Exporter Japan eyes first trade deficit in 3 decades (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? Japan probably produced its first trade deficit last year in more than three decades as energy imports surged to cover for the loss of nuclear power following the Fukushima disaster, a major blow to an economy built on its exports prowess.

For decades Japan used an exports-orientated economic policy to build up global brand names such as Toyota, Sony and Canon and a manufacturing might that was the envy of the world.

Official trade figures due for release on Wednesday are expected to show that Japan swung to a deficit for the first time since 1980, as utilities purchased fossil fuels for power stations to make up for the loss of nuclear power.

Economists say Japan’s trade will be in deficit for the next few years as it copes with the Fukushima catastrophe that released radiation into the atmosphere and forced most nuclear power stations to shut in the face of a public outcry over safety.

Trade will then return to a surplus, but long-term trends suggest the surplus will weaken anyhow. A rise in the yen to a record last year of fewer than 77 per dollar from more than 250 in 1980 is making Japanese exports increasingly uncompetitive and so encouraging manufacturers to move overseas.

“Japan can continue to export goods, but if you focus exclusively on the trade balance, then the days as an exporter are ending,” said Seiji Adachi, senior economist at Deutsche Securities.

The argument that Japan can rely on surpluses from its international trade to offset a large public debt could also look less convincing and lead some investors to bet that a funding crisis will come sooner than originally expected.

“Last year I thought we could continue to finance our debt for 10 years. Now I think it’s seven years,” Adachi said.

Trade data for December and 2011 as a whole is due on Wednesday at 8:50 a.m. (Tuesday 2350 GMT). Adachi forecasts a 2011 deficit of 2.4 trillion yen ($31.2 billion).

That would be the first shortfall since a 2.6 trillion yen deficit in 1980, one ironically also caused by a jump in oil import costs when world prices rose.

Since then Japan has been able to rely on exports of goods, including its iconic autos, MP3 players, computer chips and in recent years games consoles, to produce one trade surplus after another.

ENERGY NEEDS

Liquefied natural gas imports jumped to a record last year as utilities turned to gas-fired power generation to plug the gap left by the shutdown of most nuclear reactors after the March 11 earthquake caused the worst nuclear disaster in 25 years.

Japan, the world’s third-biggest oil consumer, has also seen import values rise due to high crude prices. Assuming that oil prices remain high, this could also keep Japan in a trade deficit for the next few years, economists say.

The trade deficit could narrow to 1.9 trillion yen in 2012 and then widen to 2.2 trillion yen in 2013, Adachi said.

In addition to energy imports, a surge in outward-bound mergers and acquisitions by Japanese firms will also lower export volumes as manufacturers go abroad, Adachi said. They are also expanding production to overseas locations rather than in Japan.

Years of trade surpluses and a high savings rate among Japanese fuelled confidence that the country could comfortably service its mounting debt, which has reached twice the size of its $5 trillion economy, the biggest burden among industrialized nations.

Japan has avoided the sell-off in its sovereign debt that has become common in debt-stricken Europe.

One reason, analysts have often cited, is that running a trade surplus makes Japan a creditor to other nations. Hefty holding of overseas assets by Japanese investors also helped give Japan a high credit status.

Economists have predicted that as the Japanese population ages and the savings rate falls that these surpluses could swing to deficits.

A shift from nuclear power generation could prove expensive enough to hasten the oncoming of Japan as a deficit nation and increase the need for tax hikes and spending cuts to lower outstanding debt.

The change in Japan’s energy balance is also proving painful for Japanese companies as it is happening largely without a well-defined energy policy from the government to assure firms that energy supplies and costs will remain stable in the future.

Nippon Keidanren, the country’s largest business lobby, cited uncertainty about energy, a strong yen and the manufacturing shift overseas on Tuesday as reasons why pay raises are out of the question for annual labor union negotiations in the spring.

“The wild card is energy costs,” said Hiroaki Muto, senior economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management Co.

“What we really need is some type of revolution to make ourselves more energy efficient. In that sense, you could say the government’s energy policy is contributing to all of this.”

The trade deficit could peak out at 5 trillion yen in 2015 due to expensive energy imports, Muto predicted.

