Facebook not so fun with a click from boss or mum












LONDON (Reuters) – Posting pictures of yourself plastered at a party and talking trash online with your Facebook friends may be more stress than it’s worth now that your boss and mum want to see it all.


A survey from Edinburgh Business School released on Monday showed Facebook users are anxious that all those self-published sins may be coming home to roost with more than half of employers claiming to have used Facebook to weed out job candidates.












“Facebook used to be like a great party for all your friends where you can dance, drink and flirt,” said Ben Marder, author of the report and fellow in marketing at the Business School.


“But now with your Mum, Dad and boss there, the party becomes an anxious event full of potential social landmines.”


On average, people are Facebook friends with seven different social circles, the report found, with real friends known to the user offline the most common.


More than four-fifths of users add extended family on Facebook, a similar number add siblings. Less than 70 percent are connected to friends of friends while more than 60 percent added their colleagues online, despite the anxiety this may cause.


Facebook has settings to control the information seen by different types of friends, but only one third use them, the report said.


“I’m not worried at all because all the really messy pics – me, drunken or worse – I detag straight away,” said Chris from London, aged 30.


People were more commonly friends with former boyfriends or girlfriends than with current ones, the report also found.


(Reporting By Dasha Afanasieva, editing by Paul Casciato)


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“Searching for Sugar Man,” “First Cousin Once Removed” Win at International Documentary Festival












LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – “Searching for Sugar Man” is continuing to find critical acclaim.


Malik Benjelloul‘s documentary about musician Rodriguez, who abandoned music only to find his career resuscitated after becoming hugely popular in South Africa, won the Best Music Documentary award at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, the festival said Friday.












“Sugar Man” also took home the Audience award.


Alan Berliner’s documentary “First Cousin Once Removed,” about his uncle’s struggle with Alzheimer’s disease, also scored big, winning for Best Feature-Length Documentary.


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Body of Turkish ex-leader shows signs of poisoning: paper












ISTANBUL (Reuters) – An autopsy on the exhumed body late President Turgut Ozal, who led Turkey out of military rule in the 1980s, has revealed evidence of poisoning, a newspaper reported on Monday.


There had long been rumors Ozal, who died of heart failure in 1993 aged 65, was murdered by militants of the “deep state” – a shadowy nationalist strain within the Turkish establishment of the day. He had angered some with his efforts to end the Kurdish conflict and survived on assassination bid in 1988.












His body, dug up last month on the orders of prosecutors investigating suspicions of foul play in his death, contained the banned insecticide DDT and the related compound DDE at ten times the normal level, Today’s Zaman cited sources from the state Forensic Medicine Institute (ATK) as saying.


“Ozal was most likely poisoned with four separate substances,” the paper reported the sources as saying, also naming the toxic metal cadmium and the radioactive elements americium and polonium as substances found in Ozal’s remains.


Forensic institute officials declined to comment.


Ozal, whose economic reforms easing the grip of the state on business helped shape modern Turkey, was in poor health. After undergoing a triple heart bypass operation in the United States in 1987, he kept up a grueling schedule and remained overweight until he died.


His moves to end a Kurdish insurgency and create a Turkic union with central Asian states have been cited as motives for would-be enemies in “deep state“, in which security establishment figures and criminal elements colluded.


It was Turkey’s military leaders who appointed him as a minister after a period of military rule following a 1980 coup.


He went on to dominate Turkish politics as prime minister from 1983 to 1989. Parliament then elected him president, but those close to him believe his reform efforts displeased some in the security establishment.


While prime minister, Ozal survived an assassination attempt by a right-wing gunman in 1988 when he was shot at a party congress, injuring a finger.


Turkish political history has been littered with military coups, alleged anti-government plots and extra-judicial killings. A court is currently trying hundreds of people suspected of links to a nationalist underground network known as “Ergenekon” accused of plotting to overthrow the government.


A media report at the start of November said Ozal’s autopsy had revealed high levels of the pesticide strychnine, but the ATK subsequently denied the report.


The head of the ATK has said the institute aims to complete its work in December and that its report would be handed over to prosecutors.


(Reporting by Seda Sezer; Writing by Daren Butler; Editing by Nick Tattersall)


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Damien Hirst: Jumping the Shark













It’s not easy to blend into the background at an exhibition of minimalist art, but Damien Hirst is somehow succeeding. On a rainy night back in January, a fashionable throng circulates through the chilly Gagosian Gallery in Manhattan, glancing at the walls—hung with an array of Hirst’s “spot” paintings, patterned with grids of colorful dots—while scanning the cavernous space for a glimpse of the artist. One guy waves around a book of the star’s work, showing off a just-bestowed autograph. When a security guard is asked where he last saw Hirst, he says: “Check the gift shop.”


