Egypt: Al-Sisi officially runs for President

Former Egyptian Ministry of Defense, General Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, officially submitted his candidacy for the presidential elections, on May 26-27, according to the official news agency Mena.

His lawyer, Mohamed Baha abu Shaqa, handed over to the Egyptian Electoral Supreme Court the over 400,000 signatures collected in support of Al-Sisi’s candidacy along with the rest of the documents required by the authorities.

“Al-Sisi collected over 460,000 signatures from citizens all around the country that support his candidacy”, said a campaign’s spokesman, Ahmed Kamel.

Egyptian laws require each presidential candidate to submit 25.000 signatures supporting his bid to run for president, collected in at least 15 of the 27 provinces of the country.

The 59 year-old former Army Chief and Ministry of Defense is widely expected to win the elections. He has gained great popular support after the military coup that overthrew ex President Mohammed Morsi last July.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Obama offers condolences to Kansas shootings victims

President Barack Obama deplored today the shootings at Kansas City-area Jewish centers, saying at an Easter season prayer breakfast there was no place for anti-Semitism or other religious-based hatred.

The federal government will provide whatever assistance is needed to investigate the attacks that killed three people on Sunday, the president said at the White House. A suspect is being held on suspicion of premeditated first-degree murder.

«As Americans, we not only need to open our hearts to the families of the victims, we’ve got to stand united against this kind of terrible violence, which has no place in our society,» he said.

It was unfortunate that synagogues and Jewish community centers would feel they needed to step up security ahead of the Passover holiday, he added.

«That this occurred now, as Jews were preparing to celebrate Passover, as Christians were observing Palm Sunday, makes this tragedy all the more painful,» Obama said. «Nobody should have to worry about their security when gathering with their fellow believers.»

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Pope Francis expresses his solidarity with Chilean victims

Pope Francis expressed his solidarity and «spiritual proximity» to the victims of the «terrible fire» that killed at least 12 people in the Chilean city of Valparaíso.

In a telegram sent by Vatican State Secretary, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, to the Bishop of Valparaíso, Gonzalo Duarte García de Cortázar, Francis sent his condolences to the families of the deceased and said he «shares the angst of those who lost their homes and goods.»

The Pope encouraged the Chilean people to stay strong in this time of adversity so that «in a spirit of solidarity and fraternal charity, the needed help reaches all those affected.»

Source: Buenos AIres Herald

Satellite photos show Russian military buildup near Ukraine, says NATO

NATO presented satellite photographs today that showed Russian deployments of 40,000 troops near the Ukrainian frontier along with tanks, armoured vehicles, artillery and aircraft ready for action.

«This is a force that is very capable, at high readiness, and, as we have illustrated through the imagery, is close to routes and lines of communication,» British Brigadier Gary Deakin said at a briefing at NATO military headquarters at Mons in southern Belgium.

«It has the resources to be able to move quickly into Ukraine if it was ordered to do so,» he said.

If Russian political leaders took a decision to send forces into Ukraine, the first Russian forces could be on the move within 12 hours.

NATO has spotted Russian forces at more than 100 different sites close to the Ukraine border, he said.

The Western alliance showed the pictures supplied by commercial satellite imagery firm DigitalGlobe to bolster its warnings of a Russian military buildup that could threaten Ukraine.

A Russian official, quoted by a state-run news agency, said the photographs were from August last year. Russia has denied massing forces near the border and accuses NATO of fomenting concern to rally support for the alliance.

NATO foreign ministers asked military planners last week to draw up a range of options for bolstering NATO forces in central and eastern European allies nervous about Russian intentions after its occupation and annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea.

Those options have now been delivered to NATO headquarters and NATO ambassadors are expected to take decisions based on them «within a week to two weeks,» Deakin said.

He ruled out the alliance sending forces to non-NATO member Ukraine, however.

«I wouldn’t envisage us deploying troops in Ukraine, that’s not in our thinking,» he said.

The United States and other NATO members have already sent extra planes to reinforce eastern European allies.

A Pentagon spokesperson said the destroyer USS Donald Cook arrived in the Black Sea on Thursday for exercises. The US vessel is expected to be working with ships from Romania, Bulgaria and Turkey.

Many of the sites in the satellite images appeared to be fields rather than established bases. The sites were located between about 20 km (12 miles) and 150 km of the Ukraine border, according to images that NATO said were taken between March 22 and April 2.

Russian troop numbers had remained at about the same level since then, Deakin said.

An official in the Russian military general staff said the NATO satellite photographs were taken in August 2013, state-run news agency RIA reported.

«These photographs that were distributed by NATO depict units of Russian forces of the Southern Military District which conducted various exercises last summer, some of them near the border with Ukraine,» RIA quoted what it said was a high-level official in the Russian general staff as saying.

A NATO official responded that the images were from March and April this year and each image showed the date it was taken.

Several images dated March 26 and taken around the Russian town of Belgorod, 40 km from the Ukraine border, showed units of a motorised rifle regiment, Mil Mi-8 and Mi-24 helicopters, tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, supply and transport vehicles, according to NATO.

Other satellite pictures, dated March 27 and taken near Novocherkassk, showed units of a motorised rifle regiment, a «probable» anti-tank battalion and artillery.

More images, dated March 22 and taken near the port of Yeysk, just 20 km from Ukrainian airspace, showed four Su-33 fighter aircraft and an airborne early warning plane, while other pictures, dated April 2, showed Su-27, Su-30, Su-24 and MiG-31 warplanes at the formerly vacant Buturlinovka air base, 150 km from the Ukraine border, according to NATO.

Source: Buenos AIres Herald

Israel imposes sanctions against Palestinians

Israel imposed economic sanctions against the Palestinians in retaliation for their leadership signing international conventions, moves that further complicate US efforts to keep peace talks from collapsing before an April 29 deadline.

An Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Jewish state would deduct debt payments from tax transfers which the Palestinian Authority routinely receives, and limit the self-rule government’s bank deposits in Israel.

On Wednesday, Israel said it was limiting its contacts with Palestinian officials, citing Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s signing of UN human rights conventions last week.

Israel viewed that move as an attempt by the Palestinians to assume the trappings of statehood outside the framework of the US-backed negotiatons.

Abbas, for his part, has accused Israel of violating a commitment to release two dozen prisoners at the end of March, the last group of about 100 Israel pledged to free, including Palestinians convicted of killing Israelis, when the negotiations resumed in July.

The official said Israel had «decided this evening to deduct debts of the Palestinian Authority to Israel from tax revenue transfers,» but would not say what amounts were involved.

The revenues which Israel collects on goods bound for the Palestinian market amount to about $100 million a month and accounts for about two thirds of the Palestinian budget.

Based on Israeli media reports, Palestinian debts to Israel for such services as electricity total at least a month’s worth of revenue.

Israel also said it would suspend its participation in a gas exploration project off the coast of the Gaza Strip.

Senior Palestinian official Yasser Abed Rabbo denounced the measures.

«These sanctions will not scare us and they’re evidence to the world that Israel is a racist occupation state that has resorted to the weapon of collective punishment in addition to other practices including settlements and their expansion and the denial of our most basic rights as a people,» he said.

Even before the latest flurry of tit-for-tat measures, the talks, aimed at creating a Palestinian state and ending a decades-long conflict, had stalled over the issue of Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, and the Palestinian’s refusal to formally recognise Israel as a Jewish state.

