Argentina appoints Malvinas Secretary to push Falkland Islands issue

According to a statement from the Argentine embassy in London, Mr Filmus's brief will include: "Bilateral actions, negotiations, strategies and co-ordination of actions with all countries to defend the Argentine rights and interests at the multilateral levels, as well as the promotion of Argentine rights worldwide."

Falklanders in the grounds of Christchurch Cathedral in Stanley celebrate the 98 percent Yes vote

Hector Timerman, the Argentinian foreign minister, said the appointment was "historic". "Never before in Argentina's history has this matter, a question of territorial integrity, occupied such an important place in a government and we are very pleased that the president has elected none other than Daniel Filmus as secretary", he said.

Taking up the position, Mr Filmus said: "It is unacceptable that in the 21st century Argentina is unable to take decisions over its entire territory and that a part of this territory is being occupied by a colonial power."

The Foreign Office said: We are aware of the appointment of Daniel Filmus, but this does not affect our position nor the position of the Falkland Islands people, who voted to remain British by 99.8 per cent in last years referendum.

"The UK has no doubt about its sovereignty over the Falkland Islands and surrounding maritime areas, nor about the Falkland Islanders right to decide their own future, the right of self-determination as enshrined in the UN Charter and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Mike Summers, a member of the Falklands assembly, said: We have noted the developments of a new Secretariat in the Argentine Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

"Whilst it may be anticipated that this will result in an increase in activity on the part of the Argentine government, in trying to persuade others of their right to colonise the Falkland Islands, it will not result in any strengthening of their weak claim to our Islands, and is unlikely to address the fundamental human rights issues underlying Falkland Islanders rights to self determination.

Diplomatic rhetoric over the windswept territory in the South Atlantic soared to fever pitch in 2012 the year that marked the 30th anniversary of the Falklands conflict. Argentina invaded the islands in April 1982, leading to a 74-day conflict that left 649 Argentinians, 255 Britons and three Falkland Islanders dead.

There are currently ongoing oil exploration efforts in the waters surrounding the islands.

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Argentina appoints Malvinas Secretary to push Falkland Islands issue

Happy New Year 2014 from Cayman Islands Sotheby’s International Realty – Video


Happy New Year 2014 from Cayman Islands Sotheby #39;s International Realty
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Destinations | Islands

Family vacations fuel a lifetime of nostalgia, from the time we are small children through our adult lives. Island travel evokes a particularly romantic reverie, which jetsetters of all ages will appreciate. Although pulling off a multi-generational trip does take effort, the planning can be fun if you approach it with the right attitude.

First off, it's everyone's vacation, so involve everyone. Call a family meeting, and have each person announce the top three places they'd like to visit and why. Note any overlaps, and draft a list of vacation-spot finalists. Think about each family member's goals or requirements for the trip. If you and your daughter want to pick up surfing, Barbados might top your list. If your son and his grandfather love history, the Maya sites near Cancn are an ancient marvel. If you continue to research, you'll discover several places that offer both surfing and historical sites, plus a kids camp for Timmy and a nature reserve for Grandma. The most important family travel advice: Don't plan on spending every minute together. A little breathing room goes a long way toward family harmony. Instead, choose a destination with a wide range of attractions, so loungers can hit the beach while active types swim with sea turtles. Plan on meeting up at specific points throughout the day, but otherwise, keep itineraries loose. Think about all you'll have to catch up on at dinner! When traveling with little ones, a flexible schedule is key, as Teresa Plowright, About.com's Travel with Kids column writer, advises. "Kids can so easily get their hearts set on something, and if problems arise (anything from a transportation issue to a sibling's tummy ache) then the disappointment is huge. When sightseeing with young kids, for example, I plan one morning activity and don't even mention the afternoon activity until I'm sure everyone's up for it."

