France’s presidential election

22 Apr

The people of France are voting in a presidential election which is taking place amid widespread concern over the eurozone crisis and high unemployment.

Centre-right incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy is seeking re-election, saying only he can preserve a “strong France”.

But he is facing a tough challenge from Socialist Francois Hollande, who has said it is “the left’s turn to govern”.

There are 10 candidates in all, and if none wins more than 50% of the votes there will be a run-off round on 6 May.

Polls in mainland France and Corsica are open until 18:00 (16:00 GMT), with voting stations in big cities remaining open for a further two hours.

Official figures put turnout by 12:00 (10:00 GMT) at 28% – only slightly lower than the figure at the same time in 2007, when morning turnout reached an exceptional 31%.

Analysts say a strong turnout would favour opposition candidates.

The first official results will be released after the last stations close at 20:00.

President Sarkozy, who has been in office since 2007, has promised to reduce France’s large budget deficit and to tax people who leave the country for tax reasons.

He has also called for a “Buy European Act” for public contracts, and threatened to pull out of the Schengen passport-free zone unless other members do more to curb immigration from non-European countries.

Mr Hollande, for his part, has promised to raise taxes on big corporations and people earning more than 1m euros a year.

He wants to raise the minimum wage, hire 60,000 more teachers and lower the retirement age from 62 to 60 for some workers.

If elected, Mr Hollande would be France’s first left-wing president since Francois Mitterrand, who completed two seven-year terms between 1981 and 1995.

If Mr Sarkozy loses he will become the first president not to win a second term since Valery Giscard d’Estaing in 1981.

French presidents are now elected for five years.

Frustration

Wages, pensions, taxation, and unemployment have been topping the list of voters’ concerns.

But the candidates have been accused of failing to address the country’s problems during a lacklustre campaign.

Francois Hollande (left) and Nicolas Sarkozy

Francois Hollande (left) is mounting a strong challenge against President SarkozyFrustration with Mr Sarkozy’s flashy style and with Mr Hollande’s bland image has also allowed radical candidates to flourish.

Marine Le Pen, a media savvy far-right leader, has invigorated her anti-immigration National Front.

Meanwhile Jean-Luc Melenchon, who is supported by the Communist Party, has galvanised far-left voters.

Centrist leader Francois Bayrou is standing as a presidential candidate for the third time. In 2007, he came third, with nearly 19% of the vote.

Voting was held on Saturday in France’s overseas territories – including Martinique and Guadeloupe in the Caribbean, Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean and French Polynesia.

Those territories vote early because results will be known on Sunday evening in mainland France – when it is still mid-afternoon in Caribbean islands and other overseas territories.

The presidential vote will be followed by a parliamentary election in June.

 

(Source: BBC News)

US introduces $60 LED light bulb

22 Apr

Philips LED bulb

A prize-winning light bulb that lasts for 20 years is going on sale in the US on Sunday – also known as Earth Day.

Made by Dutch electronics giant Philips, the bulb swaps filaments for light-emitting diodes to provide illumination.

Using LEDs endows the light with a long life and a hefty price tag. The first versions are set to cost $60 (£37).

Philips has arranged discounts with shops that will sell the bulb meaning some could buy it for only $20 (£12).

Production ban

The bulb triumphed in the Bright Tomorrow competition run by the US Department of Energy that aimed to find an energy efficient alternative to the 60-watt incandescent light bulb.

The DoE challenged firms to develop a design that gave out a warm light similar to that from an incandescent bulbs but was much more energy efficient.

Philips was the only entrant for the competition and its design underwent 18 months of testing before being declared a winner.

A cheaper and less efficient version of the LED bulb is already sold by Philips in the US and Europe.

LED bulbs face competition from compact fluorescent lights which are almost as energy efficient and cost a lot less.

Sales of more energy efficient bulbs are being aided by official moves to end production of higher wattage incandescent bulbs.

Production of 100 watt bulbs has ceased in the US and Europe. Production of 60 watt bulbs has been stopped in Europe and is being phased out in the US. From 2014, incandescent bulbs of 40 watts or above will be banned in the US.

China gives currency more freedom with new reform

14 Apr

China took a milestone step in turning the yuan into a global currency on Saturday by doubling the size of its trading band against the dollar, pushing through a crucial reform that further liberalizes its nascent financial markets.

The People’s Bank of China said it would allow the yuan to rise or fall 1 percent from a mid-point every day, effective Monday, compared with its previous 0.5 percent limit.

The timing of the move underlines Beijing’s belief that the yuan is near its equilibrium level, and that China’s economy, although cooling, is sturdy enough to handle important, long-promised, structural reforms, analysts said.

The move would help China deflect criticism of its controversial currency policy ahead of the annual spring meeting of the International Monetary Fund in Washington next week.

A slowing world economy that has pared investor expectations of a steadily rising yuan likely also gave Beijing the confidence to proceed, knowing that a larger band would not necessarily lead to a stronger currency.

“The central bank chose a good time window to enlarge the trading band. The market’s expectation for a stronger yuan is weakening,” said Dong Xian’an, chief economist at Peking First Advisory in Beijing.

“The move partially clears away doubts on whether China can manage a soft landing in its economy, and makes clear China’s reform road map.”

Investors have widely expected China to widen the yuan’s trading band this year, thanks to repeated hints from Beijing that the change would take China one step closer to its financial goal: a basically convertible yuan by 2015.

Having a currency that trades with fewer restrictions also enhances Shanghai’s status as a financial center. China envisions turning the city into a global banking hub by 2020.

“From April 16, 2012, the trading band for the yuan against the dollar in the spot interbank currency market will be widened from 0.5 percent to 1 percent, ” the People’s Bank of China said in a short statement on its website.

“At present, the development of China’s foreign exchange market is maturing, the market’s ability to independently price and manage risks is growing by the day,” the bank said.

Ultimately, the government wants the yuan to rival the dollar as a global reserve currency, and to this end it has gradually allowed the currency to trade more freely.

After a pilot programe last year was judged successful, in March this year it gave permission for firms across China to pay for imports and exports in yuan, a way of helping to increase the use of the yuan in trade deals.

NO SHARP GAINS

The yuan, also known as the renminbi or “people’s money”, hit a record high of 6.2884 against the dollar on Feb 10, but is little changed against the U.S. currency for the year, softening 0.14 percent since January.

