De kabineansatte i det tyske luftfartsselskab Lufthansa indleder fredag morgen deres strejke i Frankfurt.
Det oplyser de kabineansattes fagforening UFO.
Al trafik med Lufthansa-fly vil være ramt fra kl. 05.00 til 13.00 i Frankfurt lufthavn, der er en af Europas største.
Strejken ventes at medføre store forstyrrelser i flytrafikken.
Både korte og lange flyrejser er berørt af arbejdsnedlæggelsen.
Lufthansa har i tidsrummet mellem kl 05.00 og 13.00 to afgange fra Københavns lufthavn, men det er ikke oplyst, om de er omfattet af strejken.
Foreløbig er det kun Frankfurt lufthavn, der er berørt.
Det er et sammenbrud i forhandlinger mellem Lufthansa og de 19.000 kabineansatte tirsdag, som nu fører til den første arbejdsnedlæggelse.
Stewarderne og stewardesserne har krævet en fem procents lønforhøjelse, men Lufthansa siger, at konkurrencen på det internationale flymarked er så hård, at man ikke kan honorere kravet.
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Entire History of the Internet on One Facebook Timeline
We’ve seen companies and people do some inventive things with Facebook’s Timeline feature, but this project may take the cake.
Grovo, a company looking to better educate people about common web and mobile products, has curated the entire history of the Internet on one single Facebook Timeline.
Many important dates in the development of the Internet are honored with milestones on the company’s page, from recent social media launches like Instagram, to way back in 1536, which is the first known use of the @ symbol.
Check out the many cool happenings of the 1990s in particular — the good old dot-com days. Also, can you believe the U.S. military’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) was founded in 1958? The agency has done lots of truly mind-boggling research in those fifty-some years. And it only took six years after the invention of email in 1972 for spam emails to show up.
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
James Franco takes the role of Galaxy Note 10.1 spokesman
It seems to make sense that actor, director, short story writer, and Ph.D. candidate for Yale's English program James Franco would be the new spokesman for
Samsung's Galaxy Note 10.1. The company is aiming to show that while Franco is a man of many talents, the device can also accomplish many tasks at once.
In a new TV ad for the device, which Franco claims to have directed himself, the actor is seen walking around his house using his Note to look up information
with the touch pad, write down messages with the S pen stylus, and check out other features of the device. All the while, he touts his many skills.
The Galaxy Note 10.1 was launched earlier this month as a potential competitor to Apple's iPad. The device comes with a 10.1-inch screen, 1.4GHz quad-core
processor and Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich). The device also comes with Samsung's S Pen stylus, allowing users to "write" all over the screen.
For now, only a Wi-Fi model is available, but a Wi-Fi and LTE option are expected to be launching later this year.
Apple has also rolled out celebrity spokespeople in its Siri ads this past summer. Actors including Samuel L. Jackson, Zooey Deschanel, and John Malkovich,
along with director Martin Scorsese, are shown using the iPhone voice chat feature to ask questions, schedule appointments, and check local traffic.
Monday, August 20, 2012
LeBron James' Image May Be the Biggest Winner in the Dwig
LeBron James went from one of the most beloved NBA players to one of the most scrutinized after leaving Cleveland for Miami in 2010.
However, after a year of taking on the villain role, James was able to get back in his own skin this year, winning his first NBA championship, a Finals MVP
Award, his third NBA MVP Award and an Olympic gold medal this year.
And though it was "The Decision" that ignited the downward spiral of James' popularity among the masses, it could be Dwight Howard's indecision this past
year that helps propel James back to fan favorability.
Talks were abuzz at the beginning of the 2011-12 season about Howard wanting a trade from the Orlando Magic.
In March, ESPN's Chris Broussard reported that within a matter of days, Howard said he would waive his early termination option—which could have otherwise
allowed him to opt out of his contract—before deciding not to do so, only to then end up waiving it, ensuring that he would remain with the Magic through
the 2012-13 season.
However, even after waffling with his opt-out clause, Howard never agreed to sign an extension to stay past the 2012-13 season, leaving the Magic stuck
between a rock and a hard place. Orlando was left deciding whether to keep Howard through next season and risk watching him walk away for nothing, or trade
him for players and draft picks to help rebuild the franchise.
Then in July, Broussard again reported on Howard, except this time it was on his demand to be traded.
Howard dragged his team through the mud and claimed he wanted to be in Orlando before and after asking to be traded. He eventually wound up on the team that
most outside of Los Angeles love to hate: the Lakers.
The timing of Howard's lack of commitment couldn't be more perfect for James, as he had the best year of his life.
On top of the achievements mentioned earlier, James also recorded Team USA's first ever triple-double in Olympic play, became Team USA's all-time leading
scorer and was named to the NBA's All-Defensive First Team.
Off the court, James proposed to his longtime girlfriend—and mother of his children—before the start of the 2011-12 season, tuned out the negativity that
was being spewed about him, surrounded himself with only those who would challenge him and did a ton of soul searching in hopes of maturing and winning a
championship, as Brian Windhorst of ESPN wrote about in June.
And though James' move to Miami was undoubtedly ill-received, James never publicly said a word about leaving Cleveland during his tenure there.
He also made sure to fulfill his entire contract before eventually leaving as an unrestricted free agent—a move he had every right to make.
And it appears that his move has worked out quite well for him.
James is a champion. James is a two-time gold medalist. James is a three-time NBA MVP.
His performance over the past year has re-ignited the Michael Jordan comparisons.
He's matured, held himself accountable and finally shown that he can win when it matters.
James has even admitted he would change the way he handled his free agency two years ago.
Small-market teams are having a harder time keeping their stars, so Howard's trade demands and switching of teams may move him to the top of the NBA's most
hated list at a time when the current most hated—and former small-market betrayer—is proving his detractors wrong with his demeanor and play on the
hardwood.
As James heads into what may be the best stretch of his career, Howard's drama could be enough of a distraction to help James gain back some of the fans who
stopped rooting for him two years ago.
Friday, August 17, 2012
Echoes of Lebanon civil war as Syrian turmoil spreads
Beirut. Tit-for-tat kidnappings by Syrian rebels and Lebanese Shi'ite gunmen have escalated tensions in Lebanon, where the spectre of contagion from Syria's conflict is alarming the fractured and war-scarred Mediterranean nation, Reuters reports.
Despite government efforts to insulate it from turmoil in its once dominating neighbour, Lebanon has seen armed clashes in its two largest cities, and last week authorities said they uncovered a Syrian plot to destabilise the country.
The sight of masked gunmen in Beirut on Wednesday claiming the capture of 20 Syrians, and the kidnapping in broad daylight of a Turkish businessman near the airport, was another dramatic sign of Syria's crisis spilling over into Lebanon.
