Monday, February 28, 2011

Argentine military dictators on trial over baby kidnappings

Argentine military dictators on trial over baby kidnappings

Two former Argentine military dictators have gone on trial charged with the kidnapping of babies allegedly seized from political prisoners and opponents minutes after birth.

Argentine military dictators on trial over baby kidnappings

Jorge Videla, left, and Reynaldo Bignone, right, are accused along with six other former military figures Photo: AFP/GETTY

Robin Yapp

By Robin Yapp, Sao Paulo 7:06PM GMT 28 Feb 2011

Jorge Videla, who ruled Argentina from 1976 to 1981, and Reynaldo Bignone, the last leader of the military regime from 1982 to 1983, are accused along with six other former military figures.

Federico Delgado, federal prosecutor, called the theft of children "one of the darkest episodes in Argentina's history" as the case began in Buenos Aires.

About 500 babies were stolen from their mothers during the dictatorship, according to the campaign group Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo.

Pregnant female political dissidents were interned at secret maternity wards in centres used to torture opponents of the dictatorship.

The babies were handed to military officers or their relatives after birth while the mothers were simply killed, many of them dropped alive from military planes into the sea.

Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo has managed to identify 102 of the stolen babies so far, some of whom had become politicians or human rights activists.

"We were the regime's war spoils," said 33-year-old Leonardo Fossati, who was adopted after his parents were abducted while his mother was pregnant, as he gathered with other demonstrators on the steps of the court.

The eight on trial, who arrived at court in handcuffs, are accused of being responsible for 34 cases of kidnapping and falsifying children's identities.

Videla, 85, was considered the architect of Argentina's "dirty war" to eliminate left-wing guerrillas and supporters and has faced a series of trials since the country returned to democracy.

In December last year he was sentenced to life in jail for the torture and murder of 31 dissidents.

Bignone, 83, was sentenced to 25 years in jail last April for kidnappings and torture carried out at an army base before he became de facto president.

The dictatorship made some 30,000 people "disappear" altogether, according to human rights groups.

Evidence from 370 witnesses is due to be heard and the trial, which is being televised in Argentina, is expected to last until the end of the year.

maternity wards, jorge videla, war spoils, military dictators, political dissidents, human rights activists, federal prosecutor, military planes, military regime, political prisoners, campaign group, plaza de mayo, military figures, dirty war, fossati, yapp, military officers, grandmothers, guerrillas, dictatorship

Telegraph.feedsportal.com

H2O @ Groezrock 2010

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H2O @ Groezrock 2010

www.myspace.com/h2ofamily

Next uploads:
2010-04-24: Groezrock 2010 (H2O, Story of the Year, Bad Religion) @ Meerhout (Belgium)
2010-04-29: Alesana + A Skylit Drive + Emarosa @ Razzmatazz 2
2010-04-29: Muchachito Bombo Infierno @ Razzmatazz 1
2010-04-30: Viarock 2010 @ Villarrobledo
------------------- Mayo 2010 -------------------
2010-05-01: Viarock 2010 @ Villarrobledo
2010-05-02: Viarock 2010 @ Villarrobledo
2010-05-05: La Troba Kung-F @ Apolo
2010-05-06: Pennywise + Strike Anywhere + A Wilhelm Scream @ Apolo
2010-05-06: Electric Gozarela @ Carib Club (Razz 3)
2010-05-07: Telecogresca @ Sot del Migdia
2010-05-08: You Me At Six @ Razzmatazz 3
2010-05-11: Fun Lovin' Criminals @ Sala Bikini
2010-05-14: Berri Txarrak @ Apolo
2010-05-22: Gogol Bordello + Mariachi El Bronx @ Razzmatazz
2010-05-26: La Pegatina + CheSudaka + Muyayo Rif @ Salamandra
2010-05-27: Drizzle Of Dust @ Sala Bikini
2010-05-27: Sly & Robbie feat. Bitty Mc Lean @ Razzmatazz 2
2010-05-29: The Last Plague + A cuchillo + Addenda @ Qtres
------------------- Junio 2010 -------------------
2010-06-11: Standstill @ Apolo
2010-06-17: Sonar Festival 2010
2010-06-21: Between The Buried And Me + Vortice + The Eyes @ Salamandra
2010-06-22: Atreyu + Unearth + 36Crazyfists @ Razzmatazz 2
2010-06-23: Atreyu + Unearth + 36Crazyfists @ Sala Totem (Pamplona)
2010-06-24: Dawn Of The Maya photoshoot @ Pamplona
2010-06-25: Berri Txarrak @ Reus
2010-06-30: Day Of Rising @ Rocksound
------------------- Julio 2010 -------------------
2010-07-02: Berri Txarrak @ Aviny
2010-07-06: Alice In Chains @ Razzmatazz
2010-07-16: Cruilla BCN 2010 @ Parc del Frum
2010-07-17: Cruilla BCN 2010 @ Parc del Frum
2010-07-18: Joey Cape & Tony Sly @ Platja d'Ocata
2010-07-21: Toots & The Maytals @ Santana 27 (Bilbao)
2010-07-22: Pre-TakioFest @ Suances
2010-07-23: Takio Fest 2010 @ Suances
2010-07-24: Takio Fest 2010 @ Suances
2010-07-29: Resurrection 2010 @ Viveiro
2010-07-30: Resurrection 2010 @ Viveiro
2010-07-31: Resurrection 2010 @ Viveiro
------------------- Agosto 2010 -------------------
2010-08-05: Soziedad Alkoholika @ Erromoko Jaiak
2010-08-06: Habeas Corpus @ Astrabuduako Jaiak
2010-08-08: Berri Txarrak @ Gasteizko Jaiak
2010-08-14: Living LikeNothing Happened + Umbrella Corpse + Far'n'Hate + Clouds Over Normandy @ Be Cool
2010-08-19: Hammered Fest @ Donosti
2010-08-20: Hammered Fest @ Donosti
2010-08-21: Marvin Photoshoot @ Pamplona
------------------- Septiembre 2010 -------------------
2010-09-02: Clouds Over Normandy + All Fall Out @ Qtres
2010-09-03: Sintonitzza 2010 @ Santako
2010-09-04: Sintonitzza 2010 @ Santako
2010-09-04: Balkatalan Experience @ Santako
2010-09-06: La Pegatina + Los Barrankillos @ Santako
2010-09-16: Limp Bizkit @ Razzmatazz
2010-09-18: Not Available @ Estraperlo Club del Ritme
2010-09-23: BAM 2010 - La Pegatina + Obrint Pas + Balkatalan Experience @ Parc del Frum
2010-09-24: BAM 2010 @ Plaa Del Rei + Parc del Frum
2010-09-25: BAM 2010 @ Fabrica Damm + Toundra + Parc del Frum
------------------- Octubre 2010 -------------------
2010-10-07: elbicho @ Razzmatazz
2010-10-07: Cardiac @ The Metal Bar (Razz 4)
2010-10-08: Bigott @ La [2]
2010-10-10: Mad Caddies @ Estraperlo Club del Ritme
2010-10-15: D'Callaos @ Apolo
2010-10-15: Muchachito Bombo Infierno @ Salamandra
2010-10-16: Muchachito Bombo Infierno @ Faktoria d'Arts (Terrassa)
2010-10-17: La Pegatina @ Cerdanyola del Valls
2010-10-18: Vans Music Night - Anti-Flag + The Swellers + Pulled Apart By Horses @ Razzmatazz 2
2010-10-20: Avenged Sevenfold @ Sant Jordi Club
2010-10-22: Standstill "Room" @ L'Auditori
2010-10-24: Sick Of It All + Madball + Anal Hard @ Razzmatazz 2
2010-10-29: Balkatalan Experience @ La Farinera del Clot
------------------- Noviembre 2010 -------------------
2010-11-04: Noiseast @ The Metal Bar (Razz 4)
2010-11-06: LCD Soundsystem @ Razzmatazz
2010-11-10: Festin Canibal - Che Sudaka + Bomba Estereo + The Bares Band @ Apolo
2010-11-11: The Eastpak Antidote Tour - Sum 41 + The Black Pacific + Veara @ Sant Jordi Club
2010-11-11: Berri Txarrak @ Mundo Canibal
2010-11-12: These New Puritans @ City Hall
2010-11-12: Toundra + Carontte @ La Peixera (Manresa)
2010-11-13: Nothink + Toundra @ Sala Bikini
2010-11-20: Primal Scream @ Razzmatazz
2010-11-21: Four Year Strong + A Loss For Words + The Holybuttons @ Razzmatazz 3
2010-11-22: Rolo Tomassi + Clouds Over Normandy @ Sala Moog
2010-11-26: Israel Vibration + Txilum @ Salamandra
2010-11-27: Mantisa + Read My Lips + Potlach @ Rocksound
2010-11-30: Manu Chao "concierto clandestino" @ Salamandra
------------------- Diciembre 2010 -------------------
2010-12-02: Evergreen Terrace + Casey Jones + Read My Lips @ Estraperlo Club del Ritme
2010-12-03: The Bloody Betroots @ Apolo
2010-12-03: Yelle @ Razzmatazz Clubs
2010-12-07: M.I.A. @ Razzmatazz
2010-12-07: Semi Precious Weapons @ Razzmatazz Clubs
2010-12-10: Two Door Cinema Club @ Razzmatazz Clubs
2010-12-11: Ke$ha @ Razzmatazz 2
2010-12-11: Bongo Botrako @ Salamandra 2
2010-12-12: No Hunger Festival - Mendetz + Manos de Topo + Klaudia + El dia de la barbota @ Apolo
2010-12-16: Revolta - No Children + Marvel Hill + Hurricade @ La [2]
2010-12-17: Best Coast + Furguson @ Razzmatazz 2
2010-12-17: Nothing But Noise + The Wolf @ Sala Moog
2010-12-17: Sanjays @ La Ovella Negra
2010-12-17: Cola Jet Set + Papa Topo @ Razzmatazz Clubs (POP Bar)
2010-12-21: Muchachito Bombo Infierno @ Sala Apolo
2010-12-22: Muchachito Bombo Infierno @ Sala Apolo (segunda fecha)
2010-12-22: El nio de los recaos @ Sala Apolo
2010-12-27: Emir Kusturica & The No Smoking Orchestra @ Palau de la Musica Catalana
------------------- Enero 2011 -------------------
2011-01-15: Anal Hard @ Estraperlo
2011-01-17: The Sounds @ Nasty Mondays
2011-01-19: Nouvelle Vague @ Palau de la Musica Catalana
2011-01-21: Asking Alexandria + AID @ La [2]
2011-01-21: Breakdown Collapse + Yubarta + Clouds Over Normandy + Insmuz @ Qtres
2011-01-26: Bebe + Shinoflow @ Palau de la Musica Catalana
2011-01-26: Sherpah @ RumbaClub (La [2] de Apolo)
2011-01-28: Lori Meyers + Elastic Band @ Sala Apolo
2011-01-28: Cola Jet Set @ Ateneu de Grcia
2011-01-29: Slo Muchachito y Santos de Veracruz + Balkatalan Experience @ Sala Clap
------------------- Febrero 2011 -------------------
2011-02-02: Abril photoshoot
2011-02-05: Cavalera Conspiracy + Berri Txarrak + The Eyes + Vortice + The Eyes + Noiseast + The Lizards @ Razzmatazz
2011-02-12: A Day To Remember + Bayside + Pierce The Veil + Adept @ Razzmatazz 2
2011-02-13: Madee (concierto despedida) @ Sala Apolo
2011-02-16: Sanjays @ Moog
2011-02-17: Les Nits de la Kasba - Xc + Brujo + Chalart58 @ Sidecar
2011-02-18: Fiestas Demoscpicas Mondosonoro - El Guincho + Aliment + Der Ventilator + The Free Fall Band @ Razzmatazz
2011-02-18: Los Toros @ El local de la Mary
2011-02-20: More Than A Thousand + Far'n'Hate + AID @ Mephisto
2011-02-22: Janelle Mone @ Apolo
2011-02-24: Surface Festival fase 1: Cookie Monsters + Bustin' Out + Sons Of Meteora + Innverso + Tears In Rain + Defectos Fsicos + Tribal Brothers @ La Resistencia
2011-02-25: Love Of Lesbian @ Razzmatazz
2011-02-25: Day Of Rising + Krilin + Cohen @ Rocksound
2011-02-25: Let's Festival - Christina Rosenvinge + Single @ Salamandra

