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World Cup group matches to be scrutinised for evidence of match-fixing

• Final round of matches considered high-risk • Fifa says betting on throw-ins and bookings harder to track The final round of World Cup group stage matches are most at risk to match-fixing and will be closely scrutinised by to ensure they are totally clean, Fifa has said. Every match in the tournament is monitored by the Early Warning System that detects irregular betting patterns. But Marco Villiger, Fifa’s legal director, told a media briefing it keeps a particularly close eye on high-risk games which complete the first round at the finals. The top two advance from each of the eight first-round groups of four, and by the time teams play their final group match some have already clinched a second-round place while others know they have no chance of qualifying for the knockout stages. “These are the high-risk matches from a betting perspective,” said Villiger. “Match-fixing is the biggest threat facing football at the moment and there is a big risk in the last group matches, especially if a team is involved which has already qualified, or is already out. “We use our all our means to focus on those who have already qualified or are out. The question is, are these high-risk matches and the answer is yes, they are.” Fifa informed every national association, player, coach, delegation member and referee before the start of the tournament that they would watch out for irregular or illegal betting patterns. “I would not believe the World Cup could be a target for the betting mafia but in the meantime we have to be prepared that even the World Cup could be, not just lower-league matches.” A telephone hotline has been set up so that anyone involved in a match – players, coaches or referees – approached by a third party offering them money or a bribe for betting or match-fixing can inform Fifa in confidence immediately. “The threat is here,” said Villiger, “but we’re working closely with our colleagues at Uefa, with Interpol, with 400 bookmakers around the world, to do all we can to keep the game clean.” He added that live betting – for example when bets are placed on the first throw-in or yellow card at a match – was harder to track. “For this World Cup we are focusing much more on the investigative part of betting. We have international co-operation with Interpol and we have a number of informants who provide us with high-level information.” So far Fifa has not detected any signs of irregular betting at the finals but it is not resting on its laurels. “The World Cup, the Euros, the Champions League, other big tournaments are always vulnerable to the betting syndicates. We are binding all our forces together to fight this threat.” World Cup 2010 Fifa guardian.co.uk

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World Cup group matches to be scrutinised for evidence of match-fixing

Palestine’s Speed Sisters on track for race equality

All-female, British-backed driving team line up alongside men for debut in Ramallah event When Suna Aweidah pulls on her red overalls and slips behind the wheel of her car next Friday, she will empty her mind of everything but the race ahead. But there will be an indelible nugget of pride that she and her team, the Speed Sisters, are breaking through the traditional conservatism of Palestinian society to compete in a motor racing event on an equal basis with men. As she eases her Opel Corsa on to the Ramallah race track, she will block out the yells of “Suna , yallah!” (Let’s go!), and focus on the map of the course she has memorised and the techniques she has learned at the hands of British instructors. “When I’m racing, I feel freedom. I love speed. When I’m on the track I can break the rules,” she says. The Speed Sisters comprise eight women, aged 18 to 39, Muslim and Christian, and are starting to grab attention, practical backing and the adoration of the crowds on what is unsurprisingly a male-dominated motor racing circuit. Friday’s race, the biggest that the female racers have participated in, will be their first both as a team and since undergoing two days of intensive training in the West Bank by two British instructors. Men and women compete on an equal basis but, Aweidah says, the men have more expensive, modified cars giving them an advantage. Aweidah now has a dedicated car in which to race, but for years relied on the loan of spare vehicles from a local supportive car rental firm, Dallah. And a supporter has donated an old BMW for team training and racing. The women have the backing of the British consulate in East Jerusalem, which has invested about £6,500 in suits, helmets, training and revamping the BMW. “They aren’t just a positive role model for women, but for all Palestinians,” said consulate spokeswoman Karen McLuskie. “They are really inspiring in a conflict zone where fun is low on the priority list.” For team captain Aweidah, Friday’s race will be the high point – so far – of her struggle to fulfil her ambition to be a racing driver. She has wanted to be behind a wheel since she was a girl watching ordinary drivers in her home town of Beit Hanina in East Jerusalem. “I love driving. I love cars. It’s in my blood – it’s stronger than me,” she says. When the Palestinian Motor Sport Federation was established in 2005, Aweidah hoped to be able to participate in races. But her family was reluctant. A year later she was invited to a women-only go-kart competition in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt. “I told my family, I insist on going. We have no go-karts in the West Bank, I had only ever seen a picture of one. I had no idea how to drive one, or what the rules were.” Aweidah came sixth in a field of 18. Her family grew more supportive. Her first race in the West Bank was in 2006. To her astonishment, she found two other women participating. “The men racers found it strange, but they said OK, let them come. After a while they saw how we drive, that we proved ourselves, and they were OK. We started asking them for tips on driving – like when to use the handbrake.” Most of her friends were supportive. “Some said we’re proud of you because you do what we can’t. Some of my married friends would like to race but their husbands won’t allow it. But some women said this is a man’s sport.” With the British consulate’s encouragement, the female drivers finally formed a team. British trainers and former competitors Helen Elstrop and Sue Sanders spent last weekend, courtesy of the consulate, building on the women’s basic driving skills and mental preparation for racing. “The strength of character they’ve shown, not only on the track but in their lives in general, is phenomenal,” says Elstrop. She was surprised to discover how positive and supportive the “boys” were. “They want to see the girls compete at a higher level.” The women, she says, were “like sponges” in the training sessions. “They are astounding, a phenomenal set of girls. We are definitely sisters in speed.” The youngest of the team is Marah Zahalka, 18, a business student at Bir Zeit University whose mother is a driving instructor. Another team-member, Mona Ennab, 24, is supported at races by her mother and aunts dressed in traditional Palestinian dress. Betty Saadeh, 29, comes from a racing family: her father was a rally champion in Mexico and her brother was the 2009 autocross champion in the West Bank. Aweidah – who lives with her parents and two of her siblings, and works for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency – says the success and acceptance of the Speed Sisters is an indication of progress in Palestinian society. “It’s getting easier for Palestinian women to do the things they want, not only in sport but in all life. Palestinian women are proving themselves more and more.” She hopes one day to be able to represent Palestine in competitions abroad. “And to have our own state here so we could invite other countries to compete with us.” But for now, she is focusing on next Friday, and where that might lead. “We’re on the first step still but – inshallah – we will reach the stars.” Palestinian territories Gender Motor sport Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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Palestine’s Speed Sisters on track for race equality

