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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Saturday, May 4, 2013

JAPAN ( Japan and Turkey sign a 22 billion dollar nuclear Deal ) Nuclear power plant

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Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (L) shakes hands with Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on May 3, 2013.(AFP photo)
Japan, Turkey sign $22 billion nuclear deal
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Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (L) shakes hands with Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on May 3, 2013.(AFP photo)
Japan and Turkey on Friday signed a long-awaited deal to build a major nuclear power plant on Turkey's Black Sea coast, a milestone for the Japanese nuclear industry as it recovers from the 2011 Fukushima disaster.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan hailed the $22 billion contract as a “very important step” that would transform bilateral relations with Japan into a “strategic partnership.”
A Japanese-French consortium won the giant contract to build Turkey's second nuclear plant, Japan's first successful bid on an overseas nuclear project since a tsunami wrecked the power station in Fukushima.
Turkey weathered criticism for teaming up with Japan in light of the catastrophe, but “despite that, we have taken this step,” Erdogan said.
“What happened at Fukushima upset all of us. But these things can happen. Life goes on. Successful steps are being taken now with the use of improved technology,” the Turkish premier added.
Like Japan, Turkey lies in a part of the world that is prone to earthquakes, making it essential that nuclear plants are designed to resist the effects of such events.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who arrived in Turkey as part of a larger Middle Eastern tour, said that Japan had learnt important lessons from the 2011 catastrophe.
“Japan will share its experience and the lessons it has learnt and will contribute to the improvement of nuclear security at the highest level,” Abe said in comments translated into Turkish.
Abe and Erdogan also signed an agreement covering the peaceful use of nuclear energy.
The winning consortium includes the Japanese group Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and power company Itochu, the French energy company GDF-Suez and a Turkish company to be determined.
The French energy company Areva is to supply the plant's reactors in connection with Mitsubishi.
The Sinop plant is to comprise four reactors with a combined output of 4,800 megawatts. Construction is slated to begin in 2017, with the first reactor to be operational by 2023, an energy ministry official said.
Turkey, which relies heavily on gas and oil imports from Russia and Iran, wants to build a total of three nuclear power plants to reduce its dependence on foreign energy.
In 2010, Ankara struck a deal with Russia to build the country's first nuclear plant at Akkuyu, in southern Turkey.

Iran ( Sharia punishment - Two young gay men are fitted with nooses for Execution )

Sharia punishment
Sharia punishment

CARACAS ( Venezuelan Journalist Killed in Robbery - Johnny Gonzalez -Sports writer )

Venezuelan Journalist Killed in Robbery


CARACAS – Venezuelan sportswriter Jhonny Gonzalez was shot and killed in the wee hours Friday while leaving the building where the sports daily Lider has its headquarters, apparently for resisting a robbery, the publication said.

Lider said on its Web site that Gonzalez was killed around 2:00 a.m. when leaving to work a night shift at the Cadena Capriles building in downtown Caracas.

Several individuals in a car and on a motorcycle apparently intercepted the journalist with intention to rob him and fired three shots. Gonzalez died in the car.

Journalists do not escape the situation of violence in Venezuela, a country with one of the highest murder rates in the region with 55 homicides for every 100,000 inhabitants.

The Public Space organization denounced a 50 percent increase in cases of attacks on freedom of expression in Venezuela so far this year, and a 20 percent increase in 2012 over 2011

Friday, May 3, 2013

Mexico ( Attacks on Journalists Remain on the Rise in Mexico- 80 killed since 2000)

Attacks on Journalists Remain on the Rise in Mexico
The watchdog group Article 19 documented 50 attacks on individual journalists and three assaults on media outlets in the first quarter of 2013


MEXICO CITY – Aggression against the news media in Mexico rose 20 percent in the first three months of this year compared with the same period in 2012, the watchdog group Article 19 said Friday.

The organization documented 50 attacks on individual journalists and three assaults on media outlets in the first quarter of 2013, Article 19 spokesman Omar Rabago told Efe on the occasion of World Press Freedom Day.

One news professional went missing during the period and remains unaccounted for, while another, Jaime Guadalupe Gonzalez, was murdered on March 3, Rabago said.

“Nothing has changed,” he said. “In reality, we are still waiting for the Mexican state in this new administration to comply with what it promised,” the activist said, referring to the government of President Enrique Peña Nieto, who took office Dec. 1.

More than 80 journalists have been slain in Mexico since 2000, according to figures from the country’s independent National Human Rights Commission.

Article 19, applying the narrower definition of “a clear link between the journalistic work and the murder,” puts the number at 73.

