Thursday, 10 July 2014

Rihanna Shows Off New Septum Piercing!

Rihanna unveiling a new septum piercing as she showed up at about 4am at New York City club; maybe the most interesting thing about this new head-turning look of Rihanna's, is that it seemed like she actually didn't want the attention for wearing it, 

as she tried to cover up her mouth with her hands so the paparazzi couldn't get a picture of it.
She joined the ranks of septum-pierced Lady Gaga, Janet Jackson, and  Scarlett Johansson amonst others.

Germany Expels U.S. Intelligence Envoy Amid Spying Spat!

German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government expelled the top U.S. intelligence official in Berlin over allegations of espionage, escalating a conflict that one of her aides said has caused “grave” political harm.
The U.S. embassy official was asked to leave Germany after the Federal Prosecutor began investigating spying practices, according to the statement from Merkel’s Chancellery today.
“The government takes these activities very seriously,” Steffen Seibert, Merkel’s press secretary, said in the statement. A trustful relationship with the U.S. remains “indispensable” to Germany, “but for that, mutual trust and openness are necessary,” he said.
The dispute over alleged U.S. spying in German escalated a day after officials confirmed a second probe into espionage, compounding a rift over allegations that the U.S. National Security Agency conducted mass surveillance and hacked Merkel’s mobile phone. The expulsion follows repeated demands by Germany for the U.S. to cooperate in solving the cases.
German lawmakers were briefed by investigators in Berlin today on two cases of suspected espionage, the first involving a 31-year-old employee of Germany’s Federal Intelligence Service, or BND, charged with passing along classified documents. The second involves a suspect identified as a Defense Ministry employee. 
Based on what’s known so far “the information obtained through this alleged espionage is laughable,” Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, a member of Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union party, said in a statement. “The political damage on the other hand is disproportionate and grave.”
The two probes emerged in the last week on top of a parliamentary inquiry into global surveillance by the NSA. Separately, federal prosecutors are looking into criminal activity in the suspected tapping of Merkel’s phone.
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said that while Germany relies on American intelligence, the U.Sdoesn't have free rein to spy on one of its closest allies.
That doesn’t mean the Americans should be allowed to hire third-class people as spies,” Schaeuble said in Berlin late yesterday. “This is so stupid -- it makes you want to cry.”
U.S. Ambassador John Emerson went to the Foreign Ministry in Berlin yesterday to discuss the allegations, five days after he was called in on the back of the first probe.
The events have provoked outrage among German officials who have decried spying among allies. 
“I find it worse for a friendly state to spy on its friends than to expel this diplomat,” Florian Hahn, a lawmaker from Merkel’s CSU Bavarian sister party, said in an interview. “How big is our friendship really? The expulsion is justified.
Some lawmakers are calling for further measures as the espionage fallout threatens to seep into other policy areas, such as cooperation with the U.S. on Russia sanctions and negotiating a U.S.-European trade agreement, known as the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership.
“We have to put still more pressure on the Americans to stop spying activity here in Germany,” said Andre Hahn, a lawmaker of the anti-capitalist opposition Left party on the intelligence oversight panel. “In our view, suspending the free-trade agreement with the U.S. is a necessary step.”

Israel set to launch ground attack on Gaza!



As Hamas militants fired hundreds of rockets with a range of hundred miles into Israel, Israeli authority has said they will retaliate with lunching ground invasion into Gaza.

Responding to the Israeli attack Hamas has boasted that they are "not scared of a stupid ground attack".


What is your thought folks, do you think the Israeli government should separate the Palestinian government from Hamas in-terms of it's defensive attacks?



Eileen Ford Dies at 92!

Founder of iconic modeling agency Ford Models Eileen Ford is dead, she passed away at age 92

The legendary businesswoman was not only credited with introducing the world to perhaps the most prolific roster of supermodels over the years—including Christy Turlington, Brooke Shields, Jean Shrimpton, Naomi Campbell, and Lauren Hutton (to name a very select few)—but also transforming the industry altogether.

May her soul, R.I.P


Nigerian troops mash insurgents ambush in Delwa!

The Nigerian Defence Headquarters today revealed in a twit that it's troop crushed insurgents ambush at Delwa, Borno state, however, three soldiers were reportedly killed while seven others were injured in the attack.



The twit below:

Prince Williams and Harry in a rare webcam selfie!

Prince William and Prince Harry take part in first webchat together as they host social network 'hangout' at the Palace.


Hosted by Jamal Edwards, the hangout which happens to be the first live question and answer session to take place in the Palace, was launched with some help from entrepreneur Jamal, who caught the royal duo for a picture. 

More Photos below:











British public sector workers strike over "poverty pay"!


Striking Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS) members stand outside the Houses of Parliament in central London July 10, 2014.  REUTERS-Toby Melville

Hundreds of thousands of public sector workers including teachers, council workers and firefighters staged a 24-hour pay strike on Thursday in a stoppage that has prompted Prime Minister David Cameron to pledge a crackdown on union powers.
Protesters marched through the streets of many of Britain's main cities in one of the biggest co-ordinated labour stoppages for three years.
Denouncing what they called "poverty pay," they demanded an end to restrictions on wage rises that have been imposed by the government over the past four years in an effort to help reduce Britain's huge budget deficit.
In London, demonstrators marched towards Trafalgar Square at midday, chanting "Low pay, no way, no slave labour" to the beat of a drum. A giant pair of inflatable scissors, carried by members of the National Union of Teachers (NUT), read "Education cuts never heal."
Firefighter Simon Amos, 47, marched wearing his uniform behind a flashing fire engine parading members of the Fire Brigades Union (FBU). "The government are making us pay more for our pension for it to be worth the same, and making us work longer," he said.
The biggest public sector union involved, Unison, said early reports showed the strike had lead to 3,225 school closures with more than 1,000 others partially closed.
Refuse collectors, school support staff, cleaners, street sweepers, care workers, nursery assistants and social workers were joining the strike, it added.
Hot spots, it said, included the North East, Wales and East Midlands where most council offices had closed, while more than 60 picket lines have closed most services in Newcastle.
"It is a massive decision by local government and school support workers to sacrifice a day’s pay by going on strike, but today they are saying enough is enough," said Unison General Secretary, Dave Prentis in a statement.
HARD TIMES:
Britain's coalition government has enforced a policy of pay restraint for public sector workers since coming to power in 2010, imposing a pay freeze until 2012 and then a one percent pay rise cap, resulting in a fall in income in real terms.
The Cabinet Office played down the impact of the strike, saying that most schools in England and Wales were open and that fire services were operating throughout the country.
On Wednesday, Cameron told parliament he planned to limit unions' powers to call strikes.
"How can it possibly be right for our children’s education to be disrupted by trade unions acting in this way" he said.
Tough new laws would be proposed in the Conservative manifesto for next year's general election, he added.
These would include the introduction of a minimum threshold in the number of union members who need to take part in a strike ballot for it to be legal.
The manifesto could also back the introduction of a time limit on how long a vote in favour of industrial action would remain valid.
The NUT mandate for Thursday's strike, for example, came from a 2012 strike ballot based on a turnout of just 27 percent, Cameron said.

The issue of minimum voting thresholds last arose three months ago when a strike by London Underground train drivers caused huge disruption in the capital, prompting Mayor Boris Johnson to demand that at least half of a union's members should vote in favour for a strike to go ahead.
Source: Reuters