Thursday, December 1, 2011

Yahoo Claims up on description that Alibaba is arranging offer


Shares in Yahoo increased on description that China's Alibaba Group was arranging a conquest offer with confidential even handedness firms Brain Capital and Blackstone. Actually Alibaba has had an extensive connection with Yahoo, but dealings have in use a twist for the worse in current years.

The two companies came jointly subsequent to Yahoo bought a 43% chance in Alibaba in 2005 for $1bn. Alibaba certainly requests to obtain its chance back from Yahoo, so no matter what can erect that occur, they will strive used for it. The opinion of John Spelich, spokesperson of Alibaba Group, has not completed a conclusion to be part of an entire company offer for Yahoo.

Alibaba, one of China's top internet firms, said it was weighing option. Alibaba Group has not made a decision to be part of a whole company bid for Yahoo. Alibaba’s attention in request for Yahoo was being dictated in piece by its efforts to retrieve complete control of its own company.

Carbon drop plan is on trail: Chris Huhne


Force Secretary Chris Huhne has insisted that tactics to slash Britain's carbon emissions are on track. His opinion is that the government would not necessitate to expend any more cash in this assembly to attain this but, from 2015 onwards, gigantic speculation could be compulsory in new technologies to diminish emissions from transfer, buildings and power manufacture.

According to Carillion, one of the prime installers of solar panels, 4,500 staff they may be complete superfluous because of the slash. The anticipated charge of this change could be as elevated as £20bn, the preparation suggests, even though it also could eventually result in a mesh advantage to the wealth of £1bn.

The section of Energy and Climate Change is also in front of two promising official challenges in excess of the plans from associates of the globe and lawyers acting for installers. The carbon arrangement suggests that family unit energy bills might be 7% inferior in 2020 than at present but management policies on residence lagging and energy effectiveness are totally implemented.

Poorest Countries: Typical weather agreement pressed


The needs of poorest countries are that to begin immediately new climate deal covering all nations. The world's poorest countries have asked that discussion on a new-tangled weather agreement. A lot of of them are susceptible to climate impacts such as drought or flood.

The opinion of Selwin Hart, direct representative for Barbados, talking for the union of Small islet (Aosis)"We put ahead our consent for a new legal concurrence today to acquire belongings moving rapidly in an attempt to take action to the necessity of our confront”. They added that require bringing to a close the new deal in the next 12 months.

The 48 country least urbanized Countries bloc includes drought-prone states such as Ethiopia and Mali, individuals with extensive flat coastal zones such as Bangladesh and Tanzania, and Himalayan mountain states including Bhutan and Nepal for whom melting glaciers pretense severe dangers.

The three upward world giants think meeting on a innovative authorization must not begin currently since developed nations have yet to fulfill existing commitments. But the minor peers believe at hand is no point in time to lose.

The Associated Press: Statue of Egyptian king Amenhotep III found

The Associated Press: Statue of Egyptian king Amenhotep III found: CAIRO (AP) — Egyptian archaeologists have unearthed a large statue of king Amenhotep III who ruled nearly 3,400 years ago and who was the grandfather of the famed boy-pharaoh Tutankhamun.

The Supreme Council of Antiquities says the latest find was made at the king's funerary temple in the southern city of Luxor.

Thursday's statement says the 44 feet (13.5 meter) tall statue is made of colored quartzite. It is composed of several large pieces that once put together will depict the king as standing.

Amenhotep III ruled from 1390-1352 B.C.

The latest find comes after several other relics of the king were unearthed last year in his mortuary temple on the west bank of the Nile River in Luxor.

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Japan: Minister Pressured to Carry Out Executions

Execution chamber
at Tokyo's Detention Center
Thirteen members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult found guilty of carrying out the gas attack in the Tokyo subway in 1995 are at imminent risk of execution. The Japanese Minister of Justice is under pressure from other ministers to carry out executions before 2012. This means the cult members, and indeed all other death row inmates, are at risk of imminent execution. 

On 21 November, the sentence of the last of the Aum Shinrikyo cult members, Seiichi Endo, was finalized. Typically executions of death row inmates are postponed if proceedings against accomplices are still on-going. The completion of Seiichi Endo's case means that the other cult members who have been prosecuted and sentenced to death are now at risk of execution. They were found guilty for their respective roles in orchestrating and carrying out the gas attack, including murder, kidnapping, and experimenting with chemical and biological weapons. 

