Egypt: Abdel Fattah el-Sisi Resigns as Defence Minister Ahead of Presidential Bid


Sisi Egypt Defence Minister President Military General Coup Morsi

Egypt's defence minister Abdel Fattah al-SisiReuters



Egyptian army chief Field Marshal Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has resigned as defence minister to clear the way for his run for the Egyptian presidency.


According to state-run Al-Ahram, Sisi would broadcast an official announcement after meeting the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.


No date has been set for the vote but Sisi is expected to win easily. As the man who led the coup against former president Mohamed Morsi, Sisi is very popular outside the Islamist opposition.


The former head of military intelligence is viewed by Islamists as a violator of free speech because of his crackdown on dissent since coming to power in Egypt's interim government.


An Egyptian court this week sentenced 529 members of the Muslim Brotherhood to death for a number of deadly attacks in the biggest single capital punishment ruling in history.


The attacks were said to have taken place in southern Egypt in August, after security forces broke up two camps of Brotherhood supporters demanding the reinstatement of Morsi.


In a further attack on Islamic influence, a court banned all Hamas activities and closed the Palestinian militant group's offices in Egypt.


Egyptian officials view Hamas as a security threat on the country's border and has accused it of supporting al-Qaida-linked Islamist militants in the Sinai peninsula.



Osama Bin Laden Son-in-Law Suleiman Abu Ghaith Guilty of Post-9/11 Terror Plot


Osama Bin Laden's spokesperon

Al-Qaida spokesman Suleiman Abu Ghaith.Reuters



A US jury has found Osama bin Laden's son-in-law and al-Qaida spokesman Suleiman Abu Ghaith guilty of conspiring to kill Americans in the aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks.


The Kuwaiti imam, who was captured in Jordan last year and taken to New York for trial, is the most senior al-Qaida figure to face trial on US soil since the attacks.


He could face life in prison when sentenced on 8 September for conspiracy to kill Americans, conspiring to provide support to al-Qaida and providing support to the global terror network.


Abu Ghaith became notorious after the 9/11 attacks with a widely circulated video he used to recruit new suicide followers. "The storm of airplanes will not stop," he said in the footage, which was played in court.


Other videos include the clergyman sitting next to bin Laden and two other top al-Qaida leaders as they tried to justify the terror attacks.


Assistant US attorney John Cronan underscored the importance of Abu Ghaith's post-9/11 status, saying: "Going to that man was the very first thing Osama bin Laden did on September 11 after the terror attacks.


"The defendant committed himself to al-Qaida's conspiracy to kill Americans, and he worked to drive other people to that conspiracy.


"During the most important period of time in al-Qaida's savage history, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith was Osama bin Laden's principal messenger. He used his fiery oratory to incite al-Qaida's growing army of terror in this war with America."


In court the imam defended his religious role, aimed at pushing all Muslims to revolt against their oppressors, but denied he was an al-Qaida recruiter.



Abu Ghaith held a key position in al-Qaida, comparable to the consigliere in a mob family or propaganda minister in a totalitarian regime


George Venizelos



He said he agreed to meet bin Laden in a cave on 11 September out of respect for the late al-Qaida leader, who was a sheikh.


Abu Ghaith first drew attention in 1991 after repeatedly condemning the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. He was in the news again for a series of threats against the United States.


Following the defeat of Iraq, Abu Ghaith pressed the Kuwait government for the application of sharia law. In response, the government banned him from giving sermons.


Abu Ghaith moved to Afghanistan in 2000 where he joined al-Qaida as a spokesman and married Osama bin Laden's eldest daughter, Fatima.


In October 2001, Kuwait withdrew Abu Gaith's citizenship.


"In the national interest and according to Article 14 of the 1959 nationality law, the council (of ministers) has approved a proposed decree to withdraw Sulaiman Abu Ghaith's nationality," Kuwait's cabinet said at the time.


George Venizelos, director of the FBI's New York office, told the New York Times: "Abu Ghaith held a key position in al-Qaida, comparable to the consigliere in a mob family or propaganda minister in a totalitarian regime."


Defence lawyer Stanley Cohen said that some of the government's evidence related to a detainee at Guantanamo Bay with a similar name to Abu Ghaith, who has pleaded not guilty.


Cohen said that testimony from the so-called architect of 9/11, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, would "directly and totally repudiate the government's assertion that Mr Abu Ghaith was a member of, or provided material support to, al-Qaida or to any conspiracy laid at its feet".


Abu Ghaith was captured in Amman, Jordan, in 2013 while flying to Kuwait to visit his family.



Horses, Spears, Sea Worms and Fortune-Telling Chickens in the Pasola of Sumba


The island of Sumba in eastern Indonesia is home to the Pasola festival - a potentially fatal spear-throwing fight on horseback.


