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Protesting violence
03/11 | 23:45 GMT

©AFP / Pius Utomi Ekpei
A woman who lost her children to the sectarian violence rolls on the road during a womens march to protest the killing of their counterparts and children by Muslim Fulani herdsmen in Jos.
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Benitez stays positive despite defeat at Lille
03/12 | 09:27 GMT

©AFP / Philippe Huguen
Liverpool forward Fernando Torres (right) vies with Lille's defender Franck Beria during the UEFA Europa League match at the Lille metropole stadium in Villeneuve-d'Ascq. Liverpool coach Rafael Benitez praised his side's attitude despite seeing them fall to a 1-0 defeat at French side Lille in the away leg of their Europa League last-16 tie.

©AFP / Philippe Huguen
Fernando Torres (right) vies with Lille's defender Franck Beria
LILLE, France (AFP) - Liverpool coach Rafael Benitez praised his side's attitude despite seeing them fall to a 1-0 defeat at French side Lille in the away leg of their Europa League last-16 tie on Thursday.
The five-time European champions have fallen off the pace in the Premier League and face a struggle to qualify for next season's Champions League after a 1-0 defeat at Wigan on Monday left them in sixth place.
The Europa League is their only chance of salvaging silverware from an underwhelming campaign but Benitez said his team had given him reason for optimism despite the defeat in northern France.
"I think it was an improvement," said Benitez, whose side were beaten by a free-kick from 19-year-old Belgian prospect Eden Hazard with six minutes remaining.
"The reaction has been very positive. I am disappointed with the result, but really pleased with the effort of the players.
"I have confidence we can beat anyone on a good day at Anfield. I would be worried today if the players hadn't worked as hard as they have. The fans will play a part, they will push and will be behind the team.
"Lille are a good side, with good players and they are dangerous. We will play a difficult game at Anfield but have confidence we can beat them."
The return leg takes place on March 18 and Liverpool will enter the game without an away goal despite presentable chances having fallen to Ryan Babel and Fernando Torres.
"When you play away in these knockout competitions, you have to score when you have chances," Benitez said.
"In any competition it is important to try and score away, particularly in this one. It is a great advantage if you do. If not you have to be strong, but I think we were strong enough today.
"We had two or three situations, so that was a pity, but the reaction was good and we still have 90 minutes to play.

©AFP / Philippe Huguen
Rafael Benitez
"Sometimes you play well and score an early goal -- then you can manage the game. If we work as hard as we did today, we can beat anyone.
"The attitude of the players was fantastic. We were talking about not letting the fans down in terms of team effort and I think we did this."
Torres had a fairly quiet game as he continues his return from injury, with Lille goalkeeper Mickael Landreau repelling him on the only occasion he hit the target, but Benitez was pleased with his striker's showing.
"He was working hard today. You can see he has his pace coming back. But the main thing was the team and the players played at the level you expect of them."
The Reds return to league action at home to bottom club Portsmouth on Monday and Benitez said the objective now was to win every remaining game.
"Every game is important for us now," said the Spaniard.
"We have to be ready to play Portsmouth and try to win. Then we have to look to the Europa League game, that is how it is when you are a top side playing in different competitions."

Football
Benitez stays positive despite defeat at ...Pink Floyd wins court battle with EMI
03/11 | 14:24 GMT

©AFP/File / Paul Barker
Pink Floyd's Roger Waters performs at the Live 8 concert in London's Hyde Park in 2005. A British court has ruled in favour of veteran rock band Pink Floyd, barring their record company EMI from selling downloads of individual tracks from their albums.

©AFP/File / Paul Barker
Pink Floyd reunited for the giant Live 8 concert in London's Hyde Park in 2005
LONDON (AFP) - A British court ruled in favour of veteran rock band Pink Floyd on Thursday, barring their record company EMI from selling downloads of individual tracks from their albums.
The High Court ruled that EMI was bound under a contract with the band banning the sale of its records in formats other than as complete albums, without written consent.
A clause in their contract specified this to "preserve the artistic integrity of the albums," said judge Andrew Morritt.
Pink Floyd signed with EMI in 1967 and their albums include "Dark Side Of The Moon", one of the biggest selling discs of all time.
Pink Floyd found fame with in the late 1960s and early 1970s, hitting the global big-time with 1973's "Dark Side of the Moon", followed by "Wish You Were Here", "Animals" and 1979's "The Wall".
Relations between the original members of the band were strained in recent years but they reunited for the giant Live 8 concert in London's Hyde Park in 2005. Keyboard player Richard Wright died of cancer in 2008 aged 65.

