31 Mart 2013 Pazar

Steven Gerrard happy to help out at both ends for Liverpool


Steven Gerrard happy to help out at both ends for Liverpool

Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard believes fifth place is still achievable after his second half penalty completed a fine turnaround against Aston Villa.
Gerrard condemned relegation-threatened Villa to a 2-1 defeat with a 60th minute penalty which takes his goal tally to 11 against the Villans - more than he has managed against any other club.
The win moves Liverpool within three points of sixth-placed Merseyside rivals Everton, and five adrift of fifth-placed Arsenal.
Speaking after the win, Gerrard told Sky Sports: "I think we showed a lot of character, we had to raise it a little bit after half-time. We felt a little bit hard done by to be trailing, we thought we did enough in the first half to at least be level.
"After the manager spoke, we needed to go out and score as early as we can and that gave us the confidence and belief to go on and win the game."
Gerrard was forced into action at the other end of the pitch after his penalty, reacting well on the post to keep out Benteke's goal-bound effort with his head.
The experienced midfielder added: "One of my close friends has been giving me stick about my hair and actually said to me before the game that I might score the winner with my head today. The penalty was the winner but I think the header actually won us the game so he was right in the end."
Asked about Liverpool's aspirations for the rest of the season, Gerrard insists fifth spot is not out of the question, even though both Everton and Arsenal have games in hand over the Reds.
"(We want )To win every game. We want to finish as high as we can. If we can nick fifth or sixth that's what we want to try and do."

Louisville guard Kevin Ware suffers gruesome compound fracture during regional finals


Louisville guard Kevin Ware suffers gruesome compound fracture during regional finals

Louisville guard Kevin Ware suffered a gruesome compound fracture in the first half of the Cardinals' Midwest regional final against Duke on Sunday.
Ware rushed out to challenge a 3-pointer by Duke's Thornton and appeared to land awkwardly. When laying on the court, the tibia bone in his right leg appeared to be protruding from the skin. The game was stopped for a period of time and a pall fell over Lucas Oil Stadium.
Louisville's players reacted with anguish. Chane Behanan fell to the floor sobbing. Russ Smith was crying . Coach Rick Pitino was wiping tears from his face.
Ware asked to speak to his teammates and Pitino called them over. Then he was taken off the court on a stretcher and sent by ambulance to Methodist Hospital, which is two miles from the stadium.
Ware had been played excellent basketball for the Cardinals in recent weeks.

Futsal to produce an English Lionel Messi?


Futsal to produce an English Lionel Messi?

Just how far away are UK from producing their own Lionel Messi?
The prospect of a player in the shirt of the Three Lions, displaying the kind of skills and intelligence currently associated with arguably the world's most talented footballer is a mouth-watering one.
But is such a player merely a pipe dream or a real possibility?
For years, coaches at grassroots level have had to contend with poor facilities, uneven pitches and unpredictable weather, undoubtedly hindering efforts to improve the technical ability of the future generation of English footballers.
The Football Association has already recognised the need for an overhaul,pledging to invest £150m over the next three years to improve facilities.
Nevertheless, it is another step they are taking, which won't garner the kind of attention a multi-million pound cash injection has, that could ultimately prove as influential.
The latest edition of The Future Game the FA's technical guide for young player development - will include a recommendation for a sport which the likes of Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo grew up on - Futsal.
Futsal, a small-sided variant of football played between two teams of five players in an indoor arena, is something that has been played for decades in countries like Brazil, Argentina, Spain and Italy.
In those countries, Futsal is part of a development programme where children play the sport up until the ages of 10 or 11 before deciding whether to focus solely on football or stay with the small-sided variant.
Peter Sturgess is the FA's head of development for five- to 11-year-old players and head coach of the England men's Futsal team.
He told BBC Sport: "The FA is establishing Futsal as part of the footballing landscape in this country.

