Category: World

  • Greek sues over photo on ‘Turkish’ yoghurt in Sweden

    Greek sues over photo on ‘Turkish’ yoghurt in Sweden

    A Greek man is suing a dairy in Sweden for 50 million kronor ($6.9m; £4.5m) for using his image on pots of Turkish-style yoghurt, Swedish media report.

    Turkish Yogurt

    The man only found out his moustachioed face featured on the containers of Turkisk Yoghurt made by Lindahls when a friend living in Stockholm told him.

    Athanasios Varzanakos told Swedish Radio his friend “was annoyed and asked how it was possible” when informed.

    The dairy said it bought the photograph in good faith from an image library.

    Chief executive Anders Lindahl said it had come as a shock when the Greek man lodged a 40-page legal complaint saying that the company had used a misleading image because he had no links with Turkey.

    “We bought it from a photo agency so we assumed that everything was in order,” Mr Lindahl told the AFP news agency.

    The image remains on the Lindahls website despite the legal action.

    Relations between Greece and Turkey have long been strained and at times have turned into outright hostility.

    BBC

  • Leeds football coach has been suspended after head butting a referee

    Leeds football coach has been suspended after head butting a referee

    A junior football coach has been suspended after being accused of head butting a referee at an under 12s match in Leeds.And police and the Football Association both launched inquiries into the incident.
    Jonathan Rimmington, 44, says he is fighting to clear his name after what he describes as a stand-off with the match official.
    The dad-of-two was quizzed by police over the allegations but has been cleared by them of any wrong-doing.
    However the FA has banned him from taking charge of his Rothwell Juniors under 12s team since the incident on February 14.
    Mr Rimmington has now appointed a solicitor ahead of an FA disciplinary hearing in a bid to get the ban overturned and clear his name.
    He denies the attack, instead claiming he was left injured in the clash.
    Mr Rimmington, from Birstall, told the YEP: “The whole affair is an absolutely disgraceful advertisement for junior football in this city.
    “I have been cleared by the police but it still feels like a case of me being guilty until proved innocent because of this FA ban.”
    Trouble flared after Mr Rimmington was ordered to leave the pitch after he went on to help one of his injured players.
    The game, played at Springbank Primary School, Farsley, between Farsley Celtic and Rothwell was abandoned six minutes into the match because of the injury.
    The later incident is alleged to have happened when Mr Rimmington approached the referee on the road next to pitch as he went to his car.
    Mr Rimmington added that problems started earlier: “The grass was six inches long on the pitch and there were holes all over the place.
    “I felt it wasn’t safe and told the referee but he just told me to go away and I think we got off on the wrong footing from the start.
    “We are in charge of growing lads and have to look after them properly, they are always my main concern.
    “This has really upset them. They are getting a lot of stick because of what has happened.”
    A West Yorkshire Police spokesman confirmed the matter had been investigated and a file was passed to the Crown Prosecution Service but no further action was taken. John Riorden, governance manger for the West Riding County FA, said: “A disciplinary hearing was set up but Mr Rimmington was not available to attend. Another hearing will be arranged at a more convenient time so the matter can be dealt with.
    The YEP reported two years ago how Mr Rimmington’s team, then an under 10s said, were dubbed the ‘mini Arsenal’ because of their success in the Garforth and District junior football league.
    They were unbeaten and won the league with eight games to spare.
    More than half the team trained with the Leeds United academy and scouts from professional clubs were regularly spotted watching from the touchlines at their home games.
    Professional clubs including Manchester City, Oldham and Sheffield United have already expressed an interest in the several of the talented crop of youngsters.

    Yorkshire Evening Post

  • Bomb explodes near N Ireland MI5 base

    Bomb explodes near N Ireland MI5 base

    The Real IRA has admitted it was behind a car bomb which exploded outside MI5’s Northern Ireland headquarters.

    Palace

    The blast seems to have been timed to coincide with the precise moment that policing and justice powers devolved from Westminster to Stormont.