Entertainment
Pink Floyd wins court battle with ...Cook, Pietersen feast on Bangladesh attack
03/12 | 13:18 GMT

©AFP / Munir Uz Zaman
England captain Alastair Cook celebrates after scoring his century in Chittagong. Cook celebrated his first day as Test captain with a superb 158 not out to put England in a commanding position in the opening Test against Bangladesh on Friday.

©AFP / Munir Uz Zaman
Cook became the fifth England player to make a century in the first Test as captain
CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh (AFP) - Alastair Cook celebrated his first day as Test captain with a superb 158 not out to put England in a commanding position in the opening Test against Bangladesh on Friday.
Kevin Pietersen was also in the limelight, regaining form with a robust 99 as the tourists posted 374-3 in their first innings at stumps on the first day. Paul Collingwood was unbeaten on 32.
Cook and Pietersen dominated the Bangladeshi attack with a wide range of shots, adding 170 for the third wicket. The England captain cracked two sixes and 14 fours in the 244-ball knock for his 11th Test hundred.
Pietersen, struggling against spin on the tour before this match, smashed one six and 15 fours in his 135-ball knock before missing out on his 17th Test hundred, bowled by left-arm spinner Abdur Razzak.
"Funny things happen to cricketers on 99 all around the world," said Pietersen.
"Probably at the end of your career you look back and think one run could have made a difference to me personally, but for the team 99 was very important. I'd have taken 99 this morning, that's for sure."

©AFP / Munir Uz Zaman
Pietersen dominated the Bangladeshi attack with a wide range of shots
Left-handed opener Cook, 25, became the fifth England player to make a century in the first Test as captain after Archie MacLaren, Allan Lamb, Andrew Strauss and Pietersen.
Cook, named skipper after Strauss was rested for the tour, also scored a century on his Test debut, against India in Nagpur in 2006.
Bangladesh's decision to put England in to bat after winning the toss backfired as they struggled for wickets throughout the day on a slow pitch despite introducing spin after seven overs.
"Our strength is spin, so it didn't matter whether we bowled first or second. In hindsight, it was probably a bad decision," said Bangladesh coach Jamie Siddons.
"We thought it (the pitch) would spin from day one, but for some unknown reason it didn't turn. I think we are pretty much nearly out of the game unless we bowl terrifically in the morning."
Pietersen, who made just 41 in three one-dayers and 22 in two innings of a practice match recently, batted fluently against spin as he once hit Shakib Al Hasan for two fours and a six in one over.

©AFP / Munir Uz Zaman
Pietersen (R) smashed one six and 15 fours before being dismissed for 99
Cook reached his hundred in style, slog-sweeping spinner Mohammad Mahmudullah over mid-wicket for a six. He added 72 for the opening wicket with debutant Michael Carberry (30) and 77 for the next with Jonathan Trott (39).
Trott looked surprised when given caught behind while attempting to hook seamer Rubel Hossain. TV replays later suggested the ball had come off the helmet.
Left-handed Carberry outscored Cook in the early part of the partnership as he began with a flurry of boundaries, driving Rubel for three fours in an over.
Bangladesh's lone success in the morning session came when Carberry was trapped leg-before by Mahmudullah while attempting to sweep.
Carberry was dropped by wicket-keeper Mushfiqur Rahim off Mahmudullah when on 30, but failed to capitalise on the chance as he fell in the bowler's next over.

Cricket
Cook, Pietersen feast on Bangladesh ...Heli-skiing back in Kashmir as violence dips
03/12 | 05:44 GMT

©AFP/File / Rouf Bhat
Foreign skiers pose for a photo before lifting off in a helicopter bound for snow-covered mountains, in Srinagar. Indian Kashmir has long been seen as one of the most extreme ski destinations in the world and a new heli-skiing service has opened up new areas of the war-torn Himalayan region.

©AFP/File / Rouf Bhat
A Switzerland-based company started a heli-skiing service on Sunday
GULMARG, India (AFP) - The awe-inspiring Himalayan slopes of war-torn Indian Kashmir represent one of the last frontiers for daredevil skiers.
Now, with violence on the wane and a new heli-skiing service offering access to incredible descents in virgin snow, the region is looking to attract the well-heeled practitioners of the extreme sport.
After securing government clearance, a Switzerland-based company started a heli-skiing service on Sunday, reviving a practice thwarted for years by violence and red tape that sees skiers taken by helicopter and dropped on remote peaks.
Priced at 9,000 euros (12,300 dollars) per person per week, trips will be available up to early April, forming part of a trend that has seen the violence-weary area revive its adventure sport industry as fighting declines.
The package includes flights from the client's country and also hotel and local transportation.

