Thursday, May 31, 2012

Reuters: Most Read Articles: Justin Bieber suffers concussion in Paris

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Justin Bieber suffers concussion in Paris
Jun 1st 2012, 00:11

Singer Justin Bieber greets fans at the 2012 Wango Tango concert at the Home Depot Center in Carson, California May 12, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Mario Anzuoni

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Reuters: Most Read Articles: Panel recommends against hormone therapy

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Panel recommends against hormone therapy
May 29th 2012, 20:04

By Andrew M. Seaman

NEW YORK | Tue May 29, 2012 4:04pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Women taking hormone therapy to prevent certain chronic conditions or ease hot flashes face a complicated mix of possible benefits and risks, a new analysis of past research suggests.

The analysis, published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine, combines the results of nine previous clinical trials and found that women taking estrogen or a combination of estrogen and progestin lowered their risk of broken bones, but increased their chances of developing a host of other complications, including strokes and gallbladder disease.

Taken together, estrogen and progestin also seemed to increase the risk of breast cancer and dementia -- although estrogen alone was tied to fewer breast cancer cases.

Based on the new analysis, the government-backed U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) issued preliminary recommendations on Tuesday that postmenopausal women not use hormone therapy to prevent certain chronic conditions.

The USPSTF, a panel of independent experts, makes evidence-based recommendations for or against certain health-related prevention strategies and treatments.

Years ago, women were told that taking replacement hormones as they age may prevent -- among other things -- heart problems, dementia and osteoporosis, and the drugs were a popular treatment for hot flashes during menopause.

That changed, however, when the Women's Health Initiative study, sponsored by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, was stopped early in 2002 when it became clear postmenopausal women taking combination hormone therapy had a higher risk of heart disease and certain cancers.

After that, the USPSTF recommended against the combined use of estrogen and progestin to prevent chronic conditions, and later did the same for estrogen alone in 2005.

Their new recommendations do not change that.

Estrogen and progestin are still taken together by some women to prevent cancer in the uterus. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration allows hormone treatment for short-term relief of symptoms of menopause, including hot flashes, and to prevent osteoporosis.

NEW LOOK AT A CONFUSING TOPIC

The lead author of the new analysis done for the USPSTF said although women have heard a lot about the possible risks and benefits of hormone therapy, there hasn't been a clear message about hormone use.

"We looked at what we could find in this area and tried to find the most final results at this time," said Dr. Heidi Nelson, from Oregon Health & Science University in Portland.

The new recommendations, according to the USPSTF, are based on a "moderate to high certainty that the service has no benefit or that the harms outweigh the benefits."

Nelson and her team searched the medical literature for so-called "gold standard" studies that randomly assigned women to get hormone therapy or a placebo. They found nine that fit their standards and were published since 2002.

Four of the studies drew their conclusions from the two Women's Health Initiative trials on hormone therapy, which followed over 27,000 women. In those studies, one group took estrogen, another took estrogen and progestin and the other two took placebos.

Both trials were stopped short because the increased side effects tied to the drugs outweighed their benefits.

Overall, the researchers found women taking combined progestin and estrogen and women taking estrogen alone were 25 to 30 percent less likely to break a bone during the studies compared to the women taking a placebo.

That worked out to about five fewer broken bones per every 1,000 women annually when they were on hormone therapy.

Women taking those hormones, however, had a 34 to 79 percent higher chance of having a stroke, gallbladder disease or urinary incontinence. Both combination and estrogen-only treatment were also tied to more cases of "probable" dementia.

And the risk of invasive breast cancer was 25 percent higher in the estrogen-plus-progestin group than in the comparison group not on hormonal therapy -- but 23 percent lower among those just on estrogen.

Finally, blood clots were about twice as common in women taking combined hormone therapy than in the placebo group.

"The biggest harms are still there," said Nelson, comparing the results to earlier findings. "We're talking about blood clots and stroke. Those things were there initially and those things have not changed."

Still, Nelson said there is a lot about hormone therapy that is not known and a lot of information that needs to be collected.

The researchers note their conclusions are only based on a few trials, and although those trials followed a lot of women, many stopped taking the hormones during the trial. And the information is also limited to women between the ages of 60 and 69 years old.

The new USPSTF recommendations will be available for review and public comment on the panel's website until June 26.

SOURCE: bit.ly/KXHgHH Annals of Internal Medicine, online May 28, 2012.

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Reuters: Most Read Articles: Seattle shooting "hero" threw stools at gunman: police

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Seattle shooting "hero" threw stools at gunman: police
Jun 1st 2012, 01:55

Flowers sit outside the Cafe Racer after Wednesday's deadly shooting incident in Seattle, Washington, May 31, 2012. A gunman killed four people at the popular Seattle cafe on Wednesday then fled to a downtown parking lot where he killed a fifth person and stole her car before shooting himself in the head as police closed in, authorities said. REUTERS/Robert Sorbo

1 of 8. Flowers sit outside the Cafe Racer after Wednesday's deadly shooting incident in Seattle, Washington, May 31, 2012. A gunman killed four people at the popular Seattle cafe on Wednesday then fled to a downtown parking lot where he killed a fifth person and stole her car before shooting himself in the head as police closed in, authorities said.

