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"Brotherhood's Mursi sworn in as Egyptian president"

Mohammed Mursi has been sworn in as Egypt's first civilian, democratically elected president at a historic ceremony in Cairo. Hours after the ceremony, he was saluted by Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, leader of the military council which is handing over power..

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Saturday, July 7, 2012

Start-up attempts to convert Prof Hawking's brainwaves into speech

Prof Stephen Hawking 

         An American scientist is to unveil details of work on the brain patterns of Prof Stephen Hawking which he says could help safeguard the physicist's ability to communicate.

      Prof Philip Low said he eventually hoped to allow Prof Hawking to "write" words with his brain as an alternative to his current speech system which interprets cheek muscle movements.


      Prof Low said the innovation would avert the risk of locked-in syndrome.

       Intel is working on an alternative.

       Prof Hawking was diagnosed with motor neurone disease in 1963. In the 1980s he was able to use slight thumb movements to move a computer cursor to write sentences.

      His condition later worsened and he had to switch to a system which detects movements in his right cheek through an infrared sensor attached to his glasses which measures changes in light.

     Because the nerves in his face continue to deteriorate his rate of speech has slowed to about one word a minute prompting him to look for an alternative.

    The fear is that Prof Hawking could ultimately lose the ability to communicate by body movement, leaving his brain effectively "locked in" his body.

     In 2011, he allowed Prof Low to scan his brain using the iBrain device developed by the Silicon Valley-based start-up Neurovigil.

     Prof Hawking will not attend the consciousness conference in his home town of Cambridge where Prof Low intends to discuss his findings, but a spokesman told the BBC: "Professor Hawking is always interested in supporting research into new technologies to help him communicate."

Decoding brainwaves

       The iBrain is a headset that records brain waves through EEG (electroencephalograph) readings - electrical activity recorded from the user's scalp.
Neurovigil iBrain  
      The iBrain device collects EEG data which it transfers to a computer

     Prof Low said he had designed computer software which could analyse the data and detect high frequency signals that had previously been thought lost because of the skull.

     "An analogy would be that as you walk away from a concert hall where there's music from a range of instruments," he told the BBC.

     "As you go further away you will stop hearing high frequency elements like the violin and viola, but still hear the trombone and the cello. Well, the further you are away from the brain the more you lose the high frequency patterns.

    "What we have done is found them and teased them back using the algorithm so they can be used."
Prof Low said that when Prof Hawking had thought about moving his limbs this had produced a signal which could be detected once his algorithm had been applied to the EEG data.

       He said this could act as an "on-off switch" and produce speech if a bridge was built to a similar system already used by the cheek detection system.
Prof Hawking with Intel equipment
 Intel began working with Prof Hawking after he wrote a letter to its co-founder Gordon Moore in 2011

     Prof Low said further work needed to be done to see if his equipment could distinguish different types of thoughts - such as imagining moving a left hand and a right leg.

    If it turns out that this is the case he said Prof Hawking could use different combinations to create different types of virtual gestures, speeding up the rate he could select words at.

     To establish whether this is the case, Prof Low plans trials with other patients in the US.
Intel's effort

      The US chipmaker Intel announced, in January, that it had also started work to create a new communication system for Prof Hawking after he had asked the firm's co-founder, Gordon Moore, if it could help him.

      It is attempting to develop new 3D facial gesture recognition software to speed up the rate at which Prof Hawking can write.

     "These gestures will control a new user interface that takes advantage of the multi-gesture vocabulary and advances in word prediction technologies," a spokeswoman told the BBC.

    "We are working closely with Professor Hawking to understand his needs and design the system accordingly."


Close-up: Berlin's bear-pit karaoke

A Point of View: The curse of a ridiculous name

Man putting on "Hello - my name is" sticker

Gopnik. It's not the most common of surnames. And in Russian it's a term for "drunken lout". Those who carry a curious name know it has comedy value, says Adam Gopnik (that's G - O - P - N - I - K).

      I have a funny name. I know it. Don't say it isn't or try to make me feel better about it. I have a funny name. My children and social networkers tell me that. And you out there have even been tweeting about it: "@BBC POV, Gopnik: what kind of name is that? #weirdnames"

       Gopnik. It has a strange sound, and an ugly look. It manages to be at once starkly plain and extremely uninteresting, boringly unadorned and yet oddly difficult to say. Despite the stark, Orcish simplicity of its syllables, it manages to be hard to pronounce. "Golnik" or "Gotnik" people say, swallowing or spitting out the middle consonant.

      A first name is malleable. Your chancellor of the exchequer began life under the name of Gideon Osborne - a name that might only have helped him become one more short-tenured professor of dark arts at Hogwarts. But he plucked the safer and saner "George" from among his other pre-names, and seized the country's trust with it, for a while anyway.
Last names are more durable.

