Friday, December 31, 2010
Iran's president to sell old car for charity
It will be auctioned in February in the south-western city of Abadan.
Officials hope it will fetch more than the $2,000 (1,500 euros; £1,300) such cars sell for in Iran.
The head of Abadan's free trade zone, Asghar Parhizkar, told the Irna news agency the auction would take place during a classic car exhibition there.
The money raised would be allocated to the Mehr Housing Fund, he said.
The sale comes at a time when Mr Ahmadinejad's government has cut food and energy subsidies, raising the cost of living substantially.
It had been paying about $100bn in subsidies annually, but Iran's oil-dependent economy has been hit by four rounds of UN sanctions relating to the country's controversial nuclear programme.
Census 2010: Baltimore's fast-growing Spanishtown
First results from the US 2010 census show population growth of 9.7% over the past decade - fuelled partly by a fast-growing Hispanic minority. Further results in 2011 are expected to document the Hispanics' spread into new areas, such as the city of Baltimore.
If New York's Broadway is a place where people go to "make it", then the one in Baltimore's Fells Point area is no different. Fells Point has been dubbed "the Other Ellis Island" for its role as a port of entry for immigrants to the US - for many years it ranked second only to the island in New York Harbor for the numbers passing through it.
The Germans and Irish who found jobs there in shipbuilding, warehouses and factories were followed by Poles and Italians. African-Americans also congregated in the area.
But today it is a different immigrant community which thrives here.
Upper Fells Point is now known as Baltimore's Spanish Town because of the large numbers of Hispanics who have moved there in recent years.
A short stretch of Broadway hosts Mexican, Peruvian and Guatemalan restaurants, a Salvadorean supermarket, and a hair salon run by immigrants from the Dominican Republic.
In contrast to border states such as Arizona, California and Texas, where most of the Hispanic population has Mexican roots, here the community is very mixed, a majority hailing from Central America.
Heba Portillo, from El Salvador, was one of the first to arrive. A resident of Baltimore since 1991, he opened Spanishtown's first Latino restaurant and also runs a Spanish supermarket, which offers everything from food and CDs to money-transferring services.
"When I got here the Latino community was very small, there were no Latino restaurants or supermarkets," he explains.
"But then a few years later more people came to the city and opened more things. It has changed a lot commercially. We have seen tremendous growth."
The Hispanic community is still small as a percentage of the city's overall population, but it is increasing fast.
In 2000, the community made up 1.7% of the total, while US Census bureau figures for 2009 put it at 3%.
Over the same period the city's population fell by 2%, and the majority black population slipped from 64% to 63% as a share of the total.
Relative infancy The broad picture of the 2010 census is of a continuing shift of population from the east and mid-west to the south and west, with numbers growing only slowly in many eastern states.
Audre's story
Audre Negreto Banos was born in Mexico but grew up in Kansas and holds dual nationality. After graduation she came to Baltimore because she was offered a good job. She says she feels comfortable in the city because she has a connection with Mexico here. Even the cakes taste just like the ones she eats back in Mexico City.In the state of Maryland, in which Baltimore is situated, population growth has been buoyant by eastern standards - thanks partly to Hispanic immigrants. Reports suggest that Hispanics make up about 7% of the population, but account for about 40% of population growth since 2000.
One factor drawing people to Baltimore is the availability of jobs in construction. Fells Point is still an area where day labourers can be seen waiting on the pavement, hoping to catch a day's employment.
Abdel Pietramartel of Casa Maryland, a Hispanic outreach organisation that helps people find jobs, says he has seen a four-fold rise in his organisation's workload over the last decade.
New arrivals from Ecuador, Honduras and El Salvador are choosing the city ahead of places like Washington DC, Virginia and New Jersey, he believes, because the Hispanic community here is in its relative infancy, and the opportunities that brings.
This is also a factor that attracts would-be businessmen. Many Hispanic traders I met say Maryland offers better opportunities and cheaper rent than some of the other states where Latinos have already settled in large numbers.
Figures quoted by the Maryland Hispanic Chamber of Commerce suggest that the number of Hispanic businesses has increased to more than 20,000 in the state, a rise of about 10,000 since 1997.
People power Nicolas Ramos, who came here 15 years ago, arrived with nothing. As he shows me around his restaurant Arcos, which is on Broadway, he retells the story of how he built a life from scratch.
"A group of us drove from Mexico to Texas in a van. [After that] we went through the south, and we really fell in love with Baltimore.
Maritza's story
Maritza Orellana came to Baltimore five years ago from El Salvador. She chose the city because her brother already ran a business here. He chose it because, at the time, there weren't many Latino businesses."I called my restaurant Arcos, meaning arch, to represent the connection between Baltimore and Mexico," he adds.
The impact the Hispanic community is making here is also evident in other parts of the city, where some schools are starting bilingual teaching.A few miles away from Spanishtown is Greektown. Greek cafes and bakeries line the streets here, but nestled in among them are now a number of Hispanic restaurants and bars.
Nitsa, who opened the Greektown Music Store 30 years ago, has seen many changes. Back then the store was more than a place to buy Greek music and decorations, it was a meeting place.
"There are many other ethnicities here now, but many of the original Greek shops are still here too," she says.
"The area has changed, but it's changed for the best I would think."
As the Hispanic community continues to grow so too does its influence.
It is not yet big enough to have a political impact in Baltimore, but long-term this may change, just as it has in Florida, Texas and California, where Hispanics have been settling for generations.
As a result of population growth revealed in the 2010 census Texas is to be awarded four new seats in the House of Representatives.
Nationwide, one in four newborns is already Hispanic and by 2050, the Census Bureau expects Hispanics to make up one in three of the US population.
If the community in Baltimore continues to grow at the rate seen over the last decade it will be a factor no politician can ignore.
2011 revellers attend open-air parties around the UK
An estimated 250,000 people watched the eight-minute firework display at the London Eye, which was set to music for the first time.
Events were held in various other cities, including Glasgow and Cardiff.
Edinburgh's Hogmanay festival lasts four days and got under way on Thursday with a torchlight procession.
The ticket-only main event on New Year's Eve included fireworks, traditional Scottish dancing and an open-air concert starring Biffy Clyro, The Charlatans and Billy Bragg.
Bragg, who stayed on with his family to watch Biffy Clyro and the fireworks after his performance, said Scotland had "kind of invented new year get-togethers", so Edinburgh was where he wanted to be.
