DDMA Headline Animator

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Britain bans Islamist group after protest threat

Tue, 12 Jan 2010

London - The British government Tuesday proscribed an Islamist group which provoked outrage with plans to demonstrate on the fringes of repatriation parades for British soldiers killed in Afghanistan. Home Secretary Alan Johnson said the order to ban the group Islam UK on the grounds that it was linked to terrorism would come into effect from Thursday.

The controversial group withdrew plans to march through the town of Wootton Bassett, in the south-western county of Wiltshire, after a storm of protest last week.

It has become customary for hearses carrying the coffins of soldiers flown back from Afghanistan through the small town, with relatives and local people lining its streets in silence.

Johnson said the group had tried to escape proscription by simply changing its name. Thus the order would apply to the group's other names, including Al Muhajiroun, a description under which it was banned in 2006.

The ban would also apply other names adopted by the group, which included Islam4UK, Al Ghurabaa and The Saved Sect.

The order will come into effect on Thursday and make it a criminal offense to be a member, punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

The ban is directed at organizations which are suspected of preparing for, promoting and encouraging terrorism.

"Proscription is a tough but necessary power to tackle terrorism and is not a course we take lightly," said Johnson.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/303251,britain-bans-islamist-group-after-protest-threat.html.

Brunei publishes halal pharmaceutical guidelines

Tue, 12 Jan 2010

Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei - Brunei has produced what are believed to be the world's first halal pharmaceutical guidelines to promote medicine production that conforms to the Muslim religion, a newspaper reported Tuesday. The guidelines were endorsed by the Brunei Islamic Religious Council last week, the Borneo Bulletin said.

Vincent Cheong, the chief executive of the Brunei Economic Development Board, said he hoped the guidelines would put Brunei at the forefront of halal medical and health product manufacturing.

Viva Pharmaceutical Inc, a Canadian company, has applied for permission to invest 12 million dollars in Brunei to manufacture and distribute halal-certified medicines, vitamins and nutritional supplements in the region, he said.

The investment was expected to create about 100 new jobs.

The country wants to export most of the pharmaceutical products because Brunei's home market is small, Cheong said.

The predominantly Muslim country might also produce similar guidelines for the production of halal cosmetics, he said.

The global halal market was estimated to be worth about 1 trillion to 2 trillion dollars per year.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/303258,brunei-publishes-halal-pharmaceutical-guidelines.html.

Dalai Lama inaugurates monastery in eastern India

Tue, 12 Jan 2010

New Delhi - The Dalai Lama, the Tibetan Buddhist spiritual leader, inaugurated a monastery Tuesday in India's eastern state of Orissa, which is being described as the largest in South Asia. The Dalai Lama, who began his four-day visit to the state Monday, led the consecration ceremony in the presence of more than 300 Buddhist lamas at the Tibetan settlement at Chandragiri.

"His Holiness opened the Rigon Thupten Mindrolling monastery in a two-hour consecration and inauguration ceremony," Tenzin Taklha, a spokesman for the Tibetan leader, said by phone.

The Dalai Lama prostrated himself before the 6.5-meter-high Buddha statue installed in the shrine and offered prayers before addressing the devotees in Tibetan, the PTI news agency reported.

About 2,500 guests from India and abroad witnessed the opening of the monastery, which is spread over a 4-hectare area.

The Dalai Lama, who fled to India after the Chinese occupation of Tibet in 1959, lives in exile in the northern Indian hill town of Dharamsala.

The five-storey monastery was built at a cost of 80 million rupees (about 1.7 million dollars), said Gyetrul Jigme Rinpoche, the religious chief of the Tibetan settlement at Chandragiri.

It took six years to build and has been described as the largest monastery in the region by local media.

"The monastery is fairly big and is among the largest if not the largest one in South Asia," Taklha said.

The lamasery in Chandragiri, which is one of the 35 settlements in India that are home to more than 110,000 Tibetan refugees, is now recognized as a tourist site and has already been thronged by tourists.

Leader of China's Tibet region resigns

Tue, 12 Jan 2010

Beijing - The chairman of China's Tibet Autonomous Region resigned Tuesday, 22 months after anti-Chinese protests escalated into deadly violence in the regional capital. The regional government said it had accepted the resignation of Qiangba Puncog, 62, for unspecified reasons.

Qiangba Puncog, a Tibetan, had led the Chinese government's public-relations efforts after the rioting in Lhasa in March 2008.

Protests in Tibet's capital escalated into violence that left at least 21 people dead, the government said.

Tibetan exile groups put the death toll at more than 200 and claimed that many Tibetans were killed by Chinese paramilitary police.

The government's handling of the protests drew criticism within China and from foreign politicians and human rights groups, but it was not known whether Qiangba Puncog's resignation was directly linked to the protests.

Qiangba Puncog had served as chairman of Tibet's regional government since 2003.

A second Tibetan official, Legqog, also resigned on Tuesday from his post as head of the regional People's Congress, China's official Xinhua news agency reported. Like many Tibetans, Legqog goes by only one name.

The Tibet Daily newspaper reported last week that Legqog, 65, had already been replaced in another former post as deputy secretary of the Tibet regional branch of China's ruling Communist Party.

Tibet's most powerful official is Zhang Qingli, the Han Chinese regional party secretary.

China normally requires local officials to retire once they reach the age of 65.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/303268,leader-of-chinas-tibet-region-resigns.html.

Ban vows to assist in ridding Korean peninsula of nuclear weapons

Mon, 11 Jan 2010

New York - UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Monday he would provide "all possible efforts" to make the Korean peninsula free of nuclear weapons. Ban's remarks were in reaction to North Korea's proposal to negotiate a peace treaty with the United States to replace the ceasefire agreement that ended the 1950-53 Korean War.

North Korea also said it would return to the six-party talks if UN sanctions were lifted. The talks, which involved China, the United States, Russia, Japan, and North and South Korea, were deadlocked by Pyongyang's refusal to end its nuclear programs.

"I reiterate my call for renewed efforts to solve all (Korean) issues through dialogue in a peaceful manner," Ban told reporters at UN headquarters in New York.

"I will reserve all possible efforts to help move the process" on denuclearizing the Korean peninsula, he said.

The six-party talks had in 2005 called for a peace treaty as a closure to the Korean War and a nuclear free Korean peninsula. China-backed North Korea, and South Korea, backed by a UN force, ended the war in 1953 without a formal peace treaty.

The UN Security Council last year sharpened its arms embargo and sanctions on Pyongyang's imports of nuclear technology and material after it exploded a nuclear device in May, its second since 2006.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/303184,ban-vows-to-assist-in-ridding-korean-peninsula-of-nuclear-weapons.html.

Togo officially disqualified from Africa Cup of Nations - Summary

Mon, 11 Jan 2010

Luanda (Earth Times - dpa) - Togo were officially disqualified from this year's Africa Cup of Nations by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) Monday for failing to play their opening Group B game against Ghana in Cabinda. The decision was made in the wake of the Togo squad's decision to leave Angola and return home Sunday, two days after a terror attack on their bus by the separatist Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda (FLEC) that left three people dead.

"They are disqualified. This group is a three-team tournament," African football's ruling body was quoted by the BBC as saying.

Earlier, a CAF official stated that the match referee had received the order to blow the starting whistle "and if the Togolese players are not there, they will have lost the match and will be disqualified".