While they may not herald an imminent slide towards conflict in Lebanon, the incidents highlight the weak and tenuous authority of Lebanon's state institutions and point to future instability in the country of four million.
"This will have a negative impact on state authority, the military and the business environment in Lebanon" said Ayham Kamel of the Eurasia Group consultancy. "The likelihood of civil war right now remains low, but reaching this stage is a very alarming development".
To the outside world, kidnapping foreigners was a defining feature of Lebanon's civil war, and the brazen public appearance by the masked gunmen this week - unchallenged by security forces - echoed the chaos of the 1975-1990 conflict.
"This ...brings us back to the days of the painful war, a page that Lebanese citizens have been trying to turn," said Prime Minister Najib Mikati, whose policy of 'dissociation' from Syria's conflict next door has come under growing strain.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Notable & Quotable
Editor Josh Kraushaar blogging at National Journal, Aug. 13:
Watching Mitt Romney on the campaign trail this weekend after he tapped Paul Ryan as his running mate, it was hard not to be struck by how significantly the
candidate's message and delivery improved. Romney was newly energized, almost sounding like an evangelist preacher as he preached the merits of capitalism
and the free market.
His rhetoric was sharp and specific as he contrasted his policy vision with that of President Obama's. With Ryan, he looked confident in his sit-down
interview with CBS' Bob Schieffer.
It was as if the ghost of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie entered the cautious, often-awkward pol's body, to great effect. (Indeed, like Christie, he even
challenged a heckler at last night's event in Waukesha County, Wisconsin.)
This is the type of change that's very tough to measure in even the best polls and focus groups. Romney overruled his top consultants in picking Ryan; they
wanted him to go with a more cautious choice, like Tim Pawlenty.
But Romney clearly felt a kinship with the younger Ryan, and the chemistry was undeniable on their first couple of days on the campaign trail. Romney felt
unshackled, and felt free to play to his biggest political asset—a fiscal conservatism that's been the one consistent hallmark of his career, from working
at Bain Capital to the Salt Lake City Olympics to his tenure as governor of Massachusetts.
This carries risk, of course. Romney's hallmark of his campaign so far has been his cautiousness. . . .
Even Christie, known as the blunt political truth-teller to his fans in New Jersey, was a much more cautious pol when he ran against Gov. Jon Corzine in
2009. Indeed, his campaign was rapped for not offering specific plans, resorting to anti-incumbent generalities. It wasn't until he was elected that he
developed his persona as a straight-talking reformer.
In a sense, Romney is one-upping Christie, and placing the even riskier bet that calling for major changes is a political winner in the middle of a heated
presidential race. High-risk, high-reward, indeed.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Sun Storm VIDEO: Magical-Looking Solar Eruption, Sunspots Captured By NASA
The sun fired off a spectacular eruption last weekend, and a NASA spacecraft captured amazing video of the violent solar outburst.
A super-hot solar filament erupted in grand style Saturday (Aug. 4), arcing into space and connecting two huge sunspots. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory
(SDO) spacecraft had a front-row seat for the action, and its video footage of the sun eruption is both bizarre and beautiful.
The filament appears pinkish-purple through SDO's ultraviolet filters, and it stands out against a solar surface of mottled green, yellow and dark purple
hues.
The tendril's hot plasma snakes between the sunspots AR 1538 and AR 1540. Sunspots are temporary blotches on the sun that appear dark because they're cooler
than the rest of the solar surface. Solar flares and massive blasts of plasma called coronal mass ejections (CMEs) often erupt from sunspots, which can be
many times larger than the Earth's diameter.
The Aug. 4 outburst also propelled an enormous CME into space. CMEs that hit Earth directly can wreak havoc, temporarily disrupting GPS communications,
satellite navigation and power grids. But Saturday's solar storm shouldn't pose any serious problems, scientists said.
"The cloud is not heading directly toward Earth, but it could deliver a glancing blow to our planet's magnetic field on August 7/8," the website
Spaceweather.com wrote. "High-latitude skywatchers should be alert for auroras on those dates."
The sun is currently in an active phase of its 11-year solar cycle, and it should continue to fire off big storms for a while yet. Experts expect the current
cycle, known as Solar Cycle 24, to peak in 2013.
The $850 million SDO spacecraft, which launched in February 2010, is the first in a fleet of NASA efforts to study our sun. The probe's five-year mission is
the cornerstone of a NASA science program called Living with a Star, which aims to help scientists better understand aspects of the sun-Earth system that
affect our lives and society.
Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Afghanistan attacks kill dozens of civilians
KABUL, Afghanistan — In one of the year's deadliest days for Afghan civilians, at least 39 people were killed and more than 100 hurt Tuesday in attacks that
spanned the country from north to south, including the brutal tactic of a suicide bombing staged at a hospital where victims of an earlier blast were being
treated.
The more lethal of the two blasts in Nimruz province involved nearly a dozen would-be bombers, authorities said, although all but three were arrested or
killed before or during the attack. Nonetheless, it showed the insurgents' willingness to sacrifice large numbers of fighters in a single operation and their
continuing wherewithal to stage complex and coordinated attacks.
The blasts also reinforced a pervasive sense of insecurity felt by many Afghans. Civilian war casualties fell by 15% in the first half of the year compared
with the same period in 2011, the United Nations reported this month, but the advent of the warm-weather "fighting season" has seen an increase in violence
across Afghanistan.
Most of those killed in the triple suicide bombing in Nimruz province, in southwestern Afghanistan, and a remote-controlled blast in Kunduz province in the
north were people out shopping for their nightly iftar, the meal that breaks the dawn-to-dusk fast during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, and for the
holiday feast beginning this weekend that marks Ramadan's end.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks. The Taliban at times refrains from acknowledging having carried out suicide bombings and
other strikes that kill large numbers of civilians.
Insurgents often stage near-simultaneous bombings and have sometimes targeted medical facilities. However, the notion of deliberately hitting a hospital to
which injured people were being taken was shocking to most Afghans, even by this war's grim standard. The bombings were widely condemned, with Gen. John
Allen, the U.S. commander of the Western military in Afghanistan, calling them "intentional mass murder."
The spasm of bloodshed comes at a time when the NATO force is preparing to wind down its combat role and hand over responsibility for securing the country to
the Afghan police and army by the end of 2014, raising troubling new questions as to whether the insurgency can be contained when foreign troops depart.
The first of the two attacks took place in the town of Zaranj, the capital of Nimruz. There, explosions tore through a bustling bazaar and two nearby sites,
including the entrance to the city's main hospital. The second early-evening strike took place in Kunduz's Dasht-e Archi district, where a bomb attached to a
motorcycle killed at least 10 civilians and injured more than two dozen in a shopping area, said Enaytullah Khaleeq, a provincial spokesman.
