/ Stars that died in 2023

Monday, July 18, 2011

Yuri Budanov, Russian military officer and war criminal, died after being shot he was , 47.

Yuri Dmitrievich Budanov was the Russian military officer convicted by a Russian court of kidnapping and murder in Chechnya.

(24 November 1963 – 10 June 2011)


Budanov was highly controversial in Russia: despite the conviction, Budanov enjoyed widespread support of Russian households, as polled by public opinion.[1] At the same time, he was broadly hated in Chechnya, even by the pro-Russian Chechens. In December 2008, a court in the south Russian Ulyanovsk Oblast granted a petition for early release. After eight years in prison (of nine years he was sentenced), he was released on parole on 15 January 2009.[2]
On 10 June 2011 Budanov was shot dead in Moscow by an unknown perpetrator.[3][4]

Biography

Budanov was born in 1963 in Khartsyzk, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union. He graduated from the Tank Military School in Kharkiv and went on officer career in the Soviet Army, particularly, serving with the Soviet base in Hungary.
At the fall of the Soviet Union, Budanov was serving in Belarus, but he refused Belarusian citizenship and was transferred to the Siberian Military District, and then to Chechnya. In 1999 Budanov graduated from the military academy, receiving the rank of Guards Colonel.
According to the father of Budanov's victim, Budanov's tank regiment had been encamped just outside Tangi-Chu since February 2000, and Budanov himself had a notorious reputation among villagers. About ten days before the murder, Budanov reportedly arbitrarily searched and looted several homes in Tangi Chu, and two days before the incident he reportedly looted and threatened to torch several other homes.
From 2001 to 2003, Russian courts tried Colonel Yuri Budanov on the charges of March 27, 2000, kidnapping, rape (an allegation later withdrawn by the prosecution) and brutal murder of Elza Kungaeva, an 18-year-old Chechen girl whom Budanov alleged of being a sniper for Chechen rebels who were attacking his unit. He admitted killing her in a fit of rage, but denied the rape charges.[5]
He was assassinated on 10 June 2011 in Moscow, Russia.

Prosecution

Arrest

Budanov was arrested on March 29, 2000. According to press reports, Budanov claimed that Kungaeva was a suspected sniper, and that he had gone into a rage while questioning her.[5]
Colonel-General Anatoly Kvashnin, then chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, appeared on national television to announce to President Vladimir Putin and the nation the arrest of Budanov in the grisly case. Kvashnin accused Budanov of "humiliating" and murdering Kungayeva, and denounced the colonel's behavior as "barbarous" and "disgraceful."
In a stark contrast, Lieutenant-General Vladimir Shamanov, who was Budanov's commanding officer, exhibited strong sympathy towards him.[citation needed] He said that Budanov was one of his best commanders and offered this challenge: "To [Budanov's] enemies I say: Don't put your paws on the image of a Russian soldier and officer."[6]
The Chechen rebels offered to exchange nine recent OMON special police captives for Budanov.[7] After the Russian side refused the offer, the prisoners were executed on the morning of April 4, 2000.[8]

Charges

In relation to the case of Kungayeva, Budanov was charged with three crimes: kidnapping resulting in death, abuse of office accompanied by violence with serious consequences, and murder of an abductee.[9] No charges have been brought expressly for the beating and torture Kungaeva endured prior to her death.[citation needed] He was also charged in the beating up a subordinate officer, threatening superior officers with a weapon, and other crimes.[citation needed]
Budanov claimed that he detained Kungaeva on suspicion of being a sniper, and that he killed her during interrogation. The investigation, however, reportedly found that no member of the Kungaev family had in any way been suspected of involvement in the anti-Russian activity.
Budanov used his official position and a combat vehicle to remove Kungaeva from her home, and detained Kungaeva at a military installation; he was thus charged with exceeding his official position with violence resulting in serious consequences, which is punishable by three to ten years of imprisonment (article 286.3 of the criminal code).

Lack of a rape prosecution

The forensic physician, a Captain in the Russian military medical service, found three tears in her hymen and one in the mucous membrane of her rectum, and the report concludes that she was penetrated anally and vaginally by a blunt object after death.[citation needed]
Three of Budanov's subordinates, Sergeants Li En Shou and Grigoriev and a Private Yegorev, were found responsible.[citation needed] Charges against all three were simultaneously brought and dropped under the May 26, 2000 amnesty law.[citation needed]