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Sunday, February 27, 2011

Christchurch earthquake: Heroism, endurance and tragedy inside the Pyne Gould building

Christchurch earthquake: Heroism, endurance and tragedy inside the Pyne Gould building

Five days after the earthquake hit New Zealand, Jonathan Pearlman pieces together the dramatic events in one building, revealing stories of heroism, endurance and tragedy.

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By Jonathan Pearlman, Christchurch 6:00PM GMT 26 Feb 2011

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It was the building that came to symbolise New Zealand's darkest hour – a once solid office block, crumpled and concertinaed by a devastating earthquake.

Images of the five-storey Pyne Gould office in central Christchurch were beamed around the world, as rescue workers raced to the office block to save those caught up in its mangled wreckage.

Seventy survivors were pulled out in the first 25 hours after the disaster struck, but since then no one has made it out alive.

Now, five days after the earthquake hit, The Sunday Telegraph has pieced together the dramatic events on each floor, revealing stories of heroism, endurance and tragedy as workers took cover under desks, rushed to save colleagues and lay trapped in the dark concrete rubble for hours. Some survivors escaped unscathed, others were only freed after limb amputations using improvised tools.

With the death toll at 145, and 200 still missing, Prime Minister John Key called for a two-minute national silence on March 1 to grieve for people killed in the country's worst natural disaster for 80 years.

It was just before 1pm on Tuesday when the earthquake, which measured 6.3 on the Richter Scale, turned what should have been a day at the office into a frantic struggle for survival.

Roslyn Chapman, 30, was five hours into her very first day at her new job as an accountant with the firm Leech & Partners, based on the second floor. She was at her desk waiting for a colleague to resume a training session as the clock showed 12.51pm.

"The building just started moving quite violently," she recalled. "At first I wasn't sure if it was just a minor tremor. Then I realised it was major."

It was not the first time that workers in the 1960s office building had experienced an earthquake. After a 7.1 magnitude tremor last September, they had joked that the only thing to fall in the building was a filing cabinet. This time, though, was very different. The structure simply crumpled, folding inwards around a central shaft.

Ms Chapman scrambled under her desk, but it began to collapse on top of her as a mound of debris shut out the light. She pushed herself away, and found a space to lie down.

"There were six of us," said Ms Chapman, who was rescued eight hours later. "We were able to call out to each other. We kept each other's spirits high... It was my first day on the job but I made some friends pretty quickly."

One of the six was Emma Howard, 23, another accountant. For most of the morning, her mind had been on other things than work. It was only three days until her wedding, and she was eagerly anticipating walking up the aisle at Christ the King Catholic Church, wearing her strapless ivory gown and celebrating with her friends and family.

Suddenly, she was thrown from her chair and took cover in a foetal position on the floor, shortly before debris smashed her desk into pieces.

In desperation, she sent a text to her fiancé, Chris Greenslade, to try to help him find her. "For about five hours, I thought I was going to die," said Ms Howard. "I went through crying fits." With the help of directions from her fiance, Ms Howard was rescued by a team which tore through the roof with jackhammers.

On the first floor, Tracey Stanners, 28, was working in the office of Pyne Gould Corporation, a financial advisory firm with almost 70 employees. A data entry clerk, Ms Stanners had stayed at her desk while others went out to buy their lunch. As the building collapsed around her, she found herself trapped in darkness under her desk. She too began sending SOS text messages, telling her family: "Trapped at work ceiling fell in on us can't get out," it read.

"I was hysterical, I couldn't really hear anything," said Ms Stanners. "The darkness really started getting to you."

All around her, colleagues did their best to avoid panicking. "Stay awake and keep breathing," went the constant refrain.

Keeping calm was not easy. Near Ms Stanners, a 52-year-old colleague, who has been named only as Brian, was in grave danger, his legs trapped beneath a mass of mangled concrete slabs.

Dr Stuart Philip, a Brisbane-based urological surgeon, was in the city for a conference and ran to the building with two other doctors. They spent five hours crawling through debris to get to the survivors.

Dr Philip and his colleagues were forced to amputate Brian's legs to free him, with a female urologist using an army knife and a hacksaw.

"There really wasn't any other option," Dr Philip said. "Essentially the procedure was performed with a Swiss army knife. A builder arrived with a hacksaw. I know that sounds terrible, but that's all we had."

The first survivor to appear had been Kristy Clemence, who clambered through the ceiling of the fourth floor onto the unstable rooftop just shortly after the tremor had finished.

The 1960s building, as experts explained later, had "pancaked" inwards. But amid the murky jumble of wiring and concrete, she spied what seemed like a passageway leading to the sky, and clambered through to find a flat section of roof.

Amid continuing aftershocks, she waited – the fear visible on her face – as workmates shouted at her from the footpath below to avoid the roof's edge. Her anxious rescue onto a crane then played out live on television.

"I thought, I have to get out of the building," she recalled later, in a tearful interview. "Either the building is going to go down and I am going to get crushed, or I'll get electrocuted.

"I was able to climb through but my hair got caught on some wiring and it stopped me from going forward. I remember ripping out a big chunk of my hair to get out of the building. I was thinking about my daughter. Who's going to look after her? That gave me the strength to get through and be strong."

It would be a long wait before any further survivors were seen emerging from the building.

In dark pockets amid the debris, co-workers who survived communicated via lights on their mobile phones and knocked pieces of concrete together to guide rescuers by the noise. Some lay alone for more than 24 hours, uncertain whether the building would cave in further or whether their cries would ever be heard.

"It happened so quickly – it was like a bomb going off," said Paul Howison, a former teacher who worked on third floor at the Education Review Office, a government department which reports on quality of schools.

"The floor went from underneath us and we fell some distance, and then a concrete slab from the floor above came crashing down next to where we had landed."

Rescuers poked cameras through holes in the rubble to search for signs of life. They sent in remote sound sensors, or yelled for any survivors to call out or make a knocking sound. Frequent aftershocks also raised fears the wreckage would further collapse. After each one, rescuers retreated from the scene and used static lasers to see if anything had shifted.

