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Wednesday, August 20, 2014
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
WASHINGTON ( Singer Christina Aguilera Gives Birth to Baby Girl )
WASHINGTON – Singer Christina Aguilera, 33, gave birth to a baby girl who has been named Summer Rain, she said Monday on her Twitter account.
“So proud to welcome our beautiful daughter Summer Rain Rutler into the world,” Aguilera said of her first child with fiance Matthew Rutler, a producer she met on the set of the film “Burlesque” in 2010.
She is now a mother for the second time after having her first child, Max, 6, from a relationship with Jordan Bratman, whom she wed in 2005 and divorced in October 2010.
The singer announced her pregnancy in February in Los Angeles, a few days after the artist confirmed on Twitter her plans to marry Rutler, with whom she became engaged on Valentine’s Day.
The pop star and her fiance had always talked about getting married and raising a family, according to People magazine
LIMA ( Mayor Gunned Down in Peru )
LIMA – Authorities are investigating the murder of the mayor of the central Peruvian municipality of Amarilis, a senior police officer said Friday.
Marzony Vasquez, who was seeking re-election in October, died en route to the hospital Thursday night after two assailants on a motorcycle shot him as he was driving to his home, Col. Juan Albarracin told the media.
On learning of the mayor’s murder, Interior Minister Daniel Urresti traveled to the region to coordinate the investigation.
“We worry that the motive could have been political violence. That is, violence in which other candidates are participating via hired killers,” Urresti said.
“That would be very serious and it is what we want to rule out,” the minister said in comments to reporters.
Vasquez, an accountant by profession, became mayor last November after the removal of his predecessor, Ricardo Moreyra.
A previous mayor of Amarilis, Cesar Martinez, was killed in office in 2005, Lima daily El Comercio said in its online edition.
LA PAZ ( More Than 300,000 Abandoned Dogs Live on Streets of Bolivia )
LA PAZ – More than 300,000 abandoned dogs live on the streets of Bolivia, a country of 10 million inhabitants, officials said.
The expert in animal-transmitted infections at the Bolivian Health Ministry, Grover Paredes, said in a statement to state news agency ABI that there are 300,000 stray dogs in the country and urged that the “indiscriminate sale” of animals be controlled to put an end to that situation.
The official issued his statement on the eve of “Day of the Dog,” which is held every Aug. 16 in Bolivia in honor of St. Roch, their patron saint.
According to Paredes, in Bolivia there are also another 2.5 million canines that have owners.
The official finds the situation of dogs exposed to the elements without shelter “worrying,” because they go hungry, suffer through the bad weather and contract illnesses like rabies.
“The municipalities have to impose regulations so those people (street vendors) stop selling dogs,” he said.
The packs of dogs that wander the streets and feed on whatever they find in the garbage are a typical sight in Bolivian cities like La Paz, though the dogs are not usually aggressive toward people.
In Bolivia it is also a common practice for domestic dogs to spend the day on the street and return home to their owners at night to eat and sleep.
Mexico ( Tourist Town in Central Mexico Plagued by Kidnappings, Officials Say)
MEXICO CITY – At least seven people have been kidnapped in Valle de Bravo, a popular tourist town in central Mexico, with three of the victims already released, state officials said Tuesday.
Three kidnappings have been reported in recent days, Mexico state Government Secretary Jose Manzur said.
The victim was rescued and three suspects were arrested in the first case, Manzur said.
Of the other “six victims, two have been freed,” while the other four “are in the hands of the kidnappers,” Manzur told Radio Formula.
“Certainly, we will have good news in the next few hours,” Manzur said.
The kidnappings are being carried out by two gangs operating in Valle de Bravo, a mountain town of about 60,000 located some 150 kilometers (93 miles) southwest of Mexico City, Manzur said.
The members of one gang are in jail and once the other gang’s members are “behind bars, the matter of Valle de Bravo will be resolved,” Manzur said.
The government of Mexico state, which surrounds the Federal District and forms part of the Mexico City metropolitan area, has responded to the wave of kidnappings by launching a special operation and deploying more police officers in the town.
“It is essential that there be peace in Valle de Bravo” so tourists will visit the area “in total tranquility,” Manzur said.
