Tag Archives: Fiji

Fiji regime suspends opposition party

Fiji’s military regime said it had suspended one of the South Pacific nation’s main opposition parties for failing to meet its financial obligations.

The Fiji Labour Party (FLP) had refused to pay a FJ$6,400 ($3,400) bill to cover the cost of publishing its financial data, Registrar of Political Parties Mohammad Saneem said.

“Unfortunately, this seems to have been a deliberate decision by FLP leadership to not abide by the decree. It is now up to them to remedy their breach,” Saneem said.

He said the FLP, one of only three opposition parties the regime has approved to contest elections scheduled for September next year, had been suspended with immediate effect.

Saneem said the party would be deregistered unless it paid the bill within 60 days, which would bar it from the first vote since military leader Voreqe Bainimarama seized power in a 2006 coup.

Fiji had 17 opposition parties until the military tightened registration criteria earlier this year, lifting the membership required to qualify 40-fold from 128 to 5,000.

Only three parties met the new benchmark, the FLP, National Federation Party and the Social Democratic Liberal Party.

FLP leader Mahendra Chaudhry could not be contacted for comment on his party’s suspension.

Bainimarama rules by decree but has said he plans to create his own party and run for prime minister in next year’s election.

After seizing power, he tore up Fiji’s constitution and curbed freedom of speech and assembly, as well as muzzling local media.

International observers, including regional powers Australia and New Zealand, have said they will be closely watching developments in Fiji to see if the elections are conducted in a free and fair manner.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Looking to Lure Younger Men, Old Spice Expands Bar Soap Line

By The Associated Press

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By MAE ANDERSON

NEW YORK — Old Spice is raising the bar, literally.

The aftershave brand, which is known for appealing to more mature men, is introducing a line of scented soap bars this month.

It may seem odd that Procter & Gamble Co. (PG), which has fought in recent years to refashion its 75-year-old Old Spice brand to target younger men, is rolling out something that some people consider antiquated.

After all, not much has changed with bar soap since P&G introduced Ivory soap in 1879. Body wash has eclipsed bar soap sales in 2010, according to research firm Euromonitor International.

Bar soap sales edged up just 1 percent in the U.S. between 2007 and 2012 to $1.62 billion, according to the firm’s data. Meanwhile, body wash revenue jumped 30 percent during the same period to total $2.44 billion.

But Old Spice executives say their interviews with thousands of men each year indicate that bar soap is popular among men. Some say it’s what they grew up with, others prefer the “squeaky clean” feeling of bar soap and others just like that it’s cheaper than body wash, he said.

“We know that 42 percent of guys use bar soap in the shower, but only 15 percent of bar soap has ‘manly’ scents,” said Jason Partin, Old Spice brand manager.

The rest are odor neutral or have feminine scent, he said, leaving an opening for Old Spice.

The new soaps come in Old Spice‘s three most popular scents: “Fiji,” a summery scent, “Power Sport,” a fresher, clean scent, and “Swagger,” which is slightly musky. They’re aimed at 25- to 34-year-old men, and will cost $3.99 for a 6-pack and $1.79 for a 2-pack.

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To rev up interest, the company is rolling out an ad campaign on Tuesday that includes spots that make fun of jingle-laden soap commercials from the 1980s.

One shows a man showering with the soap in a gym locker room and then cutting open a basketball to reveal a watermelon-like inside. “It’s a really weird commercial for soap,” the accompanying jingle trills.

Another shows a man showering with the soap and then having the shower following him everywhere — even when he is in the middle of operating on a patient and when he goes out to dinner with a beautiful woman.

“The freshness will follow you all through your day,” the jingle states. “This could actually be a fairly serious problem.”

Procter & Gamble, the world’s largest consumer product maker whose products range from Tide detergent to Crest toothpaste and Gillette razors, has focused on rolling out new products in North America as it lowers costs to boost its bottom line.

