Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Belfiore Beauty/Health Buzz: Regular massages can prevent injury ...

Belfiore Beauty/Health Buzz Column.?By Vivian Brown.

Massages have been around for about 5000 years. ?Ancient cultures used oils and herbs to relieve muscle pain. ?It not only was an early form of pain relief but produced a sense of well-being.? Massages have been a part of Chinese medicine for at least 3000 years, with Physicians being the sole educator and administrator of this therapy.

Around 6 A.D. the Japanese started using massage therapy. ?They used the same basic body points as the Chinese but believed the points effected the Qi or ?Life Force Energy? and stimulation of fluid circulation. ?The Japanese also incorporated finger pressure which also stimulated the nerves or shiatsu.

Massage therapy began in India over 3000 years ago and became a Hindu tradition. ?The use of Ayurvedic treatments such as tshanpau or ?massage in the bath? could include anointing with perfumes, plus cracking the joints of fingers, toes and neck.

The Greeks as well embraced massage therapy but used it as a compliment to their fitness and gymnastics regimens.? They truly believed that a healthy life included nutrition, exercise and massages.

Historians have found writings as far back as 800 A.D. depicting the use of massage therapy as part of the medical practice in treating diseases and improving health.

Through the years many myths and negativities have developed regarding the benefits of massage therapy.? In addition, there were many schools using unethical training and recruiting methods. ?This gave massage therapy a bad reputation. ?New medical treatment options appeared and massage therapy was no longer a part of a physician?s training.

The 1990?s brought a rise in the awareness of the value of massage therapy as part of our wellness maintenance.? More credible schools were established, spas employed accredited Massage Therapists, massage therapy clinics were started and private medical practices offered massage therapy as a wellness option. ?As a result, boards, regulations, certifications and more have been established to ensure the credibility of the massage professional and the practice thereof.

Massage maintenance is an important part of staying well. ?Having a routine massage, say once a month, can be a wonderful preventative for injury and illness. This is called a maintenance massage and can help lower your blood pressure, increase circulation, boost your immune system, move toxins that build up in the tissues into the lymph system and help flush them out. All of this takes place during and after your massage.? Whether male or female, we all desire a full healthy life and massage therapy can play an important part in that journey.

There are several therapies to choose from, such as Deep Tissue which focuses on the deep layers of the muscle tissue.? A Swedish massage uses light pressure for a more comforting and relaxed massage, and the Therapeutic is a medium pressure massage that targets upper layers of tight muscles, helps reduce scar tissue, minimizes adhesions and restores range of motion. ??Wellness massages incorporate long flowing strokes for relaxation, hot stones, infusing the skin with moisturizing shea butter and designed to heal the skin, revive muscles and restore balance and tranquility to the entire body.? Reflexology is the application of pressure to the feet, hands or ears with specific hand, thumb and finger techniques. The feet and hands have zones which reflect different parts of the body. The premise is that working on these zones physically effects that part of the body in accordance with the zone.

I hope this has been educational and enlightening, or at least made you think.? Until next week, take care and good health.

All of the aforementioned massages are available at both of our Rockwall locations:? 2995 Horizon Rd. (972-771-8411) and The Mansions at 1650 S. John King Blvd. (972-722-8818).

Source: http://therockwallnews.com/2013/0204/health/belfiore-beautyhealth-buzz-regular-massages-can-prevent-injury-illness?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=belfiore-beautyhealth-buzz-regular-massages-can-prevent-injury-illness

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Monday, February 4, 2013

Obama presses his gun proposals in Minnesota

President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks about his gun violence proposals, Monday, Feb. 4, 2013, at the Minneapolis Police Department's Special Operations Center in Minneapolis, where he outlined his plan before law enforcement personnel. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)

President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks about his gun violence proposals, Monday, Feb. 4, 2013, at the Minneapolis Police Department's Special Operations Center in Minneapolis, where he outlined his plan before law enforcement personnel. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)

