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Tuesday 5 June 2012

Jean-Claude Van Damme brings special date to 2012 MTV Movie Awards: his daughter!

Jean-Claude Van Damme's love life has been quite colorful through the years — he's been married five times, twice to the same woman — so you never know who will be on his arm at an event. But his date for Sunday's 2012 MTV Movie Awards was a special one: the action hero brought his daughter. Van Damme, 51, escorted 21-year-old Bianca Bree (real name: Bianca Van Varenberg, which is Van Damme's given last name) to the Gibson Amphitheatre in Universal City last night. On the red carpet, the father/daughter duo clowned around for photographers — the "Expendables 2" star gave his offspring a spin at one point then they posed back to back. Bianca, an aspiring actress, had on an attention-grabbing outfit—a minidress with cutout sides. In her high heels, she appeared taller than her father. [Related: Jean-Claude Van Damme Talks 'Expendables 2' Action: It's Gonna Be 'Great'] Bianca took to Twitter to document her night out with her dad, writing: "As much as I don't enjoy all that flashy crap, I had a lot of fun." She also was excited to see Charlie Sheen, commenting that the "Anger Management" star "looks really good now days. Love that guy, no matter what." Bianca has been appearing in her father's movies since 2008 and has three more lined up, including "Welcome to the Jungle," which also stars her brother, Kristopher Van Varenberg , 24. (They are the children of Van Damme and ex-bodybuilder Gladys Portugues, who were married from 1987 to 1992 and then remarried in 1999.) However, Bianca is trying to carve out her own career path separate from her famous family. Last year, Bianca appeared on her father's British reality TV series, "Jean-Claude Van Damme: Behind Closed Doors," and talked about the difficulties of coming from a famous family. "Growing up under the roof of my dad, I never even saw him as something big," she said. "I never came to the conclusion that he was [famous]. I would go to school sometimes and people would say, 'Oh, I saw your dad on TV.' It can be hard having him as my father because a lot of people are fake. They can hurt you if you don't be careful. I shy away from a lot of people because I don't want them to know my life and personal issues. I just have a couple friends who are close and that is it." Meanwhile, it was a family weekend for Van Damme. The night before he brought Bianca to the MTV Movie Awards, he took Kristopher to Spike TV's 6th annual Guys Choice Awards. As noted, Kristopher is also following in his father's footsteps and the men have appeared in numerous movies together. Not only does Kristopher resemble his father, but he also has a muscular physique, which he showed off on the set of "Welcome to the Jungle" in March. [Related: Photo of Jean-Claude Van Damme's Muscular Son Hits the Web] "He raised me very well with my mother and grandparents," Kristopher has said about his famous father. "I grew up in Belgium the first five years of my life... It was good for me to be raised [with a European mentality], especially now that I'm living in L.A. Here, the sons and daughters [of famous actors] -- it's very easy for them. I've met many of them and it's, 'Tomorrow my father will buy me this' and 'I'm going here' and 'We'll party and drink and smoke.' I have no time for that. I am a machine that is [focused on] working." He says he loves working with his father "because we think the same."

Badu strips down for video with The Flaming Lips

R&B singer Erykah Badu doesn’t leave much to the imagination in a new video she shot recently with The Flaming Lips. The edgy, expressive singer - who wore her birthday suit in her 2010 “Window Seat” video - is at it again, this time posing naked in a bathtub while crooning “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” a classic made famous by Roberta Flack, per Rolling Stone. Interestingly, the most provocatively bared body parts - dripping with milk, glitter and another substance at various points throughout the video - do not actually belong to the Grammy-winning singer but her sister Nayrok, according to the magazine. The eye-popping slow-motion visual, in which The Lips frontman Wayne Coyne can be seen strumming a guitar fully clothed, accompanies the famous remake that was released back in April as part of the rock band’s compilation, “The Flaming Lips and Heady Fwends.” "Wayne is the Willy Wonka of music," Badu previously told Rolling Stone of recording with Coyne. "I didn't know what was going to happen .... By the 29th time, EUREKA! I understood exactly what I wanted." The album also features collaborations with Bon Iver, Coldplay, My Morning Jacket and Ke$ha. Source: CNN

Sunny Leone’s undies up for grabs!