($1=77 yen)

(Editing by Neil Fullick and Ed Lane)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120124/bs_nm/us_japan_economy_trade

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Warfare in 1912: A Look in Scientific American ‘s Archives [Slide Show]

Web Exclusives | Technology

Images of weapons technology from a century ago, two years before World War I broke out in Europe

Image: Scientific American

These implements of warfare were developed to fill a perceived need or follow a specific doctrine. Some, such as the development of artillery, became a central facet during the Great War, the first ?total war? that involved all of its citizens, industries and scientific ingenuity.

? View the 1912 Weapons Technology Slide Show



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Coordinated sect attack kills 143 in north Nigeria

A victim of Friday’s bomb blast and gun attacks lies in Murtala Muhammad specialist hospital in Kano, Nigeria Saturday, Jan. 21, 2012. Coordinated attacks claimed by a radical Islamist sect killed at least 120 people in north Nigeria’s largest city, hospital records seen Saturday show, as gunfire still echoed around some areas of the sprawling city. (AP Photo/Salisu Rabiu)

A victim of Friday’s bomb blast and gun attacks lies in Murtala Muhammad specialist hospital in Kano, Nigeria Saturday, Jan. 21, 2012. Coordinated attacks claimed by a radical Islamist sect killed at least 120 people in north Nigeria’s largest city, hospital records seen Saturday show, as gunfire still echoed around some areas of the sprawling city. (AP Photo/Salisu Rabiu)

A victim of Friday’s bomb blast and gun attacks is transported in Murtala Muhammad specialist hospital in Kano, Nigeria Saturday, Jan. 21, 2012. Coordinated attacks claimed by a radical Islamist sect killed at least 120 people in north Nigeria’s largest city, hospital records seen Saturday show, as gunfire still echoed around some areas of the sprawling city. (AP Photo/Salisu Rabiu)

A victim of Friday’s bomb blast and gun attacks lies in Murtala Muhammad specialist hospital in Kano, Nigeria Saturday, Jan. 21, 2012. Coordinated attacks claimed by a radical Islamist sect killed at least 120 people in north Nigeria’s largest city, hospital records seen Saturday show, as gunfire still echoed around some areas of the sprawling city. (AP Photo/Salisu Rabiu)

A victim of Friday’s bomb blast and gun attacks lies in Murtala Muhammad specialist hospital in Kano, Nigeria Saturday, Jan. 21, 2012. Coordinated attacks claimed by a radical Islamist sect killed at least 120 people in north Nigeria’s largest city, hospital records seen Saturday show, as gunfire still echoed around some areas of the sprawling city. (AP Photo/Salisu Rabiu)

A victim of Friday’s bomb blast and gun attacks lies in Murtala Muhammad specialist hospital in Kano, Nigeria Saturday, Jan. 21, 2012. Coordinated attacks claimed by a radical Islamist sect killed at least 120 people in north Nigeria’s largest city, hospital records seen Saturday show, as gunfire still echoed around some areas of the sprawling city. (AP Photo/Salisu Rabiu)

(AP) ? A coordinated attack by a radical Islamist sect in north Nigeria’s largest city killed at least 143 people, a hospital official said Saturday, representing the extremist group’s deadliest assault since beginning its campaign of terror in Africa’s most populous nation.

Soldiers and police officers swarmed Kano’s streets as Nigeria’s president again promised the sect known as Boko Haram would “face the full wrath of the law.” But the uniformed bodies of security agents that filled a Kano hospital mortuary again showed the sect can strike at will against the country’s weak central government.

Friday’s attacks hit police stations, immigration offices and the local headquarters of Nigeria’s secret police in Kano, a city of more than 9 million people that remains an important political and religious center in the country’s Muslim north. A suicide bomber detonated a car loaded with powerful explosives outside a regional police headquarters, tearing its roof away and blowing out windows in a blast felt miles away as its members escaped jail cells there.

Authorities largely refused to offer casualty statistics as mourners began claiming the bodies of their loved ones to bury before sundown, following Islamic tradition. However, a hospital official told The Associated Press at least 143 people were killed in the attack.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to release the death toll to journalists. The toll could still rise, since other bodies could be held at other clinics and hospitals in the sprawling city.

State authorities enforced a 24-hour curfew in the city, with many remaining home as soldiers and police patrolled the streets and setup roadblocks. Gunshots echoed through some areas of the city into Saturday morning.

Nwakpa O. Nwakpa, a spokesman for the Nigerian Red Cross, said volunteers offered first aid to the wounded, and evacuated those seriously injured to local hospitals. A survey of two hospitals by the Red Cross showed at least 50 people were injured in Friday’s attack, he said.

