Merapi Volcano image

image by Reuters
Mount Merapi volcano erupts, as seen from Manisrenggo village in Klaten of Indonesias central Java province November 12, 2010.
JAKARTA, KOMPAS.com - Indonesia's Mount Merapi volcano has killed 206 people since it began erupting late last month, with more than 380,000 people in makeshift camps, an official said Friday. 

“The death toll from Merapi has reached 206 people. And about 380,000 people have fled their homes,“ disaster management official Heriyanto said, updating the previous official toll of 194. 

He said rescuers had been able to recover more bodies in the central Java area where the volcano is located.
 

Mobile Phone Users Enlisting YouMail "Digital Secretary"

SAN FRANCISCO, KOMPAS.com - Ranks of mobile phone users are enlisting the services of a “digital secretary” that automatically snubs unwanted callers, transcribes messages, and gives loved ones special handling. California startup YouMail said Monday that it has passed the half-billion-call mark and now manages more than 1.5 million calls daily.

“The growth is strong and steady,” YouMail founder and chief executive Alex Quilici told AFP. “It is almost more convenient to not answer the phone with YouMail.”

YouMail lets users personalize greetings to specific incoming telephone numbers. A spouse whose call is missed might be greeted with recorded words of affection while a boss could be reassured a project is nearly complete.

A “DitchMail” feature lets users bash telemarketers, troublesome ex-paramours, or other unwanted callers in recorded greetings and then have the calls automatically disconnect. YouMail users have an online community that shares digital recordings of greetings tailored for various occasions.

Snippets lifted from movies or television shows along with music or official-sounding advisories were among the array of downloadable greetings available at greetings.youmail.com on Monday.

“The fingers you have used to dial are too fat, to obtain a special dialing wand please mash the keypad with your palm now,” said a greeting taken from a popular animated comedy television show “The Simpsons.” Another greeting featured a woman calmly advising callers they had reached the devil’s answering service then telling which buttons to hit to sell one’s soul, get directions to hell, or speak with a demon.

“When we started YouMail there were no solutions for voice mail that were fun to use,” Quilici said.

“We thought we could do a better job by letting people leave personal greetings tailored to each caller.”

DitchMail was the Southern California company’s first offering, mobile phone greetings for people users didn’t want to hear from, according to the founder. The list of DitchMail options included recordings titled “Die in a fire” and “Lying, cheating, bastard” along with an “ear-splitting whistle” and an authentic sounding “this number is no longer in service.” Telemarketers that use blocked or private numbers aren’t necessarily protected from YouMail users’ scorn.

Telemarketers phone numbers are shared in the YouMail online community, and the service lets users automatically notify callers that messages from blocked numbers will not be accepted. YouMail has expanded beyond Ditchmall to add categories for holiday, celebrity, political, inspirational, sports, polite, and foreign language greetings.

About two years ago, YouMail added machine-based conversion of voice messages to text but found “it sometimes worked wonderfully and sometimes it was completely misleading or gibberish,” Quilici said. “A phone in a crowded bar is a recipe for disaster; you get the dog died instead of the dog tried,” Quilici said of relying purely on machines to transcribe voice messages. YouMail added humans into the equation, having people edit and refine messages transcribed to text.

“We thought we could organize messages visually on computers, smartphones, iPads, iPods...true multi-platform visual voice mail,” Quilici said.

“Our goal is to provide it on every device.”

YouMail saw a boost after Google launched its Voice service that lets people have one number that rings at all of their telephones; converts voice mail or text messages into email, and allows for toll-free calls to the United States and Canada, according to Quilici. Last month, Google added Voice to its free Web-based email service Gmail and logged more than a million calls in the 24 hours after its launch.

“A category is being created of better voice mail,” Quilici said.

“You will see more carriers offering us as an option.”

Basic YouMail is free, but transcriptions are a premium service with a typical monthly plan costing seven dollars and transcribing a maximum of 50 messages from voice to text. Unlimited message transcription can be had for 30 dollars a month.

Sexual Harased In A worked Place

KOMPAS.com - Nine in ten women have suffered some form of sexual discrimination in the workplace, a study has found. A vast majority of women workers have experienced ‘gender harassment’, which includes offensive sexist remarks or being told that they could not do their job properly due to their sex.

This more common, low-level sexist behaviour was just as damaging and distressing as overt advances, experts suggest. The researchers at the University of Michigan found that 10 per cent of the women surveyed had experienced the most severe form of harassment, in which they were promised promotion or better treatment if they were ‘sexually cooperative’.

The study questioned women in two male-dominated environments – the US military and the legal profession. It found that although few were subjected to actual advances, such as being groped, 90 per cent had been subjected to gender harassment.

This included offensive remarks about being female, their appearance, body or sexual activities. The researchers argued that this ‘leads to negative personal and professional outcomes and as such is a serious form of sex discrimination’.

Gender harassment ‘creates a hostile environment that disadvantages women’, they said. Often dismissed as a misguided attempt to draw women into romantic relationships, such behaviour actually rejects women and drives them out of jobs, they said.

The findings, in Springer’s journal of Law and Human Behaviour, concluded that harassment victims fared poorly at work. They were far more likely to develop health problems that affected their performance.

Travel To Yogyakarta-Indonesia

Borobudur temple is located in Magelang regency, Central Java Province, and became part of the place when people come to visit the tour to yogyakarta.Yogyakarta who has his own province are special areas that have a government other than the governor also affected by the sultan's palace.
It is located in the middle of the island of Java, making this place visited by many travelers either from within or outside . travel from Bandung west Java is 7 hours journey by train excekutif, or can by using an aircraft with a 1,5 hours travel from each city in Java island, which provides domestic airport.


Yogyakarta is a province that still upholds customs applicable to the present. Yogyakarta is known for friendly and always smile for the visitors. yogyakarta tour are:

yogyakarta palace is a place which is always a lot of vacationing students who visit there, and used as material for the task of writing his school, because starting from lane 1 to present the history and images of the sultan's palace in Yogyakarta.
Taman Sari, a famous pool with its noble history of sultans who always chose his wife, through the window to be the consort of the king at that time.
and his very beautiful pool and manicured until now.


Jalan Malioboro, which is very famous for shopping tour by presenting a relatively cheap price and good. sold are various kinds and styles of batik, wood carvings for decoration and a lot of traditional painting with color and good pictures
For places to stay, ranging from cheap hotels to luxury available in the city better when going to visit this city, book hotel a month or two weeks earlier, to avoid a full hotel.

Borobudur Temple, is filled with sights of natural charm that is very beautiful. traveltime between Yogyakarta to Borobudur temple, reached by the time one hour by car.
This is the picture on the top of Temple and view of Parang ktitis Bantul who can reach by car 1,5 hours trip from Yogyakarta
Pantai parang kritis Bantul-Yogyakarta
Parang Kritis Beach bantul

Tips for Premature Ejaculation

From Meaning, definition and understanding of premature ejaculation, or which is also called premature ejaculation is a problem in which husband and wife in the male sex or orgasm out earlier than women. This can cause problems because the women did not get the peak of pleasure. Time is not a problem despite your wife out within 10 seconds and your at 15 seconds. The point is the concept of a first lady should take precedence.
Sometimes these problems are not understood and realized by the men, so that it can lead to problems outside the household affairs of the bed. In sexual relationships both parties must be equally satisfied. Basic sex education should be known and understood by both parties, lest one wants to win their own without thinking of their partner.
Steps to overcome and prevent ejakulasi early / premature ejaculation:
1. The direction of thought and concentration Point your mind on something that had nothing to do with sex as intercourse. Can also thinking that you do not like. This will reduce the stimulation received by the husband.
2. Reduce the sensitivity of the penis Use a condom, cream or other sex aids can reduce the stimulation received by a party man. Condoms should be used to measure thickness in order to reduce the stimulation that would be received later.
3. Pull technique When the male orgasm rush will be revoked in a timely manner, do not let all the sperm out. This technique required the participation of wives in order to succeed.
4. Right position Look for intercourse positions that normally you can enjoy for a long time. Wear these positions at the beginning of the game so you can be durable and able to orgasm or your partner out first.
Attention: - Contact your doctor if this method does not work and do not use the drug because it can be fatal vain. - Do not have sex freely without wedlock. The impact can also be fatal. Sexually transmitted diseases / STDs is always circulated everywhere without you realizing it. Use safe techniques to gain inner satisfaction. - Make sure your spouse free pms before and after marriage on a regular basis.

    
* Education seksologi blog

Long-Haul Revolution

KOMPAS.com  - Steve McKenna takes the rough with the super smooth on a rail epic through the Middle Kingdom.

WHEN I told her I was planning to zigzag across her country to savour Avatar-esque countryside, ancient imperial capitals and metropolises that never sleep, my Chinese friend Nan had a morsel of advice.

"Use eLong.net," she beamed. "It's amazing. Super-cheap flights. Cheaper than trains or buses, some of the time."

I didn't want to be rude but I had to tell her that she was wasting her breath. I'd already decided that I was going the whole hog by rail: from Guangzhou in the south, to Qingdao in the north, with stops at Guilin, Shanghai, Xian and Beijing along the way.

Despite the vagaries of long-haul train travel - I'd turned the air blue on occasions during previous trips across Europe, India and Vietnam - I've never been a big fan of flying internally, especially when you have time not to and particularly in a country such as China.

As well as its astonishingly rich history and culture, the Middle Kingdom has made no secret of the fact it wants to develop one of the world's greatest high-speed rail networks. The government is investing accordingly, with billions of yuan being splashed on new infrastructure, the target being a drastic cut in journey times and a further boost to the country's already rocketing economy. I felt it would be a shame to visit China and not see how it's all coming along.

Yet, as I stood in what was, frankly, a ridiculous queue in Guangzhou's steamy, clapped-out old railway station, I was reconsidering my grand idea. The prospect of having to endure these crowds every time I wanted to buy a ticket made me sweat even more.

"Don't all these people have to work? Where are they going on a Monday afternoon?" asked Mai, a chirpy, Mandarin-speaking Spanish tourist I'd met, who had offered to come to the station with me. An hour later, we were both standing at the counter, wiping our sodden brows. As I leafed hopelessly through my Mandarin phrase book, Mai spoke to the ticket women and the information flickered on the computer screen in front of us.

My ticket to Guilin - some 1030 kilometres west of Guangzhou - was 215 yuan ($38) for a hard sleeper, which is ostensibly a spot in a moving six-bed dorm room with no doors. The cheapest flight I could find on eLong, incidentally, was 450 yuan.

The following evening, after passing through airport-like security (bags are scanned, X-ray-style, at every station in China), I found myself in a terminal that was busy but nowhere near as chaotic as India - and much cleaner. Despite a few token English signs, nearly everything was written in Chinese characters. Fortunately, the times and train codes on the giant neon display of arrivals and departures were easy to fathom. Mine read: "T38: 19:47". Train services starting with the letters Z, C and D tend to be the best; with T and K more of a lottery, I found.

Compared with stations in Europe, Guangzhou's had sparse dining and shopping options - just a tiny KFC kiosk and a few mini-marts. The waiting rooms were packed with families, hunched together, scoffing pot noodles, while the smoking areas were full of men puffing away on cigarettes while playing cards.

As an indecipherable voice crackled over the PA system, railway staff marched along, barking into loudspeakers. Everyone gathered their things. I followed them and we were soon on a train that looked distinctly 1980s.

My cramped berth was filled by an elderly Chinese woman and four men - including a young chap in military uniform who pirouetted around the small compartment with the elasticity of a gymnast. I'd paid a little extra to have the bottom bunk and there was just enough room for my backpack and me.

As the train left the station, I began to explore. There was a mix of (fairly grotty) squat and Western-style toilets, rooms with washbasins and mirrors and several areas with warm-water taps - for drenching those pot noodles. I passed through the soft-sleeper carriages, which were carpeted and had four-bed, airconditioned rooms with lace curtains (these were almost twice the price of hard sleepers).

I sought out the dining carriage, where the menu comprised a dozen traditional Chinese options (25-40 yuan). I chose sour spicy beef with rice and vegetables. And green tea. "You no want beer?" asked the cheerful young waitress, who seemed shocked when I said no. She then struck up a little conversation, asking where I was from and whether I liked China.

"Sorry for my bad English. I'm trying to learn more," she said, immediately, and unintentionally, shaming me for my near non-existent Mandarin.

By now, the train was doing 150km/h, which is snail-slow compared with the Chinese trains of the future and even the present.

China already boasts the world's fastest train: the Maglev that bullets from Shanghai's Pudong airport to the city centre - covering 30 kilometres in just eight minutes at a top speed of 430km/h. Within a decade, it's hoped that this will be more or less the norm.

The lights in my carriage went out at 10pm (standard procedure) and eventually I dozed off. Next morning I was nudged by the guard as we approached Guilin and the joy of rail travel once again revealed itself.

Glancing out of window, half-asleep, I was greeted by a landscape of beguilingly beautiful limestone karst peaks that reminded me a little of Pandora in the movie Avatar. Much better than the ceiling of a hotel room.

Traditionally, the Chinese are sticklers for punctuality; this is reflected in its rail service. Not one of my trains was late during my month-long, 6000-kilometre-plus adventure. Though sometimes gruelling, venturing around China by rail was an ultimately rewarding experience - and a fascinating insight into a country that's destined to stamp its mark on the 21st century.

You really get a feel for the sheer enormity of the place, as well as the fact that, despite new millionaires being created every day, most Chinese are not wealthy. More than 300 million farmers eke out an existence in the countryside, while millions more migrate to and try to find work in the sprawling cities.

While foreign tourism is increasing, you'll still be very much in the minority if you take the train. Because of this, curious stares will likely follow you everywhere but most Chinese I encountered were unfailingly polite. Although most Chinese travellers won't speak English, some will give it a go. Of course, it always helps to carry a Mandarin phrase book.

For the last leg of my adventure - Beijing to Qingdao - I headed to the capital's sparkling new southern railway station.

Compared with where I'd started my trip, it felt like I'd been propelled 20 years into the future.

Beijing South is a spotless, shiny, airy arena, sprayed by beams of sunlight and dotted with spindly palm trees. Self-service ticket machines and desks with bilingual staff sit alongside rows of coffee shops and restaurants.

Unlike in Guangzhou, the giant electronic departures and arrivals screen displays information in Chinese and English. The messages that drift from the PA system are in both languages, too.

Every 10 minutes or so, rapid-fire inter-city trains depart here for Tianjin, the 120-kilometre trip taking just 30 minutes.

I boarded the D55 to Qingdao, home of the famous Tsingtao beer and a launch pad to South Korea by ferry. Like the best trains in Europe, it was sleek, comfy and fast, (covering 888 kilometres in just over five hours and costing 275 yuan). Classical Chinese music was played over the carriage speakers and the toilets were super clean.

Anyone who visits China and merely plies the routes from Shanghai Airport or Beijing South may think the Chinese have already cracked the art of 21st-century rail travel. They haven't. The network is a work in progress, however, things are heading in the right direction.

World Cup 2010 Champions Is Spain

Iniesta Gol...........................by kompas.com

KOMPAS.com -  Champions of Europe and now champions of the world, Spain captured football's Holy Grail for the first time with a 1-0 victory over the Netherlands thanks to Andres Iniesta’s 116th-minute strike at Soccer City.
The solitary goal came with penalties looming as substitutes Fernando Torres and Cesc Fabregas combined to play in Iniesta and the little Barcelona midfielder drove emphatically across Maarten Stekelenburg and into the far corner.
With this victory – their fourth successive single-goal win in South Africa – Spain became the eighth name on the FIFA World Cup™ Trophy and also the first European team to have triumphed on a different continent. For the Netherlands, who lost defender John Heitinga to a red card in extra time, there is only the heartache of another story of what might have been after previous Final losses in 1974 and 1978.
This was a match preceded by much talk of two like-minded footballing cultures, of the influence of Dutchmen like Johan Cruyff and Rinus Michels on Barcelona, of ‘tiki taka’ and Total Football. In many ways it was also a case of the irresistible force versus the immovable object. The Dutch had won 14 straight games to get to the Final, in qualifying and the tournament proper, and Spain 15 out of 16, their only slip the defeat by Switzerland in their first game here in South Africa.
Yet the Spanish found their stride first, living up to their pre-game billing as favourites. Vicente del Bosque’s side, playing in navy blue, dominated possession and fashioned the early chances. With the Dutch penned inside their half, Maarten Stekelenburg had to make a save after five minutes, diving low to stop a Sergio Ramos header from Xavi’s free-kick in from the right. Gerard Pique looked poised to follow up only to be denied by a combination of Joris Mathijsen and Dirk Kuyt.
Ramos came again in the tenth minute, beating Kuyt on the right and driving in a low centre that John Heitinga deflected behind. From the corner came another scare for the Netherlands. Xavi played the ball back to Xabi Alonso whose ball went beyond the far post to Villa but the in-form No7 sliced his volley into the side-netting.
After those near things, however, both defences got on top with none of the flair players on either side able to take a grip on proceedings. Instead the yellow-card count began to rise with Nigel de Jong becoming the fifth player in Howard Webb’s notebook by the time we reached the half-hour mark, the Netherlands midfielder, newly returned from suspension along with Gregory van der Wiel, having clattered into the chest of Xabi Alonso.
With the orange sections of the 84,490 Soccer City crowd finding their voice, their favourites almost gave them something to sing about from a corner in the 37th minute. Robben rolled the ball to Van Bommel on the edge of the box and although he failed to make a clean connection he unwittingly diverted the ball on to the unmarked Mathijsen but the defender missed his kick.
As half-time approached, Iker Casillas had barely had a save to make but entering stoppage time, Spain’s custodian had to be alert to deny Robben at his near post as a spell of Dutch pressure ended with the winger spearing in a low shot from the corner of the box.
Puyol, Spain’s semi-final hero, showed his aerial threat once more minutes after the restart when he rose above Heitinga and headed to the far post but Joan Capdevila failed to make contact. The game was gradually opening up and Dutch spurned a golden opportunity in the 62nd minute when Wesley Sneijder sent Robben running clear. Casillas came to Spain’s rescue, deflecting the shot behind with his right foot when falling the wrong way.
Spain coach Del Bosque had already sent on Jesus Navas for Pedro on the hour and the winger helped pick a hole in the Dutch defence in the 70th minute. Xavi sent him flying down the right and into the box and when Heitinga failed to deal with Navas’s low cross, the ball fell to Villa who looked odds-on to score only to see his effort deflected behind. Ramos was equally profligate after 78 minutes when he headed over a Xavi centre when unmarked, after Villa had forced another corner.
Spain were looking the more likely winners and it took Sneijder of all people to foil Iniesta with a smart tackle after his jinking run into the box. Yet Robben’s pace is a persistent threat and the Oranje No11 almost embarrassed Puyol in the 82nd minute, speeding clear of the Spain defender when second-favourite to reach a through-ball. Resisting Pique’s attempt to tackle too, he was foiled only by Casillas, the captain saving at Robben’s feet as the Dutchman sought to round him.
Extra time began with opportunities for Spain. Xavi failed to connect when well positioned and when the ball ran to Villa, his shot went wide off an orange shirt. Substitute Cesc Fabregas then broke clear on to Iniesta’s through-ball but was foiled by Stekelenburg. Mathijsen headed wide from a corner but like waves, Spanish attacks kept rolling on to the Netherlands back line and Navas was close with a shot deflected into the side-netting.
Fernando Torres replaced Villa midway through the extra period and Spain gained a man advantage four minutes late with Heitinga’s dismissal for pulling back Iniesta on the edge of the box, the offence earning him a second yellow. Iniesta would not be denied, however, as his late strike brought joy to Spain and shattered the men in Oranje.

Facebook in Deal to sell Credit

KUALA LUMPUR, KOMPAS.com – Facebook is partnering with a Malaysian company to sell credits at retail outlets across Asia for the first time, aiming to make it easier for millions of people to purchase virtual goods and play games on the social networking site while boosting revenue for developers.

Electronic payments company MOL — part of the business empire of tycoon Vincent Tan — will offer the online currency from Aug. 1 at more than 500,000 outlets including 7-Eleven stores and Internet cafes in five Southeast Asian countries, India, Australia and New Zealand, company spokesman Nor Badron said Friday.

The move is targeting people who don't have a credit card, particularly younger Facebook users, and those who don't want to take the risk of making payments online.

"Asia has a huge gaming community, and it's typically young people," Nor said. "The penetration for credit cards is very low... so the developers are not making money and missing this opportunity."

Nor said MOL already sells prepaid credits for other online games at its established network of stores, but it will be the first time that consumers can buy credits for Facebook's applications, including such popular games as Mob Wars and FarmVille, without credit cards.

MOL, which last year bought social networking site Friendster, announced the partnership with Facebook in a press release Thursday.

"We view this agreement as a major opportunity to broaden the availability of a simple, unified currency that can be used in games and applications across Facebook," said Vaughan Smith, director of business and corporate development at Facebook, in the press release.

"Working with MOL means we can offer the benefits of Facebook Credits to millions of people in Asia using a payment system that is already widely used and trusted," he said.

In Southeast Asia, the credits will be sold in Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, Indonesia and the Philippines.

More than 70 percent of Facebook members use applications, and payment transactions and volume have seen a double-digit increase over the last quarters, according to MOL.

Japan Population Down

TOKYO, KOMPAS.com - The number of foreign residents in Japan fell for the first time in nearly half a century last year as a severe recession hit jobs in the auto and other industrial sectors, according to government data.
A total of 2.186 million people were listed as foreign residents at the end of 2009, down 1.4 percent from a year earlier, ending a rising streak for the 47 consecutive years since 1962, the justice ministry said.

“We assume one of the reasons was that the global financial crisis triggered a recession,” prompting companies to shed jobs, an official at the ministry’s immigration bureau said.

Japan has one of the world’s lowest birth rates, but it has rejected large-scale immigration of unskilled workers. The ratio of foreign residents to Japan’s total population of 127 million was only 1.71 percent in 2009.

The global slowdown since 2008 badly shook Japan’s automakers, which hire South American descendants of Japanese immigrants on assembly lines. The government grants a special visa to these Japanese descendants, but the number of Brazilians in Japan decreased by 14.4 percent in 2009 and the number of Peruvians was down 3.8 percent.

The First Woman Prime Minister In Australia

KOMPAS.com - Mr Rudd was convinced to step aside after it became obvious during an emergency caucus meeting that he did not have the support of enough MPs to continue serving as prime minister.

The British-born Ms Gillard was reportedly backed by at least 75 of the Labour Party's 115 MPs, sending a clear and emphatic message to Mr Rudd that it was time to go.

The threat to Mr Rudd's leadership emerged on Wednesday night, after senior Labour powerbrokers told him that he had lost their support and Ms Gillard revealed that she would challenge him.

The prime minister was urged to step down, but a defiant Mr Rudd announced that he would go to a vote. After a night of frantic phonecalls to gauge support, Mr Rudd decided not to stand against Ms Gillard, handing her the prime ministership unopposed.

The move against Mr Rudd came amid fears that he could not win an election later this year, and hopes that Ms Gillard, who is seen as more voter-friendly than the rage-prone Mr Rudd, had a far better chance.

Ms Gillard is considered to be a consummate political performer, and is viewed by the public as warm and trustworthy. Born in Barry, Wales, her family came to Australia as "Ten Pound Poms" in 1966. She became engaged in politics at university, while training to be a lawyer, and entered parliament in 1998.

However, there is no guarantee that Ms Gillard's move to take charge of the party will put and end to Labour's problems. Ms Gillard was part of Mr Rudd's "gang of four", a small group of MPs consulted by Mr Rudd over policy issues. She had a hand in the scrapping of the emissions trading scheme, which infuriated the electorate and could leave her tarred with the same brush as Mr Rudd.

The political violence of the past 24 hours is also expected to badly damage and divide the party, and further anger voters just months from an election.
The leadership spill comes amid increasing public frustration with the government.

The Labour Party has a primary vote of just 35 per cent, with the Liberals polling 40 per cent. The dire outlook for Labour was triggered a series of unpopular decisions made by Mr Rudd, including the announcement in April that the government was shelving its flagship emissions trading scheme. Mr Rudd was also embroiled in a high profile fight with the mining industry over his planned 40 per cent super profits tax on resources.

Indonesia In Gaza

JAKARTA, KOMPAS.com - In a meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Jakarta recently, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono spoke of Indonesia’s  plan to construct a hospital in Gaza, Palestine.

"We will build a hospital in Gaza worth Rp20 billion in the hope  it will increase public health facilities in Gaza," the President said at the Merdeka Palace, last May 29, when speaking at a joint press conference after meeting with visiting Mahmoud Abbas.
   
A staunch supporter of Palestine, Indonesia was also ready to give any kind of humanitarian aid needed by Palestine and to continue to contribute to the development of capacity for the establishment of a free Palestinian state as it had been doing  so far through a forum of Asian-African countries, Yudhoyono said.
    
To follow up the plan, an Indonesian delegation consisting of among others House Speaker Marzuki Alie, a number of Indonesian members of parliament (DPR), and Coordinating Minister for People’s Welfare Agung Laksono, will visit Gaza, on June 30.
      
"Until now, the visit has been scheduled. Members of the DPR’s Commission I have obtained permission from the coordinating minister for people’s welfare, who will also join the MPs, and so the House Speaker, too," Hidayat Nur Wahid, chairman of the DPR’s Inter-parliamentarian Cooperation Board, confirmed here, Wednesday (June 16).
      
They are  expected to witness the laying of the first corner stone marking the beginning of the hospital construction on a 1.5 hectare-plot of land in Gaza.
    
"The visit is also part of the DPR’s task regarding international relations, and is also meant to deliver assistance collected from the Indonesian people for Gaza," he said.
    
Earlier this month, Dino Patti Djalal, a presidential spokesman said that the Indonesian government will join other countries in ensuring that humanitarian aid sent through the freedom flotilla mission will reach the Gaza Strip.
      
"It is true (we will join the effort). That has become the mandate of the UN that the aid must reach Gaza,"  Dino Patti Djalal said at the presidential office on June 4.
   
In principle, the aid must reach Gaza by whatever means, he said. On May 31, Israeli troops attacked humanitarian aid carrying ship Mavi Mamara that was attempting to break the Israeli blockade in the waters en route to Gaza.

Reports from various sources said nine people were killed and more than 30 others injured in the attack.  A total of 12 Indonesians joined the group, and two of them sustained gunshot woudns during the  Israeli attack.  Indonesia’s MER-C  (Medical Emergency Rescue Committee) had sent four volunteers to join the flotilla, namely Nurfitri Taher (Upi), a Mer-C project officer, Arief Rahman, a medical doctor,  Nur Ikhwan Abadi, a mechanic, and  Abdillah Onim, a non-medical worker.

In Gaza, they would  carry out certain assignments related to Indonesia’s plan  to build a hospital in Gaza.   Besides, MER-C, other Indonesian NGOs that had sent volunteers to join the humanitarian mission to Gaza  are  KISPA (Indonesian Committee for Palestinian Solidarity) and "Friends of Al-Aqsa".

Dr. Joserizal Jurnalis, a MER-C presidium member who had visited Palestine several times to give emergency medical treatments to victims of Israeli atrocities, said some Rp15 billion has been collected from the Indonesian people to help finance the hospital.
   
"I hope that  the President (Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono) will  inaugurate it,"  Dr Joserizal Jurnalis said after attending a hearing with some legislators  at the Parliament Building, last June 9, 2010.
   
He once told a television journalist that the planned hospital to be located at Bayt Lahiya, north Gaza, will most likely be named "Hospital Indonesia".
MER-C, the health ministry, the state secretariat and the foreign affairs ministry have held several meetings to discuss the planned construction of the hospital, first initiated in 2008.
       
Indonesia had earlier sent a number of ambulances, medical equipment and medicines for Gaza civilians. Meanwhile, "Dhompet Dhuafa" (DD) national charity institution has announced its plan to build artesian wells and clean water installations for the Gazans  to get clean water.
       
"Now the people of Gaza are suffering under the pressure of Israel. Their clean water supply comes from Israel," DD Program Director Arifin Purwakananta said in Jakarta early June.
       
Gaza residents are in constant fear that their clean water  supply will  be stopped any time by Israel or be poisoned, he said. DD plans to make five to ten artesian wells and clean water  installations to meet the Gaza people’s need for clean water, he added.

In an article entitled "More Than Just A Massacre" published by  Australia’s ABC on its website, Michael Brull wrote that the  Gaza-bound Freedom Flotilla was bringing water filtration equipment to Gaza.
       
"The reason it chose to do so was because there is virtually no clean drinking water in Gaza. Partially due to the damage done to greenhouses during Israel’s attacks on Gaza from 2008-2009, Gaza’s water supply system was reported to be on the verge of collapse in September last year. There was an urgent need to find clean drinking water, because, as Amnesty International had pointed out, some 90-95 percent of water in Gaza was not fit for drinking," he further wrote.
      
Kate Allen, head of Amnesty International UK said , "Israel’s continuing blockade of Gaza is preventing the importation of urgently-needed materials to repair water and sewage treatment works."
  
As noted in the Ha’aretz report, the unclean drinking water had caused respiratory and intestinal problems to babies in Gaza, wrote Michael Brull, who has a featured blog at Independent Australian Jewish Voices. The people of Gaza have been on a diet for years. They have lost weight. Their children’s growth has been stunted, and their babies have suffered anaemia.

Indonesia Porn Actress Video

KOMPAS.com - Porn videos allegedly starred by Indonesian celebrities absorbed not only domestic viewers' attention but also global's one especially among porn stars. U.S. porn star,  Vicky Vette,  got attracted to know more about Peterporn, the new title addressed to Ariel's former band Peterpan.

The Norwegian-born actress was tempted to talk about the issue dominating trending topic on microblogging Twitter for the last two days last week. Ignited by the curiousity to watch the tapes, Vicky asked Twitter users to send her them. Not long after that, one of users from Indonesia sent them to her.

The hot scenes starred by the stars impressed her so much that she asked Vivid Interactive, the corporation dealing with adult movies in U.S., to help distribute the movies shocking Indonesia. She even mentioned her plan to visit Indonesia.

"If I go to Indonesia, I want 'Ariel Peterporn' to be my guide. But I think Indonesia government will not grant me visa to enter the country," said Vicky Vette.

She also expressed her interest to join "Ariel Peterporn" on porn movie. "I just want to say that I'd like to get involved in the next "Ariel Peterporn's" movie.

The other porn star from Japan, Maria Ozawa a.k.a. Miyabi also paid special attention to the porn blockbusters. On Twitter, Miyabi commented at her account on the videos with the title of Peterporn.

At the account updated since last Friday to Saturday, Miyabi revealed that she finally got the tapes after searching for them for two days.
"Guys, after 2 days search on the web, today I get the real video of peterporn. Many thanks for my follower in Indonesia who give the link... ," Miyabi commented.

She got curious with stars on the videos. The actress who is also French-Canadian blend really wanted to know the stars on the movies.

According to her, the man is handsome and the ladies are beautiful.  The porn star with a rose and sakura picture adorning her left arm expressed her intention to get to know more about the man with the title of Peterporn and his intimate partners.

Britney Spears Got Naked

bodyguard...........
KOMPAS.com - Britney Spears' lead bodyguard has quit, claiming she sexually harassed him by parading around naked in front of him and inviting him into her bedroom. Fernando Flores is considering filing a multi-million dollar sexual harassment lawsuit against the singer, The Sun newspaper reports.

It says Flores, a former cop, has confided in friends that he feared losing his job if he didn't respond to her unwelcome sexual advances. He says the 28-year-old singer often traipsed around nude and harassed him with a series of odd invitations into her bedroom, the paper says.

"She was always giving him the come on and he felt if he didn't reciprocate he could lose his job. He finally handed in his notice last week and is considering legal action," the paper quoted a friend of Flores as saying.

"Working for Britney is tough. She's a nightmare to deal with, her emotions are out of control, she runs round the house naked and yelling at staff."

The last straw for Flores came when Spears' dad and legal guardian Jamie became upset when Britney left the home without underwear. He ordered her security staff to ensure she never leaves the house without a bra.

"Jamie went mental when he saw the pictures and Fernando was made the fall guy. He was not fired but told he was to blame. He had had enough."

News From Jimbon

Megan Fox into a Bikini Girl


                             

She's considered one of the sexiest women in the world and Megan Fox proved why as she hit the beach in Hawaii yesterday.

The 24-year-old actress put her sleek figure on show in a mis-matched bikini as she frolicked in the Maui surf with her boyfriend, former Beverly Hills 90210 star Brian Austin Green.

Later she changed her costume, emerging on the beach in a brown swimsuit with gold detailing. Fox has found herself with a little extra time on her hands following the news she will not be starring in Transformers 3.

Her exit from the film follows a public spat between her and director Michael Bay last year, in which she reportedly said he was 'a nightmare' to work for.

The star, who played Mikaela Banes in the 2007 billion dollar blockbuster and sequel, insisted earlier this month that it was her decision not to resume the role.

Her next film sees her star opposite Josh Brolin and John Malkovich in the supernatural Western Jonah Hex. It is due for release June 18.

While reality TV star Heidi Montag has expressed interest in the role, British lingerie model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley is widely tipped to take over from Fox.

Bay and Rosie previously worked together on a Victoria's Secret advert after Ed Razek, chief creative talent at the lingerie and clothing company, drafted Bay in to direct the ad.

News From :Daily mail-Jimbon

Rihanna In Sado Masochistic

KOMPAS.com - With Lady Gaga stripping off in prison, and Christina Aguilera in clinging PVC, the latest batch of music videos couldn't get much edgier.

But Rihanna has outdone her pop rivals in her raunchy and suggestive new video for Te Amo.

The daring scenes portray the heterosexual Barbadian singer as a leather clad dominatrix, kissing and striking suggestive poses with dark-haired French supermodel Laeticia Casta.

The explicit video, leaked onto the web, even shows Rihanna as a dominatrix in sado masochistic bondage scenes.

The 22-year-old mounts the tied up Laeticia from behind, forcing her head down towards the bed.

She also crawls on top of her co-star as the pair, wearing matching PVC underwear, lie on a table.

Mother-of-three Laeticia, 32, is no stranger to controversial music videos - she starred in Chris Isaak's Baby Did A Bad, Bad Thing in 1999, which VH1 refused to air before the watershed.

The new video is set in the manicured grounds of the romantic 15th century Château de Vigny, just outside Paris.

It was directed by Anthony Mandler, whose casting call asked for 'beautiful, sexy and glamorous' females who are 'comfortable in their bodies'.

Mandler has directed videos for some of the world's biggest pop stars including Usher, Nelly Furtado, Eminem and Enrique Iglesias and Te Amo is the 11th time he has worked with Rihanna.

Writing on his Twitter page, Mandler enthused: 'Thanks to all of Rihanna’s fans for the long list of suggestions... we're gonna follow our instincts and give you guys something special...'

The isn't the first time Grammy winner Rihanna has pushed the boundaries with her videos. Her upcoming Rockstar 101 video shows her naked but for a few strategically placed chains.

Selling Sex

news from,KOMPAS.com - A woman alleged to have driven neighbours out of their homes by funding her drug habit through sex has been banned from having men at her flat during the night.

Natalie Gentle, 28, has been warned she could face up to five years in jail if she breaches the tough interim Anti-Social Behaviour Order (Asbo).

The council claims Gentle has caused 'a great deal of harassment, alarm and distress' to people living nearby. 

It alleged she had been funding a drug habit through prostitution, pole dancing and lap dancing at her home in Manston Close, Ernesettle, Plymouth.

At least one family, it is alleged, had been moved into emergency housing, while others are said to have suffered ill-health.

The 28-year-old appeared before Plymouth magistrates on Thursday ahead of a hearing in July, where Plymouth City Council will seek to gain a full Asbo against her.

Her lawyer, David Teague, told the court that Gentle denied the allegations. 'She does not accept behaving in the ways described,' he said.

Gentle will have the chance to defend herself at the two-day hearing, beginning on July 22.

Until then, she is not allowed any male visitors - except her two brothers and emergency services personnel - between 10pm and 6am.

She is also banned from being found drunk or under the influence of drugs anywhere in the city.

The interim Asbo, which was originally made on May 11 but extended by magistrates yesterday, also prevents Gentle from causing any noise or disturbance to her neighbours through loud music, shouting or arguing.

She is also prohibited from using abusive words or language towards anyone in the city.

Prosecutor Dylan Sadler, for Plymouth City Council, told the bench how police in the area supported the council in its bid to keep the case public.

Miranda Kerr's Guide to Romance

KOMPAS.com - Miranda Kerr has offered some inside tips to men on how to keep the fire burning in their love life.

The Aussie supermodel says guys should at all times be themselves and pay attention to their partner's needs in their quest for romantic harmony.

Staying healthy, showing affection and a willingness to pamper are also attractive qualities in the eyes of the fairer sex, she says.

But it's the little things that apparently mean the most.

"In my experience, it is the random small gestures that I find the most romantic," she told bloke's lifestyle website AskMen.com.

"It could be something as simple as making me a cup of tea or being given a foot massage while we are watching a movie at home after a long day at work.

"If more men made an effort to do these little things for their partner throughout their everyday life they would be guaranteed to have a more romantic relationship."

Kerr revealed her top 10 romance tips to readers of AskMen.com, who voted her most desirable Australian woman in the world. They are:

10. Buy the right size

9. Listen to her

8. Connect with her

7. Know what you want

6. Don't be afraid to show her love

5. Tell her she is beautiful and romance her

4. Get a baby sitter

3. Be healthy

2. Pamper her

1. Treat her like a goddess

The Red Bra Advert,Too Hot in America

Model Ashley Graham poses  KOMPAS.com - An advert for plus-size bras has been banned on American television because it is thought to be too raunchy for viewers

Network executives pulled the commercial starring full-figured model Ashley Graham over fears that it was revealing just too much cleavage.

Plus-size lingerie firm Lane Bryant was planning to air the advert this week during a break in Dancing With The Stars.

But ABC network chiefs refused to screen it, sparking claims that they were discriminating against larger models.

A source at Lane Bryant said: 'The cleavage of the plus-size model, they said, was excessive, and we don't think that's the case.

'It certainly appears to be discrimination against full-sized women.'

The 25-second advert shows Ashley in a series of poses in Lane Bryant underwear.

A voiceover says: 'Mom always said beauty is skin deep. Somehow, I don't think this is what mom had in mind.'

Lane Bryant said the Fox network also originally refused to show the ad during American Idol and insisted on the advert being re-edited.

They finally agreed to feature it during the final ten minutes of the show.

A Lane Bryant spokesman said: 'We knew the ads were sexy, but they are not salacious.

'Our new commercials represent the sensuality of the curvy woman who has more to show the world than the typical waif-like lingerie model.

'What we didn't know was that the networks, which regularly run Victoria's Secret and Playtex advertising on the very shows from which we're restricted, would object to a different view of beauty.'

A Fox spokesman insisted: 'We didn't treat them any differently than Victoria's Secret.'

ABC declined to comment.

Cold War......

KOMPAS.com – Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is heading to a meeting of NATO ministers in Estonia at a time when the 61-year-old organization is suffering from a kind of mid-life crisis.

Almost 20 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the 28-member North Atlantic Treaty Organization is in the midst of an intense self-examination, trying to rethink its basic purpose.

NATO was founded to blunt the long-extinct threat of a Soviet invasion of Western Europe.

Now it finds itself divided on many fronts: doubts among some members about its combat mission in Afghanistan, unease with the continuing presence of U.S. nuclear weapons in Europe, prickly relations with Moscow and concerns about the wisdom of expanding NATO deeper into Russia's backyard.

Clinton and 27 of her NATO counterparts will gather Thursday in Tallinn, capital of the former Soviet state of Estonia, where they're expected to take stock of the alliance and the challenges it faces.

Among the most difficult issues on the agenda are NATO's outlook for success in Afghanistan and the prospects for putting the Balkan nation of Bosnia on track toward NATO membership.

The foreign ministers also are expected to debate the future of the U.S. nuclear umbrella for Europe, which boils down to a question of whether to withdraw the remaining Cold War-era U.S. nuclear weapons there.

The Tallinn meeting, in fact, could split over the question of whether it's time to remove an estimated 200 U.S. nuclear bombs that remain at six air bases in five NATO countries.

The Obama administration hasn't taken a public position on the fate of this small but politically nettlesome nuclear arsenal. Administration officials say NATO should debate the matter and make a collective decision.

But the U.S. is trying to persuade Russia to match any Western reductions of these short-range nuclear weapons with cuts of its own. Some in Europe, including the Germans, are less certain that such linkage is needed.

The meeting also is likely to review progress in rewriting what NATO calls its "strategic concept," updating its mission statement for the first time since 1999.

That document predated the Sept. 11 attacks, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and the August 2008 conflict between Russia and Georgia, which is eagerly pursuing NATO membership.

A final draft spelling out NATO's new mission is to be endorsed when President Barack Obama and other alliance leaders meet in November.

U.S. relations with Europe have deteriorated in recent years, in part due to opposition inside the alliance to the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003.

One of Obama's main foreign policy goals upon entering the White House was to repair ties with Europe, while also "resetting" relations with Russia, which regards NATO expansion as a threat to its influence in the former Soviet Union.

There is no serious talk inside NATO of dismantling the alliance but, as analyst Stephen Flanagan of the Center for Strategic and International Studies put it in an interview, "Some are questioning what it's for."

The original purpose was framed in purely defensive terms: to protect Western Europe from a potential land invasion by the USSR.

Today there is no USSR, and no credible military threat to NATO as a whole. But the Russia-Georgia war served as a reminder to other former Soviet republics that are now NATO members — like the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia — that their neighborhood is still dangerous.

NATO's Western European members, including Germany, are more likely to view Russia as a major trading partner and source of natural gas and oil.

Central and eastern European members of the alliance view Russia more uneasily because of Moscow's history as an imperial power. The new members of the NATO club tend to see the alliance's nuclear arsenal as a counterbalance to Russia's military might.

Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the NATO secretary-general, thinks the organization should work more closely with other military alliances far beyond Europe's borders — to include rising powers China and India. He says the Afghanistan war experience has shown the need for such global linkages.

"But some fear NATO stretching itself too thin," he told a University of Chicago audience on April 8. "Others are afraid that NATO wants to rival the U.N. For these reasons, among others, there is hesitation about NATO engaging more systematically with countries like India or China."

Cybersecurity is emerging as a major worry for NATO, and Estonia is a fitting venue for discussing this emerging threat.

In April and May 2007, during heightened tensions between Russia and Estonia, hackers unleashed a wave of cyber attacks that crippled dozens of Estonian government and corporate sites in one of the world's most wired countries.

Estonian authorities traced the attacks to Russia and suggested they had been orchestrated by the Kremlin — a charge Moscow denied.

Adm. James Stavridis, the top NATO commander in Europe, says the 2007 case — and the prospect of others to come — poses a hard question for the alliance.

The NATO credo of "an attack on one is an attack on all" is the fundamental pledge by all signatories to the NATO founding treaty. But does a cyber attack against one NATO member compel the alliance as a whole to come to that country's defense?

"In 1949 when the treaty was written, no one could have conceived this cyber world," Stavridis said in a Feb. 2 speech.

"In NATO in particular, in my view, we need to talk about what defines an attack ... because in this unsettled sea in which we sail, I believe it is more likely that an attack will come not off the bomb rack of an aircraft but as electrons moving down a fiber optic cable."

While the meeting is expected to focus on security issues, some see the upcoming meeting in Tallinn as, in part, a chance for a little marriage counseling.

Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb says the meeting could help the U.S. and its European allies air pent-up frustrations and ease tensions. "I feel it is time for the grumpy old Atlantic couples to renew their wedding vows," he said.

Hot.....Hot....Hot...

- Some people work out to look good naked. Others skip a step.

Inside a heavily curtained fourth-floor dance studio is a male-only class specialising in "Hot Nude Yoga", a form of sensualised tantric yoga practiced nude.

A few classes are co-ed, but male-only gatherings tend to be more popular and have become a mini-phenomenon in the gay community, with studios in Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Salt Lake City. A studioless group in Chicago practices in the apartment of a nude yoga enthusiast.

Fans say the nudity aids in deepening their yoga practice while building a close, and emphatically non-sexual, community.

"A lot of people, especially living in New York, don't get the opportunity to connect with people in an intimate way," said Aaron Star, who started the naked yoga movement.

And while participants do occasionally report a frisson of excitement, Star and the practice's aficionados make one thing clear: This is about physical fitness.

"This is about yoga and appreciating your body," said John Cottrell, 40, who teaches naked yoga classes in Salt Lake City twice a month. He calls them a safe, non-threatening space "to help men especially look at themselves in a different way.

"It's just fun. It's a great workout," he says.

Star began the practice to appeal to a primarily gay male audience and achieved fame in the yoga world with his DVD series "Hot Nude Yoga", which allows aspiring yogis to practice in the privacy of their homes.

Hot, yes - in temperature, for starters.

Awkward? That, too.

At the small class I attended, an undeniable sexual charge hung in the room, making the exercise at times painfully weird and embarrassing. Many nude yoga classes revolve around partnering positions, a series of postures that put two men within striking distance of the other's privates.

Not all serious yogis think the practice makes sense.

"I don't see the point," said Mary Dillion, who teaches clothed yoga in Manhattan. "I have a yoga practice that I like and I can be naked in my home. I don't need to do naked yoga."

And Joshua Stein, editor-at-large for OUT Magazine, who attended a class in 2008, says the quality of the yoga was diminished by the heightened sensuality.

"It's almost as if the yoga is something between an afterthought and an excuse," said Stein, who is heterosexual. "It gives you this grey area where you can be intimate physically, but not so aggressively intimate as in a bath house or in a bar."

He describes being asked to do a child's pose - a kneeling pose with arms stretched forward on the ground - while a partner draped himself on his back. "It's not something you really need a partner to do," he said.

Star acknowledges that partner work is a popular feature of Hot Nude Yoga that "generates a certain amount of heat" and keeps his client list high. Still, practitioners say they constantly combat the notion that their classes are orgies veiled as exercise.

At Nude Yoga NYC in Manhattan, nude yoga is not such a boys club. Instructor Isis Phoenix, 29, said her co-ed nude yoga studio attracts "a well-rounded population of ages, genders and sexual orientations". The men usually outnumber women two-to-one, however.

Phoenix sees nudity as an extra pull for men, who often need an incentive to practice yoga. Still, she nixed the idea that nudity created a sexual element, but one of comfort.

"Men more often fall into a general greater ease with their bodies than women do," she said.

But the trend seems to appeal mostly to gay men. David Flewelling teaches Mudraforce Yoga at a home studio in Montreal, Canada. As at Star and Cottrell's studios, the majority of attendees at Mudraforce are gay.

Flewelling said sex is never part of the experience. Nude yoga, while extremely sensual, is not sexual, he said.

"There's something fantastic about exercising without clothes," he said. "You're free of the restrictions that clothes put on and it puts everyone on an even keel."

Even teachers of naked yoga, while railing against the suggestion that the class is tantamount to foreplay, can send mixed signals. When my class ended, I took aside the instructor, Jeffrey Duval, and asked how he got into naked yoga. Duval acknowledged he attended his first class because he thought it was about sex.

But his experience surpassed all his expectations.

"You're shedding away your clothes, but you're also shedding away insecurities and fear," he said. "I can't think of a more perfect way to practice."

Polish President Died By Plane Crash

KOMPAS.com – Polish President Lech Kaczynski and some of the country's highest military and civilian leaders died on Saturday when the presidential plane crashed as it came in for a landing in thick fog in western Russia, killing 97, officials said.

Russian and Polish officials said there were no survivors on the 26-year-old Tupolev, which was taking the president, his wife and staff to events marking the 70th anniversary of the massacre in Katyn forest of thousands of Polish officers by Soviet secret police.

The crash devastated the upper echelons of Poland's political and military establishments. On board were the army chief of staff, the navy chief commander, and heads of the air and land forces. Also killed were the national bank president, deputy foreign minister, army chaplain, head of the National Security Office, deputy parliament speaker, Olympic Committee head, civil rights commissioner and at least two presidential aides and three lawmakers, the Polish foreign ministry said.

Although initial signs pointed to an accident with no indication of foul play, the death of a Polish president and much of the Polish state and defense establishment in Russia en route to commemorating one of the saddest events in Poland's long, complicated history with Russia, was laden with tragic irony.

Reflecting the grave sensibilities of the crash to relations between the two countries, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin personally assumed charge of the investigation. He was due in Smolensk later Saturday, where he would meet Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who was flying in from Warsaw.

"This is unbelievable — this tragic, cursed Katyn," Kaczynski's predecessor, Aleksander Kwasniewski, said on TVN24 television.

It is "a cursed place, horrible symbolism," he said. "It's hard to believe. You get chills down your spine."

Andrei Yevseyenkov, spokesman for the Smolensk regional government, said Russian dispatchers asked the crew to divert from the military airport in North Smolensk and land instead in Minsk, the capital of neighboring Belarus, or in Moscow because of the fog.

While traffic controllers generally have the final word in whether it is safe for a plane to land, they can and do leave it to the pilots' discretion. Air Force Gen. Alexander Alyoshin confirmed that the pilot disregarded instructions to fly to another airfield.

"But they continued landing, and it ended, unfortunately, with a tragedy," the Interfax news agency quoted Alyoshin as saying. He added that the pilot makes the final decision about whether to land.

Russia's Emergency Minister Sergei Shoigu said there were 97 dead. His ministry said 88 of whom were part of the Polish state delegation. Poland's Foreign Ministry spokesman, Piotr Paszkowski, said there were 89 people on the passenger list but one person had not shown up for the roughly 1 1/2-hour flight from Warsaw's main airport.

Some of the people on board were relatives of those slain in the Katyn massacre. Also among the victims was Anna Walentynowicz, whose firing in August 1980 from the Lenin Shipyards in Gdansk sparked a workers' strike that spurred the eventual creation of the Solidarity freedom movement. She went on to be a prominent member.

"This is a great tragedy, a great shock to us all," former president and Solidarity leader Lech Walesa said.

The deaths were not expected to directly affect the functioning of Polish government: Poland's president is commander in chief of its armed forces but the position's domestic duties are chiefly symbolic. Most top government ministers were not aboard the plane.

According to the Aviation Safety Network, there have been 66 crashes involving Tu-154s in the past four decades, including six in the past five years. The Russian carrier Aeroflot recently withdrew its Tu-154 fleet from service, largely because the planes do not meet international noise restrictions and use too much fuel.

The aircraft was the workhorse of East Bloc civil aviation in the 1970s and 1980s, and many of the crashes have been attributed to the chaos that ensued after the breakup of the Soviet Union. Poland has long discussed replacing the planes that carry the country's leaders but said they lacked the funds.

The presidential plane was fully overhauled in December, the general director of the Aviakor aviation maintenance plant in Samara, Russia told Rossiya-24. The plant repaired the plane's three engines, retrofitted electronic and navigation equipment and updated the interior, Alexei Gusev said. He said there could be no doubts that the plane was flightworthy.

The plane tilted to the left before crashing, eyewitness Slawomir Sliwinski told state news channel Rossiya-24. He said there were two loud explosions when the aircraft hit the ground.

Rossiya-24 showed footage from the crash site, with pieces of the plane scattered widely amid leafless trees and small fires burning in woods shrouded with fog. A tail fin with the red and white national colors of Poland stuck up from the debris.

Polish-Russian relations had been improving of late after being poisoned for decades over the Katyn massacre of some 22,000 Polish officers.

Russia never has formally apologized for the murders but Putin's decision to attend a memorial ceremony earlier this week in the forest near Katyn was seen as a gesture of goodwill toward reconciliation. Kaczynski wasn't invited to that event. Putin, as prime minister, had invited his Polish counterpart, Tusk.

Putin and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev both called Tusk to express their condolences and they promised to work closely with Poland in investigating the crash. Tusk said they had been the first to offer condolences.

"On this difficult day the people of Russia stand with the Polish people," Medvedev said, according to the Kremlin press service.

Putin told Tusk that he would keep him fully briefed on the investigation, his spokesman said.

Rossiya-24 showed hundreds of people around the Katyn monument, many holding Polish flags, some weeping.

Poland's parliament speaker, the acting president, declared a week of national mourning. Tusk called for two minutes of silence at noon (1000GMT) Sunday.

"The contemporary world has not seen such a tragedy," he said.

In Warsaw, Tusk also called an extraordinary meeting of his Cabinet and the national flag was lowered to half-staff at the presidential palace, where several thousand people gathered to lay flowers and light candles. Black ribbons appeared in some windows in the capital.

Kaczynski, 60, was the twin brother of Poland's opposition leader, former Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski. Kaczynski's wife, Maria, was an economist. They had a daughter, Marta, and two granddaughters.

Lech Kaczynski became president in December 2005 after defeating Tusk in that year's presidential vote.

The nationalist conservative had said he would seek a second term in presidential elections this fall. He was expected to face an uphill struggle against Parliament speaker Bronislaw Komorowski, the candidate of Tusk's governing Civic Platform party.

The constitution says the parliament speaker announce early elections within 14 days of the president's death. The vote must be held within another 60 days.

Poland, a nation of 38 million people, is by far the largest of the 10 formerly communist countries that have joined the European Union in recent years.

Last year, Poland was the only EU nation to avoid recession and posted economic growth of 1.7 percent.

It has become a firm U.S. ally in the region since the fall of communism — a stance that crosses party lines.

The country sent troops to the U.S.-led war in Iraq and recently boosted its contingent in Afghanistan to some 2,600 soldiers.

U.S. Patriot missiles are expected to be deployed in Poland this year. That was a Polish condition for a 2008 deal — backed by both Kaczynski and Tusk — to host long-range missile defense interceptors.

The deal, which was struck by the Bush administration, angered Russia and was later reconfigured under President Barack Obama's administration.

Under the Obama plan, Poland would host a different type of missile defense interceptors as part of a more mobile system and at a later date, probably not until 2018.

Kaczynski is the first serving Polish leader to die since exiled World War II-era leader Gen. Wladyslaw Sikorski in a plane crash off Gibraltar in 1943.

In the village of Gorzno, in northern Poland, the streets were largely empty as people stayed home to watch television.

"It is very symbolic that they were flying to pay homage to so many murdered Poles," said resident Waleria Gess, 73.

"I worry because so many clever and decent people were killed," said high school student Pawel Kwas, 17. "I am afraid we may have problems in the future to find equally talented politicians."

Apple Prepare to war with Amazon

KOMPAS.com - The first official reviews of Apple's much puffed-up and publicised iPad have come in... and they are surprisingly positive. Many gadget gurus derided the tablet computer at its January launch, as a lack-lustre bigger version of the iPhone with few new features.

Now just two days before the U.S. launch, reviewers have been able to prise the devices from the notoriously secretive Apple for hands-on testing.

Critics from the Wall Street Journal and New York Times both praised the iPad's ease of use and battery life - which lasted longer than Apple's claim of 10 hours.

Reviewers at both papers said the tablet computer, which goes on sale in the UK this month, works nicely for web surfing or consuming media like video and books.

'If you're mainly a web surfer, note-taker, social-networker and emailer, and a consumer of photos, videos, books, periodicals and music ... this could be for you,' Mr Mossberg said.

However, he added that the speedy device, which will start at $499, had 'annoying limitations.'

'The email program lacks the ability to create local folders or rules for auto-sorting messages, and it doesn't allow group addressing. The browser lacks tabs. And the Wi-Fi-only version lacks GPS,' he said.

Mr Pogue described the 9.7" tablet as 'so bright and responsive', but added: 'The bottom line is that you can get a laptop for much less money with a full keyboard, DVD drive, USB jacks, camera-card slot, camera, the works.'

eReader war heats up

The reviewers were split over whether the iPad could topple Amazon's Kindle as the most popular eReader on the market. Currently the Kindle makes up 90 per cent of the eReader market. The Kindle DX, which has a 9.7" screen, is in a similar price bracket, at $489.

The Journal's Walt Mossberg said he preferred the iPad to the Kindle.

PC Mag's Tim Gideon added: 'Kindle: I like you, but I am nervous about your future.

'The iPad displays books in a way that is much flashier than your black and white e-ink screen. It shows illustrations in colour. Page turns actually look like page turns.'

However, David Pogue from the New York Times said the device's 1.5lb weight was too heavy for reading compared to Kindle's 10oz.

He added: 'You can't read well in direct sunlight' and 'You can't read books from the Apple bookstore on any other machine, not even a Mac or iPhone.'

However, Apple's iBook store will not come preloaded on the iPad, allowing other companies, including Amazon, to create online bookstore apps for the device.

Readers will therefore be able to buy eBooks from a number of different suppliers but read them on their iPad.

Amazon said the company would 'look forward to making Kindle for iPad available very soon,' but didn't confirm if the App would be ready for the U.S launch on Saturday.

Book publishers are set to reap the rewards as the battle heats up between Apple and Amazon for eReader customers.

Today, Amazon agreed to halt heavy discounting of eBook best sellers in new pricing deals with two major publishers.

The agreements with HarperCollins and CBS Corp's Simon & Schuster will allow publishers to charge up to $14.99 for some popular titles - more than the tough $9.99 pricing cap that Amazon had set previously.

The new deals, that mirror those struck with Apple, mean Amazon will have the same array of titles that rival what Apple will offer on its digital bookstore.

Currently Apple allows publishers to set the price for their own books, with Apple receiving 30 per cent from each sale. This is very different from the standard publishing pricing, as used by Amazon. In this version publishers sell books at a wholesale rate. Then Amazon makes a profit by marking up the books above this.

John Makinson, Chief Executive of Penguins Books, said: 'We have all struggled in this industry to find an online model that works successfully in terms of content and the consumer's propensity to pay.

'I think myself that the iPad represents the first real opportunity to create a paid model that will be attractive to consumers.'

Penguin will share 30 per cent of its revenue from eBook sales for iPads with Apple. Mr Makinson said this compared to the 50 per cent publishers typically paid to book retailers including Amazon.

Google :Attack in Vietnam

HANOI, KOMPAS.com — Google Inc. accused Vietnam of stifling political dissent with cyberattacks, the latest complaint by the Internet giant against a communist regime following a public dispute with China over online censorship.  Like China, Vietnam tightly controls the flow of information and has said it reserves the right to take “appropriate action” against Web sites it deems harmful to national security.
     
The cyberattacks targeted “potentially tens of thousands,” a posting on Google’s online security blog said Wednesday.  It said it was drawing attention to the Vietnam attacks because they underscored the need for the international community “to take cybersecurity seriously to help keep free opinion flowing.”

Google apparently stumbled onto a scheme targeting Vietnamese-speaking Internet users around the world while investigating the surveillance of e-mail accounts belonging to Chinese human rights activists, one analyst suggested.  The attackers appear to have targeted specific Web sites and duped users into downloading malware programs, said Nart Villeneuve from The Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto. That may have allowed the infiltration and surveillance of activists, he said.

“This kind of stuff happens all the time in China,” said Villeneuve. “It has a chilling effect. It silences people.”

Google engineer Neel Mehta wrote in the posting, “these attacks have tried to squelch opposition to bauxite mining efforts in Vietnam, an important and emotionally charged issue in the country.”
     
The mining project involving a subsidiary of Chinese state-run aluminum company Chinalco is planned for Vietnam’s Central Highlands and has attracted strong opposition.  Foes fear the mine would cause major environmental problems and lead to Chinese workers flooding into the strategically sensitive region.
     
The computer security firm McAfee, which has investigated the malware, also discussed the attacks in a blog posting Tuesday. “We believe that the perpetrators may have political motivations and may have some allegiance to the government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam,” wrote George Kurtz, McAfee’s chief technology officer.
     
Vietnamese officials did not respond to requests for comment Wednesday.  Last fall, the government detained several bloggers who criticized the bauxite mine, and in December, a Web site called bauxitevietnam.info, which had drawn millions of visitors opposed to the mine, was hacked.

The malware apparently began circulating at about that time, according the McAfee blog. It said someone hacked into a Web site run by the California-based Vietnamese Professionals Society and replaced a keyboard program that can be downloaded from that site with a malicious program.
     
Google says its dispute with China was triggered by a hacking attack that emanated from the mainland and attempts to snoop on dissidents’ e-mail. Last week, Google shut down its search operations in China, Vietnam’s northern neighbor, after complaints of cyberattacks and censorship there. Google now redirects search queries from China’s mainland to the freer Chinese territory of Hong Kong.
     
On Tuesday, many users of the Chinese Google search engine experienced difficulties. Analysts suggested the troubles may be linked to the company’s decision to move to Hong Kong. Google initially said it was an in-house technical problem but later shifted its explanation, blaming the “Great Firewall” — the nickname for the network of filters that keep mainland China’s Web surfers from accessing material the government deems sensitive.
     
The sudden disruption and lack of explanation fit with how the government has brought companies to heel previously in the heavily monitored Chinese Internet industry, analysts said.

“I don’t think anyone should be surprised,” said Bill Bishop, a Beijing Internet entrepreneur and author of the technology blog Digicha. Tuesday’s problems were payback by the government, he said, because “Google humiliated China.”
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