Ahad, 9 Februari 2014

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


In US, ‘natural’ food may be anything but

Posted: 09 Feb 2014 04:47 PM PST

February 10, 2014

In America, there is no definition of 'natural'. – AFP/Relaxnews pic, February 10, 2014.In America, there is no definition of 'natural'. – AFP/Relaxnews pic, February 10, 2014.In the United States, pre-packaged foods loaded with artificial ingredients and chemicals can make it onto grocery store shelves boasting the label "natural".

Why? Because in America, there is no definition of "natural".

This grey area has led consumer advocates to threaten lawsuit after lawsuit against big food giants, alleging that their claims are misleading and illegal.

"There are just too damn many 'natural' lawsuits," said lawyer Stephen Gardner of the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), estimating there have been around 50 in the past decade.

"It only scratches the surfaces of the number of companies that are making these claims. We keep coming across them," he said.

Some lawsuits have been merely threatened by CSPI, and eventually settled out of court after the company agreed to change labeling.

Others have been filed by private parties seeking class action payouts.

The latest involves Kraft Foods, maker of Crystal Light powdered drink mixes which contain artificial sweeteners and colors, a texturiser called maltodextrin and a synthetic preservative called butylated hydroxyanisole.

In January, CSPI notified Kraft of its intent to sue if the word "natural" continues to appear on products like Natural Lemonade and Natural Lemon Iced Tea.

Gardner said talks with the company are ongoing, but given his experience – he first sued Kraft over similar claims on its Capri Sun drinks in 2007 – he expects Kraft to counter that the word "natural" relates to the flavour.

"I am not aware of a lemonade flavour. I am aware of lemon," Gardner said.

Asked for comment, a Kraft spokeswoman told AFP that a federal judge in California recently dismissed a similar claim against Crystal Light.

"Our products are clearly and accurately labelled with information that is both truthful and helpful for consumers," spokeswoman Caroline Krajewski said in an email.

Foods that claim to be "natural" but clearly are not can slip past authorities because the main US regulatory agency, the Food and Drug Administration, has not formally defined "natural".

However, the regulator has sent several warning letters to companies in the past, FDA spokeswoman Theresa Eisenman told AFP in an email.

"Although the FDA has not established a formal definition for the term 'natural', we do have a longstanding policy concerning the use of 'natural' in food labelling," she said.

"The FDA considers the term 'natural' to mean that nothing artificial or synthetic (including all color additives regardless of source) has been included in, or has been added to, a food that would not normally be expected to be in the food."

The FDA has left Crystal Light alone, and consumer groups complain that regulators are not aggressive enough, leaving plenty of room for corporations to exploit well-meaning shoppers who appear to be susceptible to packaging claims.

According to the market research firm Nielsen, "natural" products produce over $22 billion (RM73.2 billion) in annual sales.

A full 77% of US consumers polled said they believe "natural" claims at least some of the time, and 9% said they always do.

Despite the high volume of lawsuits, the matters often settle out of court and corporations avoid big payouts, said Gardner.

"We stop them, but they get to keep the money they stole from consumers by fraud," he said.

In some cases, a company relents to pressure from consumer groups but is sued again by private interests seeking a cash payout to people who bought the product.

Such was the case with Ben and Jerry's ice cream, which took the claim off 48 products in 2010 but has since faced a drawn out class-action lawsuit.

Some companies have quietly dropped "natural" from their packages, including Naked Juice and Frito Lay chips, as the food industry faces thorny legal questions over genetically modified ingredients and common additives like corn syrup.

In Gardner's view, the lawsuits would stop if the FDA came up with a definition for "natural".

But Baylen Linnekin, executive director of the non-profit group Keep Food Legal, said more regulation is not the answer.

"The idea that the FDA needs to define every word that has ever been used to refer to food is ludicrous," said Linnekin.

"The occasional lawsuit helps keep companies honest and that has always been the case." – AFP/Relaxnews, February 10, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Resurgent Schalke earn third straight win

Posted: 09 Feb 2014 02:45 PM PST

February 10, 2014

Hanover's Mame Diouf and Schalke 04's Felipe Santana (right) jump for the ball during the German first division Bundesliga match in Gelsenkirchen, yesterday. – Reuters pic, February 10, 2014.Hanover's Mame Diouf and Schalke 04's Felipe Santana (right) jump for the ball during the German first division Bundesliga match in Gelsenkirchen, yesterday. – Reuters pic, February 10, 2014.Schalke 04 extended their six-match unbeaten run with a 2-0 win at home to Hanover yesterday to stay fourth in the Bundesliga behind run-away leaders Bayern Munich.

Schalke host Cristiano Ronaldo's Real Madrid in the last 16, first leg of the Champions League later this month and have hit form after back-to-back defeats in December with three straight wins since the winter break.

The Royal Blues put on a regal performance at Gelsenkirchen's Veltins Arena with Jefferson Farfan tapping home after a superb run from defender Sead Kolasinac on 39 minutes.

Teenage wunderkind Max Meyer added a second a minute before the break.

"That was a very good performance we put in," enthused Schalke coach Jens Keller, who said defender Atsuto Uchida picked up a leg injury and midfielder Roman Neustadter had a badly cut knee.

The defeat ended Hanover's recent form having won their first two games of the year under new coach Tayfun Korkut to leave the guests lying tenth.

Earlier, ten-man VfB Stuttgart dropped closer to the Bundesliga's relegation battle after suffering their fifth-straight defeat in a 4-1 rout at home to buoyant Augsburg.

"There's no need to discuss the performance," fumed Stuttgart coach Thomas Schneider.

