new video:BX Ft Mr Blue ,nyandu toz & young d





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song:Diamond is rapping in the Chris Brown beat





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Video:T.I. Ft. Iggy Azalea – No Mediocre (Official Video)




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Iggy Azalea Set To Appear In “Fast & Furious 7″

Iggy Azalea 2
Iggy Azalea Set To Appear In “Fast & Furious 7″
Iggy Azalea will make a brief appearance on Fast & Furious 7, according to actor Vin Diesel.
“I just worked with her two weeks ago,” Diesel says of Azalea in an interview with SkyRockFM. “We casted her in Fast & Furious 7. She has a cameo in Fast & Furious 7.”
Outside of music, Azalea has another project which  includes  hosting this years  MTV’s House Of Style.
In the music world, she continues to advance on the charts.

Video:T-Pain Ft. Severe – Love Suicide

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video: Trey Songz – Change Your Mind Directed by Amil Barnes


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Algeria passenger plane wreckage found in Mali


The Swiftair MD-83 airplane taking off from Hamburg airport. 15 June 2014 The pilot of the Swiftair MD-83 plane, pictured here in June, had asked to change course

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The wreck of a plane that disappeared with 116 people on board on a flight from Burkina Faso to Algiers has been found in Mali, officials say.
The Burkinabe army said the plane, operated by Algeria's national airline Air Algerie, had crashed about 50km (30 miles) from the Burkina Faso border.
Air traffic controllers lost contact with the plane early on Thursday after pilots reported severe storms.
The passengers included 51 French citizens.
The McDonnell Douglas MD-83 - Flight AH 5017 - had been chartered from Spanish airline Swiftair.
Malian state television confirmed that the wreckage was found in the village of Boulikessi by a helicopter from Burkina Faso, the Associated Press news agency reports.
Gilbert Diendere, a Burkina Faso army general, said Mali had agreed to their cross-border search which was launched after a resident in Gossi described seeing a plane go down to the south-west of the town.
Weather map
"They found human remains and the wreckage of the plane totally burnt and scattered," he told AP.
French fighter jets and UN helicopters had been hunting for the wreck in the more remote desert region of northern Mali between Gao and Tessalit.
Contact with Flight AH 5017 was lost about 50 minutes after take-off from Ouagadougou on Thursday morning, Air Algerie said.
The pilot had contacted Niger's control tower in Niamey at around 01:30 GMT to change course because of a sandstorm, officials say.
Burkina Faso authorities said the passenger list comprised 27 people from Burkina Faso, 51 French, eight Lebanese, six Algerians, two from Luxembourg, five Canadians, four Germans, one Cameroonian, one Belgian, one Egyptian, one Ukrainian, one Swiss, one Nigerian and one Malian.
The six crew members are Spanish, according to the Spanish pilots' union.
Flight AH 5017 flies the Ouagadougou-Algiers route four times a week, AFP reported.
BBC West Africa correspondent Thomas Fessy says it a route often used by French travellers.

Iggy Azalea Responds To Alleged Fued With Nicki Minaj, “Just Let It Go”


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Iggy Azalea Responds To Alleged Fued With Nicki Minaj, “Just Let It Go”
Iggy Azalea addressed rumors of a  ”beef” with Nicki Minaj in a response to the BET Awards this last  weekend over Instagram and Twitter.
“This is my mind state about everything & the only time I’m ever going to refer to this again so go nuts guys, Enjoy it,”
It continued with the following  Instagram note:
“I have to say the general explosion of pettiness online in the last few days is hard to ignore & honestly…lame,” Azalea wrote. “If I had won the BET award that would’ve been great but it wasn’t my year & I don’t mind — so you shouldn’t either. Generally speaking, I’m unbothered by anything that ‘happened’ at the BET awards and just feel worn out by everyone trying to make me have wars with people all the time. Anyone who wishes me well is welcome in my life & those who don’t can’t get any more of my time… I hate to see everyone exhausting themselves on my behalf over things that I’m still not 100% sure even exist & don’t matter. Just let it go.”
Iggy then jumped on Twiiter where she continued her message.
“Also, just wanna say I think it’s dope that there was even a debate & conversation about who would win “best female rapper” this year.”
“Usually I feel like the award is overlooked. I’m happy there was anticipation in regards to who’d get it & congrats to nicki for winning.”

Ebola deaths mount in Sierra Leone and Liberia


Health workers take blood samples for Ebola virus testing at a screening tent in the local government hospital in Kenema, Sierra Leone - 30 June 2014 The WHO said Sierra Leone accounted for 32 new cases of Ebola and 15 deaths between 6-8 July

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High numbers of new cases of the Ebola virus are being reported in Sierra Leone and Liberia, with 19 deaths over three days this week, the UN's World Health Organization (WHO) says.
Such figures showed that it was a race against time to control the epidemic in Sierra Leone, medical charity MSF said.
In total there have been 539 deaths in West Africa since the outbreak began in neighbouring Guinea in February.
Regional leaders have now agreed to set up a fund to combat its spread.

