Tuesday, 10 June 2014

TOP NEWS One student, gunman dead after Oregon high school shooting

TROUTDALE Ore. (Reuters) - A gunman walked into an Oregon high school gym with a rifle and shot a student to death on Tuesday before he was found dead in a bathroom stall, in the third outbreak of gun violence to shake a U.S. high school or college campus in less than three weeks.

Reynolds High School in the middle-class Portland suburb of Troutdale was immediately locked down, then evacuated room by room, as law enforcement officials converged on the campus of 2,800 students, which had been set for its last day of classes on Wednesday before the summer break.

"A gunman entered the high school this morning, shot one student. Unfortunately, that student has died," Troutdale Police Chief Scott Anderson told a news conference. "The gunman was located and the gunman is also deceased."

Authorities identified the victim as 14-year-old high school freshman Emilio Hoffman.

Gym teacher and track coach Todd Rispler was grazed by a bullet but made his way to the school's office to initiate the lockdown, possibly saving lives, Anderson said.

Authorities have not publicly named the gunman nor said how he died, but USA Today cited a police spokesman as saying the shooter was a teenager who shot himself to death in a bathroom stall following the attack.

The violence in northern Oregon was the latest in a string of fatal shootings in U.S. public places since May, including one at a Christian college in neighboring Washington state last week in which one student died.

President Barack Obama expressed deep frustration on Tuesday at the inability of Washington lawmakers to tighten gun control measures in the wake of U.S. shootings. [ID:nL2N0OR2FU]

"The country has to do some soul searching about this. This is becoming the norm and we take it for granted in ways that, as a parent, are terrifying to me," Obama said in reply to a question at a White House online event.

'THIS IS NOT A DRILL'

Oregon lawmakers have been at a legislative impasse for about two years over stricter gun control proposals.

Television footage at the Oregon school showed police officers in helmets and tactical gear stepping from armored vehicles and running near the school's perimeter with rifles. Students streamed out of the school with hands raised.

A few miles from the school, students bused from the campus were being reunited with anxious parents in the parking lot of a shopping center.

"I'm glad it wasn't worse," said Rachelle Rueschenberg, a mother clutching her ninth-grade daughter, Maddy.

Two girls from the high school, sisters Kadejah and Deondra Nixon, told Reuters after being reunited with their parents that police were asking students whether anyone had ridden a bus to school with a student carrying a guitar case. Kadejah Nixon said she did not hear gunfire because the shooting was in a different wing of the building, but recounted an announcement over the public address system that urged students to go to the nearest classroom and close the doors.

"'This is not a drill, this is serious, get into a classroom,'" she quoted the announcement as saying.

Police said during a search of the school after the shooting they found a gun on another person, which they believed to be unrelated to the violence. That person, who was not identified, was taken into custody.

(Reporting by Shelby Sebens in Portland, Teresa Carson in Troutdale and Steve Gorman and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Writing by Cynthia Johnston and Eric M. Johnson; Editing by Peter Cooney, Jim Loney and Clarence Fernandez)
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TOP NEWS Senior Republican Cantor suffers shocking loss to Tea Party rival

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Virginia lost to a Tea Party challenger on Tuesday in a stunning Republican primary upset that sent shockwaves through Congress and gave the conservative movement a landmark victory.

Cantor, the No. 2 Republican in the House of Representatives, was easily beaten by college economics professor David Brat, who accused Cantor of betraying conservative principles on spending, debt and immigration.

The result could halt efforts to craft a House immigration reform bill, as nervous Republicans hustle to protect themselves against future challenges from the right ahead of the Nov. 4 midterm elections. It could also make Republicans even more hesitant to cooperate with President Barack Obama and Democrats for fear of being labeled a compromiser.

Cantor had been seen by many as an eventual successor to House Speaker John Boehner, and his defeat will mean a shake-up in the Republican leadership at the end of the year among House members nervous about the depth of public anger toward Congress.

A seven-term congressman with ties to the financial industry, Cantor had spent more than $5 million to head off the challenge from Brat, a political newcomer who teaches at Randolph-Macon College.

Brat spent only about $122,000, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, and was not seen in the media or national Republican circles as a danger to Cantor.

The victory also emboldened conservative leaders, and could encourage a challenge to Boehner when the new leadership team is chosen. "Eric Cantor's loss tonight is an apocalyptic moment for the GOP establishment. The grassroots is in revolt and marching," said Brent Bozell, a veteran conservative activist and founder of the Media Research Center and ForAmerica.

With nearly all precincts reporting, Brat had about 56 percent of the vote to Cantor's 44 percent.

"I know there are a lot of long faces here tonight," Cantor told supporters. "It's disappointing, sure."

Brat, speaking to an ecstatic crowd, said: "This is the happiest moment, obviously, of my life."

BLOW TO REPUBLICAN ESTABLISHMENT

The result was a blow to the Republican establishment, which had scored a string of victories over the Tea Party in primaries to select candidates for the November elections. Republicans are hoping to pick up six seats to gain a Senate majority, but are considered heavy favorites to retain a House majority.

"We all saw how far outside the mainstream this Republican Congress was with Eric Cantor at the helm, now we will see them run further to the far right with the Tea Party striking fear into the heart of every Republican on the ballot," said Representative Steve Israel of New York, who heads the House Democratic campaign committee.

During the primary campaign, Brat repeatedly accused Cantor of supporting some immigration reform principles, including "amnesty" for undocumented workers. In response, Cantor had sent voters a mailer boasting of his role in trying to kill a House immigration bill that included that provision.

Brat also accused Cantor of losing touch with his central Virginia district while serving the party's leadership.

Republican strategists suggested Cantor had been too slow to realize how real the threat from Brat was.

"Easiest way to lose a campaign is to not take your opponent seriously," strategist Matt Mackowiak said on Twitter.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said on CNN that Cantor had helped make Brat better known by attacking him by name in the late stages of the campaign.

The result unleashed immediate speculation about a possible replacement for Cantor when the House meets to pick new leaders at the end of the year, including Jim Jordan of Ohio, Jeb Hensarling of Texas and Steve Scalise of Louisiana.

U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina also faced a Tea Party challenge on Tuesday, but he beat a crowded field of six challengers who also had accused him of not being conservative enough.

(Editing by Alistair Bell and Ron Popeski)
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TOP NEWS Mosul falls to militants, Iraqi forces flee northern city

MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters) - An al Qaeda splinter group seized control of the Iraqi city of Mosul on Tuesday, putting security forces to flight in a spectacular show of strength against the Shi'ite-led Baghdad government.

The capture of the northern city of 2 million by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant - Sunni Muslims waging sectarian war on both sides of the Iraqi-Syrian frontier - complements ISIL's grip on key western towns and followed four days of heavy fighting in Mosul and the border province of Nineveh around it.

The United States, which pulled out its troops two and a half years ago, pledged to help Iraqi leaders "push back against this aggression" as the government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki asked parliament to declare a state of emergency that would give him extraordinary powers to tackle the crisis.

But the battle, for the time being, seemed to be over. Some police were discarding uniforms and weapons and fleeing a city where the black flag of ISIL now flew over government buildings.

"We have lost Mosul this morning," said a colonel at a local military command center. "Army and police forces left their positions and ISIL terrorists are in full control.

"It's a total collapse of the security forces."

A Reuters reporter saw the bodies of soldiers and policemen, some of them mutilated, littering the streets.

"We can't beat them. We can't," one officer told Reuters. "They are well trained in street fighting and we're not. We need a whole army to drive them out of Mosul.

"They're like ghosts: they appear, strike and disappear in seconds."

The fall of Mosul, a largely Sunni Arab city after years of ethnic and sectarian fighting, deals a serious blow to Baghdad's efforts to fight Sunni militants who have regained ground and momentum in Iraq over the past year, taking Falluja and parts of Ramadi in the desert west of Baghdad at the start of the year.

