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Golf's world top 10 has never been as strong as it is now

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Golf's world top 10 has never been as strong as it is now When Graeme Storm stepped off the last green at Vilamoura in October, having just missed the par putt he needed to retain his European Tour card, his world must have been shattered.

Storm had been among a number of players still vying to make the top 111 on the order of merit – the cut-off point for keeping membership – at the last qualifying event, the Portugal Masters.

That missed par putt meant he finished 112th on the money list, an agonising 100 points behind fellow Englishman David Horsey, and faced the ordeal of qualifying school.

*Read more*: Stenson and the Open: Sam Torrance's review of 2016

Storm received an early Christmas present from Patrick Reed a couple of weeks later, however, when the American declined to play the required number of events to stay in contention for a card.

Now, just over two months later, Storm is celebrating his first European Tour title for nine and a half years, having seen off Rory McIlroy at the South Africa Open on Sunday.

It is fairytale stuff and I can’t remember something like this happening before. Storm, 38, is a lovely guy and a real journeyman. The dream continues for him and it’s a great, heart-warming story.

He won it really well, too. When Rory took him to a play-off he stuck to his guns, making par at three extra holes until McIlroy faltered.

*McIlroy off to a strong start*

McIlroy was also excellent and he’ll be delighted with how well he played with his new clubs – a mixture from different manufacturers after Nike pulled out of manufacturing.

His putting was particularly pleasing. He was ranked ninth for putts per round, and that’s a very positive sign.

He mentioned back pain and that is always a concern, but provided it is nothing serious I would certainly be expecting a big performance this week in Abu Dhabi, where he has been runner-up four times.

It didn’t happen for him this time but he was a real gentleman about it. On this occasion, let’s leave the fairytales for Storm.

*Thomas cracks art of winning*Thomas won in Hawaii for the second week running (Source: Getty)

I was playing alongside the great Tom Watson at Birkdale once when I asked him what the secret was to keeping his motivation.

“At an early age I learned to win,” he said. After his explosive start to the season, I think the same can now be said of Justin Thomas.

The 23-year-old American came close to blowing it at the Tournament of Champions earlier this month before holding on to win his second title of the 2017 PGA Tour campaign.

There were no such wobbles this time, as Thomas made it back-to-back wins in Hawaii with an incredible, record-breaking victory at the Sony Open.

He started with rounds of 59 and 64 and went on to win by seven strokes, setting a new best of 72 holes on the PGA Tour of 253.

Thomas has it all going for him: he is as fit as a butcher’s dog, hits the ball a mile and is good in every department.

He is a friend of Jordan Spieth and I can absolutely see his career going in the same direction as the two-time Major winner. This start opens the door for him to have a great year; let’s see how he does.

Justin Rose got within three or four shots of Thomas on the last round at times and it was great to see him play so well and suffering no obvious effects of his recent back troubles.

With Thomas dazzling, Hideki Matsuyama also in stellar form, McIlroy starting well, Spieth showing signs of recovery and Tiger Woods set to continue his comeback, these are exciting times.

I don’t think the world top 10 has ever been as strong as it is now. Any of that group – which also includes Jason Day, Henrik Stenson and Dustin Johnson – could realistically be No1.

It’s shaping up to a fascinating year. Reported by City A.M. 7 hours ago.

Sport24.co.za | France to play All Blacks, Springboks and Japan in November

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France will play New Zealand, South Africa and Japan on consecutive weekends in November, announced the French rugby federation. Reported by News24 7 hours ago.

PwC: CEO confidence rises despite new risks and uncertainty

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· Confidence in company growth rises
· Fifty two per cent of CEOs plan to increase number of jobs
· Concerns about over regulation and lack of key skills at record levels
· CEOs feel globalisation has done little to solve income inequality

DAVOS, Switzerland, Jan. 16, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- While CEOs around the world feel they have plenty to worry about in the year ahead, their confidence in their own growth prospects and their outlook for the global economy are back on the rise.

Graphics accompanying this announcement are available at

http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/77eaac3e-f05b-4fc2-b82a-ee926f9078e1

http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f27a6ebc-f247-494a-bb07-e4507f11b772

In PwC's 20 ^th  annual survey of CEOs worldwide, 38% (2016: 35%) are very confident about their company's growth prospects in the next 12 months while 29 ^%  (2016:27%) believe global economic growth will pick up in 2017.

