Домой Блог Страница 71203

Despite The Facts, Trump Once Again Embraces Vaccine Skeptics

0

NewsHubDomenico Montanaro
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York, Tuesday, after meeting with President-elect Donald Trump. Kennedy said Trump put him in charge of a commission on «vaccine safety. «
Evan Vucci/AP
hide caption
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York, Tuesday, after meeting with President-elect Donald Trump. Kennedy said Trump put him in charge of a commission on «vaccine safety. »
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a skeptic of childhood vaccinations, will be heading up a Donald Trump-requested commission on vaccine safety and «scientific integrity,» he told reporters at Trump Tower in New York after meeting with Trump Tuesday.
«President-elect Trump has some doubts about the current vaccine policies,» Kennedy said, according to a pool report, «and he has questions about it. His opinion doesn’t matter but the science does matter, and we ought to be reading the science, and we ought to be debating the science. And that everybody ought to be able to be assured that the vaccines that we have — he’s very pro-vaccine, as am I — but they’re as safe as they possibly can be. »
Kennedy, who said the goal is «to make sure we have scientific integrity in the vaccine process for efficacy and safety effects,» noted that Trump requested the meeting. Trump happened to take the meeting on one of the busiest days in politics in one of the busiest weeks in politics since the presidential election. Trump’s attorney general nominee, Jeff Sessions, is sitting for the first of two days of hearings that questioning past allegations of racism and highlighting where he differs from the president-elect.
Meantime, there is another hearing happening related to Russian hacking and interference into the U. S. election at which the director of national intelligence and the director of the FBI — whom Hillary Clinton blames, in part for costing her the election — are testifying on Capitol Hill. They said definitively that Russia was behind the interference and had the intent of undermining American democracy and trying to get Trump elected. More than half a dozen other hearings are taking place in the coming days, including for Trump’s nominee to be secretary of state — a hearing that is sure to be a proxy fight with Trump on the U. S.’s relationship with Russia.
The Trump campaign has not responded to two emails from NPR for confirmation of the vaccine commission. Kennedy, the son of Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of the late-Sen. Ted Kennedy, has been a high-profile environmental activist and lawyer for the Natural Resources Defense Council. But he has also lent his name and prominence to a controversial cause of whether vaccines, specifically the preservative called Thimerosal, cause autism, for which there is no evidence within the scientific community.
Alarm among medical authorities
Kennedy’s announcement immediately provoked alarm among leading medical authorities. The American Academy of Pediatrics put out a statement reiterating «that vaccines protect children’s health and save lives. They prevent life-threatening diseases, including forms of cancer. Vaccines have been part of the fabric of our society for decades and are the most significant medical innovation of our time. Vaccines are safe. Vaccines are effective. Vaccines save lives. »
It’s a topic that has been hotly debated for two decades and has incited strong passions among some parents of children with autism. Out of these fears, some parents have decided to forego vaccinating their children. As a result, some parts of the country saw a measles outbreak in 2015. There were «more cases of measles in the first month of 2015 than the number that is typically diagnosed in a full year,» the New York Times noted. Of 34 California patients, 22 were of age to be vaccinated and never were; six were babies too young to be vaccinated, NPR reported. It spread to more than a dozen states.
Pushing conspiracies from the bully pulpit
Trump, who has peddled numerous conspiracies , picked up the anti-vaccine charge in a high-profile way in a September 2015 debate.
«You take this little beautiful baby, and you pump — I mean, it looks just like it’s meant for a horse, not for a child,» Trump said, «and we’ve had so many instances, people that work for me. Just the other day, two years old, two and a half years old, a child, a beautiful child went to have the vaccine, and came back, and a week later got a tremendous fever, got very, very sick, now is autistic. »
