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Hamsa Lila, Airto Moreira: S.F. Green Fest After Party

CHART-TOPPING WORLD MUSIC BAND HAMSA LILA TO PERFORM WITH AIRTO MORIERA
FOR OFFICIAL GREEN FESTIVAL AFTER PARTY BENEFITING COMMON VISION

Hamsa Lila

World music band Hamsa Lila will be returning to the San Francisco Bay area after a three year hiatus to headline a gala event benefiting Common Vision and featuring the legendary Brazilian drum master Airto Moreira. The event is an official Green Festival SF After-Dark event at the renowned Regency Ballroom on Saturday, November 14, 2009.

Hamsa Lila blew up the West Coast world music scene with their hypnotic world fusion sounds back in 2004, when their album Gathering One went to number two on both U.S. and Canadian world music charts. Their infusion of West and North African influences, and multi-lingual, trance-inducing songs had crowds dancing like never before at festivals like Earthdance, Sierra Nevada World Music Festival, and High Sierra Music Festival, as well as packing concert venues like The Fillmore and The Independent. Hamsa Lila’s unique blend of traditional instruments and influences along with modern electronic elements brought them international acclaim as a pioneering band in the world fusion genre, who’s membership have played with the likes of Paul Simon, Sting, Michael Franti, Ozomatli, Hugh Masekela, Mickey Hart, and many others.

The Brazilian musical legend Airto Moreira will be heralded as the super-star special guest, leading a group of world drum masters (TBA) in a rhythmic ceremony to kick off the evening, and then performing alongside Hamsa Lila throughout their set. Airto is a multi-instrumentalist/percussionist who has worked with some of the world’s all time greats like Miles Davis, Quincy Jones, Herbie Hancock, Santana, Paul Simon, Smashing Pumpkins, Chick Corea, and a host of others. He’s recorded numerous albums over a stellar career that spans four decades, and his recent release entitled Life After That (Narada – Virgin/EMI) has helped to win him the title as the best jazz/fusion percussionist of 2009 by DRUM! magazine.

Common Vision is a 501 (c) 3 organization that works with inner city schools planting fruit trees, traveling throughout California in bio-diesel powered coach buses and teaching young people about growing food and taking care of the Earth. To date the organization has worked with over 50,000 kids, and planted tens of thousands of fruit trees all over the state. Learn More about Common Vision here.

This special evening will be packed with guests, including Bill Rasaki, King Sunny Ade’s Master Talking drummer for 25 years. Rasaki will be performing an opening set with Airto called Planetary Pulse. Additional Master Drummers will be announced soon.

Other acts to perform include Lynx & Janover, DJ Jef Stott (6 Degrees), and DJ Dragonfly.

The evening will also include visual projections by master artists and VJs and the world renowned National Geographic South American photographer Sebastian Belaustegui will be showcasing his African’s in the Americas exhibit as well.

Tickets are on sale now here and here. Tickets are $22 in advance, $28 day of show, and $50 for special VIP passes.


Olympic losers

Which Olympic candidate cities have failed most often?

KINGS, presidents and television stars are among the grandees gathering in Copenhagen on Friday October 2nd to influence the International Olympic Committee’s choice of host city for the 2016 summer Olympic games. Barack Obama is set to address the committee in favour of Chicago, perhaps nudging his adopted city ahead of Rio de Janeiro, Madrid and Tokyo. Chicago has had plenty of practice: this is its fourth try as a candidate. Tokyo and Madrid have each had one fewer bid, while Tokyo has hosted the games. Rio is only the second South American city to be a candidate, after Buenos Aires had three unsuccessful attempts. Only Detroit has a worse record at Olympic bids than the Windy City, enduring six failures in six attempts.

Del Potro haults Fedex juggernaut at US Open

Argentine sixth seed Juan Martin del Potro upset five-time defending champion Roger Federer 3-6, 7-6 (7/5), 4-6, 7-6 (7/4), 6-2 to win the 2009 US Open men’’s final on Monday night.
Del Potro is the first South American to win the US Open men’’s crown since countryman Guillermo Vilas did in 1977. In the process of [...]

