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Archive for May, 2010

Cuba: Bruno Rodriguez Receives Egyptian Deputy Foreign Minister

May 31st, 2010 No comments

acnnews 18

Cuba: Bruno Rodriguez Receives Egyptian Deputy Foreign Minister

HAVANA, Cuba, May 31 (acn) Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez met with the Egyptian Deputy Foreign Minister Izaat Saad in Havana this Monday.

Rodriguez welcomed Saad at the Foreign Ministry’s headquarters and said he was honoured with his visit. Saad is part of a delegation from his country that now heads the Non Aligned Movement (NAM) of which both countries are members.

Cuba handed over Egypt the NAM Presidency in its XV Summit, held in the African country in 2009 with the participation of almost 50 heads of state and 120 delegations.

On that occasion, Cuban President Raul Castro defined as NAM´s priorities to preserve peace and international security, and the urgent need to eliminate all nuclear and Mass Destruction Weapons (MDW)

Cubanews/aga/7.00 PM/aga

Cuban News Agency www.cubanews.ain.cu ainnews@ain.cu



Fw: David Ray Griffin: Building What? How SCADs Can Be Hidden in Plain Sight – The 9/11 “Official Story” and the Collapse of WTC Building Seven

May 31st, 2010 No comments

Afghan Teenage Girls Flogged-Very Disturbing

May 31st, 2010 No comments

Cuba Hosts International Symposium on Chemistry

May 31st, 2010 No comments

acnnews 17

Cuba Hosts International Symposium on Chemistry

SANTA CLARA, Cuba, May 31 (acn) The 4th International Symposium on Chemistry will be held from June 1st through the 4th in this city, with the main objective of strengthening environmental management within the Latin American context. Ronaldo Santos, dean of the Chemistry-Pharmacy Department of Las Villas Central University (UCLV), told ACN that the 2nd Latin American Seminar on Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) –a methodology that assesses the impact of products, processes and services on the environment- will also take place along with this event. According to Santos, 150 delegates and guests will participate in the meeting, among them 30 coming from Mexico, Spain, Brazil, Peru, France, Colombia and Belgium. Standing out on the event’ agenda are themes related to the management, engineering and inventories of the LCA, data that are necessary to improve the use of this tool in Latin American and Caribbean nations. Ana Contreras, a specialist with the UCLV, explained that this methodology is used in the study of the life cycle of a product and of its production process, and allows for the assessment of the potential impact on the environment by way of the quantification of the use of resources and of residues generated. With the boom enjoyed by the so-called eco-design, this approach has been increasingly used in different criteria and parameters to assess environmental impact. The 4th International Symposium on Chemistry and the 2nd Latin American Seminar on LCA will have the Bolivar Convention Center as their venue.

cubanews/science/trm/trm/trm

Acogera Villa Clara simposio internacional de Quimica

Cuban News Agency www.cubanews.ain.cu ainnews@ain.cu

Havana Gets Ready to Mark World Environment Day

May 31st, 2010 No comments

acnnews 16

Havana Gets Ready to Mark World Environment Day

HAVANA, Cuba, May 31 (acn) Different cultural activities will begin at Old Havana’s historic area on June 1st, on the occasion of World Environment Day, to be celebrated on June 5. Part of the International Year of Biodiversity, these cultural actions will promote the care of natural resources, and will favor the creation of ecological awareness among the youngest generations. Meetings, conferences, workshops, exhibitions and concerts make up the program, which will try to meet the expectations of children, adolescents and adults, affirmed the organizers of these festivities. The exhibition “Dos miradas a las aves endemicas”, at the Alejandro de Humboldt Center, is among the events scheduled, which will present a children’s vision of fine arts and literature and the vision of youngsters taking photography as a starting point, as well as the meeting “Dos generaciones”, in which participants will share their experiences on the protection and preservation of cultural and natural heritage. Concerts by pianist Aldo Lopez- Gavilan and the Camerata Romeu, among other artists, will take place at the San Francisco de Assisi Minor Basilica on June 4 and 5, while, from Old Havana’s Planetarium, visitors will be able to observe the sun with two refractor telescopes and participate in a fiesta of stars, the City Historian Office reports. Celebrations will take place throughout June, at the Africa Center, the San Felipe Neri Oratorio, and the San Francisco de Paula Church.

cubanews/science/trm/trm/trm

Festejaran en la capital cubana Dia del Medio Ambiente

Cuban News Agency www.cubanews.ain.cu ainnews@ain.cu

Cuban Largest Rice Producing Cooperative Starts Harvest

May 31st, 2010 No comments

acnnews 15

Cuban Largest Rice Producing Cooperative Starts Harvest

VERTIENTES, Camaguey, May 31 (acn) The Manuel Ascunce cooperative, the largest rice producer in Cuba, started the 2010 harvest aiming at setting a new record of 13,800 tons of rice despite the draught in central Camaguey province.

