Saturday 21 February 2015

1 year after 139 Ukrainian troops released in war prisoner exchange with rebels


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A Russia-backed rebel fighter holds a sniper rifle while a mask in Debaltseve, Ukraine, Friday, Feb. 20, 2015.
Image: Vadim Ghirda/Associated Press
ZHOLOBOK, Ukraine — Ukrainian military and separatist representatives exchanged dozens of prisoners under the cover of darkness at a remote frontline location Saturday evening, kicking off a process intended to usher in peace to the conflict-ridden east.
139 Ukrainian troops and 52 rebels were exchanged, according to a separatist official overseeing the prisoner swap at a no man's land location near the village of Zholobok, some 20 kilometers (12 miles) west of Luhansk.
A busload of Ukrainian soldiers in military fatigues was transported earlier in the day from the main rebel stronghold of Donetsk to a rural spot some 140 kilometers (90 miles) to the northeast, before joining up with other groups of fellow captives.
After arriving at the location near Zholobok, the troops were made to line up and listen to a speech by a rebel representative, who ordered the men to leave the territory claimed by the separatist movements in the regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.
The soldiers — some of them using crutches, while one was carried on a stretcher — then walked for around 3 kilometers (2 miles) to a rendezvous point.
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko wrote on his Twitter account that he was informed the process had begun by the national security service.
"In the near time, 140 of our heroes will be free," he wrote, without specifying further. His spokesperson, Svyatoslav Tsegolko, later said 139 Ukrainian soldiers were released Saturday and that another would follow in the coming days.
Poroshenko also later confirmed on Twitter that 139 soldiers were "released from captivity."
The peace agreement signed last week in Minsk foresees an exchange of all prisoners in the conflict. It is unclear how many are held in total on both sides, although the Donetsk separatists have said Ukraine is holding about 580 rebels as prisoners.
Elsewhere Saturday, Ukraine's military and the Russia-backed separatist rebels accused each other of continuing to mount attacks a week after a cease-fire was called.
Ukrainian security spokesperson Col. Andriy Lysenko said that one serviceman was killed and 40 wounded in attacks over the past day. He did not reveal the total number of attacks, but said there were 10 mortar attacks on Ukrainian forces in the village of Shyrokyne on the fringes of the strategic port city of Mariupol.
Lysenko said rebels continued to move equipment toward Mariupol. Concerns persist that rebels aim to seize the city, which would aid in establishing a land corridor between mainland Russia and the Russia-annexed Crimea peninsula.
For their part, the rebels claimed that Ukrainian forces launched 15 shelling attacks overnight, including on parts of Donetsk, the largest rebel-controlled city.
The agreement reached in Minsk by the leaders of Ukraine, Russia, Germany and France called for the guns to go quiet on Sunday. The warring sides were supposed to begin drawing back heavy weapons from the front lines on Tuesday, but international monitors say they've seen no sign of that yet.
Russian and Ukrainian military officials overseeing the hoped-for peace process announced on Friday that the Ukrainian government and the rebels had worked out a plan to begin the weapons pull-out.
Heidi Tagliavini, an envoy for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe who led the talks with Russia and Ukraine that also included rebel figures, remained cautiously hopeful. "There is not a single day in the Ukrainian conflict when we can feel sure what the next day will bring," she said.
Additional reporting by Mashable
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One year later, Kiev and Moscow remember Ukraine uprising in very different ways

KIEV, Ukraine — Tens of thousands of Ukrainians flooded central Kiev late Friday to mark one year since the bloodiest day of last year's Euromaidan revolution that ousted the country's pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovych, and installed a pro-Western government, setting in motion the events that have led to a deadly and ongoing war.
Some 49 people died and around 100 more suffered gunshot wounds from police snipers on Feb. 20, 2014, in the worst day of violence against the hundreds of thousands of protesters who hunkered down on Kiev's Independence Square for three months in the freezing cold. Around 100 people died during clashes with riot police around the square between Feb. 18 and 20 last year. They have been dubbed the "Heavenly Hundred."
Crowds dressed in patriotic blue and yellow paid an emotional tribute to them on Friday, reciting prayers and singing songs as the protesters' electrified images flashed on big screens over the square. They chanted, "Heroes do not die!"
The next morning in central Moscow, thousands of Russians responded, marching under the slogan "We won't forget! We won't forgive!" to mark a year since the overthrow of Yanukovych. The Kremlin deems Ukraine's revolution a "coup." Organizers said more than 20,000 people participated in the "Anti-Maidan" march. Russian state media reported as many as 35,000 took to the streets.
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    Ukrainians mourn the "Heavenly Hundred" protesters who died during clashes with riot police around Kiev's Independence Square between Feb. 18 and 20 last year.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    A light emerges from where the protesters died.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    A woman mourns the "Heavenly Hundred" in the evening.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    A woman lights a candle to honor the "Heavenly Hundred."
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    Portraits of the "Heavenly Hundred" at a memorial in Kiev.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    Picasso's "Dove of Peace," formed using candles, is placed on Kiev's Independence Square during a memorial rally.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko embraces a killed protester's son while the national anthem plays during a memorial rally in Kiev.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    A crowd gathers at Independence Square during a memorial rally.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    A column of light marks the spot where protesters were killed, while an orchestra performs Mozart's "Requiem."
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    Ukrainians pay respects to a man who was wounded during the war in Donbass.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    A man who was wounded during the war in Donbass attends a memorial rally.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    Tens of thousands of Russian march through central Moscow to protest against Ukraine's pro-Western government and last year's revolution.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    Night Wolves motorbike gang leader Alexander "The Surgeon" Zaldostanov and Ukrainian Oleg Tsarev, an ex-parliamentarian who supports the separatists in eastern Ukraine, march in Moscow on Saturday.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    "Maidan = Fascism!" reads a sign carried by protesters in central Moscow on Saturday.
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    A demonstrator hoists up an image of Russian opposition politician Boris Nemtsov that reads, "Maidan organizer."
    Image: Mashable, Evgeny Feldman
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    "We won't forget! We won't forgive!" reads a sign depicting the West and Russia ripping apart Ukraine that is carried by a woman at the Moscow rally.

Amber Rose Put Twitter Feud ON HOLD TO BREAK IT DOWN AT CARNIVAL


Amber Rose took time out of dropping social media shade to break it down in the streets of Trinidad and Tobago for Carnival. Check out all of her Phat Tuesday festivities.