Analysts say its listless showing is likely to persist through 2012, as expectations of future gains are dulled by China’s easing economic growth, and speculation that the yuan is near equilibrium.

As China this year heads into its biggest leadership changeover in a decade, it would be in Beijing’s interests to avoid dramatic fluctuations in the yuan that could hurt exporters, many of whom are battling rising costs and tepid demand as it is.

“The yuan is close to an equilibrium. We expect it could only gain 1.4 percent against the dollar this year, so the time is right to widen the band,” said Lan Shen, an economist at Standard Chartered Bank in Shanghai.

So muted is the yuan’s outlook that investors in the offshore non-deliverable forwards (NDF) market believe there is even room for the currency to fall. The benchmark one-year NDF is pricing for a 0.4 percent depreciation.

Any decline would be a stark contrast to the yuan’s steadfast rise in recent years. It jumped about 5 percent in 2011 on top of nearly 4 percent in 2010, giving investors the impression that China was comfortable with a rising currency.

It has gained about 30 percent in nominal terms against the dollar since the landmark move in the summer of 2005 to de-peg the yuan from the greenback.

A WELCOME MOVE

The yuan’s value has always been a point of contention between China and its trading partners, notably the United States, which say China suppresses the currency to boost exports. China repeatedly rejects the accusation.

Instead, Chinese leaders say the yuan is near its equilibrium level and that authorities aim to keep its value “basically stable”, more flexibility notwithstanding.

Beijing’s desire to have the yuan trade more freely was stressed by both Premier Wen Jiabao and Central Bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan in March when they said conditions were ripe for changes.

Their calls came even as China is set to confront its slowest economic growth in a decade this year, leading many to believe Beijing is ready to foresake heady growth for a restructured economy driven more by domestic than export demand.

Although not a primary intention, a more flexible yuan also works in China’s favor in turbulent times by giving it more room to guide the currency lower to aid exports.

“The message of this move is that the renminbi appreciation story is over. Greater two way volatility will be the name of the game going forward,” said Qu Hongbin, an economist at HSBC.

Data on Friday showed China’s economy suffered its weakest growth since the global financial crisis in the first quarter by expanding just 8.1 percent, below forecasts for 8.3 percent.

The last time China changed its currency policy was in June 2010, after a two-year period when it effectively re-pegged the yuan to the dollar to shield China from the 2008-09 global financial crisis.

“I think the step should be welcomed by foreign countries, especially the United States, who has called for reforms,” said Dongming Xie, China economist at OCBC Bank in Singapore. “This is also related to growing domestic calls for economic reforms.”

(Additional reporting by Fang Yan, Kevin Yao and Aileen Wang in BEIJING, and Doug Palmer in WASHINGTON; Editing by Robert BirselEmily Kaiser and Daniel Magnowski)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/14/us-china-cbank-yuan-band-idUSBRE83D02020120414

European railway companies eye Greek network sale

13 Apr

Three European railway companies are interested in buying all or part of Greece‘s railway business, as the debt-laden country sells assets to satisfy its lenders, people familiar with the discussions told Reuters.

Russia is considering buying the entire Greek railway network and its operator Trainose, while Romania’s largest private railway company, Grup Feroviar Roman (GFR), has expressed interest in the cargo business, two high-level Greek officials said.

A Russian Railways official said it had discussed buying all or part of the network, while its head Vladimir Yakunin told Reuters, “We’re keeping in contact with the Greeks … They haven’t decided on the model yet, so it’s too early to talk about our participation.”

French railway company SNCF wants passenger and freight routes and has gone through a due diligence process, said one of the Greek officials, who attended associated meetings. Talks were held in Athens and Paris in 2010 and late 2011, when they reached the level of the transport ministry.

An SNCF spokesman in Paris said the French rail operator “is not in the running for the purchase of Trainose, nor is it in the running for the purchase of a railway company or a railway line in Greece”.

No one was immediately available for comment at GFR, which owns freight operations in Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria and Serbia, among other countries.

One of the Greek officials said he had met several times with a delegation from GFR, most recently in February.

Trainose, which officials hope will raise 200 million euros, and the Railway Organization of Greece (OSE), which owns the physical railway infrastructure, were one company before being split in 2008. Greece took over 10.7 billion euros of their debts in late 2010, about 700 million euros of it from Trainose.

The success of a deal with the European railway companies hinges largely on the Greek state’s ability to receive European Union approval for the state intervention. Athens is pushing for the green light prior to going ahead with the privatisation.

Trainose is among dozens of state-owned businesses put on the auction block under Greece’s 130 billion euro bailout programme with the so-called troika of the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund.

Under an EU timetable, the tender process for Trainose will open in the fourth quarter of 2012, and its assets will be transferred to the Greek privatisation fund. The proceeds from a sale, slated to close in the spring of 2013, will contribute to the 19 billion euro target Greece aims to raise to cut debt.

SNIFFING AROUND TRAINOSE

With nearly 900 employees, Trainose operates all cargo and passenger routes on 2,500 km of railways on 500 routes, according to the company’s website.

It narrowed its losses to 33 million euros in 2011 and swung to a profit in the final month of that year. In the first two months of 2012 it made a profit of nearly 142,000 euros, compared with a loss of 12.6 million euros a year earlier.

Since the Greek crisis, it has been restructured with 1.4 billion euros in government funding, which has been used to close loss-making routes and cut nearly half the staff.

One of the two Greek officials said a Russian delegation of around 20 people visited Athens late in 2011 and reviewed Trainose’s books to assess its value and profitability.

It was unclear if OSE, which according to filings employs 4,000 people and has 10.3 billion euros in assets, was part of the negotiations.

The Greek officials said SNCF, which has assisted in the Trainose restructuring since 2010, had “extensive discussions” about an acquisition in September 2011.

During a period of due diligence, the French “asked very detailed questions about the finances” and about buying specific railway assets, one of the officials said.

Trainose operates all passenger and freight lines in Greece. The country’s ports are strategically positioned to transport goods to rising markets across the Balkans and Eastern Europe.

China has already seized on opportunities presented by Greece’s debt crisis, with China-based COSCO Pacific last year taking control of Greece’s largest container terminal, Piraeus, negotiating a 35-year lease for almost $5 billion.

SELLING CHEAP

Two Greek government officials in Brussels said they have been pressured by European Commission officials to sell off the railways sooner than a previously agreed timetable, which they argue will hurt the price.

