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Senin, 06 Juli 2015

Who Is Chloe Bartoli?

The Woman Involved In Kourtney Kardashian and Scott Disick’s Breakup
pict source : pinterest

AB Post-Who Is Chloe Bartoli?-Chloe Bartoli has shown in place inside the chit chat websites a reasonable amount lately from the latest vacation to Monte Carlo, wherever pics display the woman snuggling approximately Kourtney Kardashian’s today ex-boyfriend, Scott Disick. Previously 7 days, allegations which Kourtney’s infant dad cheated upon Kourtney having Bartoli get manage widespread.


Nevertheless which, accurately, can be Chloe Bartoli?
In line with the Coveteur, Chloe Bartoli works together with the woman sibling, Marielou Bartoli, as a movie star stylist — however when you request Kourtney Kardashian, Chloe Bartoli is an opportunist. At the least, that’s just what Major accounts.
Disick isn’t the only real massive brand Chloe Bartoli may be linked to. Previously, Bartoli also offers also been said to get out dated Jared Leto, and several connected with Bartoli’s buyers incorporate Leto, Poppy Delevingne, Miranda Kerr, Alessandra Ambrosio, Selena Gomez, along with Nicole Richie.


Bartoli can be involved in a lot more than just doing you hair, as well. Chloe recently launched the apparel range named Re/Done, which recycles along with repurposes old-fashioned denim in to hip items which is often utilized today, in line with The movies Life.


And, it seems just as if People from france seemed to be the right area pertaining to Bartoli along with Disick to meet in place, since Bartoli was created to help French mom and dad along with talks France fluently. The truth is, Chloe along with Marielou dwell in concert in a bungalow within L . a ., wherever these people just chat France in the home, in line with The movies Life.


Due to the fact photos connected with Chloe Bartoli along with Scott surfaced on the internet, Kourtney Kardashian provides mentioned she actually is for good finished having Disick, in line with Elizabeth! On the web. Kourtney along with Scott are relationship for around nine decades, along with Kourtney provides jammed having Scott by means of numerous tough levels connected with his existence, as well as substance abuse issues along with the loss of life connected with his mom and dad.

Since reports connected with Kourtney along with Scott’s breakup gone open, Chloe Bartoli provides dealt with a major backlash upon social websites. With pics published on her Instagram consideration, by way of example, Bartoli may be named your dream house wrecker which “ruined a family. ”

Chloe Bartoli is responsible for breaking up Scott along with Kourtney

Minggu, 05 Juli 2015

Islamic State crisis: Air strikes target Syria stronghold



 The US-led coalition against the Islamic State group says it has carried out a series of air strikes in Syria on its main stronghold, Raqqa.


The city is seen by the militants as the capital of the "caliphate" they declared in Syria and Iraq in 2014.

The US military described the 16 strikes as one of the largest assaults carried out in Syria so far.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 23 IS members were killed in the attack.

The London-based monitoring group also said a US drone strike on a Raqqa school on Saturday killed six civilians, including a child.

US military spokesman Lt Col Thomas Gilleran said: "The significant air strikes tonight were executed to deny Daesh [IS] the ability to move military capabilities throughout Syria and into Iraq."


The raids follow the release of a video, apparently by IS, showing 25 men being shot dead in the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra.

Stills from the video showed the killers appeared to be young teenagers.

What difference could Syria IS strikes make?

Battle for Iraq and Syria in maps

Elsewhere in Syria, government forces are reported to have entered the town of Zabadani, as they attempt to retake it from non-IS Sunni Muslim rebels.

The Syrian troops (loyal to the government of President Bashar al-Assad) are being supported by the Lebanese Shia Muslim militant group, Hezbollah.


Zabadani is close to Syria's border with Lebanon.

The BBC's correspondent in Beirut, Jim Muir, says that the Syrian regime is determined to regain control of the strategic town once and for all, as is Hezbollah.

It wants to be sure that Shia communities on the Lebanese side of the border will be safe from attack by the Syrian rebels, who are mainly Sunnis, our correspondent says.

In this area they are led by the Nusra Front, an offshoot of al-Qaeda in Syria.

Source : BBC.com

Greece debt crisis: Greek voters reject bailout offer

Greek voters have decisively rejected the terms of an international bailout.



The final result in the referendum, published by the interior ministry, was 61.3% "No", against 38.7% who voted "Yes".

Greece's governing Syriza party had campaigned for a "No", saying the bailout terms were humiliating.
Their opponents warned that this could see Greece ejected from the eurozone, and a summit of eurozone heads of state has now been called for Tuesday.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said late on Sunday that Greeks had voted for a "Europe of solidarity and democracy".

