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Thursday, July 31, 2008

Belgrade Has Mixed Emotions About Karadzic's Trial


The people in Belgrade have reacted with mixed emotions to Radovan Karadzic's first appearance at the United Nations War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague Thursday. As Stefan Bos reports for VOA from Belgrade, the infamy of Karadzic is even generating some commercial interest.
Not everyone in Belgrade is interested to see the world's most wanted war crimes suspect appear on television at the United Nations War Crimes Tribunal at The Hague.

In a pub near the detention center from where ex-Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic was extradited Wednesday, Serbs were watching a football match instead.

Belgrade resident Rajko Mitric understands their reluctance to see the man who is on trial on charges that include genocide related to the killing of up to 8,000 Muslim men and boys in the Bosnian town of Srebrenica.

He says he is not going to watch the trial on television because in his words "there is nothing new to be seen.". He adds, "I have seen the the trial of leaders such as former Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic. And I have noticed that the trial at the Tribunal was not fair. It is a political trial."

Karadzic appeared for the first time Thursday at the U.N. Tribunal in The Hague. During the appearance, he waived his right to an attorney in the courtroom.

Some are pleased with the television coverage, for business reasons.

A Belgrade tourism agency is hoping to cash in on the Karadzic notoriety by launching a sightseeing tour to the apartment where Karadzic lived while practicing alternative medicine, as well as to the nearby cafe and grocery store he visited.

Dragana Tubic is the manager of the tour:

"The tourists, like they say, want to see the building, the cafe, to see where he spend his time," said Dragana Tubic. "That is why we organize this. It is not something political that we propose."

Officials say the negotiations center around whether to open the apartment to the public for a fee, and perhaps even allow people to sleep there.

They hope news about the UN tribunal and Karadzic will help spark interest in other things Serbian, including the the country's cultural heritage.


Source : http://www.voanews.com

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Thursday, July 24, 2008

5 ways to get your sex life going - Ladies


Unlike men, there are no approved drugs to take. If you go strictly by the rules, the best medical science has to offer is counseling, or a device that applies suction to your clitoris, or physical therapy for your vagina. While not to diminish these choices, where's that convenient, little blue pill for women?

That's what Joanne wanted to know. This isn't her real name, but she's a 26-year-old nurse at the Cleveland Clinic who felt no sex drive -- nothing, nada, zilch -- for eight years. She wasn't happy, and neither was her boyfriend.

When Joanne asked her gynecologist for help, she told her to talk to her psychiatrist. Her psychiatrist said her antidepressants were to blame -- they're known to decrease libido in about a third to a half of women, experts say.

"My psychiatrist just kind of shrugged her shoulders," Joann says. "It was just like, well, that's a side effect of the drug. That's just the way it is."

Finally, fate intervened on behalf of Joann's sex life. Last year, the anti-depressants she was taking stopped working, and her psychiatrist had to switch her to a new one. "All of a sudden, my sex drive went through the roof. It was awesome. It was wonderful," she says.

But it wasn't perfect, or even close to it. Probably because of her long-dormant sex drive, Joanne could get sexually excited, but couldn't reach orgasm. Again, after being shuffled around to various doctors, Joanne ended up with a urogynecologist at the Cleveland Clinic.

That doctor prescribed the anti-impotence drug, Cialis. At first Joanne thought it strange to take a drug meant for a man. But she tried it, and she says it's helped somewhat. "I'm still not able to achieve orgasm, but I'm getting closer each time," Joanne says. "We're working with changing the dosage."

Getting help for women's sexual problems is often a long and complicated road. "This is an area that's highly neglected," says Dr. Sharon Parish, an internist at the Albert Einstein School of Medicine who treats sexually dysfunctional women. "Many primary care doctors have no idea what to do."

So if you want help for your sexual problems, you may have to make suggestions to your doctor. "I feel like if I hadn't aggressively pursued it, I'd still be stuck in the same spot," Joanne says.

