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US Admiral Says Mideast Drills Ensure Stability

Written By Sepatu on Kamis, 20 September 2012 | 08.17

The admiral in charge of the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet has defended the large American-led naval drills taking place in the Persian Gulf and other strategic Mideast waterways as a way to ensure stability and security.

Vice Admiral John W. Miller said Thursday that the participation of more than 30 countries in the anti-mine exercises shows there is a broad, common interest in ensuring the region's sea lanes remain safe. The Navy says the drills are the largest ever focused on mines in the region.

Iran has in the past threatened to block the entrance to the Gulf. Any effort to do so would likely involve mines.

The Navy and its allies are also conducting drills in the Gulf of Oman and in the Gulf of Aden.

20 Sep, 2012


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Yoko Gives Peace Prize to Pussy Riot

Sep 20, 2012 9:21am

gty pussy riot jp 120920 wblog Yoko Gives Peace Prize to Pussy Riot

MOSCOW – Yoko Ono, the artist and widow of legendary Beatles singer John Lennon, and Amnesty International have announced that members of Pussy Riot will be among this year's winners of the Lennon Ono Grant for Peace. The group will be awarded an unspecified grant during a ceremony in New York City on Friday.

The Russian feminist punk collective became famous worldwide after Russian authorities put three members on trial for a subversive stunt in Moscow's Christ the Savior Cathedral. In February members of the group jumped on the cathedral's altar and performed what they called a "punk prayer," begging for divine intervention to rid Russia of President Vladimir Putin.

Three of the women were charged with "hooliganism" and in August they were sentenced to two years in prison. In a statement on their website, organizers called for the their release and said the trial called "into question Russia's policies towards freedom of speech and freedom of expression."

The trial was also seen as an attempt by the Kremlin to intimidate the opposition amid an unprecedented protest movement that has called on Putin to step down and for early parliamentary elections to be held.

An appeal in the case will be heard on Oct. 1 and activists have announced plans to hold protests against their incarceration in over 100 cities around the world. Russian authorities are reportedly still searching for two other women wanted in connection with the February stunt. Pussy Riot announced on Twitter that the two had fled the country, but provided no further details.

Ahead of the August verdict the women received high profile support from global music icons including Madonna, Paul McCartney, Green Day and Sting.

Other recipients of the Lennon Ono Grant for Peace this year include peace activist Rachel Corrie, author and activist John Perkins, author and journalist Christopher Hitchens who died earlier this year, and another winner that organizers declined to name "for logistical reasons."

SHOWS: World News

20 Sep, 2012


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Poles Angered by Ukraine's Graveside Fashion Shoot

Poland has protested a photo exhibition by a Ukrainian fashion magazine featuring models posing next to Polish graves.

The photographs showing women in provocative poses against a backdrop of crosses at a cemetery in the western city of Lviv were displayed at a museum last week.

Poland's Foreign Ministry said Thursday that its diplomats in Lviv protested "the impropriety of the exhibition, which could hurt feelings and provoke controversy" and had the exhibit closed.

Galina Tayan of the LZ online fashion magazine, which organized the photo session, said the photographs were meant to illustrate that even religious leaders can sin and not to offend anyone.

The head of the museum, Iryna Magdysh, said she regretted the decision to display the photos, saying "our freedom ends when another person's freedom begins."

20 Sep, 2012


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Soldier Gives Birth at Embattled Base

Sep 20, 2012 10:39am

A British team of pediatric specialists is being deployed to Afghanistan to attend to a female gunner who unexpectedly gave birth in an Afghan outpost that was the scene of a bitter battle just days ago.

The soldier reportedly didn't realize she was pregnant until she developed stomach pains two days ago. The baby was born five weeks premature.

She gave birth in Camp Bastion, a sprawling base in Helmand Province where Britain's Prince Harry is assigned as an Apache helicopter pilot.

The camp was the target of a sophisticated attack last week when three teams of insurgents dressed in U.S. Army uniforms breached the defensive perimeter and destroyed several attack jets and killed two Americans.

The camp is getting a different kind of  reinforcements this week as a pediatric team from Oxford's John Radcliffe Hospital is en route to Afghanistan to tend to the soldier and her premature baby.

The soldier, who has not been publicly identified, was deployed to Afghanistan in March. She is believed to be the first soldier to give birth on the frontline.

A Ministry of Defense spokesperson told ABC News that the mother was a gunner in the Royal Regiment of Artillery. Both she and her baby boy are healthy and in good condition.

Pregnant servicewomen are not allowed to be deployed on operations, the Ministry of Defense told ABC News.

"Usually once we find out about a woman being pregnant, we send her back to the UK on maternity leave, but this time, the baby came too fast," the spokesman said.

Even the mother was taken by surprise, officials said, unaware that she was pregnant.

"Medically, it is possible for a woman not to notice a pregnancy, but it's very, very unusual," Dr. Jack Singer, from Harley Street Pediatric Group in London, told ABC News.

"It's with great difficulty that a pregnancy goes unnoticed," joked Singer. "I mean, most women would find amenorrhea (the lack of menstrual bleeding and growth of breasts) unusual, or notice a bump at least in the third trimester."

"All it would take is a simple urine to blood test, before the women are deployed," said Singer. "If you're wearing all that gear and carrying equipment, it's not as obvious as if you're used to wearing black cocktail dresses. These women are under huge stresses and strains, so they can ignore what's going on with their body," he added.

Around 70 women have been sent back from Afghanistan in the last decade after discovering they were pregnant, and twice that number from Iraq in the same period. The Ministry of Defense commented that these figures account for fewer than one percent of British servicewomen ever deployed on operations.

Major Charles Heyman, an author of books about the British Army and a former soldier, said: "The Army needs to make sure for the welfare of the female soldier concerned that they are not pregnant before they deploy."

Servicewomen are usually on leave for at least six months after the birth of their child, but according to according to UK law maternity leave can last up to a year.

SHOWS: Good Morning America

20 Sep, 2012


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Poland Urges Ukraine to Make East-West Choice

Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski urged Ukraine's leader on Thursday to push for integration with the European Union, but acknowledged that a key obstacle is the country's jailing of its former premier, Yulia Tymoshenko.

After talks with Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych in Kiev, Komorowski said Ukraine must decide whether it wants to align itself with the EU or join a Russia-led customs union. "It is impossible to implement those two scenarios at the same time," Komorowski said at a news conference with Yanukovych. "A choice has to be made."

Tymoshenko, the country's top opposition leader and the heroine of the 2004 Orange Revolution, is serving a seven-year jail term on charges of abuse of office while leading natural gas import negotiations with Russia in 2009.

Tymoshenko, 51, denies the charges and accuses Yanukovych, the antagonist of the Orange Revolution, of throwing her in jail in order to bar her from Ukraine's Oct. 28 parliamentary election.

AP

Ukraine's President Viktor Yanukovych and Polish counterpart Bronislaw Komorowski , left, are seen during an official meeting ceremony in front of the Presidential office in Kiev, Ukraine, Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Sergei Chuzavkov) Close

The nation's relations with the EU have been strained over her treatment, which the West has condemned as politically motivated. The EU has balked at implementing a key cooperation deal with Ukraine over the Tymoshenko case.

Komorowski said Tymoshenko's jailing is a key impediment n Ukraine's road into the European club.

"The Tymoshenko case is an internal matter of Ukraine, but at the same time this case is a serious, significant obstacle in the rapprochement between Ukraine and the European Union," Komorowski said. "From our side we expect that all Ukrainian political players will work toward removing these obstacles which hamper the ... integration of Ukraine with European structures."

Yanukovych skirted a question on whether he could pardon Tymoshenko, who also faces an array of other accusations, including in connection with a 15-year-old murder case.

"The (legal) process in the case of Tymoshenko is not over yet," Yanukovych said at the news conference. "We are interested and will do everything so that all the cases take place only in the legal framework."

