Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Old people sex is great for ladies, bad news for men

Photo: Shutterstock
Having great sex in the golden years is not great for everybody, according to a surprising new study.

Older men who have sex frequently and enjoy it increase their risk of having heart attacks and other heart issues, while a fun and active sex life for older women could boost health benefits, according to the study led by a Michigan State University scholar. 

Researchers say the findings – published online in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior – are part of the first large-scale study of how sex affects heart health in later life.

“These findings challenge the widely held assumption that sex brings uniform health benefits to everyone,” chief researcher Hui Liu, a Michigan State University associate professor of sociology, said in a statement Tuesday.

Researchers mulled over data from 2,204 people aged 57 to 85 gathered between 2005 and 2006 and then again five years later for the federally-funded study.


Older men who had sex once a week or more were more likely to experience heart problems five years later than men who had no sex at all, while no risk was found among older women, the study revealed.

“Strikingly, we find that having sex once a week or more puts older men at a risk for experiencing cardiovascular events that is almost two times greater than older men who are sexually inactive,” Liu said.

“Moreover, older men who found sex with their partner extremely pleasurable or satisfying had higher risk of cardiovascular events than men who did not feel so.”

Liu said that the findings suggest that the health of older men is more negatively impacted because they exert themselves more than younger men to achieve an orgasm, resulting in more strain on the heart.

“Because older men have more difficulties reaching orgasm for medical or emotional reasons than do their younger counterparts, they may exert themselves to a greater degree of exhaustion and create more stress on their cardiovascular system in order to achieve climax,” said Liu.

High testosterone levels and the use of medication designed to boost sexual function may also contribute to the harmful effects on men’s hearts, Liu said, though noting that scientific evidence to support this is rare.


On the other hand, older women with a robust sex life were found to have a lower risk of hypertension.

“For women, we have good news: Good sexual quality may protect older women from cardiovascular risk in later life,” Liu said.

The female sex hormone released during orgasm and the effects of “good quality relationships” may also improve women’s health, she said.
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NEW YORK POST

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Obama suffers the slings and arrows of a restive world

Photos: Rodrigo Duterte has said some outrageous things.
 
(CNN) President Barack Obama bade farewell to G20 leaders in Hangzhou, China, on Monday by reminding them they're living in "turbulent" times -- and he wasn't kidding. 


His valedictory Asia tour, which moved on to Laos later in the day, is unfolding amid diplomatic slights and great power rivalries that reflect the unstable nature of the world Obama will bequeath to his successor in January.


New players


The controversies reflect the way international politics is now a stew of many competing, rising or resurgent powers that see fewer reasons to simply fall into line behind the United States than was the case following World War II and the Cold War. And it may suggest that foreign leaders are now just as interested in who will sit in the Oval Office next as they are in Obama as he heads for the exit.

Obama is not only confronting regimes in Russia, China and North Korea that are at times openly hostile to Washington -- or at least willing to make clear they don't want to play by its rules -- but over the long weekend, he got headaches from allies as well, notably Turkey and the Philippines.

"Who is he?," the fiery new President of the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte, asked Monday at a news conference, referring to Obama. The Southeast Asian leader warned he would lash out if the US President raised extrajudicial killings in the Philippines' new war on drugs in an anticipated meeting in Laos.

"I am a president of a sovereign state. And we have long ceased to be a colony of the United States," Duterte continued. "Son of a b****, I will swear at you."

It was a stunning show of disrespect for an American president. And though Obama shrugged off the comments from the "colorful" leader during his own news conference Monday, the White House later canceled his meeting with Duterte, conferring instead with the President of South Korea. Duterte later apologized for any offense caused.  

Asian troubles


Duterte is not the first erratic president of the Philippines, but his unpredictability and willingness to fan latent colonial resentment against the US represents an unwanted disruption for the White House at the end of Obama's tenure. 

It comes in a regional cauldron where Beijing is making aggressive moves in the South China Sea and Southeast Asian nations are increasingly important to US efforts to rein in the rising power.

