DDMA Headline Animator

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Iran successfully tests Bushehr nuclear plant

Iran's long-delayed first nuclear power plant has been tested successfully, a senior Iranian nuclear official announced on Monday.

“A 250 bar (atmospheric) pressure test has been successfully carried out at the Bushehr nuclear plant,” Atomic Energy Organization of Iran Director Ali Akbar Salehi said at a press conference with visiting Russian Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko in Tehran.

In February, tests were carried out at the power plant using “dummy” fuel rods loaded with lead in place of enriched uranium to simulate nuclear fuel.

But the Russian energy minister refused to say when the nuclear power plant would become operational.

“There is no need to make another (start date) promise,” IRNA quoted Shmatko as saying.

“We have been working on this power plant jointly with a sense of responsibility, and the plant will be fully operational in a short time,” he added.

The comments come after some reports suggested that the Russians would again postpone the start-up of the Bushehr power plant.

Western corporations began the construction of the Bushehr facility in the 1970s. However, following the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, the Western companies reneged on their commitments and pulled out of the project due to political pressure from Washington.

Iran then turned to Russia to complete the project. In 1992, Tehran and Moscow signed a deal to complete the construction of the nuclear power plant.

The Bushehr plant was originally scheduled to be completed in 1999, but its start-up has been repeatedly delayed.

Moscow said earlier this year that the plant would come online before the Iranian New Year, which occurs on March 21, 2010.

Two Iranian Reformists granted asylum: Report

Iran says two high-profile members of a Reformist political front, the Islamic Revolution Mujahedeen Organization, have reportedly left the country to seek asylum in Sweden and the United States.

According to a report published by Fars News Agency on Tuesday, Mohammad Ali Tofiqi — a member of the central committee at the Iranian Reformist political organization — has been granted asylum alongside his family in the Scandinavian country of Sweden.

The report added that another member of the political front Ebrahim Mehtari has also moved to seek political asylum in the US.

The public relations of the Islamic Revolution Mujahedeen Organization, however, said in a Tuesday statement that the named individuals had no longer any connection with the political front.

The statement stressed that Tofiqi resigned in August and that the organization had no information about him and was not responsible for his current activities.

It added that Mehtari had never been an active member of the political front nor had any direct relations with the organization.

Fars News Agency described Mehtari, 27, as the person responsible for making public certain details about claims of rape and torture against protesters detained during the post-vote demonstrations.

Following the circulation of the data, leading opposition figure and former presidential candidate Mehdi Karroubi called for official investigations into claims that post-vote detainees had been sexually assaulted in Iranian jails.

However, a judiciary panel responsible for looking into the matter dismissed the allegation, saying, "The panel concludes that there is no proof that people who Karroubi claimed of being raped, have been sexually assaulted."

The asylum-seeking report comes as earlier in August in a follow-up to the post-election trials of protesters detained in the unrest, Iran's Revolution Court accused the Islamic Revolution Mujahedeen Organization of "lying" and spreading "rumors of fraud in the election."

Citing examples of illegal activities carried out by the political front in the country's post-vote frenzy, the Revolution Court called for the Islamic Revolution Mujahedeen Organization to be dissolved.

Morocco paper renamed after royal cartoon closure

Akhbar Al Youm will start publication again on Monday under name Akhbar Al Youm Al Maghrabia.

CASABLANCA - A Moroccan newspaper closed by the authorities after publishing a cartoon deemed offensive to the royal family is to reopen under a different name next week, its director said Tuesday.

The daily Akhbar Al Youm, which was shut down after publishing a cartoon related to a royal wedding in September, will start publication again on Monday under the name Akhbar Al Youm Al Maghrabia, said director Taoufik Bouachrine.

"The first issue of this new daily newspaper will come out on Monday, with the hope of turning the page on the distressing past of its predecessor," he said.

At the end of October, Bouachrine and the paper's cartoonist Khalid Gueddar were each handed a four-year suspended sentence following two separate trials over the cartoon.

They were also ordered to pay more than three million dirhams (around 263,000 euros, 396,000 dollars).

A court ordered the "definitive closure" of the paper and its premises were locked to prevent journalists from getting in.

Authorities decided to take action against the Akhbar Al Youm over a cartoon in its September 26-27 edition depicting the royal family celebrating the marriage of Prince Moulay Ismail, a cousin of King Mohammed VI.

Iran to hold environmental artfest on Hormuz Island

Iran is planning to host nature-lovers at its 25th Environmental Art Festival, to be held on the country's southern island of Hormuz.

Environmental artists have been invited to create their works on the theme of 'soil', for which they can use the colorful sand of the Hormuz Island.

Artists, however, are allowed to use limited amounts of the island's sand to preserve its unique natural resources.

A one-day conference on the 'economy of environmental and land art' will also be held on the sidelines of the event.

Located 18 kilometers east of the Qeshm Free Trade Zone, Hormuz Island is known for its beautiful red soil red soil and Hara trees.

The island has witnessed numerous artistic events, including Iran's 15th Environmental Art Festival. The world's largest sand carpet was also created by Iranian artists on the island.

Somalia: Al-Shabaab Seize Control of Southern Border Town

Somalia's militant group Al-Shabaab has seized control of Dobley, a southern border town located between Somalia and Kenya, witnesses said.

Heavily armed Al-Shabaab militia entered the town without any military resistance from their arch-rivals Hizbul Islam who have vacated it.

Hundreds of terrified residents started fleeing the town early on Saturday, fearing worst may happen as Hizbul Islam militias are reportedly in the outskirts of the town.

Hizbul Islam officials and their fighters are skirted across the border with some officials even reportedly disguised as civilians crossed the border into Kenya.

A top Hizbul Islam named Isse Kamboni was on Wednesday nabbed by Kenyan security forces as he flee Al-Shabaab onslaught in southern Somalia.

The bitter war between the two groups, which are involved in fighting against the fragile UN-backed Somali government in Mogadishu, has escalated into the once peaceful southern regions, where they both have large swathes under their control.

The latest Al-Shabaab advance along the Kenyan border reignite fears of possible military confrontation with security forces along the border.

Al-Shabaab has recently warned that it will carry out attacks inside Kenya, should the East African nation continue with its plans of training dozens of Somali youths to fight for the fragile UN-backed Somali government.

In recent months, hundreds of unemployed youths from Kenya's northeastern province have been enrolled in a military training in which they are promised to receive salaries of about $600.

Kenya, which officially closed its borders with Somalia in late 2006, has amassed several of its security personnel along the porous border to avert any possible infiltration of Somali militants and terrorist elements.

"Vivid pink" diamond sells for record $10.8 million

By James Pomfret

HONG KONG (Reuters Life!) – A rare, 5-carat pink diamond was auctioned off for a record $10.8 million in Hong Kong on Tuesday, putting some shine back into the world's rare and large stones market which was badly hit by the financial crisis.

The stone, of a "vivid pink" hue and considered near perfect, but not quite flawless, triggered brisk bidding in Christie's autumn sales of Asian and Chinese art in Hong Kong.

The price smashed the previous record, set 15 years ago in Geneva for a 19.66-carat stone that sold for $7.4 million. The pink gem's per-carat price of $2.2 million was also the highest ever paid for any diamond at auction, Christie's said.

"No stone has ever been sold for $2 million a carat, we were used to ... a million dollars a carat for colored diamonds but never 2 million," said Francois Curiel, Christie's Europe chairman. "This is an absolute record that is not going to be broken for a while I believe."

The stone, set in a so-called "cushion-cut" ring by famed jewelers Graff Diamonds, was just a quarter the size of the Geneva stone and not quite flawless but the stone's "vivid pink" is considered near perfect. Curiel described it as a "fabulous pink diamond, probably one of the rarest stones I've ever seen."

While the South African-mined diamond isn't quite rated flawless given minor blemishes, Christie's said that these could be removed by minor repolishing.

Christie's has a track-record of putting rare polished stones up for sale in Asia, given its confidence in the depth of the Asian market for the world's top gemstones and artwork.

Last May, before the financial crisis began to hurt the global auction market, Christie's sold a squash-ball-sized, 101.27-carat diamond in Hong Kong for $6.2 million.

Despite this, some major gems have disappointed in Asia, including a 72.22-carat "D" flawless white diamond that failed to hit its reserve price in a Sotheby's Hong Kong sale last April, falling short of its $10-12 million pre-sale estimate.

While the world's most expensive jewel ever sold at auction is the "Wittelsbach" blue diamond, a 17th-century deep grayish-blue stone that fetched $24 million last year, top red and pink gemstones are also known for stratospheric valuations.

Perspective power plan for Jammu & Kashmir

by Vijay Kumar
November 30, 2009

Jammu,November 30 (Vijay Kumar) – Indian Union Power Secretary, H. S. Brahma has asked the State Government to formulate a perspective power generation and transmission plan for meeting the power needs of the next 20 years with stress on time bound execution. He also called for switching over to energy efficiency norms to conserve electricity.

