Friday, 15 February 2013

Dancing protest


A global Valentine’s Day event invited 1 billion women to oppose violence against woman through dancing.

The global campaign “1 billion rising” aims to show “collective strength” and “solidarity across borders” on violence against women with millions of women took part in a worldwide dance in hundreds of events throughout the world.


רחבת הסינמטק בתל אביב (צילום: ירון ברנר)
women in Te aviv
DHA Photo
Turkey
רוקדות גם בירושלים (צילום: גיל יוחנן)
Jerusalem
sweden


Italy















The most common way people give up their power
is by thinking they don't have any.~ Alice Walker 

Chicago names Mexican first Public Enemy No. 1 since Al Capone



The Chicago Crime Commission named a new Public Enemy No. 1 on Thursday, a designation originally crafted for Al Capone


. The new holder of this dubious distinction, however, is not American nor believed to be in the United States. He is Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, the infamous Mexican drug lord who is Chicago's most wanted because his Sinaloa cartel supplies a majority of the narcotics in the city.
Drug boss Joaquin

Not since Capone "has any criminal deserved this title more than Joaquin Guzman," commission President J.R. Davis said in a news release. "Guzman is the major supplier of narcotics to Chicago. His agents are working in the Chicago area importing vast quantities of drugs for sale throughout the Chicago region and collecting and sending to Mexico tens of millions of dollars in drug money."
Guzman is the boss of the Sinaloa cartel, one of Mexico's most powerful drug trafficking operations.
His nickname, which means "shorty," matches his 5-foot-6-inch frame, though he has climbed to great heights in the drug smuggling business. Forbes magazine has estimated that "El Chapo" is worth $1 billion.

The U.S. Treasury Department has declared him the most influential trafficker in the world, and Mexican authorities have been on his tail since his 2001 escape from a Mexican prison in a laundry cart.
Chicago is among the major destinations for the cartel's illegal drugs.
"While Chicago is 1,500 miles from Mexico, the Sinaloa drug cartel is so deeply embedded in the city that local and federal law enforcement are forced to operate as if they are on the border," said Jack Riley, who heads the Drug Enforcement Administration's office in the city.
The DEA is heading up a new strike force focusing on what Riley calls "choke points": where the drugs and money change hands between the cartel operatives and Chicago gangs. Language and cultural barriers at that juncture make the criminal groups more vulnerable, he said in a statement.

Officials hope this strategy weakens the cartel and creates leads that may bring the capture of Guzman, who is in hiding in Mexico.
"If I pitted Chicago's traditional organized crime group against Guzman and the Sinaloa Cartel, it wouldn't be a fight," Riley said. "In my opinion, Guzman is the new Al Capone of Chicago. His ability to corrupt and enforce his sanctions with his endless supply of revenue is more powerful than Chicago's Italian organized crime gang."















Thursday, 14 February 2013

Singer and former BBA house mate, Goldie Harvey is Dead!



Fast-rising Nigerian singer/ entertainer and BBA star, Susan Oluwabimpe Harvey popularly known as Goldie Harvey, is dead.




According to sources, she passed on after she returned from a trip to the United States where she went to attend the 55th Annual Grammy Awards which took place in Staples in Los Angeles.




The late Goldie attended  Green Springs Montessori Primary School and St. John’s College, Palm Grove before moving on to attend  the University of Sunderland where she studied Business Management.




She joined Kennis Music Label in 2010






...and had her debut album titled Gold, but her most popular songs include, “You Know It”, “JawoJawo” and DTMB (Don’t Touch My Body).

Goldie won the best female video at the 2010 SoundCity Music Video Awards  for the  video ‘You Know it’ and also picked the award for best use of costume at the Nigerian Music Video Awards; while her song DTMB picked up best Afro Pop video at the 2011 Nmva’s.



In 2012, she garnered about 10 awards including the Exquisite Lady of the Year (ELOY), 





Best Female Artiste Award and City People Best Female Artiste of the year, amongst others.

Late Goldie who also dabbled into designing was  an ambassador of Project Alert and also an inductee into the Federal Celebrity Special Marshal Corps alongside other notable Nigerian celebrities.




Goldie, 31, reportedly died on Thursday after she complained of a severe headache at her Park View residence. 