5. Selfies First


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4. Costume Close-Up 


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3. Earning Some Beads


2. Some Serious Grinding


1. Kardashian Who?


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Read more: http://www.tmz.com/2015/02/18/amber-rose-breaks-it-down-at-carnival/#ixzz3SQYlNYlW

Amber Rose Calls Kim Kardashian a 'Whore'


0216-amber-rose-twitterAmber Rose won't stop until she's at war with ALL of the Kardashian-Jenner sisters -- she just yanked Kim Kardashian into what started out as a jab at Kylie Jenner ... by calling her a "whore."
Amber started the shade-slinging by going on a radio show and ripping Tyga for dating 17-year-old Kylie Jenner. The back story, of course, is Tyga's ex Blac Chyna is Amber's BFF. Then Khloe Kardashian stood up for her kid sis with a tweet reminding everyone Amber's admitted she was a "stripper since I was 15 years old.”
Now ... Amber's fired back with a gem of a meme -- a pic of Kanye West with the text ... "When ur sister in law calls out ur ex for being a stripper ... But ur wife has a sex tape."
And that was Amber's 2nd salvo blowing up Kim -- earlier she tweeted Khloe, "I'll be that lil whore to support my family like ur older sister is a whore 2 support hers."
0216-amber-rose-tweet-Khloe-TWITTER-01Even more H.S. drama -- Wiz Khalifa (Amber's ex) just started following Khloe on Twitter ... seemingly siding with her & Kylie -- while Reggie Bush (Kim's ex) is now following Amber.
All units respond. Multiple shots fired.
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Read more: http://www.tmz.com/2015/02/16/khloe-kardashian-amber-rose-kylie-jenner-defense-tyga-relationship/#ixzz3SQXdiM2o

Tony Parker Politically Correct After Obama Says He's Better Than Chris Paul


021915_tony_parker_launchHow does it feel to have the President of the United States pick YOU over Chris Paul in a "Who's The Better Player" debate??
Exactly how you think it feels.
At least that was the take away when we asked that very question to Tony Parker last night -- since it was revealed that Barack Obama had his back in a friendly dispute on the issue with his former personal aide Reggie Love.
In fact, Love wrote about the dispute in his new book -- saying he and Obama went back and forth for years -- with POTUS eventually dropping the "RINGS" argument ... since Parker has 4 and Paul has 0.
Of course, Parker was politically correct on the subject while leaving Giorgio Baldi last night ... but look at his face -- that smile says it all.

Read more: http://www.tmz.com/2015/02/19/tony-parker-barack-obama-video-chris-paul-reggie-love/#ixzz3SQVmPp9v

Jay Z & Beyonce We Run This Town! Insane Crowd Proves It

You Gotta See This!
Either Beyonce and Jay Z need to stop going out in public, or NYC needs way more cops for NBA All-Star Weekend -- 'cause they damn near started a riot Thursday night just by stepping out of their SUV.
The scene in this video is ridiculous ... the massive crowd rushes the barricades in unison when Jay and Bey's ride pulls up outside Jay's 40/40 Club. Then, maybe to avoid even more chaos -- they walk in separately.
So, who was the opening act, and who headlined? Watch the vid to find out, but there's no doubt ... they're the reigning king and queen of NY.
Makes ya wonder why the hell they're moving to LA, right?
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Read more: http://www.tmz.com/2015/02/13/jay-z-beyonce-crazed-fans-new-york-city-video/#ixzz3SQVRZQTT

Kim, North West, Khloe, Kylie Car Accident in MontanaFF


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1:10 PM PST -- Cops tell us there was no damage to the Kardashian's vehicle -- a black Yukon GMC -- and a motor carrier service called the slide-off into police.
We're told the incident was part of a number of similar accidents that happened today due to the icy roads ... and the family was calm when cops arrived. No citations were issued.
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Khloe Kardashian skidded on an ice-covered Montana road and dangerously crossed into oncoming traffic, eventually landing in a ditch with Kim, North West and Kylie on board.
We're told the girls were driving in Bozeman, MT Saturday morning when a semi-truck drove by their car and kicked up a ton of snow, hitting their windshield and apparently blinding Khloe.
Apparently Khloe couldn't see and began swerving, right into a patch of black ice.  The car then spun out of control, crossing oncoming traffic and ending up in a ditch.
We're told cops came and everyone's ok.
The accident comes 2 weeks to the day after Bruce Jenner got in his fatal car crash.
Kim posted this pic on Instagram afterward ... seemingly making reference to the accident.
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Read more: http://www.tmz.com/2015/02/21/kim-kardashian-car-accident-khloe-montana-skid-ice-north-west-kylie/#ixzz3SQTk8jXq

