Thursday, 5 September 2013

Texas high school stabbings: Teen charged with murder


 teenager has been charged with murder in stabbings at a Houston-area high school that left one student dead and three others injured, the Harris County Sheriff's Office announced Wednesday evening.
Luis Alonzo Alfaro, 17, faces one count of murder in the Wednesday morning confrontation at Spring High School, about 20 miles north of downtown Houston, the sheriff's office said.
A 17-year-old student was killed and three other students were injured. The three injured students have been released from hospitals, the sheriff's office said.
Harris County Sheriff Adrian Garcia said earlier that "there has been some information that this may have been gang-related," but he stressed that no conclusions had been reached because the investigation was in the early stages.
Information on what led to the stabbings was limited. Garcia said an encounter between students turned into a physical confrontation involving "cutting instruments of some sort."
The statement issued Wednesday evening read in part: "The stabbing occurred during a physical altercation between several students in the hallways. During the altercation, the suspect produced a knife and fatally stabbed the victim to death and injured 3 other victims."
It was unclear Wednesday night whether Alfaro had an attorney.
After the stabbings, students were kept in classrooms for safety and to allow authorities to interview witnesses, said the superintendent of Spring Independent School District, Ralph Draper. The school intended to dismiss students for the day at noon, he said.
Sheila Dauth, mother of a Spring High School freshman, said she learned of the stabbings around 7:15 a.m., when her son texted her. They continued to communicate in the hours after, while he and other students were kept in their first-hour classes, she said.
"He said he's OK. He said it was pretty scary at first when they were rushing everyone into the classrooms," Dauth said. The students have drilled for such situations, "but I don't think he expected to be in a lockdown" like this, she said.
Dauth said she was disappointed that she learned about the incident through her son and the local media hours before the school district contacted her. The district gave automated phone and e-mail messages to parents about three hours after the stabbings, she said.
Draper, while not specifying the time it took to notify parents, told reporters that the district needed to do two things before communicating with families. First was to ensure the rest of the students were safe, and second was to coordinate with authorities so that the investigation wouldn't be compromised.

Gunmen kill 10 family members in Iraq

Twenty people were killed in violence south of Baghdad and in Mosul on Wednesday, including 10 members of the same family, police officials said.
Gunmen in Latifiya, south of the capital, stormed the home of a Shiite family at dawn, and opened fire, killing two mothers, two fathers and their children, the officials said.
One day earlier, gunmen stormed the house of a Sunni Muslim family in southern Baghdad, killing five family members in their sleep, according to police.
This comes as Sunni-Shiite frictions have escalated since an April incident in Hawija, in northern Iraq. That's where Iraqi security forces raided a site used by Sunni protesters to demonstrate against the Shiite-led government.
Sunnis have felt politically marginalized under Shiite President Nuri al-Maliki, whose government fears that Sunni Islamists, who've been involved in fighting in neighboring Syria, are now targeting it.
Separately, police reported three attacks in Mosul on Wednesday.
The deadliest involved a suicide bomber who blew himself up at a police station, killing five officers, the officials said.
Two people were shot while driving in western Mosul. Three others were reported killed when mortar rounds landed in the central part of the city.
More than 800 Iraqis were killed and another 2,030 wounded in violence and acts of terrorism last month, the United Nations said.
August's toll was lower than July's. But, said the agency's assistance mission for Iraq, "the impact of violence on civilians remains disturbingly high."
July was the deadliest month in Iraq since the peak of sectarian violence in 2006 and 2007. According to U.N. figures, 1,057 Iraqis were killed and another 2,326 were wounded in July.

Actress Scarlett Johansson is engaged

Scarlett Johansson and Romain Dauriac attend the 'Under The Skin' Premiere during the 70th Venice International Film Festival at Palazzo del Cinema on September 3, 2013 in Venice, Italy.
Scarlett Johansson's beau put a ring on it. But the wedding date is not yet set.
The actress is engaged to Romain Dauriac, who co-owns an independent advertising agency.
Her rep confirmed the happy news, but did not disclose when it occurred.
"They haven't chosen a date for the wedding," she said.
Johansson's marriage to Ryan Reynolds ended in 2011.
Last year, the actress told Vogue magazine that their divorce was "comically amicable."
But that did not mean it was a happy ending.
"Of course it's horrible," she told the magazine. "It was devastating. It really throws you. You think that your life is going to be one way, and then, for various reasons or whatever, it doesn't work out."
Johansson has appeared in various movies, including "Lost in Translation" and "Girl With a Pearl Earring."

