À Paris, le “Corleone”, restaurant sicilien d’une des filles de Totò Riina attire les curieux

Un nouveau restaurant italien a ouvert à Paris, dans le 8e arrondissement, en novembre dernier. Il s’appelle le “Corleone”, nom d’une ville de Sicile et du célèbre parrain de Francis Ford Coppola. Mais c’est surtout le restaurant de Lucia Riina, la dernière fille de Totò Riina, vrai parrain de la cosa nostra sicilienne, celui qu’on appelait “il capo dei capi“, le “chef des chefs“.Lucia Riina n’a jamais été condamnée pour quoi que ce soit. Elle est artiste-peintre et se lance dans la restauration, mais c’est bien son nom et ce qu’il évoque qui attire la majorité des clients.Quand on a vu la pancarte, ça nous a fait sourireune habitante du quartierfranceinfoC’est que son nom est écrit sur la vitrine du petit restaurant, intime, modeste. Une enseigne vert sapin éclairée par une lanterne. Alors forcément, ça fait parler dans le quartier, confirme Dominique, gardienne de l’immeuble d’à côté. “Quand on a vu la pancarte, ça nous a fait sourire.” Et en même temps, se dit la voisine, “elle n’y peut rien, elle n’est pas responsable de son père, c’est sa fille, c’est tout. Sûrement qu’en Italie ou en Sicile, on ressent plus le poids de ce nom.”La propriétaire se montre peu aux curieuxEt c’est juste pour ce nom que Léa a prévu d’aller déjeuner au “Corleone”. La jeune femme voudrait voir Lucia de ses yeux. “J’irai de toute manière, avoue-t-elle. Pour l’anecdote et savoir qui est là.”Cette cliente risque d’être déçue : la benjamine de la famille Riina n’apparaît que très peu, elle dit vouloir rester discrète.

Le “Corleone” à Paris – Reportage de Sarah Nedjar–‘—-‘–

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L’ancien président ivoirien Laurent Gbagbo libéré sous conditions

La Cour pénale internationale (CPI) a libéré sous conditions l’ancien président ivoirien Laurent Gbagbo. Une décision prise vendredi 1er février, à la suite de son retentissant acquittement il y a deux semaines de crimes contre l’humanité commis en 2010 et 2011 lors de violences post-électorales en Côte d’Ivoire. “Il est impossible de limiter la liberté d’une personne innocente”, a répété à maintes reprises l’avocat de Laurent Gbagbo.
“La Chambre d’appel a décidé à l’unanimité l’ajout d’un ensemble de conditions qui assortissent la mise en liberté” de Laurent Gbagbo, dont l’obligation de résider dans un Etat membre de la CPI en attendant un éventuel procès en appel, a déclaré le juge président de la CPI. Dans leur décision, dernier épisode en date d’un feuilleton judiciaire qui tient en haleine la Côte d’Ivoire, les juges n’ont pas précisé le nom du pays qui accueillerait Laurent Gbagbo, ni si un retour de l’ancien président dans son pays était envisageable.En détention depuis plus de sept ansLa Côte d’Ivoire est bien un des Etats membres de la Cour. Toutefois, ce pays a refusé de remettre à la CPI Simone Gbagbo, épouse de l’ancien président, malgré un mandat d’arrêt délivré en ce sens. La Cour, qui siège à La Haye (Pays-Bas), pourrait donc refuser le retour de Laurent Gbagbo en Côte d’Ivoire dans l’attente d’un éventuel procès en appel.En détention depuis plus de sept ans à La Haye, Laurent Gbagbo était jugé pour des crimes commis pendant la crise de 2010-2011, née de son refus de céder le pouvoir à son rival, l’actuel président ivoirien Alassane Ouattara. Les violences avaient fait plus de 3 000 morts en cinq mois.

Cannes 2012, rumeurs sur une sélection (3 : cinémas du monde)

Quels films seront sélectionnés au prochain Festival de Cannes ? Un mois avant l’annonce officielle de la sélection, AlloCiné fait le point sur les films attendus. 3ème volet : Zoom sur les cinémas du monde.