In Washington, the US State Department said the two sides were making progress but dismissed suggestions an agreement to extend the talks had been struck.

«The gaps are narrowing but any speculations about an agreement are premature at this time,» State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told a regular briefing.

Suorce: Buenos Aires Herald

Plantean cerrar todos los McDonald’s en Rusia

El cierre de todos los restaurantes de la cadena de comida rápida McDonald’s en todo el país, es lo que planteó el líder de Partido Liberal-Demócrata de Rusia, Vladimir Zhirinovski.

«McDonald’s ha cerrado sus restaurantes en Crimea, eso está muy bien. Los cerraremos en todo el país (…) y luego nos ocuparemos de Coca-Cola», dijo el diputado ruso citado por la agencia Ria Novosti.
Por su parte, mediante un comunicado la filial de la empresa estadounidense en Ucrania explicó que suspendía las actividades en sus establecimientos en Crimea debido a «razones de fabricación» ajenas a la compañía.
La empresa cesó sus operaciones en los establecimientos situados en las localidades de Simferopol, Sebastopol y Yalta, aunque confía en ser capaz de reanudarla en cuanto tenga oportunidad.
McDonald’s aseguró que su principal prioridad es cuidar de sus empleados, por lo que ha ofrecido a todos los trabajadores de estos restaurantes la oportunidad de incorporarse a otros establecimientos de la cadena en Ucrania.
La medida de la empresa estadounidense coincide con la adhesión de Crimea la Federación de Rusa, tras un referendo, donde la mayoría de la población de la península, que es de origen ruso, votó por la separación de Ucrania.

Fuente: http://diariocorreo.pe/

Netanyahu dispuesto a seguir el diálogo pero no a cualquier precio

El primer ministro israelí, Benjamín Netanyahu, se pronunció hoy por primera vez sobre la crisis en el actual proceso de paz con los palestinos y señaló que está «dispuesto a reanudar la negociación, pero no a cualquier precio».

Al inicio de la reunión semanal de su gabinete de ministros, Netanyahu dijo que las partes llevan meses negociando con el objetivo de lograr un acuerdo de paz, con la mediación de EEUU.

Y censuró que «justo cuando íbamos a entrar en un marco para la continuación de las negociaciones, (el presidente palestino, Mahmud Abás) Abu Mazen se apresuró a declarar que no está preparado incluso para discutir el reconocimiento de Israel como estado nacional del Pueblo Judío», reclamación israelí en la actual ronda de diálogo.

El jefe del Ejecutivo israelí lamentó que el presidente palestino solicitara de forma unilateral la admisión a una quincena de tratados internacionales, medida que consideró, una «violación sustancial los entendimientos que alcanzamos con la implicación norteamericana».

«Las amenazas palestinas de acudir a la ONU no nos afectarán. Los palestinos tienen mucho que perder con esta acción unilateral», expresó el jefe del Gobierno israelí antes de subrayar que sólo «a través de negociaciones directas y no con frases vacías y medidas unilaterales» los palestinos obtendrán su Estado.

Netanyahu aclaró que ese tipo de medidas «sólo alejarán el acuerdo de paz» y amenazó con que «serán contestadas con medidas unilaterales de nuestra parte. Estamos preparados para continuar las negociaciones pero no a cualquier precio».

Por su parte, Nabil Abu Rudaina, portavoz del presidente de la Autoridad Nacional Palestina (ANP), acusó hoy a Israel de «adoptar pasos unilaterales que amenazan el proceso de paz».

En declaraciones a la agencia «Maan», el portavoz presidencial subrayó que la parte israelí es la que ha precipitado el actual impás en el proceso eludiendo la liberación de la última tanda de 26 presos palestinos que se comprometió a liberar para favorecer la reanudación del diálogo.

Abu Rudaina añadió que Israel continúa su política de expansión de asentamientos en Cisjordania durante las conversaciones, lo que igualmente constituye otra acción unilateral que socava los esfuerzos de paz.

La negociadora jefe israelí, Tzipi Livni, tiene previsto reunirse hoy con una delegación palestina integrada por el negociador Saeb Erekat, y el jefe de la Inteligencia palestina, general Majid Faraj.

Se trata del último intento in extremis de rescatar el proceso de paz después de que el jueves una cita similar concluyera en un rotundo fracaso, con las posiciones cada vez más enconadas.

Fuente: http://www.lostiempos.com/

Horror en Afganistán: ejecutan a tiros a una fotógrafa alemana de la agencia AP

Era una veterana fotoperiodista, Anja Niedringhaus. También resultó herida la corresponsal Kathy Ganron. Fue en el interior del país. Un policía les disparó a mansalva al grito de “Dios es Grande”.

Cuando Afganistán intenta recuperar estabilidad con elecciones presidenciales abiertas y democráticas este sábado, la intolerancia y el fanatismo religioso mostraron su costado más sanguinario. Ayer, en medio de la efervescencia política, un oficial de policía asesinó a balazos a una reconocida fotógrafa alemana e hirió a una periodista canadiense en un hecho que causó conmoción internacional.

La víctima fatal es Anja Niedringhaus, de 48 años, una laureada fotoperiodista, ganadora de un premio Pulitzer, que trabajaba para la agencia estadounidense Associated Press. Kathy Gannon, de 60 años y corresponsal durante años de la misma agencia, recibió dos balazos y sobrevivió. Fue operada y se encuentra estable.

Niedringhaus y Gannon contaban con una larga experiencia como reporteras en la región y en otras zonas de conflicto. Las dos se habían trasladado a la ciudad de Khost, en el este afgano, para informar sobre las elecciones presidenciales que se celebran hoy. Viajaban en un vehículo alquilado con un conductor afgano, dentro de un gran convoy electoral que estaba repartiendo boletas. Todo el grupo contaba con protección del Ejército, de la Policía y de agentes de la Dirección Nacional de Seguridad, principal agencia de inteligencia de Afganistán.

Cuando la caravana se detuvo frente a la gobernación, las dos mujeres decidieron esperar sentadas en el asiento de atrás. Un oficial de policía se acerco, miró a través de la ventanilla y se alejó unos pasos, para luego regresar y descargar su rifle Kalashnikov AK 47 sobre ambas al grito Alá Akbar (Dios es grande). La ráfaga mató en el acto a Anja. Kathy fue trasladada de urgencia a un hospital, donde recibió atención médica.

El asesino bajó el arma y se entregó. Fue identificado como Naqibula, un comandante de Unidad de la Policía afgana. Nadie reivindicó el crimen y las autoridades no pudieron explicar el motivo, más allá de la intolerancia de algunos sectores ultrarreligiosos con respecto a las mujeres independientes y a los representantes de la prensa. Los principales grupos talibán, que habían anunciado ataques con motivo de las elecciones de hoy sábado, rechazaron cualquier tipo de relación con lo ocurrido. “ Los luchadores de la libertad no están involucrados en este ataque ”, afirmó el vocero del sector, Zabihula Muyaid.

Alemania pidió inmediatamente explicaciones al gobierno del presidente afgano Hamid Karzai. “El embajador en Kabul trabaja con insistencia para conseguir una explicación de lo sucedido”, afirmó el vocero del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores alemán, Steffen Seibert. “La noticia de la muerte de la maravillosa fotógrafa Anja Niedringhaus es estremecedora”, agregó.

