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Friday, December 24, 2010

West African leaders hold emergency meeting on Ivory Coast

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West African leaders were huddling in Nigeria on Friday over how best to defuse an escalating crisis in Ivory Coast, where President Laurent Gbagbo refuses to concede power.

The 15-member Economic Community of West African States has already urged Gbagbo to acknowledge the results of a presidential election and hand over power to his challenger, Alassane Ouattara.

But Gbagbo continues to defy international criticism of his legitimacy and many in the region fear the political turmoil could spark another civil war in Ivory Coast.

The emergency Economic Community meeting in the Nigerian capital, Abuja, is another regional attempt to find a solution. Some Africa analysts believe the organization's members are discussing all options on the table, including a military one.

U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said earlier this week that the United States and other countries were discussing with African nations the possibility of augmenting the existing U.N. force in Ivory Coast.

However, he said it was unclear what a U.S. contribution could look like, with forces of logistical support or something more indirect among the options.

The African Union has suspended Ivory Coast from the organization "until such a time the democratically elected president effectively assumes state power." The World Bank has halted lending and disbursing funds to Ivory Coast and has closed its office in the country.

Global leaders have sent a clear message to Gbagbo: Recognize the people's will and step down. They have also harshly condemned purported human rights abuses committed by Gbagbo's backers.

Kyung-wha Kang, the U.N. deputy high commissioner for human rights, has said that between December 16 and Tuesday, human rights officers had "substantiated allegations of 173 killings, 90 instances of torture and ill treatment, 471 arrests and detentions and 24 cases of enforced or involuntary disappearances." She added that the actual numbers may be much higher.
Ivory Coast election crisis

"Unfortunately, it has been impossible to investigate all the allegations of serious human rights violations, including reports of mass graves, due to restrictions on movement by U.N. personnel," she said. "Indeed, the special representative of the secretary-general was stopped at gunpoint as he sought to verify such allegations."

While acknowledging "the situation is very, very difficult to live" in, Charles Ble Goude -- the nation's youth minister under Gbagbo -- said the government is "dealing with that."

He said Thursday that "the U.N. report is not correct," especially in its fingering fellow Gbagbo backers as being to blame for the recent violence.

Instead, he accused Ouattara's supporters of using weapons at what had been billed as peaceful rallies to attack soldiers. He also said Ouattara's backers burned a building that housed government troops.

"The consequences of that are, they are no more a peaceful opposition," said Goude.

The violence is fallout of the November 28 presidential runoff, after which the country's Independent Electoral Commission named Ouattara the winner. But its Constitutional Council invalidated those results and declared that Gbagbo won.

Goude said that he and others in Gbagbo's circle couldn't accept the electoral commission picking Ouattara, noting that it announced its decision in a hotel that was also being used as Ouattara's headquarters. While stressing a desire for talks on the issue, he said there is no intention for Gbagbo to forfeit a seat that he believes is rightfully his.

"Why do you want someone who won an election to step down?" Goude said. "The president has been elected."

The international community also has largely blamed Gbagbo's backers for inciting various abuses, which Kang said are reminiscent of violence that plagued the Ivory Coast in 2004.

"The political stalemate has been characterized by the use of excessive force by the supporters of ... Gbagbo to repress public gatherings and marches; harassment and intimidation; arbitrary arrest and detention; torture; disappearances; and extrajudicial killings," Kang said Thursday at a special session of the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland devoted to the political crisis in the Ivory Coast.

Kang said the U.N. Operation in Cote d'Ivoire, as the agency is known, using the nation's French name, is receiving 300 calls a day on a 24-hour line for reporting human rights abuses.

She called for removing restrictions imposed by "security forces and youth groups loyal to Mr. Gbagbo," claiming they had hindered the ability of the United Nations to deliver services and humanitarian aid.

"The deteriorating conditions and general insecurity have severely hampered economic and social activities for many Ivorians, especially the poorest, resulting in the serious infringement of economic and social rights," she said.

View Source :

http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/africa/12/24/ivory.coast.conflict/


Inflation Rises, BI Rate to Be Revised

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Bank Indonesia still keeps the benchmark interest rate BI Rate at 6.5 percent. However, should the inflation rate be be above five percent, the central bank weigh a chance to increase the BI Rate.

"The current core inflation is at four percent. But it's still okay," said Bank Indonesia Deputy Governor Hartadi A Sarwono in Jakarta, Dec 22.

According to him, if the core inflation rate goes higher, the BI Rate would be revised.

Bank Indonesia did not expect the November's inflation rate to hit 0.6 percent, which is way beyond its prediction. "We've only made a figure of 0.5 percent of increase," said BI Governor Darmin Nasution.

As a result, the year-on-year inflation reached 6.33 percent while the cumulative level was at 5.98 percent.

View Source :

http://en.vivanews.com/news/read/195384-inflation-rises--bi-rate-to-be-revised


3 Convicted in Terror Plot in Australia

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Three men who believed Islam was under threat from Western nations were convicted in an Australian court Thursday of plotting a suicide attack against a Sydney army base.

The men - Australian citizens of Somali or Lebanese origin - were convicted in Victoria state Supreme Court of conspiring to plot a terrorist attack, and could face life in prison. Two other men were found not guilty of the same charge.

The five men were arrested in pre-dawn raids in the southern city of Melbourne in 2009.

