Passion Flower Powder Now Helps Prevent Insomnia in Adults Reports iTrustNews.com

Passion flower powder is now helping to prevent insomnia in adults as reported by iTrustNews.com. The recent introduction to the U.S. market and several prominent showings on popular television programs has helped to introduce adults to this new sleep aid according to a new report now published.

Danbury, Connecticut (PRWEB) January 10, 2013
The iTrustNews.com website has published a new report about the popularity of passion flower powder to help prevent insomnia in adults. The healing benefits of this natural plant were recently introduced to U.S. television audiences on several popular medical programs. The new report published online details the many uses of this herbal medicine and exactly which retailers are now discounting online pricing due to the recent surge in requests for this new powder.
The passiflora, sometimes referred to as passionflower, has been used for centuries for its healing benefits in many cultures. The unprocessed powder that is created through grinding of the stems, leaves and flowers of this plant is used as additives in some foods. The healing benefits include digestive health, anxiety relief and blood pressure normalization. The iTrustNews.com report focuses on the sleep therapy that some have found when using this plant in powdered form.
Some health food stores and specialty retailers are now stocking the passion flower powder in order to meet the demand of consumers. The announcement of the healing benefits and ways this powder can be used has helped to create new interest both online and offline. One of the popular ways that men and women ingest this powder is in tea or other drinks. The majority of the supplies can be found online sold in one-pound packages. The pricing in the report was found to vary from retailer to retailer although discount information is included.
The all-natural base of the passion powder is one reason that consumers are now selecting this product. Instead of pharmaceutical created medicines, the natural ingredients provide a safe and effective sleep aid to adults suffering from insomnia. The new report online is scheduled to remain updated as new prices and stock information is obtained from retailers now selling this herbal aid.
About iTrustNews
The iTrustNews company syndicates its articles, new stories and product reviews through a network of hundreds of outlets on the Internet. News is gathered and reported by this company on a daily basis. A team of writers, editors and researches work together to locate some of the best discounts that can be found online to help consumers. The iTrustNews company launched its product reviews section of its website in 2012 and has continued with updates in the New Year. Through daily updates and special reports, this company provides a trusted resource for consumers researching products and services online.
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New Book Tells of a Veteran Whose Life is Changed When He Moves to Arizona

Author John C. Bird pens a fascinating fiction about a guy who gets more than he bargained for in retirement

(PRWEB) January 10, 2013
When Retired Army Officer Andy Frank moved to Arizona, it was so he could be near his other veteran buddies. He got more than he bargained for when he met Jenifer. Readers can witness the intriguing series of events that occur in author John C. Bird’s A Veteran Moves to Arizona.
When Andy is having breakfast with his three veteran friends, he finds himself attracted to a younger woman, Jenifer, who is their server. They go on one date that changes their lives forever. A Veteran Moves to Arizona follows their budding romance amidst a conflict with the Las Vegas mob, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and other dilemmas that the couple must deal with. Adding complications to their already precarious relationship is Andy’s issue with their age difference—as he is twice Jenifer’s age—and Jenifer’s fear of men, which is brought about by her past experience with abuse. Will these two overcome all the challenges they face and find love and happiness?
An interesting story of a guy who just wants to be left alone in his retirement, who feels compelled to assist a young woman in need, A Veteran Moves to Arizona is also a take that explores the different feelings between two people who are cautiously navigating the unpredictable waters of love. It is a must-read for the Veteran, the romantic, and the Vet with PTSD and his significant other.
For more information on this book, interested parties may log on to http://www.Xlibris.com.
About the Author

John C. Bird has eight articles in publication on management topics and is the author of A Marine – A Soldier.
A Veteran Moves To Arizona * by John C. Bird

Publication Date: 10/26/2012

Trade Paperback; $19.99; 196 pages; 978-1-4797-3113-8

Trade Hardback; $29.99; 196 pages; 978-1-4797-3114-5

eBook; $3.99; 978-1-4797-3115-2
Members of the media who wish to review this book may request a complimentary paperback copy by contacting the publisher at (888) 795-4274 x. 7879. To purchase copies of the book for resale, please fax Xlibris at (610) 915-0294 or call (888) 795-4274 x. 7879.
For more information on self-publishing or marketing with Xlibris, visit http://www.Xlibris.com. To receive a free publishing guide, please call (888) 795-4274.
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Criminal cases made Pa. AG hand over NCAA suit

