Saturday 30 November 2013

U.S. man in hot water in Dubai over parody video‏


(CNN) -- It was intended as a piece of comedy, but it's turned into a drama. A young American living in the United Arab Emirates has been imprisoned since April, his family says, for posting what was intended to be a funny video on the Internet.

Now, the family of Shezanne "Shez" Cassim wants to bring attention to his case ahead of a hearing December 16. The video in question is a 19-minute short that pokes fun at a clique of Dubai teens who are influenced by hip-hop culture. In the 1990s, the label "Satwa G" was coined for a group of suburban teens who were known to talk tougher than they really were.

The video depicts a look at a "combat school" in the suburb of Satwa, where these "gangsters" are trained. The training includes how to throw sandals at targets, using clothing accessories as whips, and how to call on the phone for backup. "It's like someone in the U.S. making a parody video of a Brooklyn hipster and getting thrown in jail for it and being held in jail for months without bail," Cassim's brother, Shervon Cassim, told CNN affiliate KARE. "That's what's going on here."

Cassim's family says Shez, 29, has been charged with endangering national security, but they've not been told what about the video endangered security. UAE authorities did not respond to CNN requests for details about what charges Cassim may be facing and why. "It's just a straightforward silly comedy video. And he's being treated like some sort of dangerous criminal, high security criminal that they need to keep under maximum security conditions," Shervon Cassim told KARE about his brother. Shez Cassim has lost a lot of weight, but is otherwise in good physical condition, his brother told CNN. 

Cassim, from Woodbury, Minnesota, moved to Dubai in 2006 after graduating college to work for PricewaterhouseCoopers. Dubai lands Middle East's first World Expo He and some friends made and posted the video online in 2012. He was arrested in April 2013. According to the family, Cassim and eight friends have been charged under a cybercrimes law for endangering public order. This law, the family says, wasn't passed until after the video had been released. Two attempts by Cassim's lawyers to get him released on bail have been rejected.

The U.S. State Department is providing consular services to Cassim, a department official said, and has attended all his court hearings. "The U.S. Embassy and Consulate General have engaged with UAE counterparts to urge a fair and expedient trial and judgment," the official said. 

The Satwa G's, the family said in a statement, were known as wanna-be gangsters, and that's how Cassim portrayed them. "These 'gangstas' were known for their decidedly mild behavior and were seen as the total opposite of actual criminals," the statement said. "The fictional training depicted in the video teaches techniques that include the best way to throw a sandal at a newspaper (target) and, ultimately, how to use the mobile phone when in trouble."At the last hearing, the judge in the case asked for an Arabic translation of the video, giving the family some hope that the authorities will realize that it was a parody. "I just want my son home for Christmas," said Cassim's mother, Jean Cassim, in a statement. "He's a good young man with a great career and has never been in trouble. Now he's being held for no reason. I've been praying, going to mass and lighting candles, and that's what I'm going to keep doing. "An average of about 2,500 Americans are jailed abroad every year, and about a third of those arrests are related to illegal drugs, the U.S. State Department says. "In 2010 alone, consular officers conducted more than 9,500 prison visits, and assisted more than 3,500 Americans who were arrested abroad," the State Department's website says.

Advice for U.S. citizens traveling abroad U.S. travelers in foreign countries is subject to the laws of those countries, and there's a limit to how much help they can get from the U.S. Embassy or Consulate there. U.S. diplomatic corps officials "cannot represent you in legal proceedings or pay your legal fees or other expenses. But they can perform many vital services such as providing a list of attorneys, assisting in contacting your family, helping your family to send money, and monitoring your health and welfare," the State Department says.

Source: cnn.com

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The Biggest Failure Of All? Never Trying‏


I have written a lot about failure. I am in favor of it.

Not the kind of failure where you bet everything on one roll of the dice and lose. That kind of failure is devastating because you have used up all your resources and you don’t get to try again. No, the kind of failure I am talking about is when you take a small step toward your goal and find it doesn’t work.
That kind of failure is far from fatal, and in fact can be helpful if you learn from it and put that learning to use with the next small step you take. (It’s part of the Act. Learn. Build. Repeat. Model we have talked about throughout.) So, small setbacks = Good. Large scale failures = Bad.