Sometimes called the Forgotten Island, Sumba's people still follow ancient customs and traditions. Their unique thatched houses have three levels: the lower one is for livestock, the middle is for humans (women in rooms on the left, men on the right) and the top level is where is the ancestors live.


stars

The Milky Way arcs over traditional houses in Wainyapu village on the island of Sumba, Indonesia, during the Pasola Festival, an event held every year to welcome the new harvest seasonUlet Ifansasti/Getty



The Pasola is held every year in February or March when the Nyale, or sea worms, can be found in the shallow waters. The coming of the worms marks the end of the wet season and the time to begin planting rice – and the time to saddle up and throw spears at your rivals.


The ancient fighting game involves two teams of men on horseback charging towards each other with spears. It's a dangerous sport; players and even spectators can be injured or killed. It is believed that any spilled blood will fertilise the land and increase the year's rice crop.



Villagers gather on the beach at sunrise to look for sea worms. These worms, known as Nyale, can be found in the shallow waters during February and March. The coming of the worms marks the end of the wet season and the time to begin planting rice

Villagers gather on the beach at sunrise to look for sea worms. These worms, known as Nyale, can be found in the shallow waters during February and March. The coming of the worms marks the end of the wet season and the time to begin planting riceUlet Ifansasti/Getty



A woman holds a bowl of sea worms. The size and the shape of the worms are believed to predict the year's rice crop

A woman holds a bowl of sea worms. The size and the shape of the worms are believed to predict the year's rice cropUlet Ifansasti/Getty



Rriders prepare to throw their spears during the Pasola war festival

Rriders prepare to throw their spears during the Pasola war festivalUlet Ifansasti/Getty



A man rides into 'battle'

A man rides into 'battle'Ulet Ifansasti/Getty



A rider tries to hit a rival with a 'pasol' javelin

A rider tries to hit a rival with a 'pasol' javelinUlet Ifansasti/Getty



A boy wearing an Arsenal shirt sits on horseback at the festival

A boy wearing an Arsenal shirt sits on horseback at the festivalUlet Ifansasti/Getty



A Pasola rider throws his spear

A Pasola rider throws his spearUlet Ifansasti/Getty



Men wield machetes as a fight breaks out between supporters of rival teams

Men wield machetes as a fight breaks out between supporters of rival teamsUlet Ifansasti/Getty



A soldier holds a rifle as a fight breaks out between supporters of the two teams

A soldier holds a rifle as a fight breaks out between supporters of the two teamsUlet Ifansasti/Getty



Sumbanese men prepare a roasted pig for the feast

Sumbanese men prepare a roasted pig for the feastUlet Ifansasti/Getty



A man grills a chicken over an open fire

A man grills a chicken over an open fireUlet Ifansasti/Getty



A priest predicts the future by reading the organs of a grilled chicken

A priest predicts the future by reading the organs of a grilled chickenUlet Ifansasti/Getty



A young man prays at the tomb of his ancestors

A young man prays at the tomb of his ancestorsUlet Ifansasti/Getty



Villagers, their mouths stained with betel nut juice, perform a prayer ritual at the graves of their ancestors

Villagers, their mouths stained with betel nut juice, perform a prayer ritual at the graves of their ancestorsUlet Ifansasti/Getty




Map

The island of Sumba is in eastern Indonesia, between Malaysia and AustraliaGoogle





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Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370: 'Was the Ambassador Talking out of his A**e?' ask Chinese Relatives


malaysia airlines Indian ocean search

A family member of a passenger aboard Malaysia Airlines MH370 shouts at journalists after watching a television broadcast of a news conference, at the Lido hotel in Beijing.Reuters



A relative of one of the passengers on board crashed flight MH370 has asked whether Malaysia's ambassador has been "talking out of his arse", as the mood of the victim's families grows ever angrier.


The relatives, especially the Chinese, are increasingly frustrated with the Malaysian authorities over their handling of the vanished jetliner debacle.


Following the latest press conference by Malaysia's transport minister Hishammuddin Hussein in Kuala Lumpur, in which he announced that new satellite findings have discovered 122 objects at the suspected crash site, furious relatives have yet again poured scorn on Kuala Lumpur authorities in the Beijing hotel where they have been staying.


"All the things that were promised, we have received nothing. Was the ambassador talking out of the other end of his body? Was he talking out of his arse?" asked a relative to general applause from others, who were equally angry at the authorities over the withdrawal of certain facilities provided to them for the past few days.


During the press conference, Hussein reiterated: "For the Chinese families...they must also understand. We in Malaysia also lost our loved ones. There are so many other nations who have lost loved ones."


With emotions still running high among the Chinese relatives, Malaysian officials have defended themselves and put the blame on Beijing's media for "stoking the anger" of the victim's families.


Of the 239 passengers on board the missing jetliner, more than two thirds of them were Chinese.


"The [Malaysia's] prime minister and acting transport minister have tried their best to resolve this but, unfortunately, the papers have manipulated this and played up the sentiments until the families, especially those from Beijing, are upset. This is an accident which no one wants to see happen," said Kuala Lumpur's Home Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi.