Fifteen kidnappings have been carried out in Valle de Bravo in the past month, with victims blaming drug traffickers from other states for the abductions, the non-governmental organization Alto al Secuestro said.
Mexico state registered the most kidnappings in Mexico in July, with 40 cases, followed by Tamaulipas, with 32, Guerrero, with 20, the Federal District, with 17, and Morelos, with 15.
A total of 4,809 kidnappings occurred in Mexico between Dec. 1, 2012, when President Enrique Peña Nieto’s term began, and July 31, or about one every three hours, said Alto al Secuestro, an organization founded by anti-kidnapping activist Isabel Miranda de Wallace.
Official figures show that 2,634 kidnappings occurred between Dec. 1, 2012, and June 30, 2014, well below the number arrived at by Alto al Secuestro.
Sunday, August 17, 2014
Mexico ( man killed while repairing truck )
VILLAGRÁN, Guanajuato.- A man of about 70 years he was shot to death while repairing a van near the downtown area. So far the origin of the attack and the identity of the attackers or unknown.
Around 14:20 am on Saturday, elements of various corporations Police and paramedics, they went to the corner that make up the Central Railroad Avenue and Pípila as through a call to the 066 emergency system, reported the existence of a seriously injured person, after being the subject of a shooting attack. arrival, and pulled off to the shop "Vinos La Esperanza", agents found the body of a man about 70, who had at least one gunshot wound to the height of the skull, which remained at a same side of a Ford truck type RAM, navy blue, with plates GM84377.
Around 14:20 am on Saturday, elements of various corporations Police and paramedics, they went to the corner that make up the Central Railroad Avenue and Pípila as through a call to the 066 emergency system, reported the existence of a seriously injured person, after being the subject of a shooting attack. arrival, and pulled off to the shop "Vinos La Esperanza", agents found the body of a man about 70, who had at least one gunshot wound to the height of the skull, which remained at a same side of a Ford truck type RAM, navy blue, with plates GM84377.
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Saturday, August 16, 2014
Iran ( Iranian Lesbian: We Are The Denied Identity )
Posted on: 7th March, 2014
Samira, an Iranian lesbian
As a part of women’s community, the Iranian lesbian community faces problems twice more than other women in Iran. For 8 March, International Women’s Day, we have prepared an interview with an Iranian lesbian who is also active in LGBT rights.*Please introduce yourself and give us a summary of your activities.
My name is Samira, an Iranian Lesbian. Because of lack of support by my family and other issues in the society, I was forced to leave Iran. I am a member of IRQO (Iranian Queer Organization), for now, I am active in LGBT issues and defending LGBT rights, doing researchers to finally improve the awareness of people with cooperation of my friends.
*Dear Samira, why you were forced to leave Iran? What were your problems in Iran? Was it the only solution to leave Iran?
As I mentioned, lack of support by family, problems in the society, by government and people, these are parts of issues that forced me to leave Iran. As you know, Iranian society is Masculism, and being a woman by itself, does not make you have enough civil rights, now imagine a woman who is a lesbian in this society. After many years of being aware of my orientation, I was forced to play a role, always I was forced to reject myself and wear a mask [of a woman who is not lesbian] in favor of my family and society. But it wasn’t me and my “real self” was oppressed. Regarding the last part of your question, I think abandoning and leaving is better than staying and sufferings in humiliation.
*Suppose the family as a small part of society, were you successful in educating your family about your desired issues? What was their reaction?
I tried in many ways, both directly and indirectly, by talking, showing documents, magazines and essays of homosexuals. But the reaction was always not to hear and pretending that this issue does not exist.
*Did you try to change the situation in favor of yourself in Iran? What was the reaction of street women to you?
Unfortunately no because of the fear of everything I couldn’t act or do any awareness in this issue. But I had some friends who I told them about it, they had a very bad reaction and even made me humiliated. But I tried to explain for them that I or any lesbian is not what you think. I always tried to behave like a homosexual, but the only result for me was depression.
*As an Iranian lesbian, how you explain the problems of this part of Iranian women’s society?
The government of Iran emphasizes the forbidding homosexuality by issuing severe sentences and punishments and also giving medical permission for sex-change to hide this issue in the society. In one sentence, we are always the denied identity. I have had [homosexual] friends who had faced misbehavior and discrimination such as being raped in custody, arrested in parties, deprived of education and work.
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