Serena Williams smashes her way into U.S. Open semifinals

World No. 1 Serena Williams is bidding for a fifth U.S. Open singles title
Serena Williams underlined her status as the overwhelming favorite for the women's U.S. Open title with a crushing "double bagel" win over Carla Suarez Navarro in the quarterfinals of the New York grand slam.
The defending champion, bidding for a fifth singles triumph at Flushing Meadows, beat the Spanish world No. 20 6-0 6-0 to become the first woman since Martina Navratilova in 1989 to win a women's U.S. Open quarterfinal without losing a game.
"I played well -- I played really well," world No. 1 Williams told the WTA's official website. "I was just more focused than anything.
"I like to believe there is always room for improvement though. I haven't really thought about it yet, but off the bat, I think it was very difficult to hit a big serve today because of the winds, and I didn't get my serve up as much as I wanted to. But I don't know. I do think I definitely played well tonight."
The American's latest commanding win means she has lost just 13 games at the tournament ahead of her semifinal meeting with Li Na, who is appearing in the last four of the year's final grand slam for the first time after beating Russia's Ekaterina Makarova.
"I'm still in the tournament and I'm not thinking like, 'I'm really dominant now'," added Williams. "I'm thinking I have a really tough match in the next round and want to do well."
Earlier in the day second seed Victoria Azarenka, beaten by Williams in the 2012 final,


Colorado teen Isabella Yun-Mi Guzman accused of stabbing mom 79 times



A Colorado teenager is facing a first-degree murder charge, accused of stabbing her mother 79 times in the face and neck in the bathroom of their Aurora home.
Isabella Yun-Mi Guzman, 18, is being held without bond at the Arapahoe County Jail in the August 28 stabbing death of her mother, Yun-Mi Hoy, 47.
The teen's stepfather, Robert Hoy, told authorities that Guzman and her mother had often fought in the past, but Guzman spit in her mother's face and became "more threatening and disrespectful towards her mother" in the days leading up to the killing, according to an arrest affidavit.
Hoy told police that his wife showed him an e-mail Guzman allegedly sent her on the morning of the killing, which included the words, "You will pay," the affidavit states.
That e-mail prompted Yun-Mi Hoy to call police later that day and ask them to come to her home because her daughter had threatened to harm her, according to the affidavit.
After speaking to Yun-Mi Hoy and Guzman, responding officers determined there "were ongoing family issues between them and it appeared to be resolved," court documents state.
Robert Hoy told authorities that after the officers left, Guzman went to her bedroom and remained there the rest of the evening while her mother went back to work.
When Yun-Mi Hoy arrived home around 9:30 p.m., Robert Hoy said, she went upstairs to take a shower. Hoy told police he then "heard a thumping sound coming from upstairs and his wife call his name," according to the affidavit.
Hoy told authorities that as he tried to open the bathroom door, Guzman was pushing against it with her back to keep it closed. Hoy said he then went downstairs, called 911 and told a dispatcher that his "wife and daughter were inside the bathroom and he could see blood coming from under the door to the bathroom," the affidavit states.
Hoy also told police that when he went back upstairs, he saw Guzman standing in the bathroom doorway holding a knife.
"Hoy then observed his wife lying on the floor of the bathroom covered in blood" with a baseball bat lying next to her body, the affidavit says.
When police arrived at the home, they found Yun-Mi Hoy's nude body lying on the bathroom floor with numerous lacerations and stab wounds. She was pronounced dead at the scene at 10:28 p.m.
An autopsy showed she had 31 stab wounds to the face and 48 stab wounds to the neck, according to the affidavit.
Guzman was arrested Thursday at a parking garage by Aurora police.
On Friday morning, a judge ordered that she be held without bond.
Calls to the Aurora Public Defender's Office to locate an attorney for Guzman were not returned.