Police said the group planned to send a team of men with automatic rifles on a suicide attack against Holsworthy Barracks, an army base on the outskirts of Sydney. Officials said the men were motivated by a belief that Islam was under attack from the West, and planned to keep on shooting until they were killed.

During the trial, prosecutors said the men were upset about Australia's involvement in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Australia became a staunch U.S. ally in the war on terrorism after Sept. 11.

Prosecutors said one of the men visited Somalia in the hopes of gaining approval for the attack from an Islamic cleric. The men were accused of having ties to al-Shabab, Somalia's powerful al-Qaida-linked militia group.

Had the plot been successful, Australian Federal Police Commissioner Tony Negus said it would have been the most serious attack ever carried out in Australia.

Terrorism is extremely rare in Australia, though dozens of Australians have died in terrorist attacks overseas, mostly in Indonesia, including the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings.

The trial began in September and the jury deliberated for more than five days before returning guilty verdicts against Wissam Mahmoud Fattal, 34, Saney Edow Aweys, 27, and Nayef El Sayed, 26.

Abdirahman Mohamud Ahmed, 26, and Yacqub Khayre, 23, were found not guilty.

As jurors left the court following the verdict, Fattal said: "Islam is truth religion. Thank you very much."

Fattal, Aweys and El Sayed embraced their acquitted co-defendants before they were led away.

Outside court, Ahmed told reporters he was relieved.

"I think justice has been served," he said.

When asked about the convictions of his co-defendants, he said: "It's unfortunate, but this is God's will."

Justice Betty King ordered Fattal, Aweys and El Sayed into custody. They will appear in court again on Jan. 24.

View Source :

http://en.vivanews.com/news/read/195382-3-convicted-in-terror-plot-in-australia


Investors Consider Indonesia as Promising

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The National Economic Committee (KEN) releases an outlook on the 2010 Indonesian economy. The Indonesian government is seen as capable of stabilizing the economy despite the flat outcome.

The committee stated that Indonesia has been an outstanding spot for investment after the global economic downturn between 2008 and 2009.

"The Indonesia Stock Exchange suddenly drew the interest of international investors to put their money in," reported KEN today, Dec 20.

The composite stock price index hit 3,500 nearing the end of 2010. In fact, the benchmark index touched 3,724 on November 19, 2010, a rise of 46.98 percent compared to the final level in 2009. The IDX index was considered one of the highest worlwide.

The current issue deals with how the government channels foreign investment to the real sector.

As regards growth of investment credit, Indonesia gained 12 percent. However, Bank Indonesia proves successful in taking crucial measures during the budget year.

Upon entering 2010, Indonesia was in the middle of 2.8 percent of inflation rate, which raised optimism amidst investors. "But the rise in food prices has resulted in higher inflation rate," KEN stated.

The growing loans as well as the revised electricity tariff in mid 2010 contributed to the inflation rate.

Bank Indonesia maintained the BI Rate at 6.5 percent due to the still controlled inflation.

In August 2010, the Rupiah appreciated to Rp 9,000 against US dollar. By the end of 2010, the exchange rate is expected to stay at around Rp 9,000 against US dollar.

View Source :

http://en.vivanews.com/news/read/194795-investors-consider-indonesia-as-promising


NW Pakistan gun battle leaves 35 dead

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Pakistan (AFP) – Taliban insurgents launched co-ordinated attacks on five paramilitary checkpoints in northwestern Pakistan Friday, leaving at least 11 soldiers and 24 militants dead, officials said.

"At least 11 of our men have been martyred and 12 others wounded," Amjad Ali Khan, the administrator of lawless Mohmand tribal district, told reporters at a press conference in the area's main town, Ghalanai.

Security officials earlier said at least three soldiers were killed in the attacks.

Khan said that at least 24 militants were killed when paramilitary soldiers "befittingly repulsed" the attack at five checkpoints near the border with Afghanistan.

"The army has sent helicopter gunships and bombed suspected hide outs of Taliban," Khan said.

Earlier a senior security official told AFP: "About 150 Taliban militants attacked five Frontier Corps checkposts in Baidnami village near the border with Afghanistan.

Security forces had cordoned off the area and were searching for the fleeing militants, he said, while reinforcements were sent in "to beef up the checkpoints".

Local administration officials in Ghalanai and the paramilitary force confirmed the attack and casualties.

In a telephone call to AFP Taliban spokesman for Mohmand district Sajjad Mohmand claimed two paramilitary soldiers had been captured but security officials rejected the claim, saying no one was missing.

"We have killed 12 soldiers and occupied a checkpost," Mohmand said.

Mohmand district has seen much of the violence linked to Taliban militants in northwestern Pakistan. On December 6, twin suicide bombings killed 43 people in Ghalanai, about 175 kilometres (110 miles) northwest of Islamabad.

Meanwhile, a bomb fitted with a timer exploded in a private boys' primary school in Peshawar's Pelosi neighbourhood, wounding four children, senior police official Shafiullah Khan told AFP.

"Four children were wounded in the bomb blast at a primary school," Khan said, adding that the children were in the playground during break time when the bomb exploded indoors.

Peshawar is the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and has seen several bombings and suicide attacks blamed on Taliban militants.

Around 4,000 people have died in suicide and bomb attacks across Pakistan since government forces raided an extremist mosque in Islamabad in 2007. The attacks have been blamed on networks linked to the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.