Obama had hoped to spend his final journey to Asia as president talking up the highlights of his pivot to the region. The fact sheet the White House put out at the conclusion of the G20 touted the economic progress under the eight years of the Obama presidency. And in one key outcome of the summit, he and Chinese President Xi Jinping formally agreed that both their nations would join the Paris Climate Agreement committing to cutting carbon emissions.

But that bright spot aside, his trip to China has offered reminders that since Obama took office in 2009 -- and especially since Xi emerged as a nationalist leader after taking office in 2012 -- Sino-US relations have worsened.

Obama comments on 'friction' during his China arrival
Obama comments on 'friction' during his China arrival 01:25

At one point, a White House official warned a Chinese counterpart against restricting access of pool reporters under the wing of Air Force One, noting that it was, after all, a US plane. "This is our country," the man yelled back.

Obama shrugged off that incident, too, acknowledging that disagreements over press access often arise with China but contending that they were not emblematic of the US-China relationship.

The Republican hoping to succeed Obama, however, took a much dimmer view of the episode.
"Can you believe that the Chinese would not give Obama the proper stairway to get off his plane - fight on tarmac!" Donald Trump tweeted.

Beijing said that an "unprofessional" American press had "hyped" up the incident. 
"China has warmly and friendly welcomed all the leaders who are attending the G20 summit, why would we cause problems to the American delegations on purpose?" said Hua Chunying, China's foreign ministry spokesperson.

Either way, the flap served as a symbol of the tensions over issues of sovereignty that can occur between an ascending authoritarian state and an established democratic superpower used to getting its own way -- clashes that some analysts fear could play out on a geopolitical stage in years to come.


Frosty ties

Obama and Putin met in Hangzhou.
Obama and Putin met in Hangzhou.
"Typically, the tone of our meetings are candid, blunt, businesslike -- and this one was no different," was how Obama described it to reporters.

He referred to "gaps of trust" over Syria, warned that the US has "more capacity" both "offensively and defensively" when it comes to cyber espionage and stressed that the US has no intention of easing sanctions against Russia over its action in Ukraine.


The tough talks were a reminder that the "reset" of Russia relations that Obama pioneered at the start of his administration is now but a memory, while Putin has also taken advantage of chaos in the Middle East to reinstate Russian influence with Syria and Iran.


Turkish tensions

Obama meets Erdogan, promises cooperation
Obama meets Erdogan, promises cooperation 02:35

Obama also invested significant first-term political capital in improving relations with another foreign leader he met at the G20 -- President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey -- with whom tensions were on display in their joint appearance.

Even though Obama bemoaned the "terrible attempted coup" that failed to topple Erdogan in July, the Turkish President did not shy away from raising differences with the US in front of the press.


"All forms of terrorism are bad. All forms of terrorism are evil," Erdogan said, then mentioned the names of a Kurdish group with which the US is allied in Syria but is regarded by Ankara as a terrorist organization.

As he headed to Laos, Obama professed to being undeterred by the unpredictable unfriendly international environment at the end of his presidency.

"I think we all to have recognize these are turbulent times. A lot of countries are seeing volatile politics," he said at his news conference. "But then when you look back over the course of eight years, actually you find out things have gotten better.

"I tell my staff when they feel worn out sometimes that better is always good," he added. "It may not be everything that needs to get done, but if it's better than before we started, we'll take it."
 _______
Updated 1422 GMT (2222 HKT) September 6, 2016

Friday, September 2, 2016

WHO revise STD treatment guidelines as threat of antibiotic resistance escalates

colorful condoms
When used correctly and consistently, condoms are one of the most effective ways people can avoid catching STDs, say global health experts.


The growing global threat of antibiotic resistance has prompted the World Health Organization to update treatment guidelines for three sexually transmitted diseases: gonorrhea, syphilis, and chlamydia.


The World Health Organization (WHO) say that in general, antibiotics successfully cure all three sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), which are caused by bacteria.


However, the WHO note that these three diseases often go undiagnosed and are becoming increasingly difficult to treat, and now, because of misuse and overuse, some antibiotics have no effect at all.

