The Albanian authorities stopped 135 tons of flour that was coming from Kosovo, because the lot had not certification for the tests of aflatoxine.
This took place one day after the Kosovo Customs returned 23 tons of Albanian milk.
The Albanian authorities declared that the Kosovan good had no certifications for the exact quantity of aflatoxine.
The Ministry of Agriculture released an order that obliges the flour producers to make the aflatoxine tests.
“The goods will be blocked until the tests will come from Prishtina. Even after the tests will arrive, we will have to make our own tests, according to the rules”, declared Bilbil Myftari, director of the National Food Authority in Kukes.
They say that Albanian imports 2000 tons of flour each year from Kosovo. Kosovo is the main exporter of flour to Albania, with Serbia coming right after.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
47% don't trust political parties
The Open Society Foundation for Albania presented the European Social Poll results, which is held for the first time in Albania.
This poll that has been held in 27 European countries tries to analyze and understand the Albanian reality which is related with the social, political and cultural aspects of the Albanian reality.
Coordinated by the City University of Londer, the poll organizers held 1208 door to door interviews in 12 Albanian districts, and the data were transmitted through GPS.
People were asked: What is the party that you feel closer than others?
Results:
DP-22.7%,
SP-19,6 %,
NDS-1,4%,
RBA-1.2%,
SMI-1%,
PJIU-1%,
No Party 47,8%.
Other interesting data come from the electoral movement from one side to another. When asked “which party have you voted in 2009 and what party do you feel closer today?”
SP with 63.3%, preserves an unchanged electorate, while from 54.5% of those who have voted DP, 2.9% today feel closer to the SP.
SMI has also lost electorate, with 6.7% out of the 33.3% of the electorate moving to the SP. PJIU and UHRP have unchanged figures.
The poll shows that Gjirokaster, Berat and Kukes have the highest unemployment levels, while Korca, Shkodra and Elbasan have more employed people.
48.1% of the interviewed who are employed do not have work agreements, they work illegally.
As regards the public services, the interviewed have valued health with 4 and education with 4.9 out of 10.
Zaloshnja: Poll has some problems
Expert Eduard Zaloshnja declared that the poll published by the Open Society Foundation has some problems and cannot be reliable.
“Today’s presentation had two major problems, among many others. First of all, we didn’t have the margin of error, and when we asked them the presenters said that they hadn’t calculated it yet. It might be at least +-5 or even bigger”, Zaloshnja declared.
“The second big problem was that the result was given for districts, while the sample was national. Kukes had only 34 persons that were interviewed, while there are 60.000 persons who can vote”, Zaloshnja declared.
This poll that has been held in 27 European countries tries to analyze and understand the Albanian reality which is related with the social, political and cultural aspects of the Albanian reality.
Coordinated by the City University of Londer, the poll organizers held 1208 door to door interviews in 12 Albanian districts, and the data were transmitted through GPS.
People were asked: What is the party that you feel closer than others?
Results:
DP-22.7%,
SP-19,6 %,
NDS-1,4%,
RBA-1.2%,
SMI-1%,
PJIU-1%,
No Party 47,8%.
Other interesting data come from the electoral movement from one side to another. When asked “which party have you voted in 2009 and what party do you feel closer today?”
SP with 63.3%, preserves an unchanged electorate, while from 54.5% of those who have voted DP, 2.9% today feel closer to the SP.
SMI has also lost electorate, with 6.7% out of the 33.3% of the electorate moving to the SP. PJIU and UHRP have unchanged figures.
The poll shows that Gjirokaster, Berat and Kukes have the highest unemployment levels, while Korca, Shkodra and Elbasan have more employed people.
48.1% of the interviewed who are employed do not have work agreements, they work illegally.
As regards the public services, the interviewed have valued health with 4 and education with 4.9 out of 10.
Zaloshnja: Poll has some problems
Expert Eduard Zaloshnja declared that the poll published by the Open Society Foundation has some problems and cannot be reliable.
“Today’s presentation had two major problems, among many others. First of all, we didn’t have the margin of error, and when we asked them the presenters said that they hadn’t calculated it yet. It might be at least +-5 or even bigger”, Zaloshnja declared.