Mohmand is one of seven Pakistani tribal districts. The United States considers Pakistan's tribal belt the global headquarters of Al-Qaeda and the most dangerous place on Earth.

US officials are putting pressure on Pakistan to launch a major ground offensive in the tribal region of North Waziristan, considered a fortress for Taliban groups fighting US-led troops in Afghanistan.

Pakistan vehemently denies accusations that it is not doing enough to eradicate the Taliban in the northwest, saying 2,421 troops have been killed in fighting Islamist militants from 2002 until April this year.

Pakistan supported the Taliban regime in Afghanistan from 1996-2001, but became a US ally after the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington by Al-Qaeda.

View Source :

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101224/wl_asia_afp/pakistanunrestnorthwest


Japan approves record budget draft

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The Japanese government on Friday approved a record budget draft for the next fiscal year aimed at boosting economic growth and increasing jobs.

The 92.4 trillion yen ($1.11 trillion) budget draft is the nation's largest ever.

"We managed to provide the budget for necessary projects while walking on the tightrope of balance between economic growth and fiscal discipline," Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda said at a news conference.

The government plans to spend 70.8 trillion yen ($853 billion) for general policy delivery. About 21.5 trillion yen ($259 billion), nearly a quarter of the budget, is to be spent on repaying the national debt.

Other major spending includes child allowance and farming incentives.

The welfare cost for the world's fastest-graying country and the effect of the national debt payment are the biggest headaches for Japan's financial health, which is the worst among major developed nations.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan managed to bring down the new bond issuance slightly to 44.2 trillion yen ($530 billion), but allowed tax revenue to exceed it for the second consecutive year.

The defense budget edged down by 0.3% from the previous year to 4.77 trillion yen ($57 billion). The decline was relatively small compared with other areas. Japan says it's strengthening its defense focus on the southern part of the country, where it faces intensifying security challenges from its Asian neighbors, including North Korea.

The government plans to spend 186 billion yen ($2.2 billion) to host U.S. forces in Japan.

Cabinet officials will submit the budget draft to the Diet, or Japanese Parliament, in January.

The prime minister faces an uphill battle to get it approved as opposition parties hold the majority in the upper house of the parliament.

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[SPOILER CONTENT]


Violence up in Afghanistan, UN warns

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Afghanistan is seeing higher levels of violence this year than last year at this time, with 20% more civilians killed and the number of "security incidents" up by 66%, the United Nations says in a new report.

The number of civilians killed by the United States and its allies was lower, but insurgent attacks are significantly higher, meaning the overall number of civilian deaths is up.

More than 2,400 civilians were killed, and more than 3,800 injured in the first 10 months of this year, the report says.

More than three out of four of the casualties were caused by "anti-government elements," it says.

That's a 25 percent increase on last year, it said. Deaths caused by U.S. troops and their allies were down 18 percent.

"Assassinations" of civilians and police reached "unprecedented numbers" in August, and there were an average of three suicide attacks per week, the U.N. said in its quarterly report.

The United Nations report, which was finalized December 10, also tracked widespread kidnapping of aid workers.

A total of 134 were abducted between June and the end of October, the U.N. said. Most were freed quickly, but one Afghan was killed by his captors, the world body said.

A British aid worker was also killed this year by U.S. special forces trying to rescue her from kidnappers. Linda Norgrove, 36, was killed by an American grenade thrown by a rescuer who did not realize she was there.

U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who was the top international military commander in Afghanistan until he was fired in June, urged his troops to avoid civilian casualties in order to avoid making enemies of the population.

"It is better to miss a target than to cause civilian casualties," McChrystal said in December 2009. "We can always target enemy leaders later. We can't make up for the fact that we killed civilians."

But there continued to be high-profile incidents, including one where 23 civilians were killed in a NATO airstrike in February.

McChrystal personally apologized to Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai for those killings and ordered an investigation. It concluded that troops needed more training.

McChrystal's dismissal was not related to the incident. He was fired over disrespectful comments his inner circle made about top White House officials in a profile of the general in Rolling Stone magazine.

The United Nations report was prepared for Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

View Source :

http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/12/24/afghanistan.security/


Man arrested in Malaysia for on-line insults

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Malaysian law enforcement officials have detained a man for posting a Facebook page that allegedly included insults against the state monarch there, according to Bernama, Malaysia's official national news agency.

The 40-year-old man also allegedly was responsible for Facebook postings deemed insulting to the Sultan of Johor, a ceremonial ruler of one of Malaysia's peninsular states.

Authorities arrested the man on November 29 and seized five cell phones, five laptop computers, and a wireless router, Bernama reported.

A top Malaysian law enforcement official said a task force was formed last summer after complaints were lodged about postings on the Facebook page, according to Bernama.

Prosecutors are considering what -- if any -- legal actions to pursue in the case, Bernama said.

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http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/12/23/malaysia.facebook.arrest/index.html?eref=edition_asia&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+rss%2Fedition_asia+%28RSS%3A+Asia%29


Indian police issue terror alert in Mumbai

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Police issued an alert Thursday in Mumbai, saying four members of a militant group had entered the Indian city and were suspected of plotting violence on the Christmas and New Year's holidays.

Himanshu Roy, Mumbai's joint commissioner of police, said the suspected terrorists belong to Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, the Pakistan-based group that was blamed for a violent siege on Mumbai in November 2008.

