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Tokyo school's Armani uniforms, worth nearly €600, criticised by Japanese parliament

February 09, 2018

  

A school in Japan has adopted Giorgio Armani uniforms for students, triggering criticism in a country where hefty tuition fees are already burdening young parents.
Taimei Elementary School in Tokyo's upmarket Ginza shopping district has announced plans to introduce the optional Italian designer uniforms, which cost more than 80,000 yen (€597) for a full set.
Government education officials said today that school principals are free to set school rules and uniforms, but that this case did not have the consensus of parents.
The uniform came under attack in the country's parliament yesterday.



In Japan, where a sense of belonging and conformity are valued, uniforms are considered durable and thrifty and are worn at most secondary schools.
Critics say uniforms are part of rigid school rules which could infringe on diversity and children's rights.


'Special moment' for Coutinho as Barcelona advance to cup final

February 09, 2018

Philippe Coutinho savoured a "special moment" after his first goal for Barcelona helped them reach their fifth consecutive Copa del Rey final.
Coutinho opened the scoring in a 2-0 win at Valencia that sent Barcelona through 3-0 on aggregate, the Brazilian netting four minutes after coming on at half-time for his fifth appearance since his £142m switch from Liverpool last month.
He was quoted on Barcelona's Twitter feed as saying: "I feel happy to have scored my first goal for Barca and have helped the team get to the final.
"It's a special moment."


Coutinho's goal came when he slid to get his right leg to a cross from Luis Suarez, who also produced the assist when Ivan Rakitic struck in the 82nd minute.
Barcelona will face Sevilla in the final, aiming to win the Copa del Rey for a fourth successive season and a 30th time overall.
Boss Ernesto Valverde said in quotes reported on AS: "Barca are used to reaching and playing the finals. In my case, not so much.
"I feel very happy as it is the fifth consecutive final that the players of this team are going to play, something very complicated to repeat and repeat.
"We thought it would be very difficult and that's how it was, but we're going home with the final ticket in our pocket."
When asked how Gerard Pique was after the defender came off in the final 10 minutes, Valverde said: "In the end he noticed an overload and we decided that the best thing of all is that the player rests."
Valencia boss Marcelino said as he gave his reflections on the game: "I think they (Barcelona), in general, were superior. We had our opportunities.
"I think that in the first half we deserved to go level, but we did not do it and then their goal (Coutinho's) decided the tie."


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Winter Olympics opening ceremony 2018: Live updates as the Olympic Games officially kick off

February 09, 2018

The 2018 Winter Olympics are officially kicking off Friday morning (here in the U.S.) with the opening ceremony in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
Team USA will be led into the ceremony by Erin Hamlin, who was selected as the flag bearer. That process didn't sit well with speed skater Shani Davis, who tweeted out his displeasure. Now, he's not expected to march with the team.
Today's opening ceremony is streaming live on nbcolympics.com, but stick with us here as we'll quickly update with all the hot moments from a frigid opening ceremony. Here we go ...

It's chilly -- but stadium is filling up

PYEONGCHANG, South Korea – The Pyeongchang Olympics opened Friday night living up to their winter billing.
In a chilly Olympic Stadium, spectators huddled under heat lamps along the concourse as they waited for the ceremony to begin.
Pyeongchang organizers made every attempt to keep fans warm in the open-air venue, where temperatures were in the low 30s with slight winds. Each seat came with a package that included a blanket, hand warmers, hat and poncho.
In an effort to keep people warm, the emcees and dancers around the stadium tried to get spectators to dance to K-pop.
With about an hour to go until the ceremony, the stadium was about 75% full as a unified Korean group of taekwondo athletes performed a demonstration. On an upper level, a red-clad North Korean cheer squad shouted in unison as the athletes sent shattered planks of wood flying on the stadium floor.
- Rachel Axon

The 5 best opening ceremonies

USA TODAY Sports' Christine Brennan is no stranger to the Olympics. This will be her 18th Olympics opening ceremony. So which was the best? She breaks down her top five.