Editorials in China's mouthpieces have been criticising Malaysia for their inappropriate handling of the crisis in the last few weeks.



Sahara Group's Subrata Roy Asked to Deposit $1.6bn for Bail


Sahara Group Chairman Subrata Roy

Sahara group chairman Subrata Roy at the Supreme Court in New Delhi on 4 March, 2014.Reuters



India's highest court has agreed to release the boss of troubled Sahara Group Subrata Roy from custody, provided his company deposits 100bn rupees in cash and bank guarantees with regulators.


The Supreme Court said Roy would be granted interim bail once Sahara deposits 50bn rupees ($832m, £503m, €603m) in cash with market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), and provide bank guarantees for another 50bn rupees.


Sahara's lawyers asked the court to give the group access to some of its bank accounts, which have been seized by authorities, and expect a decision at a hearing on 27 March, Keshav Mohan, one of the lawyers representing Sahara, told Reuters. He refused to comment further.


Roy, whose company began accepting daily deposits of as little as 30 cents in 1978 and went on to build an $11bn business empire, is fighting allegations that his group failed to abide by a court order to repay 240bn rupees ($3.9bn) to depositors.


Roy, 65, has been held in a Delhi jail since 4 March but has not been charged with a crime.


He surrendered to police on 28 February after the court issued a non-bailable arrest warrant two days earlier for failing to heed its summons.


Roy, who calls himself "Sahara Sri", operates within the $670bn shadow-banking industry, which refers to the provision of capital by loans or investments between companies outwith the formal banking system. It includes hedge funds, private-equity funds and insurance companies.


Sahara is the owner of properties such as London's Grosvenor House, New York's Plaza Hotel, and at least 120 companies, including television stations, a hospital, a dairy farm and retail shops selling everything from detergents to diamonds, alongside a stake in India's lone Formula One racing team.


Sahara also claims to own 14,600 hectares (36,000 acres) of land, an area slightly bigger than the city of Cambridge.


Roy is often described in media reports as a billionaire, although he claims to only have assets worth about 50 million rupees ($831,600).



Turkey: 10,000 New Daily Users Turn to Dark Web Browser Tor After Erdogan Twitter Ban


Turkey Twitter Erdogan Social Media Ban Court

Turkey's courts have blocked access to Twitter a little over a week before elections as Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan battles a corruption scandalReuters



Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's pledge to wipe out Twitter has not stopped citizens finding other ways to satisfy their social media needs with 10,000 new users from the country signing up to the dark net browser Tor every day.


Last week, the software was attracting 10,000 new Turkish users per week but this has increased by 700% to 10,000 new users a day because of the restrictive Twitter ban.


An Ankara court has temporarily suspended a government agency's decision to block access to Twitter but the threat of the continued internet restrictions has driven Turks to the anonymous ghost-web browser.


Tor, originally standing for The Onion Router, is a system that can be used to create online anonymity by directing web traffic through a worldwide volunteer network consisting of thousands of relays, concealing the user's location and their browsing history from anyone.


Such anonymity means that users are able to buy illegal drugs, weapons and even use Twitter under a government ban without fear of being identified.


Erdogan has called Twitter a "menace" for being used to mobilise anti-government protests against his increasingly authoritarian rule.


The Turkish Twitter ban caused global controversy with tens of thousands of Twitter users reacting with spoof photos, cartoons, memes and artworks to express outrage at the decision to shut down the popular social media site.


More than 500,000 tweets were posted in the first 24 hours using the hashtag #twitterisblockedinTurkey, according to social media search engine Topsy.


Erdogan has reacted to the ongoing corruption scandal engulfing him with the Twitter clampdown. Voice recordings and documents have emerged which prove corruption within the ruling Turkish elite.


The Turkish leader said the recordings were "vile fakes", but in one of the audio clips, Erdogan is heard asking his son to remove large amounts of cash from his house.


Twitter is in talks with Ankara to resume operations and have pledged the site would return to Turkish citizens soon with a guarantee of privacy protection.



Bitcoin Exchange MtGox Hands Over Electronic Records and Other Documents to Police


Bitcoin

BitcoinReuters



Collapsed bitcoin exchange MtGox said it submitted relevant electronic records and other related documents to authorities that are probing the company's failure leading to bankruptcy.


"Following its application for commencement of civil rehabilitation, MtGox Co, Ltd. consulted with the metropolitan police department with regard to the disappearance of bitcoins which is one of the causes for said application," CEO Mark Karpeles said in a statement.


"MtGox Co., Ltd. hereby announces that it has submitted necessary electronic records and other related documents. MtGox Co., Ltd. intends to fully cooperate with each competent authority."


He added that the company "continues to make efforts to clarify facts as quickly as possible and to recover from damages".


The Japan-based firm, which at one point hosted 80% of the world's bitcoin trades, collapsed after reporting that about 850,000 bitcoins were stolen in what it claims was the result of a two-year long security breach. The company filed for bankruptcy protection in Japan on 28 February and subsequently in the US.


