Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Abbott bid to thaw Indonesia freeze


Australian PM Tony Abbott at the Australian Socceroos Official Farewell Dinner at Sydney Opera House on May 22, 2014.


Australian PM Tony Abbott at the Australian Socceroos Official Farewell Dinner at Sydney Opera House on May 22, 2014.




  • Australian, Indonesian leaders to meet for first time in six months Wednesday

  • Relationship soured over phone tapping allegations and asylum seeker policy

  • Australian PM is struggling in opinion polls after delivering painful budget

  • From Indonesia, Abbott will travel to France, Canada and the U.S.



(CNN) — A four-minute video lampooning your image as an international statesman is not the ideal start to a foreign tour.


But this week, Australia’s increasingly unpopular Prime Minister Tony Abbott will put an unflattering viral video behind him as he embarks on a 10-day trip to Indonesia, France, Canada and the U.S.


As the clip, from John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight,” spread through social media, the show tweeted: “Australia is a continent divided! After last night’s episode, they are unable to decide between hashtags #TonyDumbDumb and #TonyDumDum.”


The most recent opinion polls back up the sentiment, with an approval rating of just 33%, down from his highest rating of 45% in November last year, according to Newspoll surveys commissioned by The Australian newspaper.






Mending ties with Indonesia


Abbott’s foreign tour will start in Indonesia Wednesday when he meets President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono face-to-face for the first time in six months.


Relations between the two countries soured last November amid allegations that Australian intelligence agencies phone-tapped Indonesia’s leader, his wife and close allies. Indonesia immediately recalled its ambassador, who has only recently returned to his post.




Asylum seekers on Abbott’s trip agenda




New Australian PM Tony Abbott sworn in


“The clear indication from Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is that he wants this thing to end on good terms as he completes his presidency of 10 years,” Ross Tapsell, a lecturer in Asian Studies at the Australian National University told CNN.


Yudohoyono will step down after two terms in office, when the country votes for a new leader in July.


“He’s clearly been known to be a friend of Australia… and he’s prided himself on his international statesman image. Certainly as he comes to the end of his reign that will be how he will be wanting his legacy to be reflected, because domestically he’s been rating very poorly in the polls,” Tapsell said.


Abbott has made it clear too he wants to mend ties, on Tuesday brushing aside revelations that Indonesian journalists were in the room listening to an ostensibly private phone conversation between Abbott and Yudhoyono last month.


Asked by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Chris Ulhmann whether he knew journalists were listening, Abbott said, “the important thing is the quality of the conversation.”


Describing the call as “very genial,” Abbott said “there is no doubt that President Yudhoyono is and will always be, I think, a great friend of Australia.”


A transcript of the phone call was published on an Indonesian website in early May. A



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How to overcome shyness


Hate mingling? Dread public speaking? Try these confidence-boosting strategies to overcome shyness.


Hate mingling? Dread public speaking? Try these confidence-boosting strategies to overcome shyness.




  • Even the bold can become shy at challenging points in their lives

  • Experts suggest improv classes because of its “zero-tolerance policy for perfectionism”

  • Labeling your shyness or social anxiety is one of the easiest ways to overcome it

  • Eye contact increases likelihood a person will participate in conversation



(RealSimple.com) — Hi. My name is Sarah, and I’m a reporter, so you wouldn’t think that I would hesitate at all talking to people at parties. But I’m shy, too. And I have been since I was a kid.


Genes may have something to do with my shyness. People with different genotypes on average tend to have different levels of social anxiety, says Scott F. Stoltenberg, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, who has conducted recent research on the topic. But environmental factors count more: We take cues from our parents. We suffer if we’re bullied. Even the bold can become shy when faced with certain challenges, like a job loss or a rejection, says Anne Marie Albano, a clinical psychologist and the director of the Columbia University Clinic for Anxiety and Related Disorders, in New York City. Half the people in the United States say that they’re shy to some degree, according to Philip Zimbardo, a professor emeritus at Stanford University and a pioneer in research on shyness. He and other experts think of sociability along a spectrum, with one end being, essentially, “I live for parties” and the other, “Leave me alone — forever.” I fall somewhere in between.


There are worse things in life, of course, but I would love never having to feel awkward in social situations again. Plus, it has always been a little too easy for me to talk myself into staying home instead of going out. Experts say that every time a shy person avoids a social event, her anxiety may grow, and it won’t be any easier to feel confident the next time around. “People think that social confidence is just something people have,” says Lynne Henderson, a clinical psychologist and the director of the Shyness Institute, in Berkeley, California. “But it’s something you build by repeatedly putting yourself in social situations.”


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That’s why I decided to put myself through a self-designed boot camp. For four weeks, I read self-help books and was coached by the foremost experts on shyness. Then I took their advice to get-togethers, the running path, and even the stage. The challenge proved to be just that — a challenge. But it also worked, as it may for those of you who are shy and willing to try your own version of the program. Here’s what I learned.


Lesson No.1: Every Sentence Coming Out of Your Mouth Isn’t Going to Make Sense; Accept It


“Many shy, socially anxious people report the fear of being unable to make a desired impression on others,” says Barry Schlenker, a professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Florida, in Gainesville, who has done extensive research on social anxiety. Shy people often appear to others as socially competent, but for whatever reason (unrealistic personal standards, a lack of confidence), they can’t see it themselves. Shy people also tend to believe that when they inevitably fail to come across well, they’ll suffer unpleasant consequences, including shame, because of it. It’s no wonder, then, that they tend to clam up in large gatherings. Instead, says Henderson, they should try to “bumble freely,” to realize that it’s OK to lose their train of thought or forget a person’s name. While there’s no magic switch to change the way you view your social interactions, you can make a conscious effort to talk more often and to deliberately edit your self-judgments afterward. Pretend to be your best friend. When you’re being hard on yourself, ask, “What would she say to me?”