‘Colombia-US base accord reached’

Colombian President Alvaro Uribe

Colombia says it has completed talks with Washington on allowing US troops to use seven of its military bases.

Under the deal, the US military will be able to operate on Colombian soil to tackle drug-trafficking and terrorism.

A number of South American countries have condemned the plan and Argentina has said the bases are "not helpful".

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has expressed fears the move would amount to preparation for an invasion of his country by US forces.

Colombia’s foreign ministry said that Bogota had agreed the text of the deal with the US.

"This agreement reaffirms the commitment of both parties in the fight against drug-trafficking and terrorism," the ministry said in a statement.

The deal will now be reviewed in both countries before being signed.

‘Climate of unease’

Last week, Colombian President Alvaro Uribe visited several of his South American neighbours to try to calm fears over the proposed deal with Washington.

On Monday, South American leaders at a regional summit had reiterated concerns over the deal.

Mr Chavez warned that "the winds of war were beginning to blow" across the region.

The Brazilian president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, called for a meeting between US President Barack Obama and the region’s leaders, saying the "climate of unease disturbs me".

Washington wants to use Colombia as a regional hub for operations to counter drug-trafficking and terrorism.

The US has been forced to look for a new base for such operations after Ecuador refused to renew the lease on its Manta base, which the US military was using.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Alarm at US-Colombia troops plan

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa (left) and his Venezuelan counterpart Hugo Chavez

South American leaders at a regional summit have expressed fresh concerns over Colombian plans to grant American troops access to its military bases.

But at the gathering in Ecuador, they rejected a proposal to formally condemn the proposals, which would allow US access up to seven Colombian bases.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez warned that "the winds of war were beginning to blow" across the region.

Colombia says it needs US support to tackle drug lords and left-wing rebels.

The US wants to relocate its base for anti-drug operations in Latin America to Colombia, after Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa refused to extend an agreement allowing US access to a military base in Ecuador.

‘Unease’

The Brazilian president, Luis Inacio Lula da Silva – whose government had previously described the plans as a matter for Colombia – called for a meeting between US President Barack Obama and the region’s leaders to discuss their concerns directly.

"As president of Brazil, this climate of unease disturbs me," said Mr Silva, reports AP news agency. "I think we should directly discuss our discontent with the American government."

But during Monday’s Union of South American Nations (Unasur) summit in the Ecuadorean capital, Quito, Mr Chavez led criticism of the Colombia-US accord.

"The Yankees have started to command Colombian military forces"

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

Colombia’s rocky regional relations

Uribe tours region over US pact

The Venezuelan leader warned that the July agreement between Bogota and Washington "could generate a war in South America".

BBC South America correspondent Candace Piette says that in a news conference at the end of their meeting, held in an ancient church in Quito, the 12 presidents looked uncomfortable.

Although a number of countries in the region had previously expressed alarm over the plan, the summit failed to back Venezuelan and Bolivian calls for a joint statement condemning the move.

Instead, Unasur members agreed to hold talks – in Argentina later this month – to discuss the controversial Colombian-US proposal.

Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, a staunch American ally, toured the region last week in an effort to persuade leaders that an expanded US presence would not threaten any other nation in South America.

But correspondents say South American leaders would like firm assurances from Washington that the US forces would not operate outside Colombian territory.

‘Provocation’

Monday’s Unasur summit was held amid growing tensions between Colombia and Venezuela. The Colombian president did not attend the meeting in Quito.

Ecuador severed relations with Colombia after Bogota ordered a raid over the border in March 2008 on a left-wing Farc guerrilla camp.

On Sunday Mr Chavez stepped up accusations against Mr Uribe, saying Colombian soldiers had recently been spotted crossing the Orinoco river, which forms part of the border, and entering Venezuelan territory.

He said the alleged incursion was a "provocation" and put Venezuelan troops on a war footing along the border with Colombia.

The foreign ministry in Bogota said the Venezuelan claims were "not true", because it had checked with Colombian military commanders near the border and they had not reported any such incursion.

"The Yankees have started to command Colombian military forces," Mr Chavez also said on Sunday.

