Category Archives: Uncategorized

Τις πρόσβαλαν και ξεκίνησαν δίαιτα. Μητέρα και κόρη έχασαν 108 κιλά

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Ξεκίνησαν δίαιτα την ίδια ημέρα, χωρίς η μία να γνωρίζει για την απόφαση της άλλης, και στην επόμενη συνάντησή τους ήταν δύσκολο να αναγνωρίσει η μητέρα την κόρη.

Η υπέρβαρη μητέρα που ζει στο Swadlincote της Βρετανίας και η κόρη της που ζει στο Birmingham δημοσίοευσαν μία φωτογραφία μαζί και δέχθηκαν ένα προσβλητικό σχόλιο. Χωρίς να πει τίποτα η μία στην άλλη, ξεκίνησαν δίαιτα με αποτέλεσμα να χάσουν συνολικά 108 κιλά και να φτιάξουν σώμα… μοντέλου.

Η 22χρονη Amber ξεκίνησε δίαιτα όταν δούλευε το καλοκαίρι σε μία κατασκήνωση παιδιών και άκουσε κάποιους να μιλάνε για μία τσάντα, ένας από την παρέα ρώτησε ποιανού είναι αυτή η τσάντα και κάποιος απάντησης εκείνης της «ξανθιάς χοντρής», αυτό το περιστατικό στάθηκε η αφορμή να πάει στο γυμναστήριο να βελτιώσει τη διατροφή της και σε περίπου ένα χρόνο να χάσει περισσότερα από 50 κιλά.

Την ίδια ημέρα η 50χρονη μητέρα της, είδε φωτογραφία της στο facebook να τραγουδάει karaoke και ξεκίνησε δίαιτα.

Η 22χρονη, λέει ότι τρώει τώρα ένα καλό πρωινό που περιλαμβάνει ομελέτα, άσπρο κρέας και σαλάτα για γεύμα και δείπνο με υψηλή περιεκτικότητα πρωτεϊνών.

H οικογένεια, όπως αναφέρουν συγκεντρώνεται μία φορά κάθε μερικούς μήνες και ήταν τεράστια έκπληξη όταν στην συνάντησή τους διαπίστωσαν πόσα κιλά είχαν χάσει και οι δύο. Η 22χρονη, λέει ότι τώρα μπορεί να κάνει πράξη το όνειρό της να ασχοληθεί με τη μόδα.

Πηγή:madata.gr

Κέρκυρα: Μυστηριώδες πλάσμα σε θαλάσσια σπηλιά!

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Μοιραία έτσι ήρθαν και οι συγκρίσεις με το θρυλικό τέρας του Λοχ Νες στα Highlands της Σκωτίας.

«Δεν έχω ιδέα για το τι θα μπορούσε να ήταν και δεν έχω δει ποτέ ξανά κάτι παρόμοιο. Ίσως να είναι κάτι σαν το δικό μας Λοχ Νες ή κάποιο πλάσμα από την ελληνική μυθολογία», ανέφερε ο Robertson στην Daily Mail, συμπληρώνοντας: «Εκείνη τη στιγμή δεν κατάλαβα τι φωτογράφισα. Ήθελα να βγάλω μόνο το νερό, καθώς το χρώμα του ήταν μοναδικό».

Σχολιάζοντας το δημοσίευμα, ο βιολόγος και πρώην αντιπρόεδρος του ΕΛΚΕΘΕ Κώστας Παπακωνσταντίνου απορρίπτει τις… τερατολογίες και τονίζει: «Θα μπορούσε να είναι μόνο κάποιο είδος φάλαινας που έχει εντοπιστεί στις ελληνικές θάλασσες, ενδεχομένως φυσητήρας».