President Barack Obama listens during a meeting with local leaders and law enforcement officials while participating in a roundtable discussion at the Minneapolis Police Department Special Operations, Monday, Feb. 4, 2013, in Minneapolis, Minn. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama, and others, listens during a roundtable discussion at the Minneapolis Police Department Special Operations, Monday, Feb. 4, 2013, in Minneapolis, Minn. From left are, Minneapolis Police Officer Mike Kirchen, the president, and Minneapolis Police Chief Janee Harteau. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

In this photo released by the White House, President Barack Obama shoots clay targets on the range at Camp David, Md., Saturday, Aug. 4, 2012. The White House released a photo of Obama firing a gun, two days before he heads to Minnesota to discuss gun control. In a recent interview with The New Republic magazine, Obama said yes when asked if he has ever fired a gun. He said "we do skeet shooting all the time," except for his daughters, at Camp David. (AP Photo/The White House, Pete Souza)

President Barack Obama is applauded prior to speaking about his gun violence proposals, Monday, Feb. 4, 2013, at the Minneapolis Police Department's Special Operations Center in Minneapolis, where he outlined his plan before law enforcement personnel. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)

(AP) ? With his gun proposals dividing Congress, President Barack Obama conceded Monday the challenges he faces in winning support for measures ranging from criminal checks on gun buyers to an assault weapons ban. But, he declared: "We don't have to agree on everything to agree it's time to do something."

Obama argued that there's bipartisan support for universal background checks and for gun trafficking laws. But, acknowledging the political challenges he faces, he would say only that the assault weapons ban deserves a vote in Congress.

"Changing the status quo is never easy," Obama said. "This will be no exception. The only way we can reduce gun violence in this county is if the American people decide it's important, if you decide it's important ? parents and teachers, police officers and pastors, hunters and sportsmen, Americans of every background stand up and say, 'This time, it's got to be different.'"

Before his remarks, Obama held a roundtable discussion at the Minneapolis Police Department Special Operations Center, speaking with law enforcement and community leaders.

Obama made his pitch in Minnesota, a Democratic-leaning state where officials have been studying ways to reduce gun-related attacks and accidents for several years. It was the first he has campaigned on his proposals outside of Washington.

Ahead of the trip, the White House released a photo of the president skeet shooting at Camp David, the presidential retreat. Obama cited skeet shooting when asked in a recent interview whether he had ever shot a gun.

The president unveiled his sweeping package of proposals for curbing gun violence last month after the mass shootings at a Newtown, Conn., elementary school. But many of the proposals face tough opposition from some in Congress and from the National Rifle Association.

Reinstatement of the assault weapons ban, which expired in 2004, is expected to be the steepest climb for Obama. Universal background checks for gun purchasers may have an easier time passing Congress, though the NRA also opposes that measure.

White House press secretary Jay Carney, speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One, said Obama remained committed to the assault weapons ban and it was too early to write off prospects for any part of the package.

"We all recognize that all the components of this are difficult and face challenges, some perhaps even more than others," Carney said. "But the president's support is firm and clear."

Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., has said he hopes his panel can write gun legislation this month, though it's unclear what it will contain.

The White House picked Minneapolis as the backdrop for Obama's remarks in part because of recent steps the city has taken to tackle gun violence, including a push for stricter background checks.

After a spike in violent crimes, the city launched a program in 2008 aimed at providing more resources for at-risk youth and helping rehabilitate young people who have already perpetrated crimes. In January, Minneapolis also hosted a regional summit on gun violence for elected officials from around the Midwest.

Minneapolis Police Chief Janee Harteau and Hennepin County Sheriff Richard Stanek are also among the officials Obama has consulted as he pursues his anti-gun violence measures.

Stanek has also been leading a group of Minnesota sheriffs pushing for stronger background checks for people trying to buy guns.

The ban on assault weapons faces more obstacles in Congress, where Republicans and some Democrats are aligned against it. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said on ABC's "This Week" Sunday that he's willing to take a look at legislation that would ban certain semi-automatic weapons, but he also noted that he voted against a ban on such weapons in 1994 because it "didn't make sense."