Trial

The trial began on April 9, 2003, in Rostov-on-Don. Legal proceedings against Budanov, who underwent several retrials, lasted a total of 2 years and 3 months.[10]
Witnesses included Yahyayev, the person in the town administration, who according to Budanov had given him the picture representing Chechen snipers. However, Yahyayev said he had given no such picture to Budanov.[11] General Shamanov came to defend Budanov during trial.[citation needed] He expressed his solidarity with the defendant, as did Colonel-General Gennady Troshev and numerous other Russian soldiers and civilians who picketed the court.[citation needed] According to a poll, 50% of the Russians asked supported the demands of picketers to release Colonel Budanov from custody; 19% did not support these demands.[12]
In a controversial decision, Budanov was initially found not guilty by reason of temporary insanity on December 31, 2002, and committed to a psychiatric hospital for further evaluation and the length of the treatment would have been decided by his doctor.[citation needed]
However, in the beginning of March 2003 the supreme court invalidated the sentence and ordered a new trial. This took place in the same place but with a new judge. The sentence of 10 years of imprisonment was given on July 25, 2003.[citation needed]
The judge who convicted Budanov, Vladimir Bukreyev, himself was convicted of bribe-taking and sentenced to 10 years of imprisonment on July 6, 2009.[13]

In prison

On September 21, 2004, Shamanov, now the Ulyanovsk regional governor, signed a pardon for Yury Budanov; Interfax quoted the head of the Ulyanovsk pardons commission, Anatoly Zherebtsov, as saying that if Putin backed the recommendation, Budanov would also get back his military rank and awards.[citation needed]
The commission's decision sparked outrage in Chechnya. "Whether in jail or freed, Budanov will remain a person who has committed a grave crime, which took the life of an innocent girl," Taus Dzhabrailov, the head of Chechnya's parliament, told Interfax. Ramzan Kadyrov said: "The Ulyanovsk commission's decision is like spitting on the soul of the long-suffering Chechen people." [14] Kadyrov has also made statements that "If any of Elza's friends should meet [Budanov] I don't want to predict how they will act. The Chechen people do not consider him to be a human being, and as a war criminal, he does not deserve to be. One might be able to forgive his crime to some extent if he had killed a man. But to sexually assault a girl cannot be forgiven. He is beneath contempt. He has brought shame on the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation."[citation needed]
In February 2006 a Russian prison official announced that Budanov, who is serving his 10-year sentence, might be released early on good behaviour.[citation needed] The Chechen regional branch of the United Russia party addressed the State Duma and the Russian President with a request not to grant amnesty to Yuri Budanov.[15] The same month, on the petition of Budanov's advocate, with account of good behaviour of the inmate, the former colonel was removed from the strict custody colony to a settlement-colony.[16]
On 24 December 2008, a court granted him a release on parole. This was the fifth attempt by Budanov's lawyers to obtain him a release on licence. Four applications before that were rejected.[17] Victim's lawyers appealed to overturn the decision (thus the delay in release), but without success.[17] Former colonel was released on 15 January 2009, 15 months before completion of his conviction term.[17] The decision has been protested by Chechnya's human rights ombudsman, Nurdi Nukhazhiyev, who has accused Russian judges of "double standards" with regard to Russians and Chechens.[18]
The lawyer for the Kungayeva family, Stanislav Markelov, who had attempted a last-minute appeal against the release of Budanov, was shot dead in Moscow on January 19, 2009 along with Anastasia Baburova, a 25-year-old journalist for Novaya Gazeta.[19][20] However, the investigation of Markelov's murder showеd in November 2009 that the murder was probably unrelated to this case, but committed by Neo-Nazis as a revenge for Markelov's support of Marxist activists as a lawyer.[21]

Assassination

Yuri Budanov was assassinated around 11:30 on June 10, 2011 in central Moscow (Hamovniki, Komsomolski prospekt), Russia. Six silenced shots were fired, four of which struck Budanov in the head. The killer escaped in a car driven by an accomplice. The car was subsequently found partially burned several blocks from the site of the attack. A gun believed to be a Makarov PM was found with a silencer inside the car. Budanov's wife witnessed the assassination and is currently held by Russian authorities.[22] Russian police investigators commented that the attack was carefully planned and they consider blood revenge as one of the likely motives.[23] One witness to the murder described the driver of the car from which the six shots were fired as being "of Slavic appearance".[24]

 

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Cosimo Caliandro, Italian middle distance runner, motorcycle died from a collision he was , 29.

Cosimo Caliandro was an Italian middle distance runner died from a collision he was , 29..

(11 March 1982 – 10 June 2011)

Caliandro was born in Francavilla Fontana. In his first appearance on the world stage, he ran in the 1500 metres at the 1999 World Youth Championships in Athletics, but did not progress beyond the heats.[1] He also competed at the European Youth Olympic Festival that year and he won the gold medal in the 800 metres.[2] His first major medal came at the 2001 European Athletics Junior Championships, where he became the 1500 metres champion.[3]
As a junior athlete, he represented Italy at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships placing 100th in 2000, and improving to 68th the following year. At the 2001 European Cross Country Championships, he came 28th overall in the men's junior race. His first participation at world senior level was a 44th place at the 2004 World Cross Country Championships.[1]
Caliandro was eliminated in the heats of the 3000 metres at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships, but returned two years later to win in the event final at the 2007 European Indoor Athletics Championships in Birmingham. He represented Italy at the 2008 European Athletics Indoor Cup, taking silver over 3000 m.[4]
He won the Cross Della Volpe in Piedmont and earned a spot at the 2010 European Cross Country Championships.[5]
He died on 10 June 2011, as a result of a motorbike accident in his native town of Francavilla Fontana, in southern Italy. He had a wife and two sons.[6]

 

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Sir Patrick Leigh Fermor, British author and soldier died he was , 96.