The United Nations health agency estimates that every year, 131 million people are infected with chlamydia, 78 million are infected with gonorrhea, and 5.6 million with syphilis.

Dr. Ian Askew, WHO's director of reproductive health and research, says:

"Chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis are major public health problems worldwide, affecting millions of peoples' quality of life, causing serious illness and sometimes death."

The biggest concern is gonorrhea - and the one for which new treatment guidelines, not updated since 2003, are most urgently needed, say the WHO.

Multidrug-resistant gonorrhea strains that do not respond to any available antibiotics have already been detected and are considered untreatable.


A recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the United States says the growing threat of untreatable gonorrhea, together with rising rates of the disease, means preventing new infections is more important than ever.

'Condoms are the most effective protection against STDs'


Although antibiotic resistance in chlamydia and syphilis is less common, it does exist, note the WHO, and their prevention and treatment is also critical.

The organization says that when used correctly and consistently, condoms are one of the most effective methods of protection against STDs.

If they are not diagnosed and treated, gonorrhea, syphilis, and chlamydia can cause serious health problems and complications for women, including: pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy, and miscarriage.

For pregnant women, gonorrhea, syphilis, and chlamydia infections raise the chance of stillbirth and newborn death.

The three diseases can also double or treble a person's risk of HIV infection and untreated gonorrhea, and chlamydia can also make both men and women infertile.

The new guidelines for treating the three sexually transmitted diseases are based on the latest evidence about the most effective available treatments.

Start using new guidelines straight away, urge WHO


The WHO are urging countries to immediately start using the updated guidelines - which are consistent with the global action plan on antibiotic resistance adopted by governments at the World Health Assembly in May 2015.


Gonorrhea is caused by the bacterium Neisseria gonorrhoeae that infects the genitals, rectum, and throat. Widespread resistance to antibiotics means older and cheaper drugs no longer kill the bacterium.

Among other things, the new guidelines urge health authorities to advise doctors to prescribe whichever antibiotic is likely to be most effective, depending on local patterns of drug resistance.

The WHO do not recommend quinolones for the treatment of gonorrhea, due to widespread high levels of resistance.

Syphilis is caused by the bacterium Treponema pallidum, which spreads via contact with a sore on the genitals, anus, rectum, lips, or mouth. It can also spread from mother to child during pregnancy. If an infected pregnant women goes untreated, and her fetus becomes infected, it can to die.

The new WHO guidelines recommend a single dose of benzathine penicillin for the cure of syphilis. The antibiotic - which is given as an injection into the buttock or thigh - is considered the most effective against syphilis. It is better and cheaper than oral antibiotics.

The organization notes there are reports of shortages of benzathine penicillin in regions with high burdens of syphilis and says they are working with partners to resolve the problem.

Chlamydia is the common bacterial STD caused by infection with Chlamydia trachomatis. People with this infection are often also co-infected with gonorrhea. While most people infected with chlamydia experience mild or no symptoms, others have discharge and feel a burning sensation when urinating. However, even if no symptoms emerge, the disease can still damage the reproductive system.
________
Published:

Sexual problems more common among young women after heart attack

More women than men who reported no sexual problems at study baseline developed problems in the year after the heart attack.

Impaired sexual activity and sexual function problems are more common among young women than men in the year following a heart attack, finds a study published in JAMA Cardiology.



Almost 20 percent of acute myocardial infarctions, also known as AMIs - or more universally as heart attacks - occur among people between the ages of 18-55 years, and one third of these people are women.

While most younger adults who experience a heart attack are reported to be sexually active before the event, little is known about sexual activity or sexual function of those patients in the period following a heart attack.

Previous studies have shown women to be less likely than men to receive counseling about sex after a heart attack.


Stacy Tessler Lindau, M.D., M.A.P.P., of the University of Chicago, and colleagues conducted research to analyze patterns of sexual activity and function and identify indicators of a decrease in sexual activity in the year after a heart attack.

The team used data from the Variation in Recovery: Role of Gender on Outcomes of Young AMI Patients (VIRGO) study - a multicenter study of U.S. and Spanish patients that investigates the differences in the paths of recovery between men and women in the year after heart attack - which took place from 2008-2012.


