Thursday, July 31, 2008

Scientists say they've put exercise in a pill

Researchers experiment with a chemical compound that they say can produce the benefits of aerobic activity without the work.

Ronald Evans holds a vial of a drug that boosts the effects of exercise in mice. Evans works at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, Calif.


In AICAR, scientists say they've found exercise in a pill

1:07 PM PDT, July 31, 2008

Scientists have discovered what could be the ultimate workout for couch potatoes: exercise in a pill.



In experiments on mice that did no exercise, the chemical compound, known as AICAR, allowed them to run 44% farther on a treadmill than those that did not receive the drug.


The drug appeared to change the physical composition of muscle, essentially transforming the tissue from sugar-burning fast-twitch fibers to fat-burning slow-twitch ones -- the same change that occurs in distance runners and cyclists through training.


"You're getting the benefits of exercise without having to do any work," said David Mangelsdorf, a pharmacologist at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, who was not connected with the research.It is unknown if the drug has any benefit for athletes who actually work out -- or any human for that matter, since the research has so far only involved mice.


"The mouse doctors and cell biologists are of course quite enthusiastic about these things, but the human doctors are a little more reticent," said Dr. Benjamin Levine, a cardiologist who leads the Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine at Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas and who was not involved in the study.


The chemical pathways that transform muscle cells appear to be the same in mice and humans. But because their metabolisms are vastly different, nobody knows what dosage would be required to achieve an effect in people and whether it would be safe.


Nonetheless, lead researcher Ronald Evans, a molecular physiologist at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, said he has already been contacted by dozens of athletes and overweight people who have heard about his research from previous lectures.


"Anything that could provide half of a quarter of one percent is attractive," said Dr. Don Catlin, a professor emeritus of molecular and medical pharmacology at UCLA and a top anti-doping expert. "The athlete who can find a way to get an edge is one up on his competitors."


One request came from a horse trainer he met on an airplane who was interested in trying it out on a thoroughbred, he said. Evans declined.


He said he has notified world anti-doping officials, who are now scrambling to implement a test for it before the Beijing Olympics start next week.The compound, which is naturally produced in tiny amounts in human muscle cells and has been studied for decades, is readily available through scientific supply companies.


One company was offering AICAR for $120 a gram. At that price, giving a person the drug in the same concentration as the mice would cost thousands of dollars a day.Evans predicted that in the wake of his study, published today in the journal Cell, the drug will "fly off the shelves."


The drug has been tested in humans for a variety of conditions related to the heart and repeatedly passed basic safety tests."It was found to be a quite safe drug, at least at the doses we were using," said chemist Paul Laikind, who patented the compound in the 1980s and began testing it as a means of preserving blood flow to the heart during surgery.


The compound is now owned by drug maker Schering-Plough Corp., which is trying to develop it as an intravenous infusion for the prevention of ischemia-reperfusion injury, a complication of bypass surgery.


With more research, scientists said, the drug's fat-burning properties could also help reduce weight, ward off diabetes, prevent heart disease and help bedridden patients become fit.The discovery of AICAR as a potential couch-potato exercise pill grew out of Evans' continuing research on creating super mice.


In 2004, he made headlines for engineering "marathon mice." By injecting a single gene into the nucleus of a fertilized egg, he created mice born with more efficient muscles, faster metabolisms and stronger hearts.Evans wanted to know if it was possible to achieve the same effect using a drug.


His team didn't start with AICAR, but another compound known as GW1516, which drug maker GlaxoSmithKline is trying to develop as a drug to raise levels of HDL, or good cholesterol. The drug is known to stimulate the production of a protein known as PPARd, which in turn activates the genes that boost endurance in muscle cells.


In sedentary mice, the drug had no effect on endurance. Only when the drug was combined with exercise did it give the mice an advantage. After five weeks of training, mice that got the drug were able to run for an average of three hours and 24 minutes, a 68% improvement over mice that received only training.


When the researchers dissected the test mice, they found that the number of high-efficiency muscle fibers had increased 29%.


"That's a huge increase," Evans said. "That's the kind of stuff that Lance Armstrong and endurance athletes aim for."The experiment might have ended there, but after Evans submitted the paper for publication last year, one academic reviewer wanted to know why the drug had transformed the fiber only with exercise.

The reviewer surmised that the answer could be found somewhere in the complex chain of chemical reactions that energize muscle cells during exercise.Evans decided to try AICAR because it closely resembles a nucleotide that prompts the production of an enzyme that activates the high-endurance genes.


To Evans' surprise, the experiment worked. When sedentary mice were fed the drug daily for four weeks, they were able to run an average of 547 meters on a treadmill, 44% farther than mice that had received a placebo.

The researchers now plan to test whether AICAR or GW1516 can increase endurance beyond what can be achieved by intensive training alone, a key question for athletes.


In the meantime, Evans said that his team has developed detection protocols for both compounds and their breakdown products and turned them over to the World Anti-Doping Assn. in Montreal.


He said it is unclear whether the tests will be in place for the Olympics.Frederic Donze, a spokesman for the association, said in an e-mail that the organization "does not indicate when it implements new detection means or methods."


But he added it is not crucial for the test to be in place now.


"A number of anti-doping organizations, including the International Olympic Committee, store doping control samples of their events for eight years for potential future retesting and detection as anti-doping science advances," he said.

By Alan Zarembo - alan.zarembo@latimes.com

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

From the Land of Ooh Blah De

In the Land of Ooh Blah De

Only the best for you!

Check out the jazz from Denmark.
The best from all over the world that is, because they've got wider ears than any 'top 40' playlist you're going to get within these shores.....

In the time I've written this they've blown a fresh Don Cherry piece, Henry Threadgill, their own wonderful Dr. Big Band, and now Olivia Sellverio and Pietro Leveratt demonstrate the evolution of a great jazz group featuring that female Brazilian vocalization we fell in love with years ago. The piece is called "Assummata Di Lu Corpu Di La Tunnara".

Now they're 'Back to the Basics'---as I call it--, with Monk's "Epistrophy", and Yusef is on deck, featured in a cut with Stephane Belmondo, entitled " Apres le Jeu" , which is French for "After the Game".

Now when was the last time you heard Yusef Lateef on your radio station??? And in a cut that is not one of the usual selections? What I'm listening to was recorded in 2007!

Yusef Lateef

Just a couple of clicks and I'm 'outa here'. Immediately I become at one with a universal vibe. Good music, centering and grounding me, connecting me to like minded Hearts around the globe with a similar appreciation. A chance to experience that One Vibration that permeates All....manifesting in another Holy Trinity.....Love, Rhythm, Creative Genius, giving birth to High Art. Notes rising, falling, synchronistically stimulating your Heart's intelligence until all you can do is holler "Yes! Yes!! Yes!!! " Then again, it can be so illusive, fused with Cosmic melodies and harmonies, that only a few can 'get it', hear it, and follow the beat. Beauty~ All represented in the Divinely Inspired Music....Jazz.

