A nine year old victim of the Holocaust has attracted 3,000 friends on Facebook.

Henio Zytomirski was exterminated by the Nazis in a gas chamber in Poland in 1942. But he went on to become a national icon with his story taught as part of the country’s national curriculum. Now citizens from his hometome of Lublin have created a Facebook profile for him, in virtual memory of his life. His page is one of the more striking examples of Facebook and MySpace being used to create memorials of history’s greatest tragedies. Henio’s... [more]

Mild Growth in European online retail sales in 2010

Online retail sales in Europe are set to jump 20 percent this year, far outstripping growth in store-based sales as countries like Poland, France and Spain catch the Internet shopping bug, according to new research. The Centre for Retail Research (CRR), in a report commissioned by shopping comparison website Kelkoo, said on Monday online retail sales were likely to grow 19.6 percent to 172 billion euros (150 billion pounds) in 2010, following... [more]

Irish bad bank scheme hits fresh EU delay

Ireland’s “bad bank” scheme faces further delays as European Union approval is not expected until the end of February at the earliest, the Sunday Business Post newspaper reported, citing unnamed European Commission sources. An Irish finance ministry spokesman said he had no comment on the report. Earlier this month, Irish government officials said they were confident the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA) would have... [more]

Dutch State, ING Bank Appeal EU Ruling on Aid

The Dutch government and bailed-out financial services company ING Groep NV said Thursday that they are appealing a ruling by the European Union antitrust authority on repaying state aid. ING said the EU viewed repayment terms agreed by ING and the government as too generous. Of the euro10 billion ($14.07 billion) received from the Dutch government at the height of the financial crisis, the bank and insurer has paid back euro5 billion, plus... [more]

China economic policies under fire at Davos forum

Political leaders, central bankers and financiers at the World Economic Forum have attacked China’s monetary and trade policy and questioned its ability to tackle an overheating economy. Top Chinese officials face an increasingly difficult task insisting that Beijing is acting in the interest of the world economy by keeping its yuan currency weak against the dollar and maintaining a huge trade surplus — 196.1 billion dollars... [more]

Fears Grow That Greece May Drag Europe Down

Could Greece drag down Europe? EU finance ministers are pressing their indebted and riot-prone Balkan member to embrace a massive austerity plan and plug its debilitating deficit. But with markets skeptical and the appetite for more bailouts at a low, there are deepening concerns that a Greek meltdown could deal a severe blow to the very European idea of a common currency, and set off a domino effect through Italy, Spain, and Portugal. Keen... [more]

Google attack puts spotlight on China’s “red” hackers

SHANGHAI/BEIJING (Reuters) – They are cloaked by pseudonyms and multiple addresses, but China’s legions of hackers were thrust into the spotlight last week after Google said it suffered a sophisticated cyber-attack emanating from China. There are tens of thousands of Hong Ke, or red visitors, as they are known in China. Many are motivated by patriotism, although it is more difficult to establish their relationship with the Chinese... [more]

Poland launches Chopin bicentenary celebrations

WARSAW (AFP) – Poland launched a year of celebrations Friday to mark the 200th anniversary of the celebrated composer Frederic Chopin, which will include events both at home and abroad. Culture Minister Bogdan Zdrojewski officially launched Chopin Year at the house where Chopin was born, in Zelazowa Wola, 80 kilometres (50 miles) west of the capital Warsaw. Later Friday, the Warsaw Philharmonic was set to give its first concert as... [more]

Thieves steal Auschwitz ‘Work Sets You Free’ sign

OSWIECIM, Poland – Thieves stole the notorious sign bearing the cynical Nazi slogan “Work Sets You Free” from the entrance to the former Auschwitz death camp on Friday, cutting through rows of barbed wire and metal bars before making their escape through the snow. The brazen seizure of one of the Holocaust’s most chilling symbols brought worldwide condemnation. “The theft of such a symbolic object is an attack... [more]

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