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Thursday, March 10, 2016

Donald Trump: ‘I Think Islam Hates Us’

Donald Trump accused Islam of hating the western world in an interview Wednesday, the latest in the GOP Presidential candidate’s attacks on the religion.
“I think Islam hates us,” Trump told Anderson Cooper on CNN, after the host asked him whether Islam was at war with the West. “There is a tremendous hatred there. We have to get to the bottom of it.”
Cooper then asked whether Trump believed the hatred was in the Islamic religion itself.
“You’re going to have to figure that out,” Trump replied. “You’ll get another Pulitzer.”
“We can’t allow people who have this hatred coming into the United States and of people who are not Muslim.”

Trump argued that “it’s very hard to separate” radical Islam from the mainstream practice of the religion. “It’s very hard to define,” he said. “Because you don’t know who’s who.”
The GOP frontrunner has previously come under fire from people across the political spectrum for his comments on Islam. Trump has previously suggested a ban on Muslims from entering the U.S. until “our country’s representatives can figure out what is going on.”

'Hot Convict' Jeremy Meeks Released From Jail

The convicted Californian criminal whose "handsome" mugshot went viral has walked out of prison - and he's ready for his close-up.
Jeremy Meeks, 32, was sentenced to more than two years' jail for possession of a firearm in 2015, but he has been released early.
After his arrest, his mugshot drew thousands of admiring comments when it was posted on Stockton Police Department's Facebook page.
He was dubbed the "Hot Convict" and "Hot Felon", with social media users focusing on his high cheekbones, chiselled face and blue eyes. 
"Ralph Lauren better sign him lol," wrote one user.
The convicted Californian criminal whose "handsome" mugshot went viral has walked out of prison - and he's ready for his close-up.
Jeremy Meeks, 32, was sentenced to more than two years' jail for possession of a firearm in 2015, but he has been released early.
After his arrest, his mugshot drew thousands of admiring comments when it was posted on Stockton Police Department's Facebook page.
He was dubbed the "Hot Convict" and "Hot Felon", with social media users focusing on his high cheekbones, chiselled face and blue eyes. 
"Ralph Lauren better sign him lol," wrote one user.
another Instagram post, Meeks is pictured on a boat with the caption: "Looking forward to time on the lake with my kids."
His agent is also excited about the former prisoner's future.
"We have a lot in store regarding Jeremy's new career," Mr Jordan said in a statement.
"There are a multitude of offers on the table.
"Jeremy is humbled and grateful and overwhelmed by the outpouring of love, support, and prayers for him and his family."
Police have previously described Meeks as "one of the most violent criminals in the Stockton area".

Democratic Debate Shifts To Immigration

Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders clashed over their records on immigration in the eighth Democratic presidential debate ahead of the Florida primary.
The two candidates faced off in Miami just six days before the state decides as both accused the other of letting Hispanics down.
Mrs Clinton attacked her rival for repeatedly voting against a 2007 comprehensive immigration reform bill.
Mr Sanders responded by criticising her for opposing a 2007 measure which would have allowed people in the country illegally to obtain a driver's licence.
The two Democrat candidates are bidding to seize momentum in the contest after Mr Sanders scored an upset victory in the Michigan primary on Tuesday.
Florida is home to nearly 1.8 million Hispanic people, who include around 15% of the state's Democrats.
So far, Hispanic voters have made up around 10% of voters in the Democratic primaries and Mrs Clinton has won around two-thirds of their votes.
Both candidates mocked Republican front runner Donald Trump's plan for a wall on the Mexican border to stem immigration.
Mr Sanders said: "We do not, as Donald Trump  and others have done, resort to racism and xenophobia and bigotry."
The former Secretary of State accused Mr Sanders of supporting legislation that would have led to the indefinite detention of people facing deportation.
The Vermont Senator called that claim "ridiculous" and accused Mrs Clinton of distorting his voting record.
Missouri, Illinois, Ohio and North Carolinaare also voting to select their nominee on 15 March.
At this stage, Mrs Clinton has won 762 pledged delegates, compared to 549 for Mr Sanders.
When superdelegates are included - delegates who are free to choose whom they want to support including sitting Democratic governors and members of the House and Senate - Mrs Clinton leads by 1,223 to 574.
Candidates need 2,383 to win the Democratic nomination.
A total of 691 delegates are up for grabs, including 99 in Florida which awards all of its delegates to the winner rather than dividing them out.

New spider discovered in Australia is named Brian

Australia's most newly-discovered spider surfs, swims and can catch prey up to three times its own size. 
The spider was revealed at the World Science Festival in Australia, and was given the name 'Brian', after a famous scientist called Professor B
The spider can be found in Queensland, Australia, and eats fish, frogs, tadpoles, and even big cane toads, but luckily isn't dangerous to humans.
Brian catches its prey by sitting on the surface of water, and feeling vibrations caused by the creatures it wants to hunt. 
When it feels a vibration, it runs across the water to grab its prey.
It then dives under the water with it, before swimming back to shore to eat it up.

PM: I Will Still Run As MP When I Step Down

David Cameron has said he will stand as an MP in 2020 even though he will have stepped down as Prime Minister.

Mr Cameron ruled out a full third term as PM ahead of the General Election last year but has now said he would like to continue as MP for Witney in Oxfordshire.

He told BBC Radio Oxfordshire he would serve a full second term as Prime Minister but would then seek re-election as a backbencher in 2020.

He was returned with a majority of 25,155 in May.

When asked if he planned to continue as an MP, he said: "That is very much my intention.

"I love being MP for Witney and am very keen to continue. I draw huge strength from being a Member of Parliament in Oxfordshire."