“The second big problem was that the result was given for districts, while the sample was national. Kukes had only 34 persons that were interviewed, while there are 60.000 persons who can vote”, Zaloshnja declared.
Lezhe, father kills 19-year-old daughter
A domestic crime has shocked today a village in Lezhe, where a father has killed his own daughter.
Police says that the horrible murder took place in Tale village, and the victim is a 19-year-old girl.
Local authorities say that Valentina Beko was killed by her father, Nikollw Beko, who was arrested by the Police.
Sources say that the reason of the crime is still unknown and the father is being interrogated.
Police says that the horrible murder took place in Tale village, and the victim is a 19-year-old girl.
Local authorities say that Valentina Beko was killed by her father, Nikollw Beko, who was arrested by the Police.
Sources say that the reason of the crime is still unknown and the father is being interrogated.
18-year-old saved by kidnapper
A police patrol in Berat has saved a 18-year-old from a kidnapper.
24-year-old Tajar Hajdar Kanaçi was arrested in the act.
The knife wielding man was kidnapping a 18-year-old at the Velabisht commune.
The girl asked the help of the police, as soon as she saw them, and the officers reacted immediately.
24-year-old Tajar Hajdar Kanaçi was arrested in the act.
The knife wielding man was kidnapping a 18-year-old at the Velabisht commune.
The girl asked the help of the police, as soon as she saw them, and the officers reacted immediately.
Felipe Massa on track for historic first in China
Felipe Massa can achieve a historic first when the Formula 1 season resumes in China in two weeks.
The 31-year-old Brazilian, whose career was very nearly ended by an horrific incident during the Hungarian Grand Prix in 2009 , could become the first team-mate of Fernando Alonso to out-qualify the double world champion five times in a row.
Not even Lewis Hamilton managed that when he was Alonso's partner atMcLaren .
Massa's revival is not news - he has been back to something like his best since last autumn - but it is remarkable nonetheless.
How has it happened and what might it mean for Ferrari and Alonso?
Let's recap…
As soon as Alonso joined Ferrari in 2010, Massa, who had been with the team since 2006, fell into a secondary role behind the Spaniard.
A force of nature and a natural leader, Alonso effectively took Ferrari over - by presence, word and deed. At the same time, Massa, who hadfinished runner-up in the championship in 2008, was perhaps more concerned with his own F1 future than what Alonso's presence might mean for him and the team.
Mark Webber & Sebastian Vettel: Red Bull say row is settled
Red Bull boss Helmut Marko says the row between Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel has been "settled".
Marko said the two drivers shook hands after a post-race discussion following the Malaysian Grand Prix.
Triple world champion Vettel upset Red Bull team-mate Webber by ignoring team orders and passing the Australian to win Sunday's race at Sepang.
Marko said Vettel had been "distressed" by the situation, adding: "I don't think he will do that again."
McLaren reveals P1 performance stats
This is the moment quite literally some of you have been waiting for. You've seen the camouflage development mules. You've seen the interior. You've learned about its hybrid drivetrain and how much power its packing.
Today, you will learn that the McLaren P1 supercar will accelerate from 0-62mph in "less than three seconds" and on to a limited top speed of 218mph. Fast, no?
That's not all. McLaren has revealed more acceleration details with which you can arm yourself in the inevitable Discussing Which Supercar Is Best In The Pub On Friday Night With Friends game (deluxe edition). The P1 will sprint from 0-124mph (0-200km/h) in less than seven seconds, and go from 0-186mph (0-300km/h) in 17 seconds. McLaren rightly informs us that last benchmark is some nine seconds quicker than the old McLaren F1.
To provide you with some perspective, the Porsche 918 Spyder is estimated to hit 62mph in under three seconds and 124mph in around eight seconds, while a Bugatti Veyron SS – the 1,183bhp orange merchant of speed – hits 124mph from rest in 7.3 seconds and 186mph in 15 seconds dead. So despite McLaren's claims that the P1 was never meant to be the fastest outright, it's clearly no slouch.