Sir Patrick "Paddy" Michael Leigh Fermor, DSO, OBE was a British author, scholar and soldier, who played a prominent role behind the lines in the Cretan resistance during World War II  died he was , 96.. He was widely regarded as "Britain's greatest living travel writer",[2] with books including his classic A Time of Gifts (1977). A BBC journalist once described him as "a cross between Indiana Jones, James Bond and Graham Greene."



(11 February 1915 – 10 June 2011)

Early life and education

He was born in London, the son of Sir Lewis Leigh Fermor, a distinguished geologist, and Muriel Aeyleen (née Ambler). Shortly after his birth, his mother and sister left to join his father in India, leaving the infant in England with a family in Northamptonshire and he did not meet his family until he was four. As a child, Leigh Fermor had problems with academic structure and limitations. As a result, he was sent to a school for "difficult children". He was later expelled from The King's School, Canterbury, when he was caught holding hands with a greengrocer's daughter. His last report from The King's School noted that the young Fermor was "a dangerous mixture of sophistication and recklessness."[4] He continued learning by reading texts on Greek, Latin, Shakespeare and History, with the intention of entering the Royal Military College Sandhurst.

Early travels

At the age of 18, Leigh Fermor decided to walk the length of Europe, from the Hook of Holland to Constantinople.[5] He set off on 8 December 1933, shortly after Hitler had come to power in Germany, with a few clothes, several letters of introduction, the Oxford Book of English Verse and a volume of Horace's Odes. He slept in barns and shepherds' huts, but also was invited by landed gentry and aristocracy into the country houses of Central Europe. He experienced hospitality in many a monastery along the way. Two of his later travel books, A Time of Gifts (1977) and Between the Woods and the Water (1986), were about this journey. Written decades later, they benefit from his scholarly learning, and give a wealth of historical, geographical, linguistic and anthropological information as the narrative proceeds.
Leigh Fermor arrived in Constantinople on 1 January 1935, then continued to travel around Greece. In March, he was involved in the campaign of royalist forces in Macedonia against an attempted Republican revolt. In Athens, he met Balasha Cantacuzène (Bălaşa Cantacuzino), a Romanian noblewoman, with whom he fell in love. They shared an old watermill outside the city looking out towards Poros, where she painted and he wrote. They moved on to Băleni, the Cantacuzène house in Moldavia, where they were living at the outbreak of World War II.[1]

World War II

Leigh Fermor joined the Irish Guards, but due to his knowledge of modern Greek, he was commissioned in the General List and became a liaison officer in Albania. He fought in Crete and mainland Greece. During the German occupation, he returned to Crete three times, once by parachute.
He was one of a small number of Special Operations Executive (SOE) officers posted to organise the island's resistance to German occupation. Disguised as a shepherd and nicknamed Michalis or Filedem, he lived for over two years in the mountains. With Captain Bill Stanley Moss MC as his second in command, Leigh Fermor led the party that in 1944 captured and evacuated the German Commander, General Heinrich Kreipe.[6] The Cretans commemorate Kreipe's abduction near Archanes.[7]
Moss featured the events in his book Ill Met by Moonlight: The Abduction of General Kreipe (1950).[4] It was later adapted as a film by the same name, directed/produced by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger and released in 1957. In the film, Leigh Fermor was portrayed by Dirk Bogarde.[1]

Wartime honours and legacy

  • The National Archives in London holds copies of Leigh Fermor's wartime dispatches from occupied Crete in file number HS 5/728.

Post war

In 1950, Leigh Fermor's published his first book, The Traveller's Tree, about his post-war travels in the Caribbean. The book won the Heinemann Foundation Prize for Literature and established his career path. He went on to write several further books of his journeys, including Mani and Roumeli, of his travels on mule and foot around remote parts of Greece. Critics and discerning readers regard his 1977 A Time of Gifts as one of the greatest travel books in the English language.
He translated the manuscript, The Cretan Runner, written by George Psychoundakis, the dispatch runner on Crete during the war. Leigh Fermor helped Psychoundakis get his work published. Leigh Fermor wrote a novel, The Violins of Saint-Jacques. It was adapted as an opera by Malcolm Williamson.
His friend Lawrence Durrell, in Bitter Lemons (1957), recounts how, during the outbreak of Cypriot insurgency against continued British rule in 1955, Leigh Fermor visited Durrell's villa in Bellapaix, Cyprus:
"After a splendid dinner by the fire he starts singing, songs of Crete, Athens, Macedonia. When I go out to refill the ouzo bottle...I find the street completely filled with people listening in utter silence and darkness. Everyone seems struck dumb. 'What is it?' I say, catching sight of Frangos. 'Never have I heard of Englishmen singing Greek songs like this!' Their reverent amazement is touching; it is as if they want to embrace Paddy wherever he goes." [8]