Anne Vos, a 57-year-old from Australia, who switches from office work to receptionist during the lunch hour, remained lying in the dark on the first floor for 24 hours. Certain of death, she used her mobile phone to say her last goodbye to her family. She then spoke to a Melbourne radio station.

"I hope someone knows I'm here," she said on radio. "A couple of hours ago, I thought that's it. I managed to wiggle out a bit. Now I have a wee bit of air here. I'm a bit happier ... I'm not giving up now."

Shortly after Ms Vos was dragged alive from the rubble. Then rescuers arrived at the building's last known survivor.

Two reporters were examining the building's ruins when they heard a tapping sound – and then a voice.

Deep inside the wreckage of Education Review Office on the third floor, Ann Bodkin, 53, lay on her back, wet and cold from the sprinklers, in a quiet vault she later described as a "concrete coffin".

A small hole allowed in a ray of daylight and much-needed air. At 2.25pm, amid cheers from onlookers, she was pulled out of the ruin.

"I thought, 'I have air and room, I can survive this'," she said. "I pushed negative thoughts away and was determined to get out."

Miss Bodkin's extraction, 25-and-a-half hours after the quake, brought elation to a nation that has endured its worst natural disaster.

But the boosted hopes were short-lived. Despite occasional rumours of survivors in broken church spires or other crumpled buildings across the city, no one has been found.

Three days after the earthquake, though, Emma Howard pressed ahead with her marriage plans, determined that life should carry on as normal. "I'm fortunate that everybody we invited originally will be there," she said. A bruise on her left arm was the only sign of her ordeal.

Officiating at the ceremony, Father John Adams said: "We are affirming that the final victory will go to love, not to despair."

But for other families, the pain continues. Since the rescue of Ms Bodkin, no more taps, text messages or voices have emerged from the rubble.

Among the dead was Philip McDonald, one of the directors of Leech & Partners, the second floor accountancy firm. Married to Sharon, Mr McDonald had three children, Michael, Chantelle and Andrea.

Chantelle McDonald said a colleague told the family her father did not make it out alive.

“She was talking to him and the next minute happened and she couldn’t see anything. But she just reached out for his hand and.... she couldn’t feel a pulse,” she said.

Mr McDonald was a sportsman with a passion for sailing and skiing. He was also chairman of Mid Canterbury Rugby Union, and on the board of the Canterbury Crusaders. “He was a great guy and board colleague and we will miss him greatly,” said Murray Ellis, Crusaders chairman.

Adam Fisher, 27, a financial advisor with a fiancee and young son, worked on the first floor and is still missing.

His mother, Gaye Fisher, appeared on national television last night and pledged to keep hope of his survival. “If there is any message I can send out to the families of other missing people it is – just be patient,” she said.

Irish accountant JJ O’Connor was also still missing inside the building.

The 40-year-old moved to New Zealand with his New Zealand-born wife, Sarah, last September to take up work. His wife is expecting their second child in May. They already have a two-year-old son.

Catherine O’Connor, Mr O’Connor’s cousin, said: “We’re hoping for a miracle. We’re all just hoping now.”

The majority of those killed were working on the first and second floors, as the building crumpled on top of them. No one based on the third floor Education Review Office died - partly because they had less debris falling on them, and also because many of them were out on school visits.

Mark Maynard's wife, Kelly, who had just started working the week before as a legal executive on the first floor, rang him 20 minutes before the quake to say she left her mobile phone at home. There has been no word since.

On Thursday, he returned to the building with a rose from his garden, which he handed to a rescuer to place on top of the site.

Yesterday, a team of British rescuers was searching for her body.

"It's a waiting game." he told The Sunday Telegraph. "I've got two daughters and I need to continue for the kids."

Asked if he held any hope that his wife could be recovered, he said: "No. When you look at the building, there is no way."
Telegraph.feedsportal.com

Swansea City 3 Leeds United 0: match report

Swansea City 3 Leeds United 0: match report

Read a full match report of the Premier League game between Swansea City and Leeds United at Liberty Stadium on Saturday Feb 26 2011.

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Swansea City 3 Leeds United 0: match report -Scott Sinclair

On the button: Scott Sinclair hit the target for Swansea City twice Photo: ACTION IMAGES

By Rob Stewart 5:50PM GMT 26 Feb 2011

Swansea City remain on course for a place in the Premier League courtesy of two goals from Scott Sinclair and a third from former West Bromwich Albion striker Luke Moore.

Sinclair, the 21-year-old former Chelsea starlet, struck either side of half time, to earn Brendan Rogers' side an 11th home win of the season and a ninth in their last 11 Championship games.

Moore, who couldn't buy a goal in January, applied the finishing touch to a sublime Swansea performance, with his second in as many home games.

In contrast, Leeds United, who had lost only three of their previous 16 away matches, were a shadow of the side so deserving of their place in the top six.

However, they were unfortunate not to have been awarded a first half penalty when Alan Tate's blatant handball went unpunished. Still, they were second best for much of the contest and threatened only twice, through South African David Somma.

The 25-year-old striker, who earned Leeds a point against fellow high-flyers Norwich City at Elland Road seven days ago, saw his first half header beaten onto the bar by Swansea goalkeeper Dorus de Vries and was denied once again, by the Dutchman, after Neil Kilkenny's precise pass 10 minutes into the second half.

Having scored eight times in their last three games, since losing to Cardiff City three weeks ago, Swansea might have been three goals to the good before Sinclair's well-executed finish.

Stephen Dobbie struck an upright after five minutes, Sinclair volleyed high and wide from Mark Gower's corner and Nathan Dyer ballooned his shot over the top.

The goal itself was reward for Sinclair's sublime movement in the final third. After collecting the ball deep in the Leeds half, the young forward exchanged passes with Moore before side-footing the ball past Kasper Schmeichel.

Leeds knew their luck was out when Tate handled a Robert Snodgrass shot, a dozen minutes before the break, but got away with it. A minute later, de Vries added to the visitors' frustration by rising well to push Somma's header onto the bar.

Max Gradel's clumsy challenge on Dyer, eight minutes into the second half, gave referee Phil Dowd little option but to award a spot kick and though Leeds remonstrated, Sinclair kept his cool and made safe three more valuable points.

Gower's 67th minute free-kick was pushed around the post by Schmeichel, but the visitors were powerless to prevent Moore from nipping in to seal the spoils.

Match details

Swansea (4-5-1): D de Vries; A Rangel, A Williams, A Tate, N Taylor; J Allen, S Dobbie (L Britton 76), M Gower, N Dyer, S Sinclair; L Moore (C Beattie 79)
Goals: Sinclair 13, 55 pen, Moore 72
Leeds United (4-4-2): K Schmeichel; A Bruce, E Lichaj, G McCartney (B Parker 73), A O'Brien; M Gradel, N Kilkenny, J Howson, R Snodgrass (B Paynter 73); D Somma, L Becchio (S Watt 61)
Referee: P Dowd (Stoke)

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Telegraph.feedsportal.com

57/365 - 2/26/2011

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57/365 - 2/26/2011

Went out looking for something really original and exciting today. I got this. It's an evergreen tree. With snow. blurg....

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Saturday, February 26, 2011

Speed, Commerce Skewed Track's Design

(See Corrections & Amplifications item below.)

Years before a young luge racer from the Republic of Georgia flew to his death at the Olympics last week, officials made a series of decisions designed to make the icy track a commercial success after the Games but that left it faster, and ultimately more dangerous, than any competitive track before.

Whistler's Fast Track

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See details from the engineer on specific curves on the Whistler luge course.

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[SB10001424052748704804204575069611057394680]

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A luger slid past an improvised safety wall at the Whistler Sliding Center Saturday.

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Tour luge tracks around the world.

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Driven in part by the desire to locate the luge and bobsled track for the 2010 Vancouver Games in a high-traffic tourist area with cold temperatures, planners chose a valley at Whistler resort that was steeper and narrower than sites of previous Olympic tracks, according to press reports and interviews with those involved.

The result was a track whose speeds marked a quantum leap in a sport where even small increases require big adjustments from the athletes. After trials of the track in 2008, the course's German designer says he told the Vancouver Games' organizers and the international luge and bobsledding governing bodies that he was revising the track's projected luge speed upward by 5.5%—to 96 miles an hour—nearly nine miles an hour faster than the standing 2000 world speed record.

According to 2008 engineering documents and letters reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, officials signed off on the course's speeds. By last year, some of these officials said such speeds are unsafe and recommended that courses built in the future be slower.

Following the death of Nodar Kumaritashvili, the Vancouver organizing committee, Vanoc, and the international federation that governs luge racing said the track was safe. The racer, they say, failed to control his sled.

In the wake of the death, Vanoc and the governing bodies for luge and bobsledding, which use the same track, added a large wooden wall on the outside of the turn where the Georgian flew off the track. They padded the steel posts that bore the brunt of the collision. They also made moves to slow top speeds, including starting all luge athletes from lower points on the course to slow them down by as much as five miles an hour.

video  

Olympics: Luge Track Compromised From the Start

1:51

WSJ's Reed Albergotti reports about how design and location choices may have compromised the luge track that proved fatal during a training run.

video  

Georgian Luger's Body Arrives Home

1:58

The body of Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili arrives at his family's home, as those close to him vent their anger about his death at the Olympics. Video courtesy of Reuters.

