Sonar scanners find ancient wrecks off Italian coast

(Reuters) – A team of marine archaeologists using sonar scanners have discovered four ancient shipwrecks off the tiny Italian island of Zannone, with intact cargoes of wine and oil.

The remains of the trading vessels, dating from the first century BC to the 5th-7th century AD, are up to 165 meters underwater, a depth that preserved them from being disturbed by fishermen over the centuries.

“The deeper you go, the more likely you are to find complete wrecks,” said Annalisa Zarattini, an official from the archaeological services section of the Italian culture ministry.

The timber structures of the vessels have been eaten away by tiny marine organisms, leaving their outlines and the cargoes still lying in the position they were stowed on board.

“The ships sank, they came to rest at the bottom of the sea, the wood disappeared and you find the whole ship, with the entire cargo. Nothing has been taken away,” she said.

The discoveries were made through cooperation between Italian authorities and the Aurora Trust, a U.S. foundation that promotes exploration of the Mediterranean seabed.

The vessels, up to 18 meters long, had been carrying amphorae, or large jars, containing wine from Italy, and cargo from North Africa and Spain including olive oil, fruit and garum, a pungent fish sauce that was a favorite ingredient in Roman cooking.

Another ship, as yet undated, appeared to have been carrying building bricks. It is unclear how the vessels sank and no human remains have been found.

TRADE ROUTES

The vessels are the second “fleet” of ships to be discovered in recent years near the Pontine islands, an archipelago off Italy’s west coast believed to have been a key junction for ships bringing supplies to the vast warehouses of Rome.

“One aim was to test the hypothesis that the Pontine islands, which are very small and which were barely inhabited in antiquity, were really important maritime staging posts because they had very good natural harbors,” Zarattini said.

The team hope to find a secondary cargo of smaller items which they believe would have been stowed in straw and may be well preserved under the crustacean-clad sediments.

Last year, the project found five wrecks off nearby Ventotene, an island used in Roman times to exile disgraced Roman noblewomen. The Emperor Augustus sent his daughter Julia there to punish her for adultery.

Italy has signed a new UNESCO agreement that requires them to leave the wreckage in place, potentially opening the way to would-be treasure hunters although Zarattini said the benefits in terms of tourism outweighed the risks.

“We think the sea, which is particularly beautiful around these islands, can become a real museum,” she said.

“In the future, not so far off, a lot of people will be able to go down and see the wreckage themselves.”

(Additional reporting by James Mackenzie; editing by Andrew Roche)

Carla Bruni behind Louvre rock festival cancellation?

London, April 29(ANI): French First Lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy used influence to cancel the Louvre rock festival, fearing it would overshadow a series of concerts aimed to raise funds for Aids sufferers, it has emerged.

The Ministry of Culture refused permission to hold the open air-gig in the courtyard of the Louvre Museum, due to take place on 18-19 June, citing it “unsuitable” and potentially unsafe for such a “sensitive” and historic site.

However, a French investigative newspaper has claimed that the President’s wife, who is an official Aids ambassador for the UN, made the call.

Apparently, the singer did not want the attention to be driven away from the Aids victims devoted concerts, scheduled to begin six days after the Louvre show.

The Culture Ministry also reasoned that a rock show would be “unwelcome” on 18 June, since it marked the 70th anniversary of General de Gaulle””””s radio appeal from London for a defeated France to continue the fight against Nazi Germany.

However, French newspaper Le Canard Enchainé claims Bruni-Sarkozy had made the objections directly.

The Inrockuptibles magazine, which organizes the festival, had even appealed to her to re-think, but received a negative response. (ANI)

Greek police arrest suspected leftist guerrillas

ATHENS, April 11 (Reuters) – Greek police have arrested six people suspected of belonging to one of the country’s most militant guerrilla groups and taking part in bomb attacks, officials said on Sunday.

The arrest of the suspected members of the Revolutionary Struggle appeared to be a major strike against groups which have stepped up attacks against police, public buildings and businesses since riots that paralysed Athens in December 2008.

“They have been arrested and will be led to the prosecutor on charges of participating in a terrorist organisation,” police spokesman Thanassis Kokkalakis told a news conference.

