N. Korea family reunion lottery 'extremely cruel': rights expert


    An elderly South Korean man who left behind relatives in the North, fills out an application for an expected inter-Korean family reunion, at the Red Cross office in Seoul, on September 7, 2015
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    North Korea's use of a lottery system to allow a fraction of the families separated by the Korean War to meet is "extremely cruel", a top rights expert said Monday.
    North and South Korea agreed earlier this month to hold a weekend reunion in October for separated families -- only the second to be held in five years -- with 100 people to be selected by each side to take part.
    But Australian judge Michael Kirby, head of a UN commission that published a searing report on the rights situation in North Korea last year, noted that the country is believed to have taken some 120,000 South Koreans -- most as the North Korean troops retreated.
    With more than 60,000 people in South Korea hoping for reunification with family members -- many who are now "of considerable age" -- North Korea's capricious agreement to sporadically allow small groups to meet is far from enough, he said.
    "At the present rate of 100 being given that privilege, many, many will die before the numbers are accommodated," Kirby told reporters in Geneva.
    "It is extremely cruel of the administration of (North Korea) and a breach of fundamental human rights to deny the opportunity for families to be reunited," he said, adding: "It is really a barbarous practice."
    Kirby said previous reunions had been planned and cancelled for no apparent reason, and that the North Korean approach was exacerbating the suffering of the families longing for contact.
    "It is simply unacceptable that (knowledge about) their whereabouts, whether they are alive or dead, what happened to them, and having contact with them is left to a lottery," Kirby said.
    The commission's report accused North Korea of committing human rights violations "without parallel in the contemporary world", including the abductions of an estimated 200,000 foreign nationals from at least 12 countries.
    - Angry dismissal -
    Those findings were debated Monday at special session of the UN's rights council, which North Korea's ambassador at-large, Ri Hung Sik, dismissed as "nearly three hours talking about a non-existent issue."
    Asked specifically about widening the family reunion programme, Ri said: "the reunion of these separate families is resolved between North and South (Korea). It has nothing to do with Kirby."
    In addition to the many South Koreans taken and held, hundreds of Japanese citizens are believed to have been taken to train North Korean spies in Japanese language and customs.
    With few exceptions, world nations roundly condemned North Korea's legacy of abductions and its refusal to engage with the commission's findings.
    Japan's point-person on the abduction issue, Shoichiro Ishikawa, told the council that acknowledging its misconduct was "the only way for (Pyongyang) to gain the chance of reconciliation with the international community."
    Kirby stressed that the international community has an obligation to press ahead and try to ensure accountability for the abductions, disappearances and a wide range of other crimes against humanity that have taken place in North Korea.
    The longtime practice of international abductions by North Korean agents was "particularly barbarous, and is something akin to international piracy," Kirby said ahead of the debate.
    Many of the crimes committed in the country "shock the conscience of mankind," he said, insisting: "It is not open to the world community to turn away."
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(USA TODAY Sports)
There have been plenty of leaked reports and anonymous sources surrounding Robert Griffin III's career with the Redskins, but most of the time, the embattled QB has chosen to ignore the noise around him. On Monday, however, he took to Twitter to shoot down a controversial story that came from Bleacher Report.
Jason Cole, an NFL Insider for the site, said in a video that, "According to multiple sources within the Washington organization, there is a problem existing currently between Robert Griffin III and starting quarterback Kirk Cousins."
"Simply put, they don't talk," Cole continued. "They can't even be in the same room together at this point because of the tension that exists between the two sides."
Cole went on to explain that Griffin's behavior reflects his lack of leadership, and is just another example of the former Rookie of the Year not getting along with his Redskins teammates. He finished by saying that #10 is "isolating himself from the rest of the team."
According to Griffin, though, the report is not true. He sent out this tweet in response to Cole's claims:
After the Burgundy and Gold's triumphant effort against the Rams on Sunday, there was nothing but good vibes in the D.C. area. Cole's report certainly had the potential to stir up some trouble, but Griffin's message makes it seem like the rumors that he and Cousins are having issues and he is separating himself from the rest of the locker room are false.
Without Griffin's immediate reaction, the story had the chance to significantly dampen all that has happened in the last 24 hours. Nevertheless, questions will still be asked, meaning all is normal inside the nation's capital.
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Bernie Sanders made an entertaining yet instructive appearance on The Late Show on Friday night, faring much better in the politically-essential late-night joke arena than Hillary Clinton, Jeb Bush, and Donald Trump have thus far.
In his opening moments, host Stephen Colbert noted that Sanders is polling higher than Clinton in Iowa and New Hampshire, adding, “Hillary Clinton’s got the name recognition, she’s got tons of cash… But a funny thing happened on the way to her nomination, and it’s Vermont senator and guy-in-front-of-you-at-the-deli-trying-to-return-salami, Bernie Sanders.” 
“Is everybody ‘feeling the Bern’?” asked Colbert, repeating a Sanders campaign slogan. “Well, I’ll tell you, he wants to give you universal health care so you can have that ‘Bern’ checked out.”
When Sanders came onstage, Colbert razzed him about being a socialist, saying that if Sanders were elected, America would become like a Scandinavian country — “eating pickled herring and a high suicide rate.” 
Sanders countered that he prefers the term “progressive.” When Colbert called him “a Ralph Nader figure” (i.e., unelectable) and “the Democratic Donald Trump,” Sanders got serious: “I think that what Trump is doing is appealing to the baser instincts among us: xenophobia, and frankly, racism — describing an entire group of people, in this case Mexicans, as rapists or criminals. I think that’s disgraceful… What I am talking about is a vision that goes beyond telling us that we have to hate a group of people. What I am talking about is saying that in the wealthiest country in the history of the world, there are extraordinary things that we can do when people come together, black and white, and gay and straight, and demand that government start working for all of us, not just the few.”
It was a solid two segments of late-night talk. The 74 year-old Sanders set the bar higher for the next late-night nominee… which in this case will be Carly Fiorina on Jimmy Fallon’s Tonight Show next Monday. Gee, I wonder if Carly will have a fake chat with Fallon’s fake Trump
Brandon Funston

