This post was co-authored by Enough Project researcher Maggie Fick and originally appeared on Reuters AlertNet Reactions to yesterday’s ruling on the status of Sudan’s…
Posts Tagged ‘yesterday’
Rep. Foxx: “Fool Me Once, Shame On You. Fool Me Twice, Shame On You.” (VIDEO)
Yesterday, speaking from the floor of the House, Rep. Virginia Foxx stumbled into some tricky rhetorical territory. Using her pen for emphasis, she declared, “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on you.” (h/t Media Matters)
Re…
Emma Thompson Celebrates Adopted Son Tindyebwa Agaba’s Graduation
Six years ago she saved him from a life of unimaginable hardship, as a child soldier in war-torn Rwanda.
And yesterday Emma Thompson beamed with pride as she watched her adopted African son graduate from university.
Wearing a cream suit and …
Michael Shaw: Reading the Pictures: Bagram: Nobody Here But Us Humanitarians
(one image slightly graphic) One of the hallmarks of the Iraq and Afghanistan campaigns has been the absurd disconnect between what the military showcases…
Customs seize 28.4 kilos of ecstasy
Customs officers on the Gradina border crossing with Bulgaria yesterday confiscated 28.4 kilograms of the drug ecstasy. The narcotics were packed in 11 packages, labeled “Mitsubishi and Rolex”, said the customs officials, who worked with Serbian police (MUP) officers on the case.
Mihal Freinquel: The $3 Rule
Let’s look at the things New Yorkers spend money on daily and don’t blink an eye about.
Egypt: Injured in stable condition
All 8 Serbian nationals injured in yesterday’s fatal bus crash near Luxor are in a stable condition in hospital, and have been visited by President Boris Tadić. The names of the dead and injured have been released. A day of mourning has been declared in Serbia.
“Surge in swine flu cases”
The 68th case of swine flu was registered yesterday, marking a sharp increase on the previous day, when there were 54 cases. It is the first time that over ten new cases have been recorded in a single day.
Matthew Filipowicz: Bill O’Reilly Sues Glenn Beck For Meltdown Infringement
As you may have heard, yesterday right wing talk show host Glenn Beck was pushed both to, and over, the edge by a caller on…
Kesha Ni’Cole Nichols Dumped Over Email By Fiance Richard Jefferson
Former Net star Richard Jefferson admitted yesterday that he told his beautiful bride-to-be that their wedding was off in an e-mail — stunning her just days before their planned posh nuptials.
Kesha Ni’Cole Nichols got the heart-wrenching me…
Pick Harmison – Lord’s groundsman
• Mick Hunt backs the Durham fast bowler to thrive
• Andrew Flintoff’s knee keeps England sweating
England’s selectors have been urged to play Steve Harmison in the second Test against Australia tomorrow by the man who knows the pitch best.
The Lord’s groundsman, Mick Hunt, believes the Durham fast bowler has the pace and bounce to get the best out of the wicket, just as he did in 2005. “This pitch has a nice coverage of grass and maybe more pace and carry than we’ve sometimes had,” he said. “Harmison gave [Ricky] Ponting and [Justin] Langer a bit of a going over four years ago, so why not play him here? The pitch really looks the part and it may do a bit in the first session. It is also the same pitch that we used against Australia in 2005.” England lost the Ashes opener here four years ago but Harmison drew first blood, quite literally, when he struck Ponting on the cheek. He also hit the openers Langer and Matthew Hayden in a fiery burst in the opening session.
The England selectors are still sweating on the fitness of Andrew Flintoff, who batted both outdoors and indoors yesterday but did not bowl as he gave his sore right knee a chance to heal. “Fred saw his surgeon yesterday and he is quite optimistic about him playing in this Test,” England’s coach, Andy Flower, said yesterday. “He had an injection yesterday and we’re letting it settle down today, so he won’t bowl and just bat. But he will bowl tomorrow and we’ll see how he is and make a decision from there. Fred knows he body quite well now and he will know after training in the next couple of days whether he will be able to make a contribution to this Test.”
The player does not look quite the force he was in the 2005 series but even a reduced Flintoff would give England more balance. “He seems vulnerable a lot of the time,” Flower added. “But he’s a hell of a player and we want him in our side when he’s fit.”
If he is less than fully fit, however, and with a long summer ahead, it seems doubtful that he would be risked. He bowled 35 overs in Australia’s innings in the first Test, once again ridiculing suggestions that he would be used more selectively, in short bursts.
The third and fourth Tests in this series are also back-to-back and it is hard to see a player of his fragile tendencies playing a full part in the summer.
If Flintoff does not play tomorrow, Harmison surely will. “He is a like for like replacement for Fred,” Flower said. “They are both tall, quick bowlers. Steve is a very good fast bowler, he’s got a good record for England and he’s in form.” Ideally both Harmison and Flintoff will be charging in on Thursdaytomorrow but that looks doubtful.
Michael Markarian: Strong Federal Law Brings the Hammer Down on Dogfighters
The flagrant disregard that dogfighters routinely show for society’s norms was replaced by the snap of handcuffs and the slap of 30 or so arrest warrants.
Belgrade expects extradition of ex-KLA
Italian authorities yesterday arrested a Kosovo Albanian wanted by Serbia on war crimes charges. Muarem Gasi was a member of the so-called Kosovo Liberation Army, KLA, and is believed to have killed two Serb civilians during the 1999 conflict in the province. He was detained on an international arrest warrant.
Narcotics seized, arrests at EXIT
Police in Novi Sad announced yesterday that 15 persons were arrested on the first day of the EXIT music festival in that town. 13 of those detained were foreign nationals, police explained. They were brought in on suspicion that they possessed or trafficked narcotics.
LA Vows to be Coal-Free by 2020: Can It Be Done?
Yesterday, Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa announced his intention to make the city entirely coal-free by 2020, and turn to clean and renewable energy instead. Inspiring? Yes. Possible? Maybe not so much.
President, ministers visit south in wake of attack
President Boris Tadić says that yesterday’s attack on Gendarmerie members was an act of terrorism, but that the state will not respond with excessive force. On a visit to a Serbian police (MUP) Gendarmerie base in the Ground Safety Zone (GSZ), Tadić said that those responsible for yesterday’s attack, where two Gendarmerie members were wounded, would be treated as an act of terrorism.
Un Envoy Spends Hour In ‘hell-hole’
YANGON – United Nations human rights expert Paulo Sergio Pinheiro visited
Myanmar’s Insein prison yesterday to probe abuses and uncover how many
died during the junta’s suppression of September’s pro-democracy protests.
Mr Pinheiro, who was allowed back into Myanmar by the regime for the first
time in four years, visited the jail for about an hour. He was joined by
UN and government officials, and escorted by police, witnesses said.
Human rights groups have urged him to push for reform and press for the
release of all political prisoners. Amnesty International estimates 700
are still in detention.
Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi was secretly held at Insein in 2003.
Former political prisoner Ko Aung said the British-built prison was known
as the “darkest hell-hole in Burma”.
Earlier yesterday, Mr Pinheiro met home affairs officials in Yangon and
was scheduled to meet senior Buddhist monks.
Monks were at the forefront of the protests, which eventually swelled into
the biggest anti-government demonstrations in two decades.
Mr Pinheiro had been expected to travel yesterday to the Myanmar’s capital
Naypyidaw to meet government ministers, but that trip has been postponed,
the official said.
It was not immediately clear if Mr Pinheiro, who will leave Myanmar on
Thursday, would meet Ms Aung San Suu Kyi. – AFP