Star Wars’ Daisy Ridley Hits Out Against Criticism of Her Appearance

Daisy Ridley has spoken out against online criticism of her appearance on her Instagram account.
In two posts Wednesday, Ridley addressed an image circulating on social media that claimed her appearance in Star Wars: The Force Awakens sets “unrealistic expectations” for young girls; the image also insisted “real women have curves.”
In Ridley’s first post, which has since been deleted, she included a screenshot of the image and wrote, “ ‘Real women’ are all shapes and sizes, all ethnicities, all levels of brave, have families, don’t have families. I am a ‘real woman’ like every other woman in this world.”
Ridley removed the screenshot after the original poster was criticized in turn, and in a follow-up post she stressed the importance of everyone “being kind to each other.”
She added, “I’m a normal girl thrust into extraordinary circumstances, just like [Star Warscharacter] Rey. I will not [apologize] for how I look, what I say and how I live my life … and I am striving to be the best version of myself, even if I stumble along the way.”

Senegal's anti-FGM campaigner: 'My child won't be cut'

Kolda, Senegal - For many in Senegal, especially women, the centuries-old custom of female genital mutilation (FGM) is linked to religion. This is one misconception that one awareness campaign here is trying to dispel by using imams and community leaders as communicators.
The campaigners go to different villages in southern Senegal to talk to adults and children directly. They conduct interactive workshops in a bid to raise awareness and allow participants to share their stories through art.
In one class, students are huddled around a black clay pot turned upside down. On it, they draw their stories of FGM and child marriages. 
"It's a way for them to process what they or people close to them have gone through. It serves as therapy and we try to help explain their rights to them," says Mariama Djarama Jo, a community social worker and activist. She comes from a family of circumcisers, and is also a victim of FGM.
Mariama chose not to subject her daughters to FGM and has been actively persuading people in her family to follow suit - which they have.
More than 200 million girls and women around the world are affected by the practice.
According to the World Health Organization, the highest concentration of cases are in 30 countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia 
The West African country of Senegal is one of them - despite a ban that was enforced in 1999.
 Mariama Djarama Jo remains hopeful that the anti-FGM campaign will succeed, but says it will take over 20 years [Fatma Naib/Al Jazeera]
Mariama has been working with different local and international groups to spread awareness, especially about the health risks associated with the banned practice.
In the south of Senegal, up to 85 percent of women and girls have undergone FGM, or cutting, as it is also called.  
Certain tribes are still holding on to the practice as they see it as a tradition they must continue to "purify" their girls.
"The women who do the circumcision don't know about the health problems many girls go through because of this. And they need to know," Mariama says.
"If a girl got 'hemorrhage' [bleeding] the women would say it was some mystical disease. That means that those women don't know the danger of inflammation of the body after circumcision."
Mariama also points out the dangers of the knives being used to perform the custom: "It can happen that during 15 to 40 years of practice they use the same knife without sterilising it."

'Culture not religion'

The campaigner said the ban was a welcome step but she wished that the awareness campaigns about the risks had started before it came into force.
"It's deeply rooted in the culture. It existed even before Islam came here. Even the law, or prison, cannot stop the practice because people will say it’s their culture and tradition."
Often when women who perform FGM are reported to the police and are jailed for a few months - but this doesn't change anything according to Mariama.
"Once they come out they will continue, because that's how they earn their money. This practice of circumcision is ravaging our children, especially in our region. We have the most elevated numbers of  mothers dying giving birth here in Kolda.
"We also have the highest rate of AIDS in Kolda. It is all due to circumcision, that we have the highest rates of all of this in Kolda."
Still, she says she remains hopeful that the campaign will succeed - even if it will take over 20 years.
"We have started to educate the young generation and when the older generation goes away, the practice will stop," Mariama says.

'This custom stopped with me'

The initiative to fight FGM is run by World Vision in collaboration with Sister Fa, a Senegalese female rapper based in Berlin.
For the last three years, Sister Fa has been conducting workshops with children, parents, local rappers and the wider community to raise awareness about children's rights - especially for girls - and the dangers of cutting.
Sister Fa is a victim of FGM herself and feels very strongly about it.
"Growing up I had so much pain and anger inside me towards my mother as I did not understand why she did it to me," she says. "I thought that she didn't love me. Now I understand that she thought she was doing the right thing as she too went through it."
The rapper is the mother of a 10-year-old girl, and she cannot imagine anything similar happening to her child.
"This custom stopped with me. I will carry on educating mothers and children about their right to their bodies and how this practice is harmful to them," she says.
 Mariam wants to be a policewoman when she grows up so she can fight FGM [Fatma Naib/Al Jazeera]
Abdirahman and Mariam, two 10-year-olds from a school in Madina Sharif village in Kolda, have been part of the project for the last two years.
Abdirahman, an eloquent, outgoing five-grader says the campaign has played a huge role in his education.
If he gets a daughter when he grows up, he says he will not allow her to go through FGM.
"If my wife insists on doing it to my child I will leave her," he says firmly.
Mariam had FGM done to her when she was a little girl. She also lost her baby sister, aged only one, following complications after she was cut.
Almost every child that we encountered in Kolda knew someone that died after being cut. 
Abdirahman points out that even one of the awareness campaign NGO workers lost his baby girl to FGM.
"He is against FGM, but his wife did it behind his back and the baby bled to death," he says.
This too was a common tale told to us by locals. The women are the victims of FGM, but often they are also the main culprits that carry on the tradition due to social pressures and lack of knowledge and education.
Mariam wants to be a police woman when she grows up. She believes education is key to changing things.
"As a police woman I will be able to fight against FGM and fight for girls' education. One day I will have my own baby, and because I know how it feels to have it done and I have lost my baby sister to it, I will not do this to my own child. It will end here."