Niedringhaus inició su carrera a los 16 años como fotógrafa independiente para un diario local en Hoexter, Alemania. Trabajó para la agencia European Press antes de integrarse en 2002 a la AP. Durante los últimos 20 años se dedicó a cubrir zonas en conflicto como los Balcanes, Kuwait, Irak, Libia, Gaza y Cisjordania. Viajó a Afganistán numerosas veces desde la invasión que comandó Estados Unidos en 2001. En 2005 obtuvo el Premio Pulitzer por fotos de esa guerra.

“Yo estoy aquí no para buscar ese bang-bang clásico, sino porque creo que hay otras imágenes que pueden mostrarse, como por ejemplo cómo los civiles pueden seguir viviendo durante años inmersos en una guerra, cómo pueden organizar su vida diaria”, dijo en una de sus últimas entrevistas.

Anja es la tercera víctima de una serie de ataques a la prensa extranjera en Afganistán, ocurridos en el último mes. El 11 de marzo asesinaron a tiros al periodista sueco Nils Horner. Y hace dos semanas el afgano Sardar Ahmad, de la agencia AFP, murió en un atentado.

Fuente: Clarín

Detectan señales que serían de las cajas negras del avión

Un barco chino recogió una frecuencia que coincidiría con la grabadora. Estaría en la zona del Indico donde se cree que cayó la nave. La señal se agotará en pocos días, cuando se le termine la batería.

Cuando se cumplen cuatro semanas de la misteriosa desaparición del avión de Malaysia Airlines, el barco chino Haixun 01 que participa en las tareas de búsqueda en el océano Índico recogió una señal que podría estar relacionada con las cajas negras del avión en el que viajaban 239 personas desde Kuala Lumpur con rumbo a Beijing.

La presión va en aumento, ya que está a punto de terminarse el mes de batería que tienen los transmisores de las cajas negras, pues la desaparición del vuelo MH370 se produjo el 8 de marzo, por lo que la radio baliza dejaría de transmitir señales bajo el agua y la búsqueda se complicaría aún más.

Según el periódico oficial del Partido Comunista de China, Diario del Pueblo, la frecuencia detectada en la tarde del sábado coincide con la muestra de señal de la caja negra que había enviado el fabricante del avión, la estadounidense Boeing, pero ahora queda hacer la pertinente comprobación.

La citada señal se sitúa a unos 25 grados latitud sur y a unos 101 grados longitud este, en el sur del océano Indico, es decir, en el perímetro de los 1.700 kilómetros al noroeste de la ciudad australiana de Perth, sobre el que los investigadores creen que cayó el avión, y en el que buscan sin obtener resultados durante las últimas semanas 10 aviones militares, tres aeronaves civiles y 11 barcos.

La agencia oficial china Xinhua no sólo habló de la señal de las cajas negras, para las que actualmente se usa una frecuencia estándar internacional de 37,5 kilohercios (kHz) por segundo, sino que también explicó que un avión de la fuerza aérea china divisó varios objetos blancos flotando en el área de búsqueda. Esta no es la primera vez que se habla de objetos que luego resultan no ser del vuelo desaparecido, en concreto, Vietnam, Australia o la propia China hicieron anuncios fallidos con anterioridad.

Malasia es la encargada de liderar unas tareas de búsqueda en las que participan equipos de 26 países. “Si no hemos hallado nada en seis semanas, continuaremos buscando porque hay muchas cosas en el avión que flotarán ”, dijo el jefe de la agencia australiana que coordina la operación, Angus Houston.

“Creo que algo encontraremos que nos ayudará a reducir la zona de búsqueda”.

La que ya se puede considerar como la desaparición más misteriosa de la historia de la aviación bajo los mejores avances tecnológicos, tuvo lugar a los 40 minutos después de despegar dejando muchas preguntas en el aire y pocas respuestas sobre la mesa.

La investigación se centra en analizar el comportamiento de los pilotos y la tripulación, pero no descarta ninguna posibilidad, como podría ser un secuestro, sabotaje, altercado, incendio o que el aparato hubiese tenido problemas técnicos.

En el avión, la mayoría de los pasajeros eran chinos, 153, además de 50 malasios, siete indonesios, seis australianos, cinco indios, cuatro franceses, tres estadounidenses, dos neozelandeses, dos ucranianos, dos canadienses, un ruso, un holandés, un taiwanés y dos iraníes que utilizaron los pasaportes robados de un italiano y un austríaco.

Mientras la esperanza de muchos familiares de los pasajeros de encontrarlos con vida se desvaneció el pasado 25 de marzo, cuando las autoridades malasias descartaron encontrar sobrevivientes, haciendo un llamamiento a aceptar la dolorosa realidad de la pérdida del vuelo MH370, muchos se atan sin tapujos a la más mínima posibilidad, aunque sea del uno por ciento, en una jornada, la del sábado 5 de abril, en la que se celebra en China la Fiesta del Qingming, o Día de los Muertos.

Los familiares de los pasajeros chinos se han reunido a diario en las dependencias del hotel Lido, en el noroeste de la capital china. Un complejo en el que se han vivido escenas desgarradoras a las puertas de la sala donde mantienen reuniones con las autoridades de la aerolínea y donde 100 de ellos se hospedan, mientras que el resto lo hace en otros cuatro hoteles.

Solo un reducido grupo prefirió volar a Kuala Lumpur en busca de respuestas que no están encontrando. “Sólo nos están diciendo que esperemos información”, dijo una de las familiares. “¿Por qué no nos dan una explicación? Es mi hijo. Pasaron días. He estado aquí quince días y cada vez que hacemos una pregunta, no obtenemos respuestas”. La desesperación tras el paso de los días llevó a los familiares a protagonizar una poco frecuente manifestación frente a la Embajada de Malasia en Beijing. En ella lanzaron botellas de agua contra el edificio, vestían camisetas con el lema “Recemos por el MH370” y exigían que se les dijese la verdad.

Fuente: Clarín

Los fondos buitre buscan embargar el contrato que el país firmó con una empresa de los Estados Unidos

Presentaron una demanda contra una empresa de Delaware con la que la Argentina firmó contratos de lanzamientos de satélites en los próximos años

Por | LA NACION

WASHINGTON.- Después de la Fragata Libertad , ahora, a la carga con los satélites. Con el Gobierno celebrando «los importantes apoyos» de México, Brasil y Francia con los que espera convencer a la Corte Suprema de este país para que intervenga ante los » fondos buitre «, una nueva demanda presentada contra la Argentina pretende ahora embargar «derechos contratados por la Argentina para el lanzamiento de satélites.»

De acuerdo con la documentación del caso, como parte de sus actividades espaciales, la Argentina contrató servicios de lanzamiento con una empresa de Delaware llamada Space X. El fondo NML quiere que se embarguen esos contratos como pago de la deuda que reclama.

En rigor, se trata de una demanda contra la empresa, cuya principal base de operaciones está en California.

El novedoso ataque, que en medios locales se interpretó como una nueva embestida de los llamados «fondos buitre», apunta a contratos que la Comisión Nacional de Actividades Espaciales (Conae), realizó con esa empresa para lanzamientos en los dos próximos años.

«Esos contratos de lanzamiento en Space X constituyen una propiedad comercial que mi cliente, NML, puede legalmente embargar», dijo el abogado Robert Cohen, uno de los responsables de la estrategia de demanda contra la Argentina. Los satélites están destinados a evaluar «recursos naturales» en el país..