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania's attorney general said she granted Gov. Tom Corbett the authority to file a federal antitrust lawsuit against the NCAA because the litigation could present a conflict of interest as her office prosecutes three Penn State administrators.
Attorney General Linda Kelly told The Associated Press on Thursday that "an actual conflict of interest could, and likely would, arise if this office were involved in both cases."
Her office is prosecuting Graham Spanier, Gary Schultz and Tim Curley on charges of endangering the welfare of children, obstruction, conspiracy, failure to report suspected child abuse and perjury. Prosecutors claim they illegally covered up complaints and suspicions about Sandusky, a former defensive coordinator who was convicted last summer of 45 counts of child sexual abuse, including attacks inside campus facilities.
Corbett sued the NCAA in federal court on Wednesday, saying a set of penalties imposed against Penn State over its handling of the matter should be thrown out on antitrust grounds. The school agreed to a $60 million fine, a four-year ban on post-season play, a reduction in scholarships and the elimination of more than 100 wins under former coach Joe Paterno.
The size and scope of the criminal case made it "untenable" for the attorney general's office to sue the NCAA, Kelly said.
"Given the serious nature of both these cases, keeping these matters separate is the best course of action for the people of Pennsylvania," she said.
The NCAA has called Corbett's lawsuit meritless and an affront to the victims of Sandusky, who is now serving a 30- to 60-year state prison sentence for abuse of 10 boys over 15 years.
Spanier, forced out as president last year after Sandusky's arrest, remains a faculty member but is on paid leave. Curley is serving out the last year of his contract as athletic director, also on leave. Schultz, the school's vice president for business and finance, has retired.
All three have said they are innocent.
Under state law, the attorney general pursues and defends lawsuits involving most state agencies, but can delegate that power for reasons of efficiency or if it is otherwise deemed to be in the best interests of the state.
Kelly said her office received a request from Corbett's lawyer James D. Schultz on Friday, Dec. 14, for permission to sue the NCAA. Her office granted it three days later, she said. That authority, signed by the chief of her litigation section, can be terminated or amended by the attorney general's office, and it does not cover any appeals.
Kelly, a Republican, was nominated two years ago by Corbett, who left the office midterm after being elected governor.
Her decision drew criticism Thursday from a suburban Philadelphia politician who is considering a run against Corbett in the 2014 GOP primary. Bruce Castor, a Montgomery County commissioner and former district attorney, said the lawsuit appeared to be filed in a rush because Kelly's successor, Democrat Kathleen Kane, is scheduled to be sworn in Jan. 15.
"I can't imagine any circumstances where I would have given up a case of this importance from my office," Castor said. "It would be exciting. It would be challenging. It would be headline-grabbing. It would have all of the elements that I used to think made a case worthwhile of handling, if not by myself, with my staff."
Kane did not respond to a message seeking comment left Thursday for Charlie Lyons, a top aide in her transition.
Walter Cohen, who spent nearly seven years in the attorney general's office, including a year as the attorney general, said he doubted Kane will want to take the case back.
"She's going to be handed a lot of stuff that happened under Linda Kelly, including the Curley and Schultz and Spanier prosecutions," Cohen said. "That itself is a lot to do
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Women's hockey team at Dalhousie University suspended over hazing ritual

HALIFAX - Officials at Dalhousie University in Halifax have suspended the women's hockey team for the rest of the season after an investigation revealed that a recent hazing ritual involved excessive drinking, intimidation and humiliation.
University spokesman Charles Crosby issued a brief statement Thursday saying many of the team's players were "put in harm's way" both physically and psychologically during a private house party in September.
Crosby says an investigation by the vice-president of student services started after a first-year athlete approached the team's coach with concerns about the treatment of new players.
Though no one was physically hurt, Crosby says the incident represents a serious breach of the university's expectations.
He confirmed that the team captains have been removed from their positions and all but the first-year players have been suspended for the remainder of the 2012-13 season, which has made it impossible for the team to continue playing.
As well, Crosby said the team will be educated about the university's hazing policy and counselling services will be offered to team members.
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Spond cherishing chance at BCS title