England v Algeria: glamour fixture requires an A-list crowd

Princes William and Harry are bringing the glitz Cape Town – but can Fabio Capello’s team reign supreme? Refuse gas and air, and proceed straight to the epidural – England’s next World Cup game is upon us. Finally, Fabio Capello’s two-and-a-half lions have the chance to exorcise last Saturday’s painful draw against the USA, by grinding out a nerve-shreddingly unconvincing 1-0 victory over Algeria. The setting for Friday’s crucial game is Green Point stadium, with the Cape Town match what you might call the glamour fixture in England’s first-round schedule. Which is to say, it will be attended by various people for whom one suspects other cities in South Africa are that bit too “authentic”. Spectators are to include London mayor Boris Johnson, who is on a five-day fact-finding mission for the 2012 Olympics, and the allegedly “football-mad” Princes William and Harry, who are on a joint tour of southern Africa. William is president of the Football Association – a role somehow even more pretend than Uncle Andrew’s job as UK trade ambassador – and he and his brother will stay on in Cape Town after the game to play a leading role in Saturday’s big event, which is a glitzy reception for England’s 2018 World Cup bid. Preparations for the soiree look solid at present – though obviously all could be derailed should Harry opt to go in fancy dress as PW Botha. Ultimately, though, Friday’s game offers England a chance to silence their footballing critics – an amusing number of whom seem to be German. First up was erstwhile Germany captain Michael Ballack, who reflected upon the difference between the two international sides. “We’re inspired by our history,” he explained, “whereas I sense England are intimidated by their past.” Next in line was the legendary Franz Beckenbauer. “What I saw of the English against the USA had very little to do with football,” schadenfreuded Der Kaiser, rightly judging that he had been watching not a football game, but some kind of psychological episode. Even German-born football fan Dr Henry Kissinger called the New York Times to offer his views on the World Cup – though sweetly he declined to add to England’s misery. “Brazil has played the most beautiful football,” the former US secretary of state apparently ruled, “while Italy has specialised in breaking the hearts of its opponents, and for Germany everyone attacks in a way suggestive of Erich von Falkenhayn’s huge flanking movements in world war one – and everyone defends.” Penetrating analysis there from the former comedy Nobel peace prizewinner. Perhaps ITV might consider Kissinger as a replacement pundit for the sacked Robbie Earle? The good doctor is already scheduled to attend the later rounds of the World Cup, South Africa being one of the countries to which he can travel without risking a connecting flight to the Hague. As for our own efforts to “move on” from Saturday, they have been mixed. If anything could make you yearn to be watching even the most lacklustre of England displays again, it is the manner in which Her Majesty’s press fills the gap between games. Lowlights since Saturday include Archbishop Desmond Tutu being presented with a Sun-branded vuvuzela, and the media pack besieging the home of hapless goalkeeper Robert Green’s parents, presumably waiting for them to emerge and disown him. The Greens have since appealed to the PCC for protection. What was needed, clearly, was something to Put Everything Into Perspective – and on Wednesday, Michael Dawson and Matthew Upson provided it. Escaping from what has been described predictably as England’s “gilded cage” of a team base, the two Tottenham defenders took a busload of hacks with them to visit an orphanage jointly funded by the FA and Spurs. According to Upson, “this puts everything into perspective” (that is, the orphanage does, not travelling everywhere with dozens of Boswells). So let us gird ourselves with that recalibrated perspective. After all, in a World Cup not short of early underperformers, England’s first result now demands to be reconsidered. According to the demented mathematics of the footballing optimist, favourites Spain losing to Switzerland pretty much bumps up our shabby draw with the USA into a triumph. Or something. The point is, it should be perfectly possible to await England v Algeria nursing the same level of mad hope with which you began this tournament, safe in the knowledge your despair will have its day. World Cup 2010 Prince Harry Prince William World Cup 2010 Group C England Marina Hyde guardian.co.uk

