Thursday 21 November 2013

Cristiano Ronaldo not thinking about Ballon d'Or

The Real Madrid forward is now favourite to lift the award in light of his recent form and the extension of the prize's voting deadline - but says he might not even turn up                       


Cristiano Ronaldo has insisted that he is not concerned about winning a second Ballon d'Or, and claimed that he may not even go to the ceremony.

The Real Madrid forward scored his fifth hat-trick of the season on Tuesday as Portugal beat Sweden 3-2 (4-2 on aggregate) to clinch their place at World Cup 2014.

After scoring the only goal in the first leg, and with Fifa's decision to extend the voting, he is now considered favourite by many to be named the best footballer of 2013.

But he told Cadena Cope: "I'm not thinking about the Ballon d'Or that much. I still don't know if I will go or not - things don't depend on just me. I'm not obsessed over it."

Having been asked by a child if he would win the prize, announced on January 13, he replied: "If I do, I'll invite you all to the party."

The former Manchester United forward lifted the award in 2008 after winning the Champions League with the Red Devils, but has seen Messi triumph in the past four years.

On Wednesday, Fifa extended the deadline for votes to November 29 - and allowed those who had already decided to change their mind - due to a "low turnout" in the initial round of voting.

Ndigbo on the march fo the Confab

IN furtherance of their search for a common position on burning issues in the polity and in readiness for the proposed National Conference, Igbo leaders from all divides are to meet in Enugu on December 12.
The meeting is a follow up to the one held last Thursday and is to articulate common positions for the South-East geo-political zone .
Vanguard gathered that issues and questions raised at the parley, included restructuring, fiscal federalism and devolution of power, what should be the federating units-states or geo-political zones? What should be the system of government, presidential or parliamentary? Should we have regional or state police?
Hinting about the December 12 meeting, an Igbo leader, who attended last week's parley said the leaders do not want the South-East to be short-changed in a
new Nigeria that will emerge from the confab.
"The Igbo want a restructured Nigeria where there is equity, justice, fairness and a level playing field for all the citizens to excel. We want a Nigeria where every citizen irrespective of tongue, religious and political affiliation will be proud to call his country and be ready to defend to defend," the Igbo leader said.
Chaired by the Obi of Onitsha, His Majesty Igwe Alfred Nnaemeka Achebe, prominent Igbo leaders at the meeting, included Professor Ben Nwabueze (SAN), Mrs. Uche Azikiwe, Dr Olisa Agbakoba, SAN, Senator Anyim Ude, Chief Dozie Ikedife, Professor Elochukwu Amucheazi, Chief Nduka Eya, Archbishop Anthony Obinna, Archbishop Maxwell Anikwenwa, Senator Offia Nwali and Rear Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu (rtd).
Also present were Chief Mbazulike Amaechi, Senator Ben Obi, Dr. Aja Wachukwu, Professor Michael Echeruo, Professor Felix Oragwu, Lolo Kate Ezeofor, Prince Emeka Onyesoh, Mrs. Maria Okwor and Evang. Elliot Uko. That meeting could easily pass for the best attended gathering of who is who in Igbo land in recent times.
Commentators expressed satisfaction with the leaders' effort to draft an acceptable Igbo position for the Confab, saying failure to do so might lead to a situation where politicians send their aides to the confab, and sandwich their individual political ambition as the Igbo agenda at the expense of group interests.
Professor Amucheazu said the fact that Nwabueze, 83, agreed to direct the deliberations is a sign that the outcome will be the best for Ndigbo and Nigeria.
Rear Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu said the Confab is a very serious matter and should not be left to politicians, adding that he is confident that this great opportunity to remodel Nigeria truthfully will succeed. He also thanked Nwabueze for finally yielding to pressures to serve his people and his country.
Professor Nwabueze, who spoke with newsmen after the closed-door meeting, said the essence of the parley was to articulate a common position for Ndigbo during the conference.
"We are the Igbo Leaders of Thought, we are here in Enugu to articulate our position, Igbo position, that we are going to adopt at the National Conference. We've set up the planning committee which will plan the whole thing; it's going to be a process that will not end at this one meeting. We also have a fund raising committee, the other committee is the outreach committee that will take our position and go and discuss with other groups, ethnic groups," he said.
Prof. Nwabueze is the chairman of the planning committee with Prof. Mike Echerue as his deputy and Elochukwu Amucheazi (secretary). Fund raising is under the chairmanship of the Obi of Onitsha, Igwe Achebe.
Speaking on the move, Agbakoba reportedly said that what the Igbo leaders were doing was part of on-going meetings by other groups in the country, and urged Nigerians to utilise the historic opportunity to further discuss a way forward for Nigeria.
He admitted that Nigerians have been deceived in the past by previous regimes that dumped the outcome of such conferences but noted that Nigerians are wiser and would try to plug the loopholes.
"What President Goodluck Jonathan has done is important in the context of understating world history, even though he has been criticised because of the timing, and even though, we prefer Sovereign National Conference, but we have not generated the energy for that. National conferences have been taking place across the millennia.
Whenever an opportunity presents itself for discussion, we must jump at it. What has happened today is a continuation of what's going on across the country.
"Leaders of thought are meeting and articulating the best things to discuss; people want devolution of power, we don't want this Naira federalism where states go to Abuja every month to collect money.
Our people must work for the money... Whether it is Ohaneze, Arewa, or OPC, or Afenifere, we can see that people are suffering. We don't need to ethnicise this. This is a massive issue about how since 1914 when the missionaries came here coupled with the traders, took our land and money, enslaved us and handed us over to the independence fighters who did not conclude the arrangements properly.
"There was a compromise among Zik, Awolowo, Ahmadu Bello. This is the first time, we have another opportunity to have a look at what's going on. We should elevate the issues."
Agbakoba said the only major challenge to the conference is possible clash between President Jonathan and the National Assembly, which has also been working on the review of the constitution.
"There will be a conflict between President Jonathan and the National Assembly, which has already started a dialogue, so they are not comfortable with that. Why is Jonathan doing dialogue when they (National Assembly) are the ones saddled with the responsibility, some of them are already saying".

