Showing posts with label SINA News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SINA News. Show all posts

Sunday, 27 March 2011

Cherry blossom in full bloom in China

2011-03-27 11:14:58 GMT2011-03-27 19:14:58(Beijing Time) Xinhua English

Photo taken on March 27, 2011 show cherry blossom in downtown Shaoxing, east China's Zhejiang Province. (Xinhua/Li Ruichang)

Photo taken on March 27, 2011 show cherry blossom in downtown Shaoxing, east China's Zhejiang Province. (Xinhua/Li Ruichang)

Visitors cram at the campus of Wuhan University to appreciate cherry blossom in Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province, March 26, 2011. (Xinhua/Zhou Linli)

Tourists appreciate cherry blossom in downtown Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province, March 27, 2011. (Xinhua/Li Li)

Cherry blossoms reach their full bloom in east China's Zhejiang Province and central China's Hubei Province this weekend.

80 killed, dozens injured in clashes in Ajdabiya

2011-03-27 00:41:53 GMT2011-03-27 08:41:53(Beijing Time) Xinhua English

TRIPOLI, March 26 (Xinhua) -- At least 80 people were killed and dozens injured in clashes between Libyan rebels and the government forces loyal to leader Muammar Gaddafi in the strategic city of Ajdabiya, Al-Arabiya TV reported Saturday, citing an eyewitness.

Libyan rebels have won back control of the strategic city of Ajdabiya, which was captured by the government troops two weeks ago. Many pro-regime troops were taken hostage following fierce fighting.

Rebel fighters were now reportedly on their way to the key oil port town of Brega, where forces loyal to Gaddafi have retreated, witnesses said.

Western warplanes bombed on Friday Gaddafi's tanks and artillery outside the town to break the battlefield stalemate and help rebels take the town.

Coalition strikes against Libya open "Pandora's Box" of chaos

2011-03-27 08:41:53 GMT2011-03-27 16:41:53(Beijing Time) Xinhua English

BEIJING, March 27 (Xinhua) -- The ongoing multinational intervention in Libya has not only increased the risk of civilian casualties in the North African country but also added more uncertainties and destabilizing factors to an already volatile situation in the Middle East.

Libyan government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim said Thursday that nearly 100 civilians had been killed in the Western-led air strikes, which have been described by many as "opening a Pandora's Box" of chaos.

But Western military officials denied any civilians had been killed.

As the air strikes, launched by major Western powers including France, Britain, the United States, Denmark and Italy, entered their ninth day on Sunday, questions and doubts are beginning to surface about the goal and purpose of the mission.

Arab League chief Amr Moussa has criticized the international coalition force's bombing, saying the assaults went beyond the UN resolution that endorsed a no-fly zone over Libya.

"What has happened in Libya differs from the goal of imposing a no-fly zone and what we want is the protection of civilians and not bombing civilians," Moussa said.

Top Republicans in the U.S. Congress have also questioned the purpose and goals of U.S. military intervention in Libya and complained that lawmakers were not consulted before President Barack Obama decided that America would join the mission.

Worried that U.S. forces might be mired in a long and costly operation lacking defined goals, House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner has said in a statement: "The administration has a responsibility to define for the American people, the Congress and our troops, what the mission in Libya is."

Boehner's concern was echoed by Republican Representative Howard McKeon, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, who said: "I am concerned that the use of military force in the absence of clear political objectives for our country risks entrenching the United States in a humanitarian mission whose scope and duration are not known."

Meanwhile, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has severely criticized the U.S. role in the military operation against Libya.

"The use of force against other countries became a steady trend in U.S. policy," Putin noted, adding this trend was "disturbing."

The UN resolution "is, surely, flawed and lame ...as it allows intervention in a sovereign country," he said.

Last Tuesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov renewed in the Algerian capital Algiers his country's condemnation of the "use of force" in Libya.

"We have a common position with Algeria regarding respect for fundamental rights to human life. And, thus, we condemn any use of force" in all the countries, Lavrov said.

The chief of the African Union (AU) on Thursday also reaffirmed his reservations about the multinational intervention in Libya and questioned the participants' coordination.

Although three African countries, namely South Africa, Nigeria and Gabon, voted for the UN resolution endorsing a no-fly zone over Libya, the AU still disapproves of foreign military intervention, said Jean Ping, chairperson of the AU Commission.

"We will not oppose a decision by the international community," but "we marked our reserves" by abstaining from the Paris meeting, held shortly before France sent its warplanes to bomb Libyan targets, the AU chief said.

Earlier in the day, when giving a lecture at a university in Paris, the veteran African diplomat raised doubts about what would follow after a no-fly zone was "roughly" established.

"What's the next step? Do you have a roadmap? I don't see them at all," he said.