Mexico remains one of the world’s most dangerous countries for journalists, with 16 reporters “disappeared” over the last decade and 46 bombings and shootings at media outlets, the group says.

The Mexican security forces have been responsible for a third of the documented instances of aggression against news gatherers, Article 19 says.

Broadcast journalist Jose Gerardo Padilla Blanquet went missing on April 30 in Saltillo, the northern city where newspaper photographer Daniel Alejandro Martinez was murdered six days earlier, the organization noted. EFE

Iran News ( Young man Lashed in public - Looks like braveheart movie ) Un-real

Iran: Man lashed in public in Khash
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NCRI - A young man has been lashed in public in the city of Khash, in southeastern province of Sistan and Balouchestan Province,.This inhumane measure was opposed by furious people.
The lashing took place in end of April.
Photo: The Iranian regime’s henchmen in city of Sabzevar lashed a man in public on January 16, 2013

MONTERREY, Mexico ( Journalist Missing in Northern Mexico- Jose Gerardo Padilla was beaten a few months ago )

Journalist Missing in Northern Mexico


MONTERREY, Mexico – A radio and television announcer in the northern Mexican state of Coahuila is missing, state officials said.

Jose Gerardo Padilla Blanquet disappeared Tuesday in Saltillo, the capital of Coahuila, state security spokesman Jesus Carranza told Efe.

Padilla Blanquet’s friends and co-workers reported on social-networking sites that he was missing, Carranza said.

The journalist’s family filed a missing persons report on Wednesday, Carranza said.

Padilla Blanquet works for Radio Grande de Coahuila, whose director has received threats on numerous occasions and was beaten a few months ago.

State prosecutors are investigating Padilla Blanquet’s disappearance, Coahuila Public Safety Secretary Jose Gerardo Villarreal told the press.

“The deputy prosecutor’s office for investigating and finding missing persons immediately established a search protocol to try to locate him and we are fully supporting them in everything needed,” Villarreal said.

The mutilated body of Daniel Alejandro Martinez, a photographer for Mexico’s La Vanguardia newspaper, was found last week along with that of another young man in Saltillo.

The dismembered bodies of the 22-year-old Martinez and 23-year-old Julian Alejandro Zamora Gracia were found on April 24 in Los Arcos, a neighborhood in the southern section of Saltillo, the Coahuila state Attorney General’s Office said.

Media and press rights groups staged a protest Sunday in Mexico City and several other cities to call for an end to attacks on journalists and pressure officials to clear up crimes against members of the media.

An International Press Institute, or IPI, and World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers, or WAN-IFRA, delegation visited Mexico in February and called for more protection for journalists.

Both the IPI and Reporters Without Borders, or RSF, ranked Mexico as the fourth most dangerous country in the world for journalists in 2012, trailing only Syria, Somalia and Pakistan.

More than 80 journalists have been murdered and 18 others have been reported missing since 2005 in Mexico, the Mexican National Human Rights Commission, or CNDH, said in a report released in December.

Some 658 complaints were received from members of the news media from Jan. 1, 2005, to Nov. 30, 2012, the rights body said.

The war on drugs launched by former President Felipe Calderon, who was in office from 2006 to 2012, left about 70,000 people dead, or an average of 32 per day, in Mexico, officials say. EFE

Syria ( " Massacre " in a Sunni village near the Mediterranean coast )

BEIRUT (AP) — Syria's main opposition group on Friday accused President Bashar Assad's regime of committing a "large-scale massacre" in a Sunni village near the Mediterranean coast in which activists say at least 50 were killed with guns, knives and blunt objects.
 
This citizen journalist image released on Thursday May 2, 2013, provided by The Syrian Revolution against Bashar Assad, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows Syrian army soldiers loyal to Bashar Assad, seen in the background, standing in front of dead bodies at Bayda village, in the mountains outside the coastal city of Banias, Syria. Syria's main opposition group on Friday accused President Bashar Assad's regime of committing a "large-scale massacre" in a Sunni village near the Mediterranean coast, killing scores of people, according to activists. (AP Photo/The Syrian Revolution against Bashar Assad)
The killings in Bayda reflect the sectarian overtones of Syria's civil war. Tucked in the mountains outside the Mediterranean coastal city of Banias, the village is primarily inhabited by Sunni Muslims, who dominate the country's rebel movement. But it is located in the heartland of Assad's Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam that is the backbone of the regime.
In amateur video purportedly taken after the killings, the bodies of at least seven men and boys are seen strewn in pools of blood on the pavement in front of a house as women weep around them.
"Don't sleep, don't move," one woman sobs, leaning over to touch one of the men, who appeared already dead. The video appears genuine and consistent with reporting by The Associated Press from the area.