World peace hitcher is killed


World peace hitcher is killed

An Italian woman artist who was hitch-hiking to the Middle East dressed as a bride to promote world peace has been found dead in Turkey.
The naked body of Giuseppina Pasqualino di Marineo, 33, known as Pippa Bacca, was found in bushes near the northern city of Gebze on Friday.
She had said she wanted to demonstrate that she could put her trust in the kindness of local people.
Turkish police say they have detained a man in connection with the murder.
Reports say the man led the police to the body.
Ms di Marineo was hitch-hiking from Milan to Israel and the Palestinian Territories with a fellow artist on their "Brides on Tour" project.
They had separated in Istanbul, planning to reunite in Beirut.
Ms di Marineo was last seen on 31 March in Gebze.
An Italian embassy official told that the Associated Press news agency police tracked the man when he put a new SIM card into Ms di Marineo's mobile phone.
Local media identified the suspect only by the initials MK and said he had a previous conviction for theft.
Ms di Marineo's sister, who had gone to Turkey to look for her, identified the body. An autopsy is being conducted in Turkey.
"Her travels were for an artistic performance and to give a message of peace and of trust, but not everyone deserves trust," another sister, Maria, told the Italian news agency, Ansa. 

David Miliband quits


David Miliband quits

Labour MP David Miliband has resigned from the board of Sunderland FC because of the new manager Paolo Di Canio's "political statements".
Mr Di Canio has previously claimed to be a fascist, not a racist.
The former UK foreign secretary was serving as the club's vice-chairman and as a non-executive director.
Miliband wished the club "all success in the future. It is a great institution that does a huge amount for the North East".
Mr Di Canio was pictured in 2005 making a raised-arm salute to a group of supporters of Lazio, where he was playing.
He was given a one-match ban and fined £7,000 for this incident, and additionally was banned for a match following a similar incident earlier in 2005.
In 2011, when Mr Di Canio was appointed as Swindon Town's manager, the GMB union withdrew its sponsorship of the club, citing his political views.
Mr Di Canio scored 48 goals in 118 appearances for West Ham after joining the London club for £1.7m from Sheffield Wednesday in 1999. He began his career at Lazio, and also played for Juventus, Napoli, AC Milan, Celtic and Charlton before later returning to Lazio.
Playing for Sheffield Wednesday in 1998, he pushed referee Paul Alcock to the ground after being sent off and was banned for 11 matches.

France fire: Five children die


France fire: Five children die


The blaze in Saint-Quentin, about 130km north-east of Paris, probably accidental, reports say.
The children's father was present but escaped with serious burns, local officials said.
Three people were also killed and 13 hurt in a fire in the Paris suburb of Aubervilliers on Saturday. Officials suspect the fire was of criminal origin and an investigation is being carried out.
Officials said that the fire in Saint-Quentin began at around 22:30 local time (21:30 GMT).
The father had been looking after the children for the first time since splitting up with his wife three months earlier.
He tried to rescue his children but was beaten back by the flames and jumped from the first floor of the building to raise the alarm, reports say.

But by the time emergency services arrived, the building was not secure to enter and the children's bodies were discovered when the fire had been put out.
The flames severely hampered the firefighters' work, local official Jean-Jacques Boyer said.
The children's bodies were eventually found and they had died of asphyxiation.
Four of those injured in the Aubervilliers fire were in a serious condition. Around 60 people were reported to be in the seven-storey building when the fire began.
"The fire was probably of criminal origin, it looks like it was a settling of scores," the mayor's Chief of Staff Michael Dahan told TF1 radio.
Aubervilliers' deputy mayor for housing, Evelyne Yonnet, told French media the building was "very badly managed, with a squatting problem".
Those who escaped from the building were being temporarily housed in a local gymnasium, reports say.

24 Mart 2013 Pazar

Islamist rebels attack Mali


Islamist rebels attack Mali

Islamist rebels have striked Gao in northern Mali, officials say.
The rebels were repelled after two hours of fierce fighting, a Malian army official said.
He said the insurgents had slipped past army checkpoints to enter the town. Gao residents had raised the alarm, saying rebels had entered their neighbourhood.
Gao was controlled by an Islamist group for several months before it was liberated in a French-led offensive.
The MUJWA Islamist group had tried to impose an extreme form of sharia on the town.
Gao Mayor Sadou Diallo said the Islamist fighters had launched Saturday's attack inside the city's Quatrieme Quartier, or Fourth District, and retreated when they were engaged by Malian forces.
"There was heavy gunfire. The situation is under control now. The Islamists entered via Quatrieme Quartier, and the army went to meet them and was able to push them back," Mr Diallo told the Associated Press news agency.
"There is another group that entered via the river, but they too were pushed back. It's under control."
No death toll was immediately available after Saturday's firefight.