Tymoshenko is undergoing treatment in a Ukrainian hospital for a severe spinal condition which has left her partially paralyzed and in constant pain. She has been unable to attend trials and take part in investigations in cases against her.

Yanukovych wished her a speedy recovery, but Tymoshenko's lawyer, Serhiy Vlasenko, said the Ukrainian leader's statement signaled a continuation of "political repression" in Ukraine.

"Yanukovych has shown his true face. He has shown that he doesn't understand European values, European democracy and what a leader of a European country should be like," Vlasenko told The Associated Press.

20 Sep, 2012


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Niger Hit by Worst Flooding in 80 Years: Oxfam

The international aid group Oxfam says half a million people have been displaced in Niger as the country reels from the worst flooding in 80 years.

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs estimates that more than 80 people were killed in the floods.

The landlocked West African country of Niger has been pummeled by back-to-back droughts in 2005, 2010 and the first part of 2012 causing an acute hunger crisis. Samuel Braimah, country director for Oxfam, says the rains were needed, but the excessive rainwater has now destroyed 17,000 acres (7,000 hectares) of crops, making it even more difficult for families strained by drought to rebound.

Of the 1 million children facing life-threatening malnutrition this year in the Sahel, UNICEF says that one-third live in Niger.

20 Sep, 2012


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Afghan President Appoints New Governors

An Afghan official says President Hamid Karzai has reshuffled about one quarter of the country's 38 provincial governors as part of an effort to improve local governance.

Rafi Ferdous, a spokesman with the Council of Ministers, says 10 governors were removed or given new jobs as part of Thursday's decision.

Among the governor's to lose his job was Gulab Mangal, who ran the volatile southern province of Helmand.

Earlier this month, the Afghan parliament approved Karzai's choice of two new ministers in key security posts.

20 Sep, 2012


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Serb Acquitted on US Embassy Fire Charges

A Serbian court has acquitted the prime suspect in setting the U.S. embassy in Belgrade on fire in 2008, but has sentenced him to a year in prison for stealing property from the building.

A judge said Thursday there was no evidence that the 24-year-old Milan Zivanovic took part in the burning of the embassy when Serb rioters stormed the building on Feb. 21, 2008, in anger over Washington's support for the statehood of Kosovo, the predominantly ethnic Albanian province that had declared independence from Serbia.

But the judge said Zivanovic, a university student, took part in the stealing of a leather jacket and gloves that belonged to an embassy employee.

The attackers threw stones and flares at the embassy building. One person died in the rioting.

20 Sep, 2012


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UN Urges Pakistan to Tackle Missing Persons Issue

The United Nations has pressed Pakistan's government and judiciary to do more to tackle the problem of thousands of people who have allegedly been detained by law enforcement and intelligence agencies and remain missing.

A U.N. working group on enforced disappearances delivered its initial findings Thursday after a 10-day visit to Pakistan.

One of the group's members, Olivier de Frouville, says they were invited by the Pakistani government.

But the visit was clouded by complaints from Pakistani parliament members who claimed the group's presence was a violation of the country's sovereignty.

Several key institutions in Pakistan — including the Supreme Court, the military and the all-powerful intelligence agency — refused to meet with the group. Their lack of cooperation raises questions about how much impact the group's visit will have.

20 Sep, 2012


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Oil's Slide Continues Toward $91 a Barrel

Oil prices fell closer to $91 a barrel on Thursday, sagging for a fourth straight day as high U.S. inventories and weak economic data from Europe, China and Japan reinforced fears of a deeper global downturn.

By early afternoon in Europe, benchmark oil for October delivery was down 45 cents to $91.53 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract finished at $91.98 on Wednesday, dropping $3.31, or 3.5 percent.

In London, Brent crude traded on the ICE Futures exchange was down 54 cents to $107.65 a barrel.

Figures from Europe, Japan and China reminded investors that the world's economy is struggling, though a positive bond auction from Spain helped limit the retreat in markets.

Among the sobering news for investors was a survey in Europe pointing to a deepening recession in Europe, figures from Japan that showed the country's powerhouse export sector was continuing to suffer and a private survey of manufacturers in China that showed activity fell again in September, though at a slightly slower pace than August.

Signs that the global economy is slowing down tend to push oil prices lower because people and businesses use less energy.

"The extended losses are hinting more and more that the bullish impact of (quantitative easing) had already been priced into the market for several weeks and that the focus is now on weaker global economic growth indicators," said analysts at JBC Energy in Vienna.

Separately, crude inventories grew three times more than analysts had expected last week. Crude supplies grew by 8.5 million barrels to 367.6 million barrels. That's 8.4 percent higher than at the same time last year, according to the Energy Information Administration's weekly report.

Analysts said the uptick in inventory was tied to the return of production by U.S. Gulf Coast refineries after being shut down by Hurricane Isaac.

"We can safely assume that most of this has been on the back of platforms returning to production ... we are seeing the return of the refineries in the Gulf area too," Carl Larry of Oil Outlooks and Opinions said in a newsletter.

Some experts said the large price drop this week was exaggerated and likely to be reversed soon.

Analysts at Commerzbank said they regard "the scale and above all the speed of the price slide as excessive" even if the crude stockpile figures indicate that the market is "amply supplied" at present.

"This is all the more true given that other economic barometers such as equity markets and copper — a cyclical commodity — have defended their gains over the same period," they said. "We expect to see a countermovement in the next few days."

In other futures trading in New York, wholesale gasoline was up 2.24 cents at $2.7497 per gallon. Heating oil rose 1.82 cents to $3.0622 per gallon. Natural gas added 2.4 cents to $2.786 per 1,000 cubic feet.

————

Pamela Sampson in Bangkok contributed to this report.

20 Sep, 2012


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Syrian TV: Helicopter That Crashed Clipped Tail of Passenger Jet in Midair; Jet Landed Safely

AP

In this Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012 photo,a Free Syrian Army fighter soldier stands at the front line in the Amariya district in Aleppo, Syria. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)

Syrian TV: Helicopter that crashed clipped tail of passenger jet in midair; jet landed safely.

20 Sep, 2012


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Palestinians Condemn Romney Mideast Peace Comment

A senior Palestinian official says Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney is undermining hopes for peace and democracy in the Middle East.

Saeb Erekat, a top aide to President Mahmoud Abbas, rejected Romney's recent video remark to donors that the Palestinians have "no interest whatsoever" in peace.

Speaking at a news conference Thursday, Erekat said "no one stands to gain more from peace than the Palestinians, and no one stands to lose from the absence of peace like the Palestinians."

He said those who tolerated Israel's continued occupation of Palestinian territories are "working against democracy and peace."

Erekat also urged world leaders to "create hope and opportunities, not despair."

20 Sep, 2012


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UK Judge Says Litvinenko Inquest to Open in 2013

A senior British judge says he will hold an inquest into the death of former Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko early next year.

Judge Robert Owen said Thursday there must be no further delay. It is almost six years since the former security service officer died in November 2006.

Litvinenko, a critic of the Kremlin, died in London after ingesting polonium-210, a rare radioactive isotope.

British prosecutors have accused two Russians, Alexander Lugovoi and Dmitry Kovtun, of killing Litvinenko, but Russia refuses to hand them over.

In Britain an inquest is held to determine the facts whenever someone dies unexpectedly, violently or in disputed circumstances.

20 Sep, 2012


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British Soldier Gives Birth in Afghanistan

Britain's military says a soldier has unexpectedly given birth while serving in Afghanistan.

The ministry confirmed on Thursday that the unidentified woman delivered a son on Tuesday at Camp Bastion, Britain's major logistical base in the desert of southern Afghanistan's Helmand province.

A specialist team is being deployed from Britain to help bring home the woman — a gunner with the Royal Artillery — and her child. The defense ministry said both were in a stable condition at the base.

The woman had deployed to Afghanistan in March, meaning her child was conceived before her tour of duty began.