The VIRGO study includes data on sexual activity and function of heart attack patients from 103 U.S. hospitals and 24 Spanish hospitals. Participants were assessed at entry to the study (baseline), at 1 month and 1 year.

A total of 2,802 patients between the ages of 18-55 years were included in the analysis, of which 1,889 - 67.4 percent - were women. The average age of participants was 49 years.

Men more likely than women to resume sexual activity



Results showed that among patients who were sexually active at baseline, men (64 percent) were more likely than women (55 percent) to have resumed sexual activity by 1 month and by 1 year - 94 percent and 91, respectively - after a heart attack.

Among people who were sexually active before and after a heart attack, 40 percent of women and 55 percent of men reported no sexual function problems in the year after the attack. Additionally, more women than men - 42 percent versus 31 percent - who reported no sexual problems on entry to the study developed one or more problems in the year after the heart attack.


At the 1-year follow-up, the most common sexual problems among women included lack of interest (40 percent), trouble lubricating (22 percent), and difficulty breathing (20 percent). Erectile difficulties (22 percent), lack of interest (19 percent), and anxiety about sexual performance (16 percent) were the most common problems among men.
 

Few men across all hospitals in both the U.S. and Spain reported the use of medications to treat erectile dysfunction at baseline, 1 month, or 1 year after a heart attack.

Patients who had not communicated with a physician about sex in the first month following a heart attack were more likely to delay resuming sexual activity. In the year after the attack, women were less likely (27 percent) than men (41 percent) to receive counseling regarding restarting sexual activity.

Findings could help expand couseling, care guidelines

Significant indicators of the probability of never resuming sexual activity in the year following heart attack included older age, unpartnered status, higher stress levels, and diabetes.

The authors write:
"Patients want to know what level of sexual function to expect during recovery from AMI. Our findings can be used to expand counseling and care guidelines to include recommendations for advising patients on what to expect in terms of post-AMI sexual activity and function. Attention to modifiable risk factors and improved physician counseling may be important levers for improving sexual function outcomes for young women and men after AMI."
Limitations of the study include that the findings relied on patient self-reporting, which may have introduced recall bias, and a higher proportion of partnered people in the analytic sample could produce an upward bias on the sexual activity and sexual problem estimates.


Finally, a larger sample size and additional data would be needed to examine the effects of specific comorbidities, medications, procedures, tests, and effects of rehabilitation, prolonged or rehospitalization, or a subsequent heart attack or other health events on sexual activity.

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Published:

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Here's a breakdown of the speech that won the 2016 World Championship of Public Speaking

Darren Tay used a pair of briefs as a comedic prop.Toastmasters International

On Saturday, August 20, 27-year-old Singaporean lawyer Darren Tay became the Toastmasters International world champion of public speaking. He survived several rounds of a competition that lasted six months and included more than 30,000 competitors from Toastmasters public speaking clubs around the world.

He and nine other finalists competed at the Toastmasters annual convention, held this year at Marriott Marquis in Washington, D.C. Tay took home first place for his speech "Outsmart; Outlast," in which he tells the story of how he met a childhood bully as an adult, and how this reformed bully surprisingly taught him a valuable insight about dealing with inner struggles.


Business Insider spoke with Tay about his winning speech and what others can learn from it:

He immediately disarms the audience

Tay walks onto the stage, takes a beat as he stares into the audience, and then awkwardly steps into a pair of Calvin Klein briefs. He puts his hands on his hips to accentuate the underwear over his tailored suit and then begins telling the story of how his childhood bully once forced him to wear a similar pair of briefs over his pants and walk around school. That story could be told in a painful way, but Tay decided to keep it light.

"That is to get the audience comfortable first," he told Business Insider. "And when audience members laugh they are more open to your message."
 
When a speaker goes before a receptive audience, the audience is also brimming with energy, hoping that the speaker will succeed. Speakers don't have to crack a joke, but regardless of the context they are tasked with breaking this inherent tension.



He develops a message

Every effective presentation, whether it's on a Toastmasters stage or a conference room, needs to have a thesis that the audience members take with them when they leave, Tay explained.

