Syrian cinematographer blocked from entering US for Oscars 2017
Posted by مؤسسة الوطن العربى الإعلامية - لندن ، المملكة المتحدة . WA MEDIA FOUNDATION - LONDON, UK | Sunday, 26 February 2017 | Posted in media
ARAB GAZETTE -
A Syrian cinematographer won't be able to attend this Sunday's Oscars ceremony having been denied entry to the US by the Department of Homeland Security.
21-year-old Khaled Khateeb, who worked on the Oscar-nominated documentary short The White Helmets, is reported to have been kept from entering the country after officials found “derogatory information” against him.
The news comes a month after Donald Trump's travel ban - which prevented nationals from seven predominantly-Muslim countries, including Syria, from entering the country - was blocked by a US court.
40-minute long documentary The White Helmets is about The Syrian Civil Defense which has saved over 60,000 people from bombed buildings in war-torn Syria; it's being turned into a feature-length film by George Clooney who this week spoke out against Trump.
The Associated Press reports that Khateeb had planned on attending the ceremony with the Netflix-produced short's director Orlando von Einsiedel and producer Joanna Natasegara.
He said in an earlier statement: “If we win this award, it will show people across Syria that people around the world support them. It will give courage to every volunteer who wakes up every morning to run towards bombs.”
Trump's Muslim ban would have kept Asghar Farhadi - Oscar-winning director of nominated Foreign Language film The Salesman - from attending the ceremony, however, the filmmaker is now not attending on his own accord. In a protest against Trump's actions, the film will receive its UK premiere this Sunday - ahead of the Academy Awards - outside the US embassy.
Streep accuses Karl Lagerfeld of spoiling her Oscar nomination
Posted by مؤسسة الوطن العربى الإعلامية - لندن ، المملكة المتحدة . WA MEDIA FOUNDATION - LONDON, UK | | Posted in arts
ARAB GAZETTE - Hollywood
Meryl Streep has accused designer Karl Lagerfeld of attempting to spoil her appearance at the Oscars, after he claimed she was being paid to wear a gown on the red carpet.
Their row made headlines around the world following his allegation that Streep had decided against wearing a Chanel gown because she could be compensated for wearing a dress by a different designer.
Yesterday, Lagerfeld admitted he had been mistaken and expressed regret for his remarks - but the actress dismissed his mea culpa, and said it was a weak attempt at an apology.
Streep said: "The story was picked up globally, and continues, globally, to overwhelm my appearance at the Oscars, on the occasion of my record-breaking 20th nomination, and to eclipse this honour in the eyes of the media, my colleagues and the audience."
The 67-year-old is in the running for a best actress gong at the Academy Awards for her portrayal of an eccentric opera singer in Florence Foster Jenkins.
A win at the Dolby Theatre tonight would mean she has a fourth Oscar to her name.
Streep attracted criticism from Donald Trump when she accepted the Cecil B DeMille Award at the Golden Globes - and condemned the President for mocking a disabled reporter.
During her speech, she had said: "This instinct to humiliate when it's modelled by someone in the public platform by someone powerful, it filters down into everybody's life because it kind of gives permission for other people to do the same thing."
Afterwards, Mr Trump dismissed Streep as "overrated" and a "Hillary flunky".
Further politically charged speeches are expected from tonight's winners at the Academy Awards - with its president, Cheryl Boone Isaacs, telling Sky News: "I think and I hope that those on stage will give 45 seconds of something really meaningful and touching."
Corbyn vows to turn back the Tory tide after Copeland loss
Posted by مؤسسة الوطن العربى الإعلامية - لندن ، المملكة المتحدة . WA MEDIA FOUNDATION - LONDON, UK | | Posted in politic
ARAB GAZETTE - LONDON
The Labour leader says he is determined to "finish the job" of reconnecting the party with working class voters and values.
Jeremy Corbyn is claiming he can "turn back the Tory tide" despite a new opinion poll suggesting Labour would perform much better with a new leader.
After Labour was swept away by the Conservatives in Copeland, Mr Corbyn will attempt to fight back in a speech at the Scottish Labour conference in Perth.
Ahead of his speech, the embattled Labour leader says he takes his share of responsibility for Copeland - but blames globalisation and a rigged economy.
"We haven't done enough yet to rebuild trust with people who have been ripped off and sold out for decades and don't feel Labour represents them," he wrote in the Sunday Mirror.