The key hurdle to a sale is securing approval from the European Competition Commission (ECC) for the aid to Trainose and OSE, which is required under EU competition laws.

It is in the interest of Greek officials to sell at the highest price, while the European Commission is eager to send a signal that it wants to recover the billions in European taxpayers’ money used to bail Greece out as swiftly as possible.

If the Commission finds the aid violated EU rules and constituted an illegal government subsidy, the debt would then become the responsibility of a prospective new owner.

“No serious investor would acquire the company without that having been cleared up,” one of the Greek officials involved in the sale talks told Reuters. “They need to clear up the status of the aid first.”

In the case of Trainose, the 700 million euro debt would dwarf its estimated 120 million euros’ worth of fixed assets.

Concerns the Commission is pressuring Athens into a fast sale prompted Marilenna Koppa, a European Parliament member for the Greek Democrat Socialist Party, to seek clarification from EU Commissioner Olli Rehn in February.

“The privatisation of Trainose before authorization is granted reduces its value and in practical terms will lead to the purchase of the company at a low price,” she wrote in Brussels.

In a two paragraph answer last week, Rehn said the assertions were “not correct”.

Under a timetable agreed by Greece and the troika of foreign lenders, Athens will first sell off highly profitable gambling and lottery companies, principally OPAP (OPAr.AT), Europe’s biggest betting company.

(Additional reporting by Harry Papachristou, Matthias Blamont, Gleb Stolyarov and Markus Wacket; Editing by Will Waterman)

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/04/13/uk-greece-railways-idUKBRE83C0HD20120413

Horrible Histories is one of the smartest comedies on TV

12 Apr
Horrible Histories

Horrible Histories real talent is just how good it is at lampooning popular culture. Photograph: Rory Lindsay/BBC/Rory Lindsay

CBBC’s Horrible Histories is a wonderfully curious thing: wildly praised, yet woefully undersold as really funny … for a kids’ show. But Horrible Histories isn’t just the best show on children’s television – it’s one of the smartest comedies on TV.

That’s a bold claim, admittedly. But with the fourth series – broadcasting every afternoon this week – it’s time to stop patting Horrible Histories on the head for not being rubbish, and accept that it’s a genuinely brilliant comedy in its own right. There are few British comedies that can touch it for ideas, writing and performance – especially with shows such as Shooting Stars and Harry Hill’s TV Burp leaving a huge hole where the silly and surreal should be.

Horrible Histories real talent, though, is just how good it is at lampooning popular culture. While sketch-based comedies such as, say, The Kevin Bishop Show desperately scream: “Do you see what we’re doing here?”, Horrible Histories never forces the issue. It plays things with surprising subtlety – never making the pop culture allusion the focus of the sketch, but simply a means to an end.

The show also has an astonishing cast. Jim Howick’s Greg Wallace is played with spot-on shouty silliness in Historical MasterChef (the fact he looks nothing like him also adding to the ramshackle ridiculousness), whilst Lawry Lewin’s “amazing” take on Brian Cox in Monday’s series four opener was probably one of its funniest sketches yet. And that’s ancient Egyptian scientific fact. The cast regulars are so superb that even special guest stars such as Chris Addison can look slightly out of their depth.

Horrible Histories brings its unique and brilliant spin to events – whether that means giving The Apprentice the stone age treatment, or turning history’s most famous philosophers into a pastiche of The Monkees. But the show also may owe some of its creative success to being a children’s TV show, with its CBBC slot gifting it with a chance to grow in confidence without the sometimes impossibly high expectations that new comedies can face. Rather than being pressured into being funny, they’ve had the freedom to just be funny for the joy of it.

The biggest testament to just how far Horrible Histories has come is the reunion of The League of Gentlemen this series in sketches that see Steve Pemberton, Reece Shearsmith and Mark Gatiss play an obnoxious board of film executives to whom historical figures pitch their biopics – a spoof of Orange cinema ads. It’s perfect, given that Horrible Histories, with its focus on poo, gore and stupid deaths, is exactly the sort of thing the trio would write if they had to lower the age of their target audience and cut out all of that incest, sadism and men in black-faces abducting women from their homes.

And when it comes to children’s TV, it’s not often you get to say that.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/tvandradioblog/2012/apr/12/horrible-histories-comedy

How Gaddafi scion went from reformer to reactionary

12 Apr

(Reuters) – It was supposed to be an olive branch from the dictator’s son, an apology for those who had died at the start of the Libyan uprising, a pledge to reform Muammar Gaddafi’s four-decade old regime.

But when Saif al-Islam Gaddafi appeared on television on February 20 last year, he sounded just like his defiant and rambling father.

Wagging a finger at the camera, Saif al-Islam blamed Libyan exiles for fomenting the violence and warned of more bloodshed. There was mention of reform to Libya’s constitution, but it was hardly an offer of compromise.

“We will keep fighting until the last man standing, even to the last woman standing,” he said.

The speech, the first by a Gaddafi family member after Libya’s uprising began on February 17, 2011, was all the more confrontational because of who made it. Saif al-Islam Gaddafi had been hailed – at home and abroad – as the Western-educated, business-friendly face of Libya, a reformer who could bring the country back in from the cold. Here he was sounding like a belligerent hardliner.

His televised address three days into the rebellion, said a person who has spoken to its authors, was originally drafted with “conciliatory language � So when he came on TV, the people who helped draft the speech were flabbergasted. They realised, after all these years, he didn’t mean anything. He completely reversed what he had portrayed himself to be.”

The story of Saif al-Islam’s reversion to type, his journey from great hope back to dictator’s son, reveals a lot about the shifts inside Libya in the decade leading up to last year’s rebellion. It is a story of would-be reforms, family feuds and dashed expectations. How it ends could be crucial to Libya’s future.

Nine months on from the speech, just weeks after his father’s gruesome death, Saif al-Islam, bearded, bedraggled and dressed as a Bedouin, was captured in the Sahara desert. Today the 39-year-old is Libya’s most famous prisoner, the man at the centre of a struggle between the International Criminal Court, which has charged him as a co-perpetrator in crimes against humanity, and the Libyan government, which wants to try him for financial corruption, murder and rape.

Pressure is mounting on Libya to hand Gaddafi’s son to the ICC. Human rights organizations say the country is unable to give him a fair trial. Tripoli says he should be judged at home.