This farming cooperative is located in the south region of this Cuban province. The harvest began by collecting the grains in those small lots, and will expand to all the cooperative’s areas which will increase exponentially the volume of rice harvested.

“Manuel Ascunce” President Arturo Durán said they planted some 940 hectare, a bigger amount than in the two previous seasons.

Duran estimates that these fields will have 3.4 tons per hectare yield.

Duran said his farmers keep their commitment of producing 4,000 tons more than last year, despite the low levels of accumulated water at the Jimaguayu reservoir and the lack of rain which have a negative effect on the irrigation of the fields.

He clarified that to achieve that goal they need to increase the cultivable land surface and two harvests twice in some of the rice fields.

This cooperative has 235 members, out of which 185 lease their land to the government.

In 2010, in Camaguey province rice growers expect to sow 25,300 hectare, including the two seasons: winter (November-February) and spring (March-August)

During the last five years Camaguey reports a sustained increase in the cultivable lands, a fact that aims at reducing rice imports.

In Cuba, some 600,000 tons of rice are consumed yearly, and expects to cover half of that amount with its domestic productions.

Economy/aga/6.10 PM/aga

Cuban News Agency www.cubanews.ain.cu ainnews@ain.cu

World Telecommunication Development Conference 2010

May 31st, 2010 No comments

Not ALL Ministers and Departmental heads, pls.

At least where i worked before, we went out of our way to make news available before, during and after the various events we attended.

For the WTDC-10, I can also confirm that Minister Tammur, Secretary Henao Iduhu and PANGTEL Director (Regulatory & External Affairs), Kila Gulo-Vui are attending.

My handicap is that I just joined this Dept and openly admit my knowledge on this issue is still limited, thus wouldn’t provide any PNG angle on the meet.

I will contact Mr Iduhu today and see how they are going and provide some details to the media.

kora

Panel discusses human trafficking

May 31st, 2010 No comments

News Article May 31, 2010

Reznews Radio Video’s http://ubroadcast.com/channel/reznews

Larry Kibby – American Indian Poetry http://www.freewebs.com/lkibby1/index.htm

Short Note From Larry: Some people will not read the article below, some people will not read Larry’s Short Note, but let me express this, “Do You Have Children, Teens or a Young Adult?” Does it matter whether or not they are Females or Males? No, it doesn’t, because to those who deal in Human Trafficking, age, sex, gender and race doesn’t matter. How does this issue pertain to Indian Country? “Native American women had been lured off reservations, taken onto ships…. beaten and gang-raped by the ships’ crews.” So you see, it really doesn’t matter what race and as you will read, yes, it even happens to American Indians. You know the thing is, some parents don’t care about the well being or welfare of their children, teens or young adults and it is those forgotten and uncared about young people who fall into the hands of those who deal in Human Trafficking. If you love and care about your children, teens and young adults, then know where they are, who they run with and what kind of people they communicate with. Human Trafficking can happen anywhere, anytime and to anyone.

The following news article has been posted or forwarded in full, no material or data has altered or changed, please leave intact as is. Reznews is not responsible for the contents in the article below, therefore do not contact the Reznews Owner. Thank you.

This news article can be located at the following web site link: http://www.postbulletin.com/newsmanager/templates/localnews_story.asp?z=2&a=455050

Panel discusses human trafficking 5/31/2010 5:00:07 AM By Elliot Mann The Post-Bulletin, Rochester MN

Human trafficking – Victims, children and adults are often brought to the country legally, under false pretenses of a better career or education. However, those promises are rarely kept and the victims are forced into prostitution or forced labor, called international trafficking. Other times, family members will sell young children into prostitution to pay for a drug habit, called domestic trafficking.

An 11-year-old girl in Cambodia is told she can come to the United States to improve her life and education. A man tells her family that he will help her do so, and that he will provide safety for the child.

The family agrees to send their daughter away. They file official immigration documents. Everything seems to be legitimate. But the family never sees their daughter again.

Instead, the young girl is forced into prostitution by the man who now controls her life.

This story, along with many others similar to it, were shared during a two-day panel about Human Trafficking at the Assisi Heights Spirituality Center. The panel included a trafficking victim survivor, Bukola Oriola; experts in women’s resources and Olmsted County Attorney Mark Ostrem.