Πηγή:madata.gr

Reuters: Ευρωπαϊκό «χαστούκι» στην Τουρκία για δικαιοσύνη, ΜΜΕ, δικαιώματα

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Η έκθεση της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσης για την Τουρκία, που δεν έχει δοθεί στη δημοσιότητα ενόψει των προεδρικών εκλογών της 1ης Νοεμβρίου στη χώρα αυτή, κατηγορεί την Άγκυρα για «πισωγυρίσματα» όσον αφορά το κράτος δικαίου, την ελευθερία της έκφρασης και την ανεξαρτησία της δικαιοσύνης, σύμφωνα με το πρακτορείο Reuters.

Στο προσχέδιο της ετήσιας έκθεσης προόδου για την ένταξη της Τουρκίας στην ΕΕ, το οποίο είδε το πρακτορείο Reuters, γίνεται επίσης λόγος για σοβαρή επιδείνωση της κατάστασης όσον αφορά την ασφάλεια και για εντεινόμενη πολιτικοποίηση της κρατικής διοίκησης.

Οι Βρυξέλλες, που προσπαθούν να εξασφαλίσουν τη βοήθεια του Τούρκου προέδρου Ρετζέπ Ταγίπ Ερντογάν για να σταματήσουν τις προσφυγικές ροές από τη Συρία και άλλες χώρες προς την Ευρώπη, επιμένουν ότι δεν καθυστέρησαν τη δημοσιοποίηση της έκθεσης για πολιτικούς λόγους.

Επαφίεται, όπως λένε αξιωματούχοι, στον πρόεδρο της Ευρωπαϊκής Επιτροπής Ζαν-Κλοντ Γιούνκερ να αποφασίσει πότε θα εγκριθούν και θα δοθούν στη δημοσιότητα οι εκθέσεις για τις υποψήφιες προς ένταξη χώρες.

«Η απερχόμενη κυβέρνηση έχει καταβάλει προσπάθειες να αναζωογονήσει τη διαδικασία ένταξης. Ωστόσο, αυτή η δέσμευση αντισταθμίστηκε από την υιοθέτηση νόμων στους τομείς του κράτους δικαίου, της ελευθερίας της έκφρασης και της ελευθερίας του συγκεντρώνεσθαι που αντίκεινται στα ευρωπαϊκά πρότυπα» αναφέρεται στο κείμενο.

«Η κατάσταση έχει αναστραφεί από το 2014. Η ανεξαρτησία της δικαιοσύνης και ο διαχωρισμός εξουσιών έχουν υπονομευτεί και οι δικαστές και οι εισαγγελείς βρέθηκαν κάτω από ισχυρές πολιτικές πιέσεις» συνεχίζει η έκθεση.

Όταν ρωτήθηκε για το προσχέδιο, ένας εκπρόσωπος της Ευρωπαϊκής Επιτροπής είπε ότι δεν μπορεί να σχολιάσει «την ουσία της έκθεσης» δεδομένου ότι το έγγραφο αυτό δεν έχει ακόμη υιοθετηθεί.
Πηγή που έχει γνώση του εγγράφου είπε ότι το κείμενο που επικαλείται το πρακτορείο Ρόιτερς είχε γραφτεί πριν από την επίσκεψη της καγκελαρίου της Γερμανίας Άνγκελα Μέρκελ στην Κωνσταντινούπολη για συνομιλίες με τον Ερντογάν, στις 18 Οκτωβρίου.

Πηγή:in.gr

Olympiakos spared home loss to Platanias in Cup

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Platanias became the first Greek team to avoid defeat from Olympiakos this season, drawing 2-2 in Piraeus on Wednesday for the group stage of the Greek Cup.

In fact it was Olympiakos, featuring many second-choice players, which avoided defeat to Platanias, as it only managed to equalize in injury time via Hernani, scorer also of Olympiakos’s first equalizer early in the second half. Platanias had led twice with Leonardo Ramos and Banana Yaya.

In this first round of group games when Super League teams faced each other in the four-team pools that also include two teams each from the Football League, Panathinaikos recovered from its 3-1 loss at PAOK for the league on Sunday to see off Levadiakos 3-0 at home, with Sotiris Ninis, Stathis Tavlaridis and Viktor Klonaridis on the scoresheet.