ON THE BEACH

Saif al-Islam – the name means “the sword of Islam” – is the second eldest of Muammar Gaddafi’s seven sons. He was born in June 1972, three years after his father took power in a military coup at the age of 27.

For much of his life, and especially in the years after the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am airliner by Libyan agents over Lockerbie, Scotland, Saif al-Islam watched his father and country become more and more isolated.

Gaddafi senior called himself “Brother Leader of the Great Socialist Popular Libyan Arab Jamahiriyah” and described Libya’s political system as a perfect democracy of the masses. But it was one which ruled by terror, hunted down opponents and televised executions.

Saif al-Islam enjoyed the advantages and protections of power, including an education that taught him a couple of the languages – English, German – of Libya’s Western enemies.

Enass Ahmeda, a 38-year-old Libyan journalist who would later work at one of Saif al-Islam’s newspapers, remembers meeting Saif al-Islam at the beach as a teenager.

“He was talking and laughing about the girls around, and he pointed at me and made fun of me in English. He didn’t know I understood,” she said.

Later, Ahmeda and her sister joined Saif al-Islam and his friends in a discussion.

“I said something in English and he asked me whether I spoke English. When I said yes and told him I had understood his earlier comment (about my size) � he was ashamed,” she said.

Saif al-Islam also swore at his companions. “He was saying bad words to his friends, swearing about their mothers, so my sister asked him why he was doing that and how would he feel if someone said the same thing to him,” Ahmeda said. “He laughed and said, ‘I am Saif, no one will swear about my mother.'”

IGNORANT OR WELL INFORMED?

After high school, Saif al-Islam studied architecture and engineering at Tripoli’s Al-Fatah University, where he was nicknamed “Engineer Saif.” He studied business in Vienna and in 2002 headed to Britain to do a PhD at the prestigious London School of Economics.

The LSE forced him to take masters classes to prove his abilities before he could start the doctoral programme. Robert Wade, professor of political economy at the university, remembers receiving a call from a man who introduced himself as an education adviser for British defence firm BAE Systems. The man wanted to know what was covered in Wade’s course, “The Global Political Economy of Development.”

“Then it got a bit stranger,” Wade said. “He began to ask about the physical layout of the lecture theatre and how many entrances and exits there were to the theatre. Then he said he was ringing on behalf of Saif Gaddafi and Saif wanted to know whether he could audit my course.”

A BAE spokesman confirmed that an employee was seconded to work at Saif al-Islam’s charitable foundation at that time “as part of the company’s efforts to develop a market position in Libya.” Those ties should be “seen in the context of the general effort of the British Government at the time to improve diplomatic relations with Libya and to encourage British business to identify local requirements which they could fulfil, subject to export control restrictions.”

Saif al-Islam attended lectures with two bodyguards who stood at the lecture hall’s exits. He was not marked for his work, as he took the course voluntarily.

“He sat on his own and he never brought a single notebook or recorder or computer or anything. He just came, he sat, listened.”

The young Libyan would occasionally ask questions at the end of a lecture or come to see Wade in his office.

“I got the impression of somebody who was very ignorant of this whole area of political economy, about the functioning of the world economy on a large scale but also how the World Bank, the IMF, WTO, how they worked,” Wade said. “But he was very curious and genuinely concerned to learn.”

And Saif al-Islam’s lack of expertise in economics and diplomacy was offset by savvy in military affairs. Wade organised a dinner at a restaurant for Saif al-Islam, the Libyan’s girlfriend, a colleague and his colleague’s wife, an expert in military defence who teaches at another university.

“At dinner she sat next to him and they had a long conversation. She came out saying: ‘This guy is really well informed.’ He clearly impressed her as a very knowledgeable person about those matters,” he said.

Saif al-Islam cemented his ties with the LSE through his foundation, the Gaddafi International Charity and Development Foundation. On the day of Saif al-Islam’s PhD graduation in 2009, a donation of 1.5 million pounds was agreed for the LSE’s Centre for the Study of Global Governance. In the end, only the first instalment of 300,000 pounds was paid.

When Libya’s rebellion started last year, the university’s ties to its former student prompted its director Howard Davies to resign. The University of London, of which the LSE is part, investigated the authenticity of his thesis, “The role of civil society in the democratisation of global governance institutions: from ‘soft power’ to collective decision-making?”

Davies declined to comment. In his resignation letter he said that while there was no link between Gaddafi’s degree and foundation donations, accepting the money was a mistake.

University officials decided not to revoke the Phd. An LSE spokesman said that “whatever one thinks of him, he spent many years studying � but those were legitimate questions and it was right the University of London looked into the provenance of the PhD. What the panel found in essence was that there isn’t the evidence to justify revoking the PhD.”

Saif al-Islam, said Wade, “was no kind of playboy, no kind of dunce who got other people to do whatever he was meant to write himself. That’s just not true.”

THE REFORMER

While Saif al-Islam was abroad, Libya’s relationship with the West began to thaw.

The young Gaddafi began working with academics, executives and consultants to plot a new future for his country. Though he occupied no formal political office, he wielded influence and soon came to be seen as a potential heir to his father.

“He really had a capacity to conduct a thoughtful conversation, a political conversation, a conversation about not just Libya but the future of civil society,” said Benjamin Barber, an author and adviser to Saif al-Islam who also sat on the international board of his charitable Gaddafi Foundation.

“He really appreciated Western liberal democratic thought but he thought that it could never work in Libya without a major accommodation to the history of Libya, Libyan culture,” said Barber.

Saif al-Islam played a central role in Tripoli’s 2003 decision to abandon its nuclear and chemical weapons programmes and the following year helped negotiate the end to U.S. and European sanctions on Libya over the Lockerbie bombing.

“He wanted a solution with the West,” said Saad Djebbar, an Algerian lawyer based in London who advised the Libyan government on the Lockerbie negotiations and who met Saif al-Islam while he was in Britain. “He wanted to do everything to open up to the West.”

With Libya’s emergence from isolation, the country became fertile ground for foreign oil companies, which went on to spend billions of dollars for a share of Africa’s biggest proven oil reserves. Other investors also poured in.

Saif al-Islam negotiated the 2007 release of five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor, convicted – the six always maintained their innocence – of deliberately infecting hundreds of Libyan children with HIV. His efforts helped lead to the eventual release of hundreds of imprisoned members of the now defunct Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, which once plotted against Muammar Gaddafi from Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.