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To help your Week 2 cause (full season or daily), here's a few players I expect to be better or worse than expected. Best of luck this weekend!
STARTS
QB - Carson Palmer, Ari at Chi ($34 in DFS) - I'm doubling down on Palmer after listing him here last week. After a top 3 fantasy QB outing vs. New Orleans in the opener, Palmer now has the pleasure of facing a Bears defense that allowed a 140.5 QB Rating (third-highest in the NFL) to Aaron Rodgers in Week 1. There are 15 more expensive signal callers in the Yahoo DFS game, yet he's ranked seventh in our Week 2 rankings. Jump all over that market oversight.
[Yahoo Daily Fantasy Football: Enter our $1 Million Week 2 contest]
 RB - Joseph Randle, Dal at Phi ($23) - The inevitable happened in the Dallas backfield in Week 1, which is that Randle outplayed Darren McFadden. Randle also received 19 touches (12 more than Run-DMC), establishing himself clearly as the lead back, even if some measure of a platoon system will remain a constant. Assuming another workload that will push 20 touches, I like Randle's upside potential in a game that Vegas pegs to easily be the highest scoring matchup of the week (55.5 O/U). With Dez Bryant out for several weeks, I expect Dallas to lean even more on the running game, and also try to utilize Randle (did you see that sweet one-handed, on-the-run catch he made in Week 1?) and Lance Dunbar in the passing game (Philly was especially susceptible to RBs in the passing game last season). With something like 65-75 rushing yards and 35-40 receiving yards, I can see Randle reaching the century mark in yards from scrimmage for the second consecutive week.
 RB - Ameer Abdullah, Det at Min ($22) - Abdullah made a splashy NFL debut in Week 1, rolling up 94 total yards and a TD, while busting long gainers of 24 yards on the ground, a 36-yard catch and a 48-yard kickoff return. Had the Lions opted to give him more than 11 touches, they might have left San Diego with a win. The Lions are being coy about how much Abdullah's role might expand going forward, but the logic is that more Abdullah equals more job security for the head coach. Even on another 11 touches, I'd like Abdullah's chances against a Minnesota defensive front that was abused for 60 minutes by Carlos Hyde and the 49ers' front line. The Vikings' edges crumbled like dried leaves on Monday night, and it's tantalizing to think about Abdullah getting perimeter shots against this defense.
WR - Steve Smith Sr, Bal at Oak ($22) - Smith was a sit last week for the obvious reason of facing a Denver defense with a fantastic pass rush and two excellent cover corners (Chris Harris and Aqib Talib). With that set-up, and Smith being the clear top threat in the Baltimore passing game, I felt the Broncos could easily devise a plan to put the clamps on him. This week, though, the set-up is a thing of beauty for Smith, as Oakland is decimated by injuries in the secondary (Nate Allen, Charles Woodson, D.J. Hayden). With inexperience rampant in the Raiders pass defense this week, I can easily envision Smith blowing the top of the coverage at least a couple times.

 'American Idol' Winner Phillip Phillips
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The Deaf Film Camp’s sign-language rendition of Phillip Phillip’s “Home” is going viral for its inspirational message.
Performed completely in American Sign Language, the music video documents the camper experience at Deaf Film Camp, a two-week program dedicated to training aspiring deaf filmmakers.
The American Idol winner's catchy tune is the perfect backtrack to convey the messages of hope, possibility and support that are present as the campers find a “home” in the Deaf Film Camp.
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“The video’s shots of actors on stage, artists in action, and filmmakers in training highlight the emotional connection that our campers have made with each other,” reads the video description.
The Deaf Film Camp also went viral last year when they filmed and produced a music video to Pharell’s hit song “Happy.” The video was viewed over 1.4 million times on YouTube, and was even noticed by Pharell himself.
The Deaf Film Camp is the only camp in the world of its kind. The staff and counselors teach the deaf campers (ages 13-16) the art of deaf filmmaking, and with the guidance of successful filmmakers, the campers, ages 13 to 16, shot, edited and produced their ASL “Home” music video.
Watch the heartwarming video below:
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