The carnage in Nimruz could have been even worse, given that police arrested several would-be bombers in raids before the attack and killed or detained
several more during it, said Abdul Majid Latifi, the provincial deputy police chief. Latifi said most of the 29 victims were civilians but included four
police officers.
In Nimruz and Kunduz, the targets were civilian areas, distant from any military installation. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization force is not even
deployed in Nimruz, which borders Iran and volatile Helmand province. Last weekend, a policeman in the province turned his weapon on fellow officers, killing
10 of them.
Tuesday also brought a continuation of an ominous and increasingly common trend: assassinations of district officials. Two officials, including a district
chief, and two of their bodyguards were killed in an insurgent ambush in Badakhshan province in the country's north as they were traveling home for this
weekend's Eid al-Fitr holiday.
Monday, August 13, 2012
Ryan Has Kept Close Ties to Donors on the Right
This month, as a handful of Republicans auditioned at town halls and on bus tours to be Mitt Romney’s running mate, Representative Paul D. Ryan joined a
private conference call. For 20 minutes, he walked through his plan to cut government spending and bashed President Obama for weakening welfare work
requirements.
His audience: Several hundred field organizers for Americans for Prosperity, the Tea Party-inspired group founded by the billionaire conservative
philanthropists Charles and David Koch.
When Mr. Romney announced that Mr. Ryan would be his running mate, his campaign emphasized the congressman’s detailed knowledge of the federal budget and
his chemistry with Mr. Romney. Less well-known are Mr. Ryan’s close ties to the donors and activists who have channeled Tea Party anger into a $400 million
political machine, financed by a network of conservative and libertarian donors that now rivals, and occasionally challenges, the Republican establishment
behind Mr. Romney.
Mr. Ryan is one of a very few elected officials who have attended the Kochs’ biannual conferences, where wealthy donors sit in on seminars on runaway
government spending and the myths of climate change.
He is on first-name terms with prominent libertarians in the financial world, including hedge fund billionaires like Cliff Asness and Paul Singer, and spent
his formative years immersed in the Republican Party’s supply-side wing, working for lawmakers and conservative policy advocates like Jack Kemp.
He has appeared for years at rallies, town hall meetings, and donor briefings for groups like the Club for Growth, which spends millions to defeat
Republicans deemed squishy on taxes and spending, and Americans for Prosperity, a grass-roots group focused on economic and budget issues that is now trying
to channel Tea Party energy into a permanent electoral force. Its fourth chapter was founded in Mr. Ryan’s home state, Wisconsin.
Now Mr. Ryan could provide Mr. Romney with a critical political and intellectual bridge to the rising conservative counterestablishment represented by the
Kochs and their allies, who are planning to spend hundreds of millions of dollars and deploy thousands of volunteers to defeat Mr. Obama. Should Mr. Romney
and Mr. Ryan win in November, a constituency that has for years fulminated against the failure of Republicans to live up to their own principles could soon
have a close — and powerful — friend in the White House.
“There’s three guys that we courted for president: Paul Ryan, Mitch Daniels, and Mike Pence,” said Matt Kibbe, the president of FreedomWorks, a national
advocacy group closely allied with the Tea Party, who worked alongside Mr. Ryan when both were staff aides on the House Budget Committee. “Up until
yesterday, there was a 100 percent commitment to fire Obama. There was not a lot of enthusiasm about Romney.” Mr. Daniels is the governor of Indiana, and
Mr. Pence is a congressman from Indiana.
Mr. Kibbe added, “From a Tea Party perspective, the overwhelming response on all of our networks has been extremely positive.”
Mr. Ryan’s ties to that world began with a job at Empower America, a group founded by Mr. Kemp that ran “candidate schools” for aspiring conservatives and
advocated for a flat tax and lower spending. As a rank-and-file congressman during the presidency of George W. Bush, Mr. Ryan advocated for the privatization
of Social Security, helping push the idea toward the Republican mainstream and cementing his reputation as a conservative intellectual.
Privately, Mr. Ryan would later say, he was also stewing over what he and other conservatives viewed as the Bush administration’s fiscal profligacy and
ideological drift, including the addition of a drug benefit to Medicare and, later, a bank bailout plan, the Troubled Asset Relief Program. (Mr. Ryan voted
for both.)
That dissatisfaction was shared by the Kochs, who in the middle of the last decade began organizing conferences of like-minded donors and founded Americans
for Prosperity.
Mr. Ryan, who became House budget chairman in 2006, began attending and speaking at Americans for Prosperity events. In 2008, the Wisconsin chapter gave Mr.
Ryan its annual “Defender of the American Dream” award. Mr. Ryan also began attending the Kochs’ annual donor seminars. Last spring, Mr. Ryan was a
speaker at a “Hands Off My Health Care” rally organized by Tea Party leaders outside the Capitol, drawing enthusiastic applause.
In Congress, he emerged as a skeptic of mainstream climate change theory — opposition to which has been a top priority of Koch-affiliated activists and
research groups — and a reliable vote against energy efficiency standards, including a House vote to prohibit the Environmental Protection Agency from
regulating greenhouse gases.
The relationship helped Mr. Ryan’s campaign coffers as well as his career: the Koch Industries PAC has donated more than $100,000 to Mr. Ryan’s campaigns
and his leadership PAC, more than has any other corporate PAC, according to a New York Times analysis of campaign records.
Mr. Ryan has also developed relationships with other people in the Koch orbit, like Mr. Asness, a libertarian-minded financier known for his open letters
blasting Mr. Obama, and Kenneth Griffin, a Chicago hedge-fund executive: wealthy donors whose taste for number-crunching and policy minutiae match Mr. Ryan’
s own.
Mr. Griffin and his wife, Anne, introduced Mr. Ryan to Chicago’s deep-pocketed Republican donor circle — he has raised more money there this campaign than
any other city — and promoted his budget proposals, including arranging a speech last year at the Economic Club of Chicago.
But it was Mr. Ryan’s aggressive promotion of his budget plan that has cemented his place the counterestablishment’s rising star. Mr. Ryan’s plan, viewed
warily in its early form by other Republican leaders on the Hill, became an organizing document for the Tea Party’s Beltway wing, particularly the dozens of
Tea Party-inspired freshman lawmakers who arrived on Capitol Hill after the 2010 elections. Many of them came to rely on Mr. Ryan for counsel on whether to
accept budget compromises with Mr. Obama.
Outside political groups and research organizations praised Mr. Ryan’s plan, one of the few comprehensive conservative budget proposals detailed enough to
be scored by the Congressional Budget Office, as rigorous and credible.
“Paul was one of the first guys that we looked at and said, ‘Hey, that young guy could be the guy,’ ” said Tim Phillips, Americans for Prosperity’s
president. “And when he put out the budget and defended it, that’s when they said, ‘He could go all the way.’ ”
Officials with several outside groups that had been skeptical of Mr. Romney in the past said that the selection of Mr. Ryan had assuaged some of their
doubts.