Voir notre article sur les rumeurs cannoises à propos du cinéma français

Voir notre article sur les rumeurs cannoises à propos du cinéma américain

Si, l’an dernier, les auteurs européens chéris du festival étaient particulièrement nombreux (Moretti, Von Trier, Almodóvar,Kaurismäki, Dardenne…), on devrait en retrouver d’autres cette année. L’Anglais Ken Loach a ainsi tourné en Ecosse The Angel’s share, tandis que l’Autrichien Michael Haneke a réalisé à Paris un Amour qui devrait destabiliser la Croisette (avec Isabelle Huppert, Emmanuelle Riva et Jean-Louis Trintignant) et il faut aussi compter avec son compatriote Ulrich Seidl (Paradise).

A surveiller également : le Suédois Roy Andersson (A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence, un projet qu’il porte depuis plusieurs années), le Belge Joachim Lafosse (Aimer à perdre la raison, avec Tahar Rahim et Emilie Dequenne), le Britannique Jonathan Glazer (Under the skin, film de SF avec Scarlett Johansson), l’Allemande Margarethe Von Trotta (La banalité du mal, sur Hannah Arendt), les Italiens Matteo Garrone (l’auteur de “Gomorra”, forcément attendu avec son Big House, sur l’univers des médias), Bernardo Bertolucci (Moi et toi) et Marco Tullio Giordana (Piazza Fontana), l’Espagnol Albert Serra (Historia de la meva mort), le Russe Sergeï Loznitsa (In the fog), sans oublier le Roumain Cristian Mungiu, Palme d’or 2007 pour “4 mois, 3 semaines et deux jours” (Beyond the Hills). A 103 ans, le Portugais Manoel de Oliveira, avec son casting vermeil-merveilleux Jeanne Moreau-Claudia Cardinale-Michael Lonsdale), fait bien sûr partie des prétendants naturels (Gebo et l’ombre).

Amour (sur le tournage)

Deux Iraniens expatriés sont également attendus cette année : Abbas Kiarostami, un des réalisateurs favoris du Président du jury Nanni Moretti (Like someone in love, tourné au Japon) et Bahman Ghobadi (Rhinos season, film sur la Révoution Iranienne, mais tourné en Turquie, avec Monica Bellucci). Pour le Québécois Xavier Dolan, découvert à la Quinzaine (J’ai tué ma mère) et confirmé à Un Certain Regard (Les Amours imaginaires), l’heure de la compétition semble venue : Laurence Anyways, audacieuse histoire d’un couple qui tente de rester uni après le changement de sexe du garçon (Melvil Poupaud), pourrait bien-être le film qui divisera la Croisette. Chez les cinéastes coréens, les débuts américains de l’auteur de “Old boy” Park Chan-wook (Stoker) sont forcément guettés, tout comme la rencontre Hong Sangsoo-Isabelle Huppert (In another country). Et encore : l’Argentin Pablo Trapero (Elefante blanco avec Jérémie Rénier), le Mexicain Carlos Reygadas (Post Tenebras Lux), les Japonais Koji Wakamatsu (un fim autour de Mishima) et Kitano (Anata-e), ainsi que l’Egyptien Yousry Nasrallah, qui revient sur le printemps egyptien (Après la bataille).

Like someone in love

Pour finir, la plus grande incertitude règne sur l’état d’avancement de The Grandmasters, tourné il y a quelques mois par Wong Kar wai, mais qui ne serait finalement pas prêt à temps -cependant on se souvient qu’il avait terminé 2046 quelques heures seulement avant la projection du film sur la Croisette ! A l’inverse, le film de l’épouse de Raoul Ruiz (Les Lignes de Wellington, qui réunit à peu près tous les acteurs fétiches du Chilien) vient seulement d’être tourné, mais le producteur Paulo Branco, qui s’y connait en paris fous, compte bien être prêt pour le mois de mai.

