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Saturday 29 April 2017

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welcome to mjventertainment.blogspot.com...... Live on Live - Talking French foreign policy and the presidential race - Manuel Lafont Rapnouil RFI English RFI English 283 39 views Published on Apr 26, 2017 RFI's David Coffey speaks to Manuel Lafont Rapnouil, head of the European Council on Foreign Relations in Paris, to look at where France stands with regard to its foreign policy and what the potential outcome for France's relations abroad will be if either Emmanuel Macron or Marine Le Pen is elected president. Comments Dickson - Buffalo Iroha Nkata Add a public comment... Autoplay Up next France's Undecided: Anti-Le Pen vote no longer a given (part 1) FRANCE 24 English 5,347 views New 18:28 Pierre-Antoine Balu, of PwC, on Africa's digital revolution RFI English 34 views 10:19 Live on Live - French 1st Round Presidential Election Special - 1st Edition RFI English 1 view New 21:23 Live on Live - French 1st Round Presidential Election Special - 2nd Edition RFI English 18 views New 20:21 Is Emmanuel Macron acting overly confident? FRANCE 24 English 5,102 views New 8:27 How Anglophones speak French without knowing it FRANCE 24 English 3,710 views 12:00 Live on Live - Turkey referendum analysis with Dorothée Schmid RFI English 73 views 11:58 Will Marine Le Pen Triumph in the French Elections? Journeyman Pictures 38,050 views 26:04 Regiments of the French Foreign Legion (documentary) MAHARBAL5022 389,763 views 1:50:11 France Presidential Election: Macron, Le Pen visit closed Whirlpool factory FRANCE 24 English 6,206 views New 3:12 Macron jeered, Le Pen acclaimed at troubled French factory euronews (in English) 2,001 views New 1:34 Socialists warn Melenchon's tactics could hand election to Marine Le Pen FRANCE 24 English 4,184 views New 3:20 France Presidential Election: How Marine Le Pen hopes to lure the French disgruntled far left FRANCE 24 English 1,522 views New 2:21 Gérard Araud ─ French Foreign Policy in an Unstable World Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs 344 views 1:00:04 Kate Beckinsale Teaches Stephen To Speak Russian The Late Show with Stephen Colbert 2,152,733 views 8:29 IR 11 - Foreign Policy: Definition, Stages, Determinants and Models Parkash Sarangani 5,101 views 22:39 Video Highlights from the 3-day Easter show in Kwahu. ‪#‎PulseTv‬ ‪#‎Easter‬ ‪#‎KwahuEaster‬ Pulse Ghana Recommended for you 5:20 Airplane сrashes, failed takeoff aircraft and crosswind landings | Video collection 2017 -=HD=- The TOP Recommended for you 10:36 #Presidential election 2017: Who are Macron's supporters? RFI English 263 views New 2:17 Diane Kruger's French Accent Gets Her Out Of Trouble Every Time The Late Show with Stephen Colbert 3,136,609 views 10:43

welcome to mjventertainment.blogspot.com..... Spotlight on Africa Podcast Cameroon internet shutdown inspires punitive proposal targeting African governments By Daniel Finnan Released on 19-04-2017 Modified 18-04-2017 to 18:40 Cameroon internet shutdown inspires punitive proposal targeting African governments Cameroonian authorities switched off the internet in the country's Anglophone regions in January. Photo: Michael Bocchieri/Getty Images/AFP Podcast inShare38 Spotlight on Africa this week discusses a proposal which would punish African governments if they shut down access to the internet. The punitive measures have been inspired by a three-month shutdown in Cameroon’s Anglophone regions that the authorities have imposed following a series of protests and demonstrations. The plan by some internet service providers would restrict African governments’ access to internet resources if they stop their citizens from accessing the web. Authors of the proposal hope the idea will inspire more debate on censure of the World Wide Web in Africa and how to prevent it. Various discussions on this text will take place before a meeting of the regional internet registry body, Afrinic, at the end of May when the policy could be adopted. Andrew Alston, Liquid Telecommunications Q&A: Andrew Alston “We came up with a proposal. If governments want to shut down the internet there needs to be some punitive action. We looked at this and thought, if we stop allocating them internet addresses and resources, maybe this will have an effect. Particularly, if they keep doing it we’ll take those resources away. We realise it’s not potentially a perfect solution, but by putting that policy up there we create debate, we create a spotlight on the issue and we give the internet community a chance to comment, refine and add their own ideas. So, we end up with something more concrete to hopefully end this situation of internet shutdowns that we’re seeing so commonly in Africa.” Archives 1 2 3 ... next > last > 'This democratic hold-up is killing Africa': Mamane Tuesday, April 11, 2017 'This democratic hold-up is killing Africa': Mamane An African failed state with an autocratic leader, rigged elections, a complacent international community, angry and persecuted activists: deja vu you may argue. It’s … Laws in Africa failing to prevent rape; keeping tabs on Guinea’s president Tuesday, March 7, 2017 Laws in Africa failing to prevent rape; keeping tabs on Guinea’s president Spotlight on Africa this week looks at how laws against sexual violence are failing to protect women and finds out about a new project which aims to keep Guinean President … 'Ugandan football has come a long way': Milutin Sredojevic Tuesday, January 24, 2017 'Ugandan football has come a long way': Milutin Sredojevic Despite becoming the first team to be knocked out of the Africa Cup of Nations, Uganda are holding their heads high. The Cranes were playing their first Africa Cup of … ANC in crisis over pressure for Zuma to go Tuesday, December 6, 2016 ANC in crisis over pressure for Zuma to go President Jacob Zuma controversial leadership of South Africa and the ruling African National Congress (ANC) is a costly business, according to critics who want him out … Gambian presidential election must be free and fair, says opposition candidate Tuesday, November 29, 2016 Gambian presidential election must be free and fair, says opposition candidate The main opposition contender in Gambia’s forthcoming presidential polls has called on the African Union to help ensure a free and fair election. Adama Barrow, … US missionaries apologise for 'hurtful' Ugandan dance video Tuesday, October 18, 2016 US missionaries apologise for 'hurtful' Ugandan dance video An American missionary group has apologised for a “disrespectful” dance video which created a “mockery” of Ugandan culture. The video, produced … Towards a conservation model working with indigenous peoples Tuesday, September 13, 2016 Towards a conservation model working with indigenous peoples Conservationists are pleading for new policies that will engage with the indigenous peoples living in protected areas instead of excluding them. They s

welcome to mjventertainment.blogspot.com... Spotlight on Africa Podcast Cameroon internet shutdown inspires punitive proposal targeting African governments By Daniel Finnan Released on 19-04-2017 Modified 18-04-2017 to 18:40 Cameroon internet shutdown inspires punitive proposal targeting African governments Cameroonian authorities switched off the internet in the country's Anglophone regions in January. Photo: Michael Bocchieri/Getty Images/AFP Podcast inShare38 Spotlight on Africa this week discusses a proposal which would punish African governments if they shut down access to the internet. The punitive measures have been inspired by a three-month shutdown in Cameroon’s Anglophone regions that the authorities have imposed following a series of protests and demonstrations. The plan by some internet service providers would restrict African governments’ access to internet resources if they stop their citizens from accessing the web. Authors of the proposal hope the idea will inspire more debate on censure of the World Wide Web in Africa and how to prevent it. Various discussions on this text will take place before a meeting of the regional internet registry body, Afrinic, at the end of May when the policy could be adopted. Andrew Alston, Liquid Telecommunications Q&A: Andrew Alston “We came up with a proposal. If governments want to shut down the internet there needs to be some punitive action. We looked at this and thought, if we stop allocating them internet addresses and resources, maybe this will have an effect. Particularly, if they keep doing it we’ll take those resources away. We realise it’s not potentially a perfect solution, but by putting that policy up there we create debate, we create a spotlight on the issue and we give the internet community a chance to comment, refine and add their own ideas. So, we end up with something more concrete to hopefully end this situation of internet shutdowns that we’re seeing so commonly in Africa.” Archives 1 2 3 ... next > last > 'This democratic hold-up is killing Africa': Mamane Tuesday, April 11, 2017 'This democratic hold-up is killing Africa': Mamane An African failed state with an autocratic leader, rigged elections, a complacent international community, angry and persecuted activists: deja vu you may argue. It’s … Laws in Africa failing to prevent rape; keeping tabs on Guinea’s president Tuesday, March 7, 2017 Laws in Africa failing to prevent rape; keeping tabs on Guinea’s president Spotlight on Africa this week looks at how laws against sexual violence are failing to protect women and finds out about a new project which aims to keep Guinean President … 'Ugandan football has come a long way': Milutin Sredojevic Tuesday, January 24, 2017 'Ugandan football has come a long way': Milutin Sredojevic Despite becoming the first team to be knocked out of the Africa Cup of Nations, Uganda are holding their heads high. The Cranes were playing their first Africa Cup of … ANC in crisis over pressure for Zuma to go Tuesday, December 6, 2016 ANC in crisis over pressure for Zuma to go President Jacob Zuma controversial leadership of South Africa and the ruling African National Congress (ANC) is a costly business, according to critics who want him out … Gambian presidential election must be free and fair, says opposition candidate Tuesday, November 29, 2016 Gambian presidential election must be free and fair, says opposition candidate The main opposition contender in Gambia’s forthcoming presidential polls has called on the African Union to help ensure a free and fair election. Adama Barrow, … US missionaries apologise for 'hurtful' Ugandan dance video Tuesday, October 18, 2016 US missionaries apologise for 'hurtful' Ugandan dance video An American missionary group has apologised for a “disrespectful” dance video which created a “mockery” of Ugandan culture. The video, produced … Towards a conservation model working with indigenous peoples Tuesday, September 13, 2016 Towards a conservation model working with indigenous peoples Conservationists are pleading for new policies that will engage with the indigenous peoples living in protected areas instead of excluding them. They s.

