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Thursday, April 16, 2009

Yahoo! preparing new round of layoffs

Agence France-Presse
First Posted 13:08:00 04/15/2009

Filed Under: Unemployment, Technology (general), Internet, World Financial Crisis

WASHINGTON--Yahoo! is preparing a new round of layoffs and several hundred employees could be affected, The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times reported late Tuesday.

The newspapers said the layoffs, which would be the first since Carol Bartz took over in January as chief executive of the Internet company, could be announced as early as next week, when Yahoo! reports its quarterly earnings.

The Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo! cut some 2,400 jobs in 2008 and had 13,600 employees at the end of last year.

Yahoo!, like other companies, has been suffering from the slowdown in online advertising and has been losing share in the lucrative online search market to Google.

All Things Digital, a leading Silicon Valley technology website, reported last week that Yahoo! has held "early discussions" with computer software giant Microsoft about possible Internet search and advertising partnerships.

Microsoft tried last year to buy Yahoo! for 47.5 billion dollars in a vain effort to merge online resources to better battle Google, which rules more than 60 percent of the US online search market.

NASA astronaut to send Twitter updates

Agence France-Presse
First Posted 12:32:00 04/07/2009

Filed Under: Social networking, Technology (general), Aerospace

WASHINGTON--NASA, which used Twitter to send updates about the Mars Phoenix Lander program, is turning to the micro-blogging service again.

The US space agency announced on Monday that astronaut Mike Massimino would be using Twitter to provide a behind-the-scenes look at his training for an upcoming space shuttle mission.

Massimino will be firing off 140-character-or-less messages at @Astro_Mike.

Massimino is to be a mission specialist and spacewalker during the space shuttle Atlantis mission due to launch on May 12 to service the Hubble Space Telescope.

NASA did not say whether the astronaut would be "tweeting" from space.

NASA's Twitter feed on the Phoenix Lander program earned it praise and more than 38,000 people had signed up to receive "tweets" from Mars by the time the mission ended in November.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

State of emergency in Sulu alarms rights group

GMANews.TV - Friday, April 10

MANILA, Philippines - A Moro human rights organization on Thursday said the declaration of a state of emergency in Sulu could lead to several cases of human rights violations in the said southern Philippine province.


“Placing Sulu in a state of emergency jeopardizes the inherent and constitutional rights of civilians. It also paves the way for a full-scale military solution to the problem. The lives of civilians must take priority over the need to end the kidnapping crisis,” KAWAGIB spokesperson Bai Ali Indayla said.

Indayla issued the statement after Sulu Governor Abdulsakur Tan made the declaration to deal with the kidnapping of the three workers of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in the province.

The group fears a repeat of a similar scenario in Basilan in 2001 wherein massive human rights violations were committed by the government when the province was placed under a state of lawlessness.

ICRC workers Andreas Notter, Eugenio Vagni and Jean Lacaba have been abducted in Sulu by the Abu Sayyaf group on January 15. Lacaba was released by the kidnappers last Thursday after almost 10 weeks in captivity. The two other hostages are still being held by the kidnappers.

The group said the state of emergency could be a pretext to arrest or harass civilians on mere suspicion of involvement or sympath with the Abu Sayyaf.

“Human rights violations have already been rampant in the province even without the declaration of a state of emergency. How much more now that authorities are given vague provisions that condone the violations of basic human rights,” Indayla said. - GMANews.TV

Search: 30 crucified in Philippines Good Friday ritual

CUTUD, Philippines, April 10, 2009 (AFP) - An Australian and 29 Filipinos were crucified in different parts of the Philippines in gory annual Good Friday rituals imitating the suffering and death of Jesus Christ.

Ruben Enaje, 48, grimaces in pain as the nail is pulled out from his hands during the religious rites on Good Friday, in Cutud, north of Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/ Pat Roque)

John Michael, a 33-year-old from Melbourne, joined three local men and one woman in being nailed to a wooden cross in Kapitangan town, just outside Manila. Another 25 men were crucified in Cutud town, north of the capital.

Such practices, although not formally endorsed by the Roman Catholic church, are carried out as part of religious vows in return for favours granted or in penance for sins.

Michael, who was half-naked and wearing a long-haired wig with an improvised crown of thorns, joined the Filipinos in a procession carrying a huge wooden cross to a crucifixion site, flanked by men in Roman centurion costumes.

The Australian could be heard moaning loudly as the nails were driven into his palms and as his cross was hoisted up, allowing him to hang for about five minutes.