Sister Joseen Vogt shared her international experiences from years spent working at a ministry in Cambodia.

“You may say, ‘That is over there. What does it have to do with us?’ But it is known that many of the procurers come from (the U.S.),” Vogt said. “It is time to break the silence and shift into action.”

The general public might not be completely aware of the complexities involved in human trafficking. Instead of a person being kidnapped and forced into prostitution or work, the victims are often brought to the country legally, under false pretenses. Those exploited include adults, too.

Other times, family members will sell young children into prostitution to pay for a drug habit, called domestic trafficking.

The victims are forced into prostitution, through extreme threats or worse. Later, they are often charged as prostitutes, even though they have been forced into the cycle of abuse.

Minnesota is believed to be one of the top 10 states of human trafficking victims, due to the shipping access of Lake Superior and the Canadian border, said Linda Miller, founder of Civil Society, a St. Paul-based advocacy organization for trafficking victims.

Many times, Miller said, victims will be brought through the English colony system, because a visa is easier to secure that way. One victim from Togo was brought through South Africa, Australia, England and Canada before eventually coming over the border to Minnesota.

“About one-third of the victims to Minnesota are coming through the Canadian border,” Miller said.

Once the victims are here, the services are sold under the radar of law enforcement, said Suzanne Koepplinger, director of the Minneapolis-based Minnesota Indian Woman’s Resource Center.

Koepplinger said Native American women had been lured off reservations, taken onto ships in port in Duluth and beaten and gang-raped by the ships’ crews.

More of an enforcement focus needs to be pointed toward the procurers and the abusers, she said.

“Craigslist is the biggest pimp in the industry,” Koepplinger said. “You can buy an old refrigerator, you can buy an antique rug or you can buy a 10-year-old.”

No cases of human trafficking have been presented to Ostrem’s Olmsted County office in his three years of county attorney. But he knows that doesn’t mean it’s not happening.

“It would be ignorant of us to think that is it not a problem here in Olmsted County and in the city of Rochester,” he said.

Ostrem said the cases are extremely difficult to prove in court.

Many times the victims vanish by the time trial comes or they are mentally unwilling to talk any more about the abuse.

“We’re here to learn what we can do to help keep our victims on board,” Ostrem said.

Posted/Forward by: Larry Kibby – l.kibby@frontier.com

Reznews Radio Video http://ubroadcast.com/channel/reznews

Larry Kibby – American Indian Poetry http://www.freewebs.com/lkibby1/index.htm

Material appearing here is distributed without profit or monitory gain to those who have expressed an interest in receiving the material for research and educational purposes. This is in accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. section 107. http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html

Fw: Emergency protests today

May 31st, 2010 No comments

Shame on $4 Harper for supporting the devil Netanyahu! Council of Cdns et al should demand  we cut ties w’ Israel, whose filthy warmongers are on the level of GWB & his spook, torture, armaments buddies & ought to be banned from Can & prosecuted by the ICC!

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Cubans Enjoy Vietnamese Culture

May 31st, 2010 No comments

acnnews 14

Cubans Enjoy Vietnamese Culture

HAVANA, Cuba, May 31 (acn) The National Theater Company of Music, Dance and Contemporary Singing from Vietnam will perform on Monday at Havana’s Mella Theater, as part of the Vietnamese culture festival underway on the island until Tuesday, held within the framework of celebrations for the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Cuba and Vietnam. Attending these celebrations is a delegation from the Asian country, headed by Hoang Tuan Anh, Vietnam’s Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism, accompanied by officials from the Culture and Art Exhibition Center from that fraternal nation. Dance, music and contemporary singing presentations of traditional style, accompanied by the charm of visual arts, will contribute to bring the two countries closer together. A photographic exhibition was inaugurated on Monday at Havana’s Museum of the Revolution, which includes snapshots of Ho Chi Minh with Commander in Chief Fidel Castro, and on relations between that country and the island. On Tuesday, June 1st, the Milanés Theater of western Pinar del Rio province will welcome the Vietnamese theater company, while a film festival will be inaugurated at the capital’s Infanta Movie Theater, which will include the screening of four contemporary movies. Standing out in this cycle is the film “No quemar”, directed by Dan Nhat Minh and the winner of six Cometa de Oro prizes, among them those for Best Film and Best Director.

cubanews/culture/trm/trm/trm

Cine, fotografia y teatro en jornada cultural vietnamita

Cuban News Agency www.cubanews.ain.cu ainnews@ain.cu

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