Kokkalakis said police found a wealth of evidence at the residence of two of those arrested, including a hard disk containing pamphlets claiming attacks by Revolutionary Struggle as well as handwritten texts about past and intended attacks.

Police said in a statement they had arrested six people, revising the number down from media reports of seven arrests.

They raided dozens of suspects’ homes over the weekend, officials said, adding they had not yet found weapons or explosives. They were investigating whether the suspects had taken part in bomb attacks claimed by other guerrilla groups.

On Sunday, about 60 leftists threw stones and plastic bottles at police who raided a home in central Athens. Police fired tear gas to disperse them.

Revolutionary Struggle emerged in September 2003, about a year after the capture of the urban guerrilla group November 17.

It attempted to kill a minister in 2006 and launched a rocket-propelled grenade against the U.S Embassy in Athens in 2007, causing minor damage and no injuries.

It reappeared weeks the police killing of a teenager in December 2008, claiming responsibility for shooting at riot police guarding the culture ministry which left one wounded.

Greece’s socialist government, elected in an October snap election, has made combating guerrilla groups a priority. (Reporting by Dina Kyriakidou and Renee Maltezou; writing by Ingrid Melander; editing by Andrew Roche)

First Chinese singers fined for lip-synching

BEIJING (Reuters Life!) – Two Chinese singers have become the first people in the country to fall foul of new rules banning lip-synching nearly two years after widespread criticism of miming at the Beijing Olympics’ opening ceremony.

Lifestyle

The two young female singers were spotted lip-synching during a concert in southwestern China’s Chengdu city last year, the official Xinhua news agency said on its website (www.xinhuanet.com).

“No signals were received from their microphones while the show was on,” it quoted an official with the local government’s cultural affairs office as saying.

The two have been fined 50,000 yuan ($7,329) each, Xinhua added.

China’s feisty internet users frequently blame famous singers of short-selling their fans by lip-synching on stage.

But some have also wondered why these first fines were leveled against two almost unknown singers rather than more famous stars.

“Why do they choose to keep their eyes closed when it’s a famous singer miming?” one commentator wrote on the website of the Beijing Daily.

Lip-synching, known as “fake singing” in Chinese, burst into the open during 2008′s Beijing Olympics.

China’s Olympic organizers were lambasted by Internet users and in the media after they admitted a nine-year-old girl lip-synched during the opening ceremony, in place of the real singer who was rejected because of her appearance.

The Culture Ministry then issued an edict formally banning lip-synching and threatened to revoke the performance licenses of repeat offenders.

($1=6.822 Yuan)

(Reporting by Huang Yan and Ben Blanchard)

Marion Cotillard, Tim Burton receive French honour

London, Mar 16 (ANI): French actress Marion Cotillard and American director Tim Burton were both honoured at the French culture ministry recently.

Cotillard, 34, received one of France’s highest cultural honours at a ceremony in Paris, and was made a knight in the Order of the Arts and Letters by Culture Minister Frederic Mitterand.

Burton, 51, who directed ‘Alice in Wonderland’, was honoured and made a knight, and after receiving his green and gold medallion, said he had always loved France and felt a special connection with the French public.

“I feel much more at home here than I do in my own country and I thank you very much,” the BBC quoted him as saying.

Recipients of the order are honoured for their significant “contribution to the enrichment of French culture”.

Previous recipients include US singer Stevie Wonder, who was made a commander earlier this month, actors Dennis Hopper, Meryl Streep and Uma Thurman, and singers Bob Dylan and Kylie Minogue. (ANI)

‘Bruno’ banned in Ukraine over ‘morality damaging’ claims

Washington, July 16(ANI): Ukraine has banned Sasha Baron Cohen’s new comedy film ‘Bruno’ claiming that it will “damage the morality” of locals.

The movie that has been a huge hit in both US and UK has come under fire in the eastern European country for apparently “unjustified” shots of genitals and homosexual sex scenes.

The move to stop the film from being screened in the country came after nine out of the culture ministry’s 14 members agreed to veto its release, Contactmusic reports.

In a letter to the country’s film distributor Sinergia, officials wrote: “The Ukrainian ministry of culture has decided to ban all showings of this film on Ukrainian territory.

“The film contains unjustified showing of genital organs and sexual relations and shows homosexual acts and homosexual perversions in an explicitly realist manner. (It also contains) sadistic manifestations which could damage the morality of citizens.”