How Egypt Is Harming, Not Helping, The ISIS Fight

AL AOUR, Egypt -- Egypt's forceful response to the Islamic State's murder of Egyptian Christians in Libya this past weekend seemed to be a welcome addition to the fight against the extremist group. But observers say Egypt's actions since then indicate President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi is focusing on his own domestic politics and not on the interests of the broader fight against the Islamic State, or ISIS.
Concern is growing because Egypt's tightly controlled political environment is awash with claims the Islamic State is secretly connected to Qatar and the United States, which are publicly committed to defeating the extremist group. Analysts say that although such talk threatens to damage the unity of the countries combating ISIS, it proves helpful for Sisi, as it bolsters the idea that Egypt is under threat and only he can save it.
This idea seemed to have taken hold in Al Aour, the village that was home to 13 of ISIS's Egyptian victims.
"I have a message to Obama," Emet Suleiman Shahata, the brother of one of the men beheaded by a Libyan offshoot of the Islamic State, told HuffPost this week at the village's Coptic Christian church. "Egypt will be strong no matter what our enemies do."
Shahata and the men around him interrupted each other in their rush to explain precisely how the U.S. helped make the ISIS atrocity possible.
"The United States is the backbone of support for Qatar and Turkey, and they are backing terrorism," Shahata continued.
Powerful institutions in Egypt have promoted these sentiments. Sisi's delegate to the Arab League, Tariq Adel, sparked a diplomatic crisis in the Middle East on Wednesday by telling Cairo's state-run news agency he believes Qatar supports terrorism. He made the claim after a Qatari foreign ministry official was quoted warning that Egypt's airstrikes in Libya could harm civilians. Qatar on Thursday called its ambassador to Egypt back to Doha, its capital, "for consultation."
Prior to Adel's remarks, media outlets in Egypt also had promoted the idea that Qatar and the U.S. are aiding terror. On Tuesday, Middle East news site Al Bawaba published a headline that stated: "Strike Qatar...Daesh [ISIS] will fall."
And on Thursday, the leading newspaper Al Masry Al Youm ran a cartoon showing "Daesh," the preferred Arabic term for the Islamic State, intertwined with "USA."
The state-run newspaper Al-Ahram ran a front-page story the same day calling Qatar, Turkey and the U.S. the "triangle of the forces of evil."
Sisi has never fully warmed to either the U.S. or Qatar. Both governments expressed support for the elected Muslim Brotherhood-run government, a product of the Arab Spring, that Sisi and the military overthrew in 2013 in a restoration of Egypt's autocratic old guard.
"The Egyptians feel like they're under siege and understandably so," Fahad Nazer, a terrorism analyst at intelligence consultancy JTG Inc. and former political analyst at the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Washington, said Thursday in an email. "Anything less than unequivocal support -- especially given lingering differences with Qatar over the Muslim Brotherhood -- was likely to add to the tensions."
Like Turkey, home to the most powerful Islamist government in the region, Qatar has been connected to the Brotherhood (though it publicly denies supporting it). It has sparred with other Arab monarchies in the Gulf over that view. Those monarchies, most notably Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, have provided Sisi with billions of dollars to shore up his regime. For them, the previous Egyptian government posed an existential threat by showing that Arab democracy and political Islam might work. They're backing Sisi to ensure the largest Arab country remains an autocracy.
The U.S. has its own problems with the Egyptian general because of its mixed messages regarding Egypt's return to authoritarianism. While it continues to give Egypt millions per year in largely military aid, as it has since the country signed a truce with Israel in 1979, the U.S. administration has condemned the government's increasing assault on civil society.
The U.S. and Egypt presently have "mutual frustration," a U.S. official told the Daily Beast this week. The Pentagon made clear on Wednesday that Egypt did not inform Washington before it flew U.S.-made F-16 fighter jets to bomb ISIS camps near the town of Derna in eastern Libya.
Still, Sisi has tried to sell himself as a reasonable and important Muslim voice against the rise of extremism, a message U.S. conservatives are buying. And it looked in December like ties between the strongman and both Washington and Doha were improving, with the arrival of the first U.S. ambassador to the country since the fall of the democratic government and an apparent reconciliation between Qatar and Sisi's anti-Brotherhood backers in the Gulf.
Sultan Barakat, the director of research at the Brookings Doha Center, told The Huffington Post that though he believed Qatar's rulers were "quite used to rhetoric that comes from Egyptian media," the recall of the ambassador suggested a sudden increase in concern.
"He's only returned recently to Cairo," Barakat noted.
Nazer said in his email that relations between Cairo and Doha may be unraveling because of the change of leadership in Saudi Arabia after the death of King Abdullah in late January. The late Saudi ruler was thought to have pressured Qatar's ruler to work with Sisi, Nazer told The Huffington Post.
Libya has remained a major battleground for the ongoing conflict between Qatar and the anti-Brotherhood forces linked with Sisi despite the signs of regional reconciliation. The country is split between two militia-backed governments: one in the west composed of both moderate and radical Islamists, which is thought to be supported by Qatar, and a more secular Sisi-backed one in the east, which is internationally recognized but seen as too connected to the old Gaddafi regime.
It is the militia of that eastern government, based in Tobruk, that aided Egypt in its anti-ISIS airstrikes. U.S. officials said last August that Egypt and the U.A.E., the secular government's chief backers, had covertly launched airstrikes against the western-based Islamist groups' militias. But the Egyptian bombing raid this week was Sisi's first overt military involvement in the Libyan civil war.
The United Nations is mediating talks between the two sides that have yet to bear fruit largely because various factions still do not see a peaceful resolution as being in their best interest, The Huffington Post has learned. The Islamist militias carried out their first airstrikes against their rival on Wednesday, days after the release of the ISIS video in which the Egyptians were shown being beheaded. The same day, the secular government asked, with Egyptian support, for the U.N. to lift an embargo on the import of arms into the country. The U.S. and Britain responded late Thursday that Libya should first establish a unity government.
U.S. officials did not anticipate Sisi's government would further complicate the civil war by publicly accusing Qatar of backing ISIS. Despite the fact that Egypt has conflated Islamists in Egypt and in Libya with the Islamic State, it is a serious escalation for Cairo to call a fellow Arab government an ISIS backer. Analysts say this rift is the last thing Washington needs as it considers how to respond to ISIS: Cairo would be on the frontlines of any effort against ISIS expansion in Libya, and a U.S. base in Qatar is the center of the U.S. air war against the militants in Iraq and Syria.
For now, the U.S. has not taken a public position on the Egyptian airstrikes or the subsequent inter-Arab spat. A spokesperson for Gen. John Allen, the U.S. envoy to the anti-ISIS coalition, declined to comment on the situation's impact on the coalition.
But the crisis came as a high-profile Egyptian envoy was in Washington for the White House Summit on Countering Violent Extremism. A National Security Council spokeswoman said in an emailed statement Thursday that National Security Adviser Susan Rice had met with Egypt's foreign minister on Thursday and re-affirmed the Washington-Cairo partnership. She did not reference the strikes in Libya, but did note that Rice said the U.S. and Egypt should cooperate in Libya to "address threats from terrorism and to promote a unified Libyan government that can represent the aspirations of all Libyans." She also said Rice expressed U.S. concerns about human rights and political freedom in Egypt.
There were no immediate signs of other Arab states successfully repairing the rift. The Gulf Cooperation Council, which includes Qatar and five other Gulf states that have supported Sisi, offered conflicting messages Thursday, posting on its site two messages from its secretary-general. The first one noted the "sincere efforts of the state of Qatar in cooperation with the GCC countries to fight terrorism and extremism on all levels" (and has apparently since been removed), and the second one indicated support for Egyptian actions in Libya while making no mention of Qatar. The Egyptian government and media outlets in Egypt said that the second statement contradicted the first -- and indicated that the council did not mean to criticize Egypt's claims about Qatar.
That means the parties directly involved likely will be responsible for restoring this rift. Either Doha will lose face by moving to ease tensions without an apology from Egypt, or Sisi will have to take a political loss and prove he prioritizes international cooperation over domestic crowd-pleasing.
Akbar Shahid Ahmed reported from Washington, D.C., and Sophia Jones reported from Al Aour, Egypt.
This story has been updated with the Egyptian response to the Gulf Cooperation Council's statements.

