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Nota n°40839 |
da bfdbreftgs
il 04/09/2013 @ 17:48 | Accuracy,??? ?????Arm StrengthDeliveryReadsAthleticismSpeedPowerElusivenessVisionHandsHandsSpeedRoute-RunningCatch in TrafficYards After CatchBlockingPass BlockingStrengthPhysicalitySpace BlockingRun DefensePass RushingStrengthPursuitDisruptivenessDiagnosing SkillsTacklingCoverage SkillInside Run SupportOutside Run SupportMan CoverageZone CoverageInstinctsBall SkillsRun SupportBall SkillsVersatilityPlayMakerSpeedHandsBlockingSpeedVersatilityRoute Running???????:
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Nota n°40838 |
da erfhksens
il 04/09/2013 @ 17:47 | But by focusing support on Islamist groups, both Qatar and Saudi Arabia are seen by many to be playing with fire. "The fear is that both the Saudis and the Qataris are competing for influence in Syria by pouring in support to rival groups of jihadist fighters, and that Syria is descending into the depths of hell as a result,Iphone5 ??? ??," said Simon Henderson of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a US research group dedicated to improving American strategy in the Middle East. Engagement with Syrian rebels is seen as part of a wider effort by the Emir of Qatar to acquire greater influence for his kingdom, assisted by the riches from the world's largest natural gas fields just off its coast. In Britain,ASICS ????, Qatar is better known for owning some of London's top landmarks,??? ????????, from Harrods in Knightsbridge through to the Shard and parts of Canary Wharf, through a £50bn sovereign wealth fund. Last month the fund paid £300 million for the five star Park Lane Intercontinental, and it also helped build No 1 Hyde Park, a £1 billion apartment block. But in the Middle East, the Emir is helping redraw the entire political landscape. Last year he gave £250 million aid to Gaza,http://www.eonlinejp.com/Chanel%28%E3%82%B7%E3%83%A3%E3%83%8D%E3%83%AB%29-21006/, the territory controlled by the Palestinian militant group Hamas - thus infuriating Israel. Earlier this month, Qatar announced a £2bn aid package for Egypt, bolstering the Islamist-minded Muslim Brotherhood government that sent shockwaves through the region when it won power after the country's Arab Spring revolution. The Qatari intervention in Syria echoes its earlier involvement in Libya, where the rebellion - this time with the West's active support - overthrew the Gaddafi regime. There, too,????????????, secularists have accused Qatar of mostly helping rebels affiliated to the Muslim Brotherhood. Many of its followers support Sharia law and only limited rights for women, and critics say its vision is a clue to the kind of society the Emir really seeks to promote. Bashar Assad with Sheik Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani in 2008 (AP)At home in Qatar, the Emir hosts the largest US military base in the Arab world, a strategic bulwark against Iran, but last year he also allowed the Afghan Taliban to open its first overseas bureau. That was established to enable peace negotiations with US officials,??? ?????, although any talks have now stalled. Doha is also one of the few Arab capitals to maintain reasonable relations with Iran, which seeks to be the pre-eminent power in the Gulf region. In 1995, the Emir set up the ground-breaking satellite channel, Al Jazeera, whose largely uncensored reporting has enthralled Arab audiences and enraged their rulers ever since - although less so in Qatar itself. Here, the Emir has been less welcoming to any signs of the Arab spring. Al Jazeera's trenchant journalism does not extend to scrutinising political life within the kingdom, and the Emir and his family enjoy largely uncritical coverage. Meanwhile a Qatari poet, Muhammad al-Ajami, who wrote verses praising the Arab Spring uprising in Tunisia and calling for the overthrow of the country's own "repressive elite", is serving a 15-year prison sentence for the offence. "The Qataris present themselves as a progressive force in the Middle East, but their attitudes towards internal dissent are very different," said Nicholas McGeehan, a researcher with Human Rights Watch, an independent campaign group that monitors political freedoms worldwide. "In a country setting itself up as a bastion of media freedom, that is hypocritical as well as wrong."It all makes Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, to give the Emir his full name, something of an enigma. Born into a tribe that has ruled the former British protectorate since the 19th century, he took power in a bloodless palace coup against his own father in 1995, having become dissatisfied with the pace of modernisation. A noted Anglophile, who trained at Sandhurst and sent his heir apparent to Sherborne public school in Dorset, he has made Qatar a liberal state by comparison to its neighbour, Saudi Arabia. Women can drive, alcohol is discreetly on sale in some hotels, and in June the country will hold its first legislative elections, with both sexes voting. Qatar's wealth has helped spare it from turmoil, with average annual income per head nearly £60,http://www.brandonlinegroup.com/Kappa%E3%80%80%E3%82%AB%E3%83%83%E3%83%91-20761/,000, the highest in the world - enabling it to construct an ultra-modern capital, Doha, where 250,000 Qataris live alongside 1.5 million expatriates. The Qatari Embassy in London did not respond to questions from The Sunday Telegraph about the Emir's domestic or foreign policies. But diplomatic relations with Britain are warm. In 2011 the Emir and one of |