Islamist rebels seized vast swathes of northern Mali a year ago after a military coup in the capital Bamako.
France intervened militarily in January amid fears that the militants were preparing to advance on Bamako. It currently has about 4,000 troops in Mali.
Mali's army and soldiers from several African countries, including 2,000 from Chad, have also been involved in the fighting.
Since the intervention began, major cities including Gao, Kidal and Timbuktu have been recaptured but fighting is still continuing in desert.
France plans to withdraw its troops from Mali next month, with West African countries expected to take over in the run-up to elections due in July.

23 Mart 2013 Cumartesi

Pope Francis visits Benedict XVI


Pope Francis visits Benedict XVI

Newly elected Pope Francis has met his predecessor for lunch, the first time such a meeting has been possible for more than 600 years.
Pope Francis was flown by helicopter to Castel Gandolfo for the private lunch with Pope Benedict.
Benedict has lived at the lakeside castle south of Rome since last month, when he became the first pope in six centuries to resign, citing ill health.
Cardinal Bergoglio was elected to succeed him on 13 March.
On the agenda, some delicate handover details, including asecret document prepared by the former pope on last year's scandal involving leaked documents, our correspondent adds.
The new head of the Church is usually elected after the death of his predecessor, and there is no public record of any previous meeting between an incumbent pope and a former pope.
In 1294, former hermit Celestine V resigned after five months as pope. Boniface VIII was elected days later, and had his predecessor imprisoned. Celestine was dead within a year.
On the contrary, Pope Francis has spoken warmly of his predecessor.
One of his first acts as Pope was to call Benedict at Castel Gandolfo, where the former pontiff had been following proceedings on television.
The pope emeritus is expected to stay on at the papal summer residence until new accommodation being prepared for him inside the walls of Vatican City is ready at the end of April.
For his part, Pope Francis will begin the Church's most crucial liturgical season on Sunday with a Palm Sunday Mass in St Peter's Square.
He will then lead six more liturgies during the week, culminating with the Easter Sunday Mass and Urbi et Orbi blessing.
The new Pope chose the name Francis in honour of St Francis of Assisi - the 13th Century Italian saint who spurned a life of luxury to work with the poor.
He has called for the Roman Catholic Church to be closer to ordinary people, especially the poor and disadvantaged.
And, only 10 days into his pontificate, he has made some subtle but significant changes in the lifestyle of the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, says our correspondent.
He dresses simply, preferring to wear plain black shoes under a simple white habit rather than the red leather loafers and ermine-trimmed cape worn by his predecessor.
The first Latin American Pope spurned a special car to take a bus with his cardinals after he was elected, and insisted on returning to his Rome hotel the next day to pay his own bill.
Pope Francis places himself on the same level as his guests, rather than greeting them from a throne on an elevated platform, which is seen as a powerful gesture after centuries of Vatican pomp.
The former archbishop of Buenos Aires has also started inviting guests to his early morning Mass - including Vatican gardeners, street sweepers, kitchen staff and maids working at the hotel where he is currently staying.

Russia-China ties 'guarantee world peace'


 Russia-China ties guarantee world peace

Mr Xi, on his first official overseas trip as leader, has already met President Vladimir Putin.
He described the Russian leader as a fellow friend.
On Friday, Russia's state-owned energy company Rosneft agreed to triple oil supplies to China in return for a $2bn (£1.3bn) loan.
The two countries also agreed a preliminary deal for a gas pipeline to be built, although analysts say they are still a long way from agreeing terms.
Russia is one of the world's biggest energy producers, and China is the world's top energy consumer.
Bilateral trade reached a record $88bn last year, but the figure is still a fraction of China's trade with the EU and the US.

In recent years, the two nations have also been closely aligned on global political matters.
They have vetoed attempts by other members of the UN Security Council to authorise tougher action against Syria's government.
And they have been largely in agreement over North Korea's nuclear programme.
Mr Xi told students at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations that China would continue to oppose interference in the internal affairs of other countries.
"We must respect the right of each country in the world to independently choose its path of development," he said.
"Strong high-level Chinese-Russian ties not only meet our interests, but serve as an important, reliable guarantee of international strategic balance and peace."
During the Cold War the two countries, while both nominally Communist, were bitter competitors.
But both sides have been full of praise for each other during Mr Xi's visit.
"We can already say this is a historic visit with positive results," Mr Putin said.
Mr Xi was confirmed as China's president last week, concluding a lengthy transition process that saw him assume the Communist Party leadership in November 2012.
Commentators say he is much more charismatic than his predecessor, Hu Jintao.
On the first day of his trip to Russia, Mr Xi stepped off the plane with his wife, well-known singer Peng Liyuan.
Ms Peng's appearance was widely reported in China's state media, and caused an outpouring of debate on microblogs.
One message on the Sina Weibo website said: "China's quest for a graceful first lady is over."