The findings released today at the World Economic Forum in Davos show that while business leaders are more positive in their outlook, their levels of concern about economic uncertainty (82%), over-regulation (80%), availability of key skills (77%) remain very high. Also worries about protectionism are growing, with 59% of CEO concerned about protectionism, increasing to 64% for CEOs in the United States and Mexico.

While positive on the benefits of globalisation in building the free movement of capital, goods, and people, CEOs question whether globalisation has done anything to close the gap between rich and poor or mitigated the issue of climate change. This is in contrast to the first PwC CEO survey in 1998 when CEOs were positive about the drivers of globalisation.

Bob Moritz, Global Chairman, PwC, comments:

"Despite a tumultuous 2016, CEO confidence is moving back up - albeit slowly and still a long way from the levels we saw back in 2007. But there are signs of optimism right across the globe, including in the UK and US, where despite predictions of a Trump slump and a Brexit exit, CEOs confidence in their company's growth are up from 2016. And that mood is reflected elsewhere, with more CEOs across the world targeting the US and UK for investment than a year ago.

"While CEOs are more confident in the opportunity for growth, this year they told us these three concerns that were top of mind: a people and technology strategy that creates a workforce fit for the digital age; preserving trust in their businesses in a world of increasingly virtual interactions; and making globalisation work for everyone by engaging ever more with society and collaborating to find solutions. All topics that will be high up the Davos agenda."

*Confidence in revenue growth climbs*
In sharp contrast to 2016, CEO's confidence in their own one year revenue growth is on the rise in nearly every major country across the world.with India (71%), Brazil, where confidence levels have more than doubled (57%), Australia (43%) and the UK (41%) topping the table. Confidence also rose by 11 points in China to 35%, 6 points in the US to 39% and 3 points in Germany to 31%. In Switzerland confidence levels have more than doubled to 34%.

Bucking the confidence trend are Mexico and Japan where confidence levels have dropped, markedly so in Japan where confidence has plunged from 28% in 2016 to 14% today.

When asked what drives growth, organic expansion tops the agenda for over three quarters of CEOs (79%) in the coming year, while 41% are planning new merger and acquisition activity in 2017 and nearly a quarter (23%) of all CEOs intend to strengthen their innovation capabilities to capitalise on new opportunities.

*Where CEOs will look for growth*
PwC's first global CEO survey showed emerging markets - including China and India - as a sure bet for success. But the changeability of markets, exacerbated by currency volatility, has caused CEOs to turn to a greater mix of countries. This year's survey shows the US, Germany and the UK have become bigger priorities, while enthusiasm for investing in Brazil, India, Russia and Argentina has lessened from three years ago.

The top five most important countries for growth identified are the US (1), China (2), Germany (3), the UK (4) and Japan (5) with the UK rising in popularity as a growth destination with CEOs from the US (+4%), China (+11%), Germany (+8%) and Switzerland (+25%).

Shanghai, New York, London, and Beijing were also identified as the top four cities most important to an organization's overall growth prospects over the next 12 months.

*Globalisation*
58% of business leaders think it's become harder to balance globalisation with rising trends in protectionism. The concerns contrast with their views in the first PwC CEO survey which reported 'the typical global corporation has as much freedom of trade as it needs'.

For the past 20 years CEOs have been largely positive about the contribution of globalisation to the free movement of capital, goods, and people. However, this year's survey respondents are sceptical that it has mitigated climate change or helped close the gap between rich and poor. This is similar to the public's view on these issues in a separate consumer poll commissioned by PwC of over 5000 people in 22 countries.

Only 38% of the public believed globalisation has had a largely positive impact on improving the movement of capital, people, goods and information, compared with 60% of CEOs. Almost two thirds (64%) of the public believe globalisation has helped create full and meaningful employment, contrasting with over three quarters of CEOs (76%). The public are also less convinced than business leaders that globalisation has created, to a large extent, a skilled and educated workforce (29% of the public vs 37% of CEOs).

"Public discontent has the potential to erode trust which is needed for long term sustainable performance. The real challenge here though, isn't just one of how CEOs navigate, it's about the need for CEOs to have a deeper, two-way relationship with stakeholders, customers, employees, and the public. Understanding the root cause of the potential discontent or perception is a critical first step towards communicating the benefits of business for society. There's a lot at stake if we do not achieve inclusive global growth," comments Bob Moritz.