Tay's full message is that we are all our own worst bullies, and that the best way to deal with that is by acknowledging the presence of negative thoughts rather than fighting or ignoring them, as if we were observing a storm from inside a house. He uses a personal story to illustrate the effect childhood bullying had on him (hence the underwear over his suit) and gradually develops his message before leaving the audience with a clear, actionable takeaway.

He lets that message guide his speech

Tay said that he initially struggled with drafting "Outsmart; Outlast" because he was too focused on telling an amusing story. "That really got my speech message very diluted and disconnected," he said.
His mentor, the 2000 Toastmasters International world champion of public speaking, Ed Tate, told him that he needed to start over and have the message be what guided his writing, and that the entertaining aspects would naturally follow.

He effectively uses body language

Tay said that it's common for novice public speakers to have their gestures centered either too close to their face, which suggests nervousness, or too low, which is distracting. He said the ideal center is around the belly button.

Tay used his belly button area as the center of his gestures, moving beyond it for dramatic effect.Toastmasters International
And when he uses a prop, the pair of underwear, he uses it as a sight gag, but not before turning it into a metaphor for shame. Then, he takes them off and tosses them away to accentuate his message: that we do not have to live with shame and regret.



He has a dialogue with the audience

Great speeches make audience members feel like the speaker is talking directly to them, Tay said. The way to do this is by sharing personal details and reading the energy of everyone in the crowd.

"When it comes to crafting a speech, audience members, what they want is a story," Tay said. "And if you tell a very powerful story, it can help to bring a message across much better."

In addition to sharing personal details about himself, Tay asks rhetorical questions of the audience, including when he addresses the absurdity of giving his speech with a pair of briefs over his suit pants, which he then uses as a transition to the next part of his presentation.

Before he leaves the stage, he leaves the audience with the advice that they embrace being vulnerable during difficult moments and work with others to move on from such struggles.
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Source: BUSINESS INSIDER
 

Dilma Rousseff Is Ousted as Brazil’s President in Impeachment Vote


BRASÍLIA — The Senate on Wednesday impeached Dilma Rousseff, Brazil’s first female president, and removed her from office for the rest of her term, the capstone of a power struggle that has consumed the nation for months and toppled one of the hemisphere’s most powerful political parties.

The Senate voted 61 to 20 to convict Ms. Rousseff on charges of manipulating the federal budget in an effort to conceal the nation’s mounting economic problems.


But the final removal of Ms. Rousseff, who was suspended in May to face trial, was much more than a judgment of guilt on any charge. It was a verdict on her leadership and the slipping fortunes of Latin America’s largest country.

The impeachment puts a definitive end to 13 years of governing by the leftist Workers’ Party, an era during which Brazil’s economy boomed, lifting millions into the middle class and raising the country’s profile on the global stage.

But sweeping corruption scandals, the worst economic crisis in decades and the government’s tone-deaf responses to the souring national mood opened Ms. Rousseff to withering scorn, leaving her with little support to fend off a power grab by her political rivals.

“She lacked it all,” said Mentor Muniz Neto, a writer from São Paulo who described Ms. Rousseff’s final ouster as a “death foretold,” asserting that she lacked charisma, competence and humility. “We deserved better.”


To her many critics, the impeachment was a fitting fall for an arrogant leader at the helm of a political movement that had lost its way. But Ms. Rousseff and her supporters call her ouster a coup that undermines Brazil’s young democracy.

Moreover, her impeachment may not restore public confidence in Brazil’s leaders, or diminish the corruption that pervades the country’s politics. To the contrary, many Brazilians note, it transfers power from one scandal-plagued party to another.

Michel Temer, 75, the interim president who served as Ms. Rousseff’s vice president before breaking with her this year, is now expected to remain in office until the end of the current term in 2018.

But Mr. Temer’s centrist Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, which anchored the Workers’ Party’s governing coalition for more than a decade, was also deeply enmeshed in the colossal graft schemes staining Brazil’s political system in recent years. It arguably benefited as much as the Workers’ Party from huge bribes and illicit campaign financing.