But that link Trump tries to draw is simple, convenient and false.
Here was Ben Carson, a retired pediatric neurosurgeon, in that same debate: «We have extremely well-documented proof that there’s no autism associated with vaccinations. »
As NPR’s Scott Horsley fact checked after that debate : «Trump said all he’s really advocating is that vaccines be spaced out over a longer period of time, though the American Academy of Pediatrics says there’s no evidence that’s necessary. »
The academy noted in its statement Tuesday, «Claims that vaccines are linked to autism, or are unsafe when administered according to the recommended schedule, have been disproven by a robust body of medical literature. Delaying vaccines only leaves a child at risk of disease. »
The vaccine-to-autism link theory first came to prominence in 1997 with a now-discredited study in British journal, The Lancet , which was withdrawn in 2010. It was authored by a surgeon, Dr. Andrew Wakefield, who has since lost his license to practice medicine. (More on that here .) That very researcher met with Trump last summer .
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has categorically stated , «There is no link between vaccines and autism. » As far as thimerosal specifically, the CDC wrote:
«Research shows that thimerosal does not cause ASD [autism spectrum disorder]. In fact, a 2004 scientific review by the IOM concluded that ‘the evidence favors rejection of a causal relationship between thimerosal–containing vaccines and autism.’ Since 2003, there have been nine CDC-funded or conducted studies that have found no link between thimerosal-containing vaccines and ASD, as well as no link between the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine and ASD in children. »
Most childhood vaccines have had just trace amounts of thimerosal in them for more than 15 years. The only ones that still have more in them are some flu vaccines. The CDC notes that the removal of thimerosal was done as a precaution and points out that there are flu vaccines without it also available.
What’s more, some research suggests that autism develops in the womb. NPR noted in 2014:
«The symptoms of autism may not be obvious until a child is a toddler, but the disorder itself appears to begin well before birth. Brain tissue taken from children who died and also happened to have autism revealed patches of disorganization in the cortex, a thin sheet of cells that’s critical for learning and memory, researchers report in the New England Journal of Medicine. Tissue samples from children without autism didn’t have those characteristic patches. »
A flawed messenger
Kennedy himself has come under fire for his facts and assertions on the potential link. Salon pulled a story down completely from its website written by Kennedy in 2005 because of a series of factual errors. Salon noted that it published that piece «that offered an explosive premise: that the mercury-based thimerosal compound present in vaccines until 2001 was dangerous, and that he was ‘convinced that the link between thimerosal and the epidemic of childhood neurological disorders is real.’
But the story, co-published with Rolling Stone , had to be pulled after «we amended the story with five corrections (which can still be found logged here ) that went far in undermining Kennedy’s exposé. At the time, we felt that correcting the piece — and keeping it on the site, in the spirit of transparency — was the best way to operate. But subsequent critics, including most recently, Seth Mnookin in his book ‘The Panic Virus, ‘ further eroded any faith we had in the story’s value. We’ve grown to believe the best reader service is to delete the piece entirely. »
It all follows a pattern of Trump once again believing what conforms to a pre-disposed view. It’s similar to how Trump has handled Russian interference into the 2016 election. He and his team have cast doubt on U. S. intelligence findings that Russia hacked the DNC and a Clinton campaign official with the intent undermine American democracy and get Trump elected.
Instead of treating that issue like a serious national-security issue that demands a response, as most Republican elected officials have, he instead has focused on how there’s no evidence any hacking affected the outcome of the election.