Speaking at a high-level meeting to review the progress of various power projects in the State here today, Mr. Brahma asked the State Power Development Department to complete all the formalities for allotment of 64 new hydel power projects to executing agencies by the end of next month.

The State Government has identified about 310 hydro-electric projects across the State to tap its vast power potential, out of which 64 power projects will be taken up in the first phase. The power projects of above 200 MW capacity are being allotted to NHPC whereas mini hydel power projects of less than 200 MW capacity would be executed through Institutional Power Promoters (IPP) and local companies.

Mr. Brahma stressed on introducing energy efficient devices in all the Government owned buildings in the first phase, adding that guidance of Bureau of Energy Efficiency could be sought for the purpose. He also directed to accelerate laying of transmission lines, adding that laying of Srinagar-Leh transmission line, vital for supply of power in remote areas of Leh and Kargil districts, should be completed on priority.

Mr. Brahma urged for handing over two more Industrial Training Institutes (ITIs) to NHPC for capacity building and said that this would help in running the power projects efficiently. Two ITIs, one each at Reasi and Leh, have already been adopted by NHPC. He also urged for tapping solar energy in a big way to meet the energy requirements of the State, adding that there should be a proper monitoring mechanism to oversee execution of various power projects in the State. He said the Central team would again visit J&K in January 2010 to review various ongoing power projects.

Progress on power projects and allied works under Rajiv Gandhi Grameen Vidyutikaran Yojana and APDP also came up for discussion.

Chairman, Central Electricity Authority (CEA) Rakesh Nath, Member CEA, S. Gurdial Singh, Joint Adviser Planning Commission, R. K. Koul, Commissioner/Secretary Power, J&K, B. R. Sharma, Deputy Secretary Union Ministry of Finance. Neeher Ranjan Pandey and Power Development Commissioner, J&K were also present in the meeting.

East Turkestan: China Releases Uyghur Church Leader from Prison

A Uyghur Christian in China's troubled Xinjiang region was released earlier this month after serving two years in a labor camp for alleged "illegal proselytizing" and "leaking state secrets," according to Compass Direct News sources.

Below is an article published by Charisma:

House church leader Osman Imin (Wusiman Yaming in Chinese) was freed Nov. 18 [2009], sources said. Authorities had called for a 10- to 15-year prison sentence for Osman but significantly reduced the term following international media attention.

An outspoken leader of the Uyghur church in the northwestern region of China, Osman was first arrested in 2004 and kept at a detention center in Hotan, southern Xinjiang. Local sources said his arrest was almost certainly related to his church work.

There he was chained to a metal bed in winter and frequently beaten while interrogated. Osman was released on bail on Nov. 18, 2004, but bail was canceled in October 2006. On July 26, 2007, he was again placed under supervised house arrest and finally detained by police on Nov. 19 of that year on the charge of "revealing state secrets."

Authorities denied him access to a lawyer, and in June 2008 a court rejected his appeal without explanation.

Authorities eventually moved him to the labor camp outside Kashgar. While in prison Osman was forced to work 12 to 15 hours a day, and his health quickly deteriorated. He was reportedly suffering malnutrition throughout his confinement.

Osman and his wife, Nurgul, have two young daughters.

Still in arbitrary detention in the region is another Uyghur Christian, Alimjan Yimit (Alimujiang Yimiti in Chinese). Officials initially closed the foreign-owned business Alimjan worked for in September 2007 and accused him of using it as a cover for "preaching Christianity." He was then detained in January 2008 on charges of endangering state security and was formally arrested on Feb. 20, 2008, on charges of "inciting secession" and leaking state secrets.

Court officials returned Alimjan's case to state prosecutors in May 2008, citing lack of evidence. Last May 21, government sources told Alimjan's mother that the Public Security Bureau (PSB) in Kashgar planned to quietly sentence him to three years of re-education through labor, thereby circumventing the court system.

Under Chinese law the PSB, which originally filed the case against Alimjan, may authorize such sentences without approval from the court or other state agencies.

Court authorities have returned Alimjan's case to state prosecutors, citing lack of evidence for charges of "leaking state secrets" and "inciting secession." Family, friends and work colleagues have insisted that Alimjan is a loyal citizen with no access to state secrets, and that his arrest was due largely to his Christian faith and association with foreign Christians.

In Xinjiang's politically charged environment, Alimjan's family and friends fear he could face execution if he were wrongly linked with alleged Uyghur separatists.

Sources said there appears to be a concerted effort to shut down the leadership of the Uyghur church in a restive region where authorities fear anything they cannot control. The region of ethnic Uyghurs has come under a government crackdown the past two years as long-simmering tensions erupted.

Disputes over ownership of Xinjiang's land and rich mineral resources have led to resentment between Uyghurs— native to Xinjiang—and Han Chinese. Religious differences are also an issue, with a vast majority of Uyghurs practicing Islam, while most Chinese are officially atheists or follow Buddhism or syncretistic folk religions. Only a handful of China's estimated 10 million Uyghurs are known to be Christians.

As part of authorities' apparent effort to clamp down on Christianity, they have disbarred several lawyers involved in the defense of Uyghur Christians, including Alimjan's attorney, Li Dunyong. He was effectively disbarred at the end of May when Chinese authorities turned down an annual application to renew his law license.

Zhang Kai, another Beijing lawyer who had defended Alimjan, suffered the same fate.

Authorities failed to renew licenses for at least 15 other lawyers who had defended civil rights cases, religious and ethnic minorities and political dissidents, according to watch group Human Rights in China.

Official: Afghan buildup involves 30,000 troops

By JENNIFER LOVEN, AP White House Correspondent

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama plans to send 30,000 more troops to be deployed over six months, a senior administration official told The Associated Press Tuesday, escalating the 8-year-old war.

In his prime-time speech to the nation Tuesday night, Obama also will lay out a rough timeframe, including some dates, for when the main U.S. military mission will end.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the details had not yet been announced.

The 30,000 new troops will bring the total in Afghanistan to more than 100,000 U.S. forces. The main mission of the new troops will be to reverse Taliban gains and secure population centers in the volatile south and east parts of the country.

And the primary path for the disengagement that Obama will outline in the speech at West Point will be the stepped-up training of Afghan police and security forces.

The new infusion of troops had been envisioned to take place over a year, or even more, because force deployments in Iraq and elsewhere make it logistically difficult, if not impossible, to go faster. But Obama directed his military planners to make the changes necessary to speed up the Afghanistan additions, the official said.

Obama also insisted that a specific withdrawal scenario be built into the process of adding new forces.

The official would not disclose either the specific withdrawal date that Obama has in mind nor the changes the military will be required to make to get the troop deployments on the president's timeline.

All of the new troops are expected to be deployed by next summer.

Turkish president criticizes minaret vote in Switzerland

ANKARA, Dec. 1 (Xinhua) -- Turkish President Abdullah Gul said on Tuesday that Switzerland's vote on Nov. 29 to ban minarets in the country is contrary to fundamental rights and freedoms, the semi-official Anatolia news agency reported.

"This is a shame for the Swiss," Gul was quoted as saying at the Esenboga airport in the Turkish capital of Ankara prior to his departure for a formal visit to Jordan.

"This issue should be monitored seriously," Gul said.

Meanwhile, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said at a meeting of his ruling Justice and Development Party in the parliament Tuesday that it was a wrong decision to hold the minaret vote in Switzerland, Erdogan said.

The majority of Swiss voters on Sunday said yes to a ban on the construction of Muslim minarets. The Swiss government said in a statement that it respected the decision made by Swiss voters, and "consequently the construction of new minarets in Switzerland is no longer permitted."

Indonesian police detain protesters in Papua

Jayapura, Indonesia - Indonesian police detained several protesters flying outlawed independence flags on Tuesday during peaceful rallies against Jakarta's rule in the country's eastern-most province of Papua, witnesses and police officials said. At least two demonstrations took place in the provincial capital Jayapura to mark the 48th anniversary of the Free Papua Movement declaring independence from Dutch colonial rule.

About 15 protesters were detained for questioning, while several illegal pro-independence Morning Star flags and leaflets advocating independence were confiscated, witnesses said.

Papua police chief Brigadier General Bekto Suprapto told reporters that the police had to disperse the demonstrators because they had no permit to hold a rally.

On Monday, human rights group Amnesty International urged authorities to investigate allegations of police killings and abuses in Papua.

The London-based organization released an open letter to Papua police chief Suprapto, alleging that police officers had killed two men and beaten dozens of demonstrators in custody since late last year.

Papua, a predominantly ethnic Melanesian province 3,700 kilometers north-east of Jakarta, is a former Dutch colony that became an Indonesian province in 1964 after a vote involving tribal leaders that many regarded as a sham.