Britain does not allow female soldiers to deploy on operation if they are pregnant, and the defense ministry said it had not been aware of the woman's pregnancy.

20 Sep, 2012


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Zimbabwe Appeal on Property Seizure Dismissed

South Africa's Supreme Court dismisses a Zimbabwe government appeal against seizure of its property in Cape Town to compensate for its takeover of a white-owned farm in Zimbabwe.

A tribunal of the Southern African Development Community in 2008 ruled that the government's grabs of white-owned farmland in Zimbabwe were illegal and racist. President Robert Mugabe's government argued it was part of a land reform process to redress colonial wrongs.

Zimbabwe refused to act on the court's order to restore the farms to their owners. Subsequently, the Southern African community dissolved the court.

In 2010, South Africa's High Court attached a Zimbabwe government property in Cape Town to satisfy a punitive cost order granted by the tribunal.

Thursday's dismissal upholds that ruling. The farmer who brought the case died last year.

20 Sep, 2012


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UK, Denmark Suggest NATO Meeting on Afghan Attacks

Britain and Denmark have called for a meeting of NATO countries to discuss how to tackle insider attacks against allied troops by Afghan forces.

British Defense Secretary Philip Hammond said Thursday that such attacks, which have killed 51 international service members this year, will be addressed at a NATO defense ministers meeting Oct. 9-10. But he also suggested a wider conference on the issue where allied and Afghan experts could "come up with additional helpful approaches."

No date or place have been set for such a conference, but Danish Defense Minister Nick Haekkerup said Denmark would be willing to host it.

Under the new NATO rules, operations that mix small-sized Afghan and coalition units are no longer considered routine and require the approval of the regional commander.

20 Sep, 2012


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Rallies Against Abuse of Prisoners Grow in Georgia

Street protests against the brutal abuse of prisoners escalated Thursday in the Georgian capital, fueling anger against the government and possibly boosting support for the opposition in the runup to a tightly contested parliamentary election.

Two days after television stations aired videos of guards beating inmates and raping them with truncheons and broom handles, thousands rallied outside the Interior Ministry's headquarters and the Tbilisi prison where the abuse occurred. The demonstrators, some carrying brooms, demanded the resignation of the nation's interior minister.

President Mikhail Saakashvili has sought to defuse tensions by accepting the resignation of a minister in charge of penitentiaries and completely reshuffling prison personnel. But the simmering public anger threatens to damage his party in the Oct. 1 parliamentary vote and may boost support for the opposition Georgian Dream party led by billionaire philanthropist Bidzina Ivanishvili.

Saakashvili, who has led Georgia since 2004, has remained popular thanks to economic reforms, anti-corruption efforts and moves to integrate closer into the West. But his image was dented by his handling of a disastrous war with Russia in 2008. The opposition has also accused Saakashvili of a systematic clampdown on dissent and independent media.

Ivanishvili, Georgia's richest man who sold his extensive business assets in Russia to enter Georgian politics, said the videos had confirmed his longtime suspicions of the Georgian authorities' brutality.

Inmate's mother Veriko Kapanadze recalled that her son looked scared and tense when she last visited him in prison. "Now I understand why. It's like a Gestapo prison."

Georgian prosecutors have arrested 12 prison officials and Saakashvili has vowed that all those responsible will be severely punished. At the same time, the Georgian Interior Ministry has blamed Saakashvili's political foes for staging the videos, claiming prison officials were paid for orchestrating and filming the abuse by an inmate with connections to Ivanishvili. Ivanishvili has rejected the claim.

The prison abuse videos were broadcast by Maestro and Channel 9 television stations; the latter belongs to Ivanishvili. They said they got the videos from a prison official who has fled abroad.

20 Sep, 2012


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Arrest Made in Phone Hacking Probe

British police investigating the ongoing phone hacking scandal have arrested a journalist on suspicion of taking part in a conspiracy to gather data from stolen mobile phones.

The 30-year-old man arrested Thursday is the 14th person detained by detectives from Operation Tuleta, one of three parallel police investigations triggered by a scandal that has rocked Britain and Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. empire.

The investigations came amid revelations that reporters at Murdoch's now-shuttered News of the World tabloid routinely intercepted voicemails of celebrities and other public figures.

Dozens have been arrested in the probes of media wrongdoing and corruption. Criminal charges have been brought against Rebekah Brooks, the former chief of News Corp.'s British operations, and Andy Coulson, a former editor and the ex-communications chief for Prime Minister David Cameron.

20 Sep, 2012


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In Protests, Mao Holds Subtle Messages for Beijing

The face of dissatisfaction with China's Communist Party is the face of the man synonymous with it: Mao Zedong.

Portraits of the revolutionary leader often led packs of demonstrators in protests over Japan's effort last week to bolster its hold on islands claimed by China. Many were hoisted by people born after his death 36 years ago.

Mao, widely revered by Chinese and praised by Communist Party leaders, is supposed to serve as a unifying symbol, but it often isn't so.

To some he represents a condemnation of corruption and inequality under a government that long ago abandoned his radical policies. More frequently this week, his image was a subtle slap by nationalists who accuse leaders of being too weak in the territorial dispute.

"Mao Zedong was tough. He never backed down when it came to the national interests," said Lu Lei, a Beijing salesman who went to the Japanese Embassy with his friends to protest Tuesday. "Our current government is spineless. If Mao were alive, we would have already attacked Japan."

Mao has become a safe way for Chinese to criticize a government bent on stifling dissent. His giant portrait still looks out to Tiananmen Square in the heart of Beijing, and his name is etched into the country's constitution and the party's charter, even if his ideology has been abandoned in practice.

AP

FILE - In this Sept. 15, 2012 file photo, a Chinese man holds up a portrait of former Chinese leader Mao Zedong during protests outside the Japanese Embassy in Beijing, China. The face of dissatisfaction with China's Communist Party is the face of the man synonymous with it: Mao Zedong. Portraits of the revolutionary leader, hoisted by people born after his death 36 years ago, often led packs of demonstrators in protests over Japan's effort last week to bolster its hold on islands claimed by China. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File) Close

His image has rarely been displayed in such numbers as during the protests this week. Rows of his portraits floated through the parades — often in the company of a sea of red flags — in an eerie resemblance to the scenes from the fervent days of the Cultural Revolution when Mao was worshipped as a god.

Behind the scenes of the angry protests that rippled across more than two dozen cities this week runs an undercurrent of grievances, many of them critical of the government.

Protesters held up signs that touched on broader social issues such as corruption, food safety and the widening gap between poor and rich. Some protesters even joked that urban code enforcers — resented by the Chinese public for their brutality against unlicensed street peddlers — should be sent to fight the Japanese military.

Those messages mixed with anti-Japanese slogans on a rare occasion where the government tolerated and at time abetted public demonstrations.

"This movement has multiple purposes. Nationalism is only part of the protests." said Zheng Yongnian, director of the East Asian Institute at the National University of Singapore. "More people are angry about the current government, and they wanted to use this opportunity to vent."

The government, normally inclined to crush protests, allowed these of public anti-Japanese fury to gain leverage in its latest tiff with Tokyo over small uninhabited East China Sea islands called the Senkaku by Japanese and the Diaoyu by Chinese.

Japan controls the islands and purchased them from their private owners last week, thwarting plans by Tokyo's nationalistic governor to buy and develop them. China responded with furious rhetoric.

Both countries have sent patrol ships to the waters surrounding the islands, and there is no sign of progress in resolving the dispute between the two Asian economic powerhouses.

Allowing the protests, however, carries risks for China, as protesters can bend the intended message. They sent a quiet critique with a sign seemingly hard for the government to quarrel with: "Chairman Mao, we are missing you very much."

20 Sep, 2012


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Greek Transport Workers Join Strikes

Public transport workers in Greece have joined a growing wave of strikes against new austerity measures that the country's creditors are demanding in return for rescue loans.

