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Summary Box: H.J. Heinz 1Q results

Post n°4 pubblicato il 08 Settembre 2010 da qimeaucnzfrp
 

EMERGING MARKETS: H.J. Heinz Co.'s fiscal first-quarter net income jumped 13 percent as the foodmaker's business boomed in growing overseas markets such as India, China and Russia.

BOTTOM LINE: Net income rose 13 percent to $240.4 million, or 75 cents per share, topping analysts' expectations of 73 cents per share. Revenue rose 1.6 percent to $2.48 billion, slightly shy of analysts' $2.53 billion forecast.

THE DRIVERS: Sales growth was propelled by products like nutritional beverages in India, infant formula in China and strong ketchup growth in Russia. Sales slid in Europe and other areas of the globe, as well as in the company's U.S. food-service division.

 
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In Egypt, more people call for civil instead of religious marriage

Post n°3 pubblicato il 06 Settembre 2010 da qimeaucnzfrp
 

Cairo – Iriny has wanted out of her marriage for a decade. A member of Egypt's ancient Coptic Orthodox church, she was pushed into marrying a virtual stranger by her family 12 years ago.

Problems quickly developed, and her husband began to beat her, explains Iriny. When they had a son, Iriny's husband beat him, too. This is where her voice cracks.

Fearing for her son, she took him and left her husband to live with her parents.

But Iriny, a woman of modest means from a traditional family, cannot make a new life for herself because she is still married. In Egypt, the state leaves matters of marriage and divorce to the religious establishment, and the strict, patriarchal Coptic church will not grant her a divorce. "I want to continue my life," says Iriny, who did not want her real name to be used. "I want my own home, to live on my own with my son. My life is all lost."

Thousands more are in Iriny's shoes. Now, after a controversial court case and the government's promise of a new law dealing with personal-status issues like marriage, their cases are in the spotlight.

The resulting struggle has exposed the pitfalls of a legal system that, by forcing people to abide by religious regulations, has deprived citizens of the freedom to make decisions about their personal lives. Some - Christians and Muslims alike - are calling for alternatives.

"Our problem is that the state appears to be washing its hands of the problem, saying it's an intercommunity issue," says Hossam Baghat, director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights. "The argument we're trying to make as an organization is that Egyptian men and women of any religious conviction should enjoy the right to marry and have a family without being subject to the patriarchal family law."

Egyptian law says that a citizen's marriage and divorce petitions should be decided by the principles of that person's religion.

Christians must go to their leaders for permission to marry, divorce, or remarry, and Muslims abide by sharia, or Islamic law. A citizen's rights effectively depend on the religion he or she belongs to.

Islamic law is more permissive on issues of marriage and divorce, so Egyptian Muslims have more freedom to make such decisions than do Copts. Copts make up the majority of Egyptian Christians, who are about 10 percent of the population.

But the Coptic church wasn't always so strict. A 1938 code listed nine reasons Copts could divorce. But the first decree of the current pope, Shenouda III, upon taking office in 1971 was to disallow divorce except in cases of proven adultery. The church also allows remarriage after the death of a spouse.

Uproar in Coptic church over remarriage rulingThe church argued the state has no right to interfere. So when Egypt's Su-preme Administrative Court did just that in May, ruling that the church must allow two men, in separate cases, to remarry, it unleashed an uproar among church leaders and adherents. Pope Shenouda refused to carry out the court's order.

The Ministry of Justice announced it would write a personal status law for non-Muslims, a move the pope has long sought in order to solidify the church's stance on marriage and divorce. In July, the Supreme Constitutional Court halted the implementation of the earlier remarriage decision until the issue was resolved. This month, Pope Shenouda signaled that he approved of a draft of the law drawn up by a committee of Christian leaders.

Many observers say the moves reek of politics by the ruling National Democratic Party. "The only explanation is that this is an election year and the government needs the support of Copts, who have traditionally voted NDP," says Mr. Baghat.

Some Copts have changed religions to get a divorce, though that can be costly and risks abandonment by family and community. For those who conrt, reverting to Christianity after divorce can bring protests, even death threats, from Muslims.

The problem is compounded by the sectarian strife that pervades Egypt, says Azza Soliman, director of the Center for Egyptian Women's Legal Aid. Discrimination has made Christians tend to band together, resolving their problems within the church, she says.

Still, more Egyptians now are asking to add a third route: government-recognized civil marriage. "Civil marriage is the only solution, because you can't force the church to change its beliefs," says Karima Kamal, society editor at the popular independent newspaper Al Masry Al Youm. But she and others say the government will not permit it, because it would allow Muslim women to marry non-Muslim men, breaching Islamic law.

"It really boils down to this. If we have a civil law, then we will have no control over interfaith marriages," says Baghat.

Ms. Soliman says one option is to offer civil marriage only to Christians, which would sidestep the controversial issue of interfaith marriage. Even that is unlikely. But advocates take solace in the fact that at least people are talking about it.

"The one positive thing that is coming out of this process is that there's a more vocal minority that is speaking out against religious interpretations that are gender-biased or that do not allow easy access to divorce or remarriage," says Baghat.

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Dublin protestors pelt Blair at first book signing

Post n°2 pubblicato il 06 Settembre 2010 da qimeaucnzfrp
 
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DUBLIN (AFP) – Angry protestors hurled plastic bottles and flip-flops at former British prime minister Tony Blair as he arrived at the first public signing of his memoirs in the Irish capital Dublin on Saturday.

More than 200 noisy demonstrators, many chanting slogans criticising Blair over the 2003 Iraq war, had gathered for the event and witnesses said plastic bottles and flip-flops were thrown at him as his motorcade arrived.

None of the objects -- also reported to include eggs and shoes -- landed near the former premier as protestors surged towards a security barrier separating them from him before being repelled by police.