"Their victory was deserved and I am very, very disappointed, we must apologise to the fans as we gifted the three points in a ten-minute spell.

Bavarian minnows Augsburg are dreaming of international football next season as they rose to eighth after a sixth consecutive game unbeaten.

Two goals by midfielder Andre Hahn did the damage for Augsburg, who set a new club record of nine victories in a Bundesliga season at Stuttgart's Mercedes Benz Arena.

To compound the hosts' misery, Stuttgart had captain Vedad Ibisevic sent off with 53 minutes gone for striking Augsburg's Jan-Ingwer Callsen-Bracker in the face.

The defeat leaves Stuttgart 14th in the table, only two places from the relegation zone.

Hamburg are also deep in the relegation mire after they were thrashed 3-0 at home to Hertha Berlin on Saturday night to set an unwelcome club record of six straight defeats.

Colombia striker Adrian Ramos, who has been linked to Real Madrid and Borussia Dortmund for next season, scored twice to leave Hamburg second from bottom as they were booed by their own fans at the final whistle.

Several senior stars, including captain Rafael van der Vaart, found themselves pelted by missiles when they went to calm angry fans after the game.

Hamburg have said they will continue with coach Bert van Marwijk, but results must improve.

Third-placed Borussia Dortmund romped to a 5-1 win in Bremen on Saturday.

Dortmund dismantled Werder Bremen with Poland striker Robert Lewandowski and attacking midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan both scoring twice.

The thrashing came at a price as both Germany midfielders Marco Reus and Sven Bender are ruled out of this week's double header against Eintracht Frankfurt tomorrow in the cup and in Saturday's league match.

This was the 12th time this season Bremen have conceded three or more goals and coach Robin Dutt is under increasing pressure with his side 13th and just three points from the relegation places.

Leaders Bayern extended both their unbeaten Bundesliga records with a 2-0 win at Nuremberg to remain 13 points clear in the Bundesliga as the runaway leaders left Nuremberg with 56 out of a possible 60 points this season.

This was Bayern's 45th unbeaten Bundesliga match, dating back to October 2012, and their 29th unbeaten away league game to extend their records with a rare win in Nuremberg.

Goals either side of half-time by striker Mario Mandzukic and captain Philipp Lahm sealed the win.

In the basement battle, Eintracht Frankfurt moved up to 12th with a 3-0 win at home to bottom side Eintracht Braunschweig.

Freiburg were held to a 1-1 draw at home to Hoffenheim while sixth-placed VfL Wolfsburg enjoyed a 3-0 win at home to Mainz 05.

On Friday, second-placed Bayer Leverkusen enjoyed a 1-0 win at Borussia Moenchengladbach with South Korea's Son Heung-Min scoring the second-half winner. – AFP, February 10, 2014.

Juventus spurn chance to extend as misfiring Roma held

Posted: 09 Feb 2014 02:41 PM PST

February 10, 2014

Juventus's Paul Pogba (right) fights for an aerial ball with Hellas Verona's Marco Donadel during their Italian Serie A match at Bentegodi Stadium in Verona, yesterday. – Reuters pic, February 10, 2014.Juventus's Paul Pogba (right) fights for an aerial ball with Hellas Verona's Marco Donadel during their Italian Serie A match at Bentegodi Stadium in Verona, yesterday. – Reuters pic, February 10, 2014.Verona forward Juan Gomez came off the bench to level late and secure a 2-2 draw at home to Juventus as the champions spurned the chance to extend their lead on misfiring Roma yesterday.

Roma were away to Lazio in the city derby only four days after a 3-2 win over Napoli in the first leg of the Italian Cup semi-final.

But despite shading what was a rough and tumble encounter at the Olympic Stadium, Rudi Garcia's men failed to grab the win that would have reduced their deficit on the Bianconeri to seven points with a game in hand.

Draws for both title challengers meant Juventus retained their nine-point lead over the Giallorossi, with Napoli, who outclassed AC Milan on Saturday, now only four points off second place in third.

With Napoli virtually out of the title equation, it remains a two-horse race for this season's scudetto and Garcia, whose side have yet to play a postponed match against Parma, appeared defiant.

"We have to look on the bright side because we haven't lost any points to Juventus," the Frenchman told Sky Sport Italia.

"Their draw adds even more value to our 3-1 win (away to Verona two weeks ago). But we have to remain humble. We have yet to play Parma and that's a game we still have to win."

Juventus looked to be on their way to a comfortable win in the north east after a Carlos Tevez double inside 21 minutes.

However Luca Toni reduced arrears just after the restart and Juan Gomez headed past Gianluigi Buffon in the fourth minute of injury time as Juve's defence lost focus at a late free kick.

Juve coach Antonio Conte told Sky: "These kinds of games last 95 minutes, and we should never lose our concentration, especially in dead ball situations.

"There were other lapses of concentration in the second half and hopefully this will serve us well. We have to be conscious of the fast this title is not won yet."

Trailing 2-0, Verona's woes deepened just after the half hour when their claims for a penalty were waved off despite the ball clearly coming off the arms of defender Martin Caceres following a corner.

The hosts earned some rough justice when striker Toni headed home seven minutes after the restart to reduce arrears.

Ironically, Toni and several other Verona players appeared to have breached Juve's defence as Romulo whipped in a free kick that Toni headed past Buffon at the keeper's near post.

Former Southampton striker Pablo Dani Osvaldo made his Juve debut when he replaced Llorente on 65 minutes and missed scoring by inches when he swiped Andrea Pirlo's through ball past Rafael and off the post.

Buffon then produced a fine one-handed save to keep out Toni's left-footed strike and Verona had another penalty claim denied after the ball came off the arm of Stephan Lichsteiner as the Swiss marked Toni at Buffon's near post.