Saturday, 26 March 2011

Troops open fire as protests explode across Syria

2011-03-26 02:52:53 GMT2011-03-26 10:52:53(Beijing Time) SINA.com

Millions of supporters of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh take part in a rally in Sanaa, capital of Yemen, March 25, 2011. Saleh on Friday said he is ready to transfer the power peacefully to safe hands. (Xinhua)

Millions of supporters of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh take part in a rally in Sanaa, capital of Yemen, March 25, 2011. Saleh on Friday said he is ready to transfer the power peacefully to safe hands. (Xinhua)

Millions of supporters of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh take part in a rally in Sanaa, capital of Yemen, March 25, 2011. Saleh on Friday said he is ready to transfer the power peacefully to safe hands. (Xinhua)

Anti-government protesters take part in a sit-in demanding an overthrow of President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa, capital of Yemen, March 25, 2011. Anti-government protesters and government supporters all rallied in the capital respectively as President Saleh on Friday said he is ready to transfer the power peacefully to safe hands. (Xinhua/Yin Ke)

DAMASCUS, Syria – Troops opened fire on protesters in cities across Syria and pro- and anti-government crowds clashed in the capital's historic old city as one of the Mideast's most repressive regimes sought to put down demonstrations that exploded nationwide Friday demanding reform.

The upheaval sweeping the region definitively took root in Syria as an eight-day uprising centered on a rural southern town dramatically expanded into protests by tens of thousands in multiple cities. The once-unimaginable scenario posed the biggest challenge in decades to Syria's iron-fisted rule.

Protesters wept over the bloodied bodies of slain comrades and massive crowds chanted anti-government slogans, then fled as gunfire erupted, according to footage posted online. Security forces shot to death more than 15 people in at least six cities and villages, including a suburb of the capital, Damascus, witnesses told The Associated Press. Their accounts could not be independently confirmed.

The regime of President Bashar Assad, an ally of Iran and supporter of militant groups around the region, had seemed immune from the Middle East's three-month wave of popular uprising. His security forces, which have long silenced the slightest signs of dissent, quickly snuffed out smaller attempts at protests last month.

Syrians also have fearful memories of the brutal crackdown unleashed by his father, Hafez Assad, when Muslim fundamentalists in the central town of Hama tried an uprising in 1982: Thousands were killed and parts of the city were flattened by artillery and bulldozers.

The Assads' leadership — centered on members of their Alawi minority sect, a branch of Shiite Islam in this mainly Sunni nation — have built their rule by mixing draconian repression with increasing economic freedom, maintaining the loyalty of the wealthy Sunni merchant class in the prosperous cities of Damascus and Aleppo.

Bashar Assad now faces the same dilemma confronted by the leaders of Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen and Bahrain — ratchet up violence or offer concessions. A day earlier, his government seemed to test the latter track, offering to consider lifting draconian emergency laws and promising increased pay and benefits for state workers.

As massive crowds rejected the offers, the worst violence appeared centered around Daraa, where the arrest of a group of young men for spraying anti-regime graffiti last week set off a cycle of growing demonstrations and increasingly violent government crackdowns.

The Syrian government said 34 had been slain in Daraa before Friday, while the U.N. human rights office put the figure at 37. Activists said it was as high as 100.

Thousands poured into Daraa's central Assad Square after Friday prayers, many from nearby villages, chanting "Freedom! Freedom!" and waving Syrian flags and olive branches, witnesses said. Some attacked a bronze statue of Hafez Assad. One witness told The Associated Press that they tried to set it on fire, another said they tried to pull it down.

Troops responded with heavy gunfire, according to a resident who said he saw two bodies and many wounded people brought to Daraa's main hospital.

After night fell, thousands of enraged protesters snatched weapons from a far smaller number of troops and chased them out of Daraa's Roman-era old city, taking back control of the al-Omari mosque, the epicenter of the past week's protests.

Tuesday, 1 March 2011

Amazing photography of China through the lens

Xinhua English

Nature and cities photography of China by the professional photographers from Houston Bernardo and Tomas Medina. Bernardo and Tomas Medina are father-son photography team. (Xinhua Photo)











Nature and cities photography of China by the professional photographers from Houston Bernardo and Tomas Medina. Bernardo and Tomas Medina are father-son photography team.

Iran calls London 2012 logo 'racist': report

2011-03-01 03:33:57 GMT2011-03-01 11:33:57(Beijing Time) SINA.com

The logo for the London 2012 Olympics and Para-olympics is pictured on a screen during the launch of the brand for the Games at the Roundhouse in London, 04 June 2007. Iran have protested against the already controversial logo, saying the emblem is racist and spells the word "Zion," the ILNA news agency reported. (AFP/File/Shaun Curry)

TEHRAN - Iran said on Monday it might boycott the 2012 London Olympics because of the event's "racist" logo which resembles the word Zion, the official Irna news agency reported.

The secretary general of the National Olympic Committee said Iran had made the complaint in a letter to the International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge and was waiting for a response.

The London logo shows the numbers 2012 in four jagged multi-coloured figures and was launched in 2007. Zion is a term that refers to the city of Jerusalem and Iran does not recognise Israel.

"Certainly other countries, including Islamic nations, will react to this racist logo and this would jeopardise the goals of the Olympic games in the world," Bahram Afsharzadeh told Irna.

He warned the International Olympic Committee that "negligence of the issue from your side might affect the presence of some countries, especially Iran", Irna reported.

(Agencies)

Google tries to resolve email service problem

2011-03-01 03:49:55 GMT2011-03-01 11:49:55(Beijing Time) Xinhua English

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 28 (Xinhua) -- Google said on Monday that it is continuing to investigate a problem with its Gmail service, which reportedly caused some users' emails being all erased.

