Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Ntini tells AFP Kilimanjaro cricket game will be 'hardest test'

Ntini tells AFP Kilimanjaro cricket game will be 'hardest test'

AFP 
South Africa's bowler Makhaya Ntini cheers for his team during a one day match against South Africa at the Harare Sports Club on August 27, 2014
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Kilmanjaro (Tanzania) (AFP) - South African cricket legend Makhaya Ntini learned to play barefoot before being talent spotted and handed a pair of boots, and he knows about bowling on a bumpy pitch.
Now he says he faces his "hardest test:" playing the world's highest game of cricket near the summit of Kilimanjaro, Africa's tallest mountain at 5,895 metres (19,341 feet).
Once a herder in a rural area of the Eastern Cape, Ntini was the first black African to represent South Africa at cricket, making his debut in 1997.
"It is going to be like going back to the old days, playing a game in the dust in the rural areas, when you didn't care where you played because you were just crazy for the game," Ntini said, who played 101 Test matches and took 390 Test wickets.
"That will be the greatest of things," he said, speaking on the mountain, already high above the cloud level.
The 37-year-old fast bowler is part of an expedition of 30 players -- mainly amateurs and enthusiasts, but also some professional players, including English spin bowler Ashley Giles -- scaling the giant peak for the eccentric charity match.
Those facing the formidable bowler may be alarmed to hear that balls reportedly go far faster at higher altitude. But Ntini laughs, saying his otherwise dangerous delivery may this time be a little slower.
"It won't be my usual bowling. We'll be playing in so many clothes with the cold, and then there are the heavy boots," Ntini told AFP, during the eight-day expedition up the flanks of Kilimanjaro.
"I'll be taking six paces and that'll be it, in the thin air. I wish I was 20 years old again, it is the hardest test!" he added.
Teams, who set off trekking early Saturday, aim to reach the peak at dawn on Friday.
They then aim to play a full Twenty20 in the crater of the dormant volcano, laying down a plastic track -- hauled up by Tanzanian porters -- for the wicket, and playing in freezing air, surrounded by vast blocks of ice.
Qualified umpires will ensure the game is played properly and eligible for the record.
- Inspiration for black players -
While no technical climbing skills will be needed, playing a game at two-thirds the height of Everest will have considerable risks.
"It is a huge challenge, because each and every one of us will react differently to the altitude, we'll have to be careful," Ntini said.
"I want it to be an inspiration to others, to help other black players develop," said Ntini, who also played for India's Chennai Super Kings and England's Warwickshire.
Along with Ntini, who retired in January 2011 and now runs a cricket academy to nurture talent in South Africa, are two young compatriots, Raymond Lebokana and Robert Moloisane, from the Alexandra Township Chiefs, a Johannesburg township team.
"Participation in cricket has provided children and youth an escape from alcohol and drug abuse, and it has allowed several players to reform and lead a safer lifestyle away from gang related activities," said fellow South African Aliya Bauer, who helped fundraise to get the pair on the expedition.
The current record for the world's highest game is 5,165 metres (16,945 feet), played in the Himalayas at Everest base camp in Nepal in 2009. If successful, the game on Kilimanjaro will be more than 600 metres (1,968 feet) higher.
The mainly British team also includes players from Australia, Canada and Kenya.
Team captains are English spin bowler Ashley Giles, who helped win the Ashes in 2005, and current England women's player Heather Knight. Former England captain and head of women's cricket Clare Connor is also playing.
Players are raising money for various causes, including cancer research and African wildlife conservation charity Tusk Trust, as well as for Rwanda's first international cricket pitch. The game is growing in popularity in Rwanda after being introduced by those who returned after fleeing genocide 20 years ago.

Peace agreement calls for immediate cease-fire in Yemen

Peace agreement calls for immediate cease-fire in Yemen

RebellionsWars and InterventionsAl-QaedaArmed ConflictsArab SpringAli Abdullah SalehYemen
Peace deal signed in Yemen as prime minister resigns amid turmoil
Resignation of Yemeni prime minister could be reversed by president
A peace agreement signed in Yemen on Sunday offered hope for a resolution to a spate of sectarian violence that has killed more than 140 people and reportedly led to the resignation of the country’s prime minister.
The impoverished but strategically located Arabian Peninsula nation has long been riven by violence, but the latest outbreak has involved unusually sustained and widespread fighting in its capital, Sana, between Shiite Muslim rebels known as Houthis and government-allied Sunni Muslim militias.
Yemen is also home to what is considered one of the most dangerous Al Qaeda affiliates, but the latest outbreak did not involve its fighters.
On Saturday, a United Nations envoy, Jamal Benomar, announced an accord to end the violence had been reached and was expected to be signed imminently. Battles nevertheless erupted again Sunday, with rebels making significant advances before the peace agreement was actually signed.
The agreement calls for an immediate cease-fire and the formation of a technocratic government within a month after consultations with all political parties, Benomar later said at a news conference, the Associated Press reported.
“The head of the government may not belong to any political group,” the envoy said, reading from the document. He said it also calls for security forces to be restructured based on consultations with the political parties.
Sunday’s reports did not detail the circumstances of the decision by Prime Minister Mohammed Salem Basindwa to step down. Moreover, his resignation, in principle, has to be accepted by Yemen’s president. The official news agency Saba said there was no word on whether that had occurred, suggesting that the move might yet be reversed.
The rebels took control of the state television building Saturday and subsequently overran a military base, the central bank and a university in the capital — the latter significant because the school had been considered a redoubt of Sunni Muslim hard-liners.
Yemen, whose Al Qaeda-linked militant commanders have for several years been targeted by American airstrikes, has only fragile claims to statehood. Besides battling Al Qaeda, it has faced a persistent insurgency in the south.
As in many countries across the region, the 2011 uprisings that became collectively known as the “Arab Spring” led to turmoil and uncertainty. Ali Abdullah Saleh, Yemen’s longtime leader, was forced out in 2012, and since then Yemen has struggled to establish a strong central government and work toward some measure of economic stability.

Israel shoots down Syrian plane over Golan

Israel shoots down Syrian plane over Golan

Syria accuses Israel of siding with rebels after one of its aircraft is destroyed over Golan Heights.

Last updated: 24 Sep 2014 04:11
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Israeli army radio said a MiG-21 was shot down by a surface-to-air missile [AFP]
The Israeli military has shot down a Syrian military aircraft that it said had infiltrated it airspace over the Golan Heights.
Tuesday's incident was the most serious incident to take place on the strategic plateau since the outbreak of the Syrian civil war in 2011.
Israeli army radio said it was apparently a MiG-21 fighter jet which was shot down by a surface-to-air missile. The wreckage landed on the Syrian-controlled side of the plateau.
There was no official confirmation on the type of the aircraft.
Israel has largely stayed on the sidelines of Syria's civil war raging across the border, but its leaders appear increasingly nervous about the possibility of al-Qaeda-linked fighters occupying the Golan's high ground over northern Israel.
Syrian state TV quoted a military source saying the downing of the plane, which coincided with US attacks on the ISIL group in Syria, came "in the framework of [Israel's] support for the terrorist [ISIL] and the Nusra Front".
Annexed territory
Since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad started more than three years ago, a growing number of rockets and mortar rounds have hit the Israeli side of the Golan.
Most are stray but there have been several incidents of intentional fire, one of which killed an Israeli teenager in June.
Israel seized 1,200sq km of the Golan Heights in 1967, then illegally annexed it in 1981.
About 510sq km remains on the Syrian side of the ceasefire line, with UN forces overseeing a buffer zone stretching about 70km from Lebanon in the north to Jordan in the south.

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Navrati:Why India’s Narendra Modi may not eat at the White House dinner

Why India’s Narendra Modi may not eat at the White House dinner

 September 22  
NEW DELHI — Ronald Reagan famously said once: “All great change in America begins at the dinner table.”
What if the dinner plate of the guest of honor is empty?
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is visiting the United States later this week, his first trip to this country after his party won a resounding victory in May. It is a visit that has been a long time coming and one that both nations hope will reboot U.S.-India relations.
Modi, who will address the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Saturday and speak before a large gathering at Madison Square Garden, was expected to attend a private  White House dinner Monday.
But there is a new twist in the tale.
Modi, a devout Hindu, is observing the annual nine-day religious fastcalled Navratri, an auspicious period in the Hindu calendar that also marks the coming of autumn. No, this is not about dietary restrictions. For Modi, this is a strict no-food fast.
Fasting Hindus follow a fruit-only fast, or avoid meat, or get by with only one meal a day during this nine-day period. Some avoid onion, garlic and alcohol, as well. But Modi, who is a devotee of Hindu mother goddess Durga and a strict vegetarian and teetotaller, follows the strictest form of abstinence. Since the 1970s, he has observed water-only fasts.
In a blog in 2012, Modi wrote:
Yes, I have been fasting during Navratri for over 35 years now. This fast is never to seek anything but an act of self-purification. Fasts such as this have been a source of strength, power and inspiration for me over the last many years.
“For Modi, this is not a religious ritual; it is a spiritual tool for introspection and cleansing,” said Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay, author of the book "Narendra Modi: The Man, The Times." “For him, the fast is a personal journey inward. But knowing Modi, he will also convert it into an opportunity to tell Americans how strong he is from the inside.”
Is this a dietary or diplomatic challenge for the White House? The White House staff has organized kosher meals and has catered to accommodate the dietary preferences of other world leaders before.
“Every detail of a state visit is addressed weeks in advance of a head of state’s arrival by the U.S. State Department’s Office of Protocol in collaboration with the advance team of the visiting country," said William Bushong, chief historian of the White House Historical Association. "This would include any dietary requirements.”
“I can say that it never happened in the 11 years that I was there,” said Walter Scheib, former White House chef. “I will also say that the White House staff and the first families will go out of their way to provide a gracious and hospitable visit to all guests. I’m certain that the prime minister will be cared for and all of his needs will be satisfied.”

Real Madrid vs. Elche: Final score 5-1, Cristiano Ronaldo scores four times as Madrid rolls

Real Madrid vs. Elche: Final score 5-1, Cristiano Ronaldo scores four times as Madrid rolls

Gonzalo Arroyo Moreno
Ronaldo's second hat-trick -- he scored four goals in all -- in as many games helped Madrid power past Elche.
Credit Elche for coming out and challenging Real Madrid from the opening whistle on Wednesday. Their pressure on the Madrid defense earned them and early penalty and lead, possibly even the belief they could pull off an upset. Those feelings were short lived though as Madrid powered back with three first half goals to take a lead they wouldn't surrender.
Keylor Navas, making his first start for Real Madrid since joining them over the summer, was tested early after Dani Carvajal brought down Coro 25-yards from goal. The Madrid fullback was a lucky to avoid a red card for denying a goal-scoring opportunity, earning just a yellow card instead. Edu Albácar's bouncing free kick forced a good save from Navas as he fought the ball off.
Elche's aggressive start to the match paid big dividends in the 14th minute whenCristiano Ronaldo was adjudged to have kicked Pedro Mosquera with a high boot in the box, giving the home side a penalty. It wasn't a very good call, but the referee was not moved by the protestations from the players in white. Keylor Navas did his best to make a save, guessing the right direction on Albácar's penalty kick, but the shot was well placed and eluded the diving Madrid goalkeeper.
The lead was short-lived though as Madrid pulled even at 1-1 a mere five minutes after falling behind. Gareth Bale got free from his marker right in front of Manu Herrera and directed a cross from James Rodriguez past the Elche goalkeeper.
Mosquera, who'd earned the penalty for Elche earlier, conceded one back for Madrid in the 27th minute after he brought down Marcelo from behind. Ronaldo stepped up and buried his penalty, giving Los Blancos a 2-1 lead. Just like the first penalty, it was a very soft call with the replays showing vitally no contact by Mosquera on Marcelo.
Not content with just one goal, which is pretty much the norm for Ronaldo, the Portuguese striker scored his second of the match in the 32nd minute to extend the Madrid lead to 3-1. Marcelo provided the service sending in a cross from the right that Ronaldo went up and powered past Herrera with a towering header over the defense.
Ronaldo completed his hat-trick -- his second in two games -- in the 80th minute after he was brought down in the area by Mario Pasalic, giving Madrid their second penalty of the match. It's the 21st time that the Portuguese striker has scored three goals in a La Liga match.
That greedy 'ol Ronaldo scored his fourth goal on he match in stoppage time, giving Madrid a 5-1 victory on the day and upping his goal total to seven in the last two games.
Real Madrid: Navas, Marcelo, Sergio Ramos (Nacho 82'), Varane, Carvajal (Arbeloa 65'), Illarramendi, Kroos, Isco, James (Chicharito 78'), Ronaldo, Bale
Goals: Bale (20'), Ronaldo (28', 32', 80', 93')
Elche: Manu Herrera, Cisma, Lomban, Pelegrín, Albácar, Mosquera, Víctor, Adrian (Pasalic 67'), Rodrigues (C. Herrera 78'), Jonathas, Coro (Fajr 61')
Goals: (Albácar 15')

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