Start Quote

Families can be driven out of their villages, and sick people can be cast out to die on their own”
Anja Wolz MSF
At a summit of the regional body Ecowas in Ghana on Thursday, Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan agreed to contribute $3m (£1.8m) to the fund.
Ebola spreads through contact with an infected person's bodily fluids and there is no vaccine or cure.
It kills up to 90% of those infected but if patients receive early treatment, they have a better chance of survival.
'Precarious' The WHO statement said that Sierra Leone had accounted for 32 new cases and 15 deaths, while Liberia reported 11 new cases and four deaths.
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WHO: West Africa Ebola outbreak figures
Map
  • Guinea - 309 deaths, 409 cases
  • Liberia - 88 deaths, 142 cases
  • Sierra Leone - 142 deaths, 337 cases
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There had been two deaths and one new infection recorded between 6-8 July in Guinea, where it said the community transmission rate was low.
"The epidemic trend in Liberia and Sierra Leone remains precarious with high numbers of new cases and deaths being reported," it said.
The cases in Sierra Leone are centred in Kailahun and Kenema districts, and in Liberia's Lofa and Montserrado counties, the WHO said.
An MSF employee puts on protective gear at the isolation ward of the Donka Hospital in Conakry, where people infected with the Ebola virus are being treated - June 2014 The Ebola death rate in Guinea - where specialised health workers have been working since February - has slowed
Medecins Sans Frontieres said its teams in eastern Sierra Leone were "racing against time to stop the spread of the disease".
"We're under massive time pressure: the longer it takes to find and follow up with people who have come in contact with sick people, the more difficult it will be to control the outbreak," MSF emergency co-ordinator Anja Wolz said in a statement.
"We still have no idea how many villages are affected. I'm afraid we've only seen the tip of the iceberg."
The disease creates fear within communities and sick people are often stigmatised so experts believe the key to stopping the spread of the virus is to make sure affected communities understand it better.
"Families can be driven out of their villages, and sick people can be cast out to die on their own," said Ms Wolz.
The WHO gathers data on confirmed, probable and suspected cases and deaths in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
So far in the West African outbreak there have been 888 cases.
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Ebola virus disease (EVD)
Molecular model of parts of the Ebola virus
  • Symptoms include high fever, bleeding and central nervous system damage
  • Fatality rate can reach 90%
  • Incubation period is two to 21 days
  • There is no vaccine or cure
  • Supportive care such as rehydrating patients who have diarrhoea and vomiting can help recovery
  • Fruit bats are considered to be the natural host of the virus

new SONG:Chris Brown Ft. Usher & Rick Ross – New Flame


chrisbrown3
Brand new single from Chris Brown “New Flame” Ft. Usher & Rick Ross.. No word on where this will end up!!
Listen to Chris Brown Ft. Usher & Rick Ross – New Flame

Nicki Minaj announced “Beef” With Iggy Azalea Via Twitter



Nicki Minaj 7
Nicki Minaj Addresses “Beef” With Iggy Azalea Via Twitter
Nicki Minaj’s acceptance speech at the BET Awarda Sunday ( June 29) came across as low key disses toward Iggy Azalea.
Minaj took to Twitter (July 2)  and said that many are taking her speech, which included her saying, “What I want the world to know about Nicki Minaj is when you hear Nicki Minaj spit, Nicki Minaj wrote it,” as a jab toward Azalea, who has been rumored to use a ghostwriter. However, the YMCMB rapper says this is not the case and explained more via Twitter.
“The media puts words in my mouth all the time and this is no different. I will always take a stance on women writing b/c I believe in us!” Nicki Minaj wrote on Twitter today.
In another Tweet, Minaj spoke on women’s capability at being lyricists.  ”I believe we’re smart enough to write down our own thoughts and perspective, just like the men do. I’ve been saying this for 5 YEARS.”
Nicki Minaj also congratulated Azalea on the success of her double platinum single, “Fancy.”