A Boko Haram spokesman using the nom de guerre Abul-Qaqa claimed responsibility for the attacks in a message to journalists Friday. He said the attack came because the state government refused to release Boko Haram members held by the police.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said Saturday that he was “shocked and appalled” by the attacks in the former colony.

“The full horror of last night’s events is still unfolding, but we know that a great many people have died and many more have been injured,” Hague said in a statement. “The nature of these attacks has sickened people around the world and I send my deepest condolences and sympathies to the families of those killed and to those injured.”

President Goodluck Jonathan also condemned an attack he said saw innocent people “brutally and recklessly cut down by agents of terror.”

“As a responsible government, we will not fold our hands and watch enemies of democracy, for that is what these mindless killers are, perpetrate unprecedented evil in our land,” Jonathan said in a statement. “I want to reassure Nigerians … that all those involved in that dastardly act would be made to face the full wrath of the law.”

But Jonathan’s government has repeatedly been unable to stop attacks by Boko Haram, whose name means “Western education is sacrilege” in the Hausa language of Nigeria’s north. The group has carried out increasingly sophisticated and bloody attacks in its campaign to implement strict Shariah law and avenge the deaths of Muslims in communal violence across Nigeria, a multiethnic nation of more than 160 million people.

Authorities blamed Boko Haram for at least 510 killings last year alone, according to an AP count, including an August suicide bombing on the U.N. headquarters in the country’s capital Abuja. So far this year, the group has been blamed for at least 219 killings, according to an AP count.

Boko Haram recently said it specifically would target Christians living in Nigeria’s north, but Friday’s attack saw its gunmen kill many Muslims. In a recent video posted to the Internet, Imam Abubakar Shekau, a Boko Harm leader, warned it would kill anyone who “betrays the religion” by being part of or sympathizing with Nigeria’s government.

“I swear by Allah we will kill them and their killing will be nothing to us,” Shekau said. “It will be like going to prayers at 5 a.m.”

Friday’s attacks also could cause more unrest, as violence in Kano has set off attacks throughout the north in the past, including postelection violence in April that saw 800 people killed. Kano, an ancient city, remains important in the history of Islam in Nigeria and has important religious figures there today.

Amid the recent unrest and attacks, at least two journalists have been killed in Nigeria. Journalist Enenche Akogwu, who worked as a correspondent in Kano for private news station Channels Television, was shot Friday while reporting on the attacks, colleagues said. In central Nigeria’s city of Jos, Nansok Sallah, a news editor for a government-owned radio station called Highland FM, was found dead in a shallow stream Thursday, the victim of an apparent murder, the Committee to Protect Journalists said.

___

Salisu Rabiu in Kano, Nigeria, and Raphael Satter in London contributed to this report.

___

Jon Gambrell reported from Lagos, Nigeria and can be reached at www.twitter.com/jongambrellAP.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-21-AF-Nigeria-Violence/id-b3650aed4a6e456d914b3a5e68c3d368

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Study finds internet addiction causes changes in brain development (Yahoo! News)

A new look at the human brain shows little difference between internet addicts and drug addicts

Is Internet Addiction Disorder (IAD) real? A new study suggests it may be ? and that its effects can be seen in the?human brain.

The study asked those between the ages 14 and 21 questions about how their?internet use had negatively impacted their lives. Many of these questions run parallel to those that help diagnose an alcohol or drug problem: “Have you lied to your family members, therapist, or others to hide the truth of your involvement with the internet?” “Have you taken the risk of losing a significant relationship, job, educational, or career opportunity because of the internet?” Researchers followed up with questions to the subjects’ friends and families.

Participants who were found to be “addicted” to the internet had significant differences in brain development than those who were not. These include areas of lower volume in the parts of the brain that control emotional processing, executive thinking skills and attention, and cognitive control ? very similar to the?brain changes in drug addicts. There also appeared to be disruptions in the white matter between brain cells, affecting how neurons communicate with each other. The longer a person had suffered from IAD, the more pronounced the brain differences were.

There are a lot of questions still present in light of the study. Researchers are not sure whether addiction to the internet causes peoples’?brains to develop differently, or whether the brains were already like this, making people more susceptible addiction.