U.S. Judge Debates Whether Marijuana Should Be Considered Among Most Dangerous Drugs


MARIJUANA




By Sharon Bernstein

SACRAMENTO, Calif., Feb 11 (Reuters) - A federal judge hearing the case of nine men accused of illegally growing marijuana in California said Wednesday she was taking very seriously arguments by their attorneys that the federal government has improperly classified the drug as among the most dangerous, and should throw the charges out.

Judge Kimberly J. Mueller said she would rule within 30 days on the request, which comes amid looser enforcement of U.S. marijuana laws, including moves to legalize its recreational use in Washington state, Colorado, Oregon and Alaska.

"If I were persuaded by the defense's argument, if I bought their argument, what would you lose here?" she asked prosecutors during closing arguments on the motion to dismiss the cases against the men.

The men were charged in 2011 with growing marijuana on private and federal land in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest in Northern California near the city of Redding.

If convicted, they face up to life imprisonment and a $10 million fine, plus forfeiture of property and weapons.

In their case before Mueller in U.S. District Court in Sacramento, defense lawyers have argued that U.S. law classifying pot as a Schedule One drug, which means it has no medical use and is among the most dangerous, is unconstitutional, given that 23 states have legalized the drug for medical use.

Lawyer Zenia Gilg, who represented defense attorneys for all of the men during closing arguments, pointed to Congress' recent decision to ban the Department of Justice from interfering in states' implementation of their medical marijuana laws as evidence of her contention that the drug's classification as Schedule One should be overturned.

"It's impossible to say that there is no accepted medical use," said Gilg, who has argued that her client was growing pot for medical use.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Gregory Broderick said that it was up to Congress to change the law, not the court. He said that too few doctors believed that marijuana had medical uses for the drug's definition to change under the law.

"We're not saying that this is the most dangerous drug in the world," Broderick said. "All we're saying is that the evidence is such that reasonable people could disagree."

The defendants, he said, were illegally growing marijuana on federal land.

"They had weapons," Broderick said. "These guys were not producing medicine." (Editing by Eric Walsh)

House Bill Would Give Veterans Easier Access To Medical Marijuana


MARIJUANA PLANT
A bipartisan bill introduced in the House of Representatives Tuesday would allow Department of Veterans Affairs doctors to recommend medical marijuana to military veterans in states where it is legal.
The Veterans Equal Access Act would allow VA doctors to recommend or offer opinions about medical marijuana for veterans suffering from serious injuries or chronic conditions like post-traumatic stress disorder. VA doctors are currently prohibited from aiding patients seeking medical use of marijuana.
“Post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injury can be more damaging and harmful than injuries that are visible from the outside,” said Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), a co-sponsor of the bill. “And they can have a devastating effect on a veteran’s family. We should be allowing these wounded veterans access to the medicine that will help them survive and thrive, including medical marijuana -- not treating them like criminals and forcing them into the shadows. It’s shameful.”
Nearly 30 percent of veterans who served in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars suffer from PTSD and depression, according to a 2012 VA report. Some research has suggested marijuana may help PTSD symptoms, which can include anxiety, flashbacks and depression. A recent study found that PTSD symptoms in patients who smoked cannabis were reduced an average of 75 percent.
Other co-sponsors of the bill include Reps. Sam Farr (D-Calif.), Jared Polis (D-Colo.), Dina Titus (D-Nev.), Justin Amash (R-Mich.), Richard Hanna (R-N.Y.), Walter Jones (R-N.C.), Tom Reed (R-N.Y.), and Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.).
Currently, 23 states allow the medical use of marijuana. Ten of those states, as well as Guam, allow doctors to recommend medical marijuana for PTSD-related symptoms. The plant remains illegal under federal law for all uses.
“The men and women who served in Iraq and Afghanistan have made tremendous sacrifices for our country," said Dan Riffle, director of federal policies for Marijuana Policy Project. "They deserve every option available to treat their wounds, both visible and hidden."

U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy Says Marijuana 'Can Be Helpful' For Some Medical Conditions

Dr. Vivek Murthy, the nation's new surgeon general, says that marijuana "can be helpful" for some medical conditions, and wants science to dictate policy on the federally banned substance."We have some preliminary data that for certain medical conditions and symptoms, that marijuana can be helpful," Murthy said during a Wednesday interview on "CBS This Morning" in response to a question about his stance on marijuana legalization.
While Murthy didn't take the opportunity to endorse legalization of marijuana for medical or recreational purposes, he did add that he believes U.S. marijuana policy should be driven by science and what it reveals about the efficacy of using the plant for medical purposes.
"I think we're going to get a lot more data about that," Murthy said. "I'm very interested to see where that takes us."
Murthy isn't the first surgeon general to question U.S. drug policy. In 1993, Joycelyn Elders, the surgeon general under President Bill Clinton, said she believed that legalizing drugs in the U.S. would "markedly reduce our crime rate." Then in 2010, Elders called for the legalization of marijuana.
Other high-profile doctors have also come out in support of medical marijuana. Sanjay Gupta, CNN's chief medical correspondent and Obama's first choice to be surgeon general when he first took office 2009, produced two documentaries for the cable channel exploring the benefits of medical marijuana. Just last year, Gupta told HuffPost that he thinks the federal government should legalize medical marijuana.
In January, the American Academy of Pediatrics called on the Drug Enforcement Administration to reclassify marijuana as a less-harmful substance in order to facilitate research for its potential medical use.
Under the Controlled Substances Act, the U.S. has five "schedules" for drugs and chemicals that can be used to make drugs. Schedule I is reserved for drugs that the DEA considers to have the highest potential for abuse and no "currently accepted medical use." Marijuana has been classified as Schedule I for decades, along with other substances like heroin and LSD. While a lower schedule for marijuana would not make it legal, it could ease restrictions on researching the drug.
Despite the federal ban, 23 states have legalized marijuana for medical purposes with at least two more states expected to consider medical marijuana laws by 2016.
"Dr. Murthy's comments add to a growing consensus in the medical community that marijuana can help people suffering from painful conditions," Tom Angell, chairman of drug policy reform group Marijuana Majority, told The Huffington Post. "It's crazy that federal law still considers marijuana a Schedule I drug, a category that's supposed to be reserved for substances with no medical value. In light of these comments from his top medical adviser, the president should direct the attorney general to immediately begin the process of rescheduling marijuana."
UPDATE: 9:47 p.m. -- The Department of Health and Human Services issued a statement attributed to Murthy.
Marijuana policy -- and all public health policies -- should be driven by science. I believe that marijuana should be subjected to the same, rigorous clinical trials and scientific scrutiny that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) applies to all new medications. The Federal Government has and continues to fund research on possible health benefits of marijuana and its components. While clinical trials for certain components of marijuana appear promising for some medical conditions, neither the FDA nor the Institute of Medicine have found smoked marijuana to meet the standards for safe and effective medicine for any condition to date.

