sábado, 4 de enero de 2020

Cameron diaz and benji madden welcome toddler woman [Janury 2020]

Cameron diaz and benji madden welcome toddler woman

The couple shared the happy information on their legitimate instagram money owed with the equal publish.
"glad new 12 months from the maddens! We're so satisfied, blessed and grateful to begin this new decade by way of announcing the beginning of our daughter, raddix madden," their observe read. "she has right away captured our hearts and completed our own family."


their new daughter "has instantly captured our hearts and completed our family," they wrote. Diaz and madden, who generally avoid the highlight collectively, also plan to be very personal about their new member of the family.

"at the same time as we're delighted to share this information, we additionally experience a sturdy instinct to shield our little one's privateness," the couple shared. "so we may not be posting images or sharing any extra information, other than the truth that she is actually genuinely lovely!! A few could even say rad."
the actress and the good charlotte band member married in 2015.

viernes, 20 de mayo de 2016

Good Fiction!: A God in Ruins, Kate Atkinson.

Buen ficción !: Un Dios en ruinas, Kate Atkinson. : Un Dios en ruinas, Kate Atkinson Eso es un volumen que acompaña a 2.013 deslumbrante novela la vida de Atkinson Después de la vida, una elevación, el bucle novela apr ...

lunes, 21 de noviembre de 2011

La princesa del pop revivió en La Plata

Britney Spears se presentó antenoche
Read More... [Source: Espectáculos - lanacion.com - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

"Producto de la espontaneidad"

María Graña y Esteban Morgado presentan Entre nosotros, en El Nacional
Read More... [Source: Espectáculos - lanacion.com - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Avenida Q vuelve al Maipo por sólo tres funciones

Mariano Chiesa produce y protagoniza este multipremiado y exitoso musical
Read More... [Source: Espectáculos - lanacion.com - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

La ruta propia de Paloma Contreras

La actriz, hija de Patricio Contreras y Leonor Manso, se destaca en Mateo, de Armando Discépolo
Read More... [Source: Espectáculos - lanacion.com - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Postales de tres generaciones unidas por amor al piano

Concierto de Lyl Tiempo, sus hijos Sergio Tiempo y Karin Lechner, y su nieta Natasha Binder
Read More... [Source: Espectáculos - lanacion.com - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Otro año de grandes shows

Foo Fighters se presentará el 3 y 4 de abril, dentro del Quilmes Rock Festival
Read More... [Source: Espectáculos - lanacion.com - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Pensar en el espectador

Cine / Reestrenos
Read More... [Source: Espectáculos - lanacion.com - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

miércoles, 16 de febrero de 2011

How to index in google instantly using Digg

If you want to get indexed in Google and other search engines (Yahoo,Bing etc.) instantly just follow this steps:


1) Write an article or a few words on the blog


2) Click publish


3) Submit your article to Digg.com


4) Now go to Google.com and check if your blog is allready indexed using this command in the search box:


SITE:thenameofyourbloghere.com


5)That's all!!! your blog will be indexed.

sábado, 12 de febrero de 2011

Algeria police stifle Egypt-inspired protest

 Thousands of riot police block march through capital

By Christian Lowe and Lamine Chikhi, Reuters

  Riot policemen push against protesters during a demonstration in Algiers February 12, 2011.

Riot policemen push against protesters duringdemonstration in Algiers February 12, 2011. a

Photograph by: Louafi Larbi, Reuters

ALGIERS, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Thousands of police in riot gear blocked off the centre of Algeria’s capital on Saturday and stopped government opponents from staging a protest march that sought to emulate Egypt’s popular revolt.
Small groups of demonstrators angry at President Abdelaziz Bouteflika gathered in May 1 Square in the centre of Algiers shouting “Bouteflika out!.” They waved newspaper front pages reporting Friday’s overthrow of Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak.
But riot police hemmed them in, stopping them from carrying out a plan to march through the city. Other protesters trying to reach the square found their way blocked and at least one of the protest organisers was arrested.
“It is a state of siege,” said Abdeslam Ali Rachedi, a university lecturer and government opponent.
After about three hours, hundreds of people left the square quietly, with police opening up gaps in their cordon to let them through. Some 200 young men from a poor neighbourhood nearby stayed on the square. Some threw objects at police.
Mubarak’s resignation and last month’s overthrow of Tunisia’s leader have electrified the Arab world and led many to ask which state could be next in a region with an explosive mix of authoritarian rule and popular anger.
Widespread unrest in Algeria could have implications for the world economy because it is a major oil and gas exporter. But many analysts say a revolt is unlikely because the government can use its energy wealth to resolve most grievances.
HUGE POLICE DEPLOYMENT
Officials had banned Saturday’s protest, citing public order concerns. A massive police mobilisation, which started on Friday afternoon, appeared to have stifled it.
“I am sorry to say the government has deployed a huge force to prevent a peaceful march. This is not good for Algeria’s image,” said Mustafa Bouchachi, a leader of the League for Human Rights which helped organise the protest.
The protest was not backed by the main trade unions or the biggest opposition parties. Nearly all members of Algeria’s radical Islamist groups, which were banned in the 1990s but still have grassroots influence, stayed away.
Responding to opposition pressure, government officials say they are working hard to create more jobs and improve housing, and they have promised more democratic freedoms including the lifting of a state of emergency in force for 19 years.
Reuters reporters at the demonstration said there was a hardcore of about 150 protesters and probably substantially more but it was hard to determine how many because they were mingled with onlookers.
They said they saw police detaining a handful of protesters. There was also a small counter-protest nearby, with people chanting “We want peace not chaos!” and “Algeria is not Egypt!”
Estimates given by police and protest organisers for the numbers involved diverged greatly.
The Interior Ministry said in a statement: “An attempt to organise a march was recorded today at May 1 Square by a crowd estimated at 250 people. Fourteen people were detained and immediately released.”
Officials with the opposition RCD party, which helped organise the protest, told Reuters the demonstrators totalled between 7,000 and 10,000 and that 1,000 people were arrested.