"But if we stand together, I am confident we can do that and turn back the Tory tide."
Defiantly rejecting calls to step down, he added: "I was re-elected Labour leader five months ago with a bigger majority and I am determined to finish that job: to reconnect Labour with our working class voters and values - so we can win power to rebuild and transform Britain, for the many, not just the few."
A ComRes poll, also in the Sunday Mirror, strongly contradicts Mr Corbyn's claims:
:: 31% say they would be more likely to vote Labour if the party was not led by Mr Corbyn;
:: 77% of non-Labour voters don't believe the party has the right leader; and
:: 71% of this group believe Labour has lost touch with the working classes.
The poll suggests the most popular alternative leader to Mr Corbyn would be London mayor Sadiq Khan, who was given a rousing reception by Labour activists at the Scottish conference in Perth.
More than 100 miles south of Copeland, in Wigan - solidly Labour since 1918 - Sky News found that Mr Corbyn divides opinion among voters.
"He's got the true values of working class people," said one man. "I think the Parliamentary Labour Party should get behind him."
But one female voter said: "I just don't like him - don't know what the word is - I think he lies a bit."
And another woman said: "I don't think any of them know what's best for us at the moment. It'll have to be wait and see and hope for the best."
Wigan's MP, Lisa Nandy, speaking on Sophy Ridge on Sunday, says it's no good Mr Corbyn blaming globalisation and a rigged economy for results like Copeland.
"The trouble with looking at every factor apart from Labour is that it's just a thoroughly inadequate response," she told Sky News.
"If we really want to address what has been happening to the Labour Party for a very long time, then we as a party need to get out of our comfort zone and start confronting some of the very difficult issues we face."
Asked by Sophy if she gave Mr Corbyn a year to turn things around, the MP said: "That's what his close team said, that they're determined to do that within a year - and I think that's absolutely critical.
"We can't obviously go into a general election in the state that we're currently in."
Maps reveal schizophrenia - hotspots - in England
Posted by مؤسسة الوطن العربى الإعلامية - لندن ، المملكة المتحدة . WA MEDIA FOUNDATION - LONDON, UK | | Posted in health
ARAB GAZETTE - By James Gallagher
Maps have revealed "hotspots" of schizophrenia and other psychotic illnesses in England, based on the amount of medication prescribed by GPs.
The lowest rate of schizophrenia prescriptions was in East Dorset.
However, explaining the pattern across England is complicated and the research team says the maps pose a lot of questions.
They were developed using anonymous prescription records that are collected from doctors' surgeries in England.
They record only prescriptions given out by GPs - not the number of patients treated - so hospital treatment is missed in the analysis.
Data between October 2015 and September 2016 showed the average number of schizophrenia prescriptions across England was 19 for every 1,000 people.
The top five were:
North Kesteven, 39 per 1,000 people
Coventry, 35 per 1,000 people
Rochdale, 34 per 1,000 people
Cambridge, 34 per 1,000 people
Hastings, 33 per 1,000 people
Other high-prescribing pockets were in Manchester, Liverpool, Wigan, Kingston-upon-Hull and Walsall.
The lowest prescribing was found in:
East Dorset, nine per 1,000 people
South Gloucestershire, 10 per 1,000 people
Tewkesbury, 10 per 1,000 people
York, 10 per 1,000 people
Epsom and Ewell, 11 per 1,000 people
Prof Allan Brimicombe, one of the researchers from UEL, said: "The pattern is not uniformly spread across the country."
He suggests this could be due to "environmental effects" such as different rates of drink or drug abuse.
Prof Brimicombe told the BBC: "The top one is in the Lincolnshire countryside and there are others in the countryside."
But there is also a vein of high prescriptions in the North West.
Prof Brimicombe said: "This raises questions that we can't yet answer, but it helps us raise the question.
"In each of these areas of high prescriptions there may be a different set of drivers that are leading to this situation.
"Looking into them starts to inform policy into ameliorating it."
Different attitudes of GPs prescribing medication in different parts of the country could also be relevant.
The data explored how prescribing habits changed between 2011 and 2016.
Prof Brimicombe said: "The pattern is very striking.
"These changes do not have a strong association with lifestyle types, so it's more likely to be due to differences in policies and practices in the way mental health services are commissioned across the country."
Report : After Kim Jong-nam killing, Malaysia airport terminal declared safe
Posted by مؤسسة الوطن العربى الإعلامية - لندن ، المملكة المتحدة . WA MEDIA FOUNDATION - LONDON, UK | | Posted in reports and studies
ARAB GAZETTE - Kuala Lumpur
The airport terminal where the half-brother of North Korea's leader was killed with a nerve agent has been declared free of any "hazardous material" by Malaysian police.
Security teams in protective suits had earlier swept the area.
Malaysia's health minister said that an autopsy suggested the toxin used to kill Kim Jong-nam caused "very serious paralysis".
Tests show Mr Kim was killed with the highly toxic nerve agent VX.
An Indonesian woman arrested for the murder has said she was given 400 Malaysian ringgit ($90; £72) to carry out a prank.
Siti Aisyah, 25, told Indonesian embassy officials that she was given the cash to smear Kim Jong-nam's face with "baby oil" as part of a reality show joke.
VX is classified as a weapon of mass destruction by the United Nations. A drop on the skin can kill in minutes.
Who could be behind the attack?
Unravelling the mystery of Kim Jong-nam's death
Mr Kim died two weeks ago after two women accosted him briefly in a check-in hall at Kuala Lumpur International Airport's low-cost carrier terminal, known as KLIA2.
Health Minister S Subramaniam said the discovery that the VX toxin was used confirmed the hospital's autopsy result, which suggested that a "chemical agent caused very serious paralysis", leading to death "in a very short period of time".
The airport has been swept for toxic chemicals by various specialised police teams, forensic experts, the fire department's hazardous materials unit and the Atomic Energy Licensing Board.
"As a result of this screening process done we confirm: number one, there is no hazardous material found in KLIA2. Number two, KLIA2 is free from any form of contamination of hazardous material. And thirdly, is KLIA2 is declared a safe zone," said Abdul Samah Mat, the police official heading the investigation.
There is widespread suspicion that North Korea was behind the attack, which it strongly denies.
A Vietnamese woman and a North Korean man have also been arrested in connection with the killing.
The Vietnamese foreign ministry confirmed that the Vietnamese national being held was Doan Thi Huong, born in 1988, saying she had told officials she thought she was taking part in a television prank.
At least seven other suspects are wanted for questioning by police, including Hyon Kwang Song, 44, second secretary at the North Korean embassy in Kuala Lumpur.
After a 30-minute meeting with Siti Aisyah on Saturday, Indonesian Deputy Ambassador Andreano Erwin said: "She only said in general that somebody asked her to do this activity. She only said in general she met with some people who looked Japanese or Korean.
"According to her, that person gave her 400 ringgits to do this activity... She only said she was given a kind of oil, like baby oil."
The officials said they did not see any physical signs that the suspect had been affected by the chemical.
Malaysian police say the attackers had been trained to immediately wash their hands after the attack.
Some experts have suggested that they might have each smeared two different non-lethal elements of VX, which became deadly when mixed on Mr Kim's face.
What is the deadly VX nerve agent?
The most potent of the known chemical warfare agents, it is a clear, amber-coloured, oily liquid which is tasteless and odourless
Works by penetrating the skin and disrupting the transmission of nerve impulses - a drop on the skin can kill in minutes. Lower doses can cause eye pain, blurred vision, drowsiness and vomiting
It can be disseminated in a spray or vapour when used as a chemical weapon, or used to contaminate water, food, and agricultural products
VX can be absorbed into the body by inhalation, ingestion, skin contact, or eye contact
Clothing can carry VX for about 30 minutes after contact with the vapour, which can expose other people
Banned by the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention
Who was Kim Jong-nam?
The well-travelled and multilingual oldest son of late North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, he was once considered a potential future leader. He has lived abroad for years and was bypassed in favour of his half-brother, Kim Jong-un.
He had been travelling on a passport under the name Kim Chol. North Korea has yet to confirm that the deceased was actually Kim Jong-nam.
For many years, it was believed Kim Jong-nam was being groomed to succeed his father as the next leader.
But that appears to have come to an end in 2001 when Kim was caught sneaking into Japan on a fake passport.
He later became one of the regime's most high-profile critics, openly questioning the authoritarian policies and dynastic succession his grandfather Kim Il-sung began crafting in 1948.