Here are some treatments for sexual dysfunction you can discuss with your doctor.

1. Impotence drugs such as Viagra, Levitra and Cialis

Some studies, like one out this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association, show they work for some women with sexual problems; others have shown they don't work.

A woman's biggest hurdle could be finding a doctor who'll prescribe them, since they're approved by the FDA only for men.

The solution: Be frank with your doctor. Ask if he or she is willing to consider prescribing these drugs "off label." Be clear that you recognize these medicines have not been approved for women, and that you want to know about the risks and benefits.

2. Testosterone

Experts we talked to said taking testosterone has helped many of their female patients. "It not only helps with sex drive, it will also help with arousal," says Dr. Cynthia Brewer, a clinical associate at the Center for Specialized Women's Health at the Cleveland Clinic.

Testosterone, produced naturally by both men and women, boosts libido. Synthetic testosterone, however, has been approved only for use with men. In 2004, the FDA declined to approve a testosterone patch for women, saying it hadn't been thoroughly tested.

As with Viagra and its cousins, if you're interested in possibly trying testosterone, tell your doctor you know it's off label, and you'd like to discuss the benefits and risks for women -- knowing that not all the risks are fully understood.

There's one big hitch: Testosterone is available only in men's doses, which are way too high for women. You'll need a doctor who's familiar with how to fit the dose to a woman. There's no one central place to find doctors who specialize in female sexual dysfunction, but you can start at the American Urological Association, or at the International Pelvic Pain Society.

3. Arginine

Some doctors suggest using a cream with arginine, an amino acid that's supposed to increase blood flow.

"It's supposed to act like Viagra," says Brewer. "I saw one patient try it, and it had benefits. For another it didn't. Women can try it and decide for themselves."

4. Anti-stress herbs

You don't have to be Dr. Ruth to know that when you're under stress, you're not in the mood for love. "Stress levels will affect a woman's libido. We're more sensitive to stress than our male counterparts," says Dr. Esther Konigsberg, medical director of the Family Practice Center of Integrative Health and Healing in Burlington, Ontario.

Konigsberg often suggests these anti-stress herbs to her patients with sexual problems: ashwagandha, astragalus, panax ginseng. Licorice can also be used for stress, but she says your physician must monitor your potassium levels.

5. Experimental medicines

"There are a few investigational drugs in the pipeline for both pre- and post-menopausal women," says Sheryl Kingsberg, a clinical psychologist and chief of the division of behavioral medicine at Case Western Reserve Medical School.

Health Library

While you can't get these on the open market, women can try to join a clinical trial. Two experimental drugs, called flibanserin and bremelanotide, work on the brain to increase arousal. A third, Libigel, is a gel that boosts testosterone.

The National Institutes of Health has a list of clinical trials for female sexual dysfunction.

And the most important rule: Don't wait for your doctor to ask you about sexual problems. "Women should feel empowered to bring up the topic first, because lots of physicians aren't comfortable bringing it up themselves," Kingsberg says.

Also, be aware that drugs won't help every woman with a sex problem. Kingsberg says drugs have helped about half of her post-menopausal patients, and about 20 percent of her pre-menopausal patients. The rest, she said, benefited from counseling.


Source : http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH

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Saturday, July 12, 2008

Zimbabwe: China justifies sanctions veto


China has defended its decision to veto proposed UN sanctions against Zimbabwe's government saying they would "complicate", rather than ease, conflict in the troubled African country.

China and Russia vetoed a UN Security Council resolution to impose international sanctions on key members of Zimbabwe's government, damaging diplomatic efforts to isolate the regime and inflicting a historic defeat on the Council's Western members.

The British-backed resolution would have imposed an arms embargo on Zimbabwe and financial and travel restrictions on President Robert Mugabe and 13 other officials, and authorised a United Nations special envoy for the southern African nation.