Lionel Messi and dad pay Spanish authorities $6.6 million in tax case

Barcelona superstar Lionel Messi has had to deal with issues relating to tax payments recently.
Four-time world soccer player of the year Lionel Messi and his father have paid Spanish authorities $6.6 million after allegedly committing tax fraud between 2007 and 2009.
The "reparatory" payment was made on August 14 and includes interest, the High Court said in a statement sent to CNN. It covers the period between 2007 and 2009, Spanish media reported.
The move comes more than two months after Messi paid $13 millionin taxes to cover the tax period of 2010-2011.
Messi is due to appear in court on September 17 but one of his lawyers is requesting to "suspend" the date of his testimony, according to the statement.
A decision is expected within two days.
When it went public that he was under investigation, Messi said on his Facebook page that he had done nothing wrong.
"We are surprised about the news, because we have never committed any infringement," he said in June. "We have always fulfilled all our tax obligations, following the advice of our tax consultants, who will take care of clarifying this situation."
The off-field issues haven't affected the Argentine international's performances for Barcelona.
He scored all three goals for Barcelona in its 3-2 win at Valencia on Sunday and has netted five league goals in his two games.

Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Afghan police deaths double as international troops exit

(File) Afghan policeman stand guard at the site of a suicide attack in Kabul n July 2, 2013.
Police deaths in Afghanistan have doubled this year after NATO forces handed over security responsibility to poorly equipped and poorly trained local security forces.
The country's new Interior Minister, Mohammad Omar Daudzai, said that 1,792 Afghan policemen had lost their lives and more than 2,500 had been injured since March. That's double the number of a year ago.
Roadside bombs planted by the Taliban and other insurgent groups inflict the most damage, according to Daudzai.
Local police suffer because they lack modern weapons, armored vehicles and adequate training, he said. The security forces remain dependent on NATO air support during their operations.
On the front lines, the frustration is obvious. Security forces need better equipment.
"My job is to save the lives of my people," said Abdullah Khan, who mans a checkpoint in the city of Jalalabad. "That is not possible with a few AK-47 guns and the soft-skin Ford Ranger vehicle that I have."
He said it doesn't help that most of his officers are illiterate.
The situation illustrates the difficulties local forces face as NATO and American troops largely exit the county by the end of 2014.
The plan is to withdraw all combat troops but keep a residual force in the country to help train Afghans and carry out counterterrorism operations when needed.


Xiaomi: The 'Apple of China' looks abroad

Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun has drawn comparisons to the late Steve Jobs.

Xiaomi, one of China's hottest technology companies, served notice of its international ambitions last week when it poached Android smartphone guru Hugo Barra.

The three-year old phonemaker is still relatively unknown outside Asia, but it has been quietly stockpiling tech talent as it builds a business worth $10 billion.
The company is transparent about its desire to be a global player, and hiring Barra from Google (GOOG,Fortune 500) sends a clear signal that Xiaomi is preparing to offer its products outside the Middle Kingdom for the first time.
But going global is a big risk, and not something many Chinese companies have managed to pull off successfully.
Chinese companies -- like Taiwanese manufacturers before them -- are still better known as the worker bees that execute the innovative designs of Western firms.
But expectations for Xiaomi are high. The Beijing-based private firm and its dynamo of a CEO, serial entrepreneur Lei Jun, have drawn comparisons to Apple (AAPLFortune 500)and the late Steve Jobs.
Like Jobs, Lei is fond of announcing new products in dramatic fashion, and the Chinese CEO sometimes even dons Jobs' trademark outfit of blue jeans and a black shirt during presentations.
There are similarities to be found in the companies' advertising strategies and finely-tuned product launch cycles. Both companies have attracted legions of die-hard fans and something of a cult following.
Yet a comparison to Apple in 1980 might be more apt -- especially when considering the size of the business.
Xiaomi had sales of about $2 billion last year, and might hit $5 billion this year. Apple, meanwhile, reported more than $35 billion in sales in its most recent quarter and has $106 billion in cash sitting offshore.
"I think they still have a long way to go before [they can be] compared to Apple," said Nicole Peng, China research director at technology consultancy Canalys.
"Apple has the capability and resources to look at innovation from all different angles," Peng said. "Xiaomi is such a small company, they are mostly focused on user experience."
Yet even with relatively limited resources Xiaomi has managed to outmaneuver Apple(AAPLFortune 500). It sold more phones than Apple in China for the first time in the second quarter, according to Canalys.
Xiaomi also has a deal with telecoms giant China Mobile, something Apple has failed to secure despite numerous attempts by top executives.
The company is also set to launch a new television product, an idea Apple has toyed with for years.
Yet even if there are some product similarities, the two companies occupy very different places in the Chinese market.
The iPhone is considered a luxury item, and is beyond the reach of many of China's 1.3 billion citizens.
Xiaomi's products -- which some critics deride as Apple knockoffs -- are much more affordable. The company claims its latest offering, a low-cost smartphone called "red rice," sold its entire first batch of 100,000 units within 90 seconds. It costs around $130.
At a conference held earlier this year in China's Sichuan province, Lei said the customer was at the heart of his company's strategy.
Xiaomi engineers are encouraged to speak directly to consumers, gathering feedback they use to tinker with its software, he said. The turnaround is rapid, and Xiaomi updates its Android operating system every Friday.
"What they really excel at is understanding the user behavior of Chinese consumers," Peng said. "Consumers feel they have the capability to contribute. That works very, very well in China."
And that Steve Jobs comparison? Peng said there might be something to it.
"I don't think Lei Jun himself likes to be compared to Steve Jobs," Peng said. "But he does really have the charm to lead a talented team."