Lesson in action: To practice speaking spontaneously, I enroll in a class at the Peoples Improv Theater, in New York City. Improv helps, experts say, because it calls for a zero-tolerance policy for perfectionism. The scenes move so quickly that mistakes are inevitable, even for the most experienced performers. Plus, says Tom Yorton, the CEO of Second City Communications, a company that uses improv to build communication skills in corporate employees, participants “focus less on judging themselves and more on creating a connection with others.”


At first, every new exercise makes me nervous, and about half the scenes that I’m in are total busts, filled with awkward pauses and topics that fizzle. One in particular, about a trip to the beach, ends with a lame “Well, it was good to see you.” Later I catch myself fixating on failures. But rather than wallowing, I remember that messing up is no big deal, and that everyone else did it, too. By the third week, I feel more relaxed and realize that the more mistakes I make — and I make a lot — the less each one seems to matter.


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Lesson No. 2: The Word No Is a Major No


The most important rule of improv (and a good guideline for life) is this: Say “yes, and…” instead of “no.” In other words, agree rather than argue. Compliment, don’t insult. The theory, says Yorton, is that “the notion of ‘no,’ whether spoken in improv or in work and social situations, creates a barrier. It closes off possibilities instead of opening up new ones. If you affirm what the other person is saying and build upon it, there’s unlimited growth potential.” But why does this practice build confidence? “Because it feels empowering to acknowledge and validate others, to be someone who is helpful and giving,” say Yorton.


Lesson in action: A week into my experiment, while on a run, I bump into another jogger, a friend of my husband’s. My initial instinct is to tell him to go on ahead; I’m self-conscious about how slowly I run. But that would essentially be saying no, which is counter to the rules, so I keep running with him. We start chatting, and he tells me that from a distance, he thought I was someone else. I’m a little put off by the comparison to this person, but I don’t let it faze me, and we move on to other topics, such as work and a play that he acted in. The run breezes by so quickly that I almost don’t notice how well the improv rules worked.


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Lesson No. 3: The Eyes Are the Window to a Good Conversation


Recent data analysis by Quantified Impressions, a communication-analytics company based in Austin, Texas, suggests that in order to forge an emotional and meaningful connection before or during a conversation, you need to engage in eye contact for 60 to 70 % of the interaction. What’s more, eye contact increases a person’s likelihood of participating in a conversation, according to a 2002 study at Queen’s University, in Ontario, Canada. “If three people sit down for coffee and one person isn’t being looked at, that person is less likely to talk,” says Briar Goldberg, the director of feedback at Quantified Impressions. “Your level of eye contact lets the other person know that you’re interested in them and that they should feel comfortable continuing on with the conversation.”


Lesson in action: I show up at a weekly swing dance, where the only way to participate is to ask someone to be my partner. I’ve been trying to convince myself to go to this event for months. (I take group swing-dance classes.) But I haven’t been able to work up the nerve. But now that I have a plan, I feel more self-assured. After scanning the room, I spot a potential partner and try to catch his gaze. When he looks my way, I walk over to him and ask him to dance, and just like that we’re out on the floor. The trick winds up landing me partner after partner. In fact, I’m so encouraged, I come back to the dance twice more over the next month.


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Lesson No. 4: You — Yes, You –Make for an Interesting Conversation Topic


Shy people often hesitate to talk about themselves for fear of seeming boring or being judged, says Deborah C. Beidel, a professor of psychology at the University of Central Florida, in Orlando. But that just makes it hard for them to keep a conversation going. As Alan Garner, a communications expert, writes in his book “Conversationally Speaking,” “The people you meet want to know about you, too.” If you don’t share, the person you’re talking to might conclude that you really aren’t interested in making a connection. What’s more, if you keep pelting someone with questions without offering any statements, you force the other person to do all the talking. “The general spirit of the principle,” says Yorton, “is don’t put the burden on other people to carry all the freight.” Conversations should be symmetrical. People typically self-disclose at the same rate, writes Garner, who also offers instructions for doing so without appearing self-absorbed: When you ask questions and receive responses, “attempt to link those responses to your own knowledge and experiences.” In other words, don’t start randomly spouting facts about your dating life or job, as some shy people do when their nerves get the best of them.


Lesson in action: At a clothing swap about three weeks into my experiment, an acquaintance says that she didn’t realize I was still in New York. Instead of just confirming that I’m still in town and leaving it at that, I share a little about how crazy the last year has been. (I got married, my husband quit his job, and my mother-in-law had major surgery.) And by the time we’re leaving, we’re making plans to get coffee. I also make it a point to chat with the barista at my new favorite coffee spot whenever I go in. We don’t talk about anything special. I just ask him how he’s doing and tell him a bit about my day in return. Then, one afternoon, he tells me that this time my coffee is on him. It’s the first time that has ever happened to me, and it feels like a victory.


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Lesson No. 5: Curb Anxiety by Admitting That You Have It


According to a 2012 study published in Psychological Science, putting a negative emotion into words (that is, labeling it) can lessen that emotion’s severity. When subjects who were all fearful of spiders were asked to approach a large, live tarantula, those who had previously expressed their emotions out loud were able to get closer to the arachnid than were those who had kept their fright to themselves. This tactic may work for social anxiety, too. In fact, says Henderson, saying that you’re shy is sometimes one of the easiest ways to relax about it. There are a few theories as to why. One is that a single region of the brain, the right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, seems to handle both the labeling and the regulation of emotional responses, says Katharina Kircanski, a postdoctoral fellow in the department of psychology at Stanford University and a coauthor of the study. Zero in on one and the other will follow. The benefits of mindfulness could also be at play. “Verbalizing that you’re afraid may help you notice your feelings in the present moment, rather than trying to push them away, which can sometimes create even more distress,” says Kircanski.