Last week, the company said it found 200,000 of the lost coins in old format wallets, while rescanning them following the bankruptcy filing.


Karpeles said that MtGox "had certain old ­format wallets which were used in the past and which, MtGox thought, no longer held any bitcoins".


Factoring in the newly found bitcoins, the total number missing is now estimated at 650,000.



My South Africa Adventure: Cradle of Human Civilisation at Johannesburg's Origins Centre


San bushmen

San Bushmen populations are in steep decline across South Africa, Botswana and Namibia living in desperate poverty



Interesting fact: it turns out that Southern Africa's indigenous San people are direct descendants of the first humans to walk the earth. So they are, in essence, our very first ancestors. Now that's something for the CV.


As to where I found out this mind-boggling piece of information, it was at a superb museum in Johannesburg called the Origins Centre.


Based in downtown Braamfontein on the campus of the University of Witwatersrand, the Centre is the adult version of the more child-friendly Maropeng, which is the official visitor centre of Unesco World Heritage site, the Cradle of Humankind.


Only about an hour's drive from the northern suburbs of Johannesberg, the Cradle is, in fact, the site of the University-discovered and owned Sterkfontein hominid fossil caves, which count among the most significant archaeological sites in the world.


Anyway, given this amazing find right on its doorstep, it is perhaps unsurprising that the University decided to set up the Origins Centre in order to explain the development and evolution of humankind, starting with our roots in Africa.


To illustrate the point, the museum houses everything from skull casts sitting in pull-out drawers to show the physiological changes that took place in early evolution over the course of millions of years to a video chat about hand-crafted tools from a professor activated by lifting up a holographic stone.


My favourite bit though had to be the extensive exhibition on the everyday life, culture and spiritual beliefs of the San, as they prefer to be known in South Africa – or Bushmen as they collectively opt to be called elsewhere.


Traditionally hunter-gatherers, they are perhaps best known for their superlative hunting skills and their beautiful, finely detailed rock art, the best examples in South Africa of which can be found in the Drakensberg Mountains of Kwa-Zulu Natal.


What I hadn't realised though was that the San followed a shamanistic belief system and did things like hold ritual, healing trance-dances, a hypnotic film of which is displayed, thankfully with seating included, at the Centre too.


Dying of traditional ways


During these night ceremonies, the women sat in a circle around the campfire, clapping out rhythms and singing medicine songs, while the men danced around them until dawn.


After many hours, the shamans of the group would eventually leave their bodies and travel to the spirit world in order to perform various tasks for the greater good of the community.


But in very San fashion, it wasn't about just having one, all-powerful shaman to mediate everything for everyone else. In much the same way as they lacked any concept of personal possessions or political hierarchy, it was possible for anyone with an aptitude for it, either male or female, to take up the role of shaman – and as many as two out of five in any given group did apparently.


So maybe there's something we could all learn from that.


But the old ways are, sadly, almost gone. While some 80,000 San live in mostly dreadful conditions in Botswana, Angola and northwest Namibia, there are only about 10,000 left of what was previously an extensive population across South Africa too.


Known as the Khomani San, they reside north of the Orange River near Upington, a town in the Northern Cape that acts as gateway to the southern Kalahari desert - and there's evidence to suggest that they've been there for hundreds, if not thousands, of years.


But following 150 years or so of dispossession, displacement and even apparent genocide as a result of colonial settlement and wars not of their own making, the majority ended up having to give up the traditional life.


Many were forced to work on nearby farms as cheap labour to survive and the resulting diaspora, which shattered communities, meant that, over time, most young people had very little idea about their heritage - or even that they were San at all.


They likewise forgot how to speak their ancestral tongues and, under apartheid, mostly switched to Afrikaans, the official language of the regime and their employers.


Displacement


But a fortuitous meeting in 1995 between human rights lawyer, Roger Chennells, and San elder Gamgaub Regopstaan Kruipe, eventually led to a high-profile land claim.


On winning the case, the San were awarded 65,000 hectares of territory in and around their ancestral homeland of the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park, a site that has since merged with a similar reserve in Botswana. The newly created Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park is now a vast conservation area of more than 3.6 million hectares.


But with their traditional ways largely forgotten, the majority of San currently live in grinding poverty and continue to be routinely marginalised and discriminated against by South Africans of all ethnicities, living as second-class citizens in their own land despite being its first inhabitants.


Nonetheless, there are a number of on-going projects to help them piece together their history and traditional knowledge and to relearn and reapply old skills in a bid to create new livelihoods. So hopefully all is not lost.


The only other group of San remaining in South Africa aren't really indigenous to the region at all though. Originally from different areas of Angola and Botswana, the !Xun and Khwe people were thrown together by the army during the brutal Angolan and Namibian wars of the 1970s.


The South African Defence Force recruited San men into its ranks, while their families took refuge in the relative safety of the army's Alfa and Omega camps. And they ended up staying there until the end of the Namibian war in 1990, after which time some 3,000 of them came to South Africa with the army as refugees.