Apple's $178 Billion in Cash Would Buy SO MUCH WEED


Apple announced record-shattering Q4 2014 earnings yesterday after the market closed. Highlights of the gigantic quarter include almost $75 billion in revenue, $18+ billion in profits, and a staggering $178 billion in cash on its balance sheet.
Allow me to put that number in perspective: $178 billion exceeds the respective gross domestic products of Kuwait, Vietnam and Morocco. It surpasses the market caps of major corporations like Disney, AT&T and Bank of America. With $178 billion in cash, Apple could buy Ford Motor Company three times, Yahoo! four times, or Snapchat nine times.
Alternatively, they could buy, like, SO MUCH WEED.
How much weed exactly? The exact amount is unfathomable. But it's, like, a lot.
Apple CEO Tim Cook told analysts on the earnings call, "The volume is hard to comprehend."
No shit it's hard to comprehend! Can you imagine -- $178 billion worth of weed? It's totally blowing my mind -- and I'm not even high right now.
Oh man this is so crazy that I gotta do the math. For real.
Okay, one time in college, my buddies and I pulled all our cash together to buy weed for spring break. We had like $200, and I think we got about an ounce for it (it was some shitty Mexican dirt weed, but still -- it was weed). We piled all that weed up on a Frisbee, and it was more weed than any of us had ever seen in one place in our lives.
That was like 25 years ago, so let's estimate that the cost of a Frisbee Full of Weed (FFOW, which we'll use as our standard metric) is somewhere around $400 today assuming 2.8 percent inflation, which might be a little high (but with $178 billion for weed, it should be). So how many FFOW could they buy? Let's see...
Apple has 66,000 employees in the United States. With $178 billion, Apple could buy each one of its U.S. employees a FFOW every single day for over 18 years! And they would still have money left to buy each employee a Cypress Hill t-shirt.
Really -- I did the math (on Excel and shit):
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With benefits like that, Apple's employee retention number would be off the charts.
Granted, the company would constantly have to re-stock the Pop Chips and Vitamin Waters in the break rooms, and no one would come to work whenever Phish came to the Bay Area, but that's only like once a year, bro!
Compare Apple's numbers to those of Yahoo!, which also reported earnings yesterday. While Yahoo! has far fewer employees, they also have a only fraction of Apple's war chest, so they could only buy each of their employees a FFOW everyday for seven and a half years.
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Top talent in Silicon Valley can write their own tickets. So if you are a prospective employee considering a job at both Apple and Yahoo!, where are you going to go? Clearly to Apple. Not only does the Total Employee FFOW Years metric indicate Apple's far superior financial position, who wants to work at a place where the free weed might dry up in eight years?
The net of it is that post-Steve Jobs Apple refuses to slow down. Sales of its core products are still growing (you guessed it) like a weed, and bets on new products like Apple Watch and recently-acquired BEATS headphones will provide additional sources of growth going forward.
And if there's "one more thing" they could add to the line-up, I'm betting on the rumored iVape (a networked vaporizer with GPS and a "Find a Cheesecake Factory" app).
Whether that comes to fruition or not, look for Apple to have a monster 2015. Because it's always 4:20 in Cupertino and $178 billion is a lot of green.

Wednesday 28 January 2015

THOUGHTS WHEN HIGH ON WEED

 Another day on thoughts when high on weed does it endager our life or does it just propels us to be better and smarter
                                  shear your comments

                                                  
        The first thought that comes to my mind is do anyone really think am high the as rest on my couch all that comes to my mind is the awesome meals in the Deep freezer how to get them micro waved the fruits in the fridge how to go get them and patch up all the hole in my tummy like having more than 20 different suggestion to what my body really needs and the most frequent behavior is me plugin my earphone on my ear and then start listening to jams or either thinking about a hole lot of nasty thoughts about some slit mistake made in most fascinating movies or musical video and before i know whats happening i sleep off waking up five times healthier and stronger.And i tell myself i prefer being high than being drunk.
        And an amazing thought comes to my head whispering would the Wold Health Organization (W.H.O) have a weed sack arranged for a top Celebrity if that's the only teams he would agree by if he is ever going to accepts an offer of promoting the raising of funds for a charity program.

Thursday 22 January 2015

Russia-China poised to upset US dollar: Economist

Beijing Bulletin (IANS) Thursday 22nd January, 2015
Global powers Russia and China are gearing up to push their currency in world trade to jolt the US dollar, considered to be the default currency unit for international trade, a British economist said Wednesday.
According to Simon Hunt, "de-dollarisation" is gathering pace in EU and Asian trade markets with the likelihood of China and Russia's currencies (Russian Rouble and the Chinese RMB) being linked to gold and the eco-strategic alliance the two world powers are forming.
"Russia is selling oil and gas in currencies other than US dollar undermining the importance of the American petro-dollar. It is also converting its export revenue into physical gold," Hunt told IANS at an event organised by Confederation of Indian Industries here.
According to World Gold Council, Russia became the sixth largest economy to have gold reserves pegged at 1,187.5 tonnes while China ranks seventh with the official figure of reserves at 1,054.1 tonnes.
"Gold is a still a premiere currency where no fiat money including the US dollar can match it," he said.
Hunt said while the US dollar is on its way to decline in European Union (EU) as the recent move from the Swiss National Bank to push the Euro in ECB policy signals "mistrust with American policies and the world being US dollar," the superpower perceives the SCO and BRICS blocks as a viable threat to its hegemony.
According to the economist, China is swapping currencies and keeping Russian companies liquid by taking equity positions in state-owned enterprises, making loans and advances both within China and between the two countries.
Hunt said a large group of countries centred on the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and BRICS together with other emerging countries are keen to replace the US dollar with other currency formats with Russia getting the headway.
"The new world (developing and non US-allied nations) no longer wants to be dominated by America and want to divest themselves from being beholden to the US dollar," he said.
The Rouble, however, continues to be dependant on oil which may push Russia to enter actively in the geo-political scenario in the middle-east to push for strong oil prices while China will use loans in US dollar to convert it into assets measurable in RMB to push out the US dollar from its international transactions.
However, 32 percent comprising $4 trillion of China's forex is in US bonds.
China and Russia have also effectively switched to domestic currencies in trading using the financial tools comprising of 'swaps and forwards' amounting $25 billion to minimise the use of US dollar.