    It happened at about 0020 BST outside Palace Barracks, in Holywood, County Down. Police said no warning was given.

    The bomb went off as the surrounding area was being evacuated. An elderly man was treated for minor injuries.

    The bomb was placed in a taxi, which had been hijacked in the Ligoniel area of north Belfast, about seven miles from Holywood, at about 2150 BST.

    The driver was held hostage by three men for about two hours before being told to drive his taxi to the barracks.

    The vehicle was abandoned at the base just before midnight prompting police and security staff to evacuate the area. The bomb exploded about 20 minutes later as the evacuation was still taking place.

    An elderly man walking near the barracks at the time of the explosion was treated in hospital for minor injuries.

    There were two explosions – first the bomb and then the petrol tank, destroying the car and damaging other property.

    Chief Superintendent Nigel Grimshaw said the police had not received a telephoned warning about the attack.

    He said the taxi used was destroyed in the “significant explosion”.

    The senior officer visited the scene on Sunday night.

    “I saw young children in the arms of mothers and fathers, where we had moved people from the community into a local community centre – that’s the type of people who were affected by this totally callous act.

    “There is no question in my mind that it was designed to kill or seriously injure and that’s exactly what would have happened, were it not for the actions of my officers, military colleagues and indeed the community themselves who co-operated fully with us.”

    Up to 60 people were moved from their homes and spent the night in a community centre.

    The attack appears to have been timed to coincide with the transfer of policing and justice powers from London to Belfast.

    Northern Ireland Secretary Shaun Woodward said this “democratic transition stands in stark contrast to the activity of a criminal few who will not accept the will of the majority of people of Northern Ireland”.

    “They have no support anywhere,” he added.

    BBC

  • Turkey’s presence in EU as an armed invader in Christian lands

    Turkey’s presence in EU as an armed invader in Christian lands

    Unless we admit Turkey, says Mr Erdogan, the EU will “end up a Christian club”. Well, is that so very bad? Didn’t Christians invent just about everything for the last 400 years? And how would Europe remain recognisably European (or even Christian) after a mass-movement of Anatolian Muslims into our cities?

    For one thing that Ryanair has taught us is the overnight mobility of populations. And Turkish immigration will probably not consist of cosmopolitan elites but of peasants and their imams from Anatolia, accompanied by their burkas, naquibs and madrasas.

    And if you wonder about the outcome, wonder no more: simply go to Bradford and Blackburn and ask them about the boundless delights of mass-Islamic immigration. Go on. Ask them.

    kmyers@independent.ie

    myers hakkinda bilgi
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Myers
     

  • Queen offers sympathy to Poland after president’s death

    Queen offers sympathy to Poland after president’s death

    The Queen has expressed her “deepest sympathy” to the Polish government and people after the death of President Lech Kaczynski in a plane crash.

    Lech Kaczynski

    Gordon Brown said the whole world would be “saddened” and Tory leader David Cameron called it a “black day”.

    Rev Canon Bronislaw Gostomski, a priest at a Polish church in West London, was among those who died in the crash.

    Members of the community in London are gathering at a Polish cultural centre in Hammersmith to lay flowers.

    The president’s wife, Poland’s army chief, central bank governor, MPs and leading historians were among more than 80 passengers on board the flight.

    Officials say his aircraft came down as it tried to land in thick fog at Smolensk airport, western Russia.

    ‘Just speechless’

    Among the dead was the Rev Gostomski, the Polish president’s personal chaplain and the parish priest at St Andrew Bobola Polish Church in Shepherd’s Bush, west London.

    A colleague, Father Marek Reczek, told the BBC Rev Gostomski was a popular figure who had been in office for eight years.

    “It is a very difficult time for our parishioners. Many of them have been coming into the church to pray,” he said. “They have been crying.”

    He said a special mass to honour the memory of Rev Gostomski will be held next Tuesday at the church, starting at 1900.