After being housed in appalling conditions in tents for a further 12 years at Schmidsdrift, near Kimberley, in 2003 they were finally given proper housing and land to create a communal farm at nearby Platfontein.


So, despite still suffering the usual awful dislocation of indigenous and tribal peoples throughout the world, leading to high levels of unemployment, substance abuse and suicide, at least they now have somewhere to call their own. Which is something, I suppose.


Cath Everett is a resting journalist who has written about business, technology and HR issues for over 20 years. She recently moved from the UK to South Africa with her husband



Barclays Advises Caution in Rupee Dealings Ahead of India Election


Barclays Advises Caution in Rupee Dealings Ahead of Indian Election Outcome

Boys run near a sand sculpture of the Indian Rupee created by Indian sand artist Sudarshan Pattnaik.Reuters



Barclays has asked investors to approach the rupee with caution during the course of India's month-long general elections, which kick off on 7 April. The concern is that the vote may not deliver a clear winner.


The rupee's rally would stall at 59 to the US dollar and it could fluctuate widely based on the election outcome, according to Barclays.


"Ride the good momentum in the rupee, but do not take that trade over into the election results," noted Hamish Pepper, a strategist at Barclays in Singapore.


"Take profit before the poll verdict as the rupee could swing wildly either way once the results are out," Pepper told Bloomberg.


The rupee struck an eight-month high to 60.1350 on 26 March on rumours India would elect a government capable of boosting flagging economic growth.


Meanwhile, Westpac Banking has asked investors to stop buying the rupee closer to the 16 May deadline for counting votes.


The currency could gain some 5% on current levels if the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) wins enough seats to form a government, said Jonathan Cavenagh, a Singapore-based strategist at Westpac.


Societe Generale predicts the currency could swing past 68 to the greenback, should political parties need to cobble together an unstable, temporary coalition.


"There are still questions about whether the BJP will get the numbers they need," added Westpac's Cavenagh.


"If they do get a strong majority, I may miss out on the initial part of a rally, but I would also have protection from what could be a massive downside," Cavenagh said.


Nordea Markets said in a note: "India's Achilles heel has been its large C/A deficit (5.1% of GDP in 2012), which caused it to be included in the fragile five group.


"Since then, tough restrictions on gold imports halved the deficit to just 2.7% of GDP in 2013. About 75% of the C/A deficit can be attributed to gold imports, so this was an effective tool. The finance minister vowed to continue the ban."


"The political development is also favourable to the INR in the medium term. First, the possible move to target CPI inflation at 4% may boost the central bank's credibility and help attract global investors.


"In addition, India is likely to get a pro-business premier (Narendra Modi) who is not afraid of aggressive reforms. This will also benefit the INR," Nordea added.


Amit Agrawal, a Bangalore-based strategist at Societe Generale said in a 24 March note to clients: "We cannot rule out the risk of a hung parliament. The stakes are high as market expectations for a positive outcome have risen substantially ahead of the elections."


A decisive BJP victory could drive the rupee toward 40 to 45 to the dollar in the long term, levels last seen in 2008, Adam Gilmour, Citigroup's head of Asia-Pacific currency and derivatives sales, said on 12 March.



India: Women With Better Education Than Husbands at Greater Risk of Violence


violence against women india

An Indian woman who fled her home following domestic violenceReuters



Women in India who have a better education or earn more than their husbands are at greater risk of violence, a study has found.


Researchers at New York University have found a correlation between levels of education and earnings and the risk of severe intimate partner violence.


Findings also showed that less educated women, and those who are unemployed or earn very little, are far less likely to be beaten by their husbands.


Published in the journal Population and Development Review, study author Abigail Weitzman looked at data from India's National Family Health Survey between 2005 and 2006, which included information on domestic violence.


It also included details of the woman's relative earnings, employment and access to money. She looked at the occurrence, frequency and severity of violence.


Educated and high-earning women were 1.4 times more likely to experience intimate partner violence, 1.54 times more vulnerable to frequent violence and 1.36 times more likely to face severe attacks.



"My research suggests that there can be a backlash, including violence, toward women who attain greater education or earnings than their husbands."


Study author Abigail Weitzman



Women who are the sole earners are 2.44 times more likely to face frequent violence and 1.51 times more likely to suffer severe violence in comparison to unemployed women and women whose husbands were employed.


The increased risk fits a current theory about vulnerability to domestic violence. In gender deviance neutralisation, it is thought women's superior resources become viewed as gender deviant. As a result, the man uses violence to gain power and control in the relationship.


The study suggests that as divorce is extremely rare in India, the government should focus on alternatives to helping women in violent marriages, such as shelters and support groups.


Weitzman said: "In global development efforts, there is a large emphasis on women's employment and education. My research suggests that there can be a backlash, including violence, toward women who attain greater education or earnings than their husbands.