The Togo team pulled out of the tournament after their bus driver, assistant coach Abalo Amnalete and team spokesman Stanislas Ocloo died in the attack.

Goalkeeper Kodjovi Obilale was taken to intensive care in South Africa to receive treatment for gunshot wounds.

Ivory Coast and Burkina Faso are the other teams in Group B.

Chile first South American country to join OECD - Summary

Mon, 11 Jan 2010

Paris/Santiago- Chile became the first South American member of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) on Monday as the body's leader Angel Gurria and Chilean Finance Minister Andres Velasco signed an accession agreement. "Chile's acceptance for OECD membership marks international recognition of nearly two decades of democratic reform and sound economic policies," the OECD said in a statement.

"Chile has been engaged in a continuous effort to reform its economy. This experience will be an asset for the OECD as we try to address issues such as inequality or sustainable pension systems," Gurria said during the signing ceremony in the Chilean capital Santiago.

Formally, accession was still pending the approval of the Chilean Congress.

At the ceremony in the presidential palace, La Moneda, Chilean President Michelle Bachelet said joining the OECD will bring Chile "more jobs, but also better-quality and better-paid jobs."

"This points in the direction of a better country, better living standards and better welfare for each one of our people," Bachelet said.

Chile is the OECD's 31st member. The only other Latin American member is Mexico.

Four other countries - Estonia, Israel, the Russian Federation and Slovenia - are currently negotiating to become members, the OECD said.

In the past two decades, the South American country went from being one of the poorest in the region to one of the richest in terms of per capita income. However, it still shows worrying levels of inequality.

Despite having 13.7 per cent of its 16.5 million people under the poverty line, Chile has a per capita gross domestic product (GDP) that is similar to that of Portugal, South Korea or Turkey in 2000.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/303187,chile-first-south-american-country-to-join-oecd--summary.html.

Togo team return home to national mourning

Mon, 11 Jan 2010

Nairobi/Lome, Togo (Earth Times - dpa) - Togo's national football team flew home from Angola after retiring from the Africa Cup following an attack on its bus by separatist militants. Thousands of fans were waiting Sunday night at Lome's airport, where the team was greeted by Prime Minister Gilbert Houngbo, the BBC reported.

The crowd watched quietly with many people in tears as the coffins bearing the two members of the delegation killed in the attack were carried across the runway.

Houngbo called it a "sad day" and a "disgrace for African football." The prime minister ordered the team's return home and sent a government plane to Angola to fly it back to the capital.

The Togolese delegation's bus came under fire Friday from separatists in the oil-rich Angolan province of Cabinda.

The bus driver, assistant coach Abalo Amnalete and team spokesman Stanislas Ocloo died in the attack. Goalkeeper Kodjovi Obilale was taken to intensive care in South Africa to receive treatment for gunshot wounds.

A minute's silence for the victims was held before the opening game in Luanda Sunday. Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos condemned the attack in his opening speech but said Cabinda would remain one of the cup's venues.

The province is separated from the rest of Angola by around 40 kilometers of territory belonging to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The Togolese were due to face Ghana's national team, known as the Black Stars, on Monday evening.

Road accident kills eight in Indonesian capital

Mon, 11 Jan 2010

Jakarta - At least eight people were killed and several others injured on Monday when a container truck rammed into more than a dozen vehicles in the Indonesian capital, media reports said. The private MetroTV television station said the accident took place during the morning rush hour at the Kamal traffic circle in West Jakarta. At least 14 motorcycles were heavily damaged after being hit by the truck.

The report quoted witnesses saying that the trailer truck's brakes appeared to have failed, causing it to crash into another truck and then ram the motorcycles.

Emergency workers had to bring in heavy equipment to rescue people trapped underneath the container, the report said.

Hundreds of local residents thronged to the location to witness the aftermath of the accident, causing severe congestion in the area.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/303023,road-accident-kills-eight-in-indonesian-capital.html.

US congressmen visit Hmong returnees in Laos

Mon, 11 Jan 2010

Vientiane - Three US congressmen visited Hmong refugees who were deported to Laos from Thailand last month despite international concerns that the returnees would face persecution at home, state media said Monday. "There is no indication of discrimination or harassment or mistreatment of the people in Phalak village," Eni Faleomavaega, chairman of the House of Representatives subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific and the Global Environment, said at a press conference in Vientiane on Saturday.

The Hmong are an ethnic minority group that sided with the US military in its "secret war" against communism in Laos in the 1960s and 1970s. Tens of thousands of Hmong fled to Thailand to after the communist forces took over Laos in 1975.

Thailand deported 4,508 Hmong, who had been living in refugee camps since 2004, back to Laos on December 28, in an effort to stem the continuing Hmong migration.

Faleomavaega and congressmen Mike Honda and Anh Joseph Cao were allowed to visit Phalak village, 70 kilometres from Vientiane, where the Lao government has settled about half of the Hmong who were repatriated from Thailand last month, the Vientiane Times reported.

The visit was facilitated by the Lao government to counter media speculation that the Hmong returnees were being executed, the government mouthpiece said.

"Right now there is a lot of misinformation," Faleomavaega said. "There have been accusations made that the Hmong people coming from Thailand are being executed by the government of Laos. That is a very serious accusation."

He said an estimated 100,000 Hmong are living in the US, "so some may have relatives and may make up these stories just to get the attention of our two governments or just to find out what is going on here."

The congressmen thanked the Lao government for allowing them to see the situation for themselves.

The US normalized economic relations with Laos in 2004, which allowed Lao businesses to export products to the US at lower import tariff rates.

Last year, the US government lifted a ban on Export-Import Bank loans for US citizens to invest in Laos, to encourage new investment there.

Laos, one of the world's few remaining communist states, has been courting overseas Laotians to return home to invest in the country, one of the world's poorest.

The government's treatment of the Hmong returnees is deemed an important litmus test for the success of that campaign, Thai diplomats said.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/303024,us-congressmen-visit-hmong-returnees-in-laos.html.

US links better rights record in North Korea with improved ties

Mon, 11 Jan 2010

Seoul - The United States has conditioned improved relations with North Korea on the protection of human rights in the communist country, a US envoy said Monday. "It is one of the worst places in terms of lack of human rights," Robert King, the special US envoy for human rights issues in North Korea, said while on a visit to Seoul. "The situation is appalling."

King, who took up his post six weeks ago, said human rights was not only "one of the important conditions" in improving US-North Korean ties, but it was also an issue that must be taken up in the six-nation talks aimed at ending North Korea's nuclear weapons program.

The envoy was in South Korea gathering information on human rights in North Korea, and on the second day of a five-day visit met with South Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung Hwan. His predecessor, Jay Lefkowitz, who was the first to hold the post, was never allowed to visit the North.

The United States accuses North Korea of such rights abuses as torture, executions without trial and forced labor under inhumane conditions. North Korea insists there are no human rights abuses in the country.

Human rights are not the only bone of contention between Washington and Pyongyang, which have had tense relations since they were on opposite sides of the 1950-53 Korean War. The North's nuclear program has also proven problematic.

Both countries are involved in the six-nation talks on the program, but negotiations have been stalled since late 2008. North Korea unilaterally pulled out of the talks last year, expelled international inspectors and restarted its plutonium factory before conducting its second nuclear test in May.

