Thursday, 25 September 2014

MOVIE NEWS: A Minute With: Chloe Grace Moretz on digging into a dark role

By Mary Milliken

(Reuters) - Teen actress Chloe Grace Moretz says she might have found her darkest role yet as a battered Russian child prostitute in the thriller "The Equalizer," even though she has been in some pretty dark stuff.

She stars opposite Denzel Washington, who plays McCall, a quiet man with a secret past and a desire to avenge the abuse done to the girl by Russian gangsters.

Moretz, 17, made her debut in 2005 in "The Amityville Horror" and last year starred in the remake of horror tale "Carrie." In 2014, she has had top roles in four feature films, including "The Equalizer," which opens Friday in U.S. theaters.

Moretz talked to Reuters about learning to play a child prostitute, the Denzel effect and running with what the acting profession throws at her.

Q: You have been experimenting with different kinds of roles. How different was Teri?

A: It was incredibly different. I like to call her Alina, which is her real name, while her street name is Teri, because that is who she really is. I did a lot of research to become Alina. I went to this wonderful organization called Children of the Night, which has a hotline and you can call them and they will come pick you up and take you to a shelter and you can get out of your life on the streets.

With the amount of research I needed to do to become Alina, I felt really close to her and I think in my filmography it is probably the deepest I have gone in searching for a character. And the moments I had on set with Teri/Alina were really intense. It is probably the darkest I have ever been.

Q: How did you prepare for her Russian side?

A: I had a Russian teacher. She taught me everything. I only had to learn a couple of words, but it is a hard language to learn. I had these little cheat sheets in my pockets with the phonetics written out of how it should sound.

Q: Your character goes away in the middle of the film. Did you yearn for more scenes?

A: Yeah, I would have totally killed to have more scenes with Denzel. I only had four or five. The moments I did have with him were amazing and I learned more in those moments than I have in a long time with an actor. He's really a beautiful person to watch just act and talk and be around because he has such a being about him. I really admire him as a person.

He has a daughter who is in college and he saw me in that light and treated me the same way. He took me in. You know, he doesn't talk a lot. He isn't much of a talker. He doesn't just go on and on. But we would have some really small, nice conversations.

Q: What distinguishes you from other actors your age?

A: Honestly, I don't know. I just try to do things that are different. I just want to be all over the board.

I am trying to expand my boundaries, both emotional and physical. I want to push that further and try new things I have never experienced before. That's what makes me different: I am not afraid of a challenge and I am not afraid to jump head first into something I have never done before.

At the beginning of the year, I did my first play and I had never been on stage before, even in a school play. I think I am trying to grab anything, grasp any new moment in my life and kind of run with it. Because that is what this business allows me to do. And why not take advantage of it?

(Editing by Lisa Shumaker)



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POLITICAL NEWS: For Obama, Holder exit leaves void on civil rights issues

By Julia Edwards and Roberta Rampton

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The departure of U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder deprives the Obama administration of a powerful voice on civil rights at a time when riots in Ferguson, Missouri, have thrust the issue into the spotlight.

Civil rights advocates fear his exit leaves a hard-to-fill hole on Obama's team when it comes to events such as in Ferguson - where days of protests followed the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black teenager - and challenging laws in some states requiring voters to show photo identification, measures that Holder has said would prevent black and Latino voters from going to the polls.

They are worried that his work on voting rights, sentencing reform, and addressing racial profiling measures used by police could fall by the wayside when his yet-to-be-determined successor sets a new set of priorities - particularly as the administration focuses on counterterrorism and the threat posed by Islamic State militants.

"We always thought that he was able to say the things that Obama could not say," said Barbara Arnwine, president of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights.

"We've always seen him as an important spokesperson for the administration and that role should not go unfulfilled."

BONDS THAT GO 'MUCH DEEPER'

In a speech choked with emotion on Thursday, Holder recounted how he had been part of Team Obama since his friend was a "young senator from Illinois" making "an improbable, idealistic effort" to become president.

Obama stuck with Holder even as he became a lightning rod for Republican criticism of his administration.

"We have been great colleagues, but the bonds between us are much deeper than that. In good times and in bad, in things personal and in things professional, you have been there for me," Holder said to Obama.

Over the years, both men have spoken about racism they have experienced in their own lives.

Before he became the nation's first black president, Obama wrote "Dreams from My Father," a memoir on racial identity. But since taking office, he has often shied away from talking publicly about race.

By contrast, Holder - who worked for the NAACP legal defense fund early in his career - has been more outspoken. His sister-in-law, Vivian Malone Jones, became a hero in the desegregation movement of the 1960s after she was blocked from entering the University of Alabama when she arrived for classes.

"I think in his own way, using his role as Attorney General, Holder has addressed issues that remain off-limits," said Wade Henderson, president of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.

Holder talked openly about his own experiences with racial profiling after Trayvon Martin, a black teenager in Florida, was shot last year - days before Obama spoke out.

Holder talked about the humiliation of being pulled over and searched on the New Jersey turnpike when he was not speeding, and about being stopped by police while running in Washington's tony Georgetown neighborhood.

In August, after unarmed black teenager Michael Brown was shot and killed by a white policeman in Ferguson - sparking nights of riots - Obama sent Holder to meet with community members.

Holder vowed the Justice Department would investigate whether criminal and civil charges are warranted, but the probe is unlikely to be complete before his departure.

THINGS LEFT UNDONE

As he listed his accomplishments, Holder acknowledged that "work remains to be done."

On his to-do list in the weeks before he leaves, Holder hopes to announce new guidelines to curb racial profiling in federal law enforcement investigations, the Justice Department said.

Holder has asked federal prosecutors not to seek mandatory minimum sentences to be used when charging defendants in low-level drug cases. But more sweeping proposals to abolish mandatory minimum sentences have failed to get traction in Congress.

Holder announced earlier this year that the department would review potentially hundreds of applications for executive clemency - another project that is under way but unfinished.

In his farewell speech, Holder highlighted how he and Obama have "fought to protect the most sacred of American rights: the right to vote."

He challenged state voting laws in Texas and North Carolina that he said would restrict voting by blacks and Latinos.

"I hope that his successor continues vigorous enforcement of the Voting Rights Act," said Laura Murphy, director of the Washington legislative office for the American Civil Liberties Union.

(Reporting by Roberta Rampton and Julia Edwards; Editing by Ken Wills)



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CELEBRITY NEWS: Denzel Washington sharpens tools to exact justice in 'Equalizer'

By Mary Milliken

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - After watching the "The Equalizer," moviegoers might never see the friendly guy at the home improvement store who picks out their tools and plywood in the same way.

In the action thriller that opens in U.S. theaters Friday, Denzel Washington plays McCall, an efficient, mild-mannered employee at Home Mart, who also happens to have a past as a trained killer and a way with tools.

"He's resourceful," the 59-year-old Washington told Reuters while promoting the movie at the Toronto International Film Festival earlier this month.

Washington thinks McCall did not even need a home improvement store at his disposal.

