Edisi 27 April 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

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I N T E R N A T I O N A L

16 Pages Number 81 8th year

I N T E R N A T I O N A L

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Wednesday, April 27, 2016

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e-mail: info_ibp@balipost.co.id online: http://www.internationalbalipost.com. http://epaper.internationalbalipost.com.

Wednesday, April 27, 2016 Trump poised for East Coast primary wins in test of reorganized team Page 6

Atletico get chance for revenge against Bayern 42 years on

Australia’s asylum seeker detentions on Papua New Guinea island ruled illegal Page 13

Premarital Sex Threatens Students

REUTERS/Peter Nicholls

Actors (L-R) Emily VanCamp, Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr, Elizabeth Olsen and Jeremy Renner, pose for photographers at a media event ahead of the release of, “Captain America: Civil War”, in London, Britain, April 25, 2016.

Control and conscience divides heroes in ‘Captain America: Civil War’

LOS ANGELES - Marvel’s band of Avengers are usually a friendly bunch, but when faced with the destruction of their heroic efforts to save the world, the superheroes are split between maintaining control of their powers or going under government contract, leading to an explosive battle. “Captain America: Civil War,” out in international theaters this week and in U.S. theaters on May 6, holds the heroes accountable for the mass destruction caused by their efforts to save the planet. Last year’s “Avengers: Age of Ultron” ended with an entire town being lifted into the air. In “Civil War,” Chris Evans’ Captain America fights for superheroes to govern themselves and goes head to head with his former ally, Robert Downey Jr.’s Iron Man, who wants the heroes to be governed by the United Nations. “We like to liken it to a fight at a wedding,” said Joe Russo, who co-directed the film with his brother Anthony Russo.

“It’s something that’s been brewing in a family for some time and something happens that instigates a fall-out amongst all of the characters so relevancy and topicality are really important to us because it makes the audience feel like it’s part of their world.” “Civil War” sees Captain America’s best friend the Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan) seemingly cause massive acts of destruction. A divided superhero camp mirrors the complexities of the current U.S. political stage, Evans said. “Even in American politics, no one is right or wrong. There’s no evil here, we’re not fighting Nazis or aliens. This is just a matter of

whether we’re fighting for our head or our heart,” he said. Moments of levity come courtesy of new additions to the superhero ensemble, namely Paul Rudd’s smart-talking Ant-Man and the first appearance of British newcomer Tom Holland’s SpiderMan, the latest iteration of the web-slinging hero. Spider-Man is joining Disney’s Marvel cinematic universe as part of a collaborative deal between Walt Disney Co and Sony Pictures, which owns the rights to SpiderMan. Holland will be swinging his way into 2017’s standalone film “Spider-Man: Homecoming.” “I like the fact that they’re skewing Spider-Man young because that’s how he is in the comic books. He’s a young kid, and Tom Holland has this really great innocence and naivete but sense of subtle maturity,” Evans said. (rtr)

AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi

The EDUCATION sector in Bali was shocked by the recent of a 14 year old student in Denpasar who disposed of her aborted infant in a toilet at the Penta Medika emergency room on Jalan Teuku Umar Barat, Denpasar. The baby was found one of the clinics cleaning service staff on Sunday (Apr. 17). The public was then forced to question the current education system and wonder if there were other similar incidents that have gone unreported. “It’s a blow to education in general, to parents and the wider community even without looking for who is the most responsible whether school, family, the surrounding community or the couple themselves. Indeed, this is very heartbreaking” said academic I Made Ardana Putra. Apparently premarital sexual relationships, said Ardana, have rapidly become widespread amongst teenagers. Can this be regarded as an indication of a decline in morals and ethics? “Probably it is the result of erotic shows being easily available today” said the lecturer from the State Polytechnic of Bali.

Mitsubishi Motors President Tetsuro Aikawa, center, bows after a press conference in Tokyo, Wednesday, April 20, 2016. Mitsubishi Motors Corp. said Wednesday it used improper testing methods to make some of its vehicle models look more fuel efficient than they actually are.

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Mitsubishi Admits Cheating Goes Back 25 Years

TOKYO - Car maker Mitsubishi has been cheating on fuel economy tests for 25 years, it admitted. The Japanese company acknowledged last week that it had manipulated tests on some of its own brand and Nissan cars. It said at the time that the rigging went back to 2002 and involved 600,000 models but an internal probe has now found such tampering dates to 1991 and the total number was not known. Shares in the Tokyo-based company have plummeted since the initial revelations, wiping billions

of pounds off its market value and Japanese transport officials have raided the firm’s offices. The car maker has said that there was no evidence to suggest that UK or European models were affected. Mitsubishi Motors Corp’s President Tetsuro Aikawa, Executive Vice President Ryugo Nakao and other

executive bow as they leave a news conference to brief about issues of misconduct in fuel economy tests in Tokyo Mitsubishi president Tetsuro Aikawa said following the latest revelations that the company’s internal probe was ongoing. He said: “We don’t know the whole picture and we are in the process of trying to determine that. I feel a great responsibility.” Mr Aikawa added that it was unclear how many customers were

going to be compensated because the extent of the manipulation was still under investigation. It comes amid widening concerns over irregularities among global car makers following Volkswagen’s admission that it cheated on diesel emissions tests. The German company last week reported its first annual loss for two decades after its provision for the scandal increased to €16.2bn (£12.7bn). Meanwhile, the German government said a probe sparked by the

scandal had found anomalies in 16 global brands – though the “defeat device” technology used by VW was not employed by other car makers. (rtr) News can also be heard in “Bali Image” at Global Radio FM 96.5 from 9.30 until 10.00 am. Listen to Global Radio FM at http:// globalfmbali.listen2myradio.com or live video streaming at http://radioglobalfmbali.com and http:// ustream.tv/channel/global-fm-bali.


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