Lesson in action: It’s been four weeks since I started my boot camp, and my improv class is preparing a show. The thought of inviting my friends immediately makes me nervous, but I e-mail them anyway and make it a point to tell them how I’m feeling. Just admitting it calms me down. One friend writes that she thinks that I’m “ridiculously brave.” Another says that what I’m doing is “sort of a nightmare” of hers. Hearing that reassures me even more. When the day of the performance arrives, I sneak a peek at my pals in the audience. I realize that if I mess up, it just doesn’t matter, and my friends are not going to think less of me. It’s exactly how a socially confident person would feel. And it feels great.


RealSimple.com: 5 Ways to Win People Over


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Islamists hit back at Libya renegades




  • Ansar al Sharia fighters attack a base belonging to a Libyan army unit loyal to Gen. Khalifa Haftar

  • Without Libyan government consent, Haftar is attacking Benghazi Islamist groups

  • He says his Benghazi campaign is a war to purge Libya of extremist groups

  • Jihadist group leader accuses him of war against Islam, warns U.S. not to back him



Tripoli, Libya (CNN) — At least 15 people were killed and more than 40 wounded in battles between the Jihadist militant group Ansar al Sharia and forces loyal to a renegade general in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi on Monday, according to hospitals in the city.


Fighting erupted at about 2 a.m. when Ansar al Sharia fighters surrounded and attacked a Benghazi base belonging to a Libyan army special forces unit that allied itself with renegade Gen. Khalifa Haftar, according to residents and Col. Mohammed al-Hijazi, a spokesman for the self-declared Libyan National Army.


Battles continued for hours in different parts of the city through the morning hours. Live pictures on the privately owned Libya al-Ahrar TV showed plumes of black smoke rising as explosions and gunfire could be heard in the distance.


The fighting in Libya’s second-largest city comes more than two weeks after the previously retired Haftar — without the consent of the Libyan government and military command in Tripoli — launched a ground an air assault against Islamist groups in Benghazi.




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Saif Gadhafi appears in Libya court


Most of the casualties that al-Jalaa Hospital received Monday were Libyan army soldiers. The Benghazi Medical Center, meanwhile, said the son of its director was killed when a shell hit the director’s home during Monday’s fighting.


Hospitals in the city called for blood donations as security forces asked residents to avoid the areas of fighting.


“We remain concerned about the safety of Benghazi residents who are caught in the armed clashes. We urge all those involved in the clashes to spare residents and infrastructure, and urge Libyan authorities to ensure the protection of Benghazi residents,” said Hanan Salah, Libya researcher for Human Rights Watch.


The clashes appeared to be the most intense to hit Benghazi since Haftar’s May 16 offensive, dubbed Operation Dignity, against Islamist militia bases in and near Benghazi. More than 70 people were killed in that assault.


Without the blessing of the central government and the military command in Tripoli, some Libyan military members joined Haftar’s offensive. The move underscored the difficulty that Tripoli has had in controlling the security situation in Benghazi, more than 400 miles to the east of the capital, since the 2011 revolution that toppled longtime ruler Moammar Gadhafi.


In recent days, forces loyal to Haftar have launched airstrikes in the city, according to residents and videos uploaded onto social media sites.


One of the main targets of Haftar’s Benghazi campaign, which he said is an open-ended war to purge Libya of extremist groups, is Ansar al Sharia, which the United States earlier this year named a terrorist group. The United States says the group was involved in a September 2012 attack on a U.S. diplomatic compound, killing Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans.


Anger has been mounting in Benghazi, the cradle of Libya’s 2011 revolution, over deteriorating security in the past two years. Bombings, killings and kidnappings became near daily in the city, and an assassination campaign mainly targeting security forces intensified in recent months. Foreigners, judges, activists and, most recently, an outspoken newspaper editor are among the victims of these assassinations.


No group has claimed responsibility for the violence that has gripped the city, but officials and residents have blamed it on Islamist extremist groups that have grown in size and influence since the revolution.


Libya’s weak central government has been unable to secure the city, and one army unit in Benghazi, known as the special forces, has clashed several times with Ansar al Sharia since November.


Country divided over Haftar’s campaign


Haftar’s campaign has further divided an already polarized country. A number of military units, officials and many Libyans support his offensive against what they say is terrorism in their country. Opponents, including moderate Islamists, have described the move by Haftar as a coup attempt.


While many say they do not support Haftar the person, they are backing his campaign as a first significant use of force against extremist groups. However, some fear the campaign does not make a distinction between the extremist Jihadist groups and moderate Islamists.


On Friday, hundreds of demonstrators took to the streets of Tripoli, Benghazi and other cities in support of Haftar’s Operation Dignity.


In the capital, protesters carried a symbolic coffin — with “Ansar al Sharia” written on one of its sides — through Tripoli’s Martyrs Square. Demonstrators hit it with their shoes before stomping on it and smashing it.


The latest wave of outrage against the Jihadist group came a few days after one of its leaders held a news conference accusing Haftar of carrying out a war against Islam and warned of consequences if the offensive continues.


“We remind the criminal Haftar and those who chose his path … their insistence on this dirty war will unleash hell on him and the whole region,” Mohammed al-Zahawi said.


Al-Zahawi accused the United States of supporting Haftar and threatened it if it intervened.


“We remind America, if it tries to intervene, of its heinous defeats in Iraq, Afghanistan and Somalia. Libya … will only show America what is more severe than what it saw there,” he said.


The United States has denied any support to the campaign or recent contact with Haftar.


Meanwhile, al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb released a statement calling on Libyans to fight Haftar.


The statement, which appeared on Jihadist sites Sunday, said Haftar was waging a “war on Islam under the pretext of fighting terrorism” — a war it said was backed by the United States and financed by Arab Gulf countries.


The al Qaeda affiliate in the region described Haftar’s assault as a “Crusader plot” to stop the implementation of Sharia, or Islamic law, in Libya.




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Brothers confess to India gang rape




  • The shocking attack on the cousins ages 14 and 16 sparks outrage worldwide

  • Two police officers and three brothers are arrested

  • A total of five men are in custody so far

  • “We are scared,” says Renu Devi, a woman in the village



Katra village, India (CNN) — Three brothers have confessed to involvement in the gang rape of two teenage girls in India, a police officer told CNN.