       My parents tried to elevate the name by giving all six of my brothers and sisters poetic Welsh or Hebrew names such as Morgan and Blake. All good names but with no middle names at all to help. "Gopnik" rises immediately after each one, like a concrete cinderblock wall topped with barbed wire, to meet them bluntly as they try to escape.

      It's not just a funny name. It has become, in the Russia from which it originally hails, an almost obscenely derogatory expression.

     A gopnik in Russian, and in Russia, is now a drunken hooligan, a small-time lout, a criminal without even the sinister glamour of courage. When Russian people hear my last name, they can barely conceal a snigger of distaste and disgusted laughter. Those thugs who clashed with Polish fans at Euro 2012? All gopniks - small G. And I'm told that it derives from an acronym for public housing, rather than from our family's Jewish roots, but no difference.

    My wife, even before the Russian gopnik business, tried gently to pry apart her potential children from my name. Her name is Parker, simple as that, and she would much prefer that her offspring go through life without the difficulty of their father's name.

     "Let's just call them Parker," she urged when we married. "And then," she added gently, as one talking to a small child, "you can give them your name as a sort of secret middle name." We ended by doing the worst thing you can do to a child in these times - we hyphenated.
Three babies, one crying

        The real trouble is this. Like every writer, I would like my writing to last, and most writers who have lasted not only have euphonious names, but names that somehow resonate with their genius.

       Jane Austen. How can you not write matchlessly wry and intelligent novels with a name like that? Who would not want to be named Anthony Trollope or Evelyn Waugh? The solid sense and then the elegant malice are written into the names - even the androgyny of "Evelyn" adds to the slight air of something-not-quite-right that his prose implies.
   
      I envy even those writers blessed with those Restoration Comedy names:
  • Will Self - what better name for someone whose subject is impulse and the ego?
  • the satirical Tom Sharpe
  • the subtly ambiguous Stevie Smith
      In the Latin world, get a name like Gabriel Garcia Marquez or Mario Vargas Llosa, and you can practically make reservations for Stockholm, direct from the baptismal font.
      Are there any big modern writers who have really funny names? Only Kipling, I think, and that is an accident of the participle. More to the point, are there good writers who are now forgotten, as I am pretty sure I shall be, because their names are so funny? Yes, I have to say with dread, there are - for instance, the 20th Century American poet WD Snodgrass. Snodgrass was a truly great poet, the originator, if anyone was, of the style we now call "confessional poetry", a hero to Robert Lowell and Sylvia Plath and the rest. But he had that funny Pickwickian name, and he knew it. He used to make fun of his own name: "Snodgrass is walking through the universe!" one poem reads (I, too, make fun of my surname, in the hopes of keeping off the name-demons).

       No use. For all his priority, I bet that you have heard something of Robert Lowell and Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton but that, unless you are a specialist in American poetry, you have never heard of WD Snodgrass.

      The subject has led me, gloomily, to search for the first reference to the power of names over writers' reputations. Oddly, astonishingly, I think we can find it. it occurs in the best and most famous scene in all of English biography, that moment in Boswell's Life of Johnson when, in 1776, Boswell craftily arranges a dinner between the arch Tory Dr Johnson and the radical libertine John Wilkes. The two men, political opposites, come together over their love of learning and good food.
The Rice Portait of Jane Austin by British painter Ozias Humphry (1742-1810)  
     Jane Austen: Elegant by name and of writing style

     Wilkes is talking about the lost office of the city poet, and says: "The last was Elkanah Settle. There is something in names which one cannot help feeling. Now Elkanah Settle sounds so queer, who can expect much from that name? We should have no hesitation to give it for John Dryden, in preference to Elkanah Settle, from the names only, without knowing their different merits."

      Wilkes' cruel but accurate remark is a big one, a herald of the coming Romantic era as much as any poem about a lake or a lilac. For while the classical sensibility that Dr Johnson represented involved an, at times, undue respect for the authority of sense, the coming Romantic sensibility that Wilkes heralded involved, above all, a hypersensitivity to the accidents of sensation. Things become whatever feelings they evoke; if a name evokes an aura, it becomes it. Academics even have a name for this - they call it "phonetic symbolism".

      The only writer I can think of in all of English literature to have out-written his name - to have been given a really weird and funny-sounding name and yet replace its phonetic symbolism with a new symbolism of its own being - is...

Shakespeare.

First Folio of Shakespeare's works
        We are so used to that name by now that I think we forget how truly odd it is. A blunt description of an intrinsically funny action - shaking a spear. It is not even a dignified action, as Swordthrust might be, he is merely Shake-speare.

        In his own day, it was obviously the first thing people noticed about him. The very earliest reference we have to him as a playwright involves the critic Robert Greene sneering at his funny name.

       "He fancies that he is the only 'Shake-scene' in the country."