Among those participating in the round table discussion Monday with Obama was Minneapolis's Democratic mayor, R.T. Rybak, who said he supports Obama's proposed bans on assault weapons and high capacity magazine, as well as universal background checks.

Earlier in the day, Rybak criticized Reid for his stand. "He's dancing around this issue and people are dying in this country," Rybak said on MSNBC.

___

Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-04-Obama/id-3cd3e9e4cd354e30b380b524b6afb784

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Teen pleads not guilty to throwing boy off Bronx roof

By Shimon Prokupecz and Sheldon Dutes, NBCNewYork.com

NEW YORK -- A 17-year-old boy accused of throwing a 9-year-old boy off the roof of a Bronx apartment building pleaded not guilty Sunday.

Nine-year-old Freddy Martin was found Friday night on the pavement unconscious with severe body trauma in front of the five-story building on Nelson Avenue in Morris Heights. He was taken to Columbia Presbyterian Hospital where he remains in critical condition.

On Saturday, police arrested his neighbor, 17-year-old Casmine Aska, who originally told investigators that he threw Martin off the roof after they got into a fight, a police source said. The boys are not related, but live in the same building.

But according to court documents, Aska now says he grabbed the boy by the legs and then slipped, causing Martin to fall.

Aska was arraigned Sunday on attempted murder, assault and reckless endangerment charges.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/04/16837432-teen-pleads-not-guilty-to-throwing-boy-off-bronx-roof?lite

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Tutorial: How to Remove Any Computer Virus Free and Easy

Tutorial: How to Remove Any Computer Virus Free and Easy

Tutorial: How to Remove Any Computer Virus Free and Easy

Like a nearby pc restore organization all of us obtain computer virus elimination as you in our most typical issues with regard to pc restore. Through the years we have perfected the actual artwork associated with simple, quick, as well as free of charge computer virus as well as adware and spyware elimination. It is extremely simple to perform, and that?s why all of us do not cost a good equip along with a lower-leg for this.

Numerous nearby pc restore businesses provide this particular support with regard to more than $100 ? do not spend individuals crazy costs as well as look after this your self rather. This process functions particularly nicely immediately, since it typically takes a few several hours to accomplish completely.

This short article is actually created to assist pc customers whatsoever amounts of knowledge. The technique all of us make use of with regard to getting rid of infections works prior to Home windows superstars therefore it is ideal whenever a pc is actually unbootable due to contamination or even if your program is becoming as well extremely bogged lower.

Things You will need:

The CD-burner generate or even DVD-burner generate having a empty disk or perhaps a HARDWARE expensive generate
The ? cable ? web connection about the contaminated pc
A few several hours or even more in order to allow it to operate ? based on your own disk room.

Here is How you can:

Go to avg.com/rescue-cd and download the AVG Rescue CD ISO or bootable USB exe. (Either way works just as well as the other.)
Produce the actual bootable disk or even bootable HARDWARE expensive generate.
Make sure the actual impacted pc includes a immediate ? cable ? web arriving. (Absolutely no Wi-fi compatability) Without having a chance to obtain ? cable ? web you?re nevertheless in a position to operate this program however, you will not have the ability to revise towards the most recent computer virus meanings.
Plug-in the actual expensive generate or even place the actual disk as well as trunk upward through disk or even expensive generate. Click the link in order to learn to trunk from the disk or even expensive generate.
Allow it to tell you it?s things as well as adhere to the actual upon display directions in order to check out the machine. The machine may request you to revise prior to the check out starts that you simply ought to allow it to perform.
Allow check out operate ? it?ll most likely have a few several hours, and that?s why all of us allow our bait operate immediately.
When the check out is actually total, carry on using the on-screen directions to wash just about all bacterial infections.

Growth. Just about all carried out. Leave as well as reactivate for your thoroughly clean program.