The men have pleaded guilty to the rape charges but have not admitted to killing the girls, police spokesman Mukesh Saxena said Sunday.


All five known suspects, including two police officers, have been arrested, he said.


The police complaint also names two unknown people in the case. Investigations are trying to determine their identity, Saxena said.


The assault on the cousins, ages 14 and 16, sparked outrage in the community in Uttar Pradesh state. After being gang raped, they were hanged from a mango tree, police said.


Villagers streamed into the homes of the girls’ relatives, weeping behind their customary veils. The mother of one of the girls said her daughter wanted to become a doctor to escape grinding poverty.


The attackers, she said, deserved the same fate that befell her daughter.




Arrests in rape, hanging of two girls




Village head in India ordered rape?




Do women feel safe in India?


“Hang them in public,” she said.


CNN cannot identify the relatives or victims under Indian law.


In the northern village where the attack occurred, crowds surrounded the girls for hours after their bodies were found Wednesday. They accused authorities of siding with the suspects and blocked them from taking the girls down from their nooses unless arrests are made.


In addition to possible rape and murder charges, the officers face charges of conspiracy in the crime and negligence of duty after villagers accused them of failing to respond when they first pinpointed the suspects.


An autopsy confirmed that the girls had been raped and strangled, according to authorities. They were cremated the same day the bodies were found, in line with Hindu customs, said Mukesh Saxena, a local police official.


“We are scared,” said Renu Devi, a woman in the village where the attack occurred.


“If this could happen to them, it could happen to us also.”


Police under scrutiny


Devi has reason to fear. The girls were out in the orchard relieving themselves Tuesday night when the attackers grabbed them, authorities said.


Toilets are rare in the village, forcing women to wander away into fields in the dead of night.


“There’s no toilet. Where can the girls go?” shouted Jamuni Devi, another woman from the village. “No one has done anything for sanitation.”


Indians have more access to mobile phones than to toilets, according to a



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Kids stabbed on way for ice cream




  • A boy, 6, and a girl, 7, were stabbed in an elevator in a Brooklyn neighborhood

  • The boy, Prince Joshua “PJ” Avitto, died; the girl is in critical condition, police say

  • Police investigate whether the attack is related to a fatal stabbing in the same area



(CNN) — New York police are searching for a man who stabbed two children, one fatally, in an elevator Sunday evening.


Police described the man as a “heavy set” black male, approximately 6 feet tall, between ages 25 and 35, and last seen wearing a gray shirt. He stabbed a 6-year-old boy and a 7-year-old girl inside an elevator in their apartment building in the East New York neighborhood of Brooklyn and fled, police said.


Prince Joshua “PJ” Avitto, 6, was stabbed in the torso and transported to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The girl was also stabbed in the torso and remains in critical condition, according to police.


New York Police Commissioner Bill Bratton said Monday that the two children were on their way to get ice cream when they were stabbed.


“The amount of violence we saw in an unusual weekend reinforces the need for an energized police department,” Bratton said. “We cannot have a city where two … children going to get an ice cream are stabbed, one killed and the other fighting for her life. That is not the City of New York that we want to police.”


Families of both children have been coping with grief and have struggled to comprehend the situation.


“It’s two children. It doesn’t make any sense,” said Scott Avitto, PJ’s uncle. “We’re all just struggling, we’re trying to pull it together. Our family is strong, but we just want justice to be done.”


“Pray for her, and us. And pray for PJ’s family. This is senseless. I don’t know what monster would do something like this,” Regenia Trevathan, the girl’s great-grandmother, told CNN affiliate WCBS. She said adults were watching the children outside on a playground when they went inside the building alone to get ice cream.


Avitto was related to Taj Gibson, a forward for the Chicago Bulls. Gibson tweeted Monday morning: “They killed my lil super man. #rippj only two more weeks until your 7 birthday. Tears forever.” Gibson also posted a picture of Avitto to his Instagram account.


PJ’s godfather Henry Alston said the boy’s funeral will be Friday.


Police have recovered a Dura Edge knife that was used in the homicide.


Investigators are considering the possibility that the suspect may also be responsible for another fatal stabbing that occurred just blocks away.


Tanaya Copeland, 18, was found in the same neighborhood Friday night, unconscious and unresponsive with multiple stab wounds to her torso. Copeland was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital, police said.


The close proximity of the incidents, as well as similarities in the type of weapons used, have led detectives to believe the two cases may be related. No arrests have yet been made in either case, and the investigation is ongoing, police said.




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Dust storm kills 5 in Tehran




  • The freak storm plunged the city into darkness

  • Another 30 people were reported injured

  • Some flights were delayed at Tehran’s Mehrabad airport



(CNN) — At least five people were reported killed and 30 injured Monday evening when a freak dust storm rolled through Iran’s capital, Tehran.


The storm brought winds that nearly reached 120 kilometers per hour, or some 75 mph, according to Iran’s Press TV.


It reported the storm plunged the city into darkness, and photographs from Tehran showed giant clouds of sand and dust clogging the air.


Some flights were delayed at Tehran’s Mehrabad International Airport, but operations returned to normal when the storm passed, Press TV said.


It was not immediately clear how the victims were killed or injured.





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Monday, June 2, 2014

California killing spree dads meet




  • Richard Martinez, whose son, Christopher was fatally shot, contacted Peter Rodger

  • Elliot Rodger, 22, killed six people and himself on a rampage in Isla Vista, California

  • Martinez has criticized politicians and the NRA for lax gun laws



(CNN) — Two grieving fathers, who each lost a son in the recent killing spree in Santa Barbara, California, met for the first time Sunday.


Peter Rodger, the father of killer Elliot Rodger, met with Richard Martinez, whose son Christopher was killed by the younger Rodger in the deadly rampage through the college town of Isla Vista just over a week ago.


The meeting was private, and no media or cameras were allowed.


