French authorities and NATO confirmed the presence of four Russian warships in the English Channel on Friday, but denied they were doing military exercises and said they were taking shelter due to bad weather.
Officials quickly sought to ease fears over the presence of the flotilla after Russian media reported they were planning military exercises, with East-West tensions sky-high over Russia's intervention in ex-Soviet Ukraine.
The passage through the Channel came just weeks after a series of flights by large formations of Russian warplanes in European airspace, intercepted by NATO which has described Russia's attitude as increasingly "provocative".
However a French navy spokesman said the passage of warships led by a large submarine-hunting ship was "nothing unusual. It is merely a matter of boats in transit. Weather conditions are not good in the area."
Authorities on both sides of the Channel told AFP that such Russian naval detachments visit the region on a regular basis and that they usually do not extend their stay beyond a few days.
"The ships were escorted by the Royal Navy warship HMS Tyne as part of her UK maritime security role and have now left UK waters," said a spokesman for Britain's Ministry of Defence.
Christiane Wirtz, a spokeswoman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, told journalists that the transit of the Russian ships "even in international waters, is not really a sign of de-escalation."
A NATO spokesman insisted the ships were not carrying out exercises "in the Channel, as some Russian headlines would have us believe."
"Our information indicates that the ships are transiting and have been delayed by weather conditions," NATO spokesman Jay Janzen told AFP.
Russia's Northern Fleet said in a statement released to the RIA Novosti government news agency that its four vessels were led by the Severomorsk destroyer and the Alexander Otrakovsky amphibious landing ship.
It said the detachment had passed through the narrowest part of the channel between England and France at Pas-de-Calais and would begin a series of planned manoeuvres shortly.
The quoted statement said a storm had forced the detachment to take temporary shelter at the Bay of the River Seine off the northwestern coast of France.
"During its stay, the ships' crew will perform a series of manoeuvres aimed at combating underwater vessels and technology," the news agency quoted the Russian statement as saying.
Alexis Edme, a spokesman for maritime authorities in northern France, said that while the presence of the ships was not for an official military exercise, "that doesn't mean they aren't doing fire drills or something else," adding these were par for the course on a warship.
He said their presence was "far from new. It happens several times a year. The Channel is a passage, they are coming from the north. It would be hard for them to do anything but pass through there."

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Sierra Leone will soon see a dramatic increase in desperately needed Ebola treatment beds, but it's still not clear who will staff them, according to the top United Nations official in the fight against the disease.
Ebola has sickened more than 16,000 people of whom nearly 7,000 have died, according to figures released by the World Health Organization Friday.
Sierra Leone is now bearing the brunt of the 8-month-old outbreak. In the other hard-hit countries, Liberia and Guinea, WHO says infection rates are stabilizing or declining, but in Sierra Leone, they're soaring. The country has been reporting around 400 to 500 new cases each week for several weeks.
Those cases are concentrated in the capital, Freetown, its surrounding areas and the northern Port Loko district, which together account for about 65 percent of the country's new infections, Anthony Banbury, head of the U.N. Mission for Ebola Emergency Response, said in an interview with The Associated Press.
"The critical gap right now in those locations are beds. It's as simple that: We need more beds," said Banbury, who spoke by telephone from Ghana, where the mission is headquartered. Only about 350 of some 1,200 promised treatment beds are up and running, according to WHO figures.
Five more British-built treatment centers will open next month, tripling the current bed capacity, according to the U.K.'s Department for International Development. One near the capital is already up and running.
Still, more beds alone are not enough.
"We're concerned that the partners who have signed up to operate the beds won't be able to operate them in the numbers and timeline really required," Banbury said. He is flying to Sierra Leone this weekend to address that problem.
Sierra Leone is also dogged by unsafe burials. The bodies of Ebola victims are extremely contagious and the touching of dead bodies might be responsible for as much as 50 percent of all new cases, Banbury said.
Cultural practices call for dead bodies to be washed, and women's bodies are supposed to be prepared by other women. But with very few women on burial teams, Banbury said that it appears people are washing the bodies of women before they call for them to be taken away.
Sierra Leone also needs more burial teams: WHO numbers show that only about a quarter of the teams the country needs are trained and working.
The United Nations had hoped that by Dec. 1, the end of the outbreak would be in sight: Two months ago, it said it wanted to have 70 percent of Ebola cases isolated and 70 percent of dead bodies being safely buried by that date. That would have drastically reduced the two ways people get infected — through contact with the bodily fluids of sick people and corpses.
World Health Organization numbers show they are significantly short of that goal and Banbury acknowledged that the overall goal would not be met. He stressed that tremendous progress has been made, and many places throughout the region would meet or even exceed the targets set.
"As long as there's one person with Ebola out there, then the crisis isn't over and Ebola is a risk to the people of that community, that country, this sub-region, this continent, this world," he said. "Our goal and what we will achieve is getting it down to zero, but there's no doubt it's going to be a long, hard fight."

