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1.www.pcworld.com7040000
2.www.techtree.com6890000
3.www.xinhuanet.com6840000
4.www.bbc.co.uk6810000
5.www.wunderground.com5740000
6.www.heise.de4020000
7.www.reuters.com3630000
8.www.digitalspy.co.uk3090000
9.www.usatoday.com2550000
10.www.newsru.com2250000
11.www.elmundo.es2190000
12.www.linternaute.com2160000
13.www.forbes.com2080000
14.www.asahi.com2000000
15.www.rp-online.de1970000
16.news.yahoo.com1950000
17.www.spiegel.de1930000
18.www.sfgate.com1900000
19.pro.corbis.com1850000
20.www.stern.de1840000
21.www.msnbc.msn.com1750000
22.www.canada.com1720000
23.www.voanews.com1690000
24.www.time.com1610000
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27.www.wired.com1440000
28.seattlepi.nwsource.com1430000
29.abcnews.go.com1380000
30.www.space.com1330000
31.www.welt.de1330000
32.www.foxnews.com1280000
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34.www.lavanguardia.es1230000
35.www.chicagotribune.com1190000
36.money.cnn.com1170000
37.www.lacapital.com.ar1150000
38.www.mtv.com1130000
39.www.europapress.es1050000
40.weather.yahoo.com981000
41.www.al.com971000
42.www.repubblica.it964000
43.www.einnews.com914000
44.news.google.com889000
45.www.orlandosentinel.com854000
46.www.computerworld.com844000
47.tvnews.vanderbilt.edu835000
48.www.sueddeutsche.de803000
49.www.latimes.com773000
50.www.nj.com745000
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Kim Jong-il son speaks out against North Korean succession
Kim Jong-nam says he opposes hereditary transfer of leadership after younger half-brother tipped to become next rulerThe eldest son of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has said he opposes a hereditary transfer of power to his youngest half-brother, Kim Jong-un.Kim Jong-nam's remarks are the first public sign of discord in the tightly-choreographed succession process.However, analysts said Kim Jong-nam spends so much time outside his native land that his opinion carries little weight.The 39-year-old was once tipped to succeed Kim Jong-il before trying to sneak into Japan to go to Disneyland. The oldest of three brothers who were in the running to take over the North Korean leadership, he is the closest thing North Korea has to a playboy.Unlike many of his countrymen, who lack the resources and connections to travel overseas, Kim Jong-nam travels freely and spends much of his time in China or the country's special autonomous region of Macau, the centre of Asian gambling.He told Japan's TV Asahi, in an interview from Beijing, that he was "against third-generation succession", but added, "I think there were internal factors. If there were internal factors, [we] should abide by them."I have no regrets about it. I wasn't interested in it and I don't care,."He said he hoped Kim Jong-un would "do his best to bring abundance to the lives of North Koreans" and that he was ready to help from abroad.Kim Jong-un, believed to be 26, appeared with his father at Pyongyang celebrations marking the 65th anniversary of the ruling Korean Workers' party on Sunday, saluting marching troops and waving to the crowds.The appearance came less than two weeks after he was appointed to a top political post and promoted to a four-star general.Andrei Lankov, a Russian expert on North Korea at the Kookmin University in Seoul, said Kim Jong-nam's remarks were "almost a challenge" but said he had little influence in North Korea and lacked military support."I don't see them rallying to Kim Jong-nam," he added, emphasising that key generals preferred Kim Jong-un, who they saw as young, inexperienced and thus easy to control.Kim Jong-il is known to have three sons, one by his second wife and two by his third. He favors his youngest, who looks and is said to act like him, the leader's former sushi chef wrote in a in a 2003 memoir.Kim Jong-un studied at a Swiss school and learned to speak English, German and French, news reports have said.Kim Jong-nam is widely believed to have fallen out of favour after embarrassing the government when caught trying to enter Japan on a fake passport, saying he wanted to visit Tokyo's Disneyland, in 2001.Experts said he was likely to continue living abroad, with fewer reasons than ever to return to Pyongyang."In the future, Kim Jong-nam will have little influence on the political situation in North Korea," Cai Jian, the deputy director of the Centre for Korean Studies at Shanghai's Fudan University, said."It's very unlikely he will go back. His force within the country is now almost nonexistent."North KoreaJapanguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
BA flight 77 passengers haunted by last cries of dying man
Scotland Yard is investigating the final 50 minutes in the life of Angolan deportee Jimmy Mubenga – and the private guards who restrained him on the plane that was set to deport himThe passengers queuing for British Airways flight 77 from Heathrow comprised the clientele that might be expected to board a flight bound for a mineral-rich African country.Many of those waiting at Terminal 5's Gate A18 at 7.40pm on Tuesday night were expatriates – including British, Canadian and American engineers heading out to work in Angola's lucrative oil fields.Only one passenger, Jimmy Mubenga, was dreading his arrival at Luanda airport.Within 50 minutes, his muscular 6ft body would be laid out along an aisle at the rear of the plane, seemingly lifeless, as the aircraft was diverted from the runway and returned to the stand, where paramedics were waiting.Mubenga's last 50 minutes alive were tonight under investigation by detectives from Scotland Yard's homicide squad. The death of the Angolan father of five while he was being deported, after losing a legal appeal to remain in the UK in August, is being treated as unexplained.The police investigation is likely to focus on the actions of three private security guards who attempted to restrain Mubenga, an apparently healthy 46-year-old judo enthusiast.Detectives have already questioned passengers on the flight, four of whom have given detailed accounts to the Guardian. While some were reluctant to give their full names, fearing for their safety in Angola, they have described how Mubenga began resisting his deportation, prompting the guards to restrain him.In apparent distress, he was heard to say: "I can't breathe, I can't breathe" for about 10 minutes before passing out. Two witnesses recalled him saying: "They're going to kill me.""For the rest of my life I'm always going to have that at the back of my mind – could I have done something? That is going to bother me every time I go to sleep," said Michael, 51, a US citizen. "I didn't get involved because I was scared I would get kicked off the flight and lose my job. But that man paid a higher price than I would have."Details about the chronology of events on BA flight 77, which had been scheduled to depart at 8pm, are incomplete. What is clear is that when Mubenga received a call from his wife, Makenda Kambana, at 7.30pm, he appeared calm.He was sitting at the rear of the aircraft, between two guards, with a third in the seat in front of him. The guards worked for G4S, a private security firm contracted to escort deportees for the Home Office, which has declined to comment on the case or answer detailed questions put to it by the Guardian.Makenda had talked to her husband earlier, while he was in transit to the airport around 3pm, and he had appeared to be calm and getting on with his guards. "He was friendly with them. They did not put him in handcuffs because he was good to them. I heard them asking him how are the children."When she received his call from the aircraft, Mubenga sounded dispirited but calm. She recalled: "He was saying: 'I don't know what I am going to do, I don't know what I am going to do'. Then he said 'OK just hang up and I will call you back'."Shortly after that call, a confrontation broke out with the guards. Witnesses said Mubenga was shouting that he did not want to go home. He was physically and resisting deportation.His security escorts are likely to have known that in 2006 Mubenga was convicted of actual bodily harm after a brawl in a nightclub, for which he served a two-year prison sentence.Passengers who entered the aircraft around 7.40pm were met with the sight of four brawling men – some presumed the guards were police or air marshalls. They then described seeing the guards "on top" of Mubenga, forcing him on to or under his seat for anything between 10 and 45 minutes.Ben, a 29-year-old engineer, saw one guard reach for his handcuffs to restrain Mubenga. Michael, standing nearby, said: "The first thing I saw was the stewardesses running forward. One of them was almost in spasms she was shaking that bad … I saw three men trying to pull [Mubenga] down below the seats. All I could see was his head sticking up above the seats and he was hollering out: 'Help me'."Passengers were moved away from the rear of the aircraft, and into first class. "You could hear the guy [Mubenga] screaming at the back of the plane," said Ben. "He was saying: 'They are going to kill me'."BA stewards are understood to have moved two women sitting in the row of seats adjacent to those occupied by Mubenga and the guards.The vacated seats were taken up by Kevin Wallis, a 58-year-old engineer, who claims to have had a full view of the ensuing confrontation just a few feet away.As Mubenga resisted, Wallis heard one guard say: "He'll be alright once we get him in the air." It was around this time – 7.50pm – that Wallis took at call from his wife at his home in North Yorkshire, who said the commotion in the background "sounds really nasty".Wallis told his wife it was a deportation, and put the phone down. Wallis said he listened to Mubenga repeatedly complain that he was unable to breathe "for 10 minutes, at least" before he went silent."They [the guards] checked his neck pulse and his wrist pulse," said Wallis. "That is when they looked a bit worried."Andrew, a 44-year-old from Eastern Europe sitting in row 28, recalled seeing two men pushing down on Mubenga, who was consistently calling for help. Andrew heard cries of "don't do this" and "they are trying to kill me". He added: "In the beginning his voice was strong and loud, but with the time passing by the voice was losing its strength."Michael had a similar account, recalling Mubenga was saying "help me, help me" while three security guards were on top of him. "And then it went kind of quiet," he said. "The last thing we heard the man say was he couldn't breathe."It is unclear how much of this information was being conveyed to the cockpit. Some time after 8pm, the pilot commanding BA flight 77 headed for the runway. But his aircraft would never get into the air.At 8.25pm, police and paramedics were called to a man unwell on the aircraft, which was returned to the terminal.The Guardian's four witnesses did not recall a PA announcement asking if a doctor was on board."They left him in his seat until the paramedics came," said Wallis."I'm not sure he got any attention from anybody until the medics got there and that was 15, 20 minutes after everything went quiet," added Michael."Maybe somebody could have revived him if they had been asked. I can give CPR."Jimmy MubengaPoliceImmigration and asylumHuman rightsAngolaPaul LewisMatthew Taylorguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Student becomes new police chief in Mexican town
Marisol Valles, 20, who is studying criminology, has yet to make an arrest but is being called Mexico's bravest womanShe is a petite 20-year-old college student who paints her nails pink, has an infant son and believes in non-violence: meet Marisol Valles, the newest police chief in Mexico's drug war cauldron.The town of Praxedis Guadalupe Guerrero on the Texas border has astonished Mexico by appointing Valles to head a police force in the heart of a traditional centre for narco-traffickers.The criminology student has yet to make an arrest but has already been hailed Mexico's bravest woman for taking such a post in Juarez valley, a strip of about a dozen towns and villages where shadowy groups slaughter and mutilate police and civilians with impunity."The situation can improve if we believe in ourselves and believe there is hope," Valles told Reuters. "I want to carry this through and show that we can do this.The town's mayor, Jose Luis Guerrero, said she was the most qualified of a handful of applicants for a job, which in many parts of Mexico is considered tantamount to a death sentence.The new police chief heads a force of just 13 agents, nine of them women, with one working patrol car, three automatic rifles and a pistol. Gunmen killed a local official and his son last weekend as Valles prepared to start her job."We are doing this for a new generation of people who don't want to be afraid anymore. Everyone is frightened - it is very natural," she told Mexican media. "My motive for being here is that one can do a lot for the town ... we are going to make changes and get rid of a little of the fear in every person."Her force would focus on a non-violent role of promoting values and principles and preventing crime, she added.The appointment has upset some traditionalists - bloggers have asked if there are no men in the state of Chihuahua - and raised fresh questions about the state's capacity in an area that has seen an exodus of residents amid massacres, beheadings and home burnings.Juarez valley, once a route for Apaches and outlaws such as Billy the Kid, has been a transit point for cartels transporting cocaine, cannabis and other drugs to the US, a stone's throw across the Rio Bravo.The Sinaloa cartel is said to be waging an extermination campaign against homegrown Juarez cartel members in the valley. Analysts say rival narcos have used "plomo o plata" - lead or silver - to co-opt some police, army and politicians.MexicoDrugs tradeRory Carrollguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Michelin Stars Draw Shots
Michelin's latest dining guide dished out heaping servings of three-star reviews to restaurants in Japan. The generous distribution of stars has prompted a backlash among some Western critics and chefs.
online.wsj.com
Future Sustainable Cities: how can universities lead the way? - Video
Future Sustainable Cities: how can universities lead the way for sustainability?
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