Mes: septiembre 2019

Anything can happen.” The singer/TV personality also touched on the difficulty of acting as both mentor and judge on the show

(CBS) Cee Lo Green is sure of one thing about tonight’s episode of “The Voice” – when it comes to whom America will save, he’s not placing any bets. “It’s hard to say,” he told Celebrity Circuit when asked who will be saved – and who is going home – from his team tonight. “There were some surprises last week. Anything can happen.” The singer/TV personality also touched on the difficulty of acting as both mentor and judge on the show. “It is hard, because you get emotionally attached,” he said of the singers on his team.  One of the performers on Green’s team will be “saved” tonight by America’s votes, 하이 로우 and Green will be able to save another – leaving the remaining two to be sent home. The same will happen with Adam Levine’s team (Christina Aguilera and Blake Shelton made their cuts last week). Green is also appearing in Absolut’s “Cee Lo Distilled,” a documentary that takes a behind-the-scenes look at a day in his life (you can watch the trailer here), and has his own show on Fuse, “Talking to Strangers.” “It’s an intimate gathering, a one-on-one,” he said of the interview and performance show, which premieres tomorrow night at 11 p.m. EDT. Guests will include Keri Hilson, Lupe Fiasco, Train and Estelle. Tell us: Who do you think will be saved on “The Voice”...

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Special Section: The Arab SpringDriving through Syria’s unofficial civil warSyrian rebel city of Homs turns to ghost town Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s annual report on children and armed conflict during 2011 names 32 “persistent perpetrators” that have been on the list for at least five years, including the security forces of seven countries

(AP) UNITED NATIONS – A U.N. report released Monday includes Syrian government forces and their allied “shabiha” militias for the first time on a list of 52 governments and armed groups that recruit, kill or sexually attack children in armed conflicts. Meanwhile, to stop the escalating violence there, U.N. envoy Kofi Annan has asked governments with influence to “twist arms” amid few signs that international pressure is having any measurable effect on the fighting. In Syria, the report said, children as young as 9 years old have been victims of killing and maiming, arbitrary arrest, detention, torture, and sexual violence, and have been used as human shields. “In almost all recorded cases, children were among the victims of military operations by government forces, including the Syrian armed forces, the intelligence forces and the shabiha militia, in their ongoing conflict with the opposition, including the Free Syrian Army,” the report said. Special Section: The Arab SpringDriving through Syria’s unofficial civil warSyrian rebel city of Homs turns to ghost town Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s annual report on children and armed conflict during 2011 names 32 “persistent perpetrators” that have been on the list for at least five years, including the security forces of seven countries. That’s double the number in 2010, and Ban expressed grave concern at “the unacceptably high, and growing, number” of long-term abusers of children. Radhika Coomaraswamy, the U.N....

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