In case your actually getting problems booting upward, attempt a few of these ideas:

Very first attempt booting in to Secure Setting as well as managing a Program Recover
Following attempt booting to the Home windows Restore System as well as operating chkdsk.
Following attempt fixing trunk. ini within the Restore System
After that attempt the actual fixboot device within the Restore System
Right now attempt repairing the actual MBR
Lastly attempt booting in to the body recuperation dvds as well as carrying out a restore set up

Source: http://www.monoteizem.com/tutorial-how-to-remove-any-computer-virus-free-and-easy.html

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Sunday, February 3, 2013

New destination for medical tourism: Puerto Rico

A growing number of Americans are looking farther south than Mexico, and a bit further east, for their ?medical tourism? needs.

Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory in the Caribbean, has become a top destination of choice for those attempting to bypass the high costs of healthcare in the United States.

According to the Medical Tourism Association, a global non-profit organization raising awareness on medical tourism,?Puerto Rico is joining the game of vying for the billions of dollars spent by people seeking cheaper healthcare abroad.

?Puerto Rico is becoming a prime destination for American medical tourists,? said Renee-Marie Stephano, President of the Medical Tourism Association based out of West Palm Beach, FL.

?Since Puerto Rico is just gaining momentum, it cannot be compared to other countries, but it could catch up very fast,? said Stephano.

With healthcare costs in the U.S. increasing at a rate of 6-percent a year, and insurance coverage decreasing, Latin America has always been a viable solution for Americans looking to save money.

?I saved a lot of money,? said Lorena Romero, with a sigh of relief.

Romero spent two weeks in Puerto Rico on a medical tourism trip through Satori World Medical. The company gives employers the option to send people internationally for their healthcare needs.

And in dire need of a hysterectomy, and trying to avoid high hospital fees in the United States, Romero chose Puerto Rico.

?Everything was paid for. I have no extra medical expenses from that trip,? she said.

?It was either Puerto Rico, Mexico or Turkey,? said Romero. ?I decided Puerto Rico because it would be closer to the U.S. and that way my mom wouldn?t be more worried that we were in some foreign country.?

?It was a wonderful experience. The doctor contacted me months in advance, and let me know step-by-step what was going to happen,? said Romero.

?The nurses would speak in Spanish, but when I responded in English, they responded back in English.?

According to the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions, an organization that has monitored medical travel abroad, an estimated 1.6 million Americans would receive medical services abroad in 2012, with a growth rate of 35-percent per year. That?s over 2.1 billion dollars a year spent on healthcare services in other countries, costing the United States billions of dollars in lost revenue.

Countries like Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Chile, Brazil and Venezuela, have supported the American demand for cheaper healthcare abroad. Procedures can include anything from orthopedic surgery on hips, knees, back and spine, to cosmetic procedures like breast implants and face-lifts.

Other top destinations for international medical tourists include India, Thailand and other Asian countries.

According to the International Federation of Health Plans, a hip replacement in the U.S. on average would cost around $38,017. In Argentina, that same procedure would cost $3,589. A CT head scan in the U.S. goes for a commercial average of $510 or more. In Chile, that same procedure will cost around $184, and in countries like India, can be as low as $43.

In Puerto Rico, procedures like orthopedic surgery, cardiovascular disease treatment, oncology, neurology procedures, and many more, can be done for 60 to 80-percent less than in the United States, and with the same standards.

As a U.S. territory, all hospitals are required to comply with the U.S. infrastructure standards and be staffed by board certified physicians.

?It is American healthcare at much more affordable prices,? said Stephano.

The cost for supporting the infrastructure of healthcare in Puerto Rico is almost 70 to 80-percent less according to the Medical Tourism Association. The cost of labor for doctors and nurses, healthcare supplies, and equipment, all contribute to Puerto Rico?s lower prices.

Travel to Puerto Rico is also fast and simple for United States Citizens.? U.S. Citizens don?t require visa or a passport; just a government issued identification card.

Since most medical procedures abroad are outpatient, which can include anything from breast implants to dentistry, the patient can be sent home within hours of the surgery, making farther destinations a bit more complicated.