China Extends Custody, Probe of Human Rights Lawyer

china extends custody, probe of human rights lawyer BEIJING - The case of jailed Chinese rights lawyer Pu Zhiqiang has again been transferred to prosecutors, who can continue extending their investigation against him.
His attorney, Mo Shaoping, told VOA's Mandarin service that the move meant authorities could continue holding him without trial for up to four more months.
"The recent progress is the police department's supplementary investigation has been completed," Mo said. "This is the second time [they have] sent the case file to the [prosecutors]. In two days, we will go to examine the case file, and we will meet Pu Zhiqiang very soon."
Authorities have not commented publicly about the latest moves in the case.
Pu, who turned 50 in custody this month, was initially arrested on charges of "picking quarrels and stirring up trouble" and "illegally obtaining personal information." But police later added the more serious charges of "inciting separatism" and "incitement to subvert state power."
Pu, a well-known free-speech lawyer, was detained last May after attending a seminar on the 1989 pro-democracy movement. He was a participant in that movement, which ended when Chinese troops, backed by tanks, moved in to crush student-led demonstrations.
He has represented clients such as dissident artist Ai Weiwei and members of the New Citizens Movement, which campaigns against official corruption.
Julie Peng contributed to this report, which was produced in collaboration with the VOA Mandarin service.

China Expects 'Downward Pressures' on Its Economy in 2015

china expects downward pressures on its economy in 2015 DAVOS, SWITZERLAND - Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said Wednesday that China's slowing economy reflected the broader, global situation and promised that he would forge ahead with major reforms to boost growth prospects.
Li told the World Economic Forum in Davos that China, hurt by a housing slump and waning investment and manufacturing growth, would continue to face headwinds in 2015.
China, the world's second-largest economy, announced Monday that growth slowed to 7.4 percent in 2014 from 7.7 percent in 2013, with fourth-quarter expansion put at 7.3 percent - slightly higher than markets had expected.
"The Chinese economy will face downward pressures in 2015," Li said, adding that it was not heading "for a hard landing."
"China's economy has entered a period of new normal," he said. "The new situation has made structural reform all the more necessary. The [economic] adjustment in China reflects the world economy."
Among the reforms he listed were liberalizing the service sector, protecting intellectual property rights and deepening China's capital markets.
"We will move toward the path of reforms," Li said. "This way we can shift gears without losing momentum and achieve medium- to high-speed growth, and medium- to high-level development."
Beijing would encourage mass entrepreneurship and innovation, he said, which could "offer an endless source of creativity and wealth" and a "gold mine" for the country to tap.
The government should let the market "take a decisive role," he added.
Fiscal policy, taxation, foreign exchange and financial markets will also all be overhauled, the Chinese premier said.
"China will continue to move along the path of restructuring with great determination,'' he said.
He added that China did not intend to compete with other countries for supremacy. Regional hostilities must be resolved by political means, he said.
At last year's meeting in Davos, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe raised concerns about a potential clash between China and Japan, drawing a parallel at the time with the eve of World War I. But those worries have since eased, with both states seemingly determined to keep a firm lid on tensions.
ydney Festival 2015 Opens to A Great Reception  
Jan 16, 2015
Category:
       
 
SYDNEY, Jan. 16, 2015 - ASIATODAY.COM - Sydney Festival's opening weekend of events took over the city in an explosion of exceptional theatre, dance, music, visual arts, film and more. Over three weeks Sydney Festival brings the harbour city to life from January 8-26.
Sydney Festival 2015 is comprised of 179 events, 85 of which are free. With 495 performances across 25 indoor and outdoor venues,Sydney Festival 2015 features 974 artists from across 30 countries. With 18 world premieres, 11 Australian premieres and 22 Australian exclusives, summer in our beautiful city is not to be missed.
In Sydney's famous outdoor venue The Domain, three fantastic free events are set to delight audiences. Sydney Festival 2015 opened with a special Summer Sounds in The Domain concert with the samba sounds of South American superstar Seu Jorge kick-starting summer in Brazilian style. Symphony in The Domain this year has a very special new addition with ARIA-award winning William Barton performing on didgeridoo alongside the Sydney Symphony.
Headline artist James Thierree returned to Sydney Festival with Tabac Rouge, his largest and most extravagant work to date, receiving a five star review on opening night from the Sydney Morning Herald.
Masquerade, a world premiere and new Australian theatre work by Kate Mulvany lovingly brings to life the iconic children's book by Kit Williams. A huge success with opening audiences, this magical tale enchants everyone aged nine to 90.
The hugely popular Festival Village has returned in 2015 with a variety of thrilling circus and cabaret shows, activities and almost 40 contemporary music performances. Dublin's famous street artist Maser has transformed Hyde Park with Higher Ground, an installation and explosion of colours, shapes and stripes. Inspired by M.C. Escher's perspective-skewing artworks and reaching over two stories high, the installation reimagines a world of converging architecture and geometry on a grand scale.
A highlight of the 2015 program which is yet to come is Tex Perkin's Far From Folsom. In a world premiere and unforgettable music experience, Tex Perkins heads behind bars to embody the spirit of Johnny Cash. Delving into the country music star's dark repertoire, he recreates his seminal 1968 Folsom Prison shows within the haunting surrounds of Parramatta Gaol.
- See more at: http://asiatoday.com/pressrelease/sydney-festival-2015-opens-great-reception#sthash.Km4oey3D.dpuf
ydney Festival 2015 Opens to A Great Reception  
Jan 16, 2015
Category:
       