Subway, tram and trolley-bus services are halting for 24 hours on Thursday in the greater Athens area. Judges and doctors at public hospitals also began protests this week, turning away most cases in a slow-down strike, while tax workers are to strike Friday.

AP

A woman passes next to grafitti in central Athens, on Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. Debt-strapped Greece is negotiating a major new austerity package worth more than euro 11.5 billion ($15.1 billion) with its rescue lenders. The measures are a requirement for continued emergency loan payments. (AP Photo / Petros Giannakouris) Close

Conservative Prime Minister Antonis Samaras is again meeting with the leaders of parties backing his coalition government later to discuss the new austerity package worth at least €11.5 billion ($15 billion).

The package is expected to include more salary and pension cuts. Critics say it's just going to make the recession worse and make it more difficult for Greece to pay down its debts.

20 Sep, 2012


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New Jersey Honeymooners in New Zealand Accident

A New Jersey couple's honeymoon has ended in tragedy with the husband killed in a car crash near a popular New Zealand tourist attraction.

Police inspector Leo Tooman says the 31-year-old man died and his 28-year-old wife of four days was critically injured when their car collided with a truck Thursday morning. He says the couple failed to yield at an intersection near the Waitomo Caves.

The network of caves attracts thousands of tourists each year who come to see the glowworms, an unusual species with a bioluminescent glow similar to that of a firefly.

Another American tourist died at the same intersection in February.

New Zealand cars drive on the left side of the road. Tourists have been known to revert to the opposite side in traffic emergencies.

20 Sep, 2012


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Syrian TV: Helicopter Has Crashed Near Damascus

State-run Syrian TV says a military helicopter has crashed near the capital, Damascus.

The report said the helicopter went down Thursday southeast of Douma, a Damascus suburb. There were no further details.

The government increasingly has been using helicopters and other aircraft in its fight against an 18-month-old rebellion. Rebels claim to have shot down helicopters in the past, although the regime has blamed the problems on mechanical difficulties.

20 Sep, 2012


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Peugeot in Talks to Sell Bulk of Logistics Unit

French carmaker PSA Peugeot Citroen says it's in exclusive talks to sell a controlling stake in its logistics business to Russia's national railway for €800 million ($1 billion).

The carmaker says in a statement Thursday the talks with JSC Russian Railways could see the Russian firm take a 75 percent in GEFCO, one of Europe's leading automotive logistics businesses.

PSA Peugeot Citroen says the deal would help GEFCO expand into China, India and Latin America, in addition to accelerating its growth in Eastern Europe and Russia.

Last year GEFCO made €3.8 billion in sales. It employs 10,300 people and specializes in transport of parts and vehicles for the car industry.

20 Sep, 2012


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Lufthansa to Pool EU Flights in New Budget Carrier

German airline group Deutsche Lufthansa AG says it will combine many of its European short-haul flights with its Germanwings budget carrier as part of a wider cost-reduction effort.

The company says the new carrier will have about 90 planes and start operating in January, flying some 18 million passengers annually.

Lufthansa said in a statement late Wednesday that the new division, whose name has yet to be decided, will take over all domestic and European short-haul flights outside the airline's main hubs Frankfurt and Munich.

Lufthansa CEO Christoph Franz said the restructuring will help achieve "significant efficiency gains."

The Cologne-based group, which includes Swiss and Austrian Airlines, is currently implementing an ambitious cost-cutting program as it struggles to compete with European low-cost carriers such as Easyjet or Ryanair.

20 Sep, 2012


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UK Regulator Finds BSkyB 'Fit and Proper'

Britain's communications regulator has found British Sky Broadcasting a "fit and proper" organization to hold a license despite criticism of the company's former chief executive and chairman, James Murdoch.

The announcement on Thursday was a response to the phone hacking scandal at a newspaper owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., which effectively controls BSkyB through a 39 percent shareholding.

The agency, known as OFCOM, concluded that James Murdoch was not complicit in a cover up at the tabloid News of the World, but his failure to initiate appropriate action on a number of occasions was "difficult to comprehend and ill-judged."

Since February, James Murdoch has been a non-executive director of the company, and one of only four people on the 12-member board with connections to News Corp.

20 Sep, 2012


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Clinton: Myanmar Ex-Junta Inspired by 'West Wing'

Written By Sepatu on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 23.56

Myanmar's former generals have looked to American television for tips on how to build a democracy.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton drew laughter Wednesday in Washington as she recounted a conversation with Myanmar's lower house speaker from her historic visit to the country last year.

Clinton said: He "said to me, 'Help us learn how to be a democratic congress, a Parliament. He went on to tell me that they were trying to teach themselves by watching old segments of 'The West Wing.'"

Clinton smiled: "I said, 'I think we can do better than that Mr. Speaker.'"

The drama about a fictional U.S. president's inner-circle stopped broadcasting in 2006, while Myanmar's junta was still in power.

Clinton spoke at an event honoring Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi.

20 Sep, 2012


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Defending Graffiti, and Debating Egypt's Future

Under cover of darkness, a few municipality workers quietly began to paint over an icon of Egypt's revolution: a giant, elaborate public mural on the street that saw some of the most violent clashes between protesters and police over the past two years.

The mural, stretching three blocks along a wall off Cairo's Tahrir Square, has been a sort of open-air museum of the history of the revolution and its goals — with "martyr" portraits of slain protesters, graffiti, jokes, freedom slogans and pharaonic, Muslim, Christian and nationalist images to show Egypt's mixed heritage and a history of struggle.

Word of the whitewash quickly got out. A number of progressive, young revolutionaries showed up to defend the murals. In the dead of night, they began to film the workers as they painted under the guard of police, hoping to embarrass them. They talked with the painters about what the murals meant.

The scene on Mohammed Mahmoud Street in the early hours Wednesday was a small but telling counterpoint to last week's angry protests at the U.S. Embassy, led by ultraconservative Islamists protesting an anti-Islam film. Those protests took place only a few blocks away on another street off Tahrir.

Together, the scenes point to the competition over the identity of the new Egypt, over what the country stands for now and what can be expressed.

AP

A veiled Egyptian woman walks past newly painted graffiti that reads in Arabic "erase more," on a wall that was whitewashed during a cleanup campaign to erase old murals, in Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. Graffiti artists are repainting the walls in Mohammed Mahmoud Street, off Tahrir square, soon after municipal workers have whitewashed over a mural depicting the faces of victims of police brutality and violence over the past two years. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser) Close

The mix of largely secular activists who launched the revolt against longtime leader Hosni Mubarak last year say the "revolution" is still continuing, until the country breaks with its authoritarian past and brings freedoms and economic justice.

The Islamists, who rode to power after Mubarak's ouster, have their own vision for Egypt, which they say should adhere to an "Islamic identity" as they define it and preserve traditions.

The government says it has launched a campaign to beautify Tahrir Square, the center of anti-Mubarak protests. But activists saw it as a government attempt to blot out the calls for continued revolution and to assert that a new and stable system is now in place, under elected Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.

"They are erasing history," Gamal Abdel-Nasser, the father of a 19-year old killed during the early days of anti-Mubarak protests, said as he stood at the mural street. "This is not my government. It doesn't represent me."

And for some, repainting the wall just underlined the feeling that the Islamists have snatched the prizes of the revolution.

"This is not about the wall. It is about everything happening in Egypt," said Nazly Hussein, one of the first to arrive at the scene to protest the paint job with a camera, live streaming the workers as they covered murals. "It is about territory they took away from us."

The anti-film protests, she said, showed how under Morsi's three-month-old rule progressives were still having to fight for basic issues like freedom of expression. She pointed to government crackdowns on strikes and the recent sentencing of a Coptic Christian to six years in prison for insulting the Prophet Muhammad and President Morsi. Still unaddressed are bigger goals of the revolution.