Last week, Mr Obama said the Colombia-US plan would merely update an existing accord, Plan Colombia, whereby US military personnel already help the Colombians fight drug trafficking and left-wing rebels.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Chavez slams Colombia ‘incursion’

Hugo Chavez on Alo Presidente (9 August 2009)

The Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez, has accused Colombia of carrying out a military incursion into Venezuela.

Mr Chavez said Colombian soldiers had recently been seen crossing the Orinoco river, which forms part of the border, and entering Venezuelan territory.

He said the alleged incursion was a "provocation" by Colombia’s government.

The accusations came shortly before a summit of South American leaders is due to discuss a Colombian proposal to allow US troops access to its bases.

Mr Chavez has been embroiled in a diplomatic row with his Colombian counterpart, Alvaro Uribe, ever since news of the plan emerged.

‘Growing threat’

During his weekly TV show on Sunday, President Chavez ordered his troops to get on a war footing along the border with Colombia.

"The Yankees have started to command Colombian military forces"

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

Colombia’s rocky regional relations

Uribe tours region over US pact

"The threat against us is growing," he said. "I call on the people and the armed forces – let’s go, ready for combat!"

He said Colombian soldiers had "crossed the Orinoco River in a boat and entered Venezuelan territory" and that when Venezuelan troops arrived, they had gone.

"This is a provocation by the government of Uribe," he said. "The Yankees have started to command Colombian military forces."

Venezuela’s foreign ministry would file a formal complaint, he added, warning that its military would "respond if there’s an attack".

Mr Chavez said he would use this week’s summit of the Union of South American Nations (Unasur) in Ecuador, to urge his allies in the region to pressure President Uribe to reconsider plans to increase the US military presence.

So far, only Bolivia and Ecuador have condemned the plan, while other countries like Chile and Brazil have said they will respect whatever decision Colombia takes.

Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa, who has already announced he would not be renewing the lease of the current US base in Ecuador, said he was concerned about an increase in military activity across the border his country shares with Colombia.

Map

Mr Correa broke off relations with Colombia in March last year when Colombian troops hunting down members of the left-wing Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) killed 19 of them in Ecuadorian territory.

"We cannot ignore this threat," Mr Chavez said.

The Venezuelan leader has said he is concerned that the seven Colombian bases could become a new Guantanamo, or an enclave of US influence, like Israel.

Mr Uribe has said the increased US military presence will help Colombia in the fight against drugs trafficking and left-wing rebel groups. He also says US law would only permit a maximum of 1,400 troops and civilian contractors to be based there.

Correspondents say this is not the first time tensions have risen between the Venezuela and Colombian presidents.

Last year, a war of words culminated in the Venezuelans despatching tanks and heavy armour to the border.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The week ahead

A summit in South America, and other news

• A MEETING of the fledgling Union of South American Nations in Quito, Ecuador’s capital, on Monday August 10th, will be unusually lively, demonstrating the disunity that exists within the regional block. Alvaro Uribe, Colombia’s president, has said that he will not attend after a wave of criticism over his decision to allow American troops to use military bases in his country to pursue the battle against drug trafficking. He got a mixed response from his counterparts on a recent whirlwind tour of South America. Bolivia’s Evo Morales and Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez both blasted the plan as the first stage of widespread American military operations in the region.

See article …

Uribe and Lula discuss base use

Colombia’s President Alvaro Uribe, left, shakes hands with Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in Brasilia on 6 August 2009

Colombian President Alvaro Uribe has received tacit support from Brazil for his plans to allow US troops to use Colombian military bases.

Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim said it considered the agreement to be a sovereign Colombian matter.

Peru also expressed support, while Chile and Paraguay said the accord was a matter for Colombia. Ecuador, Bolivia and Uruguay expressed disapproval.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has cut ties with Colombia over the plan.

Mr Chavez has said he fears the move amounts to preparation for an invasion of his country by US forces.

President Uribe has visited several of his South American neighbours over the past three days in a bid to calm fears over his decision to open seven military bases to US forces.