Puerto Rico doesn?t have that problem.

?When traveling to a medical facility away from home, patients look for three qualities ? ease of travel, value and high quality of services, and a safe leisure tourism haven. Puerto Rico has all three,? wrote the Puerto Rico Tourism Company on their website.

Many tourism agencies in Puerto Rico have been attempting to take advantage of that ease, creating travel packages for potential American patients. They offer activities like excursions, shopping, and cultural events, all to be enjoyed before or after the procedure.

?At the present there are over 70 hospital facilities, some that have partnerships with hotels,? writes the company.

?There are also six approved projects that integrate hotel and hospital facilities.?

One of those facilities is the 104-room Hyatt place, with the El Tropical Casino, that sits adjacent to the San Pablo HIMA Bayamon Hospital.

?The Puerto Rico Tourism Company has also provided training and presentations for members of the industry, including hotels and hospitals,? said Luis Rivera-Marin, Executive Director of the Puerto Rico Tourism Company.

?These efforts are meant to create awareness of this market, and bring members of the industry together to begin a collaborative effort in promoting PR as a medical tourism destination.?

Despite some of the obvious advantages, many U.S. based doctors and lawyers continue to raise red flags about medical travel abroad.

For Jed Kurzban, an attorney in Miami, FL specializing in medical malpractice, he?s witnessed how medical travel abroad can play out of favor for the ?medical tourist.?

?I think it?s always more dangerous to go abroad because it limits your ability to recover (money) if there is wrong done to you,? said Kurzban.

He says it?s not uncommon to have patients seek malpractice abroad, and they usually come up short.

?If they are a out-of-country doctor, it?s very difficult to list them on a verdict form,? which would place them at fault for malpractice. ?So what happens is you end up not being able to recover that money, which is necessary many times for future medical treatments,? said Kurzban.

?But I certainly understand why people do go abroad because health insurance is so expensive.?

For Lorena Romero, she says it was worth her risk.

?Just take the chance,? Said Romero. ?At this point, nobody has the extra money anymore to give to the hospitals. Medical care is just really outrageously expensive. I just say why not. Why not do it??

And as the price of healthcare and insurance in the United States continues to rise, Puerto Rico, and many Latin American countries, will continue to accept those looking for other options.

Alex Pe?a is a freelance foreign correspondent currently covering Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Previously, Pena was based in Nairobi, Kenya covering East Africa for Voice of America TV, and has also filed stories from the Middle East, including the border of Jordan and Syria. He graduated from the journalism program at Florida Gulf Coast University in December 2011.

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Source: http://nbclatino.com/2013/02/02/new-destination-for-medical-tourism-puerto-rico/

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Sihanouk: Cambodia's last true king

A mourner carries a portrait of the late former Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk in Phnom Penh, Saturday, Feb. 2, 2013. Sihanouk's body had been lying in state at the Royal Palace after being flown from Beijing where he died Oct. 15 of a heart attack at the age of 89. The cremation, the climax of seven days of mourning, will take place Monday.(AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

A mourner carries a portrait of the late former Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk in Phnom Penh, Saturday, Feb. 2, 2013. Sihanouk's body had been lying in state at the Royal Palace after being flown from Beijing where he died Oct. 15 of a heart attack at the age of 89. The cremation, the climax of seven days of mourning, will take place Monday.(AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

Thousands of mourners gather at the Royal Palace and wait in line to pay their respects to the late former Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk in Phnom Penh, Saturday, Feb. 2, 2013. Sihanouk's body had been lying in state at the Royal Palace after being flown from Beijing where he died Oct. 15 of a heart attack at the age of 89. The cremation, the climax of seven days of mourning, will take place Monday.(AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

A man tosses flowers at the Royal Palace offered to the late former Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk in Phnom Penh, Saturday, Feb. 2, 2013. Sihanouk's body had been lying in state at the Royal Palace after being flown from Beijing where he died Oct. 15 of a heart attack at the age of 89. The cremation, the climax of seven days of mourning, will take place Monday.(AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