"This is about lowering our ceiling. Our real battle is about freedom. Now we are fighting about the right to insult the president or not," she said. "All those on the wall died for bread, freedom and social justice," she said, referring to the martyr portraits.

20 Sep, 2012


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Poles Help Belarus, Recalling Own Repressive Past

Volha Starastsina saw no choice but to flush her work down the police station toilet.

That was the only place the Belarusian journalist could hide TV footage after being detained for interviewing people on upcoming elections in the repressive state.

Her risky independent journalism is part of a Polish-funded effort to get uncensored news to Belarusians, one of several projects Poland supports in a drive to encourage democratic change in its troubled eastern neighbor.

Poland has many reasons for wanting Belarus to embrace democracy, but it largely comes down to this: When Poland looks east, it sees its own past. The censorship, secret police spying and harassment of political opponents under authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko remind Poles of what Lech Walesa's Solidarity movement endured in the 1980s. Today's Polish government is led by many former Solidarity activists, and they want to give Belarusians the same kind of Western help that proved crucial in toppling their former Soviet-backed regime.

"It's emotional. It's a Polish thing to be anti-regime," said Tomasz Pisula, a Pole who heads Freedom and Democracy Foundation, a Warsaw-based group working for democratic change in Belarus.

Other countries are also engaged in the cause, including the United States and Sweden. But perhaps nowhere is there as much support, both at the grassroots and government level, for the Belarusian democracy movement as in Poland.

The solidarity also stems from a cultural kinship and frequent contacts shared by the two Slavic peoples. A complex history of shifting borders in Eastern Europe has left a sizeable ethnic Polish minority in Belarus today that faces harassment, to the great concern of Poland.

More broadly, Poland wants to see the entire region on its eastern border evolve into a space of stable and prosperous democracies, and has been trying for years to push for democratic change in Ukraine and Georgia. That would have implications on issues ranging from fighting the flow of illegal drugs to boosting trade. And while Polish leaders don't like to state it publicly, they would also like to see a weakening of Moscow's influence in the region, with memories of past Russian domination still vivid.

The Polish efforts for Belarus are many.

The government funds a TV station, Belsat, and a radio station, Radio Racja, which broadcast independent news from Poland into Belarus, giving people an alternative to pro-regime state media. It has opened its universities to hundreds of Belarusians who lost their right to study at home for political reasons. It funds several projects aimed at blunting the effects of repression, including Pisula's, which helps political prisoners and keeps records on the perpetrators of repression — judges, police and others — should a day of reckoning come.

Starastsina, the Belarusian TV journalist who flushed her memory card down the toilet, works for Belsat. Last month, she and a cameraman were stopped by secret security, still known as the KGB, as they were reporting in the eastern Belarusian city of Vitebsk. In such cases Belsat reporters usually try to throw their memory cards under a tree or a bush, where they can be retrieved later.

But there was no vegetation in the square where they were detained, and Starastsina still had the incriminating evidence when taken to the police station

20 Sep, 2012


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Catholic Official Worried About Israel Attacks

After a series of attacks by vandals on Christian holy sites in Israel, normally tight-lipped Roman Catholic officials are beginning to speak out, publicly appealing to authorities to take a stronger stand against the violence.

The Rev. Pierbattista Pizzaballa, one of the church's top officials in the Holy Land, said he is worried about relations between Jews and Christians in the Holy Land. He believes the blame can go all around.

"I think the main atmosphere is ignorance," Pizzaballa told The Associated Press in an interview.

Because the local Christian population is tiny, "we do not exist for the majority ... They have other priorities," he said. "On the other side, we as a minority maybe didn't invest enough energy and initiatives" to reach out to Israeli Jews.

That may be changing following this month's attack on a well-known Trappist Monastery in Latrun, outside Jerusalem. Vandals burned a door and spray-painted anti-Christian graffiti on the century-old building with the words "Jesus is a monkey." Suspicion has fallen on extremist Jewish West Bank settlers or their supporters, who are believed to be behind a series of attacks in recent years on mosques, Christian sites and even Israeli army property to protest moves against settlements.

In response, the church's top officials, including Pizzaballa, the "custos," or custodian of Catholic holy sites, to issue a rare "declaration" calling on Israeli leaders to take action.

"Sadly, what happened in Latrun is only another in a long series of attacks against Christians and their places of worship," the Catholic leaders said. "What is going on in Israeli society today that permits Christians to be scapegoated and targeted by these acts of violence?"

It said authorities should "put an end to this senseless violence and to ensure a 'teaching of respect' in schools for all those who call this land home."

Israeli leaders swiftly condemned the attack, and police vowed to bring the vandals to justice. Nearly two weeks later, there have been no arrests.

The monastery was targeted shortly after Israel evacuated an illegally built West Bank settler outpost. In recent months, two other monasteries and a Baptist church were vandalized. It is not clear why the vandals have targeted Christian sites. For years, Christian clergymen also have been spat at by ultra-Orthodox seminary students in Jerusalem's Old City.

There are about 155,000 Christian citizens of Israel, less than 2 percent of its 7.9 million people. About three-quarters are Arabs, and the others arrived during waves of Russian immigration over the past 20 years. They are split between Catholicism and Orthodox steams of Christianity. Tens of thousands of Christian foreign workers and African migrants also reside in Israel.

Pizzaballa said he recognizes the attacks do not reflect the views of most Israelis, and he welcomed the condemnations by Israeli police, politicians and mainstream rabbinical authorities.

But he said Israel must do more.

"It's important not just to condemn, but also to work, to take initiatives to stop this phenomenon," he said.

Far "more serious," he said, was an incident in July in which an Israeli lawmaker ripped up a copy of the New Testament in front of TV cameras after Chrisitan missionaries mailed him the book. The lawmaker, Michael Ben-Ari, is now the subject of an ethics probe in parliament.

20 Sep, 2012


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Panetta Tours Chinese Naval Base Without Reporters

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta is getting a rare glimpse inside a Chinese naval base and will be touring two of its ships.

But details of his visit — like much of the information about China's military — were off limits to the media traveling with him.

Instead, the reporters got beer.

Chinese officials refused to let reporters stay with Panetta as he went aboard the ships, so the media were taken to the nearby Tsingtao Brewery for a tour.

The U.S. has repeatedly called for China to be more transparent about its military. Panetta was touring a frigate and a submarine at the People's Liberation Army's North Sea Fleet. The visit capped a three-day visit to China by Panetta aimed at improving U.S. relations with the communist giant.

20 Sep, 2012


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Top Executives at Vietnam Bank Resign

Three executives at a large Vietnamese bank have resigned amid a deepening probe into a scandal that has shaken investor confidence in the country.

Asia Commercial Bank said late Wednesday it had approved the resignation of chairman Tran Xuan Gia and two deputies.

Tuoi Tre newspaper reported a fourth executive currently at Eximbank had also stepped down because he was at ACB when the scandal occurred.

Vietnam' crowded banking sector is believed to have bad debts of up to 10 percent of outstanding loans and is one of the greatest risks to a once booming economy that is now slowing. The Communist government has pledged to restructure the sector, but doubts remain whether it has the will to do this

Last month, ACB's ex-CEO Ly Xuan Hai and Nguyen Duc Kien, a superwealthy founder of the bank, were arrested for "improper lending", causing a run on the bank and a large drop in the country's stock market. The arrests triggered speculation of a damaging power struggle with the country's normally secretive political and economic elite.

ACB said the executives had resigned for approving a decision by Hai to allow staff to withdraw $34 million to deposit in another bank. It gave no more details.

The bank said they have appointed a new chairman and two deputies including a representative of Standard Chartered Bank which owns 15 percent of ACB's shares.

The changes are aimed at "consolidating the management strength, enabling ACB to assert its position as a leading joint stock bank in Vietnam," it said.

It's unclear whether the executives will face criminal charges.