LeBron James is the new Michael Jordan


LeBron James is the new Michael Jordan 


In case you didn't hear, LeBron James was back in Ohio facing the Cavaliers Wednesday, and at this point there's just no better show in sports than watching LeBron play basketball. What happened Wednesday was just more proof.
The game started with a 30-minute delay because of CO2 Cannisters leaking onto the court, and it only got stranger from there. The Cavs were dominating, and for the first time in two months the Heat looked like they were finally having an off night. Midway through the third quarter, a Tyler Zeller three-point play gave Cleveland a 27-point lead, the crowd was going insane, and for Miami it looked like one of those crappy, forgettable nights that happen to even the best teams. After 23 straight wins, Miami was due for one of those nights.
Then theMiami Heat happened, and LeBron James happened. They started chipping away and, with LeBron at the center of everything, the ball started whipping around the court and every other possession ended with a wide-open Heat jumper. LeBron's impressive play of the night was actually a cross-court pass from the opposite post that hit a wide-open Ray Allen for three. Ray missed the shot, but it was still the most ridiculous pass of the year. And the Heat just kept coming.
Soon the Cavs lead was 20, then 15, and then 12. By the time Miami cut it to single digits, the Cavs were already dead.
How: Aside from grabbing what felt like 25 rebounds over the final two quarters and leading the ball movement that created wide-open looks against a helpless Cavs defense, the comeback peaked in the fourth quarter with this sequence:
  1. LeBron caught an inbounds pass, pivoted out behind the three-point line and stared down CJ Miles for a solid three seconds before draining a three in his face.
  2. He caught an awkward lob from Mario Chalmers during a 2-on-1 fastbreak, missed the layup, but muscled everyone out of the way for a loose ball on the floor and an easy putback.
  3. Two plays later, a pull-up three. Tie game. LeBron stopped to stare at the crowd.
  4. And then, after Shaun Livingston gave the Cavs hope with a made jumper to retake the lead, LeBron came back down and hit one more three to take the lead right back. 
Cleveland never led again. And that's how LeBron James killed a basketball team Wednesday night, just like he'd done to the Celtics two nights earlier.

15 Mart 2013 Cuma

Samsung Galaxy S4 unveiled


Samsung Galaxy S4 unveiled

Samsung has launched a smartphone which allows users to control its 5in (12.5cm) screen by using only their eyes.
The Galaxy S4 follows on from last year's S3, a product that sold over 40 million units worldwide.
At a lavish, Broadway-themed event in New York, the company also demonstrated the phone's ability to take two different pictures at once.
Analysts widely regard Samsung to be the biggest challenger to Apple's dominance of mobile products.
The Galaxy S4 will be rolled out globally at the end of April.
Following the launch, shares in Samsung fell 1.7% in early trade in Seoul on Friday amid worries the market for phone upgrades was "flattening out".
The company's head of mobile communications, JK Shin said 327 mobile operators in 155 countries will carry the handset.
In the UK, Vodafone, Three, Orange, T-Mobile and EE have all announced plans to offer the device on their networks.
Through a series of role-playing scenes, the South Korean firm demonstrated the phone's key features.
Much was made of the device's ability to be controlled even without touching it.
Using "Smart pause", the user can pause a video by looking away from the screen.
Additionally, the "Smart Scroll" software analyses the user's eyes and wrist to scroll through emails and any other content.

"The debut of nifty eye motion-sensitive controls to allow users to pause video and scroll through pages using eye movements alone is smart," said telecoms expert Ernest Doku from uSwitch.com.
"For commuters crammed in trains - or just those who love a bit of futuristic tech that makes their lives easier - this novel feature will really help the Galaxy S4 to stand out."
However, Charles Golvin from Forrester Research worried the swathes of new features may alienate some customers.
"The larger question is how much of this stuff can people actually use," he told the BBC.
"There's no question that there's a lot of powerful technology and innovative features - but whether people will care about them or use them I'm not sure.
"Including an image of yourself in a picture that you're taking for someone else - yes, I think that's a bit gimmicky.
"But on the video side, for a live chat where it's compositing you and your image to show both you and what you're seeing - that's not a gimmick."

