2016, ഫെബ്രുവരി 1, തിങ്കളാഴ്‌ച

13 students drown in India beach tragedy: police

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MUMBAI, India: Thirteen students reported to be on a picnic drowned on Monday after they went swimming off a beach on India’s west coast, police said.
The tragedy happened at Murud beach in the Raigad district of Maharashtra state, said assistant inspector of police Arvind Patil.
“A total of 155 students from Pune went to Murud main beach and some of them went swimming around 3:30 p.m. this afternoon,” he told AFP.
“Thirteen students are dead due to drowning. The victims were all aged between 19 and 23,” Patil said, adding that 10 women and three men died.
“Local people and police are engaged in rescue operations,” he added, saying it was not yet clear whether all the students had been accounted for.
The victims were enrolled at Abeda Inamdar College, an arts, science and commerce institute in the city of Pune in Maharashtra. Media reports said they had gone to Murud for a picnic.
Murud sits on the Konkan coast, which has dozens of beaches popular with locals who prefer it to the internationally renowned tourist state of Goa.
Murud is around 140 kilometers (90 miles) south of Mumbai.
Monday’s drowning tragedy was the latest in India, where many people are unable to swim.
In February 2014, 29 people died when a passenger boat capsized in the eastern state of Orissa.
A month prior to that incident, 21 people were killed when a tourist boat capsized off India’s remote Andaman Islands.

Saudi-French team discovers Bronze Age site in Al-Kharj

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RIYADH: A joint team of Saudi-French archaeologists, carrying out excavations on historical sites in Al-Kharj, discovered heritage artifacts belonging to the Stone and Bronze ages, and the Abbasid era, a major breakthrough for the promotion of heritage tourism in the Riyadh region.
A Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage (SCTNH) official said here on Sunday that Riyadh Governor Prince Faisal bin Bandar recently received the Saudi-French team which is carrying out the archaeological excavation and detection work at Al-Yamamah historical site in Al-Kharj.
“During the meeting, the governor was briefed on the work in progress that include the team’s research work for the fifth year of the archaeological survey in Al-Kharj,” the official said.
“During this period, the team discovered a Stone Age site in the northwest Shadida hills and a mosque at the historic Al-Bina site in the middle of Al-Kharj municipality.
The mosque, according to these archaeological experts, dates back to the Abbasid Era.
The joint team, while carrying out excavation work on the Ayn Dalai site, discovered some material remains and the initial findings indicate the site dates back to the Bronze Age.
In a bid to create a quantum leap in the course of caring for heritage tourism, the Riyadh Governorate and Al-Kharj Municipality in collaboration with the SCTNH and Ar-Riyadh Development Authority is also working to rehabilitate the King Abdulaziz Palace and its surrounding area in Al-Kharj, to transform it into a historical center. The project includes establishing a museum for Al-Kharj Municipality inside the historical palace.
The SCTNH effort in this field aims to highlight the cultural dimensions of the Kingdom through discoveries of more archaeological sites, and then rehabilitating and opening them to the public view immediately, after completing the field work, to promote heritage tourism.

UN chief presses end to Israeli occupation of Palestine

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UNITED NATIONS: United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called Israeli criticism of attacks on its settlement policy unsustainable in an opinion piece published Sunday by The New York Times, doubling down on comments earlier in the week that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said encouraged terrorism.
In the piece entitled, “Don’t Shoot the Messenger, Israel,” Ban reiterates many of his earlier comments to Security Council last Tuesday, calling Israeli settlement activity “an affront to the Palestinian people,” adding that “it is human nature to resist occupation.” He also called for a freeze on settlement activity, which most of the international community views Israeli settlements in the West Bank as illegal or illegitimate.
“Criticism of the United Nations — or attacks against me — comes with the territory. But when heartfelt concerns about shortsighted or morally damaging policies emanate from so many sources, including Israel’s closest friends, it cannot be sustainable to keep lashing out at every well-intentioned critic,” Ban wrote.
Ban wrote that he would always stand up for Israel’s right to exist, but added: “the time has come for Israelis, Palestinians and the international community to read the writing on the wall: The status quo is untenable. Keeping another people under indefinite occupation undermines the security and the future of both Israelis and Palestinians.”
Ban’s criticism was sparked by Israel’s recent approval of 150 new homes in settlements on the West Bank. In the opinion piece, Ban also pointed out that last month Israel declared 370 acres in the West Bank, “state land,” which he said “typically leads to exclusive settler use.”