Parmi les tous les titres que nous avons cités, lesquels seront finalement au rendez-vous ? Fin du suspense le 19 avril, avec l’annonce de la Sélection Officielle. D’ici là, à vous de nous dire dans les commentaires quels sont les films que vous espérez pour Cannes…

Julien Dokhan

Voir notre article sur les rumeurs cannoises à propos du cinéma français

Voir notre article sur les rumeurs cannoises à propos du cinéma américain

Finance ministers take time-out over Greece

Finance ministers take time-out over Greece

Ministers place binding obligations on Greece, while Assessment reports due in mid-March.

By

2/17/10, 10:19 PM CET

Updated 4/12/14, 7:05 PM CET

The eurozone’s finance ministers have tried to buy themselves a month’s breathing space in their struggle with the bond and currency markets over Greece’s public finances.

The stage has been set for another show-down in mid-March, when meetings are scheduled of the finance ministers of the eurozone (15 March) and the EU (16 March). Greece will deliver its own assessment by 16 March of how well its deficit reduction is going.

The European Commission and the European Central Bank (ECB) will also give an assessment in mid-March of whether further measures are needed in addition to those approved by EU finance ministers on Tuesday (16 February).

Ministers on Tuesday placed binding obligations on Greece to reduce its deficit by four percentage points this year and to bring it below 3% of gross domestic product by 2012. They also adopted a list of structural reforms that Greece should implement to remedy its public finances, including reductions in civil service recruitment, a pay freeze for the civil service, tax reform and a steep cut in the number of Greek municipal authorities.

The ministers told Greece to prepare “additional measures” that could be quickly introduced, if necessary, to reach the four percentage point cut, including raising value-added tax, placing excise duties on luxury goods and cars and increasing taxation on energy.

Greek commitments

Greece has committed itself to implementing the additional measures if called on to do so by the Eurogroup, the finance ministers of the eurozone. “To the extent that…risks materialise, the Greek government shall announce further measures,” George Papaconstantinou, Greece’s finance minister, said.

Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the Eurogroup, said on Monday (15 February), however, that eurozone governments reserved the right, in an extreme scenario, to “impose” measures on the Greek government, using a voting procedure that would exclude Greece.

Officials from the Commission and the ECB will travel to Athens in the coming days to assess Greece’s progress in bringing down its budget deficit. Olli Rehn, the European commissioner for economic and monetary affairs, said that the officials would be on the ground by the beginning of next week, at the latest, and that they would work with officials from the International Monetary Fund who are providing support to the Greek government.

The finance ministers’ agreement appeared to have reduced concerns on the markets that Greece could default on its debt. The euro rose sharply after Tuesday’s meeting, before falling back slightly yesterday (17 February). Having hit a nine-month low against the dollar of $1.35 last Friday, it had recovered yesterday to $1.37.

Greece, meanwhile, called for governments to finalise the details of how financial support would be provided in the event that it does need to be rescued from default. At an EU summit last Thursday (11 February), leaders of the EU’s national governments agreed that they would take “determined and co-ordinated” action to save Greece if, having fully implemented agreed economic reforms, the country is nevertheless at risk of collapse.

Papaconstantinou said that an “explicit message” on how support would be provided was the “most logical” way to reassure markets.

Rehn has given Greece until Friday (19 February) to respond to allegations that previous Greek governments illegally used complex financial instruments (known as credit default swaps, or CDS) to keep part of the country’s budget deficit off its balance-sheet.

“If it turns out there is such a kind of securitisation or swaps which are not in line with the rules, then of course we need to take action,” Rehn said.

The Greek government has said that the financial instruments that were used by Greece were “fully legal and well known”.

Authors:
Jim Brunsden 

Mulberry takes ‘My Local Series’ social for 2020

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British heritage brand Mulberry is launching a series of virtual gigs
and live in-conversations on its social channels, as it takes its ‘My Local
Series’ social for 2020, as part of its ‘Take Root, Branch Out’
campaign.

The initiative will kick off on Sunday, April 5, with Alan Power, a ‘My
Local’ alumnus, who will share a celebration of solidarity at 8pm on the
brand’s Instagram Live channel.