"We reiterated the agreement with the United States is something naturally for Colombia’s sovereignty"

Celso Amorim
Brazilian Foreign Minister

Chavez fumes at Colombia

Washington wants to use Colombia as a regional hub for operations to counter drug-trafficking and terrorism.

The US has been forced to look for a new base for such operations after Ecuador refused to renew the lease on its Manta base, which the US military was using.

"We reiterated that the agreement with the United States, which is limited to Colombian territory, is something naturally for Colombia’s sovereignty," Brazil’s foreign minister said after Thursday’s talks.

But during his two-hour meeting with Mr Uribe, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said the matter could have been handled more transparently, according to Brazilian media.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on 5 August 2009

The Brazilian leader is also said to have asked for guarantees that the actions of US troops would be restricted to Colombian territory.

The BBC’s Gary Duffy in Sao Paulo says concern has been expressed in Brazil about the proximity of US forces to the River Amazon, an issue always of great sensitivity to Brasilia.

Even US President Barack Obama’s National Security Adviser, James Jones, conceded on a visit to Brazil this week that a better job could have been done when it came to preparing the ground for the agreement, our correspondent adds.

During this week’s whirlwind tour of Latin America, Mr Uribe steered clear of Ecuador and Venezuela, both of which have tense relations with Bogota and Washington.

Mr Uribe has accused Ecuador and Venezuela’s leftist leaders of links with the rebel Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc), who have been seeking to overthrow the Colombian governments for 45 years.

Colombia’s accord with the US is expected to be raised again when Ecuador hosts a regional summit on 10 August. Mr Uribe and his foreign minister do not plan to attend.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Erectile Dysfunction – Why Herbal Cures Are More Effective Than Synthetic Drugs

If you want to cure erectile dysfunction you can of course use synthetic drugs but there just a quick fix, with side affects furthermore, most men are disappointed with them because they think these drugs will improve sex drive and they don’t. Herbal cures can get you a hard erection, give you more libido and [...]

Britons arrested in Brazil ‘granted bail’

Two law graduates arrested over allegations they fraudulently claimed to have been robbed ‘have had passports confiscated’

A judge in Brazil has granted bail to two British law graduates who were arrested over allegations that they fraudulently claimed they had been robbed, their lawyer said today.

Shanti Andrews and Rebecca Turner, both 23, must stay in the South American country as part of their bail conditions and their passports have been confiscated, reports said.

The pair, who both studied at the University of Sussex, were originally denied bail because they were foreigners, their lawyer, Renato Tonini, said.

Following an appeal, Andrews and Turner were told yesterday that they would be released from custody.

Speaking from Rio de Janeiro today, Tonini said: “Yes, they have been granted bail. They will be released today, but I don’t know what time.”

The women are reported to have been transferred from the squalid Polinter jail, south of Rio de Janeiro, to another prison in which they have their own cell.

They had been forced to sleep in overcrowded conditions, with just a blanket on the floor, at Polinter.

The pair told police in the Brazilian city that belongings worth £1,000 had been stolen during a bus journey.

They were taken into custody at dawn on Monday after officers from a specialist tourist support unit apparently became suspicious that they had waited several days before reporting the alleged theft to police.

The Rio de Janeiro state civil police website said the Britons had tried to register a robbery of baggage and documents and claimed they had been attacked.

A subsequent search of their lodgings, in Copacabana, allegedly uncovered some of the belongings they had originally told officers had been stolen.

Tonini said he was “confident” Andrews and Turner would be dealt with fairly by the Brazilian justice system following concerns voiced by Simone Headley, Andrews’s mother, last week.

“We hope the Brazilian justice system will see it as a misunderstanding and the girls will be able to come home safely,” she said.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office said it had not yet been informed that the women had been granted bail.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Regional battle

Honduras has been in crisis ever since President Manuel Zelaya was ousted by opponents who objected to his proposals for constitutional change.

The conflict reflects the battle between left and right that is raging throughout Latin America, argues George Philip, Professor of Comparative and Latin American Politics at the London School of Economics.

Ousted Honduras President Manuel Zelaya and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

In Latin America, as elsewhere, constitutional conflicts tend to reflect battles for power.