The film stars Cohen as gay Austrian fashionista Bruno. (ANI)

Uproar after Radio Televisyen Malaysia’s retiming of Mandarin, Tamil news

Kuala Lumpur, Apr 21 (ANI): Radio Televisyen Malaysia’s (RTM) Chinese and Indian viewers of Tamil origin are all riled up over the retiming of the Mandarin and Tamil news slots.

The MCA claimed the change of the Mandarin news time slot from 8 p.m. to 6.30 p.m. on TV2 would not benefit Chinese viewers, while a PPP leader Senator T. Murugiah also cited the same over the rescheduling of Tamil @ 2 news from its original 7.30 p.m. to 6 p.m. beginning on Monday.

MCA spokesman Lee Wei Keat yesterday questioned the Information, Communications, Arts and Culture Ministry’s motive in changing the time.

He said the revised time slot would inconvenience viewers and eventually affect the ratings and image of the RTM, The Star reported.

“The ministry should revert the Mandarin news time slot to its previous prime time of 8 p.m.,” he said.

Starting yesterday, the 30-minute Mandarin news is aired at 6.30 p.m. and noon daily on TV2, as opposed to the previous time slot of 8 p.m. on TV1.

“Many viewers will not be able to catch the news from 6.30pm to 7pm as they would either be travelling home from work or busy preparing dinner for families,” said Lee who is also MCA Information and Communications Bureau chairman.

In Ipoh, Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Senator T. Murugiah said many Indian workers complained that they could not catch the programme, called Tamil @ 2, because it was being aired too early.

“Those working in Kuala Lumpur, especially, would be caught in traffic jams. They could not make it back in time for the news,” he said after opening a motivational seminar for Indian students at SMK Sungai Pari here yesterday. (ANI)

Daily demonstrations cutting into Greece’s tourism draw

Athens – Greece prides itself on its history as the cradle of democracy and has long used that fact as a major tourism draw.

However, an influx of activist democracy that some say has gone too far – ongoing strikes paired with almost daily street demonstrations since last December – has been putting a crimp in that tourism industry.

Businesses, luxury hotels and automated teller machines are boarded up, access to Athens’ ancient city centre is cut off to traffic and riot police stand guard at every street corner.

“You cannot really plan on doing anything because suddenly you have a group of people protesting in front of you,” said Vicky Valanos, a tourist from Holland.

Combined with a global recession, the protests, which have gone on for months, are causing serious worries in the tourism industry.

“Normally, people who visit another foreign country check the weather report,” said Valanos. “But here you need to check if anyone is striking or protesting beforehand – and if they are, that means you are not able to get around because transport stops and businesses shut down.”

Tourism season isn’t in full swing, but the industry is already feeling negative effects from the protests. Visitors to Athens in recent months risk being turned away from the country’s most popular tourist sites – the Acropolis – as culture ministry employees open and close it at the drop of a hat to protest against job cuts and pay delays.

Greece’s Finance Minister, Yiannis Papathanasiou has said it is unclear how badly the financial crisis would affect the country’s vital tourism industry as the credit crunch hits potential vacationers.

But Giorgos Drakopoulos, director if the Association of Greek Tourism Enterprises (SETE), said the violence has affected the country’s image in a negative way.

“Fortunately, we believe that this is only short term and we will be back to business as usual – Egypt and Indonesia managed to bounce back after various bombing attacks which occurred in their countries.”

Businesses insist tourism has already suffered from the daily outbreaks of extremist violence in the capital since riots rocked the country in December. Those broke out after the fatal shooting of a teenager by police ignited anger amid unemployed young Greeks.

Since the riots, Athens has suffered from a spree of bombing attacks against domestic and foreign businesses. Then, last month, groups of hooded youths wielding crowbars and sledgehammers went on a rampage in central Athens and in the northern port city of Thessaloniki in broad daylight, destroying banks, storefronts and cars.

“Business is down because people are not willing to hang out in the city centre after work as they once used to – if things do not get better soon then we may be forced to close up shop and move our business elsewhere,” said Pavlos Papalabrakopoulos, who owns Il Gatto Cafe in the trendy pedestrian walkway of Voukourestiou near Syntagma Square.

Walking through the popular Plaka district, located in the shadow of the ancient Acropolis, many taverna owners and souvenir shops are already worried about the lack of tourists.

“This time last year we were busy weeks before Easter – this year we will see if we can barely break even,” said Manolis Papadakis, who runs a ceramic shop.

Tourism is one of Greece’s biggest earners, along with shipping. It makes up about 18 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product. Thus, if Europeans already reeling from a recession decide to stay away for security reasons, it could have big implications for the economy as a whole.

In 2007, the sector brought 11 billion euros (14.5 billion dollars) and 17 million visitors into the country, making it the 12th most popular international destination in the world, according to the World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO).

The bulk of tourists come from Britain and Germany, both of which have been badly hit by the worldwide financial crisis.

Pre-holiday bookings until the end of March from both countries, are already down 20 to 25 per cent from 2008, according to Drakopoulos. He adds that the trend until now has been rather negative.

Despite the gloomy prognosis, Drakopoulos remains hopeful that reservations will pick up in the coming months, adding that hotels and resorts have slashed prices to counter the drop in arrivals.

The Greek government has set aside 75 million euros for the country’s promotion as a tourist destination – nearly 50 per cent more than what it committed to last year.

“We are hopeful that the current situation will be reversed in the second trimester.” (dpa)

Italy quake damages old churches, Roman baths

The earthquake in central Italy on Monday has badly damaged several historic churches and other heritage sites, the Culture Ministry said.

At least four Romanesque and Renaissance churches and a 16th century castle were partially destroyed by the quake centred in the medieval city of L’Aquila, the ministry said.

Part of the nave of the Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio, one of the area’s most famous churches, collapsed.

The church, with a pink-and-white facade combining Romanesque and Gothic architecture, hosted the crowning of Pope Celestine V in 1294 and attracts thousands of pilgrims every year.

To the north, the belltower of the lavish Renaissance Basilica of San Bernardino also crumbled.

The mountain city of L’Aquila has a history of powerful earthquakes, and was almost wiped out by one in 1703.

Monday’s quake, which killed scores of people, was so powerful that its effects were felt in the capital Rome, 100 km to the west.

The city’s superintendent for archaeology said the Baths of Caracalla — the Roman public baths built between AD 212 and 216 and a popular tourist attraction — had suffered some damage.

Italy quake destroys four ancient churches

Rome, Apr.7 (ANI): The 6.3-magnitude earthquake that struck central Italy on Monday morning has damaged at least four old churches.

The Italian Culture Ministry said the Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio, a striking pink-and-white stone-faced structure, was among the buildings severely damaged.

It is known for its architecture and for an annual pilgrimage to honor 13th-century Pope Celestine V, a former hermit who was both crowned and buried there.

One nave wall in the church, which is also celebrated for its 14th-century frescoes and lavish Gothic interior, collapsed in the quake, while the bell tower of another church, the lavish Renaissance-era Basilica of San Bernardino, collapsed, reports The Guardian.

Also damaged was a castle renowned as one of Italy’s best-preserved 16th-century fortresses.

The Forte Spagnolo, or Spanish Fort, is so called because it was built under the orders of Spain’s then king, Charles V, whose forces had defeated local rebels.

The quake was powerful enough to be felt in Rome, around 60 miles from the epicentre.

Heritage officials in the capital said the tremor had been strong enough to damage the third-century Baths of Caracalla, the Roman public baths popular with tourists. (ANI)

Arrival of Gandhi belongings in India will take some time

New Delhi, Mar 15 (ANI): The five personal belongings of Mahatma Gandhi that were auctioned off in New York on February 5, is likely to take some more time to reach India as the government is yet to solve the legalities involved with the US Justice Department.

“Government is still pursuing with its earlier stand that the auction is illegal as per the will of Gandhi and the injunction of Delhi High Court with US Justice Department,” a senior official in the Culture Ministry said.

The official further clarified that Gandhi possessions will enjoy freedom from import duty in India.

Despite the government’s intervention to stop the sale, the belongings of Gandhi were auctioned at Antiquorum Auctioneer in New York last month. Kingfisher Airlines Chairman Vijay Mallya emerged as the highest bidder at 1.8 million dollars.

However, Mallya was unable to possess the Gandhi memorabilia due to several legal hindrances. (ANI)