©AFP/File / Rouf Bhat
Priced at 9,000 euros ($12,300) per person per week, trips will be available up to early April
French skier Andre Bianchini, a 48-year-old mountain guide from the French Alps, was one of the first to head out this week and he plans to come back.
"I've fallen in love with the mountains here. Unlike Europe, they're mostly untouched and there are no crowds," he told AFP. "The view of the valley from a helicopter is out of this world."
Himalaya Heliski had been waiting for civil aviation ministry approval in the highly militarised zone since the start of the winter season.
More than 700,000 tourists, foreign and domestic, used to visit Kashmir annually before an insurgency against Indian rule erupted in 1989. Numbers are only now recovering after nosediving when the violence started.
"We are reviving heli-skiing as violence is declining," Nawang Rigzin Jora, the minister of tourism in Kashmir, told AFP.

©AFP/File / Tauseef Mustafa
More than 700,000 tourists used to visit Kashmir annually before an insurgency against Indian rule erupted in 1989
Unrest has dropped sharply since India and Pakistan, which administer the region jointly but claim it in full, launched a peace process in January 2004.
The daily death toll has fallen from about ten in 2001 to less than two in 2009, according to police figures, though most Western countries still advise their citizens against visiting the Muslim-majority region.
Kashmir is host to Gulmarg, India's top ski resort, which has the highest ski lift in the world, climbing to more than 4,000 metres (13,100 feet).
It drew a few thrill-seeking foreigners even during the worst days of the insurgency and this season saw hundreds more skiers from Britain, Scandinavia, Australia and North America come to sample its powder.
The resort boasts thousands of metres of untracked vertical descent and virtually no restrictions on off-piste skiing.

©AFP/File / Rouf Bhat
The package includes flights from the client's country and also hotel and local transportation
Sylvian Sudan from Himalaya Heliski, which heads to isolated peaks in a different area from Gulmarg, said he had 30 clients booked for this year and expects "many more" next year.
"This is the revival year. It will send out a message that today Kashmir is safe and everything is normal," says Sudan.
The company started heli-skiing in Kashmir in 1988, a year before the eruption of an anti-India insurgency that has claimed 47,000 lives according to the official count.
It suspended its activities in 1990 and since then it has struggled to establish a permanent service. In 2007 its chopper plunged into deep snow -- fortunately without causing injuries.
Next year a New Zealand-based company in collaboration with Gulmarg Heli-Skiing, a local company, will also step in to offer a competing service.
It had bookings from 200 foreigners for trips this winter, but was unable to get the clearances in time, said Abdul Hameed, the owner of Gulmarg Heli-Skiing.
Other activities such as hiking, river rafting and snow-cycling are also undergoing a revival in Indian Kashmir, with both locals and foreigners taking part.
"Trekking and mountaineering has picked up over the years and many foreigners and Indians can be seen enjoying the treks alongside locals," said Farooq Shah, head of Kashmir's tourism ministry.

Lifestyle
Heli-skiing back in Kashmir as violence ...Britain's Prince Philip in strip club gaffe
03/12 | 12:38 GMT

©AFP/File / Carl de Souza
Queen Elizabeth II's gaffe-prone husband Prince Philip proved that at 88 he is as undiplomatic as ever, when he asked a young sea cadet if she worked in a strip club.

©AFP/File / Carl de Souza
Prince Philip once asked an Australian Aborigenie if they were "Still throwing spears?"
LONDON (AFP) - Queen Elizabeth II's gaffe-prone husband Prince Philip proved that at 88 he is as undiplomatic as ever, when he asked a young sea cadet if she worked in a strip club, newspapers reported Friday.
The former naval officer, infamous for his colourful off-hand remarks, was visiting cadets in Exeter, southwest England, when he put the question to Elizabeth Rendle.
The 24-year-old, who works as a barmaid in a nightclub, was asked what she did for a living.
"I just said that I worked in a club and then he asked, 'oh, what, a strip club?'", she told The Daily Telegraph newspaper. "Obviously I said 'No' and then he said 'Oh, it's a bit too cold today anyway'.
"I was quite surprised but I think he was just trying to lighten the mood. It was a joke and we were all laughing which drew everyone else's attention to us.
"I don't think he put his foot in it, it was a joke and I didn't take any offence. I think he was just putting people at their ease."
The Duke of Edinburgh's comments are usually intended to put the other person at ease when meeting royalty but they have often landed him in hot water on foreign visits.
Past royal outtakes include: "Still throwing spears?" -- when quizzing an Australian Aborigine during a 2002 visit and, to a 13-year-old boy dreaming of flying in a spacecraft: "Well, you'll never fly in it, you're too fat."
During a state visit to China in 1986, he warned a group of British students: "If you stay here much longer, you'll all be slitty-eyed."




