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Still Fidel
09/03 | 18:58 GMT

©AFP / Adalberto Roque
Cuban former President Fidel Castro gives a speech at Havana's University.
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Germany's Loew eager for more points in Euro football
09/04 | 02:39 GMT

©AFP/File / John Thys
Germany's coach Joachim Loew, pictured here before the start of his team's Euro 2012 qualifying match against Belgium at King Baudouin stadium in Brussels, has admitted that his side are not as slick as they had been at the World Cup. Germany, who finished third at the World Cup in South Africa, beat Belgium 0-1.

©AFP/File / John Thys
Germany's coach Joachim Loew paces the pitch at King Baudouin stadium in Brussels
BRUSSELS (AFP) - Germany coach Joachim Loew said he is looking forward to taking on Azerbaijan at home on Tuesday after his side opened their Euro 2012 qualifying campaign with a 1-0 win over Belgium.
Evergreen striker Miroslav Klose scored the second-half goal which gave Germany three points in Group A here on Friday to leave them second in the table after Turkey won 3-0 in Kazakhstan.
Germany, who finished third at the World Cup, were made to work hard and Bayern Munich's Klose showed ice-cool finishing for his 51st-minute goal after Thomas Mueller capitalised on a rare mistake in the Belgium defence.
"I expected the Belgians to be as good as they were," said Loew. "The victory was important, the team has shown plenty of spirit.
"Now we are very pleased to face Azerbaijan next week at home."
But Loew admitted his side were not as slick as they had been at the World Cup and struggled in the first-half against a determined home side.
"In the first half, we needed something to get going," Loew added. "The combinations were not so sure of themselves as at the World Cup.

©AFP/File / John Thys
German defender Philipp Lahm (L) tackles Belgian midfielder Moussa Dembele (R) for the ball
"In the second half, things got better because we had the match well under control.
Belgium now face Turkey in Istanbul on Tuesday in the next round of qualifiers and coach Georges Leekens said he was impressed with his young battling side, which included talented 17-year-old striker Romelu Lukaku.
"We had high hopes before this match, but we lost three points although my team fought well," he said.
"The players wanted it and they created chances, but Germany were effective.
"What we saw tonight is a good basis for the future. This is not fantastic, but it was a promising game for us."
With Michael Ballack working his way back to fitness after the ankle injury which kept him out of the World Cup, Bayern Munich's Lahm captained Germany as he did in South Africa.
"It was important we came away with the three points," said Lahm.
"We know we have 13 months of qualifiers, we have a long and hard road ahead of us."
Belgium's defence allowed Germany few chances to score and Manchester City defender Vincent Kompany said they can now travel to Istanbul with confidence.
"It's disturbing to lose as we had played well," said Kompany. "We must use this to get a good performance in Turkey on Tuesday.
"They did not leave much space for the Germans, we were well organised.
"It's a shame. We stood up to the third best team in the world, but in the end we were beaten."

Football
Germany's Loew eager for more points in Euro ...Deneuve, Depardieu together again at Venice filmfest
09/04 | 11:38 GMT

©AFP/DDP/POOL/File / Patrick Seeger
French movie star Gerard Depardieu. Catherine Deneuve and Depardieu, fixtures of French cinema, come together again as the oddest of couples at the Venice film festival in a farce with attitude: "Potiche".

©AFP/DDP/POOL/File / Patrick Seeger
Gerard Depardieu
VENICE (AFP) - Catherine Deneuve and Gerard Depardieu, fixtures of French cinema, on Saturday come together again as the oddest of couples at the Venice film festival in a farce with attitude: "Potiche".
Based on a play of the same name -- which translates with difficulty as "trophy wife" -- the comedy relates the unlikely transformation of bourgeois housewife Suzanne Pujol (Deneuve) into company executive and her complex relationship with a tough-as-nails union leader played by Depardieu.
"I'd been wanting to make a film about women's place in society and politics for a long time," says director Francois Ozon, 42, who tapped Deneuve among the "8 Femmes" in the 2002 film that won him international acclaim.
"As much as I didn't want to end up making a backward-looking film, disconnected from reality, I felt I could achieve the tone and verve of screwball comedies," he said in his director's statement.
"Francois Ozon has written a funny screenplay full of references to tody with respect to women and their place in society," Deneuve said late Friday. "Things have certainly changed since the Seventies, but not completely."
Ozon is among several young directors in a decidedly youthful line-up selected by festival chief Marco Mueller for this year's Mostra.
The world's oldest film festival kicked off on Wednesday with 41-year-old US director Darren Aronofsky's psychological thriller "Black Swan", while Sofia Coppola, 39, unveiled her father-daughter drama "Somewhere", set in Hollywood, on Friday.
Still to come is "Promises Written on Water", a sombre tale about a girl with a terminal illness, by 49-year-old Vincent Gallo.
Also in the under-50 crowd is Quentin Tarantino, 47, who heads the jury of this year's festival running through September 11.

