Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Jagdeo orchestrated plot to take over airwaves : Kaieteur News

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?grants cable licences to two buddies

?Vishok Persaud, Brian Yong set up shop before licence was granted
Apart from shocking disclosures that President Bharrat Jagdeo handed his friends and associates and political party multiple radio and TV licences, the granting of cable licences has shed light on a plot to snap up the entire telecommunications sector.
He granted cable licences to Vishok Persaud, the son of PPP stalwart Reepu Daman Persaud and to Brian Yong, a very close confidante.
The granting of cable licences allows the licencees to offer what in the United States and other countries is called triple play?internet, television/radio and telephone services.

Bharrat Jagdeo

Even without being coupled with cellular service Cable on the 2.5 GHz Band is a virtual monopoly in the telecommunication sector for whoever owns the licence. When a consumer accesses Cable with the triple play then regular landline services can become irrelevant.
The cable by itself monopolises the interactive flow of information and that is what Jagdeo has given to his two buddies.
Searches reveal that Jagdeo handed out the cable licences to control the electronic media.
Prime Minister Samuel Hinds, Thursday, disclosed that the former President granted the two persons cable licences on the 2.5 GHz band in December 2010. These were E-Networks, under Vishok Persaud, the son of Reepu Daman Persaud, a stalwart of the ruling People?s Progressive Party; and Brian Yong, who Jagdeo invited to mount the PPP platform in the 2006 elections.

Both Vishok Persaud and Brian Yong are known to be close to Jagdeo and Winston Brassington, the man who manages Government?s investments.
The service offered by the two men, such as 4G requires both the availability of licensed airwaves ? also called spectrum ? from the government, and considerable private investment in infrastructure.
The revelations by the Prime Minister show that Jagdeo granted licences to facilitate the development of the already established business of his friends.
In early December, 2010 Persaud introduced his company?s WiMax 4G Network, opening up a wireless digital communication system to provide broadband wireless access, satellite services providing internet access and voice services to miners and companies in the interior, and other services.

Vishok Persaud

This means that Persaud launched his service the very month that he was granted a licence. From all indications Persaud moved to set up his infrastructure knowing that he was assured of a licence from Jagdeo.
In normal circumstances, a person would await the granting of a licence before investing in infrastructure.
The case of Persaud resembles the scenario under which Yong was granted his licence. Yong received his licence in December, 2010.
He too started developing his business with the assurance that he would get a licence.

In January, 2009, Yong?s company signed a deal with O3b Networks, the developer of a new fibre-quality, satellite-based, global Internet backbone.
At that time, Yong boasted that ?with less than 1% penetration of broadband Internet usage in Guyana, we feel we have a moral obligation to provide all Guyanese Internet access for educational, commercial, and medical purposes.?
Sure enough, Yong ventured into the business offering broadband satellites and cable TV and was granted his licence.
The 2.5 GHz band, under which Persaud and Yong were licenced, is currently used for electronic news gathering services (including television outside broadcasts). Spectrum in this band is being relocated worldwide to meet increasing demands for wireless broadband services.
Using the provisions of the 2.5 band, a number of initiatives can be undertaken, such as the rapid, unplanned deployment of links to cover breaking news events; planned use of group links employing a variety of techniques to provide specialist coverage of particular events; and electronic field production, which could be used to provide elements of a television production.
In other words, these two businesses could dominate the mass media landscape of the entire country.

Brian Yong

Source: http://www.kaieteurnewsonline.com/2013/03/19/jagdeo-orchestrated-plot-to-take-over-airwaves-2/

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Live from Expand: Gaming's New Frontiers (video)

Live from Expand Gaming's New Frontiers

Join us for a conversation with three companies that are reshaping the future of gaming: Senior Associate Editor Ben Gilbert will sit down with Ujesh Desai, Vice President of Product Marketing at NVIDIA; Nate Mitchell, Vice President of Product at Oculus Rift and John Wilson, Vice President of Systems Product Group at Razer.

March 17, 2013 5:30 PM EDT

Follow all of Engadget's Expand coverage live from San Francisco right here!

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/LI2g5XbPZlg/

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'Walking Dead' Governor David Morrissey Plots His 'Revenge'

'He has a clarity to life now, with just one objective: revenge,' the 'Walking Dead' star tells MTV News about his character's future.


David Morrissey in "The Walking Dead"
Photo: Gene Page/AMC

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1703827/walking-dead-recap-governors-revenge.jhtml

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

China wraps up session to install new leadership

Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, and Premier Li Kiqiang, right, get to their seats during a plenary session of the NPC held in Beijing's Great Hall of the People, China, Saturday, March 16, 2013. China?s new leaders turned Saturday to veteran technocrats with greater international experience to staff a Cabinet charged with overhauling a slowing economy and pursuing a higher global profile without triggering opposition. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)

Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, and Premier Li Kiqiang, right, get to their seats during a plenary session of the NPC held in Beijing's Great Hall of the People, China, Saturday, March 16, 2013. China?s new leaders turned Saturday to veteran technocrats with greater international experience to staff a Cabinet charged with overhauling a slowing economy and pursuing a higher global profile without triggering opposition. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)

Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, and Premier Li Kiqiang arrive at a plenary session of the National People's Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing Saturday, March 16, 2013. China's new leaders turned Saturday to veteran technocrats with greater international experience to staff a Cabinet charged with overhauling a slowing economy and pursuing a higher global profile for the country without triggering opposition. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

Chinese President Xi Jinping, front, and Premier Li Kiqiang, back, walks to a ballot box to cast their votes during a plenary session of the NPC in Beijing's Great Hall of the People, China, Saturday, March 16, 2013. China?s new leaders turned Saturday to veteran technocrats with greater international experience to staff a Cabinet charged with overhauling a slowing economy and pursuing a higher global profile without triggering opposition. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)

Chinese President Xi Jinping claps while he arrives at a plenary session of the National People's Congress in Beijing's Great Hall of the People, China, Saturday, March 16, 2013. China?s new leaders turned Saturday to veteran technocrats with greater international experience to staff a Cabinet charged with overhauling a slowing economy and pursuing a higher global profile without triggering opposition. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)

People's Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan, second from left, poses for souvenir photos with delegates during a plenary session of the National People's Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing Saturday, March 16, 2013. China's new leaders turned Saturday to veteran technocrats with greater international experience to staff a Cabinet charged with overhauling a slowing economy and pursuing a higher global profile for the country without triggering opposition. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

(AP) ? China's new leader Xi Jinping pledged a cleaner, more efficient government Sunday as the country's ceremonial legislature wrapped up a pivotal session that installed the latest generation of communist leaders in a once-a-decade transfer of power.

The new leadership has stressed it will make a priority of social spending and other measures to spread prosperity more evenly and narrow a politically volatile gap between China's wealthy elite and poor majority, as well combat endemic corruption that has angered the public.

"In face of the mighty trend of the times and earnest expectations of the people for a better life, we cannot have the slightest complacency, or get the slightest slack at work," Xi told the nearly 3,000 delegates at the congress' closing ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in the heart of Beijing.

"We must resolutely reject formalism, bureaucratism, hedonism and extravagance, and resolutely fight against corruption and other misconduct in all manifestations," Xi said.

Xi, already the country's overall leader since being named Communist Party general secretary in November, was installed as president during the 13-day session ending Sunday, and the party's No. 2 leader, Li Keqiang, was named premier.

On Saturday, the rubberstamp National People's Congress endorsed the leadership's slate of veteran technocrats ? many with strong international experience ? to staff a Cabinet charged with overhauling a slowing economy and pursuing a higher global profile for the country without triggering opposition.

They take charge at a time of difficult transitions. With the economic model that brought decades of high growth sputtering, the government is looking to transform the world's second-largest economy by nurturing self-sustaining growth based on domestic consumption and technology industries instead of labor-intensive exports and investment.

A more assertive foreign policy, cyber-hacking and years of scouring the world for resources have touched off nervousness among China's neighbors and the U.S., and set off a small but potentially threatening backlash against Chinese investment in Africa and Latin America.

The new leaders embarked on their careers as China was re-entering world trade and politics after decades of isolation. They are representative of how far China's reach extends, having more international exposure than their predecessors.

"They will have a more rational and objective view of China and the relationship between China and the rest of the world," said Zhu Feng, a professor of international relations at Peking University. "It means they are more cognizant of how the world reacts to China and that they will be more active in seeking changes. That's a good thing."

Among the appointments endorsed Saturday, trade envoy Gao Hucheng, who has a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Paris and has worked in Europe and Africa, was named commerce minister. Appointed finance minister was Lou Jiwei, chairman of China's multibillion-dollar sovereign wealth fund and a fixture in international financial circles. Their appointments are likely to reassure trading partners and financial markets about policy continuity.

Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan, another prominent figure, was also kept on.

Similarly, Wang Yi, a career diplomat with experience working on some of China's knottiest diplomatic issues, was named foreign minister. A former ambassador to Japan, Wang worked with the United States in nuclear disarmament talks with North Korea and has charted Beijing's successful outreach to Taiwan, healing an estrangement from their separation in the Chinese civil war.

For defense minister, leaders chose Gen. Chang Wanquan, a soldier from a poor farming family who has commanded the manned space program.

The economy is limping out of its deepest slump since the 2008 global crisis, but a dip in February consumer sales and factory output has spurred fears that the rebound might be faltering. Economic growth fell to 7.8 percent last year, China's weakest performance since the 1990s.

Weaker consumer spending has set back rebalancing plans by forcing the government to support the recovery with spending on building subways and other public works.

"We think China made some progress on rebalancing in 2012; the real work will fall to new Premier Li," Standard Chartered economist Stephen Green said in a report.

A test for the new government will be if, as reformers advocate, it curbs the dominance of state industry and encourages private companies that generate the new jobs and wealth needed to keep incomes rising.

That is likely to provoke resistance from politically powerful companies, some of which in energy, telecommunications and other industries are so large that their bosses rank higher in the government hierarchy than the regulators who oversee them.