Control there, in Anbar province, as well as around Mosul in the north, would help ISIL and its allies consolidate control along the barely populated frontier with Syria, where they are fighting President Bashar al-Assad, an ally of Shi'ite Iran.

A White House spokesman renewed U.S. calls for Maliki to do more to address grievances among Iraqis, notably the once dominant Sunni minority. Many Sunnis feel disenfranchised and some have made common cause with foreign Islamist radicals, first against the U.S. troops that overthrew Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003 and now Shi'ite-led Iraqi forces.

MOSUL IS "HELL"

Thousands of families were fleeing north from Mosul, one of the great historic cities of the Middle East, towards the nearby Kurdistan region, where Iraq's ethnic Kurds have autonomy and their own large and disciplined military force, the Peshmerga.

"Mosul now is like hell. It's in flames and death is everywhere," said Amina Ibrahim, who was leaving with her children. Her husband had been killed last year, in a bombing.

In a statement, the U.S. State Department said it was "deeply concerned" and had senior officials in Baghdad and Washington monitoring events in coordination with the Iraqi government, Kurdish officials and other Iraqi figures. It said Washington would "support a strong, coordinated response".

"The United States will provide all appropriate assistance to the government of Iraq," it added, saying that its use of arms and fighters from Syria showed "ISIL is not only a threat to the stability of Iraq, but a threat to the entire region".

Some officials in Baghdad spoke of seeking help for Mosul from Kurdish Peshmerga, which have long been a force in the jockeying between Shi'ites, Kurds and Sunnis for influence and, especially, for control of oilfields in the north of Iraq.

A Peshmerga spokesman said some Kurdish troops were helping Iraqi forces guard the Syrian border crossing at Rabia.

President Barack Obama has been criticised by some at home for neglecting Iraq and letting U.S. adversary Iran extend its influence there. Washington has stepped up the supply of arms, however, notably since the rise of Islamist rebels in Syria led to a new impetus for Maliki's Sunni enemies in Iraq.

However, Iraqi police, military and security officials told Reuters the insurgents, armed with anti-aircraft weapons and rocket-propelled grenades, had taken over almost all police and army checkpoints in and around Mosul early on Tuesday.

Two army officers said security forces had received orders to quit Mosul after militants captured the Ghizlani army base and set more than 200 inmates free from a high-security prison.

Two police sources and a local government official said the militants had also broken into another jail called Badush, allowing more than 1,000 prisoners to escape. Most of these, they said, belonged to ISIL and al Qaeda. The army and police set fire to fuel and ammunition depots as they retreated to prevent the militants from using them, the officers said.

Further south, at Hawija in Kirkuk province, the head of the local council, Hussein Ali al-Saleh, said scores of Islamist militants drove into town, putting troops and police to flight.

ISIL, led by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, broke with al Qaeda's international leader, Osama bin Laden's former lieutenant Ayman al-Zawahri, and has clashed with al Qaeda fighters in Syria.

ISIL posted photographs of its fighters wearing black balaclavas on its "Nineveh State" Twitter account, interspersed with verses from the Koran. The group dubbed the Mosul offensive "Enter Upon Them Through The Gates".

In a newsletter, ISIL enjoined Sunnis to join them in the fight against Maliki's "Safavid" army - a reference to the Persian dynasty that promoted Shi'ite Islam.

"Join the ranks oh brothers!" ran one slogan. "Maliki's tyrannical strength no match for pious believers."

"EVEN THE DEAD SUFFER"

Ibraheem al-Sumeide'i, a former adviser to Maliki who fell out with him over policy, said the prime minister should make way for a government of national unity: "The fall of Mosul into the hands of ISIL means that ISIL has unified the Iraqi and Syrian front and they have achieved their goal," he said.

Some Iraqi security sources estimate more than a thousand mainly Shi'ite troops have been killed and many more deserted from the army, as regular soldiers complain their leadership has not provided them with the equipment and training.

Militants also control the Qayara district near Mosul, where there is a military base and an airfield, security sources said.

In the neighboring province of Salahaddin, they overran three villages in the Shirqat district, torching police stations, town halls and local council buildings before raising ISIL's banner. Over loudspeakers, insurgents said residents - and the police - would be safe if they remained in their homes.

On Monday, Nineveh provincial governor Atheel Nujaifi made a televised plea to the people of Mosul to stand their ground and fight. Hours later, Nujaifi himself narrowly escaped the provincial headquarters in the city after militants besieged it.

Nujaifi's brother Osama, who is speaker of the parliament in Baghdad, called on the Kurdish leadership to sent their Peshmerga forces to Mosul and wrest it back from "terrorists".

Kurdistan Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani said his region had tried to coordinate with Iraqi federal authorities to protect Mosul, but Baghdad's stance had made it impossible.

Nearly 800 people were killed in violence across Iraq in May - the highest monthly death toll so far this year. Last year was the deadliest since the sectarian bloodletting of 2006-07.

At least 20 people were killed on Tuesday when two bombs exploded at a cemetery in the city of Baquba about 50 km (30 miles) northeast of Baghdad, as mourners buried a university professor shot dead the previous day, police and medics said.

"Mourners' bodies were flung among the graves by the force of the blasts," said Muhsin Farhan, a relative of the professor.

"Even the dead are suffering in Iraq."

(Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed, Raheem Salman and Isra al-Rubei'i in Baghdad; Writing by Isabel Coles; Editing by Samia Nakhoul, Giles Elgood and Alastair Macdonald)


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TOP NEWS: Mexican immigrant who sought sanctuary in church can stay in U.S

TUCSON Ariz. (Reuters) - A Mexican immigrant who took refuge in an Arizona church to avoid deportation from a country where he has lived illegally for over a decade and raised a family can stay in the United States, a federal official said on Tuesday.

Daniel Neyoy Ruiz, 36, had been ordered to report for voluntary deportation in May. But in a high-profile challenge to U.S. immigration policy he instead turned to a Tucson church whose leaders were involved in a movement to give sanctuary to Central American refugees in the 1980s.

After spending nearly a month in the church, Neyoy Ruiz was notified by immigration officials on Monday that he had been granted a one-year stay, which can be renewed annually and includes a work permit. A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman confirmed a stay of removal had been issued.

"I cried," Neyoy Ruiz said of the decision granting him a stay, which had been twice denied previously. "I cried out of happiness and we hugged each other knowing that this was done."

Neyoy Ruiz, who has a teenage son who is a U.S. citizen, was ordered to report for voluntary deportation stemming from a 2011 traffic stop. After he took refuge in the church on May 13, immigration officials said they would not immediately act to deport him. Now that a stay has been granted, the family plans to leave the church.

"Daniel's case is not exceptional, and the fact that he was never granted prosecutorial discretion and then later denied a stay of removal should be reviewed by immigration officials," said Margo Cowan, the family's lawyer.

Federal immigration officials have focused their enforcement efforts on stopping illegal border crossers and deporting unauthorized immigrants convicted of crimes. Ruiz has never been convicted of a crime, his attorney said.

Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, which seeks to limit numbers entering the United States, criticized the action.

"While law enforcement agencies should prioritize cases, there's no reason that a deportation order shouldn't be enforced," Mehlman said.

Neyoy Ruiz is not the first immigrant to turn to a church for refuge from deportation. In 2006, Mexican immigrant activist Elvira Arellano famously entered a Chicago church and stayed there for a year, but was ultimately deported.

(Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Lisa Shumaker)
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HEALTHCARE NEWS: Poor healthcare in Alabama prisons contributed to deaths -report

(Reuters) - Severe understaffing in Alabama's prisons has contributed to at least three inmate deaths this year and has led to inadequate medical care, amounting to cruel and unusual punishment, two civil rights groups said in a report released on Tuesday.

In some cases, inmates were unwittingly placed under "do not resuscitate" orders, said the report, which was co-authored by the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Alabama Disabilities Advocacy Program. (Report: http://r.reuters.com/dek99v)

Diabetic inmates sometimes waited months before having their blood sugar levels taken, resulting, in some cases, in inmates having their toes and feet amputated as a result of inadequate care, it said.