Credit: Reuters/Robert Sorbo

By Cynthia Johnston

Thu May 31, 2012 9:55pm EDT

(Reuters) - When Ian Stawicki started shooting at a Seattle cafe in a spree rampage that would leave him and five others dead, one man stood up and tried to stop him by hurling coffeehouse stools at the gunman, police said on Thursday.

A day after the shootings in the Cafe Racer, police said the actions of that man - whom they are not naming - ultimately saved three lives and were a bright spot in a violent series of events that ended when Stawicki shot himself in the head.

Seattle Assistant Police Chief Jim Pugel described the shooting, which was caught on video, as erupting seemingly without warning amid typical mid-morning coffeehouse activity.

"Some folks are reading, others are sipping coffee, they are jocular, they are exchanging conversation, then the person comes in, looks around, sits down, you can see there's some interaction between him and the barista," Pugel said.

"One person stands up, looks like he's going to go outside for a minute. At that point, the suspect stands up and starts shooting."

Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn has said the killing spree, following a recent rash of other shootings, had shaken the city and he urged fellow municipal leaders to "bring an end to this gun violence that the city is seeing."

But Pugel said "there is a hero" who saved lives, describing him as a man sitting next the gunman who intervened when the shooting happened at the coffee house known for its live music in Seattle's Ravenna neighborhood.

"The hero picked up a stool and threw it at the suspect, hit him, picked up another stool as the suspect is shooting, and now pointing at him, and hits him with another stool," he said.

Pugel did not name the man.

"During that time, two or possibly three people made their escape," Pugel said, adding that the gunman had been between those people and the door. "So he saved three lives."

ACTING ERRATICALLY

Police said that roughly half an hour after the late-morning cafe shooting, in which four people died, the gunman fatally shot a woman and stole her sport utility vehicle in another part of the city, before ultimately abandoning it, leaving one of his two guns inside.

Police have given little explanation for the bloodshed. But Stawicki was known to frequent the cafe and reportedly had quarreled during previous visits with two of the people he shot, neighborhood residents told local TV station KIRO-7.

Stawicki has also been described as mentally disturbed, and police said an acquaintance he contacted after the cafe shooting told police he was talking nonsense.

"This former acquaintance did not know what had happened and was completely unaware of the news. This acquaintance said that he was acting erratically, talking nonsense. And this acquaintance broke off the contact," Pugel said.

Once the acquaintance heard news of the shooting, that person contacted police. When police finally tracked Stawicki down, he knelt and shot himself in the head, police said.

The father of the gunman, Walter Stawicki, said he knew his son "had issues," but that he woke up the morning of the shooting in a good mood with plans to help his girlfriend move her mother to another home, according to the Seattle Times.

"He wasn't a loose cannon. We knew he had issues," Stawicki told the paper, saying his son had faced mental illness since he was in his 20s. "We were more afraid a trucker would come at him with a fist because he was so provocative."

"I'm grieving for him, I'm grieving for his mother, I'm grieving for his brother," Stawicki said of his eldest son, who he said had long had a concealed weapons permit.

"I'm grieving for six other families."

(Reporting by Cynthia Johnston; editing by Alex Dobuzinskis and Todd Eastham)

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Reuters: Most Read Articles: San Diego eighth grader wins National Spelling Bee with "guetapens"

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San Diego eighth grader wins National Spelling Bee with "guetapens"
Jun 1st 2012, 03:09

Snigdha Nandipati, 14, of San Diego, California, holds her trophy after winning the Scripps National Spelling Bee at National Harbor in Maryland May 31, 2012. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

1 of 10. Snigdha Nandipati, 14, of San Diego, California, holds her trophy after winning the Scripps National Spelling Bee at National Harbor in Maryland May 31, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

By Ian Simpson

WASHINGTON | Thu May 31, 2012 11:09pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Snigdha Nandipati, a 14-year-old eighth grader from San Diego, won the Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday by spelling "guetapens," a French word for ambush or trap.

"It's a miracle!" Nandipati, who reads encyclopedias for fun, said after winning the contest with her correct spelling.

Second place went to Stuti Mishra, a 14-year-old eighth grader from Orlando, Florida, who finished in second place after misspelling "schwarmerei," a German word for excessive enthusiasm.

Arvind Mahankali, a 12-year-old seventh grader from Bayside Hills, New York, finished third for a second year in a row after failing to spell "schwannoma," a kind of nerve cell tumor.

Asked what she would do with her $30,000 in prize money, Nandipati, who reads encyclopedias for fun, said: "I don't know, save it for college."

While spelling her winning word, Nandipati stood before the microphone with her hands clasped.

She spelled "admittatur," an admission certificate, "arrondissement," a French urban district, and "saccharolytic," referring to the breakdown of sugars in metabolism, on her way to the title.

Nandipati, whose grandparents flew to the contest from India, said she studied six hours a day during the week and 10 to 12 hours during the weekend.

Nandipati, Mishra and Mahankali were among nine finalists winnowed from 278 contestants who started the nation-wide spelling contest on Wednesday.

They emerged from 50 young spellers aged 10 to 14 who started Thursday's semi-final rounds and were tripped up by words including "tendenz," a literary term, and "polynee," a type of pastry.

The competition took place on stage at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland, just south of Washington.

The audience, filled with families, was tense as the young contestants haltingly spelled words well above the reading levels of their respective grades in school.