More important, they said, Mr. Ryan would fire up their grass-roots members, some of whom had doubted Mr. Romney’s commitment to cutting the size of
government. Last week, before the announcement, Americans for Prosperity announced that it had begun its largest ever ad campaign against Mr. Obama, a $25
million broadside in 11 battleground states.
And on Monday, Romney officials said that the campaign had raised millions of dollars in the wake of Mr. Ryan’s selection, not only from grass-roots small
donors, but from the many big donors who rank among his fans.
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Bring on Rio! With a pop extravaganza, Britain closes a ‘happy and glorious’ Olympics
With a little British pomp and a lot of British pop, London brought the curtain down on a glorious Olympic Games on Sunday in a spectacular, technicolor
pageant of landmarks, lightshows and lots of fun.
The closing ceremony offered a sensory blast including rock ‘n’ roll rickshaws, dustbin percussionists, an exploding yellow car and a marching band in red
tunics and bearskin hats.
The Spice Girls staged a show-stopping reunion, and Monty Python’s Eric Idle sauntered through “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life” — accompanied by
Roman centurions, Scottish bagpipers and a human cannonball.
It all made for a psychedelic mashup that had 80,000 fans at Olympic Stadium stomping, cheering and singing along. Organizers estimated 300 million or more
were watching around the world.
What a way to end a games far more successful than many Londoners expected. Security woes were overcome, and traffic nightmares never materialized. The
weather held up, more or less, and British athletes overachieved.
It all came with a price tag of $14 billion — three times the original estimate. But nobody wanted to spoil the fun with such mundane concerns, at least not
on this night.
“We lit the flame, and we lit up the world,” said London organizing committee chief Sebastian Coe. “When our time came, Britain, we did it right.”
International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge declared the Olympics over with praise for the athletes.
“Through your commitment to fair play, your respect for opponents, and your grace in defeat as well as in victory, you have earned the right to be called
Olympians,” he said, adding: “These were happy and glorious games.”
But the night was about splash more than speeches.
Festive and fast-moving, the ceremony opened with pop bands Madness, Pet Shop Boys and One Direction, a shout-out to Winston Churchill and a tribute to the
Union Jack — the floor of Olympic Stadium floor arranged to resemble the British flag.
Monochrome recreations of London landmarks were covered in newsprint, from Big Ben’s clock tower and Tower Bridge to the London Eye ferris wheel and the
chubby highrise known as the Gherkin.
Street percussion group Stomp built the noise into a frenzy, and dancers brandished brooms, in a nod to the spontaneous popular movement to clean up London
after riots shook neighborhoods not far from Olympic Stadium just a year ago.
Liam Gallagher performed “Wonderwall,” a 1990s hit by his former band, Oasis, Muse rocked the house with the hard-edged Olympic anthem “Survival,” and
Queen guitarist Brian May was joined by singer Jessie J for a crowd-pleasing “We Will Rock You.”
The headline performers were each paid a pound, a little more than $1.50.
The night ended with the extinguishing of the multi-petaled Olympic cauldron and a supercharged rendition of “My Generation” and other classics by The Who
that had the crowd dancing in the aisles. Confetti rained down, and fireworks lit up the sky.
Prince William’s wife, Kate, and Prince Harry took seats next to Rogge. They sang along to “God Save the Queen.” There was no sign of the queen herself,
who made a memorable mock parachute entrance at the July 27 opening ceremony.
pageant of landmarks, lightshows and lots of fun.
The closing ceremony offered a sensory blast including rock ‘n’ roll rickshaws, dustbin percussionists, an exploding yellow car and a marching band in red
tunics and bearskin hats.
The Spice Girls staged a show-stopping reunion, and Monty Python’s Eric Idle sauntered through “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life” — accompanied by
Roman centurions, Scottish bagpipers and a human cannonball.
It all made for a psychedelic mashup that had 80,000 fans at Olympic Stadium stomping, cheering and singing along. Organizers estimated 300 million or more
were watching around the world.
What a way to end a games far more successful than many Londoners expected. Security woes were overcome, and traffic nightmares never materialized. The
weather held up, more or less, and British athletes overachieved.
It all came with a price tag of $14 billion — three times the original estimate. But nobody wanted to spoil the fun with such mundane concerns, at least not
on this night.
“We lit the flame, and we lit up the world,” said London organizing committee chief Sebastian Coe. “When our time came, Britain, we did it right.”
International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge declared the Olympics over with praise for the athletes.
“Through your commitment to fair play, your respect for opponents, and your grace in defeat as well as in victory, you have earned the right to be called
Olympians,” he said, adding: “These were happy and glorious games.”
But the night was about splash more than speeches.
Festive and fast-moving, the ceremony opened with pop bands Madness, Pet Shop Boys and One Direction, a shout-out to Winston Churchill and a tribute to the
Union Jack — the floor of Olympic Stadium floor arranged to resemble the British flag.
Monochrome recreations of London landmarks were covered in newsprint, from Big Ben’s clock tower and Tower Bridge to the London Eye ferris wheel and the
chubby highrise known as the Gherkin.
Street percussion group Stomp built the noise into a frenzy, and dancers brandished brooms, in a nod to the spontaneous popular movement to clean up London
after riots shook neighborhoods not far from Olympic Stadium just a year ago.
Liam Gallagher performed “Wonderwall,” a 1990s hit by his former band, Oasis, Muse rocked the house with the hard-edged Olympic anthem “Survival,” and
Queen guitarist Brian May was joined by singer Jessie J for a crowd-pleasing “We Will Rock You.”
The headline performers were each paid a pound, a little more than $1.50.
The night ended with the extinguishing of the multi-petaled Olympic cauldron and a supercharged rendition of “My Generation” and other classics by The Who
that had the crowd dancing in the aisles. Confetti rained down, and fireworks lit up the sky.
Prince William’s wife, Kate, and Prince Harry took seats next to Rogge. They sang along to “God Save the Queen.” There was no sign of the queen herself,
who made a memorable mock parachute entrance at the July 27 opening ceremony.
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
‘Romney Girl’ video lampoons candidate’s wealth and offshore accounts
Meet the Romney Girl – a Swiss caricature lampooning Mitt Romney over his wealth, Bain Capital tenure and resistance to outside pressure to release his tax
records before 2010.
“I’m a Romney girl, in a Romney world. Life is taxless. It’s fantastic,” sings the fictitious Miss Swiss, a former tax consultant for offshore bank
accounts at a major bank in Geneva, Switzerland. “Silver tip your hair, tax shelters everywhere. Outsource nation, Bain is his creation,” she continues.