It’s a suitable destination for an artist whose great subject is the commercialization of his own genius. Hirst once said that it “makes me feel alive” when people buy his spot-themed wallpaper. There’s some in the store, as well as a skateboard deck ($ 735), coffee mug ($ 28), and credit-card holder ($ 8). “I think becoming a brand name,” Hirst told the Independent in 2000, “is a really important part of life.”












35159  feature hirst48  01  inline202 Damien Hirst: Jumping the SharkPhotograph by Ray Tang/Rex USADamien Hirst


Now 47, Hirst persuaded buyers to pay dearly for his provocations: art made out of cigarette butts and vivisected animals, even a human skull cast in platinum and adorned with diamonds. His most famous piece, The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living—a tiger shark suspended in formaldehyde—sold to billionaire hedge fund manager Steve Cohen for a reported $ 12 million. During the 2000s, his work found particular favor with art investors who prized it as much for its appreciating value as its aesthetics.


Hirst’s work was in such demand, he relied on teams of assistants to produce it, working with varied product lines in the manner of a fashion designer. The runway items, like the shark, enhanced the value of the more mass-produced items, like the spot paintings. Hirst’s devotees credit him with clever, Warhol-esque subversion. But Andy Warhol never received more than $ 50,000 for a painting during his lifetime, while Hirst has profited handsomely from his artistic statements. London’s Sunday Times estimates his fortune at around $ 350 million, making him the richest artist in the world.


The January opening, billed as “The Complete Spot Paintings,” is the work of Larry Gagosian, Hirst’s powerful art dealer, who’s staging the exhibition simultaneously at his 11 galleries around the world. Hirst finally resurfaces at another of Gagosian’s New York locations. An impish man, he wears a black suit, an untucked shirt, and many skull rings, and is gamely posing for pictures with a swarm of admirers. An attractive young woman walks up, hands over her camera, and scurries toward Hirst. He grins and shouts, in his yobbish accent, “Who are these people?”


For all his celebrity, Hirst’s stock in the art market has experienced a stunning deflation. According to data compiled by the firm Artnet, Hirst works acquired during his commercial peak, between 2005 and 2008, have since resold at an average loss of 30 percent. And that probably understates the decline—judging from the dropoff in sales volume, collectors aren’t bringing their big-ticket Hirsts to market. A third of the more than 1,700 Hirst pieces offered at auctions since 2009 have failed to sell at all—they’ve been “burned,” in the terminology of the art world. “He has way underperformed,” says Michael Moses, a retired New York University business professor who maintains a financial index for art. “He has lots and lots of negative returns.”


Hirst’s crash is all the more perplexing because it comes at a time when the contemporary art market has sharply rebounded, with auctions pulling in proceeds that rival the giddiest pre-recession highs. And it has continued through what would appear to be a year of accomplishments for Hirst. Following the spot exhibition, there was a retrospective at the Tate Modern, which drew record crowds. For the London Olympics, Hirst designed a stadium floor that looked like one of his signature “spin” paintings—a woozy Union Jack.


Hirst declined interview requests, as did Gagosian. James Kelly, chief executive of Hirst’s private company Science Ltd., says his boss “has transcended all confines of the art world” and is unconcerned about the auction results. “Certain artworks that come to auction are being priced, one could say, more realistically at today’s values,” Kelly says. “However, the long-term view is that prices for Damien’s work will be strong.”


Hirst’s naysayers doubt that. They trace his fall to a $ 200 million auction staged in 2008, on the day Lehman Brothers collapsed. Hirst sold hundreds of works directly to bidders, defying the custom of restricting supply. “Hirst screwed with his market, and it came back to bite him,” says Michael Plummer, principal of the investment advisory firm Artvest Partners. “He broke the economic rules of the industry.”
 
 
In mid-November, Hirst’s current place in the market is on display at the New York showroom of Sotheby’s (BID), which is holding its biannual evening auction of contemporary art. The centerpiece, a monumental Rothko, is surrounded by paintings from Jackson Pollock, Warhol, and other modern masters. “Here’s the real man of the moment,” Dan Abernethy, a Sotheby’s spokesman, says, gliding toward an opalescent abstract by the German painter Gerhard Richter. In October, Eric Clapton sold a similar Richter for $ 34 million at auction, a record for a living artist.