Jism 2 director Pooja Bhatt wants to sell the pornstar-turned-Bollywood babe’s costumes for a cause Sunny Leone is in supreme demand. While the netizens are lusting after the bootylicious pornstar and her sensational videos, director Pooja Bhatt is gearing up to sell Sunny’s undergarments for a charitable cause. Pooja believes that so popular has become the Canadian import that she can find many takers even for Sunny’s lingerie! Pooja , who is shooting Jism 2 in Sri Lanka, is excited to auction Sunny’s wardrobe down to her underwear for charity.”Why should we have anything against beautiful lingerie? Hollywood stars auction their lingerie. It’s a done thing. There is a huge market for these. Given a chance, I’d love to buy Javier Bardem’s undergarments in an auction,” said Pooja in an interview to a daily. Bhatt wants to auction all the costumes online before the release of Jism 2 Given the ample skin show Jism 2 promises to dish out, we think the Bhatt gal is all set to make moolah from every possible ‘commodity’. First she made Sunny shed her clothes to film steamy bed scenes with the dishy Randeep Hooda, and now Pooja wants to auction Sunny’s clothes too. ( above is the sneak peek of the garments to be auctioned online!) Kudos to the actor-turned-director for her innovative business strategies!

Shahrukh Khan shows off his injury

The actor was spotted along with wife Gauri Khan, cheering for daughter Suhana as she performed at Shiamak Davar’s Summer Funk event Shahrukh was seen sporting a casual look at the do. Wearing a black T-shirt and torn jeans, SRK watched his daughter dance on the stage with rapt attention. And as he sat through the whole performance, what caught our attention was the injury on his thigh. All bandaged up, we wondered what made King Khan opt for tattered pants and put his wound on display. Is this the superstar’s way of gaining sympathy from his fans or a desperate attempt to create a cool style statement? We guess we would have to wait until we hear the real reason from the horse’s mouth. Shahrukh Khan has been the object of ridicule for quite some time now. And every time we think of supporting Mr Khan and his ridiculous acts, he makes it a point to mess up again. Looks like all SRK wants to do is wallow in some self-pity and create headlines these days. All we are asking Mr Khan to do is, think of better ideas to attract attention, ‘coz the cheesy ones simply don’t work. Source: BollywoodLife

Shahrukh Khan and Salman Khan to battle over football?

After lending their support to cricket, the two Khans of B-town, who can’t see eye to eye, are now set to dabble in football. Shahrukh Khan, co-owner of Kolkata Knight Riders’ team and a racing league, harbours a wish to buy 50 per cent stake in the Goan football club, Dempo SC. SRK has been a football player since his school days, and his son Aryan is following in his father’s footsteps. Salman Khan, on the other hand, is the official brand ambassador for All India Football Federation (AIFF), the governing body for Indian football. The actor intends to make football and basketball as popular as cricket. The Dabangg actor said in an interview that football is a lot easier to play in comparison to cricket. It’s a game with no frills and special gears. But Salman says that before getting into buying a team, he would like to focus on the basics of the game like building more football fields. The actor will then shift his focus to promoting basketball. This is not the first time that a star has chosen to promote a sport other than cricket. Sanjay Dutt and Raj Kundra (Superfight League –martial arts), Akshay Kumar (Karate), Shilpa Shetty , John Abraham and Dino Morea (football), and Suniel Shetty (Hockey) have all done it. What we would like to see is, whether Salman and Shahrukh’s support helps these two sports increase their popularity in India. Source: BollywoodLife

Japanese sprinter posing nude for London trip

Japan's disabled sprinter Maya Nakanishi poses in this handout picture featured in her calendar in Tokyo, Feb 7, 2012. Nakanishi, who is planning to compete in the 2012 London Paralympic Games, published a calendar featuring her posing semi-nude with her prosthetic leg to help fund her training and trip to London Paralympic Games. Nakanishi lost her right leg below the knee in a workplace accident when she was 21, then became a sprinter with her prosthetic limb. She is the Asian record holder in the T44 (one leg amputated below the knee) 200 meter and long jump and she was the first Japanese woman to be at the start line in a 100 meter final race in the 2008 Beijing Paralympic Olympics. But with little financial assistance, she made up her mind to pose herself partially nude in her calendar to fund her trip to compete in London. The calendar of 7,000 copies is priced at 1,200 yen ($15) in Japan. Source: ChinaDaily