The spellers employed a range of strategies, from writing out words on the palms of their hands with their fingers to asking for a word's language of origin.

The final competition was aired live on the ESPN Sports network.

In addition to her cash prize, Nandipati won a $2,500 U.S. savings bond and a $5,000 scholarship, among other awards.

Several spellers who had been favored to do well stumbled on Thursday. Ten-year-old Vanya Shivashankar of Olathe, Kansas, the younger sister of 2009 champion Kavya Shivashankar, misspelled "pejerrey," a type of fish.

Six-year-old Lori Anne Madison of Woodbridge, Virginia, the youngest participant ever to qualify for the bee, failed to make it past the preliminary round after incorrectly spelling the word "ingluvies," the crop of a bird or insect.

Last year's winner was 14-year-old Sukanya Roy from South Abington Township, Pennsylvania, who spelled "cymotrichous," used to describe having wavy hair.

(Editing by Greg McCune and Todd Eastham)

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Reuters: Most Read Articles: Court says marriage law discriminates against gay couples

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Court says marriage law discriminates against gay couples
May 31st 2012, 19:33

A same-sex wedding cake topper is seen outside the East Los Angeles County Recorder's Office on Valentine's Day during a news event for National Freedom to Marry Week in Los Angeles, California February 14, 2012. REUTERS/David McNew

A same-sex wedding cake topper is seen outside the East Los Angeles County Recorder's Office on Valentine's Day during a news event for National Freedom to Marry Week in Los Angeles, California February 14, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/David McNew

By Scott Malone and Terry Baynes

BOSTON/NEW YORK | Thu May 31, 2012 3:33pm EDT

BOSTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - A federal appeals court in Boston found on Thursday that a U.S. law defining marriage as a union between a man and a woman unconstitutionally denies federal benefits to lawfully married same-sex couples in a ruling that promises to push the issue of gay marriage to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The ruling on the 1996 law, the Defense of Marriage Act, marked a victory for gay rights groups and U.S. President Barack Obama, whose administration announced last year it considered the law unconstitutional and would no longer defend it.

In its 3-0 ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit concluded that the law discriminates against gay couples. Eight of the 50 U.S. states permit gay marriage, including Massachusetts, which became the first in 2004.

"Congress' denial of federal benefits to same-sex couples lawfully married in Massachusetts has not been adequately supported by any permissible federal interest," Judge Michael Boudin wrote for the three-judge panel.

The issue of gay marriage is an emotional and divisive one in the United States. Obama on May 9 said he believes same-sex couples should be allowed to marry, marking the first time a U.S. president publicly expressed support for gay marriage.

The White House said the ruling reflected Obama's view that the law is unconstitutional. Obama is seeking re-election on November 6.

Gay rights advocates hailed Thursday's ruling.

"For the first time, a federal appeals court has recognized that our Constitution will not tolerate a law that forces the federal government to deny lawfully married same-sex couples equal treatment. The writing is clearly on the wall for the demise of this unjust and indefensible law that hurts real families," said Joe Solmonese, president of the gay rights group Human Rights Campaign.

Plaintiffs, including seven married same-sex couples and three widowers, said the law, which prevents them from filing joint federal tax returns or collecting survivor benefits from the Social Security retirement program, denied them equal protections guaranteed under the U.S. Constitution.

Bette Jo Green, one of the plaintiffs in the case, welcomed the decision. Green, 70, has been married to Jo Ann Whitehead, 70, since 2004.

"How thrilling it is for us to know that the court believes in protecting our right to Social Security benefits as with all the other married couples in the country," Green said.

'DOUBLE STANDARD'

Mary Bonauto of the Massachusetts advocacy group Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders, who served as the lead attorney for the 17 plaintiffs, said she expects this case now to be taken by the U.S. Supreme Court.

"We think this is a case that really could appeal to all members of the court because it is not only a double standard ... this law is also a real outlier because it inserts Congress into an area that states govern," Bonauto said.

In a companion case also on appeal, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley argued that Congress overstepped its authority and violated the 10th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution in passing the law because it undermined states' abilities to recognize marriage equality.

Lawyers for the Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group of the U.S. House of Representatives (BLAG) had defended the 1996 law.

A federal judge in Massachusetts declared a key section of the law unconstitutional in 2010, and the appeals court agreed.

The 1st Circuit panel recognized that many Americans believe marriage to be a union between a man and a woman. But the panel concluded that federalism permits diversity of governance based on local decisions, and that choice also applied to states' decisions to legalize same-sex marriage.

"It is unconstitutional for the federal government to create a system of first- and second-class marriages," Coakley said in a statement.

Among the plaintiffs is Dean Hara, the widower of Gerry Studds, a former U.S. congressman who died in 2006. Studds, the first openly gay member of Congress, and Hara were married one week after same-sex marriages became legal in Massachusetts. Hara was not eligible to receive the pension provided to surviving spouses of former members of Congress.

Kris Mineau, president of the Massachusetts Family Institute, criticized the ruling as an attack on the traditional definition of marriage.

"For a Massachusetts-based court to just audaciously proclaim that the federal government is wrong and has to recognize a unique social experiment in Massachusetts for the purpose of providing benefits is bizarre and a violation of the principles of our federalist system," Mineau said.