Similarity rank: 7.5
Sentiment rank: 0.7

© Source: http://www.npr.org/2017/01/10/509185540/despite-the-facts-trump-once-again-embraces-vaccine-skeptics?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news
All rights are reserved and belongs to a source media.

Classified U. S. intel report: Russia gathered compromising info on Trump

0

NewsHubLast Updated Jan 10, 2017 10:32 PM EST
Multiple government and intelligence officials tell CBS News that an addendum to the classified intelligence report on Russia’s efforts to interfere in the U. S. election contained unverified details of potentially compromising information that Russia has gathered on President-elect Donald Trump.
The officials tell CBS News that the information originally came from a former British intelligence officer and was eventually turned over to U. S. intelligence as well as other government officials last year.
U. S. intelligence is in the process of corroborating the details of what the Russians may have, but the officials tell CBS News that the former British investigator and his network is credible. Because this information is so sensitive, the addendum was not part of the classified report that was distributed to a wider group of people last week.
Former acting CIA director Michael Morell, who also advised Hillary Clinton during her presidential campaign, and former CIA Director and Ambassa…
A source tells CBS News it was part of the most classified report, that only would have been presented to the president, the president-elect and Gang of 8, which is made up of the top Democrat and Republican in the House and the Senate and the chair and ranking members of the House and Senate Intelligence committees.
It is unclear whether this was actually discussed with Mr. Trump or just part of the materials presented to him during his briefing last Friday.
Mr. Trump seemed to respond to the report on Twitter, calling it fake news and a total political witch hunt.
FAKE NEWS — A TOTAL POLITICAL WITCH HUNT!
Mr. Trump’s attorney Michael Cohen disputed parts of an unverified copy of the report published by Buzzfeed, calling it, “a fake news story.” The Buzzfeed document claimed Cohen went to Prague to meet with Russian officials and that he is in a “covert relationship with Russia.”
I have never been to Prague in my life. #fakenews pic.twitter.com/CMil9Rha3D
“There is no truth to any of the statements in the reports,” Cohen said to CBS News. “I’ve never been to Prague. In September, I was taking my son to meet with the USC coach. In July of 2016, I was in Capri with my wife for her birthday. I’ve never been to Russia.”
In a pre-tape with NBC’s “Late Night with Seth Meyers,” Trump advisor Kellyanne Conway said that Mr. Trump says he was not briefed on the latest reports, which she called “unsourced” and “not confirmed.”
“It says the FBI is trying to confirm it – so nothing has been confirmed,” Conway said.
“And, I have to say as an American citizen regardless of your party or if you don’t like politics at all, which are many Americans, we should be concerned that intelligence officials leak to the press and won’t go and tell the president-elect or the President of the United States himself now, Mr. Obama what the information is. They would rather go tell the press,” Conway said.

Similarity rank: 21
Sentiment rank: 1.7

© Source: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/classified-us-intel-report-russia-gathered-compromising-info-on-trump/
All rights are reserved and belongs to a source media.