The four men were identified as Abdul Kareem Moosa, Noor Abu Ilahi, Walid Jinnah and Mahfooz Alam, each between 20 and 30 years old. At a news conference, Roy released a sketch of Jinnah.

Roy said the four recently "sneaked into the city to carry out extremely dangerous activity."

He had no information on their nationalities.

A source familiar with the police investigation told CNN that India's Ministry of Home Affairs issued a bulletin earlier this week to police departments around India warning of possible terror attacks in Mumbai and Ahmadabad, further north in the western state of Gujarat.

Specific to Mumbai, the bulletin called for beefed up security at luxury hotels, tourist hubs, churches and consulates, especially those of the United States and European nations, the source said.

The bulletin warned of possible carjackings and vehicle-borne explosives.

Mumbai police were restricting traffic starting Thursday in and around the Taj Mahal Palace and Tower hotel, one of the landmarks that had come under attack in 2008, several Indian newspapers reported.

"All roads, except for two access points, leading to the Taj hotel will remain closed from Thursday," Nawal Bajaj, a police official, told The Times of India. "This is being done due to a specific intelligence alert. This arrangement will continue for the next 15 days."

Bajaj said every food truck entering the hotel grounds will be checked and police will conduct background checks on hotel suppliers.

Additional security has been arranged for crowded destinations like the seaside Gateway of India, a popular spot for New Year's celebrations.

Lashkar-e-Tayyiba is on the U.S. State Department's list of terrorist organizations, and last month the U.S. Treasury said it is prohibiting Americans from "engaging in any transactions" with that group.

The Treasury specifically cited Azam Cheema, who helped train operatives for the 2008 Mumbai attacks and was the "mastermind" behind Mumbai train bombings carried out by Lashkar-e-Tayyiba in 2006.

Mumbai has been the target of several terrorist attacks in the past few years, including train bombings in 1993 that killed 257 people. The most shocking and freshest in the minds of Mumbaikars is the 2008 siege.

In the coordinated onslaught, 10 gunmen stormed three hotels, a train station and a Jewish cultural center, killing 164 people.

Only one of the gunmen, Mohammed Ajmal Kasab of Pakistan, survived the attack. He has been convicted of murder, conspiracy and waging war against India. His lawyers have appealed his death sentence to a higher court of Mumbai.

Last month, Indians marked the second anniversary of the attack with prayers, a march for peace and a wreath-laying ceremony.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh vowed renewed efforts to track down those behind the assault.

"We will never succumb to the designs of our enemies," he said. "We pledge to redouble our efforts to bring the perpetrators of this crime against humanity to justice."

The attack on India's largest city and its financial hub derailed the fragile peace process between nuclear-capable arch-foes India and Pakistan. Under U.S. pressure, the two neighbors resumed talks this year in a bid to restart a full dialogue, but progress has been slow.

View Source :

http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/12/23/india.terror.alert/


China's Robot Waiters: No Tipping Necessary

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A restaurant that opened this month in the eastern Chinese province of Shandong uses robots for waiters, boosting efficiency and providing further proof that human beings are superfluous. Machines don't grumble over tips. And they can't spit in your food.

The traditional hotpot eatery is staffed by more than a dozen automated servers, the distant and brightly colored relations of Star Wars' golden droid C-3PO. The robots whir around the room on little bicycles carrying meat and veggies to be dipped by restaurant-goers into bubbling broth. Customers need not shout, weep or make obscene gestures to get their waiter's attention. Every bot is equipped with motion sensors; all you have to do is get in one's way and nab a plate of food. (See the all-TIME 100 gadgets.)

Indeed, patrons of the Dalu Robot restaurant in Jinan, Shandong's capital, seem pleased with the change. "They have a better service attitude than humans," Li Xiaomei, a newcomer to the place, which can seat 100, told the AP. "Humans can be temperamental or impatient, but [the robo-waiters] don't feel tired, they just keep working and moving round and round the restaurant all night." (See the 50 best inventions of 2010.)

Restaurant owner Zhang Yongpei is hoping, eventually, to put 40 of the machines to work and come out, with the help of the Shandong Dalu Science and Technology Company, with models that can climb stairs. As it is, the droids don't just serve. A female-looking bot with fake fluttering lashes stands at the door to welcome diners - if not warmly, then at least in a soothing monotone. Another, clad in a dress, flails its arms about - sort of - in an effort to entertain the crowd. OK, maybe humans still are good for something. (via AP)

View Source :

http://newsfeed.time.com/2010/12/22/china%E2%80%99s-robot-waiters-no-tipping-necessary/


U.S. threatens WTO action on China rare earth curbs

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – China has refused repeated U.S. requests to eliminate export restraints on rare earths that have rattled its trading partners, the U.S. Trade Representative's office said on Thursday.

"Going forward, the United States will continue to pursue vigorous engagement with China on this issue and will not hesitate to take further action, including WTO dispute settlement, if appropriate," the trade representative's office said in an annual report on how well China has complied with commitments made when it joined the World Trade Organization in 2001.

The warning came one day after the U.S. trade representative's office said it had begun a legal challenge at the WTO against certain Chinese subsidies for wind power equipment manufacturers.

U.S. officials said on Wednesday they could file additional cases against questionable China policies in the clean energy sector, and the new report amplifies U.S. concerns about China's export restrictions on rare earths.