With Uruguayan manager Gus Poyet – formerly of Sunderland – already in Athens preparing to take over at AEK, caretaking coach Stelios Manolas led AEK to a 1-0 away win at Xanthi on Wednesday, through a second-half goal by Macauley Chrisantus.

PAOK needed the introduction of some of its top-pick players to defeat Panthrakikos 2-0 at home, goals coming from Dimitris Pelkas and Robert Mak.

Panionios beat Panetolikos at Agrinio for the second time within a few weeks. After its 4-0 league triumph, the Super League’s surprise package beat Panetolikos again, this time 2-1 on Wednesday.

In other games it was Asteras Tripolis 4 Kalloni Lesvou 0, Panserraikos 0 Kissamikos 0, Atromitos 2 Veria 2, Kallithea 2 Lamia 1, Apollon Smyrnis 3 Panaigialios 1, Kerkyra 1 Panachaiki 1, Zakynthos 2 Ergotelis 2, and Anagennisi Karditsas 0 Acharnaikos 1.

On Thursday PAS Giannina hosts Iraklis, Olympiakos Volou greets Hania and Panelefsiniakos meets Larissa.

source:ekathimerini.com

Jose Mourinho will be on touchline for Chelsea’s clash with Liverpool even if he accepts misconduct charge

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Football – Stoke City v Chelsea – Capital One Cup Fourth Round – Britannia Stadium – 27/10/15
Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho and assistant coaches Rui Faria and Steve Holland
Action Images via Reuters / Alex Morton

Chelsea manager must wait until a three-member disciplinary commission sits to decide on charge which might not be until early November.

Jose Mourinho will be on the touchline for Chelsea’s Premier League clash against Liverpool this weekend, even if he accepts a misconduct charge on Thursday for allegedly verbally abusing referee Jon Moss during the 2-1 defeat at West Ham last Saturday.

Is Jose Mourinho to blame for champions’ failings?

Mourinho has until 6pm on Thursday to respond to the charge, which is unrelated to the £50,000 fine and suspended stadium ban he received for publicly criticising referee Robert Madley by claiming referees are ‘afraid to give Chelsea decisions’ following the home defeat against Southampton earlier this month.

But with the Football Association regarding Mourinho’s latest brush with authority as a ‘non-standard’ case, the Portuguese must wait until a three-member disciplinary commission sits to decide on the charge and any potential punishment.

And with no fast-track policy in place for non-standard cases, it is understood that Mourinho could be forced to wait until mid-November before discovering his fate,

With Chelsea in Champions League action against Dynamo Kiev at Stamford Bridge next Wednesday, the earliest likely date for a hearing would be the following day – Thursday 5 November – and Mourinho could face anything from a fine to a lengthy stadium ban should the commission uphold the charge.

Mourinho is facing his latest charge after allegedly confronting referee Moss and berating the official during the half-time interval at Upton Park, moments after the dismissal of midfielder Nemanja Matic for two yellow cards and coach Silvino Louro for his reaction to that decision.

Chelsea face Liverpool at Stamford Bridge this weekend after suffering nine defeats, including the Community Shield loss to Arsenal, in all competitions this season.

And if Chelsea suffer a 10th defeat against Jurgen Klopp’s team which sees Mourinho lose his job as manager, any FA punishment for the Moss incident will be applied whenever, and wherever, he returns to management, with Fifa likely to be asked ensure the sanction is upheld worldwide.

source:telegraph.co.uk

China warns Australia over naval standoff

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A senior officer and military expert in the People’s Liberation Army has warned Australia not to escalate tensions in the South China Sea by following the lead of the United States and beginning naval operations close to reefs claimed by Beijing.

Senior Colonel Li Jie, a military expert at the PLA, said Australia’s involvement would “only bring trouble,” and Canberra should not become involved.

His comments follow a US mission earlier this week, in which guided-missile destroyer USS Lassen sailed within 12 nautical miles of Subi Reef in the Spratly archipelago, where China has been constructing islands with ports, fuel storage depots and airstrips.