Swiss government freezes Mubarak's assets following resignation

Mubarak's wealth has long been a subject of speculation; according to media reports, he and his family own more than $40 billion worth of assets.

By DPA
The Swiss government has decided to block any assets that may be held in Switzerland by Egyptian president Hosny Mubarak, Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey said Friday.
The minister said that a decree was issued shortly after Mubarak stepped down Friday to identify and block any assets belonging to the Egyptian president and his family.
Hosni Mubarak AP 2.12.2010 Hosni Mubarak during a press conference in Cairo, Dec. 2, 2010.
Photo by: AP
It's the same law that was applied in January to ousted Tunisian president Zine el-Abidine ben Ali and incumbent Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo, whose Swiss assets were frozen.
Bern has in recent years enacted legislation making it easier to return illegally obtained assets of corrupt leaders to their countries' coffers, on condition the funds are used for the wellbeing of the citizens.
Mubarak's wealth has long been a subject of speculation. According to media reports, he and his family own more than $40 billion worth of assets.
According to the Swiss National Bank, Egyptian deposits in Swiss bank accounts totaled 3.6 billion Swiss francs (3.7 billion dollars).

http://www.haaretz.com/news/international/swiss-government-freezes-mubarak-s-assets-following-resignation-1.342855

Mubarak's departure averted an Israeli strike on Iran

Israel will find it difficult to take action far to the east when it can not rely on the tacit agreement to its actions on its western border.

By Aluf Benn Tags: Israel news Egypt Iran
Most Israelis were either born or immigrated to this country during the period in which Hosni Mubarak ruled Egypt. This is the reality they know. And this is the significance of the stability that Mubarak provided them with.
In all the upheavals that took place in the Middle East over the past three decades, the Egyptian regime appeared to be a powerful rock. The leaders of Israel knew that their left flank was secure as they went out to war, built settlements and negotiated peace on the other fronts. The friction in relations between Jerusalem and Cairo, however frustrating it was at times, did not undermine the foundations of the strategic alliance created by the Israeli-Egyptian peace agreement.
The resignation of Mubarak following 18 days of protests in Egypt ushers in a new era of uncertainty for the entire region, and for Israel in particular. The long reign of the Egyptian leader was not unusual for the Middle East. Hafez Assad led Syria for 30 years, like Mubarak in Egypt; King Hussein and Yasser Arafat ruled for 40 years. But when they stepped off the stage, their legacy was secure. Hussein and Assad passed the reins on to their sons, and Arafat was replaced by his veteran deputy, Mahmoud Abbas. This is why the changing of the guard in Jordan, Syria and the Palestinian Authority were perceived by Israel as natural, arousing no particular concern. After all, the familiar is not all that frightening.
But this is not the situation in Egypt today. Mubarak was thrown out, before he could prepare one of his close aides or his son to take over as president. The army commanders who took over are trying to calm the Egyptian public and the international community with promises that they have no intentions of setting up a new junta in Cairo, but rather, plan to pass to transfer authority to a civilian government through free elections. But no one, including the generals in the Supreme Council of the Armed forces, knows how and when the regime transition will play out. History teaches us that after revolutions, it takes a number of years of domestic infighting before the new regime stabilizes.
This uncertainty troubles Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. His reactions during the first days of the revolution exposed deep anxieties that the peace agreement with Egypt might collapse. He tried to delay Mubarak's end as long as possible, but to no avail, and on Saturday he praised the Egyptian military's announcement that all international agreements would be respected, including the peace treaty with Israel.
Netanyahu is afraid of the possibility that Egypt may become an Islamic republic, hostile to Israel - a sort of new Iran but much closer physically. He hopes this doesn't happen and that Egypt will follow Turkey's footsteps, preserving formal ties with Israel, embassies, air connections and trade, even as it expresses strong criticism of its treatment the Palestinians. The best case scenario, in his view, even if it is less likely, is that Egypt will become like Turkey before the era of Erdogan: a pro-American country, controlled by the military.
Netanyahu shared with Mubarak his concerns about the growing strength of Iran. Egypt played a key role in the Sunni, the "moderate," axis, which lined up alongside Israel and the United States against Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his allies in Lebanon, Syria and the Gaza Strip. The toppling of the regime in Cairo does not alter this strategic logic. The revolutionaries at Tahrir Square were motivated by Egyptian national pride and not by their adoration of the Islamic Revolution in Iran. Whoever succeeds Mubarak will want to follow this line, even bolster Egyptian nationalism, and not transform Egypt into an Iranian satellite. This does not mean that Mubarak's successor will encourage Israel to strike the Iranian nuclear installations. On the contrary: they will listen to Arab public opinion, which opposes a preemptive war against Iran. Israel will find it difficult to take action far to the east when it can not rely on the tacit agreement to its actions on its western border. Without Mubarak there is no Israeli attack on Iran. His replacement will be concerned about the rage of the masses, if they see him as a collaborator in such operation. Whoever is opposed to a strike, or fear its consequences - even though they appear to be in favor, like Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak - now have the ultimate excuse. We wanted to strike Iran, they will write in their memoirs but we could not because of the revolution in Egypt. Like Ehud Olmert says that he nearly made peace, they will say that they nearly made war. In his departure Mubarak prevented a preemptive Israeli war. This appears to have been his last contribution to regional stability.

source: http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/mubarak-s-departure-averted-an-israeli-strike-on-iran-1.343012