Miss Swiss is the secret source, as the satirical Romney Girl website indicates, behind an allegation that has been circulating in real-life Washington D.C.
politics that Mr. Romney used his Swiss account to avoid paying any income tax for a decade.
The song is set to the music and lyrics of Barbie Girl by the Danish-Norwegian pop group Aqua. The Agenda Project Action Fund is behind the joke video. The
group’s founder, Erica Payne, worked with the Democratic National Committee during the 1996 re-election campaign.
The actual presidential campaigns have not exactly been taking the higher ground in a deeply negative election campaign. This week, they hit a few low – and
arguably silly – notes.
Campaigning in Connecticut yesterday, President Barack Obama described his opponent’s tax plan policy as “Romney Hood.”
“It’s like Robin Hood in reverse,” said Mr. Obama.
Responding during a Fox News interview, Mr. Romney described the allegation as “Obamaloney.”
Mr. Obama has not escaped ridicule in song format.
This parody of Gotye’s hit song Somebody That I Used to Know by JustNew Productions takes a dig at Mr. Obama and the disappointment felt by many in his
presidency.
“You took Obamacare so far. But you left me like a dog strapped on Romney’s car,” sings the disillusioned Obama supporter in the song Obama That I Used to
Know.
records before 2010.
“I’m a Romney girl, in a Romney world. Life is taxless. It’s fantastic,” sings the fictitious Miss Swiss, a former tax consultant for offshore bank
accounts at a major bank in Geneva, Switzerland. “Silver tip your hair, tax shelters everywhere. Outsource nation, Bain is his creation,” she continues.
Miss Swiss is the secret source, as the satirical Romney Girl website indicates, behind an allegation that has been circulating in real-life Washington D.C.
politics that Mr. Romney used his Swiss account to avoid paying any income tax for a decade.
The song is set to the music and lyrics of Barbie Girl by the Danish-Norwegian pop group Aqua. The Agenda Project Action Fund is behind the joke video. The
group’s founder, Erica Payne, worked with the Democratic National Committee during the 1996 re-election campaign.
The actual presidential campaigns have not exactly been taking the higher ground in a deeply negative election campaign. This week, they hit a few low – and
arguably silly – notes.
Campaigning in Connecticut yesterday, President Barack Obama described his opponent’s tax plan policy as “Romney Hood.”
“It’s like Robin Hood in reverse,” said Mr. Obama.
Responding during a Fox News interview, Mr. Romney described the allegation as “Obamaloney.”
Mr. Obama has not escaped ridicule in song format.
This parody of Gotye’s hit song Somebody That I Used to Know by JustNew Productions takes a dig at Mr. Obama and the disappointment felt by many in his
presidency.
“You took Obamacare so far. But you left me like a dog strapped on Romney’s car,” sings the disillusioned Obama supporter in the song Obama That I Used to
Know.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Gemalto gets NFC gig: Singapore punters will all bonk the same way
Operators, banks and loyalty schemes in Singapore can now use a common API to interact using short-range radio tech Near Field Communications, while in
Europe similar schemes continue to flounder.
The scheme was commissioned by the Infocomm Development Authority, a department of the Singapore government, which has asked Gemalto to run the hosting
servers. Those servers provide APIs open to any bank, network operator or other party wanting to join the NFC bandwagon, though the company admits that
neither PayPal nor Google are likely to sign up any time soon.
For paying-by-bonk – the NFC application that most interests web players and bankers – to achieve any success, standard platforms are needed. This is why
the UK mobile network operators launched Project Oscar – but the EU is still deciding if Oscar can be allowed to exist. Google and PayPal have argued that
the overwhelming market presence of the UK operators would make it impossible for them to compete, so Oscar remains stalled while the EU ponders the matter.
In the US, Google Wallet has been launched, but the Chocolate Factory has found it almost impossible to convince banks, and loyalty schemes, to port their
applications onto its proprietary secure element. That's forced Google to try a cloudy solution, but schemes like the one being deployed in Singapore, and
Project Oscar – if it is adopted – should make that easier (for those interested in open platforms).
The Singapore system, in common with Oscar, uses a secure element embedded in the SIM and thus under the control of the network operators, which is what
upsets Google and PayPal so. The market for NFC payments is still tiny, but anyone who grabs control now will likely hold onto it for decades so the matter
is far from academic.
The public, meanwhile, have shown little interest in paying for things with a bonk of the phone. Orange Quick Tap has been around in the UK for over a year
without taking the country by storm, but the infrastructure to accept bonking payments is steadily rolling out and almost all the new plastic cards being
issued support pay-by-bonk functionality.
Cards are, of course, less secure than NFC phones as they can't be remotely managed or display their status. Google Wallet is playing to security fears by
requiring a PIN to be entered before every transaction, though in the UK transactions under £20 can be completed without a PIN (which, perhaps importantly,
means they can be done without power too), but we're still some way from finding out what's acceptable to the end user.
Even in Singapore they accept that mass-transit ticketing will probably be the killer application for NFC, but are still trying to get the Land Transport
Authority on board, so perhaps there's still room for Google et al to get involved.
Europe similar schemes continue to flounder.
The scheme was commissioned by the Infocomm Development Authority, a department of the Singapore government, which has asked Gemalto to run the hosting
servers. Those servers provide APIs open to any bank, network operator or other party wanting to join the NFC bandwagon, though the company admits that
neither PayPal nor Google are likely to sign up any time soon.
For paying-by-bonk – the NFC application that most interests web players and bankers – to achieve any success, standard platforms are needed. This is why
the UK mobile network operators launched Project Oscar – but the EU is still deciding if Oscar can be allowed to exist. Google and PayPal have argued that
the overwhelming market presence of the UK operators would make it impossible for them to compete, so Oscar remains stalled while the EU ponders the matter.
In the US, Google Wallet has been launched, but the Chocolate Factory has found it almost impossible to convince banks, and loyalty schemes, to port their
applications onto its proprietary secure element. That's forced Google to try a cloudy solution, but schemes like the one being deployed in Singapore, and
Project Oscar – if it is adopted – should make that easier (for those interested in open platforms).
The Singapore system, in common with Oscar, uses a secure element embedded in the SIM and thus under the control of the network operators, which is what
upsets Google and PayPal so. The market for NFC payments is still tiny, but anyone who grabs control now will likely hold onto it for decades so the matter
is far from academic.
The public, meanwhile, have shown little interest in paying for things with a bonk of the phone. Orange Quick Tap has been around in the UK for over a year
without taking the country by storm, but the infrastructure to accept bonking payments is steadily rolling out and almost all the new plastic cards being
issued support pay-by-bonk functionality.