The issue popped up over the weekend as users reported on online forums that they had lost emails and other information within their Gmail accounts.

Google confirmed the problem Sunday on the company's website that provides status reports of its Apps services, initially saying that the issue affected less than 0.29 percent of Gmail users.

It then twice revised downward estimates of the number of users affected to 0.08 percent and then to 0.02 percent.

"Access has been restored for one third of the affected users," Google said in a latest notice Monday morning, adding that the remaining accounts are being restored on an ongoing basis.

"We expect the issue to be resolved for everyone within 12 hours," Google said.

The Gmail failure reinforces danger of becoming too dependent on the so-called "cloud", or storing and processing information through the Internet, a post on technology blog TechCrunch on Monday noted.

"It's just another example of why moving your entire life to the cloud may not always be the best idea," the post said.

Firemen extinguish forest fire in SW China

2011-03-01 01:43:23 GMT2011-03-01 09:43:23(Beijing Time) Xinhua English

Firemen try to extinguish a forest fire in Huangshan township of Lijiang City, southwest China's Yunnan Province, Feb. 28, 2011. A wildfire broke out here in dawn on Monday. (Xinhua/Li Rongzong)

Firemen try to extinguish a forest fire in Huangshan township of Lijiang City, southwest China's Yunnan Province, Feb. 28, 2011. A wildfire broke out here in dawn on Monday. (Xinhua/Li Rongzong)

Firemen try to extinguish a forest fire in Huangshan township of Lijiang City, southwest China's Yunnan Province, Feb. 28, 2011. A wildfire broke out here in dawn on Monday. (Xinhua/Li Rongzong)

Firemen climb up to a forest fire spot in Huangshan township of Lijiang City, southwest China's Yunnan Province, Feb. 28, 2011. A wildfire broke out here in dawn on Monday. (Xinhua/Li Rongzong)

Firemen try to extinguish a forest fire in Huangshan township of Lijiang City, southwest China's Yunnan Province, Feb. 28, 2011. A wildfire broke out here in dawn on Monday. (Xinhua/Li Rongzong)

Firemen tried to extinguish a forest fire in Huangshan township of Lijiang City, southwest China's Yunnan Province, Feb. 28, 2011. A wildfire broke out here in dawn on Monday.

Sunday, 27 February 2011

New Zealand earthquake death toll reaches 145


2011-02-26 09:53:28 GMT2011-02-26 17:53:28(Beijing Time) Xinhua English

WELLINGTON, Feb. 26 (Xinhua) -- The confirmed death toll from the New Zealand Christchurch earthquake rose to 145 on Saturday evening, while the number of missing people remains at more than 200.

Superintendent Dave Cliff said at a media briefing on Saturday evening that more deaths have been confirmed on Saturday afternoon and a temporary mortuary had been set up at Burnham military camp to identify bodies.

Thirty family liaison teams have been contacting families in New Zealand and overseas.

Officials said Christchurch central city will be closed for months, and in the meantime patrols would monitor the area round the clock.

Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker said that of the 1,000 buildings within the city's four avenues, just 600 were safe to enter.

Between 200 and 250 buildings had been issued with a red sticker, meaning they are unsafe to enter. Some may be in danger of imminent collapse.

New Zealand Prime Minister John Key spent Saturday in the city, meeting search and rescue workers and victims' families.

He said the earthquake might be New Zealand's single most tragic event, and called on New Zealanders to stop and remember those who lost their lives, along with the hundreds who are mourning family and friends.

Key said the government would release an economic support package for Christchurch people on Monday.

Beijing embraces third snowfall this year

2011-02-26 07:18:57 GMT2011-02-26 15:18:57(Beijing Time) Xinhua English

A sanitation worker cleans snow at Old Summer Palace in Beijing, capital of China, on Feb. 26, 2011. Beijing witnessed a snowfall Saturday morning. (Xinhua/Weng Xinyang)

A sanitation worker cleans snow at Old Summer Palace in Beijing, capital of China, on Feb. 26, 2011. Beijing witnessed a snowfall Saturday morning. (Xinhua/Weng Xinyang)

Photo taken on Feb. 26, 2011 shows snow covered Wumen gate of the Forbidden City in Beijing, capital of China. Beijing witnessed a snowfall Saturday morning. (Xinhua/Shen Bohan)

People clean snow at the Forbidden City in Beijing, capital of China, on Feb. 26, 2011. Beijing witnessed a snowfall Saturday morning.(Xinhua/Shen Bohan)

A photographer shoots a snow-covered statue in Beijing, capital of China, on Feb. 26, 2011. Beijing witnessed a snowfall Saturday morning. (Xinhua/He Junchang)

A pedestrian walks in snow in Beijing, China, early on Feb. 26, 2011. Beijing witnessed a snowfall Saturday. (Xinhua/Fan Jiashan)

BEIJING, Feb. 26 (Xinhua) -- Moderate snow fell in Beijing Saturday morning, bringing some relief to the droughty Chinese capital in the past winter.

