Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Strike, death at Makerere University


Makerere

Makerere University students have taken to the streets after a trigger-happy guard, Richard Akasia, allegedly shot dead two and critically injured one of them at God Is Able Hostel in Marerere-Kikoni.

Police say many students had gathered at the Hostel for the final leg of the Guild election campaigns when the watchman, suspecting one of the students could have intended to damage a vehicle in the parking lot, opened fire.

Earlier reports suggested supporters of Simon Kamau, one of the contestants in the guild presidential race, clashed with those of NRM's John Taylor, prompting the shooting of the Kenyan students.

“We have arrested the suspect and is being held at Old Kampala Police Station as investigations continue,” Police Spokesperson, Judith Nabakooba, says.

A resurgent riot, just after some relative calm, is forcing the Police anti-riot crew to dash back to the campus after retreating to the city earlier in the morning.

Students wearing red gowns and brandishing tree branches have gathered at the University main building and the campus freedom square to demonstrate the killings.

Ms Nabakooba says identities of the victims are not clear due to conflicting information.

It had been reported that Brian Awaga and Simon Peter Mungeni were those shot.

Friday, March 12, 2010

LOVE SHED MANY TEARS



KAMPALA - A Kenyan student at Kampala International University (KIU) is held at Kabalagala Police station for allegedly stabbing her boyfriend to death. Jane Nyiha, a second-year student of bachelor of public administration, is accused of stabbing David Musunga Ivita in the throat, causing him to bleed to death.

She was yesterday picked from her room in Kansanga, a Kampala suburb, where she allegedly committed the crime at around 11:00am. The Police also recovered a knife which she is suspected to have used.

Musunga, also from Kenya, was a third-year student pursuing a bachelor’s degree in mass communication. He was due to sit his final exams in April and graduate in September. Almost 80% of KIU students are Kenyans.

Musunga died during examination at the university clinic where he had been rushed. The two, who had been staying in the same room, were described as long-time lovers by their landlord, John Male. "They have been friendly and calm since they rented my house in 2008. Although the boy would drink, he was generally very cool," he said.

Neighbours reported that trouble started yesterday morning when Musunga returned home drunk at 4:00am. Nyiha declined to open the door for him. The landlord narrated that Musunga spent almost an hour knocking at the door, but his girlfriend only peeped through the window, laughed and ordered him out of her sight. Musunga slept at the house of a friend, David Mwenda, who is also a Kenyan. When he returned to his room at 11:00am, a brief quarrel ensued between the two, a neighbour said. "We heard the boy groaning and wondered what had happened."

When some neighbours went to check, they said they were shocked to find the boy in a pool of blood. His girlfriend reportedly dashed to a boda-boda stage to rush the victim to the university clinic where he died on arrival. The body now lies in Nsambya Hospital.

For several hours, Police detectives cordoned off the scene of the crime. They broke the padlock of the deceased’s room and picked blood-stained bed sheets, photographs and a knife among other exhibits.

Students who knew Nyiha said she was a born-again Christian and not quarrelsome. They described the deceased as a quiet, intelligent youth. Kansanga residents complained that many of the foreign students at the university’s main campus are rowdy and indisciplined. "They drink a lot, sparking off conflicts. I often receive complaints from landlords and residents concerning the improper behaviour of Kenyan students," the LC1 chairperson, Francis Sseguya, said. He called for collaboration between the Police, the community and university authorities to guarantee security in the area.

Muhammad Ndaula, the university vice-chancellor, regretted the incident, but defended the Kenyan students. The incident is just the latest in a series of murder cases involving students over love and alcohol.

In 2007, a Kenyan student, Duncan Njogu Kamore, was expelled from Busoga University for stabbing a colleague, Paul Mogaka, after they fought over a girl. In October 2008, 17-year-old Tadeo Bukye, an S4 student of Mpanga SS in Fort Portal, was stabbed to death by a jealous girlfriend at a school party. Last year in September, Phiona Mutamba, a student of Makerere University Business School, was stabbed by her boyfriend, also a student at the same school, before he committed suicide at Workers House in the centre of Kampala

Monday, January 25, 2010

marketing politics

it has been along while prior awakening that politics isnt a dirty game given the options of non-interference in the issues that one cannot define or even explain.how could peace be achieved if people still have the mediocre perception of word politic yet there are more than myriad literature mainstreaming political ideologies into familiar domains.have we not apprehended the power of politics and the damage it can cause if not properly harnessed and carefully handled by the right characters

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Pirates in fierce gun battle over ransom January 19, 2010 - 6:47AM

Somali pirates have fought a fierce gun battle over the share-out of a multimillion-dollar ransom within hours of the release of a Greek supertanker, witnesses say.