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Notre Dame linebacker Danny Spond values every chance he gets to be on the football field.
That might sound trivial. After all, doesn't every player feel that way?
Probably so, but then again, few players have seen what Spond has seen.
The native of Littleton, Colo., was a star quarterback at Columbine High, where a school shooting took the lives of 13 people in 1999. Now a linebacker, he wears jersey No. 13 to honor those victims and has been deeply affected by the school massacre in Newtown, Conn., last month.
In August, he feared he might lose his football career when a migraine headache struck him so severely that he was unable to move parts of his body.
Now he's about to take the field with a national championship at stake.
"This is the biggest stage that we'll ever play on," Spond said.
No. 1 Notre Dame (12-0) meets No. 2 Alabama (12-1) on Monday night at Sun Life Stadium, a matchup of storied programs that will collide and decide the BCS national champion. Spond is expected to start for the Irish, who enter the game with the nation's top-ranked scoring defense, just a smidge ahead of the Crimson Tide.
Alabama is favored, which to the Irish isn't exactly a relevant point.
"In our eyes, this is a step down from the Super Bowl," Spond said. "Underdog or if you're favored in these games, that doesn't really matter."
And if anyone on the field Monday night can speak on what really matters, it might be Spond.
He knows what the Columbine shootings meant to his community, both then and now. He grieved for the victims of the school massacre in Newtown that took the lives of 26 students and teachers at an elementary school.
"I can't express how horrible of an event that is," Spond said Thursday, when he was among a small group of Notre Dame players who met with reporters in advance of the title game. "Going through that ... unspeakable. It's hard to explain. It's hard to put into words. I don't know what to say about it, other than time will heal. It did our community and I know it will there."
Spond relies on faith and makes no secret of it, using his beliefs to get him through tough moments, on the field and off.
When he was hospitalized in August, football wasn't his concern. Walking was.
Parts of Spond's left side were numb when he was struck by the migraine, which doctors originally feared was a stroke. He walked with a limp after spending about half a week in the hospital, then needed rehabilitation just so he could feel close to normal again. Football was pushed aside.
That is, until he surprised the Irish by coming back so quickly.
"We were just wondering if he would ever be able to function regularly on a daily basis," Irish star linebacker Manti Te'o said. "And then for him to come out — what was it, a week and a half later? — and say 'I'm going to practice,' we were like, 'Oh, Danny, you can just chill, you know. This is life we're talking about, not just football. Just chill.' But he goes, 'I'm going to get ready.'"
So he got ready. He finished the regular season with 38 tackles in 10 games, which doesn't sound all that impressive.
Notre Dame defensive coordinator Bob Diaco begs to differ.
"Danny Spond is, to me, one of the players of the year," Diaco said.
"To watch him battle and fight and stay positive and become the player that he has become for his teammates in 2012, he is a stalwart out there to the field. It's very hard to get a play on him in the pass game or the run game. It's just really been inspirational for me to watch and be a part of. So I'm so thankful for Danny Spond specifically in my life."
Spond said the six-week wait for this has been easier than some might think, since it's allowed the Irish to prepare and heal.
In short, he knows his team will be ready for whatever Nick Saban and Alabama can throw Notre Dame's way on Monday night.
"They are a great team," Spond said. "They are obviously in this game for a reason and they have proved that in the past couple of years. Coach Saban has built a very strong program over there, so we're preparing for their best. They'll give us their best."
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Eco Wind Chimes Announces Shop by Sound Feature

Seattle (PRWEB) January 08, 2013
Eco Wind Chimes is an online company that sells American-made wind chimes. Now, the company is launching its “shop by sound” feature. The feature allows online shoppers to make purchase decisions based on a sample sound. The sample sounds enables shoppers to listen to tones, such as “Earthsong”, “Island Melody” , “Majestic Morning” and more.
“Wind chimes provide soothing relief for the soul because of the music aspect. It only made sense that our online shoppers could hear the chimes before making a decision to purchase one,” said Stephen Betzen of Eco Wind Chimes. “Our renovated website allows people to shop by price and brand. But, it is the tone feature that really allows customers to connect with the wind chimes.”
The “Shop by Sound” feature can be accessed by clicking here: http://www.ecowindchimes.com/Shop-Wind-Chimes-By-Sound-s/3.htm “Online buying is at its strongest right now. I wanted to launch this feature so customers could really hear what we have to offer. Eco Wind Chimes has always stood out when stacked against our competitors because of our dedication to providing a superior quality product,” continued Betzen. Members of the media are invited to request a complimentary wind chime upon story request qualification.
About: All Eco Wind Chime products are made, and sourced, in the USA. The soothing products produced by Eco Wind Chimes match the company’s dedication to quality workmanship, affordability, and purposeful retail. Eco Wind Chimes is owned by husband and wife team, Rachel & Stephen Betzen.
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International Radio Just Got More User Friendly

