সোমবার, ৩০ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১৩

Pelosi Misses Obamacare Vote for Wedding Anniversary

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi missed an essential vote Saturday night to fund the government and avoid a shutdown to celebrate her 50th wedding anniversary at an undisclosed location outside of Washington, D.C., Politico reports.

The California Democrat also skipped the critical caucus meeting prior to the vote, where the respective parties devise political strategy and whip votes.

In a letter to her colleagues, Pelosi said she would be "listening in on the conversations" of the meeting.

Obamacare: Massive New Rules Revealed for 2013

"Speaker Boehner has told me he has the votes for his proposals on his side of the aisle and that he will not need our help," Pelosi said.

In her absence, Roll Call reports that Pelosi's press office flooded reporters email inboxes throughout the day, slamming Republicans for their plan to defund Obamacare.

Roll Call also reported that Pelosi was spending her anniversary with her husband, Paul, at a "long-scheduled event."

Related stories:

US Shutdown Looms as Republicans Stand By Delay of Obamacare

McConnell to Newsmax: Defunding Obamacare Not 'Waste of Time' for GOP

? 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/pelosi-obamacare-vote-wedding/2013/09/29/id/528222

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Pastor Ronald J. Harris Sr. Shot & Killed at Church Revival Service

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/EURWeb/posts/10151889452893151

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রবিবার, ২৯ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১৩

As A Result Of Obamacare, Employer-Based Health Insurance Is ...

Submitted by Michael Snyder of The Economic Collapse blog,

Barack Obama promised to fundamentally transform America, and when it comes to health care he has definitely kept his promise.? Thanks to Obamacare, health care spending is up, health insurance premiums are up, the number of hours Americans are working is down and employer-based health insurance is becoming an endangered species.? Of course employer-based health insurance will not disappear completely any time soon, but it has been steadily shrinking for over a decade, and Obamacare will greatly accelerate that decline.?

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If you go back to 1999, 64.1 percent of all Americans were covered by employment-based health insurance.? That was pretty good.? Today, only 54.9 percent of all Americans are covered by employment-based health insurance, and now thousands upon thousands of U.S. employers are considering reducing the scope of the health plans they offer to employees or eliminating them altogether due to Obamacare.? If you are thinking that this sounds like a potential nightmare for millions of Americans families, you would be exactly right.

There have already been widespread reports of companies dropping health insurance, but nobody knows for sure how widespread the carnage will be.? According to Businessweek, the surveys that have been done up to this point have come up with widely varying results...

A Deloitte study last year suggested 10 percent of employers would stop offering group health plans. A widely criticized McKinsey report from 2011 put the number as high as one-third. The Congressional Budget Office?s latest projections suggest 8 million fewer people will be covered by employer plans five years from now under the ACA than without it. Many of them will get policies through health insurance exchanges instead.

But what everyone does agree on is that employer-based health coverage will continue to diminish.

And we are already watching this happen right in front of our eyes.? Just this week,?the Wall Street Journal reported that the largest security guard firm in the United States is dropping health coverage for 55,000 employees...

The nation's largest provider of security guards plans to discontinue its lowest-cost health plans and steer roughly 55,000 workers to new government-sponsored insurance exchanges for coverage next year, in the latest sign of the fraying ties between employment and health care.

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The U.S. arm of Sweden's Securitas AB is among more than 1,200 employers that offer the kind of bare-bones health plans that must be phased out beginning Jan. 1 under the health-care law. Nearly four million people are enrolled in these so-called mini-med plans, which cap benefits to participants, sometimes at as little as $3,000 a year.

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"The mini-meds go away and we're not replacing them," said Jim McNulty, a spokesman for Securitas's U.S. operation. "Their option is to go to the exchanges."

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Other big employers, including Darden Restaurants Inc., Home Depot Inc. and Trader Joe's Co., say they will stop offering health insurance to part-time workers, and will direct those employees to the state exchanges. Darden, Home Depot and Trader Joe's previously offered mini-meds to their part timers.

Speaking of Trader Joe's, I wrote about how they are eliminating health coverage for part-time workers?the other day.? Instead of providing health insurance for their part-time workers, Trader Joe's will be writing them a check and pushing them on to the Obamacare exchanges...

Trader Joe's, the grocer once lauded for providing health care coverage to its part-time workers, is about to push those employees off its plan.

According to?a memo obtained by the Huffington Post, the company will stop covering?employees who work less than 30 hours per week.

The change is set for the start of 2014.?Instead of insurance, workers instead will get a check for $500 in January.

"Depending on income you may earn outside of Trader Joe's, we believe that with the $500 from Trader Joe's and the tax credits available under the [Affordable Care Act (ACA)], many of you should be able to obtain health care coverage at very little if any net cost to you," said?Trader Joe CEO Dan Bane?in the memo.

And this is a huge reason why the shift from full-time work to part-time work in America has accelerated this year.? Obamacare creates an incentive for companies to have more part-time workers and less full-time workers.? In fact, almost all of the jobs that have been "created" by the U.S. economy in 2013 have been part-time jobs.

But it is incredibly difficult to try to support a family on a part-time job.? Sadly,?the quality of our jobs continues to decline rapidly and only 47 percent of all adults have a full-time job in America today.? This is only going to continue to get even worse under Obamacare.

As a result of these trends, more Americans are going to be forced to go out and buy health insurance "on the individual market".? When they do, they are likely to be in for a really nasty surprise...

Andy and Amy Mangione of Louisville, Ky. and their two boys are just the kind of people who should be helped by ObamaCare. But they recently got a nasty surprise in the mail.

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"When I saw the letter when I came home from work," Andy said, describing the large red wording on the envelope from his insurance carrier, "(it said) 'your action required, benefit changes, act now.' Of course I opened it immediately."

?

It had stunning news. Insurance for the Mangiones and their two boys,which they bought on the individual market, was going to almost triple in 2014 --- from $333 a month to $965.

?

The insurance carrier made it clear the increase was in order to be compliant with the new health care law.

Are you ready to have your health insurance premiums potentially double or triple?

In other cases, families are discovering that health insurance companies are simply?cancelling their health insurance plans...

Across the country, insurers are sending out ObamaCare-induced health plan death notices to untold tens of thousands of other customers in the individual market. Twitter users are posting their ObamaCare cancellation notices and accompanying rate increases:

?

Linda Deright posted her letter from Regency of Washington state: "63 percent jump, old policy of 15 yrs. cancelled." Karen J. Dugan wrote: "Received same notice from Blue Shield CA for our small business. Driving into exchange and no info since online site is down." Chris Birk wrote: "Got notice from BCBS that my current health plan is not ACA compliant. New plan 2x as costly for worse coverage." Small-business owner Villi Wilson posted his letter from HMSA Blue Cross Blue Shield canceling his individual plan and added: "I thought Obama said if I like my health care plan I can keep my health care plan."

In fact, this even happened to one member of Congress.??U.S. Representative Cory Gardner had purchased health insurance on his own because he wanted to experience what his constituents were going through, and he recently got a letter informing him that his old plan had been "discontinued"...

"After my current plan is discontinued," he wrote last week, "the closest comparable plan through our current provider will cost over 100 percent more, going from roughly $650 a month to $1,480 per month." He now carries his ObamaCare cancellation notice with him as hardcore proof of the Democrats' ultimate deception.

Is this what Obama was talking about when he promised that we could keep our old health insurance plans if we were happy with them?

In the end, millions upon millions of us are going to get pushed on to the Obamacare health insurance exchanges.

We were promised that there would be lots of competition and that prices would be reasonable.

Unfortunately, in some areas of the country it turns out that the "exchanges" are turning out to be "monopolies" where consumers?will only have one company to choose from...

?Although seven insurance companies currently operate in North Carolina, under the new Obamacare exchanges, those options will dwindle down to one in the majority of counties,? Ellmers said Thursday following the disclosure of figures by federal health officials showing that more than 60 percent of North Carolina counties will have only one insurance provider option under Obamacare: Blue Cross Blue Shield.

