Tuesday, October 15, 2013

How India Has Learned To Deal With Major Cyclones





Villagers eat at a temporary cyclone shelter in Chatrapur, India, on Saturday. India evacuated nearly 1 million people before Cyclone Phailin made landfall. The effort appears to have paid off. As of Tuesday, there were fewer than 30 deaths.



Biswaranjan Rout/AP


Villagers eat at a temporary cyclone shelter in Chatrapur, India, on Saturday. India evacuated nearly 1 million people before Cyclone Phailin made landfall. The effort appears to have paid off. As of Tuesday, there were fewer than 30 deaths.


Biswaranjan Rout/AP


The massive cyclone that hit the eastern Indian state of Orissa over the weekend destroyed tens of thousands of homes, but killed fewer than 30 people.


Another big cyclone struck the same state in 1999; 10,000 people were killed.


What was different this time? Though it's not a perfect apple-to-apples comparison, there are a number of key differences in the way India prepared and responded to the latest cyclone.


Technology, for one. Here's Reuters:




"Technological advances since 1999 mean that forecasters can accurately predict weather patterns seven days in advance. The advent of mobile phones has also made a huge difference. ... At the time of the 1999 cyclone, there were less than 2 million mobile phone users in the whole of India: today, about 25 million people in [Orissa] alone — 60 percent of the state's population — carry a phone."




And, as The New York Times reports, "Even many of the poorest villages now have televisions, and India's numerous 24-hour news channels have blanketed the nation's airwaves with coverage of the storm."


Bureaucracy


India's bureaucracy, not typically known for its efficiency, got its act together ahead of Cyclone Phailin.


Officials traveled through coastal regions of Orissa and neighboring Andhra Pradesh state, warning residents to take refuge in government shelters. After the storm, they distributed food to those displaced and tarps for makeshift shelters.


As one civil servant told Reuters: "That's the first thing I asked, that I be completely authorized to take decisions at my own level." That official, in turn, allowed those under him to act without authorization.


Lessons Learned


Third, the state learned lessons from the disaster in 1999. This time, nearly 1 million people were evacuated — some of them forcibly — from their homes.


In 1999, Orissa had only about 20 cyclone shelters. This time around, the state provided evacuees with shelter.


Again, Reuters: "Both [Orissa] and Andhra Pradesh now have disaster management departments, both have built hundreds of cyclone shelters along the coast, and drills are conducted regularly so people know what to do when an alert is issued."


The Times reported that India's response to Phailin demonstrated how the country had changed.




"Change can come slowly to India. The caste system still predominates, grinding poverty remains endemic and clean water is rare. But the effective response to the threat this weekend demonstrates that Indians are transforming their country, particularly in the ways that they communicate and get their news."




Challenges Ahead


But it's important to point out that such successes are still not that common.


As recently as June, flooding in the northern state of Uttarakhand killed more than 6,000 people.


And even in states like Orissa and Andhra Pradesh, there are inefficiencies. The Wall Street Journal reported that many measures of a $240 million National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project, put in place after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, have yet to be implemented.


And, the newspaper warned, while the toll from Cyclone Phailin has been low, it "could climb if the millions stranded without enough food and clean water are not taken care of."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2013/10/15/234679285/how-india-has-learned-to-deal-with-major-cyclones?ft=1&f=1004
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Find Out Why Tom Hanks' Most Powerful 'Captain Phillips' Scene Wasn't Even Scripted


The Oscar-winner turns in another award-worthy performance that feels old and new at the same time.


By Kevin P. Sullivan








Source:
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1715466/tom-hanks-captain-phillips-performance.jhtml

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Losing pay because your bosses are furloughed? Share your story with NBC News

As the government shutdown continues into a week three, 350,000 federal workers continue to go without pay.

NBC News has covered some of the hardships furloughed families are facing without regular paychecks coming in. But what about people employed by those families: child care providers, home health aides, domestic workers and others whose own income and livelihood has been affected? How are they making due?