When he was taken down, the centurions rushed him to a medical tent for treatment.

Michael would not say why he had joined the ceremony but an Australian companion merely said "this is a personal thing for him."

In Cutud, where such crucifixions are a 54-year-old tradition, 25 people were crucified in three districts as thousands of foreign and local tourists flocked to the scene.

Many of these "Kristos"-- as the crucified men are called -- have gone through this ordeal a number of times. The leader of the main body of Kristos, 48-year old Ruben Enaje, endured his 23rd crucifixion.

Enaje, a carpenter, vowed to undergo the ritual after he escaped unscathed when falling from a three-storey building.

Accompanying the Kristos are hundreds of "flaggelants," or "penitentes"-- hooded men who whip their own bloody backs with whips of bamboo and rope, as penance for sins.

Domingo Cunnanan, 38, said had been a "penitente" for 16 years, but had graduated to being one of the Kristos since 2007.

"I wanted to be crucified because I believe this is will keep my family safe, with the help of God," Cunnanan said.

"The pain of penitence is nothing compared with a year of grace given to my family by God," he added.

"I think it's crazy," said British tourist Mirjam Leenhouts. "Why would you want to hurt yourself?"

"That's some kind of extreme devotion," she remarked, as she witnessed the Kristos at Cutud being crucified three at a time.

After crucifixion, each Kristo is taken to a medical tent to have his wounds bandaged while another takes his place on the cross.

"We have precautionary measures such as giving out medicines, sterilising of the nails for the crucifixion, and have first aid kits prepared just in case," said George Dayrit, a medical team member.

Critics say the event has become commercialised and is used for money-making rather than an expression of faith.

Town councillor Jimmy Lazatin, an organiser of the event, said that the crucifixions were a way of attracting tourists who bought hats, sunglasses, soft drinks, snacks and shirts from vendors who converged at the site.

Not all townsfolk were involved and many could be seen drinking and gambling while their neighbors marched in the hot sun, flogging their backs crimson.

Francis Santos, a relative of one of the flaggelants, remarked "they are just selling the 'penitentes' but people still believe in God and that is why they are undergoing this sacrifice."

strs/mm

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Philippine Red Cross wants proof hostages alive

By HRVOJE HRANJSKI,Associated Press Writer AP - Wednesday, April 1

MANILA, Philippines - The Philippine Red Cross asked al-Qaida-linked militants Wednesday for proof that three aid workers held hostage were alive as troops and tanks moved closer amid threats to behead the captives.


The governor of southern Jolo island, Sakur Tan, said an informant told him the three Red Cross captives _ a Swiss, an Italian and a Filipino _ were alive Tuesday hours after the Abu Sayyaf kidnappers threatened to kill one if troops did not withdraw.

Sen. Richard Gordon, head of the Philippine Red Cross, said Wednesday he wanted proof from the Abu Sayyaf that the hostages were unharmed.

"I want to talk to the three. It is a measure to rebuild confidence," he said in a radio interview.

Security officials said a last-ditch attempt by two Muslim lawmakers to negotiate the release of the hostages faltered Tuesday after Tan, alarmed by the deadline to behead a hostage, declared a state of emergency in the predominantly Muslim province.

The declaration included a curfew, roadblocks and redeployment of government forces near the Abu Sayyaf camp in Indanan township, only a week after they pulled out in hopes the hostages might be freed.

The latest developments prompted the kidnappers to delay their threat to harm the hostages, the two security officials told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Tanks and truckloads of marines rolled out of a Jolo camp toward Indanan to try to surround the gunmen in a hilly jungle, Tan said. He refused to say if a military rescue was imminent.

"We'll make sure that these bandits cannot kidnap again," Tan said.

Interior Secretary Ronaldo Puno earlier rejected a militant demand for the government to vacate 15 Jolo villages in addition to loosening a security cordon around them. He said such a move would leave the island's civilian population exposed to militant attacks.

The hostages _ Filipino Mary Jean Lacaba, Swiss Andreas Notter and Italian Eugenio Vagni _ were seized Jan. 15 after inspecting a water project for the Jolo prison.

The Abu Sayyaf group has beheaded hostages in the past, including an American in 2001 as well as seven Filipinos in 2007.

The U.S. government has placed the Abu Sayyaf, which has about 400 gunmen, on its list of terrorist organizations.

___

Associated Press writers Jim Gomez, Teresa Cerojano and Oliver Teves contributed to this report.