She was rushed to her official hospital, Reddington, Victoria Island, Lagos, where doctors pronounced her dead on arrival. 





 She is survived by her father, step- mother, brothers and sisters. 




Goldie will be greatly missed....










9-Year-Old Mother Is At Least 12, Mexican Officials Say



9yearold Girl Gives Birth


Authorities in the Mexican state of Jalisco say tests have revealed that a girl who gave birth two weeks ago is between 12 and 13 years of age, not 9 as the parents had claimed.
Jalisco state prosecutors also say the girl was impregnated by her stepfather and not her alleged 17-year-old boyfriend.
Authorities announced last week that a 9-year-old had given birth to a baby girl and that they were looking for her boyfriend.
But prosecutors said Wednesday that DNA tests revealed the baby's father is the girl's 44-year-old stepfather and that he is under arrest.
They said an anthropological study of the girl showed she is between 12 and 13. The girls' parents didn't have a birth certificate for her and initially told authorities she was 9.

Oscar Pistorius Charged With Murder



Paralympian Oscar Pistorius was charged on Thursday with murdering his girlfriend.
 

According to Reuters, police launched an investigation after the body of 30-year-old Reeva Steenkamp was found at the sprinter's home on the outskirts of Pretoria.
Lt. Col. Katlego Mogale told The Associated Press that officers found a 9-mm pistol at the scene.
Police spokesperson Captain Sarah Mcirca also confirmed that the victim was shot in the arm and the head, USA Today reported.
"There are witnesses and they have been interviewed this morning. We are talking about neighbors and people that heard things earlier in the evening and when the shooting took place," police brigadier Denise Beukes said.
The circumstances of the shooting have not yet been released.
Steenkamp, a model and 30-year-old law school graduate, had been dating Pistorius for several months, NBC News reported.
Steenkamp's publicist Sarit Tomlinson described the incident as a "huge loss for everyone and too shocking for words."




"She was a rising star ... a very bright young girl," Tomlinson said.

Silver Woods Country Estate, the prestigious gated community where Pistorius lives, also released the following statement: "We are deeply saddened by the tragic cir­cum­stances that occurred today at Sil­ver Woods. Our sincere con­do­lences, thoughts and prayers go out to Reeva Steenkamp’s fam­ily and friends."
Pistorius, 26, who was born without a fibula in both legs, was the first double amputee to run in the Olympics. Nicknamed the "Blade Runner," he was able to compete by wearing carbon fiber prosthetic blades.
A national hero in South Africa, Pistorius ran in 11 races during the 2012 Games and the Paralympics. He returned home with "two Paralympic gold medals, Paralympic silver, two world records, a Paralympic record, an Olympic individual semi-final and an Olympic final." He was also named one of the "sexiest men alive" by People Magazine.

The South African Olympic committee said it would be inappropriate to comment on the shooting because of the ongoing police investigation, but issued the following statement: "The organization is in no position to comment on the incident other than to say our deepest sympathy and condolences have been expressed to the families of all concerned."

Wednesday, 13 February 2013

Fugitive ex-Los Angeles cop believed dead after gun battle, fire



A frame grab from KNBC4 TV aerial footage shows smoke and fire from a cabin where fugitive former Los Angeles police officer Christopher Dorner is believed to be barricaded in Big Bear, California February 12, 2013. REUTERS-KNBC4-Handout


A fugitive ex-cop accused of a grudge-fueled killing spree targeting police officers and their families is believed to have died in a mountain cabin that burned down in the climax to a massive weeklong manhunt acrossSouthern Californiaauthorities said on Wednesday.



Police were awaiting forensic analysis to confirm that charred human remains found in the smoldering ruins of the cabin were those of the 33-year-old fugitive, Christopher Dorner.



Authorities including Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said the man, who had barricaded himself inside the cabin during a standoff with police on Tuesday in the snow-swept hills of the San Bernardino National Forest, was almost certainly Dorner.

"We all are breathing a sigh of relief. We do believe it is the body of Christopher Dorner, but we don't know for certain," Villaraigosa told CNN, adding that a positive, conclusive identification could be days or weeks away.

Los Angeles Police Department spokesman Lieutenant Andy Neiman said the LAPD had returned to "a normal state of operations." But he said special security details assigned to about a dozen officers and their families threatened by Dorner would remain in place for the time being.