©AFP/File / Patrick Kovarik
French actress Catherine Deneuve
Saturday will feature another comedy, "La Passione" by Carlo Mazzacurati of Italy starring the prolific Silvio Orlando, who plays a washed-up filmmaker who is forced to set his last-chance project in Tuscany after a plumbing disaster at his country home damages a 16th-century fresco in a neighbouring chapel.
As a bizarre form of compensation, the mayor asks him to lead Good Friday ceremonies -- so the story of the Passion becomes his film, starring a local actor who happens to be an egomaniac.
"It's from the chaos itself that this story finds its meaning and in the end a certain dignity," Mazzacurati said.
"Ovsyanki" (Silent Souls) by Russian director Aleksei Fedorchenko switches the mood back to sombre in the story of a member of Russia's minority Merya culture who drives thousands of miles to bury his wife in a sacred lake.
On Sunday, the Mostra, now its 67th edition, will present US director's Kelly Reichart's "Meek's Cutoff" about the American frontier culture; Hong Kong New Waver Tsui Hark's epic mystery film "Detective Dee and the Mystery of Phantom Flame"; and "Post Mortem," set in Chile during the 1973 coup, by Pablo Larrain.

Entertainment
Deneuve, Depardieu together again at Venice ...Pakistan try to focus after trio grilled by police
09/04 | 12:07 GMT

©AFP/File / Adrian Dennis
Pakistan's one-day captain Shahid Afridi (2nd R) and his team-mates arrive ahead of a match against Somerset in Taunton, south-west England, on September 2. Pakistan's scandal-hit cricket team tried to regain their focus Saturday on looming tour matches against England after British police questioned three star players over an alleged betting scam.

©AFP/File / Adrian Dennis
The team was due to train in Cardiff on Saturday ahead of their first Twenty20 fixture in the Welsh capital on Sunday
CARDIFF (AFP) - Pakistan's scandal-hit cricket team tried to regain their focus Saturday on looming tour matches against England after British police questioned three star players over an alleged betting scam.
Test captain Salman Butt plus bowlers Mohammad Aamer and Mohammad Asif were all released without charge Friday after the interviews at a police station near the "home of cricket", Lord's in north London.
But the trio -- who protest their innocence -- are still battling charges under the International Cricket Council's (ICC) anti-corruption code and have been barred from playing any further matches pending the outcome of their case.
Aamer, at 18 one of the game's hottest talents, Asif, 27, and Butt, 25, had already withdrawn from the England tour claiming "mental torture", missing Pakistan's eight-run win over county side Somerset on Thursday.
The allegations all relate to the fourth and final Test between England and Pakistan at Lord's, which ended last week with an England victory, in which a tabloid newspaper said deliberate no-balls had been bowled.
The News of the World newspaper alleged that it paid Mazhar Majeed, an agent for several Pakistan players, 150,000 pounds (185,000 euros, 230,000 dollars) in return for advance knowledge of the balls, which could then be bet upon.

©AFP/File / Adrian Dennis
Pakistan's fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar
The 35-year-old was arrested and bailed by British police.
Team manager Yawar Saeed said Friday he was "not happy" about the situation but was trying to focus on his duties ahead of the forthcoming two Twenty20 internationals and five one-day games against England.
The team was due to train in Cardiff on Saturday ahead of their first Twenty20 fixture in the Welsh capital on Sunday.
Meanwhile, England Twenty20 captain Paul Collingwood said the Sunday of the last Test, when the allegations emerged, was "one of the lowest points" he had experienced as a cricketer.
He added on Sky Sports News: "It was a difficult day, but as the week's gone on decisions have been made and we can now focus on the cricket in hand come tomorrow."
Detectives questioned the accused trio Friday at Kilburn police station in what their lawyer Elizabeth Robertson stressed were voluntary interviews.
"At no time were they placed under arrest, they were free to leave at any time and they have answered all of the questions that were put to them and have been released without charge or conditions," she told reporters afterwards.
The head of the ICC's anti-corruption and security unit had earlier defended its decision to charge the players.
"The conclusion that we have come to is that there is a really arguable case to answer," Ronnie Flanagan told a press conference at the Lord's ground.