Referendum as it happened

"As of tomorrow, Greece will go back to the negotiating table and our primary priority is to reinstate the financial stability of the country," he said in a televised address.

"This time, the debt will be on the negotiating table," he added, saying that an International Monetary Fund assessment published this week "confirms Greek views that restructuring the debt is necessary".

But some European officials had said that a "No" would be seen as an outright rejection of talks with creditors.

Jeroen Dijsselbloem, who heads the eurozone's group of finance ministers, said the referendum result was "very regrettable for the future of Greece".

Germany's Deputy Chancellor, Sigmar Gabriel, said renewed negotiations with Greece were "difficult to imagine".

Mr Tsipras and his government were taking the country down a path of "bitter abandonment and hopelessness", he told the Tagesspiegel daily.

The partying by the "No" camp will go well into the night here and the government will be popping open the ouzo. Alexis Tsipras has called the eurozone's bluff - and it appears to have gone his way.

But the triumphalism won't last. There is still a sizeable chunk of the Greek nation deeply unhappy with what has happened. And the government will have to unite a divided country.

More than that, a deal with the eurozone has to be struck fast.

Greek banks are running critically low and will need another injection of emergency funds from the European Central Bank.

Given the bad blood of the past two weeks - Greece's Finance Minister, Yanis Varoufakis, calling the eurozone's strategy "terrorism" - it will be hard to get back around the negotiating table. And with the banking crisis and tax revenues plummeting amidst the instability, Greece's economy has weakened again, making a deal even harder to reach.

The eurozone's tough rhetoric will continue. But Greece's government will have its answer prepared: we put your demands to a democratic test - and they were rejected.

Greece had been locked in negotiations with its creditors for months when the Greek government unexpectedly called a referendum on the terms it was being offered.

Banks have been shut and capital controls in place since last Monday, after the European Central Bank declined to give Greece more emergency funding.

Withdrawals at cash machines have been limited to €60 per day. Greece's latest bailout expired on Tuesday and Greece missed a €1.6bn (£1.1bn) payment to the IMF.

Robert Peston, BBC economics editor, Athens

Greek banks have stayed shut for a week

Greek banks are desperately in need of a lender of last resort to save them, and the Greek economy.
And sad to say no banker or central banker to whom I have spoken believes the European Central Bank (ECB) can fulfil that function - because it is struggling to prove to itself that Greek banks have adequate assets to pledge to it as security for new loans.

There are only two options. The Bank of Greece could make unsecured loans to Greek banks without the ECB's permission - which would provoke a furious reaction from Eurozone leaders and would be seen by most of them as tantamount to leaving the euro.

Or it can explicitly create a new currency, a new drachma, which it could then use to provide vital finance to Greek banks and the Greek economy.

Greece on verge of euro exit

Greek government officials have insisted that rejecting bailout terms would strengthen their hand, and that they could rapidly strike a deal for fresh funding in resumed negotiations.

Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis has said that with a "No" vote, Greek banks would reopen on Tuesday.
He was due to meet senior Greek bankers late on Sunday. State Minister Nikos Pappas, a close ally of Mr Tsipras, said it was "absolutely necessary" to restore liquidity to the banks now the referendum was over.

Summit called

Some European officials sounded conciliatory after the vote.

Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni tweeted: "Now it is right to start trying for an agreement again. But there is no escape from the Greek labyrinth with a Europe that's weak and isn't growing."

Belgium's finance minister said the door remained open to restart talks with Greece "literally, within hours".

Eurozone finance ministers could again discuss measures "that can put the Greek economy back on track and give the Greeks a perspective for the future," he told the VRT network.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said he was consulting the leaders of eurozone member states, and would have a conference call with key EU officials and the ECB on Monday morning.

French President Francois Hollande and German Chancellor Angela Merkel are scheduled to meet in Paris on Monday. A summit of eurozone heads of state has been called for Tuesday.

The European Commission - one of the "troika" of creditors along with the IMF and the ECB - wanted Athens to raise taxes and slash welfare spending to meet its debt obligations.

Greece's Syriza-led government, which was elected in January on an anti-austerity platform, said creditors had presented it with an "ultimatum", using fear to put pressure on Greeks.

The Greek government's opponents and some Greek voters had complained that the question in Sunday's referendum was unclear. EU officials said it applied to the terms of an offer that was no longer on the table.

The turnout in Sunday's referendum was 62.5%.
As the result became clear, former Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, who had campaigned for a "Yes" vote in the referendum, resigned as leader of the centre-right New Democracy party.

