential American Embassy cables, Davutoglu “understands little about politics outside of Ankara.” In fact, U.S. diplomats are alarmed “by his imperialistic tone … and his neo-Ottoman vision.” In a January 2010 dispatch, the American Ambassador reported that Turkey has “Rolls Royce ambitions but Rover resources.” Former Defense Minister Mehmet Gonul was also critical of the Foreign Minister, warning American officials about his “Islamist influence on Erdogan,” and calling him “exceptionally dangerous.”

Having spoiled Erdogan through lavish public praise, despite privately acknowledging his character flaws, U.S. officials must now assume full responsibility for the Prime Minister’s reckless behavior at home and abroad!

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Despite Lavish Public Praise, U.S. is Deeply Troubled by Erdogan

European court fines Turkey 331,000 euros in case into killing of five by soldiers

July 2, 2013 By administrator

STRASBOURG / ISTANBUL

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) today found Turkey guilty of violation of right to life in an application regarding the killing of five children by the Turkish n_49868_4military in Southeast Anatolia in 2005, ordering 65,000 euros in compensation to each applicant and a total payment of 5,930 euros for expenses.

The case concerned the killing of the applicants’ five children, aged between 13 and 24, by soldiers in Toptepe village in the southeastern province of Şırnak on Jan. 19, 2005. The investigation conducted by the local authorities upon an application by the victims’ families concluded that Sibel Sartık, 23, Nergiz Özer, 16, Hamdullah Çınar, 21, Zerga Esen, 21, and Zuhal Esen, 13, were “terrorists and members of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK)” that had opened fire on soldiers and had been killed in an ensuing armed clash.” The victims, all of whom came to Şırnak from western provinces, were allegedly in the area to join the PKK.

In a report prepared on Jan. 27, 2005, based on face-to-face interviews with witnesses and families and an inspection of the scene, the Human Rights Association (İHD) said it had “the opinion that case consisted of the extrajudicial killings of unarmed victims by gendarmerie forces.”

In their application to the ECHR, the families argued that the soldiers’ use of force against their children had been excessive and that the investigation into the incident, “if it had been carried out adequately by, for example, taking swabs for gunpowder residue, would have shown that their children had been unarmed and could not possibly have opened fire on the soldiers.”

In its ruling, the court found Turkey guilty of violation of Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights for the death of the applicants’ children and ineffective investigation conducted on the case.

In a separate case, the ECHR found Turkey guilty of violation of Article 3, which covers ill treatment and ineffective investigation, and ordered Turkey to pay 19,500 euros in non-pecuniary damage and 1,000 euros in costs and expenses to Mustafa Aldemir, 59.

The case concerned his complaint that he was disabled since being wounded by gunfire from soldiers who mistook him for a militant while they were lying in wait during an operation.

A criminal investigation showed that the soldiers lying in wait near the scene of the accident had been informed that a group of militants would be passing by and their lieutenant had wrongly assumed that Aldemir was one of them. The criminal proceedings ended on Dec. 4, 2006, when they were discontinued by a military prosecutor.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: 000 euros in case into killing of five by soldiers, European court fines Turkey 331

Turkish Government man Barzani term have been extended for another 2 Year (that is a welcome development for Turkey)

July 1, 2013 By administrator

Another two years with the leader of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), Massoud Barzani, in power is considered a welcome development by Ankara, which enjoys close economic ties with the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq.

barzanis“Barzani in power for two more years is an important indication that Turkey’s relations with the Kurdish region will significantly develop during this period. For Turkey, Barzani as the head of the Kurdish region in Iraq means maintaining stability,” Bilgay Duman, an expert on Iraq at the Center for Middle Eastern Strategic Studies (ORSAM) told Today’s Zaman.

Over the past few months, the KRG’s ruling and opposition politicians have been at odds on whether to permit Barzani to stand for another term in power. Iraq’s Kurdish region parliament voted on Sunday to extend the term of Barzani until August 2015 despite the harsh opposition of some lawmakers.

According to experts, the coming two years of Barzani rule will further develop the economic ties between the KRG and Turkey — a situation that disturbs the central government in Baghdad.

Turkey now control over 60% of Iraqi Kurdistan region economy.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Turkeys man Barzani term have been extended for another 2 Year (that is a welcome development for Turkey)

Greece: the sequel (this time with even more tourists)

June 30, 2013 By administrator

By Helena Smith

Holiday sector hits all-time high as nation savaged by austerity reinvents itself

MykonosThe Greek island of Mykonos is expecting 1 million tourists during the summer as yacht owners and cruise ship passengers make up a much bigger proportion of visitors to Greece. Photograph: Getty Images

Long before the setting sun turns the sky above Mykonos into a blaze of crimson, they begin to arrive: super-yachts and pleasure boats and high-speed craft all vying for a spot in the Aegean isle’s picturesque old port.

In his aviator sunglasses, Mykonos’s harbourmaster, Lieutenant Jr Nicholaos Zigouris, supervises this elegant race for  space.

“It wasn’t like this last year or the year before,” he says. “There’s been a huge leap in the number of private and professional boats sailing in, and the tourist season has barely begun.”

Mykonos, the island made famous by Jackie Onassis, is braced to accept 1 million tourists this summer but it is not only the international jet-set descending on its shores.

The island’s economy may be in freefall, its people hit by the harshest peacetime austerity programme ever imposed on an advanced western state, but Greece is back in business.

After three lean years marked by riots, strikes, social upheaval and political unrest, 17 million or so holidaymakers – 1.5 times the country’s population and an all-time record — are about to visit, according to officials.

The arrivals have never mattered more. Tourism accounts for almost 20% of GDP – and jobs. With recession-hit Greeks also struggling with a record level of unemployment, which has reached nearly 28%, the highest in the eurozone, industry earnings this year may well be the only income for many.