The country's main bourse dropped 2 percent by midmorning while ACB shares were down by almost 4 percent.

20 Sep, 2012


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Big Wave Drags US Couple, Drowns Husband in Mexico

Authorities in Mexico say a giant wave has dragged off a U.S. couple walking on a Baja California beach, drowning the 72-year-old husband and injuring his 66-year-old wife.

Prosecutors say a navy boat found Ted Park's body two hours later in the ocean 800 yards from the spot where the wave hit the couple. The statement says Park's wife Shinae suffered respiratory problems after Wednesday's accident in Los Cabos.

The couple was visiting from Walnut Creek, California.

The U.S. consulate confirms that the man who died was a U.S. citizen.

Los Cabos at the southern tip of the Baja peninsula is a favorite vacation spot for Hollywood stars and thousands of other U.S. tourists who still venture to Mexican beaches despite the drug violence that plagues parts of the country.

20 Sep, 2012


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Kim Dotcom in Court as US Appeals Evidence Ruling

Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom is back in court as the United States appeals against releasing millions of emails in its case against him.

The founder of the file-sharing website watched Thursday from the public benches of New Zealand's appeals court. U.S. authorities accuse Dotcom of racketeering and money laundering by facilitating massive copyright piracy on his website. They are seeking his extradition.

Dotcom's legal team won an earlier ruling in which a lower court concluded the U.S. needed to release a wide range of its evidence. Appealing the ruling, the U.S. argued it should be compelled to disclose only limited evidence because the extradition hearing doesn't amount to a full trial. The US says its evidence includes millions of emails.

The court will likely rule in the coming weeks.

20 Sep, 2012


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Opposition-Led Strike Hits Trains in India

Angry opposition workers have disrupted train services as part of a daylong strike in India to protest rising diesel prices and the government's decision to open the country's huge retail market to foreign companies.

Protesters carrying party flags blocked railroad tracks Thursday in several cities and towns, including Allahabad, Varanasi and Patna. They're demanding that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh reverse the fuel hike and the decision on foreign retailers.

The strike is expected to shut down schools, businesses and public transportation.

It was called by the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, its allies and communist groups. Some of the government's allies also are involved.

Last week, the government announced it will allow foreign investment in retail and aviation and the sale of minority stakes in four state-run companies.

20 Sep, 2012


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Senegal Votes to Do Away With Senate to Save Money

Senegalese lawmakers, who are divided between a 150-seat national assembly and a 100-seat senate, voted to do away with the senate, passing a law which dissolves the institution in order to save an estimated $15 million.

Minister of Justice Aminata Toure explained that the suppression Tuesday of the senate is intended to curb government spending, and will provide the cash needed to help the victims of the yearly rains which have left thousands homeless.

Unlike the national assembly, the senate is a relatively recent institution, and has become a symbol of government waste. It's been frequently pilloried and described as an instrument of cronyism, a way to reward loyal party workers who did not get elected to the larger national assembly. Around half the senators are directly appointed by the president.

20 Sep, 2012


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Japan Posts $9.6B Aug. Trade Deficit; Exports Down

Japan's Finance Ministry reports a smaller-than-expected trade deficit of $9.6 billion for August, though weakening demand overseas is undermining hopes for an export-driven revival.

The 754.1 billion yen ($9.6 billion) deficit in August was smaller than the $9.9 billion deficit reported a year earlier. Exports in August totaled 5.05 trillion yen ($64.33 billion), down 5.8 percent from a year earlier, while imports fell 5.4 percent to 5.8 trillion yen ($73.9 billion).

The strong Japanese yen has bit into exports while demand has evaporated in crisis-stricken Europe. Meanwhile, the country's energy imports have risen following closures of most of its nuclear plants.

Japan has eked out small trade surpluses in some months this year but reported a record annual trade deficit for the fiscal year that ended in March.

20 Sep, 2012


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Colombia High Court Says Religion out in Rulings

Colombia's Constitutional Court has told a lower court judge that religious precepts cannot be used as the basis for a ruling or other decisions, issuing a directive that applies to all judicial officers in the country.

The high court said quotations from religious texts cannot be used in legal arguments or judgments to directly support the reasoning for a decision. It did say religious quotations can be used to explain a point of view.

In a directive issued in June but only made public Wednesday, the justices made a point of saying the directive was issued for a labor court judge in the southwestern city of Cali, but legal experts said Wednesday that the Constitutional Court's findings apply to all judges and prosecutors in similar cases.

Judicial authorities "are obliged to respect the principle of secularism that characterizes the Colombian state," said the Constitutional Court, which is the guardian of Colombia's constitution. Decisions "must be devoid of any expression suggesting a bias based on religious beliefs or personal convictions of the judicial officer," it added.

The court's statement was aimed at a labor court ruling in a pension case. The lower court judge's decision included a quotation from the Bible: "In the case of justice, it shouldn't even favor the poor."

20 Sep, 2012


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New French Cartoons Inflame Prophet Film Tensions

France stepped up security Wednesday at its embassies across the Muslim world after a French satirical weekly revived a formula that it has already used to capture attention: Publishing crude, lewd caricatures of Islam's Prophet Muhammad.

Wednesday's issue of the provocative satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo, whose offices were firebombed last year, raised concerns that France could face violent protests like the ones targeting the United States over an amateur video produced in California that have left at least 30 people dead.

The drawings, some of which depicted Muhammad naked and in demeaning or pornographic poses, were met with a swift rebuke by the French government, which warned the magazine could be inflaming tensions, even as it reiterated France's free speech protections.

The principle of freedom of expression "must not be infringed," Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said, speaking on France Inter radio.

But he added: "Is it pertinent, intelligent, in this context to pour oil on the fire? The answer is no."

Anger over the film, "Innocence of Muslims," has sparked violent protests from Asia to Africa, and in the Lebanese port city of Tyre, tens of thousands of people marched in the streets Wednesday, chanting "Oh America, you are God's enemy!"

AP

Publishing director of the satyric weekly Charlie Hebdo, Charb, displays the front page of the newspaper as he poses for photographers in Paris, Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. Police took up positions outside the Paris offices of the satirical French weekly that published crude caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad on Wednesday that ridicule the film and the furor surrounding it. The provocative weekly, Charlie Hebdo, was firebombed last year after it released a special edition that portrayed the Prophet Muhammad as a "guest editor" and took aim at radical Islam. (AP Photo/MIchel Euler) Close

Worried France might be targeted, the government ordered its embassies, cultural centers, schools and other official sites to close on Friday — the Muslim holy day — in 20 countries. It also immediately shut down its embassy and the French school in Tunisia, the site of deadly protests at the U.S. Embassy last week.

The French Foreign Ministry issued a travel warning urging French citizens in the Muslim world to exercise "the greatest vigilance," avoiding public gatherings and "sensitive buildings."

The controversy could prove tricky for France, which has struggled to integrate its Muslim population, Western Europe's largest. Many Muslims believe the Prophet Muhammad should not be depicted at all — even in a flattering way — because it might encourage idolatry.

Violence provoked by the video, which portrays the prophet as a fraud, womanizer and child molester, has left at least 30 people dead in seven countries. It began with a Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Embassy in Cairo, then quickly spread to Libya, where an attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi left the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans dead.

In Washington, White House spokesman Jay Carney said the Obama administration believed the French magazine images "will be deeply offensive to many and have the potential to be inflammatory."

"We don't question the right of something like this to be published," he said, pointing to the U.S. Constitution's protections of free expression. "We just question the judgment behind the decision to publish it."

In a statement, Arab League chief Nabil Elarabi called the cartoons "provocative and disgraceful" and said their publication added complexity to an already inflamed situation in the Muslim world. He said the drawings arose from ignorance of "true Islam and its holy prophet."

A lawsuit was filed against Charlie Hebdo hours after the issue hit newsstands, the Paris prosecutor's office said, though it would not say who filed it. The magazine also said its website had been hacked.