Chizuo Matsumoto (aka Shoko Asahara), the leader of the cult who has been on death row since 2006, is appealing for a second retrial. He is suspected to be suffering from mental illness. In his previous appeal in 2004, his defense lawyers requested a psychiatric evaluation. Six psychiatrists found his mental health has declined as a result of his imprisonment. The Tokyo appeal Court dismissed the findings stating that Chizuo Matsumoto was feigning illness. There are no safeguards to prevent an execution from taking place at any time after a sentence has been finalized, including while appeals for retrial are underway. 

The Minister of Justice is under heavy pressure to carry out executions before 2012. Executions have been carried out in Japan for the past 19 consecutive years. Death row inmates are usually only informed hours before their execution, and their families told only afterwards. Amnesty International believes Chizuo Matsumoto is at particular risk but all other death row inmates are at risk during this time of increased pressure to carry out executions. 

Please write immediately in Japanese or your own language: 
-Urge the Minister of Justice not to execute Chizuo Matsumoto and the other members of Aum Shinrikyo who are on death row 
-Urge the Minister of Justice to introduce a moratorium on executions with a view to full abolition of the death penalty in Japan, and to encourage more national debate on the death penalty. 

PLEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE 11 JANUARY 2012 TO: 
Minister of Justice 
Hideo Hiraoka 
1-1-1 Kasumigaseki 
Chiyoda-ku 
Tokyo, 100-8977 
JAPAN 
Fax: 011 81 3 3592 7008 
Salutation: Dear Minister 

Prime Minister 
Yoshihiko Noda 
1-6-1 Nagata-cho 
Chiyoda-ku 
Tokyo, 100-8968 
JAPAN 
Fax: 011 81 3 3581 3883 
Salutation: Dear Prime Minister 

Also send copies to: 
Ambassador Ichiro Fujisaki 
Embassy of Japan 
2520 Massachusetts Ave. NW 
Washington DC 20008 
Tel: 202 238 6700 
Fax: 1 202 328 2187 

Please check with the AIUSA Urgent Action Office if sending appeals after the above date. 

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 
Under Article 479 of Japan's Code of Criminal Procedure, "if a person condemned to death is in a state of insanity, the executions shall be stayed by order of the Minister of Justice". However, the suspension of a death penalty case on the grounds of mental incapacity has occurred only twice and then only for reasons of procedural competence. A death sentence has never been suspended because of incompetence for execution under the terms of this article. Successive Ministers of Justice have ignored this responsibility, although it is a duty and not a discretionary power. 

Executions in Japan are by hanging, and are usually carried out in secret. Prisoners are typically given a few hours' notice, but some may be given no warning at all. This means that prisoners who have exhausted their appeal options must spend their entire time on death row knowing they could be executed at any time. Their families are typically notified after the execution has taken place. 

Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases without exception regardless of the nature of the crime, the characteristics of the individual on whom it is imposed and the method of execution used by the state, as a violation of the right to life and the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment. There are currently approximately over 220 people on death row in Japan. The last execution carried out in Japan took place on 28 July 2010 when two people were executed. 

In October, the Justice Minister, Hideo Hiraoka said he would look at each death row case individually after Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura reportedly encouraged the Minister of Justice to press ahead with executions. Amnesty International and the Anti-Death Penalty Asia Network (ADPAN) called on the Minister of Justice to refrain from carrying out executions. 

Source: Amnesty International, December 1, 2011


Related articles:
Nov 21, 2011
TOKYO — Japan's top court on Monday rejected the final appeal against a death sentence meted out for the deadly 1995 nerve gas attack on the Tokyo subway, leaving 13 members of the Aum Supreme Truth doomsday cult facing ...
Feb 15, 2011
The chemist of the Aum Shinrikyo religious cult who concocted the deadly nerve gas that killed a dozen people in the Tokyo subway in 1995 has received his final judgment. Japan's Supreme Court Tuesday rejected the final ...

Sister Helen Prejean pushes Colorado to dump the death penalty

Sr. Helen Prejean
More than 2 decades after she served as spiritual adviser to a killer sentenced to die in Louisiana's electric chair, which served as the basis for her book, 'Dead Man Walking' and the Oscar-winning movie of the same title, Sister Helen Prejean is still on the same mission.

That mission, which began after she first engaged a convicted murderer as a pen pal, is continuing to counsel death row inmates -- and pushing for an end to capital punishment.

This week, she's speaking in Colorado, a state she hopes may soon follow the lead of Oregon, where Gov. John Kitzhaber recently announced a moratorium on state executions.

"There's only one execution in the last 30 years and only three people on death row [in Colorado," Prejean said during an exclusive interview with FOX31 Denver on Wednesday. "So you have to ask yourself: what's going on here?"

Prejean says the death penalty remains on the books in many states, even those where it's rarely carried out, because of the "symbolism" it affords politicians -- and the "false promise" it offers relatives of victims.

"It's symbolism for the one running for office to convey they're going to be tough on crime," Prejean said. "And that's an illusory promise to make to families, so few of whom actually see a death penalty case carried out.

"That's a cruel promise to make to people that by watching the state kill that they can be healed from their hurt."

For years, Prejean's argument against the death penalty has been a moral one. But, more recently, as states continue to struggle with bloated budgets, she's been speaking more about the economic costs.

"Colorado has this machinery of death, but it's sitting in the garage not being used," she said. "And it still costs the state millions of dollars because of the money it costs to pay for all these appeals.

"Those resources need to be spent on life, not on death," she continued. "They need to be spent on police officers, at-risk children, health care -- all the crunches coming down on the state."

Prejean, who wrote a 2nd book about 2 death row inmates she accompanied to their executions and her belief in their innocence, also argues that the finality of the punishment offers no way to rectify the potential execution of the innocent.

"We have known 138 cases of people who were wrongly convicted and taken off of death row," she said. "So the guilty are in with the innocent, that's for sure."

In Colorado, lawmakers last attempted to abolish the state's death penalty in 2009, when a bill that would have directed revenue saved by doing so to investigate cold cases died on the final day of the legislative session.

In light of the recent execution of Troy Davis in Georgia, which galvanized the country in light on ongoing questions about his innocence, and the recent moratorium in Oregon, it's possible a bill to repeal the death penalty could be introduced in 2012.

The biggest obstacle to its passage would likely be state Rep. Rhonda Fields, the mother of a murdered son -- the two convicted killers of Javad Marshall Fields and Vivian Wolfe account for two of the three inmates on Colorado's death row.

Her mere presence and the power of her story carry more weight than her one vote. And she's told FOX31 that repealing the death penalty "would be a slap in [her] face."

Ultimately, if such a bill were to pass the House and Senate, it would be up to Gov. John Hickenlooper to sign it.

Asked for a comment Wednesday, Hickenlooper's spokesman offered little indication as to what the governor would do in such a situation.

"This is not an issue that the Governor takes lightly," said spokesman Eric Brown. "Most governors struggle with the enormity of the decision."

Source: Associated Press, December 1, 2011

Drive Thru Temple of Tuthmosis III


After all the events of the last few weeks it is lovely to get back to some Egyptology. Today I was privileged to go around the Funerary Temple of Tuthmosis III with Dr. Myriam Seco Álvarez. First thanks to Mansour Boraik for arranging this for me. I find Tuthmosis III a really interesting character and his temple building on the West Bank adds to the enigma. We tend to assume that pharaohs build one temple on the West Bank and yes this is what most do. But Tuthmosis built three and at this point in time we do not understand the relationship between the three. We have the small temple at Medinet Habu which when it was built would have been the only temple at that site, we have the temple at Deir el Bahri and then the temple Dr Myriam is excavating. This is located close to the Ramasseum and in the fact the road goes right through the first courtyard, so one side of the road you have the mud brick first pylon and the other side the very large terraced remainder. (one hopes that eventually the road will be moved and the area under the road excavated as it has never been).

There is quite a lot of information on the team website http://thutmosisiiitempleproject.org/ and I also have notes from a lecture that Myriam gave http://luxor-news.blogspot.com/2009/02/mummfication-museum-lecture-tuthmosis.html

Going round today you can see that the team have done masses of work, loads of excavation and restoration. From the road the temple looks like it is made of mud brick but when you go to the top terrace and see all the stone fragments you realise that mud brick comprised only a very small part. Also the builders have made use of the natural landscape, carving into the bedrock in some places. Interestingly the temple appears to have been built on a necropolis for Middle Kingdom/ 2nd Intermediate Period and they have found a number of tombs, some intact/reused with pottery and mummies. It makes you wonder why he used that site, whether it was significant.

The stone fragments are beautifully carved and some have vivid colour on them and are worthy of museum display. The team hope to reconstruct and display what they have found but there is a LOT of work still be to done. Parts of the site are still unexcavated, lots needs recording, even more needs restoration. I suspect that Dr Myriam is going to be there a long time.

When you are on the upper terrace the layout of the temple is more obvious, split between Hathor and Amun, with separate entrances, the former being a late addition to the temple structure and boundary wall breeched in order to allow access.