The snow, with an average precipitation of 2.7 mm in the entire region of the municipality and 1.9 mm in the downtown area, began at around 2 a.m Saturday. Snowfall would go on and off over the weekend, resulting in the longest snowy weather of this winter in Beijing, a spokesman with the city's weather bureau said Saturday.

Precipitation in some suburban areas reached 10.2 mm, the heaviest the city had seen so far this winter, he added.

The highest temperature in daytime would be pulled down eight degrees Celsius to reach two or three degrees Celsius, and the lowest temperature would drop to four degrees below zero during the weekend, said the spokesman.

This is the third snow Beijing has embraced this year, with the first one falling on Feb. 9, the latest first snow for the city in 60 years.

The moderate precipitation would help alleviate drought in Beijing, as the city had not seen any precipitation for 108 days before the first snow two weeks ago, said Guo Jinlan, chief weatherman of the bureau.

Snowfall together with strong winds also helped dissipate the haze that had shrouded the city for four days and greatly improved air quality, according to the municipal bureau of environmental protection.

Heavy fog had enveloped Beijing earlier this week. With the visibility of around one kilometer, the city's air pollution had been measured as the most hazardous level this year.

Wednesday, 23 February 2011

3D pavement painting displayed in Chongqing

2011-02-23 12:26:30 GMT2011-02-23 20:26:30(Beijing Time) Xinhua English

A citizen poses on a 3D pavement painting by artist Qi Xinghua in Chongqing Municipality, southwest China, Feb. 23, 2011. The artwork covers an area of 892 square meters, 32.3meter in length and 23.3 meters in width. (Xinhua/Zhong Guilin) (hdt)

Citizens gather to watch a 3D pavement painting by artist Qi Xinghua in Chongqing Municipality, southwest China, Feb. 23, 2011. The artwork covers an area of 892 square meters, 32.3 meters in length and 23.3 meters in width. (Xinhua/Chen Cheng)

Citizens gather to watch a 3D pavement painting by artist Qi Xinghua in Chongqing Municipality, southwest China, Feb. 23, 2011. The artwork covers an area of 892 square meters, 32.3 meters in length and 23.3 meters in width. (Xinhua/Chen Cheng)

Citizens gather to watch a 3D pavement painting by artist Qi Xinghua in Chongqing Municipality, southwest China, Feb. 23, 2011. The artwork covers an area of 892 square meters, 32.3 meters in length and 23.3 meters in width. (Xinhua/Chen Cheng)

A 3D pavement painting by artist Qi Xinghua was displayed in Chongqing Municipality, southwest China, Feb. 23, 2011. The artwork covers an area of 892 square meters, 32.3 meters in length and 23.3 meters in width.

Wednesday, 26 January 2011

Six healthy habits that can make you sick

2011-01-26 02:45:58 GMT2011-01-26 10:45:58(Beijing Time) SINA.com

I dance the Macarena whenever I come across an article that argues against extreme healthy living. I laughed while reading research about dark chocolate firing up the happy brain. And I high-fived the doctors who warn folks against too much sunscreen--because it blocks the vitamin D that all of us need. I hate that stuff and was looking long and hard for an excuse not to look like a clown this summer. Thank you! I've even performed the opposite of an intervention with one of my friends last week who was trying to give up alcohol and nicotine at the same time.

And now, I bring you one more doctor you will like: Dr. Erika Schwartz, Medical Director of Cinergy Health. She's here to tell us not to get too carried away with our healthy habits. Thanks, Erika!

As a society, we are constantly striving to lead healthier, happier lives. But with these efforts, we sometimes run the risk of going too far. As a rule of thumb, any extreme is unhealthy, but rarely are we made aware of the "cons" of healthy habits, instead led to think any good thing is better if done as often as possible. Not so fast...

Here are some examples of healthy habits that can backfire when done in excess:

1. Over-exercising

Your body and mind do not need more than three to four days a week of 30 to 45 minutes of cardio activity. Cardio/aerobic exercises should be done every other day alternating with yoga, pilates, walking, and weight training on the off days.

Hiking, swimming, tennis, golf, team sports and a simple variation in exercise over the course of the week, month, and season is the best way to stay lean, toned, and energized.

2. Staying out of the sun

Our bodies need vitamin D to stay strong by making healthy bones and ward off illness by boosting our immune system. The only way to get vitamin D into our system is via sun exposure.

Don't make yourself overly neurotic about sunscreen. If you are going to the pool or beach or participating in outdoor sports that involve more than 20 minutes of sun exposure, slather on the SPF 30, but if you are simply doing your daily errands outdoors, enjoy the feeling the sun on your skin.

The only part of your body that should always be protected is the face.

3. Using antibacterial soaps and gels

Antibacterial soaps and gels are good to carry in your purse or car, but becoming obsessed with the sanitization they promise could weaken your body's ability to fight off "good bacteria."

Washing your hands with warm water and soap for 20 seconds will do the trick.

4. Sleeping

The average person needs eight full hours of undisturbed sleep at night. If you are regularly getting fewer or more than nine hours sleep, you are not doing yourself much good.

Human beings are not built to think, process, or function optimally on more or less than seven to nine hours of sleep a night. Not to mention too little or too much sleep is bad for our skin and causes bloating, overeating, confusion, and depression.