Fed says to keep rates low even after economy regains health

The Federal Reserve today said it could keep interest rates unusually low even after the U.S. job market returns to full strength and inflation rises to the central bank’s target.
In announcing its view on future rates after a two-day policy meeting, it also dropped a set of guideposts it was using to help the public anticipate when it would finally start bumping overnight borrowing costs up from zero.
It said, however, that dropping a promise to hold rates steady «well past the time» the U.S. unemployment rate falls below 6.5 percent did not indicate any change in its policy intentions. Rather than relying on unemployment and inflation thresholds to guide expectations, it said would lean on a wide range of economic indicators in making its decision.
But what stood out in the central bank’s statement was its embrace of easy money policies even after the Fed achieves its goals of full employment and 2 percent inflation.
«Economic conditions may, for some time, warrant keeping the target federal funds rate below levels the committee views as normal in the longer run,» the Fed’s policy panel said after its first meeting chaired by Janet Yellen.
Yellen, who took the helm of the central bank on Feb. 1, is set to hold a news conference at 2:30 p.m. (1830 GMT).
US stock prices fell after the statement was released, while yields on US government debt rose.
The central bank also proceeded with its well-telegraphed reductions to its massive bond-buying stimulus, announcing it would cut its monthly purchases of US Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities to $55 billion from $65 billion.
Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota dissented, saying that dropping the threshold could hurt the credibility of the Fed’s commitment to return inflation to 2 percent.
buenosairesherald.com

Francis’ papacy, a year on

In the year since his election, Pope Francis has raised so many hopes of imminent changes in Church teaching that managing all those expectations is going to be a challenge.

The Argentine-born pontiff has caught world attention by suggesting he might ease the Catholic Church’s strict rules on divorce, birth control, married or women priests and gay unions.

Off-the-cuff comments such as «who am I to judge?» about gays has contrasted with the more distant style of his predecessors John Paul and Benedict.

But while his words and public appearances have struck a chord with many Catholics, anyone hoping for a quick turnaround on those headline-grabbers is likely to be disappointed, said Boston College theologian Richard Gaillardetz.

«There is a critical mass of Catholics who want change,» said Gaillardetz, president of the Catholic Theological Society of America. «In the minds of many people, substantial change has to mean change on what I call the hot button troika – birth control, women’s ordination and same-sex marriage.

«This pope has undertaken very substantial change, but it is not necessarily going to focus on specific doctrines,» he added.

Instead, say Gaillardetz and others, Francis seeks a deeper shift in the Church to become what he calls a «field hospital» serving the needs of the faithful rather than an inward-looking institution more concerned with its own rules and procedures.

Either way, he seems be facing the religious version of what

political scientists call a «revolution of rising expectations», the moment when people think their distant leaders are listening to them and start to ratchet up their demands for change.

Older Catholics remember when expectations of a Vatican approval for contraception soared in the 1960s, only to be dashed in 1968 when Pope Paul VI’s encyclical Humanae Vitae surprised many churchgoers by upholding the traditional ban.

Many believers deserted the pews and priests quit the clergy. Large numbers of those who stayed began simply to ignore Vatican teaching on sex.

Francis gently pushed back last week at expectations of rapid change, telling an interviewer he was not «a kind of superman or a star» but just «a normal person».

«It’s not a question of changing the doctrine but going deeper so that pastoral concern takes into account situations and what can be done for people,» he added.

The international reform group We Are Church has said it is worried reforms were being held up by «strong resistance in the power structure». It also asked Rome to rehabilitate liberal priests and theologians disciplined in recent decades.

These demands are coming to the fore now because Francis has encouraged Catholics to discuss sensitive issues more openly and even sent out an unprecedented survey to hear their views.

«He has basically reopened a debate that was shut down during the previous two pontificates,» said Italian theologian Massimo Faggioli, a historian of the 1962-1965 Second Vatican Council that launched reforms Francis wants to revive.

Survey results published in Europe showed how large a gap exists between Church teaching and Catholics’ lives.

«Church statements on premarital sexual relations, homosexuality, on those divorced and remarried, and on birth control … are virtually never accepted, or are expressly rejected in the vast majority of cases,» the German bishops conference said in its blunt report to the Vatican.

It said many do not understand the rule that divorced Catholics cannot remarry in church and must be denied the sacraments if they opt for a civil ceremony. Many churchgoers see this as «unjustified discrimination and … merciless.»

But it also said most Catholics upheld the ideal of lifelong faithful heterosexual marriage and opposed abortion.

A poll from the Pew Research Center in Washington last week showed Francis was «immensely popular among American Catholics» but many still differed with some Vatican teachings.

«Large majorities of Catholics say the Church should allow Catholics to use birth control (77 percent), allow priests to get married (72 percent) and ordain women as priests (68 percent),» the Pew report said.

But the concerns recorded in Washington are not universal. Roman Catholicism, by far the world’s largest Christian church, has everyone from Western professionals to African peasants among its 1.2 billion members.

«In this global church, there are different expectations in different places,» noted Faggioli, who teaches at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota.

Catholics in Africa, where the Church is growing rapidly, have more traditional views about women’s roles. Many priests there are concerned that looser divorce rules would undercut their decades-long preaching against polygamy.

Homosexual sex is illegal in 37 countries in Africa and Catholic and Protestant clergy say the new acceptance of gays in Western churches makes them less credible than Muslim preachers who say their whole faith condemns homosexuality.

Gaillardetz said the big change Francis wants is to spread a new interpretation of the Second Vatican Council, which set out to turn the tightly hierarchical Church into a more horizontal structure sharing responsibility and power between Rome and national churches and between clergy and laity.

«This will ultimately have widespread consequences, but they’re not the kind that happen one year in,» he said.

Impatient critics are looking ahead to a synod of bishops in Rome in October to discuss the survey results. But it will not take any decisions, leaving that for a second synod next year.

«He’s telling bishops and priests: you can speak out and we should listen. This is a big change,» Faggioli said. «Some are ready to do that, like the Germans. But others, like the US and Italy, aren’t ready yet.»

Under Popes John Paul and Benedict, synods were scripted sessions with little debate. If the bishops don’t open up this time, he said, it will be «a major blow» for Francis.

«The high expectations he has raised refocus everything that happens in the Church onto him,» the theologian said.

While many bishops still seem cautious about following Francis’s example, Faggioli said surprises could still come.

«The preparations for Vatican II from 1959 to 1962 were a huge disappointment, but when the bishops arrived in Rome, they found their voice,» he said. «Maybe when they gather for the synod, a new chemistry will start brewing.»

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Schumacher showing ‘small, encouraging signs’

There are small signs of encouragement in Michael Schumacher’s condition but the most successful former Formula One champion of all time faces a long fight to recover after suffering severe head injuries in a skiing accident, his agent has said.

«We are and remain confident that Michael will pull through and will wake up,» his agent and spokeswoman, Sabine Kehm, said in a written statement today.

«There sometimes are small, encouraging signs, but we also know that this is the time to be very patient,» she added.

Schumacher, 45, slammed his head on a rock while skiing off-piste in the French Alps resort of Meribel on December 29.

The seven-times world champion has been in a stable but critical condition since then in a hospital in the eastern French city of Grenoble where doctors started lowering his sedation at the end of January to wake him up from an artificial coma.

«It was clear from the start that this will be a long and hard fight,» Kehm said.

«Michael has suffered severe injuries. It is very hard to comprehend for all of us that Michael, who had overcome a lot of precarious situations in the past, has been hurt so terribly in such a banal situation.»