LANDOVER HILLS, Md. (AP) — Dr. Martin Salia didn't get into the medical profession to get rich, and even though he was a permanent U.S. resident, he chose to work in his native Sierra Leone because the need for surgeons there was so great.
Although his medical colleagues were worried when he returned there to treat Ebola patients, they said the decision was consistent with his character.
The 44-year-old surgeon was remembered Saturday at his funeral Mass as a tireless, selfless and heroic advocate for medical care for the less fortunate. Salia died of Ebola on Nov. 17 after being flown to a hospital in Omaha, Nebraska, in the advanced stages of the deadly virus. He became the second person to die in the United States after contracting Ebola in West Africa, where it has killed nearly 7,000 people.
Ron Klain, the White House Ebola response coordinator, read a personal note of condolence from President Barack Obama to Salia's family.
"The greatest heroes are people who choose to face danger, who voluntarily put themselves at risk to help others," Klain said. "Martin Salia was such a man."
The 90-minute Mass at the home parish of Salia's family in Maryland drew a crowd that swelled to the hundreds. Relatives, friends, colleagues and dignitaries from both the U.S. and Sierra Leone were in attendance, along with Sierra Leonean immigrants from around the country, some of whom said they didn't know Salia personally.
Salia's wife, Isatu Salia, wept as she carried a small black box containing her husband's cremated remains into the church, flanked by the couple's sons, 20-year-old Maada and 14-year-old Hinwaii.
Bockari Stevens, the Sierra Leonean ambassador to the United States, called Salia a national hero who abandoned "the luxuries of the United States" to aid his homeland.
"It is a loss not only to your family. It is a loss to our country," Stevens said.
Stevens called for the United States to do more to "ensure that this scourge is blighted" in Sierra Leone, which is now bearing the brunt of the 8-month-old outbreak, and the other West African nations stricken by Ebola. Klain pledged that more aid was on the way.
"The world's response has been too late, but now, help is coming," he said to applause.
The top United Nations official in the fight against the disease said Saturday in an interview with The Associated Press that Sierra Leone will soon see a dramatic increase in Ebola treatment beds, but it's not clear who will staff them. Only about a quarter of a promised 1,200 treatment beds are up and running. The nation is also dogged by unsafe burials, which may account for up to 50 percent of all new cases, said Anthony Banbury, head of the U.N. Mission for Ebola Emergency Response.
Salia was born and raised in Kenema, Sierra Leone, and received his medical training in Freetown, the country's capital. He later served as a surgical resident in Cameroon and also worked in Kenya and the United States. His dream had been to open his own hospital in Sierra Leone, colleagues said.
Salia did not receive aggressive treatment for Ebola until nearly two weeks after he first started showing symptoms. His formal diagnosis was delayed, and it took several days for him to be flown back to the United States. Those delays, doctors said, probably made it impossible for anyone to save his life.
Dr. Marilee Cole, an international health consultant who ran a Georgetown University training program in Cameroon, remembered Salia as an unusually humble physician. The diminutive, wiry surgeon was always in motion, she said, and despite his work ethic, he managed to organize a soccer league for the hospital staff. After he completed his residency and began training other doctors, they were awed by his multitude of skills, she said.
"You never knew how hard he was working until you talked to your colleagues," Cole said. "Over the course of many years, I came to understand there was something special about him."
In a brief interview after the Mass, Salia's older son said he was heartened by the esteem in which others held his father.
"I'm really proud that he was able to do so many things for a lot of people," Maada Salia said.
Filipino boxing superstar Manny Pacman Pacquiao has challenge undefeated American boxing superstar Floyd Mayweather Jr to be man enough by fighting him if he thinks he can easily knock him out.