The report, which was based in part on more than 100 prisoner interviews and a review of medical records, concluded the problems stem primarily from severe understaffing and efforts to cut costs when awarding medical services contracts.

The state employs 15.2 doctors - based on full and part-time workers - to care for over 25,000 inmates, the report said.

"Whenever Alabama determines a person must be incarcerated, it must accept the legal – and moral – responsibility that comes from imprisoning a human being," said Maria Morris, an attorney with the Southern Poverty Law Center and the report's lead author.

Also on Tuesday, Alabama Governor Robert Bentley announced plans to convene a study to recommend ways to increase public safety and reduce overcrowding in the state's prisons, which he said houses inmates more cheaply than any other in the United States.

A spokeswoman for Bentley said the announcement was unrelated to the report.

Bentley said in a statement that he had not yet read the report but is committed to improving overall conditions in the state's prisons, including easing overcrowding, in a cost-effective manner.

"We are making fundamental and significant changes to our prison system, and I am committed to continue those efforts," Bentley said.

The report found that one inmate died in January after not receiving follow-up tests when initial ones indicated his prostate cancer had returned.

A second patient died that same month after his heart stopped while he was undergoing dialysis and with no one present to use the emergency medical equipment at hand, the report said.

A third inmate died in May when he was kept writhing in the infirmary for two days after a bad reaction of unknown origin, Morris said.

(Reporting by Jonathan Kaminsky in New Orleans; Editing by Edith Honan and Lisa Shumaker)

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DOWNLOAD VIDEO: Aramide – Feeling This Feeling

Moore Music Entertainment presents the official music video for"Feeling This Feeling" by Afro-Soul singer, Aramide.



The song which has been well received since its release, now has visuals that depict the story about friendship, love, and companionship.



Directed by Gbemi Phillips, and features fast rising actor, Deyemi Okanlawon.







DOWNLOAD VIDEO »

http://wadupnaija.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Aramide-Feeling-This-Feeling-Wadupnaija.com-Official-Video.mp4



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NOTE: Why Qatar will fight to retain 2022 World Cup

Driving in Qatar is not for the faint of heart. At rush hour in Doha, the capital of the Gulf state, getting around town is usually a white-knuckle ride.

Buses, super-sized 4x4s, concrete mixers, trucks, motorbikes and some of the world's fastest supercars, driven by mega-rich locals, all converge on the highways that snake around the city.

With no evidence of a common set of driving rules - or a willingness to use indicators, for that matter - the end result is often chaos, congestion and crashes.

Qatar's government believes the situation is set to improve as huge infrastructure projects near conclusion, including a £9.5bn ($16bn) underground metro system.
As one dusty billboard near the newly opened airport puts it: "Qatar deserves the best!"

That state-sponsored message sums up Qatar's level of ambition and is reflected in Doha's skyline, a dizzying array of steel and glass structures that gleam in the blistering desert sun.

It's on the 34th floor of one of those skyscrapers, the Al Bidda Tower, that the organising committee for the Qatar 2022 World Cup is based.

Despite recent allegations of corruption levelled at their bid, staff here are determined to press ahead with delivering football's premier international tournament.

That's because, for Qatar's elite at least, the World Cup is a catalyst for yet more change in the Gulf state. But it's also much more than that.

Back in the mid-1990s, Qatar successfully accessed vast reserves of natural gas and oil.

While there may be decades of fossil fuels still to be extracted beneath the desert sands, there is a recognition within the state of the need to build, diversify and prepare for a time when those natural resources become depleted.

Given the constantly shifting political plates within the Middle East, Qatar also recognised some years ago that it needed to think long and hard about its standing on the world stage.

Sport is at the very heart of its core strategy and winning the right to stage the World Cup in 2022 is its most notable milestone to date.

Other steps have been taken, too.
The state's sovereign wealth fund, which invests in foreign companies, already owns French Ligue 1 champions Paris St Germain, while the name of Qatar's state-owned airline adorns Barcelona's famous shirt.

World number one tennis player Rafael Nadal is a regular competitor in Doha
The world's top tennis players, golfers, cyclists and athletes are regular visitors to Doha, while Qatari-owned thoroughbreds continue to make their mark on the turf at Europe's finest racecourses.

This building of sporting bridges with the world's biggest names, brands and competitions is an example of what diplomats refer to as 'soft power' - the projection of shared cultural values designed to help protect a country's interests and build alliances with key international powers.

So the threat to strip Qatar of the 2022 World Cup following allegations of corruption and vote-buying - allegations "vehemently" denied by the tournament's organisers - strikes at more than just the prestige that hosting football's premier international event would bring.

The 2022 World Cup is the catalyst to Qatar's political, social and sporting future - and the Gulf state is determined to hang on to it.

Last week, Hassan Al Thawadi, the secretary general of the Qatar 2022 supreme committee, travelled to Oman to meet Michael Garcia, the independent ethics investigator appointed by Fifa to root out any wrongdoing in the bid process for both the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.
Qatari sources say the meeting was "comfortable" for Al Thawadi and other officials present.

But several voices within Fifa, including Uefa president Michel Platini, the only man to admit casting a vote for Qatar, have said there should be a re-run of the bidding process for 2022 if corruption is proven.

Hassan Al Thawadi has met Fifa investigator Michael Garcia to discuss claims of wrongdoing
Qatar's bid committee has spent more than £298m ($500m) in the four years since Fifa president Sepp Blatter took to the stage in a Zurich conference hall and announced the Gulf state had prevailed over Australia, Japan, South Korea and the United States.

Until now, there has been a reluctance to discuss specific numbers.

But with half a billion dollars now deployed, as Qatar starts to deliver on its bid promises, the overriding message such a revelation sends is that the gloves are coming off in the battle to keep its hosting rights.

The potential financial ramifications for Fifa if it was to revoke Qatar's victory could be significant.

Qatari officials privately say they want to avoid a legal showdown - potentially at the Court of Arbitration for Sport - with Fifa.

But given the threat they face - and their denial of any wrongdoing - all options are thought to be under consideration.

Within the Al Bidda Tower, Qatar 2022's staff are acutely aware of what is at stake. At the reception desk, a monitor displays a countdown clock indicating the months, days, hours, minutes and seconds until the tournament is due to begin.

Due to current consultations over whether the tournament should take place in summer or winter, given Qatar's extreme temperatures in June and July, it's fair to say the clock is far from definitive.

Nevertheless, in Al Wakra, a district to the south of Doha, the first stadium for 2022 is now under construction.

A computer-generated image of the stadium in Al Wakra, which is now under construction
Designed by Zaha Hadid, the architect behind the London 2012 Olympic aquatic centre, it is the first of five stadiums that will be under construction by the end of this year.

"We need to deliver on our promises, but this is a case of not just us delivering on what we promised, the whole country is mandated to deliver this World Cup," said Thani Al Zarraa, a senior engineer and project manager for Qatar 2022.

Significantly, other voices are starting to emerge within Qatar to defend its right to stage the World Cup.

Nasser Ali Al Mawlawi is not a man used to answering questions from the media but is likely to one of many key figures stepping forward to defend his country's interests.

As the chief executive of Ashghal, Qatar's public works authority, he is responsible for a £16bn ($27bn) investment in his nation's expressways.

High up in his penthouse office, over small glasses of tea, he spoke about the impact on Qatar should it lose the 2022 World Cup.

"It will be very sad for us as a people," he said. "Back in 2010, we were really happy to host. At the same time, I'm really confident that we have won it in the right way. This isn't just a World Cup for Qatar, this is a World Cup for the entire Middle East."

If Qatar is to host the first Middle Eastern World Cup, then the next few weeks will be crucial to its hopes.

It is not just facing corruption allegations, it is also fighting claims that moving the tournament from its traditional summer slot will be too disruptive, plus ongoing issues over the rights of workers.