It said the United States most recently pressed China to eliminate its export restraints on rare earths during the high-level U.S.-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade meeting last week in Washington.

"But to date China has not been willing to change its policies," the U.S. trade office said.

China controls 97 percent of global supplies of the elements and uses quotas and taxes to limit exports.

China slashed the export quota by 40 percent this year and plans to trim it further next year. It has already announced increased export taxes on rare earths in 2011.

The 17 rare earth elements are used in high-tech electronics, magnets and batteries, with applications in hybrid cars, renewable energy, computer monitors and weapons.

China's export restrictions have caused "world prices for some of the rare earths to rise dramatically higher than China's domestic prices," which has hindered efforts in other countries to develop expertise in the manufacturing of clean technology products, USTR said.

"In September 2010, China reportedly imposed a de facto ban on all exports of rare earths to Japan, causing even more concern among China's trading partners," USTR said.

China says its curbs are for environmental reasons and to manage supplies.

The U.S. Trade Representative's annual report, which is required under U.S. law and runs 124 pages, also said China still has not fully implemented some important market-opening commitments it made when it joined the WTO in 2001.

"Frequently, these problems can be traced to China's pursuit of industrial policies that rely on excessive, trade-distorting government intervention intended to promote or protect China's domestic industries and state-owned enterprises," the trade office said.

China's "serious problem" with intellectual property rights enforcement, its slow movement toward joining the WTO's government procurement pact and its indigenous innovation policies that discriminate against foreign companies are all major concerns, the trade office said.

However, the report also said progress had been made on several issues during this month's U.S.-China talks.

(Reporting by Doug Palmer; Editing by Eric Beech and Bill Trott)

View Source :

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20101223/pl_nm/us_usa_china_trade


Medvedev Praises Obama for Treaty

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Russia’s president, Dmitri A. Medvedev, on Friday called the New Start treaty “a cornerstone of security for the coming decades,” and spoke warmly of President Obama, saying that “under very difficult circumstances, he managed to make the Senate ratify this document.”

Mr. Medvedev said Mr. Obama “is a man who knows how to hear and to listen, a man not trapped by stereotypes, a man who lives up to this standard — he keeps his word.” He said he expects the thaw in relations between Russia and the United States to be a lasting one, despite midterm Congressional election gains by Republicans who are wary of Russia.

“There are people in America who are sympathetic to the ‘reset,’” he said. “There are others who shudder at the thought of it, and think all evil is concentrated in the Russian Federation. This is just democracy at work. Still, I think American society and its establishment will have enough tact and self-control to continue this path.”

Mr. Medvedev made the comments during a televised question-and-answer session with the heads of Russia’s three leading television stations.

Russia’s parliament, which was waiting for the treaty to be ratified by the Senate, held a first reading of a ratification bill on Friday. The bill will need to pass three readings by the Duma, the lower house of parliament, a process that will continue at least through the end of January. Though deputies may attach nonbinding amendments to the bill, approval is virtually assured.

“The treaty brings our relations with the United States to a fundamentally new qualitative level, to the level of equality, parity, and a balance of interests,” Foreign Minister Sergei V. Lavrov told deputies on Friday. A failure to ratify it, he said, would “deliver a serious blow to our reputation.”

Mr. Medvedev’s Friday television appearance touched on many of the same topics as Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin’s televised “conversation” last week, though it was around one-third as long, about one hour and 40 minutes.

While Mr. Putin used the occasion to emphasize what he described as the urgent need to maintain order, Mr. Medvedev reprised his calls to modernize the state, saying Russians should believe in laws and institutions, not just “a good czar and force.”

Though stability was a worthy goal during the rocky years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Mr. Medvedev said, that period is over.

“We cannot develop the nation through stability alone, we also need drive,” he said. “Drive is a desire to do something, to overcome oneself. If there are those in power who believe that they are fine, they should stay at Courchevel,” a French ski resort beloved by Russia’s moneyed -- and frequently office-holding -- elite.

Mr. Medvedev also endorsed the “vertical of power” forged by Mr. Putin. He said Russia “almost broke apart, among other reasons because of the egoism of regional leaders” before Mr. Putin abolished direct elections of governors in favor of hand-picked Kremlin appointments in 2004.

“Not all democratic methods work well,” he said. “For the time being, it is necessary to maintain the unified administration of the state – the vertical.”

Mr. Medvedev announced with some pride that had replaced one-third of Russia’s regional leaders since becoming president three years ago, saying he allots each leader two – or at most three – terms to prove his performance.

Though he was referring to regional governors, his words come against the backdrop of Russia’s central political intrigue: Whether Mr. Putin, a two-term president, will seek a return to the presidency in 2012, displacing Mr. Medvedev.

“People cannot work eternally,” Mr. Medvedev said. “Sometimes they should go have some rest, and give way to others.”

View Source :

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/25/world/europe/25russia.html


West African Leaders Hold Second Emergency Meeting On Ivory Coast Crisis

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West African leaders are holding emergency talks in the Nigerian capital Abuja Friday on how best to address the escalating crisis in the Ivory Coast.

Laurent Gbagbo's refusal to step down as president has resulted in deadly violence.

The meeting is the second this month by the 15 member Economic Community of Western African States (ECOWAS) since last month's election.