 
SYDNEY, Jan. 16, 2015 - ASIATODAY.COM - Sydney Festival's opening weekend of events took over the city in an explosion of exceptional theatre, dance, music, visual arts, film and more. Over three weeks Sydney Festival brings the harbour city to life from January 8-26.
Sydney Festival 2015 is comprised of 179 events, 85 of which are free. With 495 performances across 25 indoor and outdoor venues,Sydney Festival 2015 features 974 artists from across 30 countries. With 18 world premieres, 11 Australian premieres and 22 Australian exclusives, summer in our beautiful city is not to be missed.
In Sydney's famous outdoor venue The Domain, three fantastic free events are set to delight audiences. Sydney Festival 2015 opened with a special Summer Sounds in The Domain concert with the samba sounds of South American superstar Seu Jorge kick-starting summer in Brazilian style. Symphony in The Domain this year has a very special new addition with ARIA-award winning William Barton performing on didgeridoo alongside the Sydney Symphony.
Headline artist James Thierree returned to Sydney Festival with Tabac Rouge, his largest and most extravagant work to date, receiving a five star review on opening night from the Sydney Morning Herald.
Masquerade, a world premiere and new Australian theatre work by Kate Mulvany lovingly brings to life the iconic children's book by Kit Williams. A huge success with opening audiences, this magical tale enchants everyone aged nine to 90.
The hugely popular Festival Village has returned in 2015 with a variety of thrilling circus and cabaret shows, activities and almost 40 contemporary music performances. Dublin's famous street artist Maser has transformed Hyde Park with Higher Ground, an installation and explosion of colours, shapes and stripes. Inspired by M.C. Escher's perspective-skewing artworks and reaching over two stories high, the installation reimagines a world of converging architecture and geometry on a grand scale.
A highlight of the 2015 program which is yet to come is Tex Perkin's Far From Folsom. In a world premiere and unforgettable music experience, Tex Perkins heads behind bars to embody the spirit of Johnny Cash. Delving into the country music star's dark repertoire, he recreates his seminal 1968 Folsom Prison shows within the haunting surrounds of Parramatta Gaol.
- See more at: http://asiatoday.com/pressrelease/sydney-festival-2015-opens-great-reception#sthash.Km4oey3D.dpuf
ydney Festival 2015 Opens to A Great Reception  
Jan 16, 2015
Category:
       
 
SYDNEY, Jan. 16, 2015 - ASIATODAY.COM - Sydney Festival's opening weekend of events took over the city in an explosion of exceptional theatre, dance, music, visual arts, film and more. Over three weeks Sydney Festival brings the harbour city to life from January 8-26.
Sydney Festival 2015 is comprised of 179 events, 85 of which are free. With 495 performances across 25 indoor and outdoor venues,Sydney Festival 2015 features 974 artists from across 30 countries. With 18 world premieres, 11 Australian premieres and 22 Australian exclusives, summer in our beautiful city is not to be missed.
In Sydney's famous outdoor venue The Domain, three fantastic free events are set to delight audiences. Sydney Festival 2015 opened with a special Summer Sounds in The Domain concert with the samba sounds of South American superstar Seu Jorge kick-starting summer in Brazilian style. Symphony in The Domain this year has a very special new addition with ARIA-award winning William Barton performing on didgeridoo alongside the Sydney Symphony.
Headline artist James Thierree returned to Sydney Festival with Tabac Rouge, his largest and most extravagant work to date, receiving a five star review on opening night from the Sydney Morning Herald.
Masquerade, a world premiere and new Australian theatre work by Kate Mulvany lovingly brings to life the iconic children's book by Kit Williams. A huge success with opening audiences, this magical tale enchants everyone aged nine to 90.
The hugely popular Festival Village has returned in 2015 with a variety of thrilling circus and cabaret shows, activities and almost 40 contemporary music performances. Dublin's famous street artist Maser has transformed Hyde Park with Higher Ground, an installation and explosion of colours, shapes and stripes. Inspired by M.C. Escher's perspective-skewing artworks and reaching over two stories high, the installation reimagines a world of converging architecture and geometry on a grand scale.
A highlight of the 2015 program which is yet to come is Tex Perkin's Far From Folsom. In a world premiere and unforgettable music experience, Tex Perkins heads behind bars to embody the spirit of Johnny Cash. Delving into the country music star's dark repertoire, he recreates his seminal 1968 Folsom Prison shows within the haunting surrounds of Parramatta Gaol.
- See more at: http://asiatoday.com/pressrelease/sydney-festival-2015-opens-great-reception#sthash.Km4oey3D.dpuf

Rihanna wins Topshop T-shirt row

Appeal court judges uphold ban on fashion chain selling a sleeveless top bearing the singer’s image without her permission
A substantial number of Rihanna’s fans were likely to be led into the false belief that she had authorised the top to carry her image, the judges ruled.
A substantial number of Rihanna’s fans were likely to be led into the false belief that she had authorised the top to carry her image, the judges ruled. Photograph: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images
Pop star Rihanna has prevented Topshop selling T-shirts displaying her picture in a test case reinforcing the ability of celebrities to control their public image.
The court of appeal has ruled that the fashion retailer’s unauthorised use of the singer’s photograph amounted to “passing off” – illegally exploiting an unregistered trademark.
The three court of appeal judges – Lords Justices Richards, Kitchin and Underhill – affirmed there was no English law directly allowing anyone to restrain reproduction of their name or image. But their judgment provided further legal grounds for the famous to limit the circumstances in which commercial advantage can be derived from exploiting their celebrity status.
The dispute dates back to 2012, when Topshop began selling a £22 sleeveless T-shirt bearing a recognisable image of Rihanna derived from a photograph taken of her during a video shoot for her Talk That Talk album.
The picture was taken by an independent photographer who, as owner of the copyright in the photograph, licensed the use of the image to Topshop. Rihanna and two of her corporate licensing companies then launched legal action alleging that the use of her image for fashion clothing was not licensed and that people buying the T-shirt would think she had endorsed it.
The high court found in favour of the Barbadian performer and granted an injunction prohibiting Topshop from selling the clothes without informing prospective purchasers that it had not been approved or authorised.
Topshop’s unsuccessful appeal examined precedents where other celebrities, such as Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones, had tried to stop pictures of them being published.
Because there are no directly applicable laws, Kitchin said, “a celebrity seeking to control the use of his or her image must therefore rely upon some other cause of action such as breach of contract, breach of confidence, infringement of copyright or, as in this case, passing off.”
He added that passing off does not “protect a person against the sale by others of the same goods or even copied goods. What it protects is goodwill and it prevents one person passing off his goods or services as those of another.
“No one may, by the use of any word or name, or in any other way, represent his goods or services as being the goods or services of another person and so cause that other person injury to his goodwill and so damage him in his business.
“This allegation did disclose a sustainable case in passing off. In substance Rihanna alleged that she had suffered damage to the goodwill in her business as a result of the misrepresentation, implied in all the circumstances, that she had endorsed the T-shirt.” The law of passing off, Kitchin explained, had expanded over the years.
Commenting on the implications of the judgment, Mike Gardner, head of intellectual property at the law firm Wedlake Bell, said: “Rihanna was forced to rely on the English common-law right of passing off because in the UK, unlike certain other countries, there is no ‘image rights’ law to help celebrities to control the commercial use of their image.
“The court of appeal has dismissed Topshop’s appeal against that earlier high court decision, so the ban remains in place. This ruling, in what was seen as a finely balanced case, may encourage other celebrities to make similar claims in the future.
“Retailers will have to be extra careful in how they sell items bearing celebrity images. They will need to learn lessons from what happened with Topshop. Anything that is seen as wrongly suggesting an official tie-up or endorsement by the celebrity could lead to legal action.”
Georgie Collins, an intellectual property partner at the law firm Irwin Mitchell, said: “In the UK, there is no free-standing law of ‘image rights’ that allows a person to control the reproduction of their image, contrasted with the US. Anyone seeking to protect and prevent the unauthorised use of their image must choose from a variety of rights, including trademarks, copyright, designs and the developing law of privacy. The court of appeal has just reinforced this position.”
Leon Glenister, a barrister at Hardwicke Chambers, said: “Until now celebrities have struggled to protect their image being used by other organisations. Even now there needs to be an implied endorsement of the product [for a celebrity’s case to succeed]. Without that, there is no protection of image.”