(Source)

This article was written by Fox Van Allen and originally appeared on Tecca

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NASA’s Amazing New Photo of the Eagle Nebula Reveals Surprising Facts [Astronomy]

This new image of the Eagle Nebula—without a doubt one of the most amazing objects in space—is stunningly trippy. It combines the two opposite ends of the electromagnetic spectrum in one shot: Far-infrared and X-ray. Absolutely gorgeous. More »


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Featured Advertiser (Washington Post)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics – Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

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Iranian lawmaker: Obama proposed talks; US denies (AP)

TEHRAN, Iran ? An Iranian lawmaker claimed Wednesday that President Barack Obama called for direct talks with Iran in a secret letter to the Islamic Republic’s supreme leader that also warned Tehran against closing the strategic Strait of Hormuz.

Obama administration officials denied there was such a letter.

Iran has threatened to close the waterway, the route for about one-sixth of the global oil flow, because of new U.S. sanctions over its nuclear program.

Conservative lawmaker Ali Motahari revealed the content of the letter days after the Obama administration said it was warning Iran through public and private channels against any action that threatens the flow of oil from the Persian Gulf.

“In the letter, Obama called for direct talks with Iran,” the semiofficial Fars news agency quoted Motahari as saying Wednesday. “The letter also said that closing the Strait of Hormuz is (Washington’s) red line.”

“The first part of the letter contains threats and the second part contains an offer for dialogue,” he added.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast confirmed that Tehran received the letter and was considering a possible response.

In Washington, an Obama administration official denied that Obama sent a letter to Khamanei, saying communication of U.S. views were being delivered through other diplomatic messages. The official would give no further details. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor pointed to earlier comments from the Obama administration that noted the U.S. had a number of ways to communicate its views to the Iranian government. He said the U.S. remained committed to engaging with Tehran and finding a diplomatic solution to its larger issues with Iran’s nuclear program.

Spokesmen have been vague on what the United States would do about Iran’s threat to block the strategic Strait of Hormuz, but military officials have been clear that the U.S. is readying for a possible naval clash.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, the country’s most powerful military force, says Tehran’s leadership has decided to order the closure of the oil route if Iran’s oil exports are blocked. A senior Guard officer said earlier this month that the decision has been made by Iran’s top authorities.

Iranian politicians have made the threat in the past, but this was the strongest statement yet that a closure of the strait is official policy.

Iran’s regular army recently held naval war games near the vital waterway that were described by hard-liners as part of preparations to close the strait if sanctions are imposed. The Guard is planning major naval military exercises next month in the same region.

The U.S. last month enacted new sanctions targeting Iran’s central bank and its ability to sell petroleum abroad over Tehran’s nuclear program. The U.S. has delayed implementing the sanctions for at least six months, worried about sending the price of oil higher at a time when the global economy is struggling.

Closing the strait would have immense world economic impact. Iran is OPEC’s second largest oil producer, and oil exports account for 80 percent of Iran’s foreign currency income. To Tehran, an oil embargo would be tantamount to a declaration of war that could provoke the Iranian leadership to block the Hormuz strait.

At issue is Iran’s nuclear program. The U.S., Israel and others charge that Iran is trying to build nuclear weapons. Their case was bolstered by a report from the International Atomic Energy late last year, citing evidence that Iran was employing methods and equipment used in making bombs.

Iran has consistently denied that, saying its nuclear program is peaceful, aimed at producing electric power and isotopes for cancer treatment.

___

Associated Press writer Julie Pace in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120118/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_us

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Cruise survivors: ‘There was so much chaos’

An American mother and daughter aboard the cruise ship that grounded off the coast of Italy Friday described a scene of chaos as passengers fended for themselves to climb aboard lifeboats.

“The crew members were running around like the actual passengers,” Maria Papa told Ann Curry live on TODAY Tuesday. “They couldn’t answer any questions to anyone; there wasn’t anybody speaking English…there was so much chaos.”

Video: Cruise ship survivor: ?So much chaos? (on this page)

Papa said she doesn’t blame for the frenzied crew, instead citing lack of direction from the liner’s captain, Francesco Schettino, who now faces possible charges for abandoning ship and manslaughter. At least 11 people died and up to 29 people are still unaccounted four days after the Costa Concordia’s sinking.

“I think if the captain took more of a hand on it, then I think the crew would have been better able to understand what was going on,” she told Curry.

