Friday, May 3, 2013

Family of blind activist Chen Guangcheng 'tormented' in China

The Chinese authorities are denying potentially life-saving medical treatment to the imprisoned nephew of blind Chinese human rights activist Chen Guangcheng, the young man?s father said Thursday.

?My son?s life could be in danger? if he is not operated on for acute appendicitis, Chen Guangfu said in a telephone interview. Prison authorities have refused his request that his son, Chen Kegui, be moved to a hospital, he said.

?Chen Kegui?s life and health are now in the hands of the same authorities who have authorized or tolerated other abuses against him in prison,? said Sophie Richardson, China director for the New York based Human Rights Watch in a statement. ?To deny him appropriate treatment reflects at best incompetence and at worst a twisted effort to torment the Chen family.?

Chen Kegui's treatment at the hands of the Chinese authorities appears to be another episode in a continuing pattern of persecution of activists' relatives.

RECOMMENDED: 6 famous dissidents in China

Chen Kegui is serving a 39 month prison sentence for ?intentional injury? to local officials in his home village who raided his home in April last year searching for his uncle, the blind activist. Chen?s parents say he was acting in self defense and human rights experts say Chen Kegui?s trial last November was a farce in which he was denied his fundamental rights.

The men Chen Kegui was accused of injuring were hunting for Chen Guangcheng after his dramatic night-time escape from house arrest. Unbeknownst to the village search party, he had sought refuge at the US Embassy in Beijing.

He was later allowed to leave with his immediate family for the United States. US officials involved in the negotiations said at the time that the Chinese government had pledged to investigate claims that Chen?s relatives had been mistreated.

Those relatives say they have seen no sign of such an investigation, and that in fact they have been subjected to even greater harassment in recent weeks.

(See the Monitor's story of China's recent harassment of the family of Nobel Laureate Liu Xiaobo, here)

Chen Kegui rang his father last week to postpone his monthly family prison visit, saying that he had been diagnosed by prison doctors as suffering from appendicitis and that he was undergoing a course of intravenously injected antibiotics.

His father said the prison authorities had since twice rejected his request that his son be taken from the prison clinic to a proper hospital for an operation. ?They told me that my son had only a small problem that according to the regulations do not justify moving him,? Chen Guangfu said. ?But if he has appendicitis I think he needs surgery.?

Chen Guangfu said he feared his son was being denied suitable medical treatment in retribution for congressional testimony that his brother, Chen Guangfeng, gave last month, explaining how his relatives in China were being persecuted.

A Washington based nongovernmental organization, Freedom Now, that has been acting for the Chen family, sent an urgent appeal earlier this week to the United Nations? Special Rapporteur on Torture, requesting him to intervene with Beijing on Chen Kegui?s behalf.

RECOMMENDED: 6 famous dissidents in China

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/family-blind-activist-chen-guangcheng-tormented-china-132616948.html

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Thursday, May 2, 2013

Bridgewater Police update phone call, radio recording system

BRIDGEWATER ? A New Brunswick company secured a $12,900 deal to replace the municipal police department?s radio and telephone call recording system.

Captura Communications was awarded the project during a recent town council meeting. Five companies filed bids for the job.

?This particular piece of equipment was in need of update. It was about to become obsolete,? Bridgewater Police Chief John Collyer told the meeting.

Aging hardware and non-compatibility with computer operating systems above Windows XP is behind the reason for replacing the department?s current call recording dictaphone system, indicates the request for proposals document referring to the work.

Along with operating system requirements, the replacement gear will be able to record the police department?s encrypted and unencrypted radio traffic via the province?s trunked mobile radio systems and the department?s analog and digital telephone systems.

Chief Collyer said there?s a legal requirement to provide copies of all phone and radio transmissions for court disclosure purposes.

The new equipment is also expected to be able to record phone calls made over broadband internet connection, called voice-over internet protocol technology, should that upgrade take place within the next couple of years.

Staff technicians in a dispatch centre located within the Exhibition Drive police station provide both radio and telephone communication. The department has about 10 civilian staffers and about two dozen officers.

posted on 5/1/13

Source: http://southshorenow.ca/archives/2013/050113/news/009_Bridgewater_Police_update_phone_call_radio_recording_system.html.php

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Newtown victim's daughter confronts Ayotte

WARREN, N.H. (AP) ? A woman whose mother was killed in last year's school shooting in Newtown, Conn., confronted Sen. Kelly Ayotte Tuesday during the senator's first public appearance in New Hampshire since voting against gun control legislation.

About 150 people attended the town hall meeting, where Ayotte defended her vote against a bill that would have required criminal and mental health background checks for people buying guns online or at gun shows.

After the vote two weeks ago, the New Hampshire Republican, a former prosecutor, expressed concern that expanded background checks could harm the rights of gun owners.

"I'm just wondering why the burden of my mother being gunned down in the halls of her elementary school isn't as important," WMUR-TV reported Erica Lafferty asking.

Lafferty's mother, Dawn Hochsprung, was the principal of Sandy Hook Elementary School, where 20 pupils and six educators were slain in December. She died after lunging at the gunman to try to stop him from firing.

Ayotte said she was sorry for what Lafferty has been through.

"And I think that ultimately when we look at what happened in Sandy Hook we should have a fuller discussion to make sure that doesn't happen again," she said.