      And a later wit wrote a play in which a dim-witted undergraduate keeps talking about "sweet Mr Shakespeare, Mr Shakespeare", obviously for the comic effect of the repeated funny name. Indeed, the name "Shakespeare" is exactly like the name of a clown in Shakespeare, whose funny name would set off pages of tiresome puns:

     "Prithee, Sirrah, and where do you shake that spear? Come, sir!"
    "Oh, sire, in any wench's lap that does tremble for it."
And so on. You know the kind of thing I mean.
Anthony Trollope (1875)  
   Trollope - marvellous name

    Indeed, if he had died of the plague, as was as likely as not, after writing only two plays and some poems, I wonder if we would not now have to suppress a laugh when we heard his name in class. "The minor poets of the Age of Jonson," some don would intone - or "The age of Fletcher" or "Lovelace", for surely someone else left in his shade would have risen in the space left clear by his absence - "were Drayton and Davenant and the short lived Stratfordian, Shakespeare."

    And then the students, desperately memorising for the exam: "Yeah, there's Beaumont and Manningham and then that other one - you know, the one who died young and wrote the Roman play with the twins and those weird bisexual sonnets, which I actually kinda like - you know, the guy with the funny name."

     But he kept on writing, about bees and kings, and other things and so lost his name and became himself. It can be done, it seems, if one writes long enough and well enough.

   But the bar, that bar, is too high.

     And the phonetic symbolism of my name is too absolute. The spectre of those gopniks in their crewcuts and parkas rise to overwhelm all hope. It is fixed. I shall remain and now say goodbye - and then vanish as a, and A. Gopnik.

Russia flash floods: 144 killed in Krasnodar region

        Flood water has trapped vehicles and left residents stranded



      Flash floods caused by torrential rain have swept the southern Russian Krasnodar region, killing 144 people, officials say.

      The floods, the worst there in living memory, struck at night, reportedly without warning.
TV pictures showed people scrambling onto their rooftops to escape.

       President Vladimir Putin has flown over the region by helicopter and has had emergency talks with officials in the worst-hit town of Krymsk.

      Most of those who died were in and around Krymsk, a town of 57,000 people. But nine deaths were reported in the Black Sea resort of Gelendzhik with a further two in the port town of Novorossiysk.

     Russian TV showed thousands of houses in the region almost completely submerged and police said many of the victims were elderly people who had been asleep at the time.

    "Our house was flooded to the ceiling," Krymsk pensioner Lidiya Polinina told the Agence France-Presse news agency.

    "We broke the window to climb out. I put my five-year-old grandson on the roof of our submerged car, and then we somehow climbed up into the attic."

     Dozens of people are reportedly missing, and there are fears that the death toll will rise further.
Emergency teams have been sent from Moscow by plane and helicopter.

    Crude oil shipments from Novorossiysk have been suspended.
the flood in the city of Gelendzhik 
      Some 28 cm of water fell in some areas

     Regional governor Alexander Tkachev tweeted after flying over the affected area that there was "something unimaginable" going on in Krymsk.

     He said, quoted by the Russian Itar-Tass news agency, that "no-one can remember such floods in our history. There was nothing of the kind for the last 70 years".

'Tsunami'

     Some users of social media networks in Russia said Krymsk looked like it was hit "by a tsunami". Others accused the authorities of not telling the whole truth about the disaster.
Map of Krasnodar

       The head of the liberal opposition Yabloko party, Sergei Mitrokhin, said on his Twitter feed that local activists had blamed the ferocity of the flood on the opening of sluice gates at a reservoir.

       But Krasnodar's regional administration dismissed the allegation as "absolute nonsense", Ria news agency said.

      The Krasnodar-Novorossiysk motorway was cut, and the transport system in the region is said to have collapsed.

      In a statement, the Krasnodar authorities said altogether 13,000 people had been affected by the floods.
     
     They have declared Monday a day of mourning.

'Something unimaginable'

     Up to 1,000 rescuers are involved in searching for victims and evacuating survivors.

     More than 7,000 Russian children were attending summer camps in the area and one of the camps was evacuated, Russian media reported.

     "The floods were very strong. Even traffic lights were ripped out," regional police spokesman Igor Zhelyabin told AFP news agency, adding that evacuations were under way.
A stranded car is seen in a recently flooded street in the southern Russian town of Krymsk  
    Scenes of devastation greeted rescuers in Krymsk

    Anna Kovalevskaya, who says she has relatives in Krymsk, told the BBC her family was caught unawares by the floods.

    "The water started flooding in at 02:00 [22:00 GMT Friday]," she said.

      "People were running out into the streets in their underwear and wrapping their children in blankets. People were only able to save their passports.

       "There is no electricity and the shops are shut. Many people have lost everything and are in a state of panic."

       The rains dumped as much as 28cm (11 inches) of water on parts of the Krasnodar region overnight, forcing many residents to take refuge in trees or on house roofs.

      Oil pipeline operator Transneft said it had halted crude shipments out of Novorossiysk, but that its infrastructure in the port had been unaffected by the weather.