Her daughter and travel partner Melissa Goduti, of Wallingford, Conn., told NBC News of the horror aboard the ship when it crashed against the rocks off the small island of Giglio Friday night: “You could definitely hear the boat hit something ? it was like the boat leaned over at a 70 degree angle.

Photos: Underwater views of the Costa Concordia

“Everything was pretty much falling; dishes were falling, trash cans were falling, everything was falling.”
Goduti said.

“There was no one in charge of our lifeboat,” Goduti told Curry. “We had one (ship employee) who spoke English..and she ended up taking off and leaving. She said she needed to find her friends. So there’s no one from Costa Cruise Lines who ever said, ‘OK, stay at this lifeboat; this is what you’re doing.’”

Video: Cruise captain accused of abandoning ship (on this page)

Papa and Goduti managed to flee the ship; a particularly harrowing experience for Papa because she doesn’t know how to swim. “We went to get on one boat when they had finally sounded the alarm, and the door would not open on that lifeboat,” she told Curry. “Someone grabbed my hand and we went to the next boat.”

While the pair made it to shore safely, Papa and Goduti are angry about reports that Captain Schettino exited the boat before the ship was cleared of passengers.

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“It’s just astonishing that someone would actually do something like that,” said Goduti. Crew members, she said, didn’t even seem to know where they were, alternately reporting they were off the coast of France or Italy.

“They had no clue,” Goduti told Curry. “No one informed them. They said the captain (said) if it was an emergency he would sound the alarms. It took an hour and a half for him to sound an alarm.”

An emergency drill was scheduled for the day after the accident, said Goduti.

“(On other cruises), within one hour of getting on board, it’s mandatory, you have to go to this drill,” she said. “They take your sea pass, they scan it and they make sure that every single passenger was there. And they tell you if anything were to happen, that you are going to scan your sea pass and we’re going to know who got off the ship and who was still on the ship, so they know who to look for.

“(The Concordia sent) the crew members back on to find people who they’ve never accounted (for).”

Added Papa, “I believe the cruise should have been more prepared.”

? 2012 MSNBC Interactive.? Reprints

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/46024452/ns/today-today_people/

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Suspicions rise in Pablo Neruda’s death (AP)

ISLA NEGRA, Chile ? The suspicions have lingered for decades.

Pablo Neruda, Chile’s Nobel Prize-winning poet, would have been a powerful voice in exile against the dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet. But that all changed just 24 hours before Neruda was to flee the country in the chaos following the 1973 military coup.

He was 69 years old and suffering from prostate cancer when he died, exactly 12 days after the brutal coup that ended the life of his close friend, socialist President Salvador Allende.

The official version was that he died of natural causes brought on by the trauma of witnessing the coup and the lethal persecution of many of his friends.

Some Chileans have questioned that official telling of Neruda’s death and instead suspected foul play at the hands of Pinochet’s regime. Those doubts could get a public airing as Chile’s Communist Party asks that Neruda’s body be exhumed for testing to address long-simmering suspicions that the poet was poisoned.

The judge investigating his death could rule at any moment that the exhumation go forward.

Communist Party lawyer Eduardo Contreras said he believes the poet was murdered, and he is supported by Manuel Araya, who was Neruda’s driver, bodyguard and assistant in the year leading up to his death.

While Neruda’s widow and his own foundation have rejected the theory, its resurgence nearly 40 years later reflects the suspicions haunting this nation of 17 million that the full story behind the coup and the dictatorship remains untold.

Araya has long contended that a doctor ? not Neruda’s regular one ? gave him a fatal injection at the Santa Maria clinic or ordered somebody to do so. Talking to The Associated Press, Araya described the day of Neruda’s death at the clinic, where the poet was being treated for his cancer, phlebitis and a hip problem. Araya had accompanied him as his bodyguard to protect him ahead of his departure from Chile. He himself wasn’t there,and says the story was told to him by a nurse whose name he has forgotten.

“Coincidentally,” Araya said in sarcastic manner, Dr. Sergio Draper “was passing by in the hallway when a nurse called to him and said that Neruda was in a lot of pain, and this doctor, very considerately, goes and gives him a Dipirona (analgesic), and the Dipirona… killed him.”