5. Relying on air conditioning

While air conditioning feels great on a hot, humid summer day, don't sit and breathe in cold recycled air all day and night long. The air may contain bacteria and germs and certainly all kinds of particles of dust.

Every few hours, turn the air off, open the windows, go for a walk outside and breathe in the fresh air--don't forget to wash your air conditioning filters with warm water and soap and let them air-dry every month you're using them.

And if you work in an office building where windows never open, bring a sweater to keep your core temperature warm and get out of the office at least for lunch and a mid-afternoon break.

6. Eating organic food

While organic foods--such as fruits, vegetables, and packaged goods--tend to be expensive, the real problem is that they can still be heavily processed. Make sure to read the labels of the food you are purchasing carefully even if you are buying them from the health food store.

Foods don't need to be "organic" to be healthy. Stick with labels that have simple and few ingredients, and a low amount of natural sugars (like honey, turbinado sugar, cane sugar), sodium, and processed carbohydrates.

By Therese J. Borchard, DivineCaroline

'Biutiful,' 'Dogtooth' up for foreign-film Oscar

2011-01-26 02:23:45 GMT2011-01-26 10:23:45(Beijing Time) SINA.com

In this photo provided by Roadside Attractions, Javier Bardem, as Uxbal, is shown in a scene from 'Biutiful.' The film was nominated for an Academy Award for best foreign film, Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2011. The Oscars will be presented Feb. 27 at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood. (AP Photo/Roadside Attractions, Jose Haro)

A disturbing modern Greek myth, an Algerian independence tale, a sibling journey from Canada and a Danish study of friendship and fate are up against gritty Mexican drama "Biutiful" for the Academy Award for best foreign language film.

The nominees, announced Tuesday, are "Dogtooth," by Greece's Yorgos Lanthimos; "Algeria's "Outside the Law," directed by Rachid Bouchareb; "Incendies," from Canada's Denis Villeneuve; "In a Better World," by Denmark's Susanne Bier; and "Biutiful," by Mexico's Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu.

"Biutiful" must be considered the front-runner. The story of a dying Barcelona hustler preparing for his final reckoning, it boasts an intense central performance that has gained Javier Bardem a best actor Oscar nomination and seen Hollywood stars lining up to praise him.

Gonzalez Inarritu, whose 2006 film "Babel" received seven Oscar nominations, said he was delighted by the nominations for the film and for Bardem, who won a supporting actor Oscar for 2007's "No Country For Old Men."

"After spending four years fighting for this movie ... this is a smile on the lips," he told The Associated Press. "We feel rewarded with the recognition, a beautiful love letter."

Tough and wrenching "Biutiful" has been championed by Hollywood heavyweights including Sean Penn and Julia Roberts, who hosted an industry screening to lobby for Bardem, her "Eat Pray Love" co-star.

Gonzalez Inarritu said that given the film's "tough nature ... this recognition has double value for me."

Another uncompromising nominee is the disturbing, dystopian "Dogtooth." Described by some as a darker version of "The Truman Show," it is set within a villa where a domineering father and his acquiescent wife raise three children in an artificial universe in which the outside world takes on sinister dimensions.

Actor Christos Stergioglou, who plays the father, said he was "in a state of shock" at the nomination.

He said the film "shows what stupidity can lead to — when you want to control everything, even under the pretext of love and protection."

"It is both a very serious and ridiculous subject."

The story of three Algerian brothers swept up in the North African country's fight for independence, "Outside the Law" has already sparked controversy in France, where some objected to its depiction of the brutal war that led to Algeria's independence in 1962.

A conservative French lawmaker called the film anti-French, and its Cannes Film Festival screening in May was held amid tight security. Bouchareb has said he was surprised by the strong reaction and insisted he did not make the film to divide.

"The film is not a battleground and was not made to trigger a standoff," Bouchareb, a Frenchman of Algerian origin, said at Cannes.

Danish director Bier is Oscar-nominated for a second time for "In a Better World," the story of two families in gray, rural Denmark that become fatefully intertwined as their sons develop a risky friendship. Her 2006 movie "After the Wedding" also received a foreign language Oscar nomination.

Bier said the nomination "means a lot for a small Danish film because now it will get a whole lot of attention and will be seen by a lot more people."

She said being Oscar nominated is "being part of a very exclusive club."

"The fact that one gets nominated several times means that there's some kind of solidity in what one does," Bier told the AP by phone from the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. "It is like being knighted."

That sentiment was echoed by Quebecois director Villeneuve, whose "Incendies" follows adult twins as they travel to the Middle East to uncover their mother's war-ravaged past and a brother they never knew they had. The movie was named best Canadian film by critics in Toronto and Vancouver, but has been little seen outside its home country.

Speaking from Sundance, Villeneuve said he was "exhausted, overwhelmed and happier than ever" at the nomination.

"You just go back when you are 10-years old watching the Academy Awards and you see all the directors that you admire," he said. "I don't believe actually that I'm talking about that."

Villeneuve said the film, based on a play by Lebanese-born Wajdi Mouawad, aims to show that "everything is linked. We are victims and everybody is responsible."

"I think we have to build bridges with other cultures. It's a tiny small bridge and I think it's important for filmmakers to build bridges," he said.