RadioFlag gives call signs to stations outside North America, making it easier for listeners to search and find the stations they love.

Newport Beach, CA (PRWEB) January 08, 2013
RadioFlag is live Social Radio for a new generation of listeners, and now the company that just launched in mid - 2011 wants listeners in North America to easily discover International Radio. They look to accomplish this by displaying international radio stations in a format already familiar to its users in the U.S. RadioFlag is assigning call signs to radio stations broadcasting from around the world that do not have a tradition of using them.
RadioFlag originally featured stations from the U.S. and Canada. Both of these countries already use call signs, so listeners can better identify and remember radio stations. In fact this is common practice in most of North America. In the U.S., the FCC assigns 4 call letters, and in unique cases has even allowed 3 letters. However, many countries around the world do not issue call signs to their radio stations.
Starting with Europe, those who search for the stations they want to hear, on the web or on other apps who offer international radio, can only find their favorites if they can remember the name of the radio station. Considering radio is now available on mobile devices, screens allow very limited space to display full radio station names, not to mention the stations throughout Europe who go by similar names, make searching even more confusing.
RadioFlag prefers that international stations work with them in choosing a call sign that best fits the station’s personality and branding objectives. The company offers these stations 4 character call signs, using a combination of both letters and or numbers, and in some circumstances up to 5 characters. In addition, the station’s new call sign will be followed by a three letter ISO country code, such as - ZAF, which identifies stations broadcasting from South Africa. For example, ‘Yona Ke Yona Radio’, broadcasts from Johannesburg, and brands itself as ‘Giving local music a platform, for unknown South African artists’. The problem is remembering the station name once listeners discover it. So RadioFlag assigned the station call sign: YKY-ZAF
RadioFlag will also add an i to call signs for international internet stations. In this case, the i signifies that the station does not have a terrestrial signal, and instead only broadcasts online. For example Scratch Radio, a spirited student radio station broadcasting only over the internet from the campus of Birmingham City University, in Birmingham, United Kingdom, has been issued the call sign iSCRA-GBR. So now listeners can easily remember the station where they discovered new music genres and breaking bands on shows like DJ Ant Lee’s ‘Unsigned’.
California tech start up RadioFlag, has already used this innovative method to better brand and identify ‘Internet Only’ radio stations in the U.S., which also do not use call signs. Reserving call signs for these stations also serves to secure call letters for American College Radio stations, many of which are losing their terrestrial signal due to cuts in funding. Reserving call signs, ensures that should they be forced to make a full transition to broadcasting only online, the call signs will not be lost, and their station branding continues.
RadioFlag's BlackBerry release has proven to be very popular outside the U.S., with users from around the world not only tuning in and interacting with stations in their home countries, but also allowing them to discover some great radio in the U.S., and especially the talented DJs who broadcast from many of nation’s college campuses. The app is also available for the iPhone, Android and Windows Mobile.
RadioFlag’s founder and CEO, Anthony Roman says his team has one goal in mind, “live radio is the original electronic social network, so from the start our team believes no other entertainment medium is more naturally equipped to connect people all around the world, based on shared opinions, ideas, interests and tastes. Live Radio is dynamic, stimulating and interactive, so I think by making international radio easily accessible to a global audience, we can help empower these DJs to better inform, educate, enlighten and entertain."
RadioFlag focuses its efforts on promoting original, non -mainstream radio content, by spotlighting Indie, Community, Alternative, and College Radio, broadcasted over the Internet and AM-FM airwaves. Roman says, “RadioFlag is not a push button playlist service. We are a different option. If you want a computer algorithm to select your music, there are plenty of good services who can offer you that. RadioFlag connects listeners with real DJs behind the mic. We can’t wait to introduce listeners to international DJs and their local perspectives, which will surely open their ears to not only emerging artists and a fresh sound, but also new cultures entirely!”
The company is connecting and streaming more stations from more countries each week. Also look for more user friendly innovations this year from RadioFlag, along with a new look, and features centered around the DJ – Artist dynamic, when the company releases its redesign.
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Premium Astrology Sparks 2013 Off with More Social Media Interaction for Norah Guide Users