?The whole point of an online marketplace was to provide options, so North Carolinians could go online, compare prices, and choose plans from different companies. That is how competition is supposed to work!,? Ellmers said.

?

Beginning October 1 under Obamacare, Blue Cross Blue Shield will be the only health insurance provider serving the entire state of North Carolina in the new Obamacare exchanges, serving all 100 of the state?s counties. Its competitor Coventry Health Care, which is owned by Aetna, will only reach 39 counties.

That leaves 61 counties, or 61 percent of all the state?s counties, in a Blue Cross Blue Shield-only zone.

Not only that, but a lot of these exchanges are not even going to be ready to function properly on October 1st.? For example, according to the Washington Post, the D.C. "health marketplace" is a complete and total mess at this point...

Just days away from launch, the District of Columbia's health marketplace is announcing a pretty significant delay.

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While the D.C. Health Link will launch a Web site on October 1, shoppers will not have access to the their premium prices until mid-November. The delay comes after the District marketplace discovered "a high error rate" in calculating the tax credits that low- and middle-income people will use to purchase insurance on the marketplace.

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The insurance marketplaces, if working as plan, are supposed to spit out an estimate for a tax credit after a shopper enters in some basic information about where she lives and how much she earns. In the District, that won't happen next month. Instead, the eligibility determination will be made "off-line by experts" by early November.

So who is going to benefit from this new system?

Well, it turns out that the health insurance companies will greatly benefit.? Health insurance companies helped write Obamacare, and their stock prices have absolutely soared since Obamacare was signed into law.? If you doubt this, just check out the amazing charts in this article.

Not that they were hurting under the old system either.? They have been raking in gigantic mountains of cash for years while trying to provide as little health care as possible.? For much more on this, please see my previous article entitled "50 Signs That The U.S. Health Care System Is A Gigantic Money Making Scam".

For the rest of us, Obamacare is going to be even worse than the old system.? A 2013 Health Care Survey that polled 200 top health care professionals discovered the following about what they believe Obamacare will bring...

-- 53 percent, ?Quality of health insurance policies will suffer.?

-- 51 percent, ?Quality of care will go down.?

-- 49 percent, ?The law is overly complicated.?

-- 42 percent, ?Insurance exchanges will be poorly managed.?

-- 37 percent, ?The law still allows insurance companies to be the middleman.?

-- 32 percent, ?Too complex for businesses.?

-- 19 percent, ?Americans will die earlier.?

So Americans are going to pay more, get worse care, have more paperwork and a more complicated system, and they are likely to die younger too?

Wow, that sounds like a great deal.

Where do we sign up?

?

Your rating: None Average: 5 (17 votes)

Source: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-09-28/result-obamacare-employer-based-health-insurance-becoming-extinct

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Analysis: Shutdown, default threat elevates appeal of U.S. Treasuries

By Richard Leong

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Government shutdown. Federal default. These looming political threats to the U.S. economy might scare investors to buy more U.S. Treasuries in the coming days as they seek a shelter for their cash.

While a protracted government shutdown, and particularly a default, could harm to the image of Uncle Sam's debt, its safe-haven appeal looks unchallenged in the short term.

Worried about rising chances that federal workers and contractors won't get paid if much of the government shuts down on October 1 amid a political standoff in Washington, investors are expected to go by the conventional crisis playbook - dumping assets perceived to be higher-risk and rushing into those seen as lower risk.

An extended shutdown, which would include furloughs and temporary unpaid leave for many government employees, would have a direct impact on businesses who rely on government contracts or spending by government employees. It could also lead to delays in spending on big-ticket items by companies and consumers as confidence takes a hit.

That could all harm economic growth and make it less likely that the Federal Reserve will curb its stimulus program through bond buying, further supporting prices of government debt.

Congress must also raise the federal borrowing authority by October 17 - when the government is expected to exhaust its $16.7 trillion debt limit.

Failure to do so could threaten a debt default but many analysts think the government would slash spending before declining to pay its creditors, leaving Treasuries relatively unscathed, at least initially.

Analysts said a risk-aversion move could push benchmark yields on 10-year notes below 2.50 percent, more than 0.50 of a percentage point below the two-year high above 3 percent set in early September. Late on Friday they were trading at about 2.63 percent.

"It's paradoxical that a government shutdown or hitting the debt ceiling is good for Treasuries, but you most likely would see a flight-to-safety into Treasuries," said Bill Cheney, chief economist at John Hancock Financial Services in Boston.

INVESTOR CONFIDENCE

Any fears about a protracted government shutdown haven't been reflected in recent trading. This month, Treasuries are likely to post their first gain in five months as the sector recovered from its summer swoon, sparked by the Federal Reserve decision last week to maintain its bond purchase program.

Growing demand for some Treasury obligations that mature before the October 17 debt limit deadline knocked their interest rates to below zero this week. A month ago, they traded at 0.02 percent.

The yields on benchmark 10-year Treasuries have already fallen to their lowest levels in six weeks partly on safe-haven bids on bets about a possible government shutdown next week.

Still, a long-lasting government shutdown, or, even worse, a default, could harm the Treasuries market.

"You don't want to damage investor confidence in U.S. Treasuries," said Craig Dismuke, chief economic strategist with Vining Sparks in Memphis, Tennessee. "If there is a flight-to-safety, it would a temporary one."

Ironically, the wrangling between President Barack Obama and Republican lawmakers over the budget, the debt ceiling and the Affordable Care Act - also known as Obamacare - was renewed at a time when the U.S. fiscal picture has improved this year.

Higher tax receipts, even in this sluggish recovery, have helped lower the federal deficit and reduced the government's borrowing needs.

PAST LESSONS

Washington last shuttered government offices and stopped paying workers for five days in November 1995 and then from mid-December 1995 to early January 1996.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury notes ended that year at 5.76 percent, down from 7.88 percent at the beginning of the year. The yield had begun falling earlier that summer after the Fed started cutting interest rates in July.

More than 15 years later, under the threat of a federal default, the 10-year yield has fallen 0.6 percentage point from just above 3 percent in three weeks during late July to early August of 2011, when Republican lawmakers and President Barack Obama were also bickering over raising the debt ceiling.

In the derivatives market back then, traders ratcheted up their bets on a U.S. default. The price of thinly-traded credit default swap contracts, which might have paid out if the U.S. government missed its debt payments for an extended period, jumped to 62 basis points, which was the highest since the worst days of the global credit crunch, according to data firm Markit.

This meant an investor would have paid 62,000 euros a year to insure 10 million euros worth of Treasuries against a default within a five-year period. The contract is denominated in euros to offset the impact of a default on the U.S. currency.

On Friday, the price on the five-year CDS on U.S. Treasuries was nearly 32 basis points, the highest since May.

It is difficult to predict what might transpire the coming days.

"Looking at history, there is not a clear pattern," said Cheney at John Hancock.

The 1995 government shutdowns barely interrupted a Standard & Poor's 500 index's <.spx> winning streak. It ended up 34 percent that year.

In contrast, the S&P tumbled 14 percent in the summer of 2011 during the first debt ceiling fight between Obama and the Republicans and following Standard & Poor's stripping of the United States' AAA-rating. Investors stampeded into Treasuries from stocks.

While many still expect that the White House and Republican leaders will come up with temporary fixes to avert a government shutdown and a default, analysts said there is some nervousness given that political leaders have remained far apart.

"We are conditioned for an 11th hour deal, but you can't take anything for granted," said Eric Green, global head of rates, currency and commodity research at TD Securities in New York.

If Washington were able to keep the government running and paying its bills, the 10-year yield will likely rise back to around 2.75 to 2.80 percent. It would also allow Wall Street to focus on whether the economy is showing any signs of picking up steam and the timing of the Fed's bond buying pullback, analysts said.