2nd Al-Ahsa mosque attacker came to kingdom on visit visa: MOI

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RIYADH: Investigators have identified the second suspect in Friday’s mosque attack in Al-Ahsa as an Egyptian national named Talha Hisham Mohammed Abdo.
In a statement carried by the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) on Monday, the Ministry of Interior said the terrorist came to Saudi Arabia on family visit visa. His father, Hesham Mohamed Abdou Abdel Halim, is an expat residing in the kingdom.
Talha, 27, is still in under tight watch in a hospital, where he is under treatment for severe injuries inflicted by angry worshippers, who overpowered him during the attack.
Police had said Talha was with Abdulrahman Abdullah Sulaiman Al-Tuwaijri, a 22-year-old Saudi who detonated a bomb strapped to his body when security men stopped the duo as they tried to enter the Al-Ridha Mosque in Al-Ahsa’s Mahasin district last Friday.
Al-Tuwaijri died on the spot, along with four other people. Some 18 others were reported injured in the explosion and from gunshots fired by Talha.
Authorities are said to be looking for a third suspect.
Scholars have condemned the “heinous” attack and as a “failed attempt to destabilize the country and ignite sedition.”

British doctor seizes farm

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After months besieged on their farm at Centenary, 20 police armed with AK 47s on Friday forcibly evicted Phillip Rankin and his wife.