Later years



After many years together, Leigh Fermor was married in 1968 to the Hon. Joan Elizabeth Rayner, née Eyres Monsell, daughter of the 1st Viscount Monsell. She accompanied him on many of his travels until her death in Kardamyli in June 2003 aged 91. They had no children.[9] They lived part of the year in their house in an olive grove in the Mani Peninsula, southern Peloponnese, and part of the year in Worcestershire. In the 2004 New Years Honours Patrick Leigh Fermor was named a Knight Bachelor. In 2007, he said that, for the first time, he had decided to work using a typewriter - having written all his books longhand until then.[2]

Death

Patrick Leigh Fermor died on 10 June 2011, aged 96, following a long illness.[10]

Awards and legacy

Works

Books

  • The Traveller's Tree (1950)
  • The Violins of Saint-Jacques (1953)
  • A Time to Keep Silence (1957)
  • Mani - Travels in the Southern Peloponnese (1958)
  • Roumeli (1966)
  • A Time of Gifts - On Foot to Constantinople: From the Hook of Holland to the Middle Danube (1977)
  • Between the Woods and the Water (1986)
  • Three Letters from the Andes (1991)
  • Words of Mercury (2003) edited by Artemis Cooper
  • Introduction to Into Colditz by Lt Colonel Miles Reid, Michael Russell Publishing Ltd, Wilton (1983). The story of Reid's captivity in Colditz and eventual escape by faking illness so as to qualify for repatriation. Reid had served with Leigh Fermor in Greece and was captured there trying to defend the Corinth Canal bridge when the Germans launched an attack with paratroops in 1941.
  • Foreword of Albanian Assignment by Colonel David Smiley, Chatto & Windus, London (1984). The story of SOE in Albania, by a brother in arms of Leigh Fermor, who was later a MI6 agent.
  • In Tearing Haste: Letters Between Deborah Devonshire and Patrick Leigh-Fermor (2008), edited by Charlotte Mosley

Translations

Screenplay

 

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Sunday, July 17, 2011

Brian Lenihan, Jnr, Irish politician, TD for Dublin West (since 1996) and Minister for Finance (2008–2011), died from pancreatic cancer he was , 52.

Brian Joseph Lenihan was an Irish Fianna Fáil politician and barrister who served in the government of Ireland as Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform from 2007 to 2008 and as Minister for Finance from 2008 to 2011 died from pancreatic cancer he was , 52.. He was a Teachta Dála (TD) for the Dublin West constituency from 1996 to 2011, and he served as Deputy Leader of Fianna Fáil for a brief period in 2011 until his death from pancreatic cancer.

(21 May 1959 – 10 June 2011)

Early and private life

Born in Dublin in 1959, Lenihan grew up in Athlone, Co. Westmeath until the age of 12, attending the local Marist Brothers primary school. He was then educated at Belvedere College, where he was School Captain (i.e. Head Prefect), Trinity College, Dublin (Foundation Scholar, LL.B. (First Class)), Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (LL.M. (First Class)) and was called to the Irish Bar by the Honorable Society of King's Inns.[2]
He began lecturing in law at Trinity College, Dublin in 1984 and in the same year was called to the Irish Bar. From 1992 to 1995 he was a member of the Criminal Injuries Compensation Tribunal and the Garda Síochána Complaints Appeal Board,[3] and in 1997 he became a Senior Counsel.
Lenihan was married to Circuit Court judge Patricia Ryan.[4] They had one son named Tom and one daughter named Claire.[3]
In December 2009, Lenihan was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.[5]