*Technology and Trust*
CEOs tell us that technology is now inseparable from business' reputation, skills and recruitment, competition and growth. Almost a quarter believe technology will completely reshape competition in their industry over the next five years (23%).

In an increasingly digital-driven world, technology has created a new dynamic between business and customers bringing huge benefits for both.  However on the flip side 69% of CEOs say it is harder to gain and keep people's trust in this environment and 87% believe risks from use of social media could have a negative impact on the level of trust in their industry.  91% of CEOs also agree data privacy and ethics issues could impact people's trust in their organisations in the next five years.

Twenty years ago, trust wasn't high on the business radar for CEOs. 15 years ago only 12% of CEOs thought public trust in companies had greatly declined. This year, 58% worry that a lack of trust in business will harm their company's growth, up from 37% in 2013.

After several high-profile technology and security issues for big companies, CEOs unsurprisingly identify cyber security, data privacy breaches and IT disruptions as the top three technology threats to stakeholder trust.

"CEOs expect it to become harder to sustain trust in the digital era. But competitive advantage will go to those with the greatest capacity to turn technology into their strength when coupled with the ability to connect with their stakeholders in an on-going relationship grounded in trust," added Bob Moritz.

*Skills and jobs*
Concern about skills has more than doubled in 20 years (from 31% concerned in 1998 to 77% in 2017) and human capital is a top three business priority, with diversity and inclusiveness and workforce mobility amongst the strategies being used to address future skills needs. Skills availability is a concern for over three quarters (77%) of business leaders, and is highest for CEOs in Africa (80%), and Asia Pacific (82%).

Over half of CEOs (52% vs 48% 2016) expect to increase headcount over next 12 months. The UK (63%), China (60%), India (67%) and Canada (64%) are amongst those with the most ambitious hiring plans.  Looking by industry it is CEOs in the Asset Management (64%), Healthcare (64%) and Technology (59%) that have the most ambitious hiring plans, with CEOs in the Government and public sector (32%) having the least.

While only 16% of business leaders surveyed expect to reduce their overall employee base, CEOs say that 80% of those affected jobs will be impacted in some way by the use of technology or automation. Business leaders in Canada (100%), US (95%), Germany (93%), Australia (92%), and Brazil (91%) see technology having the greatest impact.

Over half of business leaders interviewed (52%) are already exploring the benefits of how humans and machines can work together, and two out five (39%) are considering the impact of artificial intelligence on future skills needs.

With the speed of technological change a concern for 70% of CEOs, it's no surprise that skills in creativity and innovation, leadership and emotional intelligence are identified as the most valuable skills, that CEOs are finding it difficult to recruit. Digital and STEM skills are a recruitment issue for over half of business leaders.

Bob Moritz, Global Chairman, PwC concludes:

"CEO's are concerned that key skill shortages will impair their company's growth potential, relevance and sustainability.  And it's soft skills that they value the most. Innovation and relationship skills can't be coded.  So to drive the change CEOs need - thinking carefully and actioning accordingly - a balance between technology and irreplaceable skills in their people is key.  Managing expectations with stakeholders will help enable the needed trust to survive and thrive. Bottom line - prioritizing the human element in a more virtual world will be a pre-requisite for future success."

*Notes to editors:*

1. This survey was carried out between September and December 2016. 1379 CEOs responded from 79 countries, to online, postal, face to face and phone interviews. 57% worked in privately owned companies, 43% in publicly listed companies. 36% worked at companies with revenues over $1bn PA; 38% between $101-$999bn PA; and 21% with revenues of less than $100m.
2. Growth confidence: The highest levels of confidence in 12 month growth for companies was recorded in 2007 - 52% of CEOs said they were very confidence of growth in the next 12 months. The lowest was in 2009 (21%). The highest levels of three year confidence previously recorded was 51% of CEOs (very confident) in 2011, similar to this year's survey. 2014 recorded the highest ever levels of CEO confidence in global economic growth improving (44%).
3. The public survey took place in December in 22 countries - USA, Canada, UK, France, Germany, Netherlands, China & Hong Kong, Italy, Spain, Russia, Australia, Japan, India, Brazil, South Korea, Mexico, Sweden, Switzerland, South Africa, Singapore, and United Arab Emirates.
4. List of country/regional CEO saying they are very confident of 12 month growth.