Juve continued to threaten, however, and Arturo Vidal tested Rafael with a strike which the keeper did well to push over.

But the visitors were stunned at the death.

The hosts won a free kick to the right of Juve's area, it was quickly taken and Romulo whipped in a cross which Gomez headed past Buffon after slipping between Angelo Ogbonna and Pogba.

"It's an unbelievable feeling... and feels really special taking a point from such an epic side," said Gomez.

In yesterday's late game veteran defender Walter Samuel headed a 48th minute winner past Gianluca Pegolo to secure a 1-0 win for dominant Inter Milan at home to Sassuolo.

Inter routed Sassuolo 7-0 away at the start of the season but although the league newcomers remain in the relegation zone there was to be no repeat as Pegolo saved the visitors on several occasions.

Inter's win moved them up to fifth at the expense of Verona following their earlier defeat. – AFP, February 10, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Clooney whistles at Berlin Fest, but reality does one better

Posted: 08 Feb 2014 06:57 PM PST

February 09, 2014

Clooney signs autographs as he arrives on the red carpet for the screening of the movie 'The Monuments Men' at the 64th Berlinale International Film Festival in Berlin, yesterday. – Reuters, February 9, 2014.Clooney signs autographs as he arrives on the red carpet for the screening of the movie 'The Monuments Men' at the 64th Berlinale International Film Festival in Berlin, yesterday. – Reuters, February 9, 2014.George Clooney whistled a tune and sang the praises of Belgian beer at the Berlin film festival for the international premiere yesterday of his World War Two art caper "The Monuments Men", but reality had already given him publicity money can't buy.

The premiere of the film which has been released in the United States to mixed reviews was one of the most anticipated events of the festival, where four German films are among 20 seeking the top prize.

Earlier in the day, the festival saw the press premiere of director Dominik Graf's sumptuous historic film "Beloved Sisters" based on a love triangle involving the 18th-century German poet Friedrich Schiller.

But it was Clooney's presence that created a huge queue of press to attend his news conference, where he also acknowledged that reality had caught up with his film right here in Germany.

The discovery last year of a huge trove of artwork in a Munich apartment has created a flurry of news about paintings and other treasures stolen or expropriated by the Nazis and still awaiting restitution to their rightful owners.

"We've had a long three-year conversation with the guys here at Fox (the film's distributors) to get the news to hold the story," Clooney joked, before turning serious.

"It's a story that's going to keep coming up because there's still an awful lot of art still missing and will be found in lots of people's basements. It just happened to be one rather amazing find, one and a half billion dollars... It's an amazing conversation to have, the responsibility of getting back the art to people," he said.

Clooney, who enjoys clowning at festival events, was goaded by a questioner to whistle the theme to the movie, which she said was a quote of the cat theme from Prokofiev's "Peter and the Wolf". But in Clooney's rendition, joined by co-start Matt Damon, it only seemed to have the first three notes in common.

A questioner from Belgian media asked why the film, partly set there, was not filmed there. Clooney said this was for cost reasons but he said he had visited Belgium in preparation for the film and had enjoyed the beer.

Asked repeatedly why he'd chosen this story for one of his biggest budget movies, Clooney said the historical events had grabbed him, much like the war action stories of his youth. This one, he said, had an interesting twist.

"Hollywood does like a good World War Two story but this seemed like a story I didn't know. It wasn't a megapatriotic film but a chance to talk about a unique group of people who did something for the first time in the history of war, which is the victor didn't keep the spoils, they gave it back."

Study in contrasts

Striking a contrast with the festival's first German entry "Jack", a gritty contemporary family drama, director Graf's "Beloved Sisters" depicts the 18th-century national hero and two beautiful sisters from the penniless aristocracy attempting to establish a loving "ménage a trois" over more than a decade.

Schiller marries the younger of the two sisters, who have made a pact to share everything - including him - in an attempt to protect their idyll under the guise of convention.

But the elder sister, who is trapped in an unhappy marriage of convenience, increasingly realises their naivety, and the equilibrium of their love triangle starts to become undone when the younger one becomes pregnant.

"The core of the movie is incredible tenderness," Graf told a news conference, noting that he wanted to focus on their love rather than on Schiller as a famed writer and protagonist of the "Sturm und Drang" literary movement, together with Goethe.

Graf, who has of late directed more television than film, said he let his film sprawl out over more than two hours in order to capture the slower pace of that era.

"We wanted to avoid the impression that people were racing through the streets back then," Graf said. "We would force an artificial speed, it would have falsified the whole thing."

Producer Uschi Reich, who came up with the idea, said she was fascinated by the way people were challenging the norms of relationships around the time of the French revolution in 1789.

"At that time people were really thinking about utopias, like we were in the '70s, utopias of love, living together, shared accommodations," she said. "Before and after the revolution, people tried and tested new forms of coexistence."

The film is punctuated by the characters reading out the letters sent between Schiller and the elder sister, Caroline von Beulwitz, who went on herself to become an author of note.

Graf said he reconstructed those letters himself, as von Beulwitz became ashamed of them towards the end of her life, "piled everything onto one huge pyre and burnt them all".

"Beloved Sisters" is one of 20 movies competing for the "Golden Bear", the festival's top prize which will be awarded next week. More than 400 films are screening at the Berlinale. – Reuters, February 9, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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As Afghan deployment winds down, UK ponders military’s role

Posted: 08 Feb 2014 11:21 PM PST

February 09, 2014

As British troops strip down equipment and load containers to leave Afghanistan, its military self-confidence has rarely been lower.

When Britain ramped up its presence in Helmand Province in 2006, it was a different story.