But there is one thing worse than large scale failures–and that is not starting anything new at all.
People can be extremely risk adverse and the idea of a venture not working out can scare them to the point where they never get underway. They keep thinking about the idea and/or maybe doing more and more research, and they never pull the trigger. Or they don’t start because their advisors are very conservative and keep pointing out reasons why they should delay and so they wait and think and refine and tweak and refine some more. Or they take too long to test the market, putting off actually beginning to the point where the competition has passed them by all these situations are sad.

As we have said before, if you think you have a good idea, get into the marketplace as quickly as you can, using as little money as possible, and see what happens. If it doesn’t work, you can always regroup.

But if you don’t try, you’ll never know.
###
Paul B. Brown is co-author of Just Start published by Harvard

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Thursday 21 November 2013

Chris Brown Back in Rehab After Rock Attack

A judge orders the R&B singer to spend three months in rehab after it emerges he threw a rock through his mother's car window.



Chris Brown has been ordered to spend three months in rehab after it was revealed he threw a rock through his mother's car window. The Grammy winner tossed the rock through the window on November 10 after a joint counseling session with his mother, during which she suggested the singer remain in treatment.

Details of the incident were revealed in a letter submitted to the court by the rehab facility, which discharged him after the outburst. The facility's name was not included in court filings.
The letter said: "Mr Brown proceeded to walk outside and pick up a rock and threw it through his mother's car window and it shattered." The singer was discharged because he had signed a contract agreeing to refrain from violence while in treatment.

Superior Court Judge James Brandlin also added additional rules for Brown in the coming months, requiring him to perform at least 24 hours of community labour a week and to submit to drug testing.


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Wednesday 20 November 2013

Pepsi say sorry to Cristiano Ronaldo for 'voodoo doll on train tracks' advert beforeWorld Cup qualifier‏

The picture was posted on Pepsi's official Facebook page in Sweden on the day the Swedes took on Ronaldo's Portugal in a crucial World Cup qualifier.



Pepsi has said sorry to Cristiano Ronaldo for ads of him in Sweden as a crushed voodoo doll before his World Cup hat-trick for Portugal. The soft drink giant offered "sincere and profound apologies" to the football star after posting a photo of a voodoo doll Ronaldo tied to railway tracks.

The picture was posted on Pepsi's official Facebook page in Sweden on the day the Swedes took on Ronaldo's Portugal in a crucial World Cup qualifier. The toy doll was wearing Portugal's red strip and Ronaldo's number 7, accompanied by the caption "We're going to pass over Portugal".
Another photo showed the doll Ronaldo's head crushed by a Pepsi can and a third showed it full of voodoo needles. Thousands of furious Portuguese fans had threatened to boycott the drink.



Ronaldo, 28, had the last laugh as he scored a hat-trick in his side's 3-2 victory over Sweden on Tuesday night to ensure Portugal's place in Brazil next summer. Pepsi, who sponsor Ronaldo's rival Leo Messi, said: "Football is known for the passion it inspires and the competition is getting more intense. We never wanted to give the sport a negative connotation. "Sorry to all those who were offended by the posts. They were immediately removed. "We also offer our most sincere and profound apologies to Cristiano Ronaldo and the Portuguese national side."

Source: www.mirror.co.uk

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Stonehenge archaeologist shave been digging in the wrong place - for 90 YEARS‏

The 11 bluestones were thought to be from Carn Meini in Pembrokeshire - geologists have
discovered they come from another hill just over a mile away.




Experts trying to uncover the source of Stonehenge’s giant stones have been digging in the wrong spot for 90 years. It has been a puzzle for generations how the huge Welsh blocks, weighing up to four tons, had reached the ancient monument.

Archeologists were certain the 11 bluestones came from Carn Meini one of the Preseli Hills in Pembrokeshire, 150 miles from Stonehenge in Wiltshire. But geologists using X-rays have discovered thestones actually come from another hill – just over a mile away.

Now archaeologists, who have spent decades digging for evidence of human activity in the wrong location, are moving to the new site. They hope to discover if prehistoric man cut the monoliths from the hill called Carn Goedog and transported them, or if the blocks were carried to 4,600-year-old Stonehenge by glaciers in the last Ice Age.

Dr Richard Bevins, of the National Museum of Wales, who helped to identify Carn Goedog as the true source of the stones, said: “I don’t expect to get Christmas cards from the archaeologists who have been excavating at the wrong place all these years.” He added: “This is an incredibly exciting project and we got confirmation last week that our findings have been verified . “Getting such positive feedback was a great relief.”
Dr Bevins, a leading authority on volcanic rocks, has been studying the Preseli Hills since the 70s.


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