He also played a role in negotiating the Lockerbie settlement, flying back with convicted bomber Abdelbaset al-Megrahi after his release from a Scottish jail in 2009.

The West didn’t always cheer him on. Saif al-Islam was at Meghrahi’s side in a stage-managed homecoming spectacle that angered foreign capitals which accused Tripoli of giving a hero’s welcome to a convicted killer. But for the most part he was viewed as moderate and reforming.

He pushed for more media freedom, acknowledgement of past rights abuses and the adoption of a constitution. His foundation was the closest thing Libya had to an ombudsman and was used as a point of contact for groups such as Human Rights Watch.

“We also realised that Saif al-Islam was susceptible to international pressure, that he was a good target for us as a human rights organisation within the Libyan authorities because of his direct access to his father,” said Human Rights Watch researcher Heba Morayef, who first met Saif al-Islam in 2008 in Washington.

“The general theme was, ‘Libya has changed. It is open. I recognise that there are problems but we’re working on them’. He was very clever at how he presented himself … He knew how to speak the language and how to present things to his advantage.”

When HRW told Saif al-Islam that they wanted to hold a news conference in Libya after the release of a report on the country in 2009 – a first for a place that rarely allowed scrutiny of its rights record – he told them, ‘Of course, Libya is open now. I will get you visas. Come and have a press conference,’ Morayef said. “When he made that public, he said: ‘I invited Human Rights Watch to come have a press conference in Libya, which we would never have done … in response to an invitation from Saif. But it fit in really well in his whole image of Libya is open now.

“VERY PRICKLY”

Djebbar, the London-based former adviser to Libya, describes Saif al-Islam in those years as a “gateway to his father.” Some officials grumbled that “he always rushed to claim success without recognizing the efforts of others in government.”

His reformist moves inevitably sparked speculation that he would succeed his father, despite the fact he always refused any official post.

“He was the soft face of the regime. You have the good cop and bad cop. He was the good cop,” Djebbar said. “The only alternative was Saif, and indeed he was acting as a head of state in waiting.”

But the young man’s skills did not always extend to the rough, street-wise political savvy needed to survive in Libya, a society riven by tribal and other rivalries. His ideas were often stymied by opposition from inside the ruling elite and even from members of his own family, who stood to lose from the liberalisation that Saif al-Islam backed.

These tensions surfaced in 2008, when he publicly announced that he was leaving politics. While he believed in a free market economy, press freedom and deeper democracy, his father insisted his own Jamahiriyah system of town hall meetings, which gave people a low-level voice but ensured Gaddafi’s tight grip on power at the top, should never change.

Saif al-Islam’s adviser Barber, who met Gaddafi senior on several occasions, described the relationship between father and son as “very prickly”.

“He was without question the most talented and gifted of the sons and his father knew that and I think saw him as the bright one, the chosen one,” he said. “I’m sure his father hoped that he would maybe succeed him, but at the same time, for the same reasons that Saif al-Islam was bold and smart, he was constantly challenging his father.”

It was Saif al-Islam who brought into the government the U.S.-trained Libyan economist Mahmoud Jibril, who would later become Libya’s wartime rebel prime minister. Jibril claims he was strong-armed into accepting a position when he was working as a consultant in Cairo.

“I think Saif was more like a window shopper,” Jibril said. “He once formed a committee to write up a constitution and his discussion was: ‘Well, the Australians did this, we take that, the Canadians did that, take that. Behind a constitution there is a political philosophy, a unified political system. You can’t just pick.”

For a time, establishment conservatives were content to let Saif al-Islam advocate abroad, figuring that this would lead to the end of sanctions. But once that happened, Saif al-Islam’s usefulness began to wane even as the influence of his younger brother, national security adviser Mo’Tassim, viewed by some observers as a rival for power, grew.

In one sign of Saif al-Islam’s decline, Oea, an independent newspaper he helped found, saw its print version suspended in November 2010 soon after it published an article calling for a “final assault” on the government, which it alleged had failed to tackle corruption. It reappeared on newsstands a week later with a new name, editor and a pledge of loyalty to Muammar Gaddafi.

Journalist Ahmeda, who had met Saif al-Islam decades earlier on the beach, was an Oea editor and remembers being summoned to his home after she refused to print an article by an exiled Libyan critical of the government, for fear that it would get her arrested.

“He told me, ‘You have the right not to publish it but I just want to know. The man is Libyan and he has the right to publish an article. Muammar Gaddafi is just a human and everyone has the right to criticise him.’

‘MICHAEL CORLEONE’

But criticism had its limits, even for a reformer. According to the minutes of a December 2010 meeting of his foundation, Saif al-Islam took the unusual step of publicly denying he was feuding with his brothers. Two months later, when the rebellion began, he was the first to speak out in support of the government.

“He made what I call the Michael Corleone choice,” adviser Barber said. “When the family, his brothers and long-term regime were under threat, he had a choice of going either with Benghazi or defending the family.

“He made a not very surprising decision. In the Arab world it’s family and clan first, and everything else comes after.”

Barber continued to interact with Saif al-Islam after the insurgency began and said the younger Gaddafi talked to South Africa and Turkey to try find a solution.

At the same time, Saif al-Islam held court to the world’s media. “We fight here in Libya; we die here in Libya,” he told Reuters shortly after the rebellion broke out. He later called the protesters “rats.”

When Tripoli fell last August, rebels said he had been captured. But he popped up at a Tripoli hotel used by foreign journalists to prove he remained a free man.

He later disappeared, and his Moroccan-like villa, enclosed in what was once a heavily-guarded estate with its own grape vines, orchard and a personal zoo that housed tigers, was hit in a NATO airstrike. A pile of rubble now stands in what was an entrance hall, decorated with Islamic tiles, and sprayed with the names of militias that marched into Tripoli.

The International Criminal Court said Saif al-Islam offered to surrender, but officials there feared this could be a bluff and warned mercenaries with him that if they sought to escape by aircraft they could be shot down. Gaddafi denies that such an exchange took place. “It’s all lies. I’ve never been in touch with them,” he told Reuters in November.

In his final days on the run, witnesses said he was nervous, confused and frightened, at first calling his father by satellite phone, swearing aides to secrecy about his whereabouts and, after his father was killed, seeking to avoid a similarly gruesome fate.

He was captured in the desert by fighters from the town of Zintan on November 19 without a fight and with only a handful of supporters, apparently about to flee to Niger.

