Thứ Năm, 5 tháng 7, 2018

News on Youtube Jul 5 2018

LUGANO - Il nuovo sponsor di Roger Federer, il colosso dell'abbigliamento giapponese Uniqlo, che con un contratto da 300 milioni di dollari ha indotto il campione svizzero ad abbandonare Nike, sta già inguaiando l'attuale numero due delle classifiche mondiali ATP

Uniqlo, stando all'Ong elvetica Public Eye, se ne fa un baffo dei diritti dei lavoratori, nei paesi in via di sviluppo in cui appalta la produzione di parte dei suoi prodotti

Succede, ad esempio, in Indonesia, dove 2000 dipendenti dell'azienda locale, Jaba Garmindo, nel frattempo fallita, attendono i salari arretrati dal 2015, oltre alle indennità per la perdita del lavoro

La cifra complessiva di quanto Uniqlo deve agli ex-lavoratori di Jaba Garmindo è stimata in 5,5 milioni di dollari

"Federer, dacci una mano a risolvere questa situazione", l'invito dell'organizzazione non governativa al tennista elvetico, attualmente impegnato al torneo di Wimbledon e universalmente riconosciuto per il suo fair play

Perché i lavoratori indonesiani ottengano giustizia Public Eye ha lanciato, online, una petizione internazionale: www

hello-Roger.ch. "Roger Federer- si può leggere nella petizione -ha appena concluso un enorme contratto di sponsoring con Uniqlo

Gli chiediamo di utilizzare tutta la sua influenza perché il nuovo sponsor giapponese la smetta di opporsi al versamento del dovuto a dei lavoratori che lo attendono da anni e accetti di sedersi al tavolo del negoziato con i sindacati"

Che farà Federer, noto per la sua attenzione ai problemi sociali, con la sua fondazione che aiuta l'emancipazione scolastica delle giovani generazioni africane? Forse, considerando che dispone già di un patrimonio di mezzo miliardo di dollari, avrebbe preferito evitare questa pubblicità imbarazzante, anche guadagnando qualcosa in meno

For more infomation >> La Ong Public Eye lancia un appello al campione di tennis: "Duemila dipendenti attendono i salari de - Duration: 2:45.

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The Country With No Public Transport Fares - Duration: 8:13.

The Country With No Public Transport Fares

In January 2013, Estonia's capital city of Tallinn stopped charging fares for riders of its public transport system.

The measure that allowed Tallinn residents to pay around $2 for a card that could be used for buses, trams and other means had been approved in a referendum the previous year by more than 75 percent of citizens.

Now the government is getting ready to roll out free public transport nationwide and, if successful, the Baltic state could become the first country to implement such a system.

On July 1, 11 out of 15 of Estonia's counties will allow their residents to use county buses for free; four counties opted out of the scheme.

Public transportation is generally only partially subsidized by the government in other countries, thus the free transportation measure in Estonia has already been contested.

  "It looks like a pretty promise on the outside," Jaanus Marrandi, a member of the Estonian Parliament's Economic Affairs Committee, told the local media in May.

"However, free public transport in the countryside is not possible with this level of financing." The groundbreaking national program, which officials running it say isn't an experiment, comes five years after Tallinn became the first EU capital to provide free public transportation to its residents.

According to the city's website, local officials noticed an improvement in the city employment rate just a few months into the program, as people could reach more places for work.

Labor costs fell for employers who didn't need to cover parking spots for private vehicles, and Tallinn reported a growing population.

This year, city officials are reporting only a modest growth in public transportation use, but that metric isn't the most important one to measure the success of the initiative, officials say.

  "There (was) also (a) slight increase in (public transport usage) – around 10 percent – but most important is the increased satisfaction with the service quality," says Allan Alaküla, head of the Tallinn European Union office and representative of the program.

Experts who have researched the subject, however, say no thorough evaluation has been conducted by the government because no one is eager to divulge potentially unflattering results.

"People find different ways to interpret the outcomes of free public transport and the city government has a motivation for defending it because politicians and city administrators carried it out," says Daniel Hess, a professor at the Department of Urban and Regional Planning at the University of Buffalo—SUNY, who looked at the issue.

"What I found in my research is that there was not a thorough evaluation conducted by the city government for the program that it instituted and the main evaluations have been conducted by outside researchers." At the same time, while officials tout a decrease in car traffic in the city center, private researchers say the measure hasn't actually met the important goal of reducing pollution.

  "A goal was to see a shift from cars to public transport and this hasn't really happened," says Oded Cats, assistant professor in public transport at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands who researched on the Tallinn program.