welcome to mjventertainment.blogspot.com..... FRENCH LESSON: PARLEZ-VOUS PARIS ? Podcast media 06/07/2014 Paris Education France Sport and safety in Paris media 05/07/2014 Paris Education France Paris's skatepark media 29/06/2014 Paris Education France How to buy cheap last-minute tickets for Paris shows media 28/06/2014 Paris Education France The culture scene in Paris media 22/06/2014 Paris Education France Maternity leave in France media 21/06/2014 Paris Education France In a Paris 'pram café' media 15/06/2014 Education France Paris Parisians’ daily life media 14/06/2014 Education France Paris Administrative procedures and the job of personal assistant media 08/06/2014 Education France Paris Père-Lachaise, a park in which to take a stroll media 07/06/2014 Education France Paris The Père-Lachaise Cemetery media 01/06/2014 Education France Paris The two worlds of fashion, haute couture and off-the-peg media 31/05/2014 Education France Paris Paris, the world's fashion capital media 25/05/2014 Education France Paris Saint Eustache, a venue for musical events in Paris media 24/05/2014 Education France Paris A Parisian church: Saint Eustache media 18/05/2014 Education France Paris Avicenne hospital treats foreign pati

welcome to mjventertainment.blogspot.com.... RFI English Bulletins RFI World Play Listen to RFI Expand Player Replay The Sound Kitchen Those happy Scandinavians Afp Tweeter inShare Mbappe rallies Monaco past Toulouse By AFP Issued on 29-04-2017 Modified 29-04-2017 to 19:40 media Monaco's Kylian Mbappe Lottin celebrates after scoring a goal during their French L1 football match against Toulouse on April 29, 2017 at the "Louis II Stadium" in Monaco AFP Kylian Mbappe delivered another crucial goal for Monaco as the Ligue 1 leaders fought back to defeat Toulouse 3-1 on Saturday and move three points clear at the top. Ola Toivonen struck immediately after half-time as Toulouse threatened to derail Monaco's title hopes at the Stade Louis II, but Kamil Glik equalised for the home side on 49 minutes. Mbappe then struck his 14th league goal of a remarkable breakthrough season to fire Monaco ahead just past the hour before Thomas Lemar sealed an eighth victory in a row. Monaco could take a huge stride towards landing a first French league crown since 2000 on Sunday, when third-placed Nice -- unbeaten at home this season -- host Paris Saint-Germain. The principality outfit will now turn their attention to Europe as Monaco prepare to welcome Juventus in the first leg of their Champions League semi-final next Wednesday. Leonardo Jardim restored a host of regulars -- including Mbappe, Radamel Falcao and Bernardo Silva -- to the Monaco side three days after fielding a youthful line-up in their midweek 5-0 French Cup semi-final defeat at PSG. But Toulouse, who beat Monaco 3-1 in the reverse fixture, nearly went in front when Christopher Jullien flashed a header narrowly wide of Danijel Subasic's left-hand post. Toulouse goalkeeper Alban Lafont saved from both Benjamin Mendy and Silva, before Toulouse captain Issa Diop produced a vital lunging block to deny Mbappe as Monaco gradually took control. Sweden international Toivonen had scored just once this year, but the striker capitalised on woeful defending as Jemerson fluffed an attempted clearance to steer the visitors into a surprise 46th-minute lead. Monaco's response was immediate though, and they were level just three minutes later as Polish centre-back Glik rose to power in a cross from Joao Moutinho -- the defender notching his sixth goal this term. An unmarked Toivonen spurned a chance to nod Toulouse ahead for a second time when he headed tamely at Subasic, while Lafont then pulled off a stunning reflex stop to thwart Falcao from close range. But the 18-year-old was beaten far too easily at his near post on 64 minutes as Mbappe pulled the trigger from a tight angle, his 24th goal in all competitions handing Monaco the lead. Lemar provided breathing space with Monaco's third on 75 minutes, the midfielder calmly side-footing home on the half-volley from Nabil Dirar's floated cross to end Toulouse's resistance. Falcao almost added a fourth as the Colombian barged his way into the box, only to hammer the ball against the base of the post. Reigning champions PSG could return alongside Monaco at the summit on Sunday, but Lucien Favre's Nice should prove a tough proposition having lost just twice this campaign. Tweeter inShare

welcome to mjventertainment.blogspot.com Europe Tweeter inShare FranceBrexitEurope French President Hollande says UK must pay for Brexit By RFI Issued on 29-04-2017 Modified 29-04-2017 to 16:48 media François Hollande, Jean-Claude Juncker -président de la Commission européenne- et Michel Barnier - négociateur en chef du Brexit- à Bruxelles ce samedi 29 avril. Reuters/Eric Vidal French President Francois Hollande warned Saturday that Britain must pay the price for Brexit as EU leaders met to adopt guidelines for negotiations. "There will inevitably be a price and a cost for Britain, it's the choice they made," Hollande said as he arrived at a Brussels summit. May's position "We must not be punitive, but at the same time it's clear that Europe knows how to defend its interests, and that Britain will have a less good position outside the EU than in the EU." Hollande, who is entering his last days as French president, dismissed suggestions that British Prime Minister Theresa May could strengthen her negotiating hand by winning a big mandate in elections that she has called for June 8. "I can understand the electoral argument but it will not influence the EU. The EU's principles and the objectives are already fixed, these will be the lines chosen by negotiators." Luxembourg Prime Minister Xavier Bettel also ruled out an advantage for May from a big election win. "It's an internal problem she wants to resolve in the Conservative party, to have not a hard Brexit or a soft Brexit, but Theresa's Brexit," he said. "We are very united, you seem surprised, but it's a fact." The EU's chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier meanwhile said it was also in Britain's interests for the EU to be unified, as it would boost the chances of a Brexit deal. "This extraordinary meeting shows the unity of the 27 on a clear line, but this unity is not directed against Britain, I think that it is also in its interest," he said. Unity call Meanwhile, European Union leaders called for a united front, a call that comes hot on the heels of a war of words between May and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who said Britain should not have "illusions" about the talks. On arrival at the summit, Merkel said the EU wants "good relations" with Britain but added that "we also want to defend, at 27, our common interests -- so far we have done extremely well." The EU's chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, said the bloc had a "clear line" on the talks. "But this unity is not directed against Britain, I think that it is also in its interest," he said. The EU 27 have considerably toughened the guidelines since Tusk first unveiled them a month ago, with Brussels also drawing up a detailed list of citizens' rights. Tusk said Europeans needed "solid guarantees for citizens and their families, who will be affected by Brexit on both sides -- this must be number-one priority for EU and the UK." This referred to the fate of three million EU citizens living in Britain and one million Britons on the continent, with officials hoping for a resolution on their status after Brexit by the end of the year. In a further move that will rile London, the EU is also set to back automatic membership for Northern Ireland if it reunifies with Ireland, and call for Spain to have a say over any deal that affects Gibraltar. The leaders will also discuss for the first time the spoils of Brexit -- the relocation of EU medical and banking agencies that are currently based in London. Virtually all of the 27 have put their hand up to win one of the agencies. While the EU says citizens' rights is a priority, the most touchy issue of all is likely to be Britain's exit bill. This is estimated at around 60 billion euros which mainly covers financial commitments made by the bloc while Britain was a member. The bill is politically toxic for Britain but also risks causing divisions among EU states as they debate how to plug any holes in the EU's budget. Tweeter inShare