"It could have been this room," he said. "There's plenty of stuff ... your shoe, the chain around your neck, your hair, the chair. You can do a lot of damage."

The two-time Oscar winner reunites with Antoine Fuqua, his director from "Training Day," for which Washington won his best actor statuette in 2002.

The film from Sony Corp's Columbia Pictures is expected to be the top film at the North American box office this weekend, with ticket sales of $35 million, according to Boxoffice.com.

"The Equalizer," based on the 1980s television series of the same name, depicts a man with an innate sense of justice who comes to the rescue of people in dire straits with no one to turn to.

McCall moves through Home Mart with a Zen-like calm, working hard and helping co-workers with their problems. At home, however, he leads an austere life alone and suffers from obsessive compulsive disorder and insomnia.

McCall spends long nights awake reading classics of literature in a diner, where he comes to know a teen Russian prostitute played by Chloe Grace Moretz.

Her abuse at the hands of a Russian human trafficking ring yanks McCall out of the simple existence he had sought following a complicated life in the murky world of intelligence where he had been a killer and suffered for it.

The unassuming Home Mart guy suddenly turns out to be an efficient slicer and dicer of Russian thugs.

"I wasn't just interested in running around chopping up folks," Washington said.

"So we added this element of OCD in his ritual, of folding the napkin, the tea bag and he had peculiar habits. So there is this character journey."

McCall's main nemesis of the many menacing characters in the underworld is Teddy, a Russian sociopath who comes from Europe with a posh accent and fine suits, looking more like a chief executive than a mobster.

"We wanted to make him methodical, elegant, give him a great deal of charm, but mostly bring him into the inner psychological world," said Marton Csokas, the actor who plays Teddy.

McCall's determination to decapitate the organization takes him and Teddy to the home improvement store in a tense half hour where much of the store's inventory of lethal tools is deployed in their face-off.

(Editing by Piya Sinha-Roy and Lisa Shumaker)



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SCIENCE NEWS: India triumphs in maiden Mars mission, sets record in space race

By Aditya Kalra

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's low-cost mission to Mars successfully entered the red planet's orbit on Wednesday, crowning what Prime Minister Narendra Modi said was a "near impossible" push to become the only country to complete the trip on its maiden attempt.

The Mars Orbiter Mission was achieved on a budget of $74 million, almost 10 times less than the amount the U.S. space agency NASA spent on sending the Maven spacecraft to Mars.

"History has been created today," said Modi, who burst into applause along with hundreds of scientists at the state-run Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) when it was announced the mission had been accomplished.

"We have dared to reach out into the unknown and have achieved the near impossible," said Modi, wearing a red waistcoat at the space command center in the southern city of Bangalore.

India joins the United States, Russia and Europe in successfully sending probes to orbit or land on Mars.

The mission also makes India the first country in Asia to reach Mars, after an attempt by regional rival China failed to leave Earth's orbit in 2011.

ISRO successfully ignited the main 440 Newton liquid engine and eight small thrusters that fired for 24-minutes and trimmed the speed of the craft to allow smooth orbit. A confirmation of orbit entry was received at around 8 a.m. India time (10:30 p.m. EDT on Tuesday).

After completing the 666 million km (414 million miles) journey in more than 10 months, the spacecraft called Mangalyaan

meaning Mars craft in Hindi - will now study the red planet's surface and scan its atmosphere for chemical methane. It will not land on Mars.

ISRO scientists will operate five scientific instruments on the spacecraft to gather data, the space agency's scientific secretary V. Koteswara Rao told Reuters.

The expected life of the craft is six months, after which it will run out of fuel and the agency will not be able to maintain its orbit.

Modi has said he wants to expand the country's five-decade-old space program. The technological triumph is fortuitously timed for him - he will be able to flaunt the achievement on a trip to the United States starting on Friday.

Modi also holds the additional charge as India's minister of space, and has endorsed the low-cost of the project, saying it cost even less than the budget of 'Gravity'. The Hollywood blockbuster cost about $100 million to make.

NASA, which helped India with communications on the mission, congratulated ISRO. The Mangalyaan and the NASA's Maven, built at a cost of $671 million, are simultaneously orbiting the red planet.

INDIA IN SPACE VS OTHERS

India's space program was launched in the early 1960s and the country developed its own rocket technology after Western powers imposed sanctions for a nuclear weapons test in 1974.

Still, the country remains a small player in the global space industry that grew to $314 billion in revenues and government budgets in 2013, according to Colorado-based Space Foundation.

Experts say Mars mission success can help change that.

"ISRO will now hopefully attract a lot of business," said Mayank N. Vahia, a scientist at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research. "We will now attract more international attention and international trade for satellites."

Two-thirds of the craft's parts were made by Indian companies such as Larsen & Toubro LART.NS and Godrej & Boyce.

With 30 Indian and 40 foreign satellite launches so far, its nearest cheap competition would be China, which is armed with bigger space launchers. ISRO signed an agreement with China National Space Administration on Friday to cooperate in research and development of various satellites.

Despite its success, India faces criticism for spending on space research as millions go hungry.

(In this corrected version, reference in paragraph five to no previous maiden Mars mission having succeeded has been deleted, as a multinational European craft did enter orbit successfully in 2003; and in paragraph two, 'nearly a tenth of' has been changed to 'almost 10 times less than')

(Additional reporting by Devidutta Tripathy in MUMBAI and Andrew MacAskill in NEW DELHI; Editing by Jeremy Laurence and Frank Jack Daniel)



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TOP NEWS Iraqi forces restoring control of besieged area in west: police chief

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqi forces are "restoring control" to one area in Anbar province, while fighting is ongoing in another area in the region where Islamic State insurgents surrounded two army camps over the past week, Anbar's police chief said on Thursday.



"Currently, the Iraqi forces regiments are restoring control to the Sijir area," Anbar police chief Ahmed Saddag told Reuters. Sijir is about an hour's drive west of the capital Baghdad.



"In Albu Etha, there is no control until now. The enemy Daesh is in control of Albu Etha from the northern side," he said, using the Arabic acronym for the group that calls itself Islamic State.



On Wednesday, an Iraqi soldier told Reuters that around 200 soldiers were trapped in the Albu Etha camp and were running short of food, water and ammunition.



Similarly, Islamic State insurgents on Sunday overran an army base in Saqlawiya, just 50 km (30 miles) west of Baghdad, killing or capturing 400 to 600 soldiers, a senior Iraqi security official said.



Saddag said 155 soldiers had died in that attack, 89 soldiers were missing and 104 were wounded. He said 897 soldiers were freed in Sijir and Saqlawiya.



The government said it had detained two commanders for negligence over the Saqlawiya incident, which exposed the weakness of the army.



The military crumbled this summer, as Islamic State took control of roughly a third of Iraq, and it has been bogged down since January in Anbar province, the site of a major road linking Syria and Iraq.



Islamic State has declared a caliphate in the territory it controls in the two countries. Washington has launched air strikes in both to try to dislodge the radical Islamists, but has so far failed to stop them from carrying out attacks.