However, in a New Year's message, North Korea said improved relations with the United States was a top goal in 2010.

"The fundamental task for ensuring peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula and in the rest of Asia is to put an end to the hostile relationship between the DPRK and the USA," an editorial carried in state media said, referring to North Korea by the acronym of its official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

Efforts were also under way to restart the six-nation talks. US nuclear envoy Stephen Bosworth visited Pyongyang last month to revive the negotiations and improve US-North Korean relations.

"Improved relations between the United States and North Korea will have to involve greater respect for human rights by North Korea," King said Monday.

He also said people fleeing North Korea should be recognized as refugees. US embassies have been told to open their doors to North Korean defectors seeking asylum in other countries, and ease their asylum-application process.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/303028,us-links-better-rights-record-in-north-korea-with-improved-ties.html.

South Africa defends readiness for World Cup after Angola attack

Mon, 11 Jan 2010

Cape Town (Earth Times) - South Africa on Monday defended itself against doubts over its ability to host this year's football World Cup after the terrorist attack on the Togolese national side that left three dead ahead of a football tournament in Angola. The country remained "100 per cent ready" to host the World Cup and the attack by suspected Angolan rebels on the bus carrying players and officials from Togo had no bearing on the tournament being held in South Africa in June, presidential spokesman Vincent Magwenya said.

President Jacob Zuma has emphasized that the "shocking and unacceptable" attack "should not be blown out of proportion," he said. South Africa is set to host the World Cup in June.

Zuma traveled to neighboring Angola Sunday for the opening of the African Nations Cup, two days after the attack.

The South African Football Association (SAFA) criticized as "irresponsible" reports by the foreign media that questioned South Africa's ability to host an incident free World Cup after the attack in Angola.

"That is a very dangerous generalization where people just chose to say because it happened in Angola it will happen in South Africa. Surely we have been planning for this World Cup for some time and we have all the commitment from our government," said SAFA president Kirsten Nematandani.

India, Bangladesh leaders meet to strengthen bilateral ties

Mon, 11 Jan 2010

New Delhi - Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wazed held talks with Indian leaders Monday which New Delhi said offered a "historic opportunity" to forge a "new and forward-looking relationship."Hasina arrived in New Delhi Sunday on her first official visit to India, during which five agreements including three to fight terrorism and cross-border crime were likely to be signed.

She met Monday morning with Indian President Pratibha Patil and External Affairs Minister SM Krishna. She was due to hold talks with Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh in the evening.

The leaders were security, terrorism, border-related issues, trade, investment and cooperation in infrastructure building, the Indian Foreign Office said.

"The visit of the prime minister of Bangladesh promises to be a path-breaking one and gives both countries a historic opportunity to build a new and forward-looking relationship," Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao said.

Relations between the neighbors have acquired a new momentum after Hasina's Awami League government assumed power last year.

Delhi's relations with Dhaka had suffered under the previous regime of Khaleda Zia over several issues, including the alleged sheltering of rebel leaders active in India's north-eastern region.

Bangladeshi authorities in December cracked down on the rebels, including leaders of the United Liberation Front of Asom, and handed them over to Indian authorities.

The two governments were due to sign agreements on "mutual legal assistance in criminal matters," to combat international terrorism, and organized crime and drug trafficking.

Pacts on closer economic ties including sharing electricity and cultural ties were also on the agenda.

"We seek to revive those physical and emotional links which remain disrupted since independence. We also seek their understanding and cooperation on our security and connectivity needs," Rao said.

India has pledged to provide "substantial" economic assistance to Bangladesh, for trade, investment, railways and other transportation, she said.

Hasina also plans to visit a shrine to a revered Muslim Sufi saint in Ajmer, Rajasthan state, before returning to Dhaka on Wednesday.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/303045,india-bangladesh-leaders-meet-to-strengthen-bilateral-ties.html.

North Korea seeks peace treaty, end of sanctions

Seoul - North Korea on Monday proposed negotiating a peace treaty to replace the truce that ended the 1950-53 Korean War. The Foreign Ministry in Pyongyang also demanded the lifting of UN sanctions against North Korea before stalled six-nation talks aimed at ending its nuclear weapons program could resume.

A peace treaty must be finalized for trust to be built between North Korea and the United States, the ministry argued in a statement released by the state-run media.

It also said that the establishment of such trust would also help the six-nation nuclear talks.

"The conclusion of the peace treaty will help terminate the hostile relations between the DPRK and the US and positively promote the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula at a rapid tempo," the statement said, referring to North Korea by the acronym of its official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

"If confidence is to be built between the DPRK and the US, it is essential to conclude a peace treaty for terminating the state of war, a root cause of the hostile relations, to begin with," it said.

The statement was issued after North Korea said in a New Year's message that improved relations with the United States was a top goal in 2010, and was needed "for ensuring peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula and in the rest of Asia."

Both the United States and North Korea are involved in the nuclear talks with South Korea, China, Japan and Russia. The negotiations have been stalled since late 2008. North Korea unilaterally pulled out of the talks last year, expelled international inspectors and restarted its plutonium factory before conducting its second nuclear test in May.

In past weeks, however, North Korea has repeatedly declared itself ready to return to the nuclear talks without naming a date for their resumption.

North and South Korea are still technically at war since an armistice and not a peace treaty brought the conflict to an end. The truce was signed by the United Nations, represented by the United States, on one side and North Korea and China on the other.

North Korea did not say Monday whether it thought South Korea should also take part in the proposed talks on the peace treaty.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/303047,north-korea-seeks-peace-treaty-end-of-sanctions.html.

Radical Islamist cleric back in Kenya after aborted deportation bid

Mon, 11 Jan 2010

Nairobi (Earth Times) - Kenya's bid to deport a radical Islamist cleric listed as a suspected terrorist had to be aborted last week, media reports quoting human rights officials said Monday. Sheik Abdullah al-Faisal, who is on an international list of suspected terrorists, was deported from Britain several years ago after preaching hatred against Jews, Hindus, and the West.

He was to have been flown to his home country Jamaica via the West African state of Gambia on Thursday.

In order to reach Banjul, al-Faisal would have had to change planes in Lagos, Nigeria. The airline in Nigeria however refused to allow him to board a connecting flight, according to the reports.

Nigerian authorities ordered that he be returned on the next flight to Kenya.

Al-Faisal was returned to a prison in Nairobi on Sunday evening, according to the Daily Nation newspaper.

Kenyan authorities have been battling to deport al-Faisal who reportedly entered the country by land from neighboring Tanzania. His entry into the country where he has been listed went undetected. He was arrested by anti-terrorism officers in December.

The United States, Britain and South Africa had all refused to grant him a transit visa.

Qatar's first beauty college begins registration for courses

(MENAFN - The Peninsula) Qatar International Beauty Academy Tajmeel is all set to begin its International Beauty Courses and the academy is now open for student registrations.

Tajmeel's full time International Diplomas are among the most sought after courses. The first intake of students comprise of those who have taken up the courses for business purposes and career-oriented goals and others who are following the courses out of personal interest. The ITEC certified International Beauty Courses at Tajmeel are available both on full time and part time basis.

"One of the things our students appreciate is the variety of courses we have on offer," said Beverley Crowther, the academy Principal. "The fact that our courses give students the flexibility they require has really helped them choose something that suits their individual learning requirements."