Once you've chosen a location, your accommodations will play a large role in your family's overall experience. Family-focused resorts are especially appealing for groups with younger travelers in tow. Adults can savor precious one-on-one time while their little ones enjoy organized and supervised activities. The best advice is to look for resorts with programs aimed toward specific, narrow age ranges a program for 4- to 12-year-olds will likely bore both your preschooler and your preteen. Some resorts even offer themes or "celebrity" appearances, such as your children's favorite TV characters. All-inclusive family resorts make things even easier, especially when trying to coordinate numerous adult families. Plowright says: "Bottom line about all-inclusive vacations: All needs are provided for, fun is abundant, parents can enjoy a beautiful setting and relax. And with all-inclusive pricing, parents never need wonder 'How much will this cost?' when kids want more drinks or activities." One up-front payment means no splitting checks, and purses and wallets can stay in the room. Buffet-style meals are generally available anytime a huge advantage when easing toddlers into new time zones. Plus, picky eaters can make their own plates, while gastronomes-in-training sample chicken luau, okra, steamed mussels or plantains. Families seeking more space and privacy should consider vacation rentals. Justin Halloran of vacation rental network HomeAway Inc. says, "Hands down, the best tip I can offer when traveling with kids is to stay at a vacation rental instead of a hotel." This father of three children under age 4 adds, "Plus, separate bedrooms for the adults and kids is also key for my family because no sleep means no vacation." Depending on the level of service your group desires, prices for basic rental accommodations can be quite comparable to those of resorts, especially when divided among multiple adults. Vacation rentals offer the convenience of your own kitchen, laundry, dining room, etc., so you really can feel right at home only better. Parents don't have to fret over a crying baby at mealtime, and family members with special needs may be more easily accommodated. Plus, your party will experience a more authentic version of island living driving or walking to local food markets, speaking with the neighbors and sightseeing off the beaten track. For the ultimate vacation, villa rentals will have your group living like royalty. These luxurious dwellings often lie steps from the beach, with sweeping ocean views and top-notch amenities. Your personal chef prepares all meals to order, the laundress sees to the washing, a gardener keeps the grounds up to snuff, and whenever you'd like to explore the area, just consult your driver. Nannies are also available at many properties, so adults can enjoy time alone together. Debbie Moncure, owner of The Villas of Bluefields Bay in Jamaica, communicates extensively with families ahead of time to coordinate the details of their stay. "Before they depart, we send them a long list of lunch and dinner options, so they will have exactly what they want when they arrive the first day," she explains. Her all-inclusive villas come fully stocked with guests' favorite food and drink, and chefs easilyattend to dietary restrictions or special requests for children. Whether your clan chooses a Tahitian resort, a villa in Jamaica or a cruise around Hawaii, remember the true luxury of a family vacation is spending time together. As children grow up and lives get busier, our opportunities to devote an entire week or two to family bonding grow increasingly rare. So enjoy each moment and be sure to take lots of pictures.

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Destinations | Islands

Ailing Amazon CEO airlifted from islands

By Elwyn Lopez, CNN

updated 7:59 PM EST, Sat January 4, 2014

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

(CNN) -- Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos was flown off the Galapagos Islands on an Ecuadorian navy helicopter, authorities there said, an evacuation that happened after the entrepreneur was struck by kidney stones.

Asked about the ordeal, Bezos -- in a comment relayed via Amazon -- responded: "Galapagos: five stars. Kidney stones: zero stars."

A Galapagos-based navy unit said in a press release that Bezos developed renal colic while he was on a tourist cruise near Santa Cruz Island. Daniel Ginez Villacis, a regional coast guard official, ordered that a helicopter fly him from there to Baltra Island.

Lt. Pablo Abarca, a spokesman with the Ecuadorian navy, told CNN that Bezos was transported on a Bell 430 helicopter on New Year's Day. The force has an operative unit on the Galapagos Islands, according to Abarca.

According to the official press release, Bezos, 49, was then to fly to the United States.

While the Ecuador navy said the businessman was being flown back home for surgery, that didn't turn out to be the case.

Amazon spokesman Drew Herdener said Saturday about Bezos: "He got a good outcome. No surgery was required, and he's feeling well."

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Ailing Amazon CEO airlifted from islands

Three islands belong to Iran: Hassanein Heikal

Source: Tehran Times

Prominent Egyptian journalist Mohamed Hassanein Heikal says that the three Persian Gulf islands of Abu Musa, the Greater Tunb, and the Lesser Tunb belong to Iran, and the United Arab Emirates' dispute over Iran's sovereignty over the islands is baseless and politically motivated.

"I was present at the negotiations during the time of Gamal Abdel Nasser in Egypt and Feisal in Saudi Arabia in which the Arab states traded the three islands for Bahrain," the Iranian daily Jomhouri-e-Eslami quoted Heikal as saying in an interview with the CBS network.

"They legitimized the rule of the Sunni minority over a big Shia majority in Bahrain to recognize it as an Arab state," he said.

"Instead of insisting on the notion that the islands belong to the UAE, one should accept the balance of power in the region," he added.

According to the daily, Haikal concluded his remarks on the issue by asking, "Why didn't the Arabs dare to raise the issue of the three islands at the time of the shah, but only started to highlight the case after the revolution of 1979 and continue to sow discord."

Iranian islands of Abu Musa, the Greater and the Lesser Tunbs

Iran's sovereignty over Abu Musa and the Greater and Lesser Tunbs has been disputed by the UAE. The dispute between Iran and the UAE began in 1974, three years after the UAE became independent.