Production is limited to 375 models only, combining – as you know – a 3.8-litre twin-turbo V8 to an electric motor to provide 903bhp. And because it's a hybrid, emissions (combined) sit below 200g/km of CO2. There are also DRS and IPAS technologies on board to ally it closely with the company's Formula 1 activity. This is good.
Pirelli has been working with McLaren on the tires too, and has developed a special compound for the P1, probably something a little bit less rubbish than the F1 tire TopGear.com made in Turkey. Ahem.
And here's one of the best bits about the P1. We're told the brakes are akin to those on a GT3 racer, developed by Akebono and featuring a new kind of carbon ceramic disc, previously used in space. Space!
Sadly, for us mere mortals, the price is equally cosmic. Because McLaren has confirmed that this limited run, 903bhp rear-wheel-drive hypercar that we estimate will weigh around 1,500kg (3,305lbs), will cost £866,000 ($1.3 million).
That's quite a chunk of change, but then the upcoming Porsche 918 Spyder and new Ferrari Enzo aren't going to be cheap.
This story originally appeared on TopGear.com.
Corvette through the years
Designed to woo returned American servicemen who fell under the spell of Jaguars, MGs and Triumphs during their World War II service in Europe, the Chevrolet Corvette was the first proper American sports car. And its primacy simply cannot be overstated.
Fast-forward 60 years, and the seventh generation Corvette, the C7, is ready to bow on Sunday, the eve of the Detroit auto show. Judging from spy shots and asteady stream of teaser videos released by General Motors (GM) since last fall, the C7draws on its predecessors’ design and performance heritage, but also outwardly reflects technical innovations found beneath its trademark fibreglass skin.
Before we dissect the latest iteration of the iconic car, however, BBC Autos takes a look through the six generations that preceded it, and the standout derivatives produced since its debut on a winter’s day in 1953. (GM Heritage Center)
How similar is the 2015 Audi A3 to the 1995 Audi A4?
The more things change, the saying goes, the more they stay the same. Audi was quick to evoke its well-loved first-generation A4 sedan during the introduction of the 2015 A3 and S3. "It is a car Audi of America asked for," said A3 product manager Mark Fruechtnicht. Just how similar are these two compact sedans, 20 years apart? Take a look at our impromptu gallery to find out.
Formula E: Electric cars enter the fast lane
For many, motor racing is all about the evocative roar of powerful V12 engines and the distinctive smell of burning gasoline. But when spectators line up in Rio and Rome next year for a new world racing championship, there will be neither of those things. Instead, the sleek, ground-hugging cars will whip by with hardly a sound.
That’s because the Formula E series – the latest racing series to be sanctioned by motorsport’s governing body, the FIA - will feature all-electric cars. The first team has already signed up and the first cars are expected to begin demonstrations later this year. All things being well, the first races will be staged in 2014.
The organisers hope the zero-emission cars will herald a new era in racing, with stages held in city locations that were previously ruled out because of noise and pollution concerns.
The thinking behind the series is twofold. First, electric cars have an image problem.
Many people believe they are impractical, slow and have limited range between charges. Second, most gas-guzzling motorsports are increasingly at odds with the ambitions of many drivers and manymanufacturers. So, showing electric cars screaming around some of the world’s most iconic capital cities should help solve both of these issues.
In addition, the series keeps up a long tradition of motorsports where races are used to showcase the latest in technology, often serving as test beds for ideas that eventually become commonplace on public roads.
“We are convinced that the future of auto motion, particularly in cities, is electric”, says Alejandro Agag, CEO of Formula E Holdings, which will oversee the races. “The promotion of clean mobility and sustainability is a priority for the FIA, so joining forces to set up the first sustainable global motorsport championship is a great opportunity for us.”
Car swapping
Unlike previous champion racing vehicles, which have used hybrid engines, Formula E cars will be purely electric. Forty-two of the vehicles have been ordered from the newly founded company Spark Racing Technology, which is working with veteran racecar manufacturer McLaren on the drivetrain and electronics. When finished, the ten competing teams will each have four cars each, while the remaining two will be used for crash tests.
Each one will look similar to a standard single-seat, open cockpit Formula 1 car, complete with large wings at the front and back. Details of the engines are still under wraps, but its designers do not think performance will be a problem.
