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Archive for April 2nd, 2008

Jankovic through after Dementieva quits

posted by admin in cnn, news

MIAMI, Florida — Fourth seed Jelena Jankovic booked a semifinal place at the Sony Ericsson Open in Key Biscayne after Russian Elena Dementieva retired while trailing in the second set of their quarterfinal clash.

Jankovic led 6-1 3-1 when 10th seed Dementieva, battling an apparent back injury for which she received treatment after the first set, decided she could not continue.

Serb Jankovic, who had saved five match points in her battling second-round victory over Sweden’s Sofia Arvidsson, will now face the winner of the final quarterfinal between Russian duo Dinara Safina and Vera Zvonareva.

Jankovic’s shortened quarterfinal echoed her experience at Indian Wells, where she reached the semifinals when American Lindsay Davenport retired from their contest with a back injury.

However, she is still seeking to make her first final of 2008 having lost in the final four at the Australian Open, Dubai and Indian Wells tournaments this year. E-mail to a friend

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Pace ace Shoaib to appeal five-year ban

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) — Pakistan paceman Shoaib Akhtar said on Wednesday that he would appeal against a five-year ban imposed by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) and threatened to go to court if it was not lifted.

On Tuesday, officials banned Shoaib from all domestic and international matches for repeated breaches of discipline.

Shoaib, dubbed the Rawalpindi Express for his express pace, told a news conference that the five-year ban was excessive and alleged that he had been victimized.

I have not murdered anyone that I should be given such tough punishment, he said.

Shoaib said he would file an appeal with the cricket board on Friday or Saturday. If the ban was not lifted, he said he would go to higher authorities and seek the court’s help.

The board’s chairman Nasim Ashraf on Tuesday said Shoaib was guilty of repeated indiscipline which was harming the team and had even affected the image of the country.

He said Shoaib could appeal and was still able to participate in the Indian Premier League beginning this month. However, if the ban is upheld, it would likely mean the end of the 32-year-old’s international career.

Shoaib was already on probation after the PCB fined him and imposed a 13-match international ban last year for hitting fellow bowler Mohammad Asif with a bat before the Twenty20 World Cup in South Africa.

The board also ordered him to undergo psychiatric counseling.

Shoaib tested positive for steroids in 2006 in a PCB-conducted, out-of-competition test, but had his two-year ban overturned by an appeals committee.

At his peak, Shoaib was the fastest bowler in cricket but his 46-Test career has been restricted by injuries.

He has 178 Test wickets at an average of 25.69 and 219 wickets at 23.2 in 138 limited-overs internationals.

In other cricket news, India captain Anil Kumble is in doubt for Thursday’s second Test against South Africa as the hosts struggle with a succession of injuries.

Already without star batsman Sachin Tendulkar due to a groin injury, selectors are having to consider replacements for Kumble and paceman Ishant Sharma, who both face fitness tests.

Kumble emerged from last week’s drawn series opener in Chennai with a groin strain, while Sharma had targeted a return for this Test but is still grappling with finger and toe injuries that he suffered last month on the tour of Australia. E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Nike plant closed as returning workers brawl

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BEN LUC, Vietnam (AP) — A two-day strike at a Vietnamese factory that makes Nike sneakers has ended, but the plant remained closed after workers returned and violence erupted, a union official said.

About 17,000 of Ching Luh’s 21,000 employees reported to work Wednesday morning after the labor union and management of the Taiwanese-owned plant reached an agreement to increase monthly wages by 100,000 dong ($6) amid record-high inflation, said labor union head Pham Thi Lap.

Police were called to the plant — located in southern Long An province in the Mekong Delta — when a brawl broke out and it was closed, Lap said.

No one was seriously injured, but several workers were beaten during the melee, she added.

The workers overwhelmed the police and factory guards, Lap said. Things went out of control, and we had to call in more police to restore order.