However, Agbakoba urged Nigerians including the executive and legislature to put the interest of the nation first and allow the people's will to prevail above selfish, clannish or class interests.

Barcelona's Argentine star striker Lionel Messi received his third Golden Shoe award on Wednesday as the top league scorer in Europe for his 46 goals in the 2012-2013 season.

Barcelona's Argentinian forward Lionel Messi receives the Golden Boot 2013 award, presented to Europe’s best goal scorer of the 2012-2013 season, on November 20, 2013 in Barcelona
At the awards ceremony, Messi, 26, shared credit with his Barcelona team mates, Spanish league champions last season and currently leaders of the table.
"I am really pleased. It is a really beautiful prize. It is a recognition of the (Barcelona) dressing room and of all that the team has been doing all year," he said.
Messi is currently sidelined with a torn hamstring after limping off during Barcelona's 4-1 win over Real Betis on November 10 -- his fourth injury in a year.
His club said he could be out of action for up to eight weekshttp://sport.malaysia.msn.com/football

Najib has set us back 40 years

Najib Razak shows once again that his actions are often driven by his own paramount desire to stay in power. He’s about to be challenged for the position of Umno party president soon or returned unopposed, a situation that will also determine whether he retains the position of prime minister. Most likely, from the look of things, he won’t be challenged, but he still needs to consolidate the reason he should stay on as president. So last Saturday, he abandoned his 1Malaysia slogan to announce a Bumiputera economic empowerment plan that is obviously designed to win him support from the ethnic community that patronises his party. He exposed his own contradiction and reaffirmed what we have come to see as his real belief – that he doesn’t care what means he uses as long as he achieves his end.
By his action, Najib also shows yet again that he is a flip-flopper. He has apparently forsaken his New Economic Model, which was introduced in 2010 to phase out the outdated New Economic Policy (NEP) in favour of affirmative action based on needs rather than race, and make Malaysia more competitive and investor-friendly. But now with the new Bumiputera economic empowerment plan – to which he is dedicating a whopping RM31 billion, to be dished out in the form of loans, contracts and programmes – it looks like he is reinforcing rent-seeking, which will retard sustainable growth.
By his action, Najib has set us back 40 years – to 1971, when the NEP was introduced. He has fortified the idea that there are two classes of citizens in Malaysia – Bumiputeras and non-Bumiputeras – thereby totally subverting his 1Malaysia stance. But whereas one of the stated objectives of the NEP was to eradicate poverty, Najib’s Bumiputera economic empowerment plan is not aimed at helping the needy. It seems to be providing crutches even for those who don’t need them.
Malay Economic Agenda Council CEO Nizam Mahshar is right in pointing out that the plan provides no courses of action or strategies, and no targeted outcomes. Is this perhaps deliberate? Is the money being pumped into the programmes meant to be loosely administered so that it can easily go to Umno cronies? And is the lack of targeted outcomes aimed at avoiding accountability?
Unashamedly, Najib declared that the new plan was a reward for the Malay community for supporting Umno and Barisan Nasional (BN) during the last general election (GE13). Is it really a reward for the entire community or a reward for Umno cronies?
When he increased the price of RON95 petrol in early September, he said it was a necessary part of “the process of reducing the public’s reliance on subsidies”. Ironically, his Bumiputera economic empowerment plan is perpetuating this very reliance on subsidies, but on the part of Bumiputeras.
