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Sat Nov 23 13:38:13 CET 2013
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FILE - This March 8, 2013 photo provided by the French Army
Communications Audiovisual Office (ECPAD) shows French soldiers patrolling
the Mettatai region in northern Mali. The Security Council unanimously approved
a new U.N. peacekeeping force for Mali on Thursday, April 25, 2013
to help restore democracy and stabilize the northern half of the country
which was controlled by Islamist jihadists until a France-led military operation
ousted them three months ago. (AP Photo/ECPAD, Arnaud Roine)The Associated
PressPARIS France's defense minister is in Mali to prepare the post-war
period after most French soldiers leave, to be replaced by African troops
and U.N. peacekeepers.A Defense Ministry statement says Jean-Yves Le Drian
arrived in the Malian capital of Bamako on Thursday and plans visits
with political figures and French troops who intervened on Jan. 11 and
have knocked out fortified bases of radical jihadists in the north.About
200 tons of munitions and arms have been seized and "the capacities
of these groups have been considerably reduced," according to the statement.Le
Drian's visit comes as the U.N. Security Council approved a peacekeeping
force for Mali, which will hold presidential elections in July.At year's
end, 1,000 French troops will still be in Mali, compared to around
4,000 now.
assaulted because
they were perceived as gay. About 13 percent of lesbians said the
same.A separate study of young people in England also found that, in
their teens, gay boys and lesbians were almost twice as likely to
be bullied as their straight peers. By young adulthood, it was about
the same for lesbians and straight girls. But in this study, published
recently in the journal Pediatrics, gay young men were almost four times
more likely than their straight peers to be bullied.At least one historian
says it wasn't always that way for either men or women, whose
"expressions of love" with friends of the same gender were seen as
a norm even idealized in the
19th century."These relationships offered ample opportunity for those who
would have wanted to act on it physically, even if most did
not," says Thomas Foster, associate professor and head of the history department
at DePaul University in Chicago.Today's "code of male gendered behavior,"
he says, often rejects these kinds of expressions between men.We joke about
the "bro-mance" a term used to describe close friendships
between straight men. But in some sense, the humor stems from the
insinuation that those relationships could be romantic, though everyone
assumes they aren't.Call those friends "gay," a word that's still commonly
used as an insult, and that's quite another thing. Consider the furor
over Rutgers University men's basketball coach Mike Rice, who was recently
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