"The Fed tapering is way more important than all of this," Cheney said.

(Reporting by Richard Leong; Editing by Martin Howell and Tim Dobbyn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-shutdown-default-threat-elevates-appeal-u-treasuries-120540390--business.html

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Amid Putin's crackdown, Sochi gay scene thrives

SOCHI, Russia (AP) ? A man named Ravil catapults onto the dance floor and starts stomping out the lezginka, the arrogant rooster strut of the Chechen national dance.

Ravil's spontaneous performance is made even more unusual by the fact he's in one of the two gay clubs in Sochi, the southern Russian town that will host the Winter Olympics amid Vladimir Putin's harsh crackdown on gays. The morality campaign ? centered on a law banning homosexual "propaganda" ? has threatened to overshadow the games as it provokes an international outcry.

Paradoxically, Sochi is a far cry from the conservative lifestyle that the president is trying to promote.

At club Mayak, for example, the dancers are as diverse as the city itself: a Muslim who is a former market butcher, an Armenian who owns a strip club in a nearby town, a Ukrainian who loves to sing like Whitney Houston and dress like Adele.

And the men behind Mayak are hopeful that Sochi can remain the exception to the rule as its entrepreneurial, anything-goes crowd prepares to welcome the world. "This is a resort town," says Andrei Tenichev, the owner. "We have a saying: Money doesn't smell of anything."

Tenichev moved to the south from the bustling boomtown of Moscow when he saw that Sochi desperately needed another gay hangout. Opening Mayak was a no-brainer ? "money lying on the ground," he says ? and even on a rainy Monday in September the club's cabaret show attracted at least 70 guests.

The club owner, who worked in a gay bar in Moscow before opening Mayak eight years ago, says the climate for his line of business is even better in Sochi. In Moscow, some liquor brands refused to sell to the bar, saying: "A gay bar isn't our style."

"(In Sochi) we sell more expensive liquor than anywhere else in this town," Tenichev proudly says.

He expects tacit cooperation with the local government to last at least through the Olympics in February. The Russian Olympic Committee has not made any trouble for the club, he says, because "they don't want the slightest scandal" ahead of the games. But he also hopes that gay culture in Sochi has a better chance of surviving than in other parts of Russia, despite Putin's crackdown.

The city was a gay hub in Soviet times, a fact facilitated by the Soviet Union's closed borders, an easygoing southern temperament and, for many visitors, a healthy distance from family and friends back home ? giving the place a "What-happens-in-Sochi-stays-in-Sochi" appeal.

Valery Kosachenko, an enormous man in a Hawaiian T-shirt and tiny rain boots, is a regular at Mayak. He was born in Azerbaijan and spent much of his life working in a cafeteria in Novy Urengoy, a city on the subarctic tundra most known for its bountiful gas fields. Every year since the early 1980s, Kosachenko and his Ukrainian truck driver boyfriend would make the liberating trip down south.

Kosachenko, 56, still gets misty-eyed over Soviet-era gay culture, where gays would gather under the watchful eyes of the local Lenin statue. They referred to it as Grandma Lena, a disgruntled but beloved patron saint of their nightly romps.

Homosexuality was a federal crime in Russia until 1993, but in Soviet times caf? owners were tacitly glad to garner a reputation as a gay hangout: It brought extra cash flooding in, and a few extra bribes were enough to keep the police at bay.

According to Kosachenko, public affection with other men was easier than it is now. In his opinion, the laidback lifestyle and southern effusiveness for which Sochi was known meant that few people interpreted such casual displays as immoral ? partly because of a widespread ignorance about homosexuality.

"Sochi is a multinational city, they're relaxed about everyone," he said. "And before, people didn't know anything about it (homosexuality), and so no one thought much of a hug or putting your arm around someone."

The ethnic diversity applies to Mayak itself, where Tenichev estimates that over 30 percent of his clientele is from the Caucasus ? the mountainous ethnic patchwork that encompasses Georgia, Armenia, and much of Russia's restive south. Next to Halloween, the club's biggest events are its "Caucasian Nights" ? in which dancers dress up like big-eyed Armenian girls or Chechen warriors.

Ravil, the lezginka dancer who had just turned 29, sat in the back of the club with three dozen roses in his lap and held hands with Sasha, his boyfriend. Neither gave their surnames in Russia's current homophobic climate.

"There's a tolerance here? both in terms of ethnicity and orientation," said Sasha. "But you see for yourself what kind of laws our government is passing, how people relate to us, how religion relates to us. The iron curtain starts here."

Sochi, however, isn't an escape for everyone. Many gays who grew up here are chained to the same family and social pressures as in any other Russian provincial town.

Vlad Slavsky, 17, realized he was gay two years ago. He didn't tell anyone at school, but his classmates found out ? and he thinks they may have hacked his social network account.

"In school there's a prison mentality, they live by prison rules," he said, describing more than 10 physical attacks near his home and constant taunts from other schoolmates. He now carries pepper spray and takes a taxi if he's coming home late.

But those at Mayak manage to live fluid and flexible lives. Sergei Baklykov, the 32-year-old Ukrainian who sings like Whitney, says he wanted to be a woman for a while ? and the others rib him, joking that he gave up "because it was too expensive."

While Mayak's regulars have been able to adapt, they're hardly activists. Baklykov said he was "apolitical" and didn't want to be involved in the LGBT movement in its present state because he believes "it doesn't have a leader."

And while Sochi still serves as a refuge for Russian gays, the growing conservatism of the Russian public has meant that many find it easier ? and cheaper ? to travel abroad. Those who are left tend to be older or poorer.

Tenichev says that the number of gay visitors is naturally dropping, which has meant opening Mayak's doors more and more often to other visitors ? in particular to straight women.

"It's hard nowadays to call this a gay club," he said, noting that the average age of the gay visitors is increasing, and is now easily over 30.

"I'm drawn by what's abroad," said Kosachenko, who described a recent trip to the Canary Islands as mind-blowing. "But this is my own, and I'm used to it. Here I feel at home, so I'll learn to adapt."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/amid-putins-crackdown-sochi-gay-scene-thrives-070313024.html

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India, Pakistan holding peace summit in New York

UNITED NATIONS (AP) ? A meeting of the Pakistani and Indian prime ministers in New York this weekend is a fresh chance for one leader to push for peace on the subcontinent ? and likely the last chance for the other.

Three-time Pakistani premier Nawaz Sharif and India's Manmohan Singh are due to meet Sunday on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly. It is their first face-to-face since Sharif's election victory in May. Singh will step down next year.

Sharif calls the meeting a chance for a "new beginning," but Singh has tamped down expectations for the talks which take place amid an upsurge in militant attacks in disputed Kashmir. Speaking Friday after a White House meeting with President Barack Obama, Singh said, "the epicenter of terror still remains focused in Pakistan."

The need for peace between the South Asian nuclear rivals has rarely been greater. They have been at loggerheads since Britain granted independence and carved up the subcontinent in 1947, but the impending U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan adds new uncertainty to a region increasingly threatened by Islamic militancy.

"It's timely for them to meet," said Karl Inderfurth, a former top U.S. diplomat for South Asia and now at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank in Washington.

"It's Nawaz Sharif's first chance as the new prime minister to reach across to his Indian counterpart and it's maybe Manmohan Singh's last chance to do what he has repeatedly said he wants to do, which is open up a new relationship with Pakistan."

Both men are familiar with the pitfalls of seeking to improve ties between India and Pakistan ? a relationship scarred by three wars and deep mutual suspicion.

Sharif was in power when Pakistan first tested a nuclear bomb in 1998. But he also presided over one of the more upbeat episodes in recent relations with India.

He hosted then-Prime Minister Atal Vajpayee for a summit in Lahore in February 1999, where they signed a landmark declaration on avoiding nuclear conflict and opened a cross-border bus service.