Here are links to the Denmark jazz station I listen to~
...oh and in dr.dk, 'dr' stands for Denmark, although they are doctors for my soul.

On the right side of the page, Click on the speaker icon that reads DR Jazz;
Click 'Ja' (yes) to Download their player.

Here is the DR Jazz Playlist address:

This is the listing for all their stations - HipHop, World Beat, R & B, Classical, etc.:

You're set....so sit back, and enjoy!


OH MY GOODNESS....I wondered if Yusef was still alive and- yep I'm on a tangent here,-- but keep reading to see what I found for you!
Simply because you are so very wonderful, loving and appreciative of every good thing that comes your way...Here's to your happiness!
I didn't write the following. I found it on a site, and I want you to go there, because there's music and a video that you can enjoy. Don't neglect the color highlighted links in the piece. Little gems everywhere. The original site address follows.
Festival time!
I was lucky enough to see Yusef Lateef performing live in my city. What a fantastic concert. I heard some beautiful sounds that i will never forget.
A few lines of biography from his site describe well the greatness of this artist:
Yusef Lateef is a Grammy Award-winning composer, performer, recording artist, author, educator and philosopher who has been a major force on the international musical scene for more than six decades. He is universally acknowledged as one of the great living masters and innovators in the African American tradition of autophysiopsychic music — that which comes from one’s spiritual, physical and emotional self.

As a virtuoso on a broad spectrum of reed instruments — tenor saxophone, flute, oboe, bamboo flute, shanai, shofar, argol, sarewa, and taiwan koto — Yusef Lateef has introduced delightful new sounds and blends of tone colors to audiences all over the world.


This living legend is now 87 years old, he started playing jazz in the late 30’s. It is even difficult to imagine how long he has been around, crossing different musical styles and being a reference figure in the jazz scene from the beginning. Ages and experience bring wisdom, and after studying all types of music, I think he reached the perfect synthesis, a style that is apparently minimal, but is indeed really really deep.

It is hard to describe in words the feelings you experiment in such a great concert, plus I’m not an expert of Jazz music so I won’t go into technical details, but let me say one thing: Yuseef Lateef’s music is different from the others in having a huge spiritual component. Also, the influences of African and Mid-Oriental music are evident, but I think his aim is to create a unified, universal musical language rather than simply giving a touch of “exotic” to his performance, as other artist do.

That night he played flute, sax, oboe and different types of african instruments. The Belmondo sextet, his european support band, was the perfect match. Stephan Belmondo in particular, and the bass player, of which I can’t remember the name, gave the audience some moments of pure delight. I still can remember clearly a bass solo that was pure fire. Amazing.

Note: Being a big 90’s hip hop fan (probably the only one in the audience!), it was easy to notice that his sounds were clearly a big inspiration for the producers I love most. Besides being a jazz legend, he even sounds more “hip hop” than your average hip hop producer! I’m sure that if you look in the private collection of RZA or Pete Rock, you’ll find more than one vinyl by Yuseef Lateef.


And this is why you always read to the very end of my blog posts

The Gentle Giant


loveu madly
,

Kentke

Sunday, July 27, 2008

The Games We Love to Play

Former World Scrabble Champion Mactar Sylla studies the board during the final round of competition in the Duplicate category, at the World Scrabble Championships in Dakar, Senegal Friday, July 25, 2008. France lost for a third year in a row this week to an African player in the one-on-one duel at the Francophone World Scrabble Championship.
(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)


For some Africans, Scrabble more than just a game



Jul 26, 3:31 AM (ET)


DAKAR, Senegal (AP) - To compete in the Francophone World Scrabble Championship, 32-year-old Elisee Poka spent five days in a bus traversing Africa's potholed roads. His competitors from France arrived by plane.

To prepare for the game, he carried a diary in his satchel, spending every spare moment committing words to memory. His French competitors used computers to spit out anagrams, the game's key building block.

But in spite of all their advantages, France lost to an African player for the third year in a row this week in the one-on-one duel at the Francophone World Scrabble Championship.
"We have far less means than the French players," says Poka, who as a child in Ivory Coast made his own Scrabble set out of wood because he couldn't afford a store-bought one. "But we keep on beating them."

There is more than a little irony in the string of wins given that French is the language of West Africa's colonizers. With literacy rates as low as 30 percent in Guinea and 40 percent in Senegal, many Africans still speak local dialects and know only a smattering of French, the language of the elite.

"French is not my mother tongue. I taught myself French when I was in my teens," said Senegalese player Amar Diokh, 53, who clinched the one-on-one title from a Frenchman last year. "So I can't help but feel enormous pride to be able to beat the French in their own language."

Whereas in France the game is viewed as a hobby, in several African countries Scrabble has been elevated to the status of an official sport. Mali's Ministry of Sports paid for 10 players to fly to the competition that ended here Friday. Senegal's Minister of Sports attended the closing ceremonies of this year's championship and made a declaration calling the tournament one of the year's most important sports events.

Top Scrabble players are celebrities in Senegal and have been able to parlay their success at word combinations into political careers, like former doubles champion Arona Gaye, now an adviser on sports to Senegal.

The game's popularity has meant that even French players have become household names here, like Antonin Michel, a multiple champion from Nancy, France, who has appeared on Senegalese TV. "I get a lot more respect here than I do in France," he said.

The tournament held in Dakar, Senegal's capital, drew more than 500 participants from around 20 French-speaking countries. More than half the countries represented are African. Players are divided by age and play in four major categories - one-on-one, pair-on-pair, speed Scrabble and an open competition in which a giant board is projected on a screen and all the contestants play with the same letters.




Although the French-language championship is now in its 37th year, it was not until 2000 that an African player grabbed one of the top honors. When Gaye and his Senegalese partner won the doubles tournament in Paris, the French were shocked - and a tad embarrassed.


"Their victory made an enormous amount of noise," says Michel.
Since then, Senegal hasn't looked back and last year, Senegalese players grabbed three of the top four trophies at the World Championship in Quebec.



No African player has yet won the grand champion title, which is based on scores in the four different competitions. But this year's No. 3 overall player is from Congo. Organizers say it won't be long before a player from the continent breaks the word ceiling.



The success of the African players has sharpened the skills of the French, said one of the tournament's referees, Pierre Salvati, a Scrabble player from Toulouse.



"For many years, the French had a lock on the competition," he said. "So the players started to fall asleep. Now that they're being beaten by the Africans and that motivates us to make sure we keep winning."


Another sign of Africa's growing influence is the number of African words that have been accepted into the official Francophone Scrabble dictionary. The most recent edition has at least 20 African words, most in Wolof, Senegal's main dialect. They include 'yet,' a kind of shellfish found off Senegal's coast and 'mbalax,' the style of music made famous by Grammy winner Youssou N'Dour, Senegal's most famous singer.