Premium Astrology has expanded social media services for Norah Guide users to interact with Norah – World Famous Clair-Astrologist of The Stars.

Phoenix, AZ (PRWEB) January 08, 2013
It’s 2013 and more people are discovering the secret about World Famous Clair-Astrologer – Norah. Using her wonderful clair-tool, “Norah Guide” is now available globally thanks for new social media platforms adapted by Premium Astrology.
Norah Guide, world-famous Clair-Astrologist – had improved her reporting techniques by using Progression for each period of her readings. Norah Guide is now available on FaceBook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+, Pinterest, About.Me., and Tumblr,
There are numerous types of (IPI) integrate Progression:

    Minor progression
    Tertiary progression
    Converse progression
    Ascendant Arc progression
    Symbolic Arc progression
Norah takes the guesswork out with extremely accurate Transit Guide Reports, and extended length reports for all reading services offered on Premium Astrology websites.
Read what other Norah Guide users have to say about Norah:
“I was surprised by the accuracy of the Financial part of the reading.“ - Diane
“You have released me from all my doubts an fears and given me hope. the reading was spot on. Thank you.” – Rita
“90% of the Mini Report is true, and in the Transitional plan I found interesting data that are very close to what in these last few months I tried to focus. I'm not amazed at what I received: it is as if I expected.” - Giovanna
Be amazed for with a reading providing by Norah at no charge, or previous purchase necessary. Get clarity on those questions that keep one up at night. Good sleep comes when answers are clear and easy to see, because then resolve can be implemented at the perfect time.
Premium Astrology is proud to help men and women all over the world enhance the quality of their lives through spiritual enlightenment. Premium Astrology provides fast, reliable astrological reports, and a variety of other services using the experience of Astro-Clairvoyant Norah Guide. The individual success of each of their clients is their highest priority, and Premium Astrology is available to provide live support 24 hours a day 7 days a week.
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C. African Republic leader faces rebel threat