35159  feature hirst48  03  inline405 Damien Hirst: Jumping the SharkPhotograph by Stephanie Keith/PolarisHirst’s “Sanctimony” (round painting) behind Nara’s fiberglass dog, at Sotheby’s


In a rear corner, behind an enormous fiberglass dog by Yoshitomo Nara, is Hirst’s lone entry in the auction. It’s a work called Sanctimony, part of his series of “butterfly” paintings, made by covering a canvas with household paint and affixing hundreds of wings. The effect is morbidly beautiful: The torn wings in blue, yellow, and monarch patterns play off against the turquoise background in kaleidoscopic fashion, evoking the rose window of a cathedral. To fully take in the painting, I try to back up, but bump into the rear end of Nara’s dog statue.


Hirst has little direct financial stake in the price of Sanctimony. There’s a difference between works that artists sell themselves, into the “primary market,” and the secondary trade among collectors, where the real gains happen. Nonetheless, artists care about secondary market prices, because they serve as a signal of broader importance. History offers many examples of artists who were elevated and later discarded by fickle collectors. In the 1980s there was Julian Schnabel, who cut a brash swath through the New York scene, making paintings out of broken plates and comparing himself to Picasso. His bubble burst during the 1990s recession. Today, Schnabel’s prices rarely exceed $ 500,000, and he’s known mostly as a filmmaker.


It’s too soon to say if Hirst is on a similar path. Critics have long been divided over the merits of his work, but even his detractors acknowledge that it defined an era. A product of working-class Leeds, Hirst made his name when he was still a student, as curator of a landmark show of work by a group known as the “Young British Artists.” He went on to create some of the most identifiable images of the last two decades, building a tabloid reputation for boozy antics.


“Great artists, they always go up to a peak, and then they go down to a very low low,” says collector Alberto Mugrabi. “I feel that Damien is one of the most influential artists of our time.” Hirst may care little about critics, but he knows collectors have great power. Advertising executive Charles Saatchi was an early patron, and in recent years, Mugrabi and his family have played a crucial supporting role. Mugrabi isn’t merely an art lover; he’s called his family “market makers.” His father, Jose, who made a fortune in the Colombian garment business, started collecting Warhols soon after the artist’s death, when his most expensive work commanded six figures. He continued buying them on the cheap through the downturn of the 1990s, and the Mugrabis now own the largest Warhol trove in private hands. They’ve followed a similar strategy with Hirst, amassing more than 100 pieces.


“Collectors have to learn to buy art with their eyes,” Mugrabi says, “not their ears.” An olive-skinned international bon vivant, he’s sitting in his Park Avenue office—a Warhol Blue Jackie sits propped against the wall behind his desk—and showing off a desktop picture on his computer screen: four Hirst sharks, suspended in adjoining tanks. “What’s more amazing than that?” he asks.


When asked what the piece is called, Mugrabi shuffles some papers, racks his brain, but the name won’t come to him. Finally, he yells to his secretary in an adjoining room: “Liz, what’s the name of the shark?”


Theology, Philosophy, Medicine, Justice,” she shouts back.


You can hardly blame Mugrabi for letting it slip his mind. Since he acquired the piece in 2008, he’s rarely seen it. While his family keeps a few pieces around the office—one of the artist’s glass medicine cabinets, a bull’s heart impaled on a knife and encased in a transparent box—most of their Hirsts are stored in warehouses in Newark, N.J., and Switzerland, where the animals are removed from their tanks and refrigerated. Another installation includes 30 sheep, two sides of beef, a string of sausages, an umbrella, and a dead white dove. “Just to install a piece is a lot of money,” Mugrabi says.


Ultimately, Mugrabi is investing to make a profit. He’s trying to sell the shark, for instance, and says he has a good offer. But he’s in a tough spot: Like any major art collector, he has to protect the value of his holdings. That means he must prop up Hirst by paying—perhaps overpaying—at auction. Mugrabi says he thinks the acquisition strategy will pay off, as his father’s Warhol investment did. He brings up recently deceased art critic Robert Hughes, who once interviewed him and called Hirst’s art “a cruddy game for the self-aggrandizement of the rich and the ignorant.”


“In another year, nobody will talk about this man anymore,” Mugrabi says of Hughes. “In 2,000 years, Hirst will still be in people’s vocabulary.”