The area, which is a vital trade corridor and rich in oil, gas and fisheries, is subject to a complicated web of territorial disputes involving the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan.

The US, concerned about China’s aggressive moves to enforce its territorial claims, had been indicating for weeks it would conduct the sail-through. The so-called “freedom of navigation” operation was aimed at asserting the right of ships to pass through international waters.

Two PLA warships tracked, monitored and warned the USS Lassen but the sail-through was completed without incident.

Colonel Li said if the US continued to conduct sail-throughs close to the islands, the possibility of a skirmish “could not be excluded”.

“They infringed on China’s sovereignty and went against China’s maritime interests,” he said. “We will take strong measures to resolve this.”

“It is not in Australia’s interest to become involved,” he said.

Australian defence planners have reportedly drawn up contingency plans for a possible sail-through of the contested waters in support of the US, but the government has no immediate intention to carry them out. Rather, it is taking part in some joint exercises with Chinese warships over the next week.

Two Australian naval frigates will visit Zhanjiang in Guangdong province, this weekend, as part of a confidence-building exercise.

“There have been no changes or delays to the schedule of the HMAS Arunta and HMAS Stuart since the United States activity in the South China Sea,” a spokesman for Defence Minister Marise Payne said in emailed comments on Thursday.

“The Royal Australian Navy has a long history of engagement with regional navies and regularly conducts port visits and exercises – including in China.”

The spokesman did not comment on whether Australia was planning to conduct its own sail-through of the contested waters around the Spratlys.

“As they do now, Australian vessels and aircraft will continue to exercise rights under international law to freedom of navigation and freedom of overflight,” he said.
source:afr.com

China Pushes Back Against U.S. Influence in the Seas of East Asia

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People’s Liberation Army Navy sailors in Hong Kong in July. The Chinese Coast Guard is growing drastically, and now has the world’s largest cutter, a 10,000-metric-ton vessel.

BEIJING — Much more is at stake in the American decision to challenge China by sending a destroyer near islands it built in the South China Sea than a handful of rocks, even if they sit on major shipping lines and deposits of natural resources

China, analysts say, is seeking to establish a sphere of influence in these waters — and edge out the United States.

What that means — whether it represents a crisis, or a natural and inevitable shift given China’s economic strength — depends on whom you ask. But there is little doubt that China is thinking big about how these islands could limit America’s military options, about how control over these waters could give it leverage over key trade routes and about how making the United States look hapless could strengthen its diplomatic clout in the region.

“They have a game plan; it is very clear what it is,” said Christopher K. Johnson, senior adviser on China at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington at a recent seminar. “Sometimes, I think it is easy to get lost in the weeds on what has been built on which island.”

On late Monday, the United States sent a guided missile destroyer into waters near one of the artificial islands, Subi Reef, that China considers its territory. China promptly called the naval patrol a “deliberate provocation.”

The construction of the islands, which has also involved building military installations and runways, shows how China is determined to push back the United States’ post-World War II alliance system, some experts say.

The United States sent ships and planes to the Taiwan Strait with impunity during a crisis 20 years ago in what was considered a strategic backyard for American forces. It would be much more difficult today for the United States to act in the same manner, Mr. Johnson said.

To achieve its goals, China is spending heavily on its navy, including on nuclear-powered submarines. The construction of a second aircraft carrier is underway to supplement the first carrier, launched in 2012. Its Coast Guard is growing rapidly and now has the world’s largest cutter, a 10,000-metric-ton vessel built at the Jiangnan Shipyard, where its builders nicknamed it the “monster.”

Shipbuilding for China’s Coast Guard is so robust that the fleet now has more than three times as many ships than had been planned just a few years ago, said Ryan D. Martinson, research administrator at the China Maritime Studies Institute at the United States Naval War College in Newport, R.I.

The buildup of maritime power means China, traditionally a continental power, is transforming its capabilities in an effort to secure its interests along the vital sea lanes that pass from the South China Sea through the Strait of Malacca and across the Indian Ocean to Africa and the Middle East into Europe. Much of China’s commercial trade and energy supplies travel that route.