“I have met with Peter Rodger and we plan to work together so other families such as ours will not suffer as ours have,” Martinez told CNN affiliate KEYT. “This was a private conversation between grieving fathers who’ve reached common ground.”



Christopher Martinez was fatally shot by Elliot Rodger.
Christopher Martinez was fatally shot by Elliot Rodger.





Victim’s dad: Politicians, don’t call me


An emotional Martinez has been an outspoken critic of the nation’s gun laws in the days since his 20-year-old son, a junior at the University of California at Santa Barbara, was gunned down by Rodger inside a deli on campus the night of the rampage.


Police say Rodger killed six people between the ages of 19 and 22 the night of May 23 after years of rejection and jealousy. He was later found dead in his car from a gunshot wound to the head.


His family had tried to get help for him in the weeks leading up to the massacre, even calling police to conduct a welfare check, but all attempts at helping the troubled 22-year-old college student failed.


Richard Martinez has been so grief-stricken by his son’s death that he reached out to the father of his son’s killer. Peter Rodger agreed to a private meeting Sunday.


No other details of the meeting were available.




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Why the upset over prisoner swap?




  • Soldier’s release generates controversy and questions

  • Some say the deal puts Americans at greater risk

  • Others question Bergdahl’s disappearance

  • The Obama administration may have broken the law, other critics say



(CNN) — After five years in captivity, Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl is free. But that’s hardly the end of the story. While the Idaho man’s friends and family and the Obama administration are hailing his release, the deal that set him free is getting heat from critics who say Bergdahl is a traitor who cost American lives and those who say the deal could cost American lives in the future.


A captive U.S. soldier returns home … sounds like a good thing. Why are some people so upset?


Some fear that the deal will encourage hostage-taking and open a new era in which the United States has to negotiate with terrorists. Others say the administration may have broken the law by failing to notify Congress that it was letting terror detainees free from the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Still others — many of them Bergdahl’s fellow soldiers — are queasy about the whole thing because of the questions that continue to swirl around his disappearance and claims that he may have deserted his post.


Don’t other countries make such swaps? Hasn’t the U.S.?




Released Guantanamo detainees in Qatar




Emotional homecoming for Bergdahl family




Emotional homecoming for Bergdahl family


Of course. Prisoner exchanges have been a feature of many U.S. conflicts going back to the Revolutionary War. And no student of Cold War history could overlook the exchange of U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers for a Russian spy in 1962, or of the several cloak-and-dagger spy exchanges conducted on Germany’s Glienicke Bridge. Other countries, notably Israel, have also been known to negotiate prisoner swaps to gain the release of captive soldiers.


One controversy here is a U.S. law that requires the administration to give Congress notice 30 days before releasing any detainees from the military prison at Guantanamo Bay. National Security Adviser Susan Rice said Sunday on CNN that the “acute urgency” of Bergdahl’s failing health and what she described as a narrow opportunity to win his freedom justified making the move without notifying Congress.


On Monday, White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough defended the administration’s handling of the negotiations, saying Congress had known for years of negotiations for Bergdahl’s release, including the possibility that detainees might be released.


So who is this guy, and how did he wind up getting captured, anyway?


Friends describe him as a trustworthy and outgoing world traveler who joined the Army in 2008. How he ended up captive remains a bit of a mystery. U.S. officials have declined to go into detail, but soldiers in his platoon say he was pulling guard duty when he put down his weapons and walked off base. He reportedly had sent e-mails to his parents denouncing U.S. activities in Afghanistan, according to 2012 reporting by late Rolling Stone reporter Michael Hastings.


What are the soldiers who served with him saying?


Bluntly, they resent any talk of Bergdahl as a hero. They say he’s a deserter who should be put on trial, especially in light of the deaths of at least six U.S. soldiers killed while looking for him.


“I was pissed off then and I am even more so now with everything going on,” said Matt Vierkant, who was in the same platoon as Bergdahl. “Bowe Bergdahl deserted during a time of war and his fellow Americans lost their lives searching for him.”


“I don’t understand why we’re trading prisoners at Gitmo for somebody who deserted during a time of war, which is an act of treason,” Vierkant said.


Are they right? Was he a deserter?


U.S. officials aren’t saying that, at least not directly. When asked about the issue Sunday, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel sidestepped the question. “Our first priority is assuring his well-being and his health and getting him reunited with his family,” Hagel said. “Other circumstances that may develop and questions, those will be dealt with later.”


On Monday, Pentagon spokesman Adm. John Kirby said U.S. officials “still don’t have a complete picture of what caused him to leave his base that night.”


“But let’s not forget, he was held captive as a prisoner for five years. Five years by himself,” Kirby said. “That’s a pretty high price to pay for whatever impelled him to walk off that base.”


So what’s next for him?


He’s at an American military hospital in Germany being evaluated by doctors and facing a lengthy repatriation process.


He’s in stable condition “receiving treatment for conditions that require hospitalization,” Landstuhl Regional Medical Center said in a statement. Beyond saying he requires attention to “dietary and nutrition needs,” the hospital didn’t elaborate, citing medical privacy requirements.


“The Landstuhl staff is sensitive to what Sgt. Bergdahl has been through and will proceed with his reintegration at a pace with which he is comfortable,” the hospital said.


Those in charge of treating Bergdahl are working to build up his confidence in them, a senior Defense Department official said, noting that Bergdahl hasn’t been able to trust anyone for five years.


He’ll eventually head to the United States for further treatment when he’s ready, the hospital said.


He hasn’t yet talked to his family, Kirby said.


“That will obviously occur, but it won’t occur until I think everybody believes it’s the right time,” he said.


Is it true he’s having trouble speaking English? Why?


Yes, according to a senior Defense Department official, but the reasons for it aren’t clear.


It may be that he hasn’t used English since he was captured, instead speaking to his captors in Pashtun, the local language.


Roy Hallums, a private contractor held by Iraqi insurgents for 10 months, said he didn’t have trouble readjusting to English, but said he couldn’t talk for a while because he had been forced to stay silent under threat of death.