DAMARA, Central African Republic (AP) — More than 30 truckloads of troops from Chad line the two-lane highway just outside of Damara, supporting Central African Republic government forces who want to block a new rebel coalition from reaching the capital.
In a display of force, the turbaned fighters hold their rocket-propelled grenades and other weapons they threaten to use if the rebels seeking to oust President Francois Bozize push this far south.
Gen. Jean Felix Akaga, who heads the regional force known as FOMAC, says a push on Damara, just 75 kilometers (45 miles) north of the capital, would be "a declaration of war" on the 10 Central African states.
"For us, Damara is the red line that the rebels cannot cross," Akaga said Wednesday. "If they attack Damara, we will attack."
The United Nations called for talks between the government and rebels and the Security Council scheduled closed consultations on the Central African Republic on Thursday afternoon.
The multinational force brought journalists up to Damara, where they touted the strength of the Chadian troops, who along with forces from Republic of Congo and Gabon are helping to stabilize the area.
The rebels, though, appear to be holding their positions after taking a string of towns including Sibut, which is 70 miles (112 kilometers) further north from Damara.
Back in 2003, troops under Bozize seized the capital amid volleys of machine-gun and mortar fire, and he then dissolved the constitution and parliament. Now a decade later it is Bozize who himself could be ousted from power.
On Wednesday, he announced through a decree read on state radio that he was dismissing his son, Francis, as defense minister. Chief of Staff Guillaume Lapo also was being replaced.
The president already has promised to form a coalition government with rebels and to negotiate without conditions. It's a sign of how seriously Bozize is threatened by the rebel groups who call themselves Seleka, which means alliance in the Sango language.
Bozize says there's one point not up for negotiation: he does not intend to leave office before his term ends in 2016.
"We can't destroy the country. I don't think that a transition is a good solution for the rebels, for Central African Republic or for the international community," said Cyriaque Gonda, a spokesman for the political coalition behind Bozize.
But mediators for the government and others note the rebels — an alphabet soup of acronyms in French, UFDR, CPJP, FDPC and CPSK — want Bozize gone. And that's the only issue the disparate group seems unified on. Seleka is a shaky alliance that lumps together former enemies.
In September 2011, fighting between the CPJP and the UFDR left at least 50 people dead in the town of Bria and more than 700 homes destroyed.
"Even if they show unity in the military action, we know that they are politically very disunited, the only thing that holds them together is the opposition to the current president," said Roland Marchal, a Paris-based expert on Central African Republic. "If they take control of the capital I think that divisions would appear quickly."
Gonda, who has negotiated on behalf of the government with the rebels, says some of them couldn't even accept sitting together as recently as 2008.
Meanwhile, in some parts of the capital, Bangui, a city of 700,000, life continued as normal, while in others the military buildup was evident.
Trucks full of soldiers bounced on rutted roads dotted with shacks where people can charge mobile phones. Police officers stopped vehicles at intersections. Troops from neighboring nations have arrived including about 120 soldiers each from Republic of Congo and Gabon to help stabilize the area between rebel and the government forces.
In the Bimbo neighborhood, traders went about their business, selling everything from leafy greens to meat at roadside stands.
"We don't support what the rebels are doing," said banana farmer Narcisse Ngo, as a young boy played nearby with a monkey corpse for sale along with other meat. "They should be at the table negotiating without weapons. We are all Central Africans."
Bozize, who seized power while the democratically elected president was traveling outside the country, managed to win elections in 2005 but in the years since he has faced multiple low-level rebellions that have shattered security across the northern part of this large but desperately poor country.
He won the 2011 election with more than 64 percent of the vote, though the United States said the voting was "widely viewed as severely flawed." The U.S. evacuated its diplomats from Bangui last week.
The most prominent among the rebel groups in Seleka is the UFDR, or Union of Democratic Forces for Unity.
Human Rights Watch, which has documented abuses by both government forces and rebel groups operating in the country's north, says the UFDR rebellion "has its roots in the deep marginalization of northeastern CAR, which is virtually cut off from the rest of the country and is almost completely undeveloped."
The rebels, though, also have included some of Bozize's former fighters who helped bring him to power in 2003 but later accused him of failing to properly pay them, among other grievances, Human Rights Watch says.
For the people now caught in the middle, they want life to return to normal.
"Everyone is suffering here — we have nothing to eat," said Daniel Ngakou, 55, as he watched the Chadian troops patrol his hometown of Damara. "The women are searching in the bush all day for food. We just don't know what will happen."
The United Nations called on the government and the rebels Wednesday to focus on dialogue that can avert violence and lead to a peaceful resolution of the conflict and respect for the 2008 Libreville Comprehensive Peace Agreement. That deal was signed by the government and three major rebel groups.
U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky reiterated the U.N. Security Council's call last week for all parties to refrain from any acts of violence against civilians, respect human rights and seek a peaceful solution.
"We welcome regional efforts to seek a political solution and reinforce security," Nesirky told reporters at U.N. headquarters in New York.
While the United Nations has temporarily withdrawn its staff from Central African Republic, Nesirky said the world body remains engaged in efforts to resolve the crisis.
He said U.N. special representative Margaret Vogt "has remained in close dialogue with the key parties in the Central African Republic and the region and has offered support to political negotiations," he said.
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Presidents of Sudan, South Sudan to meet Friday

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — Ethiopia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs says the presidents of Sudan and South Sudan, two countries which were at the brink of all-out war last year, are to meet Friday in Ethiopia's capital.
Spokesman Dina Mufti said Thursday that Ethiopia is optimistic the meeting will advance stalled peace deals.
Sudan President Omar al-Bashir and South Sudan President Salva Kiir signed deals in September to restart the south's oil industry. South Sudan's oil flows through Sudan's pipelines, bringing in revenue for both countries. The south shut down its oil industry last year after accusing Sudan of stealing its oil. Disagreements on the implementation of the September deal persist.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn and African Union mediators are expected to push the two leaders for a rapid implementation of the September deals.
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