24623485691_03fd432fa2_oThe farm has long been coveted by British medical practitioner Dr Sylvester Nyatsuro and his wife Veronica, who are reported to be connected to Grace Mugabe. Mrs Nyatsuro is alleged to have planted invaders on the farm when she was over last year on a visit from the UK.
Zimbabwe human rights campaigner Ben Freeth said the police had shown no legal documents to justify their action, whichcomes while court proceedings are still going on. He said he had advised MrRankin to quote section 74 of the constitution which says no person may be evicted from their home without a court order. ‘The police just laughed at them’.
The police refused access to lawyers acting for Mr Rankin, loaded his furniture onto lorries along with Mr Rankin and drove off. We understand he was later released. Freeth added: ‘Despite the drought the Rankins are in the middle of harvesting wonderful crops this season. A message from another observer said: it’s the end of the month so who pays the workers, what happens to them now?’ (For video clips The Vigil has staged several demonstrations outside Dr Nyatsuro’s clinic in Nottingham questioning why a British citizen resident in the United Kingdom for the past 10 years should seek to dispossess a Zimbabwean citizen who bought his farm in Zimbabwe with the approval of the Mugabe government.
The Nyatsuros threatened legal action against us – a tactic they have successfully used to intimidate the media. We invited Dr Nyatsuro to our forum last week to explain himself. We were told they wanted to talk to us but he did not come. On Monday (25/01/2016) we emailed Mrs Nyatsuro that we would take further action if they did not drop their claim to the farm and requested a reply within 7 days (. In a phone call Mrs Nyatsuro said she was going to Zimbabwe the next day.
The behaviour of the Nyatsuros has disgusted Zimbabwe exiles in the UK and the Vigil is to protest outside their Nottingham clinic on Friday 5thFebruary (see Events and notices for details).
The Vigil will also be running the following petition to Prime Minister David Cameron calling for an investigation into the Nyatsuros.
Petition to UK Prime Minister DavidCameron
Zimbabwean exiles in the United Kingdom and sympathisers are appalled by the behaviour of Dr Sylvester Nyatsuro and his wife Veronica who run the Willows Medical Centre in Nottingham
Dr Nyatsuro is a British citizen, long resident in this country, yet he has illegally seized a farm in Zimbabwe owned by a white Zimbabwean farmer, Mr Phillip Rankin, who bought it with the approval of the Mugabe government. Dr Nyatsuro and his wife are reported to be connected to Grace Mugabe.
We are puzzled why a British doctor should want a farm in Zimbabwe since he and his wife are apparently in full-time employment here and have no known farming expertise in a country facing starvation
We ask your government to consider revoking Dr Nyatsuro’s citizenship on the grounds that ‘it was obtained by means of fraud, false representation or concealment of any material fact’ (see: Deprivation of British citizenship and withdrawal of passport facilities –file:///Users/GG/Downloads/SN06820%20(1).pdf: House of Commons Library). We also question his suitability to run an NHS clinic in Nottingham while farming in Zimbabwe.
Other points
  • Zimbabwe’s friends abroad are increasingly anxious at the failure of the Mugabe government to declare a state of emergency so that international agencies can start campaigning for donor funds to alleviate food shortages. A ROHR supporter in Zimbabwe drew our attention to an article on the Masvingo Mirror website about the drastic effects of the food shortage (see: http://www.masvingomirror.com/2016/01/50c-for-sex-as-drought-ravages-mwenezi.html).
  • Wehave been in contact with diaspora publisher Kennedy Madhombiro who is asking for poetry submissions from Zimbabwe Vigil members for possible publication. For contact details for those interested see:https://www.flickr.com/photos/zimbabwevigil/24622132001/sizes/o/.
  • Thanks to those who came early to help set up: Rashiwe Bayisayi, Benjamin Chigamba, John Chipudhla, Joseph Chivayo, Arnold Dube, Barbara Kachidza, Fungayi Mabhunu, Jenniffer Maritsa, Sharon, Nyasha and Tanatswa Moyo, Roseline Mukucha,Rosemary Mupunga and Chipo Parirenyatwa. Thanks to Sharon, Rashiwe and Roseline Mukucha for looking after the front table. Thanks to Benjami and Arnold for putting up the banners and thanks to ROHR Central London branch for bringing food to raise funds for ROHR.
For latest Vigil pictures /. Please note: Vigil photos can only be downloaded from our Flickr website.
FOR THE RECORD: 41 signed the register.
EVENTS AND NOTICES:
  • Nottingham demonstration against racist Zimbabwean doctor.Friday 5th February from 12 noon – 3 pm. Venue: outside The Willows Medical Centre, Church Street, Carlton, Nottingham NG4 1RJ.
  • ROHR National Executive meeting. Saturday 6th February from 11 am to 1.30 pm. Venue: Strand Continental Hotel (first floor lounge), 143 Strand, London WC2R 1JA. From the Vigil it’s about a 10 minute walk, in the direction away from Trafalgar Square. The Strand Continental is situated on the south side of the Strand between Somerset House and the turn off onto Waterloo Bridge. The entrance is marked by a sign at street level. It’s between a newsagent and an optician. Nearest underground: Temple (District and Circle lines) and Holborn.
  • The Restoration of Human Rights in Zimbabwe (ROHR) is the Vigil’s partner organization based in Zimbabwe. ROHR grew out of the need for the Vigil to have an organization on the ground in Zimbabwe which reflected the Vigil’s mission statement in a practical way. ROHR in the UK actively fundraises through membership subscriptions, events, sales etc to support the activities of ROHR in Zimbabwe. Please note that the official website of ROHR Zimbabwe is http://www.rohrzimbabwe.org/. Any other website claiming to be the official website of ROHR in no way represents us.
  • Zimbabwe Action Forum (ZAF). Saturday 6th February from 6.15 pm. Venue: Strand Continental Hotel (first floor lounge), 143 Strand, London WC2R 1JA. For directions see above.
  • Zimbabwe Action Forum (ZAF) meets regularly after the Vigil to discuss ways to help those back in Zimbabwe to fight oppression and achieve true democracy.
  • Monthly Itai Dzamara protest. Saturday 6th February from 2 – 6 pmoutside the Zimbabwe Embassy in London. The protest is to mark eleven months since Dzamara’s abduction by intelligence agents.
  • Swaziland Vigil. Saturday 6th February from 10 am to 1 pm outside the Swaziland High Commission, 20 Buckingham Gate, London SW1E 6LB.
  • ROHR Reading branch community outreach and general meeting.Saturday 20th February. Community outreach from 12 noon – 1.30 pm: Venue: Broad Street. Awareness campaign on deteriorating human rights in Zimbabwe. General meeting from 2 – 5 pm: Venue: RISC 35-39 London Street, Reading, Berkshire RG1 4PS. For further enquiries contact: Deborah Harry 07578894896, Charles Mararirakwenda 07964731721, Joshua Kahari 07877246251, Shyline 07827493930.
  • Zimbabwe Yes We Can Movement holds monthly meetings in London as the political face of ROHR and the Vigil.
  • Zimbabwe Vigil Highlights 2015 can be viewed on this link:http://www.zimvigil.co.uk/vigil-news/campaign-news/746-zimbabwe-vigil-highlights-2015. Links to previous years’ highlights are listed on 2015 Highlights page.

