Monday, February 18, 2013

Mariners infield prospect Nick Franklin chowing down with 6,500-calorie-per-day diet in bid to hit the baseball further

Mariners infield prospect Nick Franklin takes part in agility drills at spring training in Peoria, AZ.

Last I saw Mariners infield prospect Nick Franklin, he was at the Arizona Fall League last October. When I ran into him in the clubhouse on Sunday, he looked quite different. Actually, I?d noticed him looking much heavier on Saturday when I saw him doing agility drills post-Mariners-workout, so I decided to ask him what?s-what.

Franklin told me he?s gained 34 pounds since September by putting himself through a 6,500-calorie-per-day diet. You can read more about it here in our story for Monday?s newspaper.

His diet is a couch potato?s fantasy. Lunch and dinner every day at Carrabba?s, Chipotle?s or The Corner Bakery. Breakfast is six scrambled eggs and not just the whites. Plus a high-caloric shake. If he has no time to cook, just hop on over to Chick Fil A.

Franklin was tired of a 6-foot-1, 162-pound frame that he says was collapsing on him last August. He now weighs 196 pounds and wants to be at 200 when the season begins.

I spoke with his personal performance coach, Jeff Higuera, by phone from Florida and he told me Franklin was a good candidate for the weight gain because of his age and the fact his body, muscles and hormones were primed for a big weight gain in any event. He also said Franklin is the most powerful baseball player he?s ever worked with and has a gym work ethic second to none. That part is encouraging, because the diet, well?let?s just say it?s something most men would love to call their own.

Mariners manager Eric Wedge told me he?s excited and wants to see the results.

Let?s be clear: Franklin isn?t sporting Incredible Hulk upper body muscle here. The biggest weight gain appears to be in his lower body, starting with his waist, his hips and his legs. He told me he can now squat 425 pounds and that the power has compensated for the weight gain and led to his maintaining speed and agility.

The biggest reason he wanted to put on the weight was to hit the baseball further. So that the balls he hits to the gaps start clearing the fence.

I guess we?ll see.

As his trainer says in the story, not every person can do a diet like this: not even your typical sportswriter, who is known to consume some calories.

?Honestly, there are some days where I just want to let it all go,? Franklin said. ?It?s hard to hold it down sometimes. Other than that, I feel like I?m on a full stomach the entire day. There?s not one point where I?m hungry. I?m always full when I?m eating, let?s just say that. I?m always eating when I?m not supposed to be eating.?

This sounds like work.

So, pass the brew and tip a glass to Nick Franklin as you chug it on down. As Tommy Lasorda might have said in the early 1990s, he?s having a shake for breakfast, a shake for lunch, and a sensible dinner ? at Carrabba?s. With a bunch of shakes in-between. Hold the mayo. On second thought, slop it on. Who?s leading this workout? Jane Fonda, or John Belushi?

This will be an interesting spring, indeed.

Source: http://feeds.seattletimes.com/click.phdo?i=52fd8adada5e1ee32ac6c06e3e92016d

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Ecuador's re-elected Correa vows media and land reforms

QUITO (Reuters) - Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa vowed on Monday to press ahead with laws to control the media and redistribute land to the poor as he looks to deepen his socialist revolution after a resounding re-election victory.

Correa, a pugnacious 49-year-old economist, trounced his nearest rival by more than 30 percentage points on Sunday to win a new four-year term. He has already been in power for six years, winning broad support with ambitious social spending programs.

His re-election triumph could set him up to become Latin America's most outspoken critic of Washington as Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is struggling to overcome cancer.

But Correa will have to balance his desire for an agenda similar to Chavez's radical socialism with a need for pragmatic negotiations with foreign investors to raise Ecuador's oil production and spur the mining industry.

He focused on his socialist reforms on Monday, saying he'd push through legislation that has been blocked by opposition leaders in Congress.

"The first thing we'll do is to push through key laws that have been left to wither as a way of hurting Correa, but this has actually hurt the country," Correa said in an interview with regional television network Telesur.

Those include a proposed land redistribution drive to give terrain deemed unproductive to poor peasants and setting up a showdown with large banana and flower producers, much the way Chavez took on Venezuelan ranchers during a decade-long land expropriation campaign.

Correa's plan to create a state watchdog group to determine if media have published inappropriate content also echoes Chavez's controls over television and cable broadcasters, and would extend Correa's vitriolic fight with opposition media.