Biffy Clyro, whose hit Many of Horrors has become a number one single for X Factor winner Matt Cardle, took to the stage topless and wowed the crowd with a volley of their anthems.
The Scottish rockers' frontman Simon Neil said: "There's no better way to end the year."
'Great night' Irina Rusina, originally from Siberia but now living in Germany, said it was her first time in Scotland and she was loving Edinburgh.
“Start Quote
Erin Wilkins Tourist in LondonWe've been queuing up here since midday and I think these are the best fireworks I have ever seen”
"I'm completely enjoying myself," she said. "It is a lot warmer but much more crowded than it is in Siberia."
Edinburgh Hogmanay director Peter Irvine said Edinburgh was now "on the map" for new year celebrations."This was a truly great night. Nothing went wrong, from the weather to the crowds, who are here from all over the world. They were incredibly good-natured, no aggravation."
Around 330 police officers patrolled Princes Street and the surrounding area, and one person was arrested for a "minor disorder".
About 5,000 people packed into Glasgow's George Square to see in 2011 with one of Scotland's biggest outdoor ceilidhs.
'Best fireworks' Crowds also gathered in central London for the free annual fireworks, which were launched from barges on the Thames and the London Eye.
Showers of brightly coloured fireworks shot into the sky to a soundtrack including Queen's We Will Rock You, The Beatles' Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, and Blur's Song 2.
Erin Wilkins, 26, and Emad Tehrani, 30, had travelled from Sydney to see in the new year in London.
Ms Wilkins said: "We've been queuing up here since midday and I think these are the best fireworks I have ever seen."
Some 3,000 police officers were on duty, and the Metropolitan Police have made 77 arrests so far for a range of offences including public order, theft and possession of an offensive weapon.
"There is a huge demand for public transport after midnight," a Met Police spokesman said.
"People may have to wait some time before getting on Tubes or trains. Those who live in London may want to walk a bit further to get to a Tube station; Charing Cross and Waterloo are extremely busy."
Hundreds of people attended the free Calennig celebrations at Cardiff Civic Centre, which featured a live music concert with Dr and The Medics and T.
The event included a fire show and funfair, as well as midnight skating at an open-air ice rink.
Party organisers were no doubt relieved the freezing conditions of the past few weeks were replaced by milder weather, with temperatures of 4-5C in Edinburgh, Glasgow and London.
The BBC Weather Centre said it had been a dull and misty end to 2010.
It said a band of rain and hill snow would move south through Scotland overnight, reaching northern England and Northern Ireland by dawn, with colder, clearer conditions, frost and ice following behind in a northerly breeze.
Further south it will be mostly dry and cloudy.
Italy furious after Brazil's Lula refuses extradition
But Brazil's government said the move was not an "affront" to another state.
Cesare Battisti has been convicted in absentia of murdering four people in Italy between 1978 and 1979.
The 56-year-old has maintained his innocence, saying he is the victim of political persecution in Italy and that he risks being killed if extradited.
"I am guilty, as I have often said, of having participated in an armed group with a subversive aim and of having carried weapons. But I never shot anyone," he wrote in a book published in 2006.
Political asylum Battisti has been on the run since escaping from an Italian jail in 1981 while awaiting trial. He spent the intervening years in France - where he started a career as a novelist - Mexico and finally Brazil.
After he was arrested in Brazil in 2007, the Italian government requested his extradition under an existing bilateral treaty. It said the former member of the radical Armed Proletarians for Communism (PAC) was a terrorist.
Last year, the Brazilian government accepted a request from Battisti for political asylum, but the Supreme Court ruled that the designation was illegal as he was convicted of "common crimes" rather than political acts.
The judges said the extradition treaty should apply, but nevertheless left the final decision to the president.
Analysis
Duncan Kennedy BBC News, Rome
Italy has been desperate to get its hands on Cesare Battisti, who has become something of a scapegoat for the country's years of political violence - someone to blame for the period known as the "Years of Lead". These were the dark days of the 1970s and early 1980s, when bombings and assassinations rocked Italy's political foundations. Very few people were ever prosecuted. There was talk of the state having a hand in some of the attacks.
Battisti represents a visible face for the wrongdoing. Families of Battisti's four alleged victims have all condemned Brazil for its failure to send back. The son of a man shot dead in 1979 said that until Battisti was returned, there could be no justice.
On Friday - the final day before handing over the presidency to Dilma Rousseff - Lula decided to turn down Italy's request "on the basis of a report by the attorney general", Foreign Minister Celso Amorim said.
"This type of judgement does not constitute an affront from one country to another," he added.But Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi condemned the move, and vowed to explore all options to have it reversed.
"I express deep bitterness and regret at the decision by President Lula to refuse the extradition of Cesare Battisti, a multiple murderer, despite insistent requests and urging at all levels from Italy," he said.
"This is a choice contrary to the most elementary sense of justice," he added. "I consider this situation is anything but closed - Italy will not give up and will make sure of its rights."
Defence Minister Ignazio La Russa said the decision was "seriously offensive to Italy, and above all to the memory of the people who were killed and the pain of the relatives of those who lost their lives".
"They should be under no illusion that this can happen without consequences," he told Sky TG24 television.
"Just the fact that Lula waited for the last hour of his term is a sign of his lack of courage," he added. "It's a disgrace. I'll never tire of saying it."
The Italian foreign ministry said its ambassador to Brazil would press the case with Ms Rousseff as soon as possible and would be recalled to Rome for consultations.
The president of Brazil's Supreme Court told reporters earlier on Friday that the legality of President Lula's decision would still have to be assessed by the chamber when it resumed work in February after a recess.
Joe Miller accepts Murkowski victory in Alaska Senate race
Authorities certified Ms Murkowski's victory on Thursday, but Mr Miller could have appealed.
Ms Murkowski lost the Republican nomination in August to Mr Miller, but she ran a write-in campaign.
This involves voters adding a candidate's name to the ballot paper as they vote.
Mr Miller had challenged the validity of some ballots, saying those on which her name was misspelled should not be counted.
Ms Murkowski is the first Senate candidate to be elected in a write-in campaign since Strom Thurmond in 1954.
Parties and fireworks as the world ushers in new year
Click to play
Firework displays, parties and other celebrations are taking place around the world to usher in the new year.
Festivities ranged from the release of thousands of silver balloons in Toyko in Japan, to the first countdown of a western new year in Hanoi, Vietnam.In Sydney, crowds watched what is hailed as the world's biggest New Year's Eve fireworks display.