Israeli academics face growing boycott pressures

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HAIFA, Israel — Israeli anthropologist Dan Rabinowitz is a leader in his field, heading a prestigious school of environmental studies at Tel Aviv University, authoring dozens of publications and holding visiting teaching positions over the years at leading North American universities.
But the British-educated Rabinowitz fears that his younger counterparts may not enjoy the same professional opportunities for a very personal reason: They are Israeli.
As a global boycott movement against Israeli universities gains steam, Israeli professors say they are feeling the pressure from their colleagues overseas. Although the movement ostensibly targets universities, not individuals, Israeli academics say they are often shunned at the personal level. They experience snubs at academic conferences, struggle to get recommendations and can experience difficulty publishing their work in professional journals.
“This is highly personal and personalized,” said Rabinowitz.
The academic boycott is part of the broader pro-Palestinian “BDS” campaign, which advocates boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel. Inspired by the anti-apartheid movement, BDS organizers say they are using nonviolent means to promote the Palestinian struggle for independence.
Israel says the campaign goes beyond fighting its occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and often masks a more far-reaching aim to “delegitimize” or destroy the Jewish state. But the BDS movement’s decentralized organization and language calling for universal human rights have proven difficult to counter.
The BDS website says “the vast majority of Israeli intellectuals and academics have either contributed directly to the Israeli occupation and apartheid or at the very least have been complicit through their silence.”
And yet Israeli universities are widely seen as liberal bastions, and their professors are some of the most vocal government critics.
Already enjoying significant support in the U.K., the academic boycott has chalked up a series of accomplishments in the United States.
In recent years, the Association for Asian American Studies, the American Studies Association, the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association and the National Women’s Studies Association have approved boycott measures.
In November, a meeting of the American Anthropological Association overwhelmingly endorsed a motion supporting a boycott of Israeli universities.
Peretz Lavie, president of the Technion, Israel’s premier science and technology university, said the effect of such decisions has so far been minimal.
Lavie, who chairs the Association of University Heads in Israel, said relations between Israeli and American universities remain strong at the institutional and leadership levels, and praised this month’s decision by the Association of American Universities reaffirming its opposition to the boycott. The group, which represents 62 leading U.S. universities, said the boycott “violates academic freedom.”
Nonetheless, Lavie said the boycott movement has become a top concern for Israeli university leaders, particularly as it gains support at the “ground level” from U.S. student unions and academic associations.
“There may be a domino effect,” he said. “If we do not deal with it, it will be a major problem.”
Lavie is now leading a battle against the boycott. While acknowledging that Israeli government policies are open to criticism, he said that holding universities responsible for them is unfair and asked why countries with abysmal human rights records, such as Iran and Saudi Arabia, have been spared.
“We have the feeling that these movements treat Israel differently than any other country in the world,” he said.
Rabinowitz counts the November vote by the anthropological association as one of the most painful chapters of his career. He said he personally tried to alter the boycott resolution twice — only to be rejected with little or no debate. He said the rejection by his colleagues was a “defining moment” for him. In a statement, the association confirmed Rabinowitz’s account, noting that the meeting was “highly charged.”
Ed Liebow, the association’s executive director, said the organization felt “a strong commitment” to take some sort of action. “The one thing we can’t do is nothing,” he said. The measure goes to the association’s more than 10,000 members for a vote this spring.
Although the American anthropologists have never before proposed a boycott of academic institutions, the association said it commonly takes public stands against governments accused of restricting academic freedom. It recently sent a letter to leaders of Turkey, criticizing them for allegedly curbing scholars there.
Ilana Feldman, a professor of anthropology at George Washington University and a boycott supporter, said the proposal, if passed, would not impede professors “in any way” from working with Israeli scholars.
Rabinowitz, however, said it is impossible to distinguish between a person and his institution, which becomes part of one’s professional identity.
Israeli academics say such feelings are increasingly common.
Rachelle Alterman, a professor emeritus of urban planning at the Technion, said she still has strong working relationships with colleagues around the world, but the pro-boycott camp is a “rising minority” in academia. She said it is less of an issue in the hard sciences like medicine and physics, and much more palpable in more subjective social sciences. Younger academics trying to establish a reputation are especially vulnerable.
Alterman said she has begun to feel a “coldness” from some colleagues at conferences that was not there in the past. She said some colleagues refuse to attend conferences in Israel, and editors at professional journals tell her it is difficult to find people willing to review papers by Israeli academics.
“I call it the dark matter. It’s there all the time, but elusive, hard to spot,” she said.
In one recent case, a British colleague coolly rejected a request to assist one of her graduate students.
“I am afraid that as part of the institutional boycott being observed by some academics in relation to Israeli organisations I am unable to help with your request,” the British professor wrote in an email.
Rabinowitz said the boycott efforts will backfire by undermining Israeli moderates and playing into the hands of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hard-line government.
“It is the best present they can give Netanyahu and the radical right in Israel,” he said