     "Of course, we limited shipments, the port is located in the lower part of town, the whole landslide has moved towards it. As we speak, the rain has started again," spokesman Vladimir Sidorov told Reuters news agency.

Mexicans challenge Pena Nieto's victory in huge march

Tens of thousands of Mexicans march along Avenida Reforma in the capital 

       Tens of thousands of people in Mexico City are demonstrating against the result of the presidential election, which was won by Enrique Pena Nieto. 

     The demonstrators, who are not necessarily linked to any particular party, say the vote was not fair.

    They accuse Mr Pena Nieto's party, the PRI, of buying votes; some carried banners saying "Not another fraud".

     Mr Pena Nieto, who was declared the winner after a recount of nearly half the votes, denies the allegation.

     The second-placed candidate in Mexico's presidential election, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, has said he will mount a legal challenge to the result.

    He said he would prove that illicit money was used to buy votes in the 1 July poll and secure the victory of centrist candidate Enrique Pena Nieto, who denies this.

 Supermarket votes

        Six years ago, after losing the presidential election by a narrow margin, the left-wing Mr Lopez Obrador led weeks of protests that caused disruption in central areas of Mexico City.

       Mr Pena Nieto was confirmed the winner on Friday after a final recount, with 38.21% to Mr Lopez Obrador's 31.59%.

      Third-placed Josefina Vazquez Mota, from the right-wing National Action Party, has admitted defeat.

     But the BBC's Will Grant in Mexico City says there is a broad spread of people, not necessarily from the left, who feel that votes in their parts of Mexico were tampered with.

     But Mr Lopez Obrador, of the Party of the Democratic Revolution, said the election had been fraudulent and that he would file an appeal next week.

    He accuses the party of Mr Pena Nieto, the Institutional Revolutionary Party, of paying for votes using gift cards for a supermarket chain.

    Numerous videos have emerged of people claiming they received credit in exchange for voting for the PRI.

    The party governed Mexico for 71 years until it was defeated in the 2000 presidential poll.

 

 

Afghanistan: Hamid Karzai urges support for 'progress'



        Afghan Finance Minister Omar Zakhilwal remains optimistic about the future of his country's economy

       Afghan President Hamid Karzai has urged international donors to continue giving aid to his country in order to safeguard political and economic gains made since the fall of the Taliban.

      He was speaking at a conference in Tokyo on how to support Afghanistan after foreign forces leave in 2014.

      Donors at the meeting pledged to give $16bn (£10.3bn) in civilian aid over four years.

      There are fears Afghanistan may relapse into chaos after the Nato pullout.

       The Afghan economy relies heavily on international development and military assistance. The World Bank says aid makes up more than 95% of Afghanistan's GDP.

        In return for the promised funds, donors are seeking assurances on good governance and transparency, to ensure funds are not lost through corruption.
 
       In his opening remarks, Afghan President Hamid Karzai pledged to "fight corruption with strong resolve

'Fragile'

       He said that despite the progress made in the past 10 years, Afghanistan's economy remained vulnerable and security a major obstacle.

      "It will take many years of hard work on our part as Afghans, as well as continued empowering support from our international partners before Afghanistan can achieve prosperity and self-reliance," he said.

       "We must do what we can to deepen the roots of security and make the transition irreversible."
President Karzai: "Afghanistan remains vulnerable as 
our economy continues to be underdeveloped"

\     UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon echoed Mr Karzai's remarks, saying progress in Afghanistan remained "fragile".

       "Failure to invest in governance, justice, human rights, employment and social development could negate investment and sacrifices that have been made over the last 10 years," said Mr Ban.

        US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stressed the need for reform to safeguard changes achieved in Afghanistan.

       "That must include fighting corruption, improving governance, strengthening the rule of law, increasing access to economic opportunity for all Afghans, especially for women," she said.

         The Tokyo conference is being attended by high-level delegates from more than 70 nations and international organisations.

       Participants have promised $4bn in annual aid between 2012 and 2015, Japanese and US officials said.

      But in return, they are seeking to ensure mechanisms are set to up monitor the Afghan government's progress on improving governance and combating endemic corruption.

Military support


     The civilian aid sought in Tokyo comes on top of $4.1bn in military assistance for Afghanistan's armed forces pledged by a summit of Nato leaders in Chicago in May.
US soldiers in the eastern Afghan province of Konar on 2 July 2012 

        According to plans endorsed at the Chicago meeting, Nato-led forces will hand over combat command to Afghan forces by mid-2013, followed by a withdrawal of combat troops by the end of 2014. After that, only training units will remain.

       Speaking during a brief stop-over in Kabul on her way to Tokyo on Saturday, Mrs Clinton announced that the US had given Kabul the status of "major non-Nato ally".

      The a move is seen as another signal aimed at allaying Afghan fears about waning Western support.

      The designation as major non-Nato ally, which already includes close US allies such as Australia and Israel, gives Kabul easier access to advanced US military technology and streamlines defence co-operation between the countries.