Machine-gun fire echoed across the coastal village of Harardhere and "there are dead bodies in the streets", one witness said.

Harardhere resident Husein Warsame said the fighting had brought the village to a standstill.

"There is no movement so far, the pirates are exchanging heavy machinegun fire inside the town and there are dead bodies in the streets."

Abdi Yare, a member of a pirate gang in the village, said two clans were disputing the ransom split.

"I have seen the body of one pirate and two injured so far but the casualties could be far higher than that," said another resident, Abdulahi Haji Mohamed.

Harardhere is a known pirate lair - 300km north of the capital, Mogadishu - where the Greek supertanker, Maran Centaurus, was held before pirates released it earlier on Monday in exchange for a reported $US9 million ($9.8 million) in ransom.

A sum of $US7 million was dropped onto the deck of the ship by plane while another $US2 million was handed over via bank transfer, according to Ecoterra International, which monitors piracy in the Indian Ocean.

The 332-metre supertanker, with its multinational crew of 28, was on its way to the South African port of Durban. It was hijacked in the Indian Ocean on November 29.

AFP

CNN correpondent performs brain op on warship January 19, 2010 - 1:11PM

ON BOARD THE USS CARL VINSON: Star CNN medical correspondent Sanjay Gupta, a practising neurosurgeon, has performed brain surgery on a 12-year-old Haitian girl aboard a US military ship.

The girl, whose name was not released, was injured in last week's devastating earthquake, and was diagnosed as having a 1.2-centimetre chunk of concrete embedded in her skull.

The ship's surgeon called for a neurosurgeon, who are in short supply in the region amid the mammoth and often chaotic rescue and recovery operation.

With the help of a CNN producer, we called CNN in Atlanta who then patched us through to Dr Gupta in Port-au-Prince," the Vinson's deputy public affairs officer Erik Schneider said.

"Someone got a hold of our international desk," Dr Gupta, 40, later recalled.

"They said there was an urgent call from the Carl Vinson. So I put a call in to them and there was something about a head injury."

Assisted by Los Angeles surgeon Henri Ford and the ship's surgeon Kathryn Berndt, Dr Gupta pulled off the surgery on Monday between his multiple reports for the international news network on the massive quake that hit the Caribbean nation.

A US Navy news report confirmed the events and added that a second operation was needed to remove a sliver of debris in the girl's skull that the medical team could not initially reach.

The girl was "neurologically intact and there wasn't any penetration of the brain," said Dr Ford, originally from Haiti.

Dr Gupta and Dr Ford said they anticipated the girl would make a full recovery.

"I was honoured to help out," Dr Gupta said afterwards.

"I have a profound respect for the capabilities of the US Navy and the medical team on board the Carl Vinson."

Dr Gupta was considered for the post of US President Barack Obama's surgeon general but withdrew his name in March last year due to family and career reasons.

AFP

Twins sharing heart to be separated

Conjoined American twin sisters have already defied expectations by living past their third birthdays.

Now their parents are hoping they'll become one of the first sets of twins sharing a heart to be successfully separated.

Emma and Taylor Bailey were born connected at the chest - sharing a liver and heart - and weren't expected to leave the hospital.

The girls, who live in the south-western US state of Arizona, exceeded medical expectations, but now have heart failure.

And their parents, Mandy and Tor Bailey, know they must be surgically separated to survive in the long term, the East Valley Tribune reported on Monday.

The Baileys have been working with a team at Seattle Children's Hospital for about two years to prepare for separation and heart transplants.

The girls have a few preliminary surgeries to go, but the family says they may be ready by the end of this year.

AP

Give adult daughter allowance, father told January 19, 2010

ROME: Adult Italians who refuse to give up the comforts of their parents' home have found a champion in a judge who ordered a father to carry on paying a living allowance to his student daughter, 32.