Dylann Roof sentenced to death for Charleston church shooting

0

NewsHubLast Updated Jan 10, 2017 5:05 PM EST
Jurors began deliberating Tuesday over whether Roof, 22, should get the death penalty or life in prison for his crimes. It took two hours for the 12 jurors to come to their unanimous decision. If they all were unable toagree, a life sentence would have been automatically imposed.
“We want to express our sympathy to all of the families who were so grievously hurt by Dylann Roof’s actions. Today’s sentencing decision means that this case will not be over for a very long time,” Roof’s defense said in a statement. “We are sorry that, despite our best efforts, the legal proceedings have shed so little light on the reasons for this tragedy.”
After the decision, Roof’s family also released a statement.
“We will always love Dylann. We will struggle as long as we live to understand why he committed this horrible attack, which caused so much pain to so many good people,” the statement read. “We wish to express the grief we feel for the victims of his crimes, and our sympathy to the many families he has hurt. We continue to pray for the Emanuel AME families and the Charleston community.”
Formal sentencing will be Wednesday morning, where families will have opportunity to speak openly in court. Roof has asked judge to appoint new defense team to file motion for retrial.
South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott thanked jurors for their service in a statement posted to Twitter, and said Roof was “rightly sentenced to death.”
My statement on today’s sentencing in Charleston. #Emanuel9 pic.twitter.com/wWNKeslnwu
In his closing arguments to the jury, Roof, who is acting as his own attorney, continued to refuse to ask to be allowed to live .
A sketch of Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof during closing arguments Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017.
Roof walked to the podium less than 10 feet from the jury box with a yellow sheet of paper. He put it down and looked past jurors for about 30 seconds before beginning to read off the page.
Every juror looked directly at Roof as he spoke for about five minutes. A few nodded as he reminded them that they said during jury selection they could fairly weigh the factors of his case. Only one of them, he noted, had to disagree to spare his life.
“I have the right to ask you to give me a life sentence, but I’m not sure what good it would do anyway,” he said.
He gave a closing argument of about five minutes on Tuesday, saying at one point he felt like he had to commit the slayings, and “I still feel like I had to do it.”
Roof did not explain his actions to jurors, saying only that “anyone who hates anything in their mind has a good reason for it.” In his FBI confession, Roof said he hoped the massacre would bring back segregation or start a race war.
Roof paused several times, but jurors never took their eyes off him. After one of the pauses, he abruptly said, “That’s all,” quickly gathered his sheet of paper and walked back to the defense table.
Jurors began their deliberations early Tuesday afternoon. After a few hours, they raised several questions about his potential imprisonment.
The jury on Tuesday asked U. S. District Judge Richard Gergel for clarification on some of the mitigating factors they’re being asked to consider, including if Roof could safely be confined if he were sentenced to life in prison. The judge told jurors to re-read the instructions he provided them to figure out what that means.
Dylann Roof spoke Wednesday to the jury that will decide whether he dies or spends the rest of his life in prison. Roof was convicted of the murd…
Jurors also asked to re-watch a speech by the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, who was one of the nine people Roof killed during a Bible study in 2015.
Prosecutors said earlier Tuesday he should be executed because he had a “hateful heart” and the young white man targeted the black church in a racially motivated attack.
Assistant U. S. Attorney Jay Richardson told jurors on Roof’s crimes more than meet the standards they’ll consider for a possible death sentence.
Richardson said the way Roof mercilessly gunned down the black parishioners at Emanuel AME Church, coupled with his lack of remorse, mean he should receive the harshest sentence available.
Richardson also reviewed emotional testimony jurors have heard about each of the victims and the voids created by their deaths.
In a courtroom a mile from the slayings, the same jury last month convicted Roof of 33 federal crimes , including hate crimes and obstruction of religion. After a holiday break, jurors returned last week to court, where for four days prosecutors laid out their case for why Roof should be executed. The government called nearly two dozen friends and relatives who shared cherished memories and opined about a future without a mother, father, sister or brother.
They shed tears and their voices shook, but none of them said whether Roof should face the death penalty or life in prison for gunning down the church members. That will be left up to the jury, with nine white and three black members.
Nine people were killed, including the pastor, in a historic black church in Charleston late June 17, 2015; the suspect, Dylann Roof, was charged…
Jurors got the case after closing arguments finished from prosecutors and Roof, who had represented himself during sentencing but had put up no fight for his life. He didn’t call any witnesses, present any evidence and had not asked for mercy.
He did try to limit the amount of heart-wrenching testimony the jurors heard, but with only little success.
Survivor Jennifer Pinckney talked about the life of her husband, church pastor and state Sen. Clementa Pinckney. She spoke about the harrowing minutes she spent huddled underneath a desk with her youngest daughter as shots rang out in the next room, unsure if the shooter was coming her way.
Dylann Roof, convicted of murdering nine people in the 2015 Charleston church attack, spoke to the jury for the first time on Wednesday and said …
In the hours that followed, the mother had to somehow explain the death to her two daughters.
“I sat in front of the girls, and I basically told them that something had happened,” she said. “I think that that’s the hardest thing that I’ve ever had to do.”
The Rev. Anthony Thompson cried as he described a conversation with his wife, Myra, about their future plans to move and pursue studies and careers in the church.
“She was my world, and she was gone,” he said.
Survivor Felicia Sanders, who gave powerful testimony during the guilt phase of Roof’s trial, wrapped up prosecutors’ case last Wednesday, talking about her creative 26-year-old son, the youngest victim, and his commitment to his faith and Emanuel.
“That night they were getting basic instruction before leaving Earth,” Sanders said. “I did not know that was going to be the life of them.”

Similarity rank: 24
Sentiment rank: -97.7

© Source: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/dylann-roof-death-sentence-charleston-church-shooting/
All rights are reserved and belongs to a source media.