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

G7 leaders tell Russia to halt Crimea referendum

Leaders of the Group of Seven economies told Russia to stop its work on a referendum in Ukraine’s Crimea region and «cease all efforts to change the status of Crimea» or face action.

«In addition to its impact on the unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, the annexation of Crimea could have grave implications for the legal order that protects the unity and sovereignty of all states,» the G7 leaders said in a statement released by the White House.

«Should the Russian Federation take such a step, we will take further action, individually and collectively,» they said.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

One dead reported in NY building collapse

A building has collapsed in Upper Manhattan killing at least one person and injuring more than a dozen, setting off a search for anyone trapped in the debris, officials said.

Massive clouds of smoke billowed from the charred rubble of the structure on the largely residential block at East 116th Street and Park Avenue in East Harlem, which reportedly collapsed sometime after 9 am.

Residents said the collapse was accompanied by a loud boom that could be heard from blocks away and shattered windows around the neighborhood.

Crowds of residents wearing protective scarves and masks filled the sidewalks of surrounding streets, which were blocked off with yellow police tape.

The New York City Police Department said it was investigating reports that the collapse may have involved two buildings.

«The cause of the explosion is undetermined at this time,» said police spokesman Martin Speechley.

«It’s a very active scene. It’s a very chaotic scene,» said Fire Department spokesman Michael Parrella. The department said at least one person had been killed and 17 people injured.

Fire trucks used high cranes to spray blasts of water into the rubble, as dozens of ambulances and police cruisers with flashing lights swarmed the scene.

Commuter trains were stopped on nearby tracks because of the debris on the rails and passengers were ordered off the Metro-North Railroad cars at the Fordham stop in the Bronx, passengers said.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Crimea’s Parliament asks to join Russian Federation, Ukraine calls for US, UK assistance

CrimeaThe Parliament in Crimea have asked Moscow to allow the southern Ukrainian region to become part of the Russian Federation.

The parliament said if its request was granted, Crimean citizens could give their view in a referendum on 16 March.

Ukraine’s interim Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk said the move had no legal grounds.

Crimea, a region whose population is mostly ethnic Russian, has been at the centre of tensions following the fall of Ukraine’s pro-Moscow president.

Crimea has closed its airspace to commercial flights. A Ukrainian airline plane was turned back today on its way from Kiev to Simferopol, the region’s main city, and had to return to the Ukrainian capital.

The captain told passengers that the Crimean authorities had closed airspace to all commercial flights and there had been no flights yesterday either.

Tension has increased in the region ahead of Sunday’s referendum which pro-Russian leaders, backed by Russian forces, have called despite it being denounced as illegal by Ukraine’s new rulers and Western governments.

New National Guard

Ukraine’s interim leaders established a new National Guard today and appealed to the United States and Britain for assistance against what they called Russian aggression in Crimea under a post-Cold War treaty.

Blaming their ousted predecessors for the weakness of their own armed forces, acting ministers told parliament Ukraine had as few as 6,000 combat-ready infantry and that the air force was outnumbered nearly 100 to 1 by Moscow’s superpower forces.

The national parliament in Kiev said it would dissolve the Crimean assembly if it did not cancel the plebiscite.

Viktor Yanukovich, whose overthrow last month after protests triggered the gravest crisis in Europe since the Cold War, insisted from his refuge in Russia that he was still Ukraine’s legitimate president and commander of its armed forces.

Acting Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk, who will visit the White House and United Nations Security Council this week, said a 1994 treaty under which Ukraine agreed to give up its Soviet nuclear weapons obliged Russia to remove troops from Crimea and also obliged Western powers to defend Ukraine’s sovereignty.

He said a failure to protect Ukraine would undermine efforts to persuade Iran or North Korea to forswear nuclear weapons as Kiev did 20 years ago. The terms of the Budapest Memorandum oblige Russia, Britain and the United States as guarantors to seek UN help for Ukraine if it faces attack by nuclear weapons.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

US Ted Turner hospitalized in Argentina due to appendicitis

While visiting the Patagonia, US business tycoon Ted Turner was hospitalized in Argentina’s Southern City of Bariloche, after being diagnosed with appendicitis.

Turner refused to undergo surgery at that hospital, and instead, decided to fly to Buenos Aires.

Seventy-six year old millionaire and creator of CNN international news network owns vast extensions of lands in the Patagonia, among them a 4,500 hectare ranch in the south of the Neuquen province, bought in 1996 to Felipe Larriviére.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

European shares slip on widening Ukraine tensions

European shares slipped in early trade today as investors were wary of the risks of another escalation in tensions between Russia and Ukraine over the weekend.

Shares of companies most exposed to Russia were among the biggest losers. Investors also avoided taking fresh bets ahead of U.S. jobs data due later in the day that will provide insight on the state of the world’s biggest economy and could influence the Federal Reserve’s policy outlook.
At 0847 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares was down 0.6 percent at 1,336.63 points. After taking a hit on Monday, the index reversed most of the selloff that was sparked by an escalation in tensions between Ukraine and Russia.
In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei share average rose to a fresh five-week high on Friday as a weak yen lifted risk appetites following better-than-expected US jobless claims and the European Central Bank’s decision to keep its rates unchanged.
The Nikkei ended 0.9 percent higher at 15,274.07, the highest closing level since Jan. 29. For the week, the index rose 2.9 percent.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Vatican confirms Pope’s visit to Holy Land

The Vatican has confirmed today Pope Francis will visit the Holy Land in May, as scheduled, after Israeli media suggested the trip could be cancelled due to a strike held by officials of the Foreign Affairs Ministry.

The Deputy Director of the Vatican’s Press Office Ciro Benedettini assured nothing has changed and that a Vatican delegation headed by Alberto Gasbarri will travel to Israel within the next days to organize the Pontiff’s trip.

The Pope’s first visit to the Holy Land will be held between May 24 and 26, and will include visits to Aman, Bethlehem and Jerusalem.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Obama’s 2015 budget proposal prompts clash with Republicans

President Barack Obama proposed new tax credits and job-training programs for US workers today in a 2015 budget that drew instant condemnation from Republicans, who dismissed the document as an election-year campaign pitch.

The $3.9 trillion blueprint for the fiscal year that begins on October 1 also would boost spending on roads and bridges and expand early-childhood education while paying for some of the additional spending by scaling back tax breaks for wealthier Americans.

The proposal has almost no chance of passage in Congress, where Republicans control the House of Representatives, but it lays out Obama’s policy priorities ahead of November congressional elections. Democrats will be fighting to keep control of the US Senate and avoid losing ground in the House.

«Our budget is about choices, it’s about our values,» Obama told reporters during a visit to an elementary school.

«At a time when our deficits are falling at the fastest rate in 60 years, we’ve got to decide if we’re going to keep squeezing the middle class or if we’re going to continue to reduce the deficits responsibly while taking steps to grow and strengthen the middle class.»

While working within the overall cap of $1.014 trillion for discretionary spending that Congress set for 2015, the president proposed $56 billion in additional spending for education, welfare and defense programs, paid for in part by ending a tax break for wealthy retirees.

Republicans objected to the plan’s spending increases and said it did not address larger fiscal challenges related to the Social Security retirement program and Medicare and Medicaid healthcare for the elderly, poor and disabled.

«After years of fiscal and economic mismanagement, the president has offered perhaps his most irresponsible budget yet,» Republican House Speaker John Boehner said in a statement. «Spending too much, borrowing too much, and taxing too much, it would hurt our economy and cost jobs.»

