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Arab League mission to return to Syria: Ban
02/09 | 00:36 GMT
UNITED NATIONS (AFP) - The Arab League and United Nations are considering sending a joint observer mission to Syria, UN leader Ban Ki-moon said Wednesday, as he warned the deadly crackdown could worsen.
UNITED NATIONS (AFP) - The Arab League and United Nations are considering sending a joint observer mission to Syria, UN leader Ban Ki-moon said Wednesday, as he warned the deadly crackdown could worsen.
Ban launched the idea as he bemoaned the UN Security Council's failure to agree a resolution on the crisis, saying the vote had been "disastrous" for the Syrian people and had only encouraged President Bashar al-Assad to step up the "war" on opponents.
A joint Arab League-UN mission could increase pressure on Assad, diplomats said. But they added that it would need careful preparation before it would got backing from the major powers.
Ban and the secretary general of the Arab League, Nabil al-Arabi, spoke on Tuesday about events in Syria since the League suspended its monitoring mission on January 28 because of the mounting violence. Many Arab states have completely withdrawn their representatives.
"He informed me that he intends to send the Arab League observer mission back to Syria and asked for UN help," Ban told reporters after a UN Security Council meeting.
"He further suggested that we consider a joint observer mission in Syria, including a joint special envoy."
The UN leader said consultations would be held with UN Security Council members in coming days "before fleshing out the details".
"We stand ready to assist in any way that will contribute towards improvement on the ground and to the overall situation," Ban said.
The UN secretary general said he feared the violence would worsen and launched into a new attack on the divided 15-member Security Council. Russia and China again vetoed a Syria resolution on Saturday.
"I deeply regret that the Security Council has been unable to speak with one clear voice to end the bloodshed," he said.
"The failure to do so is disastrous for the people of Syria. It has encouraged the Syrian government to step up its war on its own people. Thousands have been killed in cold blood, shredding President Assad’s claims to speak for the Syrian people."
He said the "appalling brutality" of the government's artillery assault on the protest city of Homs "is a grim harbinger of worse to come."
Western nations have called for Assad to stand aside and the Arab League has also proposed a plan under which he would transfer powers to a deputy to allow new elections. But Russia has stood by Assad.
"If this killing continues, it will only erode his legitimacy as leader of Syria," Ban said when asked if Assad should stand down.
"I have been repeatedly saying that he’s losing legitimacy as the leader of Syria. Therefore, it is important to take bold and decisive measures. The situation has reached a totally unacceptable stage."
The international community has been floundering over the next step to take on Syria after Russia and China vetoed the latest Security Council resolution. Russia called the text drawn up by Arab and European nations "unbalanced".
Diplomats have said the idea of a joint Arab League-UN mission would have to be considered along with other proposals.
The European Union and United States are considering toughening their sanctions on the Assad government. And some countries are considering taking the failed Security Council resolution to the full UN General Assembly where it could not be vetoed. This would only apply symbolic pressure however.
"The Arab League-UN mission will have to be discussed with a lot more detail before it can be agreed," said one Security Council diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity.
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Capello quits as England manager
02/09 | 00:06 GMT
LONDON (AFP) - Fabio Capello resigned as manager of England on Wednesday following the Football Association's decision to strip John Terry of the captaincy, the FA confirmed.
LONDON (AFP) - Fabio Capello resigned as manager of England on Wednesday following the Football Association's decision to strip John Terry of the captaincy, the FA confirmed.
In a remarkable twist to one of the most dramatic days in English football history, Capello's resignation was confirmed just hours after his likely successor -- Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp -- was cleared of tax evasion charges.
Capello's departure from the post followed talks with FA officials reported to be furious at the Italian coach's public criticism of last week's decision to axe Terry as captain.
Capello's position had come under scrutiny after he told an Italian broadcaster on Sunday that he disagreed "absolutely" with the dismissal of Terry, who faces a criminal trial for allegations of racially abusing QPR defender Anton Ferdinand during a Premier League match in October 2011.