On May 24, a California federal judge found the law unconstitutional for denying federal benefits to same-sex couples. Another federal judge in San Francisco reached the same conclusion in February in a case currently on appeal before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

(Reporting By Terry Baynes in New York; Additional reporting by Scott Malone in Boston and Samson Reiny in Washington; Editing by Will Dunham)

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Reuters: Most Read Articles: Edwards jury reaches verdict on only one of six counts

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Edwards jury reaches verdict on only one of six counts
May 31st 2012, 19:22

Former U.S. Senator John Edwards arrives for the ninth day of jury deliberations at the federal courthouse in Greensboro, North Carolina May 31, 2012. Edwards is charged with accepting excessive campaign funds to conceal his extramarital affair while he ran for president. REUTERS/John Adkisson

1 of 2. Former U.S. Senator John Edwards arrives for the ninth day of jury deliberations at the federal courthouse in Greensboro, North Carolina May 31, 2012. Edwards is charged with accepting excessive campaign funds to conceal his extramarital affair while he ran for president.

Credit: Reuters/John Adkisson

By Colleen Jenkins

GREENSBORO, North Carolina | Thu May 31, 2012 4:02pm EDT

GREENSBORO, North Carolina (Reuters) - A U.S. judge ordered jurors in the trial of former U.S. Senator John Edwards to keep deliberating on Thursday after they reached a unanimous verdict on only one of the six campaign finance charges against the former presidential candidate.

Jurors, in the ninth day of deliberations, reported reaching a verdict, raising the expectation the guilt-innocence phase of the trial had concluded. But upon returning to the courtroom, jurors revealed they had a unanimous verdict on only one count and were in disagreement on the remaining five.

The verdict was not announced as defense lawyers tried to convince the judge to end deliberations while prosecutors urged her to order the jury back to the deliberations room.

"I was obviously under the impression you had reached a verdict on all six counts," U.S. District Judge Catherine Eagles told jurors.

Prosecutors accuse Edwards of conspiring to get more than $900,000 from the two wealthy donors to keep voters from learning he was cheating on his cancer-stricken wife, Elizabeth, who died in 2010.

The defense says the supporters' money was meant as a personal gift to shield Elizabeth Edwards from her husband's indiscretions, not to influence the election.

The jury had reached a verdict on Count 3, which accused Edwards of accepting illegal campaign contributions from supporter Rachel "Bunny" Mellon in 2008.

But the jury remained deadlocked on a similar count of receiving illegal campaign money from Mellon in 2007.

In addition there are two counts of accepting illegal campaign money from friend and supporter Fred Baron; one count of conspiring to solicit illegal campaign funds; and one count of failing to report the donor payments as campaign contributions.

"Perhaps everybody should stay close by," Eagles told the courtroom after jurors left.

Earlier on Thursday, Eagles told the four alternate jurors they no longer had to report to the courthouse each day.

The alternates, who were not participating in deliberations, had become a cause for entertainment and speculation after they began wearing matching yellow, red or purple shirts on different days.

The panel is considering whether Edwards, 58, violated election laws as he sought to cover up his affair with Rielle Hunter and her pregnancy with his child during his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination four years ago.

The two-time presidential hopeful who served as the Democrats' 2004 vice presidential nominee faces possible prison time and fines if found guilty of any of six felony counts.

The charges include conspiring to solicit the money, receiving more than the $2,300 allowed from any one donor, and failing to report the payments as contributions.

(Editing by Daniel Trotta)

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Reuters: Most Read Articles: Money flies out of Spain, regions pressured

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Money flies out of Spain, regions pressured
May 31st 2012, 14:49

The headquarters of nationalised lender Bankia is seen beside a red traffic light in Madrid May 30, 2012. REUTERS/Sergio Perez

The headquarters of nationalised lender Bankia is seen beside a red traffic light in Madrid May 30, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Sergio Perez

By Sonya Dowsett and Sarah White

MADRID | Thu May 31, 2012 10:49am EDT

MADRID (Reuters) - Spaniards alarmed by the dire state of their banks are squirreling money abroad at the fastest rate since records began, figures showed on Thursday, and the credit ratings of eight regions were cut.

Spain is the next country in the firing line of the euro zone's debt crisis, with spendthrift regions and shaky banks threatening to blow a hole in state finances and pushing funding costs towards levels that signal the need for a bailout.

The European Commission gave new help on Wednesday, offering direct aid from a euro zone rescue fund to recapitalize Spanish banks and more time for Madrid to reduce its budget deficit.

That helped lower the risk premium investors demand to hold Spanish 10-year debt rather than the German benchmark on Thursday, but it remained close to the euro-era record, at 520 basis points.

Bank of Spain data showed a net 66.2 billion euros ($82.0 billion) was sent abroad last month, the most since records began in 1990. The figure compares to a 5.4 billion net entry of funds during the same month one year ago.

Spaniards are worried about the health of their banks, hit by their exposure to a 2008 property crash, and have been sending money to deposit accounts in stronger economies of northern Europe.

The capital flight data predates the nationalization of Spain's fourth biggest lender Bankia (BKIA.MC) in May when it became clear the bank could not handle losses from bad real estate investments, compounded by a recession.

Spain's centre-right government has contracted independent auditors to assess the health of its financial system in an effort to restore faith in its banks.