The crisis in Honduras, triggered when Mr Zelaya sought to amend the constitution to allow presidential re-election, also appears to follow this pattern.

For some people, most prominently Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, the conflict in Honduras is a battle between left and right.

According to this interpretation, the left, led by Mr Zelaya, is seeking a strong presidency able to lead a process of political and social transformation, while conservatives, like Roberto Micheletti, the interim president of Honduras, want a weaker executive, amply checked by the congress and the courts.

The conflict over presidential term limits, though not the only factor in making or inhibiting a strong presidency, at least partially reflects this difference of viewpoint.

The United States has a somewhat different perspective.

President Barack Obama is trying to show that his government is committed to democratic governance in Latin America whoever is involved.

He has pointedly been refusing to engage in a duel with Hugo Chavez, whether over Honduras or anything else.

For Mr Obama, the key issue is legitimation. He wants the US government to lose its historical reputation as a regional bully.

But Mr Obama wants to be a non-interventionist and a promoter of democracy as well as a good neighbour. Institutional conflicts within Latin America may make this more difficult.

Second terms

The issue of presidential re-election has recently become salient across the region.

Although all countries’ stories are different, there have already been a number of votes relating directly or indirectly to this issue.

"The slogan of the Mexican Revolution – ‘sufragio efectivo, no re-eleccion’ (an effective vote and no re-election) – was seen as democratising"

Historically, the idea of no re-election was intended to limit the advantages of presidential incumbency in countries where other forms of political accountability were weak.

Originally, presidents could do pretty much what they liked so long as they kept sufficient support within the military.

The slogan of the Mexican Revolution – ‘sufragio efectivo, no re-eleccion’ (an effective vote and no re-election) – was seen as democratising.

When democracy once again started to take root in Latin America in the 1980s, most national constitutions forbade immediate re-election, with second terms not permitted until after a waiting period, if at all.

The 1980s were a bad economic decade for Latin America and few incumbents had any prospect of re-election. The issue therefore tended to be put on hold.

In the 1990s, though, when the regional economy started to pick up, it returned with a vengeance.

Popular votes

Peru’s President Alberto Fujimori closed the national congress in 1992, organised elections for a new constituent assembly and had the new constitution approved by national plebiscite.

This new constitution, unlike the old, permitted a second consecutive election and Mr Fujimori stood again for election in 1995 and won.

His attempt to run for a third time, however, ended in disaster.

Constitutional changes during the 1990s also permitted a second consecutive presidential term in both Argentina and Brazil.

Argentine President Carlos Menem, once re-elected, considered running for a third term but then drew back.

Former Argentinian President Juan Peron

In Colombia, the constitution has recently been changed to allow a second consecutive term and there are suggestions that President Alvaro Uribe is considering asking to be allowed to run yet again.

The issue of re-election became more politically polarising once Hugo Chavez was elected in Venezuela.

Mr Chavez used a series of plebiscites to bypass the existing congress and change the constitution.

The new constitution extended the presidential term from five years to six and permitted a single re-election.

Things changed further after Mr Chavez was successfully re-elected in 2006. He then called for a plebiscite on permitting a third presidential term.

He lost the initial vote in 2007 but then called a fresh vote on basically the same issue (there were a few differences) earlier this year, which he won.

The pattern of an incumbent president calling for a new constitution to strengthen the power of the presidency and permit a second term (or more) has also been adopted by Mr Chavez’s main South American allies – Evo Morales in Bolivia and Rafael Correa in Ecuador.

Now we have the crisis in Honduras, and Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega has also just recently called for a change in the national constitution to permit presidential re-election.

It may seem anomalous that the re-election issue is so widely seen as important within Latin America.

There are, after all, ways of bypassing it. One is to use presidential relatives.

Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner was elected to the presidency of Argentina in 2007, following on immediately from her husband’s term.

Argentina’s Juan Peron was replaced as president by his wife Isabel upon his death in 1974, though her term was brief and disastrous.