      The last country to be granted the status was Pakistan in 2004.
In May, US President Barack Obama and his Afghan counterpart, Hamid Karzai, signed a 10-year strategic partnership agreement outlining military and civil ties between the countries after 2014.

 

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Microsoft in $6.2bn writedown of Aquantive

Microsoft logo 

         Microsoft is taking a $6.2bn (£4bn) charge on the value of an online advertising firm bought five years ago. 

         Microsoft bought Aquantive for $6.3bn cash in an attempt to catch rival Google in the race to grow revenues from search-related advertising.

          The writedown effectively wipes out the acquisition's value, although there was little impact on Microsoft's shares in after-hours trading on Monday.

          The purchase of Aquantive in 2007 was then Microsoft's biggest acquisition.

          The company said in a statement on Monday that "the acquisition did not accelerate growth to the degree anticipated, contributing to the writedown".

          The charge is likely to wipe out any profit for the company's fourth quarter. Wall Street was expecting Microsoft to report fourth-quarter net profit of about $5.25bn on 19 July.

            In addition to the charge, Microsoft said its forecast for future growth and profitability at its online services arm - which includes the Bing search engine and MSN internet portal - are "lower than previous estimates".

 

Afghan policeman kills three British soldiers

              Three British soldiers have been killed by a policeman in southern Afghanistan, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) has said

       Two served with the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards and one with the Royal Corps of Signals. Next of kin have been told.

        The MoD said the soldiers were shot and fatally wounded on Sunday as they left a checkpoint in
       Helmand province. The gunman was injured and later detained.

         More than 20 foreign personnel have been killed in rogue shootings in Afghanistan this year.
Such shootings are sometimes referred to as "green on blue" attacks because of the colours representing Afghan (green) and Nato (blue) forces.

        The soldiers were part of a Nato-led Isaf force who have been training Afghan counterparts ahead of a handover of security responsibility by 2014.

        The shooting happened at Checkpoint Kamparack Pul in Nahr-e-Saraj, where the soldiers were attending a meeting of elders.

        They were shot as they were leaving the checkpoint.

         Sources told the BBC a fourth British soldier was injured in the shooting but was not seriously hurt.
Prime Minister David Cameron said he was "deeply saddened by the appalling news".

           "This tragic incident again demonstrates the very real risks that our brave soldiers face every day. We will do everything possible to find out how this happened, and learn any lessons for the future," he said in a statement.

            Leader of the Opposition, Ed Miliband, told the Commons the deaths reminded them of "our duty to do everything we can to protect" UK troops.

           Defence Secretary Philip Hammond signalled that the killings would not prompt an overall change of strategy.

            He said: "Every day, tens of thousands of coalition forces, including UK personnel, live and work successfully with their Afghan counterparts to build an Afghan police force and Army which can take the lead for their own security by the end of 2014.

            "That process will continue, and though deeply tragic, yesterday's incident and attacks like it will not derail the mission or distract us from the task in hand."

            His sentiments were echoed by Nato secretary-general Anders Fogh Rasmussen said who said the Taliban had "played out a strategy" to undermine confidence in the Afghan security forces but he stressed that the insurgents could not "derail" his organisation's strategy.

            BBC defence correspondent Caroline Wyatt said that background checks are carried out on Afghan troops and police in a bid to ensure that people are not sympathetic to insurgent factions.

            But Mark Cann, spokesman for the British Forces Foundation charity, said soldiers were worried about how Afghan colleagues, particularly police, were vetted.

        'More cautious'

         And the BBC's Quentin Sommerville said the shooting, and other "green on blue" killings, meant the trust between international troops and their Afghan counterparts was diminished.

         "It makes everybody a little more cautious," he said.

          "They [Isaf soldiers] need to know that the man standing to their left and their right is someone they can trust and with these kinds of incidents that has deteriorated."

           The deaths were announced by a spokesman for Task Force Helmand who said: "Their loss will be felt deeply across the task force. However, that will be nothing compared with the grief experienced by their families at home.

          "Our thoughts and prayers are with them at this extremely difficult time."

          The attack appears to be the latest in a string of flashpoints in which members of the Afghan security or police forces have opened fire on international allies.

            The latest deaths mean a total of 26 Isaf personnel have been killed so far this year, compared with 35 for the whole of 2011.

           A total of 14 British troops have been killed in the past three years in Green on Blue attacks.

          In February, public opinion against the foreign forces in Afghanistan was inflamed by revelations that US troops burned copies of the Koran at a base in Afghanistan - reportedly by accident.

          The shooting of 16 Afghans by a US soldier in March has also created resentment.



Libya: ICC staff held in Zintan released

Lawyer Melinda Taylor (R) and translator Helene Assaf after their release (2 July) 

          Four staff members from the International Criminal Court (ICC) held in Libya for four weeks on suspicion of spying have been released.

        The announcement came during a visit to Libya by ICC president Sang-Hyun Song.