Joseph Kouassi, 27, of Ivory Coast, said he was too poor to be able to afford his own boardgame and so he made his first Scrabble set using discarded kitchen tiles. He said every time he gets to play an African word in a Scrabble competition he feels a sense of pride.


"I feel joy to know that not only have I mastered French - a language that isn't mine - but that our African words are helping enrich the French language," he said.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Take a moment and play

How well do you know your modern political geography? Can you identify countries on a map?

Here's a little game that's an enlightening way to get a different perspective on the dynamics and locations of places of conflict on our planet. It's a fun challenge, similar to figuring out where to put pieces in a puzzle. And also like the fractured image you build from, once you've got it completed, the whole picture comes alive
It'd be nice if they offered additional regions of the globe besides this set of countries. That way we could continue to grow in familiarity with our world.
Have fun~
Kentke

Monday, July 14, 2008

Satire? I’m Not Laughing.



By Jonathan Adams
I don’t read the New Yorker as often as I should because, as Seth Wessler puts it, the magazine “pegged for postgraduate degreed liberals and post-political hipsters” can be a little verbose and pretentious. But I don’t think you need rockabilly glasses to see that this perpetuation of ignorance is not satire, but perverse and irresponsible.
The New Yorker knew that the magazine would cause an uproar. Obama’s campaign is condemning the cover as “tasteless and offensive.”
To submit a letter in response to a New Yorker article for publication by the magazine, you may send an e-mail to themail@newyorker.com.

Jonathon, you are so kind.
You say that the cover is "perverse and irresponsible". I feel that we have arrived at that point in history, when what I term that 'polite social speech', that we have corraled our tongues to offer in order to be included in the conversation, just 'ain't gonna get it' anymore.
Now is the time to, with compassion, frankly and clearly speak our truth.

As a woman of African descent, I see the cover as a clear tool of propaganda.
I see the New Yorker Editors choosing to create an image that absolutely leaves a first impression of horror and fear within the minds of the masses of white Americans, as well as those non-white Americans that live from the dominant culture's way of viewing the world.

Now the fact that the editors and staff thought they could disguise their covert racism and bigotry by labeling "....their cover (as)is a satirical lampoon of the caricature Senator Obama's right-wing critics have tried to create", is an attempt to hide behind something so onerous that if we persist in speaking politely, and calling it 'simply irresponsible', ...well, then they've been successful.
However, if we call a spade a spade, then why don't we intelligent conscious human beings, working to harmoniously exist in our communities, in this nation and in the world, declare to them that we see their devious intention to divide and promote fear and revulsion?
In fact, that's a good point for debate. They see it as political satire. We do not. We understand why they might want to label it such, but do they understand why we see it as more than that? As we're talking about race alot these days, these are the points of discussion that add to a deeper understanding of people and their feelings. This is an example of what the conversation needs to include today.
If we tell them we refuse to laugh with them, at this critical evidence, of the ugly putrid cesspool from which their thinking and creativity emerge, we can help them to see themselves and their actions for what they are.

They are not contributing anything positive to the dialogue. They are purposely muddying the waters, to make sure that good hearted people will not be able to make a clear minded decision.

I appreciate one of their writers, Mr. Seymour Hersh.
But other than his articles, for the most part, with it's subtle arrogant and pretentious editorial line, The New Yorker fosters and contributes significantly to the prisons of delusion that hold the American people from experiencing the presence of wholeness and the joy of simply Being.
For New Yorkerphiles,-'postgraduate degreed liberals and post-political hipsters' these are foreign concepts.
Kentke
WASHINGTON - Barack Obama's campaign says a satirical New Yorker magazine cover showing the Democratic presidential candidate dressed as a Muslim and his wife as a terrorist is "tasteless and offensive."

The illustration on the issue that hits newsstands Monday, titled "The Politics of Fear" and drawn by Barry Blitt, depicts Barack Obama wearing sandals, robe and a turban and his wife, Michelle, dressed in camouflage, combat boots and an assault rifle strapped over her shoulder — standing in the Oval Office.
The couple is doing a fist tap in front of a fireplace in which an American flag is burning. Over the mantel hangs a portrait of Osama bin Laden.
"The New Yorker may think, as one of their staff explained to us, that their cover is a satirical lampoon of the caricature Senator Obama's right-wing critics have tried to create," said Obama campaign spokesman Bill Burton. "But most readers will see it as tasteless and offensive. And we agree."
In a statement Monday, the magazine said the cover "combines a number of fantastical images about the Obamas and shows them for the obvious distortions they are."
"The burning flag, the nationalist-radical and Islamic outfits, the fist-bump, the portrait on the wall? All of them echo one attack or another. Satire is part of what we do, and it is meant to bring things out into the open, to hold up a mirror to prejudice, the hateful, and the absurd. And that's the spirit of this cover," the New Yorker statement said.
The statement also pointed to the two articles on Obama contained inside the magazine, calling them "very serious."
In Arizona, Republican John McCain said the cover was "totally inappropriate and frankly I understand if Senator Obama and his supporters would find it offensive."
Already the cover was generating controversy on the Internet.
The Huffington Post, a left-leaning blog, said: "Anyone who's tried to paint Obama as a Muslim, anyone who's tried to portray Michelle as angry or a secret revolutionary out to get Whitey, anyone who has questioned their patriotism — well, here's your image."
___
On the Web: http://www.newyorker.com

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Mugabe: Glimpses of his Conscience Absorbing his Beat-Down


As the world and I continue to decry the turn of events in Zimbabwe, I selected these recent photos of the now completely discredited leader that ~as they say, 'A picture is worth a thousand words', clearly show that he is now feeling the weight and shame of his ending chapters in his legacy to the history of Zimbabwe.


I hope that you read my Thursday, July 10th entry, which is an article about a report that reveals the strategies and events that resulted in the campaign, election and his inauguration going down in the manner that we have all watched in horror.


It also reveals that as in many other African and so called Second and Third World nations, the military is still holding the reins of power. This report clearly shows that at this point Mugabe, is a puppet for a regime, which true enough he created, but that is currently being orchestrated by ignorance and greed, in the form of Commander Gen. Constantine Chiwenga, Zimbabwe's military chief. It also reveals that Mugabe was ready to turn over the government, but blocked by Chiwenga who is unwilling to relinquish the privileges, wealth and power they have illegally amassed, and withheld from the people of the nation. The image of being a democracy is not of any significance to them.

These are old paradigms of rule, and they must go. Again, please read the second article in that day's blog, and continue to inform yourself of all the dynamics at work in this situation.

The recent defeat of the U.N. Security Council effort at sanctions against the regime is also disgusting. Who was blocking here? Russia, and the people of Africa's newest enemy China. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/07/11/world/main4255091.shtml?source=RSSattr=World_4255091.