DA: California school principal, arrested in husband's death, released from jail


A California elementary school principal, arrested in connection with her husband's death, was released from custody Tuesday after a court hearing for her was postponed and the time expired that she could be held without being charged.
She was to be released with no formal charges filed as prosecutors waited for more information from the Kern County, California, sheriff's department, according to information confirmed by Kern County District Attorney David Zulfa.
Leslie Jenea Chance, principal of an elementary school in Bakersfield, was arrested late Thursday. The body of her husband, Todd Chance, was found August 25 in an almond orchard in Bakersfield, a city about 100 miles north of Los Angeles. His black Ford Mustang was found abandoned in a residential area.
"We do believe she is the person who drove that car to the neighborhood, then dropped it off, then walked away from the vehicle," Ray Pruitt, a spokesman for the Kern County Sheriff's Office, said after the arrest.
An arraignment hearing was scheduled for Tuesday, but the hearing was postponed. Zulfa confirmed to CNN that Chance's release was pending Tuesday afternoon, with the time expiring that she could be held without formal charges filed.
An operator at the Kern County Jail said Chance was freed about 6 p.m. (9 p.m. ET).
Leslie Chance, 46, has been principal of Fairview Elementary School in Bakersfield for three years. She was married to Todd Chance, 45, for 17 years, according to his obituary in theBakersfield Californian newspaper.
Tuesday morning, Leslie Chance's name was still listed as the principal on the school website, even though she was being held in jail without bail at that time.

Police to issue arrest warrant for Red Bull heir Vorayuth Yoovidhaya

Thai police inspect a Ferrari allegedly belonging to Vorayuth Yoovidhya, grandson of the creator of Red Bull energy drink, September 3, 2012
Thai prosecutors were poised to issue an arrest warrant Tuesday for the grandson of the creator of the Red Bull energy drink who failed to appear in court this week over a fatal hit-and-run case that sparked nationwide anger.
Prosecutors allege Vorayuth Yoovidhaya, 28, was behind the wheel of his Ferrari on September 3, 2012, when it collided with an on-duty policeman on a motorbike in downtown Bangkok.
He is charged with reckless driving causing death, speeding and failing to stop following an accident.
Thai police told CNN that Yoovidhaya's lawyer had informed prosecutors his client was in Singapore receiving medical treatment for a bout of influenza he contracted while on a business trip and would not be in Thailand for his scheduled court hearing.
Thai prosecutor Ruecha Krairiksh said his no-show meant that the speeding charges would lapse but the more serious charges of reckless driving and failing to stop would still apply.
The reckless driving charges carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in jail under Thai law.
"We can't indict him because the suspect is not present. This means the statute of limitations for speeding will expire because the incident occurred on September 3, 2012," Mr Ruesha told The Nation newspaper.
He said he would ask the court to withhold bail because of his failure to present himself in court and for postponing meetings with prosecutors.
His case provoked outrage in Thailand last year with online forums denouncing the Thai justice system for its perceived leniency towards defendants with money and connections.
An alleged attempt to cover up the crime -- which involved police arresting a suspect who pretended to be driving his Ferrari at the time of the incident -- led to the suspension of a police officer and sparked even more outrage.
Yoovidhaya also allegedly paid the family of the victim Thai baht 3 million ($97,000) in a bid to stall a civil lawsuit, police said.
The defendant is the grandson of the Chaleo Yoovidhya who formulated an energy drink called Krathing Daeng, or Red Bull, that first became popular with Thai workmen. He teamed up with Austrian Dietrich Mateschitz in 1987 and together they built an international drinks brand.
According to Forbes magazine, the Yoovidhya empire is worth $7.8 billion, making them the fourth richest family in Thailand.
Chaleo died in March 2012, leaving his heirs a vast estate based on his 49% stake in the iconic drinks brand, as well as interests in hospitals, real estate and sports teams.