"What we saw is that there was a sizable but not very dramatic increase in public transport ridership – people shifted from walking to (taking) short public transport trips and those already using public transport used it more frequently, such as teenagers and (the elderly).

Therefore, there is no impact on congestion so far and on emissions."   Other Countries, Cities Consider Similar Programs Public transport has long been a debate in many countries that wished to reduce pollution and offer an alternative that would reduce traffic congestion.

Last year, Paris officials announced they are considering free public transport to fight against pollution one year after French President Emanuel Macron said all gas and diesel cars will be banned in France by 2040.

Berlin officials made a similar announcement earlier this year with the purpose of reducing cars on the road.

  Several smaller cities in France already offer free bus rides, while experiments have been carried out in Belgium, Sweden and the U.S.According to Alaküla, the representative to the EU, Tallinn inspired Dunkirk, a French city of around 200,000, to make public transport free beginning this September.

Several other city officials came to Estonia to analyze the model, including some from cities in China, Hess says. Whether making public transport free is sustainable depends on the financial model adopted, experts say.

The idea seems more realistic, experts say, if governments are already subsidizing a large portion of the individual fare, so the transition to zero costs for passengers has minimal impact on budgets.

On the other hand, cities such as Tallinn that made public transport free only for residents covered their costs by seeing more people officially moving into the city.

"In Estonia, you pay part of the income tax where you are registered as a resident," Cats says.

"About 20,000 to 30,000 people living in Tallinn were still registered in their hometowns, such as students or those too lazy to (change their registration).

To become eligible to travel for free in Tallinn, they had to register, therefore they started paying their income tax in Tallinn." Tallinn's annual city budget increased about $29 million because of the higher number of taxpayers, Alaküla says.

  Officials say the challenges of providing free transportation is not only implementing the program but also to maintain quality service. Still, any city could benefit from the measure, experts say.

"As we continue to urbanize and have denser places that need many people reaching them, there will be an increasing need for public transit to serve these places with high-capacity transit vehicles, such as buses, streetcars, or subways," Hess says.

"Any growing city where there's a premium on land value and the traffic is choking, and where it's very expensive to travel by car and park, seems a possibility for free public transport.".

For more infomation >> The Country With No Public Transport Fares - Duration: 8:13.

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Novichok in Salisbury: The public thought it was safe ... so how could this happen four months later - Duration: 1:41.

 Confirmation that two more people in Salisbury have been poisoned by Novichok has raised questions over whether the multi-million pound decontamination effort failed

 After it was used in the attack on Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia on March 4, Salisbury had been declared safe

 But four months later a trace of the substance has poisoned Charles Rowley, 45, and his girlfriend, Dawn Sturgess, 44

 Nine "hotspots" from the original attack, where residual traces could have remained, had been identified and were being decontaminated

 It was unclear whether the new poisonings were the result of a previously unknown "hotspot" or if a small amount of the agent somehow escaped from a known area,

For more infomation >> Novichok in Salisbury: The public thought it was safe ... so how could this happen four months later - Duration: 1:41.

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Boy found alone at Union Station; LAPD seeks public's help to identify him - Duration: 3:01.

Los Angeles police are asking for the public's help to identify a child who was found alone in Union Station on July Fourth

 Officers with the LAPD's Transit Services Division found the boy about 7 p.m. at the downtown L

A. hub, the department said. Advertisement  The child, who is deaf, doesn't seem to be able to communicate and did not respond to a sign language interpreter, the Los Angeles Police Department said

 The boy is black and appears to be between 5 and 7 years old. He stands about 3 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs around 60 pounds

 He has brown eyes and dark braided hair. He was wearing a blue down jacket, white tank top shirt, beige pants and gray tennis shoes, the LAPD said

Please Retweet — We need your help to locate the family of this child found today at Union Station

It's believed he is 5-7 years old, deaf and autistic and we have been unable to communicate with him

Any info please contact LAPD Transit Services Division at (213) 922-1410 pic.twitter

com/pgCPKd8KY1— LAPD HQ (@LAPDHQ) July 5, 2018  Anyone who has information to help identify the boy is asked to call the Transit Services Division at (213) 922-1410

Tipsters may contact the LAPD's 24-hour tip line at (877) 527-3247 or Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-TIPS

For more infomation >> Boy found alone at Union Station; LAPD seeks public's help to identify him - Duration: 3:01.

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Theresa May makes her first public comment on Amesbury Novichok poisoning - Duration: 3:13.