"Finding a solution will be tricky. Our response should not be to stop educating and employing women, but nor should we plough ahead without recognising this may put them at greater risk, and making changes to help protect them."



Hot Shots Photos of the Day: 24-Hour Cupcake ATM, Knitted Beard, War Festival


Two women try out the 24-hour Cupcake ATM created by Sprinkles bakery in New York City. The ATM, located on Lexington Avenue between 60th and 61st streets, can hold 760 cupcakes and will be restocked several times a day, according to Sprinkles founder Charles Nelson

Two women try out the 24-hour Cupcake ATM created by Sprinkles bakery in New York City. The ATM, located on Lexington Avenue between 60th and 61st streets, can hold 760 cupcakes and will be restocked several times a day, according to Sprinkles founder Charles NelsonGetty



Visitors look at a light show at the exhibition Klimt and Vienna, a Century of Gold and Colours, projected on to the walls of the Carrieres de Lumieres site (Quarries of Lights) in Les Baux-de-Provence, France

Visitors look at a light show at the exhibition Klimt and Vienna, a Century of Gold and Colours, projected on to the walls of the Carrieres de Lumieres site (Quarries of Lights) in Les Baux-de-Provence, FranceReuters



A model presents a creation from Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology and Shih Chien University Emerging Design Collection during China Fashion Week in Beijing

A model presents a creation from Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology and Shih Chien University Emerging Design Collection during China Fashion Week in BeijingReuters



A woman views the Sutton Hoo helmet on display in the new 'Sutton Hoo and Europe AD 300-1100' gallery at the British Museum in London. The exhibition marks 75 years since the discovery of the finds from the Sutton Hoo ship burial site in Suffolk

A woman views the Sutton Hoo helmet on display in the new 'Sutton Hoo and Europe AD 300-1100' gallery at the British Museum in London. The exhibition marks 75 years since the discovery of the finds from the Sutton Hoo ship burial site in SuffolkGetty



Russia's Ksenia Stolbova and Fedor Klimov compete during the pairs short programme at the ISU World Figure Skating Championships in Saitama, Japan

Russia's Ksenia Stolbova and Fedor Klimov compete during the pairs short programme at the ISU World Figure Skating Championships in Saitama, JapanReuters



Supporters of J Jayalalithaa, chief minister of India's Tamil Nadu state, wear masks during an election campaign ahead of the general elections in the southern Indian city of Chennai

Supporters of J Jayalalithaa, chief minister of India's Tamil Nadu state, wear masks during an election campaign ahead of the general elections in the southern Indian city of ChennaiReuters



A rider prepares to throw his spear during the pasola war festival at Wainyapu village in Sumba Island, Indonesia

A rider prepares to throw his spear during the pasola war festival at Wainyapu village in Sumba Island, IndonesiaGetty



US astronaut Steven Swanson, a member of the International Space Station crew, tests his space suit during pre-launch preparations at the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan

US astronaut Steven Swanson, a member of the International Space Station crew, tests his space suit during pre-launch preparations at the Baikonur cosmodrome in KazakhstanReuters



The Soyuz TMA-12M spacecraft carrying US astronaut Steven Swanson and Russian cosmonauts Alexander Skvortsov and Oleg Artemyev blasts off from the Baikonur cosmodrome on its way to the International Space Station

The Soyuz TMA-12M spacecraft carrying US astronaut Steven Swanson and Russian cosmonauts Alexander Skvortsov and Oleg Artemyev blasts off from the Baikonur cosmodrome on its way to the International Space StationReuters



Rescue specialists for USA-1 drill through a concrete slab to rescue a 'victim' from the scene of a mock disaster area during a training exercise at the Guardian Centre in Perry, Georgia

Rescue specialists for USA-1 drill through a concrete slab to rescue a 'victim' from the scene of a mock disaster area during a training exercise at the Guardian Centre in Perry, GeorgiaReuters



Emergency response workers rescue a 'victim' from a flooded mock disaster area during a training exercise at the Guardian Centre in Perry, Georgia

Emergency response workers rescue a 'victim' from a flooded mock disaster area during a training exercise at the Guardian Centre in Perry, GeorgiaReuters



A swimmer does laps in the Bronte Ocean Pool as rain falls in Sydney

A swimmer does laps in the Bronte Ocean Pool as rain falls in SydneyGetty



Activists of the animalEQUALITY hold animals that died in factory farming and laboratories, to protest against intensive animal husbandry at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin

Activists of the animalEQUALITY hold animals that died in factory farming and laboratories, to protest against intensive animal husbandry at the Brandenburg Gate in BerlinReuters



A woman uses a calculator as prostitutes wait for customers in the Dolly district in Surabaya, Indonesia

A woman uses a calculator as prostitutes wait for customers in the Dolly district in Surabaya, IndonesiaReuters



Staff at satellite communications company Inmarsat point to a section of the screen showing the southern Indian Ocean, where Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is believed to have plunged