In another scene, depicting a backpacker in Shanghai, the phone was shown to translate English text into Chinese speech - before translating Chinese speech back into English text.
The dual camera feature makes use of the device's front and rear cameras simultaneously, blending the pictures together to make sure the picture taker is not "left out".
The rear has a 13 megapixel camera, while the user-facing camera captures pictures at 2 megapixels.
The phone weighs 130g, and is 7.9mm thick - making it slightly lighter and thinner than the S3.
The device uses Samsung's HD AMOLED technology, giving the S4's screen - which is marginally bigger than the S3's - a resolution of 441 ppi.
As predicted by several industry experts, most of the presentation focused on the phone's software rather than hardware.
As well as the touchless technology, the company also introduced the Samsung Hub - a multimedia storage facility that can be shared across multiple Samsung devices.


Ang Lee takes on first TV project


Ang Lee takes on first TV project

Oscar-winning film director Ang Lee is branching out into television, after it was announced he will direct the pilot episode of new series, Tyrant.
The show marks Lee's first project since the 2012 film Life of Pi, which saw the Taiwanese filmmaker win his second Academy Award .
Tyrant follows an ordinary American family caught up in the affairs of a turbulent Middle Eastern nation.
Shooting for the show on US cable channel FX will begin this summer.
The team behind the drama includes Homeland's Howard Gordon and Gideon Raff, who will act as executive producers.
"Ang Lee has demonstrated time and again an ability to present characters with such depth and specificity that they reveal the universal human condition," said FX president John Landgraf.
Lee, whose previous credits include the martial arts film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Jane Austen adaptation Sense and Sensibility and comic book blockbuster Hulk, saw his latest film win a total of four Oscars.
Aside from best director, the 3D film - based on the Booker-winning novel about a shipwrecked boy and a Bengal tiger - won awards for cinematography, score and visual effects.
The director, 58, won his first best director Oscar in 2006, for cowboy homosexual romance Brokeback Mountain.

French President Hollande defends Syria weapons plan


French President Hollande defends Syria weapons plan

France's president has defended his plan to provide ammunition and weapons to Syria's rebels, as activists mark two years since the anti-government uprising began.
Speaking after an EU meeting, Hollande said the rebels had given guarantees that weapons would not fall into the wrong hands.
France and the UK want the EU to lift its arms embargo, but Germany says it has not yet decided if it agrees.
An estimated 70,000 people have been killed and one million have fled Syria.
The status of the rebels has become one of the thorniest issues for foreign governments.
A number of explosions and suicide attacks have been blamed on armed groups believed to have links to al-Qaeda.
Russia remains an ally of President al-Assad's government and opposes arming the rebels.
The Syrian government characterises all of the rebels as armed gangs or foreign-backed terrorists.
'Certainty' on weapons
The EU agreed the arms embargo in April 2011.
Both the UK and France now want it lifted, and have hinted that they could take unilateral action to help the rebels if EU leaders continue to support the embargo.
In a news conference, UK Prime Minister Cameron said: "If we want to take individual action, [and] we think that is in our national interest, of course we are free to do so."
Mr Hollande later said he accepted that before any weapons could be delivered, the opposition must give necessary guarantees"
"It's because we have been given those [guarantees] that we can envisage the lifting of the embargo. We have the certainty on the use of these weapons," he said.
Both leaders insisted they were committed to finding a political solution, but said the world could not stand by and watch while massacres took place.
Nevertheless, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she had not reached a definitive position on the issue.
"The fact that two [countries] have changed their position is not enough for 25 others to follow suit," she said.
EU foreign ministers are expected to discuss the arms embargo again in Dublin on 22-23 March.
The UK has indicated that it might veto a forthcoming vote, due in May, to extend the embargo beyond its 1 June deadline.
The BBC's Chris Morris in Brussels says the French and British largely share the view that Russia and Iran are arming government forces, so providing weapons to the opposition is the only way to put pressure on the Assad regime.
Nevertheless, our correspondent says Germany, Austria and Sweden are among the EU states believed to be reluctant to lift the embargo.
And the UN's top humanitarian official Valerie Amos said the move could make the job of aid agencies more difficult.
Long stalemate
To mark Syria's anniversary, the International Committee of the Red Cross urged world leaders to put pressure on both sides to stop attacks on civilians.
"It is deplorable that high numbers of civilian casualties are now a daily occurrence," said Robert Mardini, who heads ICRC operations in the Middle East.
"These ongoing violations of international humanitarian law and of basic humanitarian principles by all sides must stop."
The civil unrest began on 15 March 2011 with nationwide protests following arrests in the southern city of Deraa.
Rebels now control large parts of Syria, but the conflict has appeared to be largely in stalemate for months.
A number of vigils have already been held around the world to mark the second anniversary of the conflict, including in the South Korean capital, Seoul, and in Amman in Jordan, where children gathered in front of the Citadel for an event organised by Save the Children.
Meanwhile there is concern at the UN that Lebanon is becoming more entangled in the Syrian conflict, with a UN Security Council statement underscoring its concern about cross-border attacks and weapons trafficking.
Observers believe that Iran and Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group is increasing its support for the Syrian government.


