Friday, April 18, 2014

Lifesaving slap: Victim’s mother forgives Iranian at gallows

AFP
Published - Arab News - Friday 18 April 2014
COMPASSION REDEFINED: The mother of Abdollah Hosseinzadeh, who was murdered in 2007, slaps Balal who killed her son in a street fight, before she spared Balal’s life during the execution ceremony in Nowshahr, Iran. (AFP)
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TEHRAN: An Iranian mother spared the life of her son’s convicted murderer with an emotional slap in the face as he awaited execution with the noose around his neck, a newspaper reported Thursday.
The dramatic climax followed a rare public campaign to save the life of Balal, who at 19 killed another young man, Abdollah Hosseinzadeh, in a street fight with a knife back in 2007.
Shargh newspaper said police officers led Balal to a public execution site in the northern city of Nowshahr as a large crowd gathering on Tuesday morning.
Samereh Alinejad, mother of the victim who lost another son in a motorbike accident four years ago, asked the crowd whether they know “how difficult it is to live in an empty house.”
Balal, black-hooded and standing on a chair before a makeshift gallows, had the noose around his neck when Alinejad approached.
She slapped him in the face and removed the rope from his neck assisted by her husband, Abdolghani Hosseinzadeh, a former professional footballer.
“I am a believer. I had a dream in which my son told me that he was at peace and in a good place... After that, all my relatives, even my mother, put pressure on me to pardon the killer,” Alinejad told Shargh.
“The murderer was crying, asking for forgiveness. I slapped him in the face. That slap helped to calm me down,” she said. “Now that I’ve forgiven him, I feel relieved.”
Balal said the “slap was the space between revenge and forgiveness.”
“I’ve asked my friends not to carry knives... I wish someone had slapped me in the face when I wanted to carry one,” Balal said in a television interview.
A high-profile campaign was launched by public figures including Adel Ferdosipour, a popular football commentator and TV show host, and former international footballer Ali Daei, appealed for the victim’s family to forgive the killer.

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

‘Blood moon’ wows sky-watchers - Arab News

REUTERS
Published - Arab News - Wednesday 16 April 2014
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CELESTIAL TREAT: A combo of six pictures shows the phases of the moon, from left, during a lunar eclipse in Buenos Aires on Tuesday. The entire event was to be visible from North and South America, but sky watchers in northern and and eastern Europe, eastern Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia were out of luck. (AFP)
 
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida: Parts of the world saw a rare celestial event on Tuesday when the Earth’s shadow fell across the moon, turning it orange.
The lunar eclipse unfolded over three hours beginning at about 2 a.m. EDT, when the moon began moving into Earth’s shadow. A little more than an hour later, the moon could be seen eclipsed and bathed in an orange, red or brown glow.
Depending on local weather conditions, the eclipse was visible across a swath of the United States.
Viewers from Florida to California and beyond went to viewing parties and social media and other websites to gawk and share photos of the so-called “blood moon.”
A small crowd of stargazers who gathered on a roadside north of Los Angeles saw a sliver of still-illuminated moon and a reddish shadow cast across the lunar orb.
Others who were not so lucky took to Twitter to complain about cloud cover in New Jersey and Pittsburgh. An image of rain-streaked windows under impenetrable Atlanta skies could be seen. In the Pacific Northwest city of Seattle the skies were equally overcast.
The eclipse also was visible from Australia, New Zealand and all of the Americas.
Precize coloring depends primarily on the amount of volcanic ash and other aerosols floating in the atmosphere, SpaceWeather.com reports.
The celestial show was over by over by 5:30 a.m. EDT (0930 GMT), NASA said on Twitter.
Eclipses occur two or three times per year when the sun, Earth and the full moon line up so that the moon passes through Earth’s shadow.
Tuesday’s eclipse will be the last full lunar eclipse visible from the United States until 2019, NASA said.

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Saudi Arabia - Private schools urged to use fingerprint systems - Arab News

JEDDAH: FADIA JIFFRY
Published - Arab News - Wednesday 16 April 2014
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SCHOOL SENTINEL: The system electronically registers the attendance of students, and parents are notified in instances of absence or delay in attendance. (AN photo)
 
A number of public schools have applied the biometrics attendance system on students, in line with the Ministry of Education’s new regulation.
The new system electronically registers the attendance of students and in instances of absence or delay in attendance, parents are notified.
Several school principals have also installed cameras to monitor activity on school premises, amid efforts to boost safety and productivity. Experts and educationalists in the Kingdom have expressed satisfaction with the system and claim that such a measure should be implemented in private schools too.
“I strongly believe this measure is needed in private schools as well,” said Mukhtar Khan, executive director and education consultant at the World Center for Education Consultancy in Riyadh. “The new system is a much required form of supervision. Any institution works well when rules are implemented and ad333hered to correctly. If fingerprinting or cameras can assist in disciplining students, then it’s a welcome step.”
“Monitoring cameras are a need of the hour. For instance, speed cameras installed on roads have reduced accidents by 50 percent. I believe schools will report better discipline and productivity after they install monitoring devices. Students will be more disciplined and will learn to respect regulations,” said Khan.
“I’m all for the new fingerprinting system in schools as it will help parents and teachers keep track of children and prevent them from skipping school and instil a sense of discipline,” said Ambareed Sayed, academic coordinator at The City School International in Jeddah.
Lakshman Sockalingam, a lecturer with the English Language Institute at King Abdul Aziz University (KAU), said he wished to see the same system enforced in both government and private institutions to ensure uniformity across all schools in the Kingdom.