The transfer of power to new leaders has been in the works for years and saw divisive bargaining among party power brokers and their factions. The sudden cashiering of a powerful and popular politician, Bo Xilai, over a seamy scandal of corruption and murder last year exposed fault lines that the party leadership prefers to keep hidden behind a mask of unity.

Xi and the other party leaders installed in November must heal the rifts if they are to govern. The composition of the Cabinet is more inclusive, reaching beyond the party's inner circle, which is dominated by officials and politicians with ties to Xi and one of his political mentors.

Named vice premier in charge of economic affairs was Wang Yang, an ally of now-retired President Hu Jintao. Wang earned a reputation as a relative liberal reformer by encouraging compromises over workers' strikes and a revolt by a fishing village when he ran the wealthy coastal province of Guangdong.

China has relied on technocratic managers also steeped in Communist Party politics to steer the country in recent decades, and many in the new Cabinet were in line for promotions and had strong political backing.

Some are associated with support for state industry and extensive government involvement in the economy ? elements that might complicate possible reforms. Miao Wei was reappointed to head the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, which plays a key role in industrial planning that has frustrated foreign and private sector companies.

Also Saturday, in a sign of displeasure with severe pollution, the normally compliant National People's Congress deputies cast an unusually high number of "no" votes for members of its environmental protection committee: 1,969 in favor to 850 opposed, with another 140 abstaining.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-16-China-Politics/id-6171f647d8a845799e1f69c942e7ace6

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Iram Leon Marathon Runner - Business Insider

THE STORY OF Iram Leon, a 32-year-old marathon lover with terminal brain cancer, has gone global.

Two years on from his diagnosis, Leon ran the Gusher Marathon in Beaumont, Texas, last Saturday and won ? even though he pushed his six-year-old daughter in her buggy for the entire 26.2 miles of the race.

?Here sore, reflecting and grateful, I still can?t believe that I won a marathon,??Leon wrote on his blog?after finishing in?an official time of 3:07:35.9. ?Well, I came in second behind Kiana.?

The remarkable father-daughter team faced a challenge just to get to the start line. Because buggies are officially banned from marathon routes, their application was turned down four different times before the Gusher race organisers accepted the entry, "The Huffington Post" reports.

?This is supposed to eat away at my memory in the end,??Leon told?the "Beaumont Enterprise," ?but I hope this memory is one of the last things to go and one she never loses.?

Read more of Iram Leon?s blog here >

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/iram-leon-marathon-runner-2013-3

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Egypt's Islamists Warn Giving Women Some Rights Could Destroy ...

Fear that the Freedom and Justice Party?s (FJP) victory in Egypt would lead to a move toward a harsh religious legal system were initially rejected but seem to have borne some fruit today, with the party condemning the UN declaration on women?s rights and promising to oppose the resolution.

In the statement, the FJP claims that the declaration would destroy the family and lead to a complete disintegration of society insisting full equality would mean allowing women to marry non-Muslims and would mean a de facto end to polygamy.

It further frets that allowing women to work and travel without the permission of their husbands would return society to a state of ?pre-Islamic ignorance,? demanding the world reject the plan as ?subversive.?

The declaration has several opponents worldwide, with Egypt?s government joining Iran?s, as well as the Russians and the Vatican, all with various objections centering to around gender equality or legalizing the use of contraceptives.

Last 5 posts by Jason Ditz

Source: http://news.antiwar.com/2013/03/15/egypts-islamists-warn-giving-women-some-rights-could-destroy-society/

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Saturday, March 16, 2013

Reports: Dad accidentally shoots baby son dead

By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

A 10-month-old boy was shot and killed by his father Thursday in an apparent accident at a Nashville, Tenn., hotel, local media reported.

Two police detectives from the Hermitage Precinct were close to the hotel when the call went out and made it to the scene within about three minutes but were unable to resuscitate the child, NBC affiliate?WSMV-TV Channel 4?reported.

The child's mother Jacquelin Bass, 28, and the couple's other sons, aged 3 and 2, were in the room when the gun went off, the station said.

The baby was shot once in the chest as his father, Larry Bass, 30, handled the semi-automatic handgun, the Nashville Tennessean reported.

NBC News was unable to independently confirm the accounts early Friday.

Both news outlets reported that the family, from Texas, was at the Extended Stay America hotel near Nashville International Airport when the incident happened. Larry Bass was in town to work on construction of the Music City Center, a 1.2-million-square foot convention center.

The newspaper said the family had checked in on Jan. 29.

Ten-month-old Adam Bass would have had turned 1 in May, the Tennessean reported, quoting police spokesman Don Aaron as saying that the family was "very, very distraught over what's happened" and that "the police department does not believe this was an intentional act."

Attempts to reach the police department were unsuccessful early Friday. WSMV said a police investigation was continuing.

Related:

Police: 7-year-old fatally shot by father outside gun store in Pennsylvania

Shot by sibling, police officer's daughter dies

5 accidentally shot at gun shows in North Carolina, Ohio, Indiana

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/15/17323505-reports-father-accidentally-shoots-kills-10-month-old-son-in-front-of-family?lite

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