But although nine countries, including America, Britain and France, backed the proposals, five countries voted against, including Russia and China, which both enjoy powers of veto as permanent members of the Security Council.

The defeat marks a shift in power at the heart of the UN, as Russia and China learn to flex their diplomatic muscle after years of Western domination since the fall of the Soviet Union.

"The people of Zimbabwe will not understand the Russian and Chinese veto," said the foreign secretary David Miliband, adding that he was "very disappointed."

China's decision to block the sanctions may bruise relations with Western powers weeks before Beijing hosts the Olympic Games. China also faces international pressure over Sudan, where international prosecutors are pursuing arrests for alleged war crimes in Darfur.

Liu Jianchao, the Chinese Foreign Ministry's chief spokesman, was quick to defend the veto as right for Zimbabwe.

"Under present conditions, passing a sanctions resolution against Zimbabwe would not help to encourage the various factions there to engage in political dialogue and negotiations and achieve results," he said in a statement on the Ministry's Web site.

"On the contrary, it would further complicate conditions in Zimbabwe."

The sanctions were proposed after Mr Mugabe was "re-elected" in a one-candidate election that was heavily criticised because of the violent tactics that forced the opposition candidate Morgan Tsvangirai to withdraw.

More than 100 people, mostly opposition supporters are said to have died in the attacks.

Diplomats at the UN are normally aware of their colleagues' intentions before a vote is taken, and in the circumstances it is perhaps surprising that the US, which proposed the resolution, pressed it to a decision.

The result will be seized on by the propagandists of Zanu-PF, Zimbabwe's ruling party, who insist that Zimbabwe's economic travails – inflation is estimated at over eight million per cent – are due to Western plots, rather than Mr Mugabe's mismanagement.

Some UN officials had argued that a parallel mediation process being led by the South African president Thabo Mbeki should have beengiven a chance to succeed without imposing stronger measures.

But without new international pressure, Mr Mugabe will see little need to make concessions to the opposition Movement for Democratic Change in the talks.

The defeat follows the failure of the African Union to condemn Mr Mugabe, despite observer missions criticising the election. Some leaders on the continent even made a point of overtly supporting him.

The veto leaves Mr Mugabe looking ever more secure in office, despite the blood shed for his 're-election', and demonstrates the difficulty of ensuring concerted international action – which would have been necessary to enforce the sanctions even if they had been passed.

Both Russia and China have questionable human rights records of their own, and have long been reluctant to support international intervention in what they see as other countries' internal affairs.

The Russian president Dmitry Medvedev had given ambivalent indications about his country's intentions at the G8 summit in Japan earlier this week. And China is one of Mr Mugabe's oldest allies and arms suppliers, a link dating back to the war against Ian Smith's regime, when it backed his Zanu guerrilla movement.

South Africa, Libya and Vietnam also voted against the resolution while Indonesia abstained.

It is the latest example of South Africa failing to support action against repressive rulers, despite the ruling African National Congress' own backing for sanctions when it was leading the struggle against apartheid.

Last year the country voted against a resolution calling for the Burmese junta to stop attacking ethnic minorities and engage in substantive dialogue with the democratic opposition.

Earlier yesterday Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the Nobel laureate, expressed frustration that some leaders on the continent had not condemned Mr Mugabe.

Source : http://www.telegraph.co.uk

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Sunday, July 6, 2008

E.Coli in Beef Linked to 19 Illnesses in Ohio


CHICAGO (Reuters) - A sample of raw ground beef was found to contain the same harmful strain of E.coli O157:H7 bacteria that caused outbreaks in Ohio and Michigan and sickened 19 in Ohio in recent weeks, the state's departments of health and agriculture said in a statement on Wednesday.

"Information submitted with the positive beef sample indicates the product was purchased at the Kroger Marketplace in Gahanna. It is important for consumers to realize beef purchased from other sources may also be tainted, and steps should be taken to protect themselves from foodborne illnesses," the statement said.

Source : http://voanews.com
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