"It's a high-speed sport," said Renee Smith-Valade, spokeswoman for Vanoc. "A miscalculation can have serious and sometimes fatal consequences." She added that there were no major injuries in two years of trials and training and that athletes were exhilarated by the course.

Vanoc on Tuesday declined to make officials involved in track planning available to respond to specific questions about the track's safety and planning, citing their packed Olympic schedules.

A reconstruction of the events leading up to Mr. Kumaritashvili's death shows that the track was the result of decisions that weren't entirely related to sport.

Before Vancouver bid for the 2010 Winter Games, the city's organizing committee consulted closely with the two international federations that set standards for bobsledding and luge tracks: the International Luge Federation and International Federation of Bobsleigh and Tobogganing. The federations and organizing committee members first looked at Grouse Mountain in North Vancouver, which they considered a top choice for the track, say people involved in the course's early planning.

But soon, the Vancouver bid committee agreed to move the location up into the Coast Mountains to the ski resort of Whistler, where the alpine ski events would be taking place.

Tim Gayda, the vice president of sport for the Vancouver organizing committee, told the Vancouver Sun in October 2002 that the decision would make the track financially viable after the Games.

"In order to make this thing financially sustainable, we want it someplace where people will pay top dollar to go whipping down this thing in both summer and winter," Mr. Gayda told the newspaper. The luge and bobsledding federations, he added, were "pushing us to look at options at Whistler."

video  

The Sport of Luge

1:37

Olympic silver medalist in luge, Gordy Sheer, shares some details about the sport, speed and safety with WSJ's Reed Albergotti.

video  

Changes Made in Olympic Luge

1:26

While insisting that the track at the Whistler Sliding Center was safe, Olympic and luge officials announced several changes to the luge competition. Video courtesy of Reuters.

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Georgia Leader: No Mistake Should Lead to Death

4:39

Georgian President Mikahail Saakshvili speaks about the death of Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili.

Journal Community

The Vancouver organizing committee didn't make Mr. Gayda or others associated with constructing the track available for comment. Officials with the International Olympic Committee referred questions about the track's specifications to the luge and bobsled federations.

The International Luge Federation declined to respond to multiple phone and email requests for comment on detailed questions about the track.

Bob Storey, the bobsled federation's president and a former bobsledder, said it would be jumping to conclusions to blame the Mr. Kumaritashvili's crash on speed. "The Royal Canadian Mounted Police did not attribute it to design flaws and did not attribute it to speed," he said. "The reason they call it an accident is that nobody can define the cause."

Weather was one factor in locating the run in Whistler, said Terry Gudzowsky, a technical delegate for the bobsled federation who, as a then-member of Canada's bobsled federation, participated in the initial planning. Grouse Mountain often has warmish, wet winters that could lead to mushier, slower ice. Mr. Gudzowsky said he advocated at the time moving it to Whistler, whose higher elevation made it more appealing to the sport.

"That was not an engineering decision," said the bobsled federation's Mr. Storey. "That was a commercial decision."

The available land at Whistler was steep and narrow. The committee found a plot about 100 yards wide by roughly 800 yards long. The topography meant the course would be unusually difficult and fast, according to the bobsled federation's Mr. Gudzowsky.

Mr. Gudzowsky recalls sitting in a municipal-building room in Whistler with a topographical map and drawing a fall line for the course. "It would have been nicer if the site would have been wider," he says. But the land seemed good enough. "The perfect location for a track has not been found yet."

Mr. Gudzowsky says his sketch was sent to German luge-course designer Udo Gurgel.

The 71-year-old Mr. Gurgel had built most of the major new luge runs in the world, including six Olympic tracks, over four-plus decades. He says the Whistler terrain was one of the steepest and narrowest possible. Its 100-yard-wide valley compares with Calgary's 300 yards and Salt Lake City's 500 yards.

That meant the site was too narrow to build in typical speed-slowing long curves, such as "kreisel" curves, he said. Whistler's had to be short and tight, which meant high gravitational forces against the driver in the curves and, toward the end, because the G-forces would be too much to bear, almost no curves, allowing sleds to break through previous top speeds.

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Complete Coverage: Vancouver Olympics

The course's dangers became part of its marketing.

"Vivid, violent and rough— the Whistler Sliding Centre is not for the faint of heart," the Web site of the center, operated by Vanoc, said in promotional material that remained on the site this week. "The track has a rhythm that every slider must try to capture. Sliders must find it early in their run. If they lose it, it will be hard to get back on the beat."

Soon after the track opened for testing in March 2008, it became apparent that it was faster than expected. Mr. Gurgel had projected a top speed of about 91 miles an hour for the luge. That speed was matched immediately by a test rider, Mr. Gurgel said, implying that speeds would rise once athletes got used to the tracks.

"It was crazy fast," recalls Polish luger Maciej Kurowski, who tried the track when it opened. "Everyone wants to go faster and faster in this sport."

Mr. Gurgel reprogrammed his computer simulator to take into account the early test runs and came up with a top speed of about 96 miles an hour.

Mr. Gurgel says he relayed his findings to the two federations and Vanoc in March 2008. In a letter dated March 17, 2008, and reviewed by the Journal, the International Federation for Bobsleigh told Mr. Gurgel that the federation had formally approved the Whistler Sliding Centre as a venue for international competition.

According to the letter, the federation conditioned its approval on the construction of safety walls and guidelines that require inexperienced riders to start lower down the course.

Lugers themselves were beginning to express concerns. Austrian Wolfgang Kindl said that after test runs in 2008, he and his teammates discussed how the course's lack of turns and ever-increasing speed made it hard to make corrections. "If you started to have problems there was nothing you could do because of the speed," he said after placing ninth at this week's medal competition.

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discuss

“ The error wasn't in designing a difficult, fast course - the error was in failing to ensure that, at any given point on the course, a crash would NOT result in a head-on collision with a solid piece of metal. That error made the difference between injury and instantaneous death. ”

—Jon Stokes

Luge federation officials reacted to those concerns about the Whistler course earlier this year, saying that future luge runs shouldn't exceed 87 miles an hour, the old speed record. But the decision didn't affect existing tracks, so the Vancouver track wouldn't be changed. The day before Mr. Kumaritashvili's death, another Austrian luger hit Mr. Gurgel's projected 96-mile-an-hour maximum speed.

That prompted Josef Fendt, head of the luge federation, to tell the Journal in an interview after the death that he was surprised by the new speeds.

But Mr. Gurgel says that even that speed was lower than he had told officials to expect. Late last year, working from data from 2008 and 2009, he modeled a possible top speed of about 102 miles an hour. He says he forwarded his findings to officials at the two federations, who he said agreed the facility would be safe at higher speeds.

As often happens during Olympic controversies, it is unclear who bears ultimate responsibility among numerous committees and federations.

The IOC and Vanoc have both said they aren't responsible for the tracks because they essentially subcontract technical specifications out to the luge and bobsleigh federations.

It's unclear whether anyone can be held legally liable. All athletes involved in the games must sign a legal liability waiver with the IOC, which says that they participate at their own risk.

Some legal experts say that any potential lawsuit filed against the IOC, the luge federations or the designers by Mr. Kumaritashvili's family—which has said it doesn't want to sue—would face significant hurdles. The law in Canada, the U.S. and many other countries provides that people participating in potentially dangerous sports "assume" the risks inherent in them and therefore are often barred from suing, unless lawyers could show organizers' negligence.

Related

Luger Who Died Was Terrified of Track

IOC Comments on WSJ Investigation Into Luge Track

That authorities made changes to the track after the accident might seem to indicate an acknowledgment of fault. But Ryan Rodenberg, a lawyer who teaches sports law at Indiana University, says that for public-policy reasons, such evidence would likely not be admissible in court as proof of such acknowledgment. "You don't want people shying away from corrections or improvements because they fear they'll be used against them in court," said Mr. Rodenberg.

One potential issue may have been the division of labor in laying out the course. Mr. Gurgel said that at other tracks, he has been the general contractor, in charge of building the safety walls and other equipment. This time, he was limited to designing the sheet of concrete that became the track, with the Vancouver organizers contracting out the safety features and the roof, which required the supporting column that Mr. Kumaritashvili hit. Officials from the luge and bobsled federations say the safety walls weren't the problem.

—Geoffrey A. Fowler, Ashby Jones, Matthew Futterman and Adam Thompson contributed to this article.

Write to David Crawford at david.crawford@wsj.com, Reed Albergotti at reed.albergotti@wsj.com and Ian Johnson at ian.johnson@wsj.com

Corrections & Amplifications

Whistler, British Columbia, is situated in Canada's Coast Mountains. An earlier version of this article incorrectly indicated it is in the Canadian Rockies. The above article has been corrected.
Online.wsj.com

far from the madding crowd

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Kinderdijk, looking back at the 2010 series

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Kinderdijk, looking back at the 2010 series

As you've may have noticed, I'm closing my 2010 series, this is my last upload of the Kinderdijk.
TGIF my friends!