On the old Libyan air force transport plane that took him to the town of Zintan, he wore a robe and at first hid his face and dodged questions from a Reuters reporter on board. He later confirmed he was okay and said his hand, with three of his right fingers bandaged, had been injured in a NATO air raid.

Many Libyans believe Saif al-Islam knows the location of the Gaddafi riches; his captors said they found him with only a few thousand dollars and a cache of rifles in seized vehicles.

The International Criminal Court and Libya have locked horns over who will try him. Among other things at stake, the venue could determine how fully the trial exposes secrets about the Gaddafi regime’s dealings with the West.

Saif al-Islam’s supporters, including surviving siblings who found refuge abroad, say they doubt he will be given a fair trial in Libya. He faces a prison term if convicted by the ICC, and the death penalty if found guilty by a Libyan court.

“To me it’s a great modern tragedy,” adviser Barber said. “And if there was a modern Sophocles or Aeschylus around, they would write it.”

(With additional reporting by Ali Shuaib in Tripoli and Ethan Bilby in London; Edited by Simon Robinson)

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/04/11/uk-libya-saif-idUKBRE83A0DM20120411

Simpsons creator reveals the real Springfield

12 Apr

Simpsons

Have you ever wondered where Springfield, the home of Homer, Marge, Maggie, Lisa and Bart Simpson, is really based? Photograph: AP

The tales of Homer Simpson and his family have become embedded in television lore, but have you ever wondered where Springfield, the illustrious hometown of The Simpsons, is really based?

The town of Springfield has become a character of its own on the popular animated TV show, serving as the backdrop to the adventures of the Simpson family. But in 23 years on air, the show’s creator has kept the real location of the town veiled, saying he didn’t want to “ruin it for people” – until now.

In an interview with Smithsonian Magazine’s May issue, Matt Groening revealed that the animated town is based on Springfield, Oregon, near his childhood hometown of Portland.

He also said he was inspired to use the town’s name after it was featured on the 1950s television show Father Knows Best.

“I also figured out that Springfield was one of the most common names for a city in the US In anticipation of the success of the show, I thought, ‘This will be cool; everyone will think it’s their Springfield.’ And they do,” said the show’s creator.

The tales of doughnut-loving father Homer J. Simpson and his dysfunctional family, wife Marge and kids Bart, Lisa and Maggie, have become a staple of American culture, winning 27 Emmy awards, earning a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame, and even coining a new word as Homer’s expression “D’oh!” entered the Oxford English Dictionary in 2011.

The Simpson family are named after Groening’s family – father Homer (named after the Greek poet Homer), mother Margaret and sisters Lisa and Maggie.

Bart is based on the creator himself, although Groening changed the name from ‘Matt’ to ‘Bart’ because he “had this idea of an angry father yelling ‘Bart,’ and Bart sounds kind of like bark-like a barking dog,” and he thought it would sound funny.

The inspirations drawn from Oregon didn’t just stop at the town name. Groening also said he named some of the characters after streets in Portland, including Reverend Lovejoy, the school bully Kearney and the Simpsons’ annoyingly lovable neighbour Ned Flanders.

Even the address that America’s favourite animated family live at, 632 Evergreen Terrace, is named after Groening’s own childhood home address.

The Simpsons was created by Groening for Fox television and first aired in 1989. It is the longest-running American sitcom in history, broadcast in more than 100 countries and 50 languages, and it still attracts an average 7.7 million US viewers weekly.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2012/apr/10/simpsons-matt-groening-real-springfield

The 20 worst Premier League kits

12 Apr

Arsenal (A) 1991-1993
Welcoming the Premier League era with a bang (as taste leaves the building, slamming the door behind it), this chevron shocker is a staple of bad-shirt lists because it’s quite unbelievably bad. Someone designed this; someone cleared it; some even bought it.

Aston Villa (H) 2004/05
More shameful chevron shenanigans. Rehired kit manufacturers Hummel went overboard on the pointy little bleeders for this shirt, which only lasted a year before being dechevronned. Didn’t stop people asking “Why are they sponsored by Cows?”


Birmingham City (H) 2010/11

Give the people what they want, goes the mantra. So when Birmingham hired Chinese manufacturer Xtep, there was a four-way public vote on the new shirt design, and the worst one won. Could’ve been Villa fans on the sly; certainly a lesson that democracy doesn’t work. You hear that, China?


Blackburn Rovers (A) 1996/7

Not a good season for Rovers. Alan Shearer had gone, Ray Harford resigned, Sven-Göran Eriksson reneged on replacing him – and the players had to shuffle around in this mess, which combined an unwisely bold yellow with vertical strips of what looks like doodles or the result of leaning against a freshly-creosoted fence.

Bolton Wanderers (H) 2008/09
You’d think it’d be hard to go wrong with a plain white shirt. You’d be wrong. This Reebok effort made it look like the Wanderers players were wearing some sort of sports bra. The one after that looked like a stripy Tesco carrier-bag.

Chelsea (A) 1994-1996
Back in the early 90s, there were conversations in the pub (it’s like Facebook, but boozy) about whether kit manufacturers were trying to outdo each other in awfulness. The Silver Tangerine may be Umbro’s entry, as worn by Chelsea ledges like Ruud Gullit and Dennis Wise.

Coventry City (A) 1992/93
Notable taste-swerving shirt pioneers since the 70s (the Talbot T, the cack-brown away kit), Cov reached a nadir with this effort from the Premier League’s first season. Thankfully seldom seen, it was redolent of a car windscreen in a particularly grisly public information film about seatbelts.

Everton (H) 2009/10
Yep, the white bit recalls fond memories of Everton’s excellent 1985/86 season. But coupled with the chest-crossing hem, it looks too much like a lady’s plunging neckline. And we really don’t want to consider Osman’s orbs, Cahill’s cleavage, Bilyaletdinov’s bazongas, etc.

Fulham (A) 2010/11
Apparently, some people like this kit. They say it’s the colour of Australian sports teams, as if that makes it all OK. It’s also the colour of the result left behind after a sickly cat gorges on grass, or a toddler eats its crayons.

Liverpool (H) 1993-95
Shankly changed Liverpool to all-red in 1965, but in 1991 Adidas added their three-stripe motif overtly to the right shoulder and left hip, and this update doubled the intrusion so players looked like they’d been rugby-tackled by Tippex. The team’s not been the same since. Coincidence?