I wrote about China earlier this year, just in terms of it's violent crackdown on Tibetan monks and demonstrators. But China's negative presence on the Continent doesn't end there. This week it's also been revealed, that China has transgressed the U N arms embargo against Sudan, by providing military arms, training and fighter jets!!! (You'd better not spend your hard earned money to fly over there this August!) http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080713/wl_afp/chinasudandarfurmilitarytradeunembargobritain_080713185344


I can see that I'm getting off on a tangent here.....


So let me bring it back to what I originally wanted to share with you. And that is that I want you to look deeply into the image of serious contemplation on Mugabe's face. Gone are the chest thumping bravado, the pride and determination to fight, for he realizes that he's caught in a web, with people even more treacherous than himself. A recent interviewer reported that he has the health and stamina of a 60 year old, but that may be of no avail, if he's thrown his lot with those that would simply snuff his life, to maintain their positions. At this moment, his political opposition is the least of his worries.


Sunday, June, 29, 2008, Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe at his inauguration ceremony at State house in Harare, Zimbabwe.

(AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi,)

By MICHELLE FAUL

Robert Mugabe's brazen power grab in Zimbabwe's election saga has left cracks in one of African leaders' unspoken rules: Never turn on one of your own.

The fact that even several nations are refusing to recognize Zimbabwe's ruler of 28 years marks an unprecedented change in Africa that offers a glimmer of hope for a brighter, more democratic future.

A younger generation of African leaders appears willing to break from the clubbiness that has characterized the governing elites on this continent where authoritarian rule has long been the norm.

Among the most outspoken has been Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the Liberian president who is the continent's only female leader.



On a visit to South Africa this week, she was the first African leader to support proposed U.N. sanctions against Zimbabwe's leaders, saying they send a "strong message" that the world will not tolerate violence to retain power.

"It's important, because it's the first time that we are seeing on the African continent that leadership has transitioned from the old perceptions," said Chris Maroleng, a South African political analyst.


"We're seeing more leaders beginning to embrace their own democratic notion," he added.
They include Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa, a lawyer who is his country's third leader since independence in 1964; former army commander Seretse Ian Khama of Botswana, Africa's most enduring democracy; and Nigeria's Umar Yar'Adua, only the third civilian leader since 1966, though he still is fighting a court battle over his fraud-riddled election.


Mugabe's June 27 runoff "was neither free nor fair and therefore the legitimacy of his presidency is in question. He cannot wish that away," Kenya's Foreign Minister Moses Wetangula told The Associated Press.

Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, who won the most votes in March elections, withdrew from the runoff against Mugabe after weeks of military-orchestrated violence left dozens of his supporters dead, thousands severely beaten and thousands more homeless as they were chased from villages, fled attacks or had their houses burned down.


Two days after the vote, Mugabe was declared the winner and flew to an African Union summit in Egypt where he was seen hugging many leaders, gaining the veneer of legitimacy that he sought.

"President Mugabe was accepted by his peers ... so he is legitimate," Congo's Foreign Ministry spokesman Claude Kamanga Mutond said.

But a few voices of dissent have cropped up across Africa.

"The violence that preceded the election was so intense that the results did not reflect the wishes of the people of Zimbabwe," Sierra Leone's Foreign Minister Zainab Bangura told the AP.

Rwanda also condemned the election, as did Senegal.


While some presidents were reported to have had harsh private words for Mugabe, the vast majority chose the traditional path of not putting public pressure on a fellow leader, ignoring U.N. and Western calls for tough action.


Many feared being seen as doing the bidding of the West. And Mugabe, despite his destruction of his country, still is seen by many Africans as a hero who defeated the white-minority rulers of then-Rhodesia and then drove whites off land considered stolen from blacks. Mugabe's seizure of commercial white-owned farms broke the backbone of the country's economy.


The African leaders also retained South African President Thabo Mbeki as mediator for Zimbabwe, ignoring the Zimbabwe opposition's rejection of him and widespread condemnation that his 8-year-long "softly, softly" approach to Mugabe has hastened Zimbabwe's collapse.

Liberia's Sirleaf said the African Union could only maintain its credibility if it pronounced the June 27 runoff unacceptable.

The prevailing African silence over Mugabe marks a landmark failure for the union, set up in 2002 to replace the discredited Organization of African Unity, which had become little more than a dictators' club. The new union was to be the flagship for an African renaissance based on democracy and Africans solving African problems.


At its inaugural summit in 2002, leaders committed themselves to holding fair elections at regular intervals, to allow opposition parties to campaign freely and to set up independent electoral commissions to monitor polls.




Mugabe failed on every point.




While the old organization pledged noninterference in member states, the new union includes a Peace and Security Council, structured on the U.N. Security Council, that has the right to intervene when human rights are grossly violated or crimes against humanity perpetrated.
The only African intervention has been to send troops to back Comoros government soldiers in ousting a coup leader from the remote Indian Ocean island of Anjouan in March - an easy target.


---
Associated Press writers contributing to this report include Malkhadir M. Muhumed in Kenya, Clarence Roy-Macaulay in Sierra Leone, Jonathan Paye-Layleh in Liberia, Sello Motsetsa in Botswana, and Eddy Isango in Congo.

Irony and Extremes....The World of Women Today

Two unidentified Afghan Women chat with each other afew minutes before they were executed by Taliban in Ghazni province, Afghanistan, on late Saturday, July 12, 2008. Taliban fighters told Associated Press Television News that the two were executed for allegedly running a prostitution ring catering to U.S. soldiers and other foreign contractors at a U.S. base in Ghazni city.(AP Photo/Rahmatullah Naikzad)



While in another part of our world, on a beach in Viet Nam three young women, that just on sheer appearance alone, could all be from Middle Eastern countries, smile and flaunt their competitive weapons in this year's Miss Universe contest.

Three Miss Universe contestants pose in their swimwear at Diamond Bay Resort in the Vietnamese city of Nha Trang on July 11(AFP/Miss Universe LP, LLLP/Darren Decker)



Local people watch two Afghan women shot and killed by Taliban in Ghazni province, Afghanistan, on Sunday, July 13, 2008. Taliban fighters told Associated Press Television News that the two were executed for allegedly running a prostitution ring catering to U.S. soldiers and other foreign contractors at a U.S. base in Ghazni city.(AP Photo/Rahmatullah Naikzad)

Though the caption reads 'other people' note that there are only men observing this gruesome scene.

........ironies and extremes
Kentke

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Africa's First Female President Denounces Zimbabwe Vote

Liberia's President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Nelson Mandela
at Soweto celebration honoring his 90th birthday.

C.C. sent me the following email after I shared a livid note I wrote to the Directer and President of the African Union on their cowardly silence, supporting the death of democracy in Zimbabwe.

"Ah, African politics....always a sad and difficult kettle of fish. You articulate the problem nicely. Islamic oppression of animists (and in Ethiopia sometimes communists against Jews and Gentiles) ; gender violence, slavery, tribal warfare, widespread graft.....all still plague the continent along with a lack of enlightened, non-partisan leadership which makes every additional problem bigger. I've been reading some essays by Wole Soyinka and Chinua Achebe over the last few months, and both are very candid about the past and current problems of Post Colonial Africa. So the intellectuals (especially those in exile) are still somewhat willing to be openly critical. Sadly, only the politicians are still playing games of guile and silence. What do you think of the madame president of Liberia?

I actually didn't know much about Madame President Ellen Johnson Sirlea, so I was very happy to read this article today. I share it here with you so that you too may start to become familiar with a new African leader. My hope is that her integrity will always be as firm and noteworthy as her professional expertise and career history. Proudly I declare 'Leave it to a woman' to say what needs to be said.




By DONNA BRYSON
Associated Press Writer
Sat Jul 12, 2:49 PM ET


JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
"All Africans must speak out about injustices in places like Zimbabwe," Liberia's leader said Saturday during a speech honoring former South African President Nelson Mandela.

Ellen Johnson Sirleaf devoted her speech, a week before Mandela's 90th birthday, to painting an optimistic picture of Africa's future.

But the Liberian president said she could not ignore current troubles, and that it was her duty to "express my solidarity with the people of Zimbabwe, as they search for solutions to the crisis in their country."

The remark earned applause from Mandela and a crowd of several hundred gathered in a community hall in Soweto, the famed Johannesburg township.
Sirleaf acknowledged that Liberia was far from southern Africa, and did not share this region's history of British colonial rule.

"But I am, I hope, part of the new Africa; an Africa rooted in many of the values demonstrated by you, President Mandela," she said. "In that Africa, all Africans have a responsibility for our collective future. It is, therefore, my and our responsibility to speak out against injustice everywhere." She offered her own country in West Africa as a cautionary example.

"In 1985, Liberia held a sham election that was endorsed by Africa and the world," she said. "Thirty years of civil war and devastation followed, with thousands dead and millions displaced. It need not have happened."

Sirleaf was among the few voices at a recent African Union summit denouncing a June 27 presidential runoff in Zimbabwe that followed months of brutal attacks on opposition supporters. Zimbabwean opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai withdrew from the runoff because of the violence, but Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe went ahead, and claimed overwhelming victory.

Sirleaf also had come out in support of U.N. sanctions the United States had proposed in part to force Mugabe to negotiate a power-sharing agreement with Tsvangirai. The sanctions were vetoed by Russia and China when put to a vote Friday before the U.N. Security Council. Sirleaf did not comment Saturday on the U.N. vote.

Sirleaf is the first woman elected president on the continent. The 69-year-old former World Bank official also is widely hailed as among a new crop of African leaders committed to democratic and economic reform.

Mandela, who addressed the crowd only briefly, called Sirleaf "an inspiring example to Africa and the world." He also joked that the annual lecture — in the past given by Nobel peace laureates Kofi Annan, Wangari Maathai and Desmond Tutu, as well as former President Clinton and current South African President Thabo Mbeki — drew luminaries "principally to see what an old man looks like."

Sirleaf titled Saturday's speech "Behold the New Africa," and said that despite setbacks in Zimbabwe and elsewhere, she believed the continent was overcoming dictatorship and poverty. She cited economic growth averaging 5 percent in recent years, the relief of the foreign debt burden many countries had faced, and political change.

"It is hard to predict the future and the change will not be easy or smooth in every country," she said. "But never before in world history have so many low income countries become democracies in so short a period of time."

She put the burden for continued reform on Africans themselves, citing fighting corruption and mismanagement as key.

The modern community hall where Sirleaf and Mandela spoke Saturday was built on the site where white and black South Africans gathered in 1955 and, before apartheid police broke up the meeting, adopted the Freedom Charter, pledging to fight for multiracial democracy. Four decades later, post-apartheid South Africa borrowed the Freedom Charter's declaration that the country "belongs to all who live in it" for the preamble to a new constitution.

Sirleaf called the Freedom Charter "a bold development manifesto," and said she and others across the continent intent on reform had been inspired by Mandela and other South Africans.

Turning to Mandela, she said: "If someday I am remembered as one of the many dreamers who came in your wake who, unable to fill your shoes, walked in your shadow to build a new Africa, then I can think of no better place to be in history."

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Finally...Sudan Leader To Be Charged With Genocide

"Omar al Bashir told us that we should kill all the Nubas. There is no place here for the Negroes any more."
Words of a Janjaweed fighter as told to an Amnesty International investigator.

This one year old girl was shot by a Sudanese government helicopter.
Her mother was killed.


Peace Efforts in Darfur Could Be Hampered, Some U.N. Officials Fear


By Colum Lynch and Nora Boustany
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, July 11, 2008; A01


UNITED NATIONS, July 10 -- The chief prosecutor of the Internationals Criminal Court will seek an arrest warrant Monday for Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, charging him with genocide and crimes against humanity in the orchestration of a campaign of violence that led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of civilians in the nation's Darfur region during the past five years, according to U.N. officials and diplomats.

The action by the prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo of Argentina, will mark the first time that the tribunal in The Hague charges a sitting head of state with such crimes, and represents a major step by the court to implicate the highest levels of the Sudanese government for the atrocities in Darfur.

Some U.N. officials raised concerns Thursday that the decision would complicate the peace process in Darfur, possibly triggering a military response by Sudanese forces or proxies against the nearly 10,000 U.N. and African Union peacekeepers located there. At least seven peacekeepers were killed and 22 were injured Tuesday during an ambush by a well-organized and unidentified armed group.

Representatives from the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States -- met with U.N. officials Thursday to discuss the safety of peacekeepers in Darfur. U.N. military planners have begun moving peacekeepers to safer locations and are distributing food and equipment in case the Sudanese government cuts off supplies.

"All bets are off; anything could happen," said one U.N. official, adding that circumstantial evidence shows that the government of Sudan orchestrated this week's ambush. "The mission is so fragile, it would not take much for the whole thing to come crashing down."

Sudan's U.N. ambassador, Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamad, said rebels are responsible for the attack on U.N. peacekeepers, and insisted that Sudanese forces will not retaliate against foreign peacekeepers. However, he warned that the announcement of charges against Bashir or other senior officials would "destroy" international efforts to reach a peace settlement in Darfur.

"Ocampo is playing with fire," Mohamad said. "If the United Nations is serious about its engagement with Sudan, it should tell this man to suspend what he is doing with this so-called indictment. There will be grave repercussions."

Bashir has been at the center of international efforts to seek a political solution to the crisis. U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and President Bush have routinely reached out to Bashir on issues such as counterterrorism and the deployment of peacekeepers. Bush envoys have met regularly with Bashir, and former envoy Andrew S. Natsios delivered a missive from Bush to the Sudanese leader in March 2007 urging him to allow more U.N. and African peacekeepers in Darfur.

"I will present my case and my evidence to the [ICC] judges, and they will take two to three months to decide," Moreno-Ocampo said in an interview Wednesday, referring to a pretrial panel made up of judges from Brazil, Ghana and Latvia. "We will request a warrant of arrest, and the judges have to evaluate the evidence." On Thursday, Moreno-Ocampo's office said in a statement that the prosecutor will "summarize the evidence, the crimes and name individual(s) charged" at a news conference Monday in The Hague.

The ICC does not issue formal indictments, but simply presents its charges to the pretrial chamber and asks it to issue an arrest warrant for a suspect.

Moreno-Ocampo has charged at least 11 people since 2004 -- in countries including Congo, Sudan, Uganda and the Central African Republic -- and the pretrial chamber has never refused a public request for an arrest warrant.

The violence in Darfur began in February 2003 when two rebel groups attacked Sudan's Islamic government, claiming a pattern of bias against the region's black African tribes. Khartoum organized a local Arab militia, known as the Janjaweed, and conducted a brutal counterinsurgency campaign that has left more than 300,000 people dead and has driven more than 2 million more from their homes. The Bush administration accused the government of genocide.

Officials familiar with Moreno-Ocampo's investigation said Bashir is unlikely to surrender to the ICC anytime soon. The leader has refused to release to the court two other Sudanese nationals indicted in April 2007, even appointing one of them, Ahmed Haroun, to oversee international peacekeepers and humanitarian relief efforts.

The Bush administration has long opposed the International Criminal Court, fearing it would conduct frivolous investigations of alleged crimes by U.S. service members. But the United States allowed the Security Council to authorize the court to investigate war crimes in Darfur.

Critics of Moreno-Ocampo, including some inside the United Nations, said an arrest warrant may undercut international efforts to negotiate a political settlement between Khartoum and Darfur's rebel groups. But ICC supporters counter that Bashir has never been committed to a political settlement and that he will respond only to tough measures.

"Bashir will certainly use the indictment to justify some awful reactions, such as humanitarian aid restrictions and further barriers" to the joint U.N.-African Union peacekeeping mission in Darfur, said John Prendergast, co-chairman of the Enough Project, an initiative to end crimes against humanity. "But if the international community stands firm and makes it clear that these kinds of responses will only make matters worse for Bashir . . . then he will relent."

ICC advocates contend that such court actions contribute to peace efforts. Previous indictments of world leaders -- such as former Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic and former Liberian president Charles Taylor -- by other U.N. tribunals have ultimately contributed to stability in those countries, said Richard Dicker, director of the international justice office at Human Rights Watch.

"I would never belittle the potential dangers" of such international prosecutions," Dicker said. "It is the prosecutor's job, however, to follow the evidence wherever it leads, regardless of the people in high positions, he investigates. . . . Will it be controversial? You bet. What is at stake here is limiting the impunity of those associated with these horrific events in Darfur since 2003."


Boustany reported from Washington. Correspondent Stephanie McCrummen in Nairobi contributed to this report.

Inside Mugabe's Violent Crackdown


Notes, Witnesses Detail How Campaign Was Conceived and Executed by Leader, Aides

Gen. Constantine Chiwenga, Zimbabwe's military chief, right, congratulates President Robert Mugabe at the swearing-in Sunday. It was Chiwenga's reelection plan, with a military-style campaign against the opposition, that Mugabe rode to victory.




By Craig Timberg
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, July 5, 2008; A01




HARARE, Zimbabwe -- President Robert Mugabe summoned his top security officials to a government training center near his rural home in central Zimbabwe on the afternoon of March 30. In a voice barely audible at first, he informed the leaders of the state security apparatus that had enforced his rule for 28 years that he had lost the presidential vote held the previous day.


Then Mugabe told the gathering he planned to give up power in a televised speech to the nation the next day, according to the written notes of one participant that were corroborated by two other people with direct knowledge of the meeting.


But Zimbabwe's military chief, Gen. Constantine Chiwenga, responded that the choice was not Mugabe's alone to make. According to two firsthand accounts of the meeting, Chiwenga told Mugabe his military would take control of the country to keep him in office or the president could contest a runoff election, directed in the field by senior army officers supervising a military-style campaign against the opposition.


Mugabe, the only leader this country has known since its break from white rule nearly three decades ago, agreed to remain in the race and rely on the army to ensure his victory. During an April 8 military planning meeting, according to written notes and the accounts of participants, the plan was given a code name: CIBD. The acronym, which proved apt in the fevered campaign that unfolded over the following weeks, stood for: Coercion. Intimidation. Beating. Displacement.


In the three months between the March 29 vote and the June 27 runoff election, ruling-party militias under the guidance of 200 senior army officers battered the Movement for Democratic Change, bringing the opposition party's network of activists to the verge of oblivion. By election day, more than 80 opposition supporters were dead, hundreds were missing, thousands were injured and hundreds of thousands were homeless. Morgan Tsvangirai, the party's leader, dropped out of the contest and took refuge in the Dutch Embassy.


This account reveals previously undisclosed details of the strategy behind the campaign as it was conceived and executed by Mugabe and his top advisers, who from that first meeting through the final vote appeared to hold decisive influence over the president.


The Washington Post was given access to the written record by a participant of several private meetings attended by Mugabe in the period between the first round of voting and the runoff election. The notes were corroborated by witnesses to the internal debates. Many of the people interviewed, including members of Mugabe's inner circle, spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of government retribution. Much of the reporting for this article was conducted by a Zimbabwean reporter for The Post whose name is being withheld for security reasons.


What emerges from these accounts is a ruling inner circle that debated only in passing the consequences of the political violence on the country and on international opinion. Mugabe and his advisers also showed little concern in these meetings for the most basic rules of democracy that have taken hold in some other African nations born from anti-colonial independence movements.


Mugabe's party, the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front, took power in 1980 after a protracted guerrilla war. The notes and interviews make clear that its military supporters, who stood to lose wealth and influence if Mugabe bowed out, were not prepared to relinquish their authority simply because voters checked Tsvangirai's name on the ballots.


"The small piece of paper cannot take the country," Solomon Mujuru, the former guerrilla commander who once headed Zimbabwe's military, told the party's ruling politburo on April 4, according to notes of the meeting and interviews with some of those who attended.



'Professional Killers'


The plan's first phase unfolded the week after the high-level meeting, as Mugabe supporters began erecting 2,000 party compounds across the country that would serve as bases for the party militias.


At first, the beatings with whips, striking with sticks, torture and other forms of intimidation appeared consistent with the country's past political violence. Little of it was fatal.


That changed May 5 in the remote farming village of Chaona, located 65 miles north of the capital, Harare. The village of dirt streets had voted for Tsvangirai in the election's first round after decades of supporting Mugabe.


On the evening of May 5 -- three days after Mugabe's government finally released the official results of the March 29 election -- 200 Mugabe supporters rampaged through its streets. By the time the militia finished, seven people were dead and the injured bore the hallmarks of a new kind of political violence.


Women were stripped and beaten so viciously that whole sections of flesh fell away from their buttocks. Many had to lie facedown in hospital beds during weeks of recovery. Men's genitals became targets. The official postmortem report on Chaona opposition activist Aleck Chiriseri listed crushed genitals among the causes of death. Other men died the same way.


At the funerals for Chiriseri and the others, opposition activists noted the gruesome condition of the corpses. Some in the crowds believed soldiers trained in torture were behind the killings, not the more improvisational ruling-party youth or liberation war veterans who traditionally served as Mugabe's enforcers.


"This is what alerted me that now we are dealing with professional killers," said Shepherd Mushonga, a top opposition leader for Mashonaland Central province, which includes Chaona.
Mushonga, a lawyer whose unlined face makes him look much younger than his 48 years, won a seat in parliament in the March vote on the strength of a village-by-village organization that Tsvangirai's party had worked hard to assemble in rural Mashonaland.


After Chaona, Mushonga turned that organization into a defense force for his own village, Kodzwa. Three dozen opposition activists, mostly men in their 20s and 30s, took shifts patrolling the village at night. The men armed themselves with sticks, shovels and axes small enough to slip into their pants pockets, Mushonga said.


The same militias that attacked Chaona worked their way gradually south through the rural district of Chiweshe, hitting Jingamvura, Bobo and, in the predawn hours of May 28, Kodzwa, where about 200 families live between two rivers.


When about 25 ruling-party militia members attempted to enter the village along its two dirt roads, Mushonga said, his patrols blew whistles, a prearranged signal for women, children and the elderly to flee south across one of the rivers to the relative safety of a neighboring village.
Over the next few hours, the two rival groups moved through Kodzwa's dark streets. Shortly after dawn, Mushonga's 46-year-old brother, Leonard, and about 10 other opposition activists cornered five of the ruling-party militia members. One of the militia members was armed with a bayonet, another a traditional club known as a knobkerrie.


In the scuffle, Leonard Mushonga and his group prevailed, beating the five intruders severely. But he said that this small, rare victory revealed evidence that elements of the army had been deployed against them.


One of the ruling-party men, Leonard Mushonga said, carried a military identification badge. In a police report on the incident, which led to the arrest of 26 opposition activists, the soldier was identified as Zacks Kanhukamwe, 47, a member of the Zimbabwe National Army. A second man, Petros Nyguwa, 45, was listed as a sergeant in the army.


He was also listed as a member of Mugabe's presidential guard.



'Terror Brings Results'


The death toll mounted through May, and almost all of the fatalities were opposition activists. Tsvangirai's personal advance man, Tonderai Ndira, 32, was abducted and killed. Police in riot gear raided opposition headquarters in Harare, arresting hundreds of families that had taken refuge there.


Even some of Mugabe's stalwarts grew uneasy, records of the meetings show.


Vice President Joice Mujuru, wife of former guerrilla commander Solomon Mujuru and a woman whose ferocity during the guerrilla war of the 1970s earned her the nickname Spill Blood, warned the ruling party's politburo in a May 14 meeting that the violence might backfire. Notes from that and other meetings, as well as interviews with participants, make clear that she was overruled repeatedly by Chiwenga, the military head, and by former security chief Emerson Mnangagwa.


Mnangagwa, 61, earned his nickname in the mid-1980s overseeing the so-called Gukurahundi, when a North Korea-trained army brigade slaughtered thousands of people in a southwestern region where Mugabe was unpopular. From then on, Mnangagwa was known as the Butcher of Matabeleland.


The ruling party turned to Mnangagwa to manage Mugabe's runoff campaign after first-round results, delayed for five weeks, showed Tsvangirai winning but not with the majority needed to avoid a second round.


The opposition, however, had won a clear parliamentary majority.


In private briefings to Mugabe's politburo, Mnangagwa expressed growing confidence that the violence was doing its job, according to records of the meetings. After Joice Mujuru raised concerns about the brutality in the May 14 meeting, Mnangagwa said only, "Next agenda item," according to written notes and a party official who witnessed the exchange.


At a June 12 politburo meeting at party headquarters, Mnangagwa delivered another upbeat report.


According to one participant, he told the group that growing numbers of opposition activists in Mashonaland Central, Matabeleland North and parts of Masvingo province had been coerced into publicly renouncing their ties with Tsvangirai. Such events were usually held in the middle of the night, and featured the burning of opposition party cards and other regalia.


Talk within the ruling party began predicting a landslide victory in the runoff vote, less than three weeks away.


Mugabe's demeanor also brightened, said some of those who attended the meeting. Before it began, he joked with both Mnangagwa and Joice Mujuru.


It was the first time since the March vote, one party official recalled, that Mugabe laughed in public.



'Nothing to Go Back To'


The opposition's resistance in Chiweshe gradually withered under intensifying attacks by ruling-party militias. After the stalemate in Kodzwa, the militias continued moving south in June, finally reaching Manomano in the region's southwestern corner.
The opposition leader in Manomano was Gibbs Chironga, 44, who had won a seat in the local council as part of Tsvangirai's first-round landslide in the area. The Chirongas were shopkeepers with a busy store in Manomano. To defend that store, they kept a pair of shotguns on hand.
On June 20, a week before the runoff election, Mugabe's militias arrived in Manomano with an arsenal that had grown increasingly advanced as the vote approached.


Some carried AK-47 assault rifles, which are standard issue for Zimbabwe's army. For the attack on Manomano, witnesses counted six of the weapons.


About 150 militia members, some carrying the rifles, circled the Chironga family home. Gibbs Chironga fired warning shots from his shotgun, relatives and other witnesses recalled. Yet the militiamen kept coming. They broke open the ceiling with a barrage of rocks, then used hammers to batter down the walls.



When Gibbs Chironga emerged, a militia member shot him with an AK-47, said Hilton Chironga, his 41-year-old brother, who was wounded by gunfire. Gibbs died soon after.
His brother, sister and mother were beaten, then handcuffed and forced to drink a herbicide that burned their mouths and faces, relatives said.


Both Hilton Chironga and his 76-year-old mother, Nelia Chironga, were taken to the hospital in Harare, barely able to eat or speak. The whereabouts of Gibbs Chironga's sister remain unknown. The family home was burned to the ground.


"There's nothing to go back to at home," Hilton Chironga said softly, a bandage covering the wounds on his face and a pair of feeding tubes snaking into his nostrils.


"Even if I go back, they'll finish me off. That is what they want," he said.


Two days later, as Mugabe's militias intensified their attacks, Tsvangirai dropped out of the race.
Groups of ruling-party youths took over a field on the western edge of downtown Harare where he was attempting to have a rally, and soon after, he announced that the government's campaign of violence had made it impossible for him to continue. Privately, opposition officials said the party organization had been so damaged that they had no hope of winning the runoff vote



On election day, Mugabe's militias drove voters to the polls and tracked through ballot serial numbers those who refused to vote or who cast ballots for Tsvangirai despite his boycott.
The 84-year-old leader took the oath of office two days later, for a sixth time. He waved a Bible in the air and exchanged congratulatory handshakes with Chiwenga, whose reelection plan he had adopted more than two months before, and the rest of his military leaders.


About the same time, a 29-year-old survivor of the first assault in Chaona, Patrick Mapondera, emerged from the hospital. His wife, who had also been badly beaten, was recovering from skin grafts to her buttocks. She could sit again.


Mapondera had been the opposition chairman for Chaona and several surrounding villages. If and when the couple returns home, he said, he does not expect to take up his job again.


"They've destroyed everything," he said.

Photo: Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi -- Associated Press

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Ooh.....I love it!

All-Williams Final at Wimbledon - 1st Since 2003
Venus Williams of the US., returns to Russia's Elena Dementieva, during their Women's semifinal on the Centre Court at Wimbledon, Thursday, July 3 , 2008. (AP Photo/Ian Walton)

Jul 3, 5:40 PM (ET)
By HOWARD FENDRICH(AP)

A spot in her seventh Wimbledon final already secured, Venus Williams headed back to Centre Court to catch the end of the next match.

Scouting? Not really. More like rooting. And when Thursday's second semifinal ended, Williams stood, smiling and applauding for the woman who won, the woman she will have to beat to earn a fifth championship at the All England Club: her younger sister, Serena.

The most unusual and, at times, uncomfortable rivalry in tennis is once more in the spotlight at the pinnacle of the sport: Venus will play Serena in their third all-in-the-family Wimbledon final Saturday.

It's their seventh Grand Slam title match - Serena holds a 5-1 edge over her sister - but first final at any tournament since 2003.

"Our main focus is obviously both of us getting to the final," Venus said. "Then, from there, it's every Williams for themself."

While there are, of course, differences in personality (Venus calls herself a nerd; Serena is more extroverted) and game (Venus' serve is faster, for example, and Serena's return is considered better), the siblings' paths to what will be their 16th head-to-head matchup were remarkably similar.

Neither has lost a set in the tournament, and Venus won her semifinal 6-1, 7-6 (3) over fifth-seeded Elena Dementieva of Russia 6-1, 7-6 (3), before Serena hit 14 aces in a 6-2, 7-6 (5) victory over 133rd-ranked Zheng Jie of China 6-2, 7-6 (5). Coincidentally, each Williams won 80 of the 141 points in her match.

How unsurprising were Thursday's results? Consider this: The sisters are now a combined 100-13 at Wimbledon for their careers; Dementieva and Zheng are a combined 29-13.

"We've both been working extremely hard," said Serena, who holds an 8-7 career edge over Venus. "It's just coming together."

Both have been ranked No. 1, but a combination of injuries and inactivity contributed to Venus being No. 7 now, and Serena No. 6. All of the top four-seeded women were gone by the quarterfinals, the first time that's ever happened at Wimbledon, which cleared the way a bit for the sisters.

Then again, they way they've been playing over these two weeks, and the way they always seem to play on grass, who's to say it would have made a difference?

Back on May 30, when the city was Paris and the surface clay, first Serena, then Venus, lost in the third round at the French Open.

A little more than a month later, defending champion Venus, 28, will be going for her fifth title at Wimbledon, and seventh major overall; Serena, 26, will be going for her third title at Wimbledon, and ninth major overall.

They've combined for 11 finals appearances since 2000 at the grass-court Grand Slam tournament, including when Serena beat Venus for the 2002 and 2003 titles.

"They're both going to show up, and they both want it," said David Witt, Venus' hitting partner, who also has worked with Serena. "So it's special."

One interested party who won't be there Saturday: Richard Williams, the architect of the greatest one-family dynasty in tennis history.

The father and coach who decided to teach his daughters how to swing rackets in Compton, Calif., and has seen them grace the game's greatest stages, hates seeing them slug it out against each other. So he's flying home to the United States. Won't even follow the match on TV.

"I can't stand to watch them play," he said between puffs of a victory cigarillo once the semifinals were over. "I can never do that. It makes me nervous."

It's not hard to fathom how tough it must be to try to beat your sibling, and the all-Williams matchups haven't always brought out their best play - although Serena pointedly objected to that assessment Thursday.

After Dementieva ended her loss to Venus with five consecutive groundstroke errors, she was asked about the final and said she couldn't imagine facing a sibling, adding, "For sure it's going to be a family decision."

That was interpreted by some as a comment similar to what Dementieva said in 2001 following a loss to Venus in the quarterfinals of a tournament at Indian Wells, Calif., setting up a Williams-Williams semifinal. Asked to predict the outcome, Dementieva said then: "I don't know what Richard thinks about it. I think he will decide who's going to win."

Dementieva's comment Thursday was relayed by a reporter to Venus, who said: "Any mention of that is extremely disrespectful for who I am, what I stand for, and my family."

Later, Dementieva issued a statement through the WTA saying English is not her first language and clarifying her comments: "What I meant was it is a unique situation for a family to be in, to be playing for a Grand Slam title."

That it is. The only other sisters to play each other in a major final were Maud and Lillian Watson, who met to decide the very first Wimbledon championship - all the way back in 1884.
"I personally want everything that Venus has," Serena said. "We're good at this now. We just leave everything on the court. This is the finals of Wimbledon. Who doesn't want it?"

While No. 1 Roger Federer plays Marat Safin in one men's semifinal Friday, and No. 2 Rafael Nadal meets Rainer Schuettler - who needed two days to finish his five-set quarterfinal victory over Arnaud Clement - in the other, the schedule also includes the women's doubles semifinals.
The Williams sisters will play Nathalie Dechy and Casey Dellacqua in that event, then return to the apartment they're sharing during the tournament.

Unlike any other two opponents the day before squaring off in a major final, they'll share a table for dinner. While Venus might later unwind by reading a book and Serena probably instead will opt to watch a TV show, it's not as though they'll avoid speaking to each other, even if the topic most likely won't be tennis.

"I mean, we're living together. It would have been kind of weird if we didn't talk to each other," Serena said, then added with a mischievous twinkle in her eye: "Maybe I should try that. It will be like really intimidating or something."

Sometime Saturday afternoon, weather permitting, one Williams sister or the other will be able to declare that she is, at least for the moment, the best player in the world - and in her family.

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