The foreign language film nominating process has been criticized in recent years as many critically acclaimed films and festival award winners have failed to be nominated. Part of the problem stems from a rule that limits each country to submitting only one film for consideration.

This year's list, chosen by panels of Academy members, omits some of the most heralded foreign language films of the year. Snubbed movies include Cannes Film Festival prize-winners "Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives," from Thailand, and France's "Of Gods and Men."

(Agencies)

Top 10 singles and albums on iTunes

2011-01-26 03:21:18 GMT2011-01-26 11:21:18(Beijing Time) SINA.com

U.S musician Bruno Mars performs an intimate gig onstage at the Cafe de Paris, Monday, Jan. 24, 2011, in Piccadilly, London. He has been nominated for seven Grammys at the 53rd Grammy Awards, which will be held on February 13. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan)

iTunes' top 10 selling singles and albums of the week ending Jan. 24, 2011:

Singles:

1. "Grenade," Bruno Mars

2. "Black and Yellow," Wiz Khalifa

3. "Hold It Against Me," Britney Spears

4. "Tonight (feat. Ludacris & DJ Frank E)," Enrique Iglesias

5. "Firework," Katy Perry

6. "F(asterisk)(asterisk)kin' Perfect," P!nk

7. "Hey Baby (Drop It to the Floor) (feat. T-Pain)," Pitbull

8. "Coming Home," Skylar Grey, Diddy — Dirty Money

9. "The Time (Dirty Bit)," Black Eyed Peas

10. "We R Who We R," Ke$ha

Albums:

1. "The King Is Dead," The Decemberists

2. "Science & Faith," The Script

3. "Teenage Dream," Katy Perry

4. "Sigh No More," Mumford & Sons

5. "Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes," Social Distortion

6. "Some Kind of Trouble," James Blunt

7. "Country Strong (More Music from the Motion Picture)," Various Artists

8. "Doo-Wops & Hooligans," Bruno Mars

9. "My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy," Kanye West

10. "Speak Now," Taylor Swift

(Agencies)

Google to hire more than 6,200 workers this year

2011-01-26 03:33:30 GMT2011-01-26 11:33:30(Beijing Time) SINA.com

SAN FRANCISCO – Google Inc. plans to hire more than 6,200 workers this year — boosting its work force by at least a quarter — in the biggest expansion yet by the Internet's most profitable company.

The hiring spree comes as President Barack Obama prepared to emphasize the need for more jobs during his State of the Union address Tuesday night. Google CEO Eric Schmidt was among a group of business leaders who met with Obama last month to discuss ways to bolster the economy.

But Google's push to further expand its work force, which grew by 23 percent last year, may not be well received on Wall Street. The Internet search leader's spending has annoyed some investors who prefer a more frugal approach in hopes of fatter returns.

Google executives have consistently brushed aside those concerns. They say the company needs to aggressively recruit the smartest computer engineers and the most persuasive sales representatives to maintain its lead in online search and advertising. They also stress the need to diversify into other services in computing, telecommunications and the media.

The company outlined its hiring plans Tuesday with The Associated Press without providing many specifics beyond its pledge to hire more people than it did in 2007, when it added 6,131 workers. Google hired nearly 4,600 people last year to end 2010 with 24,400 employees.

The expansion was announced on the same day Yahoo Inc. cut 100 to 150 workers, or about 1 percent, of its payroll amid pressures from falling revenue.

Google's commitment to increase its work force by at least 25 percent this year means Google's payroll may grow faster than its revenue.

Analysts polled by FactSet expect Google's revenue to increase 22 percent this year, after subtracting commissions it pays advertising partners.

Google wouldn't say how many of the new jobs will be based in the United States, where most of its current workers are located. In a speech Tuesday, Schmidt said Google will hire more than 1,000 workers in Europe this year. All told, Google has more than 60 offices in 30 countries.

"At this stage, the number of opportunities just vastly exceed the number of people we have at the company," said Alan Eustace, Google's senior vice president of engineering and research.

Even if it surpasses 31,000 employees this year, Google will still have far fewer people than Microsoft Corp., among its fiercest rival. Microsoft employed about 88,400 people through September, the most recent available.

Managing a company with the population of a small city will pose another challenge for Google co-founder Larry Page as he prepares to take over as the company's CEO April 4.

Page, 37, served as CEO in Google's early days when the company was far smaller. Google had fewer than 300 employees when Schmidt replaced Page as CEO a decade ago.

Google has become a coveted place to work, largely because Page and fellow co-founder Sergey Brin have always insisted on making the company's offices seem like a home away from home in an effort to make people more productive. All meals, snacks and drinks are free at Google, and employees can commute on free shuttles equipped with Internet access to San Francisco and other cities.

The company can afford to splurge because it has become increasingly prosperous. Google earned $8.5 billion last year, far more than its Internet peers, and ended December with nearly $35 billion in cash.

A sprawling headquarters in Mountain View, dubbed the "Googleplex," is a testament to the company's explosive growth and its ambitions to become far larger.

Google owns or leases about 4.2 million square feet scattered across more than 60 buildings in Mountain View, and it hopes to build another corporate campus on a nearby NASA complex in Silicon Valley. It also signaled plans to expand in New York last year when it paid about $2 billion to buy a 15-story office spanning about 2.9 million square feet — more space than the Empire State Building. About 2,000 Google employees currently work in that New York office.