“We are working at the extreme edge of what electric drive can do,” Peter Van
Manen, managing director of McLaren Electronic Systems, told me. “Professional racing cars generally have top speeds approaching 200mph (320 km/h). As soon as you start operating in a city center, speeds will be a little bit lower than that. Practical top speed is probably around 170 or 180mph (290 km/h).”
Acceleration will likely be just off the pace of a Formula 1 car, which can reach 60mph (96 km/h) in less than 3 seconds. This is due to the instantly available – and relatively constant - torque of an electric motor.
Are we naturally good or bad?
Fundamentally speaking, are humans good or bad? It's a question that has repeatedly been asked throughout humanity. For thousands of years, philosophers have debated whether we have a basically good nature that is corrupted by society, or a basically bad nature that is kept in check by society. Psychology has uncovered some evidence which might give the old debate a twist.
One way of asking about our most fundamental characteristics is to look at babies. Babies' minds are a wonderful showcase for human nature. Babies are humans with the absolute minimum of cultural influence – they don't have many friends, have never been to school and haven't read any books. They can't even control their own bowels, let alone speak the language, so their minds are as close to innocent as a human mind can get.
The only problem is that the lack of language makes it tricky to gauge their opinions. Normally we ask people to take part in experiments, giving them instructions or asking them to answer questions, both of which require language. Babies may be cuter to work with, but they are not known for their obedience. What's a curious psychologist to do?
Fortunately, you don't necessarily have to speak to reveal your opinions. Babies will reach for things they want or like, and they will tend to look longer at things that surprise them. Ingenious experiments carried out at Yale University in the US used these measures to look at babies' minds. Their results suggest that even the youngest humans have a sense of right and wrong, and, furthermore, an instinct to prefer good over evil.
How could the experiments tell this? Imagine you are a baby. Since you have a short attention span, the experiment will be shorter and loads more fun than most psychology experiments. It was basically a kind of puppet show; the stage a scene featuring a bright green hill, and the puppets were cut-out shapes with stick on wobbly eyes; a triangle, a square and a circle, each in their own bright colours. What happened next was a short play, as one of the shapes tried to climb the hill, struggling up and falling back down again. Next, the other two shapes got involved, with either one helping the climber up the hill, by pushing up from behind, or the other hindering the climber, by pushing back from above.
Already something amazing, psychologically, is going on here. All humans are able to interpret the events in the play in terms of the story I’ve described. The puppets are just shapes. They don't make human sounds or display human emotions. They just move about, and yet everyone reads these movements as purposeful, and revealing of their characters. You can argue that this “mind reading”, even in infants, shows that it is part of our human nature to believe in other minds.
Great expectations
What happened next tells us even more about human nature. After the show, infants were given the choice of reaching for either the helping or the hindering shape, and it turned out they were much more likely to reach for the helper. This can be explained if they are reading the events of the show in terms of motivations – the shapes aren't just moving at random, but they showed to the infant that the shape pushing uphill "wants" to help out (and so is nice) and the shape pushing downhill "wants" to cause problems (and so is nasty).
The researchers used an encore to confirm these results. Infants saw a second scene in which the climber shape made a choice to move towards either the helper shape or the hinderer shape. The time infants spent looking in each of the two cases revealed what they thought of the outcome. If the climber moved towards the hinderer the infants looked significantly longer than if the climber moved towards the helper. This makes sense if the infants were surprised when the climber approached the hinderer. Moving towards the helper shape would be the happy ending, and obviously it was what the infant expected. If the climber moved towards the hinderer it was a surprise, as much as you or I would be surprised if we saw someone give a hug to a man who had just knocked him over.
The way to make sense of this result is if infants, with their pre-cultural brains had expectations about how people should act. Not only do they interpret the movement of the shapes as resulting from motivations, but they prefer helping motivations over hindering ones.
This doesn't settle the debate over human nature. A cynic would say that it just shows that infants are self-interested and expect others to be the same way. At a minimum though, it shows that tightly bound into the nature of our developing minds is the ability to make sense of the world in terms of motivations, and a basic instinct to prefer friendly intentions over malicious ones. It is on this foundation that adult morality is built.