Iran criticizes Swiss ban on minarets

Tehran - Iran on Tuesday deplored as "discriminatory" the referendum in Switzerland where voters approved a ban on the construction of mosque minarets. Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said the ban contradicted the Western world's claims of freedom of religion.

Tehran to send complaint letters over anti-Iran resolution

Tehran - Tehran will complain to all member states of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) which voted in favor of a resolution against Iran, Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said Tuesday. The spokesman said the individual letters will be sent to make these countries understand that their decision was incorrect.

Mehmanparast added that Iran would also send letters of gratitude and appreciation to all those countries which voted against the resolution.

The Vienna-based IAEA on Friday adopted a resolution censuring Iran for secretly building a new nuclear enrichment plant at Fordo near Tehran.

Analysts said Iran's move was an effort to ease renewed tensions in the nuclear dispute, and also a bid to avoid financial sanctions against the Islamic state.

Some hardline lawmakers had called on the government to downgrade relations with those countries that voted in favor of the resolution.

However, Parliamentary Speaker Ali Larijani on Monday adopted a softer tone, saying there was still room for diplomacy to settle the dispute.

Larijani also warned that Iran would adopt "other policies" if the world powers would once again consider sanctions against Iran.

Britain joins group to monitor Philippine peace talks

Manila - Britain has accepted an invitation to join an international group that would monitor peace talks between the Philippine government and the country's largest Muslim separatist rebel group, its ambassador said Tuesday. Britain joins Turkey and Japan, which earlier agreed to be part of the International Contact Group (ICG) for the negotiations between the Philippines and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). Saudi Arabia has also been invited.

"I hope the ICG will help both parties in their efforts to work for a lasting and just peace in [the southern region of] Mindanao," British Ambassador Stephen Lillie said in a statement.

Non-government organizations have also agreed to become members of the ICG, including the Center for Humanitarian Dialogue, The Asia Foundation, the London-based Conciliation Resources, and the Jakarta-based Muhammadiyah.

The government and the MILF agreed on September 15 to form the ICG as part of efforts to resume peace negotiations, which have been stalled since August last year due to failure to sign a key territorial agreement.

The two sides have also agreed to oblige soldiers and rebel fighters to "refrain from intentionally targeting or attacking non-combatants" in Mindanao.

In August 2008, fighting broke out between MILF rebels and the military in several provinces of Mindanao after the government caved in to opposition and reneged on the negotiated territorial agreement.

More than 300 people were killed and more than half a million people displaced in the hostilities. Some of the refugees have returned home or moved in with relatives, but many were still in evacuation camps.

India's forest cover now over 23 per cent, may push for incentives at climate talks

New Delhi — India's forest cover has been growing and now stands at a total of 78.37 million hectares of land or 23.84 per cent of its geographical area and thus strengthening its bid for incentives increasing its green cover for absorbing carbon sink at the forthcoming Copenhagen climate summit.

An official report billed 'India State of Forest Report 2009' released in New Delhi on Monday by the federal Minister for Forests and Environment Jairam Ramesh shows that India's green cover during the period 1997-2007 had grown by 3.13 million hectares.

The key findings, which is based on the work done by the Forest Survey of India, shows that the country's forest cover had shown an annual average increase of 0.3 million hectares while countries like Brazil and Indonesia had seen their forests reduce at the rate of about 2.5 million hectares per year in the same period.

Broadly, about 34 per cent of the country's forests fall in the tropical moist deciduous category, 30 per cent in the tropical dry deciduous, 11 per cent in Himalayan temperate, nine per cent in the tropical wet evergreen category, 6 per cent in subtropical pine and about 5 per cent in the tropical thorn category, says the report.

Moreover, for the first time, India's forests have been mapped into 16 forest type groups and forest and tree cover has been estimated with due consideration to attitudinal levels.

The report indicates that India seemed to be doing well in protecting its dense forests, but lagged behind where moderately forest areas are concerned.

India, however, lagged behind China's achievement of gaining four million hectares of forests annually.

The report will strengthen India's demand that countries that increase their forest cover should be adequately rewarded for increasing green cover that absorbs as carbon sink.

The trend during climate negotiations so far is in favor of rewarding nations with
monetary support that are able to reduce their rate of deforestation.. India feels that there should be a similar compensation for increasing the forest cover.

According to a recent study, India's forests absorb about 11 per cent of the country's greenhouse gas emission.

Meanwhile, it is not yet clear whether the Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will attend the Copenhagen summit although reports suggested that he may be veering close to accepting the Danish invite.

Pressure has been mounting since the Chinese Premier Wen Jiaboa announced his participation and so has Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. The presence of heads of two emerging economy nations is bound to weigh in favor of Singh's visit.

U.S. President Barrack Obama is also attending the summit and has urged Singh also to do so, according to Indian media reports..

On his part, Singh told reporters on his way back home after attending the Commonwealth Summit in Port of Spain, that he has not made up his mind yet on attending next month's crucial summit.

"I have not decided yet. It is pre-mature to say," Singh said.

According to present plans, environment minister Ramesh is due to represent India at the summit that will kick off on December 7.

Some 80 presidents and premiers are expected to attend the final days of the conference on December 17-18.

New era for European Union with Lisbon Treaty

Stockholm - The European Union entered a "new era" on Tuesday when the Lisbon Treaty came into force, Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said. Sweden currently holds the rotating presidency of the 27-nation bloc. Reinfeldt was scheduled to attend a ceremony in Lisbon later in the day marking the start of the treaty.

"With the Treaty of Lisbon, EU citizens get a union that can meet the demands of the 27 member states for transparency, democracy and efficiency," Reinfeldt said in a statement.

The Swedish premier noted that the bloc accounts for "one third of the world's total economic production" and has also started to play a greater political role in global affairs.

With the treaty, "EU cooperation becomes more efficient, more active, and our international action becomes more coherent," he said, noting the creation of two new posts of president and foreign policy director of the council of EU member states.

EU leaders chose Belgium's former premier Herman Van Rompuy as president on November 19, and named Britain's Catherine Ashton as foreign policy director.

France welcomes second former Guantanamo inmate

Paris - A 39-year-old Algerian who was imprisoned for seven years in the US detention center at Guantanamo on suspicion of terrorism arrived Tuesday in France, the French foreign ministry said. "In deciding to accept a second ex-inmate on our soil, France is contributing ... to implement the decision by US President (Barack) Obama to shut the Guantanamo detention center," the ministry said in a statement.

Saber Lahmar was cleared by courts in several countries, including the United States, of all charges regarding his alleged participation in acts of terrorism.

In the autumn of 2001, Lahmar was arrested in Bosnia with five other Algerians on suspicion of planning an attack on the US embassy in Sarajevo. He was among the first terror suspects to be incarcerated in the controversial prison in Cuba.

Four of the other suspects in the case were released earlier this year. One of them was also sent to France.

Japan's Amano assumes post of IAEA chief

Vienna - Japanese diplomat Yukiya Amano on Tuesday took over the helm of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna, succeeding Mohamed ElBaradei at a time of heightened tension over Iran's nuclear program. "As you know, it is raining," he told senior staff members, referring to the November weather outside, "and the situation surrounding the Agency is stormy now. We have lots of difficult issues, challenges, but I would like to do my best."

Amano, 62, said he would seek to address all issues on the IAEA's agenda, including its role in energy, health care and in making sure nuclear technology is not abused to build weapons.

But the soft-spoken nuclear expert will likely have to invest a lot of energy in the latter role, given Iran's announcement on Sunday that it plans to build ten more uranium enrichment plants in defiance of the IAEA and the UN Security Council.

Agency inspectors might faces tougher times in Iran now that the Islamic Republic has reacted to an IAEA censure over a secret nuclear site by announcing it would further reduce cooperation.

Amano also inherited a proposed nuclear fuel deal for Iran from his Egyptian predecessor, under which Iran would exchange low-enriched uranium for foreign-made fuel to power a medical reactor.

So far, Tehran has not formally replied to the proposal that aims to reduce concern over Iran's uranium enrichment.

Amano spent a good part of his career working with nuclear issues.

He studied law at Tokyo University, considered to be Japan's most prestigious academic institution.

Since joining the Foreign Ministry in 1972, Amano took on increasingly senior positions related to arms control and nuclear non-proliferation, and served as ambassador to the IAEA until this summer.

Despite his experience, he won the election for IAEA chief only narrowly in June, because developing countries favored South African diplomat Abdul Samad Minty and saw Amano as being a candidate of Western, industrialized countries.

"I'll try to be an impartial, reliable and professional Director General," Amano said Tuesday.

Israel slams reported EU initiative on Jerusalem

Jerusalem - Israel on Tuesday slammed a reported Swedish initiative to have the European Union support the division of Jerusalem and have East Jerusalem the capital of a Palestinian state. According to the Ha'aretz daily, EU foreign ministers are expected to officially call next week for Jerusalem to be divided so as to serve as the capitals of both Israel and Palestine.