Mugrabi pulls up the auction listing for Sanctimony on the Sotheby’s website. “This painting at the height of the market would have been $ 3.5 or $ 4 million,” he says. Sotheby’s estimates it will sell for $ 1.2 million to $ 1.8 million—a tempting price. “People are very funny, because they like buying things when they’re expensive,” Mugrabi says. “They don’t like buying things when they’re inexpensive. All of a sudden, they can buy the art for the same price as it was 15 years ago, but now they don’t want to do it.”
 
 
Pricing fine art might seem like a preoccupation of the wealthy few, but it’s of interest to economists, who see it as a way to test fundamental questions about value. As Mugrabi points out, the market behaves in unusual ways: Demand for an artist’s work tends to rise as prices do, because the more expensive it becomes, the more status it confers. And while value is usually a function of scarcity, the opposite can be true for artists—some great ones, like Warhol and Picasso, left behind a prolific body of work. The most unpredictable thing about art’s valuation, though, is that it’s entirely in the eye of the beholder.


Frank Dunphy, a jovial white-haired Irishman who recently retired as Hirst’s business manager, used to advise him that “an artwork is only worth what the next guy is going to pay for it.” They met in the mid-1990s, during what he calls Hirst’s “rock-and-roll years,” when Hirst was winning acclaim and chafing at his subservience to dealers and collectors. “The galleries were saying: ‘We sell the art, you make it. Don’t get involved,’ ” Hirst said in a 1995 Observer interview. “I was saying, ‘I want to know who you are selling it to and how much for.’ ”


Dunphy had no background in art; past clients of his accounting practice included dwarf actors, circus jugglers, and a burlesque performer named Peaches Page. “It’s all showbiz,” he used to tell Hirst. As a star of the art world, Hirst was in a position to dictate his own terms. Dunphy played his London dealer, Jay Jopling, against Gagosian, whose empire was rising in New York. Instead of the customary arrangement, in which a dealer judiciously picks pieces from an artist’s studio, sells them, and takes half the proceeds, Dunphy allotted inventory as he chose, maintained control over prices and discounts, and knocked the dealer’s cut down to as little as 10 percent.


The dealers were willing to accept a smaller share because Hirst was a hot property. When a lamb pickled in formaldehyde sold for £25,000 in the 1990s, the Sun tabloid reported the news under the headline: “BAA-RMY!” A decade later, a similar piece went for $ 3.4 million at Christie’s. In 1995, the New York Times reported that Hirst’s spot paintings were selling for around $ 11,000; six years later, the most expensive were around $ 200,000; at the market’s peak, two topped $ 3 million at auction. “It’s from the marketplace that you want approval,” Dunphy says. “That’s always what you’re looking for in the end: Are people buying the work?”


Hirst made no apologies for delegating the actual work to young hourly-paid assistants. Warhol may have made his famous silk screens in a loft studio he called the Factory, but Hirst owns an actual factory: a 97,000-square-foot converted plastics plant in the English town of Stroud. His company employs hundreds, including metalworkers, taxidermists, and other specialists. “People forget that, you know, factories don’t only make dog food,” Hirst said in a video produced to promote the spot paintings exhibition. “They make Ferraris as well.”


35159  feature hirst48  02  inline405 Damien Hirst: Jumping the SharkPhotograph by Les Wilson/Mail on Sunday/Solo SyndicationHirst’s factory in Stroud, England


Hirst was dissatisfied with the art world’s distribution of wealth. Why should collectors like Saatchi and Mugrabi take all the profits? In secret, Hirst and Dunphy made preparations for an unprecedented sale, sending the factory into high production. Their 2008 auction, at Sotheby’s in London, was like nothing the art world had ever seen—some compared it to an initial public offering. The 223 lots ranged from relatively affordable ink drawings to the show stopper, a golden calf. They called the event “Beautiful Inside My Head Forever.”


Hirst’s dealers were uneasy—Gagosian pointedly declined to attend—and warned of dilution. The day the event began, Sept. 15, 2008, Hirst and Dunphy heard the news from America about Lehman. “It could have been awful for all of us,” Dunphy says. But following the proceedings from a private room at Sotheby’s and relaying news to Hirst, who was playing snooker at a bar, Dunphy watched lot after lot sell over its estimated price, driven higher by bidders such as fashion designer Miuccia Prada, Russian oligarchs, and many first-time buyers. The golden calf went for $ 18.6 million to an anonymous bidder, rumored to be a member of the royal family of Qatar.


The final tally, $ 200 million, far exceeded expectations. “That, I always thought, was a work of art in itself,” Dunphy says. “It’s going to be in art history forever, isn’t it?”
 
 
“That’s not an artistic achievement,” Michael Findlay says. “It’s a financial achievement.” One day in October, Findlay, a veteran art dealer, is in his office at the Acquavella Galleries, explaining what he sees as the debasement of today’s art market. Earlier this year, he published a book entitled The Value of Art. In this cri de coeur, he cites Hirst as a prime beneficiary of a movement that assesses art according to financial metrics rather than deeper measures of value. “In fifty years time,” he writes, “will a shark preserved in formaldehyde look dated or profound?”


Many in the art world expected, almost hoped, that the 2008 crash would be a cleansing catastrophe, but the materialistic trend has only accelerated. Instead of remaining depressed for years, as in the early 1990s, the market has recovered robustly. Economists say that rising income inequality is good for art values; for the super-rich, investing in a masterpiece can be a hedge against inflation and financial instability. “As we know,” says James Kelly, Dunphy’s successor, “there are more and more millionaires created every day, and more and more billionaires created every day.”


By the calculations of Moses, the retired NYU professor, contemporary art has returned 12.6 percent a year on average during the 2000s, far outpacing the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index. A cottage industry of art market analysis has emerged to fulfill the quantitative demands of investors. In March, for instance, Citibank (C) put out a report that identified Richter as “the next great market force,” comparing his returns favorably to those of Picasso, Warhol, and de Kooning.


Not everyone in the art world thinks such assessments are reliable. Private galleries often don’t report their sales; collectors and dealers can manipulate auction results. The art market is very illiquid—you can’t buy a share of Hirst, you have to buy the whole shark—and only a tiny percentage of asset-quality art changes hands in a given year. Therefore, just a few transactions can produce big swings in an individual artist’s valuation.


“Clearly, there are many other investment strategies without all this pain,” says Sergey Skaterschikov, a Russian investor and business strategist. Skaterschikov has probably taken the quantification of art further than any other analyst, while frankly acknowledging the risks of the market. His firm, Skate’s Art Market Research, named Hirst its “Disappointment of the Year” in 2011. “I think what ruined his market is this commoditization,” Skaterschikov says. “He degraded his market, almost cannibalized it, by developing this mass production of well-recognized images.” While Skaterschikov says Hirst can make plenty of money catering to a broader audience, he suggests that his days of record-setting sales are over. “This is Louis Vuitton (LVMUY), this is not Gerhard Richter.”


Hirst’s handlers resist any suggestion that his brand has gone downscale. Kelly says that auction results are a “totally misleading” indicator and don’t reflect the (unverifiable) performance of his primary market. “Damien’s collector base is spread widely across the globe,” he says. “With new markets such as South America and Hong Kong becoming more important, we’re seeing sales to these markets being very strong.”


Kelly maintains that, perceptions notwithstanding, the 2008 auction was a wise move. “It brought a whole new audience to Damien’s work,” he says, noting that nearly 40 percent of its buyers were making their first contemporary art purchase.


“Did it affect his market? Absolutely,” says Mugrabi, a critic of the auction at the time. “But I’m not worried about Damien Hirst.”


Hirst walked away with a sizable share of the $ 200 million proceeds, though his actual take is unknown. He also insulated himself from the swings of the Hirst market: His own collection includes valuable works by Jeff Koons, Francis Bacon, and Warhol. At Dunphy’s urging, he diversified by buying property, including Toddington Manor, a 300-room estate in Gloucestershire. “It was perfect—he sold at the peak,” Skaterschikov says of the 2008 auction. “But it left a lot of his collectors with a sour taste.”


To take a few sad cases from Artnet: In 2009 a small statue entitled Trust, acquired for more than $ 450,000 two years before, sold for $ 150,000. In 2008 a spot painting entitled Dicaprin sold for $ 1.1 million at a charity auction organized by Hirst and the singer Bono, and after one unsuccessful attempt at resale, it was auctioned off in 2011 for $ 600,000. A butterfly painting, purchased for $ 1.5 million in 2008, lost more than a third of its value by the time it was resold last year. All of those losses are considerably larger once you account for auction fees. And the market for his most ambitious work has not so much corrected as evaporated. Only four Hirsts have auctioned for more than $ 1 million this year, and none above $ 2 million.


To test his methods, I ask Skaterschikov’s firm to analyze Sanctimony, the Hirst on sale at Sotheby’s in November. Its report estimates that when it was first acquired from a private dealer in 2007, the painting was worth around $ 2.7 million. The firm figures it’s worth around $ 1.7 million now—which is above Sotheby’s own estimate.


The market delivers its verdict a few days later on Nov. 14 at the auction house’s Upper East Side headquarters. The tuxedoed auctioneer Tobias Meyer takes the podium in Sotheby’s salesroom, which is packed with art world eminences. Some are recognizable—collectors Eli Broad and Peter Brant—and others are discreet, watching from curtained skyboxes. Meyer, famous for his good looks and deep German-accented voice, swivels back and forth, hair flopping, as he plies bidders with a stockpile of catchphrases: “Shall we try one more?” “Are you sure?” The Rothko sells for $ 75 million, the Pollock for $ 40 million, and the Richter for $ 17 million, pushing the overall take above $ 375 million, a Sotheby’s auction record.


By the time the auction gets to Sanctimony, the trophy items are gone and the room is half-empty. “Lot 64, the Damien,” Meyer says, staying on a first-name basis as always with Hirst. He opens at $ 850,000 and briskly gets to $ 1.1 million, from an anonymous bidder on the phone. “At one million one hundred thousand dollars, then, are we all done?” Meyer says, drawing out the number theatrically.


Clack! Down comes the hammer. It’s over in less than 30 seconds. After adding Sotheby’s fees, the painting ends up going for $ 1.3 million, about half its value at market’s peak. It’s a hefty discount, but at least someone is still willing to buy the Sanctimony.



Rice is a Bloomberg Businessweek contributor.


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UN climate talks open in Qatar












DOHA, Qatar (AP) — U.N. talks on a new climate pact resumed Monday in oil and gas-rich Qatar, where negotiators from nearly 200 countries will discuss fighting global warming and helping poor nations adapt to it.


The two-decade-old talks have not fulfilled their main purpose: reducing the greenhouse gas emissions that scientists say are warming the planet.












Attempts to create a new climate treaty failed in Copenhagen three years ago but countries agreed last year to try again, giving themselves a deadline of 2015 to adopt a new treaty.


A host of issues need to be resolved by then, including how to spread the burden of emissions cuts between rich and poor countries. That’s unlikely to be decided in the Qatari capital of Doha, where negotiators will focus on extending the Kyoto Protocol, an emissions deal for industrialized countries, and trying to raise billions of dollars to help developing countries adapt to a shifting climate.


“We all realize why we are here, why we keep coming back year and after year,” said South Africa Foreign Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, who led last year’s talks in Durban, South Africa. “We owe it to our people, the global citizenry. We owe it to our children to give them a safer future than what they are currently facing.”


The U.N. process is often criticized, even ridiculed, both by climate activists who say the talks are too slow, and by those who challenge the scientific near-consensus that the global temperature rise is at least partly caused by human activity, primarily the burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil.


The concentration of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide has jumped 20 percent since 2000, according to a U.N. report released last week.


A recent projection by the World Bank showed temperatures are on track to increase by up to 4 degrees C (7.2 F) this century, compared with pre-industrial times, overshooting the 2-degree target that has been the goal of the U.N. talks.


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Saudi telco regulator suspends Mobily prepaid sim sales












(Reuters) – Saudi Arabia‘s No.2 telecom operator Etihad Etisalat Co (Mobily) has been suspended from selling pre-paid sim cards by the industry regulator, the firm said in a statement to the kingdom’s bourse on Sunday.


Mobily’s sales of pre-paid, or pay-as-you-go, sim cards will remain halted until the company “fully meets the prepaid service provisioning requirements,” the telco said in the statement.












These requirements include a September order from regulator, Communication and Information Technology Commission (CITC). This states all pre-paid sim users must enter a personal identification number when recharging their accounts and that this number must be the same as the one registered with their mobile operator when the sim card was bought, according to a statement on the CITC website.


This measure is designed to ensure customer account details are kept up to date, the CITC said.


Mobily said the financial impact of the CITC’s decision would be “insignificant”, claiming data, corporate and postpaid revenues would meet its main growth drivers.


The firm, which competes with Saudi Telecom Co (STC) and Zain Saudi, reported a 23 percent rise in third-quarter profit in October, beating forecasts.


Prepaid mobile subscriptions are typically more popular among middle and lower income groups, with telecom operators pushing customers to shift to monthly contracts that include a data allowance.


Customers on monthly, or postpaid, contracts are also less likely to switch provider, but the bulk of customers remain on pre-paid accounts.


Mobily shares were trading down 1.4 percent at 0820 GMT on the Saudi bourse.


(Reporting by Matt Smith; Editing by Dinesh Nair)


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Deborah Raffin, Actress and Audio-Book Entrepreneur, dies at 59












LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – Actress Deborah Raffin, who went on to found a profitable audio-book company, died Wednesday after a battle with leukemia, the Los Angeles Times reports. She was 59.


Raffin’s brother William told the Times that she had been diagnosed with the disease approximately a year ago. She died at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.












The Los Angeles native landed early parts in the 1973 film “40 Carats” and in 1975′s “Once Is Not Enough,” adapted from the steamy Jacqueline Susann novel. In the 1980s, she became something of a TV-movie staple appearing in such fare as “Mind Over Murder,” “Willa” and “For the Love of It.”


She also starred in a short-lived TV series based on the Goldie Hawn/Chevy Chase film “Foul Play,” assuming Hawn’s role of Gloria Mundy.


Raffin and her husband, producer Michael Viner, launched the audio-book company Dove Books-on-Tape in the mid-’80s, publishing a profitable mix of titles that included Sidney Sheldon’s “The Naked Face” and Stephen Hawking’s “A Brief History of Time.”


Viner and Raffin, who had one child together, divorced in 2005. Viner died in 2009.


In later years, Raffin had a recurring role on the WB drama “7th Heaven” and appeared in three episodes of ABC Family’s “The Secret Life of the American Teenager.”


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Bangladesh’s worst-ever factory blaze kills over 100












DHAKA (Reuters) – Fire swept through a garment factory on the outskirts of Bangladesh‘s capital killing more than 100 people, the fire brigade said on Sunday, in the country’s worst-ever factory blaze.


Working conditions at Bangladeshi factories are notoriously poor, with little enforcement of safety laws, and overcrowding and locked fire doors are common. The cause of this fire was not immediately known.












The blaze at the nine-storey Tazreen Fashion factory in the Ashulia industrial belt of Dhaka started on the ground floor late on Saturday and spread, trapping hundreds of workers.


“So far, the confirmed death toll is 109, including nine who died by jumping from the building,” Mizanur Rahman, deputy director of the fire brigade, told Reuters.


Witnesses said the workers, mostly women, ran for safety as the fire engulfed the plant but were unable to get through narrow exits.


“Many jumped out from the windows and were injured, or died on the spot,” Milon, a resident, said.


Most of the bodies were burnt beyond recognition and authorities had started burials while mourning relatives scrambled to find their loved ones, officials and witnesses said.


Unofficial sources put the number of dead at more than 120. Most of the bodies were found on the second floor, Rahman said.


Bangladesh has around 4,500 garment factories and is the world’s biggest exporter of clothing after China, with garments making up 80 percent of its $ 24 billion annual exports.


This was the highest ever death toll in a Bangladeshi factory fire. In 2006, 84 people were killed in a blaze in the southern port of Chittagong where fire exits had been blocked.


More than 300 factories near the capital shut for almost a week earlier this year as workers demanded higher wages and better working conditions.


(Editing by Nick Macfie)


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BAE boss says shipyard may close













One of BAE Systems’ major shipyards could be closed, the company’s UK chief executive Nigel Whitehead has said.












He told the Sunday Telegraph a decision would be made by the end of the year.


The firm was working with ministers to explore all options for maintaining the UK’s shipbuilding capability, he said.


The future of its three main shipyards – in Portsmouth, and Govan and Scotstoun on the River Clyde – after two new aircraft carriers are completed has been in doubt for some time.


There are fears there will be insufficient work available to keep all three busy and profitable as cuts in defence spending take their toll.


“The issue is how to consolidate… but make sure that we’ve preserved the capability to design and manufacture complex warships,” Mr Whitehead told the newspaper.


“We anticipate that there will be a reduction in footprint and we anticipate… that part of that might actually be the cessation of manufacturing at one of the sites.”


Continue reading the main story

Closure looms for one of Britain’s three remaining Royal Navy shipyards. And so does a renewal of hostilities over the politics of where they’re located.”



End Quote



Earlier this year the company appointed consultants to carry out a review of the business. The firm’s yard in Portsmouth is widely believed to be the most vulnerable, with 1,500 jobs at risk.


However, two bases on the River Clyde, at Govan and Scotstoun are also under scrutiny.


BAE Systems says it is working closely with the government to explore all options for maintaining the UK’s shipbuilding capability.


The Ministry of Defence says that it is up to the company itself to decide how best to deliver the naval vessels it has already agreed to produce.


In October, BAE Systems and Franco-German firm EADS cancelled their planned merger, after talks were thwarted by political deadlock.


The UK had wanted its counterparts to agree to limit their influence in the merged firm in order to maintain BAE’s strong working relations with the US Pentagon.


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Egypt’s Mursi faces judicial revolt over decree












CAIRO (Reuters) – Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi faced a rebellion from judges who accused him on Saturday of expanding his powers at their expense, deepening a crisis that has triggered violence in the street and exposed the country’s deep divisions.


The Judges’ Club, a body representing judges across Egypt, called for a strike during a meeting interrupted with chants demanding the “downfall of the regime” – the rallying cry in the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak last year.












Mursi’s political opponents and supporters, representing the divide between newly empowered Islamists and their critics, called for rival demonstrations on Tuesday over a decree that has triggered concern in the West.


Issued late on Thursday, it marks an effort by Mursi to consolidate his influence after he successfully sidelined Mubarak-era generals in August. The decree defends from judicial review decisions taken by Mursi until a new parliament is elected in a vote expected early next year.


It also shields the Islamist-dominated assembly writing Egypt’s new constitution from a raft of legal challenges that have threatened the body with dissolution, and offers the same protection to the Islamist-controlled upper house of parliament.


Egypt’s highest judicial authority, the Supreme Judicial Council, said the decree was an “unprecedented attack” on the independence of the judiciary. The Judges’ Club, meeting in Cairo, called on Mursi to rescind it.


That demand was echoed by prominent opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei. “There is no room for dialogue when a dictator imposes the most oppressive, abhorrent measures and then says ‘let us split the difference’,” he said.


“I am waiting to see, I hope soon, a very strong statement of condemnation by the U.S., by Europe and by everybody who really cares about human dignity,” he said in an interview with Reuters and the Associated Press.


More than 300 people were injured on Friday as protests against the decree turned violent. There were attacks on at least three offices belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood, the movement that propelled Mursi to power.


POLARISATION


Liberal, leftist and socialist parties called a big protest for Tuesday to force Mursi to row back on a move they say has exposed the autocratic impulses of a man once jailed by Mubarak.


In a sign of the polarization in the country, the Muslim Brotherhood called its own protests that day to support the president’s decree.


Mursi also assigned himself new authority to sack the prosecutor general, who was appointed during the Mubarak era, and appoint a new one. The dismissed prosecutor general, Abdel Maguid Mahmoud, was given a hero’s welcome at the Judges’ Club.


In open defiance of Mursi, Ahmed al-Zind, head of the club, introduced Mahmoud by his old title.


The Mursi administration has defended the decree on the grounds that it aims to speed up a protracted transition from Mubarak’s rule to a new system of democratic government.


Analysts say it reflects the Brotherhood’s suspicion towards sections of a judiciary unreformed from Mubarak’s days.


“It aims to sideline Mursi’s enemies in the judiciary and ultimately to impose and head off any legal challenges to the constitution,” said Elijah Zarwan, a fellow with The European Council on Foreign Relations.


“We are in a situation now where both sides are escalating and its getting harder and harder to see how either side can gracefully climb down.”


ADVISOR TO MURSI QUITS


Following a day of violence in Cairo, Alexandria, Port Said and Suez, the smell of tear gas hung over the capital’s Tahrir Square, the epicentre of the uprising that toppled Mubarak in 2011 and the stage for more protests on Friday.


Youths clashed sporadically with police near the square, where activists camped out for a second day on Saturday, setting up makeshift barricades to keep out traffic.


Al-Masry Al-Youm, one of Egypt’s most widely read dailies, hailed Friday’s protest as “The November 23 Intifada”, invoking the Arabic word for uprising.


But the ultra-orthodox Salafi Islamist groups that have been pushing for tighter application of Islamic law in the new constitution have rallied behind Mursi’s decree.


The Nour Party, one such group, stated its support for the Mursi decree. Al-Gama’a al-Islamiya, which carried arms against the state in the 1990s, said it would save the revolution from what it described as remnants of the Mubarak regime.


Samir Morkos, a Christian assistant to Mursi, had told the president he wanted to resign, said Yasser Ali, Mursi’s spokesman. Speaking to the London-based Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper, Morkos said: “I refuse to continue in the shadow of republican decisions that obstruct the democratic transition”.


Mursi’s decree has been criticized by Western states that earlier this week were full of praise for his role in mediating an end to the eight-day war between Israel and Palestinians.


“The decisions and declarations announced on November 22 raise concerns for many Egyptians and for the international community,” State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.


The European Union urged Mursi to respect the democratic process.


(Additional reporting by Omar Fahmy, Marwa Awad, Edmund Blair and Shaimaa Fayed and Reuters TV; Editing by Jon Hemming)


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