©AFP / Adrian Dennis
Pakistan's Kamran Akmal
He said the players had been charged under Article 2 of the ICC code, which relates to offences including corruption, betting and misuse of inside information, but declined to go into details.
Calling it a complex investigation, he said that if the players were found guilty they could face a life ban.
ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat said the case could be the worst example of corruption in cricket since former South Africa captain Hansie Cronje was revealed a decade ago to have accepted money from bookmakers in a bid to influence games, as well as trying to entice his team-mates to do the same.
The sanctions have infuriated the Pakistani authorities, in particular Pakistani High Commissioner Wajid Shamsul Hasan, who has said he believes the players are innocent and has suggested they may have been set up.
"I met the cricketers for two hours, cross-questioned them, got to the bottom of it and concluded that they were innocent," Hasan told the BBC Friday.
"The ICC had no business to take this action. The ICC is just playing to the public gallery."
Hasan suggested that Indian bookmakers had a part to play in the affair.
ICC chief Lorgat said there was "no truth that there is a conspiracy against Pakistani cricket."
He expressed his "extreme disappointment and sadness" at the situation, but repeated that "we will not tolerate any sort of corruption in the sport."
Meanwhile an ICC spokesman told AFP the trio had been dropped from its annual awards list, where Aamer was in the running for the best emerging player award and Asif was listed in the best cricketer category.

Cricket
Pakistan try to focus after trio grilled by ...Venice's 'couturiers of glass' stand test of time
09/04 | 05:38 GMT

©AFP / Vincenzo Pinto
Glass animals are exhibited at the Archimede Seguso glass-making factory on the Venice island of Murano. Archimede Seguso, who died in 1999, was a leading figure in the world of contemporary glass-making.

©AFP / Vincenzo Pinto
"We consider ourselves the 'couturiers' of glass," said Seguso
VENICE, Italy (AFP) - With a clientele that includes crowned heads, Archimede Seguso Vetreria, a stalwart of Murano's storied glassmakers, has no need to change its formula for success.
"We buck the trend. We work traditionally, everything by hand," said Gino Seguso, son of the late Archimede, the solid glass sculptor famed for his stylised animals, and generations of Segusos before him on the outlying Venetian island of Murano.
"We consider ourselves the 'couturiers' of glass," said Seguso, whose atelier collaborates with top international artists, designers and architects and caters for royalty, heads of state and the likes of Tiffany's, a loyal client for 60 years.
The guest book holds the compliments of Queen Sirikit of Thailand, King Juan Carlo and Queen Sofia of Spain and Italian President Giorgio Napolitano among other notables.
The glassmaker's enormous creations lend prestige to places like the lobby of the Veneto Bank headquarters or add extra opulence to the swank Hotel Metropole on Venice's Grand Canal near St Mark's Square.
That grandeur makes a stark contrast to the rustic Murano workshop, where a 100-year-old furnace was fired up.

©AFP / Vincenzo Pinto
Seguso's atelier collaborates with top international artists, designers and architects
Though dressed in an impeccable suit, Seguso lifted a plate off the furnace to reveal the blinding yellow heat inside, and used a long iron tool to pull out a glowing red lump of molten glass, waving it in a gentle circle as cooling strands of glass spiraled to the floor.
The workshop was set up in 1948, shortly after Archimede Seguso left the family firm to create his own brand.
He left an indelible mark on glassmaking, having started out as a teenager and worked until six months before his death in 1999 aged 90.
"In the 1920s my father was considered the maestro for animals," Gino Seguso told AFP, adding that he returned to the speciality in the late 1950s.
The older Seguso is also credited with developing the technique of embedding filigree inside his creations as well as for his lacework, a technique known as Merletto, the Italian word for lace.
In the showroom bursting with chandeliers, vases and objets d'art, as well as a glass menagerie of rabbits, ducks or fish and other figurines, Seguso, who himself joined the family business in 1959, ticks off the decades reflected in his father's rendition of the female form.