Riot police took up positions outside the magazine's offices, which were firebombed last year after it released an edition that mocked radical Islam.

20 Sep, 2012


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UN Experts to Probe Algeria's Disappeared

U.N. experts will visit Algeria to investigate what happened to thousands of people who disappeared in the 1990s during an insurgency's darkest moments.

The U.N. human rights commissioner, Navi Pillay, said Wednesday the Algerian government has agreed to allow a U.N. working group to come study the disappearances.

Pillay, who spoke during a visit to Algiers, did not say when the experts would go.

An estimated 200,000 people died during the insurgency — civilians, security forces and insurgents. More than 3,000 people have been buried without ever being identified. Thousands are unaccounted for.

Families of the disappeared mainly blame Algerian security forces for whisking loved ones away in aggressive pursuit of insurgents and their sympathizers.

During Pillay's visit, Algerian police forcefully broke up a demonstration by families of the disappeared.

20 Sep, 2012


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29 Dead, 46 Injured in Mexico Pipeline Fire

The death toll in a pipeline fire at a distribution plant near the U.S. border has risen to 29, Mexico's state-owned oil company said Wednesday. At least 46 others were injured, and more might be missing.

Juan Jose Suarez, director of the state-owned Petroleos Mexicanos company, told local media earlier in the day that at least five workers had not been seen since the blast. On Tuesday, the company, known as Pemex, said in its Twitter account that a total of seven people were unaccounted for.

President Felipe Calderon said the quick reaction of emergency teams prevented a "real catastrophe," by controlling the fire before it reached the huge tanks of a neighboring gas processing plant.

The enormous fire Tuesday hit a distribution center near the border with Texas that handles natural gas coming in from wells and sends it to a processing plant next door.

"The timely response by oil workers, firefighters and the Mexican army was able to control the fire relatively quickly and avoid a real catastrophe of bigger proportions and greater damages if the fire had spread to the center for gas processing, which is right there," Calderon said in a speech in Mexico City.

The blast and ensuing fire left charred tanks and a mound of tangled steel at the walled plant near the border city of Reynosa, across from McAllen, Texas.

Two of the injured were reported in serious condition.

Dr. Jaime Urbina Rivera, deputy medical director of Hospital Materno Infantil de Reynosa just a few miles from the plant, said his hospital had received nine injured workers with first- and second-degree burns covering 10 percent to 40 percent of their bodies, with the burns concentrated on their backs and legs. They all arrived conscious, he said.

Pemex officials said the blast appeared to have been caused by an accidental leak, and there was no sign so far of sabotage.

The facility's perimeter walls, topped with razor wire as a security measure in a country that has seen thieves, saboteurs and drug gangs target oil installations, presented an obstacle for plant workers trying to flee.

Esteban Vazquez Huerta, 18, who was inside the plant when the fire erupted, managed to find a gap in the wire, scale a wall and escape. "We had to climb the wall from that side because the fire, the heat was reaching us," Vazquez Huerta said Wednesday as he stood outside the plant, waiting for word of missing co-workers.

Until the final moments before the explosion there was no sign anything was amiss, Vazquez Huerta said.

Pemex said workers from contracting firms, such as Vazquez Huerta, and its own employees were performing routine maintenance at the plant, where pipelines from gas wells in the Burgos basin converge. The plant feeds gas next door to separate liquid hydrocarbons from the gas. The production is for domestic Mexican use.

Vazquez Huerta said that suddenly the pipes where he was working, about 300 to 400 yards (meters) from the explosion, began to sound like they were repressurizing, after being closed for maintenance.

There was a blast and he and two co-workers began running. A second explosion knocked them to the ground, but they got up and continued running. They found a space along the back wall that wasn't topped with razor wire and boosted each other over.

20 Sep, 2012


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UK Deputy Premier Apologizes for Tuition Pledge

Britain's deputy prime minister has made a public apology for breaking a pre-election promise not to back an increase in university tuition fees.

Nick Clegg, who leads the Liberal Democrat Party, said in a televised video that he was sorry the party "didn't stick to" its pledge.

Clegg's apology, shown on British television Wednesday evening, will be aired in a party political broadcast next week. The Liberal Democrats meet for an annual conference beginning Saturday.

The leader, who had gained national popularity in the run-up to the election in 2010, has lost support from the public and his party since becoming the deputy of Prime Minister David Cameron in an uneasy Lib Dem-Conservative coalition.

20 Sep, 2012


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Palestinians: 2 Killed in Israeli Strike in Gaza

A Palestinian health official says an Israeli airstrike has killed two people in the southern Gaza Strip. The Israeli military said it was looking into the report.

A Hamas security official said the strike hit a car that belonged to the group's interior ministry. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press.

One of the dead was identified as a merchant who imported goods through smuggling tunnels along Egypt's border. The other victim's identity was not immediately known. Health official Ashraf al-Kidra said another person was wounded in Wednesday night's incident.

Israel and Gaza's ruling Hamas fought a three-week war in 2008. Since then, violent flare-ups have occurred occasionally between Israel and militant groups operating in the Gaza Strip.

20 Sep, 2012


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Extremists Showing up on Front Lines in Syria

The bearded gunmen who surrounded the car full of foreign journalists in a northern Syrian village were clearly not Syrians. A heavyset man in a brown gown stepped forward, announced he was Iraqi and fingered through the American passport he had confiscated.

"We know all American journalists are spies. Now tell us what you are doing here and who you are spying for," he said in English before going on to accuse the U.S. of the destruction of Iraq and Afghanistan.

"I really want to cut your head off right now," he added, telling his men, many of whom appeared to have North African accents, that this American kills Muslims.

With the intervention of nearby villagers, the confrontation eventually was defused. But it underscored the unpredictable element that foreign fighters bring to the Syrian conflict.

Most of those fighting the regime of President Bashar Assad are ordinary Syrians and soldiers who have defected, having become fed up with the authoritarian government, analysts say. But increasingly, foreign fighters and those adhering to an extremist Islamist ideology are turning up on the front lines. The rebels are trying to play down their influence for fear of alienating Western support, but as the 18-month-old fight grinds on, the influence of these extremists is set to grow.

AP

In this Saturday, Sept. 15, 2012, photo, Col. Abdel-Jabbar Aqidi, a top rebel commander for the Aleppo area, gestures during an interview with the Associated Press, in Dwaar Al Zeytoun, on the outskirts of Aleppo, Syria. Col. Aqidi told The Associated Press there were maybe 500 jihadis involved in the battle for Aleppo, while a report from the Quilliam Foundation, a London-based think tank studying extremism, estimated a total of 1,200-1,500 foreign fighters total in the whole country. (AP Photo) Close

On Monday, a U.N. panel reported a rise in the number of foreign fighters in the conflict and warned that it could radicalize the rebellion.

The Syrian government has always blamed the uprising on foreign terrorists, despite months of peaceful protests by ordinary citizens that only turned violent after repeated attacks by security forces. The transformation of the conflict into an open war has given an opening to the foreign fighters and extremists.

Talk about the role of foreign jihadists in the Syrian civil war began in earnest, however, with the rise in suicide bombings. U.S. National Director of Intelligence James Clapper said in February that those attacks "bore the earmarks" of the jihadists in neighboring Iraq.

Rebel commanders are quick to dismiss the role of the foreign fighters and religious extremists, describing their numbers as few and their contribution as paltry.

Col. Abdel-Jabbar Aqidi, a top rebel commander for the Aleppo area, told The Associated Press there were maybe 500 jihadis involved in the battle for Aleppo, while a report from the Quilliam Foundation, a London-based think tank studying extremism, estimated a total of 1,200-1,500 foreign fighters in all of Syria.

Other commanders estimated that at most, jihadis, whether local or foreign, made up no more than 10 percent of the fighters.

While this is a small amount compared with the thousands of rebels estimated to be battling the regime, Peter Harling of the International Crisis Group warns that the religious extremists will have an influence on the rebellion.