The ITEC qualifications being offered at Tajmeel top the list of courses students are enrolling on. ITEC (International Therapy Examination Council) is an International examination board offering a variety of qualifications worldwide

Tajmeel's ITEC courses include Aesthetics Diploma, Body Therapy Diploma, Holistic and Massage Beauty Specialist Diploma. Aesthetic diploma is a full time course offering an international qualification covering practical application and theory of facials, facial massage, manicures and pedicure, waxing, eye treatments and make-up. Another full time course is Body Therapy which includes practical application and theory of body massage, vacuum suction, mechanical massage, NMES, Galvanic and body analysis. Both the courses runs for three and a half days a week, over one term

ITEC courses Holistic Massage and Beauty Specialist Diploma are part time.

Source: Middle East North Africa Financial News (MENAFN).
Link: http://www.menafn.com/qn_news_story_s.asp?StoryId=1093296262&src=NLEN.

Haiti Quake May Threaten Stability Achieved by UN Peacekeepers

Bill Varner

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) -- The United Nations peacekeeping mission in Haiti has been crippled by the earthquake that devastated Port-au-Prince, threatening progress toward political and social stability, officials said.

“Clearly it is one of the most horrible tragedies for UN peacekeeping,” Alain LeRoy, under-secretary-general for peacekeeping operations, said yesterday at the UN in New York. “The mission had made quite a lot of achievements as far as security and stability. Now we must rebuild and adjust to new demands.”

Hedi Annabi of Tunisia, the head of the mission, and his deputy, Luiz Carlos da Costa of Brazil, are among 150 UN civilian and military members of the mission who are unaccounted for and feared dead, LeRoy said. The UN confirmed the deaths of 16 peacekeepers, including 11 Brazilian soldiers and five police from Argentina, Chad and Jordan.

The UN Security Council established the peacekeeping mission in Haiti in 2004, following the resignation of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, to stabilize the violence- plagued Caribbean nation, the Western Hemisphere’s poorest. There are about 7,000 soldiers and 2,000 police in the mission.

The peacekeepers have largely eliminated gang control of two slums in Haiti, allowing the peaceful election in 2006 of President Rene Preval. The UN was preparing to assist legislative elections next month and voting for president in November.

‘Nothing Comparable’

The loss of life likely will be the greatest on a single day for a peacekeeping mission in UN history, officials said.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said today from Hawaii that the UN had suffered “grievous losses” in the quake. She scrapped a planned trip to Australia and other Pacific stops to return to Washington and help coordinate the U.S. response to the disaster.

“No one can ever doubt again what the relevance of the UN is in the 21st century or the devotion of its employees to the common cause of humanity,” former President Bill Clinton, the UN special envoy to Haiti, told diplomats in New York. “We owe it to them to respond in the right way.”

The previous worst incidents for the UN were the deaths of 17 workers from a terrorist bombing in Baghdad in August 2003 and the attack on the UN in Algiers in December 2007 that also killed 17. The previous record for UN civilian deaths in one year was 42 in 2007.

“There is nothing comparable to this,” Philip Perito of the Washington-based U.S. Institute of Peace said in an interview. “This is a real tragedy because the UN had really good people who were successful. The problem is that the UN does not have a deep bench. It does not generate leadership quickly, so it will take a long time to re-establish itself.”

‘Extremely Fragile’

Perito said the progress the UN has made in Haiti is â€Å“extremely fragile,â€

UN Assistant Secretary-General Edmond Mulet of Guatemala, a former head of the UN mission in Haiti, was to fly to Port-au- Prince to serve as its acting leader, LeRoy said. UN workers from around the world have volunteered to go to Haiti, he said. He couldn’t say how long it will take to rebuild the mission, or how much it will cost.

The budget for UN peacekeeping in Haiti is $612 million a year.

LeRoy said 3,000 UN troops in and around Port-au-Prince will concentrate on securing and possibly running the airport, patrolling the capital, guarding the port and digging through the rubble of the headquarters complex. The military chain-of- command, he said, was intact and able to perform those tasks.

“Our task is to ensure that the mandate of the mission is fulfilled,” he said. “It has to continue at the present level at least until the presidential election.”

Iran releases Syrian journalist after two weeks

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Tehran - Iran on Sunday released Reza al-Bacha, a Syrian a reporter working for Dubai TV, Fars news agency reported. Tehran prosecutor Abbas Jafari-Dowlatabadi told Fars that al- Bacha, who was arrested when covering the unrests last month in Tehran, was freed after a two week detainment.

Six months ago, the government banned the foreign media from directly covering the street protests being led by opposition supporters. Those found in violation of the ban face arrest, detention, expulsion or withdrawal of their accreditation.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302964,iran-releases-syrian-journalist-after-two-weeks.html.

Germany to test full body scanners this summer at the earliest

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Berlin - Controversial full body scanners, which can detect contours and items through a passenger's clothing, are to be tested at German airports from this summer at the earliest, a government official said on Sunday. "We are testing the new technology thoroughly and not rashly," Secretary of State for the Interior Klaus-Dieter Fritsche told the German Press Agency dpa.

Transport Minister Peter Ramsauer was critical about introducing the scanners, which have become the subject of debate after a Nigerian attempted to blow up a plane over the US city of Detroit on Christmas Day.

The path to full body scanners was "long and uncertain," Ramsauer told dpa.

"We plan to introduce tests with the scanners from the middle of the year at the earliest," Fritsche said. He did not give a specific date for the airport trials.

The devices are currently being tested in laboratories, where the key criteria are how much additional security they provide, how safe they are and the degree to which the scanners infringe personal rights, Fritsche added.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302968,germany-to-test-full-body-scanners-this-summer-at-the-earliest.html.

Germany calls for ceasefire in northern Congo

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Goma, Congo (Earth Times) - German Development Minister Dirk Niebel on Sunday called on the Democratic Republic of the Congo to cease military action in the country's north to allow as many as 200,000 internally displaced refugees to return to their homes. Speaking at a visit to a refugee camp near Goma, near the border with Rwanda, Niebel said that in addition to finding a settlement between the various parties in the regional conflict, the authorities in Kinshasa should use foreign aid to rebuild the country's infrastructure.

Public income such as roadway tolls should actually be invested in building the roads, Niebel, who began a one-week trip to Africa in Rwanda on Friday, said.

He added that Congo had good conditions for a functioning tourism industry, mentioning the necessity to use added in protecting the diversity of animal species.

Congo President Joseph Kabila plans to close the Goma refugee camp in mid-2010 for the 50th anniversary of the country's independence. As part of this process, Kabila has called for the UN peacekeeping mission to Congo MONUC to present a withdrawal plan by this date.

MONUC has said it would produce such a plan by May.

UAE president's brother acquitted of beating, raping Afghan man

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Dubai - An Emirati court on Sunday acquitted Sheikh Issa bin-Zayed al-Nahyan, the brother of the president of the United Arab Emirates, of charges that he badly beat and raped an Afghan man. The court ruled that Sheikh Issa, 40, could not be held responsible for his actions because he was under the influence of painkillers, one of his lawyers told the German Press Agency dpa.

A videotape aired by the US television network ABC in April showed al-Nayhan and policemen beating an Afghan grain dealer with whips and wooden planks with protruding nails in 2004, pouring salt on his wounds, then running him over with a car.