Old Spice, with about $564 million in annual sales, according to Bernstein estimates, is not a large …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Old Spice Introduces New Bar Soap Lineup (Rope Not Included), Showering Guys with the Bar Soap They'

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Old Spice Introduces New Bar Soap Lineup (Rope Not Included), Showering Guys with the Bar Soap They’ve Been Smelling For

Brand revives classic jingle-based soap television creative from yesteryear

CINCINNATI–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Filling a void in the marketplace when it comes to guy bar soapers in need of a more masculine smelling bar, the Old Spice brand from Procter & Gamble (NYS: PG) today announced it is introducing an all-new lineup of manly scented bar soaps to the brand’s versatile collection of male grooming products. Arriving in stores this month, new Old Spice bar soap is available in the brand’s three most popular scents – Fiji, Pure Sport and Swagger.

Pure Sport High Endurance six pack (Photo: Business Wire)

“With new Old Spice bar soap, we wanted show the more than 40 percent of guys who are bar soap loyalists that we have their backs when it comes to manly scented shower equipment,” said Joe Arcuri, Vice President, North America Beauty Care at Procter & Gamble. “We know many guys are living with an unspoken shame – that they simply use whatever bar soap is already in the shower based on what the woman in their life purchased and is often using. I guess we’re also in the business of helping guys reclaim their territory in the shower.”

To complement the launch of its new lineup of bar soaps, Old Spice will roll out a new broadcast television advertising campaign that pays tribute to the popular jingle soap commercials of the 1980s and 1990s. Developed by Wieden+Kennedy (Portland, Ore.), the campaign demonstrates how guys can wash their body the manly way, with manly scented bar soap to the tune of an extremely masculine, yet incredibly informative jingle about their life story. The campaign will launch with two television ads, “Shower” (:30/:15) and “Watermelon” (:15) on April 9, with a third spot to debut this summer.

The new Old Spice bar soap launch also will be supported by a cinema and dedicated online campaign with rich media banners bringing the marketing creative’s tagline – “The Bar Soap You’ve Been Smelling For” – to life.

As the No.1 selling anti-perspirant/deodorant stick and body wash brand with guys, Old Spice is offering bar soap users the opportunity to bring their favorite Old Spice scents into the shower …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Pacific Birds’ Ancient Extinction Estimated At Nearly 1000 Species In New Study

By The Huffington Post News Editors

By Sean Treacy

The first humans to settle the Pacific islands left a wave of extinct bird species in their wake. But gaps in the fossil record make it difficult to determine just how massive the loss was. Now, a new modeling study accounts for those gaps, pegging the lost-species count at nearly 1000—about 10% of the bird species in the world.

Whenever humans settle a land mass for the first time, extinctions tend to follow. The victims are often land animals with enough meat to make them appealing hunting targets, such as mammoths and moas. Numerous large animals in Australia died out after the first human settlers arrived more than 40,000 years ago, and the first North Americans may also have rendered many big mammals extinct between 10,000 and 20,000 years ago.

When humans first arrived on remote Pacific islands such as Fiji and Hawaii between 3500 and 700 years ago, they found birds that had evolved to become flightless, plump, and vulnerable after living in ecosystems without major predators. Humans probably hunted many of these birds to extinction, and some species also lost their habitats when humans burned away swaths of trees to make way for agriculture. “You can imagine, when you don’t have chainsaws and things, the easiest way to clear forest is to set it on fire,” says conservation ecologist and lead author Richard Duncan of the University of Canberra.

Scientists see some of these extinct birds in the fossil record, but that record is notoriously incomplete. Rough estimates have placed the total bird extinction count from about 800 to more than 2000. Duncan and his colleagues wanted to get a well-developed picture of exactly how many bird species likely died off when humans arrived.

The team decided to look for nonpasserine land birds on 41 of the 269 larger islands in the eastern Pacific. Passerines are birds that perch, such as songbirds, whereas nonpasserines are everything else, including waterfowl, birds of prey, parrots, pigeons, and rails. The team focused on nonpasserine land birds because the same large bodies that made them appealing prey also make their bones easier for archeologists to find.

The researchers then used a statistical model to estimate the number of undiscovered, extinct, nonpasserine land birds by comparing their fossils to those of species that are still alive today. “The proportion of living birds that we know are missing from the fossil record gives you an idea of how many extinct species are [also] missing,” Duncan says.

When the researchers ran the fossil data through their model, they estimated that at least 983, and as many as 1300, nonpasserine land bird species went extinct across the Pacific islands as human civilization took root there, they report today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. That means the arrival of humans in the Pacific spelled doom for roughly 10% of the world’s bird species. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Tsunami warning issued for South Pacific islands

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center says a South Pacific earthquake generated a tsunami that may be destructive near the epicenter.

It says sea level readings indicate a tsunami formed after the 8.0 earthquake Wednesday near the Solomon Islands. More distant coasts may be threatened.

The tsunami warning is in effect for the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Tuvalu, New Caledonia, Kosrae, Fiji, Kiribati, Wallis and Futuna. A tsunami watch is in effect for American Samoa, Australia, New Zealand and eastern Indonesia.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Tsunami warning issued in Pacific after magnitude 8.0 quake near Solomon Islands

A strong earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 8.0 struck near the Pacific’s Solomon Islands, sparking a tsunami alert for much of the region.

A tsunami warning is in effect for the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Tuvalu, New Caledonia, Kosrae, Fiji, Kiribati and Wallis and Futuna. A tsunami watch is in effect for numerous other areas.

There were no immediate reports of damage or fatalities.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Fiji police say teens dug up grave for witchcraft

Fijian authorities claim two teens dug up a grave, stole a skull and hid it as part of a plan to practice witchcraft.

The teens, aged 17 and 19, were due to appear in court Tuesday charged with unlawfully disturbing a grave and “pretending to exercise witchcraft.”

A statement from the Fiji Police claims that last November the unnamed teens dug up the grave of a 60-year-old man who had died four years earlier and then hid the skull under a tree about a mile away.

The Fiji Times newspaper reported the dead man’s brother alerted police in the town of Savusavu to the incident this week. The Times said the charges carry a maximum penalty of five years in jail.

A police spokeswoman couldn’t be reached for comment Tuesday.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Taiwanese linguist races to save dying language

Her eyes lit bright with concentration, Taiwanese linguist Sung Li-may leans in expectantly as one of the planet’s last 10 speakers of the Kanakanavu language shares his hopes for the future.

“I am already very old,” says 80-year-old Mu’u Ka’angena, a leathery faced man with a tough, sinewy body and deeply veined hands. A light rain falls onto the thatched roof of the communal bamboo hut, and smoke from a dying fire drifts lazily up the walls, wafting over deer antlers, boar jawbones and ceremonial swords that decorate the interior like trophies from a forgotten time.

“Every day I think: Can our language be passed down to the next generation? It is the deepest wish in my heart that it can be.”

Kanakanavu, Sung says, has a lot more going for it than just its intrinsic value. It belongs to the same language family that experts believe spread from Taiwan 4,000 years ago, giving birth to languages spoken today by 400 million people in an arc extending from Easter Island off South America to the African island of Madagascar.

Taiwan is where it all starts,” says archaeologist Peter Bellwood, who with linguist Robert Blust developed the now widely accepted theory that people from Taiwan leveraged superior navigation skills to spread their Austronesian language far and wide. At least four of Taiwan‘s 14 government-recognized aboriginal languages are still spoken by thousands of people, but a race is on to save the others from extinction. The youngest good speaker of Kanakanavu, also known as Southern Tsou, is 60, and the next youngest, 73.

“To survive a language has to be spoken,” Sung said. “And with this one it isn’t happening.”

It’s a story repeated in the remote corners of the earth, as younger generations look to the dominant language for economic survival and advancement, whether it be English or, in Taiwan‘s case, Chinese. Aboriginals account for only 2 percent of the Taiwanese population of 23 million. Many young people are leaving Dakanua, a picturesque village in the south that is home to the Kanakanavu language, to work in the island’s cities.

Sung is clearly revered by Dakanua’s tiny cadre of Kanakanavu speakers, who are happy to spend long hours going over their language with her and a small group of graduate students she brings to the village from National Taiwan University in Taipei.

On a recent Saturday afternoon, they sat outside a well-ordered cluster of whitewashed concrete buildings, painstakingly documenting the proper use of the imperative and the grammatical subtleties of concepts like “it could be that” or “it is possible that.” In the background the bamboo and palm tree covered contours of Mt. Anguana protruded through a moving blanket of fog and mist, and a thin rain fell in the Nanzixian River valley below.

Life here is defined by farming, a reverent belief in Christianity — Presbyterian and Roman Catholic missionaries converted almost two-thirds of the aboriginal population in the 1930s and 40s — and chronic concern about the harsh elements. Five hundred residents in the nearby village of Hsiao Lin Tsuen were buried alive 3 1/2 years ago when torrential rains unleashed by a typhoon sent thousands of tons of mud cascading down onto their homes.

Sung started working with aboriginal languages almost by accident. After returning to Taiwan in 1994 as a newly minted doctor of linguistics from the University of Illinois, her department head at National Taiwan University pushed her into the discipline, insisting that Taiwan‘s majority Chinese population had to understand more about its aboriginal minority.

“At first I was intimidated,” says Sung, now the director of the university’s Graduate Institute of Linguistics, one of a handful of Taiwanese bodies seeking the preservation of the aboriginal languages as part of a wide-ranging effort funded by the government. “I had no idea of how to carry out my field work among the aboriginals. But over time I got used to it. And I learned the importance of Taiwanese aboriginal languages in the overall scheme of Austronesian dispersion.”

The deep rooted linguistic seeds the dispersal sowed have now morphed into dozens of languages — Malay for example, and the Philippines‘ Tagalog — that make Austronesian one of the largest language groups in the world.

The dispersion is illustrated by the similarities of the words for “ear.” What linguists call the proto-form — the Taiwanese basis from thousands of years ago — is usually rendered as “galinga.” In modern Taiwanese aboriginal dialects that becomes “calinga,” while in the Philippines it’s “tenga,” in Fiji “dalinga,” in Samoa “talinga,” and in Papua New Guinea “taringa.” Taiwanese aboriginals traveling to New Zealand, for example, are struck by the close relationship of their own languages to Maori, particularly when they hear the local version of numbers.

Sung’s most recent project was collating a Chinese-English dictionary for the Seediq language spoken by the tribe of Taiwanese mountain dwellers memorialized in “Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale,” a 2011 film recounting their rebellion against Japanese occupiers in the 1930s. Last February she began her work with Kanakanavu, hoping she can preserve the language before the last speakers die out.

The odds against her are long. Even many 40- and 50-year olds are incapable of mouthing anything more than a few simple phrases in their native tongue.

Still, frolicking on the neatly cut lawn of Dakanua’s deserted bed and breakfast is a three-year old girl with a runny nose, an infectious smile and a lovely lilt to her voice.

She is the granddaughter of Mu’u Ka’angena, the man with the leathery skin, and just within earshot she begins conversing with him in very simple Kanakanavu.

“Did you hear that?” Sung asks. “Isn’t it wonderful? She’s our hope for the future.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Fiji begins cleanup after Cyclone Evan passes

Fiji residents are beginning to clean up after a powerful cyclone blew through the Pacific island nation.

Cyclone Evan on Monday ripped roofs from homes and churches, flooded roads and forced thousands to evacuate their homes. Strong seas near the capital, Suva, pulled two container ships onto a reef. Authorities say they hope to refloat them.

Overall, Fiji appears to have come through the storm relatively intact, with some places yet to be assessed. There are no reports of deaths, the international airport at Nadi reopened Tuesday and most tourist resorts sustained only minor damage. Power and communications remain down in parts of the country.

The storm earlier wreaked greater havoc on Samoa. Authorities on Tuesday abandoned a search for 10 missing fishermen, bringing the death toll there to 14.

Source: Fox US News

3 reportedly killed after cyclone sweeps through Samoa

Three people have been killed – including two children – after Tropical Cyclone Evan lashed through Samoa, Sky News Australia reports, citing local media.

In the country’s capital, Apia, the cyclone destroyed homes and toppled trees and power lines.

Samoa’s Meteorological Service predicts the storm will turn back after passing the island of Upolu, possibly putting Apia at risk for more damage.

Tourists have been evacuated from coastal areas and the South Pacific island states of Tonga and Fiji have also been bracing for the storm, Sky News Australia reports.

Click for more from Sky News Australia.
Source: Fox World News