       The team had been accused of spying while visiting Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of the deposed Libyan leader, in the town of Zintan.

        A senior member of the Libyan attorney-general's office confirmed to the BBC that the four would be leaving Libya.

         "They are due to face the courts here in Tripoli for the final ruling" on 23 July, the source said.

         "We expect them to come back for the hearing but if they don't, a ruling will be made in absentia," the source added.

      Coded documents

           Mr Song offered an apology to the Libyan authorities for the "difficulties" caused by the mission.
In a news conference organised in Zintan, Mr Song also thanked the Libyan authorities for arranging the "release of the four ICC staff to be re-united with their families".

         Mr Song also "expressed his relief that the ICC staff members were well treated during their detention".
         The ICC employees had been accused of jeopardising Libya's national security, the BBC's Rana Jawad in Tripoli reports.

          One of the four, Australian lawyer Melinda Taylor, was accused of passing Saif al-Islam coded documents, allegedly written by his former right-hand man, during the team's visit.

          Ms Taylor and her Lebanese colleague Helene Assaf, a translator, were then formally detained.

         Their two other colleagues, Russian Alexander Khodakov and Spaniard Esteban Peralta Losilla, remained with them out of solidarity.

          Last week, the ICC promised in a statement to investigate any claims of wrongdoing by its staff upon their release and to impose "appropriate sanctions" if necessary.

         Ms Taylor was appointed by the ICC to help prepare the defence of Saif al-Islam, who was captured by the Zintan militia last November as he tried to flee the country.

         The Zintan militia have refused to hand Saif al-Islam over to Tripoli, while the Libyan government is rejecting ICC demands to try him in The Hague.

         Some have expressed concern that Saif al-Islam may not face a fair trial in Libya.

          He was previously considered to be heir apparent to his father, Col Muammar Gaddafi, who was overthrown last year following a popular uprising and Nato air campaign mandated by the UN to protect Libyan civilians.

         Col Gaddafi himself was killed after being captured during an assault on his hometown of Sirte in October.

 

Does being big on Twitter help you land a good job?


        What's the best way to impress employers - having tons of Twitter followers, or a flashy CV? Go for big-name companies and prestige every time, advises Lucy Kellaway of the Financial Times.

           If you asked me about my working life, I would tell you that I've worked at the Financial Times for a quarter of a century. If pressed further, I might reveal (depending on who was asking) that long ago I worked briefly for JPMorgan. I might also add that I went to Oxford University.

          Yet according to a blog on the Harvard Business Review website, this sort of institutional name-dropping is not only vain and superficial, it has outlived its usefulness.

           Prestige simply isn't as prestigious as it used to be.

           For a start many of the big names aren't looking so impressive any more. We don't revere Goldman Sachs or News Corp or McKinsey in the same way we used to.
           And social networks mean we no longer have to rely on the names of institutions to do our signalling for us - we can do it ourselves.

          The upshot is that young people should stop scrambling over each other for jobs at Bain and Morgan Stanley - all such big names do is pigeonhole people. The only true way to stand out is to stop focusing on who you are working for, and think of what you are doing instead.

         This blog is one of the most cheering things I've read in ages.
   
        Or rather it would be cheering if it weren't for the fact that it is completely wrong.

         Of course it is achievements that count. The trouble is, most people, apart from a few entrepreneurs, haven't really achieved anything terribly tangible. If you are Mark Zuckerberg you don't need big names on your CV. The rest of us do.

         Far from getting less important, flashy affiliations are now more important than ever. This is partly because the job market is so bad that everyone needs all the help they can get. But it's also because getting these good jobs and good degrees is harder than it used to be.

JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, News Corp

          In my day what counted was breeding and luck, with effort and skill lagging far behind. Now the order is reversed.

         Anybody who has got a job at Goldman and held on to it for a decade has achieved something that might not be socially valuable, but offers conclusive proof that the person is bright and hardworking - as well as possibly arrogant and greedy.
          Neither do social networks make affiliations redundant. The more information there is out there, the more we need a few decent names on a CV as a shortcut.

         And I fail to see how being big on Twitter makes you attractive to future employers. Surely it just tells them you spend more time composing silly little messages than working.

        So I would advise the ambitious to go for prestige every time. Of course it is shallow and unfair, but it works.

         Having a prestigious employer already is a great help in finding a new one. And the great thing about such affiliations is that even if they don't impress others (which they do, mostly) they may impress yourself.
In my experience these mighty institutions work well as comfort blankets, wombs and crutches, all roles that are generally frowned on - but wrongly so. I'm a huge fan of all three.

 

Barclays boss Bob Diamond resigns amid Libor scandal

Barclays chief executive Bob Diamond


          Barclays chief executive Bob Diamond has resigned with immediate effect. 

        The move comes less than a week after the bank was fined a record amount for trying to manipulate inter-bank lending rates.