Pacquiao made the statement as reaction to the Instagram post of Mayweather showing a video with the background music of “Another one bite the dust” getting knocked down by Mexican boxing star Juan Manuel Marquez.

The Filipino congressman from Sarangani province said instead of using the social media to mock him, Mayweather should just accept his challenge for a fight and make professional boxing fans all over the world happy. “Since he thinks I’m so easy to put to sleep then he should just fight me,” Pacquiao said.


Pacquiao said he wants to fight Mayweather since he wanted the boxing fans to be happy since they had long wanted to see him fight Mayweather. As proof of his willingness to fight Mayweather, Pacquiao said he is open to have the smaller purse in their bout as long as Mayweather agrees to fight him anytime next year.


Pacquiao’s business manager Eric Pineda said the initial talk for the realization of the long-awaited fight has already started and they are confident it could lead to a good result. Pineda said money is less of Pacquiao’s concern since he is more focused on making the professional boxing fans happy by fighting Mayweather.

A fight with Mayweather in 2015 became a big possibility after Pacquiao convincingly defeated Chris Algieri via a unanimous decision. In their bout, Pacquiao floored Algieri six times to the delight of his boxing fans all over the world.

Boxing fans and experts are all clamoring for a Pacquiao-Mayweather bout since the two are considered as two of the best boxers in the world today. While Pacquiao is very vocal about his intention to fight Mayweather that is not the case for the latter. Sources said Mayweather is reluctant to fight Pacquiao since he is afraid to lose to the latter.

In the world of professional boxing Pacquiao is known for his speed and power and Mayweather for his head and shoulder defense.

Part of the allure of epidemiology is being able to describe and predict highly dynamic outbreaks with simple, clean mathematical models. But how close can models really get to perfectly mapping the spread of disease?

Modeling how disease spreads early in an outbreak is a major challenge as sample sizes remain low and variables high. But a recently-developed method of making short-term outbreak projections called the IDEA model has shown promise, and is even doing an excellent job of tracking the current Ebola outbreak.

"If validated, the implications of such a finding may be profound," wrote the model's creators in an open-access 2013 paper in PLOS One, "e.g., the ability to project, with a high degree of accuracy, the final size and duration of a seasonal influenza outbreak within 2 weeks of onset."


The graph above shows how the model is faring with the current Ebola outbreak. So far, it's nearly perfect. If the IDEA model continues to predict the epidemic with the same accuracy, we can expect Ebola to start burning out in December, with a total of 14,000 cases. Currently, according to the CDC there are or have been 8,400. We have a ways to go.

So how does the model work? A few weeks ago, we discussed the infamous r_0 number—which is used to calculate the transmissibility of a disease in terms of additional infections per infected individual—and a model known as SIR, which describes the powerful dynamics involved in mixing susceptible (S), infected (I), and immune (R, for recovered) segments of a population that's exposed to infection.

The SIR model is classically used to see how much an infection can grow within a population, with those susceptible becoming infected, and the infected sometimes becoming recovered or immune. (A good explainer example is this model of a potential zombie outbreak.) When combined with r_0, the models can give us the force of an infection.

Generally, epidemic models grow from the SIR framework, with each one adding a new "compartment." For example, the SEIR model adds an "E" for a population group that's been exposed, and is incubating the pathogen, but isn't yet infectious—such as when US Ebola patient zero Thomas Eric Duncan boarded his plane from Liberia in September.

The MSIR model adds "M," a group with natural, born-with-it immunity. Meanwhile, the SIS model actually removes the immune group entirely from the equations, a situation that fits the common cold and flu, in which being infected once offers no future protection.

There are several other variations on the basic compartmental model, but this is hardly the only modeling strategy out there. Both generally and as a way of informing the models above, we might turn to the IDEA model.

IDEA stands for "incidence decay and exponential adjustment." Yes, finally, we get to really talk about exponential things in the proper sense, rather than the usual casual redefinition of the term to mean "a lot."

One of the IDEA scheme's creators, Amy Greer, writes that the model is "based on the idea that we could use simple types of public health surveillance data and turn that information into reliably accurate projections of what might happen in the outbreak in the short-term."