Manchester United (H) 2009/10 
Commemorative kits are good for clubs, in that they can scrap them after a year, and for fans, in that they don’t have to put up with frequently awful designs for more than one campaign. Some centenary or other ‘inspired’ Nike to whack a black rugby-shirt V across the chest; reaction was mixed, to say the least.

Newcastle (A) 1997/98
Newcastle don’t have to wear their away kit very often; good job, with shockers like this. This cacophony of blue, green and orange – with badge and stripe off-centre for no real reason – looked like an ugly bruise ripening in the sun, and when Kenny Dalglish’s underachievers wore it in a 4-1 defeat at Leeds ref David Elleray changed his own shirt to avoid any comparison.

Norwich City (H) 1992-1994
No apologies for including the legendary “Canary-cack” shirt, one of several from the dawn of the Premiership when kit designers appeared to be seeing just how much they could get away with. Apparently manufacturers Ribeiro went bust halfway through the 1993/94 season, and replacements Mitre toned it down ten notches for the following campaign; draw your own conclusions.

Nottingham Forest (H) 1994-1996
Forest were relegated and immediately re-promoted in a pin-striped strip of cool simplicity, which was the subtly altered in pre-season to replace Shipstones with new sponsor Labatts. Sadly they then switched to this over-egged pudding, with thick black “rucksack straps” and unnecessary white horizontals.

Reading (A) 2007/08
Hoops are jolly, lively livery. Perhaps influenced by the dour public image of Steve Coppell – a man who once, when asked what promotion to the Premier League meant, replied “nine months of hell” – Reading dialled down the joy by choosing change colours of funereal black and grey. Reading were relegated.

Sheffield Wednesday (H) 1995-1997
You’d think it’d be difficult to get it wrong with stripes. You’d be wrong. After a century of regularity, Wednesday suddenly decided to go all barcode, making it harder to see the badge (pity) and manufacturer logo (justice) and adding unprecedented splashes of yellow. And that’s to say nothing of the background montage of letters saying, oh yes, SWFC (Stop Wilfully Faffing with the Colours?).

Sunderland (A) 1996-97
“To mark the 11th anniversary of the 1985 Milk Cup Final – which Sunderland lost 1-0 to Norwich City through an own goal in a season which ultimately saw both teams relegated – we’ve honoured our Canary conquerors by adopting their colours for a change strip.” So ran a press release which we’ve just made up.

Tottenham (A) 1995/96
Purple is the colour of kings. Purple is the colour worn by high academics. Purple is the colour of pride. Purple is the colour of UKIP. Purple is the colour of death. Purple should not be the colour of a football kit.

West Ham (H) 1993-95
In the early 90s, kit manufacturers overstepped the mark. Having signed up West Ham and Southampton, Pony wasted no time in pasting their trademark (no, really) reverse tick across the chest of the players, attempting to justify it with various other unnecessary brush-strokes.

Wigan (A) 2008-09
Fluorescence demands confidence. It screams “look at me”, so you’d better be worth looking at. Barcelona did it in 2005, Chelsea in 2007; Wigan coat-tailed along the following season. No need for jokes about news arriving slowly in Wigan.

The 20 best Premier League kits

12 Apr

Two decades of high-eyeball merchandising opportunities… sorry, team shirts have produced some crackers and some shockers. First, how it should be done…

Arsenal (H) 2000-2002
The finite shelflife of modern kits help take you back to a certain time, and Arsenal’s relatively shortlived sponsorship by Sega’s ill-fated Dreamcast pins this kit to the dawn of the new century: Pires, Henry, Ljungberg, Vieira, Campbell, Cole and a third Double.

Aston Villa (A) 2009/10
After two years of oppressively dark away kits, Villa’s 2009 set paired simple dark blue shorts with a top of almost stunning simplicity: plain white with a subtle pinstripe and unfussy sponsor logo. The year after, they switched back to black and gained an ugly new sponsor. Never mind.

Blackburn Rovers (H) 1992/93
Back to dark blue after a brief flirtation with a suspiciously sky-blue hue, Blackburn’s first top-flight kit for 26 years paid much more reverence to the ancient halves than to the sponsors’ red logo. Quite right, too: why bow to corporates when Uncle Jack’s signing the cheques?

Chelsea (A) 2003/04
Chelsea have had some awful away kits of late but this design was well-received. The central double stripe was eye-catching without being eye-watering, and even its slight similarity to an Embassy Regal cigarette packet was kinda retro.

Crystal Palace (H) 1997/98
Few teams can have changed their colours more often than Palace, who have flitted between white, red and blue in various combinations. The late-90s dabbling with white shorts, socks and collars coincided with a top-flight season that begun with Steve Coppell and concluded with Lombardo, Brolin and ignominy.

Fulham (H) 2009/10
After disastrous dalliances with asymmetry and overcomplication followed by back-to-basics plain white, Fulham got the balance right with this round-collared, black-sleeved effort. That it coincided with the greatest season in their history may be a happy accident or divine design approval.

Leeds United (H) 1993-1995
New unfashionable sponsor, new unheralded kit-maker, new unprecedented horizontal stripe… it could have gone horribly wrong, but this blue-collared classic was a marvel of understated design. Sgt Wilko’s team responded with two fifth-place finishes.

Leicester (H) 1996-1998
A golden era for the Foxes, with the first silverware in a quarter-century and Martin O’Neill building a team featuring Heskey, Lennon, Claridge & Co. They lined up in this kit, with tasteful two-tone V-neck collar and cuffs and a sponsor logo yet to absurdly incorporate the sun.

Liverpool (H) 1995/96
They like a bit of ‘istoree at Anfield. After unfortunate early-90s kits majored on three intrusive diagonal white stripes, Adidas’ final strip for a decade recalled the club’s 70s pomp by relegating the manufacturer motif to a subtle sleeve-stripe and restoring the red hegemony everywhere except a bold white V-neck.

Manchester City (A) 2011/12
If you have plans to conquer the continent, you can do worse than ape AC Milan. That was Malcolm Allison’s idea in the late ’60s, when City adopted Rossoneri stripes as an away kit – and won the league, FA Cup, League Cup and Cup Winners’ Cup. This season’s strip reverts to the popular theme.

Manchester United (H) 1998-2000
Reeking of David Beckham, this kit strongly evokes the 1999 Treble-winning side – although in Europe the side wore a simpler version shorn of the black piping. The zip-up collar and elasticated cuffs even kept out the worst of the weather. Well, some of it.