The U.N. General Assembly adopted a resolution Thursday, recognizing Mr. Gbagbo's opponent, Alassane Ouattara, as the winner of Ivory Coast's presidential election.

Also Thursday, the Central Bank of West African States said it has blocked funds to Mr. Gbagbo, adding pressure on the defiant leader to leave office.

Earlier Thursday, a United Nations official said more than 170 people have been killed in the past week in Ivory Coast.

The U.N. deputy human rights chief, Kyung-wha Kang, said the U.N. has substantiated at least 173 killings, 90 cases of torture, 471 arrests, and 24 cases of people disappearing in a five-day period beginning last Thursday.

The U.N. Human Rights Council passed a resolution in Geneva Thursday strongly condemning the killings and other human rights abuses, and calling for an end to the violence.

The U.N. representative to Ivory Coast, Young Choi, told VOA that the situation in the country is very tense and said there are human rights violations everywhere to be seen.

On Wednesday, the United States said it is talking with African nations about boosting the 10,000-person U.N. peacekeeping force in Ivory Coast.

The presidential election was meant to restore stability to Ivory Coast, eight years after a civil war split the country into rebel- and government-controlled areas.

Mr. Gbagbo has ruled the country since 2000. His term officially ended in 2005, but he remained in office through repeated election delays.

View Source :

http://www.voanews.com/english/news/West-African-Leaders-Hold-Second-Emergency-Meeting-On-Ivory-Coast-Crisis---112422549.html


Many stores open today for last-minute shoppers

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Whether last-minute shoppers have been too busy until now to Christmas shop, or their procrastination just provides an adrenaline rush, many stores will be open today to oblige them.

Today's Christmas Eve mad dash is expected to be the best holiday season for stores since 2007, and possibly the best ever. With Christmas falling on a Saturday this year, today is a holiday for many U.S. workers.

Marshal Cohen, the chief fashion industry analyst with researcher NPD Group, calls it "Fantastic Friday." He says, "I really do think it's going to be one of the busiest days of the year."

A strong Christmas Eve would be a great holiday gift for retailers. The National Retail Federation says holiday sales could reach $451.5 billion this year, up 3.3 percent over last year. That would be the biggest year-over-year increase since 2006, and the largest total since sales hit a record $452.8 billion in 2007.

Some retailers are trying to stay open as late as they can today. Many Old Navy clothing stores will be open until 7 p.m.

%@AP Links

Sound:

<> 00:07 "running pretty smooth"

Michael Caruso, vice president, Caruso Florist

Florist Michael Caruso says he has more than 400 deliveries for Christmas Eve.

<> 00:12 "and gourmet baskets"

Michael Caruso, vice president, Caruso Florist

Florist Michael Caruso says there are a lot of gifts you can get for the holidays at a florist.

<> 00:07 "running pretty smooth"

Michael Caruso, vice president, Caruso Florist

Florist Michael Caruso says he has more than 400 deliveries for Christmas Eve.

<> 00:12 "and gourmet baskets"

Michael Caruso, vice president, Caruso Florist

Florist Michael Caruso says there are a lot of gifts you can get for the holidays at a florist.

<> 00:10 "the 24th already"

Michael Caruso, vice president, Caruso Florist

Florist Michael Caruso says business has been brisk. ((note: "tomorrow" in cut refers to Friday)) ((watch for dating))

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http://www.necn.com/12/24/10/Many-stores-open-today-for-last-minute-s/landing.html?&blockID=3&apID=aa41662380a64cae805c855c832ff73f


Police search Mumbai for 4 in alleged terror plot

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MUMBAI, India (AP) — Police searched India's financial capital on Friday for four men who authorities believe entered Mumbai to carry out a terrorist attack, a top police official said.

Authorities issued a terror alert for the city, where a three-day terrorist seige in 2008 killed 166 people. Since then, police tend to take even minor threats seriously and have periodically raised the alarm, but there have been no subsequent attacks in the city. Despite checkpoints and some road closures, traffic and activity in most of Mumbai was normal on Friday.

Police have received credible information that at least four men belonging to the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group have entered the city and were planning to strike during the holiday season, said Himanshu Roy, joint police commissioner of Mumbai Police. India blames Lashkar for the 2008 assaults.

"The four men are planning violent attacks that are going to cause destruction," Roy said. "The four have recently arrived in Mumbai. We believe the threat is serious."

Pakistani officials could not immediately be reached for comment.

On Friday, police set up checkpoints along major roads in the city, put additional men on patrol duty at public places and released computer photographs of the four suspects.

Roads were also closed near the Taj Mahal hotel and Mumbai's iconic landmark Gateway of India. In addition to being India's financial capital, Mumbai is also home to Bollywood, the country's prolific film industry.

He identified the four men but said their nationalities were not known.

In March, Mumbai police said they prevented a major terrorist strike after they arrested two Indian men, who, police said, were preparing to hit several targets in the city.

Then in September, police issued a terror alert for the city during a popular Hindu festival. Police said they had information that two Islamist militants were planning a terror strike and that the men were acting on directions from handlers in Pakistan.

India has called on Pakistan to crack down on terrorists thought to be operating from their soil. Lashkar-e-Taiba is banned by Pakistan's government but it still thought to have support in Pakistan's powerful military and intelligence community.