The model attempts to make up for the usual shortcomings of the r_0 number, which, according to the IDEA creators, often fails to accurately account for epidemic control efforts.

As with the compartmental models, r_0 is at its best at the very beginning of an outbreak using sets of initial values. In an outbreak, things change fast, however, and public health responses can add a ton of variables to the mix.

Again, in the case of Ebola, how could a research have modeled the way misinformation and protests have undermined quarantine efforts? This is where IDEA is designed to be most effective.

If you remember, r_0 is technically defined as the average number of secondary infections that can be expected to result from one primary infection. In other words, this is how many people that each infected person can expect to transmit the disease to before they, the primary case, become not-infectious.

Ebola sits at around r_0 = 1.5 in the United States and closer to 2 in West Africa, where the disease has a higher chance of spreading. Keep in mind the 1.5 is an initial value and as more control measures are taken, it should decline.

Measuring the decline is where things get murky, according to Greer. Her model uses a new term d to modify r_0 like this:



The main thing here is the d, which is a factor representing some discount function that changes through time, so named because it resembles discounting in financial models. Here it's meant to represent the efforts taken to control the epidemic, vaccinations and quarantines etc. The larger d gets, the smaller the I result, which is the number of total infected individuals.

Using this first I, we can find out how I changes through time, given by this equation, where the Ret at time 0 is just r_0:



So, multiplying the R value at a given time, which is the Ret, by the first equation we got using d will tell us how many infected individuals we can expect at the next time interval (days, probably).

All that is to say that the IDEA model is a much more dynamic way to look at transmissibility as it's continuously being modified by the various control mechanisms we might put into place to limit the epidemic or, rather, the observed effects of them.

Algebraically twisting around the equations above, along with other equations in the model that predict changes in an epidemic's immune and susceptible populations, gives us some other useful predictions: The expected time an epidemic is likely to stop growing, an estimated maximum number of total infected individuals, and so on. The model can also give epidemiologists a way of determining how effective their control measures are.

Greer and her team tested the model out on data from an H1N1 outbreak in Nunavet, Canada (a reasonably isolated population). You can see the results below. Not bad: the models tracked the observed data pretty well. (Note that SI refers to how many different time intervals, the ts above, are calculated.)


In simulated epidemics, the researchers found that their model did very well with low or moderately low starting r_0 values, which SIR can have a difficult time with. According to Greer and her team, the IDEA prediction was a near-perfect fit.

"We found that best-fit projections for the IDEA model for disease dynamic systems with low or intermediate r_0 were exceedingly good, with parameters derived within 3–4 generations able to project the full extent of simulated epidemics with remarkable accuracy," the team concluded in their PLOS One paper.
So you think that June is the “marrying-est” month of the year?

Not anymore. December is it. Well, at least this year when showbiz couples have been saying and are saying “I do’s,” following in the footsteps of Susan Roces and Fernando Poe Jr. who got married on Christmas Day in 1968.

Let’s do a recap.

Year 2014 was ushered in by wedding bells for Drew Arellano and Iya Villania at Christian rites in Nasugbu, Batangas, in January, an affair so secret that even some of those invited didn’t know what was up. So?

• Alwyn Uytingco and Jennica Garcia were secretly married on Feb. 12, also very secretly. They are waiting for the stork’s visit early next year.

• Karylle and Yael Yuzon on March 21 at a Christian wedding in Tagaytay.

• Jericho Rosales and Kim Jones chose Boracay as venue for their sunset wedding. Unlike some couples who wrongly think that the whole country will gatecrash their wedding, Jericho and Kim proudly told the world about their special day months in advance.

• Boots Anson-Roa and Francisco “King” Rodrigo sealed their second-time-around (both lost their first partners years earlier) in an afternoon wedding on June 14 at the Archbishop Palace in Mandaluyong City. It was the Wedding of the Decade, traditional every step of the way that started with King doing the pamanhikan and patiently waiting for the wedding night to cap a romance that caught the fancy and the heart of the Filipinos.

• Amy Perez and Carlo Castillo (finally!) realized their long-time dream of making their union official, blessed by the church, on Nov. 12, after the long-held annulment of Amy’s first marriage. Together for more than eight years, the couple has two children, with Amy’s son from a failed marriage treated by Carlo like his own.