Earlier, thousands of revellers took to the streets in New Zealand - the first major country to see in 2011.
Meanwhile, party-goers in Europe are gearing up for firework displays and other events planned across the continent.
A musical and fireworks are planned at the UK's London Eye big wheel -
which is marking its 10th anniversary.
Crowds have also gathered in Madrid's Puerta del Sol square to take part in "Las Uvas" (The Grapes), a tradition in which people eat a grape for each of the 12 chimes of midnight.
And in the US, up to a million people are expected in New York to see the famous Times Square Ball drop at midnight.
The municipal authorities and warmer weather have combined to clear the streets following the snowstorm which blanketed the city this week.
Dragon display In Hong Kong, hundreds of thousands of people gathered along Victoria Harbour to watch fireworks explode from the roofs of the city's most prominent buildings.
At the Zojoji temple in central Tokyo, Japan, monks chanted as visitors packed in to count down until midnight. Thousands released a mass of silver balloons carrying notes with their hopes for the future.
And in Taipei, the capital of Taiwan, fireworks formed the shape of a dragon spiralling up the tallest skyscraper.
This year's display is the country's biggest ever, costing $2m (£1.3m), to mark the beginning of year 100 on the Taiwan calendar.
In Sydney, about 1.5 million people came out with blankets and camping equipment ahead of the seven-tonne fireworks display above the Harbour Bridge.
Crowds began arriving more than 12 hours before the main display, with new visitors turned away as early as 1500 (0400 GMT), the Associated Press news agency reports.
"We know how to party on new year back home, but Sydney is a bigger and better party than anywhere else," Marcio Motta, a 26-year-old spectator from Brazil, told the Press Association.
This year, meanwhile, marked the first time Vietnam's capital, Hanoi, officially celebrated a Western-style countdown. In previous years, the city authorities have focused on Tet, the holiday marking the lunar new year, which begins on 3 February.
In the Philippines, safety officials urged caution after firecrackers injured at least 245 people in recent days. According to tradition, many believe noisy celebrations drive away evil and misfortune.
In Burma, however, the military government has banned all fireworks and said severe action would be taken against anyone using them.
Political activist Aung San Suu Kyi, who was released from house arrest in November, called for the Burmese people "to struggle together with new strengths, new force and new words in the auspicious new year".
The tiny Pacific nation of Kiribati was the first to welcome in the new year at 1000 GMT. The religious island nation was set to mark the event with church and village services.
Nintendo issues warning on 3DS games for children
It said specialists had warned of possible damage that could be caused by 3D games which present different images to the right and left eye.
Younger children should only play 2D versions of 3DS games, said Nintendo.
Parental control The 3DS, the successor to the hugely popular DS handheld, goes on sale in late February in Japan and in Europe and the US in March.
The new handheld has two screens like older versions of the console with the top screen being able to show 3D images without the need for special glasses.
Parents should turn off this function if the handheld is going to be used by a child under six years of age, said Nintendo. It said the advice it had received from experts also applied to other 3D content that younger children might be exposed to.
In issuing the warning, Nintendo joins Sony and Toshiba in alerting people to the ill effects that can attend watching 3D movies or playing 3D games.
Sony has already said that parents should get medical advice before letting children watch 3D content on the PlayStation. Toshiba has said parents should keep an eye on children watching its TVs that can display 3D images without needing glasses.
The companies have also warned that watching too much 3D content can cause adults discomfort.
Conclusion to Breaking Dawn: Revealed?!?
POSSIBLE HUGE SPOILER ALERT: We may know how Breaking Dawn concludes.
Because the final installment of The Twilight Saga will be broken into two parts, producers had to find a way to break up the films in a suspenseful manner. According to someone who read the script and then spoke to a Robert Pattinson fansite, writers have come up with a way to do just that.
The Volturi will confront the Cullens in a bloody, climactic scene that is described as follows:
Alice touches Aro. When she touches him, he ’sees’ what will happen if he continues his course. So, the first person whose head comes off is Carlisle. In the vision. Then everything goes to sh-t and all kinds of dying happens. And Bella and Edward kill Aro. Bella and Edward, they die too. All these other people die, too. Jane and her brother. Lots of deaths on both sides. Then the [Volturi] guy snaps out of it, says he’s sorry. Everybody makes up and lives happily ever after.
No fantasy sequence of this kind takes place in the book. However, as mentioned, the movie must come up with a way to conclude one half of Breaking Dawn and transition into the final movie.
Might this rumored scene accomplish that goal? You tell us. How does it sound?
Because the final installment of The Twilight Saga will be broken into two parts, producers had to find a way to break up the films in a suspenseful manner. According to someone who read the script and then spoke to a Robert Pattinson fansite, writers have come up with a way to do just that.
The Volturi will confront the Cullens in a bloody, climactic scene that is described as follows:
Alice touches Aro. When she touches him, he ’sees’ what will happen if he continues his course. So, the first person whose head comes off is Carlisle. In the vision. Then everything goes to sh-t and all kinds of dying happens. And Bella and Edward kill Aro. Bella and Edward, they die too. All these other people die, too. Jane and her brother. Lots of deaths on both sides. Then the [Volturi] guy snaps out of it, says he’s sorry. Everybody makes up and lives happily ever after.
No fantasy sequence of this kind takes place in the book. However, as mentioned, the movie must come up with a way to conclude one half of Breaking Dawn and transition into the final movie.
Might this rumored scene accomplish that goal? You tell us. How does it sound?
JWoww on Jersey Shore Season 3: Crazy Drama!
JWoww promises plenty of drama when Jersey Shore returns for Season 3 next week. We're inclined to believe the fake-breasted, hot-headed star.
Frequent sparring partner Angelina Pivarnick may be gone, but according JWoww (Jenni Farley), tears and tirades are still to come on the MTV hit.
“There’s a whole lot of drama!” JWoww said, admitting that she is at the center of much of the action herself, thanks to her split with Tom Lippolis.
JWoww’s pissed off ex publicly accused her of cheating - and cheating her out of royalties - last summer, but the starlet is hardly heartbroken.
Instead, she's turning her misadventures in love into the third season of her hit show, along with a dating advice book to be released next year.
At least she has Sammi Giancola to take out her frustrations on. Watch JWoww get into it with her roomie in the Jersey Shore Season 3 trailer!
Frequent sparring partner Angelina Pivarnick may be gone, but according JWoww (Jenni Farley), tears and tirades are still to come on the MTV hit.