However, Honduras’s particular conflict, while it has an institutional aspect, can also be seen as a further round in the conflict between Mr Chavez (and his supporters) and the region’s conservatives. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

New escalation in Mexico drug war

Funerals of federal agents

Ten Mexican police officers have been detained in connection with the torture and murder of 12 federal agents during a major escalation in the drug war.

The arrests come as more than 5,000 troops and federal police are deployed in the western state of Michoacan.

The troop surge, one of the biggest in the anti-drugs campaign, comes after a local drug gang launched co-ordinated attacks in 10 cities last week.

The state governor has protested against the "military occupation".

The federal authorities say they are investigating links between the municipal police and drug traffickers in the murder of the agents, whose bodies were found bound and gagged and shot through the head next to a major highway.

Earlier this year 10 mayors in the state were arrested by the federal authorities on suspicion they were working with the drug gangs.

Cocaine transit

Troops with automatic weapons and ski masks to shield their identity have set up roadblocks across Michoacan, President Felipe Calderon’s home state, in a major show of force.

Nineteen police were arrested in one small town, 10 of whom are still being held in custody while alleged links with drug gangs are investigated.

The BBC’s Charles Scanlon in the US city of Miami says Michoacan has long been an entry point for South American cocaine, from which it is transported north to the US border.

The federal government believes that local police and officials have long been in the pay of the drug gangs.

The Michoacan gang, known as the "Family", announced itself as a terrifying new force three years ago when its hitmen tossed the severed heads of five victims onto a dancefloor in a city nightclub.

Troops have set up roadblocks across the state in a major show of force, but analysts say federal agents remain highly vulnerable in a region where drug gangs can easily get intelligence about their movements.

map updated


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

British waste lands in Brazilian waters

• Rubbish included syringes, nappies and condoms
• Transport of waste may have violated international treaty

Police in Brazil are investigating how 1,400 tonnes of British hazardous waste, including nappies, condoms and toilet seats, ended up rotting in three Brazilian ports.

The discovery prompted disgust and alarm that the South American country was being used as a dumping ground in violation of an international treaty on the movement of hazardous waste.

Authorities said they wanted Britain to take back the 65 containers. “We will ask for the repatriation of this garbage,” Roberto Messias, the head of the environment agency, told reporters. “Clearly, Brazil is not a big rubbish dump of the world.”

Five Brazilian companies which imported the containers between February and May have been fined. They said they thought they were receiving plastic for recycling.

The shipment, which reportedly originated in the Suffolk port of Felixstowe, the UK’s largest container port, ended up in the port of Santos near Sao Paulo, and two other ports in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. Instead of recyclable plastic the containers were found to have chemical toilet seats, computer fragments, batteries, syringes, old medicine, leftover food, condoms and nappies.

An additional 25 containers, also thought to be from the UK, were later found with hospital waste, including bags of blood. Brazilian pride was especially piqued by a collection of grubby toys with a note in Portugese saying they should be scrubbed and donated to poor children.

Brazilian police are investigating two UK companies which so far have not been named.

The British embassy in Brasilia said the UK was opposed to illegal trade of any kind and would seek to establish if the Basel convention on the movement of hazardous waste had been broken.

“Where any company is found to have contravened the strict controls on the export of waste as set out by the Basel convention, which is fully ratified by the UK, the UK authorities will not hesitate to take action.

“The UK takes a strong global lead on protection of the environment and the safeguarding of human health, and will do all it can to stamp out the illegal trade in waste.”

European companies seeking to bypass domestic regulations have traditionally used Africa as a dumping ground for hazardous waste, including sewage, contaminated oils and acids.

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Tevez completes move to Man City

Carlos Tevez

Manchester City have confirmed the signing of former Manchester United striker Carlos Tevez, who will hold a 1400 BST news conference on Tuesday.

The Argentine, 25, left Old Trafford last month and will sign a five-year deal following a medical.

City depart for a three-match tour of South Africa on Wednesday.

"It’s terrific news," said boss Mark Hughes. "He’s an international of the highest class who possesses all the attributes to help drive us forward."

Hughes added: "This is yet another deal that shows the commitment of the owner to make this club the very best it can be."