Spain must lay out its restructuring plans for Bankia to the European Commission (EC), a spokesman for the EU executive arm said on Thursday. He added that a domestic solution to the country's bank crisis would be better than a European rescue.

The government said on Wednesday it would finance a 23.5 billion euro rescue of the bank through the bank fund, FROB but senior debt bankers said that the syndicated bond market is currently closed for Spanish agencies.

REMOVING UNCERTAINTIES

The prospect that Spain might not be able to handle losses at its banks has pummeled shares and the euro, although both regained some stability on Thursday.

"What we need first of all is for the Spanish government to tell us its restructuring plans for Bankia, what options it is considering," said European Commission spokesman Amadeu Altafaj in a radio interview.

"From there, we will study the plans and see whether they comply with requirements for public aid."

Spain should carry out the refinancing of its banking sector, laid low by a decade of unsustainable lending during a property boom, by market mechanisms or government funds, rather than a European rescue which would have negative connotations, Altafaj said.

"The sooner uncertainties are removed the better," he added.

The government also hopes to clear doubts on Friday about how it plans to ease financing problems among its 17 autonomous regions.

Treasury ministry sources said a mechanism to back the regions' debt would be agreed at the weekly's cabinet meeting and figures showing they were on track to meet their spending cuts targets would be released.

Fitch Ratings downgraded eight regions on Thursday, warning that a failure from the government to adopt new measures would result in further ratings cuts.

Spain's Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria is due to meet U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and International Monetary Fund Director General Christine Lagarde in Washington on Thursday.

The deputy PM will outline Spain's measures to tackle its crisis during the meetings, which were convened before Spain's situation reached boiling point, a government spokesman said.

(Additional reporting by Jose Elias Rodriguez and Jesus Aguado; Editing by Julien Toyer and Peter Graff)

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Reuters: Most Read Articles: U.S. tourists freed unharmed in Sinai: security source

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U.S. tourists freed unharmed in Sinai: security source
May 31st 2012, 13:35

CAIRO | Thu May 31, 2012 9:35am EDT

CAIRO (Reuters) - Two U.S. tourists were released unharmed by Bedouin kidnappers in the Sinai Peninsula on Thursday, security sources said, a day after they had been abducted by tribesmen seeking the release of one of their kinsmen held by the Egyptian authorities.

"The tourists are with Egyptian security now," a security source told Reuters. "They were released after successful negotiations with the army, with the mediation of Bedouin sheikhs."

Several other tourists have been held briefly by tribesmen in recent months and have been released unharmed.

(Reporting by Youssri Mohamed; Writing by Tamim Elyan; Editing by Alison Williams)

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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Reuters: Most Read Articles: FOREX-Euro heads for biggest drop in eight months

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FOREX-Euro heads for biggest drop in eight months
May 31st 2012, 03:54

Wed May 30, 2012 11:54pm EDT

* Worries growing Spain needs external help

* Euro/yen edges nears 11-year low, hit in Jan

* Dollar/yen hits 3 1/2-month low, Aussie/yen at 6-month low

* US bond yield at 60-yr low, undermining dlr/yen

By Hideyuki Sano

TOKYO, May 31 (Reuters) - The euro was poised for its biggest drop in at least eight months as increasing likelihood of Spain needing outside assistance to fix its public finance and banking system led to a major escalation in the perennial crisis in the currency bloc.

Spanish government bond yields surged to a six-month high while German bond yields fell to record lows, pushing the spread between the two to a new high, adding stress to markets already frayed by the anxiety Greece may leave the euro zone.

"Things are starting to look ugly. It seems like the market is making Spain its next target after Greece," said Teppei Ino, currency analyst at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ.

The euro fell to as low as $1.2358, a level last seen in mid-2010, when it had bottomed at $1.1876. It has dropped 6.6 percent this month, the biggest since September.

Against the yen, the common currency fell to 97.374 yen , edging near a 11-year low of 97.04 yen, hit in January, with many traders now considering a break of that low as highly likely.

The euro's fall was driven by concerns that Spain, an economy bigger than that of Greece, Portugal and Ireland combined, will probably need assistance as its fragile economy and ailing banking sector make it impossible to cut deficit.

So far, though, Madrid has ruled out seeking Europe's help for its banks, while EU paymaster Germany has firmly opposed any collective European banking resolution and guarantee system.

"There's a huge amount of flight-to-quality moves right now. Only a policy coordination in Europe can stop this but markets can't find it now," said Ayako Sera, senior market economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank.

"Until we see that, people will do a trade that will minimise losses rather than make profits," Sera added.

PREPARE FOR WORST

Spain is by no means the only concern for investors, with markets rattled by Greek polls showing parties for and against a bailout are neck-and-neck ahead of the country's second election on June 17.

Italian debt yield also rose above six percent for the first time since May while traders also warily look at whether the Irish will support Europe's new fiscal treaty as expected in a referendum on Thursday.

With investors trying to escape the euro zone and to hoard liquid assets, the dollar's index against a basket of currencies rose to 20-month high of 83.11. It looks set to end above its 100-month average for the first time in almost ten years.

"Everyone, from banks to companies, is now trying to prepare themselves to make sure they can get funding when they need money," said Hideki Amikura, forex manager at Nomura Trust Bank.