Adding to the conspiracy theories, it was at the same Santa Maria clinic where another prominent Pinochet critic, former President Eduardo Frei, was allegedly poisoned while recovering from hernia surgery in 1982. A judge in Chile has accused four doctors and two of the dictator’s agents in Frei’s death. The case is ongoing, and Frei’s body has been exhumed. One of the doctors questioned in the case, though not accused: Sergio Draper.

The AP was unable to reach the doctor for comment, after contacting the clinic where Neruda was treated and one of Chile’s main medical schools.

However, in an interview published in the Argentine newspaper Clarin in September, Draper strongly denied the allegation. he said he was only following the instructions of Neruda’s physician, Vargas Salazar, to help relieve the patient’s pain by giving him what he remembers was the drug Dipirona.

“I ordered that he be given an injection prescribed by his physician,” Draper said. “I was nothing more than a messenger. It’s outrageous that we are constantly under suspicion.”

Neruda and Allende symbolized a turbulent, confrontational era in Chilean history, and their deaths following the Sept. 11, 1973 coup have long been shrouded by suspicion. Authorities recently exhumed Allende’s body and confirmed that the former president committed suicide rather than be captured as troops moved in on the presidential palace.

Pinochet’s dictatorship lasted from 1973 to 1990, and left 3,095 opponents of the military regime dead or missing, according to recent government statistics. There were 37,000 political prisoners. Neruda’s fame as a poet and dissident was posthumously heightened by “Il Postino,” or “The Postman,” a semi-fictional 1994 film about his exile that won several Oscar nominations. He is buried on the Isla Negra estate where he lived.

Veteran forensic expert Dr. Luis Ravanal said it could be difficult to find traces of toxic substances that would confirm Neruda’s poisoning.

“It is one thing is to detect a substance, another to demonstrate that it is there in sufficient quantities to kill him,” he told the AP. “It is difficult to determine if it is a lethal or therapeutic dosage.”

But Contreras says an exhumation is needed. He said medical records and Araya’s account proved to him that Neruda’s cancer was under control at the time of his death. No autopsy was performed because foul play was not suspected that night. Only later did the suspicions arise.

“One thing is clear: Neruda didn’t die of cancer,” Contreras said.

Contreras said the death certificate issued at the clinic listed the cause of death as cachexia, or extreme malnutrition and weight loss that left him unable to carry out minimal activities. But at the moment of his death, Neruda weighed more than 220 pounds (100 kilograms), according to Araya and Mexico’s ambassador to Chile at the time of the coup, Gonzalo Martinez Corbala.

Martinez told the AP from Mexico City that he found no change in Neruda between visits to him before and after the coup.

Martinez said that before hearing the driver’s statements he had suspected nothing unnatural about Neruda’s death. “Now I have doubts,” he said.

The Pablo Neruda Foundation, which manages his estate, author rights and house/museum, rejects the claims of his driver.

“It doesn’t seem reasonable to build a new version of the death of the poet based only on the opinions of his driver,” the foundation said in a statement, contending that Araya does not present any credible evidence to support his claims.

“The Sept. 11, 1973 coup, the death of his friend, President Salvador Allende, and the persecution launched against others of his friends, caused his health to deteriorate to the point that … he had to be transferred in an emergency from his Isla Negra home to the Santa Maria Clinic on September 19,” where he died of natural causes, said the foundation in a statement.

Araya says he went at least eight times to Communist Party directors to tell his story, but they paid no attention.

Contreras explained. “We were in a dictatorship; we weren’t at the time interested in information different from that given by Matilde,” he said, referring to Neruda’s widow, Matilde Urrutia, who supported the foundation’s conclusion until her death.

Araya, refuses to speak to Chilean media, finally took his story to the respected Mexican investigative magazine Proceso, and the May 2011 article went viral.

That persuaded the party to pay attention.

“Everything indicates that it was a heart attack (that caused his death),” Contreras said. “What caused the attack? The injection… If you read the literature on Dipirona you are going to find that it is lethal when given in excess.”

The Chilean newspaper El Mercurio, which backed the dictatorship at the time, reported in its Sept. 24, 1973, edition that Neruda had died in a way similar to what Araya described. It said that the poet died “of a heart attack … a consequence of a shock. After receiving an injection of a sedative, his condition deteriorated” and he entered a pre-coma state and died.

Draper was one of several doctors called to testify in the possible killing of former President Frei. Frei was recovering from a hernia operation in the Santa Maria clinic when his health suddenly deteriorated and he died in January 1982. Six people have been accused of poisoning him, according to the judicial file.