©AFP / Vincenzo Pinto
The older Seguso is credited with developing the technique of embedding filigree inside his creations
During Italy's pre-war fascist period, which harkened back to the Roman empire, the feminine figure was more classical, with a smaller head and fuller body, he said. Moving on to the 1970s, he held up another nude, this one tall and thin.
Seguso dreams of building a museum devoted to his father's work and has approached Canadian-American architect Frank Gehry, designer of the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, and the Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles, for the project.
Today the atelier's 30 craftsmen -- all local except for one Sri Lankan and one Russian -- work at their own pace, producing no more than three or four objects a day.
Seguso's three daughters Emanuela, Francesca and Barbara are in charge of jewellery and accessories under the brand Segusissime, with clients including US First Lady Michelle Obama.
"The idea of making glass jewellery came to them in a flash when they were in their forties," said Seguso, in his early 70s.
While aware of the threat of copies mass-produced on "terra firma" -- meaning mainly China -- Seguso, whose pedigree as a glassmaker goes back to 1397, was untroubled.
"You can tell the difference. If they want to copy us, let them. We can always create something new and distinctive," he said.
Archimede Seguso Vetreria is a purveyor of "slow glass," Seguso joked. "We will stick to our tradition of creating by hand with a touch of fantasy."

Lifestyle
Venice's 'couturiers of glass' stand test of ...Hong Kong's Woo accepts career award at Venice filmfest
09/03 | 21:47 GMT

©AFP / Alberto Pizzoli
Hong Kong film director John Woo celebrates after receiving the Golden Lion for lifetime achievement during the award ceremony at the 67th Venice Film Festival.

©AFP / Alberto Pizzoli
Hong Kong film director John Woo
VENICE, Italy (AFP) - Veteran Hong Kong filmmaker John Woo accepted a Golden Lion for lifetime achievement at the Venice film festival on Friday, dedicating the honour to his "dear mother".
"When I was a younger man, when becoming a filmmaker was a crazy dream, I learned that the impossible could become possible," said the 63-year-old Woo, who has known success in both Asia and Hollywood, which first took notice when he came up with "The Killer" in 1989.
"I dedicate this award to a person who first brought me into the cinema, and set a course for my life, who said 'If you set your mind to something then you should do it,' and that's my dear mother."
Friday also saw the premier of Woo's new action-packed "Reign of Assassins", co-directed with Su Chao-Pin, pitting Chinese megastar Michelle Yeoh against ruthless killers.
The "Crouching Dragon, Hidden Tiger" star is herself an assassin in the film, tasked with protecting the remains of a mystical Buddhist monk said to be the repository of an ancient power-wielding secret.
Festival director Marco Mueller, flanking Woo at a news conference earlier Friday, said that in his films "you have the perfect union of Chinese tradition and avant-garde films."
©AFPTV
VIDEO: "Somewhere" in Venice for Sofia Coppola. Duration: 00:52
Woo, who recently returned to China after 16 years in Hollywood, notably directing John Travolta in "Broken Arrow" and Tom Cruise in "Mission: Impossible 2", said: "I am starting a new chapter with new dreams."
Sharing the limelight with Woo on Friday was Sofia Coppola, presenting "Somewhere," about A-list actor Johnny Marco (Stephen Dorff) and his daughter Clio (Elle Fanning), who are adrift in the lonely world of Hollywood moviemaking.
Going into the gala screening, the 39-year-old Coppola told Italian television that Clio's character was based on the daughter of a Hollywood friend.
Elle Fanning, 12, taking to the red carpet in a strapless blue and green A-line dress, said of Johnny Marco: "He sort of wakes up and becomes a better father."

©AFP / Alberto Pizzoli
From L: Marina Fois, Roschdy Zem, director Antony Cordier, Nicolas Dechauvelle and Elodie Bouchez
Coppola, who won an Oscar for "Lost in Translation," said earlier that she had won her own dad's seal of approval for "Somewhere".
Multiple Oscar winner Francis Ford Coppola "thought it could only be made by me, and we should all make the movies that only we can make," the daughter said.
Also Friday, French director Antony Cordier unspooled "Happy Few", a vehicle for multiple sex scenes about a wife-swapping foursome that asks the question, "Can one love two people at once?"
"The ultimate perversion in the film, the painful moment, is when they feel conjugal desire for the lover," Cordier said.

©AFP / Vincenzo Pinto
L-R: Stephen Dorff, Sofia Coppola and Elle Fanning
In the end, "they're characters who try to live a utopia, but they are like everyone else: they're jealous, they suffer, and so on," said 37-year-old Cordier, one of a horde of young directors showcased at this year's Mostra.
The three films are among 24 competing for the coveted top prize Golden Lion to be announced on September 11 at the world's oldest film festival, now in its 67th edition.
On Saturday the Mostra presents the much anticipated comedy "Potiche" by Francois Ozon, 43, starring veteran French actors Catherine Deneuve and Gerard Depardieu.