Staff at satellite communications company Inmarsat point to a section of the screen showing the southern Indian Ocean, where Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is believed to have plungedReuters



A young relative of one of the deceased 46 navy sailors from the sunken naval ship Cheonan attends an event marking the fourth anniversary of the incident at the National Cemetery of South Korea in Daejeo. The South Korean naval corvette is believed to have been torpedoed by North Korea on March 26, 2010 near the disputed sea border with the North

A young relative of one of the deceased 46 navy sailors from the sunken naval ship Cheonan attends an event marking the fourth anniversary of the incident at the National Cemetery of South Korea in Daejeo. The South Korean naval corvette is believed to have been torpedoed by North Korea on March 26, 2010 near the disputed sea border with the NorthReuters



A search and rescue worker looks for survivors in the aftermath of a mudslide in Oso, Washington State

A search and rescue worker looks for survivors in the aftermath of a mudslide in Oso, Washington StateGetty



A bouquet of flowers lies on a damaged farming vehicle in the aftermath of a mudslide in Oso, Washington State

A bouquet of flowers lies on a damaged farming vehicle in the aftermath of a mudslide in Oso, Washington StateGetty




Kim Jong-un Turns Blind Eye to North Korea's Illegal Property Market


Kim Jong-un makes rare public appearance in front of international media

North Korean leader Kim Jong-unReuters



The regime of Kim Jong-un is turning a blind eye to North Korea's growing illegal property market, where people unofficially buy and sell houses despite such transactions being forbidden in the country.


The socialist state owns all property within it, meaning transactions in houses and apartments are forbidden. Anyone who sells, buys or rents a house can be sentenced to hard labour, according to socialist statutes.


However, North Korea is one of the fastest developing property markets in the world with "widespread and sophisticated" transactions, according to a Reuters report which cited defectors and experts.


"Homes, one of the few resources North Koreans have, are now extensively traded unofficially. The regime has no option but to tolerate this ... because officials are involved as well," said Jeong Eun-mee, a Seoul National University (SNU) research professor.


The percentage of North Koreans who are buying their own home - as opposed to waiting for the government to assign one - is growing rapidly.


A survey last year of 133 people who defected from North Korea in 2012 was carried out by the SNU's Institute for Peace and Unification Studies. This survey found 67% of the defectors had bought their own homes, compared to 14% who had been given accommodation.


Certain people selling food and cheap consumer goods in private markets around the country are also working as property brokers. Deals are made in US dollars in the capital Pyongyang and in Chinese yuan along the Chinese border.


Subsequently, buyers and sellers bribe housing officials, who issue or modify documents, to approve the transactions, Reuters' sources said.


"It's another example of how the regime of leader Kim Jong-un is turning a blind eye to a black market that offers North Koreans a chance to upgrade their living conditions, move from one location to another, or to simply make some money, especially given that house prices have been rising steadily," according to sources.


Defectors staying outside the country normally send money to their families to buy better homes. Some of them are also considering property as an investment option, as they hope for an eventual unification of impoverished North Korea and the wealthy South.


Defectors send an estimated $10m each year to the home country, routing the money through agents on the Chinese border, according the Organization for One Korea, a South Korean support group for defectors.


"Money talks in North Korea. If you have money, send it to somebody you trust. You can buy a decent house in the border region with China," said Kim Young-il, a defector and activist in Seoul.



Malaysia Airlines Plane MH370: Underwater Volcanoes 'May Mean Wreckage is Never Found'


Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 Search Indian Ocean Australia

Staff at satellite communications company Inmarsat point to a section of the screen showing the southern Indian Ocean, where Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is believed to have plungedReuters



The search for the missing Malaysian Airlines plane MH370 will be vastly hindered by a chain of active volcanoes under the sea where teams are looking for the wreckage.


Underwater geologist Robin Beaman, from the James Cook University in Australia, said the volcanoes will make the search much more difficult because of the changing landscape beneath the southern Indian Ocean.


"It's very unfortunate if that debris has landed on the active crest area, it will make life more challenging," he told the Sydney Morning Herald.


"It's rugged, it's covered in faults, fine-scale gullies and ridges, there isn't a lot of sediment blanketing that part of the world because it's fresh [in geological terms]."


Beaman said the giant undersea chain of volcanoes has barely been mapped in detail, meaning any attempt to retrieve the aircraft will require extensive 3D mapping and the use of multibeam echo sounders.


Fastest Growth of Underwater Volcanoes Documented at Monowai

Wreckage thought to be along chain of underwater volcanoesReuters



This is particularly problematic because Australian experts no longer have the capacity to go beyond depths of three kilometres after the only government vessel capable was decommissioned in December last year.


"It's bad timing really. Australia has no capability of mapping these depths," he said.


"On the flanks of the ridge, which is very likely where any crash zone occurred, there has been virtually no ... mapping apart from the odd strip. It's all going to have to be remapped, there's no doubt."