The daily said it had obtained a "draft document," authored by Sweden, the current holder of the rotating EU presidency, implying that the EU would recognize a unilateral Palestinian declaration of statehood.

Reacting to the report, Israel Foreign Ministry Spokesman Yigal Palmor warned that "the Swedish initiative will not help promote the peace process."

"This kind of initiative will only contribute to marginalizing the European role in the peace process," he warned.

"The EU should convince the Palestinians to return to the negotiating table as soon as possible," he said.

Israel captured East Jerusalem from Jordan in the 1967 Middle East war and incorporated it into the city's municipal boundaries shortly afterward.

In 1980, Israel formally annexed East Jerusalem, a move not recognized internationally.

Palestinians claim East Jerusalem as the capital of a hoped-for independent state.

UN slams 'discriminatory' Swiss minaret ban

By BRADLEY S. KLAPPER, Associated Press Writer

GENEVA – The United Nations called Switzerland's ban on new minarets "clearly discriminatory" and deeply divisive, and the Swiss foreign minister acknowledged Tuesday the government was very concerned about how the vote would affect the country's image.

U.N. human rights chief Navi Pillay said Sunday's referendum to outlaw the construction of minarets in Switzerland was the product of "anti-foreigner scare-mongering."

The criticism from Pillay, whose office is based in the Swiss city of Geneva, comes after an outcry from Muslim countries, Switzerland's European neighbors and human rights watchdogs since 57.5 percent of the Swiss population ratified the ban.

The Swiss government opposed the initiative but has sought to defend it as an action not against Islam or Muslims, but one aimed at improving integration and fighting extremism.

"These are extraordinary claims when the symbol of one religion is targeted," Pillay said in a statement. She said she was saddened to see xenophobic arguments gain such traction with Swiss voters despite their "long-standing support of fundamental human rights."

The referendum doesn't affect Switzerland's four existing minarets, or the ability of Muslims to practice their religion. It only bans the towers used to put out the Islamic call to prayer.

But wealthy Arab tourists might think twice now about spending their money in Geneva and other Swiss cities, and the neutral country's efforts to mediate in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict could also suffer.

In Athens on Tuesday, Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey said the government was worried about the ban.

"We are very concerned with this referendum. The reality of our societies in Europe and throughout the world is that each limitation on the coexistence of different cultures and religions also endangers our security," Calmy-Rey said during a meeting of foreign ministers of the 56-nation Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

"Provocation risks triggering other provocation and risks inflaming extremism," she added.

Sunday's referendum, which was backed by nationalist parties, forced the government to declare illegal the building of any new minarets.

Calmy-Rey stressed that Muslims were accepted in Swiss society, and the decision would not change the foreign policy of the country, which would continue to maintain close relations with Muslim nations.

"Swiss Muslims are well integrated and will continue to attend the 200 mosques in the country," she said.

The minister said if an appeal against the referendum is lodged at the European Court of Human Rights, it would be up to the court to decide on its legality.

International Space Station crew lands safely

MOSCOW – Astronauts from Canada and Belgium and a Russian cosmonaut landed safely on the Kazakhstan steppe on Tuesday, wrapping up a six-month stint on the International Space Station.

The Russian Soyuz TMA-15 capsule carrying Canadian astronaut Bob Thirsk, Russian cosmonaut Roman Romanenko, and Belgium's Frank De Winne touched down without a hitch near the town of Arkalyk in Kazakhstan's barren north, Russian Mission Control spokesman Valery Lyndin said.

Parachutes slowed the craft to a soft touchdown at 10:15 a.m. Moscow time (0715 GMT), as scheduled.

Russian medical teams arrived in all-terrain vehicles to help the crew out of the capsule, in a carefully choreographed recovery operation. The crew is to be flown to Moscow later in the day.

Russian Federal Space Agency chief Anatoly Perminov said at a briefing that all three were in good condition.

The trio blasted off to the International Space Station on May 27. Their arrival marked the doubling of the station's permanent crew to six people.

The expedition was also a milestone for the Canadian space program, marking the first time a Canadian has taken part in a long-term mission.

Iran warns tough actions against British sailors

By NASSER KARIMI, Associated Press Writer

TEHRAN, Iran – Iran warned on Tuesday that it will take strong action against five British sailors detained by the Iranian navy after their racing yacht was stopped last week in the Persian Gulf if it is proven they had "bad intentions."

The detention could heighten tensions between Iran and major world powers, including Britain, that are demanding a halt to Tehran's controversial nuclear program. It could also flare up the longtime rivalry between Iran and Bahrain, since the yacht was the pride of a high-profile racing program sponsored by the Arab Gulf nation's king.

The British government said Monday that Iran is holding the five British crewmembers after their yacht, owned by Sail Bahrain, was stopped last Wednesday after straying inadvertently into Iranian waters while en route to Dubai to join the Dubai-Muscat Offshore Sailing Race.

Foreign Secretary David Miliband said Britain has been in touch about the case with Iranian counterparts and hoped the matter would be resolved soon. Speaking Tuesday to BBC, Miliband described the issue as a "purely consular matter."

"There's certainly no confrontation or argument," Miliband said. "As far as we are aware, these people are being well treated, which is right and what we would expect from a country like Iran."

But the head of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's said Iran will prosecute the Britons if they intended to "violate the national security" of Iran.

"Naturally if bad intentions on the part of these individuals are proven, there will be a serious and strong attitude toward them," Esfandiar Rahim Mashai said, according to the Fars news agency. "The decision will be up to the judiciary, which is independent from the administration."

The five were detained by Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard, Fars reported. The Guard, which runs its own naval forces, has the responsibility of protecting Iran's Persian Gulf waters. The Guard's navy chief, Gen. Ali Reza Tangsiri, said that if the five were stopped in the Gulf it would be by the Guard — though he did not confirm the detention.

Iran has taken a tough line with previous cases of Westerners entering its borders. It detained three young Americans who strayed across the border from northern Iraq in July. Despite U.S. insistence that they were innocent hikers who accidentally entered Iran, Tehran has accused them of espionage — a sign that they could be put on trial.

Miliband insisted that the five Britons were civilians who "were going about their sport."

"It seems they may have strayed inadvertently into Iranian waters. We look forward to the Iranian government dealing with this promptly," he said.

Sail Bahrain's Web site identified the yacht as the "Kingdom of Bahrain" and said it had been due to join the 360-mile (580-kilometer) Dubai-Muscat Offshore Sailing Race, which was to begin Nov. 26. The event was to be the boat's first offshore race, the Web site said, adding that the vessel had been fitted with a satellite tracker.

British media identified the five as Oliver Smith, Sam Usher, Luke Porter, Oliver Young, and David Bloomer.

The detention of the British would not be the first of foreign nationals by Tehran.

Fifteen British military personnel were detained in the Gulf by Iran under disputed circumstances in March 2007. Iran charged them with trespassing in its waters, and the Iranian government televised apologies by some of the captured crew.

All were eventually freed without an apology from Britain, which steadfastly insisted the crew members were taken in Iraqi waters, where they were authorized to be.

Suicide bomber kills Pakistan parliamentarian

By Junaid Khan

MINGORA, Pakistan (Reuters) – A suicide bomber killed a provincial parliamentarian in northwest Pakistan on Tuesday after walking into the official's house along with guests and blowing himself up.

More than a dozen people were wounded in the attack in Swat Valley in northwest Pakistan, police said.

The army, battling a Taliban insurgency, launched an offensive in Swat in late April and says it has cleared most of the area, but it still faces pockets of resistance.

Lawmaker Shamsher Ali was a member of the Awami National Party, part of a coalition that rules the North West Frontier Province.

"People were coming to exchange Eid greetings with him when a man came and blew himself up," his relative Farooq Khan said.

The nuclear-armed country is under growing U.S. pressure to crack down harder on militants to help fight the Taliban in Afghanistan, where President Barack Obama is expected to send 30,000 more troops to try to put down an insurgency.

That may be more difficult because Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari faces growing calls to relinquish many of his powers and analysts say it's up to the country's powerful military to decide whether to intensify the fight against militants.

Security forces killed more than 2,000 fighters in the Swat valley, about 120 km (80 miles) northwest of Islamabad, in the offensive, according to the army. There has been no independent verification of that casualty estimate.

The leader of the Taliban in Swat and self-styled cleric Fazlullah telephoned the BBC last month to say he had escaped to Afghanistan and would soon launch raids against the army.

The army said in July he was believed to have been wounded.

Serbia at hearing: Kosovo's independence illegal

By MIKE CORDER, Associated Press Writer

THE HAGUE, Netherlands – Serbia argued to the World Court on Tuesday that Kosovo's declaration of independence was an unlawful challenge to the international legal order that tore at the very fabric of Serb national identity.