Although senior FA officials were known to be unhappy with Capello's comments, the former AC Milan and Real Madrid coach was expected to remain for the final few months of his contract, which would expire after Euro 2012.
However in a bombshell announcement released shortly after 7.20pm (1920 GMT), the FA confirmed that Capello's four-year reign was over.
"The Football Association can confirm that Fabio Capello has today resigned as England Manager," the statement said, following discussions between Capello, FA chairman David Bernstein and FA General Secretary Alex Horne.
"The discussions focused on the FA Board’s decision to remove the England team captaincy from John Terry, and Fabio Capello’s response through an Italian broadcast interview.
"Fabio's resignation was accepted and he will leave the post of England manager with immediate effect."
Capello was not immediately available for comment. FA officials have scheduled a press conference at Wembley on Thursday.
The 65-year-old took over as England coach in December 2007 following the country's failure to qualify for the Euro 2008 final, signed a lucrative £6 million-a-year contract with a brief to halt years of English footballing under-achievement on the international stage.
His hardline disciplinarian approach reaped impressive results during an initial two-year honeymoon period, when a revitalised England qualified for the 2010 World Cup with ease.
Facts: Capello's England highs and lows
Capello won praise for his handling of the first controversy involving Terry's captaincy, when he summarily dismissed the Chelsea defender following allegations about his private life in early 2010.
However the bubble burst after a disastrous campaign in South Africa, which saw England draw with the United States and Algeria, scrape a 1-0 win over Slovenia before suffering a humiliating 4-1 thrashing by Germany.
Capello, who had controversially been given a contract extension just prior to the World Cup finals, managed to cling on to his position but in many respects was battling the perception of being a lame duck manager.
His clumsy handling of the decision to reappoint Terry last year -- replacing Rio Ferdinand without informing the respected Manchester United defender first -- was sharply criticised.
With the FA letting it be known that they would prefer Capello's successor to be English, Tottenham manager Redknapp emerged as the overwhelming favourite to take up the post.
The biggest obstacle to Redknapp becoming England manager vanished on Wednesday when the 64-year-old was acquitted of tax evasion following a two-and-a-half week trial at Southwark Crown Court.
One bookmaker immediately suspended betting on Redknapp replacing Capello as odds on the Londoner taking over were slashed.
Former England managers Graham Taylor and Sven-Goran Eriksson both said Redknapp would be a logical successor.
"Now that Harry has been proved innocent it makes a clear path should the FA wish in the future to offer him the England manager's job when Fabio Capello comes to the end of his reign," Taylor told the BBC.
England players meanwhile reacted with shock to news of Capello's departure, with striker Wayne Rooney confessing he was "gutted" by the news.
"Gutted capello has quit. Good guy and top coach. Got to be English to replace him. Harry redknapp for me," Rooney wrote on Twitter.
Liverpool full-back Glen Johnson also took to Twitter to pay tribute.
"Sad news to see Capello step down. Good man and a Good manager. ThanksForEverything," he wrote.
UK News
Capello quits as England ...US begins stem cell trial for hearing loss
02/08 | 17:15 GMT
WASHINGTON (AFP) - US researchers have begun a groundbreaking trial to test the potential of umbilical cord blood transplants, a kind of stem cell therapy, to treat and possibly reverse hearing loss in infants.
WASHINGTON (AFP) - US researchers have begun a groundbreaking trial to test the potential of umbilical cord blood transplants, a kind of stem cell therapy, to treat and possibly reverse hearing loss in infants.
The phase I trial follows promising studies on mice showing that such transplants were able to rebuild the structures of the inner ear, and some anecdotal evidence from humans, sparking hope of a cure for some forms of deafness.
One of those people is two-year-old Finn McGrath, who suffered brain damage after being deprived of oxygen during a prolonged and complicated delivery, according to his mother, Laura.