Sheikh Issa was charged with rape, causing bodily harm and endangering a life.

"We have made every effort to secure a verdict of innocence in this case," the lawyer Habib al-Mulla said.

"The court found that he was not responsible (for his actions), because he had been given anesthetics and drugs," al-Mulla said. "The tape was made to blackmail him."

The sheikh's former business partners Bassam and Ghassan Nabulsi, who made the video, were sentenced in absentia to five years in prison each.

"All individuals are equal before the law," the UAE's office of human rights and the judiciary said in a statement. "There is no discrimination between citizens on the grounds of origin, domicile, religious belief or social status."

Sheikh Issa, though a royal, holds no position in the UAE government.

"The government of Abu Dhabi explicitly condemns the acts ... that appeared on the tape," it said.

The matter had been settled "between the parties in the case," the statement noted, "and none of the parties involved asked for criminal charges to be filed." The statement did not provide details.

The government's office of human rights said the government "considered that the events depicted on the tape required a comprehensive review to ensure respect for human rights."

The court's verdict came as German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle's landed in the country for a series of high-level meetings.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302973,uae-presidents-brother-acquitted-of-beating-raping-afghan-man.html.

Africa Cup of Nations starts as confusion continues - Summary

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Luanda (Earth Times - dpa) - As the Africa Cup of Nations opened on Sunday in the Angolan capital of Luanda, confusion remained whether Togo would honor their opening Group B fixture in Cabinda on Monday following a deadly attack on their team bus on Friday. The low-key opening ceremony however was overshadowed by the death of three members of the Togolese delegation who were killed when the bus they were traveling in came under attack from Cabinda separatists.

The bus driver as well as the assistant coach Abalo Amnalete and the team's spokesman Stanislas Ocloo died during the attack.

Some reports had the team returning to Togo on Sunday, whilst others said that the players had initially decided to leave, but then changed their minds.

Angolan President Jose Eduardo Dos Santos formally opened the 27th Africa Cup of Nations and in his speech delivered in Portuguese, referred to the incident.

Watched by several dignitaries including the president of football's controlling body FIFA, Joseph Blatter and the president of the African controlling body CAF, as well as South African president Jacob Zuma, a near capacity crowd of 50,000 in the November 11 National Stadium watched a display showing cultural potential of the country.

The show was divided into various stages of Angolan history, including colonialism, resistance and independence.

Earlier Sunday Confederation of African Football (CAF) spokesman Kodzo Samlan was quoted as saying the Togolese players wanted to play, while the country's Prime Minister, Gilbert Huongbo, has demanded the team return home.

Togo captain Emmanuel Adebayor, who on Saturday said that he wanted to go home, told French radio station RMC Sunday that the players had discussed the issue and the majority of them wanted to compete in the tournament.

"We are staying in the same accommodation as Ghana and the Ivory Coast and we discussed it with players from the other sides and we decided that we wanted to stay.

"However, when I spoke to the Head of the State of the country this morning, he told me that the presidential plane was on its way to fetch us.

"The Head of State has called us, so we have to return to Togo."

The Manchester City striker said he expected to land in the Togo capital of Lome later Sunday.

Jonathan Ayite, who plays for Nimes in France, said that even though the majority of players wanted to stay and play, it was not really up to them.

"We are willing to represent our country, but we are also willing to listen to our Head of State. At this stage, not a single player has left Angola."

Earlier Sunday, doctors treating reserve goalkeeper Kodjovi Obilale, who was airlifted to South Africa and underwent an operation on Saturday, said that they were happy with the progress of the 25- year-old.

The head of the trauma unit, Professor Elias Degiannis said that although it was very early on, he was satisfied with the progress.

"He is being kept ventilated and sedated in the trauma intensive care unit where he will remain until such time as we are satisfied with his condition."

The Pontivy player was one of several people injured when the Togolese team bus came under attack as they were driving to their Cup of Nations base in Cabinda.

Togo have been drawn into Group B together with the Ivory Coast, Mali and Ghana.

The Ghana Football Association meanwhile, has confirmed the Black Stars will be competing in Cabinda after being assured of "total security" in the wake of the terror attack.

"We will be playing the Cup of Nations and have taken no such decision to withdraw," said FA president Kwesi Nyantakyi.

Haitian-Americans awaiting word from loved ones

By MATT SEDENSKY, Associated Press Writer

MIAMI – Alourrde Pierre stood inside a Little Haiti community center, wringing her hands as she waited for news of her parents and 15 siblings in Port-au-Prince. Her children ask what happened to their grandmother, but she has no answer.

"It is so hard not knowing," said 37-year-old Pierre. "What can we do?"

It is a scene replaying countless times among the roughly 800,000 people in the U.S. of Haitian descent, desperate for any morsel of information about loved ones on the earthquake-devastated nation. Feverish calls, texts and e-mails largely go unanswered as the distraught try to muster a reason to hope as bodies pile up on Haiti's streets.

At a Brooklyn bus stop, 30-year-old Oneil Laurent sobs as he talks of his father, who he's been unable to reach. At the Prestige Barber Shop in Miami, the usual morning chatter was eclipsed by the drone of news updates on the earthquake and the heavy silence of relatives waiting for the worst. And in Evanston, Ill., cab driver Anel Calixte watched CNN at Sweet Nick's Caribbean restaurant, unable to focus on anything but the tragedy.

"You have no life anymore," he said. "You don't know what to feel anymore because your whole family is there. Your whole family."

As news trickled out of Haiti, some poured their energy into relief efforts, joining Americans with no connection to the country who collected bottled water, canned goods, medical supplies and money. Others bowed their heads in prayer or sat transfixed by their TVs.

People did what they could to mobilize aid to Haiti, the poorest country in the Western hemisphere. The U.S. dispatched ships, helicopters, planes and a 2,000-member Marine unit. New York cabdrivers transported relief items to collection points, various search-and-rescue teams headed to the nation to push through the rubble of buildings, and companies prepared to send heavy equipment.

The State Department established a toll-free number (888-407-4747) for people seeking information about family members in Haiti. The government advises that some callers may receive a recording because of the heavy volume of inquiries.

There were brief glimpses of good news, with occasional calls to the nation going through and relatives located safely.

After hours of desperately dialing her parents in Delmas, Jouslene Burrows, who was in the Bahamas, reached her father.

"My mummy already got the flu because she spent the night outside," Burrows said. "They told me they are waiting, hoping help will reach them, hoping something good will happen because they have no water, food or electricity."

But for many, the uncertainty was crushing, not only in the U.S.

Nassau, Bahamas housekeeper Rosette Isnealle, 50, prayed that her two daughters enrolled in a Port-au-Prince university are not among the dead.

"I'm terrified," she said. "I can't get in touch with them. All day I have been calling and I can't find communication."

At the Haitian Consulate in Manhattan, diplomats struggling to locate their own families sobbed as they tried to help countless callers. "It is indescribable," said counsel general Felix Augustine.

In South Florida, where the population of about 275,000 Haitians is the largest in the country, some still tried to hold out hope, blaming the lack of contact from relatives on Haiti's poor communications infrastructure. But it was growing harder by the minute.

As community organizers in Miami's Little Haiti tried to develop response plans, 29-year-old Katia Saint Fleur scoured Facebook, tears welling in her eyes as she sought information about relatives.