Serbia's ambassador to France, Dusan Batakovic, said the February 2008 independence declaration challenged his country's sovereignty and undermined international law by breaching U.N. Security Council resolutions that set up a U.N.-backed provisional administration in Kosovo.

Batakovic was speaking on the first morning of nine days of hearings on the legality of Kosovo's independence.

Kosovo is expected to argue later Tuesday it was never part of Serbia, but Batakovic cast the ethnic Albanian-dominated region as Serb heartland.

The 15 judges are being asked to render their legal opinion on the validity of Pristina's declaration, which has been recognized by 63 countries but not by the Security Council. The opinion has no binding effect, but other countries with potential breakaway regions, like the Basque district of Spain, are closely watching the outcome.

The court, formally known as the International Court of Justice, likely will take months to reach its decision.

"The question before you is vital to my country," Batakovic told the court, the U.N's highest judicial body. "Kosovo is the historical cradle of Serbia and constitutes one of the essential pillars of its identity."

NATO bombed Serbia for 78 days in 1999 to end a brutal crackdown by the forces of then-President Slobodan Milosevic against separatist Kosovo Albanians. Some 10,000 Albanians were killed and close to a million forced out of their homes. Hundreds of Serbs were also killed in retaliatory attacks by Kosovo separatists.

Batakovic said Serbia "condemns and severely regrets" the violence unleashed by the Milosevic's former administration, but said Serbs are still being targeted today in Kosovo.

The United States and most European Union states are among those that have recognized Kosovo's independence. Serbia, backed by Russia in the U.N. Security Council, and a majority of world's states are against the recognition.

Batakovic said that Kosovo's declaration "is a challenge to the international legal order, based as it is on the principles of state sovereignty and territorial integrity."

After Serbia and Kosovo's presentations Tuesday, 29 other countries including the United States, Russia, France and Britain will each get 45 minutes to present arguments in hearings that will wrap up Dec. 11.

The last advisory opinion the court gave was in 2004 when it ruled that Israel's planned 425-mile (684-kilometer) security barrier in the West Bank violates international law and urged the United Nations to take action to stop its construction. Israel rejected the opinion.

Honduras Vote Winner Calls for Foreign Recognition

TEGUCIGALPA—The winner of Honduras' controversial election called on Latin American governments on Monday to recognize him as president-elect to help pull the country out of a deep political crisis since a coup.

Sunday's election is likely to set Washington against emerging Latin American power Brazil, which says the vote was invalid and handed victory to the coup leaders who overthrew leftist President Manuel Zelaya on June 28.

The United States has tried and failed to have Zelaya reinstated and now looks resigned to backing the election as the best way for Honduras to get out of political gridlock and diplomatic isolation.

Opposition leader Porfirio Lobo won some 55 percent of the vote, easily defeating ruling party candidate Elvin Santos. A boycott by supporters of Zelaya was ineffective and electoral officials say the turnout was above 60 percent.

Lobo, 61, a conservative landowner, urged leftist governments in the region to recognize the vote, which was scheduled before the coup.

"We ask them ... to see that they are punishing the people who went to vote, do so every four years and have nothing to do with what happened on June 28," he told journalists.

The U.S. State Department called the vote "a necessary and important step forward" after results came in on Sunday but did not say whether Washington would explicitly recognize Lobo.

"It sounds to me like they're all set to recognize the election. They've made all the noises -- I guess there is some thing or other that could go wrong but it does seem to me (that they'll recognize it)," said Peter Hakim, president of the Inter-American Dialogue think tank based in Washington.

But Brazil, which is increasingly flexing its muscles as its economy becomes more powerful, has dug its heels in on Honduras and refuses to acknowledge Lobo's win.

"Brazil will maintain its position because it's not possible to accept a coup," President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said on Sunday.

Zelaya, sent into exile in the June coup, slipped back into the country in September and has taken refuge in the Brazilian Embassy in the Honduran capital. That put Brazil at the heart of a crisis in a region where the United States has long been dominant.

Washington supported coups and right-wing governments fighting civil wars against Soviet-backed leftist guerrillas in Central America during the Cold War.

Today, millions of Central American immigrants to the United States send home money that is vital to the economies of countries like Honduras and El Salvador.
Obama's Approach in the Region

The coup against Zelaya sparked Central America's biggest political crisis since the end of the Cold War.

Neither Zelaya nor his arch-rival, Roberto Micheletti, who was installed as interim president by Congress after the coup, took part in the presidential election.

The dispute is threatening U.S. President Barack Obama's attempts to turn a new page with Latin America, where leftist governments are in the majority.

Argentina and Venezuela also oppose the Honduran election, but Panama, Peru and Costa Rica have said they back the vote .

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez said the elections "were a sham" and took place in "absolute illegality," Telam official news agency reports said on Monday.

Honduras is the second largest coffee producer in Central America but the crisis has not affected production.

Lobo declared victory after electoral authorities gave him an almost unassailable lead with 55 percent of the vote , compared to 38 percent for Santos, who conceded defeat.

Lobo has also called on the international community to resume aid that was blocked in retaliation for the coup.

Due to take office in January, he must now decide what to do with Zelaya. He could try to negotiate a form of political amnesty for the deposed leader and the main players in the coup in a bid to unite the deeply divided nation.

Micheletti touted the vote as the way to end the crisis, upsetting leftists in Latin America who want to see Zelaya restored.

Saudi Flood Victims to be Compensated

By Stephen Jones

Survivors of flash floods in Saudi Arabia, which killed more than 100 people last week, will receive funding from local authorities.

Officials in Jeddah will pay families devastated by last Wednesday’s floods 2,400 riyals (US$640) a week, as well as meeting the costs of hospital treatment for survivors.

The move came after an intervention by King Abdullah, the Saudi daily newspaper Arab News reported.

“The government committee for housing has provided apartments to 2,186 people whose houses were destroyed or damaged in the flooding,” Capt. Abdullah Al-Amri, spokesman for Civil Defense in Makkah told the newspaper.

“The committee is also trying to find accommodation for the remaining victims,” he added.

The rainstorm came the day before the annual Haj pilgrimage began, where thousands of Muslims from around the world converge on the oil state to celebrate Eid Al Adha.

Many victims were caught in their cars and drowned in 6.5 feet of water. A rescue operation by the Jeddah Municipality is still ongoing.

Jeddah Governor Prince Mishaal bin Majed has called on local officials to restore electricity to the region and remove the piles of debris caused by the mass destruction of the floods.

Source: The Epoch Times.
Link: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/25815/.

Wrong Number Miracle

Mom was going to miss mortgage payment if she sent daughter money
By ERIC S. PAGE

Virginia Saenz could hear the desperation in the voice of the telephone message. It was 5 a.m. on the day before Thanksgiving, and the caller, Lucy Crutchfield, was trying to tell her daughter that she'd send money for groceries -- but she'd have to miss a mortgage payment to do it.

But Crutchfield dialed the wrong number. Instead of getting her daughter, she got Saenz, a real estate agent from the San Diego suburb of Tierrasanta.

"I know right now we are all struggling," Saenz said. "Lisa on the phone, she sounded so desperate for her daughter, it broke my heart."

Saenz did the only thing she could think of -- she called Crutchfield back and said not to worry. Crutchfield would pay the mortgage, and Saenz would handle the groceries.

"She said, 'You have the wrong number ... don't worry any more,' " Crutchfield recalled.

For Crutchfield, it was a holiday miracle. Her house is already in foreclosure. Her mother recently passed away, and Crutchfield is now trying to pay off her house. She had a money order prepared to make a mortgage payment on that house -- but was going to cash it in when her daughter called asking for money.

"I thought I was going to lose that house, too," Crutchfield said.

Saenz told Crutchfield to keep her money and promised to take care of her daughter. The real estate agent then called Crutchfield's daughter.

"I asked her what she would like, what her kids like, and then I felt really bad because she said she only wanted eggs and milk," Saenz said. "When somebody only asks you for eggs and milk, they are in a really bad situation."

So Saenz went grocery shopping on Thanksgiving morning with her 14-year-old son in tow to tell her what kids liked to eat. They bought food for a Thanksgiving dinner and enough groceries to get Crutchfield's daughter through the end of the month -- her next payday.

She said the act of giving made "the day special for me."

"I helped somebody," Saenz said Friday. "I think it's what anybody would have done."

Clinton daughter, Chelsea, engaged to be married

By BETH FOUHY, Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK – Turns out those discredited rumors of a possible Chelsea Clinton wedding last summer were mostly just premature: The 29-year old daughter of former President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has become engaged to her longtime boyfriend, 31-year old investment banker Marc Mezvinsky.