Qatar insists it will not build stadiums "on the blood of innocents" and is taking action to improve the terms and conditions of workers.

But organisations such as the International Trade Union Confederation claim that recent reforms by the Qatar government are "cosmetic" and simply don't go far enough.

The ITUC believes "modern slavery" exists in Qatar and wholesale reform of labour laws is needed to stop workers dying and to improve conditions.

Fifa has been subjected to protesters claiming that migrant workers are being treated badly in Qatar
As for the dates for the tournament, a recommendation is likely to come in early 2015, with the expectation that November and December of 2022 will be put forward by the taskforce led by Fifa executive committee member Sheikh Salman.

But will Qatar's bid make it to that stage?

Garcia concluded his ethics investigation on 9 June, against a backdrop of weekly allegations from Fifa files leaked to the Sunday Times.

His report and recommendations are expected to be delivered to Hans-Joachim Eckhart, Fifa's independent ethics adjudicator, in mid-July.

Garcia's planned update at Fifa's congress this week may not reveal much either.

In any case, Fifa's ethics chamber only has the power to caution and sanction individuals, not entire nations or bidding committees.

It will therefore be up to the governing body's powerful executive committee to decide, if corruption is proven and directly linked to Qatar 2022, what action should be taken.

Once again, politics will play its part, especially with the Fifa presidential election due to be contested next year.

Ultimately, given the bid processes for both 2018 and 2022 were ran in tandem, with allegations of collusion between voting nations already in existence, it may be difficult to re-run just one in isolation.

In that same vein, it is difficult to believe there is much of an appetite within Fifa to upset Russia, which is due to stage the 2018 tournament.
That's all before the fury of the Arab world is factored into the equation if Qatar were to be stripped of its winning bid status.

Strong representations from the heads of confederations supportive of Qatar are believed to be behind last October's statement from Blatter that Qatar 2022 would definitely go ahead.

Fifa president Sepp Blatter is likely to have the final say on Qatar 2022
However, when asked last week to give his opinion on Qatar's prospects in light of the fresh allegations, he replied that he was "not a prophet".

Nevertheless, Blatter is likely to have the final say on the tournament's viability - if Garcia's report provides him with the political capital to act.

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NOTE: Blatter told he should quit next year

Sepp Blatter was told to "stop attacking the messenger" by FA chairman Greg Dyke

Fifa president Sepp Blatter has been urged to stand down next year by European football chiefs because of the damage to Fifa's reputation from recent corruption allegations.



Dutch FA president Michael van Praag told Blatter, 78, he should not seek re-election in 2015.



FA chairman Greg Dyke said Blatter's claim that allegations were racially motivated was "totally unacceptable".

Fifa is investigating allegations around Qatar's 2022 World Cup bid.



Blatter met Uefa officials at the Fifa congress in Sao Paulo on Tuesday after winning support from the world governing body's five other confederations.



Dyke said he told Blatter: "The allegations being made are nothing to do with racism; they are allegations about corruption.



"These allegations need to be properly investigated and properly answered.

"Mr Blatter, many of us are deeply troubled by your reaction to these allegations.



"It's time for Fifa to stop attacking the messenger, and consider and understand the message."



England's Uefa vice-president David Gill also called for Blatter not to stand for a fifth term.



The former Manchester United chief executive said: "The very fact in 2011 he was clear it was just for four years, that should have been the situation. To change his mind is disappointing."



Asked whether he thought Blatter should step down next year, Gill added: "Personally, yes. I think we need to move on."



The Fifa president is said to have told delegates he still wished to stand in next year's election.



Uefa executive committee member Van Praag added: "Fifa's image has deteriorated because of everything that's happened in recent years.

"Few people still take Fifa seriously and, however you look at it, Blatter is mainly responsible.



"People link Fifa to corruption and bribery and all kinds of old boy's networks."

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LIVE: Obama answers Tumblr questions on college loans

President Barack Obama stressed that he believes paying for college is worth it Tuesday afternoon in a discussion with Tumblr users on student loans and skyrocketing college costs.

"Is this a good investment? It absolutely is," the president said in response to a question from a Tumblr user. "It continues to be a very smart investment for you to go to college."

But the president also stressed that college isn't for everyone: encouraging students to look into trade schools and be practical about making sure they are studying for a profession that there is actually demand for.

The discussion is moderated from the White House by the microblogging site's 27-year-old founder David Karp. (Karp skipped college in favor of the startup world.) Tumblr solicited questions from its users — 40 percent of whom are between 18 and 34 years old — beginning last Thursday. Yahoo acquired Tumblr on May 20, 2013.

Ahead of the chat, the president expanded a program so that millions more borrowers can qualify for lower monthly payments, capped at 10 percent of their income. The president also made a White House appearance on Monday to stump for a more comprehensive student loan bill backed by Senate Democrats, which would allow many borrowers to refinance their old student debts.

Critics of the bill and the president's executive action say they don't do enough to address the root problem: higher education's skyrocketing cost.

The president says he wants the country to lead the world in the share of the population that has a four-year degree by 2020. But lightning-fast increases in tuition, especially at public institutions, have made it more challenging for low-income and middle-class young people to go to college. By this spring, average college debt will reach $30,000. The total amount of outstanding student debt passed $1 trillion last year.

Obama has mentioned his own student loans in speeches to explain why he cares about making college more affordable. "Michelle and I have been in your shoes," he told college students when he was on the campaign trail in 2012. Obama and the first lady were still paying off their hefty student debts from college and law school when he was elected to the Senate in 2004, when they were both in their 40s.

The president has held other "White House Socials" before, answering questions on Twitter, Reddit and other platforms. This will be his first time using Tumblr for such an event.

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LIVE: Obama answers Tumblr questions on college loans

President Barack Obama stressed that he believes paying for college is worth it Tuesday afternoon in a discussion with Tumblr users on student loans and skyrocketing college costs.

"Is this a good investment? It absolutely is," the president said in response to a question from a Tumblr user. "It continues to be a very smart investment for you to go to college."

But the president also stressed that college isn't for everyone: encouraging students to look into trade schools and be practical about making sure they are studying for a profession that there is actually demand for.

The discussion is moderated from the White House by the microblogging site's 27-year-old founder David Karp. (Karp skipped college in favor of the startup world.) Tumblr solicited questions from its users — 40 percent of whom are between 18 and 34 years old — beginning last Thursday. Yahoo acquired Tumblr on May 20, 2013.

Ahead of the chat, the president expanded a program so that millions more borrowers can qualify for lower monthly payments, capped at 10 percent of their income. The president also made a White House appearance on Monday to stump for a more comprehensive student loan bill backed by Senate Democrats, which would allow many borrowers to refinance their old student debts.

Critics of the bill and the president's executive action say they don't do enough to address the root problem: higher education's skyrocketing cost.

The president says he wants the country to lead the world in the share of the population that has a four-year degree by 2020. But lightning-fast increases in tuition, especially at public institutions, have made it more challenging for low-income and middle-class young people to go to college. By this spring, average college debt will reach $30,000. The total amount of outstanding student debt passed $1 trillion last year.

Obama has mentioned his own student loans in speeches to explain why he cares about making college more affordable. "Michelle and I have been in your shoes," he told college students when he was on the campaign trail in 2012. Obama and the first lady were still paying off their hefty student debts from college and law school when he was elected to the Senate in 2004, when they were both in their 40s.

The president has held other "White House Socials" before, answering questions on Twitter, Reddit and other platforms. This will be his first time using Tumblr for such an event.
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NOTE: Why Qatar will fight to retain 2022 World Cup

Driving in Qatar is not for the faint of heart. At rush hour in Doha, the capital of the Gulf state, getting around town is usually a white-knuckle ride.

Buses, super-sized 4x4s, concrete mixers, trucks, motorbikes and some of the world's fastest supercars, driven by mega-rich locals, all converge on the highways that snake around the city.

