Wednesday, November 30, 2011

French man ordered to pay wife 10,000 euros for lack of sex


A court in France has ordered a man to pay 10,000 euros ($13,300) in damages to his long-frustrated ex-wife after he failed in his marriage "duties" by withholding sex from her for years.

In the May ruling, published on Tuesday in the Gazette du Palais judicial review, an appeals court in the southern city of Aix-en-Provence upheld an earlier decision to award the damages for "absence of sexual relations".

The couple, who are both 51, married in 1986 and have two children. They divorced in January 2009 in the city of Nice.

In its ruling, the court said the man's wife deserved the damages due to the suffering she endured because of her sexless marriage.

"The wife's expectations were legitimate in the sense that sexual relations between married people are an expression of their mutual affection and part of the duties that proceed from marriage," the court said.

It dismissed the husband's argument that health problems and long working hours had simply reduced the opportunities for the couple to have sex.

The court ruled that he had not proved "any health problems that would make him completely incapable of having intimate relations with his wife."

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

About Akosombo (Nkonson-konson-bo (a chain of rock)



It was called Nkonson-konson-bo (a chain of rock). That was the name given to the little known settlement by its inhabitants, who in 1733, had settled at the foot of the gorge formed by the Akwapim and Togo mountain ranges.

Nkonson-konson-bo soon became strategically a frontline safe haven of the militant Akwamus, who in retreat after two hundred years of conquest and imperial rule, had sought refuge in the safety provided by the hills and the river Volta It is said that the Chief of the Akwamus made his nephew headman of the community to keep a lookout for their enemies from the north of the river.

For nearly two centuries the Akwamus enjoyed the protection, security and peace of the gorge, cultivating the rich fertile land and harvesting the abundance of fish from the river Volta, without any intrusion so to speak, until Sir Albert Kitson, an Australian geologist, who first discovered bauxite in Ghana in 1915, noted Nkonson-konson-bo, as a future hydro-electric dam site. This name latter became corrupted to Akosombo.

With this remarkable discovery began the gradual but steady transformation of Akosombo into pre-eminence. World leaders, industrialists, engineers, surveyors and international celebrities from across the globe began to take express interest in what was seen as one of the biggest projects on the African continent.

Ghana's first President, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah made the implementation of the Volta River Project the cornerstone of his vision for the development and prosperity of the newly independent nation. This gave a fresh impetus to the Volta River Project which got under way in 1961, 46 years after the potential of the gorge was first identified.

The period of construction saw a steady stream of visitors arriving in Akosombo from all parts of the world. Engineers and surveyors, industrialists and financiers, government leaders and international celebrities, either came to contribute to the implementation of the multi-purpose scheme or to get a feel of such a world famous project.

Akosombo has been carefully planned and developed with modern infrastructure and recreational facilities. The services of the world renowned architectural and engineering firm, Dioxides Associates, who had completed a master-plan for Tema, Ghana's modern sea port, were obtained to supervise the implementation of the Akosombo township project.

Decades after the township of Akosombo was built it has earned an international reputation not only as the home of one of Africas most successful development schemes but also as an important and popular tourist destination. Its scenic beauty with undulating chain of mountains and valleys hold a breadth- taking fascination for tourists and residents alike.

The construction of the Akosombo Dam has resulted in the formation of the largest man-made lake in the world in terms of surface area(8502sq.km). The Akosombo Dam and the Volta Lake together with the gigantic Hydro-Electric Power Station reveal the wonders of nature, science and technology which hold spell-bound fascination for tourists.

Today, with the introduction of a 15-year national tourism development plan, to exploit the nation's tourist potential, Akosombo is uniquely positioned to play a significant role in the realization of this programme. A systematic integrated development plan which involved the development of electric power, lake transportation, hotels and pleasure activities, as well as fishery, has offered tourism a new fillip to further exploit the vast resource base of Ghana's sovereign river, the Volta

Monday, November 28, 2011

Women Fake Orgasms To Stop Men Being Unfaithful - Study

Women fake their orgasms in a bid to stop their partners from cheating, a new study has revealed.

The research by Columbia University in New York and Oakland University of Michigan questioned 453 women who had been in a relationship for at least six months.

It was found that pretending to orgasm was the most popular strategy employed by a woman to keep her partner from straying.

But those who faked it were also more likely to use other tactics such as dressing up in the bedroom and keeping tabs on their partners' whereabouts.

More than half (53.9%) of the women questioned admitted to faking their orgasms with this group being the most likely to be suspicious of their partners' fidelity.

"One particular reason that emerges from a lot of studies is 'to keep my partner interested in this relationship', or 'to prevent him from defecting from the relationship or leaving the relationship for another woman,'" said researcher Farnaz Kaighobadi