Three months later the impetus for peace was crushed when a Pakistani military quietly infiltrated into an area of Indian-held Kashmir called Kargil, sparking fighting that left hundreds dead on both sides and could have sparked nuclear war. Sharif, who said the army acted without his knowledge, was ousted in a coup five months later.

Back in office again, Sharif is particularly keen to increase cross-border trade to jumpstart Pakistan's stricken economy.

"Pakistan and India can prosper together, and the entire region would benefit from our cooperation," Sharif told the General Assembly Friday.

But Singh has said relations can only improve once Pakistan cracks down on militants accused on staging attacks in India ? a perennial concern that has only intensified since the 2008 Mumbai attacks that killed 164 people in India's commercial hub. On Friday, Singh said, "the epicenter of terror still remains focused in Pakistan."

A renewed spate of violence along the disputed Kashmir frontier this year has threatened a decade-long cease-fire. On Thursday, suspected separatist rebels killed 10 Indian security forces in the Indian-held portion of the Himalayan region ? an attack that the top elected official there said was aimed at derailing the meeting of Sharif and Singh in New York.

Yet with time running out on his nearly decadelong premiership, Singh will be thinking about his legacy.

He was born in the northern Punjab village of Gah in what later became Pakistan, and within a year of taking office invited then-Pakistani leader Pervez Musharraf to a cricket match in India. The two made heartening progress in talks and even pronounced in 2005 that the peace process between India and Pakistan was "irreversible."

Subsequent events, particularly the Mumbai attacks, proved that to be a folly.

Formidable obstacles remain toward achieving a lasting peace. Despite increasing people-to-people ties and tentative moves to ease barriers to commerce and travel, the security establishments on both sides still regard the other as the enemy. As well as the core dispute of Kashmir, the two nations competing interests in Afghanistan could intensify when the U.S. withdraws.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/india-pakistan-holding-peace-summit-york-042203187.html

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Arkansas vs. Texas A&M Preview

By: Adam Ford

Published: Friday, September 27, 2013

Arkansas' game with Texas A&M could turn into an offensive shootout, featuring the Razorbacks' running game, led by Alex Collins (pictured left) and Jonathan Williams, and the 2012 Heisman trophy winner, Johnny Manziel (pictured right).
Arkansas' game with Texas A&M could turn into an offensive shootout, featuring the Razorbacks' running game, led by Alex Collins (pictured left) and Jonathan Williams, and the 2012 Heisman trophy winner, Johnny Manziel (pictured right).

After getting torched for over 300 passing yards by Rutgers, Arkansas faces one of the most formidable attacks in college football, in Texas A&M?s Air Raid with Heisman winner Johnny Manziel as its trigger-man. The Aggies torched the Razorbacks for 700 yards in 2012, winning 58-10 in College Station.

QUICK FACTS

TEXAS A&M

Head Coach: Kevin Sumlin (14-3, 2nd season)

2012 Record

11-2 (6-2 SEC)

2013 Record

3-1 (0-1 SEC)

Starters Returning

11 (6 offense, 5 defense)

Offense

Air Raid

Defense

4-3

KEVIN SUMLIN

Texas A&M head coach Kevin Sumlin and Arkansas offensive coordinator Jim Chaney should be familiar with one another, since Sumlin worked under Chaney as Purdue?s wide receivers coach from 1998-2000. Neither has the scoop on the others? offense, however, since both run different systems now. Sumlin made it to Oklahoma in 2003 and learned the Air Raid under offensive coordinator Kevin Wilson, who had learned it from Mike Leach before him. Sumlin headed out to Houston in 2008, taking the Air Raid with him. There, he found Case Keenum, and the Texas Tech-style Air Raid was his offense of choice.

TEXAS A&M OFFENSE

The offense Texas A&M runs may be described as an ?improvised Air Raid.? It often does not look like what Mike Leach or Kliff Kingsbury are doing due to the improvisation abilities of its quarterback, Johnny Manziel. Sumlin also inherited a better run-blocking offensive line than most Air Raid coaches have at their disposal, so the Aggies have added some zone running plays to the playbook. The between-tackles running ability of tailback Ben Malena against spread-out defensive fronts provides a great complement. These runs plus Manziel?s scrambles (over 1,000 rushing yards, mostly improvised but some called runs) helped A&M lead the SEC in rushing yards last season.

Texas A&M?s offensive line took a dip in quality when left tackle Luke Joekel was drafted second overall in the NFL draft. Right tackle Jake Matthews is still pretty good, and the line overall is quality. The wide receivers are where A&M is truly amazing. Mike Evans (6-foot-5, 225 pounds) is a mix of size, speed, and athleticism unlike any in college football. He had seven receptions for 279 yards against Alabama. If a team is able to contain him with only a couple of defenders, the rest of the A&M receiving corps isn?t quite as deadly. Malcome Kennedy is the next-best target for Manziel. They throw a lot of bubble screens (often packaged with zone runs) to keep the defense honest, and then take deep shots when the defense creeps up. If Arkansas is unable to tackle in the open field against these physical wide receivers, this game will turn into a rout rather quickly.

TEXAS A&M DEFENSE

At this point in the season, it appears that Texas A&M?s defense exists to fulfill the requirement that they keep 11 men on the field when the other team has the ball. Last season, Mark Snyder?s unit was rather feisty, though. They gave up a lot of yards and points, but much of that was because they were on the field for large chunks of time and had a lot of blowouts, which led to junk time scoring by their opponents. If the 2013 defense can reach the level of the 2012 defense, the Aggies will be right back in the national title picture. Until then, the Razorbacks are providing a tough matchup.

Texas A&M lost both interior defensive tackles. Opponents have had major success running the football straight up the middle. Two of the three linebackers are gone as well, and the Razorbacks' offensive line have an easy time opening up holes through the middle. The Aggies defense is pretty fast, however, so if they stack the box, getting the seal on the edge will not be as easy as it was against Louisiana-Lafayette and Southern Miss.

Therefore, in order to soften up the A&M defensive front, Arkansas must be able to throw the ball. If AJ Derby is the Razorbacks' quarterback (Bret Bielema tweeted that Allen will be available Saturday), he does not provide much of a deep threat, but did a decent job working the middle, underneath routes. Giving him help is the offensive line, who has given up just three sacks this season. The only sack allowed against Rutgers (top-10 nationally in sacks by coming in) came in desperation time. Texas A&M?s pass rush is not as good as Rutgers?, so Derby (or Allen) should have all day to throw on most plays. The Aggies will blitz a lot, but it will probably take a six-man rush (two blitzers) to generate major pressure. As long as whoever is playing quarterback for Arkansas can recognize blitzes and read his hot routes (not a given), the Hogs should avoid taking sacks.

HOPE

Hog fans want something to hope for against an old SWC rival that is bursting with confidence. Here are some nuggets to hang your hat on.

  1. Opposing quarterbacks have rushed 27 times for -72 yards against the Razorbacks this season. Half of those runs (14) are sacks, but Arkansas did a fantastic job of containing two mobile quarterbacks (Terrance Broadway and Gary Nova) this season. Every quarterback has been sacked at least twice and rushed for negative yardage. Next up? Containing Johnny Manziel, whose ability to scramble supplements his ability to pass.

  2. A Bret Bielema-coached team has never surrendered more than 48 points. This may be a moot point because it?s debatable that Arkansas could possibly score near 48 even if A&M did, but Bielema-coached teams rarely get torched defensively. The most points scored by a Bielema team (84) is nearly twice that number.

  3. The matchup of Arkansas? offense vs. Texas A&M?s defense may actually be more favorable than the matchup of Texas A&M?s offense vs. Arkansas? defense. The Aggies? D is truly bad. Despite just one noteworthy opponent (Alabama, whose offense has floundered in its other two games), the Aggies are dead last in the SEC and 110th nationally in total defense. They are 106th against the run and 87th against the pass.