How the South China Sea would operate with a dominant China is a matter of debate.

Does China want to threaten foreign powers with force if they intervene, a model fashioned after the Monroe Doctrine, asked M. Taylor Fravel, associate professor of political science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. If the goal was to try to exclude the United States, then China’s actions so far have been counterproductive, he said.

Mr. Fravel suggested that the free flow of shipping through the South China Sea was not incompatible with greater Chinese influence in the region.

“If the attraction of China’s economy and of Chinese investment is one source of political influence, China has few incentives to interfere with the international waterways in the South China Sea,” he said. “In fact, such interference would likely weaken China’s influence and not enhance it. If China aspires to greater influence in the region, its ability to achieve and maintain that influence requires ensuring an open, dynamic trading system that links Asia with other regions.”

Others are less sanguine. Creating a sphere of influence in the South China Sea would not necessarily mean China would abide by the rules, Kurt M. Campbell, former assistant secretary of state for East Asia, said at the recent Center for Strategic and International Studies seminar.

The United States is trying to persuade China to sustain the post-World War II operating system in Asia — freedom of navigation, peaceful settlement of disputes and fidelity of contracts — that has given Asia perhaps its best four or five decades in 1,000 years, Mr. Campbell said. But now the Chinese are saying the status quo no longer holds in the South China Sea. It is natural, but worrying, that as a rising power challenging the existing order, China wants to put its “own stamp on things,” he said.

“If you listen very carefully to Chinese friends, they are saying this is no longer an international waterway,” Mr. Campbell said. “That we will provide safety for the ships transmitting this water. My own personal view is that this is antithetical to our strategic interests and in fact antithetical to Chinese strategic interests.”

Despite concerns in the United States, it is not in China’s interests to use force to get its way in the South China Sea, said Wu Xinbo, director of the center of American Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai. “It would be foolish for China to use force on other claimants in the South China Sea. The political and strategic cost is too high.”

China’s objectives are not necessarily sinister and from its point of view represent a “sensible” strategic approach, said former Rear Adm. Michael McDevitt, now a senior fellow at CNA, a nonprofit research organization in Arlington, Va.

“Since the South China Sea was the traditional route the West used on the way to invading, China wants to make sure that eventually they can establish sea control in the South China Sea in times of conflict,” Mr. McDevitt said, referring to Britain and other European powers. “It is our job to make sure that they cannot keep us at bay should there be a conflict.”

Hugh White, a critic of the United States’ response to China’s growing power whose message is unpopular in Washington but well received among Chinese analysts, said China’s short-term goal in the South China Sea was to throw its weight around and to show America’s allies that Washington was unable to respond effectively.

The Obama administration had tried with its freedom-of-navigation maneuver near the artificial island, Subi Reef, to show that it was doing something to counter Chinese ambitions, said Mr. White, a professor of strategic studies at Australian National University.

But the action was too timid, he said. The destroyer traveled within 12 nautical miles of the new island, and then left quietly and quickly, and American officials were barred from describing it in any detail. It left the opposite impression of being strong in the face of a determined power and allowed the Chinese to move ahead undeterred, he said.

“It showed just how reluctant Washington is to stand up to China for fear of provoking a crisis,” Mr. White said.

Source:nytimes.com

 

Daniel James Holdom appears in court charged with murder of Karlie Pearce-Stevenson

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Holdom, 41, appeared via videolink in Maitland local court in New South Wales after being charged overnight.

A 41-year-old man faced court on Thursday charged with the murder of Karlie Pearce-Stevenson.

Daniel James Holdom appeared via video link in Maitland local court, declining to apply for bail.

Police said Holdom had been arrested at 4.15pm on Wednesday at Cessnock police station on the New South Wales mid-north coast.

Pearce-Stevenson was 20 when police allege she was killed “some time between 14 and 15 December 2008”.

Her body was found in Belanglo state forest in August 2010 but not identified until last week, when police verified she was the mother of a two-year-old discovered in July in a suitcase 1,200km away beside a South Australian highway.