Tevez, who will wear the number 32 shirt at Eastlands, spent a season with West Ham before joining Manchester United on an extended loan deal in 2007.

His move to Old Trafford ended a long-running saga following complications with West Ham’s registration of the player.

"He is not only outstanding technically but he is a reliable goal scorer"

Mark Hughes

The Premier League has ratified all the paperwork regarding his move to Eastlands having been assured City have sole registration of the striker.

Tevez, the only player to win the South American player of the year award three seasons running, won the Olympic gold medal with Argentina in Athens in 2004.

He was at Old Trafford as Sir Alex Ferguson’s side lifted successive Premier League titles, becoming a crowd favourite as he scored 34 goals in 99 league and cup starts.

Tevez will become one of a select band to have joined both Manchester clubs and he could re-visit his former club at the Old Trafford derby on 19 September.

"He is not only outstanding technically but he is a reliable goal scorer and someone who will contribute fully to the team ethic," Hughes added.

"He gives us another exciting, attacking dimension."

PHIL MCNULTY’S BLOG

"Is he better than what City currently have Can they afford him Yes, and most emphatically yes."

United said in June that they were willing to pay the £25.5m to turn the striker’s two-year loan move into a permanent five-year deal but Tevez decided to move on.

Speaking after Tevez’s decision to leave Manchester United, the player’s advisor Kia Joorabchian said: "He has to sign the next five years with a club he believes has got ambition to go forward in the Premier League, a club with history and one that really wants to achieve things."

Argentine international Tevez scored 15 goals last season but was often on the bench for key games and was wary of not getting enough first-team football ahead of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

Manchester City’s summer spending so far has seen them sign striker Roque Santa Cruz from Blackburn for £18m and Aston Villa midfielder Gareth Barry for £12m.

But a proposed bid for Barcelona striker Samuel Eto’o fell through – even though reports suggested the club was willing to make the Cameroon international the highest-paid player in the world, earning £250,000 per week.

There have also been rumours that Chelsea captain John Terry is on Manchester City’s wish-list, although Stamford Bridge boss Carlo Ancelotti insists the England defender is not for sale at any price.

Arsenal striker Emmanuel Adebayor is understood to be in talks over a move to Eastlands.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Man Utd move for ‘new Ronaldinho’

• Ferguson targets 18-year-old tipped as ‘new Ronaldinho’
• United offer financial package of £7m plus add-ons

Manchester United have re-established formal contact with the Brazilian club Gremio about trying to reach a compromise over a fee for Douglas Costa, the talented 18-year-old who has been hailed as “the new Ronaldinho” in his country.

Sir Alex Ferguson, the United manager, rates Costa as the brightest young talent currently playing in South America but the Premier League champions could not convince Gremio to allow him out on loan when negotiations began earlier this summer and believe the deal can happen only if the Porto Alegre club drastically lower their valuation.

Gremio have severe financial issues and are acutely aware that selling their most prized young asset could be the answer to those problems. With that in mind, they have informed prospective buyers they want £21m. United regard that as excessive for a player who has not yet played 20 senior games but they are hoping Gremio’s position is negotiable and have put together a financial package, with an initial outlay of £7m, plus a series of success-related add-ons if the player lives up to the promise that has brought him to the attention of Ferguson via John Calvert-Toulmin, the club’s principal scout in Brazil.

The transfer hinges on whether a compromise can be agreed and United are hoping the influential deal-maker Chris Nathaniel can help to convince Gremio that they risk getting nothing at all if they continue to play hardball. Nathaniel, whose extensive list of clients includes Rio Ferdinand and Robinho, is prominently involved with Costa and has spent the last few days in Brazil, in the process holding extensive talks with Gremio’s hierarchy.

• United striker Macheda robbed in his home
• The Rumour Mill: All the latest transfer gossip
• Terry in Chelsea talks as Man City prepare bid

Manchester City are also aware of Costa’s burgeoning reputation but they, too, regard Gremio’s demands as exorbitant and would rather pay significant transfer fees for established players. United’s policy is different, targeting players below the age of 25 if large sums are involved, and Costa fits into their transfer strategy as a young, talented footballer whose value should feasibly go up in future years, just as happened with Cristiano Ronaldo, who was 18 when he signed from Sporting Lisbon.