"His doctors told us he was at high risk for cerebral palsy, vision issues, hearing problems and mental retardation," she said in an interview with AFP.
Finn's early days were an all-out struggle to survive, so for his parents, learning that he had failed his hearing tests and had damaged hair cells -- the sensory receptors in the inner ear that pick up sounds -- was almost an afterthought.
He had organ failure, breathing problems, and his cerebral palsy left him unable to roll, crawl or walk, hold his head up, talk or eat.
As his parents searched for ways to help him, they came upon stories online that told of studies using cord blood to help children with cerebral palsy and other disorders.
Prior to his birth, the McGraths had arranged to privately bank his umbilical cord blood, a procedure that costs around $2,000 plus storage fees, and remains controversial among pediatricians.
Private companies such as the Cord Blood Registry, which is funding the Texas study on hearing loss, urge expecting parents to bank their umbilical cord blood and reserve it for personal use as a way to protect their family.
That advice runs counter to the guidelines issued by the American Academy of Pediatrics in 2007, which calls such claims "unsubstantiated" and says banking for personal or family use "should be discouraged" but is "encouraged" if it is to be stored in a bank for public use.
Since Finn's parents had already banked his, they enrolled him in cord blood trial for cerebral palsy in North Carolina and he received his first transplant in November 2009 when he was about seven weeks old.
A second transfusion followed and by May, his parents began to notice a change.
Nighttime noises, like an alarm on his food pump or the sound of ripping medical tape, would suddenly startle him awake, his mother recalled.
"He started vocalizing sounds and we could tell that he was anticipating things that we would say. Like, if he had heard a story a number of times or a song, he would smile like he recognized the song or the story."
Finn had a third infusion in September 2010, when he was one year old. Four months later, an otoacoustic emissions test (OAE), which plays a sound and picks up vibrations in the cochlea and hair cells, came back normal.
The early hearing tests that showed hearing loss were not exactly the same as the later tests that came back normal, so McGrath is cautious about comparing them directly, but she believes the cord blood transfusions may have helped.
"All I can tell you is anecdotally he was not able to hear for probably the first three or four months of his life, and then when he was about six to eight months old, he started hearing."
The hearing trial in Texas aims to take a first step in testing the safety, and later the efficacy, of transfusing cord blood in children age six weeks to 18 months who have sustained post-birth sensorineural hearing loss.
Some reasons that children lose their hearing at or after birth may include oxygen deprivation, head injury, infection, strong doses of antibiotics or loud noises.
Sensorineural hearing loss affects approximately six per 1,000 children, and there is no available medical treatment. Hearing aids or cochlear implants are typically offered to boost the ability of the damaged tissues.
"Stem cell therapy may potentially repair the damaged structures of the inner ear and restore normal hearing," lead investigator Samer Fakhri told AFP.
"We are at the initial stages of this process and the results are looking promising," Fakhri added.
Research using stem cells in cord blood, known as hematopoietic cells, is already under way on some types of brain injury, cerebral palsy, juvenile diabetes, kidney and lung disease, he said.
The new study at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center is being funded by the Cord Blood Registry, and those eligible must have already banked their own umbilical cord blood with CBR.
But to Stephen Epstein, an otolaryngologist in Maryland, that does not pose a conflict of interest, because separate medical institutions in Texas and Georgia are conducting the Food and Drug Administration-approved research.
"If both of them can reproduce the same results then I would say it has some validity to it," said Epstein, who is not involved in the study.
"This is certainly a welcome, acceptable experiment, but it should be looked at with caution and time will tell."
One patient is already enrolled and the study, which runs for one year, has room for nine more.
While Finn McGrath still faces many challenges due to his cerebral palsy, his mother is grateful for the things he can do.
"I don't know how much worse off he would have been without the stem cell transfusion," McGrath said, pointing to his normal cognition, lack of seizures, good hearing and vision.
"We remain hopeful that he will continue to improve."