Since becoming interim president in May, Mr. Temer has had approval ratings nearly as dismal as Ms. Rousseff’s. Shifting the government to the right, he named a cabinet without any female or Afro-Brazilian ministers, outraging many in a country where nearly 51 percent of people define themselves as black or mixed race, according to the 2010 census.

Several of the men named by Mr. Temer have already resigned under the cloud of scandal, including his anticorruption minister and his planning minister, amid claims that they were trying to stymie investigations into the bribery engulfing the national oil company, Petrobras.

Mr. Temer was recently found guilty of violating campaign finance limits, a conviction that could make him ineligible to run for office for eight years. Beyond that, a construction executive has testified that Mr. Temer was the beneficiary of a $300,000 bribe, an assertion Mr. Temer disputes.

The impeachment effort has divided the nation and stirred passions on both sides. Of the four Brazilian presidents elected since Brazil’s democracy was re-established in the 1980s, Ms. Rousseff is the second to be forced from office through the impeachment process. In 1992, Fernando Collor de Mello resigned before the Senate could convict him on corruption charges.


“It’s painfully obvious that Temer is a slap in the face to Brazilian democracy,” said Creuza Maria Oliveira, the president of the National Federation of Domestic Workers, which represents millions of maids who benefited from the strengthening of labor laws by Ms. Rousseff.

“Dilma is a champion of the poor,” said Ms. Oliveira, who was among the supporters of Ms. Rousseff who accompanied her to the Senate this week. “Temer is a champion of his own political class, which he wants to shield from justice.”

Some prominent business and political figures in Brazil counter that Mr. Temer, a former speaker in the lower house, has the political skills needed to muster support in a fractious, discredited Congress for ambitious measures aimed at increasing investment in the economy and easing a major pension crisis.

Mr. Temer’s administration has “all the conditions needed to embark on a new route,” Philipp Schiemer, the head of Mercedes-Benz’s operations in Brazil, told reporters in recent days. “We need to decide if we want a Brazil like Venezuela or a Brazil inserted in the new world.”

Still others, including Ms. Rousseff, contend that the ease with which the political elite shunted aside the president will bring more divisiveness and political tumult in Brazil.

“This is serious because other presidents of the republic will have to deal with this,” Ms. Rousseff said this week in her testimony in the Senate, comparing her ouster to the coups toppling Brazilian leaders throughout much of the 20th century. “If that isn’t political instability, then I don’t know what is.”

Unlike many of the politicians who led the charge to oust her, Ms. Rousseff, 68, remains a rare breed in Brazil: a prominent leader who has not been accused of illegally enriching herself.

Instead, her trial revolved around a contentious legal question of whether she committed an impeachable offense by employing budgetary tricks to conceal yawning deficits.


Ms. Rousseff repeatedly insisted that she did nothing illegal, pointing out that her predecessors also manipulated the federal budget. But her opponents argued that the scale of her administration’s transfers of funds between giant public banks, to the tune of about $11 billion, seriously eroded Brazil’s economic credibility and helped her get re-elected unfairly in 2014.

Ms. Rousseff will not go to jail after her conviction, but she expressed defiance throughout her trial, insisting that Brazil’s economic crisis was largely the result of shifts in the global economy that cut commodities prices.

A bureaucrat who specialized in overseeing giant public companies in Brazil’s energy industry, Ms. Rousseff had not held elected office until her predecessor, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, anointed her as his heir after other leaders in the Workers’ Party were tarnished by a vote-buying scandal. As a divorced grandmother known as an avid reader of literature, she was an exception in the male-dominated political scene.

Brazil’s Line of Succession Is Engulfed in Scandals

The impeachment of the president has come to embody public anger over corruption and a battered economy. But those in the succession chain are also engulfed in scandals.

 The impeachment of the president has come to embody public anger over corruption and a battered economy. But those in the succession chain are also engulfed in scandals.

In addition to serving as Mr. da Silva’s hard-charging chief of staff, she was known for her involvement with the Palmares Armed Revolutionary Vanguard, an urban guerrilla group, in her youth. Agents of the military dictatorship captured Ms. Rousseff and tortured her repeatedly in the early 1970s.