Costa, a Brazil under-20 international, has other admirers in Spain and Italy but has indicated he would like to move to England and become United’s fourth signing of their summer, following Luis Antonio Valencia, Michael Owen and Gabriel Obertan to Old Trafford.

Carlos Alberto, Brazil’s outspoken World Cup-winning captain in 1970, recently accused United of “raping Brazilian football” and urged Fifa to intervene to prevent the country’s best young players from being lured away by Europe’s leading clubs.

United, however, are proud of their expansive operation in South America, having plucked three Brazilian players – Rafael and Fabio da Silva plus Rodrigo Possebon – from relative obscurity in the past two years.

Costa, who joined Gremio at the age of 11 and is contracted to the club until February 2013, helped Brazil to victory in the South American Youth Championship in January and February, scoring three goals in the process, but United’s interest in the player dates back more than a year before that. Gremio is the club where Ronaldinho made his breakthrough and Costa has obvious similarities in terms of his ability to run with the ball and beat opponents from his favoured role between midfield and attack, as well as being a free-kick specialist.

Any deal would be dependent on the player receiving a work permit but United have never had significant problems obtaining the necessary paperwork in the past.

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Guinea on alert for ‘attack plot’

Captain Moussa Dadis Camara (left) talking to General Mamadou Bah Toto Camara

The military government of Guinea says it has put the army on high alert at all border posts after uncovering plans for an attack on the country.

The West African state said armed men were gathering on the borders with Guinea-Bissau and Senegal to the north and Liberia to the south.

An announcement on state-run national radio said drugs cartels were believed to be behind the plans.

Guinea is a key transit point for drugs en route from the Americas to Europe.

When the junta led by Captain Moussa Camara seized power some seven months ago, it made the fight against drugs one of its key priorities.

Several leading suspects have been arrested and are awaiting trial, but the regime must have made powerful enemies in the process, correspondents say.

Map showing Guinea

The BBC’s Alhassan Sillah in the capital, Conakry, says the announcement of the national alert caught most people off guard and many have reacted with trepidation.

The statement, carried on state radio said "well informed sources" had indicated that the attackers were on the payroll of drug cartels.

"The ministry of defence was informed by the security services and other credible sources of the preparation of an armed attack on Guinea from its borders with Guinea-Bissau and the region of Casamance [in Senegal]," it said.

"These sources have also indicated that there are armed men regrouping on the border with Guinea Bissau to the north and the town of Foya to the south on the border with Liberia."

Election pressure

The statement comes as the military government faces increasing pressure from both local political and civil society groups and the international community for it to hold elections.

Captain Camara has said he will stand down after free and fair elections, which he says will take place by the end of 2010.

The African Union suspended Guinea after the coup, which followed the death of long-standing President Lansana Conte. Many Guineans welcomed the coup, seeing it as bringing an end to years of misrule.

Guinea has more than a third of the world’s bauxite reserves, and also has large reserves of gold, diamonds, iron and nickel.

COCAINE TRAFFICKING ROUTES INTO EUROPE VIA WEST AFRICA

  • 1. Most of the world’s supply of cocaine comes from South America. Venezuela is one of the main departure points for illicit drug consignments leaving the region. Drugs are flown or shipped to West Africa in shipping containers, small boats, or private and commercial aircraft

  • 2. West Africa has become a major hub for smuggling South American cocaine into Europe as British and American anti-drug efforts have curtailed the use of traditional smuggling routes

  • 3. In West Africa the drugs are stockpiled and prepared for transport into Europe by South American, European and local drugs gangs
  • 4. The drugs are smuggled to Europe by shipping container, overland, airfreight or on commercial passenger flights using "mules" via West and East Africa.
  • The countries shown are identified in the INCB report. Routes shown are general indications of illicit drug routes. They are not intended to show exact routes.

Source: INCB, Interpol
Map showing smuggling routes from South America to Europe via West and East Africa

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