The couple sent an e-mail to friends Friday announcing the news, saying they were looking at a possible wedding next summer. Matt McKenna, a spokesman for the former president, confirmed the engagement Monday.

Mezvinsky is a son of former Pennsylvania Rep. Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky and former Iowa Rep. Ed Mezvinsky, longtime friends of the Clintons. Ed Mezvinsky was released from federal prison last year after serving a nearly five-year sentence for wire and bank fraud.

Margolies-Mezvinsky served just one term in Congress before losing her seat in 1994 after voting in favor of President Clinton's 1993 budget, which was controversial at the time.

At the State Department Monday, Hillary Clinton had one brief encounter with reporters but took no questions. Later, her spokesman, Ian C. Kelly, was asked about the reported engagement but said it would be inappropriate for him to comment.

"I have a daughter who's around, she's 22 years old. And the last thing I would want would be for the State Department spokesman to talk about the personal plans of my daughter, so I am going to decline any comment on that," Kelly said.

The former first daughter and her fiance became friends as teenagers in Washington and both attended Stanford University. They now live in New York, where Mezvinsky works at G3 Capital, a Manhattan hedge fund, and Clinton is pursuing a graduate degree at Columbia University's School of Public Health.

Before returning to graduate school, Clinton worked at Avenue Capital, a hedge fund run by prominent Democratic donor Marc Lasry. She also worked at McKinsey and Company, a management consulting firm.

Since her debut on the public stage as a curly haired 12-year-old during her father's 1992 presidential campaign, Clinton has maintained a fairly low public profile. That changed in 2008, when the press-shy Clinton stepped out on the campaign trail to help her mother's bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Before beginning a relationship with Mezvinsky, Clinton dated Ian Klaus, a Rhodes Scholar she met while studying international relations at Oxford in 2002. Klaus dedicated his first book, "Elvis is Titanic," about his experience teaching in the Kurdistan province of Iraq, to Clinton.

Earlier this year, Hillary Clinton was forced to tamp down speculation that her daughter and Mezvinsky were already engaged and would marry in August on Martha's Vineyard. President Barack Obama, who was vacationing on the island at the time, was rumored to be on the guest list.

Aides to Hillary Clinton, citing Chelsea's privacy, declined to disclose whether she has received an engagement ring or any other details about wedding plans. It will be an interfaith marriage; Mezvinsky is Jewish, while Clinton grew up attending Methodist Church with her mother. Bill Clinton is Southern Baptist.

Word of the engagement was first reported by ABC News.

Getting to Know Chelsea's Fiancé

by Mike Krumboltz

Chelsea Clinton recently announced her engagement to longtime boyfriend Marc Mezvinsky. The news inspired an avalanche of Web searches on Ms. Clinton, but those were small potatoes compared to the number of lookups on her betrothed.

Almost immediately, lookups on "marc mezvinsky photos" and "marc mezvinsky job" surged into the thousands. Searchers quickly discovered that Mezvinsky is an investment banker at a Manhattan hedge fund, and he comes from a family with strong political ties.

While the Mezvinksys aren't as powerful as the Clintons, they are arguably just as controversial. Marc's father, Edward Mezvinsky, served as a congressman from Iowa for two terms in the '70s. Later he was famously sentenced to prison for around seven years. According to blog from ABC News, Ed Mezvinsky was found guilty of fraud "after getting caught up in a series of Nigerian email scams." Yup, those email scams.

Mr. Mezvinsky didn't actually conduct the scams, but he did attempt to scam others in order to raise money to contribute to the "get rich quick" scheme. Again, according to ABC, Mezvinsky's mother-in-law was a victim, as were some of his closest friends. After serving several years in prison, the former representative is now a free man.

Marc's mother, Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky, is also no stranger to the public eye. She herself served as a Pennsylvania congresswoman from 1993-1995. Apparently, her political future took a turn for the worse when she voted to support President Clinton's budget "after months of publicly voicing her opposition to the bill because it did not contain enough spending cuts." According to official site from house.gov, Ms. Margolies-Mezvinsky also worked as a television reporter in the 1970s.

The wedding, according to an email Chelsea Clinton sent to friends, is likely to be this coming summer. With four parents who all served in government, expect the toasts to run long.

Obama briefs world leaders on Afghan strategy

Tue Dec 1, 2009

As the US public support for the Afghan war is fading away, President Barack Obama has briefed world leaders on his new strategy for the eight-year conflict.

"The commander in chief has issued the orders," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said on Monday.

His orders to US military commanders came before making a major speech to the American people at the US Military Academy at West Point on Tuesday.

The US president is expected to announce an increase of up to 35,000 additional US forces to Afghanistan and an exit timeframe, according to officials.

On new war strategy, Obama called French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown on Monday.

French newspaper Le Monde said Washington had asked for 1,500 more French troops.

The US leader also told Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd of his plans in person, during Oval Office talks. Rudd vowed to send more police trainers and civilian aid experts to Afghanistan.

Some 35,000 American soldiers were deployed in Afghanistan when Obama took office. After an initial boost in February there is now about 68,000.

The new surge would put more than 100,000 American troops in Afghanistan at an annual cost of about $75 billion when the nation is struggling to reduce high unemployment and foreclosure rates.

More than 900 American soldiers were killed in Afghanistan and October was the deadliest month since the start of the war in 2001 with 74 US soldiers killed.

Aside from the high human death toll, inflicted mostly on civilian population of Iraq and Afghanistan, the wars have cost 768.8 billion dollars and by the end of this fiscal year (October 2010) the price tag will approach one trillion.

Meanwhile, Pakistani Premier Yousuf Raza Gilani said on Sunday that the US decision to send thousands of extra troops to Afghanistan may destabilize his country.

Gilani, in an interview with DPA, went on to add that an increase in US troops in Afghanistan is likely to lead to a spill over of militants inside Pakistan.

Pakistan has been witnessing increasing violence ever since the country joined the so-called US-led war on terror. Deadly attacks and bombings have claimed countless lives across Pakistan in recent years.

Opinion polls show US public support for the Afghan war has significantly dropped since Obama's presidency, with a majority now saying that they oppose the war which is not worth fighting.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/112562.html.

EU Lisbon Treaty enters into force

The European Union's first president has officially taken office, following the ratification of the Lisbon Treaty by the bloc's 27 member states.

The treaty, designed to boost the EU's global position and reinforce the role of the bloc's parliament, entered into force late Monday to replace the bloc's constitution.

It also created two new posts -- president of the European Council and a high representative for foreign affairs.

During a summit in November, the EU heads of states chose Belgian Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy to be the first permanent European Council President.

Catherine Ashton from the UK also officially became EU's foreign policy chief as a successor to Javier Solana, who leaves his post on Tuesday after 10 years in the role.

The two new jobs are considered the most immediate effects of the accord.

The treaty comes into force almost exactly eight years since its conception, after overcoming its final hurdle when the Czech Republic became the last of the member states to ratify it earlier this month.

Supporters of the pact believe it will make the EU more democratic and more efficient, but critics say it will cede too many national powers to Brussels.

Ozone hole saves Antarctic from global warming

Tue Dec 1, 2009

Amid global concern over depletion of the ozone layer, scientists have said the ozone loss cooled the Antarctica by shielding it from global warming.

Reports conducted by the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) suggest the positive impact the environmental catastrophe of ozone hole on protecting Antarctica from global warming.

Scientists said Antarctica has been protected from the global warming's damaging effects by the ozone layer hole, the impact of one of the worst environmental disasters of the 20th century.

The hole in the ozone layer was caused by the release of chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) gases. The hole, however, has cooled temperatures and shielded most of Antarctica from global warming, the report found.

"The most astonishing evidence is the way that one man-made environmental impact, the ozone hole, has shielded most of Antarctica from another, global warming," said John Turner, head of climate research for the British Antarctic Survey and lead editor for the review.

The study has also found South Pole sea levels will rise 1.4 meters globally by 2100 as polar ice melts.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/112568.html.

US urges France to send more troops to Afghanistan

Tue Dec 1, 2009

The US has asked France to send an additional 1,500 troops to join the coalition forces in Afghanistan as Washington is expected to send at least 30,000 more reinforcements.

On Monday, The daily Le Monde published a report on its website, saying US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made the request on Thursday in a telephone call to French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner.

The French Foreign Ministry has neither confirmed nor denied the report.

But the White House said Monday that President Barack Obama had called his French counterpart Nicolas Sarkozy to update him on plans prior to the US leader's major speech on Tuesday outlining his Afghan war strategy. During the speech, Obama is expected to announce the deployment of 30,000 more US troops in Afghanistan.

Sarkozy's government has insisted that it has no plans to increase its Afghanistan contingent, which currently numbers 3,400 soldiers.

On Monday, Britain confirmed plans to send 500 more soldiers to Afghanistan in early December with its total contribution to the Afghan war amounting to 10,000 given the presence of special forces involved in training and civilian activities.