Cards are, of course, less secure than NFC phones as they can't be remotely managed or display their status. Google Wallet is playing to security fears by
requiring a PIN to be entered before every transaction, though in the UK transactions under £20 can be completed without a PIN (which, perhaps importantly,
means they can be done without power too), but we're still some way from finding out what's acceptable to the end user.
Even in Singapore they accept that mass-transit ticketing will probably be the killer application for NFC, but are still trying to get the Land Transport
Authority on board, so perhaps there's still room for Google et al to get involved.
Monday, August 6, 2012
Stocks higher...Justice wants info from HCA...Bleacher Report added to Time Warner line-up
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks closed the session higher in the face of no fresh economic news. The Dow was up 21 points, or 0.2 percent, to 13,118. The S&P
was up 3 points, while the Nasdaq added 22 points.
UNDATED (AP) — HCA Holdings says the Justice Department wants information about heart procedures performed at some of its facilities. The nation's biggest
hospital operator also said in an unusual posting on its website that The New York Times may soon run news stories on patient care at its hospitals. The
Times declined to comment when contacted by The Associated Press. HCA runs 163 hospitals and 110 free-standing surgery centers.
NEW YORK (AP) — Shares of Best Buy were up 13 percent today. Best Buy's co-founder has offered to take the electronics seller private only months after
leaving as the company's chairman.
NEW YORK (AP) — Oil rose above $92 per barrel for the first time in more than two weeks. Oil has gained nearly 20 percent since hitting a low of $77.69 in
late June.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Time Warner's Turner Broadcasting System says that it has bought sports news website Bleacher Report in a strategic move meant to help
sell more ads and cover the cost of sports programming. Having Bleacher Report will give Turner more outlets to show video from those games and make money
through ads. Levy said Bleacher Report expands Turner's ability to sell ad packages that cover not just TV but websites and mobile properties as well. Terms
of the deal were not announced.
was up 3 points, while the Nasdaq added 22 points.
UNDATED (AP) — HCA Holdings says the Justice Department wants information about heart procedures performed at some of its facilities. The nation's biggest
hospital operator also said in an unusual posting on its website that The New York Times may soon run news stories on patient care at its hospitals. The
Times declined to comment when contacted by The Associated Press. HCA runs 163 hospitals and 110 free-standing surgery centers.
NEW YORK (AP) — Shares of Best Buy were up 13 percent today. Best Buy's co-founder has offered to take the electronics seller private only months after
leaving as the company's chairman.
NEW YORK (AP) — Oil rose above $92 per barrel for the first time in more than two weeks. Oil has gained nearly 20 percent since hitting a low of $77.69 in
late June.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Time Warner's Turner Broadcasting System says that it has bought sports news website Bleacher Report in a strategic move meant to help
sell more ads and cover the cost of sports programming. Having Bleacher Report will give Turner more outlets to show video from those games and make money
through ads. Levy said Bleacher Report expands Turner's ability to sell ad packages that cover not just TV but websites and mobile properties as well. Terms
of the deal were not announced.
Sunday, August 5, 2012
'Kristen Stewart' Finally Tells Robert Pattinson Why She Cheated in Video Parody
"Kristen Stewart" has finally broken her long silence. For the first time since her well-rehearsed—er—heartfelt public apology to Robert Pattinson, the
disgraced Twilight heroine enumerated point by point what caused her to hook up with Rupert Sanders. And what's more, she recorded her hilarious—er—heart-
rending confession on video for Rob's eyes only, plus anyone else who happens to run across the video on YouTube.
Okay, okay. The confession wasn't really KStew's. It was a video parody, called Kristin Stewart Explains Cheating, done by actress Laura McDonald whose
impression of La Stewart is absolutely perfect—right down to the Snow White and the Huntsman star's speech patterns, incessant hair flipping, and other
annoyingly fidgety mannerisms. Even La Stewart would have to agree.
As you can see on the video below, which, as "KStew" explains, was posted online so that "only [RPattz] can could see it," McDonald's KStew tells Rob she
cheated on him with her "Snow White and the Thor director, Rupert Sanders, for a variety of 'really good reasons.'"
For one thing, Sanders convinced her that all great directors have sex with their stars, and since he is a great director, he naturally does the same. In
fact, "KStew" prattles, "Martin Scorz did the same thing with Goodfellas which is why they were so good."
An even better, or at least totally necessary, reason was the time she and Sanders had to have sex to save his life. A large snake somehow ran amok on the
set, and it sank its poisonous fangs into the director's "wiener." What was "KStew" supposed to do, just stand there and let him die? Of course not. She
dropped to her knees and sucked the poison out. Anyone else would have done the same.
To top it all off, "Kristen" rattles off her hysterical confessions as movers collect and take away a large pile of boxes stacked behind her. All the cartons
bear labels like, "RPattz Fan Mail, RPattz Hair Products, RPattz Hoodies, and RPattz Sunscreen."
Wonder if the real Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson will find McDonald's video funny? You can watch and enjoy it below. What do you think?
disgraced Twilight heroine enumerated point by point what caused her to hook up with Rupert Sanders. And what's more, she recorded her hilarious—er—heart-
rending confession on video for Rob's eyes only, plus anyone else who happens to run across the video on YouTube.
Okay, okay. The confession wasn't really KStew's. It was a video parody, called Kristin Stewart Explains Cheating, done by actress Laura McDonald whose
impression of La Stewart is absolutely perfect—right down to the Snow White and the Huntsman star's speech patterns, incessant hair flipping, and other
annoyingly fidgety mannerisms. Even La Stewart would have to agree.
As you can see on the video below, which, as "KStew" explains, was posted online so that "only [RPattz] can could see it," McDonald's KStew tells Rob she
cheated on him with her "Snow White and the Thor director, Rupert Sanders, for a variety of 'really good reasons.'"
For one thing, Sanders convinced her that all great directors have sex with their stars, and since he is a great director, he naturally does the same. In
fact, "KStew" prattles, "Martin Scorz did the same thing with Goodfellas which is why they were so good."
An even better, or at least totally necessary, reason was the time she and Sanders had to have sex to save his life. A large snake somehow ran amok on the
set, and it sank its poisonous fangs into the director's "wiener." What was "KStew" supposed to do, just stand there and let him die? Of course not. She
dropped to her knees and sucked the poison out. Anyone else would have done the same.
To top it all off, "Kristen" rattles off her hysterical confessions as movers collect and take away a large pile of boxes stacked behind her. All the cartons
bear labels like, "RPattz Fan Mail, RPattz Hair Products, RPattz Hoodies, and RPattz Sunscreen."
Wonder if the real Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson will find McDonald's video funny? You can watch and enjoy it below. What do you think?
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Frustrated Annan quits as Syria peace envoy
(Reuters) - Former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan is quitting as international peace envoy for Syria, frustrated by "finger-pointing" at the United
Nations while the armed rebellion against President Bashar al-Assad becomes increasingly bloody.