*Very confident of short-term revenue growth*
* * *2017* *2016* *2015* *2014*
India 71 % 64 % 62 % 49 %
Brazil 57 % 24 % 30 % 42 %
Romania 52 % 50 % 44 % 39 %
Spain 50 % 54 % 35 % 23 %
Australia 43 % 35 % 43 % 34 %
UK 41 % 33 % 39 % 27 %
Argentina 40 % 42 % 17 % 10 %
US 39 % 33 % 46 % 36 %
Denmark 39 % 30 % 33 % 44 %
Mexico 38 % 46 % 50 % 51 %
*Global* *38* *%* *35* *%* *39* *%* *39* *%*
Canada 38 % 31 % 36 % 27 %
Italy 38 % 20 % 20 % 27 %
Nordic 37 % 31 % 26 % ***
China 35 % 24 % 36 % 48 %
Switzerland 34 % 16 % 24 % 42 %
South Africa 33 % 37 % 39 % 25 %
ASEAN** 32 % 38 % 47 % 45 %
Germany 31 % 28 % 35 % 33 %
Russia 31 % 26 % 16 % 53 %
Africa* 28 % 42 % *** ***
Hong Kong 27 % *** *** ***
Japan 14 % 28 % 27 % 27 %
Venezuela 13 % *** *** ***

*    Africa excludes South Africa
**  The ASEAN countries in which interviews were conducted are: Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam 
*** Not available

1. List of CEOs planning job increases by industry.

*Percentage of CEOs expected to boost headcount*
* * *2017* *2016* *2015* *2014*
Asset and  Wealth Management 64 % 65 % 61 % 58 %
Healthcare 64 % 56 % 59 % 53 %
Technology 59 % 67 % 55 % 63 %
Business services 57 % 51 % 56 % 62 %
Hospitality & Leisure 55 % 53 % 45 % 51 %
Mining 55 % 45 % 52 % 25 %
Industrial Manufacturing 54 % 47 % 53 % 46 %
Retail 53 % 51 % 46 % 51 %
Transport & Logistics 53 % 51 % 49 % 40 %
Communications 51 % 48 % 40 % 52 %
Power & Utilities 51 % 42 % 36 % 36 %
Engineering & Construction 50 % 42 % 51 % 51 %
Entertainment & Media 48 % 39 % 46 % 53 %
Pharmaceuticals & Life Sciences 46 % 64 % 58 % 44 %
Banking & Capital Markets 45 % 43 % 53 % 52 %
Automotive 43 % 48 % 49 % 45 %
Insurance 41 % 49 % 50 % 59 %
Metals 41 % 32 % 41 % 22 %
Energy (includes Oil & Gas) 41 % *** *** ***
Chemicals 40 % 46 % 50 % 49 %
Consumer Goods 40 % 41 % 40 % 46 %
Forest, Paper & Packaging 35 % 36 % 27 % 45 %
Government/public services 32 % *** *** ***

*** Not available

* About PwC  *
At PwC, our purpose is to build trust in society and solve important problems. We're a network of firms in 157 countries with more than 223,000 people who are committed to delivering quality in assurance, advisory and tax services. Find out more and tell us what matters to you by visiting us at  www.pwc.com .

PwC refers to the PwC network and/or one or more of its member firms, each of which is a separate legal entity. Please see  www.pwc.com/structure  for further details.

© 2017 PwC. All rights reserved Contact:
Mike Davies (on site at Davos), PwC
Mobile: +44 7803 974 136
Email: mike.davies@pwc.com
More details: http://press.pwc.com, ceosurvey.pwc
Follow/retweet: @pwc

--------------------This announcement is distributed by NASDAQ OMX Corporate Solutions on behalf of NASDAQ OMX Corporate Solutions clients.

The issuer of this announcement warrants that they are solely responsible for the content, accuracy and originality of the information contained therein.

Source: PwC via GlobeNewswire

HUG#2071214 Reported by GlobeNewswire 7 hours ago.

Sports › France to play All Blacks, South Africa and Japan in rugby

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France will host Japan for the first time in 44 years for the final test match of its autumn campaign in November. The French rugby federation says it will be Japan's first test in France since a 30-18 loss to the Tricolors in 1973 in the southwestern city of Bordeaux.… Reported by Japan Today 3 hours ago.

South Africa Ford recalls Kugas over fires

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South Africa Ford recalls Kugas over fires US car giant recalls more than 4,500 vehicles in South Africa after dozens of Kugas catch fire. Reported by BBC News 6 hours ago.

Did you know?

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Gert “Hottie” van Heerden a former middleweight and light-heavyweight champion of South Africa and Willie Ludick a former welterweight and middleweight champion became lay preachers for the Full Gospel Church. Reported by SuperSport 6 hours ago.

Crocodiles maul tour guide to death at farm in South Africa

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Johan Burger was found dead by colleagues when they arrived for the morning shift Reported by Independent 5 hours ago.

A New Problem Emerges For The Davos Elite

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A New Problem Emerges For The Davos Elite Last night we reported that while snacking on $40 hotdogs, the global financial, political and entertainment elite will be "struggling for answers" and cowering in "silent fear" as the world's most powerful people face a force they have never encountered before - the rising tide of populism, first demonstrated by the "unexpected" Brexit vote and subsequently by the "shocking" election of Trump. As Moises Naim of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace put it, "*there is a consensus that something huge is going on, global and in many respects unprecedented. But we don't know what the causes are, nor how to deal with it." *

Adding to the farcical nature of this year's Davos shindig is that, while one of the main topics of discussion is "populism" and social and wealth inequality, overnight a new Oxfam study revealed that not only 8 people own the same amount of wealth as (the poorer) half of the world, but that *since 2015, the richest 1% has owned more wealth than the rest of the planet*. It is expected that many of the "eight people" highlighted by Oxfam will be present at Davos.

And while in years past Davos was eager to whistle past the graveyard, and discuss in broad terms the state of the world, ignoring its own role in the unprecedented wealth divide, this year's Davos conference which is officially starting in just a few hours, is facing more immediate problems which it can no longer afford to ignore.

One of these is that trust in governments, companies, and thus the executives present at the Forum, has plunged over the past year as ballots from the United States to Britain to the Philippines have rocked political establishments and scandals hit business. Trust in the media itself, meant to be an objective and impartial observer of the Davos boondoggle, yet sadly captured, has likewise crashed to record lows across all age groups.

*As such, one major problem facing Davos, is one of loss of credibility*, as the majority of people now believe the economic and political system is failing them, according to the annual Edelman Trust Barometer, released on Monday ahead of the Jan. 17-20 World Economic Forum.

A simpler way of putting it: *"There's a sense that the system is broken," *Richard Edelman, head of the communications marketing firm that commissioned the research, told Reuters.

And it's not just the poor who have lost faith: "*The most shocking statistic of this whole study is that half the people who are high-income, college-educated and well-informed also believe the system doesn't work*."

As Reuters puts it, the 3,000 business, political and academic leaders meeting in the Swiss Alps this week find themselves increasingly out of step with many voters and populist leaders around the world who distrust elites. And this time the increasingly angry world is closely watching.

Governments and the media are now trusted by only 41 and 43 percent of people respectively, with confidence in news outlets down particularly sharply after a year in which "post-truth" become the Oxford Dictionaries Word of the Year. Trust in business was slightly higher, at 52 percent, but it too has declined amid scandals, including Volkswagen's rigged diesel emission tests and Samsung Electronics' fire-prone smartphones.

The credibility of chief executives has fallen in every country surveyed, reaching a low of 18 percent in Japan, while the German figure was 28 percent and the U.S. 38 percent.

Trust in governments fell in 14 of the countries surveyed, with South Africa, where Davos regular President Jacob Zuma has faced persistent corruption allegations, ranked bottom with just 15 percent support.

Making matters worse, according to a PwC survey released at Davos, even the global business elite is starting to lose oses confidence in the benefits of globalization, i.e. the very bread and butter of the people present at the world's biggest echo chamber symposium.

*Which leads us to the second core problem*: *that of an unprecedented disconnect between "Davos Man" and the real world*, and nowhere is this more obvious than in the participants themselves.

As Bloomberg puts it, while "the top executives, financiers, academics and politicians making their way up the mountain to the World Economic Forum will be talking a lot about such non-establishment leaders as President-elect Donald Trump, France’s National Front chief Marine Le Pen and Italian populist Beppe Grillo of the Five Star Movement, *they won’t be meeting them. Not one of the leaders bent on overturning the world order as Davos has designed it will be present*."

So much for Davos learning from its mistakes, or truly seeking to reach out to its sworn nemesis: those who have been elected because they represent everything Davos is not.

Still, these s0-called " upstarts will loom over the proceedings, Bloomberg notes. "Trump, who won't have an official representative there, has expressed strong feelings about some of the countries sending delegations, including his own."

Meanwhile, Europe’s populist leaders, for their part, have "their own view of the annual gathering of the rich, the powerful, the famous  *and the sycophantic.*"

And yet, despite the clear and present danger from global populism what does Davos believe is the biggest threat facing the world in 2017?

*"Extreme Weather."*



Attendees appear to be less focused on Trump’s presidency or on upcoming elections in France, the Netherlands, Germany and possibly Italy than on other global concerns. The forum’s annual survey on the most likely risks for 2017 found that “extreme weather events” was the top worry. “Failed national governance,” the closest category to such surprise events last year as Brexit and Trump’s election, wasn’t in the top five, although it placed third in 2015.



Adding to the surreal nature of this year's meeting, *no economic risks have even made it into the top 5 "risk" categories for the second year in a row.*

While we would be the first to acknowledge that no tangible change in the world can take place without these most important and influential decision-makers sitting down and tackling pressing global issues, what is clear is that the biggest problem facing Davos may also be the simplest, and most reflexive one: a complete failure to diagnose and isolate the biggest problem facing the world at this moment is: *the utter cluelessness of Davos itself.* Unfortunately, we see no reason why and how this could change. Reported by Zero Hedge 5 hours ago.

Rory McIlroy has stress fracture in rib, out of Abu Dhabi Championship

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After a runner-up finish in South Africa, we might not see the No. 2 golfer in the world again for a bit Reported by CBS Sports 5 hours ago.

News24.com | I'm not interested in being president - Madonsela

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Former Public Protector Thuli Madonsela says she has no desire to become the president of South Africa. Reported by News24 5 hours ago.

Golf-McIlroy out of Abu Dhabi Championship with rib injury

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Jan 16 (Reuters) - World number two Rory McIlroy has withdrawn from the Abu Dhabi Championship after tests on Monday showed he picked up a rib injury in South Africa last week, the European Tour said. Reported by Reuters India 4 hours ago.

McIlroy out of Abu Dhabi Championship

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McIlroy out of Abu Dhabi Championship World No 2 Rory McIlroy has withdrawn from the Abu Dhabi Championship after tests on Monday showed he picked up a rib injury in South Africa last week, the European Tour said. Reported by SuperSport 5 hours ago.

Sport24.co.za | SA relay team prepare for Tokyo 2020 Games

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Athletics South Africa has announced a 33-member national relay preparation squad for the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games. Reported by News24 4 hours ago.

Obama's Hesitation To Free An Elderly Political Prisoner Is Shameful

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A 74-year-old Puerto Rican man sits in federal prison today having served 34 years, twelve of them in solitary confinement. Research shows that at that age the likelihood of recidivism, should he be released, is less than you or I committing a federal offense, even if we have never committed a previous crime. He has asked the president for executive clemency.

I ask you, President Obama: When it comes to Puerto Rico, who in the world are you listening to?

Oscar is a veteran of the armed forces and is serving a grossly disproportionate sentence, and yet he has never been convicted of any act of violence. His only crimes were for conspiracy -- 55 years for seditious conspiracy in 1981, and an additional 15 years for conspiracy to escape in 1987. Serious charges -- but are they worth 34 years of imprisonment?

If President Obama does not commute his sentence now, right now, he may not be released until he reaches 80. His call for freedom has been seconded by Nobel laureates Desmond Tutu, Rigoberta Menchu and Mairead Maguire.

So, I ask you, Mr. President, after you have crusaded against disproportionately long criminal sentences, who is counseling you to deny clemency to this one senior citizen?

He is an avid supporter of Puerto Rico's independence from the United States. In 2016, the island's status as a colony of the United States has never been clearer. Congress passed a law that denied Puerto Rico immediate access to a bankruptcy reorganization of its massive debt and established a seven-person board to completely take over its finances and budgetary authority.

The executive branch argued to the Supreme Court that federal power over Puerto Rico was so omnipotent, that effectively, Puerto Rico's constitution could be undone by Congress if it thought necessary. And the Supreme Court ruled in two cases that Puerto Rico has no sovereign power independent of whatever power Congress decides to grant it because it is an unincorporated territory of the United States.

That's code for Puerto Rico is a colony of the United States. It does not control its currency, its economy, its trading partners, its shipping vessels, its immigration, or its borders. The federal courts that operate on the island can impose the federal death penalty even when Puerto Rico's constitution bans it.

The 74-year-old prisoner who sits in an Indiana penitentiary has railed against this colonial status of Puerto Rico. He was imprisoned for his ideas and he was previously offered clemency by President Bill Clinton. He refused because the offer did not include other Puerto Rican political prisoners at the time. All of them have been released since. Mercy here is appropriate since granting presidential clemency for prisoners who advocate for Puerto Rico's independence is not a complete rarity. President Harry Truman, Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton have all done it.

When it comes to Puerto Rico, President Obama is not listening to its political or religious union, or civic leaders. They have all demanded the release of this prisoner. He is not listening to the people of Puerto Rico or its diaspora -- in December over 100,000 of them signed a petition supporting executive clemency in this case. He is not listening to Puerto Rican members of Congress like Nydia Velazquez, Luis Guitierrez, Jose Serrano or the representative from the Island they have all demanded immediate release.

Mr. President, you are not listening to your own words when you eulogized Nelson Mandela at his memorial in South Africa in 2013. You spoke of Mandela's activism for freedom, inspiring both him and the whole world and then he spoke of Mandela's reconciliatory outlook: "It took a man like Madiba to free not the prisoner, but the jailer as well... to teach that reconciliation is not just a matter of ignoring a cruel past, but a means of confronting it with inclusion, generosity and truth."

President Obama, the name of this Puerto Rican political prisoner is Oscar López Rivera. He is widely considered to be the Puerto Rican Mandela, and he has now served more time than Mandela did in South African prisons.

I personally met with Oscar López Rivera in prison in 2015. López Rivera holds no rancor, and was the picture of peace and benevolence. His mind was clear and spirit intact. His return to his cell that day as I exited the visiting room was an affront to everything I have learned about justice in our country.

Mr. President, listen to him, listen to us. For in commuting his sentence, it will not only free Oscar López Rivera, but also indict very system that unjustly jails him.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 3 hours ago.

McIlroy out of Abu Dhabi Championship with rib injury

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(Reuters) - World number two Rory McIlroy has withdrawn from the Abu Dhabi Championship after tests on Monday showed he picked up a rib injury in South Africa last week, the European Tour said. Reported by Reuters 2 hours ago.

Ciara Explains Her Decision To Abstain From Sex With Russell Wilson: 'It's Important To Have Standards'

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Ciara has no regrets about practicing abstinence with her then fiancé Russell Wilson! While she received a bit of backlash for their decision, the songstress is explaining why it was perfect choice for them to wait until marriage! Photos: All The Stars To Wed In 2016 Speaking to the February issue of Cosmo South Africa, the preggers starlet [...] Reported by Perez Hilton 7 minutes ago.

News24.com | Morgan Deane 'has to stay here for her kids'

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Morgan Deane has to stay in South Africa because her children are here, her lawyer has said in the Cape Town Magistrate’s Court. Reported by News24 11 hours ago.

Mother slides out of baby’s room on her back

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Mother slides out of baby’s room on her back Footage shows Caryn Morris, of Durban in KwaZulu-Natal Province, Eastern South Africa, slithering out of her baby's room on her back so she doesn't disturb him. Reported by MailOnline 10 hours ago.

WMFDP: Globalization Prominent With Rise of 250M International Migrants

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In a climate where rhetoric about borders, immigration and trade agreements continues to dominate the public consciousness, a review of emerging economies indicates that the march of globalization isn’t stopping any time soon.

PORTLAND, OR (PRWEB) January 17, 2017

GLOBALIZATION: The process in which people, ideas and goods spread throughout the world, spurring more interaction and integration between cultures, governments and economies.

Globalization is one of those words, like gentrification, that by its very nature stirs deep emotion on a personal and professional level. Those emotions run the gamut, from elation to antagonism, and the only constant is that people have an opinion about it.

At the outset of 2017, there are several examples of globalization. The World Bank estimated the number of international migrants rose to over 250 million in 2015. More than 38 percent of them moved between developing countries in 2013. (1) The World Trade Organization (WTO) reports that 52 percent of developing countries’ exports went to other emerging economies in 2014, up from 38 percent in 1995. Trade between China and India was $1.7 billion in 1997, while it had reached $72 billion by 2014. Finally, India’s trade with Africa rose 60 percent in four years, to almost $48 billion, for the 2014-2015 fiscal year.

“With globalization comes the necessity to examine how companies deal with issues of diversity. This has been a big problem in the corporate world for some time now, and it must rise to the occasion,” says Bill Proudman, co-founder of White Men As Full Diversity Partners (WMFDP).

CEOs and C-Suite executives are predominately white and male. WMFDP works with multinational firms to foster diversity & inclusion, taking an approach different than most, if not all, diversity consultancies. “When we work directly with leaders in the dominant group, we find that they want to help create more inclusive workplace culture, but often they’re unsure of how and where to begin. They step back from their leadership role and rely on others – typically women or people of other ethnicities – to work for change. Yet, when leaders take an active role, we’re more likely to see tangible, improvements in diversity and inclusion,” said Proudman.

Proudman is quick to point out that while globalization can spur cultural integration, its acceleration can breed conflict – Brexit and the current American political climate being the most notable examples.

Women’s workplace advocacy group Catalyst, a partner with WMFDP, (2) in their Inclusive Leadership: The View From Six Countries report, found that in India for example, 62 percent of innovation is driven by employee perceptions of inclusion. (3)

The link between diversity and innovation is not a new idea, but when company metrics prove it, people in high places take notice, like in the United Kingdom, where a study revealed that senior executive income rose 3.5 percent with every 10 percent increase in gender diversity.

65 percent of 321 executives of global firms surveyed by Forbes Insights claimed to have a plan in place to recruit a diverse workforce — but only 44 percent include staff retention programs.

“It costs a company about five to 10 thousand dollars to replace an hourly wage employee, and for executives it’s ten times that. Retaining good people is all about fostering a culture of inclusion, creativity and innovation. It makes moral sense and it also makes fiscal sense,” says Proudman.

No matter the political climate, the worldwide barometer tells us that globalization will continue to roll out across border and political lines. The numbers also indicate that the ratio of conflict to harmony will largely be determined by those that cultivate diversity and inclusion at every echelon.

About White Men As Full Diversity Partners (WMFDP):

White Men as Full Diversity Partners (WMFDP) is a diversity and Leadership Development firm founded by Bill Proudman, Michael Welp and Jo-Ann Morris in 1996 in Portland, Oregon. WMFDP takes an unorthodox approach toward eradicating bias and discrimination in the workplace. Their client list includes Alaska Airlines, Dell, Lockheed Martin, Northwestern Mutual, Chevron Drilling & Completion, The Nature Conservancy, Mass Mutual, and more. The majority of C-level executives are white and male, and they are frequently omitted from a vital role in diversity and equality. Proudman and Welp observed that these critical subjects were not being taken to the doorstep of these leaders – all to the detriment of struggling minorities and the economy as a whole. With a background that includes extensive field work in post-Apartheid South Africa in the early 1990’s, Proudman and Welp have dedicated the last two decades to educating and engaging leaders of any race, color, gender or orientation. Welp, PhD, is the author of the book “Four Days to Change” which chronicles the journey from rural South Africa, to the boardrooms of America – all to lay the groundwork of a global paradigm shift.

1. Schuman, Michael, “Brexit Won’t Stop Globalization,” Bloomberg, July 13, 2016.

2. "Testimonials." White Men As Full Diversity Partners. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Jan. 2017.

3. Irde, Shachi, “The Growing Importance of Creating an Inclusive Workplace,” Association for Talent Development (ADT), December 20, 2016. Reported by PRWeb 11 hours ago.

Vuvuzelas: a noisy but welcome return at AFCON 2017

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Vuvuzelas – plastic horns – which blow loud monotone notes, shot to global attention seven years ago during the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. Reported by euronews 10 hours ago.
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