(Reporting by Raheem Salman; Writing by Yara Bayoumy; Editing by Robin Pomeroy and Hugh Lawson)





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TOP NEWS U.S. has no evidence of any Islamic State plot against subways: sources

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States has no evidence to back up an Iraqi claim that Islamic State forces were plotting to attack U.S. subway systems, two senior U.S. government security officials told Reuters on Thursday.



In the past, the United States had received threats that various militant groups were targeting such transportation systems but there is no recent information about an imminent plan by Islamic State, one official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.



A separate source in Congress said lawmakers and staff had not been briefed on any current Islamic State threats against subways in U.S. cities.



Earlier on Thursday, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said Iraq had received "credible" intelligence that Islamic State militants plan to attack subway systems in Paris and the United States.



(Reporting by Mark Hosenball; Writing by Susan Heavey; Editing by Bill Trott)





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TOP NEWS UK parliament set to approve Iraq air strikes against Islamic State

By William James

LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister David Cameron is expected to win approval from parliament to join U.S.-led air strikes on Islamic State militants in Iraq at a specially convened session on Friday.

A coalition including the United States and Middle Eastern allies such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates has already started bombing Islamic State targets both in Iraq and Syria. France has also taken part in the strikes on the insurgents in Iraq, although so far not in Syria.

Until now, Cameron has held back from joining the action after suffering a humiliating defeat last year when lawmakers rejected British air strikes against Syrian government forces. The vote also undermined U.S. President Barack Obama's efforts to win support for air attacks on Damascus forces, which he subsequently called off at the last minute.

By contrast, parties from across the political spectrum have signaled they will back Cameron's position in Friday's vote, which is expected at about 1600 GMT. Approval would take Britain into its first military action since a 2011 aerial campaign against Muammar Gaddafi's forces in Libya.

Cameron announced the emergency recall of parliament on Wednesday. Islamic State - which has captured swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria - posed a threat to Britain's security that could not be ignored, he said, adding that he was confident of winning cross-party support.

Britons are wary of another war after long, unpopular campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan. However, the beheading of two U.S. journalists and a British aid worker by a militant with a British accent has rallied political support for tackling Islamic State.

Britain says around 500 of its citizens have traveled to fight in Syria and northern Iraq, raising fears that radicalized fighters could return to stage attacks on home soil - something Cameron has described as the biggest threat to national security.

Cameron, who is up for re-election next year, has ruled out sending British ground troops to fight and made clear that its involvement was conditional on the Iraqi government asking for help, which it did on Wednesday.

He has also stressed the importance of involvement by regional powers in an effort to avoid the perception of a Western assault against Islam - something that could be used as a propaganda tool to recruit insurgents.

The approach looks to have won over sceptical lawmakers in Cameron's Conservative party, who rebelled last August when he sought approval to launch an air assault on the Syrian government in response to its use of chemical weapons.

Although some dissent is expected, the leader of the main opposition Labour party, Ed Miliband has said his lawmakers will support the motion, as will the Liberal Democrats, junior partner in the coalition - effectively ensuring it will pass.

Amid wider legal and technical concerns, the government will not seek approval to take its fight against Islamic State across the border into Syria, where the group has also established a stronghold. Australia, Belgium and the Netherlands are also set to join the air strikes in Iraq.

(Editing by David Stamp)



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TOP NEWS Possible successors to U.S. Attorney General Holder

(Reuters) - Attorney General Eric Holder will announce his resignation on Thursday after nearly six years as the top U.S. law enforcement official.

Here is a look at some possible candidates to replace him.

* Donald Verrilli, 57, serves as the U.S. solicitor general. In that role he is the Obama administration's top representative before the U.S. Supreme Court. He has held the position since June 2011. His most high-profile victory before the high court was the landmark 2012 ruling upholding President Barack Obama's signature healthcare law. Verrilli earlier spent years as a partner at the Jenner & Block law firm.

* Deval Patrick, 58, is the two-term Democratic governor of Massachusetts. President Barack Obama has expressed his admiration for Patrick, saying in March "he could be very successful at the federal level" and would make "a great president or vice president." He is the first black governor of his state. His term as governor ends in January 2015. He served as assistant attorney general for civil rights under President Bill Clinton. He gave speeches at the 2008 and 2012 Democratic national conventions that boosted his profile.

* Kamala Harris, 49, is the Democratic attorney general of California. She has held the top law enforcement job in the most populous U.S. state since being elected in 2011. Previously she served two terms as the district attorney in San Francisco. She gained national attention for taking a hard stance in settlement negotiations with banks over illegal foreclosures. She also backed the successful legal effort to overturn the state's ban on same-sex marriage. Obama apologized in 2013 after calling her "the best-looking attorney general in the country" in remarks at a fundraiser.

* Kathryn Ruemmler, 43, served as President Barack Obama's top legal advisor for three years. She left her position as White House counsel in April to rejoin the Latham & Watkins law firm, where she had worked in between government jobs. In addition to serving in the White House under both Obama and President Bill Clinton, she has also worked as a federal prosecutor. She was part of the team that successfully convicted former Enron executives Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling.

* Preet Bharara, 45, has served for five years as Manhattan U.S. attorney, one of the most prominent federal prosecutor posts. In that job, Bharara has overseen high-profile prosecutions of insider trading, terrorism and political corruption. His office secured the terrorism conviction of Suleiman Abu Ghaith, a son-in-law of former al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, and investigated Steven A. Cohen's SAC Capital Advisors hedge fund for insider trading, resulting in a $1.2 billion plea deal. Formerly chief counsel to Democratic U.S. Senator Charles Schumer of New York, the Indian-American Bharara has said he does not have aspirations for elected office.

* Loretta Lynch, 55, has served two stints as Brooklyn U.S. attorney, first from 1999 to 2001 and then again starting in 2010. She is known for keeping a low profile, and her office earlier this year brought a tax evasion case against Republican U.S. Representative Michael Grimm of Staten Island. Lynch has overseen a $1 billion mortgage-fraud settlement with Bank of America, terrorism cases including the conviction of a man for a plot to bomb New York City subways, and money-laundering charges against HSBC that resulted in a $1.9 billion fine. Since 2013, she has chaired a committee of U.S. attorneys who provide policy advice to Holder.

* Thomas Perrelli, 48, served for three years under Obama as associate attorney general, the No. 3 post at the Justice Department before rejoining the first Jenner & Block law firm in 2012. He led the U.S. government's efforts to negotiate a $25 billion settlement to resolve claims against financial institutions for servicing of mortgages and negotiated the creation of a $20 billion fund to compensate victims of the Deepwater Horizon 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

(Compiled by Lawrence Hurley, Nate Raymond, Jessica Dye and Will Dunham; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)



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TOP NEWS U.N. nuclear assembly rejects Arab bid to pressure Israel

VIENNA (Reuters) - Member states of the U.N. nuclear agency rejected on Thursday an Arab resolution criticizing Israel over its assumed atomic arsenal, in a diplomatic victory for Western states that opposed the initiative.