In a case that has provoked debate in Italy, Giancarlo Casagrande, 60, of Bergamo, risked having his assets confiscated unless he resumed paying €350 ($550) a month and €12,000 in arrears to his daughter, Marina, after he decided three years ago she was old enough to pay her own way.

With concerns growing in Italy about the 59 per cent of Italians under 34 still living at home, Roberto Calderoli, a cabinet member, called the ruling ''a slap in the face for good sense''.

Eight years after she was due to graduate with a degree in philosophy, Ms Casagrande is still working on her thesis and lives with her mother. The allowance was fixed when her parents divorced in 1997 .

''It's easy to say she is a bambocciona,'' her mother said, using the Italian slang for children who refuse to leave home, which roughly translates to big baby. ''But it's hard for children to find work today.''

Two years ago a Milan court dismissed an application by an engineer, 36, to force his father to pay a €2000 monthly allowance.

A legal expert said Mr Casagrande was easy to sue because he had broken off payments to his daughter without seeking a settlement.

Her mother said the student had been trying to make ends meet as a dance instructor and promised she was no slacker.

''Marina should graduate in March with a thesis on the holy grail,'' she said.

Guardian News & Media

Jessica and the dagger: saga of sex and a lost soul January 19, 2010 - 12:37PM

The ex-lover of jailed murderer Jessica Davies breaks his silence to Henry Samuel in Paris and Neil Tweedie

Jessica Davies used the most curious of bookmarks; her then boyfriend, Laurent Couturier, called it "the dagger".

He had bought the black-handled kitchen knife with a six inch-blade to prepare food. "It cut the best," he remembered.

Davies, then 28, English-born but raised in France, would slip it between the pages of the book she was reading while at home in her Parisian flat.

The implement became the subject of increasing fascination as the summer of 2007 wore on. Dark thoughts , which would soon find tragic expression, were marshalling in the mind of Davies, now 30, sometime catwalk model, banker's daughter and niece of a British Government minister.

As she begins a 15-year prison sentence for killing a man she had brought home, she can still not explain what drove her to do it. The answer resides somewhere in a life that promised much but which degenerated into an aimless existence characterised by alcoholism, promiscuity, drug dependency and casual, terrifying violence.

It was in August 2007 that Davies used the knife on herself, slashing her wrists in the bath in a second attempt at suicide (the first was in 2004). She sliced right down to the tendons before attacking her thighs and legs, inflicting wounds that required 27 stitches.

"I need to see blood to wake myself up to life - or leave it," she said later, admitting to harbouring thoughts of suicide from the age of 11. Unfortunately, the blood did not have to be hers.

Three months later, on the night of November 11, the niece of Quentin Davies, the Conservative-turned-Labour MP and Minister for Defence Equipment and Support, used the knife again, sinking it five inches deep into the throat of Olivier Mugnier.

Mr Mugnier, 24, jobless and carefree, had made the mistake of accepting the offer of a one-night stand at Davies's flat, in the affluent suburb of St Germain-en-Laye, after meeting her in O'Sullivan's, an Irish bar five minutes from her home.

When the police arrived at the flat to find him dying in a pool of blood, Davies explained how she had initially used the knife to open a bottle of wine. Her victim had been too drunk to make love and was sitting up with his back to her.

"I just wanted to cut him a little but the knife went in by itself," she later explained. "I remember a strange sensation, which must have been the knife going in, but no image at all. It was profoundly shocking and must have been the jolt that snapped me out of the state I was in.

"I remember being on the phone to the emergency services, one hand on the receiver, the other pressed to his throat."

She told the paramedics: "I am a monster", before being ushered by a female police officer into the tiny bathroom. As the ambulancemen worked frantically to stem the tide of blood issuing from the victim's throat, Davies was examining herself in the mirror, grabbing a hairbrush and saying: "I look a state." How had she reached that point of near insanity?

Born in London in February 1979, she was educated in France. Hers should have been a starred life. Beautiful, intelligent and regarded by those who knew her as a kind and sensitive person, she also enjoyed the privileges of wealth - her father Richard, brother of Quentin, was successful in finance.

But there were shadows, too. During her childhood, her maternal grandmother made repeated attempts to kill herself. There was instability in her father's family, too. His brother Julian was a schizophrenic who tried to kill his mother over the alleged non-payment of a debt.