Defending Li Na knocked out by qualifier

Yaroslava Shvedova of Kazakhstan celebrates after winning her match against Li Na of China during the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris June 4, 2012. [Photo\Agencies] PARIS - French Open champion Li Na's title defence ended on Monday when she was knocked out in a flurry of errors by Kazakh qualifier Yaroslava Shvedova 3-6 6-2 6-0. After taking the first set, the Chinese seventh seed collapsed, taking only two games out of the next 14. Last year's champion made 41 unforced errors as she spectacularly lost control of a match in which she had looked to be cruising towards victory. The blustery conditions on Court Suzanne Lenglen made serving difficult, but the Kazakh's aggressive approach left Li flat-footed. Her rhythm went to pieces in the face of an all-out assault from the doubles specialist who was not expected to be a realistic challenger in the singles draw, even in a tournament jam-packed full of shock results. China's Li Na leaves the court after losing to Yaroslava Shvedova of Kazakhstan during the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris June 4, 2012. [Photo\Xinhua] Shvedova, who has won grand slam doubles titles at both Wimbledon and the US Open in 2010, had signalled her intent coming into the match having not dropped a set in her opening three matches. Having stormed through the second set, Shvedova broke her opponent's serve three times in the decider, and while she wasted two match points in the final game, she eventually closed it out when Li netted a tame backhand. Shvedova, ranked 142 in the world in singles, will now play the winner of Varvara Lepchenko's match against Wimbledon winner Petra Kvitova in the quarter-final. Source: ChinaDaily