Source : BBC.com

20 Things That Will Make You Love Emilia Clarke More Than You Already Do

20 Things That Will Make You Love Emilia Clarke More Than You Already Do

1. You probably know her as Daenerys Targaryen in Game of Thrones.



HBO

A Queen, a Khaleesi, a badass who’s also the Mother of Dragons.

2. She also plays the role of Sarah Connor in Terminator : Genisys.


Paramount Pictures / Via fallforthefallen.tumblr.com

As if she wasn’t badass enough.

3. Did you know that she’s friend with Neville Longbottom?

instagram.com

Daenerys + Neville = SHIP THEM!!


4. She posed with Schwarzi and soldiers based in South Korea.

instragam.com

#SquadGoals #SupportOurTroops


5. She’s always down for fun.

instragam.com

She tries to make us laugh, we just want to be her BFF.

6. She’s a fashion icon


instagram.com



You need these sunglasses.



7. This was the first photo she posted on Instagram.




instagram.com



Just when you thought you couldn’t love her more.



8. When she introduced us to “Cali from the Valley.”


youtube.com

She loves Clueless, I repeat, she loves Clueless.

9. When Kristen Wiig did a hilarous impression of Daenerys and she posted this to tell the world how much she liked it.

instagram.com

Notice the majestic eyebrows.

10. When she unintentionally revealed an interesting fact about Jason Momoa.

youtube.com

( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) he he

11. She’s so cute when she laughs!

Via thebestofgameofthrones.tumblr.com

12. So effing cute!

Via gifmambo.com

13. She reminded us that we have the right to vote and that we should use it.

instagram.com

She’s Daenerys Stormborn of the House Targaryen, the First of Her Name, the Unburnt, Queen of Meereen, Queen of the Andals and the Rhoynar and the First Men, Khaleesi of the Great Grass Sea, Breaker of Chains, and Mother of Dragons. So you better listen to her.

14. She’s funny and she’s not afraid to laugh at herself.

instagram.com
Game of ~throne~.

15. When British Vogue interviewed her.

youtube.com

Her laugh is so adorable.

16. Her smile is contagious.

instagram.com


17. When she became a rastafarian Targaryen.

youtube.com

And it was for a good cause.

18. When she answered to her french fans in the “Box of Questions” - “La Boîte à Questions.”

youtube.com

“You know nothing Jon Snow.”

19. When Josh Horowitz interviewed her and she said those few words that every Game of Thrones fan wanted to hear.

youtube.com

SPOILERS or not, we don’t know yet.

20. And finally, when she won the eyebrow-off.

youtube.com

“Take that Cara Delevingne!”

Source : buzzfeed.com

USA vs Japan preview, What to know ahead of 2015 Women’s World Cup final at BC Place


USA vs Japan preview of 2015 Women’s World Cup - VANCOUVER – The rivalry between the U.S. and Japan’s women’s national soccer teams has generated some tremendous moments. Japan won on penalty kicks at the 2011 FIFA Women’s World Cup and the U.S. exacted a measure of revenge in the gold-medal game at the London 2012 Olympics.

One thing their rivalry hasn’t generated is animosity. Heading into Sunday’s FIFA Women’s World Cup final at BC Place, the teams took turns heaping praise on each other.


“I can’t reflect too much on 2011,” said U.S. head coach Jill Ellis. “I have tremendous respect for Japan and what they are today and not just what they’ve accomplished in the past.”

“I really am grateful for this opportunity,” Japan coach Norio Sasaki said through a translator on Saturday. “I feel a sort of fate because we always play in the final against the U.S.”

While their personalities may not clash, their respective styles of play could prove to be an interesting contrast. The U.S. unveiled a more aggressive offensive formation in their semi-final win over Germany.

Sasaki said his Japanese side has what it takes to counter the American attack.

“The strength of the U.S. team is the power and also the organized way of playing. The structure and the strong desire to win. They are highly motivated,” he said. “We don’t have as much power, but we have the skills, techniques and a network amongst the players.”

What time is the U.S.-Japan Women’s World Cup final?

Kick-off is 4:00 p.m. PDT.

What channel is the U.S.-Japan match?

The game will be broadcast in Canada on CTV and RDS. In the U.S., the match will air on FOX.

Players to Watch

Curtain call for two legends

Sunday’s final will be the last World Cup matches for two of the greatest players in women’s soccer.