With no evidence of a common set of driving rules - or a willingness to use indicators, for that matter - the end result is often chaos, congestion and crashes.

Qatar's government believes the situation is set to improve as huge infrastructure projects near conclusion, including a £9.5bn ($16bn) underground metro system.
As one dusty billboard near the newly opened airport puts it: "Qatar deserves the best!"

That state-sponsored message sums up Qatar's level of ambition and is reflected in Doha's skyline, a dizzying array of steel and glass structures that gleam in the blistering desert sun.

It's on the 34th floor of one of those skyscrapers, the Al Bidda Tower, that the organising committee for the Qatar 2022 World Cup is based.

Despite recent allegations of corruption levelled at their bid, staff here are determined to press ahead with delivering football's premier international tournament.

That's because, for Qatar's elite at least, the World Cup is a catalyst for yet more change in the Gulf state. But it's also much more than that.

Back in the mid-1990s, Qatar successfully accessed vast reserves of natural gas and oil.

While there may be decades of fossil fuels still to be extracted beneath the desert sands, there is a recognition within the state of the need to build, diversify and prepare for a time when those natural resources become depleted.

Given the constantly shifting political plates within the Middle East, Qatar also recognised some years ago that it needed to think long and hard about its standing on the world stage.

Sport is at the very heart of its core strategy and winning the right to stage the World Cup in 2022 is its most notable milestone to date.

Other steps have been taken, too.
The state's sovereign wealth fund, which invests in foreign companies, already owns French Ligue 1 champions Paris St Germain, while the name of Qatar's state-owned airline adorns Barcelona's famous shirt.

World number one tennis player Rafael Nadal is a regular competitor in Doha
The world's top tennis players, golfers, cyclists and athletes are regular visitors to Doha, while Qatari-owned thoroughbreds continue to make their mark on the turf at Europe's finest racecourses.

This building of sporting bridges with the world's biggest names, brands and competitions is an example of what diplomats refer to as 'soft power' - the projection of shared cultural values designed to help protect a country's interests and build alliances with key international powers.

So the threat to strip Qatar of the 2022 World Cup following allegations of corruption and vote-buying - allegations "vehemently" denied by the tournament's organisers - strikes at more than just the prestige that hosting football's premier international event would bring.

The 2022 World Cup is the catalyst to Qatar's political, social and sporting future - and the Gulf state is determined to hang on to it.

Last week, Hassan Al Thawadi, the secretary general of the Qatar 2022 supreme committee, travelled to Oman to meet Michael Garcia, the independent ethics investigator appointed by Fifa to root out any wrongdoing in the bid process for both the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.
Qatari sources say the meeting was "comfortable" for Al Thawadi and other officials present.

But several voices within Fifa, including Uefa president Michel Platini, the only man to admit casting a vote for Qatar, have said there should be a re-run of the bidding process for 2022 if corruption is proven.

Hassan Al Thawadi has met Fifa investigator Michael Garcia to discuss claims of wrongdoing
Qatar's bid committee has spent more than £298m ($500m) in the four years since Fifa president Sepp Blatter took to the stage in a Zurich conference hall and announced the Gulf state had prevailed over Australia, Japan, South Korea and the United States.

Until now, there has been a reluctance to discuss specific numbers.

But with half a billion dollars now deployed, as Qatar starts to deliver on its bid promises, the overriding message such a revelation sends is that the gloves are coming off in the battle to keep its hosting rights.

The potential financial ramifications for Fifa if it was to revoke Qatar's victory could be significant.

Qatari officials privately say they want to avoid a legal showdown - potentially at the Court of Arbitration for Sport - with Fifa.

But given the threat they face - and their denial of any wrongdoing - all options are thought to be under consideration.

Within the Al Bidda Tower, Qatar 2022's staff are acutely aware of what is at stake. At the reception desk, a monitor displays a countdown clock indicating the months, days, hours, minutes and seconds until the tournament is due to begin.

Due to current consultations over whether the tournament should take place in summer or winter, given Qatar's extreme temperatures in June and July, it's fair to say the clock is far from definitive.

Nevertheless, in Al Wakra, a district to the south of Doha, the first stadium for 2022 is now under construction.

A computer-generated image of the stadium in Al Wakra, which is now under construction
Designed by Zaha Hadid, the architect behind the London 2012 Olympic aquatic centre, it is the first of five stadiums that will be under construction by the end of this year.

"We need to deliver on our promises, but this is a case of not just us delivering on what we promised, the whole country is mandated to deliver this World Cup," said Thani Al Zarraa, a senior engineer and project manager for Qatar 2022.

Significantly, other voices are starting to emerge within Qatar to defend its right to stage the World Cup.

Nasser Ali Al Mawlawi is not a man used to answering questions from the media but is likely to one of many key figures stepping forward to defend his country's interests.

As the chief executive of Ashghal, Qatar's public works authority, he is responsible for a £16bn ($27bn) investment in his nation's expressways.

High up in his penthouse office, over small glasses of tea, he spoke about the impact on Qatar should it lose the 2022 World Cup.

"It will be very sad for us as a people," he said. "Back in 2010, we were really happy to host. At the same time, I'm really confident that we have won it in the right way. This isn't just a World Cup for Qatar, this is a World Cup for the entire Middle East."

If Qatar is to host the first Middle Eastern World Cup, then the next few weeks will be crucial to its hopes.

It is not just facing corruption allegations, it is also fighting claims that moving the tournament from its traditional summer slot will be too disruptive, plus ongoing issues over the rights of workers.

Qatar insists it will not build stadiums "on the blood of innocents" and is taking action to improve the terms and conditions of workers.

But organisations such as the International Trade Union Confederation claim that recent reforms by the Qatar government are "cosmetic" and simply don't go far enough.

The ITUC believes "modern slavery" exists in Qatar and wholesale reform of labour laws is needed to stop workers dying and to improve conditions.

Fifa has been subjected to protesters claiming that migrant workers are being treated badly in Qatar
As for the dates for the tournament, a recommendation is likely to come in early 2015, with the expectation that November and December of 2022 will be put forward by the taskforce led by Fifa executive committee member Sheikh Salman.

But will Qatar's bid make it to that stage?

Garcia concluded his ethics investigation on 9 June, against a backdrop of weekly allegations from Fifa files leaked to the Sunday Times.

His report and recommendations are expected to be delivered to Hans-Joachim Eckhart, Fifa's independent ethics adjudicator, in mid-July.

Garcia's planned update at Fifa's congress this week may not reveal much either.

In any case, Fifa's ethics chamber only has the power to caution and sanction individuals, not entire nations or bidding committees.

It will therefore be up to the governing body's powerful executive committee to decide, if corruption is proven and directly linked to Qatar 2022, what action should be taken.

Once again, politics will play its part, especially with the Fifa presidential election due to be contested next year.

Ultimately, given the bid processes for both 2018 and 2022 were ran in tandem, with allegations of collusion between voting nations already in existence, it may be difficult to re-run just one in isolation.

In that same vein, it is difficult to believe there is much of an appetite within Fifa to upset Russia, which is due to stage the 2018 tournament.
That's all before the fury of the Arab world is factored into the equation if Qatar were to be stripped of its winning bid status.

Strong representations from the heads of confederations supportive of Qatar are believed to be behind last October's statement from Blatter that Qatar 2022 would definitely go ahead.

Fifa president Sepp Blatter is likely to have the final say on Qatar 2022
However, when asked last week to give his opinion on Qatar's prospects in light of the fresh allegations, he replied that he was "not a prophet".

Nevertheless, Blatter is likely to have the final say on the tournament's viability - if Garcia's report provides him with the political capital to act.
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DOWNLOAD NEW MUSIC AND VIDEO OF Flavour, Illbliss, Waje & Bez – Fly With The Eagles (Guinness W/Cup Theme Song)

Guinness, official beer of the Super Eagles, have released a video to support them in Brazil World Cup 2014 set to kick off in a few days.