Democrats hope to draw a contrast with the Republicans’ focus on fiscal restraint and portray themselves as better able to deliver jobs and growth.

Obama’s proposal signaled a shift from last year’s emphasis on deficit cutting to a greater focus on fighting poverty, a goal the president is highlighting as he eyes his legacy with fewer than three years left in office.

Republicans, cognizant of Americans’ slow recovery from the 2007-2009 recession, also have focused on poverty-reduction but they favor a dramatically smaller government role.

House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, a potential Republican presidential contender in 2016, argued in a report on Monday that the government had barely made a dent in combating poverty in the past 50 years despite massive spending. He blasted Obama’s Tuesday proposal.

«This budget isn’t a serious document; it’s a campaign brochure,» said Ryan, who will unveil a Republican budget as a counter to Obama’s in the coming weeks.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

UN says world powers responsible for failing to stop Syria war crimes

All sides in Syria’s civil war are using shelling and siege tactics to punish civilians and big powers bear responsibility for allowing such war crimes to persist, UN human rights investigators said today.

In their latest report documenting atrocities in Syria, they called again on the UN Security Council to refer grave violations of the rules of war to the International Criminal Court (ICC) for prosecution.

«The Security Council bears responsibility for allowing the warring parties to violate these rules with impunity,» the report by the UN commission of inquiry on Syria said.

«Such inaction has provided the space for the proliferation of actors in the Syrian Arab Republic, each pursuing its own agenda and contributing to the radicalization and escalation of violence.»

Divided world powers have supported both sides in Syria’s three-year-old conflict and a diplomatic deadlock has exacerbated the bloodshed.

The independent investigators, led by Brazilian expert Paulo Pinheiro, said that fighters and their commanders may be held accountable for crimes, but also states which transfer weapons to Syria.

Syrian government forces under President Bashar al-Assad have besieged towns including the Old City of Homs, shelling relentlessly and depriving them of food as part of a «starvation until submission» campaign, the report said.

It said the Syrian air force had dropped barrel bombs on Aleppo with «shocking intensity», killing hundreds of civilians and injuring many more.

Insurgents fighting to topple Assad, especially foreign Islamic fighters including the al-Qaeda affiliated ISIS, have stepped up attacks on civilians, taken hostages, executed prisoners and set off car bombs to spread terror, it said.

The 75-page report, covering July 15-January 20, is the seventh by the United Nations since the inquiry was set up in September 2011, six months after the anti-Assad revolt began.

The investigators have not been allowed into Syria, but their latest findings were based on 563 interviews conducted by Skype or by telephone with victims and witnesses still in the country or in person with refugees in surrounding countries.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Russia says can’t control Crimea troops; NATO, Moscow to hold talks

Russian forces remain in control of Crimea, where Interfax reported they seized control of two Ukrainian missile defence sites overnight, and Putin gave no sign of backing down.

«What he wants above all is a new empire, like the USSR but called Russia,» former Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko told France’s Europe 1 radio.

In Washington, US President Barack Obama acknowledged that Russia had legitimate interests in Ukraine but said that did not give Putin the right to intervene militarily.

«President Putin seems to have a different set of lawyers making a different set of interpretations,» Obama said. «But I don’t think that’s fooling anybody.»

A senior administration official said Obama spoke to German Chancellor Angela Merkel yesterday and discussed a potential resolution to the crisis. The Russian-speaking German leader has good relations with the German-speaking Putin, and Berlin is Russia’s biggest economic partner.

The official said Obama, in his phone call with Putin last Saturday, had discussed what officials called an «off-ramp» to the crisis in which Russia would pull its forces in Crimea back to their bases and allow international monitors to ensure that the rights of ethnic Russians are protected.

The US president will stay away from a G8 summit scheduled for Sochi, Russia, in June unless there is a Russian reversal in the Ukraine crisis, the official added.

Russia said today it could not order «self-defence» forces in Crimea back to their bases ahead of the first face-to-face talks with the United States on easing tensions over Ukraine and averting the risk of war.

NATO and Russia will hold parallel talks in Brussels amid concerns that a standoff between Russian and Ukrainian forces in Crimea could still spark violence, or that Moscow could also intervene in Russian-speaking eastern Ukraine.

France said European Union leaders meeting in Brussels tomorrow could decide on sanctions against Russia if there is no «de-escalation» by then. Other EU countries, including Germany, are more reticent about sanctions.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Israel intercepta un barco cargado de misiles procedente de Irán

El cargamento es de fabricación siria y se dirigía a la Franja de Gaza, según han informado las autoridades israelíes

La Marina israelí ha interceptado durante la madrugada del martes un barco procedente de Irán con bandera panameña, llamado Klos C, que iba cargado con arsenal sofisticado de fabricación siria. El barco ha sido interceptado en el Mar Rojo, en la frontera marítima entre Sudán y Eritrea, cuando iba de camino a la Franja de Gaza transportando docenas de misiles de largo alcance iguales a los que se lanzaron desde el sur del Líbano a Israel en 2006.

La operación, llamada “Revelación completa”, ha sido realizada por el comando de élite de la Marina llamado Flotilla 13, después de hacer un seguimiento durante varios meses de este cargamento de arsenal sofisticado. Según ha comentado el ejército israelí a la prensa este miércoles, ninguno de los 17 tripulantes sabía que llevaban misiles a bordo, ya que iban escondidos entre el cargamento normal y se había recubierto cada misil con una capa de cemento para hacerlos pasar desapercibidos.

El primer ministro israelí Benjamín Netanyahu, que se encuentra de visita oficial en Estados Unidos, aprovechó para recordar al mundo que a pesar de la reciente (y frágil) reconciliación entre Irán y las potencias occidentales, el país persa continúa atacando a Israel a través de terceros países.

“En un momento en el que está acercándose a las grandes potencias, Irán sonríe y dice toda clase de cosas amables, el mismo Irán que está enviando armas mortales a organizaciones terroristas y lo está haciendo a través de una red de operaciones secretas para enviar cohetes y misiles,” comentó Netanyahu en un comunicado a los medios través de su oficina en Jerusalén.

Irán intenta atacarnos
El tipo de armamento que ha sido interceptado habría dado a Hamás en Gaza mucha más capacidad armamentística, ya que se trata de misiles capaces de alcanzar objetivos hasta 200 kilómetros. “No es la primera vez que Irán intenta esto, desde luego, en ocasiones anteriores también interceptamos otros navíos con armamento,” comentó durante una conferencia telefónica el ex comandante de la Marina israelí, el vicealmirante Eliezer Marom.

“Irán continúa intentando atacar Israel a través de terceros países como Siria y el Líbano, o como hemos visto hoy, Hamás en Gaza, pero desde hace varios años tanto la Marina, como el ejército de tierra y aire colaboran para evitar que este tipo de armamento llegue a manos de terroristas. Algunas veces no hemos conseguido llegar a evitar el envío y es por esta razón por la que Hezbolá acumula un arsenal de más de 100 mil misiles,” comentó Marom.

Fuente: ABC

Asteroide pasará hoy entre la Tierra y la Luna Este contenido ha sido publicado originalmente por Diario EL COMERCIO en la siguiente dirección: http://www.elcomercio.com/tecnologia/ciencia/asteroide-tierra-Luna-astronomia-ciencia_0_1096090496.html. Si está pensando en hacer uso del mismo, por favor, cite la fuente y haga un enlace hacia la nota original de donde usted ha tomado este contenido. ElComercio.com

Un asteroide descubierto hace menos de una semana pasará hoy cerca de nuestro planeta y aunque los científicos aclararon que no existe riesgo de impacto, se indicó que la roca espacial estaría pasando más cerca que la distancia Tierra-Luna.