“It’s like your vocal chords are like your muscles in your arms. If they don’t get any use, they get out of shape,” he told CNN’s “New Day.”


What about these detainees the U.S. let go? Should we worry about them?


According to senior U.S. officials, they’re mid- to high-level officials from the Taliban regime that ruled Afghanistan when the U.S. invaded the country. They include figures said to be linked to the late terror leader Osama bin Laden, his al Qaeda terror network and to abuses inside Afghanistan during the Taliban’s rule.


But Kirby said Monday that U.S. officials have received assurances from Qatari officials that the men “were not going to pose a direct threat to the national security of the United States.”


He declined to go into detail, but according to a senior defense official, they will be subject to Qatari supervision and a one-year travel ban.


Should we expect any more prisoner swaps or releases?


There aren’t any other U.S. military personnel being held, so there won’t be any more swaps involving troops, at least. But it’s possible that Bergdahl’s release presages a broader release of Afghan citizens from Guantanamo Bay, said CNN terrorism analyst Peter Bergen.


“At the end of hostilities, both sides typically swap prisoners, and we’re coming to the end of conventional hostilities between these two groups,” he said.




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What would a Taliban split mean?


Azam Tariq, a Mehsud faction spokesperson and Pakistan Taliban leader, says his faction is separating from the militant group.


Azam Tariq, a Mehsud faction spokesperson and Pakistan Taliban leader, says his faction is separating from the militant group.




  • Mehsud faction of Pakistan Taliban defects, citing ideological differences

  • The break comes after months of internal friction within the militant group

  • Analysts say the split weakens the Taliban, government talks played a role

  • It remands to be seen how Al Qaeda and splinter groups will respond



(CNN) — After months of infighting within the Pakistan Taliban, a major faction of the deadly militant group has apparently had enough.


The Mehsud faction has announced it’s parting ways with the central leadership of the group, known formally as the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), over ideological differences.


The breakaway faction had made attempts to convince the TTP to give up what it said were “un-Islamic” practices, such as attacks in public places, extortion, and kidnappings, and decided to separate from the banned terrorist outfit after these attempts failed, a spokesperson for the newly-formed faction, Azam Tariq, said in a statement released to the media last week.


It’s the first split since the TTP — a coalition of militant groups — was founded in 2007, seeking to establish its version of sharia law across Pakistan.




Pakistanis view of talks with Taliban




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New Taliban leader tried to kill Malala


Analysts say the move has major implications for alliances among Islamist groups in the region but there’s no guarantee it will lead to less violence.


The breakaway faction will be led by Khalid Mehsud — also known as Khan Syed Sajna — a TTP commander based in South Waziristan, near Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, Tariq said.


It’s believed Mehsud will command as many as 2,600 tribesmen, representing around half of the TTP’s forces, although the exact number is hard to determine due to the many smaller splinter groups with changing names and allegiances in other parts of the country, according to Raza Rumi, Senior Fellow at the Jinnah Institute, a Pakistani think tank and consulting editor at



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Sex trafficking hero quits after expose




  • Somaly Mam drew international attention for her personal tale of surviving sex slavery

  • She used that narrative to begin a foundation and collect money to save girls

  • But Newsweek reports this month that her personal story is untrue

  • Mam resigned from the foundation this week



(CNN) — She was the world’s crusader against the trafficking of girls for sex in Cambodia, and she told an extraordinary personal tale: she was a village girl sold by a grandfatherly man into sex slavery.


Triumphant as well as beautiful, Somaly Mam won attention from Oprah Winfrey, a New York Times columnist, a PBS documentary, Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People of 2009, and even CNN, which named her a “Hero” in 2007.


The fame — and her memoir “The Road of Lost Innocence” — generated millions of dollars for her Somaly Mam Foundation, fighting sex traffickers.


But her personal story wasn’t true, according to a Newsweek exposé this month.


In the wake of the magazine’s revelations, Mam resigned this week from her foundation, which had hired a law firm to independently investigate Mam’s background when questions arose. The law firm’s findings weren’t disclosed by the foundation.


Mam, whose book says she was born around 1970 or 1971, couldn’t be reached for comment, but the foundation still bearing her name issued a statement this week:


“As a result of (the law firm’s) efforts, we have accepted Somaly’s resignation effective immediately,” foundation executive director Gina Reiss-Wilchins said. “Despite the foundation’s heartfelt disappointment, we remain grateful to Somaly’s work over the past two decades and for helping to build a foundation that has served thousands of women and girls.


“The foundation’s commitment to eradicating the trafficking and sexual exploitation of women and girls in Southeast Asia remains steadfast, and we ask that you continue to stand with us in the face of these challenging times,” Reiss-Wilchins said.


Villagers contradict her


A Newsweek story by Simon Marks cited how Mam’s childhood acquaintances, village leaders and even a cousin contradicted her autobiography.


Residents of the Thloc Chhroy village told the magazine they never saw or met the cruel “Grandfather” who turned her into a domestic slave as a child, a rich Chinese merchant who raped her, or a violent soldier whom Mam said she was forced to marry as a teenager. Mam claimed all those experiences in her story of survival.


In fact, Mam arrived with a family and lived a normal life in the village from 1981 until 1987, when she finished high school and then took a teachers exam, according to a commune chief, childhood friends, a cousin and a school official interviewed by Newsweek.


Furthermore, “Mam was well-known and popular in their small village, a happy, pretty girl with pigtails,” Newsweek reported.


Those villagers’ accounts differed from the horrific personal narrative that Mam told the media and readers of her memoir.


In an interview with CNN on Friday, Marks said he spoke with “to dozens of villagers, former teachers, commune chiefs, who all say that they witnessed Somaly Mam arrive in the village.”


“They say that they saw her arrive in the village with a family, she grew up in the village living a relatively normal life,” said Marks, who’s a contributor to Newsweek.


Millions in donations


Mam’s foundation attracted such corporate partners as Estee Lauder Companies and Goldman Sachs. Actress Susan Sarandon sits on the group’s advisory board.