In addition, Ecuadoreans voted for a new Congress on Sunday and Correa said he expected his ruling Alianza Pais to win a majority. That would help speed his efforts to pass the proposed legislation.

But he is also expected to pass a new mining law that would ease investment terms as a way of helping close a deal with Canada's Kinross to develop a large gold reserve. That will be a major test of his ability to offer investment security while ensuring the state keeps a large portion of revenue.

The vice-president of Kinross in Ecuador, Dominic Channer, said that "good progress" had been made in the negotiations.

"Kinross ... understands that the government plans to send mining and tax reforms to the National Assembly. These reforms should provide improvements to investor security and an improved economic balance for mining projects," Channer told Reuters.

With almost three-fourths of votes counted by Monday afternoon, Correa had 57 percent support compared with 23 percent for conservative candidate Guillermo Lasso.

The election established Lasso, a former banker from the coastal city of Guayaquil, as the face of the opposition. Six other candidates trailed way behind.

Lasso has called Correa a dangerous authoritarian who has curbed media freedom and controlled state institutions.

Even some supporters disapprove of Correa's tempestuous outbursts, fights with media and bullying of adversaries

SOCIALIST ALLIANCE

His re-election puts him in line to be the de facto leader of the leftist ALBA group of Latin American nations that push state-driven economic policies and oppose free-market reforms promoted by Washington.

Chavez made a surprise return to Venezuela on Monday after two months of cancer treatment in Cuba, but his health is delicate and it is unclear if he will be able to stay in power and continue being the region's leftist standard bearer.

The continued success of Latin American socialism will depend on strong commodities prices that underpin generous social spending, and Correa needs foreign investment to ensure state coffers remain full during his next four-year term.

Ecuador has been locked out of capital markets since a 2008 debt default on $3.2 billion in bonds, and Correa's government has taken an aggressive stance with oil companies to squeeze more revenue from their operations.

Correa's recent statements show that although he wants to maintain many of his radical policies, he also wants to soften his reputation as an anti-capitalist crusader within investing circles.

"The advantages of our country for foreign investment are political stability, a strong macroeconomic performance ... and important stimulus to new private investment," he said last week while hosting the emir of gas-rich Qatar.

Correa's government is also in talks with China to secure funding for the $12.5 billion Pacifico refinery, which would allow Ecuador to save up to $5 billion a year in fuel imports.

"We can't be beggars sitting on a sack of gold," is a catch phrase Correa has used in recent months to argue that Ecuador needs to attract oil investments and expand a mining industry that has barely begun to tap its gold and copper reserves.

(Editing by Kieran Murray and Sandra Maler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ecuadors-elected-correa-vows-media-land-reforms-193721974.html

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Pakistan Shi'ites demand protection from militants

QUETTA, Pakistan (Reuters) - Thousands of Pakistani Shi'ites furious over a sectarian bombing that killed 89 people protested on Monday, demanding that security forces protect them from hardline Sunni groups.

The attack, near a street market in the southwestern city of Quetta on Saturday, highlighted the government's failure to crack down on militancy in nuclear-armed Pakistan just a few months before a general election is due.

Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), seen as the most ruthless Sunni sectarian group, claimed responsibility for the latest bombing, just as they did for another bombing that killed nearly 100 people in the same city last month.

While the Taliban and al Qaeda remain a major source of instability, Sunni sectarian militants, who regard Shi'ites as non-Muslims, have emerged as another significant security threat.

Shi'ite frustrations with waves of attacks on them have reached boiling point, piling pressure on Pakistani leaders ahead of elections expected within a few months.

The government is already under fire for failing to tackle a host of other problems, from power cuts and corruption to poverty.

In Quetta, some ethnic Shi'ite Hazaras are refusing to bury their dead until the army goes after the LeJ.

Around 4,000 men, women and children placed 71 bodies beside a Shi'ite place of worship. Muslim tradition requires that bodies are buried as soon as possible, and leaving them above ground is a potent expression of grief and pain.

Some coffins contained three or four bags of remains, with photographs of the dead on top. Grown men wept beside a hand-written list of victims hanging on a wall.

Protesters chanted "stop killing Shi'ites".

"We stand firm for our demands of handing over the city to the army and carrying out a targeted operation against terrorists and their supporters," said Syed Muhammad Hadi, spokesman for an alliance of Shi'ite groups.