Asian stocks mostly higher as dollar strengthens

0

NewsHubAsian shares were mostly higher Wednesday morning on the back of a strengthening dollar and quiet trading ahead of remarks by President-elect Donald Trump.
KEEPING SCORE: Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 rose 0.4 percent in the morning session to 19,370.86. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 added 0.4 percent to 5,782.90. South Korea’s Kospi was up 1.2 percent at 2,071.09. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng surged 0.7 percent to 22,911.06, while the Shanghai Composite was little changed at 3,161.87. Shares in Southeast Asia were mostly higher.
WALL STREET: The Nasdaq composite index notched its fourth record-high close in a row, increasing 20 points, or 0.4 percent, to 5,551.82. The S&P 500 ended unchanged at 2,268.90. The Dow slipped 31.85 points, or 0.2 percent, to 19,855.53.
TRUMP FACTOR: Investors are awaiting Trump’s first news conference in nearly six months, as questions fly over Russia’s role in the election year hacking of Democratic groups. Markets are awaiting news on Trump’s plan to disengage from his businesses and on his policy positions.
THE QUOTE: «Except for some minor commotion here and there as risk sentiment continued to yo-yo, markets have been hushed overnight as caution takes hold, ahead of Donald Trump’s» press conference, said Illka Gobius, managing director at Pinpoint.
ENERGY: Benchmark crude rose 13 cents to $50.95 a barrel. It lost $1.14, or 2.2 percent, to close at $50.82 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, which is used to price oil sold internationally, added 11 cents to $53.75.
CURRENCIES: The dollar rose to 116.17 yen from 115.65 yen in late trading Tuesday in Asia. The euro fell to $1.0547 from $1.0607.

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at https://twitter.com/yurikageyama
Her work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/yuri-kageyama

Similarity rank: 0
Sentiment rank: 3.8

© Source: http://www.heraldonline.com/news/business/article125601154.html
All rights are reserved and belongs to a source media.

There is a 'false premise' spreading through the market right now, Vanguard CIO says

0

NewsHubWith bond yields rising in recent months, there’s been a notion that investors will flee the bond market and move into stocks.
However, Vanguard’s chief investment officer, Tim Buckley, isn’t buying it.
«There’s this false premise out there of this Great Rotation — that everyone is going to leave bond funds and go into equity funds and it’s probably quite the opposite,» he said in an interview with » Power Lunch » on Tuesday.
«The last thing you want to see people do is sell their bonds and buy more equities and put more risk in their portfolio,» added Buckley, who helps oversee $3.8 trillion in assets under management.
In fact, he agrees with former Clinton Treasury Secretary Larry Summers , who told «Squawk Box» on Tuesday morning that he believes the market rally since Election Day is a «sugar high. »
Buckley said the market was fairly valued before President-elect Donald Trump ‘s victory, and while it has run up since then, the fundamentals haven’t really changed.
«There’s a lot of euphoria in the market,» he said, noting that people are excited about the prospect of infrastructure spending, cutting tax rates and the possibility of repatriating corporate profits.
«It’s easy to speculate about those things but we don’t know policy one around them and what form they’ll take, because it really matters the form that infrastructure spending takes and what happens with those corporate profits that are repatriated,» Buckley said.
He advises individual investors to stick with their plans. For example, if someone has a 60-40 split in stocks and bonds, continue to buy into the market in that proportion.
«To do anything else is to speculate and that’s not investing. Investing, at the end of the day, you’re looking out a 10-year period not a 10-day period. «

Similarity rank: 0
Sentiment rank: -1

© Source: http://www.cnbc.com/2017/01/10/there-is-a-false-premise-spreading-through-the-market-right-now-vanguard-cio-says.html
All rights are reserved and belongs to a source media.