27 slain in Baghdad bombs

At least 27 people were killed and more than 50 others were wounded Tuesday when nine car bombs exploded in largely Shiite areas in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad, police said.
The attacks unfolded within an hour shortly before sunset, police said. The explosions took place in Karrada, al-Alam, Talbiya, Abu Dsheer, Al-Maamil, Zafaraniya, al-Shurta Rabaa and Skaniya, police said.
The deadliest attack was in al-Shurta Rabaa, in southwestern Baghdad when a car bomb in a busy shopping area killed six people and wounded 12 others.
At dawn, gunmen stormed a house of a Sunni family in Arab-Jabour district in southern Baghdad and shot dead five family members, police said.
This comes as Sunni-Shiite frictions have escalated since an April incident in Hawija, in northern Iraq. That's where Iraqi security forces raided a site used by Sunni protesters to demonstrate against the Shiite-led government.
Sunnis have felt politically marginalized under Shiite President Nuri al-Maliki, whose government fears that Sunni Islamists, who've been involved in fighting in neighboring Syria, are now targeting it.

Tuesday, 3 September 2013

Reflected light from London skyscraper melts car

London's 'Walkie Talkie' building

Never mind the traffic, car owners in London have a new hazard to worry about: A skyscraper whose reflected rays have the power to melt cars.

It may sound like science fiction, but it was no joke for Jaguar XJ owner Martin Lindsay, who parked his pricey ride near the under-construction building, officially called 20 Fenchurch Street, but known by many Londoners as the "Walkie Talkie" for its distinctive shape.

When he returned to the car, he found some panels warped beyond repair by the beam of light reflected down from the curved side of the landmark glass tower.

The developers of the 37-floor building, Canary Wharf and Land Securities, have said they'll pay for the high-spec vehicle to be fixed.Never mind the traffic, car owners in London have a new hazard to worry about: A skyscraper whose reflected rays have the power to melt cars.

It may sound like science fiction, but it was no joke for Jaguar XJ owner Martin Lindsay, who parked his pricey ride near the under-construction building, officially called 20 Fenchurch Street, but known by many Londoners as the "Walkie Talkie" for its distinctive shape.

When he returned to the car, he found some panels warped beyond repair by the beam of light reflected down from the curved side of the landmark glass tower.

The developers of the 37-floor building, Canary Wharf and Land Securities, have said they'll pay for the high-spec vehicle to be fixed.

The developers of the 37-floor building, Canary Wharf and Land Securities, have said they'll pay for the high-spec vehicle to be fixed.

"Canary Wharf Construction and Land Securities have been very good and agreed to pay for the damage, and accept that there is an issue which they will resolve," Lindsay told CNN.

"I am in construction and sometimes things go wrong which nobody would have envisaged, and this is one of them."

The City A.M. newspaper said light reflected from the building had also previously damaged a van parked on the same street, Eastcheap.

A joint statement from Land Securities and Canary Wharf said they were taking the issue of light reflecting from the building seriously.

"The phenomenon is caused by the current elevation of the sun in the sky. It currently lasts for approximately 2 hours per day, with initial modeling suggesting that it will be present for approximately 2-3 weeks," it said.

The developers have been in touch with local businesses and have arranged with local authorities for three parking spaces which may be affected to be suspended, it said.

"In addition, we are consulting with local businesses and the City to address the issue in the short-term, while also evaluating longer-term solutions to ensure the issue cannot recur in future."

20 Fenchurch Street, designed by architect Rafael Viñoly, will feature about 33,000 square meters of glass -- an area equivalent to more than 4.5 soccer pitches -- once complete.

It's not the only building reportedly to have directed scorching light onto the ground below.

The Las Vegas Review-Journal said in 2010 that the glass-sidedVdara Hotel in Las Vegas was reflecting a ray of light so intense that it scorched the hair of a visitor using the hotel's pool, as well as melting a hole in a plastic bag he had by his sun lounger.