Afghanistan, current and former officers say, was seen as a winnable war that would showcase Britain's military and rebuild its reputation with US officers underwhelmed by its performance in Iraq.

Both inside and outside the armed forces, however, the recent campaign is increasingly seen as a disastrous error, sapping Britain's enthusiasm for using military force just as savage budget cuts begin to bite.

Other Western allies are cutting their budgets too. However the bottom line for Britain, analysts say, is that it may be left without the forces or the will to mount operations as it has in the past.

Last month former US Defence Secretary Robert Gates (pic right) complained Britain's military could no longer offer a "full spectrum" of military capabilities to act as a full US ally in future conflicts or confrontations.

That prompted an angry rebuttal from Prime Minister David Cameron, pointing to new equipment purchases. Britain will launch the first of two new aircraft carriers later this year, having spent several years with none. Defence sources say its first order for more than a dozen F-35 Joint Strike Fighters could come within weeks.

Even within Whitehall, however, there is open debate over the military's focus.

In a speech to the Royal United Services Institute in December, Chief of Defence Staff General Nicholas Houghton said that concentrating too much on "exquisite equipment" risked leaving a "hollow force" with inadequate personnel.

"Unattended, our current course leads to a strategically incoherent force structure," Houghton said.

He said that while in his 40 years of service the military has never been held in such high public regard as it is now, "the purposes to which they have most recently been put have seldom been more deeply questioned."

Recent wars, he said, had produced a "creeping reluctance" to use force that could prove problematic. Britain lost 447 soldiers in Afghanistan - twice the losses in Iraq or the 1982 Falklands War.

In September, when Parliament vetoed British involvement in any US-led strike on Syria, many officials saw the move as setting a precedent that could limit future operations.

London's International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) estimates that the 8% planned cuts in defence spending from 2010 would reduce Britain's combat capability by 20-30%.

On Wednesday, the IISS's annual global military balance assessment showed Britain has lost its place as the world's largest defence buyer to Saudi Arabia, although it remains the largest in Europe outside Russia.

France might have a lower overall defence budget - US$52 billion (RM173 billion) in 2013 against Britain's US$57 billion (RM190 billion), according to the IISS, but it is seen to have greater military reach and enthusiasm to act.

A Pentagon-funded report by the US-based Rand Corporation said France had built a more flexible military able to adapt more quickly to conflicts like in Libya or Mali. By comparison, Britain's focus on Afghanistan had left its army ill-suited to other conflicts.

In the words of one UK defence source, the British military "is now perfectly designed to support the US in the kinds of wars America has no intention of fighting again."

Nor is that the only worry. "The Syrian vote was a big deal," says Nikolas Gvosdev, professor of national security studies at the US Naval War College. "We had always assumed Britain would be there and then suddenly it wasn't."

A new strategic defence review is expected in 2015, also the year of Britain's next general election.

Interservice rivalries, some say, have long bedevilled British defence planning, as has a political focus on retaining defence industry jobs in marginal constituencies.

In addition, Scotland, home to Britain's nuclear submarines, will be voting in a referendum this year that could see it secede from the United Kingdom, although most polls suggest it will not. Cameron's promised vote on Britain's membership in the European Union could also have an impact on military relations with European powers, particularly France.

With garrisons in Germany closing, a larger majority of Britain's army will be based within its shores than at any time since the 18th century.

On paper, Britain's "Force 2020" - the military it expects to have by the end of the decade - should be able to provide one ongoing "stabilisation operation" with up to 6,500 personnel, ships and aircraft, together with shorter-lived operations with 1,000-2,000 troops.

The largest single one-off operation the military could mount, the Ministry of Defence said, would involve some 30,000 personnel, roughly two-thirds of its 2003 Iraq force.

However, defence experts say that assumption was based on no further cuts, something seen as unlikely.

Britain's military is still broadly respected. Its special forces remain legendary, if small, and the Royal Navy's 15-ship minesweeper force is amongst the world's largest, much of it permanently deployed to the Gulf where US commanders say they would prove vital in any war.

The new carriers, although the second may yet be mothballed, will be the largest warships Britain has ever launched, potentially valuable to US and other allies as their overstretched navies struggle to cover the globe.

Still, defence chief Houghton warned the Royal Navy in particular, risked losing "critical mass" in personnel.

In January, British media reported the country's only available warship was forced to sprint the length of the North Sea at maximum speed after a Russian warship began loitering near UK territorial waters off Scotland.

A smaller military is not necessarily less capable. Britain might now have only 230 combat jets against 450 in 1993, but they are more capable, able to launch Storm Shadow cruise missiles without entering enemy airspace. British defence technology is still seen as world-class.

There is also no shortage of enthusiasm for new tasks. Houghton said he favoured increasing the number of troops on UN peacekeeping, and others talk of increasing training missions to Africa.

Finding those troops could be tough, however. The army will take the brunt of impending cuts, losing 20,000 soldiers from 2010 numbers to stand at 82,000 by 2018.

Plans call for reserve forces to grow from some 22,000 now to 35,000 by the end of the decade, but recruitment has been lacklustre, and the number of part-time soldiers has fallen. A new recruitment campaign has begun.

Britain's fourth Anglo-Afghan war looks set to end better than the first, an initially successful 1839 invasion that turned into defeat and disastrous withdrawal three years later.

Critics say that by going on the offensive in Helmand in 2006, Britain may have made matters in Afghanistan worse, helping kickstart a nationwide insurgency. The operation was launched when a UK general, David Richards, later head of the entire British military, was commanding the NATO force.