Trying to get a job at Google is akin to trying to get into Stanford University, where Page and Brin started working on their search engine as graduate students. The company receives more than 1 million applications a year and identifies the top candidates through a rigorous screening process that analyzes SAT scores, grade-point averages and their performance on tests with such questions as: "How many different ways can you color an icosahedron with one of three colors on each face?"

The people who make it through Google's intellectual gauntlet will likely be under intense pressure if they get hired. Management is pushing aggressively for more innovation so that the Internet giant can fend off emerging threats from smaller companies such as Facebook and Twitter.

"The opportunities are so big this year that for us to maximize them we are going to have to work quicker and we are going to have to make decisions faster," Eustace said.

As its Internet social network grows, Facebook has become more successful at luring away Google's workers. About 200 of Facebook's roughly 2,000 employees used to work at Google. The defections haven't left a big dent, given that the company hired an average of nearly 200 workers every two weeks last year.

But the recent raids by Facebook and other promising startups got Google's attention. To retain employees, the company gave its entire work force a 10 percent raise. That move alone could increase Google's operating expenses by about $500 million this year, based on analyst estimates. Virtually all employees also receive stock options, a benefit that turned most of the company's early hires into multimillionaires.

(Agencies)

Michael Jackson's doctor pleads not guilty

2011-01-26 01:42:47 GMT2011-01-26 09:42:47(Beijing Time) SINA.com

Doctor Conrad Murray, the late Michael Jackson's personal physician, listens during his arraignment on a charge of involuntary manslaughter in the pop star's death, in Los Angeles, California, January 25, 2011. [Photo/Agencies]

LOS ANGELES - Michael Jackson's personal physician pleaded not guilty on Tuesday to a charge of involuntary manslaughter two weeks after he was ordered to stand trial for his role in the pop star's 2009 death.

The judge presiding over the case against Dr. Conrad Murray also set a trial date for March 28. Murray, who had his license to practice medicine suspended as a condition for his bail, faces up to four years in prison if convicted.

Murray was with the pop singer when he died at age 50 at a rented Los Angeles home on June 25, 2009, from what coroners ruled was an overdose of the powerful anesthetic propofol and a cocktail of sedatives.

The doctor was ordered to stand trial earlier this month after a six-day preliminary hearing in which witnesses testified that Murray was slow to call for help on the morning of Jackson's death, and that he tried to hide evidence of propofol in the singer's bedroom.

Defense lawyers have suggested that the "Thriller" singer may have injected himself with the fatal dose of propofol, which he was using as sleep aid while rehearsing for a series of planned comeback concerts in London.

Involuntary manslaughter, to which Murray pleaded not guilty, is defined as unintentional killing without malice and is a lesser charge than murder.

(Agencies)

83rd Oscar nominations released

2011-01-26 02:28:09 GMT2011-01-26 10:28:09(Beijing Time) Xinhua English

Actress Mo'Nique (L) and Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences President Tom Sherak read the nominees for Best Actor at the 83rd Annual Academy Awards Nominations Announcement in Los Angeles, United States, Jan. 25, 2011. "The King's Speech," "The Social Network," "The Fighter" and "Black Swan" are among the leaders in nominations for the top categories at the 83rd Academy Awards, including the best picture, director and acting contests, the film academy announced Tuesday morning. Ten films received best picture nominations which also include "Inception," "The Kids Are Alright," "127 Hours," "Toy Story 3," "True Grit" and "Winter's Bone." The 83rd Oscar awards will be presented Feb. 27 at the Kodak Theater in Hollywood, hosted by actor James Franco and actress Anne Hathaway. (Xinhua/Qi Heng)

Actress Mo'Nique (L) and Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences President Tom Sherak read the nominees for Best Picture at the 83rd Annual Academy Awards Nominations Announcement in Los Angeles, United States, Jan. 25, 2011. "The King's Speech," "The Social Network," "The Fighter" and "Black Swan" are among the leaders in nominations for the top categories at the 83rd Academy Awards, including the best picture, director and acting contests, the film academy announced Tuesday morning. Ten films received best picture nominations which also include "Inception," "The Kids Are Alright," "127 Hours," "Toy Story 3," "True Grit" and "Winter's Bone." The 83rd Oscar awards will be presented Feb. 27 at the Kodak Theater in Hollywood, hosted by actor James Franco and actress Anne Hathaway. (Xinhua/Qi Heng)

Actress Mo'Nique (L) and Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences President Tom Sherak read the nominees for Best Director at the 83rd Annual Academy Awards Nominations Announcement in Los Angeles, United States, Jan. 25, 2011. "The King's Speech," "The Social Network," "The Fighter" and "Black Swan" are among the leaders in nominations for the top categories at the 83rd Academy Awards, including the best picture, director and acting contests, the film academy announced Tuesday morning. Ten films received best picture nominations which also include "Inception," "The Kids Are Alright," "127 Hours," "Toy Story 3," "True Grit" and "Winter's Bone." The 83rd Oscar awards will be presented Feb. 27 at the Kodak Theater in Hollywood, hosted by actor James Franco and actress Anne Hathaway. (Xinhua/Qi Heng)