Iran's historical claim to sovereignty over the islands goes back to the Parthian Empire (247 BC to 224 CE) and the Sassanid Empire (224 to 651 CE). Iran believes the islands were occupied by Britain and refers to the agreement between Iran and the Emirate of Sharjah of 1971.

The current emir of Dubai (who is also the vice president, prime minister, and defense minister of the UAE), Sheikh Muhammad, has stated publicly that "he believes the tensions over the islands have been fabricated by the United States."

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Three islands belong to Iran: Hassanein Heikal

Indonesia relocates families to build resorts

Lombok, Indonesia - As the boat approaches Indonesia's Gili Sunut island, the captain shuts down the engines, letting it drift the final few metres towards the shore. A strange quiet hangs in the air, punctuated by the water slopping against the hull.

Once home to 109 families, this tiny island now lies deserted. Skeletal concrete structures dot the landscape, their door frames and windows removed. Only the roof of the mosque has been left out of respect for Allah, but that too will be razed when a "six-star resort" is constructed here over the coming years.

"The government came to Sunut, to the mosque, and held a meeting with the local people to talk about the development," says Mustiadi, a fisherman, who like many Indonesians goes by one name."We refused the idea of relocation, but after more consultations they told us that we didn't have any choice."

The People's Coalition for Fisheries Justice Indonesia (KIARA), a sea and land rights advocacy group, says the fate of Mustiadi and his community will become more common under a new government programme to promote investment in islands and coastal areas. KIARA says many more islands will effectively be sold to foreign buyers, trampling the rights of fishermen and threatening traditional livelihoods.

After their eviction in June, the former residents of Gili Sunut were relocated to a new settlement on the other side of the bay. The Singaporean developer, Ocean Blue Resorts, has provided each family with a new bungalow and between 3m and 5m rupiah ($246 to $411) in compensation. But Mustiadi says it's not enough.

"They gave us a bungalow, but the roof leaked and it was very poor quality. I decided to rebuild mine, but not everyone could afford to do that. They still haven't paid us for our ruined houses on Gili Sunut," he said."Now life is harder because we live further from our fishing waters. In our new village there is no school, and still we have no road and no running water.It feels like the government hasn't taken care of us."

Booming tourism

Tourism is booming on the island of Lombok. In September, the land division of Indonesian media conglomerate MNC reportedly set aside 700bn ($57.4m) rupiah to invest in an "integrated tourist resort" in Kuta on the island's south coast. The completion of a sealed coast road and the opening of an international airport in 2011 are rapidly boosting the number of visitors.

The locals take what they're given and they don't know how to fight the government. Often the police and the army are used to push people out.

- Selamet Daroyni, KIARA coordinator for education

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Indonesia relocates families to build resorts

Jeff Bezos evacuated off Galapagos Islands for kidney stones

By Elwyn Lopez, CNN

updated 7:59 PM EST, Sat January 4, 2014

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

(CNN) -- Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos was flown off the Galapagos Islands on an Ecuadorian navy helicopter, authorities there said, an evacuation that happened after the entrepreneur was struck by kidney stones.

Asked about the ordeal, Bezos -- in a comment relayed via Amazon -- responded: "Galapagos: five stars. Kidney stones: zero stars."

A Galapagos-based navy unit said in a press release that Bezos developed renal colic while he was on a tourist cruise near Santa Cruz Island. Daniel Ginez Villacis, a regional coast guard official, ordered that a helicopter fly him from there to Baltra Island.

Lt. Pablo Abarca, a spokesman with the Ecuadorian navy, told CNN that Bezos was transported on a Bell 430 helicopter on New Year's Day. The force has an operative unit on the Galapagos Islands, according to Abarca.

According to the official press release, Bezos, 49, was then to fly to the United States.

While the Ecuador navy said the businessman was being flown back home for surgery, that didn't turn out to be the case.

Amazon spokesman Drew Herdener said Saturday about Bezos: "He got a good outcome. No surgery was required, and he's feeling well."

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Jeff Bezos evacuated off Galapagos Islands for kidney stones

Amazon Founder Jeff Bezos Medical Evac From Galapagos Islands

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is recovering after being evacuated from the Galapagos Islands by the Ecuadorian navy because he suffered severe kidney stones, according to a translated press release from the Ecuadorian navy.

Bezos was vacationing on a cruise around the islands, when he became ill on New Year's Day. According to the navy, Bezos was evacuated from the island by helicopter to Baltra Island where a private plane took him to the U.S. for emergency surgery.

Bezos' family and friends thanked the helicopter operators and crew members for their quick response.

A spokesperson for Amazon sent us this email when we asked about Bezos' health Saturday night: "I sent the inquiry to Jeff and here's what he sent back: 'Galapagos: five stars. Kidney stones: zero stars.'"