Superintendent Mick Willing said on Thursday he believed the child, Khandalyce Pearce-Stevenson, had been murdered at some point after her mother “but we are trying to establish the exact time”. Police are yet to charge anyone with her death.

Willing said the mother had “sustained certain injuries to her body but I cannot go any further into those injuries as the investigations are ongoing.

“Now we know that others have knowledge of what occurred to Karlie and Khandalyce and we need those people to come forward. The time to do that is now.”

Police alleged this week the people involved in killing the pair had used Pearce-Stevenson’s phone to text her family for years afterwards, asking for money and reassuring them they were safe. Pearce-Stevenson’s mother withdrew a missing person’s report she filed in 2009 because of texts indicating her daughter was alive.

They also allegedly accessed Pearce-Stevenson’s bank account to claim wages, welfare and other payments totalling more than $90,000.

A woman in a wheelchair, accompanied by a man, allegedly impersonated Pearce-Stevenson at a bank in South Australia in 2010. Police allege the same woman used identity documents for Khandalyce and her mother to claim payments at a Centrelink office in 2010.

Holdom will reappear in court on 11 November.

source:theguardian.com

Australia to trial cloud passports in world-first move

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Australia is looking at trialling passport-less travel in a move Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop predicts will go global.

The idea of cloud passports is the result of a hipster-style-hackathon held at the Department of Foreign Affairs, which culminated in an X-Factor style audition before the secretary Peter Varghese, Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop, Assistant Minister Steve Ciobo and Chris Vein from the World Bank.

Earlier this year the call was put out to the diplomatic corps in Canberra and the 110 missions around the world for any idea that would radically rethink of business as usual.

More than half the department’s staff responded by submitting, or by voting or commenting on one of the 392 pitches to the “DFAT Ideas challenge”.

The top 10 were presented to the quartet of judges who favoured the idea of passport-less travel. Under a cloud passport, a traveller’s identity and biometrics data would be stored in a cloud, so passengers would no longer need to carry their passports and risk having them lost or stolen. DFAT says 38,718 passports were registered as lost or stolen in 2014-15, consistent with the 38,689 reported missing the previous year.

Australia and New Zealand are now in discussions about trialling cloud passports. Ms Bishop acknowledged there were security requirements which would have to be met in order to store biometrics in the cloud, but told Fairfax Media: “We think it will go global.”

The Minister revealed the idea at the InnovationXchange headquarters in Canberra. InnovationXchange is a brainchild of the minister, dreamed up to disrupt the traditional ways bureaucrats distribute the aid budget, which the Coalition has severely cut since coming to office.

With its low slung chairs and beanbags for seats, standing desks and low hanging lightbulbs that wouldn’t look out of place in a converted warehouse in New York, Ms Bishop says the headquarters “would be at home in Silicon Valley”.

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Staff dress casually and are encourage to shun suits. But the serious results they are already achieving in InnovationXchange’s short life are attracting attention from other departments, which have visited the team of nine staff to observe how they are challenging the cultural norms of bureaucracy.

Another initiative InnovationXchange is pioneering includes a US$100 million data collection service in partnership with Bloomberg Philanthropies.

Former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg sits on InnovationXchange’s reference group.

His organisation will tip in $85 million with the Australian government contributing $15 million.

“That’s my idea of public-private leverage,” Ms Bishop said.

Data for Health will collect basic births and deaths data in 20 countries. The so-called health census data will be open source and available to governments, NGOs and the media.

source:theherald.com.au

Remembering the meaning of the Greek “Ochi” in 1940

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October 28 is “Ochi Day” in Greece. It marks the anniversary of the decision by Athens on October 28, 1940 to reject an ultimatum from Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, which triggered Greece’s entry into the Second World War.

The Washington Oxi Day Foundation is a nonprofit organization dedicated to informing American policymakers and the public about the profound role Greece played in bringing about the outcome of World War II.

It has compiled a video of world leaders acknowledging the role played by Greeks in the Second World War and of the work done by the foundation.

source:ekathimerini.com