         Mr Diamond said he was stepping down because the external pressure on the bank risked "damaging the franchise".

          Chancellor George Osborne welcomed the decision and said he hoped it was the "first step towards a new culture of responsibility in British banking".

          "It is the right decision for the country," Mr Osborne said, saying the country needed a strong Barclays concentrating on lending and contributing to economic recovery.

          Chairman Marcus Agius, who had announced his own resignation on Monday, will now take over the running of Barclays until a replacement is found.

         "I am deeply disappointed that the impression created by the events announced last week about what Barclays and its people stand for could not be further from the truth," Mr Diamond said in a statement.

         He will still appear before MPs on the Treasury Committee on Wednesday to answer questions about the Libor affair.





         "I look forward to fulfilling my obligation to contribute to the Treasury Committee's enquiries related to the settlements that Barclays announced last week without my leadership in question," Mr Diamond said.

          The Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, told the BBC that Mr Diamond's resignation was "the right decision".

         "There are many questions to be answered about the rate fixing and Barclays will have to answer many of those questions," said Mr Alexander.

          "Responsibility has been taken in the right way. Hopefully this will help Barclays to establish the right culture in the future."

      Resignation calls

         Last week, regulators in the US and UK fined Barclays £290m ($450m) for attempting to rig Libor and Euribor, the interest rates at which banks lend to each other, which underpin trillions of pounds worth of financial transactions.






            Staff did this over a number of years, trying to raise them for profit and then, during the financial crisis, lowering them to hide the level to which Barclays was under financial stress.

           Prime Minister David Cameron, who has launched an inquiry into banking standards, has described the rigging of Libor rates as "a scandal".

          The Serious Fraud Office is also considering whether to bring criminal charges.
After Mr Agius announced his resignation on Monday, politicians and shareholders continued to call for Mr Diamond to go.

           Responding to Mr Diamond's departure, opposition leader Ed Miliband said: "It was clear Bob Diamond was not the man to lead the change that Barclays needed."

            He repeated Labour's criticism of the terms of the parliamentary inquiry, to be led by the head of the    
            Treasury Committee, that the government announced this week.

            "This is about the culture and practices of the entire banking system which is why we need an independent, open, judge-led, public inquiry."
Mr Diamond, one of the UK's highest paid chief executives, was head of Barclays Capital, its investment bank division, when his staff were trying to manipulate the key inter-bank rates.

          "He maintains that he didn't know what was going on," says BBC business editor Robert Peston. "He feels he was hounded out."

          It emerged over the weekend that Mr Diamond spoke to the deputy governor of the Bank of England Andrew Tucker about Barclays' Libor submissions at the height of the credit crunch in 2008.

         The details of that telephone conversation will be an important area of questioning at this week's hearing of the Treasury Committee.

          Barclays' managers came to believe, after the conversation between Mr Diamond and Mr Tucker, that the Bank of England had sanctioned them to lie about what they were paying to borrow when providing data to the committees that set the Libor rate.

 

La Barbe: France's bearded feminists

The Grand Orient


     A group of French feminists has found a new way to fight inequality - with sarcastic humour and fake beards. Only rarely is there a violent response.

         Colette Coffin unzipped her handbag and pulled out a small piece of artificial fur. "This is my speaking beard," she explains.

       "I've got a much bushier one but this has a wider hole so I can talk without getting too much fluff in my mouth."

       Deftly, she hooks the string loops around her ears and turns to face me. The effect is bizarre. With the little ginger triangle on her chin, the schoolteacher wearing a prim summer dress resembles a wannabe Lenin.

       Ilana Eloit, a political sciences student in jeans, shows me her beard. It matches her long dark hair perfectly but she complains it is "very itchy".
Glancing around, she stuffs it back into her bag under the table. "We don't want to give the game away yet," she says.

        As dusk falls, I sit at a pavement cafe in an upmarket neighbourhood in Paris with a dozen members of the direct action feminist group, La Barbe.

        The name comes from the group's pantomime style of protest. Its members infiltrate high-level, male-dominated meetings. In due course they get to their feet and silently don false beards before one of them reads out an ironic statement congratulating the men on their supremacy.

       The emphasis on facial hair ridicules antiquated male attitudes. "It's meant to be 'ringard'," says Ilana.
        "How would you translate that? Maybe 'corny' or 'behind the times'? You see, in the days of the Third Republic, all the great men used to wear big beards. That was the end of the 19th Century but not much has changed in the way many men behave and think in France."

       In colloquial French, La Barbe also means "enough is enough". The group includes women of all ages from teenagers to grandmothers. They come from a variety of backgrounds and say they are united by a determination to fight entrenched sexism.
        La Barbe was set up four years ago in the wake of the last presidential elections when, for the first time, one of the mainstream parties fielded a female candidate for the top job in French politics.
Ultimately the Socialist candidate Segolene Royal lost out to Nicolas Sarkozy of the centre-right. Now Royal's ex-partner, Francois Hollande, the man she lived with for 25 years, is president.
      