"I think numbers are irrelevant," he said, adding that the extremists are a "very important phenomenon in many ways. Their presence is very divisive, whether there are many or not."

"They are certainly visible, and this increasingly shapes the complexion of the opposition in ways that are not negligible," Harling said.

Reflecting their extreme sensitivity to the topic, the media center on the Syrian-Turkish border investigated and questioned any journalists they discovered who had written about foreign fighters in Syria.

20 Sep, 2012


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Italy High Court Upholds American Convictions

Italy's highest criminal court on Wednesday upheld the convictions of 23 Americans in the abduction of an Egyptian terror suspect from a Milan street as part of the CIA's extraordinary rendition program, paving the way to possible extradition requests by Italian authorities.

The ruling by the Court of Cassation marks the final appeal in the first trial anywhere in the world involving the CIA's practice of abducting terror suspects and transferring them to third countries where torture is permitted.

The Americans were convicted in absentia following a three-and-a-half-year trial, and have never been in Italian custody. They risk arrest if they travel to Europe and one of their court-appointed lawyers suggested that the final verdict would open the way for the Italian government to seek their extradition.

"It went badly. It went very badly," lawyer Alessia Sorgato said after the court announced its decision after a day of deliberations. "Now they will ask for extradition."

Milan Prosecutor Armando Spataro, one of Italy's top anti-terrorism magistrates who shaped the prosecution, hailed the top court's decision, saying it was tantamount to a finding that extraordinary rendition "is incompatible with democracy."

The court will make public its reasoning behind the decision in a written document in about 90 days.

"We will see if the minister of justice intends to request extradition, since the final verdict poses this issue," Spataro said.

The Americans and two Italians were convicted in November 2009 of involvement in the kidnapping of Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, also known as Abu Omar, on Feb. 17, 2003 — the first convictions anywhere in the world against people involved in the CIA's practice of abducting terror suspects and transferring them to third countries where torture was permitted. The cleric was transferred to U.S. military bases in Italy and Germany before being moved to Egypt, where he says he was tortured. He has since been released.

Those convicted include the former Milan CIA station chief, Robert Seldon Lady, whose original seven-year sentence was raised to nine years on appeal. The other 22 Americans, all but one identified by prosecutors as CIA agents, also saw their sentences stiffened on appeal, from five to seven years.

Previous Italian governments, both from the center-left and from the center-right had declined to act on prosecutors' requests during trial to extradite the American suspects, most of whom had court-appointed lawyers the defendants never met. While some of the defendants in the case were known figures attached to the U.S. Embassy or Consulate in Milan, many of those named in the trial are believed to have been aliases, which would hinder extradition efforts.

Premier Mario Monti, an economist from outside of politics, is leading a government of technocrats concentrated on saving Italy from financial disaster. Since any extradition request can take months to run its course, and elections are due in spring, it could conceivably be a new government to have the final say on whether to press for extradition of the Americans.

Among those whose sentence was upheld was U.S. Air Force Col. Joseph Romano, who was security chief at Aviano Air Force base where the Egyptian cleric was driven from Milan before being taken by plane to Germany and eventually Egypt.

20 Sep, 2012


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Belarus Denies Visas to European Vote Monitors

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe says two of its representatives have been denied entry to Belarus to monitor parliamentary elections in the ex-Soviet nation.

The OSCE, a top trans-Atlantic security and rights group, said Wednesday that Belarus had denied visas to two elected members of the OSCE's Parliamentary Assembly, Marieluise Beck of Germany and Emanuelis Zingeris of Lithuania, without an explanation.

The OSCE has fielded more than 300 observers to monitor Sunday's elections.

Leading opposition groups have withdrawn their candidates from the vote and called for its boycott, complaining about political prisoners and the opportunities for election fraud. Belarus' authoritarian president, Alexander Lukashenko, has led the nation of 10 million since 1994, cracking down on dissent and independent media.

20 Sep, 2012


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Belize Close to Extension, Part Payment on Debt

The Central American nation of Belize may be close to a negotiated extension and partial payment on a $23 million bond payment it would default on this week if nothing is done.

Belize missed a deadline for the payment on August 20, but has been under a one-month grace period.

A source on the government negotiating team that has been talking with creditors said Wednesday there has been progress on extending the grace period, in exchange for a partial payment.

The source was not authorized to be quoted by name and did not say how much the payment would involve. The country's total debt is $544 million.

Parliament said Monday it will hold a special session one week from Wednesday.

Belize has heavy debts from infrastructure projects and recent nationalizations.

20 Sep, 2012


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Photos: Today in Pictures: Sept. 19, 2012

Like It. Tweet It. Digg It.

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20 Sep, 2012


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Chavez, Challenger Aim for Youth, Women Voters

Presidential candidate Henrique Capriles is mobbed at rallies by ecstatic women who press close to touch him and leave scratches on his arms and neck. Some shout "Marry me!" to the single 40-year-old who's trying to unseat President Hugo Chavez in next month's hotly contested vote.

The 58-year-old Chavez campaigns as the living legend who for more than 13 years has remade this oil-rich country in his socialistic vision. But he's also adjusting his approach as he confronts for the first time a younger, charismatic rival.

The two are taking at times contrasting approaches ahead of Venezuela's Oct. 7 election but they're aiming for the same pool of swing voters made up of Venezuelans under 30 and women of all social classes.

While recent polls show everything from a tie to a double-digit lead for Chavez, they've also revealed between 10 and 20 percent of voters who are either undecided or won't say whom they support.

Most of those — about 1.5 million of them — are working-class voters who will play a crucial role in the election, said Angel Alvarez, a professor of political science at Venezuela's Central University.

To try to persuade them, Chavez and his campaign have been using "the threat that Henrique Capriles has a package of secret economic measures that are going to seriously affect them," Alvarez said.

AP

In this Sept. 1, 2012 photo, opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles, center left, is embraced by a female supporter during a campaign rally in Miranda, Venezuela. Capriles and Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez are waging intense, contrasting campaigns ahead of Venezuela's Oct. 7 election while aiming for swing voters among young Venezuelans under 30, middle-class households and women of all social classes. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano) Close

"As for Capriles' side, I'd say the strategy is to show that Chavez's government has performed badly in a range of areas from crime to jobs," Alvarez said. "Who will win? The one that manages to convince those voters... that his adversary is the more dangerous one."

Capriles is also betting on his youthful appeal. He's campaigned vigorously in more than 200 towns nationwide, pumping hands and sweating among the crowds. The opposition-aligned organization Voto Joven, or Youth Vote, estimates that more than a third of registered voters are between the ages of 18 and 25, making them a key target for both camps.

As the response at campaign events show, Capriles' appeal to women has become another asset, turning the lean, athletic candidate into a kind of opposition sex symbol.

On the stump, Capriles has argued that he would inject a fresh voice into politics and replace a bloated administration that's run out of ideas. He also tries to reassure Venezuelans that he won't take away the social programs started by Chavez and will manage a peaceful transition of power.

"I ask each Venezuelan to reflect deeply, put your hand on your heart and think if it can be better, and think if after 14 years, whether the one who didn't come through is going to do it in the next six years," Capriles told supporters at a rally on Monday. "Think about it, young people, women."

Chavez, for his part, faces a challenge rare in electoral politics: trying to appear fresh while seeking a third presidential term that would extend his time in office to two decades.

First, Chavez has tried to erase doubts about his health after more than a year of cancer treatment. He's shown up on television singing and dancing, even at times slinging an electric bass guitar over his shoulder and pretending to play to the beat. Nonetheless, he's appeared at fewer rallies and has at times looked noticeably bloated and aged.

He's also gone to great lengths to freshen up his image for younger voters. Instead of his military fatigues, he's been wearing casual blue jackets and occasionally a yellow scarf.

20 Sep, 2012


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