But the qualities that made her a compelling chief of staff did not carry over when she became president. Her autocratic persona and short temper became legendary in Brasília, a capital where back-room deals are customary when forging and nurturing alliances with an array of bickering parties.

Many voters also felt betrayed after Ms. Rousseff’s re-election campaign, when she narrowly won on promises to maintain extensive state control over the economy, resulting in generous public spending. But once re-elected, she went in another direction, appointing a finance minister who tried to win approval for market-friendly policies.


“She simply lied through her teeth to get re-elected, forming a wave of national indignation,” said Antonio Risério, a historian and cultural commentator. “Upon perceiving that they voted for one person and elected another, the majority of the population started to want her head.”

With Ms. Rousseff deposed, the Workers’ Party, a dominant force in Brazilian politics for much of the past decade and a half, is now scrambling to find its way in a political landscape where conservative voices are growing more powerful.

João Santana, the party’s campaign strategist who helped Ms. Rousseff win two presidential elections, faces charges of illegally receiving millions of dollars in offshore accounts from the bribery scheme involving the national oil company.

Even more damaging for the party, federal investigators are seeking graft charges against Mr. da Silva, the former labor leader universally known as Lula, who was president from 2003 to 2010. The move adds to mounting legal problems faced by Mr. da Silva, who is still signaling that he plans to run for president in 2018.

Ms. Rousseff found herself increasingly isolated in recent months, with many in her party quietly withdrawing their support. But some in the party defended Ms. Rousseff as she made her last-ditch effort before the Senate this week.

“You veered from the narrative when you were elected president of the republic as a woman, from the left, a former militant against the dictatorship, without a husband to pose by your side in the photographs,” said Regina Sousa, a Workers’ Party senator from Piauí in northeast Brazil.

“You never fit in the cute little dress designed by the conservative elite of this country,” Ms. Sousa added.

Heated tempers marked the trial in the Senate. Crying as she spoke, Janaína Paschoal, the law professor who was an author of the impeachment request, said she had been inspired by God and that she was seeking impeachment for the good of Ms. Rousseff’s grandchildren.

Ms. Rousseff’s lawyer, José Eduardo Cardozo, said he was stunned that her opponents had dragged Ms. Rousseff’s family into the acerbic debate, pointing out that Ms. Rousseff was never accused of embezzling public funds to benefit her family.

“If you want to condemn her, go ahead, but don’t mock the honor of a dignified woman,” said Mr. Cardozo, also crying as he spoke.

________



Monday, August 29, 2016

Italy earthquake: Amid the rubble, a couple says 'I do'


Acquasanta Terme, Italy (CNN) -- They had been planning the perfect wedding for more than a year. The dress, the suit and the venue were all reserved. 

And then four days before the big day, part of the church crumbled in an earthquake.

Still, Ramon and Martina Adazzi tied the knot Sunday in the town of Acquasanta Terme, near the epicenter of a devastating earthquake in central Italy that has killed at least 291 people and flattened entire villages.

The couple were heartbroken when their celebrant told them the church's altar was covered in debris. Cracks had formed up the walls, and 16th-century frescoes had torn open and crumbled. The building was not usable.

"At first I was shocked. We've been organizing this for more than a year," Adazzi told CNN.
But the couple vowed to carry on with the ceremony.

"When Don Giovanni said the church was not safe, I told my wife: I want to celebrate my wedding there because they need a moment to think of other things now," Ramon told CNN on the day of the wedding.

"I love the city. I love the people. Why would I take my wedding to another city?" he said.

So despite the ongoing aftershocks they moved the service to a village square, with the green Marche mountains and the town's fractured buildings as their backdrop.

The wedding -- attended by dozens of people, including some from as far away as Brazil and Canada -- was a brief moment of joy in the grim central Italian quake zone and a testament that life does indeed go on.

"Of course I was worried and nervous. And I didn't want to create even more problems for the village," Adazzi said. "But everyone has been so wonderful and welcoming."

