Friday, May 27, 2011

27/05 Lý Nhã Kỳ: Nàng lọ lem sexy của biển


Thứ sáu, 27/05/2011 08:58 AM
Nghịch đùa cùng những con sóng trong trang phục gợi cảm, Lý Nhã Kỳ trông quyến rũ như một nàng lọ lem của biển.
Đây cũng là những khoảnh khắc lãng mạn hiếm hoi của người đẹp bận rộn Lý Nhã Kỳ được ghi lại ở biển Nha Trang, trong lần tham dự triển lãm ảnh "Vẻ đẹp trước biển" do nhiếp ảnh gia DL Duy thực hiện.

番外編(下)年金分割 失うものに注意

厚生労働省の人口動態統計によると、2009年の離婚件数は、前年比0・9%増の25万3408組。ただ、同居期間20年以上の離婚数は同3%増、35年以上に限ると同7・9%増となっている。
熟年離婚の増加が目立つなか、離婚した場合に年金を分割する仕組みを詳しく知りたいとの声も届いた。
離婚時の年金分割は07年4月から始まった制度だ。社会保険労務士でファイナンシャルプランナーの菅野美和子さんは「夫婦だった期間中の年金記録を分け合い、年金額の多い人から少ない人に分割する仕組みです」と話す。
 分割される記録は07年4月以前の夫婦期間も対象。事実婚の夫婦にも、原則として適用される。ただし、分割されるのは厚生年金や共済年金だけで、基礎年金は対象外。独身時代の分も分割されない。
会社員の夫と専業主婦の妻を例に考える。分割の割合は、2人の話し合いで決めるのが原則で、妻の取り分は最大でも半分までだ。合意すれば離婚後2年以内に年金事務所で手続きを取る。合意できない場合は家庭裁判所に申し立てて分割割合を決める。
ただし、08年4月以降の夫の厚生年金記録については、妻が年金分割を請求すると、合意がなくても自動的に、記録の半分が妻に分割される。
厚生労働省のまとめでは、09年度の場合、年金分割によって分割を受けた側の年金額は月3万1337円増えた。
年金が増えるのはありがたいが、「失うものもある点に注意して」と菅野さんは指摘する。夫婦のままなら年金の上乗せ分を受け取れる場合があるが、別れてしまえばもらえない。夫が死んだ際の遺族年金も受け取れなくなる。また、妻が60歳未満の場合は、離婚後は国民年金保険料を自分で払う必要が出てくる。
こうしたデメリットも考慮したうえで離婚を考えるなら、情報収集が大事だ。50歳以上の人は、分割をした場合の年金見込み額を年金事務所で試算してもらえる。離婚前なら、こうした請求をしたことは相手に通知されない。
(このシリーズは、田渕英治、斉藤保が担当しました)
◇離婚時の年金分割の3か条
・分割対象は厚生年金や共済年金だけ
・受け取れるのは結婚期間中の最大半分まで
・遺族年金が受け取れないなどのデメリットも
(2011年5月27日  読売新聞)

27/05 メガ太陽光発電、年内着工…ソフトバンク・孫社長

 大規模太陽光発電所の建設計画を提唱するソフトバンクの孫正義社長は26日、事業化に向けた子会社を2、3か月以内に設立し、年内に着工する意向を表明した。

 大阪市内で関西広域連合の会合に出席後、報道陣の質問に答えた。子会社の社長には孫社長が就任予定。ソフトバンクの売り上げのうち、数%を事業に充てる方針だという。孫社長は「来年から発電できるようにしたい」と述べた。

(2011年5月27日 読売新聞)

27/05 News Analysis: Does Mladic arrest actually move Serbia closer to EU membership?