FILM STUDY

Let?s start with how NOT to stop Johnny Manziel. Alabama came out shockingly unprepared for the game a couple of weeks ago. They did change their usual 3-4 defense into a 4-2-5 look with some 4-1-6 dime packages, but other than that, they tried to play base defense, with their usual man-to-man bump-and-run coverage on the outside. Their early-game blitz packages were very vanilla and not tailored to A&M?s attack at all. Perhaps this was just so Saban could make Sumlin show his hand, because as soon as A&M jumped up 14-0 six minutes into the game, Saban abruptly switched to a better attack, apparently a more A&M-specific game plan. Although the Aggies still scored 28 more points, the defense did enough the rest of the way to allow the offense to win the game.

Here?s a bad blitz from early in the game. Linebacker CJ Moseley is going to blitz around the A&M right tackle, while the Tide defensive end (#42) is going to stunt to the inside, attempting to draw the tackle into blocking him and freeing up Moseley to have a free run at Manziel.

However, as you can see, this play breaks the cardinal rule of defending Manziel: NEVER LOSE CONTAIN. Manziel is much too fast for the blitzing Moseley, whose momentum carries him away from Manziel and allows the speedy QB to get outside the box for a 15-yard gain.

LSU had it right. The Tigers held Manziel to 27 rushing yards on 17 carries in 2012, and won the game 24-19, keeping the Aggies scoreless during the second and third quarters and half of the fourth.

Here, Barkevious Mingo crashes hard at left defensive end (bottom), but he?s not going straight for the quarterback. His job is to pull up and close off Manziel?s scramble lane to his right side. At the top of the screen, fellow defensive end Sam Montgomery is crashing hard to force Manziel to make a decision. If Manziel wants to scramble to his left, the spy linebacker (highlighted) is there to close off that lane. LSU is also reliant on its two defensive tackles to get pressure straight up the middle.

Here?s the result. Notice that Manziel has no scramble lane. The defensive tackles are coming up the middle, and the spy has closed off the lane around the defensive end. Manziel has to look to a running back screen that is not open, but since he has nowhere to go, he has to throw it and the play goes for no gain.

Arkansas is going to be best served by trying what LSU did. Unfortunately, Arkansas? secondary is not near the level of LSU?s, so the Razorbacks will either need some luck or they will need the defensive line to have a truly legendary game. The Hogs will need all of the following to use the "contain Manziel" strategy:

  1. Extremely fast and agile defensive ends, capable of tackling Manziel in the open field... If they do manage to contain. Just getting leverage on Manziel isn?t enough, as he?s perfectly capable of escaping the grasp of even the surest tacklers.

  2. Defensive tackles capable of getting pressure up the middle. Spread offenses like to ?spread? a defense out and attack in space, but the same concept can be used by a defensive line to get one-on-one blocking matchups. If Byran Jones/Darius Philon and Robert Thomas can get pressure up the middle, they can force Manziel to react quicker, shaving precious seconds off the amount of time the secondary has to hold coverage.

  3. The Hogs have to be able to survive with just one or two linebackers on the field. Lake and Mitchell have to spy and make open field tackles, along with covering the zone read plays to Texas A&M running back Ben Malena.

KEYS TO THE GAME

ARKANSAS MUST win first down, offensively and defensively. This was a key to the game last week, and the Hogs failed on offense but were mostly successful on defense. Offensively, the Hogs faced way too many 2nd-and-9+ situations. For the game, Arkansas averaged 3.14 yards per play on first team. The goal needs to be 4.5-5.0 yards per play on first down. Arkansas' three best first-down plays were Williams? 21-yard pass to Henry on a trick play, and two runs by Keon Hatcher, one for 11 yards and another for an 8-yard gain. Without those three plays, Arkansas averaged a meager 1.53 yards per play. That is not going to win games. Defensively, the Razorbacks need to hold Texas A&M to under 4.0 yards per play on first down. Rutgers managed 4.44 yards per play on first down. These numbers include gains of 33, 16, 16, 11, 25, and 42, but also include three sacks and nine incomplete passes.

TEXAS A&M MUST slow the Arkansas running game and force the Razorbacks to beat them through the air. This one seems pretty obvious. Rutgers was very successful against Arkansas? run, holding the Hogs to 107 yards on 30 called runs (sacks and sneaks taken out). It might be tougher for the Aggies, who are 101 spots lower than Rutgers in the rush defense rankings (5th vs. 106th), and who gave up over 300 rushing yards to Rice.

ARKANSAS MUST be at least +3 in turnover margin. This may not be as hard as it appears. Arkansas finished +3 against a Rutgers team that traditionally takes care of the football. One of the turnovers was a little fluky, but the other two were forced by the defensive line getting pressure. AJ Derby hasn?t turned the football over in seven quarters as the Hogs QB and Allen threw just one interception in three starts. The Razorbacks will not win if they turn it over. Defensively, pressure will force turnovers, as Manziel is apt to make a bad decision with the football when under duress.

TEXAS A&M MUST be patient with the underneath routes. Arkansas blew a couple of coverages against Rutgers, but the Razorbacks are probably more stout against the deep pass than they looked in that game. Almost every successful pass route thrown against Arkansas? defense this year has been into the seam and hook zones (4-10 yards across the middle of the field), where Razorback linebackers and safeties rolling underneath have given coverage that is too soft. The Aggies are too good for the Hog defenders to slow down on shorter routes, but if Johnny Football gets an itching to go deep, the Hogs may have a chance at some turnovers.

MATCHUP OF THE GAME is Arkansas? offensive line against Texas A&M?s defensive front. To put it frankly, Arkansas is going to have to get lucky on defense to hold A&M under 42 points. Either the Aggies are going to have to come in unfocused, Manziel is going to have to try to force some passes that aren?t there, or he?s going to have to try to scramble against contain and get sacked or fumble against the Razorbacks' defensive ends. Or, perhaps less politically correct, some Aggies are going to have be injured or suspended. Ultimately, Arkansas? best defense is its offense. If Arkansas can work the clock, keep the defense resting, and score almost every time they have the football, it could be a relatively close game.

Without Brandon Allen, I don?t think Arkansas would be able to produce the offense necessary to keep up in a shootout. The Razorbacks should still rush for over 200 yards, and will probably top 400 yards of total offense either way, but they?ll need to score on every possession to keep up. I think Arkansas? defensive line is able to get penetration against a very good Texas A&M offensive line, but once you are through the line, actually corralling Manziel is a whole different animal. Arkansas? secondary often struggles to cover for five seconds, but 10, 15 seconds? Gulp.

Prediction: Texas A&M 49, Arkansas 28

Source: http://www.wholehogsports.com/news/2013/sep/27/arkansas-vs-texas-m-preview/

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Beware Of Malware-Infected Blogs | Andrea Zecevic

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Internet users and blog-browsing addicts beware! As weblogs come free and are quite easy to use, they continue to gain popularity. Hence, criminals operating on the Internet are becoming more aware and are taking advantage of the use of these online personal journals to ensnare unwitting victims. Not long ago, spyware and malware were spread mostly through email and file-sharing, and system infection was prevented by spam blockers and email scanners. Nowadays, clicking on a seemingly harmless link can make you vulnerable to those with shady intentions in an instant.

A common practice of computer crooks involves making up phony weblogs that look harmless or genuine. They then embed viral codes or keylogging programs within the site, and send out the blog?s url address through spam e-mail, chat rooms or instant messenger. Even innocent blogs that allow comments that are not moderated may fall be victimized through comment spam leading to infected blogs. The trick lies in convincing the potential victim to click on a link that activates the malware embedded in the blog site, or leading them to input valuable information within the fraudulent blog, such as credit card details and account passwords, which the keylogging program then records and automatically sends to the site owner.