Arab states had submitted the non-binding resolution - which called on Israel to join a global anti-nuclear weapons pact - to the annual meeting of the 162-nation International Atomic Energy Agency, in part to signal their frustration at the lack of progress to move toward a Middle East free of nuclear weapons.



The United States and its allies argued that the resolution, if adopted, would be counterproductive. Fifty-eight countries voted against the text and 45 states for. Other countries either abstained or were absent.



(Reporting by Fredrik Dahl; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)





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TOP NEWS Iraqi PM says Islamic State plans subway attacks in U.S. and Paris

By Arshad Mohammed and Jonathan Allen

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Iraq has "credible" intelligence that Islamic State militants plan to attack subway systems in Paris and the United States, the prime minister said on Thursday, but U.S. and French officials said they had no evidence to back up his claims.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's comments were met with surprise by security, intelligence and transit officials in both countries. New York's leaders scrambled to ride the subway to reassure the public that the nation's largest city was safe.

Abadi said he received the information Thursday morning from militants captured in Iraq and concluded it was credible after requesting further details. The attacks, he said, were plotted from inside Iraq by "networks" of the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL.

"They plan to have attacks in the metros of Paris and the U.S.," Abadi told a small group of U.S. reporters while in New York for the annual meeting of the U.N. General Assembly. "I asked for more credible information. I asked for names. I asked for details, for cities, you know, dates. And from the details I have received, yes, it looks credible."

Some Iraqi officials in Baghdad questioned Abadi's comments. One high-level Iraqi government official told Reuters it appeared to be based on "ancient intelligence." Another called it "an old story." Both spoke on condition of anonymity.

Abadi did not provide further details. A senior Iraqi official traveling with him later said Iraqi intelligence had uncovered "serious threats" and had shared this information with its allies' intelligence agencies.

"A full assessment of the veracity of the intelligence and how far the plans have gone into implementation is ongoing," the official said.

Ben Rhodes, a deputy national security adviser to U.S. President Barack Obama, said the United States had "not confirmed any specific threat."

"What we've consistently said to the Iraqis is if they have information that is relevant to terrorist activity or terrorist plotting, that they can and should share that through our intelligence and law enforcement channels," Rhodes told reporters traveling with Obama on Air Force One from New York.

"We would certainly take seriously any information they are learning," he said.

French security services also said they had no information confirming Abadi's statement, a French government official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

STRONGER TRANSIT SECURITY

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and other local officials suggested they were unfazed, updating their public schedules on Thursday to add trips on the city's subway system to reassure millions of daily commuters.

"We are convinced New Yorkers are safe," de Blasio said at a press conference at a lower Manhattan subway station as he stood alongside New York City Police Commissioner Bill Bratton and George Venizelos, assistant director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The New York Police Department's intelligence bureau found no specific, credible threat, de Blasio said.

Bratton said in response to Abadi's comments that he sent more police to patrol subways and streets in the city which was already on high alert because of the U.N. meeting.

Joseph Sheehan, 44, from the city's Queens borough, learned about the threats from the web. "They were checking bags earlier at the Port Authority. Seems like they do that at times of heightened alerts," he said.

In Los Angeles, America's second most populous city, law enforcement officials said that while no specific threat had been made to the transit system, they were working with federal authorities to monitor the situation and urged residents to remain vigilant.

Officials in Chicago and Washington also said they knew of no threats to their transit systems.

The United States and France have both launched air strikes against Islamic State targets in Iraq as part of a U.S.-led campaign to "degrade and destroy" the radical Sunni militant group, which has seized a third of both Iraq and Syria.

Abadi disclosed the intelligence while making a case for Western and Arab countries to join that campaign. "We want to increase the number of willing countries who would support this," he said. "This is not military. This is intelligence. This is security. The terrorists have a massive international campaign. Don't underestimate it."

In the past, the United States had received threats that various militant groups were targeting transportation systems but there is no recent information about an imminent plan by Islamic State, one U.S. official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

Abadi also said that Iraq did not want to see foreign "boots on the ground," but stressed the value of providing air cover, saying Iraq's air force did not have sufficient capability.

He said Australia was "very interested" in participating, though he did not provide details. He also voiced optimism about a planned British parliament vote on Friday on the matter, saying "they reckon it will be successful."

Earlier on Thursday, France said it would increase security on transport and in public places after a French tourist was killed in Algeria, and said it was ready to support all states that requested its help to fight terror.

(Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball and Ian Simpson in Washington,; Frank McGurty, Steve Holland and Rodrigo Campos in New York, Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles,; Nicolas Bertin in Paris and Ned Parker in Baghdad; Editing by Jason Szep, Lisa Shumaker and Peter Cooney)



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TOP NEWS New York officials scramble to reassure city after security threat

By Ellen Wulfhorst

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A warning by Iraq's prime minister that Islamist militants planned to attack New York City sent political leaders scrambling on Thursday to assure the public it was safe to ride the subways and travel the streets of the nation's largest city.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio each had the same idea - take a subway ride to a busy transit hub to announce that everything was under control.

"I have a simple message for all New Yorkers. There is no immediate credible threat to our subway system," de Blasio said at a hastily arranged news conference at Manhattan's Union Square where he arrived by subway from City Hall.

A few minutes earlier, and a few blocks away, the governor staged his appearance by taking a subway to Penn Station, a major rail terminal.

"You are going to see a greater police presence than you have seen before," Cuomo said. "Don't be alarmed. If anything, that should be comforting."

While the newest threat was unsubstantiated, the added police presence was a precaution, said New York Police Commissioner William Bratton, who appeared alongside the mayor.

Their public reassurances were reminiscent of pronouncements by former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani when New Yorkers, devastated by the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center, were fearful of further devastation to the city.

The security concerns arose after Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said Iraq had received what he termed credible intelligence that Islamic State militants planned to attack subway systems in Paris and the United States.

Senior U.S. and French officials promptly said they had no evidence to back up the claim. Abadi made his remarks while in New York for the annual meeting of the U.N. General Assembly.

Extra police patrolled among crowds of commuters and tourists dragging luggage through busy subway hubs and at Penn Station and the Port Authority Bus Terminal during the evening rush hour.

Uniformed officers, several with explosive-sniffing dogs, were stationed every few hundred yards, with tables set up to conduct random bag searches.

New Yorker Richard Betancourt, 64, gave a thumps-up to a group of police officers keeping watch at a 42nd Street subway.

"They'd be stupid not to go for it," he said of the visible security presence. "New York is the No. 1 target."

"It's something that these nut jobs might see, and then they'll think twice before they do anything, if they have any brains," he said.

The police commissioner said security would be added throughout the city, with heavily armed teams of counter-terror police, stepped-up searches and coordination with private security workers.

Additional security was planned for Yankee Stadium, where baseball star Derek Jeter was to play his last home game before retiring at the end of the season.