“There’s a whole lot of drama!” JWoww said, admitting that she is at the center of much of the action herself, thanks to her split with Tom Lippolis.
BUSTIN' OUT: JWoww is so ready to this season.
“You will see that I go through a bad breakup, and I find new love,” Jenni says. “Everyone finally gets to see my side. I come out of my shell.”JWoww’s pissed off ex publicly accused her of cheating - and cheating her out of royalties - last summer, but the starlet is hardly heartbroken.
Instead, she's turning her misadventures in love into the third season of her hit show, along with a dating advice book to be released next year.
At least she has Sammi Giancola to take out her frustrations on. Watch JWoww get into it with her roomie in the Jersey Shore Season 3 trailer!
Amber Portwood and Clinton Yunker: It's Over!
Amber Portwood and Clinton Yunker have broken up, paving the way for her eventual reconciliation with baby daddy/punching bag Gary Shirley.
Just kidding ... about the second part.
The controversial Teen Mom star ended the "mature relationship" this week, and the mixed martial artist has wasted little time moving on.
"He told me Amber broke up with him."
In true reality TV style, things got crazy when Gary Shirley, who's been criticized for egging Amber on, showed up to the same restaurant.
"Clinton's brother was there with him and he tried to pick a fight with Gary and friends," the source said, though no punches were thrown.
Police were called to the restaurant but no one was arrested.
Amber Portwood and Gary Shirley had planned a trip to New York City to celebrate New Year's Eve and the prospect of getting back together.
Those plans were nixed when a No Contact Order was given to Portwood in lieu of her domestic violence charges from the local D.A.'s office.
She pleaded not guilty, but the No Contact Order remains.
That order bars her from seeing or having any contact with Shirley. It remains to be seen if it will be lifted. As far as Clinton Yunker goes?
"Clinton didn't seem too torn up about the breakup," the source said. "In fact, he seemed ecstatic and was really having a good night!"
Just kidding ... about the second part.
The controversial Teen Mom star ended the "mature relationship" this week, and the mixed martial artist has wasted little time moving on.
PORKER: They seemed like such a good match, too ...
"I was out with some friends at Buffalo Wild Wings and recognized Amber's boyfriend Clinton, but he was all over some girl," a source said."He told me Amber broke up with him."
In true reality TV style, things got crazy when Gary Shirley, who's been criticized for egging Amber on, showed up to the same restaurant.
"Clinton's brother was there with him and he tried to pick a fight with Gary and friends," the source said, though no punches were thrown.
Police were called to the restaurant but no one was arrested.
Amber Portwood and Gary Shirley had planned a trip to New York City to celebrate New Year's Eve and the prospect of getting back together.
Those plans were nixed when a No Contact Order was given to Portwood in lieu of her domestic violence charges from the local D.A.'s office.
She pleaded not guilty, but the No Contact Order remains.
That order bars her from seeing or having any contact with Shirley. It remains to be seen if it will be lifted. As far as Clinton Yunker goes?
"Clinton didn't seem too torn up about the breakup," the source said. "In fact, he seemed ecstatic and was really having a good night!"
Thursday, December 30, 2010
SRK, Hrithik in Dubai for New Year
Where will you spot them in the city?
The group also includes Chunky Pandey, Gauri's buddy Kajal Anand, and it seems Arjun Rampal and his family are also trying to make it to the UAE to join them.
And what did SRK have to say about the New Year? "To new beginnings. Have a healthy, happy & fulfilling new chapter. May all your troubles be as shortlived as your New Year resolutions. Love," the star posted on his Twitter page.
Meanwhile, before the New Years party begins, Hrithik will be busy teaching his kids Hridaan and Hrehaan snow-boarding at Ski Dubai, Mall of the Emirates. It seems the young Roshans had been wanting to learn snow-boarding for a while now, and their dad just had to give in to their wishes. Think SRK and Gauri's kids Aryan and Suhana will join them? Could be!
BABY JOY! Natalie Portman pregnant with first child
The couple, who met during the production of Black Swan, have also become engaged.
In May last year Natalie, 29, hit back at reports she’d grown close to Sean Penn after splitting from ex Devendra Banhart in September 2008.
‘Sean Penn is a friend and colleague,’ she told Us Weekly.
‘The reports that we are romantically involved are completely untrue. I normally do not respond to rumours about my private life, however, this repeatedly fabricated story has forced me do so.'
Luke Worrall says Kelly Osbourne's Twitter rant is all lies
And it appears the 26-year-old was hoping for a reconciliation.
On Christmas Day in England, Kelly found out something that definitely ruined her festive fun.
'@Luke_worrall is the biggest piece of shit he has been trying to get back w/ me I only came home for Xmas to see him mean while he has been...' she Tweeted.
Kelly has now removed various posts about Luke, 21, including a warning that 'all girls beware' and claiming 'all he did was use me'.
She's left her conclusion online: 'Dont think I have ever felt so stupid he made a fool of me going to be off Twitter for a while never felt heart brake like this in my life.'
Luke responded with: 'lies on twitter awesome', then 'im not going to spill personal business over twitter im not that low!'
The couple got engaged in November 2008 but split in July amid allegations Luke 21, had cheated.
‘This one sucked way more because I was going to marry him,' Kelly told Ellen DeGeneres on her talk show after the break-up.
Joanna Page: My husband saw me in crotch-less Spanx!
Joanna, 33, who's married to Emmerdale actor James Thornton, 35, is currently appearing in panto in Dick Whittington in Milton Keynes.
'I love the singing and dancing,' she says. 'We're doing 9 To 5, In The Navy, Don't Stop Believin'... When else do I get the chance to be up on stage singing and dancing?'
Husband James proposed on Christmas Day eight years ago and is a real romantic - bringing Joanna breakfast in bed every day.
He adores her, even when she's wearing dodgy underwear.
'Once he saw me in these Spanx that had a split crotch!' she reveals.
'I thought: "How could I get something so unattractive and put a split crotch in it as well?"
'I'd bought them because I was panicking about this really gorgeous Armani dress that I had for the BAFTAs.
'The back came down really low and it was really flimsy material, so I bought some Spanx knickers that came up really high and then I had to cut them so they wouldn't show.
'But then because they're so tight the top started curling. So all the way through the BAFTAs I was trying to hoist up my Spanx.'
Joanna's appearing alongside Dirk Benedict and Stavros Flatley in Dick Whittington at the Milton Keynes Theatre - to book, visit ambassador tickets.com.