The factory, which makes shoes for U.S. sportswear giant Nike, will remain closed for the next three days for security reasons, said Nguyen Van Thua, a provincial trade union official.

Company officials declined to comment.

We are encouraged by the labor union and the provincial government in helping to find a fair and timely resolution to the current work stoppage, George Lin, factory general manager said in a statement Wednesday.

Some employees interviewed by AP Television News, who declined to give their names for fear of losing their jobs, said the brawl started when a group of workers who disagreed with the deal began attacking those who came to work.

Some workers switched off the electricity and they threw chairs at the other workers who tried to switch it on, one said.

The workers asked for a 20 percent bump to their $59 average monthly salaries along with better lunches at the company cafeteria.

They were given a 10 percent raise and the company agreed to provide free lunches, Lin said in the statement.

Consumer prices in Vietnam are 19 percent higher than they were a year ago, according to government figures. Hanoi responded in January by increasing the minimum wage foreign-owned companies are required to pay by roughly 13 percent.

The Ching Luh plant has been operating since 2002.

It is one of 10 factories that contact with Nike to produce sneakers in Vietnam, producing about 75 million pairs of shoes a year. The Ching Luh plant accounts for about 12 percent, Nike spokesman Chris Helzer said.
found here.

IOC pushes for open Internet at Olympics

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BEIJING, China (AP) — The Internet must be open during the Beijing Olympics.

That was the message a top-ranking International Olympic Committee official delivered Tuesday to Beijing organizers during the first of three days of meetings — the last official sessions between IOC inspectors and the Chinese hosts before the games begin in just over four months.

Beijing routinely blocks Chinese access to some foreign news Web sites and blogs, a practice it has stepped up since rioting broke out over two weeks ago in Tibet.

Kevan Gosper, vice chairman of the IOC coordinating commission, said restricting access to the Internet during the games would reflect very poorly on the host nation.

This morning we discussed and insisted again, Gosper said. Our concern is that the press (should be) able to operate as it has at previous games.

Gosper said the Chinese had an obligation under the host city agreement to provide Internet access to the 30,000 accredited and non-accredited journalists expected to attend.

There was some criticism that the Internet closed down during events relating to Tibet in previous weeks, Gosper said.

Laws that lifted most restrictions on foreign media went into effect January 1, 2007. The rules are to expire in October.

I’m satisfied that the Chinese understand the need for this and they will do it, Gosper added.

When asked about Gosper’s comments, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said China’s management of the Internet followed the general practice of the international community. Watch a Chinese hacker describe how no Web site is safe in China

She acknowledged that China bans some Internet content, and said other countries did the same. She declined to say if the Internet would be unrestricted for journalists during the Olympics. Learn more about how the Internet is regulated in China

Gosper spoke after Hein Verbruggen, chairman of the inspection committee, addressed his Chinese hosts. Without being specific, Verbruggen noted that China’s August 8-24 games had become embroiled in controversy.

The unrest in Tibet — and China’s response — has heightened calls for a boycott or a partial boycott of the games. This comes in the wake of worries over Beijing’s polluted air, and calls for China to increase pressure on Sudan to end fighting in Darfur.

The Darfur issue prompted Hollywood director Steven Spielberg to step down as an artistic adviser for the opening and closing ceremonies.

The torch relay left Beijing on Tuesday for Kazakhstan and a monthlong global tour. Protests are likely at an event Chinese organizers hoped would generate positive images of the country. Watch the Olympic torch arrive in Beijing

Clearly in recent times more than ever, the Beijing Games are being drawn into issues that do not necessarily have a link with the operation of the games, Verbruggen said. We’re all aware the international community is discussing these topics, but it is important to remember that our main focus during these meetings is the successful delivery of the games operations.

The IOC has refused to speak out against China’s actions in Tibet, saying it is a sporting body, not a political one. It has maintained the Beijing Olympics are a force for good in opening up the country.