Abby Wambach

The brash forward has accomplished everything a footballer can — except win a World Cup. The 35-year-old has accepted a reduced role on the 2015 roster for a chance to finally win it all on the much-maligned turf at BC Place.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward
Homare Sawa
 THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward
Sawa was a workhouse for the 2011 team that won it all. Like Wambach, the 36-year-old has accepted a limited role, but could prove to be a critical cog in an organized Japanese side.

Captains courageous

Both team captains–Japan’s Aya Miyama and the USA’s Carli Lloyd–have been integral to their team’s success.

Carli Lloyd

No one has benefited more from the USA’s more aggressive style than Lloyd, who has been allowed to roam and create scoring chances. Lloyd has scored in all three knockout games at the Women’s World Cup.
lloyd 720

Aya Miyama

Along with Lloyd, Miyama is a frontrunner to win the Golden Ball as the tournament’s top player. Miyama has two goals and two assists in the tournament and her chemistry with forward Yuki Ogimi will pose the biggest threat to a U.S. defence that has gone more than 500 minutes without surrendering a goal.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck
Who will be at the game?

Americans and plenty of them. All estimates suggest Sunday’s crowd will be filled with U.S. soccer fans, which should give the American players a boost.

There will also be a few big names at BC Place. U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden will be in attendance along with his wife Jill. They will be joined by U.S. Ambassador to Canada Bruce Heyman, former U.S. men’s national team player Cobi Jones and former U.S. women’s national team player Mia Hamm.

Who will not be there?

One person will be conspicious by his absence: FIFA president Sepp Blatter.

Blatter is skipping the Women’s World Cup final. And his No. 2, secretary general Jerome Valcke, is also staying away.

Blatter was initially due to attend Sunday’s final in Vancouver. But his travel plans were downgraded to undetermined.

That changed Tuesday to a no.

There was no immediate word on who will present the trophy to the winning team at BC Place.

-with files from Canadian Press

Source : Globalnews.ca

2015 Women's World Cup


VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- If it means ending a wait that is now a less than a week shy of 16 years, older than many of the fans expected to fill BC Place in a sea of red, white and blue on Sunday, Abby Wambach will bide her time on the bench.

If asked, she will watch the beginning of Sunday's Women's World Cup final against Japan from that vantage point. She will, if asked, watch the game conclude from there. She probably won't be asked to do both, having started three times and had a part in all six games the United States previously played in this tournament, but anything is possible on the day she will step on a World Cup field for the final time in her career as the U.S. tries to win the final game of the tournament for the first time since 1999.

So often the finisher, the most prolific one of all time, she waits willingly to see the conclusion of an era she will inevitably define.

Which isn't to say she will wait patiently.

"All I care about is winning this World Cup," Wambach said of her role in advance of the final. "And, of course, it being my last World Cup chance, we're one game away. It excites me. And it's really nerve-racking. It's brutal. I'm not going to say this because it's brutal to sit on the bench because I'm not playing; it's brutal to sit on the bench because I really feel like it's taking years off my life. I now understand what my parents have been going through. I get what our friends and family talk about, how stressful it is, because you don't have control of the outcome of what's going on unless you're on the pitch."

On this stage, even she has struggled to control that outcome when on the pitch in previous World Cups. When there is only one outcome that matches a team's expectations, both those of the public and, frankly, those of the participants, there is ample room for disappointment. Just as Wambach has done almost everything there is to do in the sport, the teams on which she has played have also done almost everything there is to do. Almost.

"I think that obviously the legends of the '99 World Cup obviously set a very high standard for this program," said Heather O'Reilly, who earned her first cap not long after Wambach did so in 2001. "It's been really cool for me as a player to have been here for many years and see the development of the game. A lot of good players have come in and out. And our mission is always the same, and that's to win these major tournaments."

O'Reilly isn't the sort to haphazardly choose her phrasing. She said major tournaments for a reason. Most of the United States players on the field Sunday have won a major title. Many of them have done so against Japan; many members of the U.S. team beat Japan to win gold in the most recent Olympics. This is not a generation that has come up empty on the big stage. Wambach is an Olympic champion twice over, not three times only because of an injury days before the 2008 tournament that was part of the Beijing Games.

But as Wambach is among the first to point out, the World Cup is different. Her pursuit of that prize is a personal narrative but also a history of the time in which she played.

Just four years after the magic of 1999, Wambach's World Cup debut came when the tournament returned to the United States at the logistical equivalent of the last minute in 2003 because of concerns about the SARS virus in China. Played in the fall, thereby forced to compete head-to-head against college and professional football, the World Cup suffered the unenthusiastic reception afforded to many sequels. While the U.S. drew nearly 90,000 fans to three group games it won by a combined 11-1 margin in 2003, almost identical to its margin of dominance in the halcyon days just four years prior, the attendance mark was less than half that for the same games four years earlier.