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England v Algeria: glamour fixture requires an A-list crowd

Japan Accused of Bribing Nations to be Pro-Whaling

On the heels of an International Whaling Commission meeting slated for later this month to discuss the future prospects of commercial hunts , conscience and moral imperatives may not be the only thing influencing the countries present there. An undercover investigation, conducted by reporters from The Sunday Times , found whaling-friendly Japan has sought to bribe small nations into taking … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Japan Accused of Bribing Nations to be Pro-Whaling

How does Mexico treat its illegals?

By Larry Elder We can't infringe upon the right of people to move freely within our territory,” said Mexican President Vicente Fox during President George W. Bush's recent visit. Earlier, Fox said he stood by the statement he previously made to the BBC: “I dare say that in 10 years, the U.S. will be begging, will be pleading with Mexico to send it workers.” Does Mexico practice what it preaches? First, Mexico put its military and police forces on its porous, zigzagged, mountainous, crime-ridden southern border with Guatemala. Chiapas – the South Carolina-sized southern Mexican state that shares the longest border with Guatemala – is Mexico's poorest, most illiterate state. About Chiapas, one United Nations human rights commissioner said, “Mexico is one of the countries where illegal immigrants are highly vulnerable to human rights violations and become victims of degrading sexual exploitation and slavery-like practices, and are denied access to education and health care.” Typically, when Mexican authorities catch illegal aliens, they place them overnight in a detention center, then bus or fly them back to their country of origin. Despite the fact that Mexico militarized its border and deported 203,128 illegal immigrants in 2004, many illegals get through by bribing corrupt military and police. Do Mexicans appreciate the way America has allowed so many poor, Mexican illegals to enter the United States? No. According to a recent Zogby poll, 73 percent of Mexicans call Americans “racist”! When asked whether the United States' wealth comes from freedom and “plenty of opportunity to work,” 70 percent of Americans agreed, while only 22 percent of Mexicans agreed. Sixty-two percent of Mexicans said America became wealthy because “it exploits others' wealth.” While Americans, according to the poll, see Mexicans as hard-working (78 percent), Mexicans think of Americans as racist, intolerant and not very hard-working. Racist? Mexico should look in the mirror. According to the Houston Chronicle's Rachel Graves, around the turn of the 17th century, Mexico imported more African slaves than anywhere else in the New World. As a result, tens of thousands of blacks (no one knows for sure – the Mexican census does not recognize them) live in Mexico, mostly in destitute villages in its poorest states. An estimated 30,000 to 40,000 blacks live in Costa Chica. How do they fare? According to the Houston Chronicle, many are illiterate, struggling to get a decent education for their children from government schools. One Costa Chica missionary says, “The kids here are considered by their teachers to be largely unteachable.” When stopped by the police, Mexican blacks are often instructed to sing the Mexican national anthem to prove their citizenship! If so many Mexicans consider Americans racist, why do polls show that nearly half of Mexico's inhabitants say that their lives would improve if they could work here illegally? Intolerant? America legally accepts about 1 million immigrants per year, with perhaps as many as 12 million people living here illegally, about half of whom come from Mexico. Many estimate that 500,000 or more people enter the country illegally every year. California Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante is Hispanic. So is the man who holds the powerful position of speaker of the California Assembly. Los Angeles, America's second-largest city, has a Hispanic mayor, and of the 54 members of California's congressional delegation, nine are Hispanic. The former governor of California once proposed granting driver's licenses to illegals. And in California, under some circumstances, an illegal alien can apply for the cheaper in-state college tuition. Many predict the Hispanic governor of New Mexico, Bill Richardson, former Clinton Cabinet member, will run for president. Not very hard-working? According to the International Labor Organization, Americans work more than almost anybody in the developed world, including Japan. The average American worked 1,824 hours in 2004, compared with the Spanish at 1,799 and the French at 1,441 hours. The Dutch put in even less – working 25 percent fewer hours than Americans. President Bush, against the wishes of many in his own party as well of half of all Americans, makes the reasonable case for a guest worker program that would allow or provide some sort of legal status for those living here illegally. Latino “activists” do that cause harm by staging protests and waving the Mexican flag and demanding their “rights.” For example, Juan Jose Gutierrez of Latino Movement USA says, “We think that the right thing to do is to grant full rights, full equality, under the laws in the Constitution of the United States, to all immigrants, period.” Americans raise legitimate concerns about the competition illegals pose to unskilled labor, and that illegals cut in front of people already waiting in line to get in the country legally. Americans resent expenditures for illegals on education and health care, and problems posed by some who commit additional crime in America. Illegals' attitude of entitlement helps to explain the growing anger Americans feel toward illegal aliens. Students leaving high schools, waving Mexican flags and chanting “Si se puede” do their “cause” – no favor. http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=49620 added by: nowherefast