Hotel pool employees called the phenomenon the "Vdara death ray," the newspaper reported. A spokesman for the hotel's owner told the paper it was working on design solutions.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Basketball star Dennis Rodman heads to Pyongyang for second trip in a year

VICE photos of Dennis Rodman and the Harlem Globetrotters in North Korea with Kim Jong Un.
VICE photos of Dennis Rodman and the Harlem Globetrotters in North Korea with Kim Jong Un.


Former basketball star Dennis Rodman was headed to Pyongyang Tuesday on a five-day visit amid speculation he may try to negotiate the release of jailed U.S. citizen Kenneth Bae.
In Beijing, the gateway for flights to Pyongyang, Rodman told Reuters he was on another "basketball diplomacy tour" and would not be discussing the release of Bae.
"I'm not going to North Korea to discuss freeing Kenneth Bae," Rodman told Reuters in a telephone interview before he left Beijing for Pyongyang. "I've come out here to see my friend (Kim) -- and I want to talk about basketball," he added.
Later pushing through a throng of journalists at Beijing airport, the 6 foot 7 inch (2.01 meter) former basketballer said: "I'm just trying to go over there to meet my friend Kim, the Marshal. Try to start a basketball league over there, something like that."
However, he told the Huffington Post last week that he would likely broach the issue with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
"I gave (Kim Jong-un) a great indication of when I'm going to Beijing soon -- that's just a hop, skip and a jump from North Korea. So basically, you know, I'm pretty sure I'll be talking to him soon," Rodman told the Huffington Post.
"I will definitely ask for Kenneth Bae's release," he said. "I will say, 'Marshal, why is this guy held hostage?' I could try and soften it up in that way."
"If the Marshal says, 'Dennis, you know, do you want me to let him loose?' and then if I actually got him loose -- and I'm just saying this out the blue -- I'd be the most powerful guy in the world."
Rodman's trip -- which is being sponsored by Irish bookmaker Paddy Power -- is the second to the hardline Communist state this year. In March, Rodman was pictured with Kim, an ardent basketball fan, laughing and eating while watching an all-star basketball match.
He was criticized over the trip which came at a time of escalating tension, with North Korea threatening missile strikes on the U.S., South Korea and Japan.
Rodman has previously made no secret about his desire to help Bae. He once tweeted that he wanted the 30-year-old unchallenged leader of North Korea to "do him a solid" by freeing him.
Bae was sentenced to 15 years hard labor in February after he was convicted of unspecified "hostile acts" against North Korea. The country's state-run Korean Central News Agency said the Korean-American was arrested late last year after arriving as a tourist in Rason City, a northeastern port near the Chinese border.
North Korea last week canceled a "humanitarian mission" by Robert King, U.S. special envoy on North Korean human rights issues to Pyongyang, aimed at negotiating the release of Bae, citing annual military drills last week by the U.S. and South Korea.

Time Warner Cable and CBS reach deal to end blackout

time warner cable cbs

Time Warner Cable and CBS have reached an agreement to end a month-long blackout and restore CBS programming to about 3 million viewers.

At issue in the fight was how much Time Warner Cable has to pay CBS for the right to transmit its programming.
In a statement released Monday, Time Warner Cable(TWCFortune 500) said it would resume carriage ofCBS (CBSFortune 500) stations in New York, Los Angeles, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Denver and Pittsburgh. Showtime and other cable networks will also be restored.
Time Warner Cable customers had also lost access to the premium cable networks Showtime, The Movie Channel and The Smithsonian Channel, which are also owned by CBS.
Financial terms of the agreement were not released. Programming started to return on Monday evening.
The deal settles a dispute that began on Aug. 2. Industry analysts had said the U.S. Open tennis tournament and looming start of the NFL football season would likely spur a resolution.
Mignon Clyburn, acting chairwoman of the Federal Communications Commission, said she was pleased the dispute had been resolved.
"[M]edia companies should accept shared responsibility for putting their audience's interests above other interests and do all they can to avoid these kinds of disputes in the future," she added.

