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Sudanese youths call for peaceful government overthrow


(Reuters) - Young people in Sudan, the last Arab state to experience a successful popular uprising, are using social networking sites to rally support for their plan to topple the government through peaceful protests.

Encouraged by weeks of Tunisian demonstrations which ousted President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali on Friday, Sudanese are harking back to the popular uprising in 1985 which overthrew President Jaafar Nimeiri after 16 years of harsh rule.

Fresh from this week's demonstrations against rising prices, young Sudanese are circulating calls on Facebook, Sudanese websites and by text message calling on families to stand outside their houses and light a candle for 30 minutes at 7 p.m. (11 a.m. EST) every day -- starting on Saturday.

"People will stand for one day, two, three, seven - soon it will reach the media ... then it will hit the streets and topple this tyrant," Wail Jabir wrote on Facebook, where more than 400 people have already signed up for the protest.

"This is just a beginning," another comment said.

Students demonstrating against rising food and petrol prices clashed with police on Wednesday and Thursday in three towns in the mostly Arab north, including Khartoum.

The Khartoum government is grappling with a deep economic crisis at the same time as it faces the near-certainty that South Sudan, which produces 75 percent of the country's oil, will secede when results of a referendum are announced.

Foreign exchange shortages have forced Sudan to cut subsidies on petroleum products and sugar, a strategic commodity, to devalue the currency and restrict imports.

Khartoum deployed 17,500 police in north Sudan for the southern independence referendum which ends on Saturday. The opposition says the aim was to crack down on dissent rather than secure polling booths, as few southerners voted in the north.

President Omar Hassan al-Bashir is wanted for war crimes and genocide in the western Darfur region by the International Criminal Court, the only sitting head of state indicted by the court, and even some close allies have refused to let him visit. Bashir denies the allegations.

Sudan's 1985 uprising began with popular protests by students and spread into a general strike, with hundreds of thousands of people taking to the streets.

Eventually the military leadership turned against Nimeiri and joined the protesters, recalls lawyer Omer Abdelaati, who gave the speech calling for the general strike in 1985.

"It was just like this," he said, pointing to footage of Tunisia on the news. "The schools, universities, banks, everything closed, Khartoum was paralyzed -- everyone was on the streets in Khartoum and in the regions," he said.

A joint civilian and military transitional government then ruled for one year before holding Sudan's last democratic elections in 1986.

(Reporting by Opheera McDoom,

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What Women Want

You might think you know what women want, but are you sure you’re not buying into some commonly believed myths?

Look, you could assume women want you to be super macho, wax lyrical about your feelings and ditch your female friends, but guess what? Myth, myth and myth.

Here are some things women (really) don’t want in a partner or relationship, and what turns their interest on instead.

Myth No. 1 - Women want to talk

It’s a known fact that women like to talk -- a lot. In fact, research even points to how a woman uses 20,000 words a day compared to a man’s 7,000. Although you might think such info means women want to wrestle you into hour-long conversations, the truth is they just want you to listen to them talk. See, it’s much more important to her that you hear her out instead of warble back uninterested remarks

So, instead of whining about how you don’t feel like chatting about your day, all you have to do is open your ears and hand her the invisible mic.

Myth No. 2 - Women want macho men

When you and your woman are at a club and some random guy hits on her, you might think that she wants you to stand up to the plate and rustle the offender up a bit until you and the guy get Tasered by security. However, that just makes you look possessive and crazy, which makes her feel embarrassed. Yes, women want manly men who know their way under the hood of a car and can manage a household budget, but they aren’t impressed by a flashy show of macho behavior -- so leave the bar brawls to Brody Jenner, please.

Myth No. 3 - Women want to hear about your feelings

Many women have said they want men who will open up about their feelings. So we welcomed the metrosexual trend, which was not only about men packing on the moisturizer but also about lowering the fortress on their sensitive sides.

That’s fine and well, but don’t open your emotional floodgates just for the sake of it or if it’s not your style. When women whine about wanting a man who expresses his feelings, they’re really saying that they want a man who’ll talk about his thoughts and opinions. That makes her feel more included in your world and helps her get to know you. It doesn’t mean she expects any badly written poetry or crying sessions either

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Brisbane, Australia (CNN)

Brisbane awoke Wednesday to sunny, clear skies amid renewed warnings that a wave of water was sweeping through the city's main river system, threatening to exceed the damage done by the record 1974 floods.