Hundreds of Buddhist nuns wait in line at the Royal Palace to pay their respects to the late former Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk in Phnom Penh, Saturday, Feb. 2, 2013. Sihanouk's body had been lying in state at the Royal Palace after being flown from Beijing where he died Oct. 15 of a heart attack at the age of 89. The cremation, the climax of seven days of mourning, will take place Monday.(AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

Mourners rest in a field in front of the Royal Palace where they body of the late former Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk rests in Phnom Penh, Saturday, Feb. 2, 2013. Sihanouk's body had been lying in state at the Royal Palace after being flown from Beijing where he died Oct. 15 of a heart attack at the age of 89. The cremation, the climax of seven days of mourning, will take place Monday.(AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) ? When the flames at the cremation ground are quenched and Cambodia's former monarch Norodom Sihanouk's ashes scattered on Phnom Penh's riverfront, the mighty Mekong River may well carry away the country's last true king, a towering figure in a procession of more than 100 monarchs stretching back 2,000 years.

Today, Cambodia has a new king, but he holds little of the power that Sihanouk once wielded. Instead, a poor farmer's son and onetime communist commander, strongman Prime Minister Hun Sen, now occupies the dominant position that Sihanouk represented for years.

For over half a century Sihanouk bestrode this Southeast Asian country like a colossus, wresting independence from France, keeping the opposing Cold War powers at bay while maneuvering adroitly ? at times brutally ? through domestic minefields.

A larger-than-life character, Sihanouk survived wars and the Khmer Rouge reign of terror before succumbing to a heart attack last October at the age of 89. The King-Father, as he is called, will be cremated Monday.

His son, current King Norodom Sihamoni, a gentle man and former ballet dancer, by most accounts ascended the throne reluctantly and does not appear to have inherited any of the father's political skills needed in Cambodia's winner-take-all arena.

Bent on monopolizing power, Hun Sen's regime has not afforded Sihamoni powers guaranteed to the monarchy by the constitution and even restricts the king's movements outside palace walls, according to royalists and political opponents.

Sihamoni's shrinking role and personality, together with the erosion of traditional society, does not bode well for monarchy's long-term future.

"I think the survival of the monarchy after Sihamoni drops off the mortal coil is, at best, a 50-50 bet," says Milton Osborne, an Australian historian and author of a Sihanouk biography.

"He would be much happier if he could go back to France," says Son Soubert, the king's high privy councilor ? or to the Czech Republic. Sihamoni spent 25 years in the two countries, as a student in Prague and Cambodia's ambassador to UNESCO, the cultural body, in Paris.

He has described his time in what was then Czechoslovakia ? "my second homeland" ? as belonging to the "happiest part of my life" and still speaks Czech like a Prague native. Diplomats say that after dinner, usually taken alone, the 59-year-old bachelor loves to read Czech and French theater reviews and watch DVDs of ballets and operas.

"Grandiose, energetic and charismatic, Sihanouk was considered by many as the quintessential 'God-King', a model which contrasts sharply with the quiet, reserved, and circumscribed stance of Sihamoni," says Astrid Noren-Nilsson, a political scientist at Cambridge University. "Whilst Sihanouk was a natural-born, astute politician, Sihamoni does not aspire to any political role."

By contrast, Hun Sen, in power for 28 years after defecting from the Khmer Rouge, says he won't step down until he's 90 and is grooming his three sons for bigger things, the eldest already a two-star general holding key military positions. Hun Sen's brother is a provincial governor, a nephew-in-law serves as national police chief and a daughter recently bought the colonial building that housed Phnom Penh's City Hall. Family members, relatives and political cronies control vast business enterprises.

Bridges, schools and roads across the country bear Hun Sen's name, or that of his powerful wife Bun Rany, and both have had royal-like titles bestowed on them. His is Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo, or Illustrious Prince, Great Supreme Protector and Famed Warrior. In 2009, the prime minister announced that in a previous life he had been King Korn, a peasant who rose up to usurp the throne in the late 15th century. He has since sponsored statues and a book about the monarch.