Employing the inspirational sounds of Waje, Bez, Flavour and IllBliss, the video calls for Nigerians to cheer on the Eagles. ENJOY!



DOWNLOAD »

http://k007.kiwi6.com/hotlink/9wpujh4ilb/Flavour_Illbliss_Waje_Bez_-_Fly_With_The_Eagles_Guinness_W_Cup_Theme_Song_47vibez.com.mp3



VIDEO »

http://septin911.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Flavour-Illbliss-Waje-Bez-Fly-With-The-Eagles-Guiness-WCup-Theme-Song.mp4



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EXCLUSIVE: YouTube on its way to PS4 with simple sharing option and more

YouTube is on its way to PS4, a development that'll allow users to publish videos of their gaming exploits to the popular Google-owned site with a simple press of the DualShock 4′s share button.



The announcement came during Sony's press conference on Monday at E3 in Los Angeles.



"Sharing your greatest gaming achievements on YouTube will be a piece of cake on PS4 thanks to the dedicated sharing capabilities at the very heart of the PS4," PlayStation's Sarah Ali said in a blog post Monday.



The launch of the new feature will see YouTube offered as a social option – alongside Facebook, Twitter, Twitch and Ustream – accessed by hitting the controller's share button.



"In just a couple of quick steps, you can go from playing your favorite games to publishing videos on your own YouTube channel," Ali explained. "You'll also be able to see your friends' shared YouTube videos using the 'What's New' feed."



Besides the integrated sharing functionality, there'll also be a new YouTube app for the PS4 offering users easy access to the video-sharing site's vast range of content, including YouTube channels, videos and personalities.



Sony hasn't yet offered a specific date for the launch of the PS4′s new YouTube features, saying only that they'll arrive in the fall.

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NEW TECHNOLOGY: Vizio’s aims to redefine value with its full-array M-Series LED TVs

Vizio looks primed to make yet another big step this year towards toppling the titans of the HDTV world (namely Samsung and LG), unveiling its spanking new M-Series Full-Array LED TV lineup. The new 1080p HDTV series offers a model size for every occasion, big upgrades to Vizio's display technology, a slimmer design, and new features like a remote with a full QWERTY keyboard. And based on our experience with the new line at CES 2014, we think Vizio may be on the verge of a record-breaking year. 

Display upgrades

Perhaps the biggest new feature, or at least the one we're most excited about, is the upgrade in available active backlighting zones for the new M-Series. Claiming to double the previous available number for up to 36 active LED zones, Vizio describes its new design as "a milestone in picture quality for mainstream consumers." Put into more tangible terms, the more active backlight zones an LED display incorporates, the more nimble the TV can be when reacting to deep contrasts between light and dark images such as, say, a luminous planet glowing in the deep black of space.

In addition, the new displays incorporate Vizio's Active Pixel Tuning, which is designed to "further increase contrast and picture detail accuracy," as well as Vizio's Clear Action Rate 7202, which the company claims will allow for enhanced motion performance.

Smart TV

Like the previous M-Series, the new TVs also offer Wi-Fi, paired with the Vizio Internet Apps Plus smart TV platform, which is packed with a full suite of video apps like Netflix, Hulu Plus, Vudu, and Youtube, as well as music streaming apps like iHeartRadio, and the latest addition, Spotify. Vizio also claims the platform is setup to work seamlessly with your tablet or smartphone, allowing "supported apps like Netflix and Youtube" to be launched from your mobile device.

New design and features

While Vizio has garnered a reputation for its ability to pack a wallop of value into its TVs, we've always felt their aesthetics have lagged just a bit behind the competition. Vizio aims to change that, enhancing its new models with ultra slim 8mm bezels wrapped in a metallic finish. And at .3-inches thick, the new frames shave off 20 percent from last years lineup.

Finally, the new TVs are paired with a full backlit smart remote, which incorporates a full QWERTY keyboard, allowing a much more intuitive experience for surfing the Web from your big screen, as well as alleviating the headaches of those labored app log-ins.

A breakdown of the full lineup with suggested retail pricing is listed below. (Note: the number directly following the 'M' indicates the model size)

M322i-B1$330
M422i-B1$530
M492i-B2$700
M502i-B1$700
M552i-B2$900
M602i-B3$1,250
M652i-B2$1,500
M702i-B3$1,900
M801i-A3$3,200

The new models are rolling out nationwide to major electronics stores now. With sizes running from 32-inches to the full 80-inch monster, Vizio's new M-Series aims to fit the bill for virtually any home theater. We'll likely find out more about each individual model as the series continues to roll out, as well as pulling in a new M-Series for ourselves for a full review, so stay tuned.

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EXCLUSIVE: Netflix calls Verizon out on the big red screen [Update: Netflix backs off]

By Ryan Waniata | June 9th, 2014 14:00 PM

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You know things are bad when relations are reduced to corporate tattletaling. But when it comes to pointing the finger at who's responsible for its customers' bad streaming video experience, Netflix is apparently willing to aim at its contentious partner, Verizon. Recently, we learned that Verizon internet customers suffering from buffering have begun seeing the message "Verizon Network is crowded right now" complete with a scary exclamation point, courtesy of Netflix. A screenshot of the message was tweeted by Yuri Victor, and later confirmed via tweet by Netflix spokesman, Jonathan Friedland.

The tweets started a buzz online concerning Netflix's brazen condemnation, growing loud enough to prompt a heated public spat between the two companies. The altercation resulted in a cease and desist order from Verizon on Thursday June 5th, and a blog post from Netflix four days later, ambiguously implying that the messages to Verizon customers would end on June 16th. But the debate appears far from over. Read below to follow the full timeline so far.

Verizon strikes back

Verizon's quick-fire response to Netflix's tatteltale messages started by denouncing them as a PR stunt. According to a report by Gizmodo, Verizon spokesperson Bob Elek posted this message in response: "This is a PR stunt. We're investigating this claim but it seems misleading and could confuse people." But that was just the start of the back and forth between the two adversaries.

The next day, Verizon raised the heat, ushering a cease and desist order from the company's general counsel, Randall S. Milch, that in no small terms, ordered Netflix to stop displaying its messages.

"As Netflix knows, there are many different factors that can affect traffic on the Internet, including choices by Netflix in how to connect its customers and deliver content to them, interconnection between multiple networks, and consumer in-home issues such as in-home wiring, Wi-Fi, and devices settings and capabilities," Milch wrote in the letter.

The statement concluded that if the messages continued, Verizon would "pursue legal remedies." 

Netflix concedes – sort of

Netflix at first shrugged off the threat. Representatives responded that same day with an official statement, telling several organizations, "This is about consumers not getting what they paid for from their broadband provider," and telling The Verge, "We are trying to provide more transparency, just like we do with the ISP Speed Index, and Verizon is trying to shut down that discussion."

On Monday, Netflix made good on its claims that the messages were little more than a test, however, implicitly agreeing to end the slams to Verizon on June 16th. Still, while the move seems to be aimed at satiating Verizon's ready team of legal eagles, the company has seemingly no plans to back down completely.

"As part of this transparency campaign, we started a small scale test in early May that lets consumers know, while they're watching Netflix, that their experience is degraded due to a lack of capacity into their broadband provider's network," the company said via the blog post.

After claiming the test was scheduled to conclude June 16th, the company also added, "We will evaluate rolling it out more broadly." Not exactly a "kiss and make up" message.

Mo' money, same problems

Buffering and poor picture quality aren't new to many of Netflix's customers, but a deal between the two companies in which Netflix reluctantly agreed to pay Verizon for a direct connection to its network was designed to rectify the problem. However, after Verizon's FiOS service ranked a pitiful number 8 on last month's Netflix Speed Index report, Monday's blog also came with more bad news for the ISP. Though the messages may be stopping, Netflix was quick to point out Verizon's FiOS slipped even further, now ranking at number 10 on Netflix's Speed Index report for May. And Netflix wants you to know, as far as it's concerned, the blame is all on the other side of the stream.