2016, ജനുവരി 29, വെള്ളിയാഴ്‌ച

Abu Dhabi website for visitors available in 10 languages

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Dutch has now been added to the list of languages joining Arabic, English, German, French, Italian, Portugese, Russian, Chinese and Japanese.

AdTech Ad
Abu Dhabi Tourism and Culture Authority (TCA Abu Dhabi) has added yet another language to its online destination resource www.visitabudhabi.ae meaning the portal can now be read in 10 different languages around the world.
Dutch has now been added to the list of languages joining Arabic, English, German, French, Italian, Portugese, Russian, Chinese and Japanese.
The website offers extensive information on Abu Dhabi's attractions and experiences, culture and heritage, events and recreation activities. It currently achieves a daily hit average of more than 11,000, presenting it as a valuable source of information for potential visitors.
The hotel search option aggregates live deals and room availability from over 50 booking engines, giving visitors real-time information prior to their decision to book. The flight search functionality compares and displays real-time information from 50 booking engines and more than 25 international airlines in one screen, allowing visitors to find immediately the best fares to suit their travel plans to Abu Dhabi.
Mouza Al Shamsi, Acting Executive Director Marketing and Communications, TCA Abu Dhabi, said: "As Abu Dhabi continues to develop and expand its attractions as it becomes a year round destination, attracting more visitors to reach record numbers year or year, we need to reach out and let as many people as possible know why they should visit our fabulous destination.
Since 2013 www.visitabudhabi.ae has scooped 20 top industry honours including in 2015, 3 Gold Stevie Awards, 3 Silver Stevie Awards and one Bronze Stevie Award. The site was also an Official Nominee in the 2015 Webby Awards.

Saudi may ease curbs on foreign ownership, visas

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Retail, wholesale will open fully once rules are approved