Demolition zone

Communities in this mountainous region of central Italy are grieving so much loss of life and overwhelmed by the thought of how to rebuild.

Some 20 kilometers to the southwest, the center of Amatrice was a demolition zone on Sunday.

The home of the famous Amatriciana pasta sauce was supposed to be bustling with tourists this weekend to celebrate the town's 50th spaghetti festival. Instead, rescuers had all but given up hope of finding any more survivors.


A church partially destroyed in the earthquake in Amatrice.
It has been four days since the earthquake jolted central Italy -- now well past the 72-hour window in which experts say the chance of finding survivors is most likely. Many more bodies may still be trapped under piles of rubble.

Towns destroyed in Italy's earthquake
 But the task now has moved on to knocking down the buildings left half standing to make sure that they don't come crashing down in aftershocks, causing more deaths or injuries.

CNN correspondents in Amatrice saw bulldozers knocking down entire homes Sunday and cranes lifting containers to carry out mountains of debris in what promises to be an exhaustive cleanup.

A town razed

Much of the town's main street was destroyed or badly damaged. The popular Roma Hotel partially collapsed, its rooms gutted and its roof slumped on one side in the shape of a wave.

The community in Amatrice are worried that a bell tower built in the 1400s will be demolished.
A single bell tower built in the 1400s stood tall among the rubble. But with its deep cracks, shaky foundations and little left around it, many fear that it, too, will have to be demolished.

What's left of Amatrice, it seems, is being razed.

Italy quake highlights our vulnerability to disaster

The town is usually home to just 2,000 people. But in the middle of summer its population can swell to 15,000, particularly on festival weekends.

This makes it more difficult to ensure that everyone is accounted for. Demolition and rescue crews were thoroughly searching each building with sniffer dogs and consulting with residents before knocking anything down in case another body might be found.


The rescuers who worked through each night in the initial days to find survivors are now racing against time for a different reason: Storms are expected to hit central Italy in a few days, threatening to turn the mounds of dust to mud.

They are also working under a scorching sun. Temperatures soared to 34 degrees Celsius on Sunday, well above average in the mountainous town.


Laying loved ones to rest

In his weekly Angelus prayer, Pope Francis offered condolences Sunday for those affected by the earthquake.


 
"Once more I say to those beloved people that the Church shares their sufferings and their worries. We pray for those who died and for the survivors. The quick way in which authorities, volunteers, civil protection members are working, shows how important is solidarity to overcome such suffering," Pope Francis said.

On Saturday Italy began burying the dead in a tearful state funeral attended by hundreds, many of them bandaged and bruised and still in shock from the week's traumatic events.

Some of the mourners at a state funeral for Italy's earthquake victims were clearly in shock as they said goodbye to victims.
In the town of Ascoli Piceno, a local gym was transformed into a funeral hall, a basketball net the backdrop of the altar.

Thirty-five coffins adorned with flowers and framed photographs sat in three rows for victims from the town of Arquata del Tronto. Taped to the foot of each coffin was a white paper with the name of the deceased.

Among the coffins was one belonging to a young girl named Giulia Rinaldi. Bishop Giovanni d'Ercole, who led the ceremony, told a painful story of how Giulia was found dead on top of her younger sister, Giorgia, who survived. The older girl apparently shielded her sibling from harm.

"They were holding each other, between them in embrace, both death and life," he said.

Hundreds attended the state funeral and Catholic service to lay their loved ones to rest.
 A woman at the funeral named Maria said she lost friends and family in the quake, and described how she and her husband used their bare hands to dig neighbors out of the rubble.
"Community is very important. In small villages like this," she said. "The relationship with the land and those you love, with our family, is very, very strong. It will be even stronger. We won't give up."
Mourners grieve at Italy's state funeral for earthquake victims.
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Updated 1730 GMT (0130 HKT) August 28, 2016
CNN's Atika Shubert, Tim Lister, Frederik Pleitgen and Livia Borghese reported from Italy. Journalist Angela Dewan wrote from London. CNN's Karen Smith, Rebecca Coleman and Bharati Naik contributed.