It's no secret that Netflix is by far the most popular streaming service in the U.S. At peak hours, the service takes up a massive swath of bandwidth, most recently measured at around 34 percent of all traffic in North America. Its wide success, and perceived hogging of the network, put the company in prime position for ISPs like Comcast and Verizon to broker paid deals for more direct access to their large subscriber bases.

However, while Netflix's much decried Comcast deal launched the communications titan to number 3 on the streaming chart, Verizon has had a lot of trouble keeping pace. And interestingly enough, the latest numbers show that Comcast slipped two spots in May as well, landing the company back at number 5.

The speed issue is even more entangled thanks to past claims that Verizon, and other ISPs, were intentionally throttling Netflix streams in order to coax cash from the service. However, if money was the motivation, and Verizon already has the deal it was looking for, the question as to why streams over Verizon's pipelines are still so low must be asked. Perhaps the issue is less opaque than the throttling conspiracies suggest, and Verizon is simply unable to keep up with the Johnson's when it comes to handling streaming video.

Then again, seeing Comcast move backwards last month as well, one has to wonder exactly where these infusions of cash from Netflix are actually going. Is the money going to the ISPs' bottom line, instead of their pipelines? Or is the fix, as suggested by Verizon's David Young in a recent Cnet interview, simply a work in progress?

In any case, while the conclusion of these tests next week may settle the legal issue, it appears that Netflix is no longer mincing words when it comes to exactly who it thinks is to blame for your sluggish feeds. There are plenty of bread crumbs leading to shady dealings between top ISPs and the rest of the Internet's tangled pipelines, and Netflix has been quick to cast blame. He said/she said has become the status quo when it comes to the schoolyard fighting between Netflix and the ISPs with which it takes issue, becoming a near weekly phenomenon. 

Netflix is now taking its case straight to the consumer, in a highly public forum. And with the whole world watching, it appears the cat may be out of the bag, messages or no. 

Updated 6/05/2014: Today we learned that Verizon has expanded on its initial rebuff, with a cease and desist letter.

Update 6/09/2014: Netflix wrote in a blog that its "small scale test," ostensibly referring to its messages to Verizon customers, would end June 16, 2014. The company also added new information from its latest speed index report.

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NIMASA rescues hijacked Ghanaian fishing vessel

The Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency on Tuesday said its satellite surveillance system had helped to rescue a Ghanaian fishing vessel from suspected hijackers last Thursday.



A statement by Mr Isichei Osamgbi, NIMASA's Deputy Director and Head of Public Relations Unit, said the International Maritime Bureau disclosed that the Liberian-flagged ship, "Fair Artemis" lost contact with its owners on Wednesday.



The statement said the Ghanaian registered vessel was hijacked off the coast of Ghana and sailed across Togo and Benin Republic to Nigeria.



It said the Ghanaian Fisheries Authority and the operators of the fishing vessel joined in requesting NIMASA to bring the incident to a logical conclusion.



"A Greek oil tanker with 24 crew members has lost contact with its owners in the Gulf of Guinea, sparking fears that the ship may have been hijacked by pirates,'' the statement said.



It said that responding, NIMASA immediately launched its satellite surveillance system in collaboration with the Nigerian Navy and the Nigerian Air Force.



It added that the six hours surveillance operation was coordinated by Capt. Warredi Enisuoh, NIMASA Director of Shipping Development.



"The newly built satellite surveillance system of the agency which has penetrating radar capabilities was brought to bear and the incident was resolved within six hours.



"The NIMASA team, working with the Nigerian Navy and the Nigerian Air Force, used air and sea patrols.



"They quickly put up a response which made the hijackers abandon their mission and flee," the statement quoted Enisuoh as saying.



It explained that the International Maritime Organisation had designated Nigeria as one of the five Regional Maritime Rescue Co-ordination Centres (RMRCCs) in Africa.



"Nigeria, therefore provides Search and Rescue and security co-ordination in the waters of Benin Republic, Cameroon, Congo, Gabon, Sao Tome and Principe, and Togo, in addition to its own territorial waters," it said.



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SHOCKING NEWS: Police CSP’s son and his friends rape 19-year-old girl in Lagos

A 19-year-old girl has recounted how her ex-boyfriend, identified as Kingsley, and his friends gang-raped her and also recorded the act.

The incident occurred when she visited Kingsley's wife, who recently delivered a newborn baby.

But it tuned out that she had walked into a trap, which not only resulted in her being serially raped, her sister also got molested and thoroughly beaten up.

However, for fear of further attack by Kingsley and his cohorts who are believed to be cultists, the family sadly agreed to an amicable settlement.

Vanguard's Crime Guard reports that the ex-boyfriend is the son of a serving Chief Superintendent of Police, CSP, attached to a police unit in Jos, while his mother sells food at Area K command along Badagry expressway.

Narrating the incident, the victim said, "On that day I went there at Ketu in Ijanikin to visit my ex-boy friend Kingsley, whose wife had just had a baby. When I got there, I met him outside, I asked him of his wife, he said she was inside with the new born baby. So, I went inside to see her. When I got into the house, the wife and the baby were not inside but I met two other guys.

"I decided to go out but the door was locked, I asked Kingsley to please open the door so I could go since the wife was not inside. His friends said I would not, except I brought my younger sister. Then, I asked what for, they said my sister offended them at a party they attended recently. They said she denied them at the party which led to one of them been beaten by other guests at the party. They said they have been looking for my sister, that I should call her.

"I told them she just lost her phones so there was no way I could contact her. Then, they brought out their knives and axes and asked me to pull off my clothes, and that if I don't take my clothes off, they would start cutting me little by little and then I will die a slow and painful death. I started pleading with them not to hurt me. But they refused and continued to threaten me.

"When it became clear that they would harm me if I didn't yield to their request, I started pulling my clothes. After that, Kingsley was the first one that raped me while his friends used their phones to record it. When he was through, the second one called Ifeanyi aka Fabulous and the third one Asaly, took turns to rape me. After they finished, they asked me to wear my clothes, which I quickly did. They gave me my phone which they sized initially to call my mum, to enable me reach my sister which I did. They made sure the phone was on speaker so that they could hear the conversation between my mum and I.
"Unfortunately, when I called, she said she was far from home where my sister was but promised to call back as soon as she got home. I told her it was urgent that I speak with my sister and she said she would be in the house within the next two hours. This was at about 12 noon. So, while I was waiting for my mum to call, two other friends of Kingsley came to the house and also raped me. When it was 2pm, they put their knives into a lit stove threatening to use it on my body if my mum did not call back.

"I had to call my mum who said she was almost in the house. When she got to the house, she called me and I told my sister to come to the junction that leads to Kingsley's house because I didn't want her to come to the house so that they won't rape her too.

"When she got to the junction, she called me, I pleaded with them to allow me go to the junction to get my sister, that if they went to the junction without me, there was no way my sister would agree to come with them.

"Initially, they refused, but later, they agreed and instructed Kingsley and Asale to go with me to the bus stop. When I got to the junction, because my eyes were very red and my face swollen, my sister knew something was fishy, she asked me what happened, I told her nothing that I have been sleeping. And she said that is a big lie that even when I wake from sleep, my face is never swollen.

"When she insisted, I told her everything in my dialect so that they won't understand what I was telling them. But one of them felt I was explaining what happened to my sister, he called the other three who were in the house to come, that I had finished explaining to them.

"When I saw the other guys coming, I collected money from my sister and pretended that I wanted to buy water from a nearby shop, when I got there, I told the woman who owns the shop what happened but she said they won't be able to attack us outside in the open. While I was there, they started slapping and hitting my younger sister. I went there and was pleading with them to stop beating her.

"They said I should keep calm, if I didn't, they would deal with me also. So, I did. The attack drew the attention of commercial tricycle riders who were at the bus stop, they came to rescue us but were sent away after they told them it was boyfriend and girlfriend issue. I told them it was not true.