As battles raged on Thursday in Syria's second city, Aleppo, between rebel fighters and government forces using war planes and artillery, U.N. Secretary-
General Ban Ki-moon announced in New York that Annan had said he would go at the end of the month.
"Kofi Annan deserves our profound admiration for the selfless way in which he has put his formidable skills and prestige to this most difficult and
potentially thankless of assignments," Ban said. Talks were under way to find a successor.
Annan's mission, centered on an April ceasefire that never took hold, has looked irrelevant as fighting has intensified in Damascus, Aleppo and elsewhere.
Annan blamed "finger-pointing and name-calling" at the U.N. Security Council for his decision to quit but suggested his successor may have better luck.
Russia, the United States, Britain and France began pointing fingers at one another over who was responsible for Annan's sudden announcement he would depart.
One senior council diplomat said it was now time to acknowledge the "utter irrelevance of an impotent Security Council" on Syria.
Syria expressed regret that Annan was going.
Annan suggested that the continued arming of all sides in the conflict and the Security Council deadlock had undermined his ability to pursue a diplomatic
solution.
"The increasing militarization on the ground and the clear lack of unity in the Security Council, have fundamentally changed the circumstances for the
effective exercise of my role," Annan told reporters.
In an editorial published on the Financial Times' website, Annan said Russia, China and Iran "must take concerted efforts to persuade Syria's leadership to
change course and embrace a political transition" -- meaning the departure of Assad.
"It is clear that President Bashar al-Assad must leave office," Annan said.
Annan wrote that Western powers, the Saudis and Qatar must start "pressing the opposition to embrace a fully inclusive political process - that will include
communities and institutions currently associated with the government."
Ban's spokesman, Martin Nesirky, declined to comment on who might replace Annan but said a decision could come soon.
BLAME GAME
Russian President Vladimir Putin, a strong supporter of Assad, said he regretted Annan's decision to step aside and referred to him as a "brilliant diplomat.
Moscow's U.N. ambassador, Vitaly Churkin, suggested to reporters in New York that Western powers that had opposed "reasonable and balanced proposals" in the
Security Council had undermined Annan's peace efforts from the start.
The White House pinned the blame squarely on Moscow and Beijing, which together vetoed three resolutions intended to increase the pressure on Assad, thereby
undercutting Annan.
"Annan's resignation highlights the failure at the United Nations Security Council of Russia and China to support resolutions, meaningful resolutions,
against Assad that would have held Assad accountable," White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters aboard Air Force One.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague echoed that view.
"We understand Annan's frustration that, due to vetoes in the Security Council, the international community was unable to give him the support that he needed
and requested," Hague said in a statement.
Hague reiterated that Annan's six-point peace plan for Syria was still the best option for securing an end to the conflict. French Ambassador Gerard Araud,
Security Council president this month, shared that view.
Washington, U.N. diplomats say, has been convinced that the Security Council cannot play a meaningful role in the Syria crisis since Russia and China first
vetoed a Western- and Arab-backed resolution in October. But it reluctantly supported European efforts to try to get the council to take action.
U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice issued a statement that made no mention of the United Nations playing a role in resolving the Syria conflict.
"We will continue to work urgently with our partners in the international community — including the over 100 countries in the Friends of the Syrian People
— to accelerate the transition, provide support to the opposition, and meet the increasingly grave humanitarian needs of the Syrian people," Rice said.
Council diplomats have said privately the United States and Gulf Arab states have become increasingly frustrated in recent weeks with what they saw as
Annan's dogged commitment to diplomacy at a time when they believe all avenues for dialogue with Assad have been exhausted.
France's U.N. envoy, Araud, said the council appeared to be "irreconcilably" deadlocked but that it would be dangerous for countries to go outside the United
Nations to resolve the Syria conflict.
But that is already happening. The United States, other Western powers, Saudi Arabia and Qatar are increasing support for the rebels, U.N. diplomats say, and
are reconciling themselves to the view that Syria's civil war will be long and bloody.
Separately, Araud said the U.N. observer mission would likely "disappear" on August 19, the day its recently renewed mandate expires.
BATTLE FOR ALEPPO RAGES
In Syria, the fight for Aleppo, the latest battlefield, intensified. Rebels turned the gun of a captured tank against government forces, shelling an air base
north of the city.
Assad's troops bombarded the strategic Salaheddine district in Aleppo itself with tank and artillery fire supported by combat aircraft, while rebels tried to
consolidate their hold on areas they have seized.
In the capital, Damascus, troops overran a suburb on Wednesday and killed at least 35 people, mostly unarmed civilians, residents and activist organizations
said.
The fighting for Syria's two biggest cities highlights the country's rapid slide into full-scale civil war 17 months after the peaceful street protests that
marked the start of the anti-Assad uprising.
The head of the U.N. peacekeeping department, Herve Ladsous, confirmed to reporters on Thursday that Syria's rebels now had heavy weapons.
World powers have watched with mounting concern as diplomatic efforts, including Annan's mediation effort, have faltered, and violence that has already
claimed an estimated 18,000 lives worsens.
About 60 people were killed in Syria on Thursday, 43 of them civilians, according to the opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Also on Thursday, activists and residents in the central city of Hama said Syrian forces killed at least 50 people during clashes with rebels there.
The rebels' morale was boosted when they turned a government tank's gun on the Menakh airfield 35 km (22 miles) north of Aleppo, a possible staging post for
army reinforcements and a base for war planes and helicopter gunships.
Reuters correspondents heard heavy weapons fire on Thursday morning from Salaheddine in southwest Aleppo, a gateway to the city that has been fought over for
the past week.
Heavily armed government troops are trying to drive a force of a few thousand rebel fighters from the city in battle whose outcome could be a turning point
in the conflict.
Aleppo had long stayed aloof from the uprising, but many of its 2.5 million residents are now caught up in battle zones, facing shortages of food, fuel,
water and cooking gas. Thousands have fled and hospitals and makeshift clinics can barely cope with casualties after more than a week of combat.
The U.N. World Food Program and Food and Agriculture Organization said up to 3 million Syrians were likely to need food, crop and livestock aid in the next
12 months as the conflict has prevented farmers harvesting crops.
In New York, the U.N. General Assembly was expected to vote on Friday on a resolution drafted by Saudi Arabia that backs the rebels.
Russia, which has consistently supported Syria at the United Nations, said it would not back the resolution because it was unbalanced and would encourage
rebels to keep fighting.
(Additional reporting by Erika Solomon in Aleppo, Dominic Evans amd Mariam Karouny in Beirut, Gabriela Baczynska in Moscow, Stephen Addison in London, Tom
Miles in Geneva; Writing by Giles Elgood and Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Michael Roddy and Peter Cooney)
Nations while the armed rebellion against President Bashar al-Assad becomes increasingly bloody.