US going to boost nuclear missile defences to counter North Korea


US going to boost nuclear missile defences to counter North Korea

US Secretary of Defence Chuck Hagel has announced plans to boost missile defences on the US West Coast to counter the threat from North Korea.
He said the US would add 14 interceptors, which can shoot down missiles during their flight, to 30 already in place in California and Alaska by 2017.
Mr Hagel cited a "series of irresponsible and reckless provocations" recently by North Korea.
Tensions have risen after Pyongyang's third nuclear test last month.
Only last week North Korea threatened the US with a pre-emptive nuclear strike.
'Stay ahead of threat'
But despite the isolated country's latest fiery rhetoric, analysts say the regime is years away from producing a missile with the capability to reach the United States.
"The US has missile defences to protect us from limited ICBM [Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile] attacks," Mr Hagel told Friday's press conference.
"But North Korea in particular has recently made advances in its capabilities and has engaged in a series of irresponsible and reckless provocations."
The defence secretary said the US would also deploy a radar-tracking station in Japan.
Mr Hagel continued: "The reason we're doing what we're doing, and the reason we're advancing our programme here for homeland security is not taking any chances, is to stay ahead of the threat and to ensure any contingencies."
The Pentagon chief said the additional 14 interceptors would be deployed to Fort Greely, in the US state of Alaska, at a cost of about $1bn (£660m).
He also announced the Pentagon was beginning environmental impact studies for additional interceptor sites, allowing a shorter timeline for construction if the president decides to go ahead with installing further interceptors.
The Alaska and California sites were built during the presidency of George W Bush as protection from a possible strike by North Korea.
Technical difficulties with the interceptors slowed the installation.
When asked about the "poor performance" of interceptors during recent trials, Mr Hagel said further tests would be carried out this year.
"We have confidence in our system," he said, "and we certainly will not go forward with the addition of the 14 interceptors until we're sure we have the complete confidence we need."

HIV drugs cure about one in 10


HIV drugs cure about one in 10

Rapid treatment after HIV infection may be enough to cure about a 10th of those diagnosed early, say researchers in France.
They have been analysing 14 people who stopped therapy, but have since shown no signs of the virus.
It follows reports of a baby girl being effectively cured after significantly early treatment in the US.
However, most people infected with HIV do not find out until the virus has fully established into the body.
The group of patients, known as the Visconti cohort, all started treatment within 10 weeks of being infected. The patients were caught early as they turned up in hospital with other conditions and HIV was found in their blood.
They stuck to a course of antiretroviral drugs for three years, on average, but then stopped.
The drugs keep the virus only in check, they cannot eradicate it from its hiding places inside the immune system.
Normally, when the drugs stop, the virus bounces back.
This has not happened in the Visconti patients. Instead, some have been able to control HIV levels for a decade.
Dr Asier Saez-Cirion, from the Institute Pasteur in Paris, said: "Most individuals who follow the same treatment will not control the infection, but there are a few of them who will."
He said 5-15% of patients may be cured, meaning they no longer needed drugs, by attacking the virus soon after infection.
"They still have HIV, it is not eradication of HIV, it is a kind of remission of the infection."
Their latest study, in the journal PLoS Pathogens, analysed what happened to the immune system of the patients.
Early treatment may limit the number of unassailable HIV hideouts that are formed. Nevertheless, the researchers said it was unclear why only some patients were successfully cured.
Dr Andrew Freedman, a reader in infectious diseases at Cardiff University School of Medicine, said the findings were absolutely interesting.
"The presumption is that they've started treatment very early and the virus hasn't spread to so many of the long-term reservoirs and that's why it works.
"Whether they'll control it forever, or whether it'll be for a number of years and subsequently they will progress and the virus will reappear, we don't know."
However, he cautioned that many patients would be diagnosed much later than in this study.
Deborah Jack, the chief executive of the National AIDS Trust said it was "exciting times" in progress towards an HIV cure, but the key factor was early treatment.
"This just underlines the importance of people being testing and diagnosed early. Currently half of people living with HIV in the UK are diagnosed late - indicating that they are likely to have been infected for five years."