Early political career

Lenihan is a member of a famous Irish political dynasty.[6] His father Brian Lenihan, Snr, first elected in 1957,[7] was a cabinet minister for over twenty-five years,[citation needed] Tánaiste,[8] MEP,[7] and a candidate for President in the 1990 election.[9] His grandfather was Patrick Lenihan who followed his son into the Dáil from 1965 until 1970.[7] Lenihan's aunt Mary O'Rourke was first elected as a TD in 1982,[7] served for a time in the Senate,[7] and is also a former cabinet minister.[citation needed] His brother Conor was a TD from 1997 to 2011 and served as a Minister of State.[7][8] Despite these facts Lenihan has said that he resents any implication that he is a member of the political establishment.[10]
Lenihan first held political office in 1996 when he was asked to stand in the Dublin West by-election caused by the death of his father.[11] Noel Dempsey, who was Fianna Fáil's Director of Elections in the contest, did not expect his party to hold the seat.[12] Lenihan secured 252 more first-preference votes than Joe Higgins of Militant Labour, and was elected on the 11th count.[13] Following his re-election at the 1997 general election[14] Lenihan became chairman of the All-Party Oireachtas Committee on the Constitution. He served in this position until 2002, when he was appointed Minister of State for Children.[citation needed] He had previously been thought of as a potential member of the Cabinet before the 2002 general election.[15]
Lenihan has often been deployed as a representative of government on topical issues or television shows, and is known for giving his own personal opinion on some matters. He was involved in a dispute with the Labour Party over its leader Pat Rabbitte's desire for a presidential election in 2004; Lenihan said the party was "turning the presidency into a political football".[16] He defended the government again in February 2005, this time against Sinn Féin who he suggested were "milking the peace process for political gain".[17] He would later suggest his preference for becoming the Opposition if the alternative was to enter government with Sinn Féin.[18] When three Irishmen fled convictions on terrorism charges they had received in Colombia, the Minister described their return as "most unhelpful to the peace process".[19] Lenihan spoke at the Fianna Fáil Ardfheis in Killarney on 22 October 2005 and at the Ardfheis in Citywest on 24 March 2007.[20][21] Appearing on The Week in Politics in the wake of unfounded allegations published by a number of Sunday newspapers on Liam Lawlor's death in October 2005, Lenihan said Lawlor's legacy would be the setting up of a Press Council to deal with such matters as they arose in future and was also among the politicians who paid tribute to Lawlor in Dáil Éireann.[22][23][24] When other Fianna Fáil ministers were silent, Lenihan stressed as "unthinkable" the acceptance of illegal payments by former Taoiseach Bertie Ahern in Manchester, a comment highlighted positively by Pat Rabbitte in Dáil Éireann following Ahern's public apology in October 2006.[25] Yet Lenihan denied Brian Cowen was "setting a bad example" following a 2007 Hot Press interview in which the future Taoiseach admitted his student past of smoking cannabis.[18] He was involved in the 2007 negotiations between Fianna Fáil and the Green Party about the latter party entering government.[18]

Minister for Children (2002–07)

In his first term as Minister for Children Lenihan announced a new news television programme targeting young people, dealt with matters relating to the internet and pedophilia, announced changes to Ireland's adoption laws and increased the numbers of gardaí employed in the Central Vetting Unit which assesses childcare workers.[26][27][28][29] Lenihan retained the post of Minister for Children in 2005 when the government upgraded it to a cross-departmental role allowing all those in government whose job it is to look after the interests of children to work under one aegis.[citation needed] Although not a member of the cabinet, the Minister was allowed to attend cabinet meetings.[citation needed] He was involved in a proposal to outlaw domestic spanking in June 2005.[30] On 25 October 2005, representing the government, he expressed upset at the "repeated failure and gross dereliction of duties" highlighted in the Ferns Report.[31] His senior in the Department of Health and Children Mary Harney sent him in place of her to speak at an Irish Nurses Organisation conference in May 2006.[32] He addressed a United Nations committee on children's rights in September 2006.[33] On 16 October 2006, Lenihan announced that legislation increasing the age of criminal responsibility by five years from 7 to 12 would come into law immediately.[34] Before leaving office in 2007 he announced several new items, including a review of pedophilia and an increase in the number of judges and other officials working with criminal children.[35] He received criticism from a number of nurses in a disagreement over their working hours at another conference of the Irish Nurses Organisation on 10 May 2007.[36]

Cabinet career (2007–11)

Lenihan has served in the Cabinet since 2007. He was initially Minister for Justice, but was promoted to the post of Minister for Finance one year later.

Minister for Justice (2007–08)

After the 2007 general election Fianna Fáil were returned to power as part of a coalition with the Progressive Democrats, the Green Party and some Independents. Lenihan was the only Fianna Fáil TD to be promoted to the cabinet, as Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform, by Taoiseach Bertie Ahern,[37] a post which Lenihan's father had held from 1964 to 1968.[citation needed] They are the only father-son pair to have held that office.[citation needed] The post was available due to the loss of previous Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform Michael McDowell in the election.[38] Lenihan immediately promised to place the victim of a crime first and stated that a referendum on children's rights would take place.[39] His first function as Minister for Justice was to attend the graduation of newly trained members of the Garda Síochána Reserve on 16 June 2007.[40] As Minister for Justice Lenihan was involved in several high profile deportation cases.[41][42][43]

Minister for Finance (2008–11)

Considered a "close ally" of Brian Cowen, Lenihan was promoted to Minister for Finance following the election of Cowen as Taoiseach on 7 May 2008.[44] His 2006 intervention to assist with the development of emergency legislation when it emerged rapists were being freed from jail was seen as a major factor in his promotion to the Department of Finance.[11] Lenihan's time as Minister for Finance has been dominated by the financial and banking crises which faced Ireland in the late 2000s. He unveiled three government budgets within the space of fourteen months, nationalised Anglo Irish Bank and unveiled the National Asset Management Agency or NAMA.
On 18 September 2008, Lenihan issued an emergency phone call to Director-General of RTÉ Cathal Goan after an edition of radio phone-in programme Liveline, presented by Joe Duffy, led to mass paranoia that Ireland's banking system was on the verge of collapse.[45] The Minister warned in an interview the following day with Economics Editor for RTÉ George Lee that the public need not react "on the basis of unfounded allegations made on radio programmes".[45]