A semifinal loss to Germany, combined with the demise days before the tournament of a professional league born out of the optimism during an afternoon in the Rose Bowl, only underscored an uncertain future for those asked to replace the stars who preceded them.

Against a two-fold blow of football season and a time difference unfavorable to television viewers at home, the 2007 World Cup in China might have passed with little comment, good or bad, if not for the scale of the 4-0 loss to Brazil in the semifinals and the heat of the comments from Hope Solo after a game in which she watched from the bench.

If the time before the 1996 Olympics and 1999 World Cup was the prehistory of the women's game, the years between that pair of semifinal losses -- first to Germany and then Brazil -- were the dark ages. Not a single one of even the 30 largest home crowds in national team history was recorded between the 2003 and 2011 World Cups. In 14 games on domestic soil in 2005 and 2006, the national team averaged 5,070 fans (the comparable period in 2013 and 2014 drew an average of more than 12,000 fans in 24 games).

Wambach/Hamm
A. Messerschmidt/Getty Images
"Abby Wambach made her World Cup debut in 2003, then carried the U.S. women's soccer torch passed to her by Mia Hamm."

The renaissance, of course, arrived courtesy of Wambach's head in the 2011 tournament in Germany. In addition to the core fan base that remained in place and the familiar audience of soccer-playing girls and their families, a country that was generally awakening to the sport anyway and always eager for a good story went along for the ride. Megan Rapinoe's cross and Wambach's header in the dying embers of extra time against Brazil sparked a fire that burned beyond the penalty shootout loss against Japan in the final, further stoked by Olympic gold against Japan a year later after a classic semifinal against Canada on the (natural) turf of one of soccer's hallowed grounds.

On Saturday in Vancouver, Japanese captain Aya Miyama spoke of concerns about dwindling momentum for the game in her own country four years after World Cup glory and of her desire to ensure the sport became a fixture and not, as she put it, a fad for girls in that country.

As Mia Hamm, Julie Foudy, Kristine Lilly and others stepped away from the United States' team, professional leagues came and went and World Cups slipped away.

And always the comparison lingered for Wambach and those around her.

"The game's evolved; it's come so far," Carli Lloyd said. "It's just really different. But I don't want to win a World Cup just because people will stop talking about the '99 team. I want to win a World Cup because I've dedicated my entire life to this. And my dream is to be a world champion."

The same is true for Wambach, which is why she will do anything asked of her Sunday, even if it's nothing. It's because of everything that came before it.

"I can't be happier for this team to be in another final," Wambach said. "It's an achievement of itself. But we still have to win. We haven't won anything yet. And we know what that feels like from four years ago, and it's not a good feeling."

It is all the worse because it is a long wait until the next chance comes around. For Wambach, the wait would be forever.

Source : espn.go.com

Hillary Clinton accuses China of 'stealing US secrets'


US Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton has accused China of stealing commercial secrets and government information.
She accused China of "trying to hack into everything that doesn't move in America", and urged vigilance.
US officials had named China as the chief suspect in the massive hack of the records of a US government agency earlier this year.

China had denied any involvement, and called US claims "irresponsible".

'Fully vigilant'
Speaking at a campaign event in New Hampshire, Ms Clinton said that China was stealing secrets from defence contractors and had taken "huge amounts of government information, all looking for an advantage."

She added that she wanted to see China's peaceful rise but that the US needed to stay "fully vigilant".

"China's military is growing very quickly, they're establishing military installations that again threaten countries we have treaties with, like the Philippines because they are building on contested property," she said.

"The hacking of federal government computers may have compromised the records of four million people"

US officials have blamed China for a major data breach of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) that was revealed in June.

The hacking of federal government computers could have compromised the records of four million employees.

US intelligence chief James Clapper called China a "leading suspect" after the incident.
But China dismissed the accusation, saying that it was "irresponsible and unscientific".
China has previously argued that it is also the victim of hacking attacks.
Republican presidential candidates have used the recent OPM cyber hack to attack President Obama's administration, accusing it of "incompetence".
Marco Rubio and Rick Perry have called for the US to threaten sanctions against organisations linked to hacking, while Mike Huckabee has argued that the US should "hack China back".
Meanwhile, Democratic candidate Martin O'Malley has called for better funding for cyber security.
The hack against the OPM is not the first time that China has been blamed for a cyber attack against the US.
An earlier attempt to breach OPM networks was blocked in March 2014, with the US saying China was behind the attack.

source : http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-33399711

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