Where last year’s ‘My Local Summer’ series saw Mulberry host events
across London, Tokyo, Seoul, Sydney and NYC, this year sees the musicians,
poets and artists will be live streaming everywhere from bedrooms to
bathrooms.

Each week has a unique line-up that includes interactive daytime
workshops and evening sessions showcasing live performances, with Joy
Crookes returning to ‘My Local’ for the second year in a row on April 9
with a performance of her new single, while King Charles and Swim Deep’s
lead singer Austin Williams make their ‘My Local’ debut along with poets
James Massiah and Sonny Hall, who will read from his new book, The Blues
Comes With Good News.

On Sunday, April 12 Arlo Parks will perform hits ‘Cola’ and ‘Eugene’,
fresh from winning a place on Sound of 2020, the annual BBC music critics
poll.

More performers will be announced weekly, on Mulberry’s Instagram
@mulberryengland.

Take Root, Branch Out features a programme of commissions,
collaborations and activities designed to bring together our global
community and lift the spirits of all those in isolation. Along with events
across Instagram and Facebook, a newly launched Mulberry Sounds Spotify
channel keeps the music playing between live sessions, with playlists
released each week from artists including Maisie Peters and Ahyoung Kim.

The ‘My Local’ activities will be free to all, but Mulberry is asking
its community to consider making a donation to Mulberry’s Coronavirus
Appeal in partnership with the National Emergency Trust. All funds raised
will be distributed by the National Emergency Trust to local UK charities
and support groups, who can most effectively and efficiently support
communities and individuals in need.

Image: courtesy of Mulberry

Commission rejects Polish telecoms plan

Commission rejects Polish telecoms plan

Polish regulatory authority wanted to limit the control of the country’s biggest telecoms firm.

By

Updated

The European Commission today (5 March) rejected plans by Poland’s telecoms authority to regulate the country’s internet market.

“If the market itself is able to provide fair competition, don’t disturb it with unnecessary regulations,” Neelie Kroes, the European commissioner for digital agenda, said.

The Polish authority had proposed guaranteeing internet service providers (ISPs) access to “traffic exchange” services, which ISPs use to connect their subscribers to the internet.

The Polish regulatory authority, Urząd Komunikacji Elektronicznej (UKE), said in November that it wanted to limit the control that Telekomunikacja Polska (TP) had over the market for exchanges services. It said that TP, Poland’s dominant telecoms firm, might be overcharging rival companies for providing these services, because it owns much of the relevant infrastructure.

“[TP] actually operates in isolation from market prices, dictating price conditions which basically have to be accepted by ISPs who have no alternative,” UKE said.

The Commission said, however, that “regulation of these particular markets for internet traffic exchange services is not necessary to protect consumers or competition”. A spokesperson for Kroes said that the planned regulation could make the market situation “worse”.

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The Commission’s decision is binding on the authority, which could appeal to the European Court of Justice. A UKE official refused to comment on whether the authority would appeal. But he said that TP had proposed a compromise solution that the authority was evaluating.

Authors:
Jim Brunsden 

'Joker' Steps Become Bronx Tourist Attraction

NEW YORK — Move over, Rocky, there’s a new stairway to climb. A set of outdoor steps in The Bronx has become a tourist attraction in recent weeks since the release of the movie “Joker.”

The stairs are between two buildings on Shakespeare Avenue, about a half-mile from Yankee Stadium.

In the movie, lead actor Joaquin Phoenix dances as he goes down the steps wearing a bright red suit and clown makeup.

Now neighborhood residents using the steps are being joined by tourists trying to recreate the scene. The visitors have been taking selfies, and some have even shown up in costume.

Coming to the stairs is “really immersive,” said Oliver Bonallack, a visitor from Brighton, England.

“You never really get to experience a film firsthand,” he said. “I feel like it is so iconic.”

But not everyone is thrilled with the upsurge in popularity.

“We live in the neighborhood, it’s taking up all of our time, we’re all being inconvenienced,” said Bronx resident Cathyrine Spencer. “Every day when I come down the stairs, I have to go through a barrage of people.”