    At the Polish Information Centre in Hammersmith, Szymon Nadolski said it did not matter if people supported the president.

    “They are still our president and intellectuals,” said the 30-year-old. “I think everybody will be united regardless of who they support.”

    Monika Skowronska, vice chairman of the Polish Social and Cultural Association, said she knew one of the passengers – Ryszard Kaczorowski, the last President of the Polish Government-in-Exile.

    “I’m in complete and utter shock. I am trying hard not to cry. People are just speechless,” she said.

    ‘Biggest tragedy’

    Members of the Polish community in the UK have been e-mailing the BBC since the news broke.

    Marcin, from London, said: “I was shocked when I discovered what happened in Smolensk this morning.

    “It is the biggest tragedy in the history of Poland, because so many very important people have died at the same time.”

    Many of the messages make reference to the purpose of the president’s visit to Russia.

    Maciej, also from London, said: “What makes this news more sad is that they were flying to mark the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, which was such a blow to our nation.”

    The Katyn forest massacre was the mass murder of thousands of Polish officers and intellectuals, carried out by Soviet forces in 1940.

    Sabina Kubica, originally from Krakow but now living in Edinburgh, wrote: “I’m absolutely shocked and deeply sad. This might be one of the darkest days.”

    Mr Brown broke off from campaigning in Scotland to pay tribute to the Polish president.

    “I think the whole world will be saddened and in sorrow as a result of the tragic death in a plane crash of President Kaczynski and his wife Maria and the party that were with them,” he said.

    “We know the difficulties that Poland has gone through, the sacrifices that he himself made as part of the Solidarity movement.

    Mr Cameron said he was a “very brave Polish patriot who stood up for freedom”.

    “He suffered hugely under communism and always stood up for his beliefs, and for his great faith in his country,” he added.

    BBC

  • Polish President Lech Kaczynski ‘in plane crash’

    Polish President Lech Kaczynski ‘in plane crash’

    Polish President Lech Kaczynski and scores of others are believed to have been killed in a plane crash in Russia.

    Lech Kaczynski, file image

    Officials in the Smolensk region said no-one had survived after the plane apparently hit trees as it came in for landing in thick fog.

    Several other government figures, including the army chief of staff, were also thought to have been on board.

    They were in Russia to mark the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, when the Soviets killed thousands of Poles.

    The BBC’s Adam Easton in Warsaw says the crash is a catastrophe for the Polish people.

    He says Prime Minister Donald Tusk was reportedly in tears when he was told.

    Plane ‘hit trees’

    The Russian emergencies ministry told Itar-Tass news agency the plane crashed at 1056 Moscow time (0656 GMT).

    Ministry spokeswoman Irina Andrianova said it had been flying from Moscow to Smolensk, but had no details on the identities of those killed.

    Smolensk regional governor Sergei Antufiev told Russian TV that no-one had survived.

    “As it was preparing for landing, the Polish president’s aircraft did not make it to the landing strip,” he said.

    “According to preliminary reports, it got caught up in the tops of trees, fell to the ground and broke up into pieces. There are no survivors in that crash.

    “We are clarifying how many people there were in the [Polish] delegation. According to preliminary reports, 85 members of the delegation and the crew.”

    Russian investigators said there were a total of 132 people on the plane.

    Smolensk map

    Controversial figure

    The president was flying in a Tupolev 154, a plane that was designed in the 1960s and capable of carrying more than 100 passengers.

    Our correspondent says there had been calls for Polish leaders to upgrade their planes.

    As well as the president and his wife, Maria, a number of senior officials were also said to be on the passenger list.

    They included the army chief of staff Gen Franciszek Gagor, central bank governor Slawomir Skrzypek and deputy Foreign Minister Andrzej Kremer.

    Mr Kaczynski has been a controversial figure in Polish politics, advocating a right-wing Catholic agenda.

    He has opposed rapid free-market reforms and favoured retaining social welfare programmes.

    BBC