In the 2008 attack, several gunmen laid siege to two luxury hotels — including the Taj Mahal — a Jewish center, a popular restaurant and Mumbai's crowded main train station. The lone surviving gunman was captured and earlier this year sentenced to death.

New Delhi has repeatedly accused Islamabad of complicity in terrorist attacks against India. Pakistan denies the charge saying it only offers the militant groups political and diplomatic support.

View Source :

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jNyvfnz_JU8_hCRF-3_z6gFioXHw?docId=41c4243579e646da86ff5b55e49768c5


New South Korea exercises to test border tension

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South Korea has said it will hold new large-scale military drills involving ground and air live fire on Thursday.

Artillery, jets and about 800 soldiers will take part, the government said, alongside separate naval exercises that began on Wednesday.

Tension has been high since North Korea shelled the South's Yeonpyeong island last month, killing four South Koreans.

Drills by the South on Monday near Yeonpyeong sparked Northern threats of retaliation that did not materialise.
Huge scale

An army spokesman said Thursday's drill would be held at Pocheon, 20km (12 miles) south of the border - about 50km from central Seoul.

Exercises have been held at Pocheon before, but this would be on an unprecedented scale, the spokesman said.

"The scale of mechanised assets taking place is enormous. When we would normally have 6 K-9 mechanised artillery, we'll have 36.

"We'll have the F-15 jets firing. We'll have choppers. You can say most of the mechanised assets taking part will be firing live ammunition," the spokesman said.

"We will retaliate thoroughly if the North commits another provocative act like the shelling of Yeonpyeong," First Armoured Battalion commander Choo Eun-sik told Yonhap news agency.

"Through this exercise [at Pocheon], we will demonstrate our solid military preparedness," he said.

The BBC's Kevin Kim in Seoul says this is the largest winter live-fire exercise ever conducted on land here.

Separately, a "routine" four-day naval firing exercise has begun off the east coast of South Korea, involving six warships and helicopters.

The North Korean shelling of Yeonpyeong shocked South Koreans.

It sparked the replacement of the country's defence minister and the development of a more active defence and deterrence policy among South Korean planners.

South Korea and the US - with which it has a long military relationship - had already been conducting large-scale military exercises, following the apparent torpedoing of a South Korean warship by the North on 26 March, which killed 46 south Korean sailors.

The pace of military drills has been stepped up in recent weeks, despite frequent denunciations from North Korea and its closest ally China.

Meanwhile on Tuesday, a giant Christmas tree was lit on the southern side of the demilitarized zone, despite concerns in Seoul that North Korea could strike the position.
Richardson visit

Efforts to redirect the Korean issue back to the negotiating table have been unsuccessful.

China and the North say it is time to return to the six-nation talks about North Korea's nuclear programmes.

But the US, South Korea and Japan have said they will not return to such talks, which have previously involved rewards for the North if it cuts back on nuclear development.

After a visit to North Korea, the US politician, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, said North Korea agreed to let international monitors back into the country to inspect its nuclear sites.

China has also urged the North to invite staff from the International Atomic Energy Agency but there has been no word from the North on the subject.

"The six-party talks will be restarted again when the North Koreans display a willingness to change their behaviour," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said.

North Korea walked out of the six-party talks in April 2009 and expelled UN nuclear inspectors from the country.

View Source :

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12056875


Heavy rains, mud slides wash away Christmas spirit in California

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LOS ANGELES -- Many Californians who endured flooding, mud slides and evacuations during a weeklong onslaught of rain now must clean up or even rebuild -- and some may not be able to spend Christmas at home.

The storm's push across the West left a muddy mess Thursday across southern California and the threat of avalanches in Nevada, where Clark County officials urged residents of Mt. Charleston, near Las Vegas, to leave after snowslides near two mountain hamlets.

Preliminary damage estimates throughout California were already in the tens of millions of dollars and were expected to rise. The inland region of southern California east of Los Angeles was among the hardest-hit areas, especially San Bernardino County.

In Highland, people were literally chased from their homes by walls of mud and water. They returned Thursday to find as many as 70 homes, some with Christmas presents under the tree, inundated with mud several feet deep. Highland officials estimate the storm caused $17.2 million in damage to homes, cars and a bridge that was washed away.

Leslie Constante burst into tears when she approached her parents' house and saw a red tag slapped on the garage, meaning authorities deemed it unsafe to enter. Out front, a holiday display with two reindeer was enveloped in mud several feet deep.

"My mom and dad worked so hard for this," said Constante, 29.

Many drivers were rescued from swamped cars. The body of Angela Wright, 39, of Menifee was recovered from a car swept off a flooded road Wednesday near Canyon Lake in Riverside County, the coroner's office said. She is the only known fatality.

In Riverside County, the damage estimate was nearing $30 million.

In Orange County, spokesman Howard Sutter issued a preliminary damage estimate of $23 million, adding that it is expected to rise. The upscale community of Laguna Beach suffered an estimated $4 million in damage to 46 businesses and 20 homes. A section of the city's popular beachfront park was washed away.

When the sun came out Thursday, however, volleyball players quickly filled what was left of the park.

View Source :

http://www.freep.com/article/20101224/NEWS07/12240343/Heavy-rains-mud-slides-wash-away-Christmas-spirit-in-California


Firms licensed to do business in countries on U.S. terror list

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An obscure Treasury Department office has granted licenses to major U.S. companies to do business with companies in Iran and other nations deemed state sponsors of terrorism, under a federal law that allows certain products to be exported to those countries, Treasury officials said Thursday.