Kinderdijk (a free translation: Childrendike) is a village in the province South-Holland in the Netherlands and is part of the commnity Nieuw-Lekkerland.
The place is famous for it's mills, which are on the World heritage list of UNESCO since 1997.
There are nineteen mills, build around 1740.
Pastures with grass-feeding cattle, willows and mills, long stretched villages on dikes and near rivers, hitorcal farms and blooming fruitorchards, this is the typical argrarian culturelandscape of the south edge of the green hart of the Netherlands.
Kinderdijk was the first dutch village with electricity supply, in 1886.
There are many story's about the name Kinderdijk. The most famous one is as follows:
In 1421 there was a big flood, called the Saint Elisabethsflood. When the worst part of the storm was over, people climbed on the dike to see what the damage was and they saw a creadle floating on the water. They had no hope that there was something alive in that cradle, but when they came closer, they saw a cat jumping on that cradle from one side to another to keep it in balance, so that there couldn't come any water in that cradle.When that cradle finally reached the dike, they saw a baby peacefully sleeping in that cradle, tadaa....Kinderdijk, with thanks to that cat ofcourse.

If you want, view large: View On White

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Friday, February 25, 2011

Franois-Joseph Navez - Women Spinning in Fondi at Neue Pinakothek Munich Germany

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Franois-Joseph Navez - Women Spinning in Fondi at Neue Pinakothek Munich Germany

Franois-Joseph Navez - Women Spinning in Fondi (1845)

Neue Pinakothek Art Museum Munich Germany

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Thursday, February 24, 2011

Empire State

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Madang Resort View

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Olympique Marseille v Manchester United: live

Olympique Marseille v Manchester United: live

Follow minute-by-minute commentary of the Champions League last 16 game between Olympique Marseille and Manchester United at Stade Velodrome on Wednesday Feb 23 2011, kick-off 19:45 GMT.

LIVE

REPORT

MARSEILLE

0 - 0

FT

MAN UTD

Wednesday, February 23 19:45

Champions League

Stade Vdrome

(HT 0-0)

Nani

Old and new: United's Portuguese forward Nani (right) competes for the ball with Marseille's Argentine defender Gabriel Heinze Photo: AP

Jonathan Liew

By Jonathan Liew 9:49PM GMT 23 Feb 2011

Jonathan's Twitter

COMMENTARY

KEY MOMENTS

WRAP: Well, that'll be about all from me. I could go on for for pages and pages about the defensive masterclass we just witnessed, but I'm not entirely confident anybody would be interested. Ultimately, both sides were happy to leave it to a 90-minute shoot-out at Old Trafford, and given that half the ties in this round are more or less over (four away wins, and just one home win) it's not a bad result for the neutral, either. Thanks for all your emails, I'll see you anon.

21.45 Fergie's still raw about the incident between M'bia and Rooney on 87 minutes. "It's a red card," the Govan knight announces. "The game was disappointing. They made sure they weren't going to lose a goal. We got into some good positions at times, but not enough."

But he's still fairly chipper about making it through: "Nil-nil can be a dangerous score, but it's about winning the game, and if we win the game, we're through."

And on Chris Smalling: "A very sound performance. Excellent. Excellent again. He likes defending." Well that's fortunate, given that he's a defender.

21.40 Right, here's Sir Alex.

21.38 Imagine going to a restaurant. A pretty good restaurant, as well - one of the best 16 in Europe, apparently. They bring you your starters, and it's not bad. They clear the starters away, and you sit and wait for the main course. Through the hatch you can see your main courses being prepared in the kitchen, but time passes and you're still waiting. Eventually the waiter comes over and tells you that your main course will be ready, but only if you come back in three weeks' time. "Well," you'll be able to tell him, "I've thought of the perfect analogy for this."

21.34 Mario Gomez has scored what must be a late winner for Bayern Munich at the San Siro! Are we about to see all three Italian teams going out at the last-16 stage?

FULL TIME Marseille 0-0 Manchester United A result that suits pretty much everyone except me, and you. The red flares go off in the crowd as the players shake hands and ITV, like a smoker dashing out for a fag, goes straight to a commercial break.

90 min Just the one minute of injury time. Nani dances down the left, but he fouls Diawara as he does so. That will probably be it.

89 min Oh, that's nothing like it from Valbuena. Again it fails to clear Berbatov on the near post. As the ball comes back in, referee Felix Brych spots an infringement in the area and awards a free-kick to United.

88 min We're in for a grandstand finish! Ayew wins a corner on the Marseille left!

87 min Berbatov with the header away from Valbuena's corner. Diawara tries a piledriver from 30 yards, but it hits Smalling and runs safe. And Berbatov almost plays it through to Rooney on the break! It wasn't the best ball, and M'bia can wrestle Rooney off the ball in a slightly licentious fashion.

86 min The ball runs out of play and into the hands of Alex Ferguson. Heinze dashes up to him and snatches the ball out of his hands. No love lost between those two... Marseille take the throw, work it down the left, and win a corner.

84 min It ain't gonna happen, is it? Another long ball from the back in the direction of Rooney, but Mandanda claims it easily, like plucking apples off a tree.

83 min It goes short, and Fletcher's cross from the right is blocked by M'bia. A second effort is claimed by Mandanda under pressure from Rooney. United have just switched it round a little here, Fletcher going out to the right, Rooney taking up a more central position and Nani trying to work the left flank.

82 min Now, free-kick to United about 45 yards out after Diawara grapples with Nani. Scholes to take.

81 min Nani almost through after a lovely United move! Nani started the move, nutmegging Valbuena and slipping it to Berbatov. Berbatov tried to play it into the path of Nani, but Kabore just got the tiniest deflection on it, and that gave Mandanda enough time to race out and claim the ball.

E-mail 79 min The Gibson debate continues to rage. "Give Darron Gibson a break," urges Steven Craigie. "Sir Alex obviously sees something in him we don't see, and he's hardly ever wrong." Poborsky! Cruyff! Kleberson! Veron! Djemba-Djemba! Fortune! Bellion! Miller! Prunier! This one will run and run.

78 min A huge cheer for Valbuena, whose season looked to be over when he got his knee injury last month. Instead, here he is in the last 16 of the Champions League. Remy makes way. Here's hoping the introduction of Scholes and Valbuena open this game out a bit. We could, to borrow a well-worn footballing sentiment, do with a goal.

77 min Scholes is jittering about like a horny chinchilla here. He wants to be on the end of every ball, including his own. He slips the ball to Berbatov on the United left, and the Bulgarian wins a corner. The corner goes short, and Evra can't get a cross in.

76 min All right, that's more like it! Valbuena's stripped off and getting warm. He'll make his entrance at the next suitable juncture in play.

E-mail 75 min Vidic sends it long for Rooney, but it trickles out for a goal-kick. Adrian Guzman has sent me a one-word email, and possibly the most sensible one-word email I've received: "Chicharito!!!"

E-mail 73 min Berbatov shoots well over from about 25 yards. "Gibson, give me your bib, son!" writes Philip Marshall. "I heard that Carrick vomited when he realised that he was lining up beside the mono-browed buffoon. I wouldn't have him in my village team, and we're a bunch of overweight old men." Oh come on, Philip, get off the fence.

71 min Farewell, Darron Gibson. Adieu, goodbye, mwah, mwah. He did all right, actually. Paul Scholes comes on.

69 min There is going to be a change for Marseille, but it's not Valbuena but Cheyrou who comes on, replacing Edouard Cisse. Any bright ideas on how to breathe some fire into this game, anyone? All suggestions gratefully accepted, up to and including the actual exhalation of fire, into the game.

68 min Berbatov with a superb chance! It's blocked! The ball trickled into the Marseille area after a pull-back from O'Shea and a back-heel by Nani, Fanni looked to have it covered but missed it completely, and Diawara desperately dived in to deny Berbatov.

67 min Brandao almost gets in behind the United defence. Driven by little but primal fear, Smalling tears back into position and dispossesses him.

65 min We've still not seen a substitution from either side. You sense Alex Ferguson will make a move soon if he wants to leave France with an away goal. He's always said that a 0-0 in the first leg favours the home team.

63 min Listen to that noise. The crowd at the Stade Velodrome sense that the momentum is with them. All they need is that final ball... and that's not it from Heinze. Yuk, yuk, yuk.

61 min Ayew! And Brandao was unmarked at the far post! Remy took the shot, it was blocked and muddled its way through to Ayew, and although the Ghanaian's left-footed shot was dragged well wide, it almost went into the path of Brandao, who couldn't react quickly enough! The last five minutes have been all Marseille.

60 min And now it's a free-kick on the Marseille left, which Lucho is going to take... nah, it's headed away. All right, Didier, have a look at your watch. What does it say? What does it say? That's right, it's Valbuena time.

59 min Here's Remy, all body feints and dancing feet! Vidic blocks it out for a corner. The noise level rises.

58 min Rooney spots Mandanda off his line and tries to chip him from 50 yards! He doesn't get nearly enough on that, though.

57 min It's been a good few minutes for Marseille, actually. Carrick, who so far has been about as much use as a singing carrot, puts the ball out for a throw on the Marseille left, but United are struggling to stamp their mark on the game in this half.

56 min Lucho almost gets on the end of a sumptuous long ball from Heinze, who's had a good few minutes. Van der Sar rushes out and catches the ball with his eyes closed, which is quite a trick.

54 min Rooney crosses from the left, and Heinze with a crucial header away as Mandanda comes for it and misses! Nani was ready to head that into an empty net, but Heinze used all his experience, and all his head, to clear the danger.