Of course, this suits Umno fine, because as long as the party drums it into the Malays that they cannot compete without assistance, they will have to depend on Umno’s largesse. And, consequently, they will continue to vote it into power. But, at this rate, how will the Malays – who, incidentally, form the majority of the population – be able to progress on their own? And how will this affect the country’s productivity and goal of becoming a developed nation by 2020? With this kind of plan and this kind of subsidy mentality in place, do you think we can still make it?
I much doubt it. Najib’s action has effectively stopped Malaysia from moving out of its malaise. We will continue to lag behind because we can’t seem to shake off ethnocentric policies that blunt our economic competitiveness, enfeeble our human resources, and curtail our efficiency. If he still wants us to believe that we can become a developed or high-income nation by 2020, he is fooling us.
http://www.blogger.com/

Jewish leader blasts return of Nazi art trove to recluseThe leader of Germany's Jewish community on Thursday slammed a decision by authorities to return hundreds of paintings to a recluse accused of hoarding priceless artworks believed stolen by the Nazis.

The president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, Dieter Graumann, said the aim by prosecutors to give back some 300 works as early as next week was an irresponsible choice.
"After the whole thing was handled over 18 months nearly conspiratorially, the hasty reaction for a general return is certainly also the wrong one," he told the daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung, stressing that the case had a "moral and historical dimension".
The chief prosecutor in the southern city of Augsburg, who is investigating 80-year-old Cornelius Gurlitt on charges including tax evasion, acknowledged Tuesday that many of the hundreds of works confiscated from his home in February 2012 clearly belonged to him outright.
Prosecutor Reinhard Nemetz said he had asked a task force working on the spectacular find to identify such paintings "as soon as possible".
The head of the World Jewish Congress, Ronald S. Lauder, told AFP this week that the decision to quickly give Gurlitt several works before making headway on the provenance of the looted art in the stash was "outrageous".
Gurlitt is the son and heir of a powerful art dealer tasked by the Nazis with selling works that they stole, extorted or seized in exchange for hard currency, and with handpicking masterpieces for a "Fuehrer Museum" for Adolf Hitler in the Austrian city of Linz that was never built.
Customs police seized the works, including masterpieces by Picasso, Matisse and Chagall, during the raid last year on Gurlitt's Munich flat.
Authorities had initially said that the haul included 1,406 artworks but a spokesman for Nemetz told AFP that because some of the sketches could no longer be counted as separate works, the official total was now about 1,280.
Prosecutors were Thursday to post pictures and titles of nearly 600 works in the hoard thought to have been looted from Jewish families by the Nazis on an official website, www.lostart.de.
The remaining artworks, those seized by the Nazis from museums and galleries as avant-garde "degenerate" art, will remain under wraps for now as the investigation continues, authorities said.

The case only came to light this month in a magazine article, drawing sharp criticism from victims of Nazi looting who believe their long-lost works may be in the collection.http://news.malaysia.msn.com/

Iran embassy blasts rock Beirut - in pictures





Iran embassy blasts rock Beirut - in pictures

Iran embassy blasts rock Beirut - in pictures