"Please if you can contact us any way, do so," she wrote on a cousin's page. "We are going crazy trying to reach you guys."

Edeline Clermont of Miami got word that her 12-year-old nephew was dead. The boy's parents, brother and sister are unaccounted for. And all told, she has more than 20 relatives in Haiti she has been desperately trying to reach.

"I didn't sleep at all. I just lay there, waiting for answers," she said with tears in her eyes. "I'm afraid that everybody is gone."

Frequent victim in the past, Asia to aid Haiti

By TINI TRAN, Associated Press Writer

BEIJING – Asian leaders cited their own experiences with natural disasters Thursday in offering help to quake-shattered Haiti as part of a massive international effort to alleviate the effects of the catastrophe.

Haitian officials have predicted a horrific death toll of more than 100,000 in the wake of the magnitude-7 quake Tuesday that left most of the capital Port-au-Prince in rubble.

Haiti's devastation is all too familiar to Indonesia: a mammoth quake struck off the country's western coast in 2004, spawning a tsunami that killed about 230,000 people in 14 countries — half of them in Indonesia.

"As a country that has been itself devastated by a similar situation, we are absolutely saddened by what's happening in Haiti," Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said at a meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in Vietnam. "We call on the ASEAN community, including ourselves, of course, to do what we can do to assist them."

The United Nations has released $10 million from its emergency funds, even as U.N. workers and peacekeeping troops on the island nation at the time of the quake struggled with their own losses. The U.N. headquarters building collapsed, and at least 16 personnel are confirmed dead, with up to 150 still missing.

"We'll be using whatever roads are passable to get aid to Port-au-Prince, and if possible we'll bring helicopters in," said Emilia Casella, a spokeswoman for the U.N. food agency in Geneva.

Its 200 staff in Haiti were trying to deliver high-energy biscuits and other supplies, despite looting and the threat of violence in a nation long plagued by lawlessness.

The Red Cross estimated that some 3 million people will require aid, ranging from shelter to food and clean water, and said many Haitians could need relief for a full year.

The World Bank said it would provide $100 million in emergency aid to Haiti to support recovery and reconstruction work. Experts would be sent to assess the scope of the damage and help prioritize where needs are greatest.

The global relief effort picked up steam Thursday as a Chinese chartered plane with emergency relief supplies landed in Port-au-Prince. British officials said rescue workers arrived in neighboring Dominican Republic, with search dogs and heavy equipment. The crew planned to reach Haiti later in the evening.

Other offers of money and aid poured in from across the world, including Asia.

"Having been victims of such natural calamities ourselves in the past few years, we are exchanging information and views," said Surin Pitsuwan, secretary-general for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

Meanwhile, China dispatched a chartered plane loaded up with 10 tons of tents, food, medical equipment and sniffer that arrived in Haiti Thursday. Accompanying the emergency materials were a 60-member earthquake relief team that had firsthand experience in the country's own quake disaster two years ago.

The world had sped to Beijing's aid during its May 2008 quake, which had rumbled across a huge swath of southwestern China, leaving almost 90,000 people dead or missing.

"Most of the members are very experienced," Liu Xiangyang, deputy chief of the National Earthquake Disaster Emergency Rescue Team, told the official Xinhua News Agency before their departure. China's Red Cross has also offered emergency funding of $1 million to Haiti.

Meanwhile, Australia pledged an initial $9.3 million for emergency humanitarian relief and reconstruction assistance, with about half going for emergency water, food and shelter, while the remainder will be for rehabilitation efforts.

"Australia is concerned for the welfare of all those affected by the earthquake and is offering immediate assistance to be coordinated with regional and international efforts," Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said.

Japan will provide up to $5 million in aid, along with $330,000 worth of tents and blankets, a Foreign Ministry official said. A four-member fact-finding mission will also be sent to determine what Japan can do to help.

South Korea will give emergency humanitarian aid worth $1 million, its Foreign Ministry spokesman Kim Young-sun said, and is considering sending rescue teams.

The devastation is widespread, with the sheer number of dead bodies expected to pose a health and safety problem. The World Health Organization said it had sent specialists to help clear the city of corpses, and the International Red Cross was sending a plane Thursday loaded mainly with body bags.

The European Commission has approved $4.37 million while member states Spain, the Netherlands and Germany promised millions more.

Rescue teams from France and Switzerland were on their way, while Spain dispatched three planeloads of rescuers and 100 tons of tents, blankets and cooking kits.

The Israeli army sent in two planeloads of rescue staff and equipment to set up a field hospital in Haiti that can serve up to 500 people a day. The crew will include 220 rescue workers, including 40 military doctors and 24 nurses.

Israel was sending in an elite Army rescue unit of engineers and doctors.

Canada sent a military reconnaissance team to assess and planned an initial donation of $4.8 million, with more aid to flow after reports to Ottawa by military reconnaissance team.

President Barack Obama promised an all-out rescue and humanitarian effort including military and civilian emergency teams from across the U.S. The aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson was expected to arrive off the coast Thursday and the Navy said the amphibious assault ship USS Bataan had been ordered to sail as soon as possible with a 2,000-member Marine unit.

"We have to be there for them in their hour of need," Obama said.

China tells Web companies to obey controls

By JOE McDONALD, AP Business Writer

BEIJING – In China's first official response to Google's threat to leave the country, the government Thursday said foreign Internet companies are welcome but must obey the law and gave no hint of a possible compromise over Web censorship.

Foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu, without mentioning Google by name, said Beijing prohibits e-mail hacking, another issue cited by the company. She was responding to questions about Google at a regular ministry briefing.

"China's Internet is open," Jiang said. "China welcomes international Internet enterprises to conduct business in China according to law."

Google said Tuesday it would stop censoring search results in China and might shut down its China-based Google.cn site, citing attempts to break into accounts on its Gmail service used by human rights activists.

Jiang gave no indication whether the government had talked with Google. The state Xinhua News Agency said earlier officials were seeking more information about its announcement.

The main Communist Party newspaper warned companies to obey government controls as Web users visited Google's Beijing offices for a second day to leave flowers and notes expressing support for the company.

Peoples Daily, citing a Cabinet official's comments in November, said companies must help the government keep the Internet safe and fight online pornography and cyber attacks.

Web companies must abide by "propaganda discipline," the official, Wang Chen, was quoted as saying. "Companies have to concretely increase the ability of Internet media to guide public opinion in order to uphold Internet safety."

Also Thursday, a law professor and human rights lawyer, Teng Biao, wrote on his blog that someone broke into his Gmail account and forwarded e-mail to another account. Teng said he did not know whether he was one of two Chinese activists mentioned by Google as hacking targets.

"Google leaving China makes people sad, but accepting censorship to stay in China and abandoning its `Don't Be Evil' principles is more than just sad," Teng wrote.

Outside the Google offices, some visitors poured small glasses of liquor, a Chinese funeral ritual.

One man left a copy of Peoples Daily, which he said represented the tightly controlled state media that China's public would be left with if Google pulls out and censorship continues.

"Google is the true hero in this silent city," said a note left outside the building in the capital's Haidian technology district. Referring to the government Web filter, popularly known as the "Great Firewall," another note said, "The tallest walls cannot divide people's sentiments. Google: Bye, let's meet on the other side of the wall."

Employees entered and left the building but declined to talk to reporters.

Google's main U.S. site has a Chinese-language section but Beijing's filters make that slow and difficult to access from China.