Human rights campaigners welcome Saudi Arabia's law on domestic violence

Saudi Arabia has approved a new law to combat violence at home and in the work place
Saudi Arabia has approved a new law to combat violence at home and in the work place


Human rights campaigners have welcomed a landmark decision in Saudi Arabia designed to combat domestic violence.
However, they urge caution. The country's legal system is based on sharia law and rarely sees new laws being introduced. Critics allege that Saudi Arabia is known for suppressing women's rights, and it remains to be seen how this law will be put into practice, according to experts.
For the first time in Saudi Arabia's history the kingdom's cabinet has approved a ban on domestic violence and other forms of abuse both at home and in the workplace. The law, which was passed last Monday, is meant to protect every citizen, but in particular the most vulnerable including children, women and domestic workers. The law is expected to be implemented within 90 days.
Adam Coogle, a Saudi Arabia researcher for Human Rights Watch, said: "We welcome the law because it makes crimes such as physical and emotional abuse easier to prosecute and it is a step in the right direction -- but the law has some major drawbacks. I'd urge caution until we see how exactly this law will be implemented and whether domestic abuse cases will now actually be punished in courts."
The law states that physical or sexual violence is punishable with a minimum jail sentence of one month and a maximum of one year, and fines of up to $13,300. Judges can double the sentence for repeat offenders. Abuse victims will be given access to necessary health care, psychological treatment and family counseling.
According to Coogle, male guardianship in Saudi Arabia is a major obstacle to the new law. "How can a woman escape an abusive husband if she's not allowed to drive and can't even travel without the permission of her male guardian?" Coogle said. He is also concerned that the law does not mention the issue of marital rape.
Eman Al Nafjan, a Saudi writer and blogger who tweets as Saudiwoman, told CNN: "Having this in a country where we still have male guardianship system, where we still have child marriage -- it's a contradiction -- these things are still legal and yet you're talking about protection from harassment. It doesn't seem like a system where a lot of action will be taken. This seems to be more about talking than actually implementing."
Domestic violence is a problem in Saudi Arabia but no reliable figures exist on how many people get abused each year. According to researchers there have been very few instances in the past where rapes and physical violence cases went to court as women do not dare to come forward.
Until last week, no written penal code existed on domestic violence and physical abuse. That means that it was up to individual judges to determine what actions are illegal and how to punish them, if at all.
The new law makes it easier to punish such crimes as they now can rely on written regulations. "Judges own the courtroom," Coogle said. ""A man's testimony still carries more weight than that of a woman so we'll have to see whether this law will change the status quo."
Billionaire Saudi prince tweets support for women driving
Bandar al-Aiban, President of Saudi Arabia's Human Rights Commission which is backed by the Saudi government, told CNN: "This is a very important law. We've been working on it for a long time. I'm very pleased to see it enacted. King Abdullah himself is behind this law," he said.
"This shows the kingdom is really moving forward with enacting laws that protect its citizens and residents and to make sure the kingdom is now in accordance with international obligations and international standards regarding human rights."
Earlier this year, a campaign was launched calling for an end to violence against women. In the King Khalid Foundation advert a woman wears a hijab with only her eyes visible - one clearly bruised and blackened. A slogan written in Arabic underneath reads: "Some things can't be covered."



6 British soldiers accused of attacking NYPD cop

Six British soldiers who have been charged with assaulting an off-duty New York City police officer are expected to appear in court this week, according to a police spokesman.
The six soldiers were arrested early Friday morning after the 30-year-old police officer was injured outside a bar in Manhattan's Murray Hill neighborhood, said New York Police Department spokesman Sgt. Thomas Antonetti. A verbal altercation quickly escalated into a physical fight, he said.
The cause is still unclear, he added.
All of the soldiers are Fiji nationals who serve in the 1st Scots Guard of the British Army, according to Antonetti. The group was visiting New York City for a battalion rugby match.
The men are identified as Iosefo Yavala, Iliakini Raderua, Thomas Shute, Felite Vunisarati, Mosese Kuruala, and Joeli Raduva according to NYPD.
The NYPD officer, 30, and a friend, 26, suffered lacerations and bruising to the face and head. They were taken to a hospital where they were treated and released, Antonetti said.
All six British soldiers were charged with third-degree assault, Antonetti said. One of the men was also charged with robbery, accused of trying to steal the NYPD officer's cell phone, he said.
The British Ministry of Defence released a statement to CNN saying it is "aware of an incident in New York involving some British Army soldiers. This is a matter for the NYPD and it would be inappropriate to comment while there is an ongoing investigation. All those who are found to fall short of the Army's high standards will face disciplinary action, up to and including discharge, if appropriate."
Three of the men will appear in a New York District Court on Tuesday, according to public records from the New York Criminal Court.