Health/Medicine
US begins stem cell trial for hearing ...Capello quits as England manager
02/09 | 00:06 GMT
LONDON (AFP) - Fabio Capello resigned as manager of England on Wednesday following the Football Association's decision to strip John Terry of the captaincy, the FA confirmed.
LONDON (AFP) - Fabio Capello resigned as manager of England on Wednesday following the Football Association's decision to strip John Terry of the captaincy, the FA confirmed.
In a remarkable twist to one of the most dramatic days in English football history, Capello's resignation was confirmed just hours after his likely successor -- Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp -- was cleared of tax evasion charges.
Capello's departure from the post followed talks with FA officials reported to be furious at the Italian coach's public criticism of last week's decision to axe Terry as captain.
Capello's position had come under scrutiny after he told an Italian broadcaster on Sunday that he disagreed "absolutely" with the dismissal of Terry, who faces a criminal trial for allegations of racially abusing QPR defender Anton Ferdinand during a Premier League match in October 2011.
Although senior FA officials were known to be unhappy with Capello's comments, the former AC Milan and Real Madrid coach was expected to remain for the final few months of his contract, which would expire after Euro 2012.
However in a bombshell announcement released shortly after 7.20pm (1920 GMT), the FA confirmed that Capello's four-year reign was over.
"The Football Association can confirm that Fabio Capello has today resigned as England Manager," the statement said, following discussions between Capello, FA chairman David Bernstein and FA General Secretary Alex Horne.
"The discussions focused on the FA Board’s decision to remove the England team captaincy from John Terry, and Fabio Capello’s response through an Italian broadcast interview.
"Fabio's resignation was accepted and he will leave the post of England manager with immediate effect."
Capello was not immediately available for comment. FA officials have scheduled a press conference at Wembley on Thursday.
The 65-year-old took over as England coach in December 2007 following the country's failure to qualify for the Euro 2008 final, signed a lucrative £6 million-a-year contract with a brief to halt years of English footballing under-achievement on the international stage.
His hardline disciplinarian approach reaped impressive results during an initial two-year honeymoon period, when a revitalised England qualified for the 2010 World Cup with ease.
Facts: Capello's England highs and lows
Capello won praise for his handling of the first controversy involving Terry's captaincy, when he summarily dismissed the Chelsea defender following allegations about his private life in early 2010.
However the bubble burst after a disastrous campaign in South Africa, which saw England draw with the United States and Algeria, scrape a 1-0 win over Slovenia before suffering a humiliating 4-1 thrashing by Germany.
Capello, who had controversially been given a contract extension just prior to the World Cup finals, managed to cling on to his position but in many respects was battling the perception of being a lame duck manager.
His clumsy handling of the decision to reappoint Terry last year -- replacing Rio Ferdinand without informing the respected Manchester United defender first -- was sharply criticised.
With the FA letting it be known that they would prefer Capello's successor to be English, Tottenham manager Redknapp emerged as the overwhelming favourite to take up the post.
The biggest obstacle to Redknapp becoming England manager vanished on Wednesday when the 64-year-old was acquitted of tax evasion following a two-and-a-half week trial at Southwark Crown Court.
One bookmaker immediately suspended betting on Redknapp replacing Capello as odds on the Londoner taking over were slashed.
Former England managers Graham Taylor and Sven-Goran Eriksson both said Redknapp would be a logical successor.
"Now that Harry has been proved innocent it makes a clear path should the FA wish in the future to offer him the England manager's job when Fabio Capello comes to the end of his reign," Taylor told the BBC.
England players meanwhile reacted with shock to news of Capello's departure, with striker Wayne Rooney confessing he was "gutted" by the news.
"Gutted capello has quit. Good guy and top coach. Got to be English to replace him. Harry redknapp for me," Rooney wrote on Twitter.
Liverpool full-back Glen Johnson also took to Twitter to pay tribute.
"Sad news to see Capello step down. Good man and a Good manager. ThanksForEverything," he wrote.