53 min Brandao tries to glance a header past Van der Sar from all of 15 yards! That's an easy claim for the goalkeeper. Still, you'd have to put that down as one of Marseille's best chances of the game, right up there with that moment when they made five passes in a row in the Manchester United half. It was Lucho with the cross.

51 min Van der Sar sweeps out of his goalmouth to pick a cross from off the head of Remy.

50 min Brandao heads it away at the near post. Berbatov fouls Cisse as United try to build again.

49 min Vidic and Brandao go up for a high ball. They both make it down to the ground safely, but as they land Brandao's left elbow flies out and catches Vidic in the jaw. By accident or design? Nothing's given. United get a corner on the left.

47 min A little glance by Nani, and O'Shea is away. The Irishman looks up and tries to pick out a cross. Diawara heads it away.

46 min Ayew tries to bundle his way through the United midfield, but gets blocked off.

20.45 Fergie reckons United could pass it better. He also blames the hardness of the pitch. Andy Townsend reckons Marseille don't have much to worry United. I reckon Marseille have a lot more to worry United than Andy Townsend does. Or ever did. Right, we're off again.

20.44 Not that this has been anything like a classic. It's about as much of a classic as Dan Brown's Deception Point, only with a good deal less action. On a number of occasions, however, both teams have come close to coming close, if you see what I mean. The defences are just about managing to hold things together, but the approach play's been pretty good so far. Nani's giving Gabriel Heinze a good solid workout on the United right. Remy's mainly ploughed the right touchline, but he's popped up a few times on the left, to the good-natured surprise of all. And throughout, the spectre of Wayne Rooney looms large. What will he do this time? Will he score from 45 yards? Will he bend time? Will he score a tap-in and then lift up his shirt to reveal solidarity with the people of Libya? Who knows?

20.34 In the other games tonight, it's Inter Milan 0-0 Bayern Munich and Arsenal 1-0 Stoke. I've not tried putting scorelines in italics before, it's rather satisfying. Almost as if they're landmark legal cases. From what I've been hearing, however, Inter v Bayern is succeeding only in being a landmark in boredom so far.

HALF TIME Marseille 0-0 Manchester United

45 min Oh right, that's half-time. Cup of tea, everyone? Cup of tea.

44 min Here's Nani again, dancing down the right. Heinze's terrified of lunging in, and backs off, backs off, backs off. He does quite well in the end, actually, timing his slide as Nani's about to cross and winning a goal-kick.

43 min Shot from distance by Kabore! Yeah, that's gone miles wide. But better from Marseille, who are managing to push United back here.

42 min M'bia wins that round, going down as the corner comes in and winning a free-kick.

41 min Now, a corner to United as Heinze slides in to block a cross from Nani on the right. Some silliness in the area as Berbatov wants to slow dance with M'bia and M'bia expresses his preference for the windmill...

40 min And the corner almost snuck in at Van der Sar's near post! You could see Van der Sar coming to the slow but alarming realisation that he was going to have to intercept the ball's trajectory, and eventually caught it none too confidently at his near post.

39 min Fine cross by Remy! Vidic has to head it out for a corner...

38 min Nani shifts inside in search of a little space. He goes down under the challenge of Cisse, and as he falls, handles the ball.

E-mail 36 min "Dear Jonathan," writes Rob Potter. "If you spent more time watching the game instead of complaining about the ITV commentators, you might note that Darron Gibson has made all of the passes setting Nani free down the right tonight. I will admit to being surprised myself, but credit where it is due, eh?" Just as I paste those words in, Gibson tries another pass through to Nani that gets cut out. Fair point, though.

35 min Lucho with the cross from the left. Brandao's orange boots propel him skywards, but Vidic heads the ball safely into the arms of Van der Sar.

33 min Evra crosses from the left. A Marseille foot flies in and clears it. Now Marseille might be able to break, but Vidic spots the dangers and shovels it out for a throw.

32 min It's got the feel of a slow-burner, this game. We've not seen the best of United, but we've not seen the best of Marseille, either. The best players on the pitch have been O'Shea, Fletcher, Cisse and Kabore, rather than Rooney, Berbatov, Lucho and Brandao.

31 min Nani with a superb cross from the right! It's smack in the path of Berbatov, but an alert Mandanda rushes out and nicks it.

30 min Another huge long ball from Smalling. Under pressure from Nani, Heinze heads it out for a throw. Or rather, he misjudges the ball completely, it ends up hitting him on the back of the neck, and it goes out for a throw.

28 min Now, here's Heinze, the man Liverpool fans will remember as 'The Man Who Would Be Konchesky'. He clips a cross to Brandao in the area, who brings it down on his chest and tries an acrobatic bicycle kick that trickles harmlessly into the arms of Van der Sar.

26 min Another burst down the left by Remy. This time he wins a corner, which Lucho is going to take. We haven't seen too much of Lucho so far... and that's a less than sparkling corner, landing at the feet of Smalling on the near post.

25 min And now Evra gives the ball away. Marseille spread the ball left, and Remy runs at O'Shea, with Fletcher also tracking him. The cross is blocked.

23 min Marseille have just come back into this. United have given the ball away a few times, and they're suddenly looking a lot less certain in possession. Remy reverses the ball for Ayew, whose fierce left-footed shot is blocked.

22 min Fanni with a deep, swirling cross to the back post. Smalling heads it away.

Twitter 20 min "How do you rate Darron Gibson?" asks Sam Ainsworth on Twitter. "It's obvious he's wasting away at United, but is he any good?" No, would be my short answer to that one. He's got a hard shot, though, which will get you a surprisingly long way in the game.

18 min Kabore spreads it right to Remy. The cross just flicks Vidic, and Van der Sar catches at his near post. Remy reckons it went out of play for a corner, but referee Felix Brych doesn't.

17 min Ayew, one of the few remaining players in the competition to be named after a Pink Floyd song, almost gets clear down the left, but O'Shea closes him down hastily and he has to go backwards.

15 min The game's just settled down a bit after than slightly hairy start. The quality's not too bad, either. As I say that, Rooney runs the ball straight out of play down the left.

E-mail 14 min Tom Godfrey writes: "Five minutes in and that's two 'fervid's and a 'fervent' already from Drury. Someone's been on dictionary.com." Everybody's got their favourite piece of Peter Drury commentary. Mine is: "Lightning on the verge of striking twice, albeit 200 miles apart." What's yours? Do share.

12 min Diawara tries to switch the ball from right flank to left, and almost gives the ball straight to Berbatov! If Berbatov had managed to control that, he would have been 40 yards from goal with not a defender in sight.

11 min "There's a breeze here tonight," Peter Drury reckons. "I think it's called Le Mistral." Peter Drury speculating about unwelcome blasts of cold air. You couldn't write this stuff.

10 min Rooney's volley is blocked. Nani again got down the right and crossed, but it just wouldn't sit down for Rooney.

9 min United with the better start and more possession. Nani finding space on the right. Rooney popping up in all kinds of unexpected positions, like the centre circle, and the left wing.

7 min M'bia brings down Nani on the United right. The free-kick's pulled back to the edge of the box, and Fletcher's low, long-range Scud is parried by Mandanda! And then claimed at the second attempt.

6 min Brandao tries to jiggle his way past Evra. Evra says no, and a good job he did, as Brandao would have been clean through on goal.

5 min It appears as though Rooney's been given licence to roam. Either that, or Alex Ferguson's currently trying to make himself heard above the din on the touchline: "Wayne! WAYNE! STOP ROAMING!"

4 min Shrill screeches from the home fans whenever United get the ball and pass it around, like they're doing right now. Eventually Smalling, like all English defenders eventually do, decides he's had enough of passing it sideways and tries a huge punt upfield that runs all the way through to Mandanda in the Marseille goal.

2 min Berbatov is tackled well by M'bia on the Marseille right, but he gets the loose ball and crosses. Rooney can't bring it down quickly enough.

1 min Marseille are in good form, they've not lost since December 5. For all their talented potential going forward - Ayew, Brandao, Lucho, Remy - it could well be their defence that decides this tie. If they can prevent United from getting an away goal, they've got a real chance.

19.45 United to kick-off, playing from left to right for those of you who like to draw a picture in their minds. Three men stand over the ball. Rooney to Berbatov to Nani, and we're away.

19.44 Oh God, it's Peter Drury. "For Manchester United, the competition really starts here. To experience the fervid ambience of the port of Marseilles is to understand just how much hosting a knockout game in this competition, for the first time in two decades..." Drury. Disappear. Now.

19.38 The Stade Velodrome? you ask. Why, that looks nothing like the velodrome I saw on the news yesterday, the one with Chris Hoy and Boris Johnson and a big curving roof. Well, you'll notice that the ground is sort of bowl-like in shape, with the stands sloping down to the pitch. That's where the track used to be. They built the stands over the track, using the natural slope to give it a sort of amphitheatre atmosphere. File under 'useless information that both you and I will forget within seconds'.

19.30 If the last 16 of Europe's premier club competition is a room (go with me here), then Darron Gibson is the elephant in it, in more ways than one. Sir Alex Ferguson has opted for Gibson in preference to Paul Scholes, choosing youth over experience. And skill. O'Shea starts ahead of Rafael at right back.