Cuomo said authorities already had boosted security in response to potential threats from Islamic State and other militant groups. The New York governor, together with his New Jersey counterpart, Chris Christie, announced a bi-state initiative to that end on Wednesday.

(Additional reporting by Frank McGurty; Editing by Ken Wills)



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TOP NEWS U.S. Attorney General Holder to step down, successor faces array of challenges

By Julia Edwards and David Ingram

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Eric Holder said on Thursday he would step down as U.S. attorney general, setting up a potentially bruising Senate fight to confirm a successor who can tackle a long list of pending challenges at the Justice Department.

Holder, an unapologetic liberal voice and one of President Barack Obama's closest allies, will remain in office until a successor is nominated and confirmed. His nearly six-year term, marked by civil rights advances and frequent fights with Congress, made him one of the nation's longest serving attorneys generals.

"I will never leave the work. I will continue to serve," Holder, with Obama at his side, said during a brief White House announcement of his departure.

The next attorney general will face many challenges, including managing counter-terror initiatives aimed at Islamic State militants, balancing privacy rights against government surveillance efforts, and deciding whether to continue attempts to prosecute former spy agency contractor Edward Snowden, now living in Russia, for revealing surveillance secrets.

Holder's successor also will oversee a series of cases against banks and individuals over the manipulation of foreign exchange rates, and must decide whether to continue Holder's effort to scale back the prosecution of nonviolent drug offenders.

Holder's departure could set off a tense confirmation fight with Republicans in a lame-duck U.S. Senate session scheduled after the Nov. 4 midterm elections, although the chamber's majority Democrats can invoke rules making it easier to get around Republican efforts to block confirmation.

Republicans hope to gain a Senate majority in the elections, making it likely Obama will send up a nomination before a new Congress convenes in January.

A White House official said Obama has not made a decision on a Holder replacement. Names floated for the job include Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, Solicitor General Don Verrilli, former Associate Attorney General Tom Perrelli, California Attorney General Kamala Harris, Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch and Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick.

Holder forcefully embodied many of the president's most liberal positions, including support for more gun control, criticism of America's prison system and a desire to try terrorism suspects in civilian instead of military courts.

Despite a drumbeat of Republican criticism since becoming attorney general in 2009, he was one of the last three original members of Obama's cabinet, along with Education Secretary Arne Duncan and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack.

Republicans responded to Holder's decision to step down with harsh assessments of his tenure, and gave a preview of the difficulties Obama will face in getting a successor confirmed.

"I will be scrutinizing the President's replacement nominee to ensure the Justice Department finally returns to prioritizing law enforcement over partisan concerns," Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said.

Holder made civil rights a cornerstone of his tenure, bringing a series of cases against local police for using excessive force, suing the state of Arizona over a law aimed at Hispanic immigrants and successfully blocking many state voter ID laws before the 2012 election, likening them to Jim Crow-style poll taxes.

He visited Ferguson, Missouri, last month, promising a Justice Department investigation after the shooting death of a black teenager by a white policeman led to violent clashes with police.

While Holder has no immediate plans once he steps down, a Justice Department official said, he has told friends that he wants to find a way to help restore trust between law enforcement and minority communities.

Holder built a name more on the people he did not prosecute than on those he did, which is unusual for an attorney general.

The Justice Department did not criminally charge any major Wall Street firm or executive for fraud in connection with the 2007-2009 financial crisis. Holder also steered clear of criminal charges against CIA agents involved in waterboarding, an Arizona sheriff investigated for civil rights violations and disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong, who admitted using performance enhancing drugs.

Holder had previously signaled his plans to step down by the end of the year, and the Justice Department said he finalized his decision at a White House meeting earlier this month.

Holder was a natural choice for attorney general after campaigning for Obama in 2008, when he took on the sensitive job of helping to vet Obama's choices for a vice presidential nominee.

His resume included Ivy League degrees, a job prosecuting corruption and a judgeship in Washington. Holder served in the Justice Department's No. 2 job under Democratic President Bill Clinton.

The Senate confirmed him on a 75-21 vote in 2009, reflecting some Republican uneasiness about Holder's liberal views and about his role in Clinton's pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich in January 2001.

Holder quickly reassured Republicans when he dropped the Justice Department's corruption case against Ted Stevens, a former Republican senator from Alaska whom lawmakers had sympathy for. Prosecutors in the case improperly withheld evidence from Stevens' defense lawyers.

The honeymoon began to fade during Holder's first month in office in February 2009 when, in a speech on civil rights, he said America was acting as a "nation of cowards." Critics denounced the comment as not sufficiently patriotic.

Later, he infuriated Republicans when he reopened a criminal investigation into the CIA's use of waterboarding and other harsh interrogation methods - the same probe that ended with no prosecutions. Many Republicans thought the CIA's actions were defensible and legal.

Holder's battles with Republicans reached a peak in 2012 when the Republican-led House of Representatives voted largely along party lines to find him in contempt for withholding documents from them.

Obama claimed privilege over the documents about how the Justice Department responded to revelations about a botched anti-gun-trafficking program along the U.S.-Mexico border known as Operation Fast and Furious.

(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton, Susan Heavey, David Ingram, Aruna Viswanatha; Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by Mohammad Zargham, Bill Trott and Steve Orlofsky)



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TOP NEWS Militant in Syria beheading videos identified: FBI

By Julia Edwards and Mark Hosenball

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A masked Islamic State militant seen wielding a knife in videos at the beheading of two Americans has been identified, FBI Director James Comey said on Thursday, but he declined to give the person's name or nationality.

The videos released in August and September of American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff showed a masked Islamic State militant brandishing a knife and speaking English with a British accent.

A European government source familiar with the investigation said that the accent indicated that the man was from London and likely from a community of Asian immigrants. U.S. and European officials said the principal investigative work identifying the man was conducted by British government agencies.

"I believe that we have identified," Comey told a small group of reporters. "I'm not going to tell you who I believe it is."

Actual beheadings were not shown on the Foley and Sotloff videos. The videos imply that the masked militant was the person who carried out the killings. But the videos did not show him actually drawing blood from the victims but faded to black after he finished his speeches and then cut to pictures of the beheaded bodies.

Investigators said that because of the way the videos were edited, it is possible that someone other than the British-accented man carried out the murders.

A third video purporting to depict the murder of David Haines, a British aid worker, surfaced later and Islamic State militants also have threatened to kill a second British aid worker, Alan Henning.

John Cantlie, a British journalist held by the group, has appeared in two Islamic State videos criticizing U.S. airstrikes against the group and suggesting that the United States had become engaged in "Gulf War III."

The British ambassador to the United States, Sir Peter Westmacott, told CNN shortly after Foley's killing in August that Britain was working on identifying the suspect using voice-recognition technology. Westmacott said then that law enforcement was close to identifying the man.

British authorities had sought to keep a lid on news coverage of their investigation, hoping that might make it easier for authorities to capture militants implicated in the beheadings. Prime Minister David Cameron is scheduled to address the British parliament on Friday about his country's involvement in the fight against Islamic State.