The Brisbane River, which cuts through the city center, was expected to rise another 2 meters at high tide Wednesday afternoon before peaking at 4 a.m. Thursday at more than five meters.

"We are preparing for the worst natural disaster in our history," said Queensland Premier Anna Bligh. Models predict that 19,700 homes will be "completely flooded" in Brisbane, which is home to more than 1 million residents and another 4,000 homes are likely to be affected in Ipswich, she said.

The river is expected to rise beyond the records set in 1974 when it broke its banks, flooding more than 6,000 homes and killing 14 people.

The devastating impact has not been limited to flooding. Some places that remain dry have been isolated for more than two weeks, she said. Medicines and other supplies have been ferried in by helicopter in some cases. "These floods have an effect, whether they're in your backyard and coming through your floorboards or whether you are isolated," she said.

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Ten people have died this week in Queensland and more than 90 were missing, Neil Roberts, Queensland Emergency Services Minister, told Australian Broadcasting Corporation TV.

Seven Australian Defense Force helicopters were dispatched Wednesday to join the eight military choppers already in the state as rescuers searched for survivors and the bodies of people swept away by the floodwater, Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard said Wednesday.

Most were missing in and around the city of Toowoomba, which was devastated Monday by what is being described as an "inland tsunami." Toowoomba is about 100 kilometers west of Brisbane.

"I think we've all been shocked by the images of that wall of water just wreaking such devastation and.. when we hear the statistics about how many homes are going to be hit in Ipswich and here in Brisbane, the dimensions of it are truly mind-boggling," Gillard said.

"It is terribly sad and I do fear that as a nation we have to prepare ourselves for some more bad news and for a rising death toll," she told Sky News. "The nation is going to have some grieving to do and today we've got some work to do as well, to assist people to prepare and to keep with the search and rescue, there are Australians desperately waiting for news."

She told 4BC Brisbane that she has received offers of help from around the world.

Residents spent Tuesday sandbagging their homes and moving valuables to higher ground and, in some cases, evacuating their homes.

Steve Cook, a resident of the Brisbane inner suburb of West End, spent the afternoon loading his family's belongings into vehicles to be driven away from the flood zone.

"It's pretty chaotic on the streets at the moment," he said. "The streets are almost blocked with four-wheel drives and utilities and everyone is desperately packing their belongings into cars to try to get away before the flood peaks."

By late Tuesday, the water was a meter (3 feet) from his doorstep, one street from the banks of the Brisbane River. Like thousands of others here, he was moving his wife and two children to a relative's house on higher ground.

Onlookers gathered Tuesday at the bank of the Brisbane River as the waters rose. Debris could be seen floating in the fast-flowing water.

"We're just watching the river now and we've seen jetties come past, all sorts of things just floating down the river," said Desire Gralton, who lives in the ground-floor apartment of a four-story building in the Brisbane suburb of New Farm on the Brisbane River. "It's amazing."

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She and her family their personal belongings, photographs and documents to their car outside after stacking their belongings in order of importance -- the most valuable items piled atop furniture they were resigned to losing.

"We're expecting it to come through about one meter through our apartment, so we're trying to move everything higher than that and hope for the best," she said. "If the flood comes into our level, we'll all lose our electricity. So pretty much everyone would have to be evacuated."

Power was being switched off Wednesday to homes in Brisbane and Ipswich, west of the city, as flood water threatened electricity sources. Around 21,000 homes were without power in Ipswich, as well as up to 4,000 homes in Brisbane where water had already breached the banks of the Brisbane River.

"We've already started isolation of the low-lying areas" of Brisbane's Central Business District, said Energex spokesman Mike Swanston. By the predicted river peak on Thursday afternoon, power cuts could extend to about 10 city blocks, he said.

Hundreds of residents sought shelter Tuesday night in evacuation centers in Brisbane and Ipswich where they were expected to stay for days until the water recedes.

The heavy rain and predicted flooding in Brisbane follows flooding elsewhere in the state. Soon after Christmas, water swamped the northern city of Rockhampton, 600 kilometers (370 miles) north of Brisbane, triggering a massive recovery operation to rebuild the town.

In a development that Bligh acknowledged "seems completely ridiculous," the premier pleaded with residents of Brisbane to conserve water, since the city's treatment plants could also be jeopardized by the floodwaters. "As crazy as it sounds, now is not a time to be wasting water, because we don't know what might happen with our water supply," she said.

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