"Luckily, for us, one of our neighbours, a soldier who lives in the same compound saw how they were beating us, he alighted from the tricycle to find out why they were attacking my sister.

"I narrated what happened to him. After, he was able to rescue my sister from them, they attacked him, when he tried to call his fellow soldiers for help via his phone, they snatched it from him. It was while they were attacking the soldier that I escaped to a relative's house nearby to call my mum. My sister also escaped after that.

"When I got home, I explained what happened to my mum who took me to the police station to report the case and subsequently, Kingsley and two others were arrested while others fled.

Giving an insight into her relationship with Kingsley, the victim said, "Something happened between both of us while we were dating; I got pregnant only for me to discover that a lady was already seven months pregnant for him. So, I had to get rid of my pregnancy because there was no way I would become a second wife.

A close family friend who pleaded anonymity also told Vanguard's Crime Guard that the case was settled amicably later after both families met with the police.

The victim, however, said they agreed for settlement out of court because of fear. "After we reported the case to the police, three of the suspects were immediately arrested in order to retrieve the video recording of the barbaric act but no video was found in their phones.

"The reason the family resorted to settlement was because we didn't want our lives to be at risk. This guy and his group are cultists and there is every possibility that they might attack us again if the suspects are prosecuted.

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EXCLUSIVE: Facebook recruits PayPal president David Marcus to lead mobile messaging efforts

After two years as president of PayPal, David Marcus is moving to Facebook to take up the role of vice president of messaging products.

In a post on LinkedIn published Monday, Marcus said he was "excited" about the move, adding that he was "looking forward to getting my hands dirty again attempting to build something new and meaningful at scale."

He said that at first he'd had doubts about "another big company gig," but had been impressed by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg's "compelling vision about mobile messaging."


Above: David Marcus [Image via Facebook]
He added, "Mark's enthusiasm, and the unparalleled reach and consumer engagement of the Facebook platform ultimately won me over."

The social networking giant said on its site that starting from July Marcus will lead efforts to develop "great new messaging experiences that better serve the Facebook community and reach even more people." Given Marcus's background, it's also possible he could help introduce e-commerce features into Facebook's mobile apps.

The company is keen to expand its mobile presence in a bid to boost revenue, with messaging apps a key part of its strategy. Its Q4 2013 financial results revealed that for the first time in its history, mobile ad revenue exceeded that of desktop, with 53 percent of the company's income generated via its mobile apps in the three-month period.

Buoyed by the rising mobile revenue and keen to push out more mobile apps with more ads, the company in April announced it would be removing the ability to send messages from within its main application, forcing users to download its standalone Messenger app, which is currently used by more than 200 million people every month.

In a further indication of Facebook's increasing focus on messaging, the company recently spent a whopping $19 billion on the acquisition of popular mobile messaging service WhatsApp, and is in the middle of trying to sort out the launch of its Snapchat-like app, Slingshot.

Marcus is likely to focus primarily on developing Messenger and new mobile messaging services, with the WhatsApp acquisition having been conditional on it being able to retain its independence and brand.

John Donahoe, CEO of eBay – PayPal's parent company – will oversee the running of the online payment outfit until a successor is found.

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Skype for iPhone to get major update, redesigned from ground up

Microsoft's trying to get everyone excited about Skype for iPhone with the promise of an update it describes as "the biggest change ever" for the software.



"iPhone will soon join the redesigned Skype mobile app club, and we can't wait for you to try it," Skype's Eric Lin said in a blog post about the update, which is set to roll out in the coming days.



"The new Skype for iPhone is the most refined version yet. It has all the visual finish that iOS users expect, smooth animations and even a few features that aren't just new for this version, but new to Skype altogether."



Skype 5.0 for iPhone is the company's attempt at providing a consistent look and feel with the Android and Windows Phone Skype apps, "while still optimizing for iPhone's strengths," Lin said.



The revamped app will apparently be "over five times faster than before," and offer smoother scrolling and transitions with no adverse effect on battery life.



You'll also be able to start group chats from the hub and send messages and photos to friends and family even if they're offline, with content appearing on their device as soon as they're available again.



Conversation status will also sync across devices with the updated app, so "as you read your messages on your PC, tablet, Xbox and so on, those conversations will be marked as read (or unread if new messages come in) on your iPhone, too."



To discover all the new features, we'll have to wait till the update pops up in the iOS app store "in about a week."



A refreshed iPad version is also on the way, though is expected to land a little while after the iPhone update.



Lin said in his near-rhapsodic blog post that Skype's designers and engineers had "obsessed over every pixel" to create the new version of Skype for iPhone. That's certainly some build up, but will it deliver?

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SPORT NEWS: Neymar Injury Scare For Brazil

Brazil briefly held its collective breath when Neymar went down clutching his right ankle in training on Monday, but the incident turned out to be nothing more than a momentary scare.



The 22-year-old forward went down with no one near him. He, however, quickly got back up and finished the training game at the Selecao's Granja Comary base in Teresopolis.



The incident, which happened three days to the host nation's opening World Cup game against Croatia in Sao Paulo, is a matter of utmost concern for coach Luiz Felipe Scolari.



A sprain to Neymar's right ankle earlier this year forced him out of Barcelona's squad for one month.



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DOWNLOAD VIDEO: ChopStix Ft. Ice Prince, Yung L & Endia – Stinking Sh!t

"Grip Muzik presents the official video to Chopstix' STINKING SH#T which features his label-mates Yung L , Endia and Chocolate City's Ice Prince Zamani. STINKING SH#T is off Chopstix' Parallax Album, due out this year.



The video was shot on location at Elegushi Beach, Lagos. Directed by Mr Moe Musa."







DOWNLOAD TO DEVICE »

http://bit.ly/1hFcMQq



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TECHNOLOGY: Computer AI passes the Turing test for the first time

If you needed more evidence of the rise of the machines, there's news from London this weekend where a computer has successfully passed the Turing test for the first time. Under the rules of the test, named after brilliant British mathematician Alan Turing, a computer program must convince more than 30 percent of those interacting with it that it is human.

The rule has long been held as a barometer of progress in the field of Artificial Intelligence and the fact that a contestant at the Royal Society of London has succeeded is significant. While other similar claims have been made in the past, one of the organizers said that "this event involved the most simultaneous comparison tests than ever before, was independently verified and, crucially, the conversations were unrestricted."

Named Eugene Goostman and developed in Russia, the winning program impersonated a 13 year-old Ukrainian boy, doing enough via an instant message routine to convince 33 percent of the judges that it was indeed human. This meets the criteria set down by Turing in 1950: "[In the future] it will be possible to program computers… to make them play the imitation game so well that an average interrogator will not have more than 70 percent chance of making the right identification after five minutes of questioning."

In development since 2001, Eugene is hosted online and can be questioned by anyone over the Web. "Our main idea was that he can claim that he knows anything, but his age also makes it perfectly reasonable that he doesn't know everything," said Vladimir Veselov, one of the programmers behind Eugene "We spent a lot of time developing a character with a believable personality."

Whether or not the AI responds with the right answer isn't under examination in the Turing test — it only focuses on the 'humanness' of the responses — so Eugene is unlikely to be taking over the world any time soon. However, some observers added a note of caution: "In the field of Artificial Intelligence there is no more iconic and controversial milestone than the Turing Test, when a computer convinces a sufficient number of interrogators into believing that it is not a machine but rather is a human," Coventry University's Kevin Warwick told the Telegraph. "Having a computer that can trick a human into thinking that someone, or even something, is a person we trust is a wake-up call to cybercrime."

"It is important to understand more fully how online, real-time communication of this type can influence an individual human in such a way that they are fooled into believing something is true… when in fact it is not," Warwick added. Coincidentally, the landmark breakthrough came on the 60th anniversary of Alan Turing's death.

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