Organizers try to help fans stay warm

The opening ceremony is going to be cold. Frigid, in fact. So organizers for the event are hooking up fans with a blanket, poncho, seat cushion and more as they enter the stadium.

Who’s going to carry the flag for the unified Korea team?

Representatives from both countries naturally. South Korean male bobsledder Won Yunjong and women’s hockey player Hwang Chung-gum were tapped for the honor, according to the IOC. The two will carry the Korean Unification Flag, which features an image of a blue Korean Peninsula against a white background

How does a 28-hour work week sound? German metal workers hammer out landmark deal

February 08, 2018
Employers will not be able to block individual workers from taking up the offer. Those who take advantage of the deal will be paid only for the hours worked, and at the end of two years they will have to return to the full 35-hour working week.

The collective deal was agreed by IG Metall, and for now only applies to around 900,000 workers in the metals and electrical industries in the south-western state of Baden-Wurttemberg.

 

Night shift metal workers of the Kirchhoff Automotive (Kirchhoff Witte) company hold flags with the logo of Germany’s metalworkers’ union IG Metall as they stage a warning strike on early January 8, 2018 in Iserlohn, western Germany. GUIDO KIRCHNER/AFP/Getty Images

But the state, home to major companies such as Bosch and Daimler, the makers of Mercedes, is often seen as a weather vane for the German economy and it is likely to be rolled out further.

Last year, the economy grew at its fastest rate since 2011 and unemployment is at its lowest since reunification in 1990, putting workers in a strong position. The deal came after IG Metall called strikes and workers downed tools at firms including Daimler, Siemens and Airbus. But economists say it is also a sign that work-life balance could be as important as pay in future negotiations.

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Head of U.S. Environmental Protection Agency asks: Is global warming really a bad thing?

February 08, 2018


As head of the Environmental Protection Agency, Scott Pruitt has repeatedly questioned the scientific consensus that rising levels of carbon dioxide from human-fuelled activity are warming the planet.

He’s now taking a different tack: Even if climate change is occurring, as the vast majority of scientists say it is, a warmer atmosphere might not be so awful for human beings, according to Pruitt.

“We know humans have most flourished during times of what, warming trends,” Pruitt said Tuesday during an interview on KSNV, an NBC affiliate in Las Vegas. “So I think there’s assumptions made that because the climate is warming, that that necessarily is a bad thing. Do we really know what the ideal surface temperature should be in the year 2100, in the year 2018? That’s fairly arrogant for us to think that we know exactly what it should be in 2100.”

Pruitt continued: “There are very important questions around the climate issue that folks really don’t get to. And that’s one of the reasons why I’ve talked about having an honest, open, transparent debate about what do we know, what don’t we know, so the American people can be informed and they can make decisions on their own with respect to these issues.”




Not long after taking office last February, Pruitt seemed to reject the established science of climate change in a nationally televised interview — a move that outraged scientists, environmental advocates and his predecessors at the EPA.

“I think that measuring with precision human activity on the climate is something very challenging to do and there’s tremendous disagreement about the degree of impact, so no, I would not agree that it’s a primary contributor to the global warming that we see,” Pruitt said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” last March. “We need to continue the debate and continue the review and the analysis.”



This file photo taken on February 02, 2012 shows a cloud of smoke coming out from a chimney in a winter sky in Seclin, northern France. PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP/Getty Images

At the time, his comments represented a startling statement for an official so high in the U.S. government. They put him at odds not only with leaders around the world, but also with the EPA’s own official scientific findings. President Donald Trump has famously called the idea of human-driven climate change a hoax. Other Cabinet members, including Energy Secretary Rick Perry, have questioned the scientific basis for combating global warming.

He now seems to have embraced an argument long held by other climate-science skeptics: That a warmer atmosphere may in fact be better for humanity.