She was a lost soul........!!!!???????
She's in sensational shape and is ready to show she deserves to be in the spotlight in Dancing On Ice 2011.
‘When she split from her husband, I decided I would be able to help her because she had finally decided she wanted to do something with her life,' says Claire, 44, whose organisation Can Associates used to look after Katie Price.
'She was a lost soul. She had no close friends, she was like a drowning person in a pool.'
Claire knew the British public would give Kerry, 30, another chance if she cleaned up her act - and she was right. The mum-of-four quit drugs and slimmed down.
‘Every time we get her out to premieres or functions, we make sure she looks amazing,' says Claire.
'She's got a much healthier lifestyle. Her skin looks good and her hair looks amazing.'
Natalie Cassidy: I don't have enough milk to breastfeed
Cassidy is devastated she's been forced to give up breastfeeding her baby daughter, Eliza.
'I'm just bottle-feeding now. I did six weeks but there wasn't enough
milk. I was expressing and getting, like, half an ounce. There was just
nothing there. My milk had just finished,' she explains.
'I was really upset because I'd have breastfed for six months if I could
have.'
Eliza, who was born on 24 September, is the first child for the EastEnders
actress and her fiancé Adam Cottrell, and she's a very thirsty little girl.
'She drinks 7oz of milk every three and a half hours, like a six-month-old baby. She's really hungry!' says Natalie.
'I loved it, but if you haven't got the milk, you can't magic it up.'
Coleen Rooney: Rebecca Ferguson's my style icon
Fellow Liverpudlian Rebecca came runner-up to Matt Cardle in this year's final, but is set to have a successful singing career after being snapped up by Simon Cowell's record comany.
'I've met Rebecca and I think she has a really nice style,' says Coleen.
'I know there are a lot of stylists involved on the show, but she looks classy and elegant when
she's just out and about.
'She's lovely, very down-to-earth and sweet.'
Coleen, 24, adores the party season and believes there's nothing better than a LBD teamed with sparkly accessories for a fab festive look.
'Clutch bags and big earrings are my favourite ways to update a classic black dress,' she says. 'But getting my hair done is the most important thing - I love it.'
'No Anorexia' model Isabelle Caro dies aged 28
He added that he did not know the exact cause of death.
Ms Caro appeared in posters for an anti-anorexia campaign in 2007, but the ads were banned in several countries.
It was not clear why it took so long for her death to be made public.
The anti-anorexia campaign came amid a debate among fashion circles on the use of "ultra-skinny" models on the catwalk.
The AFP news agency reported her as saying at the time: "I thought this could be a chance to use my suffering to get a message across, and finally put an image on what thinness represents and the danger it leads to - which is death."
The model, who was 5ft 4in tall (1.65m) at the time of the poster campaign, reportedly weighed 32kg (five stones).
Ms Caro's acting instructor, Daniele Dubreuil-Prevot, told the Associated Press news agency that Ms Caro had died after returning to France from a job in Tokyo.
She said family and close friends had held a funeral ceremony in Paris last month.
Mr Bigler, who was a friend of Ms Caro, told Swiss media: "She was hospitalised for 15 days with acute respiratory disease and was recently also very tired, but I do not know the cause of her death."
First great-grandchild for Queen
The newborn, who is 12th in line to the throne, was born in Gloucestershire Royal Hospital on Wednesday. Her name has not yet been confirmed.
Mr Phillips, son of Princess Anne, met his wife in Montreal in 2003, and they wed at Windsor Castle five years later.
A statement from Buckingham Palace read: "The Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh, the Princess Royal, Captain Mark Phillips and Autumn's family have been informed and are delighted with the news."
Canadian-born Mrs Phillips, a former Roman Catholic, was accepted into the Church of England shortly before their wedding in May 2008.
Her husband would have had to give up his right to the throne had she not done so.
Since 1701, heirs to the throne marrying Catholics cannot become sovereigns.
Peter Phillips is the only son of Princess Anne and her first husband, Captain Mark Phillips. He does not have a royal title because his mother turned down the Queen's offer of honours for both her children.
Peter's younger sister Zara Phillips announced her engagement to the rugby player Mike Tindall earlier this month.
Who's the baby now, Elton John?
The singer's child will grow up in the most extraordinary crucible of wealth, privilege and kitsch, says Judith Woods.
Photo: EDDIE MULHOLLAND
Please don’t let the scurrilous rumours be true that Sir Elton John’s new son was induced on December 25, in order to be The Ultimate Christmas Present, I just couldn’t bear it. I’d rather bury my head in a luxury lambskin footmuff until little Zachary Jackson Levon Furnish-John arrives in Britain to live happily ever after in his £35,000 nursery. Ladbroke’s is already offering 6/1 that Zachary’s collection of limited-edition Gucci First Sneakers will eclipse Suri Cruise’s $1 million pret-a-porter wardrobe within six months.
At online retailer cafepress.co.uk, Zachary can be kitted out in an “I Love My Daddies” babygro and an “I’m Lucky, I Have Two Dads” bib, which is a fine sentiment, but for the fact one of them happens to be Elton John, arguably the biggest baby in showbusiness.
Let us remember that this hissy-fit-made-flesh once demanded a private jet be repainted before he would board it, and used to insist that lawyers be flown across the Atlantic to meet him, only to refuse to leave his hotel room.
Sir Elton is financially incontinent but...
redeemingly generous and his need for instant gratification is legendary: when he fell in love with a tram in Melbourne, it cost him £10,000 to buy – and £1 million to ship back to his home in Windsor. But we all have to grow up sometime and perhaps, at 63, Sir Elton feels ready to let someone else throw all the toys out of the (Silver Cross) pram.
redeemingly generous and his need for instant gratification is legendary: when he fell in love with a tram in Melbourne, it cost him £10,000 to buy – and £1 million to ship back to his home in Windsor. But we all have to grow up sometime and perhaps, at 63, Sir Elton feels ready to let someone else throw all the toys out of the (Silver Cross) pram.
Both he and David Furnish, his civil partner, are understandably overjoyed by the birth of a baby whose mystery egg-sperm-donor-surrogate-conception continuum, was of such baffling complexity it was probably first scribbled on an envelope by Stephen Hawking.
Furnish, who has been with his high-maintenance inamorato for 17 patient years, may or may not be the father – ditto Sir Elton himself. All identities remain private for now at least, and frankly, as with all human procreation, once the mewling newborn arrives, how it got here becomes academic.