There's something wild going on in the corporate bond market

0

NewsHubThe corporate debt market is kicking off the new year with a bang.
Companies have issued a whopping $65 billion in high-grade debt so far since Jan. 2, the most ever for this time of year. The beginning of the year is normally an active period, but the amount issued so far is already more than half the $125.6 billion issued during the full month of January 2016 — and that was also a record, according to data analysis firm Informa Global Markets.
The gusher of new debt also coincidentally comes as Congress is about to discuss corporate tax reform , which could include eliminating the deductibility of interest paid on debt.
As of last Friday, the first week of the year saw $52 billion in investment-grade issuance, a record first week. «It was led by financials,» said Informa analyst Chris Reich. «Financials accounted for 85 percent of the total of weekly volume. »
Reich said the pace slowed Tuesday, with just $2.6 billion, but more is expected later in the week, including a possible $6 billion or so offering for a merger.
Jon Duensing, head of corporate credit at Amundi Smith Breeden, said the pace was well above normal, but it fits the pattern of financial firms coming out early in the new year — and they normally do it ahead of the earnings period, which for banks kicks off in earnest on Friday. Issuers this year included Citigroup , Barclays, Credit Suisse, Caterpillar Financial and Ford Motor Credit.
One factor driving the volume of deals could be expectations that interest rates will be lower earlier in the year, with the Fed expected to hike three times in 2017.
He said it’s not likely the rush is due to tax law changes. «It’s probably more related to seeing markets that are open, investors that are willing to invest [and] the availability and cost of capital,» Duensing said.
In a note, Goldman Sachs economists said they expect some type of limit on deductibility of interest expenses, and they suggest three options for Congress in dealing with it: «…changes to interest deductibility and the depreciation of capital investment appears fairly likely, as lawmakers have debated such changes for years and incremental options are available,» they wrote.
The first way would be to grandfather interest payments on existing debt and allow companies to continue to depreciate existing capital expenditures. But future debt would be covered by the new law and capital expenditures would be fully expensed. Alternately, lawmakers could gradually phase out the old system in steps. A third way was proposed by Trump himself, and that would be to offer taxpayers a one-time choice of staying in the old system with full interest deduction and partial depreciation deductions or switching to the new system.
«That could be very transformational. There’s still a lot of question marks,» said Duensing. «There’s still a lot of uncertainty about what the final rule of law would look like. » He also said there are a lot of variables and options that could be discussed.
«The idea might be if you remove the interest benefit from debt, maybe if you go buy a widget-maker instead of depreciating the widget-maker, you’re allowed to completely expense that,» he said.
He said if the law does take effect in some form, it could mean a lot of changes ahead for the market. «The investment grade corporate bond market is a little under $6 trillion. The U. S. dollar high-yield market is $1.5 trillion. Both of those markets have grown relative to the size of the U. S. economy, and there have been questions of how sustainable is the continued growth of the corporate balance sheet on the corporate debt side. This could be one of the catalysts that slows that growth and perhaps reverses it. We’re at letter A and a long way from Z,» he said.
Another part of the tax discussions would be more simple to enact, he said. That is the proposed repatriation of funds kept offshore by U. S. corporations, which could be given a one-time break to bring the cash home. There has been much talk about whether companies would use the cash to buy back stock or issue dividends, or use it to reinvest in their businesses in the U. S., as the Trump administration would like to see.
Duensing sees a third alternative. «Once that money goes on shore, we think they could retire and pay down some debt,» he said. He estimates about half of it could be used for debt repayment, since companies already raised debt to buy stock, with the idea that they had the cash overseas.
Duensing said the idea of the returning capital going to retire debt has had a positive effect on some spreads of issuers in the investment grade market.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch analysts wrote Tuesday that they believe issuers saw higher rates coming and decided to rush to the market early this year. They had expected a total $90 to $100 billion of issuance for the entire month of January.
The analysts have previously said they expect 17 percent less corporate issuance this year, due to rule changes around the one-time repatriation tax holiday for overseas corporate cash. According to Informa, 2016’s investment grade issuance was a record $1.28 trillion.
«That would ease supply pressures for US companies with significant cash balances held abroad which means particularly in the Technology and Pharma sectors. Hence we look for a $50bn reduction in supply next year due to potential repatriation of foreign cash,» they wrote.
The Bank of America analysts also said they see a favorable market in the early new year with tighter spreads. They note that demand is picking up, and they expect the supply to slow down.
«High grade corporate bond prices have rebounded about 1.5 percent from their December 16th 2016 post-election lows and bond fund/ETF flows have reacted predictably. Hence during the most recent week (ended Jan 4th) we saw a large inflow of $2.71bn — more than offsetting the $2bn cumulative post-election outflows prior to that. This week also saw the return of foreign buying after their absence in December, due in part to year-end dollar funding strains,» they wrote in a note Tuesday.

Similarity rank: 0
Sentiment rank: 0

© Source: http://www.cnbc.com/2017/01/10/theres-something-wild-going-on-in-the-corporate-bond-market.html
All rights are reserved and belongs to a source media.

