Saturday, March 26, 2011

2011 FORMULA 1 QANTAS AUSTRALIAN GRAND PRIX - Qualifying Session #1 video

Uploaded by on Mar 26, 2011
First session from today's Grand Prix action. Sitting near the chicane again, just like I did last year :)

Carn Webber :)

Goldbug100 - Protein Reactor Combined Fuels Inc. (PRCF) Enters the Alternative Health Products and BIO-FUELS Technologies Markets!

Protein Reactor Combined Fuels Inc. (PRCF.PK) is the Trade and Market Division that coordinates the Supply-Chain Management Infrastructure of all the Products of EURO-PACIFIC FUELS TECH CORPORATION - a Strategic Assets Development, Research, Technology Maintenance and Concept Management Company who has “PERMANENT COOPERATION and ACQUISITION TRANSITION AGREEMENTS” acquiring 60% Ownerships of several China Companies related to manufacturing of Alternative Health Promoting Products using effective Chinese Herbs and other Organic Herbs as well as BIO-FUELS or Alternative Fuels.

At the close of market at the end of the week the shares rose Up 0.0395 (7,900.04%) to finish at $0.04
.
the company was originally Preachers Coffee Inc
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Protein Reactor Combined Fuels Inc. engages in the manufacture and sale of coffee products; and wholesale/retail of coffee beans, as well as offers coffee shop franchises under the Preacher’s Coffee brand name. The company provides coffee in various forms, such as Green beans, Roasted, and Ground. It also involves in growing, harvesting, and processing Arabica type of coffee beans. Preachers Coffee sells its products through wholesale and retail to coffee traders, as well as to coffee shops worldwide via direct distribution and through international freight forwarders. The company was formerly known as Preachers Coffee, Inc. and changed its name to Protein Reactor Combined Fuels Inc. in February 2011. Protein Reactor Combined Fuels Inc. is based in Baguio City, the Philippines.

Preachers Coffee, Inc.
Export Processing Zone
Baguio Economic Zone Loakan Road
Baguio City, 2600
Philippines - Map
Phone: 63 9 2630 71848
Fax: 63 2 857 2033
Website: http://www.preacherscoffee.com





Inbox - SCAM ALERT "I Need Your Help In This Transaction" bait $15,000,000

If you are from Britain please forward details of the scam to  The National Fraud Authority (NFA)

-----original message-----
From: Karim
To: undisclosed recipients
Date: Saturday 26 March 2011 0245 hours
Subject: I Need Your Help In This Transaction

I am Mr El Hadi Karim, remittance department manager bank of Africa (BOA) Burkina Faso. I contacted you for a business transaction of funds for investment purpose.

A deposited Fund valued US$15 Million dollars by late client of this bank here in Africa before he died. Please contact me at once to indicate your interest.

I will like you to acknowledge the receipt of this e-mail as soon as possible and treat with absolute confidentiality and sincerity.

I look forward to your quick reply.

Best regards,

El Hadi Karim


Libya today - #havejustwatchedONtv - CNN Libyan Woman Struggles to Tell Media of Her Rape, burst in to the Rixos Hotel in Tripoli but dragged away by Gadaffi thugs

Uploaded by on Mar 26, 2011 
 
Libyan Woman Struggles to Tell Media of Her Rape.

A Woman from Benghazi burst in to the Rixos Hotel in Tripoli. She wanted to talk to the foreign journalists but was dragged away to jail by armed waiters and guards.

"They say that we are all Libyans and we are one people," said the woman, who gave her name as Eman al-Obeidy, barging in during breakfast at the hotel dining room. "But look at what the Qaddafi men did to me." She displayed a broad bruise on her face, a large scar on her upper thigh, several narrow and deep scratch marks lower on her leg, and marks that seemed to come from binding around her hands and feet.

She said she had been raped by 15 men. "I was tied up, and they defecated and urinated on me," she said. "They violated my honor."

She pleaded for friends she said were still in custody. "They are still there, they are still there," she said. "As soon as I leave here, they are going to take me to jail."

For the members of the foreign news media here at the invitation of the government of Colonel Qaddafi — and largely confined to the Rixos Hotel except for official outings — the episode was a reminder of the brutality of the Libyan government and the presence of its security forces even among the hotel staff. People in hotel uniforms, who just hours before had been serving coffee and clearing plates, grabbed table knives and rushed to physically restrain the woman and to hold back the journalists.

Ms. Obeidy said she was a native of the rebel stronghold of Benghazi who had been stopped by Qaddafi militia on the outskirts of Tripoli. After being held for about two days, she said, she had managed to escape. Wearing a black robe, a veil and slippers, she ran into the Rixos Hotel here, asking specifically to speak to the news service Reuters and The New York Times. "There is no media coverage outside," she yelled at one point.

"They swore at me and they filmed me. I was alone. There was whiskey. I was tied up," she told Michael Georgy of Reuters, the only journalist who was able to speak with her briefly. "I am not scared of anything. I will be locked up immediately after this." She added: "Look at my face. Look at my back." Her other comments were captured by television cameras.

A wild scuffle began as journalists tried to interview, photograph and protect her. Several journalists were punched, kicked and knocked on the floor by the security forces , working in tandem with people who until then had appeared to be members of the hotel staff. A television camera belonging to CNN was destroyed in the struggle, and security forces seized a device that a Financial Times reporter had used to record her testimony. A plainclothes security officer pulled out a revolver.

. Two members of the hotel staff grabbed table knives to threaten both Ms. Obeidy and the journalists.

"Turn them around, turn them around," a waiter shouted, trying to block the foreign news media from having access to Ms. Obeidy. A woman on the staff shouted: "Why are you doing this? You are a traitor!" and briefly put a coat over Ms. Obeidy's head.

There was a prolonged standoff behind the hotel as the security officials apparently restrained themselves because of the presence of so many journalists, but Ms. Obeidy was ultimately forced into a white car and taken away.

"Leave me alone," she shouted as one man tried to cover her mouth with his hand.

"They are taking me to jail," she yelled, trying to resist the security guards, according to Reuters. "They are taking me to jail."

Questioned about her treatment, Khalid Kaim, the deputy foreign minister, promised that she would be treated in accordance with the law. Musa Ibrahim, a government spokesman, said she appeared to be drunk and mentally ill. "Her safety of course is guaranteed," he said, adding that the authorities were investigating the case, including the possibility that her reports of abuse were "fantasies."

Charles Clover of The Financial Times, who had put himself in the way of the security forces trying to apprehend her, was put into a van and driven to the border shortly afterward. He said that the night before he had been told to leave because of what Libyan government officials said were inaccuracies in his reports.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

An earlier version of this article misstated the surname of a Financial Times reporter. He is Charles Clover, not Glover.

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