Central African Republic 'killers' named and shamed


Seleka soldiers drive to a village where residents say was attacked and a mosque burnt the night before by anti-Balaka militiamen, about 25km (16 miles) from Bambari - 10 May 2014 The Amnesty report contains first-hand accounts from victims and witnesses of alleged war crimes
Amnesty International has identified those it believes are responsible for atrocities recently committed in the Central African Republic (CAR).
Several leaders from rebels and militia groups, as well as former Presidents Francois Bozize and Michel Djotodia, are named by the rights group.
The trouble in CAR began as Mr Djotodia's mainly Muslim rebels seized power in March last year.
The majority Christian state then descended into ethno-religious warfare.
Thousands of people have been killed and almost a quarter of the country's 4.6 million inhabitants have been forced from their homes.
The report - Central African Republic: Time for Accountability - says that most attacks have been conducted openly, with the perpetrators showing no fear of sanction.
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CAR's religious make-up
  • Christians - 50%
  • Muslims - 15%
  • Indigenous beliefs - 35%
Source: Index Mundi
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Mr Djotodia stepped down under regional pressure in January, but the fighting has continued.
He has declined to comment on the allegations.
The presence of some 7,000 international peacekeepers has also failed to put an end to the violence and revenge attacks.
"Those responsible for leaving hundreds of thousands of innocent people with nowhere to hide from their murderous violence must be given nowhere to hide from justice," Christian Mukosa, Amnesty International's CAR researcher, said in a statement.
"Only by ending impunity can the cycle of violence that has gripped CAR be stemmed," he said.
'Sophisticated command' The report says that Mr Djotodia's Seleka forces are responsible for serious human rights violations including massacres, rapes, extrajudicial executions, torture, burning of villages and enforced disappearances during their military campaign that started in December 2012.
In particular it names Nourredine Adam, who headed Seleka's security services, as someone who should face justice.
Anti-balaka militiamen simulate an enemy attack as they pose for a photograph near the town of Yaloke - 25 April 2014 Anti-balaka fighters are not shy about talking about their encounters
Muslim refugees listen to a radio at the Catholic church in Carnot, Central African Republic - April 2014 Most Muslim communities in the west and in the capital have had to leave
A Seleka fighter holds his machine gun near the town of Kuango, close to the border with Democratic Republic of Congo - 9 June 2014 Seleka fighters withdrew from Bangui towards the north-east in January
Currently, the north-eastern part of the country is under the rule of Seleka and armed cattle herders - and human rights abuses are continuing there, the report says.
On Monday a church in the central town of Bambari came under attack by Seleka fighters, and 26 civilians who had sought shelter there were killed.
Amnesty says the mainly Christian anti-balaka militias were loosely organised groups of bandits until December 2013, when a co-ordinated attack was launched in the capital, Bangui, involving militia commander Levy Yakete.
Map showing the location of the Central African Republic and the countries that border it
Such deliberate and large-scale killings of civilians, sometimes followed by mutilation, dismembering and burning of the bodies, have continued unabated, the report says.
The anti-balaka groups are now well armed, have a "sophisticated organisational command" and include former soldiers loyal to ousted President Bozize, including members of his former presidential guard.
They have forced tens of thousands of Muslims to flee to neighbouring states, Amnesty says.
A Seleka soldier stands in the ruins of a mosque, which residents say was attacked and burnt by anti-balaka militiamen Many mosques have been burnt down in revenge attacks
Muslims rest inside the Catholic church in Carnot, Central African Republic - April 2014 Both Muslims and Christians have sought sanctuary in churches across the country
Following repeated anti-balaka attacks on Muslims in the west of the country and in Bangui, in April the UN refugee agency began to transfer Muslim communities to safer areas, it says.
Amnesty's report also says the peacekeeping forces have been involved in human rights violations, in particular it points to an incident involving Chadian troops who opened fire on civilians in a market in Bangui in March.
The new President, Catherine Samba-Panza, has asked the International Criminal Court to investigate the violence and in March the UN launched an inquiry into human rights abuses in the former French colony.
Amnesty names at least 20 people it says are suspected of ordering or committing atrocities and suggests they should be tried under international law by a hybrid court using national and international experts.

source BBC NEWS africa

Somalia piracy: Development 'would curb illegal industry'


Somali pirate with Taiwanese fishing vessel, Sept 2012 Pirates have earned millions of dollars through hijackings
Piracy off Somalia's coast would fall sharply if the country's economy was more developed, a study says.
Local elites and communities in remote areas protect pirates because they lack an income, it adds.
Foreign navies have a strong presence around Somalia in order to keep shipping lanes safe.
This has led to a decline in attacks off the Somali coast, with the UN estimating that about 40 people are still being held by pirates.
At the peak of their activity three years ago, the pirates held more than 700 crew members and more than 30 ships.
'Import centre' The World Bank estimates that pirates netted more than $400m (£230m) in ransom money between 2005 and 2012.
Ships off the coast of the Somali capital, Mogadishu (30 Oct 2012) Ships are safer since foreign navies increased patrols off Somalia's coast
Somalia has been a largely lawless state since the fall of long-serving ruler Siad Barre in 1991.
Warlords, religious groups and clans have been fighting for control of Somalia.
The study, by the University of Oxford and King's College London, says Somalia witnessed a surge in pirate attacks when territory was contested or elections took place.
This suggested the behaviour of clan leaders in Somalia was similar to that of politicians in Italy and Taiwan, who extended protection to criminals when they needed extra funds to further political ambitions, the study adds.
"Local communities support pirates when there isn't a better alternative income stream," said Federico Varese, a co-author of the report based at the University Oxford.
"By improving the infrastructure of Somalia, building new harbours and roads to link the remote areas to trade routes, our research concludes that poorer communities would be less likely to resort to piracy," he added.
People in Somalia's north-eastern city of Bosasso cut ties with pirates once the economy grew, the study says.
"As the city regained its importance as a major trading port for livestock and an import centre for the wider region, pirates were no longer tolerated - pirate hostages were freed and pirates were imprisoned by the local clan leaders," the study adds.