"We will not bury the bodies unless our demands are met."

PROTESTS SPREAD

The paramilitary Frontier Corps is largely responsible for security in Baluchistan province, of which Quetta is the capital, but Shi'ites say it is unable or unwilling to protect them.

The roughly 500,000-strong Hazara people in Quetta, who speak a Persian dialect, have distinct features and are an easy target for Sunni hardliners.

The LeJ has stepped up suicide bombings and shootings in a bid to destabilize strategic U.S. ally Pakistan and install a Sunni theocracy, an echo of the strategy that al Qaeda pursued to try and trigger a civil war in Iraq several years ago.

On Monday, Pakistanis demonstrated in other major cities including the capital Islamabad and Lahore, where Shi'ite activists put up lights along roads and passed out water during a sit in.

"Installation of lights and other arrangements indicate that we are ready to stay here till the government meets our demands and make necessary measures to stop Shia genocide in Pakistan," said Ammar Yasir, a local Shi'ite leader.

The city's lawyers staged a strike in solidarity with Shi'ites.

In Karachi, a strike to protest against the Quetta bloodshed brought Pakistan's commercial hub to a standstill.

Authorities boosted security as protesters blocked roads, disrupted rail services to other parts of the country and torched vehicles. Protesters clashed with police who stopped them entering the airport.

(Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pakistan-shiites-demand-protection-militants-065936322.html

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Friday, February 15, 2013

Five Fab Family Holidays ? That We're Not Going On! ? Seana Smith

Post image for Five Fab Family Holidays ? That We?re Not Going On!

Oh it never hurts to have a dream, does it?

To check out a few pretty pictures.

We?ve had some great overseas holiday in the past few years, great overall that is.

There?s always been some dramas and explosions, some tantrums and traumas along the way.

To be honest, I think I get the most value out of looking forward to a family holiday.

Anticipation can be blooming uplifting.

We don?t know how Hubby?s timetable will pan out for later this year. We needs to try to change his FIFO dates to get home for next Xmas.

So we can?t make any plans to book a family holiday. ?As ever.

But that?s no reason not to have a few ideas.

So I?ve been doing some family holiday exploring, just for a wee bit of escapism, just for fun.

Here are my current top five holidays I?d love to go on with the family but probably won?t.

Oh go on, have a peek.

(Is it too rude to describe these ideas as family holiday porn?)

Heron Island

Heron Island

I?d love to visit Heron Island on the Great Barrier Reef, both my sister?s have been and I?ve been meaning to for the past 25 years.

I think the children are old enough to really enjoy and appreciate a trip there now. ?Reading my friend Annabel Candy?s posts?from a visit with her three childen had me salivating.

Heron Island?s website is here.

?

Club Med Anywhere

ClubMed

We?ve tried to book a Club Med holiday but twice have been too late to get in during school holidays.

That?s the problem with not being sure of hubby?s work dates and so unable to book far ahead. ?We?ll get there one day.

I think it?d suit all the family. Tell you what I?d LOVE? the ?new four-day health and wellbeing retreats that Club Med has planned at at Club Med Bali (12-23 March) and Cherating Beach (7-14 April), themed around the concept Body and Soul: Four Colours in Four Days.

A bit of a mind and body retreat whilst still with the kids ? sounds fab.

More Club Med info here.

?

Cruising The High Seas

pjewel-7

I spent a lot of time sailing on small yachts when I was a child but have never taken to the high seas on a cruise. Shame!

Having head so many reports from friends, I?m dead keen. But our Intn?l Man of Mystery isn?t as he gets terribly seasick and has spent too long on oil rigs to feel that the sea has any romance left for him. One day I?ll take the kids on my own.

I just read that P & O are upgrading their kids programmes to include animation courses for for kids. P & O has partnered with Stop Motion Pro who made Wallace and Gromit and The Pirates, so the courses should be good.

Find out more here.

?

?Lady Elliot Island

Lady elliot island

Friends from school have raved about their holidays on this tiny island resort on the Great Barrier Reef. It?s a relaxed life on the island, the resort is simpler and more eco focussed than other Queensland resorts.

There are fringing reefs all around the island so snorkelling from the beach is wonderful, and there are manta rays swimming around, wonderful.

Lady Elliot?s website is not sleep or fancy, but has heaps of information, find it here.