In computer and information technology, ?malware? is a term that generally refers to software that is intended by the creator to cause damage or break into a computer system, often without the knowledge or informed assent of the owner. The different types of malware include computer viruses, Trojan horses, adware, worms, and spyware. On a more specific level, spyware is a type of malware that is primarily used for profit. Produced commercially, these programs are used for collecting information about the users of a computer system. It does this by activating pop-up advertisements, as well as changing the normal activity of a system?s web browser in such a way that the creator of the spyware benefits financially.

A typical sign that a spyware is in effect, is when a standard search engine query is redirected to a different page filled with paid-for ads. A certain type of spyware, at times referred to as stealware, does as its name implies; it steals from a genuine business or website owner by overwriting relevant marketing codes, such that the income value goes to the spyware author instead. Malware can also be used to thieve directly from the infected computer?s user, by installing keyloggers that record specific keystrokes as the user types in passwords, or other valuable information like credit card numbers. The malicious program then sends this information to the spyware creator, and that?s how the stealing begins.

In the case of a malware-infected blog, the site itself deceitfully serves as host to the malicious program. The setup is one that often allows malware to get past detection and filtering systems unnoticed. Furthermore, having a somewhat permanent place in the world wide web, it is always accessible to Internet users?all they have to do is click on an active link to be lured into the trap. As such, it posts a greater danger to those who are unaware that malware-infected blogs abound and how they can become victims.

Today, there may be hundreds of these malware-infected blogs that still continue to spread malicious software. The spread of these malware and spyware infected blogs may be due in part to the increased availability of malware and spyware to online crooks. Recent reports have it that certain search engines like Google are dealing with exposure of a special search capability in their system that allows end-users to locate and download malware files on the web. This feature was previously hidden and served as a device utilized and known only to security research and anti virus companies. The bad news is, these supposedly secreted features are by now known to hackers and profiteering Internet criminals. They don?t need to create these malicious programs to cause damage to other people?s computer systems or steal valuable data; hundreds of them are just a download away.

For one to find malware with the use of Google, it is essential to have the specific signature of a certain malware program. These signatures are now being shared on the Internet by hackers, and that causes greater ease for other online bandits to carry out the search for a particular malware program using its unique signature. In some pro-hacking web sites, the signatures are even indexed in an online database, such that users only need to input the name of the malware and it instantly returns the corresponding signature. End-users are even asked to share fresh malware to the site so that the site moderators are able to produce a signature for it fast, to be made available to other users. This way, hackers, even bloggers who are unskilled in hacking but nonetheless have a tainted intention, will be able to make use of any malware of their choice, and spread it through different blogs.

Probably the most important thing to do in order to protect your computer from malware is to install a trusted anti-virus program and to keep it updated. Scan computers on a regular basis, and also keep patches up to date. Keeping a firewall up should also help. Next is to be cautious when opening and reading email and instant messages, especially those that are unwanted, or come from email addresses you don?t recognize.

Furthermore, when using an instant messenger, beware of active links that even your trusted contacts send. Before you even consider clicking on any link, be sure to ask first what site it leads to. Better yet, you may even consider holding off on clicking the link until you?re able to personally talk to the person sending it to verify its authenticity. Ignoring the message is yet another option, if the message does not seem that important at all.

There is hope, however, as leading IT and Internet firms are coming up with ways to disable these web scammers. Information sites, as well as blog code improvements like Google?s ?nofollow? tag, are up and running to help bloggers and other users protect their computer systems. While more advanced means are yet to make it to the greater public?s knowledge, staying informed and vigilant is the main defense against malware-infected blogs.

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Source: http://www.andreazecevic.com/?p=1442

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Sudan: New protests demanding regime fall

KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) ? Security forces opened fire on Sudanese protesters Friday, witnesses said, as thousands marched through the streets of the capital in an opposition push to turn a wave of popular anger over fuel price hikes into an outright uprising against the 24-year rule of President Omar al-Bashir.

At least 50 people have been killed so far this week in the security forces' crackdown on a startling burst of protests, sparked by cuts on fuel and gas subsidies. The marches are turning into the heaviest domestic challenge yet faced by al-Bashir, who had so far been spared the sort of anti-authoritarian popular revolts seen around the Arab world the past two years.

Though he has kept his grip on the regime, al-Bashir has been increasingly beleaguered. The economy has been worsening, especially after South Sudan broke off and became an independent state in 2011, taking Sudan's main oil-producing territory. Armed secessionist groups operate in several parts of the country. And al-Bashir himself, who came to power as head of a military-Islamist regime after a 1989 coup, is wanted by the International Criminal Court over alleged crimes in Sudan's western region of Darfur.

Protesters marched in several parts of Khartoum and in at least one other city, Wad Madani, after weekly Muslim prayers. Security forces opened fire on a march on 60th Street in eastern Khartoum, one witness said, speaking on condition of anonymity for security reasons. There was no immediate word on casualties.

In the Khartoum district of Omdurman, a longtime opposition stronghold, one of Sudan's most prominent opposition leaders, Sadiq al-Mahdi, delivered the Friday sermon at a mosque, telling worshippers that al-Bashir has been spending the state's budget on "consolidating power" and failed "to lift the agony off the citizens' shoulders."

"Life became unbearable. Citizens' main concern is survival after the government gave up on its responsibility to provide subsidies," said al-Mahdi, of the National Umma Party. "We call for changing the regime."

After the sermon, a crowd of protesters marched from the mosque through the district, changing "the people want the downfall of the regime," the slogan heard in Arab Spring uprisings from Tunisia and Egypt to Syria and Yemen.

Security forces were deployed nearby in pick-up trucks mounted with machine guns. Omdurman residents blocked their streets with rocks and pipes in an attempt to keep security forces out, though witnesses reported that police opened fire tear gas and live ammunition on the march as it tried to cross the Nile River into central Khartoum.

"People will not be stopped by the killings until this rotten regime leaves," one witness and Umma Party member, Mohammed al-Mahdi, told the Associated Press.

Anti-government protests first erupted this week in the town of Wad Madani south of Sudan's capital, then spread to Khartoum and seven other cities after the government on Sunday cut subsidies on fuel and gas, causing prices to leap. Angry protesters torched police and gas stations and government buildings, while students marched chanting for al-Bashir's ouster.

The subsidy cuts are part of a program worked out with the International Monetary Fund aiming to salvage the economy after the break with the south, seeking to cut state spending while encouraging non-oil sectors. Al-Bashir justified the new measures, saying they would rescue the country from "collapse."

A gallon (3.8 liters) of diesel sprang from eight Sudanese pounds ($1.81) to 14 pounds ($3.18). A gallon of gasoline, once 12 pounds ($2.7), jumped to 21 ($4.7), while a canister of cooking gas that was 14 pounds ($3.2) is now 25 ($5.6).

Faisal Saleh, a political commentator in the daily newspaper Khartoum, said the new protests were significant because of their geographical exten, the variety of protesters and the bloody response by the security forces.

"This only reflects that the government feels endangered by the protests. We have seen secondary school students shot to death for only chanting against the regime, not even throwing a rock," he said.

He said that what remains to be seen is whether the opposition can formulate a united leadership to lead these protests. "Te coming hours are very critical because they are big test whether the revolt will continue to fade away," he said.

Two rights groups, Amnesty International and the African Center for Justice and Peace Studies, accused the government of using a "shoot to kill" policy against this week's protests, saying they had documented 50 deaths in rioting on Tuesday and Wednesday.

"Shooting to kill ? including by aiming at protesters' chests and heads ? is a blatant violation of the right to life, and Sudan must immediately end this violent repression," said Amnesty's deputy chief for Africa, Lucy Freeman.

Youth activists and doctors at a Khartoum hospital told The Associated Press that at least 100 people died since Monday. Sudanese police, in a statement carried by the official SUNA news agency late Thursday, put the death toll at 29 people, including policemen. A precise toll was almost impossible to obtain, partly due to a media blackout that prevented journalists from obtaining records and a 24-hour Internet outage on Wednesday.