      Women in Hollande's government 
            Back in 2007, many women complained about male chauvinism in the press and on the campaign trail. When Royal announced her decision to stand, some of the most dismissive remarks were made by her own party colleagues. Laurent Fabius, who ran against her, publicly asked who would look after her children if she went for the presidency.

       Since then La Barbe has targeted political parties, shareholder meetings of big businesses and other institutions which they see as male-dominated.
Cannes Festival protest 
       No films by women? "Marvellous!", "Thank you!"
Recently the group made global headlines when members crashed the Cannes Film Festival. On the red carpet normally reserved for glamorous stars in designer dresses, five bearded women posed with signs which read "Marvellous!" ''Thank you!" ''Splendid!" and ''Incredible!"

        They were angry that none of the 22 films selected for the official competition was directed by a woman.
"Generally, feminist happenings are all about women," says Colette.

        "But we focus on men because the problem for us is not women, it's men.

        "Our idea is to create a mirror effect to show a male-dominated situation which highlights the invisibility of women."

        On this particular evening, the group had invited me to witness a protest at the headquarters of the French Freemasons, the Grand Orient de France, which was founded in 1733.

         I wondered why they had picked on the masons. For many years, the Grand Orient would not allow its lodges to initiate women, but this changed in 2010.

        "You see, there was a huge conflict," says Colette. "It wasn't easy at all. That proposition was adopted at something like 51% of the lodge, but it was tough and many of them are still fiercely opposed to women."

        At intervals, members of La Barbe walk into the masons temple on the Rue Cadet, ostensibly to hear a public lecture entitled "What sort of secular morality for what kind of Republic?"

        I follow them into a hall decorated with neo-classical columns and red velvet curtains. In front of a huge bust of Marianne - a symbol of the French Republic - four men are seated on a low stage.

        The presentation was characterised by impossibly long Gallic sentences and a succession of rhetorical questions. I try hard to concentrate but my mind starts to wander.

      After 15 minutes, the first bearded lady gets to her feet.

La Barbe activist in Freemason's lodge
    
       Several more follow suit but the speaker, the director of a religious affairs institute, pretends not to notice. Members of the audience began to whisper and crane their necks.

        Finally the women climb on to the stage. Colette stands at the lectern and reads out a brief statement praising the masons for their tireless work in excluding women for so many years.

       With the usual irony she asks how some heretical lodges could be permitted to accept "sisters" after a battle lasting three centuries. Guy Arcizet, the Grand Master of the Lodge, looks uncomfortable but tries to smile and insists that he is all in favour of freedom of expression.

Colette's speech (excerpt)

Colette's speech

      Out of the corner of my eye, I see a door opening at the other end of the hall and a security man appears. It is clear he is not amused and his face begins to twitch.
      Having made their point, the women are preparing a dignified departure but then a student supporter begins taking pictures. Suddenly the gloves came off.
The young man's camera is ripped from his hands and the women are jostled and pushed out of the hall by about 10 men. Some belong to the security service of the Grand Orient. Others are apparently members of the masonic lodge.
     When I asked why so much force is being used, a plainclothes security man seizes me by the shoulder and tries to drag me down the corridor. Then he snatches my mobile phone.
    Colette emerges from the fracas with broken glasses and a large purple bruise on her shoulder. Other members of the group show me cuts and scratches on their hands and arms. They too had their phones and handbags confiscated.

      "They had no right to invade our privacy," says one of the masons. Another man, sweating profusely, is trying to calm the situation but his impassioned pleas only make things worse.
By the time I get downstairs, there are four police cars in the street outside.

     "Over the past four years we have done nearly 100 actions but this is the first time we've had to press charges for assault," says a badly shaken Colette.

     I asked the French Freemasons for a comment on the incident, but they were unable to provide one.
La Barbe pride themselves on their sense of humour but there is real anger behind their antics.
The gender wars in France have been exacerbated recently by the Dominique Strauss Kahn scandal which exposed a time-honoured practice in France of hushing-up or shrugging off sexual advances by powerful men.
Then, in the dying days of the Sarkozy presidency, a decision by the constitutional council to scrap France's sexual harassment law sparked outrage. This judgment meant that all ongoing cases not yet ruled on in court would be thrown out leaving many victims with no legal protection.
The law was repealed after a complaint that it was "too vague" by a former deputy mayor in the southern Rhone region, who had been sentenced to three months in prison and a 5,000 euro (£4,020) fine for sexually harassing three employees.

     "On the plus side," says Ilana, "Hollande's new government has a record number of women, even if they control few of the most important ministries. But we suspect it is tokenism, because most of the top civil servants behind the scenes are men."

      Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, the first French women's rights minister since the 1980s, has promised a revised sexual harassment law will be presented to the new parliament within the next few weeks.
She admits that France has slipped down all international rankings on equal rights, and has vowed to promote gender equality.

 

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