Champions League Quarter-Final Draw

Champions League Quarter-Final Draw


Both the quarter-finals and semi-finals are drawn at the same time, so at this point you can begin to plot the winners route to the final at Munich.

Qualifiers:

Real Madrid
Borussia Dortmund
Juventus
Paris St Germain
Barcelona
Galatasaray
Bayern Munich
Malaga


Champions League Quarter-Final Fixtures
The Champions League quarter finals will be played over two legs, home and away. Here are the dates of when these matches will be played and we will supply a full fixture list as soon as the draw is made in March 2013.

1st Leg - 2nd Apr 2013
1st Leg - 3rd April 2013
2nd Leg - 9th April 2013
2nd Leg - 10th April 2013

14 Mart 2013 Perşembe

Pope Francis warns Church


Pope Francis warns Church

Pope Francis has warned the Catholic Church would become "a compassionate NGO" without spiritual renewal.
In a Sistine Chapel Mass with cardinals on his first day as the Pope, the pontiff said: "If we do not confess to Christ, what would we be?
"We would end up a compassionate NGO. What would happen would be like when children make sand castles and then it all falls down."
Francis is the first Latin American - and the first Jesuit - Pope of all times.
The BBC's David Willey, in Rome, says the 76-year-old has already been ready to stamp his style on the papacy.
Pope Francis is regarded as a doctrinal conservative, but he is also seen as a potential force for reform of the Vatican, analysts say.

On Wednesday night, Pope Francis endeared himself to the crowds in St Peter's Square - and underlined his reputation for humility - when he asked them to bless him before blessing them in return from the balcony of the basilica.
The Vatican's account of his first hours in the top job on Thursday also emphasised Pope Francis's humility, describing how he shunned a special car and security detail provided to take him to the Vatican, travelling instead on a bus with the other cardinals.
Following his first outing as pope to the Rome basilica on Thursday, Francis went back to the clergy house in a city centre side street where he had been staying ahead of the conclave that elected him.
"He packed his bags and then he went to pay the bill for his room so as to set a good example," said Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi.
He also broke tradition by remaining standing to receive cardinals' acts of homage after his election, instead of sitting in the papal throne.
On Friday, Pope Francis will meet all the cardinals, including those aged over 80 who did not take part in the election.
On Saturday he will meet the world media at a papal audience, an opportunity perhaps to set out some of his global vision, says the BBC's James Robbins in Rome.
A visit to his predecessor Benedict XVI at his retreat at Castel Gandolfo outside Rome is also planned, but will not occur in the next couple of days.
The visit to Benedict is important, correspondents say, as the existence of a living retired pope has prompted fears of a possible rivalry.
Francis will be installed officially in an inauguration Mass on Tuesday 19 March, the Vatican added.
The election of Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio surprised many observers when it was revealed.
Although he reportedly came second to Pope Benedict XVI during the 2005 conclave, very few had predicted the election of the first pope from outside Europe in 1,300 years.
Despite his reputation as a doctrinal conservative, Pope Francis is also seen as a potential force for reform of the Vatican bureaucracy - and analysts say that may have won him the support of reforming cardinals.
The new pontiff will certainly come under strong pressure to reform the Curia, the governing body of the Church.
He will also face an array of challenges which include the role of women, interfaith tensions and dwindling congregations in some parts of the world.
The 76-year-old from Buenos Aires is the first Pope to take the name of Francis - reminiscent of Francis of Assisi, the 13th Century Italian reformer and patron saint of animals, who lived in conditions of poverty.