Of greater interest is that even a £290,000 flower habit, the largest private collection of photography in the world, (most of it stored at his home in Atlanta, where he employs a curator), founding and chairing one of the biggest Aids charities, assorted dogs and houses, fame and success simply wasn’t enough. There have been murmurings that Zachary was created on the mother – or father – of all whims, a living, breathing fashion accessory for the notoriously obsessive Sir Elton, but Furnish seems sensible enough to have thought things through.
Humans are hard-wired to procreate. Scientific advances fuel hope and feed aspiration and, as is now abundantly clear, sexual proclivity has little bearing on an individual’s impulse to love and nurture.
The underlying sadness is that Sir Elton and Furnish, whose Aids charity donated £1.4 million to Ukraine last year, attempted to adopt Lev, a 14-month-old HIV-positive boy abandoned in a Ukrainian orphanage. The application was refused on the grounds that Sir Elton, at 62, was too old and his civil partnership with Furnish, not recognised by the authorities – and with a rubber stamp a small boy’s life chances were crushed. There is no culture of adoption in Ukraine, certainly not for children with HIV.
Whether that encounter ignited the desire for a baby of their own is a matter of conjecture. Either way, the couple chose not to pursue adoption and are the proud fathers of a boy who will grow up in the most extraordinary crucible of wealth, privilege and kitsch. There will be A-list godparents, a glitzy christening and a lifetime of giddy excess. No one doubts that Zachary Jackson Levon will be loved, nor that his fathers will spare a thought for his namesake, Lev, left behind in Makeyevka’s orphanage.
After all, if parenthood teaches us anything, it’s that love for a child isn’t about bespoke furnishings or cashmere blankets. It’s a tender trap, an emotion that takes hold of you by soft stealth and quietly and surely strangles you with your own heartstrings, so you can never escape.
Of greater interest is that even a £290,000 flower habit, the largest private collection of photography in the world, (most of it stored at his home in Atlanta, where he employs a curator), founding and chairing one of the biggest Aids charities, assorted dogs and houses, fame and success simply wasn’t enough. There have been murmurings that Zachary was created on the mother – or father – of all whims, a living, breathing fashion accessory for the notoriously obsessive Sir Elton, but Furnish seems sensible enough to have thought things through.
Humans are hard-wired to procreate. Scientific advances fuel hope and feed aspiration and, as is now abundantly clear, sexual proclivity has little bearing on an individual’s impulse to love and nurture.
The underlying sadness is that Sir Elton and Furnish, whose Aids charity donated £1.4 million to Ukraine last year, attempted to adopt Lev, a 14-month-old HIV-positive boy abandoned in a Ukrainian orphanage. The application was refused on the grounds that Sir Elton, at 62, was too old and his civil partnership with Furnish, not recognised by the authorities – and with a rubber stamp a small boy’s life chances were crushed. There is no culture of adoption in Ukraine, certainly not for children with HIV.
Whether that encounter ignited the desire for a baby of their own is a matter of conjecture. Either way, the couple chose not to pursue adoption and are the proud fathers of a boy who will grow up in the most extraordinary crucible of wealth, privilege and kitsch. There will be A-list godparents, a glitzy christening and a lifetime of giddy excess. No one doubts that Zachary Jackson Levon will be loved, nor that his fathers will spare a thought for his namesake, Lev, left behind in Makeyevka’s orphanage.
After all, if parenthood teaches us anything, it’s that love for a child isn’t about bespoke furnishings or cashmere blankets. It’s a tender trap, an emotion that takes hold of you by soft stealth and quietly and surely strangles you with your own heartstrings, so you can never escape.
Faces of the year 2010 - the women
Some of the women who have made the headlines in 2010, left to right: Iris Robinson, Amy Williams, Kathryn Bigelow, Peppa Pig (top), Sarah Ferguson, Anna Chapman, Sue Sim, Mary Bale (middle), Justine Thornton, Gamu Nhengu, Rachel Chandler, Lady Justice Hallett (bottom).....
JANUARY
Democratic Unionist MP Iris Robinson, 59, tried to take her own life, according to her husband, Northern Ireland's First Minister Peter Robinson, after he discovered she had had an affair with a teenage man.Mrs Robinson had broken parliamentary codes of conduct for failing to report a £50,000 donation from two property developers for her lover Kirk McCambley to buy a cafe.
Before the revelations emerged, Iris Robinson announced her retirement from politics and public life on mental health grounds.
FEBRUARY
Amy Williams slid her way to becoming only the ninth British Winter Olympic gold medallist in 86 years and the first solo gold medallist for 30 years.Her victory came in the Games at Whistler in Canada in the women's skeleton event on a trusty sled she calls Arthur.
Nicknamed "Curly Wurly" because of her frizzy hair, Williams' performance was all the remarkable since Britain doesn't possess a full skeleton track apart from a dry concrete push track in Bath.
MARCH
They called it the Battle of the Exes. In the red corner for the Oscars' best director award was James Cameron for his sc-fi blockbuster Avatar.In the blue corner was his former wife Kathryn Bigelow for her low-budget, independent movie The Hurt Locker.
Bigelow triumphed with her film about an American bomb-disposal team in Iraq.
She became the first woman to win the best director award and described her triumph as "the moment of a lifetime".
APRIL
It was a case of a piggy in the middle of a controversy when a Channel Five children's cartoon character named Peppa Pig pulled out of a Labour Party election campaign stunt.Peppa was due to attend the unveiling of Labour's mini-manifesto for families.
But E1 Entertainment, the company that licenses Peppa, said, "In the interests of avoiding controversy, we have agreed she should not attend."
Lord Mandelson accused the BBC of "stirring up trouble" by blocking Peppa's appearance by leaning on E1. The BBC denied the claim.
MAY
Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York, became the latest victim of the News of the World's "fake sheikh" sting operations.The veteran investigations editor Mazher Mahmood caught her on camera apparently agreeing to provide access to her former husband, the British trade envoy Prince Andrew, in return for £500,000.
"That opens up everything you would ever wish for," she told the reporter.
Later the Duchess apologised for a "serious lapse of judgement" and admitted that her financial position was "under stress".
JUNE
The glamorous form of 28-year-old Anna Chapman found itself on the front pages of newspapers around the world when she was unmasked as a Russian agent by the FBI in the US.Chapman was part of a ring of so-called "deep sleeper" agents from American suburbs paid to penetrate US policy-making circles.
She was previously married to an Englishman in London before moving to the US after divorcing him.