?

Jean-Michel Cousteau Resort, Fiji

Fiji jmcousteau

And yes, it?s another resort surrounded by coral reefs!

Oh why not!?

As a child I went scuba diving all over the world with Jacques Cousteau and his amazing underwater TV programs.

His son founded this resort, which sounds amazing. Some friends have been and had a fantastic time with the family.

The downside, it?s very, very expensive and also gets booked up very fast.

Hmmmm? kids, you might have to wait until you?ve all left home for this one.

The website with photos to make you drool is here.

Do you ever do a little island dreaming?

Would your family enjoying one of these pretty luxurious holidays?

Or is camping the way to go every time?

Happy family holiday planning.

Your ideas to add to my list are VERY welcome!

Seana

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Source: http://www.seanasmith.com/five-fab-family-holidays-that-were-not-going-on/

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Ensure Paying Your Taxes with a Credit Card Won't Hurt Your Credit Score

Ensure Paying Your Taxes with a Credit Card Won't Hurt Your Credit ScorePaying your taxes with your credit card isn't necessarily a bad thing, and can even earn you a fair number of rewards points if you've got a good card. You have to be careful, however, because aside from potential convenience fees you can damage your credit score if you carry a high balance for too long. US News explains:

[I]f the amount you charge to your credit card is fairly large and you carry that balance for several months or longer, you could damage your credit score. Remember the amount of available credit you have is one factor in determining your credit score, so you want to do whatever you can to increase that amount. Consider the pros and cons of charging that large amount to a credit card you may not be able to pay off within a reasonable amount of time.

This is a pretty standard consideration with any large purchase, but we don't have many of those and your tax bill may be the only one you encounter on a regular basis. If you're putting it on your credit card, make sure you can pay it off quickly so you don't harm your credit just to put off payment awhile longer.

Should You Pay Your Taxes with a Credit Card? | US News

Images by Feng Yu (Shutterstock) and LHF Graphics (Shutterstock).

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/1xN0LNhYsac/ensure-paying-your-taxes-with-a-credit-card-wont-hurt-your-credit-score

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My Sweaty Valentine

It is Valentine?s Day and I want to talk to you about how you smell. This will not be a discussion about how your musky, earthy scent attracts a mate. No, we need to have a conversation about how your urinous, acidic odor might drive one away.

There are ways to safeguard against the Valentine?s Day faux pas of smelly underarms. Think about what you will wear to celebrate the holiday. I?m going to make this simple ? avoid polyester.

It seems like it would be easy to adhere to such advice, but consider possible Valentine?s Day agendas: a bike ride for two, a hike to a secluded picnic spot, a candle-lit prix frixe dinner. Athletic wear is an olfactory nightmare, but even a romantic, flowy blouse could ruin a date. Sporty or dressy, garments made from synthetic fibers smell worse than anything else in the closet. The reason why can be understood by examining the fibers? chemical and physical properties.

Rachel McQueen is an assistant professor at the University of Alberta. Her research primarily focuses on the development and retention of odor in textiles. Because human odor profiles and fabric fiber structures are so complex, it is difficult to pick apart all the factors that lead to a garment retaining odor.

So Dr. McQueen started with the basics, answering the question: Does polyester actually have greater odor intensity compared to natural fibers? ?A lot of people would probably think, ?So what, I knew that, because when I go to the gym my polyester T-shirt stinks to high heaven,?? says Dr. McQueen. But she wanted scientific proof to validate these anecdotal stories. And she wanted to determine whether more odor intensity was associated with more garment bacteria.

While working on her doctorate at the University of Otago in New Zealand, Dr. McQueen and her colleagues performed a statistical analysis of bacterial population found on odorous garments. What they discovered flies in the face of what is commonly believed to be associated with textile odor.

I was in a stinky situation myself two weeks ago while attending ScienceOnline2013. This is no ordinary conference. Highlights of the Wednesday evening opening, at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, included finding out what kind of microorganisms live on your face and under your arms. While passing time, waiting to get sampled, I made small talk with fellow attendees, strangers, informing them that I do not wear deodorant. This topic of conversation made perfect sense in the context of the experiment for which we were all anxious volunteers. Later, I regretted the decision.

I don?t have a meaningful, philosophical explanation for why I don?t wear deodorant. One day I just stopped. That was five years ago and after a week without it I realized I didn?t always need it, so now I rarely use it.