13 Mart 2013 Çarşamba

PKK releases eight Turkish soldier hostages


PKK releases eight Turkish soldier 

The Kurdish terrorist group, the PKK, has released eight Turkish soldiers and officials it has held captive in northern Iraq for up to two years.
"We have safely received the prisoners," Husamettin Zemberlioglu, a Kurdish politician said.
The move is being seen as part of efforts to end the 30 years conflict between Turkey and the PKK.
Last month the jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan called for prisoners to be released by both sides.
Turkey's Deputy Prime Minister, Besir Atalay, welcomed their release as "a gesture of goodwill".
"The [peace] process is going just fine. There is big public support, expectation and hope," Mr Atalay was quoted as saying by the state-run Anatolia news agency, before the handover was completed.
On news of the release President Abdullah Gul said: "We are happy that our citizens who had been away from their country for so long, and from whom we had not received any news, are returning."
The freed eight are expected to be escorted across the border into Turkey, where they will be reunited with their families and flown home.
The Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, started its armed campaign for an ethnic Kurdish homeland in south-east Turkey in 1984.
It is regarded by Turkey, the US and EU as a terrorist organisation. More than 40,000 people have been killed on both sides, since the conflict began.
Last year saw some of the heaviest fighting in decades.
But, after several false starts in recent years, observers say peace efforts currently appear to have greater momentum.
Members of the Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) helped mediate the release and were in northern Iraq to receive them.
"We hope that the release will open the way for the peaceful solution to the Kurdish issue," said a member of the delegation, Adil Kurt.
"It is important that [they] are returned to their families safely."

President Obama repremands China over cyber attacks


President Obama repremands China over cyber attacks

President Barack Obama has said in a TV interview that the USA is engaging in "tough talk" with China about its alleged cyber attacks.
President Obama told ABC News some hacking originating from China was state sponsored, although he played down congressional talk of a cyber war.
He spoke a day after US intelligence chiefs said cyber attacks had replaced terrorism as the main security threat.
China refuses such hacking and instead says it is the victim of such attacks.
Mr Obama was asked in the interview with ABC News on Wednesday, about claims from US lawmakers that the scale of attacks on American firms and infrastructure amounted to a cyber "war" with China.
"You know, there's a big difference between them engaging in cyber espionage or cyber attacks and obviously a hot war," the president said.
"What is absolutely true is that we have seen a steady ramping up of cyber security threats. Some are state sponsored. Some are just sponsored by criminals.

"And we'll have some pretty tough talk with them. We already have."
"We've made it very clear to China and some other state actors that, you know, we expect them to follow international norms and abide by international rules.
China has long been suspected of a role in cyber attacks, prompting Pentagon warnings that America must guard against a "digital Pearl Harbor". A US congressional report last year named China as "the most threatening actor in cyberspace".
The issue has become a growing bone of contention between USA and China.
On Tuesday, US Director of National Intelligence James Clapper told a Senate committee that cyber attacks had supplanted terrorism as the top security threat facing the country.
A day earlier in New York, US National Security Advisor Tom Donilon called on Beijing to take steps to stop cyber crime.
Last month, a report from US security firm Mandiant said a unit of China's People's Liberation Army had mounted data raids on the computer systems of more than 140 mostly US-based organisations.
US state department officials have said hacking comes up "in virtually every meeting we have with Chinese officials".
In January, the New York Times said it had been subject to cyber attacks from China, following the newspaper's report on the wealth of outgoing Premier Wen Jiabao's family.

The New Pope!


The New Pope has been elected!


Argentine Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio has been elected the Catholic Church's new Pope.
The first Latin American to be Pope, he will call himself Francis I.
An hour earlier, white smoke billowing from the Sistine Chapel chimney announced to the world that cardinals gathered inside and had made their final choice.
Cardinal Bergoglio replaces Benedict XVI, who resigned last month saying that he was not strong enough to lead the Roman Catholic Church.
The 115 cardinals have been in isolation since Tuesday afternoon, and held four inconclusive votes.
At least 77 of them, or two-thirds, would have had to vote for a single candidate for him to be elected the new Pope.
Before the conclave began, there was no clear frontrunner to replace Benedict.
Crowds with umbrellas massed in the square flying flags from all around the world.
The Catholic News Agency said people were running through the streets of Rome, hoping to reach St Peter's Square in time for the appearance of the new Pope.
A troop of Swiss Guards in silver helmets and full regalia marched to the Basilica in preparation for the announcement, as military bands played for the onlookers.
The new Pope will emerge from the loggia overlooking the square to deliver his speech.
He will have already accepted an invitation to become Pope and the cardinals will have sworn allegiance to him, afterwards  he will have gone to pray alone.