Interior Minister Ibrahim Mahmoud said Friday that 600 people have been arrested for "sobatage" and will stand trial, according to SUNA. He warned on Friday that "the safety of citizens is a red line."

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Associated Press writer Geir Moulson contributed to this story from Berlin.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sudan-protests-demanding-regime-fall-142516397.html

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Parting Schotts: Union hockey alumni update: Grosenick sharp; Simpson scores

A couple of updates on two former Union hockey players for you on this Saturday.

-- Goalie Troy Grosenick stopped 28 shots Friday in leading the Worcester Sharks to a 2-1 AHL preseason win over the Providence Bruins at the New England Sports Center in Marlborough, Mass.

Grosenick was named the game's second star.

-- The teams met again Saturday, this time at the at the Dunkin? Donuts Center in Providence, R.I. Wayne Simpson scored to help the Bruins to a 3-1 win.

Simpson's goal early in the second period tied the score 1-1. He beat J.P. Anderson. Grosenick didn't play..

Follow @slapschotts on Twitter. Follow @dgazettesports on Twitter.

Source: http://www.dailygazette.com/weblogs/schott/2013/sep/28/union-hockey-alumni-update-grosenick-sharp-simpson/

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Iran calls for destruction of all nukes

Hours before the first significant high level meeting between the U.S. and Iran since the Iranian revolution in 1979, Iran's President Hassan Rouhani urged the destruction of all nuclear weapons.

Rouhani's statement was closely watched because his country faces severe international embargoes because its nuclear program is suspected of building a nuclear arsenal.

"Any use of nuclear weapons is a violation of the U.N. charter and a crime against humanity," Rouhani said, speaking at U.N. headquarters in New York.

As head of the Non-Aligned Movement, Rouhani called for a total destruction of nuclear weapons and said "de-targeting, de-alerting or reducing the number of nuclear weapons [is] not [a] substitute for their total elimination."

The nuclear weapon states must lead the charge to disarm, Rouhani said and he called on Israel to join the Non-Proliferation Treaty "without delay" in a rare, direct reference to the country.

"The world has waited too long to disarm," Rouhani said. "As long as nuclear weapons exist, the threat of their use exists."

In his speech, Rouhani laid out the following three pronged plan to promote disarmament. He called for an early commencement of negotiations, in the Conference on Disarmament, on a comprehensive convention on nuclear weapons for the prohibition of their possession, development, production, acquisition, testing, stockpiling, transfer, use or threat of use, and for their destruction.

He urged the designation of Sept. 26 as an international day dedicated to eliminating nuclear weapons.

Rouhani also proposed convening a high-level international conference on nuclear disarmament in five years to review progress in this regard.

Rouhani's speech comes ahead of today's landmark meeting between U.S. and Iranian officials.

Secretary of State John Kerry will meet face to face with his Iranian counterpart, Foreign Minister Javid Zarif along with foreign ministers from Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany, the so-called P5+1.

The State Department down-played expectations today, saying that no-one expects a breakthrough from this one meeting, but it will open an opportunity to see if the Iranians are serious about wanting to negotiate.

Asked earlier today what he needed to know from the Iranians to show that they are serious, Kerry responded, "I'll let you know after they've been serious."

Kerry added, "We're going to have a good meeting, I'm sure."

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/irans-rouhani-calls-destruction-nukes-183513607.html

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One day, many dead: The start of Kenya mall siege

Sneha Kothari-Mashru, 28, a part-time radio DJ who smeared blood onto her arm and clothes to pretend to be dead during the Westgate Mall attack, speaks to an Associated Press reporter in Nairobi, Kenya, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2013. First-hand accounts of the chaotic first hours of the four-day siege of Kenya's posh Westgate Mall are beginning to emerge. (AP Photo/Khalil Senosi)

Sneha Kothari-Mashru, 28, a part-time radio DJ who smeared blood onto her arm and clothes to pretend to be dead during the Westgate Mall attack, speaks to an Associated Press reporter in Nairobi, Kenya, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2013. First-hand accounts of the chaotic first hours of the four-day siege of Kenya's posh Westgate Mall are beginning to emerge. (AP Photo/Khalil Senosi)

Rafia Khan, who hid in a ceiling crawl space during the Westgate Mall attack, speaks to an Associated Press reporter in Nairobi, Kenya Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2013. First-hand accounts of the chaotic first hours of the four-day siege of Kenya's posh Westgate Mall are beginning to emerge. (AP Photo/Khalil Senosi)

FILE - In this Saturday, Sept. 21, 2013, file photo, armed police leave after entering the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya, after gunmen threw grenades and opened fire Saturday, killing at least 22 people in an attack targeting non-Muslims at the upscale mall. First-hand accounts of the chaotic first hours of the four-day siege of Kenya's posh Westgate Mall are beginning to emerge. First-hand accounts of the chaotic first hours of the four-day siege of Kenya's posh Westgate Mall are beginning to emerge. (AP Photo/Jonathan Kalan, File)

FILE - In this Saturday, Sept. 21, 2013, file photo, a security officer helps a wounded woman outside the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya, after gunmen threw grenades and opened fire during an attack that left multiple dead and dozens wounded. First-hand accounts of the chaotic first hours of the four-day siege of Kenya's posh Westgate Mall are beginning to emerge. (AP Photo/Jason Straziuso, File)

FILE - In this Saturday, Sept. 21, 2013, file photo, civilians who had been hiding inside during the gun battle manage to flee from the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya after gunmen threw grenades and opened fire Saturday, killing at least 22 people in an attack targeting non-Muslims at the upscale mall. First-hand accounts of the chaotic first hours of the four-day siege of Kenya's posh Westgate Mall are beginning to emerge. First-hand accounts of the chaotic first hours of the four-day siege of Kenya's posh Westgate Mall are beginning to emerge. (AP Photo/Jonathan Kalan, File)

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? It's 1:30 on Saturday afternoon in the Westgate Mall. Rafia Khan is huddling in a crawl space of the Millionaires Casino with her cousin and eight other people as gunmen roam the building and shoot, again and again, into crowds of shoppers.

Now she is teaching those in hiding ? perfect strangers ? words that she hopes will keep them alive.

The group had found the ceiling-level space as they fled gunfire and explosions.

While they are hiding, word spreads by mobile phone text messages that Islamic militants have taken control of the shopping mall that houses the casino. Word also spreads that the gunmen are allowing Muslims to leave ? testing them by asking about their knowledge of Islam.

Khan and her cousin are the only Muslims among the small group. They decide to teach the others to recite the Shahada, the short Arabic-language creed that proclaims there is only one God and Muhammed is his prophet.

Over and over, Khan whispers the words slowly and phonetically, as if to a child: "La il-a-ha il-Al-lah wa Mu-ham-mad ru-soul Al-lah."

___

Saturdays are crowded at the Westgate Mall, Nairobi's most elite retail destination and a crossroads of the global economy. Rich foreign businessmen go there, as do wealthy Kenyans. There are shopping diplomats, and aid workers watching movies. They stroll the Nakumatt grocery store and have sandwiches at Java House. They buy sunglasses, silk shirts and phones.

Much of Kenya lives on less than a couple of dollars a day, but these poor also come to Westgate. They work inside, carrying boxes at the supermarket, sweeping the marble floors. Or they just come to watch.

"Poor. Rich. High class. All of them are there," says Khan, whose husband is a wealthy businessman.

On this Saturday, though, they would watch children weep and watch them die. They would leave injured friends behind as they fled the attackers. They would be shot, and hit by shrapnel from grenades. At least 67 would die in what became a four-day siege by extremists from al-Shabab, the Somalia-based, Muslim militant group.

This is what happened in those first hours.

___

The Westgate Mall entrance, about 12:36 p.m.:

Kenyan authorities believe there are as few as six gunmen, although the numbers remain unclear. The first team, wearing bulletproof vests, storms Westgate's front entrance, throwing grenades and firing assault rifles as they run. They are clearly well-trained.