Whether you are a family who can’t pay your babysitter, or a home health care provider who isn’t being paid, NBC News wants to hear from you.

Submit your story via email here.

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Monday, October 14, 2013

Asmussen rejects Athens' call for ECB to roll over Greek bonds


By George Georgiopoulos and Martin Santa


ATHENS/LUXEMBOURG (Reuters) - The European Central Bank cannot roll over Greek bonds as this goes against a ban on financing governments, a senior ECB policymaker said on Monday, dashing Athens' hopes it will help plug a funding gap next year through such a move.


Athens will be financed by bailout loans until the second half of 2014, when it hopes to tap bond markets again. It then faces a funding gap of nearly 11 billion euros for 2014-15, the International Monetary Fund and Athens estimate.


Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras said on Monday that Greece planned to roll over debt next year to narrow the funding shortfall. He said that euro zone central banks had promised to roll over Greek bonds and that if they did not they should make up the difference by other means.


But ECB Executive Board member Joerg Asmussen ruled out the idea, which is banned under the ECB's statutes.


"We must find a way to close this financing gap and there is absolutely no way that it can be done in a way of rollover bond or whatsoever which results in monetary financing," Asmussen told reporters in Luxembourg.


"This is not possible for the ECB and not for the whole euro system."


In the latest in a series of options Greek officials have floated as ways to cover the shortfall, Stournaras said Athens planned to roll over about 4.5 billion euros ($6.1 billion) of debt due next March.


Greece's international lenders have agreed they could give the country further debt relief if it meets fiscal targets this year, likely in the form of lower financing costs or extended repayment times for its loans.


But none of the options Athens has so far come up with for squaring the funding circle have gained much traction abroad.


The European Commission puts Greece's funding gap at 3.8 billion euros in 2014, while the IMF estimates it will be 4.4 billion euros.


CENTRAL BANKS 'OBLIGED TO HELP'


Cut off from bond markets since 2010 after its debt crisis exploded, Greece has been kept afloat by 240 billion euros in rescue loans from the European Union and IMF.


Asked whether Greek bonds held by euro zone central banks should also be rolled over to help cover the post-bailout funding gap, Stournaras was quoted as saying this was part of a November 2012 agreement.


"Greece will ask for debt relief based on the decision by the Eurogroup (in November) and there are many ways this can be done," he told financial daily Naftemporiki in an interview.


"There are Greek bonds held by central banks, which had said they would roll them over but up to now have not done so," he said. "If they do not want to implement this because they consider it monetary financing, they must find equivalent measures".


The ECB and other euro zone central banks hold a nominal 19 billion euros of Greek bonds, of which 10 billion matures in 2014.


Greece's creditors - mainly the EU and the IMF - have agreed to look into the bloc's 17 national central banks replacing some of the Greek bonds they hold with new Greek paper as the debt matures.


This measure, called the "rollover of ANFA holdings", might spare Greece from having to redeem 3.7 billion euros of debt in 2013-2014 and 1.9 billion euros in 2015-2016.


As well as Asmussen rejecting this idea on Monday, the ECB has said before that it would not roll over the Greek bonds it acquired through the Securities Markets Programme (SMP).


But Stournaras said the euro zone's central banks need to come to the rescue one way or another.


"This is an obligation on their part, which they must stick to... We have up to now stuck to our promises. They must abide by theirs."


(Additional reporting by Sakari Suoninen in Frankfurt; Editing by Hugh Lawson)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asmussen-rules-ecb-rollover-greek-bonds-143826446--business.html
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Saturday, October 12, 2013

'Office' star pleads guilty in minor drug bust


7 hours ago

IMAGE: Craig Robinson

Jason Kempin / Getty Images

Craig Robinson

Craig Robinson has built his career on making people laugh -- but on Wednesday, he found himself in a not-so-funny situation in the Bahamas. According to the Associated Press, the comedian was detained in the Bahamian capital Nassau for drug possession.