Observers note that some of Hun Sen's actions bear an uncanny resemblance to those of Sihanouk, including the latter's hours-long speeches, the forays into the countryside to bond with villagers via handouts and earthy language, and even the two men's propensity to belt out songs in public. Hun Sen, like Sihanouk, brooks no rivals to his power.

However, the government denies it is trying to relegate Sihamoni to the shadows.

Minister of Information Khieu Kanharith says Hun Sen swore a sacred oath before Sihanouk's corpse to protect the monarchy and that relations between the prime minister and Sihamoni are "very good."

"The reason why some people say the king is without power, a prisoner in the palace, is because they compare him to the King-Father. This is wrong," the minister said. "Sihanouk was also head of state involved in politics. The current king is playing the classic role of protecting Cambodian unity, tradition, religion. The king will survive if he is firmly committed to this constitutional role."

To date, Sihamoni has shown little desire to expand his role, staying in the background as long his father was alive. "Now we will see if he can exercise his power. It depends on him, now that he has a free hand. He has to show that he is king," Son Soubert says.

The constitution stipulates that the monarch heads a potentially powerful Supreme Council of National Defense and an annual People's National Congress. But the law enacting the council has languished in draft form since 1993 and there is no draft yet related to the congress. Son Soubert says axing the congress would break a long tradition allowing all citizens direct access to the king.

Sihamoni, his councilor says, has also not been allowed to take some trips abroad, including one on invitation from the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C. And diplomats say he would like, if permitted, to take more trips to the countryside, where his father enjoyed his greatest support but where Sihamoni cannot make much of a difference.

"I don't know him very well. I just know that he is the son of the King-Father so I will love him too," said Khim Touch, a 60-year-old farmer from Kampot province who like hundreds of thousands others came to Phnom Penh to pay her last respects to Sihanouk. She recalled Sihanouk once coming to her village to pass out sarongs, rice seeds and cash.

Soung Sophorn, a young human rights lawyer, says the king's popularity is fast diminishing because "people see that he cannot solve their problems compared to what Sihanouk did. The king himself is not strong, brave enough to oppose Hun Sen, and Hun Sen has closed all the doors."

Because of the current king's his isolation, the lawyer says Sihamoni is losing touch with the country's vital majority, the young, while Hun Sen may even gain support from the older generation because he is portraying himself as a Sihanouk admirer as he serves as master of ceremonies at his elaborate funeral.

Others disagree. Nilsson says the mass outpouring of grief and reverence following Sihanouk's death has strengthened the institution although since Sihanouk's abdication in 2004 "the monarchy has increasingly moved to become a decorative monarchy along the lines of Western European constitutional monarchies."

"The passing of Sihanouk can be understood as the end-point of this longer process, cementing the role of the monarchy as a strictly constitutional one," she says. "Since Sihamoni carries himself as a strictly constitutional monarch, the monarchy no longer poses any challenge to Hun Sen, and Hun Sen will have no reason to act against the monarchy."

The royalists themselves wrestle with how to deal with Sihanouk's complex legacy. The young king abdicated the throne for the first time in 1955 to assume various political leadership roles, including head of state for life, although he was back on the throne later. Sihanouk in fact eroded kingly power while retaining the aura of kingship in the eyes of the general population.

Exactly what kind of a mantle Sihamoni may assume remains to be seen, but Osborne says that for now the monarchy remains important for Cambodia's sense of national identity, at least among some segments of the population. And Geoffrey Gunn, a Southeast Asia expert at Japan's Nagasaki University, adds that at times of national crisis royalty can be wielded as a rallying national symbol.

"I think Hun Sen understands that he cannot diminish the status of the monarchy to irrelevance," Gunn says.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-02-Cambodia-Twilight%20of%20a%20Monarchy/id-947de5617d5445e0819ff52cd5021022

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Video: Fans, players gear up for game day in New Orleans

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Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50683566/

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