“The climate is changing. That’s not the debate. The debate is how do we know what the ideal surface temperature is in 2100? . . . I think the American people deserve an open honest transparent discussion about those things,” Pruitt said in an interview with Reuters last month. He added, ” This agency for the last several years has been more focused on what might be happening in 2100, as opposed to what is happening today.”

And during a hearing on Capitol Hill later in January, Pruitt said: “There are questions that we know the answer to; there are questions we don’t know the answer to. For example, what is the ideal surface temperature in the year 2100? [It’s] something that many folks have different perspective on.”



The White House withdrew its controversial nominee to lead the Council on Environmental Quality, Kathleen Hartnett White. Anthony Behar/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The theme echoes one advanced by Kathleen Hartnett White, Trump’s pick to lead White House’s Council on Environmental Quality, who once touted carbon dioxide as “the gas of life on this planet.” The White House withdrew her nomination on Saturday after even Republican senators raised questions about her expertise.

Pruitt also has been the main administration official pushing for a government-wide effort to debate the science of climate change. He first raised the possibility of such a “red team-blue team” exercise in an interview last June.

“What the American people deserve, I think, is a true, legitimate, peer-reviewed, objective, transparent discussion about CO2,” Pruitt told Breitbart’s Joel Pollack.


“That red team-blue team exercise is an exercise to provide an opportunity to the American people to consume information from scientists that have different perspectives on key issues,” Pruitt told Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., “and frankly could be used to build consensus in this body.”

It’s unclear why Pruitt thinks warmer temperatures may be better for people. The last 11,700 years, before the end of the last ice age, constitute a relatively stable period of climate for human civilization. Many of the cities built during those millennia dot the coasts of Earth’s continents and were located there assuming relatively stable sea levels.

And while rising temperatures may indeed boost agricultural yield in some regions, they are projected to cause debilitating drought elsewhere.

Though the not-so-bad argument may be new for Pruitt, some conservative and fossil-fuel industry groups have used it for almost three decades. In 1991, for example, the Western Fuels Association funded “The Greening of Planet Earth,” a 30-minute video arguing that more CO2 in the air helps farmers.

In 2001, the Cato Institute echoed the video’s message. “The video was right,” Patrick Michaels, a senior fellow at the libertarian think tank, wrote. “The greens were wrong.”
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Indian man arrested for selling wife's kidney, which she didn't even know was gone

February 08, 2018


“They convinced her she needed an operation,” her father said in a phone interview with The Washington Post. Medical staff at the facility told Sarkar she needed an immediate appendectomy. She underwent surgery the next day, she told India’s the Telegraph.

“My husband warned me not to disclose the surgery in Kolkata to anyone,” Sarkar told the Hindustan Times. They kept her inside her home for several months that followed, her father said. But after the appendectomy, Sarkar’s pain intensified – this time, in her lower back. She pleaded with her husband to take her to see a doctor, but he refused.

Then, about three months ago, relatives on Sarkar’s father’s side took her to a local medical center, the largest healthcare facility in the northern region of West Bengal. An ultrasound there uncovered the fact that Sarkar’s right kidney was missing.

“I was shattered,” Sarkar told the Telegraph. In addition, her left kidney was infected, her father told The Post. “She’s still very ill,” he said.

On Friday, the 28-year-old woman filed a complaint with West Bengal police, authorities told The Post. On Monday, police arrested the woman’s husband Biswajit Sarkar, a cloth merchant from the Murshidabad district, and her brother-in-law, Shyamal Sarkar, said Uday Shankar Ghosh, the inspector-in-charge.

The men have been charged with commercially trading human organs and detaining a woman with criminal intent, according to local news outlets. Police say the husband confessed to selling the kidney to a businessman in the Indian state of Chattisgarh.

Sarkar alleges that her husband sold off her kidney to make up for her family’s failure to meet dowry demands.