For Marseille, the tantalising prospect of Mathieu Valbuena's return after a month out with a knee injury. He's on the bench tonight. If you're wondering where you know that name from, he scored for France against England a few months back. Also, he's excellent.

I'd love to hear your views on the teams, the match, the players in the match, that rather clunky elephant analogy earlier, that kind of thing. Drop us a line.

Marseille (4-3-3): Mandanda; Fanni, M'bia, Diawara, Heinze; Cisse, Kabore, Lucho; Remy, Ayew, Brandao. Subs: Andrade, Taiwo, Hilton, Cheyrou, Jordan Ayew, Abriel, Valbuena.

Man Utd (4-3-3): Van der Sar; O'Shea, Smalling, Vidic, Evra; Gibson, Carrick, Fletcher; Nani, Berbatov, Rooney. Subs: Kuszczak, Brown, Hernandez, Scholes, Fabio, Rafael, Obertan.

Referee: Felix Brych (Germany)

19.15 Bonsoir! It's a big night for Marseille tonight. For many teams, winning their first European Cup marks a watershed - the start of a golden era, or similar.

In the case of Marseille, it marked quite the opposite. Three weeks after becoming the first ever winners of the Champions League in 1992/93 - and still the only French team ever to capture Europe's top competition - they were implicated in a bribery and corruption scandal that saw them relegated to the second division, stripped of their league championship and barred from defending their title.

They were a pretty handy team in those days, Marseille - Barthez in goal, Desailly in defence, Deschamps in midfield and Rudi Voller and Alen Boksic up front. (There were more, they didn't win the Champions League with only five players, although that would have been awesome.)

But since that glorious, balmy night in Munich, Marseille have gone past the last 16 of this competition. Their 1993 triumph appears in the record books almost as an anomaly, and instead it was Milan, their beaten opponents that night, who went on to conquer Europe.

Tonight, with one of their 1993 heroes Didier Deschamps at the helm, they can take a huge step towards bringing the glory days back to the Cote Bleue, and writing themselves a new history. Now, that was miles more interesting than some silly preamble about Alex Ferguson's hairdryer, wasn't it? Teams to follow.
Telegraph.feedsportal.com

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Arsenal v Stoke: Arsne Wenger urges his side to claim vital victory and stay in touch with Manchester United

Arsenal v Stoke: Ars Wenger urges his side to claim vital victory and stay in touch with Manchester United

Arsène Wenger admits Arsenal's chances of winning the league for the first time in seven years could hinge on tonight's crucial game against Stoke.

Arsenal v Stoke: Wenger says win is vital

Keep it going: Arsenal manager Ars Wenger is desperate to see his side keep their unbeaten run going in the Premier League to keep the pressure on leaders Manchester United Photo: EPA

By Telegraph staff and agencies 10:45AM GMT 23 Feb 2011

Arsenal appeared to be out of the title race when they lost to Manchester United in December, but a run of nine league matches unbeaten has seen the Londoners drag themselves back into the reckoning.

Wenger's side could reduce the gap between themselves and leaders United to just one point with a victory tonight and the Frenchman has called on his squad to secure what he believes could be a decisive win in the title race.

"This is a very important one for us," Wenger said. "The best way to win the Premier League is to win the game. It is only that which is important.

"If you want to keep in touch with Manchester United, which we want more than anything, this game is vital.

"We have given so much in the Premier League, we have gone through so many difficult periods and have come back with such resilience."

Wenger will be without in-form striker Robin van Persie (hamstring) and defender Laurent Koscielny (back) tonight, but hopes the duo will be fit for Sunday's Carling Cup final against Birmingham.

Losing Van Persie is a big blow for the Gunners as he has scored five times in his last three matches, but Wenger hopes that Andrei Arshavin can weigh in with a few goals in the Dutchman's absence.

Meanwhile, Wenger has confirmed that Aaron Ramsey will return to Arsenal when his loan spell at Cardiff ends this weekend, despite manager Dave Jones' attempts to keep the midfielder until the end of the season.

"I intend to use him," Wenger said. "I have had good reports from Cardiff. He could be available for the second game against Leyton Orient on Wednesday."
Telegraph.feedsportal.com

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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Blue Palette

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Blue Palette

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FC Copenhagen v Chelsea: head-to-head

FC Copenhagen v chelsea: head-to-head

The story of both teams so far in this season's Champions League and key clashes to look out for.

Chelsea - FC Copenhagen v Chelsea: head-to-head

Be prepared: Chelsea face Copehagen in the Champions League tonight Photo: AFP

Jonathan Liew

By Jonathan Liew 9:48AM GMT 22 Feb 2011

Jonathan's Twitter

FC Copenhagen v Chelsea

Parken Stadion, 19.45 TV: SS2

Story so far....

COPENHAGEN

BATE Borisov (A) D 0-0

BATE Borisov (H) W 3-2

Rosenborg (A) L 1-2

Rosenborg (H) W 1-0

Rubin Kazan (H) W 1-0

Panathinaikos (A) W 2-0

Barcelona (A) L 0-2

Barcelona (H) D 1-1

Rubin Kazan (A) L 0-1

Panathinaikos (H) W 3-1

CHELSEA

Zilina (A) W 4-1

Marseille (H) W 2-0

Spartak Moscow (A) W 2-0

Spartak Moscow (H) W 4-1

Zilina (H) W 2-1

Marseille (A) L 0-1

PREVIOUS MEETINGS
The teams met in the second round of the Cup Winners’ Cup in 1998, with Chelsea squeezing home 2-1 on aggregate. But Chelsea also played in Copenhagen in the 1960 Fairs Cup. Representing London, a team featuring Jimmy Greaves won 7-2 on aggregate against a Danish representative side called Staevnet.

KEY CLASHES

Mikael Antonsson v Fernando Torres
A tall, strong, disciplined defender in the mould of Brede Hangeland, whose place he took at Copenhagen, Antonsson is unlikely to be dragged out of position by Torres. Instead, we may see Torres dropping deeper or drifting wide to receive the ball and then attempting to turn back towards goal.

Jesper Gronkjaer v Ramires
Gronkjaer is no longer the old-fashioned left-winger of his Chelsea days. Instead, he drifts inside to link midfield and attack, and Ramires’s role in cutting out his service will be vital. When Ramires brings the ball forward, Gronkjaer will need to track him back to restrict his options.

STATS
40 Per cent: Copenhagen’s average possession during the group phase.

REFEREE
Bjorn Kuipers (Netherlands) - also refereed Chelsea’s group games against MSK Zilina earlier this season and Atletico Madrid last season. Owns a chain of supermarkets and a hair salon in his hometown of Oldenzaal, near the German border.

jonathan liew, jimmy greaves, atletico madrid, fc copenhagen, representative side online, fairs cup, group games, gronkjaer, german border, group phase, zilina, oldenzaal, kuipers, cup winners, kazan, winger, midfield, clashes, hair salon, chelsea

Telegraph.feedsportal.com

Monday, February 21, 2011

Duc Monster 796 at Glendora Mountain

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Duc Monster 796 at Glendora Mountain

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Gorgoxo a 1,7x-- Weevil at 1,7x

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Gorgoxo a 1,7x-- Weevil at 1,7x

-f:11 nominal, f18 efectivo
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-Cmara: sony a200
-Obxetivo: cosina 100 macro +69mm de tubos de extension, co que acado unha magnificacin de 1,7x
-iluminacin: Flash metz mecablitz 36 montado nun lateral cun bracket caseiro e con duas capas de difusin da luz.

No crop, large version: www.flickr.com/photos/anxoresua/5466678590/sizes/l/in/pho...

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Manchester City keep eyes on the prize to swat aside FA Cup hopefuls Derby County

Manchester City keep eyes on the prize to swat aside FA Cup hopefuls Notts County

Manchester clearly has no time for misty-eyed sentimentality over the FA Cup. Manchester United’s Pyrrhic victory over Crawley on Saturday, though, at least acknowledged the spirit of this competition.

On target: Patrick Vieira hit two as Manchester City enjoyed a five goal flurry against Derby County Photo: PA

Rory Smith

By Rory Smith 11:07PM GMT 20 Feb 2011

Rory's Twitter

Manchester City were rather more ruthless against Notts County. Although the Cup’s romance withered along Mancunian Way this weekend, its significance soared. “The FA Cup is always important,” Roberto Mancini said. “And for us, it is important to reach a final.”

His words were almost tautologous. Mancini’s teamsheet expressed the same belief, the City manager fielding Mario Balotelli, David Silva, Yaya Touré and Edin Dzeko. Their neighbours may have given the impression they have better things to do than win the FA Cup but for City there is nothing so alluring as the gleam of silver.

Mancini has earned a reputation as a safety first sort of a manager. His desire to avoid risk here, though, is unlikely to be judged pejoratively. There is a banner which hangs from Old Trafford’s Stretford End, marking every year which passes since City last won a trophy. The Italian has made it his mission to have that very public taunt removed.

To do so, he will need first to overcome Aston Villa, and then Everton or Reading. Expect equally strong line-ups then, too. “The next two games are not friendlies,” he said. “And we never beat Everton.”