By 2011, the Somaly Mam Foundation attracted $ 2.1 million in revenue and incurred $ 3.67 million in expenses, according to its annual report.


In 2012, those revenues rose to $ 2.78 million and the foundation’s expenses fell to $ 2.3 million, its annual report said. That year, the foundation helped thousands of sex workers: 9,269 in Cambodia, 1,356 in Laos and 6,675 in Vietnam, the report said.


Many people in Cambodia long doubted Mam’s personal story, but they feared her duality: Mam was polished and charming in front of international donors, but was “tyrannical” and “moody” in the office, even ordering the girls in her foundation to do her personal chores, the magazine reported, quoting named and unnamed sources.


False claims by “rescued” girls


Some of the girls and young women whom Mam rescued from slavery were used in testimonials promoting Mam’s foundation, but at least one of those girls later “confessed that her story was fabricated and carefully rehearsed for the cameras under Mam’s instruction,” Newsweek reported.


Meas Ratha portrayed herself on a French television program in 1998 as a teenager who had been sold to a brothel and was forced to become a sex slave, but last year, Ratha said the foundation chose her to go on television after auditioning her, the magazine said.


In fact, Ratha was never a sex slave. Her parents couldn’t care for their seven children so they sent Ratha and her sister in 1997 to a refuge center of group called Agir Pour Les Femmes en Situation Precaire, or AFESIP (Helping Women in Danger), whose then president and co-founder was Mam, Newsweek said.


Now in her early 30s in Phnom Penh, Ratha told Newsweek she reluctantly agreed to the fake story about being a child sex slave: “Somaly said that…if I want to help another woman I have to do [the interview] very well,” she told the magazine.


Ratha wasn’t the only purported rescued girl telling fictions, according to the magazine.


Long Pros claimed a woman kidnapped her and sold her to a brothel, where she was tortured and forced to undergo two crude abortions. Pros alleged an angry pimp gouged out one of her eyes with a piece of metal. Mam rescued Pros, and Pros’ story was recounted by New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof in 2009. In 2008, he also profiled Mam in a column headlined “A Heroine From The Brothels.”


But Pros’ family, neighbors and doctor contradicted her account: A physician performed surgery on a nonmalignant tumor covering her right eye when she was 13, and medical records clearly showed her eye before and after the surgery, Newsweek said. Pros was then sent to Mam’s group to be part of a vocational training program, an eye hospital director told the magazine.


This week, the foundation ended its relationship with Pros, also as a result of the law firm’s investigation into her background, Reiss-Wilchins said.


“We are permanently removing Ms. Pros from any affiliation with the organization or our grant partner, but will help her to transition into the next phase of her life,” Reiss-Wilchins said.





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6 climbers missing on U.S. mountain




  • Six people are missing after trying to climb Mount Rainier

  • Park official: It’s believed to have fallen in an area with “no viable chance of survival”

  • Rescue crews discovered tents and climbing gear near Carbon Glacier

  • Search will continue by air only, as it’s too dangerous to enter from the ground



(CNN) — Six people who attempted to climb Mount Rainier in Washington state have been involved in some sort of fall, with “no viable chance of survival,” a park official said after a helicopter search team spotted climbing gear on the mountain Saturday.


Tents and equipment believed to belong to the group were located in the area of Carbon Glacier, a debris area with a lot of falling rocks and ice, said Mount Rainier National Park spokeswoman Fawn Bauer.


Rescuers received a signal from the party’s emergency beacons, but will continue their search by air only, because entering the area from the ground is too dangerous for a rescue crew, Bauer said.


The climbing party, which included two experienced guides, last made contact with the park Wednesday afternoon. At that time, Bauer said, the party indicated everything was fine and that they were at 12,800 feet.


The climbers planned to reach the summit on Thursday and descend on Friday.


Friday afternoon, Alpine Ascent, the company affiliated with the guides, notified the park that they were not able to locate the group.


About 10,000 people attempt to scale Mount Rainier each year, but only about half reach the 14,417-foot summit, according to the National Park Service.





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Report: NSA collects facial images


File photo: Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden appears by remote-controlled robot at a TED conference in Vancouver on March 18, 2014.


File photo: Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden appears by remote-controlled robot at a TED conference in Vancouver on March 18, 2014.




  • The New York Times publishes a report, citing documents from Edward Snowden

  • Facial recognition is powerful but not always so straightforward

  • An NSA spokeswoman declines to say whether imagery is collected from social media



(CNN) — The National Security Agency is reportedly capturing millions of images per day to feed facial recognition programs.


Citing top-secret documents obtained by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the



Snowden: ‘I was trained as a spy’




New NSA scoop will reveal American targets


Facial recognition is a computer-based system that automatically identifies a person based on a digital image or video source that is then matched to information stored in a database. The technology is powerful, but not always straightforward.


According to the New York Times: “It has difficulty matching low-resolution images, and photographs of people’s faces taken from the side or angles can be impossible to match against mug shots or other head-on photographs.”


The newspaper said it was unclear how many images have been acquired, nor was it clear how many people have been caught up in the program.


An NSA spokeswoman defended the program.


“We would not be doing our job if we didn’t seek ways to continuously improve the precision of signals intelligence activities — aiming to counteract the efforts of valid foreign intelligence targets to disguise themselves or conceal plans to harm the United States and its allies,” NSA spokeswoman Vanee M. Vines said in response to the New York Times report.


“The lawful collection of foreign identity intelligence allows NSA to better identify and track such targets.”


Speaking to the newspaper, Vines declined to comment on whether the agency collected facial imagery of American citizens from social media like Facebook.


CNN’s Jim Stenman contributed to this report.





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Turkish cops harass CNN reporter




  • Ivan Watson was reporting live from Istanbul for CNN when cops approached him

  • They demanded to see his credentials and passport

  • He was escorted in police custody

  • Watson was not arrested, and police apologized for the incident



(CNN) — A CNN correspondent was harassed by Turkish plainclothes police as he was live on air, reporting on tensions between the officers and demonstrators on the first anniversary of mass protests in Istanbul.