La Unión Astronómica Internacional informó que el asteroide, que ha sido denominado como 2014 DX110, fue descubierto el 28 de febrero desde el Telescopio Pan-STARRS en Hawaii. La Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe (SAC) indicó que el asteroide de 98 pies de diámetro tendrá su mayor acercamiento de la roca espacial cerca de las 5:00 p.m. y de haber sido de noche requeriría un telescopio de buen tamaño para intentar avistarlo. «Aunque algunos observatorios en otros países intentarán captarlo, no será fácil debido a que se estima que se estará desplazando a más de 33,000 millas por hora», señaló la entidad educativa. La SAC indicó que entre marzo y abril otros cuatro asteroides aún más grandes se acercarán un poco a nuestro planeta. «Se trata de 4 enormes rocas espaciales, cuyo diámetro es de entre 1.3 y 1.8 kilómetros», indicó la entidad educativa a la vez que aclaró que los asteroides denominados 2000 EE14, 2003 QQ47, 1995 SA, y el 2000 HD24 estarían pasando bastante más distantes que la distancia Tierra – Luna. Sobre el asteroide que estará acercándose hoy a la Tierra, se informó que varios astrónomos intentarán captar al «2014 DX110» utilizando un telescopio robótico en las Islas Canarias, al noroeste de África. Aunque se anticipa que será difícil captar la roca espacial debido a su rápido movimiento, el intento será transmitido cerca de las 5:00 p.m.

Este contenido ha sido publicado originalmente por Diario EL COMERCIO en la siguiente dirección: http://www.elcomercio.com/tecnologia/ciencia/asteroide-tierra-Luna-astronomia-ciencia_0_1096090496.html. Si está pensando en hacer uso del mismo, por favor, cite la fuente y haga un enlace hacia la nota original de donde usted ha tomado este contenido.

Fuente: ElComercio.com

Vladímir Putin, entre los 278 candidatos al Nobel de la Paz

El premio de este año cuenta con una cifra récord en el número de nominados. Además del presidente ruso, entre los candidatos se encuentran nombres como el de el exanalista de la CIA Edward Snowden o el papa Francisco

El Nobel de la Paz contará este año con la cifra récord de 278 nominados al premio, según ha informado el Comité Nobel noruego, institución encargada de fallar el galardón. Entre ellos se encuentra el presidente ruso Vladímir Putin.

La candidatura de Putin llega en un momento de máxima tensión bélica por la situación que se vive en Ucrania. El presidente llamó hoy «a no trasladar el componente político a los asuntos relativos a la cooperación económica» ante las posibles sanciones por su intervención en Crimea. Esto ocurre después de que advirtiera ayer que aún contempla la posibilidad de emplear a las fuerzas armadas en el país para garantizar la seguridad de los rusos y rusohablantes que residen allí.

De los 278 candidatos de este año, 47 son organizaciones y el resto, individuos.

Según el testamento del magnate sueco Alfred Nobel, creador de los centenarios premios, pueden nominar candidatos al galardón de la Paz, el único que no se otorga ni entrega en Estocolmo, catedráticos de Universidad en Derecho o Ciencias Políticas, parlamentarios o antiguos laureados.

Sólo si quienes nominan lo hacen público se puede conocer la identidad de los candidatos, ya que el Comité Nobel noruego no confirma nombres, sólo el número total de aspirantes.

Se sabe que entre los nominados al premio de este año figuran el exanalista de la CIA Edward Snowden, el papa Francisco, la activista paquistaní Malala Yousafzai, el ginecólogo congoleño Denis Mukwege, el presidente ruso Vladímir Putin, y la jefa de la diplomacia de la UE Catherine Ashton.

El anterior récord se había alcanzado el año pasado, cuando hubo 259 candidatos y al final ganó la Organización para la Prohibición de las Armas Químicas (OPAQ), distinguida por sus «amplios esfuerzos» para eliminar esos arsenales, una labor que ganó visibilidad con la crisis siria.

Fuente: http://www.publico.es/

El rito satánico que ha escandalizado a Estados Unidos

ReyesEncontraron el cuerpo de una jóven de 15 años que había sido violada y asesinada el pasado 5 de febrero. Días después se conocerían más detalles de lo que en Estados Unidos (EEUU) se ha considerado uno de los más «macabros» hechos ocurridos en Houston por dos jóvenes adolescentes.

Según apunta el Clarín, el cuerpo de Corriann Cervantes, una adolescentes de 15 años, había sido torturado hasta la desfiguración. La víctima fue golpeada, asfixiada y violada. Un destornillador clavado en la cabeza y la impresión de un crucifijo invertido en el estómago agregaban atrocidad a su martirio.

Un pacto satánico entre dos chicos estaba detrás del horror, que conmueve a Estados Unidos. «Lo que ocurrió fue sádico. Lo que a la larga ocurrirá en el Tribunal será que se hará justicia», indicó John Jordan, fiscal del condado Harris.

Los adolescentes José Reyes, de 17 años, y un muchacho de 16, están acusados de ser los autores del crimen y enfrentan cargos punibles con la pena capital. Matar en forma atroz a Cervantes fue, según reconstruyeron los investigadores, «la forma de vender sus almas al diablo».

Ya han sido detenidos
Reyes fue arrestado el domingo, entregado por sus padres, a quienes les había confesado parte de lo ocurrido. En tanto, el menor de 16 está detenido en un centro carcelario juvenil.

La pesadilla para Cervantes comenzó el 5 de febrero cuando fue convocada por los jóvenes -quienes, según reconstruyen las crónicas periodísticas locales, compartían escuela con la víctima- a un departamento, situado en el sureste de Houston.

Un cenicero, la tapa de un inodoro y la varilla de una persiana fueron los elementos usados para golpearla en forma repetida. Luego la asfixiaron y violaron en la soledad de la vivienda, que estaba desprovista de ocupantes y muebles.

Durante el suceso, la chica gritó: ¿por qué me hacen esto? Y trató de huir.

Los investigadores aún no pudieron determinar si la chica falleció por los golpes que recibió en su cabeza, por estrangulación o por lesiones internas derivadas de la violación. Un residente descubrió el cadáver, parcialmente vestido, dentro del apartamento tras haber visto la puerta abierta.

Fuente: http://www.eleconomistaamerica.mx/

Los pediatras belgas aseguran que ningún niño les ha pedido nunca morir

pediatrasEn una carta remitida al Parlamento antes de la votación manifestaban su temor de que los menores se crean obligados a ahorrar sufrimiento a sus padres

El doctor Stefaan Van Gool, profesor y jefe de servicio de neurología y oncología infantil de la Clínica de la Universidad Católica de Lovaina, es uno de los impulsores de la carta publicada en varios medios belgas y de la enviada al presidente del Parlamento -con la firma de 160 pediatras- para que no se apruebe una ley «precipitada». Estos especialistas en el cuidado de niños gravemente enfermos han hecho un llamamiento «desde la experiencia cotidiana, no como puro ejercicio filosófico de salón» para evitar que Bélgica dé luz verde a la eutanasia infantil. Pero su misiva no consiguió que diputados socialistas, liberales, verdes y nacionalistas aprobasen la polémica norma.