The surge comes amid mounting public pressure in the Western countries to bring the troops back home and allegations of 'fatal' shortages of equipment for troops along with questions over whether the 'unwinnable' campaign is worth the cost.

The US and Britain have been urging other NATO member states to help shoulder the burden of the war in Afghanistan, which remains engulfed in the flames of militancy despite more than eight years of foreign military presence.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/112569.html.

Israel constructs 25 new units in West Bank

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has okayed the construction of 25 new housing units in the West Bank settlement of Keidar despite international calls to the contrary.

During a phone conversation with Defense Minister Ehud Barak on Monday, Netanyahu instructed Barak to stop preventing the construction of the new units in the West Bank, claiming the units do not fall under the cabinet's decision to halt settlement construction activities for 10 months.

Tel Aviv had earlier agreed to freeze all settlement activities, except in Jerusalem Al-Quds, for 10 months in a bid to re-launch stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

Israeli officials hope that the official declaration of a settlement freeze in the occupied West Bank would enable the renewal of negotiations with the Palestinian Authority, which has refused to engage in peace talks until Israel implements such a measure.

Tel Aviv is, moreover, currently under intense pressure from the international community to halt the construction of illegal settlements in the West Bank. Israeli settlements are widely considered the main obstacle in the way of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

Under the 2002 Roadmap for Peace plan brokered by the United States, the European Union, the United Nations, and Russia, Israel has to 'dismantle settlement outposts erected since 2001 and freeze all settlement activities'.

There are currently 121 Israeli settlements and approximately 102 Israeli outposts built on Palestinian land occupied by Israel in 1967. All of these settlements and outposts are illegal under international law and have been condemned by numerous United Nations Security Council resolutions.

These settlements and outposts are inhabited by a population of approximately 462,000 Israeli settlers. Some 191,000 Israelis are living in settlements around Jerusalem Al-Quds and an additional 271,400 are spread throughout the West Bank.

All such Jewish settlements are deemed illegal under international law because they have been erected on occupied lands that the Palestinians claim for a future state.

Thousands unknowingly infected with HIV: Algerian NGO

Nov 30, 2009

ALGIERS — An Algerian health organization warned Monday that thousands of people in the north African country are unknowingly infected with the AIDS virus as it called for more testing and prevention efforts.

"The epidemic of HIV/AIDS is progressing at an alarming rate in Algeria," said Scander Abdelakader Soufi, president of the Association to Fight Sexually Transmissible Diseases and AIDS (AnisS), on the eve of World AIDS Day.

"Thousands of people are infected without knowing it," Dr Soufi said, adding that large-scale tests were needed, along with a public information campaign and psychological and socio-economic measures to help the sick.

Algeria had 4,084 HIV-positive people at the end of October and 1,011 people who had developed AIDS, according to official health ministry figures cited by Soufi's non-governmental organization.

But "according to more realistic estimates," 21,000 people are infected by HIV/AIDS, AnisS reckoned. Soufi told a press conference at a forum organized by the daily El Moudjahid that the figure is "rising sharply every year."

"We have to act now, while Algeria has a low rate" of HIV-AIDS, noting that there was "a general decline in commitment" to fight the disease, Soufi said.

The executive director of the National Foundation for Medical Research (FOREM), Dr Abdelhak Mekki, bemoaned a lack of funds for associations working in this sector, in a country "where two-thirds of the population is under 40."

Mekki called for further cooperation with the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, which is in the forefront of the battle against the killer diseases, and stressed the role that civil society can play in dealing with HIV-AIDS by handing out condoms and holding meetings among young people.

"It's unthinkable that there is no discussion between parents and their children on sexual education. Yet young people surf the Internet, which whets their appetite," said Algerian rap star Lofti Double Kanon, who is a member of AnisS.

The musician said he had "learned with horror that they don't know about using condoms".

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved.

Somalia: Former President Says Puntland's Troops Join Pirates

The former president of the semi-autonomous region of Puntland General Adde Muse Hersi has Sunday said that some of the regions' troops joined the Somali pirates operating in the Indian Ocean and coast of Somalia.

Mr. Adde Muse talked more to journalists in the port town of Bosaso reiterating that a number of Puntland's forces are taking part in the attacks against the ships traveling in the coast of Somalia and Gulf of Aden disproving that the instability situations in the region are the mastermind from out of Puntland region.

The former president talked more on the insecurity situation in the region saying that the people in the regions were those who are behind the violence in the areas under the administration of Puntland.

He also talked the problems in the north and south of Galka'o town calling for both sides to talk and end their disagreements through dialogue pointing out that they used to talk to solve their conflicts earlier and return peace and stability.

The statement of the former president of Puntland General Adden Muse Hersi comes as there had been insecurity situation in parts of Puntland recently.

Lobo elected president in Honduras

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras, Nov. 29 (UPI) -- Porfirio "Pepe" Lobo, a conservative businessman, appeared on his way to an easy victory Sunday night in the Honduras presidential election.

Early returns showed Lobo, 61, of the National Party had garnered more than 52 percent of the votes to 34.4 percent for former Vice President Elvin Santos of the Liberal Party, The Miami Herald reported.

Lobo, an opponent of ousted President Manuel Zelaya, remained neutral in the coup that forced Zelaya out of the country at gunpoint June 28.

Zelaya defeated Lobo in 2005, and Santos had served as Zelaya's vice president.

The BBC said the interim government had hoped a high turnout -- more than 60 percent of registered voters had cast ballots -- and a clear winner would give the election legitimacy.

Argentina and Brazil, however, said they would not recognize the results because doing so would legitimize the coup, the British broadcaster reported.

The United States said it would accept the election results.

"Significant work remains to be done to restore democratic and constitutional order in Honduras, but today the Honduran people took a necessary and important step forward," State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said in a statement.

Zelaya, who had dismissed the election as a "fraud," had not commented publicly on the results by early Monday.

His supporters had called on voters to boycott the presidential election.

Zelaya was temporarily replaced by in June by Roberto Micheletti. Neither Zelaya nor Micheletti were candidates in the election.

An estimated 30,000 troops were deployed to provide security for Sunday's election, with Zelaya's supporters vowing to demonstrate for his return.

Lebanon Wants To Develop SOF

NICOSIA [MENL] -- Lebanon's military has set as its priority the training of special operations forces.

Saudis Order LAVs From U.S.

WASHINGTON [MENL] -- Saudi Arabia has submitted an order for U.S.-origin light armored vehicles for its National Guard.

Industry sources said the Saudi Arabian National Guard has would receive $2.2 billion worth of light armored vehicles from the United States. The sources said the contract stipulated the delivery of 724 LAV-2 combat vehicles from General Dynamics Land Systems.

Source: Middle East Newsline.
Link: http://www.menewsline.com/article-1173,18313-Saudis-Order-LAVs-From-U-S.aspx.

Algeria Seeks UAVs From U.S.

CAIRO [MENL] -- Algeria has renewed interest in procuring unmanned aerial vehicles from the United States.

Diplomatic sources said the regime of Algerian President Abdul Aziz Bouteflika has again discussed the need for UAVs for counter-insurgency missions. The sources said the Bouteflika regime has sought unmanned platforms from the United States as part of expanded military cooperation.

Russian police have 4 suspects in train bombing

Moscow - Russian police investigators said Monday they had located the hideout of four persons suspected in the train bombing- derailment at the weekend which killed 26 persons and injured 100. A police spokesman was cited by the Interfax agency as saying a hideout had been found in a village not far from the scene and that in an attic the traces of four suspects had been discovered.

The hunt for the four was now underway with the help of phantom pictures, the spokesman said, in developments three days after the late-night derailment of the Nevsky Express train on the busy St. Petersburg-Moscow line.

Moscow media, citing investigators, reported that the chief suspect being sought was a former soldier from the northern Caucasus region who had defected to a group of Islamic terrorists.

While investigations were underway, an explosive device blew up on railroad tracks in the semi-autonomous northern Caucasus republic of Dagestan just before a train was to pass by. There were no injuries.

The late Friday bombing-derailment of the train was the second such attack on Russia's busiest rail route after a bombing of a Nevsky Express train in 2007. Two Chechens were arrested at the time.

One newspaper, Kommersant, said Monday that a prime suspect in both attacks was seen in former soldier Pavel Kossolapov, a follower of the top terrorist Shamil Basseyev who was killed in 2006.

Rescue officials meanwhile put the number of persons still missing from the Friday bombing at four.

Incoming EU president Van Rompuy visits Denmark

Copenhagen - Herman Van Rompuy, recently appointed to become permanent President of the European Council, on Monday paid a brief visit to Denmark. Van Rompuy met with Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen for informal talks ranging from the UN climate change summit that opens next week in Copenhagen to Denmark's views on the European Union.