"Wherever you look, you can't find reason to expect a reversal in this. I cannot help thinking that the euro will fall below $1.20."

The dollar fell to as low as 78.71 yen, its lowest in 3 1/2 months, as investors favoured the yen, the currency of the world's largest creditor nation despite a mountain of its public debt.

Fall in U.S. bond yields also helped to push down the dollar against the yen, as the currency pair is known to have strong correlation with the yield gap between the two countries.

The 10-year U.S. bond yield fell below 1.6 percent , not seen at least for six decades an cutting yield advantage over JGBs to near the lowest level in recent decades.

The dollar for now has a crucial support from its 200-day moving average at 78.63 yen.

The Australian dollar fell 0.3 percent to a fresh six-month low of $0.9673, after having fallen 1.3 percent on sharp fall on oil and commodity prices on Wednesday.

Selling by Japanese accounts against the yen was also a driver in its fall, with the Aussie/yen falling to six-month low of 76.26 yen.

Highlighting the impact of gloomy global economic outlook on commodity exporters and emerging markets, Brazil cut interest rates to record low of 8.50 percent.

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Reuters: Most Read Articles: Spain cries for help: is Berlin listening ?

Reuters: Most Read Articles
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Spain cries for help: is Berlin listening ?
May 30th 2012, 20:37

A man shouts slogans during a protest outside headquarters of Spain's fourth largest bank Bankia in Madrid May 24, 2012. REUTERS/Sergio Perez

A man shouts slogans during a protest outside headquarters of Spain's fourth largest bank Bankia in Madrid May 24, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Sergio Perez

By Michael Stott

MADRID | Wed May 30, 2012 4:37pm EDT

MADRID (Reuters) - Crisis is the watchword in Madrid. Take your pick - liquidity crisis, debt crisis, banking crisis, economic crisis, confidence crisis, investor crisis, jobless crisis. Spain, the ailing euro zone's latest problem child, has them all.

As the problems pile up, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's five-month-old conservative administration feels like a government under siege. Nervy top officials are reluctant to speak on the record for fear of slipping up. Policymakers contradict one another. Plans keep changing. Financial markets reel amid the uncertainty. The gloom in ministry corridors is palpable.

The latest gaffe: after weeks insisting that one of the country's biggest banks, Bankia, did not need fresh funds, ministers dropped the bombshell last Friday that there was a 23-billion-euro hole in the accounts. They have yet to explain clearly how they will find the money when they are already struggling to finance a spiraling national debt.

The effect of the Bankia news on fragile financial markets was devastating. Spanish shares dived to 9-year lows, the euro sank and investors fled Spanish government debt, pushing the yield towards the 7 per cent level at which fellow eurozone members Ireland and Portugal were forced to seek national bailouts from Brussels.

To hear the government tell it, outsiders have got it all wrong: Spain has lived beyond its means for too long and is now going through a painful but necessary period of adjustment to shrink its state sector, cut spending and boost competitiveness. All the right things are being done. Rajoy's government is serious, committed and enjoys a comfortable parliamentary majority.

Officials say foreigners don't understand that Spain has boosted its exports more than any other European country in the past three years, that it has reformed its labor markets, cut its costs of production and come clean about the problems in its banks, which lent too enthusiastically to finance a huge property bubble that has now burst.

Now, ministers say, Madrid just needs time and some help and support from its European partners to get through the most acute phase of the crisis and give the reforms time to work.

RUNNING OUT OF TIME AND IDEAS

Unfortunately, time is running out.

Despite fresh proposals from Brussels on Wednesday that could go some way towards offering Rajoy what he wants - if they find their way through the Union's tortuous decision-making process into law - Europe's paymaster Germany has yet to fulfill Spain's wish list.

Spanish depositors are jittery. Newspaper editors tell of calls from members of the public unsure what to do with their money, asking for advice. Anecdotes abound of the wealthy moving their money to the relative security of London, Germany or France. London property agents Savills and Knight Frank say the number of Spanish buyers grew 14-21 percent in April compared with the average of the preceding six months.

Official bank deposit figures are published with a big time lag: the latest numbers, for April, are due shortly.

Spanish bankers insist that there will be no bank runs. But ministers in private are clear about their wish to see European-wide bank deposit guarantee measures put in place quickly to avoid the risk of what could be a catastrophic event. There are signs the European Central Bank favors deposit guarantees.

Problems are mounting on other fronts. With the cost of borrowing heading rapidly towards 7 percent and most foreign investors already shunning Spanish debt, the government will find it increasingly difficult to refinance 98 billion euros of debt and find another 52 billion euros to fund its deficit this year.

Local banks are barely lending, or offering loans at prohibitively high rates, squeezing companies and increasing the risk of a chain of bankruptcies which could send the economy into a nosedive. The banking system's total loans to the business sector were 44.6 billion euros at the end of March half of what they were at the end of the boom in 2007, and the contraction continues almost every month, according to Bank of Spain data.

Consumers are postponing big purchases and cutting back spending. Spain's soaring borrowing costs have become a national obsession since the crisis. Taxi drivers opine knowledgeably about the "risk premium" Spain must pay to borrow and TV news bulletins open with the latest number for "la prima de riesgo".

The government acknowledges that the situation is critical.