US officials were unimpressed after a September 2012 attack on the UK-guarded Camp Bastion killed two US marines and destroyed several aircraft. The Pentagon fired two US generals shortly after, but no British officers were punished. The MoD says there was no evidence UK commanders were responsible.

"The irony is that Afghanistan was supposed to justify the Army's existence," said one former officer. Instead, "it's ended up guaranteeing its destruction." - Reuters, February 9, 2014.

Three years after Fukushima Japan’s nuclear plants still not empowered

Posted: 08 Feb 2014 09:57 PM PST

February 09, 2014

Hundreds of technicians and engineers are camped out in Tokyo hotels trying to revive Japan's nuclear industry, shut down in the wake of the Fukushima (pic) disaster almost three years ago.

It's proving a hard slog. A new, more independent regulator is in place, asking difficult questions and seeking to impose tougher safety rules on utilities that were largely their own masters for the past 50 years.

The Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) was created in 2012 and set new safety guidelines in July last year. It now has four teams vetting reactors at nine nuclear power stations on a list of those seeking to re-start. A deadline to complete the checks has been missed, as the NRA is still asking for reams of information. No one is able to predict when the first of 48 reactors will be turned back on.

The delays are biting the utilities which are having to spend billions of dollars to import fossil fuels to keep the power on, pushing Japan into a record trade deficit and risking undermining Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's polices to end years of stagnant growth.

"All the utilities are in a similar situation and, unless outstanding issues are resolved, we can't judge that they are in compliance with the standards," Tomoya Ichimura, an NRA director, told Reuters.

The regulator and staff from the utilities and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd, a leading supplier of nuclear plant equipment, are ploughing through mountains of paperwork on the technical specifications of reactors and their vulnerability to natural disasters such as the earthquake and tsunami that knocked out the Fukushima Daiichi station in March 2011.

All lack experience in carrying out such detailed safety checks because of the lax regime that existed before Fukushima.

"Only the framework of the safety criteria was decided, not the details, so the dialogue between the NRA and power companies to work out the specifics is taking time," said Seiichi Nakata, Project Leader, Department of Policy, Communication and International Affairs at the Japan Atomic Industry Forum.

Once the checks are done, reactors must undergo planned inspections, which took as long as two months under the previous regime, as well as get the go-ahead from local authorities before they can be turned back on. The plants are being treated as if they have just been built and are seeking certification to start operating for the first time.

Interviews with utility and nuclear industry staff, regulators and government officials reveal a climate of uncertainty, frustration and long hours.

A taskforce of some 90 NRA inspectors dispatch orders and requests to hundreds of staff from regional utilities seconded to the capital and camped out for months in business hotels near the regulator's headquarters. As many as 2,800 staff at Mitsubishi Heavy are involved in dealing with utilities' requests on specifications and other data, the company said.

Kyushu Electric Power Co, Hokkaido Electric Power Co, Kansai Electric Power Co and Shikoku Electric Power Co say they have each stationed scores of employees in Tokyo to respond to queries from the regulator.

A typical working day for them lasts from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. They stay in cheap business hotels within a quick commute of the NRA headquarters in a leafy district of central Tokyo. One of those, the Hotel Unizo in Shimbashi, a bustling district of bars and restaurants, charges 11,000 yen (RM358) a night. To keep costs in check, some companies offer staff a daily allowance of as little as 1,500 yen (RM49) for meals, and no laundry, said one person close to the safety review process.

Any downtime not spent returning home to visit families is used to prepare for more meetings with the regulator.

"Everyone involved in the safety reviews is irritated and it is mentally draining," said one staffer at a regional utility, who has been stationed in Tokyo since July and has missed key dates on his children's school calendar.

"I can't read books or watch TV. There's no time to relax," he said, adding he rarely has time even to wash his clothes. "I have 20 sets of underwear and socks bought from convenient stores rolled up like sushi in my office," he said.

The utilities also rent office space for staff to prepare paperwork for the regulator, said an official who oversees the process at a regional utility. Asked when he expected reactors to be re-started, he replied: "That's what we want to know."

Utilities must submit thousands of pages of documents outlining their compliance and readiness on a checklist of 27 main items required by the NRA, covering everything from quake protection to their emergency responses. Kyushu Electric, which has applied to re-start four reactors, has submitted more than 10,000 pages of documents to the regulator, said spokesman Hiroki Yamaguchi.

The regulator is still feeling its way and often changes the criteria for compliance, forcing utilities to submit more documentation, people in the industry said. The utilities then take their requests to Mitsubishi Heavy, which is struggling to meet deadlines.

"Mitsubishi Heavy basically handles safety assessments of the plants, and the utilities vie with each other to get help from them, creating a bottleneck," said the person involved in the checks at a regional utility.

Mitsubishi Heavy declined to comment on claims that it was the reason for some delays.

The cost to Japan's economy and the utilities' finances is heavy. Japan imported a record 87.5 million tonnes of LNG last year, at a cost of US$69 billion (RM230 billion), according to customs-cleared import data. Imports of thermal coal were also at record levels.

"There's a growing consensus from a purely economic perspective that Japan needs to re-start as many reactors as it can, in order to build out the diversification of its power sources and reduce fuel prices," said Tom O'Sullivan, founder of independent energy consultancy Mathyos Japan.

Forecasts that the first nuclear reactor would be back in operation by the middle of this year are misplaced, said Tetsuo Yuhara, a director at The Canon Institute of Global Studies, who previously spent 30 years at Mitsubishi Heavy.

"I have no forecast for re-starts. It's the same situation as a year ago, as two years ago. Nothing has changed." - Reuters, February 9, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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Amazon removes ‘gibberish’ ebooks from Kindle shelves

Posted: 08 Feb 2014 07:13 PM PST

February 09, 2014

Amazon last Friday yanked gibberish translations of classic works from the shelves of its online ebooks shop.