Morocco 'bans the sale and production of the burka'

0

NewsHubMorocco has banned the sale, production and import of the burka, according to local reports.
Letters announcing the ban were sent out on Monday, giving businesses 48 hours to get rid of their stock, the reports stated.
There was no official announcement from the government, but unnamed officials told outlets the decision was made due to «security concerns».
It is unclear if Morocco is now intending to ban the garment outright.
A high-ranking interior ministry official confirmed the ban to the Le360 news site, adding that «bandits have repeatedly used this garment to perpetrate their crimes».
The burka, which covers the entire face and body, is not widely worn in Morocco, with most women favouring the hijab, which does not shroud the face.
Women in Salafist circles, and in more conservative regions in the north, are more likely to wear the niqab, which leaves the area around the eyes uncovered.
The decision has split opinion in the North African kingdom, led by King Mohammed VI, who favours a moderate version of Islam.
Hammad Kabbaj, a preacher barred from standing in parliamentary elections in October over his alleged ties to «extremism», denounced the ban as «unacceptable», mocking the «Morocco of freedom and human rights» which «considers the wearing of the Western swimsuit on the beaches an untouchable right».
Meanwhile. the Northern Moroccan National Observatory for Human Development said it considered the measure an «arbitrary decision that is an indirect violation of women’s freedom of expression and wearing what reflects their identities or their religious, political or social beliefs».
But Nouzha Skalli, a former family and social development minister, welcomed the ban as «an important step in the fight against religious extremism».

Similarity rank: 1.1
Sentiment rank: 4.2

© Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-38574457
All rights are reserved and belongs to a source media.

Chris Young And Cassadee Pope Blown Away By GRAMMY Nomination

0

NewsHubBeyoncé’s country-infused song “Daddy Lessons” may not have impressed the GRAMMY’s country music committee, but this year’s nominees did include several rising artists alongside more established names.
Related: Beyoncé’s ‘Daddy Lessons’ Rejected for Country GRAMMY: Report
Cassadee Pope and Chris Young were nominated for Best Country Duo/Group Performance for their song “Think of You,” and they’re both bowled over by the accolade. “I am so honored by this morning’s news,” Young said. “Cassadee and I have had such a great time together with this song at radio and on tour. Having it not only go No. 1 but also be nominated for a Grammy is really incredible!”
Visit Radio.com to read the full story!

Similarity rank: 0
Sentiment rank: 3.3

© Source: http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2017/01/10/chris-young-and-cassadee-pope-blown-away-by-grammy-nomination/
All rights are reserved and belongs to a source media.

'Super social' house pig named 'Hamma Montana' available for adoption

0

NewsHubGRAND RAPIDS, MI — This pet likely won’t sing, but she won’t have a problem hamming it up.
The Humane Society of West Michigan is offering the chance to own a house pig named Hamma Montana. The large, black Akita pig gets its name from the titular character played by Miley Cyrus on Disney’s «Hannah Montana. »
The pig, described as «super social» can be adopted from the Humane Society of West Michigan for $50. The society shared a picture of the pig on its Facebook page on Tuesday, Jan. 10.
The Humane Society of West Michigan ensures that all adopted pets are well cared for. Individuals who are interested in adopting must fill out an application, meet with an adoption counselor and go through an animal matching process.
To speed up the adoption process, guests are asked to fill out an adoption application before arriving and to bring any current pet’s medical history. Applications are available here.

Similarity rank: 0
Sentiment rank: 1.7

© Source: http://www.mlive.com/news/grand-rapids/index.ssf/2017/01/super_social_house_pig_named_h.html
All rights are reserved and belongs to a source media.

Out of the woods

0

NewsHubThirty four year old singer Orka Teppler is a veteran of the Israeli music scene. Her newest venture was born from a partnership with bassist Nitai Jamal Marcus. Teppler and Marcus met guitarist Eden Nir, violinist Nadav Fast, flutist Ruth Danon and drummer Itay Kfir, and Forest was formed. Their sound is both ethereal and grounded; spiritual folk for seeking souls. Forest has many upcoming shows: today in Zichron Ya’acov, in Jerusalem’s Ein Kerem neighborhood on the 19th, Shavei Zion on the 20th, Givat Haim on the 28th and Tel Aviv on February 16. Teppler sat down with The Jerusalem Post to discuss egoless music, sacred ceremonies and walking barefoot in the forest.
How did Forest come together?

Similarity rank: 0
Sentiment rank: 2.1

© Source: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Culture/Out-of-the-woods-478041
All rights are reserved and belongs to a source media.

Timeline words data