Police said they arrested and charged four people with various public order offences. The men, two in their late teens and two in their 30s, were released on bail to appear in court later in the month.

One woman meanwhile said she tried to make a citizen's arrest on Blair once he was inside the bookshop where the event was taking place.

"After I went through airport-like security to get to Mr Blair, I told him I was there to make a citizen?s arrest on him for war crimes committed in Iraq," said Kate O'Sullivan, an activist with the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign.

"Mr. Blair looked down and I was immediately grabbed by five security men and dragged away."

Blair was signing copies of "A Journey", his account of a decade in Downing Street from 1997 to 2007, which was released earlier this week.

In the book, he said he "can't regret" the decision to go to war in Iraq alongside then US president George W. Bush but acknowledged that he did not foresee the "nightmare" which it unleashed.

He will hold another book signing in London on Wednesday which anti-war activists are also pledging to target.

In Dublin, the demonstrators waved placards with slogans such as "Blair lied, millions died" and "Lock him up for genocide" and chanted amid a heavy police presence.

Part of the city's main thoroughfare, O'Connell Street, where the bookshop is located, was sealed off and access inside was tightly controlled.

Several hundred people braved pouring rain to queue at a back entrance to the store in the hope of getting their book signed by Blair.

Killian Kiely, a 21-year-old from south Dublin, was among those who got to meet him.

"I wanted to see him, he is one of the most important leaders of his generation though there is a lot I would disagree with about his policies," he said. "I just wanted to see him in the flesh."

But many hoping to meet Blair were left disappointed when he left after about an hour and a half of signing.

In his first live television interview promoting the book on Friday, Blair brushed off the criticism he still faces seven years after the Iraq invasion.

"One of the first things that you learn in politics is that those who shout most don't deserve necessarily to be listened to most," he told Irish state television RTE.

"Everyone should be listened to equally, irrespective of the volume of noise."

In a fresh sign of continuing opposition to the war, more than 2,500 people have joined a group on social networking website Facebook calling for shoppers to move Blair's book to the crime section in bookshops.

Blair, who reportedly received a 4.6-million-pound (7.1-million-dollar) advance for the book, will donate all proceeds to the Royal British Legion, a charity helping war veterans.

Despite continuing controversy over the Iraq conflict, Blair is particularly hailed by many in Ireland for his key role in the Northern Ireland peace process.

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Despite formal combat end, US joins Baghdad battle

Post n°1 pubblicato il 05 Settembre 2010 da qimeaucnzfrp
 

BAGHDAD – Days after the U.S. officially ended combat operations and touted Iraq's ability to defend itself, American troops found themselves battling heavily armed militants assaulting an Iraqi military headquarters in the center of Baghdad on Sunday. The fighting killed 12 people and wounded dozens.

It was the first exchange of fire involving U.S. troops in Baghdad since the Aug. 31 deadline for formally ending the combat mission, and it showed that American troops remaining in the country are still being drawn into the fighting.

The attack also made plain the kind of lapses in security that have left Iraqis wary of the U.S. drawdown and distrustful of the ability of Iraqi forces now taking up ultimate responsibility for protecting the country.

Sunday's hour-long assault was the second in as many weeks on the facility, the headquarters for the Iraqi Army's 11th Division, pointing to the failure of Iraqi forces to plug even the most obvious holes in their security.

Two of the four attackers even managed to fight their way inside the compound and were only killed after running out of ammunition and detonating explosives belts they were wearing.

The American troops who joined the fight and provided cover fire for Iraqi soldiers pursuing the attackers were based at the compound to train Iraqi forces, said U.S. military spokesman Lt. Col. Eric Bloom. Iraqi forces also requested help from U.S. helicopters, drones and explosives experts, he said. No American troops were hurt, Bloom said.

Under an agreement between the two countries, Iraq can still call on American forces to assist in combat and U.S. troops can defend themselves if attacked.

In Sunday's assault, six militants wearing explosives vests and matching track suits and armed with machine guns and hand grenades pulled up at a checkpoint with an explosives-laden car, said a senior Iraqi military intelligence official who was inside the building at the time.

The six assailants left the car and started shooting, killing a soldier at the checkpoint, he said. Guards at an observation tower returned fire, killing four militants, while two entered a building in the military compound.

Iraqi soldiers shot and killed a seventh attacker who was driving the vehicle, causing the car bomb to explode, the official said. The blast left behind a gaping crater in the ground.

The fighting came to an end after the two assailants who breached the compound ran out of bullets and detonated their explosives vests, the official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters.

Two weeks earlier, an al-Qaida-linked suicide bomber waded into a crowd of hundreds of army recruits outside the building and detonated a blast that killed 61 people. That was the deadliest act of violence in Baghdad in months.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Sunday's attack.

Baghdad has been on high alert since President Barack Obama declared the official end to U.S. combat operations on Wednesday, setting up more checkpoints, intensifying searches of people and vehicles and handing out more guns and bullets to troops guarding the capital.

The number of U.S. troops has fallen from a high of 170,000 to just under 50,000 this August; all U.S. troops must be out of Iraq by 2012.

The remaining American soldiers have a noncombat role and mostly assist Iraqis in stabilizing the country. However, U.S. forces can still help Iraqi forces hunt down al-Qaida and other militants and can defend themselves or their bases against attacks.

Insurgents have intensified their strikes on Iraqi police and soldiers to mark the change in the U.S. mission.

Iraq's political instability now appears to be threatening the country's security. Six months after an inconclusive election, Iraq still has no new government. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shiite, is struggling to keep his job after his political coalition came in a close second to a Sunni-backed alliance in the March 7 vote.

___

Associated Press writers Qassim Abdul-Zahra, Rebecca Santana and Hamid Ahmed contributed to this report.

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