“Now, I understand why he forbade me to reveal anything,” she told the New Indian Express. “He and his family tortured me during the past 12 years of marriage for dowry and when my family failed to meet their demands, they sold my kidney.

According to her father, the couple wed in 2005. At the time, her family gave the groom’s family gold, silver, and 180,000 rupees in cash, he said, “but they kept asking for more.”

“He used to say ‘your father has so many cars, he’s sitting there with so much wealth, look at us, we have nothing,” the father told The Post.

Dowries – the payment from a bride’s family to a groom’s – have been banned in India since 1961. But they persist, and women continue to be abused and even murdered by their husbands and families when dowry demands are not met. Stronger laws were introduced in the 1980s to protect married women from cruelty and battering, but the practice of dowry-giving remains entrenched.

The men allegedly confessed that the kidney was sold to a businessman in the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh, according to the Hindustan Times.

Reached by the Telegraph, her husband claimed his wife agreed to donate her kidney. He says she even signed a consent letter, which she denied.

Authorities suspect the sale was part of an organ-trafficking racket, an inspector with West Bengal police in Farakka told the Telegraph.

Such organ smuggling rings are well entrenched across India. Traffickers are known to rob poor people of their kidneys and sell them to wealthy patients around the world.

In 2008, police uncovered one of the world’s largest kidney trafficking rings, in the city of Gurgaon. They found a labyrinthine kidney bazaar run by men posing as doctors, preying on poor labourers who had moved to the city for work. Investigators said they believed the trafficking network included buyers from Canada, Greece, Saudi Arabia, Dubai, the United Arab Emirates and the United States. Many came to India on tourist visas.

Following the arrest of a “kidney kingpin” running the network, India tightened its rules for organ exchanges. But the underground organ market still thrives in India. South Asia as a whole is the leading hub for transplant tourism, according to the World Health Organization. The Voluntary Health Association of India has estimated that about 2,000 Indians sell a kidney every year.


Many experts have blamed demand for India’s illegal kidney trade on sagging medical infrastructure and a surge in renal diseases. India also lacks an official system for collecting donated organs. In addition, traffickers have a continuous supply of kidneys from poor Indians looking for extra money.

One of the biggest crackdowns in recent memory involved the 2016 arrests of more than a dozen people in a sophisticated kidney transplant ring, including several doctors and the chief executive of one of Mumbai’s leading hospitals. Local press dubbed it the “Great Indian Kidney Racket.”




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Heartbroken mother of Irish man who went missing during US hike says she has lost hope that he is alive

February 07, 2018


The heartbroken mother of a young Irish man who went missing during a hiking trip in the US has revealed she has lost hope that he is alive.

David O'Sullivan's mother Carmel opened up after her 'horrific' ordeal and said that she lies awake at night wondering what happened to him.

The 25-year-old left Ireland in March last year to embark on a five-month trek of Pacific Crest Trail, hiking from California to the Canadian border.

David, who is from Midleton in Cork, last contacted his family on April 7 last and his mother Carmel said that after ten months she thinks that he has died.

Carmel appeared on The Neil Prendeville Show on Cork's Red FM on Tuesday, and when she was asked if she thinks her son is alive, she said: "At this stage, no, at the beginning there had been weeks without contact because of the isolation of the place and no Wi-Fi."

Searches are still being carried out to try to find David and Carmel explained that not knowing what happened to him is particularly difficult.

"I know there are people who have buried their children and that's horrific but at least they know where they are - we don't know where David is,we don't know what happened.

"We don't know if he fell down the side of a mountain, we don't know if he died quickly, was he there for days looking for help?

"I go into my imagination at night, usually at two or three o'clock in the morning when I wake up, I check my phone, I'm always checking my phone.

"At the beginning I was waiting for David to contact me, I had the phone by my bed and I would think, 'I'll kill him when he contacts me.'