Dorner is suspected of killing four people in all, including a deputy sheriff who was shot on Tuesday.

He had been on the run since last Wednesday when he was named as the prime suspect in the slaying of a couple in Irvine, south of Los Angeles.

Armed police officers search vehicles driving south in Yucaipa February 12, 2013, during the manhunt for fugitive former Los Angeles police officer Christopher Dorner. REUTERS-Alex Gallardo

The search intensified last Thursday after he was accused of killing of a Riverside policeman, about 60 miles east of Los Angeles, in an ambush that left a second officer wounded.

Law enforcement converged later that day in the San Bernardino Mountains after a pickup truck identified as Dorner's was found abandoned and burning in the snow near the ski resort community of Big Bear Lake northeast of Los Angeles.

The ensuing manhunt, stretching from the desert north of the mountains to the Mexican border, was described by Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck as the region's most extensive ever.

'WARFARE' ON POLICE

An angry manifesto posted last week on Dorner's Facebook page claimed that he had been wrongly dismissed from the Los Angeles Police Department in 2008. He vowed to seek revenge by unleashing "unconventional and asymmetrical warfare" on officers and their families.

The cabin where Dorner is believed to have made his last stand was a short distance from a police command post.

Armed police officers stop traffic in Yucaipa February 12, 2013, during the manhunt for fugitive former Los Angeles police officer Christopher Dorner. REUTERS-Alex Gallardo

Tuesday's climax to the manhunt began when two housekeepers encountered a man believed to have been Dorner inside a vacant cabin in the Big Bear area. They surprised the fugitive, who tied them up and then took off in a purple Nissan parked near the cabin, authorities said.

One of the women freed herself and called police. Villaraigosa said the housekeepers might end up qualifying for a $1 million reward that was posted for information leading to Dorner's capture, the largest sum ever offered in a Southern California criminal investigation.

State game wardens spotted the stolen vehicle and gave chase. The suspect crashed that car, then commandeered a pickup truck at gunpoint from another motorist and traded gunfire with the game wardens as he sped away, authorities said.

Dorner ultimately abandoned the truck and fled into the woods to the cabin, which was believed to be otherwise vacant, and exchanged gunfire with deputies who closed in on the scene.

During a lull in the shooting, the cabin caught fire and was quickly engulfed in flames. It remained unclear on Wednesday how the blaze began.

The Los Angeles Times reported that authorities had pumped tear gas into the cabin through smashed windows and called for the suspect to surrender but received no response. As police used a demolition vehicle to tear down the walls, they heard a gunshot from inside before the cabin burst into flames, the Times said.

Dorner's last confirmed encounter with authorities was on Thursday, police said, when he ambushed the two Riverside policemen. The former U.S. Navy officer is also suspected of having exchanged gunfire on Thursday with police in nearby Corona. One officer was slightly wounded there.

Dorner's first alleged victims were a campus security officer and his fiancée, the daughter of a retired Los Angeles police captain who represented Dorner during police disciplinary hearings leading to his dismissal.

Dorner was terminated after a police board of inquiry found that he had lied in accusing a training officer of using excessive force against a homeless man. LAPD Chief Becker has opened a review of that case.



“Life is short, live it. Love is rare, grab it. Anger is bad, dump it. Fear is awful, face it. Memories are sweet, cherish it.”