Up in the mini-resort that his father, Mykonos’s first hotelier, built back in the 1960s, Andreas Fiorentinos says Greeks have learned the hard way to appreciate the benefits of tourism.

“The crisis has taught us that we cannot fool our clients,” says Fiorentinos, taking in a spectacular view framed by bobbing yachts below. “And it has made us more aware. People understand how important it is for our economy.”

Like many, the third-generation hotelier believes the time has come for Greece to reinvent itself. For too long, he says, the industry has been overly dependent on its image as a destination of sun, sand and sea. “As a result of catering to price-sensitive tourists interested only in drinking and going to the beach, we have failed to tap into a whole market,” he sighs. “It’s an outdated model that has to change.”

Fiorentinos is also deputy secretary general of EOT, the country’s tourism board. “For the past year we’ve been visiting tourist expos around the world to convey the message that Greece is not only about souvlaki and Zorba the Greek. If it weren’t for our lumbering state we would have moved away from those stereotypes long ago.”

The efforts to appeal to a broader and more affluent audience – evident in the blossoming of five-star resorts, boutique hotels and gastronomic and cultural tourism – have not been easy.

Breaking old moulds has frequently been thwarted by corruption and vested interests, the twin ills blamed for bringing the country to its knees.

“Take Delos,” says Fiorentinos referring to Mykonos’s adjacent isle, an archaeological treasure trove and the country’s most sacred site. “It was considered the most important place in the ancient world. But do we show it off? No. Every day it closes at 3pm because the [state-run] archaeological service refuses to do otherwise.”

In the same vein it has taken nearly 20 years for Mykonos to get a new marina, seen as vital for attracting the fast-growing cruise tourism sector and niche commerce.

This year’s sharp rise in numbers has been partly attributed to a 40% increase in travellers on cruise ships, mostly from the US.

But it is not just westerners who are fuelling this tourism boom. Seated in his air-conditioned Athens office, Andreas Andreadis, who heads the association of Greek tourism enterprises, SETE, says much of Greece’s new traffic arises from the lifting of visa restrictions in long-haul emerging markets such as China, Turkey and Russia.

Russian arrivals at regional airports alone have shot up by 230% this year.

Andreadis says about 1.2 million Russians are expected to visit the country this year. “The volume is so high that SETE has employed 20 of its own people just to help stamp visas.”

Airlines have got more than 1m extra seats and scores of new routes to the country, including to places such as Mykonos island.

“We are linked to 14 countries and 28 destinations. There are daily flights to London, Milan and Istanbul,” says Athanasios Kollias, the air traffic controller at the island’s newly expanded airport. “From now on, 120 charters are expected every week. In May the number of passengers flying in from abroad more than doubled.”

Summer bookings to Greece from Germany and the UK have also soared. Some of the 15% increase from Germany was attributed to the chancellor, Angela Merkel – because of her insistence on austerity, exhorting her compatriots to visit the country. This month, Lufthansa chose Athens for the inaugural flight of its new flagship plane, the B747-8, the largest aircraft in the world.

For Andreadis the key to sustaining this boom is quality. And on Super Paradise beach, Mykonos’s favoured spot for the cool and trendy, the emphasis on improved service is everywhere to be seen. There’s a champagne bar at one end and a massage tent at the other as holidaymakers lounge on new sunbeds, under new, thatched, umbrellas, and take in the turquoise waters below.

For people like Nikos Xydakis, who has run a beach taverna for the past 40 years, the new look is not just about survival. “This year we had to do everything, even clean the beach because the state is in no position to help. But in life everything changes. The crisis has played a big role. Our tourists have changed and we have changed too.”

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Greece: the sequel (this time with even more tourists)

(“A Twelve Year Old Tells Us How the Banks Are Robbing Us”), Victoria Grant, (Video)

June 29, 2013 By administrator

(“A Twelve Year O12 year oldld Tells Us How the Banks Are Robbing Us”), Victoria Grant, calls out the corruption of the Canadian private banking system. She is articulate and gutsy. She provides policy alternatives. If Victoria represents even a sliver of the future generations, then there is hope for positive change.

Change of life: What I like about this more pragmatic video (“The High Price of Materialism”) is its concise demonstration of how we can actually improve our standard of living by owning less and sharing more. Sustainable change can actually be a step up, rather than a step down.

Conclusion

As these videos show, we can embrace our highest human possibilities by engaging change constructively. These videos also demonstrate that if we fail to courageously and consciously work for mindful, positive change we will leave thoughtless, destructive change in our wake.

The present situation is clear. We have created far greater threats by trying to avoid change, then by accepting the challenge of change. Our refusals to change our wasteful ways, our addictions to personal comfort, and our tendencies to exploit others, have created greater environmental, political, and economic instability, not less.

Even now, when the consequences are in our face, we still resist the need for deep changes. For all the rhetoric of “reform” and “change you can believe in” in education, economics, politics, and the environment, precious little substantive change has been initiated and sustained. Perhaps, we are avoiding future blame or running from past guilt.

When we embrace change, we replace these small and static conceits with the desire for initiative and movement.

Let’s take up change as a joy, rather than a grim necessity. Let’s make change an invited, pleasurable part of how we learn. We will be straining against every habit of our industrial training, our deeply engrained emotional, institutional, and cultural habits.

However, if we pull this off, a powerful liberation will emerge. No longer will we be hiding away in our physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual caves, because now we can live with each other and appreciate the gift of change that we have created together.

In this viral, interconnected world, small change influences can assert large effects. Conscious change that you embrace now can have a multiplied result. Therefore, seize the opportunity and challenge of change in what deeply calls you, and work with others to become more dynamic participants in the shaping of our world.

Now is time to make good. Now is the time to make change good.

Filed Under: News

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