The last surveys of the area to create a 3D map of the sea floor were conducted 20 years ago, and were only around 10 to 20km wide – making Beaman even less optimistic of finding the plane.


"It'll be very unlikely that debris has fallen in those little 10 to 20-kilometre-wide zones. You're left with gaps of hundreds of kilometres where there is no detailed understanding of what the sea floor terrain looks like."


Australia's prime minister Tony Abbott has said the search will continue until it becomes hopeless: "It is not absolutely open-ended but it is not something we will lightly abandon," he said.



FLIGHT MH370 FACTBOX


Flight MH370 took off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport en route to Beijing at 00:41 on Saturday 8 March (16:41 GMT Friday).


About 50 minutes later, the aircraft lost contact with air traffic control.


No distress call was made.


On board, there were 12 Malaysian crew members and 227 passengers from 14 countries. That included 153 Chinese and 38 Malaysians.


Two Iranian male passengers, Pouria Nour Mohammad Mahread and Delavar Syed Mohammad Reza, were travelling on fake passports. Neither had any apparent links to terrorist groups.


No debris from the plane has been found in the international search.


Last confirmed communication with Indian Ocean satellite occurred at 08:11am, meaning plane continued to fly for seven hours after radar signal was lost.


At least 25 countries, including China, the US and Singapore, have now joined in the search for the missing plane.




Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370: New Satellite Images Locate 122 Objects Off Perth


Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 Search Indian Ocean Australia

Staff at satellite communications company Inmarsat point to a section of the screen showing the southern Indian Ocean, where Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is believed to have plungedReuters



Malaysian authorities said fresh satellite images have located dozens of objects floating in the southern Indian Ocean, where missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is believed to have crashed.


Malaysia's transport minister Hishammuddin Hussein told a press conference in Kuala Lumpur that 122 objects possibly related to the Boeing 777 that disappeared earlier this month were spotted by France's Airbus Defence and Space division.


"Some objects were one metre length others were as much as 23 metres in length," Hussein said. "Some objects appeared to be bright possibly indicating solid material."


Hussein said the potential debris were located in an area of about 400 square kilometres, located 2557 Km from Perth.


The minister added that the new images taken on March 23 were analysed by the Malaysian Remote Sensing Agency (MRSA) but it was not possible to conclude the objects were definitely from MH370.


He said it was the fourth separate satellite lead that was being investigated.


"A multinational team led by Australia is combing the waters trying to find debris from the flight," Hussain said.


Hussein said the search area had been divided in two sectors over which 12 aircrafts were flying in an attempt to locate the missing plane.


"We will never give up trying to find the plane in order to bring closure to the families and to establish exactly what happened to MH370."



BREAKING NEWS: Israel Sinks Palestinian Smuggling Boats


Israel Gaza Tunnel Terror Hamas Palestine Fatah West Bank Egypt

A Palestinian works inside a smuggling tunnel flooded by Egyptian forces, beneath the Egyptian-Gaza border in Rafah, in the southern Gaza StripReuters



The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) have sunk two Gaza-bound smuggling boats, resulting in several casualties on the Palestinian side.


The vessels were returning to Gaza from Egypt and were suspected of being used for smuggling goods, said an IDF spokesperson.


The Israeli navy had opened fire at the boats off the Gazan coast after they were attacked. At least four Palestinians are said to have been injured in the incident and no Israelis have been wounded.


The IDF said explosions were heard on the boats subsequent to the firing.


The Palestinian Ma'an news agency claimed the injured were Gazan fisherman, and they have been admitted to a hospital in Rafah.


Local reports suggest the use of light artillery by the Israeli forces knocked out the power supply in the southern Gaza town of Rafah.



Malaysia Airlines MH370's Disappearance: Legal Proceedings Against Operators and Boeing Begin


Missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 and legal proceedings against the airlines

Malaysia Airlines MH370's Disappearance: Legal Proceedings Against Operators and Boeing BeginReuters



As the hunt for the debris of the Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 continues in the remote region of the southern Indian Ocean, legal procedures demanding the records of the plane have begun.


Januari Siregar, father of the Indonesian passenger Chandra Siregar aboard the Boeing 777, has sought information of the flight's data via the Chicago-based law firm Ribbeck Law Chartered. The move is seen as a prelude to a full-fledged lawsuit against the airlines and is likely to be followed by a barrage of similar litigations by others.


The request, seeking 26 kinds of information regarding the plane from both the Malaysia Airline System Bhd and Boeing, was filed in the Illinois stage court in Chicago. The sought data include possible defects on the plane, the kind of cargo and the training given to the crew members.


"That's usually how we begin the process. We have our own experts doing their investigation. If the wreckage is not found, there would be little or no evidence we can rely on. We are hoping against hope that they do find the wreckage of the plane and the black box," the law firm's spokesperson Mervin Mateo told Bloomberg.


The firm specialises in aviation cases.


The passenger jet, with 239 people on board - 227 passengers and 12 crew members, en route to Beijing abruptly disappeared from all radar screens on 8 March.