Brazil's booming beauty market draws investors




Ponte Octávio Frias no Brooklin, São Paulo (SP).jpg


A flush new middle class and a population strong on working adults is dropping major cash on designer shampoos, lotions and cosmetics, rapidly turning this country into a beauty industry powerhouse.
Sales of beauty products in Brazil hit $43 billion in 2011, a growth of 142 percent in five years that puts it on a pace to overtake Japan as the world's second-largest beauty market within a few years, according to Euromonitor, a global market research company. At the same time, Japan's beauty market grew by 40 percent and the United States' by 7.3 percent.
This growth is fed by consumers just like seamstress Cidalia Maria de Almeida. On a quick lunch-break visit to a hair products store, she scanned rows of bottles and jars that promised to give her springy curls more shine, bounce, volume or freedom from frizz. She finally plunked two deep-conditioning hair masks into her basket.
She's struggled to make rent in the past, but now has more work than she can handle. The bit of extra cash, she said, she spends on herself.
"I can afford a little luxury every once in a while, a little something to make myself look good," she said. "I can try something new, like this, just because I want to see if it works."
The fastest growing segments of the market saw eye-popping jumps in sales between 2006 and 2011: Depilatories went up by 299 percent, cosmetics by 281 percent and sun care by 230 percent. Consumers such as Almeida are buying more of what they've always purchased, then are reaching back to the shelves, hungry for novelty.
"The potential in Brazil is really significant. The demand is high and continuing to grow," said Hana Ben-Shabat, a partner in the retail practice of A.T. Kearney, a global management consulting firm. "It's incredible because the consumption per capita is very close to what you're seeing in places like America and the UK. The population is very fashion-forward."
Companies are responding. Sephora, owned by LVMH, the world's leading luxury products group, opened its first store in Brazil in July, and while the company can't give numbers, it was the most successful store opening in the company's history, said Paula Larroque, senior vice president for Latin America.
"Brazilians are truly beauty junkies," she said. "We really see limitless potential."
The success has spawned four other stores, and the company plans 30 to 35 more within four years, according to Larroque.
Demand crosses all categories, she said: cosmetics, fragrances, skin care, hair care, accessories, served with a side of cutting-edge innovation.
"Brazilian consumers are also very sophisticated, with a vast knowledge of beauty products and beauty trends," Larroque said.
L'Oreal is already the world leader in beauty, topping international heavyweights such as Procter & Gamble, Unilever and Estee Lauder, and investing in Brazil is essential to staying on top, said Blaise Didillon, head of research and innovation for L'Oreal Brazil.
He said per capita spending on beauty and personal care products is around $260 a year in Brazil, and that is leading companies to invest heavily in understanding Brazilian needs.
In 2008, L'Oreal opened a lab in Rio to focus on hair — a national obsession. Human hair falls into eight types depending on diameter, curliness, the number of waves, twists and other measures, and highly multiracial Brazil has all eight, unlike most countries in Europe, Asia or Africa, Didillon said.
"It's a big challenge but interesting for development."
"When you come from France and spend time in the streets, in the metro, in the bus, it's amazing to see the relationship between women here and their hair," said Didillon. "They're always touching their hair. It's not like that in France."
Brazilian women tend to wear their hair long. L'Oreal's tests have also revealed that half of all Brazilian women smell their own hair at least once a day.
The dedication to texture and scent also makes Brazil a prime testing ground for new products, he said.
"If we succeed in Brazil, there is a high potential to spread the technology outside Brazil, to Latin America but also to India, the US, France," he said.
Another business opportunity lies in the Brazilian infatuation with smelling good.
Although Brazil represents less than 3 percent of the world's population, it makes up 12 percent of deodorant consumption with the highest use in the world. Brazilians also spend more money on perfume than any other nation.
"Other countries have more people or more resources, but don't have the habits we have," said Joao Carlos Basilio, president of the Brazilian Association of Personal Care, Perfume and Cosmetics Industry. "For us, having any kind of body odor is frightful, a lack of civility. For someone introducing a product here, it's essential to remember that."
Brazil has seen at least one of its own beauty brands take off as well: Natura has become a national beauty phenomenon with its tropical scents and flavors. Its reported profits in Brazil grew by 10 percent in 2012 to reach $2.8 billion. And now it's expanding abroad, where it already had $367 million in revenue last year.
In December, the company announced a $71.6 million deal to purchase 65 percent of Australian high-end beauty retailer Emeis Holdings, which operates under the brand name Aesop in Asia, Europe, North America and Australia.
Leaving the salon with a trim and refreshed highlights, Glaucia de Almeida Soares joked that the subject was so important to her countrymen — and women — that the government should subsidize the industry to protect every Brazilian's right to look their best.
"Thank God for these women and all their little magic potions and things," she said waving to the salon with fingernails sparkling in Carnival-friendly glitter. "If you look better, you feel better. If you're having a bad day, make yourself blonde, put on some lipstick, some nail polish, and you end up feeling like Gisele (Bundchen). It's good for the soul."







“The only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle.” – Steve Jobs