Few people inside the mall think of terrorism when they hear the first explosion, and many think it's an electrical box giving way under Nairobi's unreliable power grid. But as one blast gives way to another and the clatter of machine-gun fire is heard, thousands of people know they need to move. But where?

Outside at the entrance, Ben Mulwa, a community organizer driving to the mall for lunch, jumps from his car and takes shelter in a shallow flowerbed. He also thinks it's a bank robbery. An unarmed mall security guard takes cover next to him.

Then he sees four attackers in the driveway, racing in his direction. All carry rifles.

"I realized this is bigger trouble than I actually thought," he says.

Mulwa hears a bang, and the guard next to him is shot through the head. He never moves again.

"That's when I saw the second gunmen actually pointing his rifle at me," he says later. Three shots ring out. In his mind, he sees his 1-year-old daughter. "I asked God: Why would you want my daughter to go through this?"

___

Al-Shabab once controlled wide swaths of Somalia, bringing with it a harsh version of Islam that required punishments such as stoning adulterers to death. The group has been threatening revenge on Kenya since 2011, when Kenyan soldiers crossed into Somalia and helped hobble the al-Qaida-linked militants.

The group said in an emailed statement after the attack that "any part of the Kenyan territory is a legitimate target. ... Kenya should be held responsible for the loss of life."

Authorities believe the group had planned long in advance, scouting the mall carefully.

"They likely had cased the location for some time and knew very well the best place and time to attack," House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, R-Mich., said in a statement to The Associated Press.

The gunmen, for the most part, are dressed casually. Many are in khakis and long-sleeved shirts. Some have checked scarves around their necks or flung over their heads. Only some are wearing bulletproof vests.

Most carry AK-47 or G3 assault rifles, weapons widely used in the region and easily available on the black market.

But some of the gunmen are draped with belts of large-caliber ammunition, and witnesses hear the fast, frightening, echoing blasts of heavy machine-gun fire.

As they storm through the mall, the music system keeps playing, an undertone to the explosions and screams. The music of Adele and Ne-Yo filters through the carnage.

___

Millionaires Casino crawl space, 12:57 p.m.:

"Are you okay???"

"Mum??"

"Can u message us Mum???" ? Text messages Khan received from her 24-year-old daughter while in hiding.

___

Parking area, third-level rooftop, about 1:30 p.m.:

The young mother watches the gunman shoot. Crowds of people are stumbling, screaming, falling around her.

He is calm.

She is terrified.

Sneha Kothari-Mashru, 28 and a part-time radio DJ, watches through a tangle of her long brown hair, which she has thrown across her face to appear as if she is already among the dead. She has smeared blood onto her arm and her clothes, taking it from the corpse of a teenage boy. She has kicked off her blue high heels.

The gunman doesn't scream, she recalls days later. He rarely speaks. There is no obvious anger in his expression. He seems confident, she says. "He was normal."

About 15 minutes later, Kothari-Mashru watches as the gunman speaks quietly to one family. She can't hear what is said, but the wife is dressed in the billowing robes worn by highly observant Muslim women. Slowly, the family members stand, raise their hands above their heads, and walk away.

Other witnesses described similar scenes. Elijah Kamau, who was at the mall at the time of the midday attack, said he listened as militants told one group of their plans.

"The gunmen told Muslims to stand up and leave. They were safe," he said.

In the email statement, al-Shabab said their fighters "carried out a meticulous vetting process at the mall and have taken every possible precaution to separate the Muslims from the Kuffar (disbelievers) before carrying out their attack."

___

This is not the rule, however, in the attack.

Dozens of Muslims are shot, and many are killed. Most often, the gunmen fire wildly, spraying bullets into crowds and not bothering to ask about religion.

Some of the bloodiest scenes occur just a few feet from where Kothari-Mashru pretends to be dead.

A Junior Super Chef cooking competition was being held in the parking area and dozens of people ? many from Kenya's community of Ismaili Muslims ? were at long tables set up beneath car advertisements.

Gunmen had already fired through the crowds at the competition when Kothari-Mashru hides nearby. Afterward, the tables are still arranged in many places, complete with upholstered chairs and red tablecloths. But puddles of blood are everywhere, with corpses one on top of another.

___

Parking area, third-level rooftop, about 3 p.m.:

Word goes out that someone has found a place to hide.

Kothari-Mashru decides to run. As she leaves, though, she sees a friend she had met that day, lying down, obviously wounded.

"Can you get up?" Kothari-Mashru asks.

Her friend has been shot three times. She smiles at Kothari-Mashru, but says she cannot move.

As the crowds swarm toward what seems to be safety, Kothari-Mashru leaves.

"It was heartbreaking," she says later.

She swallows.

"I don't know. I don't know," she says. "She couldn't get up. She couldn't move. She just lay there."

Soon, Kothari-Mashru is among dozens of people on a back staircase heading to safety. As she races down, she runs into her husband, who had convinced two plainclothed policemen to help find her. Later, Kothari-Mashru's friend was rescued and treated at a hospital.

___

Millionaires Casino, about 4 p.m.:

Police bang on the door of the casino. The 10 people hiding in the crawl space are escorted out by security forces. They were never forced to recite the creed.

___

Westgate Mall, about 6:30 p.m.:

Dozens, perhaps more than 100 people, remain scattered thorugh the mall as the sun sets. Bodies are carried out as security forces push the gunmen into ever smaller areas.

Mulwa, who had taken cover in the flowerbed and was shot in the leg, has already been taken to safety by police and hospitalized. After surgery, he is released from the hospital.

The siege does not end until Tuesday night, at the end of fierce gunbattles, a fire and the collapse of part of the structure.

Among the dead is Kofi Awoonor of Ghana, a beloved 78-year-old poet who was in Nairobi for a literary festival. His body was flown Wednesday to Accra, the capital of his homeland, where hundreds gathered at the airport to remember him as a man of peace.

In one verse, he was clearly conscious of his own mortality.

"When the final night falls on us

"As it fell upon our parents,

"We shall retire to our modest home

"Earth-sure, secure

"That we have done our duty

"By our people;

"We met the challenge of history

"And were not afraid."

___

Associated Press writers Adam Schreck and Jacob Kushner contributed to this story.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-09-26-AS-Kenya-The%20Terror%20Begins/id-7658287ec291445c994bf61a600fdb1b

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Cabot Oil & Gas establishes initial 2014 production growth guidance of 30 to 50 percent, reaffirms 2013 production guidance

Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation (NYSE: COG) established its initial 2014 production growth guidance range of 30 to 50 percent and reaffirmed its 2013 production growth guidance range of 44 to 54 percent. "We have provided initial 2014 guidance to further reaffirm management's confidence in our ability to continue to provide best-in-class production growth in 2014," said Dan O. Dinges, Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer. "While production volumes have recently been impacted by our strategic decision to periodically hold back production due to the recent softness in Marcellus spot market pricing and scheduled infrastructure maintenance projects (most of which will be completed by early October), we believe these are both short-term phenomena that will not have an impact on our production growth in 2013 and beyond."

"Cabot's Marcellus position continues to provide the most economic natural gas in North America with a breakeven cost below $1.20/Mcf," stated Dinges. "While current regional pricing will affect our realized pricing in the short-term, we continue to believe the focus should be on the quality of our asset and our extensive inventory of low-risk, high-return drilling opportunities in the Marcellus Shale."

This article is for information and discussion purposes only and does not form a recommendation to invest or otherwise. The value of an investment may fall. The investments referred to in this article may not be suitable for all investors, and if in doubt, an investor should seek advice from a qualified investment adviser. More

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Source: http://www.oilvoice.com/n/Cabot_Oil_Gas_establishes_initial_2014_production_growth_guidance_of_30_to_50_percent_reaffirms_2013_production_guidance/e9aa0029ce51.aspx

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Russia agrees to U.N. resolution on Syria chemical weapons (cbsnews)

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