Showing posts with label break. Show all posts
Showing posts with label break. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 August 2010

Woods and former wife break silence about their divorce

Watch Woods and former wife break silence about their divorce

LARA MARLOWE in Washington

TIGER WOODS and his former wife, Elin Nordegren, have broken their silence about their divorce, he in a press conference at a golf tournament in New Jersey, she in an exclusive interview with People magazine.

Ms Nordegren said she has been on an “emotional roller coaster” since the scandal broke last Thanksgiving Day weekend.

“I have been through the stages of disbelief and shock, to anger and ultimately grief over the loss of the family I so badly wanted for my children,” she said in excerpts from the interview released by People before the magazine reaches newsstands tomorrow.

In 19 hours of interviews over four days in Windermere, Florida, where she has rented a home, Nordegren said she had lost weight, could not sleep and her hair fell out due to the stress of the break- up of her six-year marriage to Woods. She said speculation that she attacked Woods with a golf club on the night of the car crash that made the scandal known was truly ridiculous.

The 30-year-old former au pair said she felt stupid as more and more of Woods’s infidelities were revealed. “How could I have not known anything? The word betrayal isn’t strong enough. I felt my whole world had fallen apart.”

At The Barclays in Paramus, New Jersey yesterday, where he practised for the FedEx Cup play- off yesterday, Woods bumped fists with fans and signed autographs. He stopped smiling, however, during a news conference where he again assumed responsibility for the break-up of his marriage.

“My actions certainly led us to this decision and I have made a lot of errors in my life and that is something I’m going to have to live with.”

Woods twice failed to answer when reporters asked whether he still loved his ex-wife.

“I wish her the best in everything. You know, it’s a sad time in our lives and we’re looking forward to [rebuilding] our lives and how we can help our kids the best way we possibly can. And that’s the most important thing.”

Woods now stands 112th on the FedEx Cup points list and must make a decent finish this week if he is to advance to the next stage in the championship.

He acknowledged that his game was affected by the break-up. “At times it was difficult [to focus]. Certainly you try and block it out as best you can and focus on a shot. But at times it certainly was, yes.”

Nordegren is reported to have received between $100 million and $750 million in the still-undisclosed divorce settlement, which became final on Monday.

“She is very unselfconscious about the fact that yes, she is going to be a very wealthy woman,” said Sandra Sobieraj Westfall, the journalist who interviewed Nordegren for People . “It will make it easier for her to get through this, because she can stay home with her children. She doesn’t have to go right out and get a job and she can travel, to take her children back to Sweden.”

Nordegren also said though that “money can’t buy happiness or put my family back together”.

She is studying for a university degree in psychology and says that despite her ex-husband’s infidelity, “I also feel stronger than I ever have. I have confidence in my beliefs, my decisions and myself.”
Coppied by http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/2010/0826/1224277610097.html

Tuesday, 24 August 2010

Cities braced in Sindh as rising water threatens to break levees

See the Cities braced in Sindh as rising water threatens to break levees


A Pakistani man walks with a boy as they wade through floodwaters near the village of Basira in Punjab
By Andrew Buncombe, Asia Correspondent
Workers frantically piled sandbags and stones and tried to repair leaking levees as surging water threatened two more cities in the southern province of Sindh yesterday.

Pakistani troops have built around 10 miles of defences to protect Shadad Kot and Qambar, but as water continued to pour into the Indus river last night, the authorities were deeply worried that the lines could be breached.

Already, hundreds of thousands of people have been evacuated from Shadad Kot and the surrounding area. Almost a month after the floods began devastating Pakistan's north-west, in the far south water levels are still rising as the floods make their way towards the sea.

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The crucial question is whether they can be stopped and diverted before destroying more communities. Spread across a huge swathe of the country, more than six million people have been left homeless.

"It is the last-ditch effort to save the city," Brigadier Khawar Baig, who was overseeing efforts to save Shadad Kot, told the Associated Press. "We are trying to block the water here. If it crosses over, we fear it will go further south and inundate more towns."

Officials told reporters that the eastern side of the city was threatened by water more than 9ft deep. Levees were constantly being repaired with stones and sand-bags, but the authorities were unsure whether they would be able to do enough.

The scale of the flooding that has spread across Pakistan would have challenged the logistical capabilities of any government. But the slow response of the civilian administration headed by President Asif Ali Zardari has continued to anger those who have lost everything.

Yesterday in Punjab province, hundreds of people who fled the rising waters blocked a major road near the town of Kot Adu in demonstration. They complained that they had been camped out nearby for several days without the authorities bringing any emergency supplies.

The constant concern of aid organsiations is the possible spread of waterborne diseases such as cholera. With so many people forced from their homes, emergency shelters, clean water and food is also going to be required for weeks.

A spokesman for the UN's humanitarian organisation suggested millions of people were currently short of food.

Adding to the country's turmoil, more than 36 people were killed yesterday in a series of bomb attacks in the north-west of Pakistan.

In an attack on the outskirts of Peshawar, the leader of an anti-Taliban militia was killed as he passed through a market, while in South Waziristan, a pro-government cleric and more than 20 other people died in a suicide attack on a mosque inside a religious school which also injured 40.
Coppied by http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/cities-braced-in-sindh-as-rising-water-threatens-to-break-levees-2060145.html