Scheduled to walk down the aisle in December are: Aiza Seguerra and Liza Dino on the 8th “somewhere in California” (same-sex marriage is not…yet… approved in the Philippines); Bianca Gonzales and JC Intal on the 12th (remember how JC “copied” the finale scene of It Takes a Man and a Woman in which John Lloyd Cruz proposed to Sarah Geronimo at the airport); Chito Miranda and Neri Naig on the 14th; Joross Gamboa and his non-showbiz girlfriend Katz Saga; and, but of course, Marian Rivera and Dingdong Dantes on the 30th in what promises to be the Wedding of the Year. (Unless they change their plan, Jewel Mische and her American boyfriend Alistair Kurtzer might have what Jewel described as “a winter wedding” in the US.)

More weddings scheduled next year: Yeng Constantino and her pastor-boyfriend Victor “Yan” Asuncion,Patrick Garcia and his non-showbiz girlfriend Nikka Martinez, John Prats and Isabel Oli, and, but of course, Heart Evangelista and Sen.Chiz Escudero on Valentine’s Day (Feb. 14).

Unless a couple jumps the gun on us, that’s the wedding list so far.
Eminem. (AFP)

NEW YORK | Eminem is provoking more outrage on a new album in which he threatens female stars, but this time the self-styled Rap God also waxes philosophical on the reasons for his aggression.

The top-selling artist in hip-hop history readily courts controversy on “Shady XV,” released Friday for the holiday shopping season.
A compilation album, “Shady XV” has one disc worth of new material from Eminem and other musicians on his Shady Records, with a second disc featuring hits from the label’s 15 years.

Eminem — or at least his musical character — imagines attacking singer Lana Del Rey as he alludes to one of the notorious recent incidents of violence against women, American football star Ray Rice’s beating of his girlfriend which was caught on a surveillance camera.

Eminem, after referring to his latent embrace of gay rights, raps: “Play nice? Bitch, I’ll punch Lana Del Rey right in the face twice / Like Ray Rice in broad daylight.”

On the track “Vegas,” against a backdrop of guitar riffs, Eminem speaks of raping another rising female star, Australian hip-hop artist Iggy Azalea: “Put that shit away, Iggy / You don’t want to blow that rape whistle on me.”

The lyrics drew widespread outrage on social media, with many saying such blatant misogyny was unacceptable, even for a rapper who frequently explains he is performing in the voice of the character “Slim Shady.”

Azalea belittled the 42-year-old Eminem on Twitter, writing that she was “bored of the old men threatening young women as entertainment trend.”

The 24-year-old tweeted that the lyrics were “especially a(w)kward because my 14 year old brother is the biggest eminem fan and now the artist he admired says he wants to rape me. nice!”

‘TOO LATE TO START OVER’

The harsh lyrics mark the latest twist for Eminem, who has swung between unbridled aggression to contemplative reconciliation throughout his career.

Most famously, the Detroit rapper has had a complicated, to say the least, relationship with his mother. He fantasized about violence against her on 2000′s “The Marshall Mathers LP” before apologizing to her in song.

Similarly, Eminem has distanced himself from his songs’ earlier homophobia but on his latest full-fledged album, last year’s “The Marshall Mathers LP 2,” returned to using the word “faggot,” calling it a generic insult rather than an anti-gay slur.

On “Shady XV,” Eminem again employs his narrative technique of dialogues with himself or his alter ego and becomes philosophical about his legacy.

On “Guts Over Fear,” Eminem demonstrates his prowess as one of the quickest-fire rappers as he muses about himself, “It’s too late to start over.”

“The media made me the equivalent of a modern-day Genghis Khan / Tried to argue, it was only entertainment, dog,” Eminem said of the criticism early in his career.

But Eminem also bemoans critiques that he has gone soft as he explains why he has gone back to his earlier incarnation. “So, to the break of dawn, here I go recycling the same old song,” he raps.

Eminem also offers what could be an apology to Lana Del Rey and Iggy Azalea — or at least an explanation for himself.

“It just breaks my heart to look at all the pain I caused,” he raps. “But what am I gonna do when the rage is gone?”