welcomtomjventertainment.blogspot.com......Tunisian officials sacked after protests By AFP Issued on 29-04-2017 Modified 29-04-2017 to 19:00 media Tunisians protest on April 29, 2017 after parliament debated a bill that would grant amnesty to businessmen accused of corruption during Zine El Abidine Ben Ali's rule AFP Tunisia said Saturday it had replaced two senior officials in a southeastern region, days after protesters there booed the prime minister off stage following weeks of demonstrations. Tunisia has faced a wave of protests and strikes over joblessness, corruption and perceived marginalisation, six years since a revolution ignited by similar grievances. Prime Minister Youssef Chahed was shouted down and forced to leave a heated town hall meeting on Thursday in Tataouine, 500 kilometres (300 miles) south of Tunis. On Saturday, the government announced that "Mohamed Ali Barhoumi (was named) governor of Tataouine and Mohamed Cherif named sub-prefect". Their predecessors were dismissed, as was the regional head of the National Guard, a government source told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity. "Other officials will follow," the source added, without elaborating. Chahed and his delegation had announced measures to bring jobs and development to the region, which residents claim is marginalised. Tataouine residents have long demanded more jobs and a bigger share of the revenues from oil extraction in the region. Several ministers accompanied Chahed on Thursday to the town where the market, banks and shops were shuttered and burned tyres lay in the streets -- evidence of barricades erected during recent protests. Dozens of protesters interrupted Chahed during a speech with cries of "Work! Freedom! National dignity!" -- a slogan from the 2011 uprising that toppled longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and sparked the Arab Spring uprisings. In Tunis on Saturday, several hundred people demonstrated against a bill that would allow an amnesty of Ben Ali-era officials being prosecuted for corruption, in exchange for paying a fine and reimbursing any illicit gains. "It will not pass!" chanted the mostly young protesters in the centre of the capital. Some wore T-shirts and carried signs bearing the slogan "Manich Msamah" ("I don't forgive" in Arabic) the name of the group that organised the protest. "No reconciliation (with the corrupt). They must first be accountable, then we can talk about reconciliation," Tayssir Jlassi, a 23-year-old student, told AFP. President Beji Caid Essebsi backs the amnesty bill which he has said would "improve the investment climate" in Tunisia, battered by years of economic turmoil since Ben Ali's fall. The law had been put aside last year, but reappeared this week during a parliamentary committee hearing, triggering an outcry by civil society groups. inShare

welcome to mjventertainment.blogspot.com......Indians throng temple to crack Trump's visa curbs By AFP Issued on 29-04-2017 Modified 29-04-2017 to 16:40 media Indian Hindu devotees offer prayers to Lord Balaji, known as the 'Visa God', at the Chilkur Balaji Temple in southern India AFP Hundreds of Indians gather daily at a 500-year-old Hindu temple in southern India where they pray for a single wish -- an increasingly elusive US visa. The Chilkur Balaji temple dedicated to Lord Balaji -- a re-incarnation of Hindu god Vishnu -- on the outskirts of Hyderabad city, has long been a one-stop solution for prospective Indian immigrants seeking US visas, earning it the sobriquet of 'visa temple'. But temple officials say the place has seen an increase in visitors since the election of US President Donald Trump, who this month signed an order seeking to reform the "H-1B" work visa system. The "H-1B" visas are highly sought after by aspiring Indian immigrants but Trump's push to make the permits available only to the most-skilled or highest-paid applicants has many worried. Software engineer Shreekanth Angirekula was among the fortunate ones, having recently secured a US visa after repeated rejections. "It's a miracle. I couldn't get a visa for the last two years but after visiting the temple everything went off smoothly," Angirekula, 33, told AFP. "I am not superstitious but there was definitely divine intervention," he said. More than 100,000 devotees visit the temple every week, for visas and other reasons. They proffer their passports and a flower before the deity as they circumambulate the inner sanctum of the temple 11 times while chanting Hindu hymns. Once the wish is granted, worshippers must return to make 108 rounds of the sanctum. Chief priest Ranga Rajan said devotees come from across the country in pursuit of visas. "Same passport, same documents, same embassy and same applicant, but their visas were rejected before coming to the Lord," Rajan told AFP. "It's all Balaji's blessings," he said, adding "it's not superstition but spiritualism". The temple's supposedly magical powers gained repute in the 1980s after a group of engineers visited the temple to pray for visas. They were all granted their wish, and soon, hordes of aspirants followed in their wake. "I have applied for the visa for (my) studies and I hope Balaji will make it happen," student Raja Shekhar Reddy told AFP. "This visit has boosted my confidence," he said. inShare News videos : French Election: Abstention, Anger & Apathy video playing French Election: Abstention, Anger & Apathy Trump's First 100 Days, The Pope in Egypt (part... Trump's First 100 Days, The Pope in Egypt (part 2) Macron vs. Le Pen: France's bitter... Macron vs. Le Pen: France's bitter presidential run-off race (part 1) The booming business of cannabis in Spain The booming business of cannabis in Spain Pope Francis: "It is through education that... Pope Francis: "It is through education that man can transcend himself" The 51% - The Afghan women defying... The 51% - The Afghan women defying tradition by seeking divorce Video Smart Player invented by Digiteka 1234567 Sport 29/04/2017SportFootballEngland Late Bournemouth goal condemns Sunderland to second division 29/04/2017SportFootballGermany Leipzig draw opens door for another Bayern title 29/04/2017SportFootballItaly Atalanta draw edges Juventus closer to the Italian title Press reviews 29/04/2017 African press review 29 April 2017 29/04/2017 French press review 29 April 2017 AFP Egypt urges US to play 'active' Mideast peace role US rider Young dies of injuries from race crash Tunisian officials sacked after protests Champs Elysees attacker's father 'threatens' police Sunderland relegated, Vardy makes Leicester safe Sunderland's 10-year Premier League stay ends 24 dead in Kyrgyz landslide: emergencies ministry Pope in Egypt rejects fanaticism, urges charity Cosplay with hijabs showcased in Malaysia Thiem beats Murray to make Barcelona final 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Facebook

Thursday 27 April 2017

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World Future People by Dickson Buffalo, ft Ginika,Dahilo,Sharon B,Rootman and Tubor Feziy

welcome to mjventertainment.com...... Home › Grail Raises $900M in Series B Round Subscribe to Cancer Grail Raises $900M in Series B Round Mar 01, 2017 NEW YORK (GenomeWeb) – Grail has raised $900 million out of a planned $1 billion, in the first close a Series B financing round that was led by Arch Venture Partners and included Johnson and Johnson Innovation as well as Amazon, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene, McKesson Ventures, Merck, Tencent Holdings, and Varian Medical Systems. Grail plans to use the financing to support ongoing efforts in product development and the validation of its tests for early-stage cancer detection, including its Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas study and other large-scale clinical trials. The firm said that some of the proceeds were also used to repurchase part of Illumina's stake in the company. Illumina now owns "slightly less than 20 percent" of Grail. The company announced its intention in January to raise $1 billion in the Series B round before the end of the first quarter. Grail CEO Jeff Huber said in a statement that Grail "made tremendous progress in 2016" toward its goal of developing a noninvasive test for early cancer detection. It will continue to leverage "high-intensity sequencing, population-scale clinical studies, and state-of-the-art computer science and data science," he said. Filed Under Cancer Business News financing NGS Grail Illumina We recommend Grail Seeks to Raise $1B in Series B; Illumina's Stake to Fall Below 20 Percent 360Dx, 2017 Paradigm Diagnostics Raises Additional $3M in Series B Round 360Dx, 2017 Atlas Genetics Raises $35M in Series D Fundraising 360Dx, 2017 Intuity Medical Raises Additional $15M in Series 3 Financing 360Dx, 2017 UK Genomics Firm Congenica Raises $10M 360Dx, 2017 Genalyte Raises $36M in Funding 360Dx, 2016 Powered by TrendMD Breaking News Roche Q1 Diagnostics Revenues Up 6 Percent Clovis, Myriad Genetics Working to Meet Post-Market Study Commitment for PARP Inhibitor Exact Sciences Q1 Revenues Triple Meridian Bioscience's Q2 Revenues Up 6 Percent Fulgent Genetics Forms JV in China Synlab to Offer Counsyl's Inherited Disease Screening Test in Europe, Latin America Featured White Papers By NanoString Nanostring Profiling in Immuno-Oncology By Myriad RBM Quality Systems for Multiplex Immunoassay Testing Services for Clinical Trials May 04 Featured Webinar Liquid Biopsies for Improved Recurrence Monitoring in Colorectal Cancer Sponsored by Qiagen This online seminar will provide an overview of the use of liquid biopsies for cancer recurrence monitoring with a particular focus on colorectal cancer. What's Popular? In Cancer US Task Force Changes Guidelines for Prostate Cancer Screening Clovis, Myriad Genetics Working to Meet Post-Market Study Commitment for PARP Inhibitor Almac Diagnostics, EORTC Collaborate to Establish Molecular Profiles for Cancer Patients Urine DNA Test Shows Potential for Early Bladder Cancer Detection, Danish Team Reports at AMP Global MDNA Inks South Korean Distribution Deal for Prostate Cancer Test Sponsorships