It turns out some individuals are blessed with odor-free armpits. A research group in Hamburg, Germany identified a gene critical for odor formation. A single mutation in the gene, ABCC11, leads to complete odor loss in the carrier. Human body odor forms when bacteria consumes protein rich fluids secreted from glands in the armpits (among other places) leaving behind vile fatty acids, vinegar?s big brothers. The gene mutation means these odor molecules never become part of the secretion in the first place.

Unfortunately, few people with this mutation realize they are carriers. A study last month conducted in the UK found that 78% of people who carry the mutated gene still wear deodorant.

This is not surprising, considering that for 100 years we have been trained to wear deodorant. Like Pavlovian dogs, our societal response to puberty?s signals is doling out antiperspirant. Sarah Everts uncovered the history of antiperspirant in this story for Smithsonian magazine which explores how deodorant and antiperspirant became social norms.

All of this pit lit gives credence to my anti-antiperspirant stance, but unfortunately I don?t posses the ABCC11 mutation. The gene mutation also affects ear wax; you may be a carrier if yours is dry. Mine is quite sticky; besides, sometimes I smell. Just as I did the third morning of ScienceOnline2013 when I realized, mid fist pump, while screaming, ?I?m a African? during the nine o?clock convergence (I told you this was no ordinary conference), that I had B.O. This is a disconcerting notion when you are surrounded by people you barely know, many of whom you have informed that deodorant application is not in your hygiene regimen. So when your associates catch a whiff of acidic odor, like Fifi the kitty in a Pepe Le Pew cartoon, there will be no doubt as to its origin.

I was too far from the hotel to return and change. So I kept my elbows pinned to my sides and convinced myself that the shirt would air out as I moved. At the end of the day I put the shirt to my nose; it was offensive. Then I dug my travel shirt out from the bottom of my suitcase. It smelled fine, like my laundry detergent. One shirt (made of cotton) had endured 18 hours of wear, including travel: on a train, on a plane, in a warm taxi, in a van full of people, through a lemur center (Oh my god, you want to talk about stench!) and by foot, several blocks. The other shirt (made of polyester) was foul within an hour. There had to be a scientific explanation.

When Dr. McQueen and her colleagues studied microbial populations on garments composed of different materials the findings were surprising. ?Bacteria survives a lot longer on wool then on polyester and cotton,? says Dr. McQueen. Which is contrary to what was expected and ? regardless of her findings ? what we are still led to believe.

If odor molecules are the leftovers when bacteria eats, then it is presumed that a garment with less bacteria will have less odor. Because of this line of thinking, antimicrobial coatings are being researched and produced for athletic and healthcare attire. Dr. McQueen laments that even Merino wool manufactures will tout the fabric?s antimicrobial properties on their websites. Dr. McQueen laughs, ?It?s like, hang on, there?s bacteria all over your body, there?s bacteria all over a sheep?s bodies. It doesn?t make sense.?

The difference in surface morphology between the two fiber types is what is more likely to be responsible. Surface morphology describes the terrain of a fiber. A natural fiber like cotton or wool is highly textured compared to a manmade fiber which has a smooth surface. On a larger scale, these surface properties result in polyester having a sheen and wool being matte.

Dr. McQueen likes to picture wool as activated carbon. ?The complexity of wool and its structure has a lot of different potential chemical binding sites,? she says. Not only is it possible for odor molecules to bind fairly strongly to the wool fibers, but the intricacy of natural fibers physically limit the ability of odor molecules to escape the fabric. If odor molecules don?t escape, then we can?t smell them. Odor molecules do not penetrate a polyester fiber and since there is only a weak surface interaction the odor molecules are free to travel into an olfactory system and register as unpleasant.

Rachel McQueen has further experiments to conduct to prove her hypothesis. She admits, ?This is a really under studied area: odor on textiles.? In her ongoing research she hopes to identify the mechanisms for the interactions between odor molecule and fibers.

Textile science has taught has this: if the cutie from your running club invites you on a Valentine?s Day Five Miler, accept without fear of a stench. Just by pass all the high-tech fabrics in your drawer (at least for the layer closest to your skin) and don some cotton. Happy Valentine?s Day!