PHOTOS: Celebrity mugshots

Best known for playing Darryl Philbin on NBC's "The Office," Robinson, 41, was attempting to board a plane back to the U.S. when customs agents discovered he was carrying a small amount of marijuana and "suspicious" pills (later revealed to be ecstasy), Superintendent Stephen Dean of the Royal Bahamas Police Force told the AP. "It was nothing major," Dean said.

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Even so, Robinson was taken into custody and ordered to appear before a magistrate. He reportedly told the court he did not know that the drugs (which he brought from the U.S.) were illegal in the Bahamas.

After pleading guilty to two counts of drug possession, the "Hot Tub Time Machine" actor was fined $1,000 and ordered to leave the country. He could have faced up to four years in prison, the AP reports.

PHOTOS: Stars at court

Incidentally, this is not Robinson's first drug-related run-in with the law. Back in June 2008, he was arrested by Culver City, Calif., police on suspicion of possessing MDMA. Prosecutors charged him with two felony counts of drug possession and one count of being under the influence of illegal drugs; he later agreed to take drug education classes in exchange for the charges being dropped. 








Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/office-star-craig-robinson-pleads-guilty-minor-drug-bust-8C11374146
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

French Press Agency Tallies Increasing Violence In Iraq


Nearly 5,000 Iraqis have been killed so far this year in sectarian bombings and other terror attacks. Renee Montagne talks to Prashant Rao, the Baghdad bureau chief for AFP, the French Press Agency, which has been keeping a grim tally of the spiraling violence this year in Iraq.



Copyright © 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.


RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:


Iraq is not still at war but you wouldn't know that from the death toll there. So far this year, about 5,000 Iraqis have been killed in the kind of violence that shook Baghdad on Monday - eight separate bombings that left at least 30 people dead. Most of the attacks are carried out by Sunni extremists against Shiites - that's Iraq's majority - that now dominates the government. It's a sectarian conflict that harks back to the worst of the fighting when the U.S. were still fighting there.


The Baghdad bureau of the French Press Agency - AFP - has been keeping a tally since last year of the bloodshed and has taken the unusual step of posting that tally on the Web where it's updated daily.


For more, we turned to their Baghdad bureau chief, Prashant Rao. Thanks very much for joining us.


PRASHANT RAO: Thanks for having me.


MONTAGNE: AFP decided to put up its daily casualty count on the Web - as I've just said. Why did AFP decide to do that?


RAO: Well, it got to the point where our numbers weren't tallying with some of the more public numbers that were being published. And we also felt that people weren't paying attention. And, you know, we started publishing more than a year ago when violence was much lower than it is now. But we still felt that some really tragic things were happening in Iraq.


MONTAGNE: Among the figures that you've put out that is so stunning is that last month alone, 880 some people died. Let me ask you, how has the civil war next door in Syria affected Iraq and how much does it have to do with this violence?


RAO: Well, it plays a very big role. Iraq and Syria share a 375 mile border. There's fighters moving on both sides of the Iraq-Syria border, the kind of divisions within Syria amply divisions within Iraq. Bashar al-Assad's regime is made up of Alawites who are an offshoot of Shias, and most of the rebels fighting him are Sunnis. And that sort of has a knock on effect in Iraq.


Now a lot of Western Iraq is very, very dangerous. Earlier this year, there were Syrian truck drivers who were driving through the main highway, linking Syria to Baghdad and these three Syrian truck drivers were executed by members of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, which is the al-Qaida group. And then a couple months later, a video surfaced on YouTube of how the executions were carried out. This attack happened on the main highway, in broad daylight. These militants have no fear of any kind of authority figure in terms of the army or the police coming in to stop them.


MONTAGNE: You mentioned the politics behind this violence.


RAO: Mm-hmm.


MONTAGNE: Has there been any progress in getting Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to stop the heavy-handed treatment that his Shiite government has doled out to the minority Sunnis?