Beijing promotes Internet use for business and education but operates extensive filters to block access to material deemed subversive or pornographic, including Web sites run by dissidents and human rights groups. Its market of 338 million Internet users is the world's most populous.

The Global Times, published by Peoples Daily and known for a fiercely nationalistic tone, took an unusually conciliatory stance Thursday, warning that Google's departure would be a "lose-lose situation" for China.

"Google is taking extreme measures but it is reminding us that we should pay attention to the issue of the free flow of information," the newspaper said. It said China's national influence and competitiveness depend on access to information and added, "We have to advance with the times."

The White House said Wednesday it was briefed by Google on its plans in China but refused to give details. Spokesman Robert Gibbs said President Barack Obama made his stance on Internet freedom clear during his trip to China in November, when he told students an open exchange of information makes all countries stronger.

Gibbs said the White House is awaiting China's response to Google's announcement. Asked whether the incident could cause a U.S.-China chill, Giggs said: "We stood in China when we gave the answer about a free Internet. So, the president and this administration have beliefs about the freedom of the Internet."

It appeared unlikely other companies might follow Google's lead and try to change how business is done in China.

"As long as you aren't involved in politics, the media or pornography, the government will leave you alone," said Siva Yam, president of the United States of America-China Chamber of Commerce, which primarily represents U.S. companies in China.

Haiti quake: Survivors struggle while awaiting aid

By MIKE MELIA, Associated Press Writer

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – Turning pickup trucks into ambulances and doors into stretchers, Haitians are frantically struggling to save those injured in this week's earthquake while hoping foreign governments will quickly send in aid.

Help began arriving early Thursday when an Air China plane carrying a Chinese search-and-rescue team, medics and aid landed at Port-au-Prince airport, and more than 50 people in orange jumpsuits got out accompanied by trained dogs.

The U.S. and other nations said they were sending food, water, medical supplies to assist the Western Hemisphere's poorest nation, where the international Red Cross estimated 3 million people — a third of the population — may need emergency relief.

In the streets of the capital, survivors set up camps amid piles of salvaged goods, including food being scavenged from the rubble.

"This is much worse than a hurricane," said Jimitre Coquillon, a doctor's assistant working at a makeshift triage center set up in a hotel parking lot. "There's no water. There's nothing. Thirsty people are going to die."

If there were any organized efforts to distribute food or water, they were not visible Wednesday.

The aid group Doctors Without Borders treated wounded at two hospitals that withstood the quake and set up tent clinics elsewhere to replace its damaged facilities. Cuba, which already had hundreds of doctors in Haiti, treated injured in field hospitals.

President Barack Obama promised an all-out rescue and humanitarian effort including the military and civilian emergency teams from across the U.S. The aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson was expected to arrive off the coast Thursday and the Navy said the amphibious assault ship USS Bataan had been ordered to sail as soon as possible with a 2,000-member Marine unit.

"We have to be there for them in their hour of need," Obama said.

A U.S. military assessment team was the first to arrive, to determine Haiti's needs.

The global relief effort picked up steam Thursday with a British flight carrying a government assessment team and 71 rescue specialists along with heavy equipment arriving in the neighboring Dominican Republic. The crew prepared to head to Haiti. A Los Angeles County Fire Department 72-member search team left for Haiti late Wednesday.

The United Nations released $10 million from its emergency funds, even as U.N. forces in Haiti struggled with their own losses. The U.N. headquarters building collapsed, and at least 16 personnel are confirmed dead, with up to 150 still missing, including mission head Hedi Annabi of Tunisia and his chief deputy, Luis Carlos da Costa.

"We'll be using whatever roads are passable to get aid to Port-au-Prince, and if possible we'll bring helicopters in," said Emilia Casella, a spokeswoman for the U.N. food agency in Geneva.

There was no estimate on how many people were killed by Tuesday's magnitude-7 quake. Haitian President Rene Preval said the toll could be in the thousands. Leading Sen. Youri Latortue told The Associated Press the number could be 500,000, but conceded that nobody really knew.

"Let's say that it's too early to give a number," Preval said told CNN.

Survivors used sledgehammers and their bare hands to try to find victims in the rubble. In Petionville, next to the capital, people dug through a collapsed shopping center, tossing aside mattresses and office supplies. More than a dozen cars were entombed, including a U.N. truck.

Nearby, about 200 survivors, including many children, huddled in a theater parking lot using sheets to rig makeshift tents and shield themselves from the sun in 90-degree heat.

Police officers carried the injured in their pickup trucks. Wisnel Occilus, a 24-year-old student, was wedged between two other survivors in a truck bed headed to a police station. He was in an English class when the magnitude-7 quake struck at 4:53 p.m. and the building collapsed.

"The professor is dead. Some of the students are dead, too," said Occilus, who suspected he had several broken bones. "Everything hurts."

Other survivors carried injured to hospitals in wheelbarrows and on stretchers fashioned from doors.

Bodies lay everywhere in Port-au-Prince: tiny children next to schools, women in rubble-strewn streets with stunned expressions frozen on their faces, men hidden beneath plastic tarps and cotton sheets.

Balancing suitcases and belongings on their heads, people streamed on foot into the Haitian countryside, where wooden and cinderblock shacks showed little sign of damage. Ambulances and U.N. trucks raced in the opposite direction, toward Port-au-Prince.

Calls from victims seeking help from emergency services weren't getting through because systems that connect different phone networks were not working, said officials from a telecommunications provider in Haiti.

Calls were being placed sometimes 15 to 20 times from the same phone, which was "painful to watch," said Jyoti Mahurkar-Thombre, Alcatel-Lucent's general manager of wireless voice.

About 3,000 police and international peacekeepers cleared debris, directed traffic and maintained security in the capital. But law enforcement was stretched thin even before the quake and would be ill-equipped to deal with major unrest. The U.N.'s 9,000-member peacekeeping force sent patrols across the capital's streets while securing the airport, port and main buildings.

Looting began immediately after the quake, with people seen carrying food from collapsed buildings. Inmates were reported to have escaped from the damaged main prison in Port au Prince, said Elisabeth Byrs, a U.N. humanitarian spokeswoman in Geneva.

It was unclear whether the U.S. ground troops heading this way would be used for security operations as well as humanitarian efforts.

Port-au-Prince's ruined buildings fell on both the poor and the prominent: The body of Archbishop Joseph Serge Miot, 63, was found in the ruins of his office, said the Rev. Pierre Le Beller at Miot's order, the Saint Jacques Missionary Center in Landivisiau, France.

Haitian Senate President Kelly Bastien was rescued from the collapsed Parliament building and taken to a hospital in the neighboring Dominican Republic. The president of Haiti's Citibank was also among the survivors being treated there, said Rafael Sanchez Espanol, director of the Homs Hospital in Santiago.

A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter evacuated four critically injured U.S. Embassy staff to the hospital at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where the military has been detaining suspected terrorists.

The U.S. Embassy had no confirmed reports of deaths among the estimated 40,000 to 45,000 Americans who live in Haiti, but many were struggling to find a way out of the country.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said Thursday it has launched a Web site to help Haitians find loved ones missing in the quake.

Robert Zimmerman, deputy head of the group's tracing unit, said people in Haiti and abroad can use the site to register the names of missing relatives.