dubai - Saudi Arabia may further ease restrictions on foreign ownership in the economy and overhaul the visa system as the kingdom seeks to draw investors to help reduce its reliance on oil exports.
The world's biggest oil exporter is considering allowing foreigners to own 100 per cent of a company in at least four more industries, Mohanud Helal, secretary general of the Economic Cities Authority, said in an interview in Riyadh. Retail and wholesale will be opened fully, from a 75 per cent limit now, once rules are approved, Abdullatif Al 0thman, governor of the Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority, said on Monday.
As oil prices plummet to around $30 a barrel, authorities are racing to find alternatives to revenue from crude exports to finance a budget deficit of about 15 per cent of economic output.
Foreign investments in non-oil industries are also crucial to create jobs for Saudi nationals in the private sector in a country where youth unemployment stands at about 30 per cent. Almost 90 per cent of private-sector jobs created in five out of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Countries between 2000 and 2010 went to expatriates, according to the International Monetary Fund. Nationals filled over 70 per cent of public-sector jobs.
"The decision had already been made on some of the industries," Helal said. The Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority, known as SAGIA, has identified about four sectors in which full foreign ownership may be permitted, he added without elaborating. Calls made to SAGIA after office hours weren't immediately returned.
The slump in oil prices has already pushed Saudi authorities to cut spending, issue more debt and draw down the kingdom's foreign-currency reserves. Officials are also weighing plans to sell stakes in state-owned entities from hospitals to airports and even Saudi Arabian Oil Co, the kingdom's biggest oil company, known as Aramco.
The country is also reviewing its visa system by looking for ways to accelerate the process of issuing work and visit permits, according to Helal, who heads the regulatory body governing four economic cities, including King Abdullah Economic City.
"It is a very important and much needed step," said Mohammed Alsuwayed, the Riyadh-based head of capital and money markets at Adeem Capital. "We need foreign investors to contribute to the expansion of the Saudi economy, specifically the private sector and for them to better understand what or where they are putting their money in, they need to be allowed better access into the kingdom."
The kingdom last year started allowing direct foreign investments in its stock market, the Arab world's biggest. The benchmark Tadawul All Share Index has dropped 36 per cent over the past year, compared with a 27 per cent-decline in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.
Authorities are looking at allowing visitors, including pilgrims, to visit landmarks in various parts of the country through tourist visas. Enabling workers to bring family in easily is another area which is being considered, Helal said.
"These are all things that are being looked at as we speak today and very quickly we will hear how some things are quickly changing to further the invitation of the international community," he said.

Woman uses sister's ID to give birth at hospital in Dubai

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The 27-year-old woman, K.I., who holds a Comoros Islands passport, allegedly used her sister's name in the hospital form before walking into the clinic of the doctor.

AdTech Ad
A housewife has faced charges in court for allegedly providing false details for an admission in the emergency unit of a hospital. She has been charged with forgery and use of a forged document when her case was heard by the Court of First Instance.
The 27-year-old woman, K.I., who holds a Comoros Islands passport, allegedly used her sister's name in the hospital form before walking into the clinic of the doctor. The incident allegedly happened on August 16, last year. K.I. admitted in the prosecution investigation that she managed to be admitted into the hospital where she gave birth, using her sister's name. A nurse at the hospital said that K.I. came to the hospital and was about to give birth.
"She claimed she was M.I. I put her name in our records as she gave it to me. She did not carry an ID." The nurse added that the woman came alone without her husband and claimed to them she had a medical record at that hospital.
"The doctor on duty asked me whether she had any medical file with us but I told her we could not find any as she did not carry a health card".
Even after K.I. gave them her full name they could not find any medical file for her at the hospital. A clerk at the hospital said that K.I. looked tired when she came to the emergency unit.
"She did not have any ID or health card. She gave a phone number which belonged to the name she gave and was registered in our electronic system.
"I found a file but the photo was not clear enough to match it with the face of K.I., whose features have changed." A verdict is expected on February 10.

Woman delivers 5 babies in 2 minutes

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She wanted three children with her husband and was really hoping for a baby boy.

Kim Tucci, a 26-year-old mum from Perth, Australia, has given birth to quintuplets - one boy and four girls - in just two minutes.
Only 30 weeks along when she went into labour, the five children were born at King Edward Memorial Hospital.
Tucci has a nine-year-old son from a previous marriage and two daughters with her husband Vaughn. She wanted three children with her husband and was really hoping for a baby boy, according to Woman's Day.
In a Facebook post she said, "The babies and I are both doing very well, thank you for all your well wishes and support."
The new addition to couple's growing brood is made up of a son, Keith, and four daughters - Ali, Penelope, Tiffany and Beatrix.

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