Bezos is the founder of online retail giant Amazon and recently bought the Washington Post newspaper.

"The TNNV-AV Juan Ibarra, TNNV-AV German Quishepe and SGOP William Altamirano, crewmembers of the helicopter, received messages of thanks from the families and close collaborators of the businessman with worldwide fame for the timely action and demonstrated professionalism," the navy said in a statement. " When seconds make a difference to save a human life in the Insular Area, the Ecuadoran Navy fulfills its task, ensuring the safety of the residents, national and international tourists while they are in the Galapagos Archipelagos."

In an interview with ABCNews.com last year, Bezos, 49, explained the challenges of taking over a media company.

"What we need to do is always lean into the future, when the world changes around you and when it changes against you -- what used to be a tail wind is now a head wind -- you have to lean into that and figure out what to do because complaining isn't a strategy," he said.

Jeff Bezos Buys Washington Post

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Amazon Founder Jeff Bezos Medical Evac From Galapagos Islands

Islands Red Cross helps Everett shelter

Seven volunteers from The Islands Chapter of the American Red Cross have helped staff an emergency shelter in Everett, which opened Dec. 15.

The action was in response to a large apartment fire in downtown Everett that day that took one persons life and left 20 others in need of temporary housing.

Snohomish County Red Cross volunteers opened the shelter at Central Lutheran Church in Everett, and have been staffing it around the clock with help from other chapters in the region. Volunteers serve as shelter operators, cooks, caseworkers and case managers, nurses, mental health counselors, among other capacities.

We were happy to help out, said Ron Conlin, disaster services coordinator for Islands Chapter. Snohomish County volunteers had responded to 12 incidents in 12 days, and they needed relief themselves. We were able to send people from South and North Whidbey and the San Juans.

The Islands Chapter serves Whidbey, Fidalgo and the San Juan Islands and a small section of La Conner. The Chapters main office is in Anacortes with a satellite facility on the Seaplane Base in Oak Harbor.

In 2012, The Islands Chapter assisted 29 families affected by home fires and other local emergencies, and provided emergency communications and other assistance for more than 400 military families through Red Crosss Service to Armed Forces Programs. Both services are provided predominantly by volunteers.

The Red Cross is a crucial player in emergency response and preparedness in our diverse group of island communities, says Mike Stamper, executive director of Islands chapter. We also work regionally to ensure emergency response and assistance for every person who needs it.

The work of Islands Chapter, like all other Red Cross operations, is supported almost exclusively by donations.

To volunteer, get training, or donate, visit http://www.redcross.org

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Islands Red Cross helps Everett shelter

ONE FOR THE RECORD DECEMBER 27 2013 28 ISON METEORS NIBIRU YELLOWSTONE CANARY ISLANDS – Video


ONE FOR THE RECORD DECEMBER 27 2013 28 ISON METEORS NIBIRU YELLOWSTONE CANARY ISLANDS
ONE FOR THE RECORD DECEMBER 27 2013 28 ISON METEORS NIBIRU YELLOWSTONE CANARY ISLANDS I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube....

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ONE FOR THE RECORD DECEMBER 27 2013 28 ISON METEORS NIBIRU YELLOWSTONE CANARY ISLANDS - Video

Japan rescues balloonist trying to reach islands

TOKYO: A Chinese man who tried to fly a hot-air balloon hundreds of kilometres to islands disputed between Beijing and Tokyo was rescued by Japans coastguard after ditching in the sea, an official said yesterday.

The 35-year-old took off from Chinas Fujian province on Wednesday morning in an attempt to land on one of the Tokyo-controlled islands, the Japan Coast Guard official said.

It was an ambitious goal hot-air balloons travel largely at the mercy of the wind, and the islands are tiny specks in the East China Sea 359 kilometres away from the take-off point.

They are hotly disputed between Beijing, which regards them as its territory and calls them Diaoyu, and Tokyo, which calls them Senkaku. Tensions have at times reached feverish heights.

In the event the pilot sent a request for help several hours into his flight and ditched in the sea, with a Japanese rescue helicopter picking him up 22 kilometres south of his goal, the official said.

The man, who was unhurt, was handed over to a Chinese patrol ship outside Japanese territorial waters, he added.

Photos distributed by the Japan Coast Guard showed a striped, multicoloured balloon drifting half-deflated in the steely blue waters.

Reports identified the man as Xu Shuaijun, a balloonist who in 2012 became the first man to pilot a hot-air balloon over northeast Chinas Bohai Bay.

On his verified account on Weibo, a Chinese version of Twitter, Xu posted a short message declaring that he had been returned safely to the city of Fuqing in Fujian province.

I have returned safely, Xu wrote. Thanks everyone for your concern.

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Japan rescues balloonist trying to reach islands