Ayotte said she hoped to find some common ground but that she didn't think the enhanced background checks that she voted against would have changed the outcome in the Newtown shootings.

"Mental health is the one area that I hope we can agree on going forward to work on because that seems to be the overriding issue on the list and that is why I have been trying to work across the aisle on that issue," she said.

Local and out-of-state groups who opposed Ayotte's vote held up signs that read "Shame on You." Ayotte supporters countered with signs reading "I support Kelly."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nhs-ayotte-defends-gun-control-vote-063549232.html

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Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Andreessen: Android poised to explode in emerging markets

Marc Andressen on Bloomberg

Bloomberg recently TV interviewed Marc Andreessen, the guy who’s famous for co-founding Netscape and currently works as a VC at his own Silicon Valley VC shop, Andreessen Horowitz.

Towards the end of the interview, he was asked what’s big for 2013. After saying that tablet growth would still be huge, he followed up with this quote:

"The other thing I think I'd point to is the $50 Android smartphone is about to hit the market worldwide. Smartphones are about to be put in the hands of another 3 billion people who don't have them. And that's probably the single biggest thing that's happening right now."

In the developed world, we tend to think of Android as Samsung Galaxy S3 and S4, the new HTC One, maybe some Sony, and throw Motorola in for good measure. Yeah, we hear about cheaper hardware, but rarely do we stop to think about what it means to emerging markets.

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/oiknIfBg26w/story01.htm

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Israel negotiator welcomes Arab peace plan

JERUSALEM (AP) ? Israel's chief peace negotiator is welcoming the Arab League's decision to sweeten a decade-old initiative offering comprehensive peace with Israel.

The Arab League's original 2002 peace initiative offered regionwide peace with Israel in exchange for a withdrawal from all territories captured in the 1967 Mideast War to make way for an independent Palestinian state.

Under Monday's decision, announced in Washington at talks with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, the Arabs said they would accept small modifications to the 1967 lines, as long as they are agreed upon in talks with the Palestinians.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who opposes a pullback to the 1967 lines, had no immediate comment.

But his chief negotiator, Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, on Tuesday called the Arab gesture "good news that should be welcomed."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-negotiator-welcomes-arab-peace-plan-121102706.html

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Foursquare CEO Dennis Crowley: ?People Think We Don't Know How To Generate Revenue. This Is Wrong.?

crowley 2Foursquare has taken a fair amount of flack lately, as the company rolls into its fourth year in business. Some claim Foursquare's userbase had stagnated; others claim that the company lacks a sustainable business model. After denying the negative user base claims, Foursquare CEO Dennis Crowley went on clarify that they do have a business model in place ? in fact, March was their biggest revenue month to date.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/CGpvWmetvTA/

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New drug stimulates immune system to kill infected cells in animal model of hepatitis B infection

New drug stimulates immune system to kill infected cells in animal model of hepatitis B infection

Monday, April 29, 2013

A novel drug developed by Gilead Sciences and tested in an animal model at the Texas Biomedical Research Institute in San Antonio suppresses hepatitis B virus infection by stimulating the immune system and inducing loss of infected cells.

In a study conducted at Texas Biomed's Southwest National Primate Research Center, researchers found that the immune modulator GS-9620, which targets a receptor on immune cells, reduced both the virus levels and the number of infected liver cells in chimpanzees chronically infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV). Chimpanzees are the only species other than humans that can be infected by HBV. Therefore, the results from this study were critical in moving the drug forward to human clinical trials which are now in progress.

The new report, co-authored by scientists from Texas Biomed and Gilead Sciences, appears in the May issue of Gastroenterology. Gilead researchers had previously demonstrated that the same therapy could induce a cure of hepatitis infection in woodchucks that were chronically infected with a virus similar to human HBV.

"This is an important proof-of-concept study demonstrating that the therapy stimulates the immune system to suppress the virus and eliminate infected liver cells," said co-author Robert E. Lanford, Ph.D., of Texas Biomed. "One of the key observations was that the therapy continued to suppress virus levels for months after therapy was stopped.

The current therapy for HBV infection targets the virus and works very well at suppressing viral replication and delaying progression of liver disease, but it is a lifelong therapy that does not provide a cure.

"This GS-9620 therapy represents the first conceptually new treatment for HBV in more than a decade, and combining it with the existing antiviral therapy could be transformative in dealing with this disease," stated Lanford.

The Gilead drug binds a receptor called Toll-Like Receptor 7 that is present in immune cells. The receptor normally recognizes invading viruses and triggers the immune system to suppress viral replication by the innate immune response and kill infected cells by the adaptive immune response, thus orchestrating both arms of the immune system.

HBV damages the liver, leading to cirrhosis and liver cancer. Liver cancer is the fifth most common cancer worldwide and the third most common cause of cancer death. According to the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), up to 1.4 million Americans are chronically infected with HBV.

The World Health Organization estimates that two billion people have been infected with the hepatitis B virus, resulting in more than 240 million people with chronic infections and 620,000 deaths every year.

###

Texas Biomedical Research Institute: http://txbiomed.org/

Thanks to Texas Biomedical Research Institute for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127969/New_drug_stimulates_immune_system_to_kill_infected_cells_in_animal_model_of_hepatitis_B_infection

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