International correspondent Ivan Watson had just finished explaining that police had closed off central Istanbul to prevent demonstrators from being able to lay flowers at the sight of last year’s protests when he himself was manhandled by officers.


Viewers of CNN International on Saturday morning watched as officers demanded to see Watson’s press credentials and passport, as well as those of his crew.


The camera kept rolling as the officers grabbed Watson and started walking with him. One officer kneed him in the back. They also broke the microphone off CNN’s camera while wrestling it out of the hands of the cameraman.


The veteran reporter told anchor Errol Barnett, “Errol, we’re being detained right now.”


Watson and his team were escorted in police custody. Police officers argued that Watson’s press accreditation, issued by the Turkish prime ministry, could have been “counterfeited” and that he had to produce a passport. He was not permitted to leave until the passport was retrieved from the nearby CNN bureau. But officers didn’t arrest him.


According to Watson, after about a half-hour, the CNN team was released, and another officer apologized for the officer who had kneed him. Police also apologized for the inconvenience.


Watson is based in Istanbul. In his 12 years in the country, the press credential has sufficed as proper identification for reporting. The demand to see a passport was unusual.


He was at Taksim Square, where mass protests surged a year ago.


The protests began over the proposed development of a park but swelled in large anti-government demonstrations that were met with a government crackdown.


Activists called for nationwide demonstrations to mark the first anniversary of the protests, but, as Watson reported, police were denying them that opportunity.


On Saturday, Gezi park — the place where the protests started — was closed off, and both riot police and plainclothes officers were deployed in large numbers.


The Turkish government accuses protesters of trying to undermine Turkey’s economy and is not allowing public displays of dissent, especially in this sensitive place, Watson said.


Protesters say they want to express their opinions freely.


As night fell Saturday, police fired tear gas in Taksim Square to disperse the demonstrators. There were some scuffles between groups of protesters and riot police.





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Sunday, June 1, 2014

Store defends flag likened to KKK hood


Customers enter an ASDA store in London, England.


Customers enter an ASDA store in London, England.




  • British supermarket ASDA unveils hooded flag for World Cup fans

  • Critics claim the flag resembles Ku Klux Klan outfit

  • ASDA defends the product and says it is nothing more than a flag



Follow us at @WorldSportCNN and like us on Facebook


(CNN) — A British supermarket chain has defended the sale of a wearable England flag that has been compared to a Ku Klux Klan uniform.


The white and red flag of St. George in stock at ASDA outlets features a pointed hood which the store says will allow English fans to show support their national team during the World Cup while keeping dry during the notoriously unpredictable British summertime.


But some fans have taken to social media sites to register their disapproval of the similarities between the £3 ($ 5) flags and the hooded outfits worn by the KKK.


Twitter user @beyondlimits posted “Dear ASDA, Your wearable klu klux klan style England flag is not acceptable.”


Meanwhile, @iAmNaemaan said “I don’t think ASDA thought the whole ‘wearable flag’ thing through properly.”


Pictures of the offending item have since been tweeted and retweeted hundreds of times on the micro-blogging site.






A subsidiary of the American retail giant Walmart, ADSA issued a statement to CNN Friday addressing their surprise at the controversy and stressing that their hooded flag product is also available in other country’s national colors.


“We know there’s chatter on twitter about our wearable World Cup flags, but it’s simply a flag with a hood — nothing more, nothing less,” the statement read.


“We opted for a hood on our wearable England and Brazilian flags as you never know what the British weather will bring.


“We want customers to get behind the team without getting wet.”


The flag is just one of numerous World Cup themed items ASDA has been stocking in the run up to the tournament which kicks-off in Brazil on June 12.


Other British supermarkets such as Tesco and Sainsbury’s offer similar World Cup items which extend into products like beers, food, barbecues and televisions.


Last year the British Retail Consortium estimated that the British economy could lose £2 billion ($ 3.5 billion) if England failed to qualify for the World Cup. Businesses are hence keen to cash in on the event while it lasts.


However, it wasn’t just Twitter users suggesting ASDA might have struck the wrong note with the wearable England flag.






“In theory it was a good idea because it’s England and it rains,” Simon Chadwick, professor of Sport Business Strategy and Marketing at Coventry University, told CNN.


“However, I think it does show a lack of good judgment and discretion on the part of people working for ASDA.”


“This is particularly the case in this country as there’s a debate right now about the St George’s Cross, about the flag, about immigration and the rise of UKIP,” referring to the success of the Euro-skeptic political party in recent local and European Union elections.


“I think this showed a lack of good judgment on the part of the management,” he said.


Read: ’31-0 – On the Road with Football’s Outsiders’




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'Gangnam' hits 2 billion YouTube views


Psy's


Psy’s “Gangnam Style” video has broken records with 2 billion views on YouTube.




  • The Korean pop tune is first to reach two billion page views

  • Gangnam Style was first uploaded in July 2012

  • Artist Psy tweets that the achievement was “very honorable”



(CNN) — As viral videos go, “Gangnam Style” went gangbusters ages ago. But now it has charted a new record: 2 billion YouTube views.


Breaking records is nothing new for the Korean pop tune. It was first uploaded in July 2012 and took only three months to achieve 800 million views, making it then the most-watched video of all time, according to Google Spokesman Matt McLernon.




Psy: Growing up ‘Gangnam Style’


Those achievements might not enshrine Psy in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. But when it comes to measurements of pop-culture, the 2-billion mark is a modern-day milestone — making Psy’s earworm, with its equine choreography, a titan of zeitgeist.


Psy’s twitter feed was full of congratulatory tweets and retweets of news stories commemorating the record on Sunday.


The 36-year-old acknowledged the achievement himself in a tweet on Friday, citing “very honorable and burdensome numbers. With the appreciation, I’ll come back soon with more joyful one! #THX”




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