En la conversación mantenida con ABC antes de tomar el tren hacia un congreso en Alemania, Van Gool reafirma cada uno de los puntos en los que se apoya la misiva enviada al Parlamento. En esa argumentación, los médicos afirman que esta ley «no responde a ninguna demanda real» puesto que «la mayoría de los pediatras nunca ha recibido una petición voluntaria y espontánea de eutanasia de un menor de edad», entre otras cosas -explica- porque «gracias al avance de las unidades de paliativos ningún niño sufre». Es más, con las terapias «desescaladas y graduales», recuerda el texto, ya se evita «prolongar innecesariamente la vida en circunstancias difíciles». Y en ese sentido, Van Gool explica que la velocidad a la que se ha tramitado la ley, solo se entiende «porque el objetivo final no son ni los niños enfermos ni sus padres, sino las elecciones de mayo. Se va a judicializar el final de la vida de los menores, cuando es mucho mejor la buena práctica médica y los cuidados paliativos».

Pero no solo los niños son los protagonistas. Este reputado oncólogo infantil recuerda que él y sus compañeros son testigos «del dolor indescriptible de los padres» y que «la ley sólo aumentará su confusión y su estrés», y pone el acento en un punto especialmente delicado: «En la ley, el acuerdo de los padres aparece como un seguro ante la solicitud de eutanasia expresada por el niño. En la práctica, las cosas pueden ser muy diferentes porque un niño podría ver la eutanasia como un deber, si siente que sus padres ya no soportan verlo sufrir».

Fuente: ABC

Europe snaps winning run as earnings disappoint

Wall StEuropean stocks snapped a week-long winning streak, weighed down by a batch of disappointing updates from blue-chip companies including Swiss food group Nestle and French bank BNP Paribas.

Shares in Nestle fell 1.4 percent after it said it may undershoot its long-term growth targets again this year due to weaker demand from emerging markets (EM) and price pressures in Europe.

French spirits group Pernod Ricard also warned about weak demand in China on Thursday as it cut its annual profit growth goal.

The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index was down 0.2 percent at 1,323.86 points, falling for the first time in seven sessions. The Euro STOXX 50 index was down 0.3 percent at 3,085.30.

Britain’s Rolls Royce, the world’s second-largest aircraft engine maker, was the top faller on the FTSEurofirst 300, down 11.4 percent, after it forecast declining defence aerospace and marine revenues in 2014.

Also weighing on the index were banks BNP Paribas and Banking Group, down 4.3 percent and 3.7 percent, respectively, after their quarterly updates.

BNP Paribas reported a 76 percent drop in quarterly profit after booking a $1.1 billion litigation provision, triggering a downgrade to «hold» from «accumulate» at CM-CIC Securities.

Bucking the sector trend was Germany Commerzbank, which rose 3.1 percent after posting a small profit in the fourth quarter of 2013 and showing its restructuring had gained traction.

Nearly halfway through Europe’s earnings season, 58 percent of European companies have met or beaten quarterly profit forecasts, their best score since the third quarter of 2012, according to Thomson Reuters StarMine data.

Meanwhile, Japan’s Nikkei average slid nearly 2 percent, snapping a three-day winning streak, as investors cautiously awaited US economic data and sold shares across the board. The Nikkei ended 1.8 percent or 265.32 points lower at 14,534.74, marking its biggest daily percentage drop in a week. On Wednesday, it had notched a 1-1/2-week closing high.

The broader Topix fell 1.6 percent to 1,199.74, with all of its 33 subsectors in negative territory.

Source: Buenos AIres Herald

Storm, bringing deadly ice and snow, slams US southeast

stormA deadly winter storm brought heavy snow, freezing rain and potentially historic accumulations of ice to the southeastern United States today, causing thousands of power outages and disrupting early commutes, forecasters said.

The worsening storm stretched from eastern Texas to the Carolinas, and is likely to reach the Middle Atlantic states by late yesterday, National Weather Service meteorologist Roger Edwards said.

«It’s unusual to have an ice storm that far east in the Deep South,» he said.

The wintry mix has already caused two weather-related traffic deaths in Mississippi, and three in northern Texas, authorities said.

More than 2,700 US flights were canceled and hundreds more delayed early on Wednesday, according to flight-tracking website FlightAware.com.

A quarter to three-quarters of an inch of ice was expected in a broad section of Georgia, including metropolitan Atlanta. Some areas could see more than 1 inch.

The Interstate 20 corridor from north central and northeastern Georgia into South Carolina would be among the hardest hit by icy conditions, Edwards said.

Snowfall totals were expected to be unusually high in the region, with nearly 8 inches of snow forecast for Charlotte, North Carolina, and 9 inches for Spartanburg, South Carolina.

Edward Clay, 40, who lives in Greer, South Carolina, decided against driving to Asheville, North Carolina, Wednesday for his job as a construction project superintendent even though snow flurries were just beginning.

«I could get to Asheville easy,» he said. «Getting back to South Carolina is the problem. It’s going to be an all-around bad day to be on the road.»

Government officials were quick to make plans to deal with the impact of the storm, following another two weeks ago that paralyzed Atlanta-area roads and forced more than 11,000 students in Alabama to spend the night at their schools.

Hundreds of schools and government offices across the South were closed on Wednesday, and power outages started to climb as the weather conditions that forecasters had warned about for days took shape.

About 59,000 Georgia Power customers were without power early on Wednesday. South Carolina emergency officials said about 4,000 residents in Aiken near the Georgia border were without power.

Some road accidents were reported, but there were no fatalities, officials said.

Conditions deteriorated overnight as a swath of the Deep South, from Alabama through South Carolina, was deluged with rain, sleet and snow, and residents prepared themselves for freezing rain and slick roads, Edwards said.

«The morning commute is just going to be horrendous,» Edwards said, warning of impassable roads, traffic accidents and thick ice bringing down trees and power lines.

«Folks who are not accustomed to handling these conditions are best served by staying out of them – staying indoors, staying off the roads.»

The last significant ice storm in Georgia was in January 2000, when up to half an inch of ice left more than 350,000 people without power, weather service meteorologist Dan Darbe said.

With the latest storm, «we’re talking a much larger area and a much larger amount of ice», he said.

Source: Buenos AIres Herald

Comcast to buy Time Warner Cable for $45.2 billion

Time Warner CableComcast Corp said today it would buy Time Warner Cable Inc for $45.2 billion in an all-stock deal that combines the two largest US cable operators.

The friendly takeover comes as a surprise after months of public pursuit of Time Warner Cable by smaller rival Charter Communications Inc, and immediately raised questions as to whether it would pass regulatory scrutiny.

Comcast will pay $158.82 per share, which is roughly what Time Warner Cable demanded from Charter.

The combined company would divest 3 million subscribers, about a quarter of Time Warner’s 12 million customers. Together with Comcast’s 22 million video subscribers, the roughly 30 million total would represent just under 30 percent of the US pay television video market.

The new cable giant would tower over its closest video competitor, DirecTV, which has about 20 million video customers.

If successful, the deal will be the second time in little more than a year that Comcast has helped reshape the US media landscape after its $17 billion acquisition of NBC Universal was completed in 2013.

The proposed combination, which would give roughly 23 percent of the merged company to Time Warner Cable shareholders, is subject to regulatory approval and the two companies expect to close the deal by the end of the year.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald