Tuesday, 25 September 2012

ARTICLE OF THE WEEK: THE TOP CEO’S AND THEIR TROOPS: THE DYNAMIC BRANSON.



Larger than life entrepreneur Sir Richard Branson is well known for his personable management style. The charismatic chairman of the Virgin Group, author, adventurer, space traveler and gazillionaire, projects a refreshing sense of approachability and humility in managing his business ventures.
Crucial to his success is his philosophy of prioritizing his employees over customers and shareholders. His logic is flawless: happy employees perform well resulting in satisfied customers, and thus business will be good and the shareholders will be rewarded.?
Mr. Branson goes to extraordinary lengths to engage with his employees. He regularly takes out entire flight crews for dinner and parties when he arrives on a Virgin Atlantic flight and even stays at the crew’s hotel rather than in expensive digs downtown. All Virgin employees are given a Virgin card, which provides big discounts on the airline as well as at Virgin Megastores and other Virgin businesses.?
This unique management approach begins at the recruitment process where personality takes precedence. From its outset, Virgin “hired friendly over experienced,” Branson said. It sought out employees who had fresh perspectives, great attitudes, and were eager to have fun, and then trained them to do their jobs. Those who arrived with experience from other air carriers were those who essentially “had learned how to not do their jobs,” he said.
“It all comes down to the people you hire,” Branson said. “Those running the company have to love it, and they also have to believe in the products you sell. The CEO must care as much about the cleaning ladies and switchboard operators as well as the company’s other directors”.
Extending this level of openness towards employees has its rewards. Studies have found a strong correlation between CEO ratings and overall company happiness. Bradley Brummel, who specializes in workplace psychology, said company and CEO ratings are closely linked, as employees tend to hold the CEO somewhat responsible for their work conditions. “A good CEO has the potential to enhance overall evaluations, while a poor one can make an otherwise positive work environment seem bleak”, Brummel said. “CEOs with the most visibility are likely to have the most influence in overall company ratings, for better or worse”.
It is clear that if employees are happy with their leadership, that sentiment echoes through the entire company. Branson’s ever-present loyalty to the rank-and-file employees is returned in kind. Working for Virgin, especially in Europe, is nothing short of a badge of honor.?
Critically, this is why recognizing and celebrating great performance and great people is one of the hallmarks of happy workplaces.

Abu Hamza concerns raised by Queen


The Queen voiced concerns to the previous government about the inability of UK authorities to arrest Abu Hamza al-Masri, the  has learned.
The 's Frank Gardner says the Queen told him she had spoken to a home secretary about the issue.
On Monday, a European Court of Human Rights ruling paved the way for the radical cleric to be extradited to the US after an eight-year battle.
The Home Office said the extradition would happen "as quickly as possible".
Our correspondent said the Queen had been upset that there was no way to arrest the radical cleric and spoke to the then home secretary to ask why somebody who appeared to be inciting violence and hatred was still at large.
"Like anybody, she was upset that her country and its subjects were being denigrated by this man," said our correspondent, who stressed that the monarch was not lobbying but "merely voicing the views that many have".
It is rare for the Queen to express opinions on such matters.
On Monday, a panel of the European court's highest judges declined to refer the case of Abu Hamza and four other terrorism suspects to the European Court's Grand Chamber - the last avenue of appeal open to them in their fight against extradition to the US.
The men have argued that they will face inhumane treatment in the US if they are sent there.

Syria and Iran to overshadow UN General Assembly


President Barack Obama at the UN (21 Sept 2011)
World leaders are gathering in New York for a UN General Assembly likely to be dominated by Syria, although it is not formally on the agenda.
Discussions are also expected to centre on Iran's nuclear programme and the video that has prompted anti-US protests across the Muslim world.
President Barack Obama is due to focus on the Middle East when he gives one of the opening speeches on Tuesday.
His address comes six weeks before the US presidential election.
But it is not to be seen as a campaign speech, according to White House spokesman Jay Carney.
"I would expect the president to address the recent unrest in the Muslim world and the broader context of the democratic transitions of the Arab World."
'Extremel

A BEAUTIFUL VIEW OF SEA CLIFF – RESORT & SPA ZANZIBAR.


 

 

BEYONCE TO PERFORM FOR BENEFITING ALICIA KEYS CAMPAIGN “KEEP A CHILD ALIVE”.



Beyonce and husband Jay-Z continue to prove Harry Belafonte and his comments about them socially irresponsible wrong! After hosting a $40,000 ticket fundraising dinner for President Obama’s re-election campaign, she has signed on to perform at Alicia Key’s Black Ball.
She and Carole King will hit the stage at the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York on November 1st. The extravaganza will benefit Alicia’s “Keep A Child Alive” organization to help those affected by HIV/AIDs in Africa and India.

China's first aircraft carrier enters service


China's first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, 24 September The Liaoning was named after a province in north-eastern China
China's first aircraft carrier has entered into service, the Defence Ministry says.
The 300m (990ft) Liaoning - named after the province where it was refitted - is a refurbished Soviet ship purchased from Ukraine.
For now the carrier has no operational aircraft and will be used for training.
But China says the vessel, which has undergone extensive sea trials, will increase its capacity to defend state interests.
The delivery of the aircraft carrier comes at a time when Japan and other countries in the region have expressed concern at China's growing naval strength.
China and Japan are embroiled in a row over disputed islands in the East China Sea. Several South East Asian nations are also at odds with China over overlapping territorial claims in the South China Sea.
It also comes weeks ahead of a party congress expected to see the transition of power to a new generation of Chinese leaders.

Friday, 21 September 2012

Apple promises maps app will 'improve'


Queue for iPhone 5
Apple has responded to fierce criticism of its mapping software, saying the application will "improve".
The mapping software angered users who said it was riddled with inaccuracies, misplaced towns and cities and omitted key landmarks.
Apple said it appreciated all the customer feedback it was receiving about the app and would work hard to improve it.
The problems emerged a day before the global launch of its iPhone 5 handset.
Hundreds of people have camped out for days to ensure they are among the first to buy one of the smartphones. At Apple's flagship store on London's Regent Street almost 1300 people were in line for one of the phones.
The mapping system comes with updates to Apple's phone operating system and is bundled in with the iPhone 5.

SOCIAL MEDIA FOUNDERS LOSS BILLIONS THIS PAST YEAR.


Forbes analyst discuss the fall of social media billionaires, which has us wondering has the social media bubble burst? In the video below is a list of the top founder and their net loss in billions in the past year.Mark Zuckerberg leads the pack as $8 billion of his net worth was loss in the fall of Facebook’s stock.

Bullfighting declared legal in France


Spanish bullfighter tackles bull in Arles, southern France, 9 Sep 12This month a corrida was staged in Arles, featuring Spanish bullfighters
France's Constitutional Council, a top legal authority, has rejected a plea from animal rights campaigners to ban bullfighting.
The campaigners wanted the fights categorised as cruelty to animals.
But the judges said the "traditional" fights, held in areas of southern France, "do not harm people's protected constitutional rights".
More than 1,000 bulls are killed annually in French bullfights, the AFP news agency reports.
Although bullfighting originated in neighbouring Spain, it took root in France a century and a half ago. Fights - known as corridas in Spain - are especially popular in the Nimes and Arles areas.
A ban on bullfighting came into force in Spain's Catalonia region this year, after lawmakers voted for it last year - the first such ban in the country's mainland.
The BBC's Christian Fraser in Paris says a recent opinion poll in France suggested 48% support for a ban, although earlier polls suggested as many as two-thirds of the French electorate would back a ban.
France's Interior Minister Manuel Valls, born in Barcelona, spoke in favour of bullfighting earlier this month.
Bullfights are banned in some parts of France. Animal rights groups are now considering taking the issue to the European Court of Human Rights, our correspondent reports.

Julius Malema: South Africa issues 'arrest warrant'


Julius Malema (file photo)
A warrant has been issued for the arrest of firebrand South African politician Julius Malema on corruption charges, his lawyer says.
South Africa's elite Hawks unit has been investigating the allegations against Mr Malema for months.
The authorities have refused to comment in public on reports about the arrest warrant, but lawyer Nicqui Galaktiou says they have confirmed it to her.
Mr Malema, once a close ally of President Zuma, is now a fierce critic.
He strongly denies allegation he profited from government contracts in his home province of Limpopo.
According to the weekly City Press newspaper, he will be charged with fraud, corruption and money-laundering.
Ms Galaktiou told Reuters news agency Mr Malema would appear in court next week and would not be jailed or arrested before then.
"We don't have a confirmed date yet. We have not seen the warrant of arrest. We don't know what the charges are," she said.
Mr Malema was expelled as head of the Youth League of the governing African National Congress in April but has recently held several rallies in the Rustenburg area, scene of a violent mining dispute.
He has been calling for a national strike and has accused Mr Zuma of ignoring the plight of poor black South Africans.
The BBC's Milton Nkosi in Johannesburg says Mr Malema's supporters will see the reported charges as a political witchhunt.
But our correspondent points out that the investigation began long before the recent strikes.
The ANC is due to meet in December to decide whether Mr Zuma will remain as party leader going into elections due in 2014.
Mr Malema and others are campaigning for him to be replaced.

Pakistan film protests: 15 die in Karachi and Peshawar



BBC's Aleem Maqbool: "There have been big protests in Peshawar, Lahore and indeed in Karachi"
Fifteen people have died as violent protests erupted on the streets of Pakistan's main cities in anger at an anti-Islam film made in the US.
Ten people were killed in the port city of Karachi and a further five died in the north-western city of Peshawar, hospital officials said.
Protesters also breached the diplomatic enclave in the capital, Islamabad, near the US embassy.
There has been widespread unrest over the amateur film, Innocence of Muslims.
Dozens of people have been reported wounded and  correspondents said some were in a critical condition.

Start Quote

Seen more injured in last hour than all of yesterday. Once again people saying they want to burn the US embassy”
Aleem MaqboolBBC News, Islamabad
Protests have already left several people dead around the world, including Pakistan, where the government had appealed in advance for peaceful protests, declaring a holiday and "day of love" for the Prophet Muhammad.
Although US targets have borne the brunt of protests against the film, anti-Western sentiment has been stoked further by caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad published this week in the satirical French magazine, Charlie Hebdo.
France shut embassies and other missions in around 20 countries across the Muslim world on Friday.
Protests were banned in France itself and in Tunisia, where France is the former colonial power, but there were widespread demonstrations elsewhere.

THE BEST DAD IN THE WORLD


 

FLAVIANA MATATA OPENS UP ABOUT HER LIFE & FASHION ON BBC AFRICA’S PROGRAMMES DIRA YA DUNIA & FOCUS ON AFRICA.


 
The supermodel and former Miss Universe Tanzania (2007), Flaviana Matata, was in the UK for the London Fashion Week.
She spoke to the BBC a few hours before returning to New York where she is based when not working in Europe, Africa or other parts of the world. Here she is being interviewed for BBC Africa’s news and current affairs TV programme in Kiswahili, Dira ya Dunia.
 She was also interviewed for BBC’s Focus on Africa radio programme. Listen to the interview at 1500 GMT. It will also appear on our podcast.
 Flaviana posing with BBC Africa’s very fashionable presenter Kassim Kayira
 Flaviana with Jestina George of www.jestina-george.com (a blogger based in London) at the BBC studios in London
For the interview Flaviana rocked  a leather jacket from Zara, Dress from Mango, Gucci sunglasses & gorgeous shoes from McQueen.
Tanzania’s supermodel Flaviana Matata has had a very busy schedule and to be precise she’s been busy on the runway between New York  & London.
At the moment Flaviana is in the UK where she has just taken part in London Fashion Week.
Earlier today Flaviana visited the BBC  Africa studios in London where she was interviewed for BBC Africa’s news and current affairs TV programme in Kiswahili, Dira ya Dunia  &  for Focus on Africa.
The former winner of Tanzania’s first Miss Universe pageant, in 2007, started by telling how she got into the fashion industry and later dished out on the latest tips on what is fashionable these days.
Below is the link where you can listen to the Focus on Africa interview. It is also being currently promoted on the BBC’s Entertainment & Arts pages.
 
For more African news from the BBC download the Africa Today podcast.
 Photo credit: Manuel Toledo, BBC Africa

Tuesday, 18 September 2012

Kate topless pictures: French criminal inquiry 'starts'


The Duchess and Duke of CambridgeThe couple's lawyers want a civil court to force Closer to hand over the images
A criminal inquiry has started over the publication of topless photos of the Duchess of Cambridge, the AFP news agency has reported.
It comes ahead of a court ruling on a bid by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge to stop a French magazine selling and distributing the images.
The couple says the publication by Closer breached their privacy.
The French Prosecutor's Office is now to decide whether a full investigation of the royals' claim is merited.
The photographs were taken while the duchess was sunbathing on a private holiday with her husband at the French chateau of the Queen's nephew, Lord Linley, in Provence, earlier this month.
The decision to begin the preliminary criminal inquiry follows a formal complaint by the royals to prosecutors, with aides saying they were looking for proceedings against both the magazine and the photographer who took the pictures.
In their separate civil application to a court in Nanterre near Paris, the royals are asking for an injunction to force Closer's owners to hand over the images to prevent further publication, or face a daily fine of 10,000 euros (£8,000).
A lawyer for Closer earlier claimed the royal couple's reaction was disproportionate.
In court on Monday, Aurelien Hamelle, the lawyer representing Prince William and Catherine, said the scenes captured were intimate and personal and had no place on the front page of a magazine.
He said the couple could not have known they were being photographed, adding it would only have been possible to see them with a long lens.
In response, Delphine Pando, representing Closer, said topless photographs were no longer considered shocking in modern society and denied the chateau was inaccessible to public view.
She also said the magazine did not hold the rights to the pictures, so it could not be proved that the magazine intended to republish them.
The BBC's Paris correspondent Christian Fraser said most lawyers seemed to agree that under strict French law the pictures represented an undisputed breach of privacy.
Under French law, the damages related to legal proceedings could run into tens of thousands of euros and, in theory, the magazine editor and photographer could be sent to jail for a year.
Royal tour
British newspaper has printed the pictures.
But Italian magazine Chi - along with Closer, part of former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's Mondadori media group - printed a special edition on Monday featuring more than 20 pages of the photographs.
Meanwhile, Irish Daily Star editor Michael O'Kane has been suspended while an internal investigation is carried out into the publication of the photographs.
Currently on a Diamond Jubilee tour of South-east Asia and the South Pacific, the royal couple travel on Tuesday to the island nation of Tuva

Mexico mass jailbreak sparks manhunt near Texas border


Police stand outside a jail after the escape of more than 130 inmates in Piedras Negras
The inmates escaped through a tunnel dug out from the prison's carpentry workshop to a perimeter fence.
The prison director and two other employees are being held over the incident at the facility in Coahuila, the state's attorney general said.
A massive manhunt is under way, and the US authorities are on alert in case any escapees attempt to cross the border.

One by one, the inmates fled through a tunnel measuring 2.9m (9.5 ft) deep and 7m long, attorney general Homero Ramos said in a statement broadcast on local TV.
Some 132 men managed to escape from the prison in the city of Piedras Negras, which borders Eagle Pass in Texas to the north.
The state government has offered rewards of 200,000 pesos ($15,600; £9,600) for information leading to the arrest of each prisoner.
This is not the first time such a mass breakout has taken place in Coahuila, but it is by far one of the biggest in recent years, says the BBC's Will Grant in Mexico City.
Such events only go to underline further to the incoming government of President Enrique Pena Nieto the dire state of the prison system in Mexico, our correspondent says.
Mr Pena Nieto is to take office on 1 December. However, prison reform is not expected to be one of the main priorities of his government, our correspondent adds.

China-Japan protests resume amid islands row



Protesters gathered outside the Japanese embassy in Beijing
l
Fresh anti-Japan protests have erupted in China over disputed islands amid raised tension on the anniversary of Japan's invasion of north-east China.
Thousands of protesters chanted slogan outside the Japanese embassy in Beijing as riot police lined the streets.
Japan's coast guard says several Chinese ships are in waters near the islands, known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, Japanese media report.
This follows a brief landing by two Japanese activists earlier on Tuesday.
The islands have long been a point of contention and recent tension has led to fears of a naval conflict.
The latest developments fall on a politically sensitive anniversary, which marks what is known as the ''Mukden incident''.
On 18 September 1931, Japanese soldiers blew up a railway in Manchuria, blaming it on dissidents. This was later revealed to be a pretext for the invasion of north-east China.
China's defence minister told reporters after meeting US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta, that China hoped for a peaceful resolution to the dispute with Japan, Chinese state media reported.
"We reserve the right to take further actions, although we hope to settle the issue through peaceful negotiation," said Liang Guanglie.
Mr Panetta was in Beijing for talks with his counterpart and top Chinese leaders. He did not mention the dispute, but called for closer military contact between the US and China.
"Our goal is to have the United States and China establish the most important bilateral relationship in the world, and the key to that is to establish a strong military-to-military relationship," he said.
However, Mr Panetta, who was in Tokyo on Monday, had earlier warned of the potential for the conflict to escalate and urged both sides to show restraint.

EVERTON 2 NEWCASTLE 2


IT should have been a night when the talk was about enthralling sport, emotional support and a game that epitomised all that is good about English football. 
Instead, an old debate has been re-opened and this time, the bodies that govern the game will be under pressure to act fast. 
After another calamitous mistake, one which deprived Everton of a richly deserved victory, the clamour for the introduction of goal-line  technology has reached new levels.
Frantic finale: Victor Anichebe thought he had won the game for Everton with an 88th-minute strike...
Frantic finale: Victor Anichebe thought he had won the game for Everton with an 88th-minute strike...
... two minutes later, though, Demba Ba nudged a bouncing ball past Tim Howard and into the net
... two minutes later, though, Demba Ba nudged a bouncing ball past Tim Howard and into the net
...but an earlier effort was the big talking point after the linesman failed to see the ball across the line
...but an earlier effort was the big talking point after the linesman failed to see the ball across the line

MATCH FACTS

EVERTON: Howard, Hibbert, Jagielka, Distin, Baines, Neville, Osman, Pienaar, Fellaini, Mirallas (Naismith 83), Jelavic (Anichebe 44). Subs not used: Mucha, Heitinga, Gueye, Coleman, Duffy.
Goals: Baines 15, Anichebe 88.
NEWCASTLE: Harper, Perch, Steven Taylor, Williamson, Santon, Cabaye, Anita, Gutierrez, Marveaux (Ba 46), Cisse (Ameobi 80), Ben Arfa. Subs not used: Elliot, Gosling,  Bigirimana, Shola Obertan, Tavernier.
Goals: Ba 49, 90
Referee: Mike Jones (Cheshire)
The Premier League have said they want to bring it in to play ‘as soon as is practically possible’ and, after this draw, Everton manager David Moyes was asking for it to happen even quicker. 
The Scot understandably, was shattered that his team failed  to collect three points from an  absorbing tussle. With better  fortune and arguably better  officiating, Victor Anichebe and Marouane Fellaini would have put Everton out of reach.
‘I thought we had a couple of goals in the game that should have counted,’ said Moyes, referring to a header from Anichebe late in the second half that TV replays clearly showed to have crossed the line, and a strike from Fellaini that was wrongly adjudged offside. 
‘The linesman is standing on the line, so you hope he sees it. I don’t know how he has missed them. 
‘I told him after the game he had cost us a couple of goals. But there is nothing I can do about it. Technology will eventually come in.’
Significantly, his opposite number was in total agreement.
Tribute: Everton showed true class as they honoured the victims of Hillsborough before kick-off
Tribute: Everton showed true class as they honoured the victims of Hillsborough before kick-off
Tribute: Everton showed true class as they honoured the victims of Hillsborough before kick-off
Tribute: Everton showed true class as they honoured the victims of Hillsborough before kick-off
‘My technical team told me it was over the line,’ said Newcastle boss Alan Pardew, referring to  Anichebe’s 79th-minute header. ‘I have been saying for as long as anyone that technology must come in. It has cost Everton a crucial goal.’
It was such a shame that this topic ended up as the talking point. Everton for much of the contest were outstanding, playing with verve and swagger, but Newcastle made just as big a contribution in the second period.
Here were two fine sides, playing football in the spirit it is intended. 
A draw may have been the final outcome, Demba Ba’s double  cancelling out efforts from Leighton Baines and Anichebe, but it was an evening when football emerged  victorious.
Baines in the backside: Everton defender Leighton handed the home side the lead early on
Baines in the backside: Everton defender Leighton handed the home side the lead early on
Baines in the backside: Everton defender Leighton handed the home side the lead early on

'JUSTICE' DONE?  PARRY'S TV BLUNDER ON SKY

Sky commentator Alan Parry lost his sense of perspective straight after the second Everton goal, which looked like being a dramatic late winner.
With the home side having been denied two goals earlier by poor officiating, Parry suggested: 'For the second time on Merseyside this week (it) means that justice has been done.'
Some five seconds later - maybe just long enough for a producer to shout in his ear - he added: 'This one rather more trivial than last week’s verdict.'
This was the first game played on Merseyside since the  revelations about the Hillsborough disaster were published and, as was the case when they provided the opposition for Liverpool in their first game after the tragedy in 1989, Everton covered themselves in glory. 
It has been a hugely emotional week on Merseyside. For all the joy and relief that came from Liverpool fans being exonerated by the Hillsborough Independent Panel, there remains pain and disbelief about the horrors that unfolded on the Leppings Lane terrace. 
How best to mark the occasion was clearly something Everton had thought long and hard about. The display was wonderfully poignant and dignified without being sentimental and was a fitting tribute to their Red brothers and sisters.
Hit the post, literally: Nikica Jelavic's evening didn't last long after he collided with the upright
Hit the post, literally: Nikica Jelavic's evening didn't last long after he collided with the upright
Here, in raw, touching terms, was Merseyside standing united.
It had been mooted that You’ll Never Walk Alone would be played before kick-off but, instead, it was perhaps more fitting that The  Hollies’ He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother rang out when the 96 names were shown on screens at either end of the stadium.
Their tribute was widely  commended and, soon after, so was the football Everton produced. 
Newcastle were also very poor. 
‘We were shocking,’ fumed Pardew,  who watched the game from the directors’ box, as he was serving the first of a two-game touchline ban. ‘The first half was as bad as we have been in my time here.’
Off the line: Newcastle themselves forced the hosts on the back foot, and Baines had to clear
Off the line: Newcastle themselves forced the hosts on the back foot, and Baines had to clear
Only a linesman’s flag prevented Everton from taking a third-minute lead but on this occasion the decision was correct. Nikica Jelavic had strayed offside just before Fellaini’s shot had been parried by Harper.
The reprieve was only temporary as Baines gave Everton a 15th-minute lead. He exchanged passes with Fellaini before doing likewise with Steven Pienaar before smashing a drive beyond Harper.
Everton wasted good chances before the break and they were made to pay shortly after it when Ba, who came on as a substitute for Sylvain Marveaux, swept in after some poor defending.
Back in it: Second-half substitute Demba Ba took just four minutes to pull his side level
Back in it: Second-half substitute Demba Ba took just four minutes to pull his side level
Back in it: Second-half substitute Demba Ba took just four minutes to pull his side level
But Everton came back and, as Moyes said, should have been rewarded only for Fellaini to be wrongly ruled offside when running on to a Pienaar pass and then the same assistant, Ceri Richards,  failing to spot Anichebe’s header crossing the line.
When Anichebe pounced in the 88th minute, it looked as if Everton had got their rewards but Ba had the final word, applying the  dramatic end to a whirlwind night