The Lisbon Treaty that created the new post of full-time president of the European Council enters into force Tuesday.

European Union leaders appointed Van Rompuy at a special summit on November 19, but he is not due to assume office until January.

Brown confirms 500 more troops for Afghanistan - Summary

London (Earth Times - dpa) - Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Monday that 500 more troops will be sent to Afghanistan imminently, taking overall British troop levels to over 10,000, including special forces.

Brown told Parliament in London that the additional troops now had the sufficient level of supplies and equipment to be deployed in southern Helmand province from "early December."

Brown's confirmation of the increase in troop levels, initially announced in October, came on the eve of an expected US decision on a major troop surge in Afghanistan.

Brown said his "conditions" for committing more troops had been fulfilled as eight other countries - apart from the US - had also pledged to increase their contingents.

"It is often said that America and Britain fight alone in Afghanistan. That is wrong," said Brown, without naming the fellow NATO members that had promised to send more soldiers to Afghanistan.

Brown said the increase in British levels would serve the goal of "Afghanization," which would eventually allow British soldiers to "come home."

The total figure of more than 10,000 British troops includes several hundred members of the elite Special Air Services (SAS), who would "take the fight directly to the Taliban," Brown said.

However, experts pointed out that, even though Brown made a point of including the SAS in the overall count, the elite troops, who engage in highly secretive undercover operations, had been present in Afghanistan from 2001.

Brown said he was also satisfied that the Afghan government of President Hamid Karzai would fulfill its pledge to train sufficient numbers of the Afghan National Army and security forces.

By late January 2010, Afghan troops would take over the "partnering roles we foresee for them in Helmand province," said Brown.

He called on the Karzai government to step up its efforts to fight corruption by making sure that all 400 district governors in the county were appointed purely "on merit."

Brown, who was later Monday due to hold a video conference with US President Barack Obama, has said he is confident that, following the US troop announcement, Europe's NATO partners would be prepared to muster an additional 5,000 soldiers for Afghanistan.

Russian politician hit with fine for insulting Moscow mayor

Moscow - A Russian opposition politician and a leading Russian newspaper were ordered to pay fines of 11,500 euros (17,240 dollars) each on Monday for making corruption claims against Moscow Mayor Yuri Lushkov. Former Russian Deputy Prime Minister Boris Nemtsov and the newspaper Kommersant are both required by the court's ruling to withdraw their accusations of corruption against Lushkov, the controversial mayor of Moscow for 17 years, reported the Itar-Tass news agency.

A spokesperson for the newspaper said it was more than doubtful that a Moscow court could objectively issue a ruling in a case involving Lushkov.

Lushkov had initially demanded 114,000 euros in damages for insults. He was recently accused of election fraud after municipal elections in Moscow.

Iraqi general assassinated in disputed city of Kirkuk

Kirkuk, Iraq - A general from the Iraqi army's military intelligence service was killed in the disputed northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk on Monday, police told the German Press Agency dpa. Mohammed Khader, 46, was an ethnic Kurd and a member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, one of the two political parties that have for decades dominated Iraqi Kurdish politics.

Armed men jumped out of a civilian car in front of his house in the eastern Kirkuk district of al-Nasr and fatally shot the general, police said Monday.

His assassination comes amid heightened political tensions in the city ahead of the 2010 parliamentary elections.

Kirkuk and its environs are among the most ethnically diverse regions of Iraq.

Many Iraqi Kurds hope to make the city the capital of a future, independent state, calling it their "Jerusalem." Iraqi Arab politicians, allied with northern Iraq's Turkmen minority, view the city, and its nearby oilfields, as an integral part of the country.

Rancorous debate between Kurdish and Arab lawmakers over voting in the city delayed passage of the country's elections law for months.

The region's largest bloc of Arab politicians last week threatened to boycott the vote, which now appears likely to take place in mid- February or March, if parliament does not agree to increase the percentage of seats to be chosen by expatriate Iraqis.

In the similarly divided region around the northern city of Mosul, some 400 kilometers north of Baghdad, police on Monday told Baghdad's Aswat al-Iraq news agency that gunmen had shot a police officer from the nearby, predominantly Turkmen town of Tal Afar.

The slain man was visiting family in eastern Mosul, Aswat al-Iraq reported.

Despite successive security pushes that police say have netted hundreds of suspected terrorists, Mosul and its environs remain among the most dangerous regions in Iraq, and insurgents continue to launch near-daily attacks there with deadly effect.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/297054,iraqi-general-assassinated-in-disputed-city-of-kirkuk.html.

British soldier dies after blast in southern Afghanistan

London (Earth Times - dpa) - A British soldier has died after being injured in an explosion in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan, the Ministry of Defense (MoD) in London reported Monday. The death - the 99th British fatality in Helmand this year - brings the number of British military personnel killed on operations in Afghanistan since 2001 to 236.

The announcement came shortly after Prime Minister Gordon Brown confirmed in Parliament that Britain will send a further 500 troops to Afghanistan later this week.

The additional deployment, confirmed on the eve of President Barack Obama's announcement of a decision on US troop levels in Afghanistan, takes the overall number of British personnel - including special forces - to over 10,000.

Hungarian parliament approves 2010 budget

Budapest - The Hungarian parliament on Monday evening passed the 2010 budget bill by 201 votes to 179, putting in place a key final part of the interim government's crisis management policy. Prime Minister Gordon Bajnai described the budget as one of "security and stability," the state news agency MTI reported.

The budget is aimed at keeping the government deficit to 3.8 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) next year, despite a deep and ongoing recession.

"This decision seals the nation's security, even amid the global economic crisis," Bajnai said.

Ministries, local authorities and the state-owned rail network are among those entities that will find themselves at the sharp end of public spending cuts in 2010.

Prime Minister Gordon Bajnai's caretaker government has already made huge cuts to public sector pay and pensions since it took office in April.

If next year's budget targets are met, it would give Hungary one of the lowest deficits, as a proportion of GDP, in the European Union.

Both the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Commission deemed the target achievable after a fact-finding mission earlier this month, although they cautioned that there will be no room for any loosening of the purse strings.

The finance ministry forecasts that the Hungarian economy will shrink by 6.7 per cent this year and 0.6 per cent in 2010, before returning to growth in 2011.

Bajnai's cabinet now has a maximum of five more months in office before general elections, which opinion polls and recent by-election results suggest will sweep the center-right Fidesz-Christian Democrat alliance into power.

The opposition bloc voted against the budget, and Fidesz leader Viktor Orban has declared that it will be torn up and rewritten if and when his party forms a new government.

A concerted effort to lower the budget deficit was a key condition for a 25-billion-dollar IMF-led bail-out package credited with saving Hungary from bankruptcy a year ago.

New round of talks begin to settle Darfur conflict - UN

New York - Sudan's warring parties have begun a new round of talks, but they lack conviction for an agreement in the six-year conflict, a UN official said Monday. The talks in Doha were attended by representatives from all communities in Darfur, the belligerents and the Khartoum government, said Djibril Bassole, the UN envoy to the talk told the UN Security Council.

"Unfortunately, the belligerents' current lack of confidence in each other makes for slow progress in the peace talks and for an end to military hostilities," Bassole said.

The talks, supported by the Emir of Qatar, the League of Arab States as well as the African Union, were designed to allow the various armed groups to talk to each other as well as with Khartoum.

"The aims are to find a comprehensive resolution of the underlying causes of crisis, to overcome inter-communal hatreds caused by war and to accelerate socio-economic development," Bassole said.

Negotiations to end the ethnic conflict in Sudan in recent years failed. The conflict in Western Sudan since 2003 has killed over 300,000 civilians and displaced more than 2 million others.

The 15-nation council, which debated the situation in Darfur, said in a brief statement that the talks reached a crucial stage and it urged all parties to settle their differences.

Pakistani prime minister begins Germany visit - Summary

Berlin (Earth Times - dpa) - Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani began Monday a four-day official visit to Germany to promote economic cooperation and discuss the insurgency in the border areas of Pakistan and Afghanistan. He was set to meet with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at her office on Tuesday. He met briefly Monday with the German foreign minister, Guido Westerwelle.

The Foreign Ministry said Westerwelle met Pakistan's foreign minister, Mahmood Qureshi, and praised Pakistan's efforts in the fight against terrorism.

Gilani told reporters before leaving that Germany was Pakistan's "important economic partner" and the main agenda of his visit would be strengthening bilateral relations especially in trade, economics, science and technology, health and education.

Germany is Pakistan's fourth-largest trading partner and its biggest in the European Union.

During his talks with Merkel, Gilani is expected to discuss the new Afghanistan and Pakistan policy that US President Barack Obama is expected to announce on Tuesday.

Pakistan has expressed concerns over the surge in western troops in Afghanistan, saying that it could create further troubles for the country struggling against Taliban militants in its tribal region adjoining Afghanistan.