Finland vs Czech Republic Hockey Live Stream

It’s a best match now live streaming online the Hockey live event between Finland vs Czech Republic . This hockey match game is somewhat very exciting and anticipated event in the history of International Hockey Federation where both Countries are participating with this game event. Live streaming is available on your favorite TV host such as ABC, CBS, ESPN, but there are some reason why limited bandwidth only. But it’s not sad at all since there are still remaining live stream provider that you can watch it here over the internet online. Read more news, updates, scores, and live feed video HERE . Finland vs Czech Republic Hockey Live Stream is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

NKorea warns of war if punished for ship sinking

Washington (CNN) — The president of South Korea has vowed “resolute” measures against North Korea for its alleged attack on a South Korean warship, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency reported Thursday. A five-country committee announced Thursday morning in Seoul that they had concluded a North Korean submarine fired a torpedo that sunk the South Korea warship in March. “(We) will take resolute countermeasures against North Korea and make it admit its wrongdoings through strong international cooperation and return to the international community as a responsible member,” President Lee Myung-bak told Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd in phone talks, according to Lee's office, Yonhap reported. The warship, the Cheonan, sank after an explosion ripped it in half on March 26 in disputed waters off North Korea. Forty-six sailors were killed or lost in the incident. North Korea immediately denied the allegation. The North Korean National Defense Commission said in a statement to official television that its navy did not torpedo the South Korean ship, calling South Korean Lee Myung-bak “a traitor,” Yonhap reported. The conclusion came from a joint investigation committee composed of American, Australian, British and Swedish and South Korean experts. The United States has been “deeply and actively involved” in the investigation and “strongly supports its conclusions,” Assistant Secretary of State Kurt Campbell said. Since last month, the U.S. military has believed a North Korean torpedo attack was the most likely cause of the explosion, according to a U.S. military official. The military official said at the time that the blast of an underwater explosion sank the ship, but that the explosive device itself did not come in contact with the hull of the South Korean ship. The United States has a mutual defense treaty with South Korea and Japan to defend “against any aggression,” so if a military confrontation develops, the United States would be responsible for defending South Korea, the official said. “I don't think it will come to that,” the official said. “They know they need to have a response, but there is too much at stake for South Korea to have a confrontation on the Korean peninsula. North Korea has nothing to lose, but South Korea is a serious country with a huge economy.” There are military options for South Korea beyond firing missiles, said John Delury, who studies North and South Korea at the Asia Society. Anything combative would hurt South Korea economically, Delury said, but the country could increase its naval presence along the line that divides South and North Korea in the waters surrounding the countries. He notes that comes with a risk. “Those actions could trigger a conflict,” he noted. “It will be interesting to see how South Korean President Lee [Myung-bak] characterizes this incident,” said Nicholas Szechenyi, deputy director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think tank. “A military strike of some sort would be risky because the North Korean regime is so unpredictable,” he said. “You have to be careful about military retaliation because North Korea has thousands of artillery pieces pointed towards the south and could bombard Seoul very quickly.'” The senior U.S. official said that South Korea is expected to “come up with a set of responsible measures” in response, such as action at the U.N. Security Council. Included in those actions could be a resolution condemning the attack, arguing it violates the U.N. charter, Szechenyi said. “The problem is that China is a permanent member of the council and tends to take a very soft position on North Korea, so it is an open question whether the resolution will pass or not,” he said. The Chinese will face a lot of pressure from the United States, but it already sent a clear message of solidarity with North Korea when it recently rolled out the red