FBI Director Comey told reporters about a dozen Americans were known to be fighting with militants in Syria, and some had already returned to the United States. Earlier, U.S. officials had said about 100 Americans had joined up.

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham and Grant McCool)

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TOP NEWS French, U.S. planes strike Islamic State, Britain to join coalition

 
By Arshad Mohammed and Tom Perry

NEW YORK/BEIRUT (Reuters) - French fighter jets struck Islamic State targets in Iraq on Thursday, and the United States hit them in Syria, as a U.S.-led coalition to fight the militants gained momentum with an announcement that Britain would join.

The French strikes were a prompt answer to the beheading of a French tourist in Algeria by militants, who said the killing was punishment for Paris' decision last week to become the first European country to join the U.S.-led bombing campaign.

In the United States, FBI Director James Comey said Washington had identified the masked Islamic State militant in videos with a knife at the beheading of two American hostages in recent weeks. Those acts helped galvanize Washington's bombing campaign.

"I'm not going to tell you who I believe it is," Comey told reporters. He said he knew the person's nationality, but declined to give further details.

A European government source familiar with the investigation said the accent indicated the man was from London and likely from a community of immigrants. U.S. and European officials said the principal investigative work identifying the man was conducted by British government agencies.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, in New York to attend a U.N. meeting, said on Thursday he had credible intelligence that Islamic State networks in Iraq were plotting to attack U.S. and French subway trains.

Senior U.S. officials and French security services said they had no evidence of the specific threat cited by Abadi. But New York Police Commissioner William Bratton said the department boosted its presence on subways and city streets after the Iraqi warning.

City officials added there was no specific, credible threat, and Mayor Bill de Blasio said: "We are convinced New Yorkers are safe."

Officials in Chicago and Washington, D.C., said they knew of no threats to their transit systems.

Some Iraqi officials in Baghdad questioned Abadi's comments. One high-level Iraqi government official told Reuters it appeared to be based on "ancient intelligence".

France said earlier on Thursday it would boost security on transport and in public places after the killing of French tourist Herve Gourdel by Islamic State sympathizers in Algeria.

Britain, the closest U.S. ally in the past decade's wars, announced on Thursday that it too would join air strikes against Islamic State targets in Iraq, after weeks of weighing its options. Prime Minister David Cameron recalled parliament, which is expected to give its approval on Friday.

While Arab countries have joined the coalition, Washington's traditional Western allies had been slow to answer the call from U.S. President Barack Obama. But since Monday, Australia, Belgium and the Netherlands have said they would send planes.

The Western allies have so far agreed to join air strikes only in Iraq, where the government has asked for help, and not in Syria, where strikes are being carried out without formal permission from President Bashar al-Assad. France said on Thursday it did not rule out extending strikes to Syria, too.

Overnight, U.S.-led air strikes in eastern Syria killed 14 Islamic State fighters, according to a monitoring group, while on the ground, Kurdish forces were reported to have pushed back an advance by the Islamists toward the border town of Kobani.

The air raids follow growing alarm in Western and Arab capitals after Islamic State, a Sunni militant group, swept through a swath of Iraq in June, proclaimed a "caliphate" ruling over all Muslims, slaughtered prisoners and ordered Shi'ites and non-Muslims to convert or die.

'HARSHNESS, BRUTALITY, TORTURE AND MURDER'

More than 120 Islamic scholars from around the world, including many of the most senior figures in Sunni Islam, issued an open letter denouncing Islamic State. Challenging the group with theological arguments, they described its interpretation of the faith as "a great wrong and an offense to Islam, to Muslims and to the entire world."

"You have misinterpreted Islam into a religion of harshness, brutality, torture and murder," said the letter, signed by figures from across the Muslim world from Indonesia to Morocco.

A third night of air raids by the United States and Arab allies targeted Islamic State-controlled oil refineries in three remote locations in eastern Syria to try to cut off a major source of revenue for the al Qaeda offshoot.

The strikes also seem to be intended to hamper Islamic State's ability to operate across the Syria-Iraq frontier.

Obama has vowed to keep up military pressure against the group, which advanced through Kurdish areas of northern Iraq this week despite the air strikes. Some 140,000 refugees have fled to Turkey over the past week, many telling of villages burnt and captives beheaded.

"The only language understood by killers like this is the language of force, so the United States of America will work with a broad coalition to dismantle this network of death," Obama said at the U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday.

KURDS HALT ISLAMIC STATE ADVANCE

One danger the U.S.-led campaign faces in Syria is the lack of strong allies on the ground. Washington remains hostile to the Assad government. It wants other Syrian opponents of Assad to step into the breach as Islamic State is pushed back, but such "moderate opposition" groups have had limited success.

One group that has fought hard against Islamic State on the ground in Syria has been the Kurds, who control an area in the north but complain they have been given no support from the West.

On Thursday, two Kurdish officials said Kurdish forces had pushed back the advance by Islamic State fighters toward the border town of Kobani in overnight clashes. Fighting near the town in recent days had prompted the fastest exodus of refugees of the entire three-year-old Syrian civil war.

Islamic State, which launched a fresh offensive to try to capture Kobani more than a week ago, concentrated its fighters south of the town for a push late on Wednesday, but Kurdish YPG forces repelled them, the Kurdish officials said.

Islamic State fighters also remain to the east and west of the town and fighting continues in the south.

Near Damascus, Assad's Syrian army overran rebels in a town on Thursday, strengthening the Syrian leader's grip on territory around the capital.

Assad's forces, backed by the Lebanese Shi'ite movement Hezbollah, have been gradually extending control over a corridor of territory from Damascus to the Mediterranean coast.

Many Syrian activists and rebels have criticized the United States for focusing on striking Islamic State and other militant groups while doing little to bring down Assad.

Iraq's prime minister told reporters that he conveyed to Syria a message from Washington that U.S. strikes would target Islamic State militants rather than Assad's government.

"What they emphasized is that their aim in Syria is not to destabilize Syria, is not to have a threat of Syrian sovereignty, is not to attack the regime in Syria, but rather to diminish the capabilities of Daesh (and other) terrorist organizations," Abadi said, referring to Islamic State.

Commenting on the fight in Iraq against Islamic State militants, Abadi said that in addition to seeking air cover, Iraqi forces were starting to run low on ammunition and needed a steady supply.

    While acknowledging U.S. air strikes on Islamic State forces in the north of the country, he said the United States had not helped in the south.

    "The onslaught of Daesh we have stopped and we are reversing it," he said. "It is slow, but we have managed with zero support - I can say - with zero support from the Americans or from anybody else," he said.

    "Yes, the Americans ... intervened when Arbil was endangered, but there was no intervention whatsoever in the south," he said. "And of course that was painful at the time."

(Additional reporting by John Irish, Julien Ponthus and Andrew Callus in Paris, Sylvia Westall in Beirut, Nicolas Bertin in Paris; Mark Hosenball, Ian Simpson and Julia Edwards in Washington, and Frank McGurty, Jonathan Allen, Scott Malone and Steve Holland in New York; Writing by Giles Elgood and Peter Graff; Editing by Will Waterman, Peter Cooney, Jonathan Oatis and Ken Wills)



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ENTERTAINMENT NEWS: 'Jersey Shore' star 'The Situation' indicted on tax charges

By Aruna Viswanatha

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Michael "The Situation" Sorrentino, star of the reality TV show "Jersey Shore," and his brother have been charged with not paying taxes on $8.9 million in income, according to an indictment handed down on Wednesday.

Sorrentino, 32, who popularized the phrase "gym, tan, laundry" to refer to the pre-party routine of the show's cast members, allegedly failed to report income while also claiming clothes and cars as business expenses.

The brothers, who are charged with conspiring to defraud the United States government and filing false tax returns, are expected to appear in federal court later on Wednesday, the U.S. Attorney in New Jersey said.

The MTV series "Jersey Shore," which stopped production in 2012, featured a cast of 20-something Italian-Americans partying, tanning and complaining about their jobs at a beachfront T-shirt stand.

According to the indictment, Sorrentino was paid between $1,500 and $48,000 for appearances at nightclubs, bars and liquor stores between 2010 and 2012, and failed to declare some of it.

The brothers also disguised personal grooming expenses as legitimate business expenses in information provided to their accountant, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors also accused Sorrentino's companies of altering accounting records before providing them in response to grand jury subpoenas.

Lawyers for the two brothers did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. A publicist for Sorrentino last year confirmed he was under investigation and said Sorrentino expected no action to be taken once the facts were revealed.

A photo posted to Sorrentino's Twitter account just before the charges were announced on Wednesday showed text that read: "to be old and wise you must first be young and dumb."

"Rather than living in reality and reporting their true income, Michael Sorrentino and his brother Marc created the illusion that they earned less income by filing false and fraudulent tax returns," Jonathan Larsen, who heads the Internal Revenue Service's criminal investigations unit in Newark, New Jersey, said in announcing the indictment.

In 2011, teen clothing retailed Abercrombie & Fitch offered to pay Sorrentino to stop wearing its clothes because the company was worried about damage to its reputation.

(Reporting by Aruna Viswanatha; editing by Susan Heavey, G Crosse and Cynthia Osterman)

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ENTERTAINMENT NEWS: Houston jury clears Patti LaBelle's bodyguards of assault

AUSTIN Texas (Reuters) - A Houston jury cleared bodyguards of Grammy Award-winning singer Patti LaBelle in a lawsuit filed by a former West Point cadet who claimed they beat him so badly he had to drop out of the military academy.



In a decision late on Tuesday, the federal court jury sided with the singer's bodyguards, who said Richard King initiated the 2011 dispute while he was waiting for a ride at a Houston airport. Attorneys for the bodyguards said King shouted racial epithets at the group and hit LaBelle's son.



"While staggering around the passenger pick-up area, King was, among other things, screaming obscenities and attempting to enter LaBelle's limousine transportation," they said in papers filed at court.



King's lawyers said the bodyguards, including one who weighed over 400 pounds (180 kgs), started the attack because he was too close to the group. They said he was forced to drop out of West Point due to brain injuries suffered in the assault.



"LaBelle's security guards are - with her complete consent and approval - violent paid thugs who have no qualms about assaulting innocent people who happen to be standing too close to ... LaBelle," they said in court papers.



(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Bill Trott)





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ENTERTAINMENT NEWS: 'We were like guerrilla filmmakers': U.S. filmmaker on Syria

By Shanshan Chen

LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) -

(The fourteenth paragraph of this Sept. 23 story has been corrected paragraph to 'no women on the Aleppo local council' from 'no women on local councils in Syria')

Inspired by a Syrian-Palestinian activist she met in Washington D.C. at the start of the Syrian uprising, U.S. filmmaker Andrea Kalin dropped her other projects and devoted herself to capturing the Syrian conflict - and people - on film.

More than three years and several perilous trips to Syria later, her documentary "Red Lines" is a unique record of her travels with Mouaz Moustafa and his fellow-activist Razan Shalab al-Sham, a leading Syrian women's rights activist.

When Kalin met Mouaz through a common friend, Mouaz had already been to Syria as head of the Syrian Emergency Task Force, a pro-democracy NGO, supporting the groups whose peaceful protests began the uprising in early 2011.

"He was supporting civic outreach, and at the same time, he was pushing the civil society, peace," Kalin, an award-winning documentary maker, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview from Washington.

Mouaz, now a U.S. citizen, was also warning the U.S. authorities: "if they don't support the moderate opposition and give them the support they need, they are going to be overrun and subsumed by the extremists. He was saying this three years ago," Kalin recalls.

Intrigued by the young man, Kalin put all her other work on hold and focused her lens on Syria.

"I just jumped in, with no funding, with no resources, with no concept of how we're going to tell the story, but I knew it was unfolding in front of my eyes. It's an important story to capture," said Kalin.

Mouaz introduced Kalin to Razan, a young activist who had fled to Turkey. She was making dangerous trips across the border into Syria, using a network of activists to smuggle medical aid to opposition groups.

By building trust and a close relationship with the two young activists, Kalin was able to capture valuable footage inside Syria and tell the stories that had not reached the mainstream news media.

"We didn't tell the American embassy; we didn't go with a security detail, we didn't have insurance. We were like guerrilla filmmakers with our cameras," said Kalin.

"My co-director Oliver Lukacs and I made four trips to Syria, two I went on, two Oliver went on, (we were) at Razan's 'mercy', so to speak - we never went in a legal way. We were lucky."

The relationship they built with their Syrian friends, "that trust is very important to be able to get access" to people in the turbulent country, she said.

"I started out as a radio journalist, and I know the difference of the level of intimacy with your characters," said Kalin.

For Kalin, the true revolution in Syria is the gradual change in women's roles in a traditional society. She attended women's governance courses in Turkey organized by Razan, who told her there were no women on the Aleppo local council before the uprising.

Razan and fellow activists hoped that by encouraging women to work in politics, they would contribute more and have a bigger say in building civil society. Many women made the hazardous trip across the border to join the training sessions.

"For me, the strongest moment in the filmmaking was ... watching women being trained in the electoral process. The setting was bleak, a typical hotel room, with Disney stickers on the wall, and they used a 'ballot' box made from a cardboard box for wine glasses," said Kalin.

"It was in that room those women changed my perceptions. They were the ones that were learning about democracy, and (from their spirit), I learnt the real practice of democracy."

"It's a story that has been missed ... those young activists were willing to sacrifice everything for a cause. People were overlooking that there were so many young people in the Arab world that want the same thing as we have in the west, that we take for granted."

"We still turn our back on a nation whose population is 40 percent displaced, and where tens of thousands have been killed. Unfortunately, the political situation is very difficult (to change). For me, the best the film could do is to raise awareness, and prick people's conscience about the suffering of the Syrian people."

"Red Lines" will be screened in the UK at the Rich Mix cinema in east London on Sept. 25.

(Editing by Tim Pearce)



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ENTERTAINMENT NEWS: Leonardo restoration sheds light on genius as a young man

By Philip Pullella

FLORENCE Italy (Reuters) - If there is any mind an art restorer would die to get into, it would be that of Leonardo da Vinci, the master painter, architect, engineer and inventor whose genius epitomized the brilliance of the Renaissance.

That was the unique opportunity restorers in Florence have relished as they clean the "Adoration of the Magi", a massive painting that Leonardo started in 1481 at the age of 29 but abandoned a year later, leaving it in various stages of conception and development.

The painting on wood, measuring about 2.5 by 2.5 meters (8.2 by 8.2 feet) depicts the three wise men who paid tribute to the infant Jesus in Bethlehem, but it also includes a riot of human figures, battling horses, architectural designs, landscapes and skies.

Done on 10 slabs of wood glued together, it has blank areas, areas with under-drawings, and sections in advanced stages.

"This is perhaps the most quintessential work-in-progress in the history of art," said Cecilia Frosinini, one of the directors of the ongoing restoration of the work, which is slated to return to Florence's Uffizi Gallery next year.

"Leonardo never wanted this to be seen by anyone at this stage, probably not even by those who commissioned it, probably not even his assistants. This is the phase in which he was still elaborating in his mind what the final work would look like," she said, standing in front of the piece.

Leonardo received the commission to paint an altar piece depicting the Adoration from the monks of the monastery of San Donato a Scopeto, near Florence. He stopped abruptly when he left to take up an offer of steady income from the Dukes of Milan.

In the late 1500s it was acquired by Florence's Medici family, whose restorers added layers of both clear and sepia-colored varnish to give it a homogenous, monochrome look when they put it in their collection.

The current restoration project, which began three years ago, has removed much of the dull, oxidized varnish as well as traces of past restoration attempts, revealing many previously hidden details, facial expressions and subtleties of light and shadow.

There are sections where the same horse's head is drawn in various positions, where horses in battle still have three hind legs because Leonardo still had not decided which would go and which would stay.

A PEEK AT A SECRET

"The great fascination of this project was seeing something that we were not supposed to see, standing behind the artist and imagining what the final version could have looked like," said Patrizia Riitano, one of the two restorers who cleaned it.

"I hope that I have been able to enter Leonardo's mind, at least a little bit," said Riitano, who has also worked on paintings by Raphael and other Renaissance masters.

The restoration showed that despite the large size of his work, Leonardo did all the under drawings freehand, eschewing the "cartoons", or dotted-lined outlines, used at the time to divide large complex works into sections.

"We have gotten close to this inexhaustible genius who is never satisfied with his work, who wants to be totally free, even from himself, free from the restrictions that the cartoons would have imposed," said Frosinini.

"It is as if we are privy to a private conversation - Leonardo talking to himself, perhaps even arguing with himself," she said.

Experts at the Opificio delle Pietre Dure, Italy's premier, state-run art restoration lab, have ruled out a hypothesis put forward 15 years ago that Leonardo had done only the preliminary work and the paint was added by an unknown artist long after the master's death in 1519.

"Of course there were restorations and small additions here and there over the centuries but we are convinced that this is all substantially Leonardo," said Roberto Bellucci, a renowned expert on cleaning oil paintings who restored it with Riitano.

In 2001, the Uffizi, after much public and in-house hand wringing, decided not to restore the masterpiece because it was deemed too delicate by some.

Improved techniques and more scientific studies convinced the Uffizi to go ahead with the restoration this time.

Marco Ciatti, the head of the restoration lab, said that if the cleaning had not gone ahead, viewing it would have been "like trying to read a book of poems in a dark room".

After the wood backing of the painting is restored, it is due to return to a special room in the Uffizi, where it will be on display with two other Leonardo works.

(Reporting By Philip Pullella; Editing by Michael Roddy and Sonya Hepinstall)



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ENTERTAINMENT NEWS: Eduardo Cabra, Calle 13 lead Latin Grammy nominations

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Puerto Rican singer Eduardo Cabra topped the 15th annual Latin American Grammy Awards nominations on Wednesday with 10 nods, followed by his band, Calle 13, with nine and songwriter Andres Castro with eight.



Calle 13, known for its eclectic musical style, scored nominations in coveted categories that included best album, for "MultiViral"; best record, for "Respira el Momento"; and song of the year, for "Ojos Color Sol."



Cabra will also vie for the top producer award.



Gabriel Abaroa Jr., president of the Latin Recording Academy, said the nominations reflected the "dynamic and vibrant worldwide Latin community of artists, producers, engineers and songwriters."



Senior mastering engineer Tom Coyne received seven nominations, while Colombian songwriter Julio Reyes Copello and singer Carlos Vives were not far behind with six nods each. Cuban singer Descemer Bueno and singer/songwriter Enrique Iglesias each earned five.



The Latin Grammy Awards will be broadcast live on Nov. 20 from MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on U.S. Spanish-language network Univision.



Iglesias' "Bailando" is also up for record of the year, along with Colombian singer Carlos Vives' "Cuando Nos Volvamos a Encontrar" and "El Mar De Sus Ojos," and singer/songwriter Marc Anthony's "Cambio De Piel."



Anthony was also nominated for best album, for "3.0."



(Reporting by Patricia Reaney; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

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ENTERTAINMENT NEWS: Universal Music sues Monster over Beastie Boys music

By Nate Raymond



NEW YORK (Reuters) - Two Universal Music Group units sued Monster Beverage Corp on Wednesday for using music co-owned by the Beastie Boys in a promotional video, accusing the energy drink maker of copyright infringement.



The lawsuit, filed in New York federal court, comes three months after the Beastie Boys obtained a $1.7 million verdict against Monster over copyrights for the same music.



The latest lawsuit, filed by Capitol Records and Universal-Polygram International Publishing, seeks at least $1.2 million for the infringement of five Beastie Boys recordings and compositions.



Both lawsuits centered on an online video promoting an annual snowboarding competition that Monster organizes and sponsors in Canada called "Ruckus in the Rockies."



The video, which Monster had uploaded to YouTube, featured the competition and an after-party attended by DJs, including Z-Trip. It included a remix by Z-Trip of Beastie Boys songs.



It also concluded with a sentence saying "RIP MCA." Adam Yauch, a Beastie Boys member who went by "MCA," died a day before the May 2012 snowboarding event, after a battle with cancer.



A federal jury in June awarded the Beastie Boys $1.7 million for copyright infringement and false endorsement. Monster has said it would appeal, and is seeking a new trial.



Songs at issue in both cases include Beastie Boys tunes such as "Sabotage," "So Watcha Want" and "Make Some Noise."



Representatives for Monster and the Beastie Boys had no immediate comment. A spokesman for Universal Music, a subsidiary of Vivendi SA, declined comment.



The case is Capitol Records LLC v. Monster Energy Company, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 14-cv-7718.



(Reporting by Nate Raymond in New York; Editing by Richard Chang)





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