Budget 2009

Lenihan delivered the 2009 Budget on 14 October 2008 – the budget had been called early due to the worsening economic conditions.[46][47] The controversial measure of removing Medical Cards from most over 70 year olds (by means testing) caused a massive public outcry.[48][49] This caused a backlash against the government and backbench unease; one Fianna Fáil TD, Joe Behan, left the party in protest.[50][51]
Public outcry meant the government had to twice revise the budget in an attempt to satisfy the pensioners and unions, and indeed the backbenchers. Lenihan was not present at the press conference, which included Brian Cowen, John Gormley and Mary Harney, to announce the removal of minimum wage employees from the 1 per cent income levy and a promise that 95 per cent of senior citizens would keep the medical card.[52]

Second (emergency) Budget 2009 and NAMA

On 7 April 2009, Lenihan delivered an emergency budget overriding the measures previously announced, amounting to a further €3.25bn increases in taxes and reductions in spending programmes in the current year, as well as corresponding fiscal changes to future years. Explaining the purpose of the budget changes before the Dáil, he said: "we must stabilise our public finances. Until we show that we can put our own house in order, we cannot expect those who have invested here and who might invest here in the future to have confidence in us".[53]
The emergency budget also saw the announcement of the National Asset Management Agency or NAMA, designed to house banking assets.[54] The Cabinet approved 150 pages of draft legislation outlined by Lenihan at a meeting in late July 2009; it was published later that week.[55][56] In September 2009, Lenihan announced €54 billion would be given by NAMA to Irish banks in exchange for an estimated €77 billion in loans.[57] The legislation enacting NAMA was passed in Dáil Éireann and Seanad Éireann before being signed by President Mary McAleese during November 2009.[58][59] Lenihan identified nine prospective NAMA board members on 22 December 2009.[60][61]
In February 2010 Brian Cowen defended his claim that the NAMA will increase the supply of credit into the economy despite the International Monetary Fund (IMF) saying it would not lead to any significant increase. "People should contemplate what level of credit accessibility we'd have in this economy without NAMA," he said. "It's not just sufficient in itself obviously for credit flow, it's certainly an important and necessary part of restructuring our banking system, of that there's no doubt, in terms of improving as a location for funding of banking operations," said Mr. Cowen. He previously said that the government's objective in restructuring the banks through NAMA was to "generate more access to credit for Irish business at this critical time". In September 2009, Lenihan expressed a similar view, saying it would lead to more lending for business and households. Cowen was responding to reports published on 8 February that the IMF had told Lenihan in April 2009 that the NAMA would not lead to a significant increase in lending by the banks.[62] The comments, which appear in internal Department of Finance documents released under the Freedom of Information Act, were made by senior IMF official Steven Seelig who will join the board of NAMA in May 2010. Minutes of a private meeting at the department between Mr. Lenihan and IMF officials on 29 April 2009 last state that the "IMF (Mr. Seelig) do not believe that Nama will result in significant increase in bank lending in Ireland". The Government has maintained that NAMA's purchase of bad loans from the banks with State bonds would increase the flow of credit in the economy since the plan was unveiled April 2009. Speaking at the publication of the NAMA legislation in September 2009, Mr. Lenihan said it would "strengthen and improve" the funding positions of the banks "so that they can lend to viable businesses and households". The IMF estimated in their published report the domestic banks would face losses of up to €35 billion, though the department pointed out this would be partly funded from operating profits and provisions already taken against some loan losses.[62]
In July 2010 after the a revised business plan was published it was revealed that it is now predicting a possible profit of €1bn, with the possibility of losses of up to €800m, after an initially projection of more than €4bn in profit. The plan published today updates and revises the interim business plan published in October of last year which was prepared on the basis of information supplied at that time by the five participating institutions (Anglo Irish Bank, AIB, Bank of Ireland, EBS and Irish Nationwide) and in advance of the detailed examination of any of the key loans by NAMA. Minister Lenihan has denied that the Government got its sums wrong on NAMA.[63] The original business plan estimated a profit of €4.8bn based on a rise in assets value of 10%. Today's revised figures say that if they recover the full value of the loans plus 10% it will result in a profit of €3.9bn. NAMA chairman Frank Daly said the plan confirmed that the five institutions covered by NAMA had not disclosed or had been unaware of the extent of the financial crisis afflicting their borrowers. He said the banks had shown 'remarkable generosity' towards their borrowers, adding that NAMA had no intention of maintaining that approach. 'To say the least we are extremely disappointed and disturbed to find that, only months after being led to believe that 40% of loans were income producing, the real figure is actually 25%.