To rid themselves of that hoodoo, Mancini will have to hope his multi-million pound superstars perform rather better than they did here. The scoreline, bloated by three late goals from Carlos Tévez, Dzeko and Micah Richards, offers the impression that City cruised into the fifth round. Such a picture is misleading.

Indeed, had it not been for two simple strikes from set-pieces from the rather unlikely source of Patrick Vieira, City might have found those last few minutes infinitely more uncomfortable, particularly after the start Notts County made.

Clearly infused with confidence after running the world’s richest club close at Meadow Lane, Paul Ince’s team opened with all the intensity expected of the FA Cup’s Davids when offered a glimpse of their Goliath. Krystian Pearce headed over, Alan Gow saw a free-kick saved, Karl Hawley struck a post with a deliciously-curled effort.

City, conversely, created little, Dzeko heading straight at Stuart Nelson. They required a slice of good fortune to take the lead, Vieira’s header from Silva’s corner deflecting off Pearce’s hand and in. His second was rather more emphatic, Aleksandar Kolarov’s delivery thumped home just before the hour.

“It was disappointing to lose two goals from set-pieces,” Ince said. “But you look at their side, and they are powerful. We had players at 5ft 10in who were marking someone at 6ft 2in, 6ft 3in. It was always going to be an uphill struggle, but against teams like this you have to take advantage of whatever chances you get.”

County did not. Ince felt that if his side had equalised, they might have caused an upset. As it was, the second goal heralded the arrival of the man who would rob them of all hope, who would turn this game from struggle into saunter.

As Vieira celebrated, Balotelli lay prostrate on the floor, victim of a clash of heads with Pearce. His injury was, at least, well timed: Mancini had always planned to remove him after an hour following almost two months on the sidelines. The striker, though, is not one to accept even that sort of logic graciously; his snood was tossed to the floor in disgust as he groggily made his way from the pitch.

In his stead came the man who would, eventually, leave County dazed and confused. Tévez rounded Nelson to score the third, teed up Dzeko for a simple fourth and watched as Richards lashed home the fifth. Three goals in seven minutes. The Argentine does not have a sympathetic bone in his body.

That is why Mancini introduced his captain, now on 50 goals in 69 City appearances. He needed the sort of character who has no room for romance. City, for now, exist to win a trophy, any trophy. Mancini needs players who have nothing but desire.

pyrrhic victory, roberto mancini, david silva, edin dzeko, stretford end, patrick vieira, micah richards, old trafford, line ups, rsquo, eyes on the prize, derby county, sentimentality, target, manchester city, hopefuls, gleam, yaya, crawley, everton

Telegraph.feedsportal.com

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Matterhorn seen from Gornergrat

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Matterhorn seen from Gornergrat

View of the Matterhorn - On a sunny winter day in Zermatt - Switzerland.
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Anti-Gadhafi Protests Swell to Biggest Level

Longtime Libyan strongman Col. Moammar Gadhafi faced what appeared to be the greatest resistance to his rule Friday, with human-rights and opposition groups reporting demonstrations in several Libyan cities that met a deadly government response.

New York-based Human Rights Watch put the death toll at at least 84 in three days of protests. Human-rights and opposition groups also reported difficulty contacting witnesses inside Libya, suggesting Internet and mobile-phone disruptions.

Renesys, an Internet operability tracker, said Libya appeared to have cut off most Internet connections late Friday, but that much of the service —about two-thirds—had been restored early Saturday.

Groups monitoring Libya said the army has been deployed to the restive, eastern city of Benghazi, scene of this week's first and largest clashes between pro-Gadhafi forces and protesters who seek regime change.

Tawfiq Alghazwani, a Dublin-based member of the National Congress of Libyan Opposition who cited witnesses inside Libya, said protests took place in nine cities Friday, the largest move against Col. Gadhafi in his 42 years of rule. Mr. Alghazwani said 100,000 people—including professionals, women and youth—turned out in Benghazi, Libya's second city.

Since Tuesday, protesters have railed against corruption, unemployment, lack of political freedom and repression of civil rights.

Farnaz Fassihi has the latest on the military crackdown in Bahrain following three days of protests. Plus, unrest continues in Libya, Yemen and Iraq. Also, Egypt says Iran has asked for permission to allow its warships to pass through the Suez Canal.

Mr. Alghazwani's group placed the week's death toll at above 90. He said several of these demonstrators had been shot by Gadhafi militias and what people on the ground said they believed from their nonlocal dialect to be mercenaries from outside Libya.

It wasn't possible to independently verify these claims, and Libya's government has clamped down on journalists covering protests and has arrested several journalists this week.

Initial reports by Mr. Alghazwani's body, a union of Libyan opposition groups, on previous demonstrations and protester death tolls have largely been confirmed later by rights groups and news outlets.

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libya0217

European Pressphoto Agency

Government supporters shout slogans and hold portraits of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi during a pro-government gathering in Tripoli on Thursday.

libya0217

libya0217

As the wave of protests spreads across North Africa and the Middle East, amateur video from Libya appeared to show unrest in Al Bayda. Video courtesy of Reuters.

The reports came as online Libyan newspaper Quryna reported a meeting set for next week of Libya's legislative forum, the General People's Congress, will be postponed.

A government spokesman said he expects the body to meet in early March, and that changes will be announced in response to the unrest. "I anticipate a minister reshuffle, and that should go some way to appease the protesters," said spokesman Abdulmajeed Eldursi.

"Some ministers may lose their posts—there will be no immunity for a single person if the ministers are not doing their duties the proper way," he added.

Mr. Alghazwani, the Dublin-based opposition member, said troops in Benghazi are guarding main buildings including banks and the offices of the Libyan central bank, but that the army hasn't been involved in clashes with protesters.

Signaling the scale of the breakdown in civil order in east Libya, a traditional hotbed of anti-Gadhafi activity, some local police in Benghazi and the town of Al Baida battled beside protesters against central-government security forces, according to Mr. Alghazwani and others.

Both Mr. Alghazwani and analysts from HRW said pro-Gadhafi loyalists who had camped in the main athletics stadium in Benghazi in previous nights had left the stadium and city center.

Libya's capital, Tripoli, remained free of antiregime rallies. State media broadcast large, pro-government rallies, showing Col. Gadhafi, in his trademark white suit, driving through Tripoli, rallying thousands Thursday.

Col. Gadhafi, who has held a tight grip on power and tolerates little public dissent—is the latest to be threatened by an upwelling of popular sentiment against established Arab regimes.

Regional Upheaval

View Interactive

A succession of rallies and demonstrations, in Egypt, Jordan, Yemen, Algeria, Bahrain and Iran have been inspired directly by the popular outpouring of anger that toppled Tunisian President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali. See how these uprisings have progressed.

More photos and interactive graphics

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Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Libyan pro-government supporters in Tripoli on Feb. 16. hold portraits of leader Moammar Gadhafi to show support for the veteran leader.

0216libya

0216libya

Amid unrest elsewhere, analysts said the Libyan clashes could become serious enough to rattle oil markets and the international petroleum industry, which is active in the country. Libya is one of the world's largest oil producers.

"The situation in Libya is gaining momentum now," said Theodore Karasik, director of research at the Dubai-based Institute for Near East & Gulf Military Analysis. That could worry Western oil firms, who in recent years have reengaged in Libya after the country's long spell as a pariah state.

In 2003, Libya agreed to give up its nuclear program, opening the door to increased Western investment. In 2007, U.K. oil-giant BP PLC signed a $900 million exploration and production contract. The company is due to drill at least five wells offshore Libya this year.

"We are monitoring the situation, but [BP] activities, such as they are, are pretty small at the moment and unaffected," said BP spokesman Robert Wine in London.

A small gathering of protesters, calling for the release from jail of a human-rights attorney, swelled into a violent anti-regime demonstration in Benghazi late Tuesday. Since then, local media, human-rights and opposition groups outside the country have reported a series of clashes across Libya.

Opposition groups and Internet-based organizers called for demonstrations against Col. Gadhafi's rule Thursday, the anniversary of two separate, bloody crackdowns in Benghazi by Libyan forces.

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LIBYA

Associated Press

Gadhafi backers Friday in Tripoli.

LIBYA

LIBYA

Human Rights Watch said hundreds of peaceful protesters took to the streets Thursday in Benghazi and at least four other towns. "Libyan security forces shot and killed the demonstrators in efforts to disperse the protests," the group said in an emailed statement Friday, citing witnesses.

Some of the worst violence was in the town of Al Baida, east of Benghazi, the group said. Human Rights Watch said hospital staff put out a call for additional medical supplies, overwhelmed by an influx of 70 injured protesters, half of which were said to be in critical condition from gunshot wounds.

The organization said a witness in Benghazi said hundreds of lawyers and activists gathered in front of the city's high court Thursday evening to demand constitutional reform and rule of law.

Mr. Alghazwani, who said he has been monitoring clashes all week through his contacts inside Libya, said about 3,000 lawyers and professionals camped outside the court. Thousands more youths gathered in support and clashed throughout the night with security forces, he said, placing his estimate of casualties at over 50.

None of the deaths were immediately verifiable. Videos circulated on social-networking sites showed Libyan protesters chanting, "People want to bring down the regime!" and "Al Jazeera, you are right," a reference to the Qatar-based satellite news station that has aggressively covered the regional unrest.
Online.wsj.com