Drop in Ebola cases ‘signals turning point’

Sierra Leone sees biggest fall in Ebola cases but experts warn outbreaks can flare up as quickly as they die down
Ebola
Health workers take the temperature of a boy who came in contact with a woman who died of Ebola in Liberia. Photograph: Stringer/Reuters
The Ebola epidemic seems to have reached a turning point, as cases fall in all three of the worst-hit countries of west Africa, according to World Health Organisation figures.
Last week there were fewer than 150 cases reported, with Sierra Leone accounting for most of them – 117 of the total. The previous week it reported 184 cases and the week before 248. At the peak in December, the country was reporting 550 cases a week. Liberia’s case numbers have dropped from a high point of more than 300 a week in August and September. This week it reported eight, while the total for Guinea was 20.
Dr Christopher Dye, the director of strategy in the office of the WHO director general, told the BBC News website: “The incidence is pretty clearly going down in all three countries now.
“Each of the last three weeks has been the most promising we’ve seen so far, the message is reductions in all places.”
Dr David Nabarro, the UN secretary general’s special envoy on Ebola, and senior coordinator of the response, said the outbreak was diminishing, while insisting: “I want all to be vigilant.”
Nabarro, who is now at the World Economic Forum in Davos to discuss funding for fighting the epidemic, told the Guardian the UN was now looking for $1bn more to add to the $1bn that governments, international organisations and philanthropists have already donated. That is $500,000 more than has so far been pledged.
“It will be hard to raise, but the last bit – getting to zero – is the most difficult and is very expensive,” he said.
In an interview in London earlier this week, he said the money would be needed to ensure a fast and flexible response to any new outbreaks, using helicopters to access remoter regions and bring in the personnel needed, as well as carrying out the intensive detective work of tracing contacts to ensure everybody who is infected is treated and isolated.
But the rhetoric around the epidemic has changed. Last October, the WHO was warning that the number of new infections was doubling every four weeks. The Centers for Disease Control in the US estimated that there could be 1.4m cases by this month.
Now, WHO is talking of new case numbers halving. In Guinea, where they are dropping fastest, the numbers are halving every 10 days, in Liberia every 14 days and in Sierra Leone every 19 days. There have been 21,724 reported cases so far and 8,641 officially recorded Ebola deaths. The true figures are believed to be much higher.
Experts are warning, however, that Ebola outbreaks can flare up again just as quickly as they die down. In Guinea, the pattern has been a sequence of rises and falls. Mali has been declared free of the virus, but, said the WHO: “Surveillance and information sharing will be increased in the border districts of Guinea-Bissau, Côte d’Ivoire, Mali and Senegal adjacent to the three intense-transmission countries.”
In the worst affected countries, there are long-awaited moves to return life to something closer to normality. Schools in Guinea have begun to reopen after five months’ closure. The decision was sudden, with staff and parents given just four days’ notice. Both Liberia and Sierra Leone have also said schools will reopen.
The closures were ordered to avoid mass gatherings where people would come into physical contact and there was a risk that transmission of the virus would occur. Public meetings, political rallies and even football games were also halted and curfews were imposed on roads at night to prevent people travelling.
In Liberia, where the first signs of a drop in cases were seen, the government is treating the apparent slowing of the disease with “very cautious optimism”, said information minister Lewis Brown.
However, he stressed there was no room for complacency and warned that the slightest lapse in vigilance could yet prove disastrous. “We are determined that as the cases continue to go down, there is no recurrence,” he told the Guardian. “We may have got a handle on the transmission of the virus; we may be in a position to isolate and treat people quickly. But this is a virus which, given our sociology and health infrastructure, could spread again very, very quickly. So we have to make sure that no one has any false sense that the hard work’s done.
“When you add the fact that we share very porous borders with both Sierra Leone and Guinea, you can understand why, even as our numbers go down, we remain very cautiously optimistic.”
He added: “We continue to call for a regional approach to ending this scourge; none of us can be safe until all of us are safe.”
The epidemic has continued to take a severe toll of health workers, who are exposed to the greatest risk by their physical contact with those who are sick. In total, 828 have been infected across the three countries and 499 have reportedly died, says the WHO. The numbers becoming infected in Liberia and Sierra Leone have fallen but they rose in Guinea in December.

Baroness Amos

Guinea’s president, Alpha Condé, yesterday called on the International Monetary Fund to provide debt relief to help his Ebola-stricken country build a health system capable of preventing a future epidemic.
Condé was meeting Christine Lagarde, the IMF’s managing director and the World Bank president Jim Kim at the Davos World Economic Forum in an attempt to reduce payments to Guinea’s creditors.
The country has been one of the three West African countries affected by the Ebola virus, and Condé said any help provided would be re-cycled into health.
His call came as Baroness Amos, UN undersecretary for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief, hit out against the way the international community responded to the Ebola crisis. Amos said that much more support was needed, with better co-ordination and a more long-term approach.
“We should not be having to scramble around to raise money to put in place to set up the supply chains,” said Amos, who was speaking on a separate panel to Condé.
She said the three countries currently being dealt with – Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia – were post conflict. “I think we are way too short-term, we have to be in for the longer term. We have to say as a global community to say we are going to be with you for the next, 20 years, for example.”
But she highlighted the difficulties in coordinating the various bodies and said governments businesses and NGOs needed to work together. “We have agencies with separate and overlapping mandates, we are highly bureaucratic,” she said.