RAO: There are some elements where treatment of Sunnis has been improving. The government seems to be more positive towards the use of the Sahwa, these were Sunni tribal militias that allied with the U.S. military against al-Qaida. And the government has always been fairly ambivalent towards them because - as you said - it's a Syrian government and they're mistrustful of these Sunni groups. But, in recent months, there's been greater talk and there's been actual action in terms of reestablishing some of these Sahwa militias to man check points that carry out patrols in Sunni areas. But there's still a great deal of criticism as to how Sunnis are treated in Iraq - a lot of criticism of the sort of barring of Sunnis from political life. So it's not just the sort of army cracking down, which is another allegation that's made, that the army and the police unfairly come into Sunni houses and target them.


MONTAGNE: Finally, what is daily life like now for Iraqis in the midst of all this violence?


RAO: Unfortunately, a lot of them were, you know - for want of a better word - frivolous things, which is kids playing at neighborhood soccer fields and going to cafes and restaurants. A lot of that has been curbed as the levels of violence have increased. But, you know, the basics of daily life - like going to the market, going to the mosque - that has continued.


MONTAGNE: Well, thank you for speaking with us.


RAO: Thank you.


MONTAGNE: That's Prashant Rao, Baghdad bureau chief for the French News Agency, AFP.


(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)


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Monday, February 18, 2013

Eliminating the Source: What Causes Autism | Natural Holistic ...

Many parents hope that in finding a source of autism, this disorder can be cured or prevented. Unfortunately, scientists have yet to find one single reason why children develop autism. It is possible that someday autism will be linked to a specific gene abnormality, but the more likely source is not one thing, but a number of factors in a child?s world. Autism cannot be prevented or cured, so the best we can do to assist autistic children and adults is to be understanding and willing to compromise to make the world comfortable for them and ourselves.

First off, there are certain things that do not cause autism, and these myths should be laid to rest immediately. Most importantly, bad parenting does not cause autism. In the past, mothers were blamed for traumatizing their children with cold parenting techniques, which was believed to lead to autism. This is simple not true. Autism is also not caused by malnutrition, although food allergies occur in my autistic children and some autistic children do benefit from taking daily vitamins.

Many autistic individuals have other health problems related to immune deficiencies. Overall, these things all seem to point to genetics. Although autism is not the parents? fault, it is most likely that autism was found elsewhere on your family tree, and it is not uncommon for parents to raise more than one autistic child. Autism may also be linked to vaccinations, although this is still being highly studied. The benefits of vaccinations greatly outweigh the risks of them causing autism, so you should not deprive your child simply because you are fearful. Talk to you doctor if you have concerns about vaccinations.

There are many links between autism and the brain. Most people with autism have larger brains, and they are ?wired? differently than a typical brain. Differences occur in many parts of the brain, so it cannot be targeted to one specific brain malfunction overall, but rather a brain malfunction in general. Autistic children also show signs of an immune deficiency. Evidence in this study is not yet strong, but research is still being done.

Nobody knows what causes autism. Therefore, we can do nothing to prevent and cure it, but rather we can simply treat the autistic people in our lives with the best of our ability. Becoming educated in autism is the key-the more you know about the disorder, the better you can aid individuals who suffer from it. Autism is a complex problem, and as researchers develop new understandings of the way it affects the body, better treatment options will become available, with the hope that someday we will be able to cure this disease.

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About Dee Braun

Dee is an Adv. Certified Aromatherapist, Reiki Master, Adv. Color/Crystal Therapist, Herbalist, Dr. of Reflexology and single mom who is dedicated to helping others any way she can. One way she chooses to help is by offering information on the benefits and uses of natural health and healing methods for the well-being of both people and pets. Dee also teaches Aromatherapy, Reflexology and Color/Crystal Therapy at the Alternative Healing Academy

Source: http://www.natural-holistic-health.com/eliminating-the-source-what-causes-autism/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=eliminating-the-source-what-causes-autism

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