An array of titles including "Treasure Island" and "War of the Worlds" billed as translations of famed books into French, Italian, and Spanish and offered by an "M Angelo" for 99 cents each were gone after complaints that they made no sense.

The seller had "direct published" the books, which are in the public domain and no longer under copyright protection, and even added his or her name as co-author next to renowned authors such as Robert Louis Stevenson and H. G. Wells.

The digital books appeared to have been translated using the kind of automated program available as a free service online.

"The books are no longer available," Kindle team spokesperson Brittany Turner said in a brief email reply to an AFP inquiry.

Amazon declined to disclose information about who was behind the translations or how many of the ebooks were sold.

Amazon Direct publishing platform rules bar the sale of public domain content that is freely available online by anyone other than the original copyright owners.

Kindle also reserves the right to reject ebooks that are outright awful.

"We don't accept books that provide a poor customer experience," Kindle Direct Publishing content guidelines stated.

"We reserve the right to determine whether content provides a poor customer experience."

The posted list of what constitutes a lousy reading experience includes books being shabbily translated.

Other Kindle self-publishing taboos included pornography, offensive content, and violating copyrights. – AFP, February 9, 2014.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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Keputusan Taib tidak beri kesan terhadap politik serta pentadbiran negeri

Posted: 09 Feb 2014 01:48 AM PST

February 09, 2014

Biarpun sedih dengan keputusan Ketua Menteri Tan Sri Abdul Taib Mahmud untuk meletak jawatan, tiga presiden parti komponen Barisan Nasional (BN) Sarawak senada bahawa keputusan itu tidak akan memberi impak keterlaluan.

Ini, menurut mereka, asalkan pemimpin yang bakal dipilih meneruskan corak kepimpinan yang dibentuk sejak sekian lama.

Presiden Parti Progresif Demokratik Sarawak (SPDP) Tan Sri William Mawan Ikom (gambar) berkata berkata Taib telah lama mentadbir Sarawak, meninggalkan asas kukuh pentadbiran, justeru pemimpin baharu yang bakal dipilih hanya perlu meneruskan sistem yang telah lama diamalkan itu.

"Selagi sistem serta pentadbiran sedia ada diteruskan, saya percaya tidak akan ada impak besar kepada Sarawak, walaupun Taib sudah lama mentadbir negeri ini. Kita semua faham keputusan ini menyedihkan ramai pihak khususnya rakyat Sarawak, namun keputusan dibuat selepas pelbagai perkara diambil kira," katanya.

Mawan berkata Taib merupakan pemimpin yang bertanggungjawab, di bawah pentadbirannya berjaya membawa perubahan pesat serta pembangunan terhadap negeri itu, tidak lupa hasil sokongan penuh rakyat negeri ini.

"Bagi saya Taib bukan hanya seorang pemimpin biasa, dia adalah pemimpin hebat," katanya.

Presiden Parti Rakyat Sarawak (PRS) Tan Sri James Jemut Masing berkata keputusan Taib untuk mengundurkan diri tidak mengejutkan, dan akan memberi sokongan kepada bakal pengganti yang akan dipilih nanti.

"Saya sudah mengagak berita ini, rasa amat sedih namun PRS akan memberikan sokongan penuh kepada keputusan serta sesiapa saja yang bakal dipilih. Saya sendiri akan memberitahu Majlis Kerja Tertinggi (MKT) PRS agar mereka berpendirian sama dengan saya, menyokong calon tersebut," katanya.

Masing juga berharap walaupun Taib berundur, beliau akan terus memberi nasihat kepada pemimpin-pemimpin politik negeri.

"Kita juga menyokong cadangan MKT Parti Pesaka Bumiputera agar Taib dicalon serta menjadi Yang Dipertua Negeri yang baharu," katanya.

Sementara itu, Presiden Parti Rakyat Bersatu Sarawak (SUPP) Tan Sri Peter Chin Fah Kui berkata SUPP bersedia dan berupaya bekerjasama rapat dengan ketua menteri Sarawak yang baharu untuk terus memajukan negeri ini dan kesejahteraan penduduknya.

"Taib mengabdikan diri dalam jangka yang panjang untuk berkhidmat kepada negara dan negeri. Dedikasi beliau terhadap tugasnya dan banyak dasar inovatif yang beliau perkenalkan selama bertahun-tahun tidak syak lagi telahpun bertapak di samping membuahkan hasil dari segi transformasi ekonomi di kawasan bandar dan luar bandar.

"Hakikat bahawa Sarawak berada di tempat kedua dalam kalangan negeri di Malaysia dari segi KDNK per kapita bukan satu kebetulan, sebaliknya terhasil daripada usaha berterusan dan lestari di pihak kerajaan negeri," katanya.

Chin berkata setiap pemimpin perlu berdepan saat genting dalam hidupnya apabila perlu membuat keputusan untuk bersara daripada berkhidmat kepada orang ramai, tidak kira apa jua jawatan atau kuasa yang mungkin dipegangnya.

"Tun Mahathir (Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad) dan Tun Abdullah (Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi) telah melakukannya dan kini Taib pula berbuat demikian. Selamat bersara dan mudah-mudahan pengganti beliau serta yang lainnya akan mendapat manfaat daripada pengalaman beliau yang kaya serta pelbagai itu," katanya.- Bernama, 9 Februari, 2014.