Nota n°40837 |
da erfhksens
il 04/09/2013 @ 17:46 | After last season’s disappointment, Sir Alex Ferguson insisted that his team’s goal difference had to improve were United to wrest the advantage from their neighbours. Van Persie – driven by a raging personal thirst for trophies – ensured such a wish was fulfilled. It has been his strikes that have ensured games that might have been previously drawn were this time won: that record-busting haul of victories has been driven by his wand-like left foot. And here, with the title in touching distance,KATE SPADE ??? ??, the man whose unstinting effort had for so long at the Emirates remained unrewarded by anything requiring silver polish, gave vivid demonstration of his importance. Poor Villa, for Van Persie this was personal.It began,http://www.brandgrouper.com/Timberland%20%E3%83%86%E3%82%A3%E3%83%B3%E3%83%90%E3%83%BC%E3%83%A9%E3%83%B3%E3%83%89-20815/, the Dutchman’s celebration of title success, no later than two minutes into the game. Rafael, galloping forward as he has so often this season, seemed to overhit a cross from the right. But the ball drifted out to Ryan Giggs beyond the far post, who span it back across the goal line for the Dutchman to steer into an unguarded net. His reaction to the goal spoke of his desire: he looked close to ecstatic as he ran to embrace his colleagues.That,http://www.fashionbrandonline.com/kate%20spade-20605/, though,http://www.eonlinejp.com/IPAD%E3%82%AB%E3%83%90%E3%83%BC%20%E3%83%96%E3%83%A9%E3%83%B3%E3%83%89-20987/, was merely the appetiser. After 13 minutes, Wayne Rooney, playing deep in midfield, received a pass from Shinji Kagawa and lofted the ball in behind the Villa defence. Van Persie took a step into space, left Ron Vlaar flat-footed and thundered the ball,??? ??????, bending and wobbling,iphone5?????? ??, past a static Brad Guzan. It was an astonishing goal, oozing virtuosity, a goal fit to win any title, the goal of the century according to his manager.Van Persie wasn’t finished there. Giggs, who was starting as visible recognition of his central part in all 13 Premier League titles won by United,JILL STUART iphone case, turned on the afterburners to leave Matthew Lowton in his wash,http://www.eonlinejp.com/iphone%20%E3%82%B1%E3%83%BC%E3%82%B9%20%E9%9D%A9-20986/, as if this were his first and it was 1993 all over again. He passed inside and Van Persie ensured that he would be taking home the match ball to go with his long-coveted medal.Never mind that at times this season this United team have not been the equal of some of their sparkling predecessors, with that goal the title had been locked down. And Van Persie’s central part in its attainment will be recorded in history. He is not the first to have made the difference in Sir Alex Ferguson’s accrual of 13 championships.Eric Cantona’s sense of certainty won it for him in 1993. The former United chairman Martin Edwards reckons the supreme midfield scheming of Paul Scholes was largely responsible for landing the 2000 title. Cristiano Ronaldo was the beating heart of the wins in 2008 and 09. But Van Persie&rsquo,??? ?????? LTD;s role this time round in turning the second best team in the country into the runaway champions cannot be over-stated.“He has made a fantastic contribution, in terms of impact he has made as big as I can imagine,” said Ferguson. “We had an expectation of him. His performances last year were sensational. Arsene [Wenger] said to me he’s a better player than you think. I think he was right.”The simple fact is, if City had signed Van Persie, the Premier League trophy would now be decorated once more in sky blue ribbons. Instead, last night, to the giddy exctiement of those of red persuasion, Old Trafford was his stage, this was his command performance, the moment his long-recognised genius got its trophy-shaped reward. ???????:
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Nota n°40836 |
da bfdbreftgs
il 04/09/2013 @ 17:46
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Nota n°40835 |
da bfdbreftgs
il 04/09/2013 @ 17:45 | Would-be immigrants sit on the ground after arriving at the Armed Forces of Malta Maritime Squadron base on July 10th (Reuters)The boat, which was picked up by the Maltese Coastguard,http://www.brandgrouper.com, was the 14th to arrive this year alone, and came just a week after another one carrying 290 people. Altogether, 1,079 refugees have arrived in similar fashion in Malta this year alone,http://www.fashionbrandonline.com/BURBERRY-20668/, and 17,743 in the last decade. But in the EU's smallest state,http://www.fashionbrandonline.com/CHANEL-20652/, which has just 400,000 people and is roughly the size of the Isle of Wight, that is a lot more than it might sound. The equivalent in Britain would be 2,500,000 extra people - roughly the equivalent of two Birminghams - a point not lost on Mr Muscat, who last week accused Brussels of lecturing his country about human rights while doing nothing to share the burden. "Right now we cannot cope with these numbers, they are unsustainable," he told The Sunday Telegraph. "Malta is the smallest state in the EU, and we are carrying a burden that is much bigger than any other country."Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat (AFP)Mr Muscat, 39, who studied at Bristol University, was speaking during an official visit to Rome last week, shortly after the European Court of Human Rights had issued an interim order blocking any moves to fly the Somalis back to Libya. Strasbourg's judges backed claims by Maltese human rights groups and EU commissioners that Mr Muscat was violating EU law by not allowing them to make asylum claims first, and that the move was an illegal "push-back". "This is not push back, it is a message that we are not push-overs," retorted Mr Muscat. He added that as a contributor to the EU bailouts of its southern European neighbours, Malta should expect the EU to offer something in return. "People say solidarity, solidarity, but then nothing happens."Whether Mr Muscat, whose centre-Left Labour Party resents the charges of xenophobia that have been thrown at it, really intended to carry out the "push back" is a matter of debate. Some suspect it was just a stunt to force Brussels to give practical help rather than high-handed lectures. As Mr Muscat himself puts it: "We have stamped our feet to say look guys, don't leave us alone."But either way, the row has highlighted how Malta - and nearby Italy - is struggling to reconcile their obligations as EU states with their unsought role as the doormat for illegal migrants from Africa seeking entry to Europe. As Europe's most southerly nation - it lies level with Tunisia – Malta's immigration problems are not just about numbers. While Britain frets about an influx of educated, English-speaking Eastern Europeans, Malta contends mainly with arrivals from the poorest and most war-torn parts of sub-Saharan Africa. (Ian Noel Pace/Demotix)Most arrive largely destitute, having blown most of their savings on an €700 people's smuggler's fee and the gruelling 15-day trip by truck and foot across the Sahara. And although a certain resourcefulness is needed to make that journey in first place, many have little schooling and speak neither Maltese or English, the island's second language. Hence the groups of Africans who gather at certain road junctions around the capital, Valletta, hoping for labouring work from passing builder and hoteliers. It can be a long wait. "I have been here a month, and have found nothing," said Goodluck Ajeh, 25, a footballer originally from Nigeria. "I will take any job - right now I am just looking for my daily bread."Unusually for an EU country,http://www.eonlinejp.com/Samsung%20Galaxy-20984/, Malta makes all illegal immigrants stay in secure detention centres while their asylum claims are processed, a process that can take up to 18 months. But when that time expires, few in practice are sent back. Nearly 90 per cent are from Somalia and Eritrea, both countries deemed too dangerous for deportation to. (Ian Noel Pace/Demotix)Libya is likewise deemed off-limits, because of a wave of reprisals carried out against black Africans for their role in fighting as mercenaries for Colonel Gaddafi in Libya's civil war. Instead, they end up languishing in large, government-run hostels and overcrowded rented homes, where they stand out conspicuously. While the locals pride themselves on being a tolerant, cosmopolitan people - large numbers of Maltese live abroad as immigrants themselves - there are tensions in areas like Marsa, a shipyard town of 6,000. "For a place our size to be invaded by about 1,000 immigrants in the last six or seven years is a big shock,IPAD??? ???? ??," said Marsa's Labour mayor, Francis Debona, 53. "It's not because they are black,????? ?, it's just a matter of suddenly having another big population with cultures and practices that are very different to our own. "It's all very f |
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