Davies's capacity for erratic behaviour was evident in her attempt to burn her school down, followed by her transfer to boarding school. Her parents' divorce and the departure of her father to Italy with his lover further undermined her increasingly fragile mental state.

When her mother, Monique, left Paris, Davies lived alone in an apartment provided by her father, who put pressure on her to find a job after a lacklustre university career at Toulouse.

A fledgling career in modelling - she worked for the French mail-order firm, La Redoute - failed to take off, and she worked intermittently in bars and offices, relying on money from her parents.

Hanging out in bars became her primary pastime, together with drugs, including ecstasy, cocaine and various kinds of antidepressant, and casual sex.

Her friend, Lubomira Ratzov, 29, said: "I thought they would tell me she had killed herself, not someone else. She has an inner anger that she takes out on herself, not others. She's a very generous person who wants to help people. She's a very intelligent, beautiful girl. The boys were all mad about her but didn't know where they stood with her. She wanted the life of a couple, but she was not shy and did not have problems going with a boy on the first night. She appeared very self-assured, but that was not the real Jessica. Jessica was a girl who was hurting inside.

"The way she treated men was a form of revenge on her father. She told me in a very light, detached way that she had tried to commit suicide."

Davies maintained regular contact with her uncle Quentin. "We write to each other," she said. "He's someone I admire, for his success, his convictions and his humanism. We discussed the French Revolution. He's very cultured."

She found a degree of stability with Mr Couturier, now 38, their often-tempestuous relationship lasting two years. When it finally dissolved in mid-2007, Davies tried to kill herself.

"We had recently split up," he explained. "I was worried not to have news, not to be able to reach her at work.

"I had the keys and let myself in to her flat. I found a letter to her mother.

"Then I went into the bathroom. There was blood everywhere, the bath was full of blood-coloured water.

"I thought she was dead, but discovered that she was in hospital.

"In her personality, she turned violence against herself.

"If we had a fight, her instinct was to leave. My explanation is that she was very much in love [with me] and this relationship failed and that was the spark for the killing.

"She drank huge amounts of alcohol, up to 15 pints of Guinness, much more than I could bear. And she was on medication."

Despite their split, the couple slept together the night before the murder.

"I never had feelings of guilt that it should have been me who was murdered. We spent two years together. I think if it was supposed to happen to me, it would have happened before."

He continues to visit her in jail.

"Even if we were together tomorrow, I wouldn't fear for my life. She still can't understand what happened."

His mother, Anie Erny Beaufils, remembered: "Never, never, never was she violent. She wouldn't hurt a fly. She was a very sensitive girl.

"She was very in love with Laurent, but couldn't leave him. They were like Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton: two strong characters who kept splitting up and getting back together.

"He adored her; she was his doll. He was much older than her and very protective. He didn't want to leave her alone.

"Both of them were depressed and taking the same medication, Effexor. It's very strong and one should absolutely not drink with it.

"She was a highly intelligent girl with an extraordinary IQ. I was like a mother to Jessica, she would confide in me even more than her own mother. She had only good things to say about her own family, her mother, father and uncle.

"She had lots of lovers, as she needed someone to hold her, but you couldn't keep her down because she wasn't stable in her head, always on antidepressants.

"If I had known more about her childhood, I would have done more to help. Never did she speak about her suicidal grandmother and her uncle Julian's mental illness."

A psychiatric report on Davies pointed to her father's failure to exercise his authority during her adolesence and her mother's "invasive" presence.

Her father admitted in court that he had been "poorly placed" to assess his daughter's situation following his departure for Italy, but he denied that she had intended to kill Mr Mugnier.

She had, he said, been "traumatised" by some events in her life.

The psychiatric report stated: "She [Davies] had a tendency to seek refuge in a parallel world. Her amnesia over the facts appears genuine and she had serious narcissistic problems, she had a destructiveness and a borderline personality.

"Olivier was a means of separating from her partner. She had ambivalent feelings of desire and hatred towards men. He was a pure sexual object. Olivier failed to fill the void of Jessica Davies. And instead of taking it out on herself, Olivier freed her destructiveness."

Davies's mother has still not absorbed the fact that her daughter will be in prison for up to 15 years.

"I have tried to explain what happened to myself, but I cannot," she said. "This isn't at all like my daughter. She is a nice girl."

The Telegraph, ,London


* Support is available for anyone who may be distressed by calling SANE Helpline 1800 18 7263; Lifeline 131 114; Salvo Crisis Line 9331 2000; beyondblue 1300 22 46 36.

Billionaire wins Chilean presidency

A billionaire media magnate, Sebastian Pinera, is to become the next president of Chile after a runoff election on Sunday that put an end to a 20-year hold on power by the left-wing coalition of outgoing head-of-state Michelle Bachelet.

Bachelet's defeated candidate, Eduardo Frei, a former president himself, conceded defeat after an official count of most ballots showed Pinera had picked up 52 per cent to his 48 per cent.

Bachelet was constitutionally barred from seeking another term.

The victory by Pinera, 60, marked the defeat of the Concertacion coalition of four left-wing and centrist parties that had governed Chile since the 1990 exit of dictator General August Pinochet.

Pinera, who owns one of Chile's four television networks and a big stake in flagship airline LAN among many other business interests, is seen likely to continue social policies that left Bachelet with sky-high popularity ratings of about 80 per cent.

But, in a victory speech before 30,000 supporters, he promised reforms to "break down the walls dividing us and build new bridges to bring us together".

He told Concertacion's defeated rival Frei that "our country needs unity - the problems facing us today are big and challenging and require unity."

When he cast his ballot, he said the change he represented would be "like opening the window to let fresh air in".

Pinera easily won the first round of the presidential elections on December 13, but then saw his lead narrow to a statistical dead heat with Frei as Bachelet leveraged her popularity in defence of her candidate.

In the end, he squeaked through, according to an official count from 60 per cent of polling stations.

Complete results were expected by the early hours of Monday.

Bachelet, who had assured the electorate she would welcome whoever won, telephoned Pinera to congratulate him.

Frei also wished his rival luck.

"The majority of Chileans gave him their trust to direct the fate of the country for the next four years," he said as he conceded the race.

"I hope that what will prevail will be dialogue, the search for consensus and the retention of social conquests that were hard-won and which have been transformed into a symbol of our relationship with the world," he said.

Some 8.3 million people were eligible to vote in Chile, one of Latin America's most prosperous nations.

Interior Minister Edmundo Perez Yoma confirmed Pinera's victory by saying: "The country today wanted a change. It has swung to the right, and we wish the new government all the best."

Some of the first issues Pinera will have to address, however, are potential conflicts of interest highlighted by Bachelet in the run-up to Sunday's election.

Pinera, who Forbes magazine says has a fortune of $US1.2 billion ($A1.3 billion), has investments in many activities in Chile, and the outgoing president suggested strongly that maintaining them could raise serious questions.

He has sought to dodge the tag his critics put upon him that he was the Chilean version of Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, notably by setting up a blind trust to handle much of his fortune and promising to divest his 26-per cent stake in LAN before taking office March 11.

He said, however, that he would hold on to his football club.

Venezuela seizes three banks, two others closed

The Venezuelan government of Hugo Chavez seized three banks and ordered two other financial institutions closed, as the country reeled from a currency devaluation he hopes will improving cratering state finances.

"In order to guarantee a healthy national banking and financial system, the board... has decided to intervene (with regard to) the following firms: InverUnion Banco Comercial; Banco Del Sol; and Mi Casa," banking regulator Sudeban said in a statement.

The closures come despite warnings that now regular business seizures could further spook foreign investors and undermine Chavez's efforts to put state revenues on a solid footing.

The nationalization of eight small- and medium-sized institutions last year prompted fears of a run on the country's banks, as investors moved to withdraw funds. It also sparked a dip in Venezuelan bonds and the country's currency in free trading.

The banking regulator defended Monday's move as a boost to the sector's stability, claiming the three seized banks were facing "serious administrative and managerial problems that resulted in insufficient liquidity to cover their short-term obligations."

Sudeban also closed down investment bank Baninvest and Banco Real Banco de Desarrollo, "due to inefficient operations" and announced that the banks' clients would not have immediate access to their deposits.

The government currently controls around 25 percent of the banking sector, largely due to the purchase of the Banco de Venezuela from the Spain's Santander group in 2009.

Venezuela's National Assembly on December 15 passed a banking reform law giving the state more power to regulate the sector, a move that coincided with Chavez's drive to revamp national finances, with an eye on legislative elections next year, observers said.

Supporters of Chavez had faced a tough fight at the polls, as the government saw its ability to woo supporters with popular spending programs curbed by evaporating state revenue.

In an effort to increase oil revenue Chavez earlier this month announced the bolivar would trade at 4.30 against the dollar for "non-essential" goods -- double the previous rate -- and a rate of 2.60 bolivars against the dollar for basic goods.

The Venezuelan military then moved to shutter 70 firms, including a European-backed supermarket, amid panic buying by customers who feared imminent price hikes.

The currency move is already being felt by firms exporting to Venezuela. Goodyear, a US tire company, on Monday said the devaluation would cost it 150 million US dollars in the first three months of this year.

© 2010 AFP
This story is sourced direct from an overseas news agency as an additional service to readers. Spelling follows North American usage, along with foreign currency and measurement units.

China denies 'selective rescue' in Haiti January 19, 2010 - 8:14PM

China angrily has denied accusations that its rescue team in Haiti was only searching for Chinese nationals missing after last week's devastating earthquake.

"Concerning the comments that Chinese rescuers only rescue Chinese, these comments are false and are made out of ulterior motives," foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu told reporters on Tuesday.

"The Chinese rescue team departed China immediately after the quake. They not only found the bodies of the Chinese peacekeepers, they also found the bodies of UN officers in Haiti and many others."

The 60-strong Chinese medical team in Haiti has already treated more than 200 locals and China has air-lifted rescue supplies and aid to the devastated country, he said.

"These actions are not selfish and brook no accusations. The accusers should be accused," Ma said, after media reports about China's contribution to the humanitarian operation in Haiti.

"Our rescue team and Chinese peacekeepers have made a great contribution to the relief efforts. We have won high appraisal from relevant parties, including the secretary general of the United Nations."

Tens of thousands were killed in the 7.0-magnitude quake that struck Haiti on January 12, with an estimated quarter of a million injured and 1.5 million left homeless.

Ma said China would consider a UN request for nations to help provide an additional 3,500 peacekeepers to help maintain order in Haiti, but made no firm commitment.

The bodies of eight Chinese peacekeepers killed in the quake were on Tuesday repatriated and given a state funeral, including a procession down the Avenue of Heavenly Peace, the capital's main thoroughfare, past Tiananmen Square.

"They sacrificed their lives for the maintenance of peace. Here I would like to express deep condolences," Ma said.

© 2010 AFP

Cadbury agrees to £11.5 bln takeover by Kraft January 19, 2010 - 9:39PM

Cadbury has agreed to a takeover from US food giant Kraft worth 840 pence per share or 11.5 billion pounds (13.1 billion euros, 18.9 billion US dollars), the two firms said on Tuesday.

"The board of Kraft Foods is pleased to announce the detailed terms of a recommended final offer for Cadbury and the board of Cadbury unanimously recommends Cadbury security holders to accept the terms," a statement said.

The US firm proposes to pay 500 pence in cash and 0.1874 new Kraft Foods shares per Cadbury share. That would value each Cadbury share at 840 pence.

"In addition, Cadbury shareholders will be entitled to receive 10 pence per Cadbury share by way of a special dividend following the date on which the final offer becomes or is declared unconditional," the statement added.

"The terms of the final offer reflect the strength of Cadbury's business, its brands and the future potential for growth through the combination of Kraft Foods and Cadbury."

© 2010 AFP
This story is sourced direct from an overseas news agency as an additional service to readers. Spelling follows North American usage, along with foreign currency and measurement units.

Cadbury agrees to £11.5 bln takeover by Kraft January 19, 2010 - 9:39PM

Cadbury has agreed to a takeover from US food giant Kraft worth 840 pence per share or 11.5 billion pounds (13.1 billion euros, 18.9 billion US dollars), the two firms said on Tuesday.

"The board of Kraft Foods is pleased to announce the detailed terms of a recommended final offer for Cadbury and the board of Cadbury unanimously recommends Cadbury security holders to accept the terms," a statement said.

The US firm proposes to pay 500 pence in cash and 0.1874 new Kraft Foods shares per Cadbury share. That would value each Cadbury share at 840 pence.

"In addition, Cadbury shareholders will be entitled to receive 10 pence per Cadbury share by way of a special dividend following the date on which the final offer becomes or is declared unconditional," the statement added.

"The terms of the final offer reflect the strength of Cadbury's business, its brands and the future potential for growth through the combination of Kraft Foods and Cadbury."

© 2010 AFP
This story is sourced direct from an overseas news agency as an additional service to readers. Spelling follows North American usage, along with foreign currency and measurement units.

Looters prey upon quake-ravaged Haiti STEPHANE JOURDAIN January 19, 2010 - 11:24AM

Roving bands of hundreds of looters on Monday swarmed across Port-au-Prince, while police and military officials tasked with protecting Haiti's quake-stricken capital were nowhere to be found.

World leaders have promised to dispatch additional police, troops, marines and UN peacekeepers to the city which has spiralled into chaos and despair after being levelled by a massive earthquake nearly a week ago.

But for now, the commercial heart of Haiti's shattered capital remains firmly in the hands of the thieves and vandals, who make off with whatever has not been damaged beyond use.

Looters roamed from shop to shop, some clearly survivors scavenging for food and water, as the unrest across the region was stoked by a delay in supplies reaching hundreds of thousands of people desperate for aid.

But others on the rampage on Port-au-Prince's lawless streets appeared to be simply marauders availing themselves of whatever goods they might be able to use or sell at a later time.

And not all of the city's looting victims were merchants.

"I wanted to get my possessions from my house but the looters prevented me from doing so," said one distraught elderly man, near what remains of his rubble-strewn home.

"They've already stolen almost everything I own: my rice, my spaghetti, my milk," the old man said disconsolately.

Occasionally, one or two isolated police officers fired shots into the air in an effort to stop the looting in the city centre but they were vastly outnumbered by the masses of looters, who scattered briefly, if at all, before returning to their plundering.

Widespread looting on Sunday led Haitian police to open fire on a crowd in the capital, killing at least one man who was shot in the head, as others ransacked a supermarket.

"Incidents of violence and looting are on the rise as the desperation grows," warned the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

Roaming gangs of looters steal anything they can find: sneakers, fabric, music stereos. Everything is up for grabs.

International officials overseeing relief operations on Monday said they were painfully aware of the need for additional troops and police to get vital aid to quake survivors - and to restore a semblance of order as Haiti struggles to emerge from the worst catastrophe to befall the poor Caribbean nation.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon requested 3,500 extra troops and police to boost his battered mission in Haiti as the world body's death toll from the disaster rose to 46, with hundreds of staff still unaccounted for.

Speaking to reporters after briefing the Security Council on his six-hour visit to the devastated Haitian capital on Sunday, Ban said he had requested that the UN mission, known as MINUSTAH, be considerably beefed up.

Vital aid and a surge in US military personnel to Haiti on Monday brought a drip of hope to despairing survivors still seeking basic supplies and security nearly a week after the killer quake.

About 1,700 US troops were already on the ground as part of the humanitarian response and in a bid to provide desperately needed security to back up those efforts.

And food rations provided by the United Nations and humanitarian organisations slowly began to trickle out to Haiti's desperate recipients.

Meanwhile, more than 2,200 Marines arrived aboard the amphibious ship USS Bataan, boosting overall US troop numbers to 7,000 either in Haiti or offshore.

And Lieutenant-General Ken Keen, US commander of the joint task force in Haiti, said there would be 10,000 US troops in the area in coming weeks.

Pot bill signed into law in US state January 19, 2010 - 12:59PM AP

New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine has signed legislation granting chronically ill patients legal access to marijuana.

Corzine's office said the governor signed the bill late on Monday, his last full day in office. Governor-elect Chris Christie will be sworn in on Tuesday.

New Jersey is the 14th state to allow patients with diseases such as cancer, AIDS, glaucoma and multiple sclerosis to use marijuana to alleviate their pain and other symptoms.

The legislation allows for dispensaries to be set up around the state where patients with prescriptions can access the drug.

Growing marijuana at home will remain illegal, as will driving while high.

Assembly sponsor Reed Gusciora says New Jersey's medicinal marijuana law is the strictest in the country.

Lawlessness, health crisis loom over Haiti DAVE CLARK January 19, 2010 - 8:09PM

Lawlessness, health crisis loom over Haiti
DAVE CLARK
January 19, 2010 - 8:09PM


Troops struggled Tuesday to control looters in the ruined Haiti capital amid urgent efforts to speed up aid deliveries to hundreds of thousands of survivors of a devastating earthquake.

A health crisis also loomed as a week after the 7.0-magnitude tremor aid workers struggled to tend to the homeless and injured amid deteriorating security in the stricken capital Port-au-Prince.

The United Nations said Tuesday more than 90 people had been pulled out alive so far, but with hopes of finding any more survivors in the rubble fading, relief efforts were focusing on the estimated quarter of a million injured and 1.5 million left homeless.

The Security Council was expected Tuesday to approve a request for 3,500 extra UN troops and police to be deployed to help curb lawlessness.

Even as pledges of improved security were made, thousands of homeless Haitians were prey to roving bands of looters swarming through the ruins of Port-au-Prince, with police and military officials tasked with protecting the vulnerable populace nowhere to be found.

Officials have expressed fears the final death toll may top 200,000 -- if it is ever known at all -- while a government minister said Sunday that 70,000 bodies had already been buried.

A lucky few survivors received treatment from surgeons on a US Navy ship floating kilometers (miles) from Port-au-Prince, but the medics aboard were frustrated at not being able to do more.

Related article: Babies pulled from the rubble

Secretary General Ban Ki-moon requested 3,500 more troops and police for the battered UN mission that was trying to bring stability to the dysfunctional Caribbean state even before disaster struck.

The UN peacekeeping mission -- which had its headquarters destroyed in the January 12 earthquake -- had been deployed in Haiti since 2004 to help stabilize the country, already the poorest in the Western Hemisphere.

More than 2,200 Marines had arrived aboard the amphibious ship USS Bataan, boosting overall US troop numbers to 7,000 either in Haiti or offshore.

Approximately 1,700 US troops were already on the ground overseeing the aid effort and trying to provide desperately needed security. US commanders promised more than 10,000 personnel in total would be in the disaster zone in the coming weeks.

"We will stay as long as is required," said Major General Cornell Wilson. "We are working in conjunction and coordination with UN forces and the government of Haiti for security issues."

Related article: UN chief seeks 3,500 reinforcements for UN mission in Haiti

US President Barack Obama proposed a joint US-Brazilian-Canadian leadership for relief efforts as the scale of the disaster overwhelmed the international humanitarian operation. Related article: US to accept Haiti orphans

Obama suggested to Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva that the three countries "should lead and coordinate efforts by the international community of Haiti donors and other parties," a Brazilian government official said.

EU nations promised more than 600 million US dollars in aid and reconstruction funds but Dominican President Leonel Fernandez estimated 10 billion US dollars over five years would be needed to help Haiti recover.

In the stinking capital Port-au-Prince, where corpses lay abandoned under the rubble and palace gardens were turned into putrid slums, groups of survivors roamed the streets to scrounge supplies.

Troops in combat gear fired off rounds and hauled some people to the ground to try to stop the worst of the pillaging.

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Looters roamed from shop to shop, some clearly survivors scavenging for food and water, as the unrest across the region was stoked by a delay in supplies reaching the hundreds of thousands who have been without a steady source of food or water since the quake struck.

"I wanted to get my possessions from my house, but the looters prevented me," wailed one distraught elderly man near what remains of his rubble-strewn home.

The International Committee of the Red Cross warned that violence by desperate Haitians was growing.

"Prices for food and transport have skyrocketed since last Tuesday and incidents of violence and looting are on the rise as the desperation grows," it said in a statement.

Related article: Looters prey upon quake-ravaged Haitian capital

Aid was trickling through to the needy though and UN agencies said field hospitals and food distribution had multiplied in and around the capital.

Around 105,000 food rations and 20,000 tents were distributed Monday by the World Food Programme and humanitarian groups from neighbouring Dominican Republic, a Haitian official said.

Amid the death and desperation the life-affirming tales of survival that had provided glimmers of hope in preceding days were drying up, although an 18-month-old baby was found alive on Monday.

Emergency workers expanded their operations to battered communities outside of Port-au-Prince, including Gressier, Petit Goave, and Leogane, which were all leveled by the quake.

© 2010 AFP
This story is sourced direct from an overseas news agency as an additional service to readers. Spelling follows North American usage, along with foreign currency and measurement units.