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Google and Ogooglebar: Who owns the meaning of words?
Until this week, you could have said ogooglebar, a term sanctioned by no less than the Language Council of Sweden, and roughly equivalent to the English speaker’s mouthful “ungooglable.”
Unfortunately for search-challenged Scandinavians, Google didn’t like the idea of its name being part of a general term for online search, and suggested amending the definition to describe only searches performed via Google. The Language Council – which is dedicated to documenting the emergence of new words in Swedish – didn’t think much of this, or fancy a lengthy legal process. So the word was removed from the official list of new Swedish terms.
Whether absence from this list will make much difference to Swedish speaking habits remains to be seen, although it seems unlikely. As the Council put it in an online statement on 26th March – at least so far as I can tell, courtesy of none other than Google’s translation service – “Google has namely forgot one thing: language development do not care about brand protection. No individual can decide about the language.” The grammar may be iffy, but the point is clear. Courtesy of the internet, the furore around ogooglebar is likely only to spread its usage.
There are larger concerns at stake here, however. I’ve spent much of the last year writing a book about language and technology, and the rise of “ungooglable” and its international equivalents marks one of the most characteristic linguistic evolutions of our age: binary vocabulary.
Unfollow, unfriend
To take just a handful of terms, consider what it means to “like” and to “unlike”, or to “favourite” and to “unfavourite”; how you can “follow” and “unfollow”, or “friend” and “unfriend”, other people; and how you constantly “click” or “unclick” onscreen boxes.
In each case, what’s on offer is a near-miraculous promise of agency: the possibility of words and actions that are, unlike those taking place in the real world, entirely reversible. There’s nothing that cannot be undone in an instant, then done again at will (the word “undone” itself has existed in English for around 700 years but, when Shakespeare and his predecessors used it, they usually implied death or destruction: a far cry from pressing “Ctrl-Z” on a keyboard).
Even “ungoogleable” has a reassuring kind of certainty to it. On the one hand lies the ordered, searchable realm within which we conduct our daily digital business. On the other, there’s the stuff we’re best off not worrying about: a messy, unsearachable space spanning everything from cyber-dissidents to criminals, via paywalls and anonymous networks.
Except, of course, the boxes of online experience are never quite as tidy as they seem. “Untag” yourself from an embarrassing public image – or indeed from an image that doesn’t actually show you at all – and both the deed and the undeed will remain recorded forever. Unfollow or unfriend someone you know and they will vanish from view – but they may well never forget or forgive. No matter how many times you click undo, the machine records and remembers.
Reversible words promise a kind of perpetual present, in which everything can always be exactly the way you want it (provided you only feel one of two ways). Yet data itself only accumulates. Whether you consider yourself to be ogooglebar or not, the digital book of your life is steadily being written within somebody’s servers – and few of its words will ever be unwritten.
Bayern Munich hit nine past Hamburg to move closer to title
German side Bayern Munich produced a sensational performance to thrash Hamburg 9-2 and take another step towards becoming Bundesliga champions.
Claudio Pizarro scored four for Bayern, while another ex-Chelsea player Arjen Robben grabbed two in the romp.
The Bavarians would have sealed the title with that win had Borussia Dortmund failed to defeat Stuttgart - but the defending champions won 2-1.
Paolo Di Canio poised to talk to Sunderland about manager's job
Paolo Di Canio is set to hold talks with Sunderland about succeeding Martin O'Neill at the Stadium of Light.
The Black Cats sacked O'Neill on Saturday after a run of poor results left them only one point above the relegation zone with seven games left.
Di Canio, who led Swindon Town to promotion from League Two last season but resigned in February, has no top-flight managerial experience.
Pope Francis delivers Easter plea for peace
Pope Francis has delivered a passionate plea for peace in his first Easter Sunday message since being elected.
Francis used his "Urbi et Orbi" address to call for peace in Africa, Asia, the Middle East and across the globe.
He singled out "dear Syria", saying: "How much blood has been shed! And how much suffering must there still be before a political solution is found?"
Easter is the most important festival in the Christian calendar and pilgrims have attended church across the world.
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