As battles raged on Thursday in Syria's second city, Aleppo, between rebel fighters and government forces using war planes and artillery, U.N. Secretary-
General Ban Ki-moon announced in New York that Annan had said he would go at the end of the month.
"Kofi Annan deserves our profound admiration for the selfless way in which he has put his formidable skills and prestige to this most difficult and
potentially thankless of assignments," Ban said. Talks were under way to find a successor.
Annan's mission, centered on an April ceasefire that never took hold, has looked irrelevant as fighting has intensified in Damascus, Aleppo and elsewhere.
Annan blamed "finger-pointing and name-calling" at the U.N. Security Council for his decision to quit but suggested his successor may have better luck.
Russia, the United States, Britain and France began pointing fingers at one another over who was responsible for Annan's sudden announcement he would depart.
One senior council diplomat said it was now time to acknowledge the "utter irrelevance of an impotent Security Council" on Syria.
Syria expressed regret that Annan was going.
Annan suggested that the continued arming of all sides in the conflict and the Security Council deadlock had undermined his ability to pursue a diplomatic
solution.
"The increasing militarization on the ground and the clear lack of unity in the Security Council, have fundamentally changed the circumstances for the
effective exercise of my role," Annan told reporters.
In an editorial published on the Financial Times' website, Annan said Russia, China and Iran "must take concerted efforts to persuade Syria's leadership to
change course and embrace a political transition" -- meaning the departure of Assad.
"It is clear that President Bashar al-Assad must leave office," Annan said.
Annan wrote that Western powers, the Saudis and Qatar must start "pressing the opposition to embrace a fully inclusive political process - that will include
communities and institutions currently associated with the government."
Ban's spokesman, Martin Nesirky, declined to comment on who might replace Annan but said a decision could come soon.
BLAME GAME
Russian President Vladimir Putin, a strong supporter of Assad, said he regretted Annan's decision to step aside and referred to him as a "brilliant diplomat.
Moscow's U.N. ambassador, Vitaly Churkin, suggested to reporters in New York that Western powers that had opposed "reasonable and balanced proposals" in the
Security Council had undermined Annan's peace efforts from the start.
The White House pinned the blame squarely on Moscow and Beijing, which together vetoed three resolutions intended to increase the pressure on Assad, thereby
undercutting Annan.
"Annan's resignation highlights the failure at the United Nations Security Council of Russia and China to support resolutions, meaningful resolutions,
against Assad that would have held Assad accountable," White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters aboard Air Force One.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague echoed that view.
"We understand Annan's frustration that, due to vetoes in the Security Council, the international community was unable to give him the support that he needed
and requested," Hague said in a statement.
Hague reiterated that Annan's six-point peace plan for Syria was still the best option for securing an end to the conflict. French Ambassador Gerard Araud,
Security Council president this month, shared that view.
Washington, U.N. diplomats say, has been convinced that the Security Council cannot play a meaningful role in the Syria crisis since Russia and China first
vetoed a Western- and Arab-backed resolution in October. But it reluctantly supported European efforts to try to get the council to take action.
U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice issued a statement that made no mention of the United Nations playing a role in resolving the Syria conflict.
"We will continue to work urgently with our partners in the international community — including the over 100 countries in the Friends of the Syrian People
— to accelerate the transition, provide support to the opposition, and meet the increasingly grave humanitarian needs of the Syrian people," Rice said.
Council diplomats have said privately the United States and Gulf Arab states have become increasingly frustrated in recent weeks with what they saw as
Annan's dogged commitment to diplomacy at a time when they believe all avenues for dialogue with Assad have been exhausted.
France's U.N. envoy, Araud, said the council appeared to be "irreconcilably" deadlocked but that it would be dangerous for countries to go outside the United
Nations to resolve the Syria conflict.
But that is already happening. The United States, other Western powers, Saudi Arabia and Qatar are increasing support for the rebels, U.N. diplomats say, and
are reconciling themselves to the view that Syria's civil war will be long and bloody.
Separately, Araud said the U.N. observer mission would likely "disappear" on August 19, the day its recently renewed mandate expires.
BATTLE FOR ALEPPO RAGES
In Syria, the fight for Aleppo, the latest battlefield, intensified. Rebels turned the gun of a captured tank against government forces, shelling an air base
north of the city.
Assad's troops bombarded the strategic Salaheddine district in Aleppo itself with tank and artillery fire supported by combat aircraft, while rebels tried to
consolidate their hold on areas they have seized.
In the capital, Damascus, troops overran a suburb on Wednesday and killed at least 35 people, mostly unarmed civilians, residents and activist organizations
said.
The fighting for Syria's two biggest cities highlights the country's rapid slide into full-scale civil war 17 months after the peaceful street protests that
marked the start of the anti-Assad uprising.
The head of the U.N. peacekeeping department, Herve Ladsous, confirmed to reporters on Thursday that Syria's rebels now had heavy weapons.
World powers have watched with mounting concern as diplomatic efforts, including Annan's mediation effort, have faltered, and violence that has already
claimed an estimated 18,000 lives worsens.
About 60 people were killed in Syria on Thursday, 43 of them civilians, according to the opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Also on Thursday, activists and residents in the central city of Hama said Syrian forces killed at least 50 people during clashes with rebels there.
The rebels' morale was boosted when they turned a government tank's gun on the Menakh airfield 35 km (22 miles) north of Aleppo, a possible staging post for
army reinforcements and a base for war planes and helicopter gunships.
Reuters correspondents heard heavy weapons fire on Thursday morning from Salaheddine in southwest Aleppo, a gateway to the city that has been fought over for
the past week.
Heavily armed government troops are trying to drive a force of a few thousand rebel fighters from the city in battle whose outcome could be a turning point
in the conflict.
Aleppo had long stayed aloof from the uprising, but many of its 2.5 million residents are now caught up in battle zones, facing shortages of food, fuel,
water and cooking gas. Thousands have fled and hospitals and makeshift clinics can barely cope with casualties after more than a week of combat.
The U.N. World Food Program and Food and Agriculture Organization said up to 3 million Syrians were likely to need food, crop and livestock aid in the next
12 months as the conflict has prevented farmers harvesting crops.
In New York, the U.N. General Assembly was expected to vote on Friday on a resolution drafted by Saudi Arabia that backs the rebels.
Russia, which has consistently supported Syria at the United Nations, said it would not back the resolution because it was unbalanced and would encourage
rebels to keep fighting.
(Additional reporting by Erika Solomon in Aleppo, Dominic Evans amd Mariam Karouny in Beirut, Gabriela Baczynska in Moscow, Stephen Addison in London, Tom
Miles in Geneva; Writing by Giles Elgood and Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Michael Roddy and Peter Cooney)
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