The stairway joins the ranks of well-known movie settings, like the steps at the Philadelphia Museum of Art seen in “Rocky.”

Big Study Casts Doubt On Need For Many Heart Procedures

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — People with severe but stable heart disease from clogged arteries may have less chest pain if they get a procedure to improve blood flow rather than just giving medicines a chance to help, but it won’t cut their risk of having a heart attack or dying over the following few years, a big federally funded study found.

The results challenge medical dogma and call into question some of the most common practices in heart care. They are the strongest evidence yet that tens of thousands of costly stent procedures and bypass operations each year are unnecessary or premature for people with stable disease.
That’s a different situation than a heart attack, when a procedure is needed right away to restore blood flow.

For non-emergency cases, the study shows “there’s no need to rush” into invasive tests and procedures, said New York University’s Dr. Judith Hochman.

There might even be harm: To doctors’ surprise, study participants who had a procedure were more likely to suffer a heart problem or die over the next year than those treated with medicines alone.

Hochman co-led the study and gave results Saturday at an American Heart Association conference in Philadelphia.

“This study clearly goes against what has been the common wisdom for the last 30, 40 years” and may lead to less testing and invasive treatment for such patients in the future, said Dr. Glenn Levine, a Baylor College of Medicine cardiologist with no role in the research.

Some doctors still may quibble with the study, but it was very well done “and I think the results are extremely believable,” he said.

About 17 million Americans have clogged arteries that crimp the heart’s blood supply, which can cause periodic chest pain. Cheap and generic aspirin, cholesterol-lowering drugs and blood pressure medicines are known to cut the risk of a heart attack for these folks, but many doctors also recommend a procedure to improve blood flow.

That’s either a bypass — open-heart surgery to detour around blockages — or angioplasty, in which doctors push a tube through an artery to the clog, inflate a tiny balloon and place a stent, or mesh scaffold, to prop the artery open.

Twelve years ago, a big study found that angioplasty was no better than medicines for preventing heart attacks and deaths in non-emergency heart patients, but many doctors balked at the results and quarreled with the methods.

So the federal government spent $100 million for the new study, which is twice as large, spanned 37 countries and included people with more severe disease — a group most likely to benefit from stents or a bypass.

All 5,179 participants had stress tests, usually done on a treadmill, that suggested blood flow was crimped. All were given lifestyle advice and medicines that improve heart health. Half also were given CT scans to rule out dangerous blockages, then continued on their medicines.

The others were treated as many people with abnormal stress tests are now: They were taken to cardiac catheterization labs for angiograms. The procedure involves placing a tube into a major artery and using special dyes to image the heart’s blood vessels. Blockages were treated right away, with angioplasty in three-fourths of cases and a bypass in the rest.

Doctors then tracked how many in each group suffered a heart attack, heart-related death, cardiac arrest or hospitalization for worsening chest pain or heart failure.

After one year, 7% in the invasively treated group had one of those events versus 5% of those on medicines alone. At four years, the trend reversed — 13% of the procedures group and 15% of the medicines group had suffered a problem. Averaged across the entire study period, the rates were similar regardless of treatment.

If stents and bypasses did not carry risks of their own, “I think the results would have shown an overall benefit” from them, said another study leader, Dr. David Maron of Stanford University.

“But that’s not what we found. We found an early harm and later benefit, and they canceled each other out.”

Why might medicines have proved just as effective at reducing risks?

Bypasses and stents fix only a small area. Medicines affect all the arteries, including other spots that might be starting to clog, experts said.

Drugs also have improved a lot in recent years.

Having a procedure did prove better at reducing chest pain, though. Of those who had pain daily or weekly when they entered the study, half in the stent-or-bypass group were free of it within a year versus 20% of those on medicines alone. A placebo effect may have swayed these results — people who know they had a procedure tend to credit it with any improvement they perceive in symptoms.

Dr. Alice Jacobs, a Boston University cardiologist who led a treatment-guidelines panel a few years ago, said any placebo effect fades with time, and people with a lot of chest pain that’s unrelieved by medicines still may want a procedure.