The officials' remarks came after the New York Times Web site reported that the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control had granted nearly 10,000 licenses to companies to sell goods as varied as popcorn, chewing gum, cigarettes and body-building supplements.

Under federal law, U.S. companies can trade with blacklisted countries if the Treasury approves the transactions as medical or humanitarian necessities, especially in relieving famine.

In the past, the Treasury has also let U.S. companies do business with foreign firms accused of selling banned technology to blacklisted nations - sometimes as a result of political pressure.

A Treasury official said Thursday evening, after the publication of the Times article, that "the great majority of the authorized exports" are mandated under federal law, which requires that Treasury allow exports of agricultural commodities, medicine and medical goods to Iran, Cuba and Sudan.

"Because the U.S. has the toughest and most comprehensive sanctions against Iran, allowing for the exportation of food, medicine and medical devices is consistent with our objective of not hurting the Iranian people," the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

The official added that all licenses granted "advance our national security and foreign policy goals."

According to the Times report, the recipients of these licenses included Kraft Foods, Pepsi and a subsidiary of Citigroup, as well as lesser-known firms.

The definition of a humanitarian or medical necessity under the federal law is so broad that companies have been able to sell products that seem not to meet those criteria. For example, the Treasury approved sales of luxury food products to chain stores in Iran owned by blacklisted Iranian banks, according to The Times.

Stuart Levey, the undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said in a statement Thursday night that allowing "the export to Iran of food items like hot sauce or salad dressing from the U.S. is required by statute and, in any event, is trivial in the context of our Iran policy."

The transactions have not been free of political interference.

In 2003, long before Levey took his post, the Treasury had planned to deny a medical waste plant exemption requested by a Honolulu firm seeking to buy parts from a Chinese company that had been accused of selling missile technology to Iran and Pakistan.

But Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii) intervened on behalf of the Honolulu firm, whose owner was a political supporter and financial contributor. A Treasury official confirmed the account.

An Inouye spokesman, Peter Boylan, told the Times that the senator's advocacy on behalf of the firm had nothing to do with the political contribution.

Boylan told the Post in a statement Thursday that the firm "committed to the transaction prior to implementation of the ban and without the [parts] his business would have failed immediately and more than 90,000 pounds of untreated medical waste would have been left unattended on the docks of an Oahu port." ]

View Source :

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/23/AR2010122305890.html


Anyone can rent President Obama's vacation home

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President Obama has arrived in Hawaii for a 10-day vacation, once again staying at a private rental home in Kailua, a residential community on the Windward Coast of Oahu, about a half hour's drive from his childhood home in Honolulu. The five-bedroom house is available here on the homeaway.com site for $3,500 a night. Read more about the Obama vacation in USA TODAY's The Oval blog.

That's rich for most folks' blood, but if you had a big family sharing the cost, it could be doable. Actually, renting a house can be the way to go in a hot resort area. It often is cheaper than staying in a hotel. You can cook, too, which saves money.

Feel free to share your home-rental thoughts and favorite sites to do that.


Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Taliban says Afghan stress weakened Holbrooke

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The Afghan Taliban said on Tuesday diplomat Richard Holbrooke was a "giant of American politics and diplomacy" but had been weakened by the challenge of trying to end a war that has dragged on for nearly a decade.

Taliban Spokesman Qari Yousuf Ahmadi said the Soviet Union's occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s caused the death of their leaders, although he did not cite medical evidence, and added the conflict may mean other U.S. officials follow Holbrooke to "lighten their burden by simply going to the other world".

"The protracted Afghan war and the descending trajectory of the Americans' handling of the warfare in the country had had a lethal dent on Holbrooke's health as a high-ranking American official," Ahmadi said in a emailed English-language statement.

"He was grappling with a constant psychological stress."

The Taliban, hardline Islamists who are the leading group in the insurgency that Holbrooke was trying to end, governed most of Afghanistan from 1996 until they were ousted by U.S.-backed troops after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

Their fight has gained momentum in recent years, with the conflict spreading to once relatively peaceful parts of the country. This has also been the bloodiest year of the war, with record civilian and foreign troop casualties.

Holbrooke, who negotiated the 1995 accord that ended the Balkans war and was U.S. President Barack Obama's special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, died on Monday at age 69, after surgery to repair a tear in his aorta.

Ahmadi said Holbrooke was the latest in a long line of senior officials who were devastated by the effort of running a war in Afghanistan, citing the deaths of Soviet leaders Yuri Andropov, Konstantin Chernenko and Leonid Brezhnev.

"They relieved themselves of the hard task of the Afghan mission by retreating into the lap of death," he said.

"The recent symptoms are indicating that an outbreak of the same epidemic diseases has started in the political and military echelons of America," he added.

General David Petraeus, top U.S. and NATO commander for Afghanistan, briefly collapsed at a Senate hearing in June but blamed dehydration and skipping breakfast.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in an interview published in August that he aimed to retire next year, although his press secretary shot the comments down as no more than "musings" over a wish to quit, which Gates has done before.

"Some of them lighten their burden by simply going to the other world and others, while being still alive, choose to avoid shouldering the mission," Ahmadi added.

The American embassy in Kabul did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the statement.




 

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