Liu Qi, president of the organizing committee, told Verbruggen the preparations were in the final stage but suggested the hosts would not let up.

There’s a saying in China that if you want to walk 100 steps — though you have walked 90 — you have finished only half the journey. We still have 10 steps left, and those 10 are very critical to the whole journey.

The People’s Daily, the official Communist Party newspaper, warned in an editorial Tuesday that troubles lie ahead in the four months before the games.

With the opening of the games approaching, the burden on our shoulders is heavier and the task tougher, it said. We must keep a clear head, improving our awareness of the potential dangers, and bravely facing all the difficulties and challenges.
found here.

IOC pushes for open Internet at Olympics

posted by admin in cnn, news

BEIJING, China (AP) — The Internet must be open during the Beijing Olympics.

That was the message a top-ranking International Olympic Committee official delivered Tuesday to Beijing organizers during the first of three days of meetings — the last official sessions between IOC inspectors and the Chinese hosts before the games begin in just over four months.

Beijing routinely blocks Chinese access to some foreign news Web sites and blogs, a practice it has stepped up since rioting broke out over two weeks ago in Tibet.

Kevan Gosper, vice chairman of the IOC coordinating commission, said restricting access to the Internet during the games would reflect very poorly on the host nation.

This morning we discussed and insisted again, Gosper said. Our concern is that the press (should be) able to operate as it has at previous games.

Gosper said the Chinese had an obligation under the host city agreement to provide Internet access to the 30,000 accredited and non-accredited journalists expected to attend.

There was some criticism that the Internet closed down during events relating to Tibet in previous weeks, Gosper said.

Laws that lifted most restrictions on foreign media went into effect January 1, 2007. The rules are to expire in October.

I’m satisfied that the Chinese understand the need for this and they will do it, Gosper added.

When asked about Gosper’s comments, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said China’s management of the Internet followed the general practice of the international community. Watch a Chinese hacker describe how no Web site is safe in China

She acknowledged that China bans some Internet content, and said other countries did the same. She declined to say if the Internet would be unrestricted for journalists during the Olympics. Learn more about how the Internet is regulated in China

Gosper spoke after Hein Verbruggen, chairman of the inspection committee, addressed his Chinese hosts. Without being specific, Verbruggen noted that China’s August 8-24 games had become embroiled in controversy.

The unrest in Tibet — and China’s response — has heightened calls for a boycott or a partial boycott of the games. This comes in the wake of worries over Beijing’s polluted air, and calls for China to increase pressure on Sudan to end fighting in Darfur.

The Darfur issue prompted Hollywood director Steven Spielberg to step down as an artistic adviser for the opening and closing ceremonies.

The torch relay left Beijing on Tuesday for Kazakhstan and a monthlong global tour. Protests are likely at an event Chinese organizers hoped would generate positive images of the country. Watch the Olympic torch arrive in Beijing

Clearly in recent times more than ever, the Beijing Games are being drawn into issues that do not necessarily have a link with the operation of the games, Verbruggen said. We’re all aware the international community is discussing these topics, but it is important to remember that our main focus during these meetings is the successful delivery of the games operations.

The IOC has refused to speak out against China’s actions in Tibet, saying it is a sporting body, not a political one. It has maintained the Beijing Olympics are a force for good in opening up the country.

Liu Qi, president of the organizing committee, told Verbruggen the preparations were in the final stage but suggested the hosts would not let up.

There’s a saying in China that if you want to walk 100 steps — though you have walked 90 — you have finished only half the journey. We still have 10 steps left, and those 10 are very critical to the whole journey.

The People’s Daily, the official Communist Party newspaper, warned in an editorial Tuesday that troubles lie ahead in the four months before the games.

With the opening of the games approaching, the burden on our shoulders is heavier and the task tougher, it said. We must keep a clear head, improving our awareness of the potential dangers, and bravely facing all the difficulties and challenges.
found here.

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