</form>  despite a new Novichok poisoning in her first comments since the incident emerged yesterday

 The Prime Minister said her thoughts were with the people of the Wiltshire city "once again" four months after the "brazen and reckless" poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal

 She added: "The message from Salisbury is clear - it is very much open for business

The government will continue to provide every support to the local community.''  It comes hours after security minister Ben Wallace admitted there was "low risk but not zero risk" to the public, adding people should "take some precautions"

  Two new victims, named by friends as Charlie Rowley, 45, and Dawn Sturgess, 44, fell critically ill after being exposed to the same Russian nerve agent that poisoned the Skripals in Amesbury - less than 10 miles from Salisbury

Read More Novichok poisoning  The UK government is "assuming" the latest poisoning was not a direct attack by Russia

 Salisbury MP John Glen said it was "most likely" due to "discarded paraphernalia" from the March attack

 Home Secretary Sajid Javid hosted a meeting of the government's COBRA emergency committee over the latest poisoning this morning

  Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson and Environment Secretary Michael Gove all attended

 England's participation in the World Cup, which is being held in cities across Russia, became a prominent issue after the Salisbury incident in March

 The British Government blamed the Kremlin for the attack, which left the former Russian double-agent and his daughter critically ill

 While a complete boycott of the World Cup was ruled out, no senior Government officials or royals were expected to attend the competition

 Russia denies any involvement in the incident, claiming the British Government has used it for political gain

 On Friday Kremlin foreign minister Sergey Lavrov claimed the UK has destroyed evidence from the Salisbury probe

 He also said the Government had "grossly manipulated" the chemical weapons watchdog when it orchestrated a change in the rules to allow it to identify who is responsible for attacks

 But a UK Government spokesman said: "These allegations are further examples of distraction from the Russian government, designed to confuse and detract from the issues at hand

 "This is a tactic we have seen Russia deploy consistently, from the downing of MH17, through the annexation of Crimea, to the use of chemical weapons in Salisbury and Syria

"

For more infomation >> Theresa May makes her first public comment on Amesbury Novichok poisoning - Duration: 3:13.

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Seattle Public Library: Summer Reads - Duration: 3:40.

For more infomation >> Seattle Public Library: Summer Reads - Duration: 3:40.

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Hawaii volcano eruption: Public urged to stay away as lava oozes into residential areas - Duration: 1:09.

Related articles  He also offered reassurances following the latest explosion at volcano's summit, which happened at 1

21am HST yesterday, or 9.21pm GMT. More than 65 homes have been destroyed so far by lava, with in excess of 2, people evacuated

 Although sparsely populated compared with Oahu, where capital city Honolulu is located, it is still home to 2, people

For more infomation >> Hawaii volcano eruption: Public urged to stay away as lava oozes into residential areas - Duration: 1:09.

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✅ Renaud apparaît en forme en public, ses fans sont rassurés - Duration: 1:06.

 Alors que la question de l'état de santé de Renaud préoccupe toujours ses fans, le chanteur les a rassurés en apparaissant, ce week-end, lors d'un tournoi de pétanque à l'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue, dans le Vaucluse

Ce moment a été immortalisé et partagé sur Instagram par son ex et mère de son fils Malone, Romane Serda.  « Mon chouchou a mis mon tee-shirt, trop mignon

Quel beau model, le plus beau ! », a-t-elle écrit en dessous de deux photos montrant le chanteur à fond au boulodrome, vêtu d'un tee-shirt à l'effigie de son ex

Mais alors Renaud, tu tires ou tu pointes ?

For more infomation >> ✅ Renaud apparaît en forme en public, ses fans sont rassurés - Duration: 1:06.

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Jodi Arias loses bid to bar public from seeing her appeal - Duration: 0:38.

For more infomation >> Jodi Arias loses bid to bar public from seeing her appeal - Duration: 0:38.

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✅ Renaud apparaît en forme en public, ses fans sont rassurés - Duration: 1:09.

 Alors que la question de l'état de santé de Renaud préoccupe toujours ses fans, le chanteur les a rassurés en apparaissant, ce week-end, lors d'un tournoi de pétanque à l'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue, dans le Vaucluse

Ce moment a été immortalisé et partagé sur Instagram par son ex et mère de son fils Malone, Romane Serda.  « Mon chouchou a mis mon tee-shirt, trop mignon

Quel beau model, le plus beau ! », a-t-elle écrit en dessous de deux photos montrant le chanteur à fond au boulodrome, vêtu d'un tee-shirt à l'effigie de son ex

Mais alors Renaud, tu tires ou tu pointes ?

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