In private, officials say, Rajoy has been pressing Brussels and Berlin for the European Central Bank to guarantee all bank deposits in the eurozone to prevent bank runs, to buy Spanish sovereign debt to reduce yields and calm markets, for greater European fiscal integration and for allowing the European bailout fund to lend money directly to recapitalize Spain's sickly banks. The ECB is resistant to bond purchases on a massive scale.

"Spain is going through a major crisis of confidence," one diplomat said. "Markets are good at pricing risk but they hate uncertainty - and right now that uncertainty is killing Spain."

COMMUNICATION

Bankers and local media say Rajoy's own stumbles are making matters worse at a critical time. The 56-year-old, like many of his ministers, hails from provincial Spain, has no international experience, lacks deep knowledge of finance and speaks only limited English.

A hastily scheduled press conference by the premier on Monday ended with markets taking fright at his lack of clarity about how to fund the Bankia bailout and his insistence that Spanish banks did not need a European bailout. Government sources expressed frustration that the media had failed to understand the prime minister's "clear message".

"I was expecting that this government would do things better," one senior banker here said. "Instead they are shooting from the hip. You can't say to the market that you are going to do one thing and then do something else."

"Where are the technocrats ?" another banker asked. "What this government needs is a really good technocrat who has the experience and the knowledge to cope with a situation as tough as this one."

Analysts and foreign bankers here say the Madrid government is making a big gamble by assuming that the European Union's paymaster Germany, together with the European Central Bank, will in the end "do the right thing" and come to Spain's rescue.

Germany has led opposition to increasing the size of the EU's bailout fund, to guaranteeing all eurozone bank deposits, to allowing the use of common eurozone bonds to fund governments and to letting the ECB buy more government debt to push down yields.

Instead, Berlin preaches austerity, inviting the mainly southern European crisis countries to follow the same path it took last decade - structural reforms to improve economic competitiveness, tight discipline on spending and reductions in borrowing.

The resentment in Madrid is very apparent.

"Countries which are doing reforms need to find a way to be rewarded, rather than punished," deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz said in a conversation with Reuters. "...it's not possible to explain to citizens that what they save through austerity will then be spent on higher debt interest payments."

Top officials mutter about how today's European Union consists of a "German Union plus the rest" and local businessmen make unflattering comparisons with Berlin's domination of Europe in World War Two.

A commonly heard view among top Spanish bankers, officials and diplomats is that Spain is "too big to fail".

It is inconceivable, they say, to imagine the eurozone without its fourth biggest economy. Spain's future is inextricably linked to Europe's future. So Germany is bound to agree reluctantly to change course and allow the ECB and the bailout fund to support Spain.

"It may go down to the wire, it may get very bad," one senior diplomat here said. "But Germany has to choose. With Greece it did not have to choose. It could allow Greece to fail. But if Spain fails, Europe fails. So in the end we have to believe that Merkel and the Taliban of the Bundesbank (German central bank) will change their minds and do what they need to do to save Europe."

Deputy Prime Minister Saenz says it's about nothing less than the future of Europe. "If the EU doesn't reinforce the eurozone with some sort of mechanism, it's not about who leaves, it's about the EU itself. What is Europe without the euro?"

Whether that is true remains to be seen.

Reuters reported last November that France and Germany had secretly discussed plans for a smaller "core" eurozone consisting of strong nations intent on deeper economic integration.

"They think here that Spain is a very important country and a crucial part of Europe," said one long-time Madrid bank adviser. "But they forget that for the Germans, Spain is a minor country next to Greece and Italy."

(Additional reporting by Annika Breidthardt in Berlin and Fiona Ortiz in Madrid, editing by Janet McBride)

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Reuters: Most Read Articles: What Are 'Bath Salts' And Are They Illegal?

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Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
What Are 'Bath Salts' And Are They Illegal?
May 31st 2012, 03:24

By Andrew Chow, JD at FindLaw.com

Wed May 30, 2012 11:24pm EDT

What are "bath salts"? We're not talking about the cosmetic variety that you add to bath water for soaking. Rather, the term "bath salts" describes illegal designer street drugs that have been linked to violent delusions and even death.

In a bizarre and gruesome example, bath salts may have driven Rudy Eugene, 31, to strip naked and eat the face of Ronald Poppo, 65, on Saturday, some police and doctors in Miami believe. Police shot and killed Eugene when he refused to stop eating Poppo's face; Poppo is in critical condition at a hospital.

Bath salts were also blamed in another Florida incident in which a man overdosed on the drug and died. Similar cases nationwide have led the Drug Enforcement Agency and state lawmakers to take action.

The DEA last fall banned three chemicals commonly used to make bath salts: mephedrone, MDPV, and methylone. Possession or sale of these synthetic stimulants could result in federal drug charges.

In addition, at least 38 states have enacted bath-salt bans, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. The bans spell out a wide range of penalties for possession and trafficking, and include a variety of different chemicals that can be used to make bath salts, not just the three stimulants banned by the DEA.

That brings up another concern: Because bath salts are made by "street chemists," there's really no way to know what chemicals are actually contained in any given quantity of bath salts, one expert told WebMD. There's also no medical test to detect bath salts in a patient. "The only way we know if someone has taken them is if they tell you," the expert said.

