Saturday, April 30, 2016
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Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Westbrook responds in style to 'not-superstar' jibe
Reuters
(Reuters) - Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban declared that Oklahoma City's Russell Westbrook is "not a superstar" and then watched as the point guard eliminated the Mavs from the playoffs on Monday.
A controversial owner known for ruffling feathers, Cuban stated prior to Game Five that the Thunder only have one superstar, Kevin Durant.
"I think (Westbrook is) an All Star, but not a superstar," Cuban told reporters prior to his team's season-ending 118-104 loss.
"I consider Durant a superstar. There’s only a few guys that you put them on any team and they’ll win 50 games. To me that’s the definition of a superstar." Westbrook responded with a dominant performance of 36 points, 12 rebounds and nine assists, lifting Oklahoma City to a 4-1 best-of-seven series victory.
With Dallas trailing by just three in the final quarter, the five-time All Star Westbrook ran off eight straight points for his team to effectively put the game and the debate to rest.
Durant further drove the point home following the contest.
"He’s an idiot," Durant said of Cuban. "That’s what we got to say about that. He’s an idiot. Next question."
Westbrook has faced his share of criticism throughout his career as a shoot-first point guard who does not always defer to Durant.
But after leading the NBA in scoring a season ago, Westbrook rounded out his game this campaign and led the league with 18 triple-doubles, the most since Magic Johnson in 1981-82.
Westbrook and the Thunder will now face San Antonio in the Western Conference semi-finals.
(Writing by Jahmal Corner in Los Angeles; editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
https://www.yahoo.com/sports/news/westbrook-responds-style-not-superstar-jibe-061245593--nba.html
Monday, April 25, 2016
Kenyan police fire tear gas as opposition marches on electoral body
Mon Apr 25, 2016 | 10:49 AM EDT
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NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenyan police fired tear gas into a crowd of opposition leaders and their supporters as they marched on the office of the country's electoral commission to demand it disband before next year's election.
Several protesters were arrested and at least two policemen were injured by stones, police said.
The opposition rejected the outcome of the last presidential vote in March 2013. Its leaders petitioned the supreme court to overturn the result. The court upheld it.
Raila Odinga, the leader of the opposition and its candidate for president, said then that he accepted the court's decision and the victory of his opponent, Uhuru Kenyatta. That helped avert the kind of violence that broke out after Kenya's 2007 election, when more than 1,200 people were killed.
But now Odinga and his fellow opposition leaders have turned on the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), demanding that it be dissolved before the elections set for August 2017.
Odinga and Kalonzo Musyoka and Moses Wetangula, leaders of the main opposition CORD coalition, said over the weekend they would storm the IEBC offices and eject its commissioners.
Mon Apr 25, 2016 | 10:49 AM EDT
Kenyan police fire tear gas as opposition marches on electoral body
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By Humphrey Malalo
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenyan police fired tear gas into a crowd of opposition leaders and their supporters as they marched on the office of the country's electoral commission to demand it disband before next year's election.
Several protesters were arrested and at least two policemen were injured by stones, police said.
The opposition rejected the outcome of the last presidential vote in March 2013. Its leaders petitioned the supreme court to overturn the result. The court upheld it.
Raila Odinga, the leader of the opposition and its candidate for president, said then that he accepted the court's decision and the victory of his opponent, Uhuru Kenyatta. That helped avert the kind of violence that broke out after Kenya's 2007 election, when more than 1,200 people were killed.
But now Odinga and his fellow opposition leaders have turned on the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), demanding that it be dissolved before the elections set for August 2017.
Odinga and Kalonzo Musyoka and Moses Wetangula, leaders of the main opposition CORD coalition, said over the weekend they would storm the IEBC offices and eject its commissioners.
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They led about 500 supporters, who waved placards, whistled, shouted, and threw stones at police, to the commission's office in downtown Nairobi. Riot police dispersed them with tear gas.
"We have made some arrests and I’m yet to establish the number," Japheth Koome, the police commander for Nairobi county told Reuters. "Two police officers were injured after they were hit with stones."
Odinga, Musyoka and Wetangula were driven off shortly after the tear gas was fired, without addressing their supporters or the media.
The opposition accuses the IEBC of failing to act on their complaints stemming from the last election. They accused it of incompetence, citing the failure of electronic voting and counting equipment.
IEBC rejects the accusations and says any party that wants to eject its commissioners should follow established procedure, which include petitioning parliament to remove them.
"The commissioners and senior officials were ready to meet CORD leaders and discuss their concerns, but they tried to come with a crowd that was difficult to contain," Andrew Limo, a spokesman for the IEBC, told Reuters.
Riot police in lorries patrolled the streets near the IEBC offices two hours after the protests were dispersed.
(Writing by Duncan Miriri; Editing by Larry King)
http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSKCN0XM15I
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