Neruda’s case since May has been in the hands of Judge Mario Carroza, who also investigated the death of Allende. Advised by a team of international forensic experts, he concluded that Allende had committed suicide.

He is also trying to determine how 725 opponents of the dictatorship died.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120116/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_chile_poet_s_death

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Stars light up red carpet ahead of Golden Globes (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Hollywood A-listers including George Clooney paraded up the Golden Globe Awards’ red carpet on Sunday ahead of the ceremony honoring the year’s best films and TV shows hosted by acerbic comedian Ricky Gervais.

The British funnyman returns to the Golden Globe stage for the third straight year to host the champagne-soaked bash where prizes are given to actors, actresses, directors and producers in precursor of the more staid Oscars later this year.

Along with Clooney, Angelina Jolie, Meryl Streep, Brad Pitt, Leonardo DiCaprio and numerous others were expected to walk the fashion-filled red carpet ahead of dinner and the program.

Gervais arrived early in a crimson and black tuxedo, Clooney looked dapper in gray. “Modern Family” TV star Sofia Vergara showed off a form-fitting, teal-colored Vera Wang gown and Harry Winston jewels.

Many actresses wore strapless dresses or had plunging necklines and hand-tied bowties were a must among men. Even Uggie the dog from most-nominated film “The Artist” put his four paws on the carpet — black tie around his neck, of course.

While movies, TV shows and celebrities capture the limelight at the Golden Globe Awards, all eyes will be on Gervais this year after his caustic sense of humor and teasing of stars last year tweaked the sensibilities of some celebrities. He hadn’t been expected to return, but here he is.

“I did it because the media said I wouldn’t come back. I’m here to annoy them,” Gervais said on the red carpet before the big show. When asked about his opening routine, he repeated statements he’s made in recent weeks.

“I don’t think I’m going to push the boundaries, more of the same, I think. I didn’t think I said anything outrageous last year,” he said.

The Golden Globe Awards are given out by the roughly 90 members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association at what annually is among the key events during Hollywood’s awards season because of the media exposure it brings.

OSCAR INFLUENCE?

Honors bestowed on TV shows often lure audiences that can turn a little-seen program into a hit, and films and stars that are declared Golden Globe winners often go on to compete for Oscars, the world’s top movie prizes given out later this year.

But veteran Hollywood awards watcher Tom O’Neil of website Goldderby.com notes that in recent years, as more awards shows have aired on TV and Oscar organizers have made changes to their nomination process, the HFPA’s influence has waned.

“Six of the last seven years they haven’t picked the same best movie. ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ is the only one,” said O’Neil.

Silent-era film “The Artist,” a romantic tale shot in the style of old Hollywood, heads into Sunday night’s ceremony with six nominations, including best comedy or musical. Late last week, it was named 2011′s best movie at the Critics’ Choice Awards and appears a good bet to take the Golden Globe for best musical or comedy.

HFPA voters also pick a winner of best film drama, and “The Descendants,” starring Clooney as a father trying to keep his family together during a crisis, has the strongest shot at walking off a victor, O’Neil said. Although civil rights drama “The Help” also has been well-received in Hollywood this year.

Among actors and actresses, Meryl Streep looks to be a good pick to claim the trophy for best actress in a drama playing former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in “The Iron Lady.” She faces a challenge from Viola Davis in “The Help,” after Davis also picked up the Critics’ Choice trophy.

Michelle Williams competes for best actress in a movie musical or comedy in “My Week with Marilyn” against the likes of “Saturday Night Live” comedian Kristen Wiig for “Bridesmaids.”

Clooney with “Descendants” takes on Leonardo DiCaprio for “J. Edgar” and Brad Pitt in “Moneyball” in the best drama actor category, and “Artist” star, Frenchman Jean Dujardin, is the odds-on bet for best actor in a film musical or comedy.

Among TV shows, thriller “Homeland” is one of the new shows competing for best drama, taking on others such as “American Horror Story” and “Game of Thrones.” Best comedy nominees feature past favorites such as “Glee” and “Modern Family.”

The three-hour Golden Globe Awards show airs live on NBC on Sunday night, starting at 8 p.m. EST (0100 GMT on Monday).

(Reporting By Bob Tourtellotte; Editing by Sandra Maler)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120116/en_nm/us_goldenglobes

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