Despite new laws and a growing awareness of bath salts' side effects -- notably, dangerously high body temperature, extreme paranoia, and vivid hallucinations -- the use of bath salts seems to be on the rise in the United States. Poison-control centers tallied more than 6,100 bath-salt emergencies in 2011, up from just 303 in 2010, The Daily Beast reports.

Related Resources:

  • Bath Salts: The 'Cannibal' From Miami's Alleged Dangerous Drug Of Choice (The Huffington Post)
  • Emergency Department Visits After Use of a Drug Sold as "Bath Salts" --- Michigan, November 13, 2010--March 31, 2011 (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
  • 'Bath Salts' Drug Gets Snorted, Banned in Fla. (FindLaw's Blotter)
  • State Drug Possession Laws (FindLaw)
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Reuters: Most Read Articles: Suspect in Seattle gun rampage shoots himself

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Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Suspect in Seattle gun rampage shoots himself
May 31st 2012, 03:20

1 of 10. The owner (R) of a coffee shop, where a gunman shot and killed three people and injured two more, is consoled by a woman in Seattle, Washington, May 30, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Robert Sorbo

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Reuters: Most Read Articles: Image shows buildings gone at Iran site: diplomats

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Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Image shows buildings gone at Iran site: diplomats
May 31st 2012, 00:11

By Fredrik Dahl

VIENNA | Wed May 30, 2012 8:11pm EDT

VIENNA (Reuters) - U.N. nuclear inspectors displayed new satellite imagery on Wednesday indicating that some small buildings had been dismantled and other possible clean-up work undertaken at an Iranian military site they want to visit.

One image from May 25 showed signs that "ground-scraping activities" had taken place at the Parchin facility, as well as the presence of a bulldozer, according to diplomats who attended a closed-door briefing by U.N. nuclear agency officials.

This will likely further strengthen Western suspicions that Iran is "sanitizing" the site of any incriminating evidence before allowing the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) into the complex. "It is very clear," one Western envoy said.

Iran's IAEA envoy, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, dismissed such accusations by Western officials, telling reporters after the briefing that "this kind of noise and allegations are baseless".

Wednesday's disclosure followed inconclusive talks between Iran and six world powers in Baghdad last week to address concerns about the nature of its nuclear activities.

The Parchin complex is at the centre of Western allegations that Iran has been conducting research and experiments relevant to developing a nuclear weapons capability. The Islamic Republic has repeatedly denied any such ambition.

Last week, the IAEA said in a report issued to member states that satellite images showed "extensive activities" at the facility southeast of Tehran.

Western diplomats said this was an allusion to suspected cleaning at Parchin. They have earlier cited other images showing recent activity at the site, including a stream of water, as suggesting Iran is trying to remove evidence.

At Wednesday's briefing for diplomats accredited to the Vienna-based agency, IAEA Deputy Director General Herman Nackaerts presented several satellite images, including from November and earlier this month, participants said.

The image from late May indicated that two or possibly three small side buildings - in the same area as the main structure that is of interest to the U.N. agency - had been removed, diplomats said.

"It was like a demolition area," one Western diplomat said.

IRAN NOT READY FOR VISIT

Nackaerts did not elaborate on what he believed was happening at the facility, apart from reiterating that the agency needed to go there to clarify the issue, diplomats said.

Iran, which denies Western accusations it is seeking to develop nuclear weapons capability, has dismissed charges aired about Parchin as "childish" and "ridiculous".

An IAEA report last November said that Iran had built a large containment vessel in 2000 at Parchin in which to conduct tests that the U.N. agency said were "strong indicators of possible (nuclear) weapon development."

It said a building was constructed "around a large cylindrical object." A large earth berm between the building containing the cylinder and a neighboring building indicated the probable use of high explosives in the chamber.

The IAEA said the vessel was designed to contain the detonation of up to 70 kg of high explosives. Diplomatic sources say the suspected tests likely took place about a decade ago.

Last week, Iranian media said the IAEA had not yet given good enough reasons to visit Parchin, which Iran says is solely a conventional military site.

"The reasons and documents have still not been presented by the agency to convince us to give permission for this visit," the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani, was quoted as saying by Fars news agency.

Soltanieh made clear that the IAEA could only gain access to Parchin once a broader agreement had been reached on how to address the agency's questions about possible military aspects to Iran's nuclear program.

IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano said after visiting Tehran last week that he expected this framework agreement to unblock the agency's investigation would be signed soon, but Soltanieh said it had not yet been finalized.

Robert Kelley, a former senior IAEA official, said that if there were any uranium traces at the site the agency's inspectors were still likely to find them.

"If Iran is washing out the building and equipment outside, and there is actually uranium present, letting the uranium contaminated water run across the parking lot means the IAEA is going to have a 100 percent chance of finding it."

World powers who met Iran last week proposed ways of defusing concerns about its nuclear works, for example by having Tehran scale back uranium enrichment and accept more intrusive IAEA inspections in exchange for relief from economic sanctions.

No agreement was reached although the two sides decided on another meeting in Moscow on June 18-19.

But Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Wednesday he did not expect the next talks to yield a breakthrough. "We are not expecting miracles at the next nuclear meeting in Moscow," he told France 24 television.

(Additional reporting by John Irish in Paris; editing by Mark Heinrich)

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