Prosecutors described her as a "highly trained agent" and a "practised deceiver".
JULY
Chief Constable Sue Sim became the public face of the police hunt for the Northumberland killer Raoul Moat.Each day Chief Con Sim, who was in temporary charge of Northumbria Police, faced the media and read out statements in a slow, enunciated style.
She drew praise for the human way she dealt with members of the public, especially those living in areas affected by the manhunt.
But she also made headlines for a minor gaffe, when she mistakenly uttered that every stone would be left unturned in the search for Mr Moat, although some commentators detected sexism in what they thought was an unnecessary focus on her appearance.
AUGUST
Forty-five-year-old bank worker Mary Bale became the subject of a worldwide hate campaign when CCTV footage of her throwing a cat into a wheelie bin was posted on YouTube by the cat's owners anxious to find the culprit.After she'd been identified, Bale apologised for her action: "It was a split second of misjudgement that has got completely out of control."
The RSPCA pressed charges and she was fined £250.
SEPTEMBER
From geek to chic went Justine Thornton's public image after her partner Ed Miliband's election as Labour leader thrust her into the media spotlight.The heavily pregnant Ms Thornton sported a maternity dress patterned with blue and red hearts accompanied by a blue bolero jacket and a cropped haircut to match, in contrast to her previously less glamorous style.
The 39-year-old environmental lawyer, who began her career as a child actress, gave birth to Samuel, the couple's second son, in November.
OCTOBER
After suffering the disappointment of being voted out of The X Factor, teenage singer Gamu Nhengu faced the prospect of being deported to her native Zimbabwe.Her widowed mother breached visa conditions by wrongly claiming £16,000 in tax credits.
A member of the House of Lords, the Earl of Clancarty, asked the UK Border Agency to reconsider Gamu's case.
At first they insisted the decision was correct but later agreed to reconsider her case. Their decision is still pending.
NOVEMBER
After being held hostage by Somali pirates, Rachel Chandler and her husband Paul tasted freedom once more after 13 months in captivity.The couple from Tunbridge Wells in Kent were handed over to local officials after the payment of a ransom thought to be in the region of $1m (£649,326).
Though they both received a beating for showing defiance to being separated, they were released in good health.
The couple held out, according to Mrs Chandler, because "we are survivors".
DECEMBER
Having refused a legal challenge to hold some closed sessions of the 7 July bombings inquest, the coroner and appeal court judge Lady Justice Hallett earned much praise for her handling of the hearings.Giving short shrift to testimony by authorities she found unsatisfactory, she displayed a contrasting humanity and sympathy for victims who related their experiences.
"You are amazing, you sound amazing, you look amazing," she told one survivor.
"You've reduced us to silence," she told another.
Compiled by Bob Chaundy
What Kate Moss did next: record an album?
Supermodel Kate Moss is reported to be installing a recording studio in her new London home so that she can work on an album.
BY Olivia Bergin | 30 December 2010
Photo: REX
Kate Moss to open a modelling school?
The Daily Mail reveals that a close friend of her musician boyfriend Jamie Hince has said: "Kate's fashion days are winding down and she's no longer designing for Topshop, so her dream is to record an urban album."
Hince, a guitarist in the band The Kills, is also reported to have told friends that Moss is hoping to install a music studio in their new £7.5 million home in the leafy suburb of Highgate, North London.
In pictures: Kate Moss' greatest fashion hits
The Croydon-born model, 36, is no stranger to the stage: in July she accompanied Hince and musician Nick Cave by playing the tambourine at a charity gig hosted by designer Bella Freud, and in 2009 she sang with ex-boyfriend Pete Doherty (again, for charity) at the Café De Paris in London.
She also currently enjoys a starring role on the cover of Bryan Ferry's latest album Olympia, and is rumoured to be duetting with the former Roxy Music frontman on his next production.
Kate Moss's life in fashion
If such rumours turn out to be true, we could be hearing a lot more of the interview-shy model's dulcet tones over the next year...
Gordon Ramsay - Just don't mention the B-word
As chef Gordon Ramsay emerges from a hair transplant clinic, Iain Hollingshead offers some words of advice to the follicularly challenged
Photo: Channel 4
by Iain Hollingshead 7:00AM GMT 30 Dec 2010
Just when you thought couldn’t have any less respect for Gordon Ramsay, the embattled chef whose idea of family diplomacy is to write an open letter starting “Dear Mother-in-law”, he was photographed on Tuesday emerging from a £30,000-a-pop hair transplant clinic in Beverly Hills, California, wearing a natty bandanna that made him look more like Silvio Berlusconi than he might have wished.
“Gordon Barnet!” exclaimed one newspaper, which is probably a politer version of the retort uttered by the owner of the Foxtrot Oscar restaurant when he spotted the paparazzo.
Ramsay, 44, who still possesses a fuller range of blond locks than he does a vocabulary, might seem an unlikely candidate for a transplant operation. And yet a wave of vanity has swept the Glasgow-born chef since transferring to American television. Last year he was persuaded by Simon Cowell to inject Botox into his chin. Earlier this year he joked on Radio 1 that his “goolies” might get the same treatment. Now it is the turn of his poor follicles.
Of course, Ramsay is not alone. An estimated £2.3 billion is spent annually in America on hair loss treatments. Scores of British men in entertainment, from Cowell to Jude Law, are rumoured to have had their pates fiddled with. While John Cleese, Shane Warne, Graham Gooch, Duncan Bannatyne and James Nesbitt have all spoken openly about their transplants. “It’s changed my life,” says Nesbitt. “It’s horrible going bald. Anyone who says it isn’t is lying.”
Five years ago, aged 25, I would have agreed. The process starts with denial: the camera angle was unforgiving, the light bad, the hair in the shower someone else’s. During the summer you convince yourself that you are merely moulting in the heat, like the family dog. For the rest of the year you just have to make sure that mirrors never catch you unawares, your head constantly angled down, the forehead wrinkled to minimise its burgeoning surface area.
After a year or so of this nonsense you’re on to the anger stage – often manifesting itself in frenzied research to see if something can be done. The short answer is: no. While German researchers announced recently that they hope to grow human hairs from stem cells within a year (not the first time that baldies have felt the remaining hairs, on the back of their neck, thrill with unfulfilled excitement), for now we are left only with snake-oil merchants, invasive chemistry and unappealing surgery.
In numerous online forums angry young men – a quarter of men in their 20s show signs of male-pattern baldness – debate the merits of camouflage sprays (cheap and don’t work) over laser combs (expensive and don’t work).
More expensive still is Propecia, a daily pill that costs around £40 per month. It has the advantage of actually working in most cases. However, it can also cause impotence in a small number of cases – a fairly large disadvantage given the concerns that prompt many balding men to seek remedy in the first place. Regaine, a topical lotion, has also shown positive results, but you have to pay upwards of £25 per month and keep on using it for the rest of your life.
Unsurprisingly, then, hair transplants have become an increasingly popular prospect. The surgery has improved, thanks to a technique known as Follicular Unit Extraction (FUE), which allows surgeons to take thousands of individual follicles from the thick thatch at the back of your head and replant them at the front.
The procedure takes around eight hours under local anaesthetic and is virtually undetectable if performed in the early stages of balding – which, presumably, informed Ramsay’s logic. However, it also tends to cost at least £7,000, you can’t expose the grafted area to sunlight for six months, or swim for a year, and you’ll still look pretty stupid if your hair continues to recede, creating a shiny, unhappy desert between the grafted spot at the front and the source of the graft at the back. And while it might briefly extend your American television career, everyone else will think you’re a complete wally.
All in all, then, you might as well get to the acceptance phase of the balding process as soon as possible. William Hague, Harry Hill, Heston Blumenthal – the B-Word isn’t half as bad as Ramsay probably thinks. The only thing the merry gang needs now is for Prince William, another thinning British blond, to go for a buzz cut before April.
In numerous online forums angry young men – a quarter of men in their 20s show signs of male-pattern baldness – debate the merits of camouflage sprays (cheap and don’t work) over laser combs (expensive and don’t work).
More expensive still is Propecia, a daily pill that costs around £40 per month. It has the advantage of actually working in most cases. However, it can also cause impotence in a small number of cases – a fairly large disadvantage given the concerns that prompt many balding men to seek remedy in the first place. Regaine, a topical lotion, has also shown positive results, but you have to pay upwards of £25 per month and keep on using it for the rest of your life.
Unsurprisingly, then, hair transplants have become an increasingly popular prospect. The surgery has improved, thanks to a technique known as Follicular Unit Extraction (FUE), which allows surgeons to take thousands of individual follicles from the thick thatch at the back of your head and replant them at the front.
The procedure takes around eight hours under local anaesthetic and is virtually undetectable if performed in the early stages of balding – which, presumably, informed Ramsay’s logic. However, it also tends to cost at least £7,000, you can’t expose the grafted area to sunlight for six months, or swim for a year, and you’ll still look pretty stupid if your hair continues to recede, creating a shiny, unhappy desert between the grafted spot at the front and the source of the graft at the back. And while it might briefly extend your American television career, everyone else will think you’re a complete wally.
All in all, then, you might as well get to the acceptance phase of the balding process as soon as possible. William Hague, Harry Hill, Heston Blumenthal – the B-Word isn’t half as bad as Ramsay probably thinks. The only thing the merry gang needs now is for Prince William, another thinning British blond, to go for a buzz cut before April.
Boney M singer Bobby Farrell dies aged 61
Farrell, he continued, had complained of breathing problems before and after the show on Wednesday. The cause of his death has yet to be established.
Farrell, the only male member of the popular four-piece, had been due to perform in Italy on New Year's Eve.
Born Alfonso Farrell in Aruba, he had been touring with three female backing singers under the name Bobby Farrell of Boney M.
The original Boney M, known for such hits as Daddy Cool and Rivers of Babylon, disbanded in 1986.
Michael Jackson autopsy show 'in bad taste'
In a letter, the pair accused the company of being motivated by "blind desire" to exploit the singer's death.
The show - entitled Michael Jackson's Autopsy: What Really Killed Michael Jackson - is scheduled to be broadcast in Europe in January.
"Your decision to even schedule this programme is in shockingly bad taste and insensitive to Michael's family," the co-executors wrote.
"On behalf of Michael's family, fans, common sense and decency, we urge you to reconsider and cancel this programme," they added.
An advertisement used to promote the show reportedly depicts a body covered by a sheet with one hand wearing the singer's trademark sequined glove visible.
"Discovery obviously views this as clever advertising and creative 'branding' for its programme," Branca and McClain continued.
"In fact, the ad is debased, sick and insensitive."
Discovery Communications declined to comment on the letter, the Reuters news agency reported.
Meanwhile, lawyers for the doctor facing trial for involuntary manslaughter over Jackson's death may suggest the singer killed himself, a prosecutor has claimed.
In a court session to discuss evidence in the case against Dr Conrad Murray, Deputy District Attorney David Walgren said he believed defence lawyers were looking into the theory.
"They don't want to say it but that's the direction in which they are going," he said on Wednesday.
Outside the Los Angeles courtroom, defence lawyer J Michael Flanagan declined to comment and said lawyers were still investigating the case.
A preliminary hearing is scheduled to begin on 4 January where it will be decided if there is sufficient evidence to hold Dr Murray for trial.
Dr Murray has repeatedly denied causing Jackson's death.
Khodorkovsky gets six more years in Russia jail
He could "only be reformed by being isolated from society", the judge's verdict said.
Khodorkovsky was convicted on Monday in a judgment criticised by the US and others as selective justice.
Once seen as a threat to former President Vladimir Putin, he was found guilty along with former business partner Platon Lebedev of stealing from their own oil firm, Yukos, and laundering the proceeds.
After Washington accused Russia of applying selective justice, the Kremlin said in effect the outside world should mind its own business.
Lawyers for the two defendants are expected to appeal but if Khodorkovsky does remain in jail until 2017, it will mean he does not return to society until well after the next Russian presidential election.
Some analysts have suggested he could otherwise pose a political threat to the Kremlin's candidate in 2012.
'Damn you!' Khodorkovsky and Lebedev were first arrested in 2003 and sentenced in 2005 for fraud and tax evasion.
On Thursday, the court in Moscow sentenced the two men to 14 years in prison, to run concurrently with the eight-year term handed down in 2005.
The term includes time served since the two men's arrest.
Judge Viktor Danilkin had been reading the 800-page verdict out since Monday.
As sentence was passed, a woman in the courtroom shouted "May you and your offspring be damned!", according to an AFP news agency correspondent.
The two defendants, however, are said to have reacted calmly to the decision.
Supporters of the two defendants have held rallies outside the courthouse to condemn Mr Putin and the Kremlin.
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