English.news.cn   2011-05-27 05:08:45FeedbackPrintRSS
by Steve Milosevic
BELGRADE, May 26 (Xinhua) -- Is the arrest of Bosnian Serb General Ratko Mladic simply yet another milestone on Serbia's tortured path toward European Union (EU) integration? Or does it represent a diplomatic "tipping point," a discernible moment that will redefine Serbia's future direction?
In the high-risk contest of Balkan politics, where external forces most often decide the final outcome, the answer will ultimately come from Brussels.
Mladic's arrest does offer a moment of self-congratulation for patient, persistent EU politicians, who have gradually been extracting ever larger compromises from Serbia, as the country desperately seeks to hop on the European gravy train.
More than any of the other countries to emerge from the implosion of the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s, Serbia bears a stigma of the perpetual "bad boy on the block." Mladic was charged with genocide and crimes against humanity by the ICTY in The Hague, most notably for the summary execution of captured Bosnian Muslim soldiers after the fall of the UN-protected zone of Srebrenica in 1995.
Will these same politicians conclude that Serbia has suffered enough, and that by offering up Mladic a national catharsis has been achieved? Was Mladic's arrest a game-changer?
Former British prime minister Tony Blair, more than any other leaders, pinpointed the motive behind the arrest by saying: " Europe and the prospect of European Union membership can act as a magnet for changing the behavior of countries, changing their political system. So it's big news and good news."
"The doors of Europe are open to you," announced former ICTY chief prosecutor Carla del Ponte, upon hearing about the arrest. " This is excellent news for the citizens of Serbia."
French President Nicolas Sarkozy described Serbian President Boris Tadic's decision to arrest Mladic as "courageous," and said it was "a step toward integration of Serbia into the European Union someday soon."
These are the expectations, these are the motives. In fact, with less than a year before general elections in Serbia, the future of the pro-EU movement in Serbia rests on whether vague assurances of eventual EU membership will be enough to stem the inevitable nationalistic backlash.
Almost immediately after news of Mladic's arrest leaked out, a Serbian Internet forum asked the question: "Who sold out Ratko Mladic?" In a country where the vast majority in a recent poll said they would rather turn down the 10-million-euro reward for Mladic than turn him in, what political leverage remains for Tadic to make future compromises and reforms without seeming to capitulate?
Tomislav Nikolic, leader the Serbia's main opposition Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) which has a strong nationalistic following, said that Tadic owed the Serbian people an explanation for the arrest of Mladic. Although vilified internationally as a war criminal, Mladic was perceived differently by many of his supporters, according to Nikolic, who carefully weighed his words in the aftermath of the arrest.
Furthermore, with the Serbian constitution explicitly stating its sovereignty over Kosovo, which unilaterally declared independence from Serbia in 2008, how much room is left to maneuver?
There are also judicial reforms and regional cooperation to address. Just hours after the arrest of Mladic, another Serb leader from the 1990s, Goran Hadzic, a former president of Serb enclaves in Croatia, emerged as the leading war crimes fugitive on the revised ICTY list.
Editor: Mu Xuequan
Related News

27/05 UN chief hails Mladic arrest as "historic day for international justice"


English.news.cn   2011-05-27 02:59:00FeedbackPrintRSS

UNITED NATIONS, May 26 (Xinhua) -- UN Secretary-General Ban Ki- moon on Thursday welcomed the arrest of key war crimes fugitive Ratko Mladic, the former commander of the Bosnian Serb Army, saying that "This is an historic day for international justice."
Ban, who is visiting France on Thursday, made the remarks in a statement issued here by his spokesman, which said, "The secretary- general welcomes today's arrest of Ratko Mladic."
The secretary-general "commends (Serbian) President (Boris) Tadic and the Serbian authorities for this significant step toward ending impunity for those indicted for serious violations of international humanitarian law during the conflict in the former Yugoslavia," said the statement.
Mladic, the war-time leader of the Bosnian Serb forces, was arrested on Thursday in Serbia after evading capture for almost 16 years. He is awaiting transfer to The Hague, where he will stand trial before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY).
Mladic faces numerous charges, including genocide, extermination, murder, persecutions, deportation, taking of hostages and inflicting terror on civilians, particularly in connection with massacre of up to 8,000 Muslim men and boys in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the supposedly "safe haven" of Srebrenica in July 1995 in one of the most notorious events of the Balkan wars.
This "important arrest" will enable the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) to move closer to completing its mandate, Ban said. "Ending impunity is essential for reconciliation, sustainable peace and justice in the region."
The statement also voiced the secretary-general's thoughts with the victims and their families "who have waited almost sixteen years for Mr. Mladic to be brought to justice for crimes including those committed at Srebrenica."
"This is a historic day for international justice and for the world's collective fight against impunity," he said. "It sends a powerful message that those who are alleged to have committed crimes against humanity may try to evade justice but they will, in the end, be held accountable."
Editor: Mu Xuequan