welcome to mjventertainment.com....'Prison Break' stars were as excited about that reunion as you were By Sandra Gonzalez, CNN Updated 1426 GMT (2226 HKT) April 26, 2017 (CNN)It took four episodes, but Michael Scofield and Lincoln Burrows are finally on the same side of the prison bars once again. In Tuesday's episode of "Prison Break," brothers Michael (Wentworth Miller) successfully broke out of Ogygia prison and joined his brother (Dominic Purcell) in the increasingly dangerous streets of Yemen. In a long-awaited moment, Michael, who'd started the season pretending not to remember his brother for safety reasons, finally acknowledged and embraced his older brother. Their reunion came after a tense moment that left ISIL leader Abu Ramal dead and Michael and Co. labeled as enemy No. 1 by ISIL loyalists who watched Ramal's murder at the hand's of the team broadcast on TV. Trouble has found the brothers once again, but at least they're together again, much to fans' delight. The decision to put the brothers' reunion off until episode 4 was motivated by a desire to earn the moment, according to executive producer Paul Scheuring. "I think we left Season 4 with such a shock -- Michael's death -- that we couldn't just bring him back in episode 1 and say, 'Hey, everything's fine!' I think the audience would be upset with that," he told CNN at a recent Paley Center for Media event in Los Angeles. "And so we felt like the mystery of what happened in those seven years and how this guy could be Michael Scofield and still be alive deserved a lot more story." RELATED: 'Prison Break' return: 'This wasn't a reboot. This was a rebirth' "Prison Break" aired on FOX for four seasons from 2005-09. Fox announced its return in early 2016. In the 8-plus years since "Prison Break" went off the air, Miller and Purcell appeared on screen together in the CW's superhero jaunt "Legends of Tomorrow." (It was on that set that the two actors had the idea to bring the "Prison Break" gang together again for another adventure.) And off screen, the two maintained a friendship -- both actors say they're more like brothers in real life -- that Miller said fueled the scene. "There was a lot of work that went into executing this show. It's very physical, it's very demanding...but there was not a lot of work I had to do [in that scene]," Miller said. "It was just there in our history." Purcell agreed. "Wentworth's reaction was enough. He turned around and said, 'My brother' and boom. That was it," he said. "It was a very real moment. That was a genuine moment." REVIEW: '24,' 'Prison Break' latest missteps with TV reboots Knowing that fans would be looking forward to the brothers' reteaming, however, came with pressure. "I remember that moment specifically because I was thinking, 'F--k, this is the moment everyone's been waiting for; don't f--k this up,'" Purcell said. "It was a beautiful moment and thankfully it worked." Tuesday's episode also saw the demise of original character Paul Kellerman (Paul Adelstein) and more clues were given as to the identity of Poseidon, a mysterious character who is fueling much of the action this season. Still outstanding, however, is another much-anticipated reunion -- the one between Michael and now-remarried wife Sara (Sarah Wayne Callies). The two characters couldn't seem further apart (in proximity, at least) at this point in the season's run, and that's intentional. Miller said his character will have to "earn that reunion." "Yes, there's a potential reunion, but will she even recognize him and is he even worthy of that relationship still?" he said. "Those are things that take time to explore and we didn't want to rush." "Prison Break" airs Tuesdays on FOX. Paid Content Looking to Buy Luxury Property in the U.S.? Better Now Than Later Looking to Buy Luxury Property in the U.S.? Better Now Than Later Mansion Global by Dow Jones The US Presidents Ranked from Poorest to Richest The US Presidents Ranked from Poorest to Richest InsideGov | By Graphiq Grail Raises $900 Million in Series B Round Grail Raises $900 Million in Series B Round 360dx.com The Most Famous Actors With Famous Parents The Most Famous Actors With Famous Parents PrettyFamous | By Graphiq 35 Animals That May Soon Go Extinct 35 Animals That May Soon Go Extinct The Zoo Zoom These Are the World's Poorest Countries These Are the World's Poorest Countries country-facts.findthedata.com Recommended by Paid Content Hollywood's Most Famous Couples, Past and Present PrettyFamous | By Graphiq ‘Game of Thrones’ Star Emilia Clarke Shells Out $4.64 Million for Chic California Home Mansion Global Trovagene Signs Deals to Distribute Liquid Biopsy Tests in Europe, Middle East 360dx.com 25 of the World’s Most Luxurious Yachts Rich and Richer More from CNN Convicted terrorist admits she lied to become US citizen Meet the Russian 'father of all bombs' Has democracy reached a breaking point? 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Wednesday 26 April 2017

welcome to mjventertainment.com.....MIDDLE EAST Tweeter SYRIA FRANCE CHEMICAL WEAPONS BASHAR AL-ASSAD France claims scientific proof Assad behind 'chemical attack' By RFI Issued on 26-04-2017 Modified 26-04-2017 to 16:46 media French Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault announces the findings of the French inquiry into the attack AFP France claims it has proof that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government was responsible for the suspected chemical attack that killed 87 people earlier this month. "There is no doubting the responsibility of the Syrian regime given the way that the sarin [gas] used was produced," French Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault told journalists after a secret service report was presented to a meeting of French defence chiefs on Wednesday. Tests made on unexploded ordnance and on victims found a chemical fingerprint is "typical of the method developed in Syrian laboratories", he said, adding that the production method "bears the regime's hallmarks and allows us to determine its responsibility for this attack". He said the substance France believes was used in the attack, in which 31 children were among the 87 dead, contains hexamine, a component that was also found in a gas attack in Saraqeb in north-west Syria in 2013. Assad, backed by his ally Russia, denies that Syrian forces are using chemical weapons and claims to have handed over stockpiles under a Russian-brokered deal in 2013. National Front demands proof The vice-president of France's National Front, Florian Philippot, demanded proof of Ayrault's claim on Wednesday, recalling the US government's allegations that Saddam Hussein had chemical weapons before the 2003 invasion of Iraq. He called for a UN inquiry, "not an inquiry by M Ayrault". After the attack US President Donald Trump ordered air strikes on a Syrian airbase, claiming it was launched from there. On Monday the US government placed 271 chemists from the Syrian Scientific Studies and Research Centre (SSRC) and other officials on its financial blacklist in response to their presumed role in the chemical weapons attack.

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welcome to mjventertainment.com.... Caitlyn Jenner doesn't regret voting for Trump despite LGBT 'mistakes' Former 'Bachelor' star Chris Soules arrested after deadly crash Top Stories CLEVELAND, OH - NOVEMBER 04: Beyonce performs on stage during a Get Out The Vote concert in support of Hillary Clinton at Wolstein Center in Cleveland, Ohio on November 4, 2016 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Duane Prokop/Getty Images) Beyoncé's announces four college scholarships for 'creative, conscious and confident' women 'Dirty Dancing' remake: First look at Abigail Breslin as 'Baby' Actress Heather Morris (R) and dancer Maksim Chmerkovskiy attend "Dancing with the Stars" Season 24 at CBS Televison City on April 24, 2017 in Los Angeles, California. Heather Morris on 'Dancing with the Stars' ouster: 'It is what it is' LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 06: Actor Scott Baio attends KIIS FMs Jingle Ball 2013 at Staples Center on December 6, 2013 in Los Angeles, CA. (Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Clear Channel) Scott Baio clarifies blaming Erin Moran's death on drug use 'Star Wars: Episode IX' gets summer 2019 release date LAS VEGAS, NV - SEPTEMBER 28: Recording artist Sir Elton John performs during the first night of his new show, "The Million Dollar Piano" as John begins a three-year residency at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace September 28, 2011 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images) Elton John thanks fans after health scare Writers inch closer to strike with guild vote The controversial debate about '13 Reasons Why' Colbert tears apart Trump's accomplishments What does Kobe Bryant see in his nightmares? George Clinton: 'Ain't no funk in the Trump' Erin Moran likely died of cancer complications, officials say Jennifer Lopez talks Alex Rodriguez romance Kenny G. surprises passengers with mid-air concert Justin Bieber reflects on his troubled past What to watch John Michael Higgins, Nicole Richie, Adam Campbell in 'Great News' 'Great News' confirms TV shows about TV are usually bad news Emma Watson and Tom Hanks star in tech thriller 'The Circle' Diana and Charles are wed on July 29, 1981. Here the prince and princess, clad in an emanuel wedding dress, leave St. Paul's Cathedral. 'Feud' Season 2 will be 'a very different kind of feud,' says Ryan Murphy Media Fox News' new, O'Reilly-free lineup debuts to O'Reilly-level ratings Television host Bill O'Reilly attends the Hollywood Reporter's 2016 35 Most Powerful People in Media at Four Seasons Restaurant on April 6, 2016 in New York City. Bill O'Reilly vows 'the truth will come out' Fox News anchor joins lawsuit alleging racial discrimination, harassment at network In Trump era, Rachel Maddow starts beating Fox News Paid Partner Content LendingTree Rates hit 3.12% APR (15 yr). Are you eligible? Rates hit 3.12% APR (15 yr). Are you eligible? Veteran homeowners get a huge reward in 2017 Reverse mortgage: Worth the risk? CompareCards 2 cards charging 0% interest until 2019 2 cards charging 0% interest until 2019 Results are in: See the best credit cards of 2017 Getting approved for 1 of these cards means you have excellent credit Trulia Homes & Neighborhoods Ready to trade up? Find out how much your home is worth San Diego homes for sale Getting ready to sell? Find out what your home is worth now Follow Us © 2017 Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. All Rights Reserved. CNN Sans ™ & © 2017 Cable News Network. Terms of servicePrivacy guidelines.

welcome to mjventertainment.com...... by Julia Horowitz @juliakhorowitz April 25, 2017: 5:53 PM ET Jay Z's Spotify competitor is owned by artists Jay Z's Spotify competitor is owned by artists It's not a new Beyoncé song. But it's destined to be a big hit. The pop star has announced four college scholarships in honor of the one-year anniversary of her "Lemonade" album. The Formation Scholars program will give awards to "young women who are unafraid to think outside the box and are bold, creative, conscious and confident," according to the announcement. Four schools are participating: Berklee College of Music, Howard University, Parsons School of Design and Spelman College. Both Howard and Spelman are historically black universities. Beyoncé twin news met with odd tweets from Denny's, Atlanta Police Department Each college will have one recipient for the 2017-18 academic year. Incoming, current and graduate students who are studying creative arts, music, literature or African American studies are eligible to apply. Spelman College indicates the one-time award is worth $25,000 on its website, which would cover a little more than one semester's worth of tuition, fees and room and board. Interested students are asked to submit a portfolio of work and answer an essay prompt: "How has LEMONADE inspired your educational goals?" Participating schools are (not surprisingly) excited about the program. Howard University touted the news on Instagram, while Berklee College of Music President Roger Brown called Beyoncé a "strong and inspiring role model" in a statement. "Lemonade" won a Peabody Award last week, and Beyoncé took home two Grammys for her work in February. CNNMoney (New York) First published April 25, 2017: 5:53 PM ET Paid Content After 21 Years, Suge Knight Finally Reveals the Two People Who Killed Tupac Shakur After 21 Years, Suge Knight Finally Reveals the Two People Who Killed Tupac Shakur BET TruGlamour's Spring to Summer Styles TruGlamour's Spring to Summer Styles TruGalmour 35 Animals That May Soon Go Extinct 35 Animals That May Soon Go Extinct The Zoo Zoom Our Surprising Brain Our Surprising Brain Simone Says Chinese Students Are Big Buyers in Australia Chinese Students Are Big Buyers in Australia Mansion Global These Are the Most Dangerous Countries for Travel These Are the Most Dangerous Countries for Travel Global Disease and Injury Impact | HealthGrove Recommended by

welcometo mjventertainment.com.....A presidency playing out in dog years Michael D'Antonio By Michael D'Antonio Updated 1953 GMT (0353 HKT) April 25, 2017 Colbert tears apart Trump's accomplishments Colbert tears apart Trump's accomplishments Colbert tears apart Trump's accomplishments 01:39 Story highlights Michael D'Antonio: Trump at 100 days is just like the Trump who has always been: self-aggrandizing, prone to mistakes He says but what's OK for an NY publicity hound is unconscionable, dangerous for a President "Michael D'Antonio is the author of the book "Never Enough: Donald Trump and the Pursuit of Success" (St. Martin's Press). The opinions expressed in this commentary are his. " (CNN)Aboard Air Force One, which he has used to commute almost weekly to his resort in Florida, Trump recently bragged of his great early success. "I think we've had one of the most successful 13 weeks in the history of the presidency," he said as, oddly, the image of Darth Vader flashed on a video screen beside him. The trouble was Trump had completed just his 11th week as president, not his 13th, perhaps indicating he is as disoriented as anyone, what with his innumerable advances and retreats in pursuit of actual successes. Donald Trump's controversy-a-day style has produced news at such an exhausting rate that it feels like he has held office forever. His is the first presidency occurring in the equivalent of dog years, with domestic and foreign policy changing so rapidly that 100 days with Trump feels like two years with any other commander in chief. He is governing in the fashion in which he has lived his life, like an over-eager puppy who is all wriggly, attention-seeking, impulsive, prone to mistakes and clumsy to clean up. Trump's rabid supporters like him in part because he rejects the conventional. But even he seems to grasp that a President must meet certain benchmarks. Trump voters speak out on President's actions Trump voters speak out on President's actions 11:30 The fact is that, 100 days in, our President remains very much the man he was throughout his frenetic and haphazard decades in the public eye. If you track Trump's record, as I have, you find yourself following a thousand pathways, many of which lead to dead ends. Recall that among the roles he has adopted and thrown off over the years include pro-football league leader, gambling casino magnate, mortgage lender and "university" founder. And how different is it for Trump to use Twitter to bizarrely suggest, among other strange things, that President Obama had him wiretapped than it was for him to use tabloid trickery in his New York days? Back then, these tricks included assuming false identities to drum up publicity for himself. With his Obama wiretapping accusation -- a scandal on a level with "Nixon/Watergate," he declared -- Trump was the same reckless provocateur New Yorkers have always known. The difference, of course, is that what was playful for a Manhattan publicity hound is unconscionable for a President. Tapper: Trump 'cramming' ahead of 100-day mark Tapper: Trump 'cramming' ahead of 100-day mark 02:27 Unfounded allegations posted on his own Twitter account inevitably damage Trump's credibility and the office he occupies. They also pose a challenge to anyone relying on Trump's word. Devin Nunes learned this the hard way. Apparently eager to help the President out with the wiretapping nonsense, Rep. Nunes made a dead-of-night visit to the White House complex and then announced he had seen documents supporting the idea that Obama officials had spied on Trump folks. But when Nunes, too, failed to produce proof, he had to step down from his position leading an investigation of the Russian election meddling. If Nunes acted on the assurance that the White House had proof of Obama's wiretapping, he was either deliberately misled or hasn't ever paid attention to the way Trump operates. Trump has long been a flamethrower and anyone who gets too close runs the risk of getting burned. The new President also set fire to our political system with his reckless claim that as many as 5 million illegal votes were cast in the election. These are all the acts of a man who still confuses self-promotion with the pursuit of success, mistaking headlines for achievement and the needs of his own ego for the national interest. Trump's extreme rhetoric, character flaws and obvious lack of relevant experience so concern the American people that a record-setting number of people turned out to protests held on January 21. (By one account, 1 in every 100 Americans participated.) And true to his Trump-centric nature, the President has done little to calm the nation's anxiety about him. Gallup reported that Trump's approval rating is the lowest in history for a president nearing the 100-day mark in his first term. At 41%, Trump's favorability rating trail's Obama's by 22 points. Candidate Trump vs. President Trump Candidate Trump vs. President Trump 04:19 What's more, even with his own party in control of Congress, Trump remarkably couldn't deliver on the big promise that would have pleased his base — repealing and replacing Obamacare. Here the trouble was that candidate Trump had promised to keep all the good parts of the health care system, including guaranteed coverage for dependents up to age 26, while removing the elements that pay for them. As his West Wing staff set about working with members of Congress to reach a deal, it became clear that neither the administration nor the GOP in Congress had done the work required to actually improve the system and do better by the American people. Trump hilariously declared "nobody knew health care was so complicated." With the nation watching, the self-proclaimed great negotiator ran out of moves and chose to be photographed behind the wheel of a big truck, looking for all the world like a little boy pretending to drive. Speaker of the House Paul Ryan withdrew the plan before he and the President could suffer a humiliating roll call defeat. The image that emerged from this debacle was of a President unable to close a deal even when he was negotiating with people in his own party. Despite all the failures, Trump continues to apply the skills and strategies of his past to the present, even though running a family real estate empire isn't remotely like being President of the United States. For example, Trump has always struggled to trust others and surrounded himself with family members charged with bearing enormous responsibilities, whether they were qualified or not. He's doing the same in the White House, turning to his daughter, Ivanka, and son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Trump has added so many responsibilities to Kushner's portfolio that this young man with absolutely no experience in public service can now be seen as a "mini-me" version of the President. Van Jones: Where is conservative outrage? Van Jones: Where is conservative outrage? 07:45 Add to this daughter Ivanka's installation in a White House office as "adviser" and it's easy to get the impression that the 45th President is trying to run the country the way he ran his family business, with relatives holding the positions closest to him. Americans aren't very happy with this arrangement. A Quinnipiac University poll released April 20 showed a majority think Jared and Ivanka's roles are "inappropriate." Another Trump trope he has brought to the White House is his lifelong habit of changing his mind whenever it suits him, refusing to be held to prior statements and claims. So, first it's China manipulates its currency. Now (he says) it doesn't. First, it's the North Atlantic Treaty organization (NATO) is obsolete. Now he says it's not. First the Russian strongman Vladimir Putin is worthy of admiration. Now Trump is in conflict with Putin. First the Federal Reserve Bank's interest rate policies were wrong. Now he approves. And so on. As with these reversals, Trump has simply set aside a great many of his campaign promises. For example, not a single linear foot of new wall has been constructed along the US border. (He'd promised to get started on day one of his presidency.) On foreign affairs, the isolationist candidate Trump has been replaced by an interventionist Trump, and again he has made himself ridiculous while trying to ratchet up pressure on Kim Jong Un by announcing that an aircraft carrier group -- he used the quaint term "armada" -- was headed to the waters off North Korea. Unfortunately the carrier was not actually headed where the President indicated, which opened him up to all sorts of deflating mockery. Trump's grand plans collide with 100-day mark Trump's grand plans collide with 100-day mark 03:28 Indeed, controversy and mockery have trailed Trump in abundance during his first 100 days in the White House. Late night political humor has enjoyed a resurgence and anti-Trump fervor can be seen at town hall meetings, even those conducted by Republican members of Congress, across the country. A few days ago a gathering of psychiatric experts at Yale concluded that Trump has a "dangerous mental illness" and is not fit for the office he holds. Many of Trump's opponents may feel gratified to note his struggles and nod in agreement with diagnoses offered by professionals. This exercise is beside the point. Trump remains the only President we've got. For this reason we must pray for some moderation and appreciate the signs that it may be at hand. We can also appreciate the ways in which Trump has revived civic life. During his first 100 days, the response to Trump from citizens, courts and members of Congress has been more consequential than anything the President has accomplished and, remarkably, that response may actually be having a salutary effect on him. The latest poll numbers should make Trump smile The latest poll numbers should make Trump smile On April 21, the Los Angeles Times noted that Trump had completed his least chaotic week thus far. It seems the American system may be stronger than the man's pandemonium and he may yet be calmed by the weight of the office. The 100-day takeaway is that Trump still confuses frenzy with action and lacks the experience, temperament and character to be President. It's a matter of who he is -- and the man's past indicates that except in cases of absolute failure (for example, major bankruptcies) he doesn't really learn and adapt. Unfortunately, as President his failures are our failures, too. This sobering fact should inspire more pushback from competing institutions and from people taking to the street. Such resistance is how the nation will help itself survive the Trump era. It may also teach the old publicity hound some new tricks. He may even learn to calm down before he bites someone and does more serious harm. Were he to function as a more-or-less normal chief executive, Trump would receive the treats he has always craved, including attention, approval and admiration. Paid Content A Few Kind Words about the Most Evil Man in Mankind’s History A Few Kind Words about the Most Evil Man in Mankind’s History Libertarianism.org Latest Million Dollar Celebrity Homes For Sale Today Latest Million Dollar Celebrity Homes For Sale Today Mansion Global Our Surprising Brain Our Surprising Brain Simone Says Killer of Jennifer Hudson's Family Makes Shocking Claim in His First Interview Killer of Jennifer Hudson's Family Makes Shocking Claim in His First… BET TruGlamour's Spring to Summer Styles TruGlamour's Spring to Summer Styles TruGalmour Mitochondrial Sequences Point to Early Aboriginal Roots In Australia Mitochondrial Sequences Point to Early Aboriginal Roots In Australia GenomeWeb Recommended by Paid Content After 21 Years, Suge Knight Finally Reveals the Two People Who Killed Tupac Shakur BET Leo Tolstoy: The State Is Incompatible With Christ’s Teachings Libertarianism.org Lord Richard Attenborough’s Riviera Home is on the Market for €2.5 million Mansion Global These Are the Most Dangerous Countries for Travel Global Disease and Injury Impact | HealthGrove More from CNN Ivanka Trump gets hisses, boos from German crowd when she defends her dad Surgeon general resigns Barack Obama snaps photo of Michelle Obama on yacht Sarah Palin's treatment at Fox News: Ailes called her 'hot', Wallace hoped she would sit in his lap Recommended by Calls for Assad's wife to lose UK citizenship Calls for Assad's wife to lose UK citizenship What’s wrong with Europe? 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welcome to mjventertainment.com...FranceSecurityTerrorism Champs-Élysées shooter did not appear to be radicalised - police By RFI Issued on 22-04-2017 Modified 22-04-2017 to 11:52 media French CRS police patrol the Champs Elysees Avenue the day after a policeman was killed and two others were wounded in a shooting incident in Paris, France, April 21, 2017. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier The suspect in a gun attack on the Champs-Élysées that left a policeman dead was long known to the police but had shown "no sign" of radicalisation, Paris Prosecutor François Molins said on Friday. Molins said that investigators were still working to determine if the man had acted in concert with others. "Investigations will now focus on determining [whether he had] the benefit of possible accomplices," Molins told the press conference. He added that the suspect, 39-year-old Karim C., had not been on France's official Fiche S watch list of those being monitored by security services. The shooter opened fire with an automatic weapon on a police van on the famous Champs-Élysées avenue at around 9pm Paris time on Thursday. After killing a police officer and injuring his two colleagues just a few hundred metres from the Arc de Triomphe, the gunman was shot dead while trying to flee on foot, according to the police. A note found near the suspect's body had handwritten messages expressing support for the Islamic State group, Molins said. A statement published by its propaganda agency Amaq also said the attacker was "one of the Islamic State's fighters". Soon after, police launched a raid on the suspect's home in a middle-class neighbourhood in a suburb east of Paris. Karim C. had previously served nearly 14 years in prison on three counts of attempted murder, including of police officers, as well as for lesser offences. "Police unions say there is a problem because the assailant was convicted several times – saying he wanted to attack the police – but was released anyway," he explained. Neighbours react Karim Cheurfi, 39, was described as an oddball by his neighbours in the multi-ethnic suburb of Chelles east of Paris, about a 30-minute train ride from the centre of the City of Light. "Everyone knew him here," said one resident in the quiet area where Cheurfi lived with his mother. "It was someone who had lost all reason, who was psychologically very damaged," said the resident, asking not to be named. Another local man, Salim, described him as "nuts" and someone never seen at the local mosque, while fellow resident Abdel said Cheurfi had been influenced by his repeated experiences in prison. "He hated the police and France," 23-year-old Abdel said, yet he found it hard to believe he was linked to the Islamic State group, which claimed the attack a few hours after the shooting on Thursday evening. Salim, who said he knew Cheurfi's cousin, said the gunman "could hardly use a remote controller for the television. Go on the internet and contact esh (Islamic State)? I can't see it." After shooting a policeman dead with an automatic weapon and injuring two others on Thursday night, Cheurfi was killed in return fire. A hand-written note praising IS was found near his body. Plots thwarted French authorities claim they have thwarted on average one plot every month since December 2015 when a wave of Islamist-inspired violence began. In January 2015, gunmen targeted the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine and a Jewish supermarket, which was followed by atrocities around Paris including at the Bataclan concert hall in November of the same year. In July 2016, a self-radicalised extremist drove a truck through crowds watching fireworks in the southern city of Nice, killing 86. inShare1

welcome to mjventertainment.com.... France inShare ParisPresidential election 2017FranceFrench politics In Paris suburb, young French voters want their voices heard By Brenna Daldorph Issued on 25-04-2017 Modified 25-04-2017 to 11:54 media A voter casts her ballot at the Paul Eluard Elementary School near the “3,000” housing projects in Aulnay-sous-Bois. Brenna Daldorph/RFI Young people turned out in force to vote in the first round of France's presidential elections in the Paris suburb of Aulnay-sous-Bois. At a polling station near the Trois Mille (3,000) housing projects they said voting was part of their duty as French citizens-- even though many feel excluded from French national dialogue. Aulnay-sous-Bois mayor Bruno Beschizza cast his vote on 23 April in a sunny elementary school tucked in a residential neighborhood in an affluent part of the city. The town, which sits to the north-east of Paris, is the third largest in the Île-de-France region and has a population of 82,520. It is socio-economically mixed, giving the impression of several, separate towns grouped into one. The south tends to be more affluent, while the north is home to a large public housing estate. This fracture made its way to international headlines in February when a white police officer was charged with using a truncheon to anally rape a young black man from the Aulnay-sous-Bois projects. Like other towns in the department of Seine Saint Denis, Aulnay-sous-Bois is known for low voter participation. Only about half of the population - roughly 44,000 people - registered to vote in this year’s presidential elections. “This problem isn’t specific to this presidential election,” said Mayor Beschizza, a former police officer and member of the conservative Republicans party. “We know civic engagement is low here - it’s been like this for the past 20 years. We do see engagement in local elections. The thing is, in communities facing all kinds of difficulties - be they social or economic - people feel like anything other than hyper-local politics is very distant.” Voting to fight stigma But the day of the elections, there was an unprecedented turnout in the low-income neighbourhoods in the north. Throughout the afternoon, a steady stream of people filed into another Aulnaysien polling station, Paul Eluard Elementary School-- which sits on a tree-lined street just north of the town’s socio-economic dividing line, a dilapidated shopping centre. The crumbling, graffiti-adorned Galion mall is dominated by a huge poster featuring French national footballer Moussa Sissoko. He’s is a local boy, a former resident of the projects nicknamed “3,000” for the original number of units. It was built in 1969 for employees at the nearby Citroën car factory, most of them immigrants from France’s former colonies. At that time, when France’s economy was booming, the state and industrialists encouraged immigration as a source of cheap labour. The crumbling Galion shopping centre marks the socio-economic divide in Aulnay-sous-Bois. It features a huge poster of Moussa Sissoko, a football player who grew up in the “3,000” projects. Brenna Daldorph/RFI A large number of voters on Sunday were young, most of them, born and raised in France, are the children and grandchildren of these immigrant workers. Walid, a 23-year-old electrician at Air France, was voting in his first presidential election. “I grew up here in Aulnay-sous-Bois and people stigmatise us a lot,” he said. “I was determined to put my ballot in the ballot box so that people see that, even in Aulnay, we are interested in the elections. We are here and we are French, so we have the responsibility to vote.” He said he wasn’t the only one who felt that way. “All of my friends are voting this year,” Walid said, a sentiment echoed by many voters. Ambre Froment, a 23-year-old volunteer at the Paul Eluard polling station, grew up in Aulnay-sous-Bois. She herself is highly politicised and is planning to run for legislative office in 2020 and is a local representative for the party of hard-left candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon. “There is this story that people here don’t care about politics,” she said. “But it isn’t true. I think people here are even more engaged than my friends in Paris.” Unemployment tops concerns Voters from 3,000 know what issue is most important to them: unemployment, especially for young people. According to city officials, one out of three young people in Aulnay-sous-Bois is without work. The housing projects are the most affected. Some find part-time work at the bustling market near 3,000. Marie-Ange, who is doing her Sunday shopping there, came to Aulnay-sous-Bois from the French overseas department of Guadeloupe in the 1960s as part of another French government scheme to recruit labour. She is retired from her job in the hotel industry but she worries for her grandchildren. “I’m an old lady, I’m retired and, honestly, I’m almost dead, so I’m not expecting anything,” she said. “But what I’m worried about are the young people. There’s no jobs, nothing. Young people go to school and yet there is nothing waiting for them. It makes me cry.” For most residents of 3,000 the issue is clear. However, it’s considerably harder to identify the candidate who might solve that issue. In desperation, Marie-Ange fasted for three days and prayed all morning but at 3.00pm on election day, she still hadn’t figured out who to vote for. Minorities feel excluded Back at the polling station, excited whisperings and occasional shouts gave away many voters' preference for Mélenchon, who has had growing support among youth on the capital's outskirts. Mélenchon ended up winning Aulnay-sous-Bois, finishing with 10,214 votes (33.81%). He swept the northern part of the city, getting almost 60 percent of votes in an area that has historically voted for the President François Hollande's Socialist Party. At the Paul Eluard polling station, 342 votes cast were for Mélenchon out of a total of 579. But, on the ground, the support was more nuanced. Many people said they came to the polls with heads spinning from the dizzying array of 11 candidates. Though this feeling marked elections in communities all across France, residents of 3,000 felt particular distance from the candidates. A voter hesitates before casting her vote at the Paul Eluard Elementary School near the “3,000” housing projects in Aulnay-sous-Bois. Brenna Daldorph/RFI Kartoum Touré is a 27-year-old teacher who lives in Aulnay-sous-Bois. She was born and raised in France, but she said that she often feels excluded from national dialogue because of her Malian origins and Muslim faith. Standing in front of the polling station, she still didn’t know who to vote for. “It’s my responsibility to vote as a French citizen. But when I look at all the candidates, none of them actually fit with me,” Touré said. “It makes me wonder - does being French mean dressing a certain way? Or thinking in a certain way? Or eating in a certain way? Is it a specific haircut or does it mean having blue eyes? Well, I don’t have blue eyes, I have textured hair and I wear a headscarf. And I’m French, too.” Local politician's ambitions For the people from the 3,000 projects, there just isn’t a candidate who represents them, yet. On Sunday, as the polls prepared to close, a young man named Hadama Traoré was just getting started. Traoré, who’s from Aulnay-sous-Bois, is preparing to run for local office in elections in 2020. His focus is local concerns, ranging from police violence to unemployment to zoning problems - all issues that could get people to the polls. As the sun set on Sunday evening, Traoré was holding a community meeting in the market square. Attendees balanced plastic plates stacked with homemade baked goods and kids played with Traoré’s loudspeaker, shouting his slogan “La révolution est en marche!”, or “The revolution is happening!” But Traoré has his eyes on bigger things. In 15 years, he says, his movement could have a enough steam to go for the presidency. And he hopes that, if that election comes, the choice of who to vote for would be a bit easier for many from 3,000.

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Monday 24 April 2017

welcome to mjventertainment.com.... Asia-Pacific inShare North KoreaUnited StatesChinaNavy North Korea denounces US naval deployment to the region By RFI Issued on 11-04-2017 Modified 11-04-2017 to 18:27 media This US Navy handout photo obtained March 15, 2017 shows the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70), foreground,as it transits the East China Sea with the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force Murasame-class destroyer JS Samidare (DD 106) on March 9, 2017. AFP/US Navy/MC2 Sean M. Castellano North Korea condemned on Monday the US sending a naval strike group to the area, and has vowed that it is ready for "war". The development raises questions about the possibility of conflict in the region. RFI's Tom Wheeldon takes a closer look. The potential for regional conflict has increased, especially after US President Donald Trump's warning that America is willing to take uniliateral action against North Korea, if its main ally China doesn't rein it in. “What China’s been trying to do is to engage in dialogue,” says James Hannah, Asia analyst at UK-based think tank Chatham House. “The problem is that without a commitment in Pyongyang to engage in discussion on denuclearisation, the support in Washington D.C., Seoul and Tokyo is pretty limited.” After a series of missile tests, many experts think Pyongyang is two to three years away from getting workable nuclear weapons. “It may be that the missile strikes against Syria is indirectly an attempt to signal that where North Korea is concerned, the US is willing to consider all options,” notes John Nilsson-Wright, East Asia expert at Cambridge University. South Korea weighs in After the impeachment of the conservative president Park Geun-hye, widely seen as tough on North Korea, elections are only a month away in South Korea. Frontrunner Moon Jae-in supports a more conciliatory approach to the North. But snapping at his heels in the polls in Ahn Choel-Soo, who favours a more hawkish position against Pyongyang - he's especially keen on sanctions. This might affect what North Korea does in the next month. “From the point of view of North Korea, the question is: who would they best want to see succeeding the impeached president Park?” says Nilsson-Wright. “The likelihood is that they would prefer Moon over Ahn – in which case, if they’re following events closely, they have an incentive to avoid any provocations between now and the elections.” Beneath all of this, as far as North Korea goes one thing is clear. President Kim Jong-Un's one big priority is his regime's survival. And, when announcing a weapons test in January, his government news agency specifically referred to the fates of Saddam Hussein in Iraq and Muammar Gaddafi in Libya. These dictators gave up their nuclear weapons programmes, then they couldn't prevent regime change by the West. That is the strongest sign that, whatever the US or China might do, North Korea will continue its nuclear weapons ambitions.

welcome to mjventertainment.com....Coson Nigeria April 12 at 10:22am · COSON MOURNS STAUNCH MEMBER, TONY GREY Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON) has condoled the family and diverse fans of its staunch member, Tony ‘Ozimba’ Grey who transited on Monday April 10, 2017. The Warri based music star who held the South-East and South-South parts of the country spell bound with his special fire brand music style called Ozimba, had popular hit songs like Ije Udo, She’s my Love, My Message, Tribute to Marvin Gay, Come Back Love, etc ... See More Image may contain: 1 person, standing

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welcome to mjventertainment.com...French press review 24 April 2017 By Michael Fitzpatrick Issued on 24-04-2017 Modified 24-04-2017 to 09:07 media This morning, if you want to avoid wall-to-wall presidential analysis, pontification, prediction and prognostication, you'd be well advised to turn to the sports pages of the French newspapers. The editorial in business daily Les Echos says the outcome of the French presidential election's first round is further proof of the extent to which France is divided. And the leader article goes on to say that, even if the young centrist Emmanuel Macron is clear favourite to win outright in two weeks' time, the hardest part is still to come: he now has to find the means of putting his plans for reform into action and that with all the disadvantages which attend a president who is unlikely to have a parliamentary majority following the elections in June. Too early to shout 'victory' for centrist reformer La Tribune warns that the outcome of the second round is anything but a foregone conclusion, especially if it degenerates into a clash of the pro- and anti-European camps. And the same financial paper says that last night's result shows the clear determination of French voters to clear the presidential landscape of the debris left by three decades of mainstream left-right dominance. French politics changed last night, we are assured. Few survivors as French politics suffers second earthquake Conservative paper Le Figaro considers the outcome a "new earthquake" in French politics, since no candidate from the mainstream Socialists or Republicans has survived into the decisive second round. The first earthquake was, of course, that triggered by the National Front's Jean-Marie Le Pen's famous defeat of Socialist Lionel Jospin in the first round in 2002. This time Le Figaro is also struck by the huge improvement in the performance of Jean-Luc Mélenchon of the hard left. The right-wing daily says the combined results constitute the biggest shock in French politics since 1958, the year which saw the birth of the current, Fifth Republic. Le Figaro says the Socialists will have a hard time recovering from the crushing defeat of their man, Benoît Hamon, and suggests that the party will now face a period of internal struggle which will be murderous. But the right-wing paper is also clear about the implications of the defeat for the mainstream conservative Republicans. Three months ago François Fillon was heading into an election which he simply couldn't lose. His refusal to withdraw following a crippling series of scandals was directly responsible for last night's defeat. Fillon said as much in his concession speech last night. For Le Figaro, the crucial question now is whether the Republicans can remain united in the run-up to the parliamentary elections in June, or are they going to go down in a bloody succession battle with hostilities breaking out this very week. The advice the various conservative luminaries give to their voters for the second round will be the first indication of how deep the divisions are. Emmanuel Macron just one step from victory Left-leaning Libération gives the front-page honours to Emmanuel Macron, saying that he's now just one step from the presidency. In fact, he may be a lot closer than that since, as Libé points out, virtually all the defeated candidates and the big names in the various parties have called for a vote in favour of Macron in the second round. An opinion poll carried out last night as the results were being announced confirmed earlier poll suggestions that Macron will win about 60 percent of second round support, solidly defeating Marine Le Pen. The National Front leader remains confident that she can mobilise a sufficient number of those who abstained yesterday - about 23 percent of voters stayed away - while also attracting supporters of the now-defeated Fillon and Nicolas Dupont-Aignan. inShare Related French vote turnout nearly 70% by … Early turnout figures up on 2012 in … Polling opens under tight security in … European leaders welcome Macron … Macron tops French first round to … French vote turnout nearly 70% by … Early turnout figures up on 2012 in … Polling opens under tight security in … European leaders welcome Macron … Macron tops French first round to … French vote turnout nearly 70% by … Prev Next Promoted stories 10 Simple Reasons Why Donald Trump Would Be A Great President 10 Simple Reasons Why Donald Trump Would Be A Great President Swing State These 6 Presidential Properties Are Currently On The Market These 6 Presidential Properties Are Currently On The Market Mansion Global 12 Gadgets That Will Change the World 12 Gadgets That Will Change the World Gadgets World New York State Licenses PreventionGenetics New York State Licenses PreventionGenetics GenomeWeb Sponsored content by Outbrain 1234567 Sport 24/04/2017SportCricketPakistan Younis Khan runs his 10,000th in Test match against West Indies 21/04/2017SportFootball Real face Atletico in Champions League semi-final 21/04/2017SportAthletics Olympic champion Rollins banned for a year Press reviews 24/04/2017 World media welcome Macron first-round lead 24/04/2017 French press review 24 April 2017 AFP Henri van Breda pleads not guilty to slaying his S. 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welcome to mjventertainment.com.... France inShare France Presidential election 2017 French politics Press review World media welcome Macron first-round lead By Michael Fitzpatrick Issued on 24-04-2017 Modified 24-04-2017 to 09:18 media Emmanuel Macron and his wife, Brigitte Trogneux, after the results were announced RFI/Pierre René-Worms Most of the world's media heaved a sigh of relief at the result of France's presidential election first round on Monday. But there was one dissonant note in the US. Perhaps ironically in the wake of Brexit, media across the Channel are hailing the strong showing of pro-European Emmanuel Macron, while adding that far-right Eurosceptic Marine Le Pen's second-place success should not be ignored. "The threat from the French extreme right has not gone away," warns the centre-left Guardian. Macron faces challenges The Financial Times predicts the 7 May runoff will be an "act of coronation" for Macron. Dangerous words given the unhappy history of crowned heads here in France. But the Financial Times warns that governing will not be easy, saying Macron could be forced into hard bargaining to implement his reform agenda. Mainstream defeated Papers in several countries are pointing to the historic defeat suffered by the mainstream left and right, with the US financial daily the Wall Street Journal calling the vote a "stunning rebuke of France's mainstream political forces". In an article headlined "France torn apart", Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung notes that more than 40 percent of voters yesterday cast ballots for either the far right or the far left. Macron's victory is so narrow that in the two previous presidential elections he wouldn't have won a place in the second round, the Frankfurt-based daily says, warning against assumptions the centrist will win easily next month. French politics broken Swiss daily Le Temps says the result is a sign that the French republic is "broken" and that voters want "deep change". The second round, according to the Geneva-based paper, is "set to oppose two visions of France -- one inclusive and open to the world and its concerns, and the other cut off behind its borders and its old myths". The stakes are high, the Swiss daily says: "The final choice of the French will change their country but also the face of the world." Fox pitches for Le Pen An opinion piece on America's right-of-centre Fox News website says le Pen is still in with a good chance and compared the situation to US President Donald Trump's shock win, saying: "She may pull off an even bigger surprise than the Tweeter in Chief. Yuge, in fact." The New York Times is struck by Macron's strange status as someone who has set himself apart from establishment parties and yet who clearly hails from the political and social elite. "His profile is that of an insider, but his policies are those of an outsider," the NYT says. "If the precocious Mr Macron is to succeed, his first challenge will be to sell himself, a product still largely unfamiliar to almost everyone," according to the New York daily. Europeans relieved Poland's centre-left Gazeta Wyborcza has expressed relief that the prospect of a French exit from the EU -- which could spell disaster for the bloc -- appeared slightly further off as polls show Macron likely to beat Le Pen in the run-off. "The European Union needs to survive the divorce with Britain that has just begun. But Frexit -- a French departure from the union -- would have buried the European project. And that's what National Front leader Marine Le Pen threatened," according to the Polish paper. The BBC says France is "entering uncharted political waters" and notes that, whoever came out on top in the next round, the country remains "deeply divided". A comment piece in Australia's Sydney Morning Herald, calls the election results "a political earthquake". Optimism attracts voters In an editorial headlined "The hope of Macron", Spain's top-selling daily El Pais said the young centrist's success "points the way that traditional parties must follow if they want to reconnect with their voters". "The man who is shaping up to become the youngest president of the French Republic has broken through in a France engulfed in crisis and pessimism," El Pais says. "His optimistic outlook on the future of the country and of Europe seduced voters at a time of rising populism, nationalism and xenophobia."

welcome to mjventertainment.com...NigeriaBoko HaramUS US government overlooking human rights concerns with Nigeria warplane sale By Daniel Finnan Issued on 19-04-2017 Modified 19-04-2017 to 15:01 media Nigerian soldiers in Maiduguri, Borno State on 25 March 2016. Photo: Stefan Heunis/AFP The US government is pushing forward with plans to sell light aircraft to the Nigerian military to help in their battle against the hardline Islamist group Boko Haram. Twelve Super Tucano attack aircraft worth 600 million dollars will be sold to Nigeria, according to US officials cited by several reports last week. However, there are still concerns about human rights abuses committed by the Nigerian military such as the accidental bombing in January of a camp for displaced people. Some experts also worry that the Super Tucano is not the best strategic choice in the fight against Boko Haram, nor does it offer the best value for money to the Nigerian government. RFI spoke to Matthew Page, a former intelligence analyst on Nigeria for the US State Department. “With the arrival of the Buhari administration, the US government felt a strong degree of pressure to essentially change tact and do something that showed that they were much committed to helping Nigeria fighting Boko Haram…The human rights concerns persist and after the Buhari government came into office, my sense was that the US government essentially wiped the slate clean.”

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welcome to mjventertainment.blogspot.com:>>Polls: Trump approaches 100 days with lowest job approval rating in more than 70 years Dylan Stableford Senior Editor Yahoo NewsApril 23, 2017 Six days before marking his first 100 days in office, President Trump has the lowest approval rating of any president in more than 70 years, a pair of polls published Sunday found. According to a new ABC News/Washington Post poll, just 42 percent of Americans approve of Trump’s performance as president, while 53 percent disapprove. Nearly 70 percent of Americans approved of the job Barack Obama was doing at the same point in his presidency, while just 26 percent disapproved. On average, past presidents have enjoyed a 69 percent approval, 19 percent disapproval split at or near their first 100-day mark, according to the survey. Not Trump. According to a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, nearly two-thirds of Americans (64 percent) give Trump “poor or middling marks for his first 100 days in office” — including 45 percent who say he’s off to a “poor start.” In 2009, by contrast, 54 percent of Americans said that Barack Obama’s first 100 days had gotten off to either a good or great start, compared with 46 percent who said fair or poor. The survey shows Trump’s overall job-approval rating at 40 percent as he approaches 100 days — the lowest job-approval rating for a new president at this point in the history of the NBC/WSJ poll. (Source: ABC News/Washington Post) Source: ABC News/Washington Post The net disapproval of Trump’s job as president appears to stem from feelings about his judgment and temperament. According to the ABC/Washington Post poll, 58 percent say he lacks honesty and trustworthiness — the same percentage that see him as out of touch — while 59 percent say he lacks the temperament for the job and 61 percent say he lacks empathy. But the survey also found one aspect of the job in which Trump is enjoying broad support: 73 percent approve of his pressuring companies to keep jobs in the United States. (That number includes “most Democrats, liberals and nonwhites … three groups that are broadly critical of Trump more generally,” per the poll.) A slim majority (53 percent) say Trump is a “strong leader,” compared with 45 percent who say he is not. But Trump’s supporters are overwhelmingly steadfast and loyal in their support. The ABC/WaPo survey found that a whopping 96 percent of those who voted for Trump in November say they have no regrets and would vote for him again. Which is one reason why Trump continues to hold campaign-style rallies more than 3 1/2 years away from the next election. On Saturday, April 29, Trump announced that he will mark his 100th day in office with “a BIG rally” in Pennsylvania, on the same date as the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner — an event Trump has said he will not attend. Late Sunday, Trump tweeted his reaction to the newly-released polls, saying that they “are very good considering that much of the media is FAKE and almost always negative.” Trump also falsely claimed that the ABC/Washington Post poll proved he would “still” beat Hillary Clinton in the popular vote if the election were held today. New polls out today are very good considering that much of the media is FAKE and almost always negative. Would still beat Hillary in ….. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) April 23, 2017 …popular vote. ABC News/Washington Post Poll (wrong big on election) said almost all stand by their vote on me & 53% said strong leader. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) April 23, 2017 Trump never won the popular vote. Clinton won the popular vote by nearly 3 million more votes overall, finishing with 65,844,610 (48.2 percent) compared to Trump’s 62,979,636 (46.1 percent). The ABC/Washington Post survey suggested that because fewer Clinton voters (85 percent) said they would vote for her than Trump voters (96 percent) would for him, it would result in an overall Trump victory (43 percent to 40 percent) over Clinton in a “hypothetical re-do.” Read more from Yahoo News: ‘I am all in’: Lindsey Graham boards Trump train after lengthy feud Trump: I won’t say whether we sabotaged North Korea missile test Trump on North Korea: ‘We are sending an armada’ Trump: Syria gas attack had ‘a big impact’ on me Hillary Clinton reportedly said ‘that was my last race’ after election loss