“It’s intuitive that if you take the blockage away you’re going to do better, you’re going to feel better,” but the decision is up to the patient and doctor, she said.

The bottom line: There’s no harm in trying medicines first, especially for people with no or little chest pain, doctors said.

When told they have a problem that can be fixed with a stent, “the grand majority of patients in my experience will opt to undergo that procedure” to get improvement right away, said Dr. Jay Giri, a cardiologist at the University of Pennsylvania with no role in the study.

Maryann Byrnes-Alvarado is not among them. The 66-year-old New York City woman said she joined the study six years ago after having trouble walking, which “scared me to death,” but so did the idea of a heart procedure.

She was relieved when she was assigned to the medication treatment group. Her doctor altered her blood pressure medicine, added a cholesterol drug and aspirin, and adjusted her diet. Now her risk factor numbers are better and she can walk again without difficulty.

“I believe I got the best care that I could get” and avoided an operation, she said.

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE AP Chief Medical Writer

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

5 states with the most motorcycle theft

They’re not everyone’s preferred means of transportation, but motorcycles continue to thrive in the United States. Some view motorcycles are the best option in places like New York City, which is known for its traffic and severely limited parking; others simply have never wanted or needed a car, and some simply prefer the independent lifestyle associated with motorcycles.

But for all the positives associated with motorcycles, there are plenty of negative ones as well. In particular, thieves tend to hone in on motorcycles. Aside from the fact that they lack in anti-theft technology and their locks are easier to crack, thieves also seek motorcycles out because many are powerful, high-performance vehicles that can produce easy returns when they’re sold as a whole or stripped for parts.

Overall, there were a total of 44,268 motorcycle thefts in the United States in 2017, according to the National Insurance Crime Bureau. Of the 44,268 motorcycle thefts in 2017, 42% were recovered from Jan. 1, 2017, through Feb. 28, 2018.

Preventing motorcycle theft

Compared to cars (60%), the stolen-motorcycle recovery rate is quite low (30%). Here are some methods to help keep motorcycles safe:

Lock the ignition Lock the motorcycle to a stationary, immovable object Lock the forks and disc brakes Install a motorcycle alarm Install a hidden “kill switch”

The time of the year can also play a factor with the risk of theft as July, August and September are the three months with the highest theft risk, while February, December and March are the three months with the lowest theft risk.

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NFHS Announces Soccer Innovator Sockatyes as Corporate Partner

Sockatyes, developer of an innovative patented product designed to keep soccer socks in place without elastic material, has entered into an agreement as a corporate partner of the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS).

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Sockatyes, which will be the exclusive NFHS corporate partner for soccer, is the 22nd corporate partner of the NFHS.

The Sockatyes product helps in preventing muscle cramps and injuries by conforming to the size of a player’s calf while allowing movement. Another benefit is the quick release tab that allows for rapid removal if an athlete requires medical treatment. Since 2001, Sockatyes has evolved with the involvement of athletes and sports therapists.

“We are looking forward to our partnership with Sockatyes,” said Bob Gardner, NFHS executive director. “This innovative product should be beneficial to the more than 800,000 boys and girls who play high school soccer.”

Approved by the Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), the Sockatyes product became the first change to international football kits in more than 100 years when shinguards were introduced. Sockatyes is also proudly partnered with La Liga de Futbol Profesional (LFP), which is Spain’s professional football governing body.

“Sockatyes is very excited to be the exclusive NFHS corporate partner for soccer,” said Stanley Yu, chairman of Sockatyes Holding Limited. “We are established and proven in professional sports, including La Liga in Spain, and look forward to supporting the mission of the NFHS and working with student-athletes, coaches and referees across the country.”

 

About Sockatyes

With its roots in professional European soccer, Sockatyes provides patented and FIFA-approved apparel and advertising products. Sockatyes straps keep socks in place and are preferable to tourniquet-style alternatives. PortiRed’s flexible advertising space near the goal provides new revenue sources for schools. For more information, visit