Peletakan jawatan Waytha tidak jejas usaha bantu kaum India, kata Dr Subramaniam

Posted: 09 Feb 2014 01:41 AM PST

February 09, 2014

Tindakan Pengerusi Barisan Bertindak Hak Penganut Hindu (Hindraf) P. Waytha Moorthy meletak jawatan sebagai timbalan menteri tidak akan menjejaskan agenda MIC untuk membantu komuniti India, kata Timbalan Presiden MIC Datuk Seri Dr S. Subramaniam.

Katanya beliau melihat peletakan jawatan Waytha sebagai keputusan peribadi dan tidak menggugat kedudukan perwakilan kaum India dalam kerajaan.

"Bagi saya mereka hanya membangkitkan isu yang sudah dibangkitkan oleh kami (MIC)," katanya kepada pemberita selepas menghadiri upacara keagamaan di kuil Hindu di Petaling Jaya, dekat Kuala Lumpur hari ini.

Beliau berkata MIC telah dan akan terus berusaha menangani isu berkaitan kaum India dan kedudukannya dalam kabinet membolehkan usaha itu dilaksana dengan lebih berkesan.

"Sudah tentu ada sesetengah isu tidak dapat diselesaikan dengan segera. Kami berpuas hati dalam sesetengah isu dan ada juga yang kami tidak puas hati," katanya menambah kata antara isu yang diselesaikan dengan jaya ialah pendidikan Tamil, manakala yang kurang memuaskan pula berkenaan pengambilan kaum India dalam perkhidmatan awam.

Ditanya sama ada MIC akan membuka pintu dan bekerjasama dengan Waytha untuk meningkatkan taraf hidup kaum India, beliau berkata perkara itu tidak mustahil, bagaimanapun bergantung kepada beberapa aspek termasuk bidang kerjasama yang boleh dilakukan.

Hindraf dalam kenyataan semalam, berkata peletakan jawatan Waytha sebagai Timbalan Menteri di Jabatan Perdana Menteri adalah kerana kegagalan kerajaan menunaikan janji dalam memorandum persefahaman yang dimeterai sebelum pilihan raya umum 5 Mei tahun lepas.

Sementara itu Speaker Dewan Negara Tan Sri Abu Zahar Ujang ketika dihubungi Bernama hari ini, berkata beliau belum menerima surat peletakan jawatan Waytha sebagai senator dan hanya mengetahui perkara tersebut melalui media.

Beliau berkata sepatutnya Waytha terlebih dahulu memaklumkan kepada Dewan Negara sebelum mengumumkan kepada media.

"Sejak Jumaat saya belum terima surat peletakan jawatan daripada Senator Waytha, saya mengetahuinya melalui akhbar. Terpulang pada budi bicara beliau, untuk Dewan yang mulia ini dan Senator (Waytha) juga seorang yang mulia sepatutnya tahu menghormati Dewan dan Perlembagaan," katanya.

Abu Zahar juga berkata beliau sedia berjumpa dan menerima surat peletakan jawatan Waytha pada bila-bila masa.

"Sebagai warganegara Malaysia, beliau antara seorang yang bertuah kerana dilantik oleh Yang di-Pertuan Agong atas nasihat Perdana Menteri untuk berada dalam Dewan Negara," katanya.

Sementara itu Presiden Parti Progresif Penduduk (PPP) Datuk Seri M Kayveas berkata Waytha tidak patut menyalahkan kerajaan dan Barisan Nasional (BN) sebagai alasan meletak jawatan sebaliknya menyalahkan diri sendiri kerana gagal menjalankan tugas dan tanggungjawab diberi.

"Dia gagal menjalankan tugas walaupun diberi peluang dan ruang. Dia langsung tidak faham bahawa untuk menjayakan sesuatu perubahan, memerlukan masa dan bukan semudah ABC dan tempoh satu malam untuk selesaikannya.

"Kami, MIC, PPP bekerjasama dalam mencari penyelesaian kepada masalah dihadapi masyarakat India seperti kemiskinan, sekolah Tamil dan setinggan dan dilakukan tanpa publisiti langsung.

"Tetapi Waytha langsung tidak pernah menemui kami sejak dilantik hingga masyarakat datang kepada kami beritahu betapa sukarnya menemui Waytha. Jadi usaha kami membantu masyarakat India tidak akan terjejas tanpa penglibatannya pun," katanya.

Senada dengannya, Presiden Kongres India Muslim Malaysia (Kimma) Senator Datuk Seri Syed Ibrahim Kader turut meminta Waytha menjelaskan dakwaan kononnya kerajaan dan BN gagal dalam menyelesaikan masalah yang dihadapi masyarakat India.

"Namakan apa yang BN gagal buat. Janganlah cakap tidak buat langsung. Banyak sudah buat dan diselesaikan, pelbagai imbuhan dan bajet telah diberi. Bukannya tidak bagi langsung.

"Saya tidak faham macam mana dia boleh buat tuduhan macam itu. Saya rasa dia ada agenda lain melalui Hindraf dengan platform yang telah diberi, dan bukannya betul-betul hendak perjuangkan masyarakat India," katanya kepada Bernama. - Bernama, 9 Februari, 2014.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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Give PR people a break

Posted: 08 Feb 2014 08:17 PM PST

February 09, 2014

Cass Shan started off as a copywriter tasked with understanding buying behaviour. She now immerses herself in understanding buy-in behaviour.

Everybody loves a public relations person.

Sure, you get the stereotype "bitchy" gay PR person on TV, but the reality is PR people love what they do and they do it because they genuinely care about people's feelings.

The true PR person knows that words play an important role in conveying key messages.

It takes year of experience to do the job right and climb the PR ladder in the industry. 

The truth is PR people are portrayed with two personalities – the fake nice front and the hard "bad" front for a reason.