"It went on further and there were no developments and it went on and on and now I'm just waiting for contact from America to report that he has been found or that they have found something belonging to him or even that one of the aerial searches has a possibility," she said.

Carmel said that former media student David was a keen mountain climber and that he was thrilled to go on his adventure of a lifetime.

She said: "He had been saving for this for a long time but he only told us in September 2016, I nearly had a seizure, I had never even heard of it.



"The Camino is very popular here and that's like a holiday park in comparison.

"I hardly slept that night but the next morning he told me it was something he had wanted to do for a long time and we couldn't stop him, he was 25 years old and all excited about this - he was planning it, plotting it and doing so much research.

"From the messages he sent us he was delighted over there, he thought it was terrific and when I went there I could see the beauty."
Read More: 'It's horrible not knowing' - Brother of man missing in US since April hopes search effort 'provides answers'

Carmel said that her life is "on hold" and that she just wants to know some information about what happened to David.

Devastated Carmel said: "Right now I'm fine but I couldn't tell you that in the next ten minutes that I wouldn't be here roaring crying, I can't tell you, I can't explain it, it's just horrific.

"Sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night or in the morning and think, 'David, where are you?'

"I know there are people who are missing people for years and years and I honestly don't know how they go on.

"The best case scenario is that we find him and can bring him home, people keep saying at least we'll get closure but sure that still means my son is dead, and I think that's still the best possibility I have at the moment."

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Community 'devastated' as young mother Aine Gribben dies suddenly at home

February 07, 2018

Police are investigating the circumstances surrounding the sudden death of a young Co Tyrone mum whose body was found in a house on Saturday.

Coalisland woman Righnach Aine Gribben, who was in her 20s and a mother to two young sons, was found dead in a house in the town's Millview Manor at the weekend.
Police say her death is not being treated as suspicious at this time.
A post mortem examination has taken place, and police are awaiting the results of toxicology reports.

Righnach's funeral was taking place at 11am today at St Mary and St Joseph's Church on Coalisland's Brackaville Road.

She will then be laid to rest in the adjoining cemetery.

The young woman is survived by her parents Paul and Joanne, sister Faoiltirna and brothers Padraig, Caoimhin and Lorcan.

The family's death notice said: "Sacred Heart of Jesus have mercy on her soul.

"Very deeply regretted by her much-loved cousins and extended Gribben and Rushe family circle and friends."
Touching pictures posted online by the devoted mum show her spending time with her loved ones.

Righnach's friends and family took to social media to thank the local community for the tributes paid to "our brown-eyed girl".

Momhaine Nic Aogain wrote: "We would like to thank everyone for their messages of love and support.
"This has been the most difficult thing we have ever been through and our hearts are broken in a million pieces for our brown-eyed girl.

"Again we sincerely thank and appreciate everyone's words of love and support."

One grieving friend wrote: "Righnach Aine Gribben sleep well with the angels wee pet."

Another posted: "RIP Righnach Aine Gribben fly high beautiful! Thoughts and prayers go out to the family."

Popular Rignach was also described as a "beautiful wee woman" by a devastated friend.

She posted: "She has always had a place in my heart, and always will.

"Rest easy wee pet until we meet again."

Righnach's former school, Gaelscoil Ui Neill in Clonoe, also expressed its "deepest commiserations" in a death notice posted in the Irish News.

And Tir Eoghain No 1 Celtic Supporters Club said they were "saddened to learn of the death of Righnach, sister of club member Padraig".

They wrote: "We extend our deepest sympathies to the Gribben family."

SDLP councillor Malachy Quinn said the local community had been left "devastated" by the young woman's untimely death.

"It has been quite a shock to everyone - when any young person dies it is a tragedy, but the suddenness of this makes it particularly so," he said.

"This is the second death of a young person in this area in recent months.

"In January we lost GAA player Christopher Colhoun, who was only 33, after he fell ill.

"I would like to pass on my condolences to Righnach's friends and family."
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