Middlesbrough (H) 1992/93
Although predominantly red since the 19th century, Boro have often been bold with wedges of white, and their kit for the Premier League’s maiden season was a fine example. Lennie Lawrence’s team wore proud splashes of white and that iconic ICI sponsor’s logo.

Newcastle United (H) 1995-1997
If the round white four-button collar lent this shirt a timeless quality, the Newcy Brown bottle label rendered its wearer almost a walking symbol of the city. And with attacking title campaigns, stunning record signings and dramatic managerial walkouts, everyone was watching Newcastle.

Nottingham Forest (H) 1992/93
Compared to its magic-eye predecessor and black-swathed successors, this was a classy outfit for Brian Clough’s final, relegation-doomed season. The buttoned red collar and subtle pinstripe were entirely suitable attire for Stuart Pearce and Roy Keane to wear while terrorising the division.

QPR (H) 1995/96
The titular hoops have remained largely untouched, but this is our favourite iteration. The simple round blue collar and centralised badge marked a classy debut by kit manufacturers View From (who they?). Shame the team struggled without Sir Les Ferdinand and dropped out of the top flight.

Southampton (H) 1995-1997
After two years of looking awful in Pony’s first Saints kit with asymmetric stripes and a reverse tick at the top, Le Tiss & Co. were delighted to receive a back-to-basics affair with pleasing thin stripes and a retro collar. Just don’t mention the Where’s Wally socks.

Tottenham Hotspur (A) 2000/01
You can tell a good away shirt when you hope for more kit clashes. Tottenham only had to wear this tasteful, regal dark blue outfit a handful of times and lost on each occasion – although they had unveiled it at the tail-end of the previous season with a home win against Sunderland. Oh well.

West Brom (H) 2002/03
Boinging into their first top-flight season since 1986, the Baggies took kit design in-house and produced their best shirt in years. Tasteful stripes, no extraneous detail, simple collar… if only they hadn’t finished 19th in it.

West Ham (H) 2001-03
With Harry Redknapp, Rio Ferdinand and both Frank Lampards gone, this was a new era for West Ham under Glenn Roeder. With Paolo Di Canio looking more imperious than ever in two-tone round-neck, blue sleeves and white socks, the Hammers finished seventh, their second-highest position in 15 years… then got relegated the following season.

Wimbledon (H) 1993/94
For the second Premier League season, Wimbledon acquired a sponsor and a new kit manufacturer, darkened the blue and added a tasteful yellow collar. It worked: fired by 24-goal Dean Holdsworth, the Dons finished sixth – as it turned out, their highest position.

 

http://fourfourtwo.com/blogs/fourfourtwoview/archive/2012/03/28/the-20-best-premier-league-kits-ever-1.aspx

Del Piero and Totti grab the perfect wave on Big Wednesday in Serie A

12 Apr

RESULTS Tue 10 Apr Chievo 0-1 AC Milan Wed 11 Apr AS Roma 3-1 Udinese, Catania 1-2 Lecce, Napoli 1-3 Atalanta, Parma 2-0 Novara, Fiorentina 0-0 Palermo, Inter 2-1 Siena, Genoa 1-1 Cesena, Juventus 2-1 Lazio.

Wednesday evening was an emotional one for two players whose careers have basically been a window into the true heart of Italian football over the last two decades.

It was ‘Big Wednesday’ in Serie A and two veterans caught the perfect wave. Alessandro Del Piero scored the winner for Juventus against Lazio and Francesco Totti netted the goal that put AS Roma 2-1 up at home to Udinese.

Both players are coming to the end of their illustrious careers, but still possess the ability to grab the limelight away from any young pretender – and retain the title of genuine fuoriclasse.

Del Piero was making his 700th appearance for Juve when he trotted on to replace Mirko Vucinic with just over 15 minutes remaining in the perfect setting of the Juventus Arena.

Suddenly the volume was amplified to such levels that even Antonio Conte was forced to give up screaming at the top of his lungs and instead settled for some manic arm-waving from the sidelines.

With the home side encamped in the Lazio half, but with Vucinic giving the ball away at every turn, the match was evenly poised at 1-1 – a scoreline which would have left Juve a point shy of AC Milan at the top of the table after the champions had sneaked a 1-0 victory at Chievo 24 hours earlier.

But the stage was set for Del Piero to once more roll back the years and produce a moment of sheer drama, with one of his trademark curling free-kicks with just eight minutes remaining.

It looked as if Andrea Pirlo was set to try his luck but, with the visitors unable to get their wall set up, the referee gave Del Boy the nod. With Lazio goalkeeper Federico Marchetti rooted to the spot, the ball was in the net before he could move, and the stadium was soon in a state of delirium.

An instant poll among Bianconeri fans demanded club president Andrea Agnelli reverse his decision to make this the 37-year-old club legend’s last season, but it seems there is no going back.

Conte has only given Del Piero three starts throughout the campaign, but he has scored against Inter in the league and Milan in the Cup in the new stadium.

Having made his debut for the Old Lady as an 18-year-old mop-haired youth at Foggia back in September 1993, he has now scored 187 Serie A goals, taking him into the top ten in the all-time goalscoring charts.

Before last night’s game, Totti had scored 211 league goals to put him fifth amongst the greats. Just moments after Del Piero reeled away with his familiar tongue-out celebration, down in the Capital the Roma captain was sticking his thumb in his mouth to indicate he had moved on to 212.

Roma were desperately searching for a win against Udinese in order to keep their hopes of holding on to third place alive, but much like Juve, the Giallorossi had dominated their opponents only to be left labouring with the scores locked at 1-1.

Totti’s vital goal may have been a tap-in, but it lifted the Romans after the debacle that was their 4-2 defeat to relegation-threatened Lecce at the weekend, and they would ultimately go on to secure a 3-1 victory.

Two years Del Piero’s junior, Totti, much like his old friend, can still unlock any defence with his movement and quickness of – and of course he too is a leader and team player.

While his team-mates and coach Luis Enrique had to listen to jeers as their names were announced, one name received only cheers and applause. However, in the post-game melee with the press, Totti’s first words were “we win as a team and lose as one.” Almost at the exact same moment back in Turin, Del Piero was saying much the same thing.

Class, as they say, is permanent, and these two greats of the Italian game are still on the crest of a wave.