27/05 Mladic arrest delights, shocks and surprises Serbia


English.news.cn   2011-05-27 05:08:18FeedbackPrintRSS

Ratko Mladic. (Xinhua/Reuters File Photo)
BELGRADE, May 26 (Xinhua) -- The news of the capture of Ratko Mladic, the Bosnian Serb commander wanted for war crimes, was received by delight, shock and surprise in Serbia.
For those in government and political parties with a pro-EU orientation, the prospect of removing the constant impediment of meeting the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) requirements has all but fallen away.
Cedomir Jovanovic, leader of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in Serbia, congratulated Serbian President Boris Tadic for bringing the process of reconciliation in region ever closer, reported the Serbian daily 'Blic.'
Jovanovic said Tadic had continued the task initiated by assassinated Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic with the extradition of former Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic to the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in 2001.
"This arrest means we have met the huge responsibilities which we have as a country to ourselves, to our neighbors and the future of Serbia," said Jovanovic. "Bringing Mladic to justice is not just satisfaction to the victims... but also an opportunity for our society to remove a heavy weight under which we have lived more than 15 years."
Mladic was charged with genocide and crimes against humanity by the ICTY in The Hague, most notably for the summary execution of captured Bosnian Muslim soldiers after the fall of the UN protected zone of Srebrenica in 1995. He was the most high-profile fugitive still at large, dating back to the civil conflicts that erupted during the breakup of the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s. He had been in hiding since 1996.
Jovanovic added that a war crimes trial would strip away Mladic ' s heroic facade, which anti-Hague and anti-European Union political forces in Serbia maintain.
"By dismantling the nature and the mechanism of political crimes, the majority of people in Serbia will finally get a real opportunity to realize that Mladic is not our hero, but our national disgrace," said Jovanovic.
However, Tomislav Nikolic, leader of Serbia's opposition Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) told the Serbian news agency Beta that he was surprised by the arrest and that its timing opens more questions.
"Who was it who saw that man yesterday, and recognized him?" asked Nikolic. "Is it perhaps that Serbia knew the entire time the location of Ratko Mladic? What factor determined that he would be arrested today?"
Nikolic, whose party has a strong nationalistic following, said that Tadic owed the Serbian people an explanation for the arrest of Mladic, who although vilified by the ICTY was not perceived as a villain domestically.
"The vast majority of Serbian citizens, along with us, do not today know how to react or what the consequences mean for future life in Serbia," said Nikolic.
As for the Mladic family, they are in a state of shock according to family lawyer, Milos Saljic, reported the Bosnian news agency Srna. The family had no forewarning of the arrest, said Saljic.
A year ago the family asked for Mladic to be officially declared dead by a court in Belgrade, explaining they had had no contact with him in seven years and assumed he was dead due to failing health.

NHỮNG HUYỀN TRÂN THỜI ĐẠI!


 

Sử viết:
Công chúa Huyền Trân là con của vuaTrần Nhân tông, năm Tân Sửu (1301) được vua cha hứa gả cho vua Chiêm Thành làChế Mân, khi Chế Mân sai người đem sính lễ  đến cưới thì triều thần không thuận. Năm Bính Ngọ (1306) Chế Mân tình nguyện dâng hai châu Ô và Rí làm lễ sính, vua Trần Anh tông (anh công chúa) thuận gả để lấy hai châu ấy sau đổi tên là Thuận Châu và Hoá Châu.Năm 1307, Chế Mân chết, vua Anh tông sai Trần Khắc Chung giả mượn tiếng đến thăm, tìm cách đem công chúa về nước để tránh nạn hỏa thiêu theo phong tục Chiêm Thành.
Về chuyện này, người đời sau khen vua Trần Anh tông biết dùng nhan sắc của em gái mình mà… mở mang bờ cõi; nhưng cũng có người mỉa mai vua Chế Mân của Chiêm Thành vì mê nữ sắc đã đem đất đai của tổ quốc mà dâng hiến cho ngoại bang qua hai câu thơ:
“Hai châu Ô, Rí vuông nghìn dặm
Một gái Huyền Trân giá mấy mươi?”