Speaking up for those who inhabit a world of shadows

Ye Haiyan stands at the door of her support center in Yulin, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region. The center, which cares for local sex workers, was recently attacked by unknown assailants. Photos by Huo Yan / China Daily Defending the rights of sex workers means sharing their experiences, Tang Yue reports from Guangxi. The shattered signboard may suggest that the four-story building is an ordinary hotel, but a glance inside reveals an odd similarity between the residents. All are female. Most are in their 40s, but some are older. Most are from poverty-stricken rural areas in neighboring provinces. They don't stay here for days but for months, sometimes even years. They don't just live, but work here, providing probably the cheapest sex service in China, at a charge of 10 to 30 yuan ($1.50 to $5) a time. Each pays 15 yuan a day to rent a darkened 6-square-meter cubicle with yellowed, peeling walls and the heavy smell of damp. There is no window and no shower. After finishing with each client, the women wash with the limited boiled water provided by the hotel - one bucket in the morning, another in the afternoon. During this year's Spring Festival holiday, this dingy hotel in Yulin, Guangxi, welcomed a new face. But she was only 36. And she was doing it for free. Her name is Ye Haiyan, although she's better known as Liumangyan, or Hooligan Swallow, the name she's used online since 2005. Having worked to promote HIV prevention among sex-workers and advocating their rights, Ye said she came to the hotel to "better understand and speak for the most unprivileged rural sex workers". Ye volunteered for a two-and-a-half-day stint, and served four men, aged 18 to 50. She then related the story on her five micro blogs. The tale quickly became an Internet phenomenon and sharply divided opinion, with some netizens applauding her "brave and conscientious behavior" while others labeled her "immoral and shameless". Tensions rose recently. On May 23 and 24, eight men broke into the support center that Ye established last year to care for local sex workers. They smashed furniture and threatened Ye with a knife. She reported the incidents to the local police, but so far, there have been no arrests. "I expected the controversy," admitted the diminutive Ye. "Despite all the challenges, the positive note is that the public is paying more attention to the plight of sex workers. I'm happy to see that." These low-paid women not only endure terrible working conditions, they also have greater exposure to sexually transmitted diseases, because the customers don't always use condoms, and are more vulnerable to violence and abuse. However, their biggest concern is not the poor sanitary conditions or strange clients, it's the police. Prostitution is illegal in China, but the World Health Organization estimates that there are some 4 million sex workers in the country, and some experts suggest that the true figure may be higher. If caught, sex workers face a fine up to 3,000 yuan. For those working in these shabby hotels, that equates to the earnings from about 150 clients. Poor, illegal, helpful The banner on the wall of the working center states Ye's goal: To exempt underprivileged sex workers from economic punishment. "It's easy to be a moralist and ask 'Why don't they choose a decent, safe job?' but the reality is much more complicated," said Ye. "Those who haven't gone through what these sisters have experienced really have no right to judge or offer opinions." Ye Haiyan and two of her volunteers at the support center she founded last year. Some of the women have escaped from domestic violence, while others are widows or their husbands are in prison. Many of these illiterate women shoulder heavy financial burdens, such as medical bills and tuition fees for their children, she said. Even charging the lowest rate, a sex worker can earn about 2,000 yuan per month, at least twice the salary in other jobs, if they can find them. "Stories of migrant workers slaving for months and not being paid are not uncommon. That helps to explain why the sex workers here are willing to take the risks they get paid immediately. That is very important for those with a family to support," said Ye. She believes these low-rate sex workers are providing a social service because many of their clients are lonely migrant workers, while others are local widowers whose sexual appetite has been heightened by long periods of solitude. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, China now has more than 150 million migrant workers who are away from their hometowns for at least six months each year. "They are very poor and don't even have shirts without holes. But they are also human beings. They also have desires. They have to find a way to satisfy their needs," said Xiaolongbao, meaning "Small steamed bun", a sex worker for 12 years. Chi Susheng, a lawyer and a deputy to the National People's Congress, agreed: "The reality is that a lot of migrant workers need this service. If the anti-pornography campaign makes it difficult for them to find such places, it will increase the likelihood that they will harass other women and force them to have sex," said Chi, who proposed the legalization of prostitution during the NPC session in March. She said legalization would ensure that sex workers undergo regular health checks and better prevent the spread of AIDS. There are also voices against the proposal. If prostitution is legalized, at the current time when the wealth gap is so wide, men will feel less guilty and more women will be encouraged to do it and are liable to come to harm, according to Zhang Hongping, a women's rights researcher at the China Cultural Institute in Beijing. "Ye may think that she is promoting women's rights, but feminism has never promoted doing anything in the form of sexual services," she said. "Feminists pursue freedom and equality, not 'sacrificing' oneself to save others." A change of attitude Ye has not always been supportive of sex workers. She ran a (legitimate) massage parlor in Yulin for a couple of years in the late 1990s, next door to a hair salon that provided sexual services. Ye during her time as an unpaid sex worker. Provided to China Daily Every time the sex workers came by and sat for a while, Ye and her staff felt uncomfortable and carefully cleaned the chairs after they left. "At that time, I looked down on them, too," she admitted. In 2001, she divorced and became a single mother. A friend of a friend, a sex worker, offered Ye and her 1-year-old daughter a place to stay. As a result, she heard a lot of "heartbreaking stories" about sex workers and started to defend them online. She set up a website to speak on their behalf in 2005, but later closed it because of public pressure and attacks by hackers. Ye was about to give up, but the murder of Yaoyao, a 23-year-old sex worker and supporter of the website who was killed by a client in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, made her determined to continue. In 2006, Ye founded the China Grassroots Women's Rights Center in her hometown of Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province. When she started promoting HIV-preventive measures among sex workers, she discovered that some were reluctant to use condoms for fear they would serve as evidence of prostitution. Last year, she moved back to Yulin and opened the working center, surrounded by hair salons, massage parlors and shabby hotels, most of which house sex workers. The less-than-10-square-meter center already has three diehard volunteers. Xiaolongbao, who helps to build up the network, calls Ye "Brother Yan" because "no single man treated us equally, cared and protected us like her". But every day she worries about being arrested. Liangzi, a local cleaner, is the "housekeeper, security guard and accountant". An enthusiastic charity worker since the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, he has worked with volunteers in local orphanages and schools. So far, however, he has failed to persuade any of them to join the center, because they "only like to do volunteer work in the sunshine". Mo Diandian, a 19-year-old school student in charge of the center's micro blog, said that some classmates know he is a volunteer at the center and are OK with it. But his parents, who "hold very traditional views", have no idea about his involvement. The center doesn't just provide condoms and encourage the women to take HIV tests. The volunteers also try to deliver as much comfort and care as possible. Earlier this year, they organized a Spring Festival dinner for those women who didn't go home. Now, as the Dragon Boat Festival approaches, the volunteers are counting the zongzi (dumplings made from bamboo leaves and glutinous rice) they will have to buy for the sisters. The women have inspired Ye so much that she named the center Fuping, meaning "Duckweed", because "the plant is just like the sex workers, who are always floating but are also strong and vital". Source: DailyChina

Stephen Baldwin fights Kevin Costner in court

(CNN) -- Lawyers for Kevin Costner and Stephen Baldwin began choosing jurors Monday to decide a legal dispute between the two actors stemming from the 2010 Gulf oil spill. Baldwin and a New Orleans businessman say Costner and others tricked them into selling their stock in a company that made oil spill cleanup machines the same week BP placed a $52 million order for the technology. The judge has ordered both actors to attend each day of the trial, which is being heard in a federal court in New Orleans. The oil separation technology was developed in the 1990s by a company created by Costner, but Baldwin became involved while in New Orleans to produce a documentary about the Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico in May 2010. Baldwin and Spyridon Contogouris decided to sell their stock soon after getting it because of differences with other shareholders, according to the lawsuit. They signed an agreement to sell their shares to Patrick Smith, who then transferred them to a company partly owned by Costner, on June 11, 2010. BP announced on June 15, 2010, it would lease 32 machines from the company. If Smith and Costner had told them BP was placing a huge order, they would not have sold, the suit said. The 10% of the company that Baldwin sold for $500,000 should have been worth $3.8 million, while the 28% stake sold by Contogouris for $1.4 million was worth $10.6 million, the suit said. Lawyers for Costner and Smith contend Baldwin and Contogouris sold their stock "with eyes wide open, to get out of a soured business relationship and to invest in other ventures." They knew that BP might place the order, a defense filing said. It was widely reported in the news and Costner testified about it to Congress two days before the stock sale. Contrary to trying to trick Baldwin into selling his shares, Costner was "dumbfounded," "flabbergasted" and "furious" when he learned Baldwin and Contogouris had sold out "because it enabled plaintiffs to cash out their interests" before the company had earned any money, the defense filing said. Costner and Baldwin are both on the list of witnesses expected to testify. Source: CNN

Madonna's Marine Le Pen Nazi Depiction Lands Singer In Hot Water

How do you get under the skin of a French right-wing politician? Just ask Madonna, who successfully ticked off National Front leader Marine Le Pen during a show in Tel Aviv, Israel, last Thursday. According to Agence France Presse, Madonna performed her song 'Nobody Knows Me' in front of a giant screen showing Marine Le Pen with a swastika on her forehead. The image appeared only for a split second in a montage featuring the likes of Sarah Palin and Chinese president Hu Jintao. However, the photo apparently caused enough of a stir for Le Pen to consider suing. France's far-right National Front candidate for the presidential election Marine Le Pen delivers a speech in Paris, Tuesday, May 1, 2012. (AP Photo/Francois Mori) According to the Daily Mail, Le Pen has threatened legal action should Madonna continue with the performance in France. Marine Le Pen is the head of France's National Front, a far-right political party that has been accused of racism. "We are not a Nazi party, and object to being depicted as such," a party source reportedly told the Daily Mail. The National Front won a record 18-20% of the vote in France's presidential elections on April 22. Radio France Internationale, an international public broadcaster, reports that Le Pen will be "watching very closely" to see if Madonna does a repeat when she performs in Paris on July 14.

Pilot signaled trouble moments before crash that killed 163 in Nigeria

Lagos, Nigeria (CNN) -- The pilot of the Dana Air plane that crashed into a densely populated neighborhood in Lagos, Nigeria, radioed that the plane was having trouble just minutes earlier, an airline official told CNN on Monday. The details emerged as search and rescue crews worked to recover bodies from the wreckage, while authorities searched for the flight data recorders to try to piece together what brought down the plane Sunday, killing all 153 people aboard and at least 10 on the ground. The death toll will probably rise as crews search the rubble of a two-story residential building that the McDonnell Douglas MD-83 plane struck. It was unclear how many people were inside the building and on the street outside at the time of the crash, Mohammad Sani Sidi, the emergency management director, told CNN from the crash site. Nigeria's National Emergency Management Agency said late Monday that 137 bodies -- including the body of a woman clutching the body of a baby, apparent residents of the area -- had been removed from the crash site. Alexander Bankole, director of search and rescue for the agency, announced at 7 p.m. that the search would be suspended overnight and resume Tuesday morning. The pilot declared an emergency as the plane was on final approach to Murtala Muhammed International Airport, and witnesses said it appeared the plane was having engine trouble, said Oscar Wason, Dana Air's director of operations. Wason identified the pilot as an American, but did not release his name or hometown. The co-pilot was from India, and the flight engineer from Indonesia, Wason said. U.S. citizens were on board the flight, the U.S. State Department said Monday, but the agency did not have an exact number. The consulate in Lagos was working to notify the victims' next of kin, spokesman Mark Toner said. Also among the dead are six Chinese citizens who were on board the flight, the Chinese Embassy in Nigeria said Monday. According to witnesses, the passenger plane appeared to be coming in high with its nose up when it crashed, hitting the ground tail first, Wason said. The flight, bound from the Nigerian capital of Abuja, crashed at 3:43 p.m. (10:43 a.m. ET) Sunday in the neighborhood of Iju Ishaga, just north of the airport, according to the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority. The crash site was 11 miles from the runway, Wason said. The families of the dead were gathered at the airport late Sunday, hours after the crash, and were told there were no survivors, Wason said. Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan ordered an immediate investigation into the crash, while declaring a three-day period of national mourning for victims. Initial rescue efforts were hampered by massive crowds that poured into the streets after the crash, making it difficult for crews and medical workers to get to the wreckage. Police used batons to beat back onlookers to make way for rescue crews and ambulances, witnesses said. "There were so many people, you had to push through people to walk," said Pearl Ezeokeke, who was at the crash site. Femi Green-Adebo, who lives a few blocks from the crash site, said he was home Sunday when he heard a "loud explosion" and ran outside with friends. "We were trying to see if we could help others," he said. "It was so hot, we couldn't get close because of the fire." The number of people in the street quickly swelled, and he said he saw police and ambulances trying to make their way through the crowd. By Monday morning, military police had cordoned off the crash site, and workers were sifting through debris. Charred remains were being pulled from still-smoldering wreckage and placed in body bags set back from the crash site. Workers also were sifting through the debris for personal effects, trying to match passports, identification cards and other paperwork to the passenger manifest. Technicians took pictures of cell phones, some partially melted. A team of Boeing engineers was en route to investigate the crash, Wason said. The airplane that crashed was 22 years old and was purchased from Alaska Airlines. It underwent a routine maintenance checkup every 200 hours, and it had just been inspected three days earlier, Wason said. The Nigerian aviation authority has not asked Dana Air to ground its planes, though the airline canceled all its flights Monday as show of respect for the victims of the crash, he said. Dana Air, which is privately owned and based in Lagos, began operations in 2008. Nigeria's deadliest air disaster came in July 1991, when all 261 on board a Nigerian Airways airliner were killed when the plane crashed shortly after takeoff in Saudi Arabia. On Saturday, a Boeing 727 cargo plane operated by Nigeria-based Allied Air from Lagos overshot the runway in Accra, Ghana, and hit a passenger bus, killing 10 people, officials said. Dana Air set up a 24-hour hotline to provide information about the Sunday crash. "Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of guests who were involved in the Dana Air mishap," the airline posted on its website. "May the souls of the deceased rest in peace." Lagos, with a population of more than 7.9 million people, is one of the fastest-growing cities in the world. It is Nigeria's commercial hub. Source: CNN

Suicide rate on the rise in Malaysia

PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia - The suicide rate is on the rise in Malaysia, with more than 1,000 people taking their own lives over a three-year period. Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai said the ratio of suicides from 2007 to 2010 was 1.3 for every 100,000 people, but added that it could be higher. "These are just figures we collected from post-mortems. We think suicides are under-reported," he told a press conference after chairing the Mental Health Promotion advisory council meeting here. Of the 1,156 people who committed suicide over the three-year period, the majority were aged between 24 and 44. Liow said this was alarming as the victims belonged to the productive age group. "National statistics also show that men outnumber women three to one, while the Chinese had the highest number of suicides at 48%, followed by Indians (21%), Malays (18%) and other races (13%)," he said. However, he said the country's suicide rate was far lower than the global average of 16 for every 100,000 people. Given the increase in suicides in Malaysia, the Government had decided to launch a five-year National Suicide Prevention Strategic Action Plan starting this year, said Liow. Part of the plan is to shift mental health treatment from being purely institutionalised in hospitals to more community-centric and to be made available at community mental health centres. "By bringing mental healthcare to the clinics, the Government is adhering to the World Health Organisation's recommendations of getting the public to play a greater role in providing support for mental health patients," said Liow. The initial target is to set up one community mental health centre in every state this year. "Currently, we have 224 psychiatrists in the ministry. The ratio of psychiatrists to the population is 1:150,000, but ideally we need to get a ratio of 1:50,000, which means we need a three-fold increase," he said. Source: AsiaOne

'Natural gas offers lower emission'

KUALA LUMPUR - There is in urgent need for a new paradigm of development to meet the demands of the rising "global middle class" and natural gas has an important role in the new paradigm, said Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak. The Prime Minister said a new paradigm was crucial as the world community could not afford to allow emerging economies to follow the same "grow first, clean later" model adopted by early industrialisers as it would bring grave consequences to the well-being and security of future generations. "I believe natural gas has an important role within that paradigm, sustaining development and at the same time decoupling it from rising emissions. "Natural gas offers an alternative to the environmental concerns posed by the use of fossil fuels in economic development. "It may not be the perfect solution but it is without doubt one of the best we have today, offering the lowest carbon footprint of all the fossil fuels," Najib said when opening the 25th World Gas Conference here yesterday. The Prime Minister said given the significant growth in electricity demand in the non-OECD countries, aggressive substitution of natural gas for coal would represent an immediate and the most pragmatic route to mitigating emissions growth. Najib said over the last 30 years, gas had tripled its share of the country's primary energy mix to become the largest energy source. He added that Petronas' LNG complex, one of the world's largest facilities at a single site, supplies 20% of the combined LNG imports of Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and China. Source: AsiaOne

Gambling woes to shoot up after Euro 2012

Gambling problems are expected to get worse after Euro 2012 ends. According to the Gamblers Rehab Centre, the number of calls to the GRC hotline is expected to triple after July 1. Its secretary Karline Chew said: "It is only after the games, when they've lost all their money, that the gamblers or family seek help over their debts. "It is a trend. After a sporting event is over, calls to our hotline shoot up, especially after football games." Chew said the centre now received an average of five calls a day on gambling problems but the number would hit 10 to 15 after Euro 2012. "The GRC will stand by for a spike in calls. We will try to get more volunteers to counsel gamblers who wish to be rehabilitated," she said, adding that calls soared to 27 a day after the 2010 World Cup. She said gamblers usually did not call the hotline themselves. "Serious gambling cases affect family members and usually it is either the gambler's spouse or parents who will seek help," Chew said, adding that most of those involved in football gambling were men. She said the most tragic case she encountered was a punter who jumped off a building when he could not handle his gambling debts. Chew said the GRC had two main call centres in Kuala Lumpur and Johor. "After we receive calls, we give the callers the number of our service station nearest to them. Our volunteers will then meet and counsel them," she said. Chew said the GRC also had two shelters for gambling addicts who sought rehabilitation. "They will spend three months in our shelters in Seremban or Kluang," she said. "In those three months, the gamblers will not be allowed to communicate with the world outside," said Chew. "Activities will be conducted to help them overcome their addiction." Source: AsiaOne

Stricter rules for maids cleaning windows

A statement yesterday said that maids are allowed to do so only if they are physically supervised by their employer or by an adult representative of their employer. Window grilles, which need to be installed, should also be locked at all times during the cleaning process. The new rules apply to all homes, except for windows that are at the ground level or along common corridors. These come after nine maids fell to their deaths this year, compared to four cases for the whole of last year. Eight maids fell to their deaths in 2010. MOM investigations showed that five of the nine deaths this year were related to maids cleaning windows in an unsafe manner. Two arose from hanging laundry, while the causes of the last two are pending further investigation. On Sunday morning, a 29-year-old Indonesian maid fell from her employer's 12th- floor flat in Woodlands Drive 44, but she was grabbed by neighbours one floor below. Singapore Civil Defence Force officers set up an inflatable safety cushion and later pulled the maid to safety. She was sent to Khoo Teck Puat Hospital with stomach and neck pains. MOM said it engaged a variety of stakeholders to hear different perspectives on the issue and invited them to co-develop effective solutions. These views came from members of the public, comments on online forums, and e-mail messages to MOM, among others. A door-to-door survey was also conducted among some 600 households to better understand window cleaning practices. In-depth, one-to-one interviews with maids as well as a townhall session with employers, members of the public, employment agencies and non-governmental organisations were also held, said MOM. Most stakeholders called for the Government to impose the new rules as there was "less support for a ban on window-cleaning regardless of precautions taken". This is because there are safe ways to clean window exteriors, such as through locked grilles and with the use of extendable wipers. The survey also showed that most households, including those without maids, cleaned their window exteriors fairly frequently. Among those who did, most had window grilles. Circulars will be sent to all maid employers to notify them of the tightened safety requirements. Employers who fail to comply may be prosecuted and barred permanently from hiring a maid, said MOM. MOM also plans to raise the penalty for employers prosecuted for failing to provide their maids with a safe working environment. The ministry said it intends to double the penalties from the current S$5,000 fine and/or six months' jail to S$10,000 fine and/or 12 months' jail. "This is part of the ongoing review of the Employment of Foreign Manpower Act and its subsidiary legislation," said the spokesman. Source: AsiaOne

US Navy hopes stealth ship answers a rising China

A super-stealthy warship that could underpin the U.S. navy's China strategy will be able to sneak up on coastlines virtually undetected and pound targets with electromagnetic "railguns" right out of a sci-fi movie. But at more than $3 billion a pop, critics say the new DDG-1000 destroyer sucks away funds that could be better used to bolster a thinly stretched conventional fleet. One outspoken admiral in China has scoffed that all it would take to sink the high-tech American ship is an armada of explosive-laden fishing boats. With the first of the new ships set to be delivered in 2014, the stealth destroyer is being heavily promoted by the Pentagon as the most advanced destroyer in history — a silver bullet of stealth. It has been called a perfect fit for what Washington now considers the most strategically important region in the world — Asia and the Pacific. Though it could come in handy elsewhere, like in the Gulf region, its ability to carry out missions both on the high seas and in shallows closer to shore is especially important in Asia because of the region's many island nations and China's long Pacific coast. "With its stealth, incredibly capable sonar system, strike capability and lower manning requirements — this is our future," Adm. Jonathan Greenert, chief of naval operations, said in April after visiting the shipyard in Maine where they are being built. On a visit to a major regional security conference in Singapore that ended Sunday, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said the Navy will be deploying 60 percent of its fleet worldwide to the Pacific by 2020, and though he didn't cite the stealth destroyers he said new high-tech ships will be a big part of its shift. The DDG-1000 and other stealth destroyers of the Zumwalt class feature a wave-piercing hull that leaves almost no wake, electric drive propulsion and advanced sonar and missiles. They are longer and heavier than existing destroyers — but will have half the crew because of automated systems and appear to be little more than a small fishing boat on enemy radar. Down the road, the ship is to be equipped with an electromagnetic railgun, which uses a magnetic field and electric current to fire a projectile at several times the speed of sound. But cost overruns and technical delays have left many defense experts wondering if the whole endeavor was too focused on futuristic technologies for its own good. They point to the problem-ridden F-22 stealth jet fighter, which was hailed as the most advanced fighter ever built but was cut short because of prohibitive costs. Its successor, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, has swelled up into the most expensive procurement program in Defense Department history. "Whether the Navy can afford to buy many DDG-1000s must be balanced against the need for over 300 surface ships to fulfill the various missions that confront it," said Dean Cheng, a China expert with the Heritage Foundation, a conservative research institute in Washington. "Buying hyperexpensive ships hurts that ability, but buying ships that can't do the job, or worse can't survive in the face of the enemy, is even more irresponsible." The Navy says it's money well spent. The rise of China has been cited as the best reason for keeping the revolutionary ship afloat, although the specifics of where it will be deployed have yet to be announced. Navy officials also say the technologies developed for the ship will inevitably be used in other vessels in the decades ahead. But the destroyers' $3.1 billion price tag, which is about twice the cost of the current destroyers and balloons to $7 billion each when research and development is added in, nearly sank it in Congress. Though the Navy originally wanted 32 of them, that was cut to 24, then seven. Now, just three are in the works. "Costs spiraled — surprise, surprise — and the program basically fell in on itself," said Richard Bitzinger, a security expert at Singapore's Nanyang Technological University. "The DDG-1000 was a nice idea for a new modernistic surface combatant, but it contained too many unproven, disruptive technologies." The U.S. Defense Department is concerned that China is modernizing its navy with a near-term goal of stopping or delaying U.S. intervention in conflicts over disputed territory in the South China Sea or involving Taiwan, which China considers a renegade province. China is now working on building up a credible aircraft carrier capability and developing missiles and submarines that could deny American ships access to crucial sea lanes. The U.S. has a big advantage on the high seas, but improvements in China's navy could make it harder for U.S. ships to fight in shallower waters, called littorals. The stealth destroyers are designed to do both. In the meantime, the Navy will begin deploying smaller Littoral Combat Ships to Singapore later this year. Officially, China has been quiet on the possible addition of the destroyers to Asian waters. But Rear Adm. Zhang Zhaozhong, an outspoken commentator affiliated with China's National Defense University, scoffed at the hype surrounding the ship, saying that despite its high-tech design it could be overwhelmed by a swarm of fishing boats laden with explosives. If enough boats were mobilized some could get through to blow a hole in its hull, he said. "It would be a goner," he said recently on state broadcaster CCTV's military channel. Source: YahooNews