carpet to receive North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, Delury said. The United States and South Korea could also delay the upcoming transfer of operational control of U.S. and Korean military forces from the United States to South Korea. The transfer is due in April 2012. “It would be more of a political statement to remind North Korea the U.S. is a steadfast ally of South Korea and will come to its defense,” Szechenyi said. Seoul also has limited economic activity with Pyongyang that could be suspended, including a joint industrial complex and some trade. North Korean involvement in the attack also would throw doubt on the future of six-party nuclear diplomacy talks involving the United States, South Korea, China, Japan and Russia. China has been pushing for another round of talks, but the senior U.S. official said there will be less interest now in a quick return to the negotiations. “If the North Koreans are going to continue to misbehave, we have to think whether it makes sense to return to the six-party talks,” the official said. On the other hand, the official suggested the incident might give the United States leverage. China, which hosts the talks and has the closest relationship with North Korea, could be encouraged to get a “better resumption point” in the talks, rather than just pick up where they left off, the official said. Szechenyi suggested South Korea might also ask the United States to put North Korea back on the list of state sponsors of terror, from which it was removed in 2008 as part of the effort to get the country to stop its nuclear program. Putting the country back on the terror list would trigger a number of tough economic sanctions against North Korea, he said. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who will visit Seoul next week, will talk with the South Korean government about the investigation, Assistant Secretary Campbell said. Clinton will also visit Japan and China during her trip, and the North Korean issue is likely to be high on the agenda. Clinton will have “the closest possible consultations with Japan, China and South Korea about the next phase,” added by: onemalefla

FHMs TOP 10 Sexiest Women

1. Cheryl Cole 2. Megan Fox 3. Marissa Miller 4. Frankie Sandford 5. Keeley Hazell 6. Kristen Stewart 7. Kelly Brook 8. Adriana Lima 9. Jessica Alba 10. Abbey Clancy I DO NOT OWN AUDIO, I TAKE NO CREDIT, I DID NOT OWN ANY OF THE PICTURES, NO COPYRIGHT INTENDED, please don’t block this vid from other countries, or the whole vid.

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FHMs TOP 10 Sexiest Women

Partipate on the Contest: Football Robot Players

Photo: BBC News – Football Robot Player can make sense of their surroundings and react to the movements of other robot players. The Robotic Football Team will play for Scotland to compete against other countries in the Robocup contest in Turkey next year. These robots that have been developed by academics at Edinburgh University that can make sense of its surroundings and react to other robot players’ movements. Dr Sethu Vijayakumar of Edinburgh University’s school of informatics, who developed the robots, he said that “Robocup is a key challenge in robotics research.> > Read More Partipate on the Contest: Football Robot Players is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

PS3 Update 3.21 for PlayStation 3 Gamers

The new PS3 Updates are bad. Well, for those who use pirated games. The  PS3 Update 3.21 will prevent gamers from being able to play pirated PS3 games. It will fix the system of PS3 which they’ve been trying to do for a long time now. The Playstation manufacturers are saying that this new update should prevent the use of any illegal games or softwares for the PS3. As expected, many gamers are not happy about this new firmware update for the PS3. The Playstation 3 is one of the most popular gaming consoles in the world and this move may see a downturn in units sold especially in other countries where pirating is rampant. You may choose not to upgrade your PS3 unit but the reports indicate that such a move will prevent some other features for the PS3 as well. Reports have surfaced that preventing your PS3 update 3.21 will cause your PS3 to prevent playback of PS3 software titles or Blue-Ray video discs that require PS3 version 3.21 and later. This could also prevent the ability to sing into PS3 networks for Playstation features that require you to sign on too these networks. It has yet to be seen if the PS3 Update 3.21 for PlayStation 3 Gamers will have a big adverse effect in countries like the United States. PS3 Update 3.21 for PlayStation 3 Gamers is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading