Saturday, 6 August 2016

Rio Olympics 2016

Beating heart of Brazil's musical heritage reveals deeper message

Star Online Report

A joyful sashay through Brazil's extraordinary musical heritage was infused with a social message and a warning over the dangers of climate change as Rio de Janeiro drew back the curtain of the 2016 Olympic Games with a highly charged opening ceremony.
"Past the risky point" is how creative director Fernando Meirelles described the state of the planet hours before the ceremony in the Maracana Stadium, and the Oscar-nominated director of City of God made good on his promise to urge the expected three billion-plus television audience to sit up and take action, reports the official website of Rio Olympic Games.
Giant, NASA-inspired heat maps showing the projected effect of sea-level rises on cities including Amsterdam, Shanghai and Rio de Janeiro were displayed, while the sight of smiling musical legends Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veleso delighted the watching thousands.
The Amazon featured heavily, with one section highlighting the birth of the world's biggest rainforest inducing gasps of delight as clouds of luminous yellow butterflies engulfed the iconic football stadium.
The celebration continued to be matched by Meirelles' message, with even the Olympic rings turning a lush green after the almost 11,000 parading athletes were each given a cartridge containing a seedling. Organisers have pledged that every tree will be transplanted to create an Athletes' Forest in Deodoro, site of the second-largest Rio 2016 venue cluster.
Areas of low-income housing were represented by wild urban beats and stark images of poverty. A city of contrasts, pop-funk sensation Ludmilla shared the stage with 1950s samba queen Elza Soares, before 12-year-old rapper MC Soffia picked up the baton and led 1500 residents of the Carnaval city into a rocking street party.
Many of Brazil's highest profile personalities made an appearance. Supermodel Gisele Bundchen, 36, marked what she has declared to be her last appearance on a catwalk in spectacular style, holding the stadium enraptured to Tom Jobim's iconic song The Girl from Ipanema. Compatriot Lea T, the first transgender model to sign a beauty contract, added to the insistent message of tolerance and diversity, carrying a placard in the Athletes' Parade.
The tones of acclaimed British actress Judi Dench were also heard, reading a classic Brazilian poem. As bizarre as that sounds, it somehow fitted the smile-inducing spectacle.
Two further moments of international focus stood out. First, the awarding of the newly inaugurated Olympic Laurel to two-time Olympic gold medallist athlete Kipchoge Keino, 76, recognising his work educating orphaned children, and the arrival of the Refugee Olympic Team to roars almost as deafening as those reserved for the home athletes.
In a fitting finale, it was Vanderlei Cordeiro de Lima, the marathon runner made famous for seeing his gold medal hopes dashed by a spectator who wrestled him to the ground during the latter stages of the Athens 2004 race, who lit the Olympic flame.
As predicted by Meirelles, Brazil's "heart" proved more than enough.

Khasru, Fakhrul, Salahuddin make way into BNP standing committee

The party announces full list of executive and standing committee members

UNB, Dhaka
BNP today announced its full list of executive and standing committee members, four and a half months after its national council was held on March 19.

Party secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir announced the committees at a press briefing at BNP's Nayaplatan central office in Dhaka.

According to the fresh list, BNP’s central executive committee has been constituted of 502 members and 35 vice chairmen and 73 advisers, Fakhrul said.

UNB adds: Mirza Fakhrul, Amir Khasru Mahmud Chowdhury and Salahuddin Ahmed, who is now in India, got entry in the 19-member standing committee.

However, two posts --17 and 18 number positions in the BNP policymaking body -- will be announced later.

At the BNP national council held in the city, party councillors endorsed Khaleda Zia as party chairperson and her son Tarique Rahman as senior vice chairman.

They also entrusted Khaleda with the responsibility to constitute the party executive committee and stranding committee.

Earlier, the party unveiled the names for 41 posts, including that for secretary-general, senior joint secretary-general, treasurer, joint secretaries general, organising secretaries and assistant organising secretaries.

However, some changes were brought in the earlier declared posts.

Held militants prefer to die: IGP

Star Online Report
Inspector General of Police (IGP) AKM Shahidul Hoque today alleged that arrested militants prefer to die instead of giving any information.
When a militant is detained he tells police, “Kill me, I will go to heaven,” the IGP tells a discussion quoting the militants.
The police chief was talking as a key speaker at a seminar on ‘Curbing Militancy and Terrorism: Role of Community Policing and Mass Media’ at the Jatiya Press Club in Dhaka. 
READ ALSO: Source of arms in Dhaka attack traced: IGP
He urged all to find out the people who are motivating the militants and how they are being motivated.

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