Image: elbow patch ? HonestlyWTF, Photomicrographs: Fiber Reference Image Library

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=45d82e015be86b24fe9662bc4a1a774d

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ComScore Says 5.3 Trillion Ads Shown In 2012, But 3 In 10 Are Never Seen

comscore total ad impressionscomScore just released its Digital Future In Focus report for 2013, offering a broad swath of data in areas like social networking, search and mobile. But the most interesting finding, at least to me, involved display advertising ? that 5.3 trillion impressions were served in the United States, but three in 10 are never actually rendered in-view.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/f1C6PqBN4k0/

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Le Canada prolonge son soutien de la mission de la France au Mali

14 f?vr. 2013 17h53 HE

OTTAWA, ONTARIO--(Marketwire - 14 f?v. 2013) - Le gouvernement du Canada a annonc? aujourd'hui qu'il prolonge d'un mois son soutien de la mission fran?aise au Mali. ? la demande du gouvernement fran?ais, au d?but du mois de janvier, les Forces arm?es canadiennes ont fourni un avion de transport strat?gique CC-177 Globemaster III de l'Aviation royale canadienne en appui ? l'op?ration Serval, mission fran?aise au Mali, et ce soutien sera prolong? jusqu'au 15 mars.

? Le Canada est d?termin? ? rester solidaire ? ses alli?s de l'?tranger pour combattre les extr?mistes et pour apporter une contribution positive ? la s?curit? r?gionale et internationale ?, a d?clar? l'honorable Peter MacKay, ministre de la D?fense nationale. ? Le travail de nos militaires, hommes et femmes, qui appuient l'intention de notre gouvernement aide ? stabiliser la situation au Mali et ailleurs. ?

? Le Canada se r?jouit de soutenir ses alli?s fran?ais, ainsi que du bon travail qu'ils accomplissent avec les forces africaines pour combattre les extr?mistes dans le nord du Mali ?, a d?clar? le ministre des Affaires ?trang?res, John Baird. ? Certaines personnes ont mis en doute la n?cessit? de ce type d'?quipement militaire au moment o? notre gouvernement l'a achet?. Or, l'exemple des r?cents jours et des r?centes semaines prouve l'utilit? de cette capacit? de transport lourd et la sagesse de la d?cision du gouvernement d'investir dans l'Aviation royale canadienne. ?

L'op?ration Serval est men?e aux termes de la r?solution 2085 du Conseil de s?curit? des Nations Unies, qui autorise le d?ploiement de la Mission internationale de soutien au Mali sous conduite africaine et qui demande ? la communaut? internationale de soutenir cette mission et les forces de s?curit? et de la d?fense maliennes.

La Force op?rationnelle a?rienne Mali est constitu?e d'un avion CC-177 Globemaster III et d'environ 40 membres de l'Aviation royale canadienne dont des membres d'?quipage navigant et d'entretien du 429e Escadron, ainsi que des techniciens des mouvements a?riens du 2e Escadron des mouvements a?riens, deux unit?s de la 8e Escadre Trenton. Depuis le 17 janvier, 27 vols totalisant plus de 194 000 kilom?tres ont ?t? effectu?s et ont permis de transporter plus de 765 000 kilogrammes d'?quipement militaire et de membres du personnel dans le cadre de l'op?ration Serval.

? La capacit? de transport lourd strat?gique offerte ? la France est un exemple du soutien concret que les Forces canadiennes apportent ? des alli?s cl?s dans le cadre de leurs missions de lutte contre les organisations terroristes dans le Nord du Mali ?, a d?clar? le g?n?ral Tom Lawson, chef d'?tat-major de la D?fense. ? Cette mission illustre le haut degr? de pr?paration op?rationnelle de l'Aviation royale canadienne et l'importance de pouvoir se fier sur une force exp?ditionnaire a?rienne souple et polyvalente en ce 21e si?cle. ?

Le CC-177 Globemaster III et le personnel de l'Aviation royale canadienne ont quitt? Trenton en direction de la France le 15 janvier et ils ont effectu? leur premier vol op?rationnel le 17 janvier en soutien ? l'op?ration Serval.

Le commandant du d?tachement affect? ? la Force op?rationnelle a?rienne Mali est le major William Church.

Notes ? l'?diteur :

http://www.cjoc.forces.gc.ca/exp/mali/index-fra.asp

http://www.combatcamera.forces.gc.ca/site/index-fra.asp

Source: http://www.marketwire.com/mw/release.do?id=1757260&sourceType=3

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