PR people are just like you and me. They have feelings, too, and have every right to have feelings of frustration, anger, demotivation and any highs and lows that us mere mortals have, too.

That's the reason they sometimes appear to have dual personalities – the nice front and the so-called bad front.

People need to understand that being a PR person is not easy.

After all, how many of us can keep a cheerful outlook all day, every day?

We need to understand that PR people have an important job of keeping everyone else happy – even when they themselves may be having a bad day.

Which is why PR people give the improper impression of being two-faced.

At this point, I may as well clarify that the previous article I wrote on Brickfields Asia College was not an advertorial.

It happens to be my true feelings of the college based on what I know about them.

Perhaps, because I was trained as a copywriter and wholeheartedly admit to having being one, that people misunderstood and assumed that it was a paid advertorial when, in fact, it was an opinion piece which happened to have been written by an ex-copywriter who decided to share her thoughts in writing.

Back to PR people, that's the same issue they face. While they may be sharing their true positive feelings through their words, people who misunderstand them and may think they're being "two-faced" and mistrust occurs.

I must say that people who climb through the corporate ladder to achieve a PR director position do so with much patience, having seen much in their years of experience and dealt with practically every PR issue in town.

I have much respect for people who climb their way up and earn their position.

It's not easy being on top.

Sometimes, it gets lonely. My heart goes out to the top PR people who must walk into the office every day, shouldering a great responsibility and balancing the need to practise PR at work with their staff while taking work seriously at the same time.

There are PR directors who are so loaded with work that they desperately want people to take their workload off them to help ease their schedule.

I always try to volunteer to take some work off from the boss when I can because I understand the pressure they're under.

Rule No. 1: Always support your boss.

PR directors need all the support they can get and it's a tough role to play. That's why I wish people would stop stereotyping PR people and give them a break when they rightfully deserve a break.

I will never forget the numerous PR people I've met who do it so well because I know I still have much to learn every time I watch how well they do it.

Here's kudos to the PR people I've met who never stopped teaching me how they do it. – February 9, 2014.

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insider.

Di mana Najib Razak?

Posted: 08 Feb 2014 03:23 PM PST

February 09, 2014

Amin Iskandar adalah penerima anugerah zamalah Asian Public Intellectuals (API) bagi sesi 2009-2010. Kini merupakan Pengarang Berita bagi The Malaysian Insider. Beliau "berkicau" di www.twitter.com/aminiskandar.

Di manakah Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak ketika Malaysia memerlukan kepimpinannya?

Ketika provokasi demi provokasi yang mungkin akan memusnahkan keharmonian kaum dan agama, Najib tidak berbuat apa-apa untuk menghentikannya.

Lebih memburukkan keadaan apabila Menteri Dalam Negeri, Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi berkata semalam, tawaran RM1,200 daripada sebuah pertubuhan bukan kerajaan (NGO) yang berjaya menampar Teresa Kok tidak dianggap sebagai satu ancaman.

Ahmad Zahid juga berkata, polis hanya akan bertindak sekiranya NGO tersebut mahu membunuh.

Jika di negara maju, menteri kanan yang 'pintar' seperti Ahmad Zah‎id sudah pasti akan dipecat kerana kenyataannya akan dianggap mewakili kerajaan.

Akan tetapi di Malaysia berbeza, seseorang menteri boleh berbuat dan berkata apa sahaja‎.

Apakah Najib akan membiarkan kenyataan Ahmad Zahid mewakili pendirian kerajaan Malaysia?

Bayangkanlah bagaimana rakyat mahu merasa selamat apabila seorang menteri kanan boleh mengatakan sesuatu galakan  jenayah secara terbuka seperti ditawarkan NGO Islam itu bukanlah sesuatu yang dianggap sebagai ancaman.

‎Jadi selepas ini jika terdapat tawaran berbentuk ganjaran wang daripada pihak pembangkang kepada seluruh rakyat yang berjaya menampar Ahmad Zahid, apakah jawapan sama akan diberikannya?

Najib harus bertindak segera sebelum terlambat.

Beliau juga harus ingat, ayahnya, Tun Abdul Razak Hussein, dihormati kebanyakan rakyat Malaysia.

Jangan sampai beliau jadi pemusnah kepada legasi Abdul Razak.

‎Bagaimana pula dengan reputasi Malaysia sebagai sebuah negara berbilang kaum dan agama?

Apakah Najib mahu melihat ia turut musnah?

‎Isu pengharaman penggunaan kalimah Allah oleh bukan Islam sudah menyebabkan Malaysia ditertawakan di persada antarabangsa.

‎Selepas ini, kita akan ditertawakan lagi dengan jawapan menteri kanan seperti Ahmad Zahid ketika ditanya tentang jenayah.

Jangan sampai tragedi berdarah antara kaum tidak diingini seperti pernah ‎berlaku satu ketika dahulu berulang semata-mata kerana Malaysia mempunyai perdana menteri yang tidak memimpin.

Provokasi perkauman seperti yang berlaku pada Khamis, jika tidak dihentikan akan menyebabkan keadaan menjadi lebih buruk.

Jika Najib sudah penat dan tidak lagi larat lagi untuk memimpin negara, lepaskanlah jawatan tersebut.

Beri peluang kepada yang benar-benar mampu untuk memimpin.

Setidak-tidaknya, bubarkanlah Parlimen untuk membenarkan rakyat Malaysia berpeluang memilih semula setelah negara tidak kemana selepas sembilan bulan  sejak Pilihan Raya Umum ke 13. – 9 Februari, 2014.

* Ini adalah pendapat peribadi penulis dan tidak semestinya mewakili pandangan The Malaysian Insider.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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