Budget 2010

On 9 December 2009, the government budget for 2010 was delivered. Referred to at home and abroad in such terms as "the harshest budget in decades", "the most austere Budget in the history of the State" and "what can only be described as one of the toughest Budgets in the history of the State",[64][65][66] it was marked by pay cuts for the public sector, and social welfare cuts.[67][68] Also announced at the same time was €70 million for survivors of floods which had affected parts of the country.[69] Global investors approved the measures introduced by Lenihan, with Irish government bonds receiving a boost following the Budget.[70]

Citigroup conference call

On 1 October 2010 Lenihan was in a telephone conference with Citigroup when due to a mistake made by Citigroup, the bank's clients were all able to be heard on the line.[71] As the 200-500 investors realised within 2 minutes their lines were not muted, many began to heckle Mr. Lenihan.[71] Some traders made what the Telegraph described as "chimp sounds", while another cried out "dive, dive".[71] Another was heard saying "short Ireland" before adding "why not short Citi too?".[71] Another investor on the line stated "this is the worst conference call ever".[72] After 20 minutes, the call was restarted, with the clients now muted.[72]
On 2 October 2010, Lenihan denied that he was heckled, with his spokesperson stating:
A number of media organisations were on the call. None offered a similar analysis to the Telegraph, which was not on the call. At the end of the call, spreads on Irish bonds narrowed which indicated that the 200 investors on the call were reassured.[72][73]
The Department of Finance has stated that the reports were inaccurate, stating: "The Minister was not interrupted as reported by the Telegraph. There was no heckling – indeed, participants congratulated the Minister and the NTMA."[74]

FT Worst Finance Minister in Europe

On 6 December 2010, the Financial Times annual survey of the 19 Eurozone finance ministers, ranked by European economists, named Brian Lenihan as the Eurozone's worst finance minister for the second year in a row.[75][76]

 Vanity Fair: Lenihan is "tricky"

The March 2011 issue of Vanity Fair describes Lenihan as "tricky," for allegedly manipulating his meetings with the members of the Dáil so that when they emerge, they are the ones who must announce the bad news about the latest budget cuts and tax hikes to the media (and thus bear the brunt of the anger and blame for the austerity measures). Lenihan's role in post-collapse Ireland is likened in one particularly lurid passage as "normalizing a freak show" and attempting to assure the Irish that they didn't all just see what they saw. Yet, he is also described as "the last remaining Irish politician anywhere near power whose mere appearance does not cause people on the streets of Dublin to explode with either scorn or laughter" because of his perceived innocence and his well-publicized illness.[77][78]

Opposition (2011)

He barely held onto his seat in the 2011 general election, only winning on the fifth count. He was the only Fianna Fáil TD out of 47 in the entire capital city. [79]
He was the Deputy Leader of Fianna Fáil and party spokesperson on Finance until his death.

April 2011 interview

In an April 2011 interview Lenihan claimed the European Central Bank forced Ireland into taking a bailout and rejected claims by a senior ECB figure that the bank warned Ireland in mid-2010 of the dangers it faced. He has also accused members of the ECB executives of briefing against Ireland and of "betrayal". Lenihan criticised some of the 17 governing board members of the bank for the "damaging" manner in which they had briefed some media about Ireland. He said, "On the betrayal issue, I did feel that some bank governors should not be speaking out of turn and that only the president should speak for the bank." The position of the ECB on Ireland's seeking of assistance was different from that of the European Commission, said Mr. Lenihan. "I don't think the commission were anxious to bounce member states into a programme. "That was my strong impression from my discussions with Commissioner Rehn." he said, adding that "the ECB clearly subscribed to a different view." He gave a graphic description of his feelings when the bailout talks were concluded. "I've a very vivid memory of going to Brussels on the final Monday to sign the agreement and being on my own at the airport and looking at the snow gradually thawing and thinking to myself, this is terrible. No Irish minister has ever had to do this before."[80]

Health and lifestyle

When David McWilliams claimed Lenihan ate large doses of raw garlic during the visit to his house and that he said he had developed the habit since becoming Minister for Finance one source said:
It's true he does like eating garlic, but he doesn't chew it like gum – it's good for the blood, apparently.[81]
Then Minister of State Pat Carey also said on radio that Lenihan "constantly chews garlic".[82]
Lenihan was hospitalised on 16 December 2009, complaining of insomnia and a possible hernia.[83] Surgery, described as "a minor procedure that was brought forward", was performed.[84] Leader of the Opposition Enda Kenny wished him well in a speech.[85] On 26 December 2009, TV3 reported that Lenihan had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.[86] The Sunday Times then reported that "a number of authoritative sources" had said the claim was true.[87] Public service broadcaster RTÉ stated that Lenihan had contracted what it described as "a serious condition".[88] The Government Press Secretary stated that the health of a politician is a private affair.[89] The "unwarranted intrusion" by TV3 was met with disapproval – even by opposition politicians; Labour Party deputy leader and Finance Spokesperson Joan Burton offered her condolences: "It's certainly not a departure in the media that I would welcome. I'm really shocked that a story like that could be broadcast at Christmas".[90][91] However the journalist in question who made the disclosure, Ursula Halligan, received support for report from many publications and journalists including the political bi-weekly Village magazine, Ger Colleran, editor of the Irish Daily Star, the Irish Times and the Phoenix magazine, who stated that "If a report of the finance minister facing a serious illness while simultaneously grappling with the biggest financial crisis in the history of the state is not in the public interest, then nothing is".[92]
In a personal statement on 4 January 2010, detailing the precise nature of his illness, Lenihan said he underwent tests prior to Christmas which identified a blockage at the entrance to his pancreas. He said cancerous tissue was identified in the material that had caused the blockage, and he intended to begin treatment for cancer. Having discussed the matter with his doctors and the Taoiseach, he said he will continue on in the finance portfolio and "to fulfil the essential functions of my office".[93]