The nominees for best actor for the 83rd Academy Awards are shown in this combination of file photographs January 25, 2011. From left are Jeff Bridges for 'True Grit', Jesse Eisenberg for 'The Social Network', Colin Firth for 'The King's Speech', Javier Bardem for 'Biutiful' and James Franco for '127 Hours'. The Oscars will be presented in Hollywood February 27, 2011.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

The nominees for best supporting actor for the 83rd Academy Awards are shown in this combination of file photographs January 25, 2011. From left are Jeremy Renner for 'The Town', Mark Ruffalo for 'The Kids Are All Right', Christian Bale for 'The Fighter', John Hawkes for 'Winter's Bone' and Geoffrey Rush for 'The King's Speech'.' The Oscars will be presented in Hollywood February 27, 2011. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

The nominees for best actress for the 83rd Academy Awards are shown in this combination of file photographs January 25, 2011. From left are Natalie Portman for 'Black Swan', Jennifer Lawrence for 'Winter's Bone', Michelle Williams for 'Blue Valentine', Annette Bening for 'The Kids are All Right' and Nicole Kidman for 'Rabbit Hole'. The Oscars will be presented in Hollywood February 27, 2011. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

The nominees for best supporting actress for the 83rd Academy Awards are shown in this combination of file photographs January 25, 2011. From left are Hailee Steinfeld for 'True Grit', Helena Bonham Carter for 'The King's Speech', Amy Adams for 'The Fighter', Jacki Weaver for 'Animal Kingdom' and Melissa Leo for 'The Fighter.' The Oscars will be presented in Hollywood February 27, 2011. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

The 83rd Annual Academy Awards Nominations Announcement was held in Los Angeles, United States, Jan. 25, 2011. "The King's Speech," "The Social Network," "The Fighter" and "Black Swan" are among the leaders in nominations for the top categories at the 83rd Academy Awards, including the best picture, director and acting contests, the film academy announced Tuesday morning. Ten films received best picture nominations which also include "Inception," "The Kids Are Alright," "127 Hours," "Toy Story 3," "True Grit" and "Winter's Bone." The 83rd Oscar awards will be presented Feb. 27 at the Kodak Theater in Hollywood, hosted by actor James Franco and actress Anne Hathaway.

Twitter confirms it is blocked in Egypt

2011-01-26 03:35:23 GMT2011-01-26 11:35:23(Beijing Time) SINA.com

SAN FRANCISCO – Twitter confirmed on Tuesday the Internet messaging and communications site had been blocked in Egypt, where thousands of people have taken to the streets to protest President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule.

"We believe that the open exchange of info & views benefits societies & helps govts better connect w/ their people," the company wrote in a message, or tweet, as it confirmed the blocking of its service.

(Agencies)

Tuesday, 25 January 2011

Zigong Dinosaur Lantern Festival kicks off


2011-01-25 06:03:07 GMT2011-01-25 14:03:07(Beijing Time) Xinhua English

Illuminations are seen during the 17th Zigong International Dinosaur Lantern Festival in Zigong, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Jan. 24, 2011. The lantern festival, which kicked off on Monday, will last for 43 days to celebrate the Chinese Spring Festival which falls on Feb. 3 this year. (Xinhua/Jiang Hongjing)

A man carrying his daughter walks through a corridor decorated with red lanterns during the 17th Zigong International Dinosaur Lantern Festival in Zigong, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Jan. 24, 2011. The lantern festival, which kicked off on Monday, will last for 43 days to celebrate the Chinese Spring Festival which falls on Feb. 3 this year. (Xinhua/Jiang Hongjing)

Illuminations are seen during the 17th Zigong International Dinosaur Lantern Festival in Zigong, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Jan. 24, 2011. The lantern festival, which kicked off on Monday, will last for 43 days to celebrate the Chinese Spring Festival which falls on Feb. 3 this year. (Xinhua/Jiang Hongjing)

Illuminations are seen during the 17th Zigong International Dinosaur Lantern Festival in Zigong, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Jan. 24, 2011. The lantern festival, which kicked off on Monday, will last for 43 days to celebrate the Chinese Spring Festival which falls on Feb. 3 this year. (Xinhua/Jiang Hongjing)

A woman poses for photo under a corridor decorated with red lanterns during the 17th Zigong International Dinosaur Lantern Festival in Zigong, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Jan. 24, 2011. The lantern festival, which kicked off on Monday, will last for 43 days to celebrate the Chinese Spring Festival which falls on Feb. 3 this year. (Xinhua/Jiang Hongjing)

A rabbit impersonated by a park staff member gestures during the 17th Zigong International Dinosaur Lantern Festival in Zigong, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Jan. 24, 2011. The lantern festival, which kicked off on Monday, will last for 43 days to celebrate the Chinese Spring Festival which falls on Feb. 3 this year. (Xinhua/Jiang Hongjing)

Illuminations were seen during the 17th Zigong International Dinosaur Lantern Festival in Zigong, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Jan. 24, 2011. The lantern festival, which kicked off on Monday, will last for 43 days to celebrate the Chinese Spring Festival which falls on Feb. 3 this year.