Death

Brian Lenihan died on 10 June 2011, at the age of 52, after a battle with pancreatic cancer.[94] It was reported that Lenihan died in the early hours of the morning at his home in west Dublin. He was survived by his wife, their two children, his mother, three brothers and one sister.[95] His death received attention from the international media.[96][97][98][99] President Mary McAleese said she was saddened by the death of "such a young and talented public servant".[100] Thousands of people queued to sign books of condolence nationwide, with the figure soon reaching 10,000 while thousands of others clicked a tribute page on Facebook.[101] Thousands of people also visited Lenihan's Dublin constituency office, travelling from all over Ireland including County Cork , County Galway and County Donegal.[102]

 

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Godfrey Myles, American football player (Dallas Cowboys), died from a heart attack he was , 42.

 Godfrey Clarence Myles was an American professional football player who played linebacker for the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL) for six seasons in the 1990s, winning three Super Bowl championships died from a heart attack he was , 42.. Myles previously played college football for the University of Florida.

(September 22, 1968 – June 10, 2011)

Early years

Myles was born in Miami, Florida in 1968.[1] He attended Miami Carol City High School in Miami Gardens,[2] and played high school football for the Carol City Chiefs.

College career

Myles received an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where he played for coach Galen Hall and coach Steve Spurrier's Florida Gators football teams from 1987 to 1990.[3] He was a team captain and a first-team All-Southeastern Conference (SEC) selection at safety in his senior season in 1990, after being a Sporting News honorable mention All-American at linebacker as a junior in 1989.[3]

Professional career

The Dallas Cowboys selected Myles in the third round (sixty-second pick overall) in the 1991 NFL Draft,[4] and he played for coach Jimmy Johnson and coach Barry Switzer's Cowboys from 1991 to 1996.[5] He was mainly used as a backup linebacker and special teams player. During his six-season NFL career with the Cowboys, the team won three Super Bowls (XXVII, XXVIII, XXX), and Myles recorded 135 tackles and two interceptions.[1][6] Myles started in eleven games during the 1995 season, but injured his anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) during Super Bowl XXX.[7] He returned to the Cowboys for his final season in 1996, but his playing time was reduced and he never started again.[7]
Myles signed with the Denver Broncos as a free agent in April 1997, but they waived him on August 20, 1997, before the start of the 1997 regular season.[8]

Death

It was initially reported that Myles suffered a massive heart attack on June 8, 2011,[9] and that he died in Miami.[7][10] It was subsequently reported that Myles had, in fact, suffered a massive stroke,[11] and expired when his family decided to remove life support after he had been declared brain dead on June 9, 2011.
Myles died in the early morning of June 10, 2011; he was 42 years old.[11]

 

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Jim Rodnunsky, Canadian-born American cinematographer and technician, inventor of the Cablecam system, died from brain cancer he was , 54.

James "Jim" Lewis Rodnunsky was a Canadian-born technician, cinematographer and inventor of the Cablecam system. Cablecam consists of cable-suspended, remote control cameras to film overhead shots died from brain cancer he was , 54.. Rodnunsky's Cablecam is now widely used in sporting events, film and television.[1][2] Rodnunsky's Cablecam is a direct competitor of the Skycam system, which was invented by Garrett Brown.


(July 18, 1956 - June 10, 2011)

Rodnunsky was born and raised in Edmonton, Alberta.[1] He moved to the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles, California, as a teen with his parents.[1] He earned bachelor's degrees in economics and political science from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). After college, Rodnunsky further studied both filmmaking and acting.[1]
Rodnunsky first used an early Cablecam prototype to film skiers in the Blackcomb Mountains of British Columbia, Canada, in 1989.[1] Cablecam has since evolved into an "industry standard" for sporting events, according to Variety Magazine.
The operator of Cablecam used a joystick to move the camera approximately twelve feet above players at sporting events, such as football games, allowing the camera to film from nearly any angle needed by the director.[1] Variety Magazine called Rodnunsky's Cablecam as one of the technological inventions which permanently changed television coverage of sports events, along instant replays and handheld cameras.[1]
Rodnunsky won several Emmy Awards and three Academy Scientific and Technical Awards from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences during his career.[1]
Jim Rodnunsky died from brain cancer on June 10, 2011, at the age of 54. A resident of Granada Hills, Los Angeles, he was survived by his wife, Lisa; three children - Tatiana, Daniel and Alexandra; and two brothers, Serge and Pierre..[2]

 

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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...