As dusk fell Wednesday, thousands of people gathered on blankets outside the crumpled presidential palace, including hundreds of women who waved their hands and sang hymns in a joyful, even defiant tone.

Ricardo Dervil, 29, said he decided to join the crowd because he was worried about aftershocks and was tired of seeing dead bodies.

"I was listening to the radio and they were saying to stay away from buildings," he said. "All I was doing was walking the street and seeing dead people."

Lawyers' office in Malaysia 'Allah' case ransacked

By JULIA ZAPPEI, Associated Press Writer

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia – Vandals splashed a church with paint and burglars ransacked a law firm defending Christians in their fight to use the word "Allah," adding to religious tensions in Muslim-majority Malaysia, police and officials said Thursday.

The Church of St. Elizabeth in southern Johor state was splashed with red paint before dawn, district police chief Osman Mohamed Sebot said. It was the 10th church attacked or vandalized since Friday night in Muslim-majority Malaysia, where people of different faiths have generally lived without conflict.

Meanwhile, the offices of the law firm representing Herald was broken into and ransacked, lawyers said Thursday.

Lawyer S. Selvarajah said that staff arrived at work in the morning to find several locks and steel grill doors to enter the 2nd and 3rd floor offices cut, drawers ransacked and papers strewn on the floor.

He said his partner's laptop was missing. A mobile phone service provider's shop and tuition center on the first floor were not broken into, he said.

"Only our office has been targeted," he said. "It looks like it is an intimidation tactic ... We anticipated something will happen. We are definitely upset about this," he told The Associated Press.

The incident adds to the tension building up since the church attacks began Friday night. Eight churches have been firebombed by unknown attackers, including one that was partially gutted. Two other churches were splashed with paint, and another place of worship — a Sikh temple — was pelted with stones, apparently because Sikhs use the word "Allah" in their scriptures.

The attacks followed a High Court ruling on Dec. 31, allowing a Catholic publication, the Herald, to use "Allah" as a translation for God in its Bahasa Melayu language edition. The ruling, which overturned a government ban on the word, upset many Muslims in Malaysia.

Bahasa is the language of the Malay Muslims, who comprise about 60 percent of the country's 28 million population. It is also spoken by indigenous people of Sabah and Sarawak states on Borneo, who form more than 70 percent of Malaysia's 2.5 million Christians.

The government, which has appealed against the High Court ruling, says "Allah" is exclusive to Islam and its use by Christians would mislead Muslims. The Christians say they have been using the word for decades, and it is the only word they have for God in their language.

The government has condemned the attacks on the churches and has vowed to uphold the freedom of religion guaranteed to minorities by the constitution.

The ban is over the use of "Allah" only in published material and not in everyday speech by the country's various minorities.

Selvarajah said police and staff could not enter the third-floor office, in Kuala Lumpur's Petaling Jaya suburb, because the door was jammed. He said a camera in the building staircase was sprayed but he could not say with what.

Petaling Jaya police chief Arjunaidi Mohamed confirmed the break-in, saying police were investigating. He said it should not immediately be linked to recent church attacks. "It has nothing to do with the churches," he said.

Hamas says investigating Egyptian soldier's death

GAZA, Jan. 13 (Xinhua) -- Hamas is investigating the death of an Egyptian soldier killed on Gaza borders and will hand over the findings to Cairo, the deposed Hamas government said on Wednesday.

"The investigation is about to complete," said Hamas Interior Minister, Fathi Hammad, in Gaza city.

"We will ask for an urgent meeting with the Egyptian officials when the inquiry is over" to give them the results, he said.

Last week, Hamas demonstrators rallied on the sealed Gaza border with Egypt to protest against an alleged underground wall construction and Egyptian restrictions on an international aid convoy entering Gaza.

The Hamas supporters threw stones at Egyptian forces on the border, triggering armed clashes between the two sides in which an Egyptian soldier was gunned down at his observation tower.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit has called on Hamas to hand over those responsible for the killing of the soldier.

Source: Xinhua.
Link: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2010-01/13/content_12805433.htm.

UAE, Germany in 'broad agreement' on Iran

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Abu Dhabi - The United Arab Emirates and Germany are in "very broad agreement" on the proper response to Iran's controversial nuclear program, Germany's foreign minister said in Abu Dhabi Sunday. UAE President Sheikh Kalifah bin-Zayed al-Nahyan, speaking alongside German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle in Abu Dhabi, told reporters that Iran was an "ally."

"We hope that Iran behaves in a way that makes sanctions unnecessary," Sheikh Khalifah said.

"We, in the UAE, are particularly affected as neighbors of Iran. We are trying everything to cooperate with Iran. But we also see with great concern that Iran is not acting transparently with regard to its nuclear program," he said.

"We want to say in all clarity that we demand more cooperation and collaboration from Iran. That would also be in Iran's interest," Sheikh Khalifah said.

The United Arab Emirates has financial dealings with Iran, but has long looked with suspicion at its nuclear program, and is in a longstanding dispute with its neighbor across the Gulf over islands claimed by both.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302988,uae-germany-in-broad-agreement-on-iran.html.

First US bank collapse of 2010: Horizon Bank

Sat, 09 Jan 2010

Washington - A small bank in the state of Washington became the first US bank to collapse in 2010, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) said. Horizon Bank's estimated 1.3 billion dollars in assets and 1.1 billion dollars in deposits are being assumed by Washington Federal Savings and Loan Association, of Seattle, Washington, the FDIC said Friday. Horizon had 18 branches which will be taken over by Washington Federal Savings and Loan.

FDIC estimated that losses to its insurance fund would be limited to 540 million dollars.

Horizon joined the 140 US banks closed by regulators in 2009 amidst bad real estate loans that contributed to the recession, the highest number of banks to collapse since the end of the savings-and- loan crisis in 1992, when 181 lenders failed, the Wall Street Journal reported.

In a separate move, regulators also closed down Kern Central Credit Union, in Bakersfield, California, a three-branch institution that served farm workers.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302884,first-us-bank-collapse-of-2010-horizon-bank.html.

Report: 20 more terrorists trained in Yemen for attacks

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Washington - Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian man charged with attempting to blow up a Christmas Day flight over Detroit, told investigators that about 20 other Muslims were being trained in Yemen for similar attacks, US broadcaster CBS said, citing the British intelligence services. The attack on the Delta/Northwest Airlines flight was prevented only because the PETN explosive that Abdulmutallab smuggled on board failed to detonate.

An initial inquiry commissioned by US President Barack Obama found that the attack had been plotted by the Yemen affiliate of the terrorist group al-Qaeda.

US flight security officials have tightened checks on people boarding US-bound flights. Passengers from 14 countries are being specially scrutinized, including from various Arabic-speaking countries and Nigeria.

According to CBS, the US has sent FBI agents to Ghana, where Abdulmutallab started his journey to the US after spending five months in Yemen.

US investigators believe that the suspected terrorist met an al- Qaeda member in the Ghanaian capital, Accra, where he possibly received the PETN material which he then hid in his underpants, CBS reported.

The 23-year-old Nigerian, who is charged with trying to blow up the plane with 290 people on board, was arraigned in Detroit in federal court on Friday, where he pleaded "not guilty." He was indicted by a grand jury on six charges.

Eyewitnesses said the young man's legs were in chains in the court appearance. Wearing a white T-shirt and khaki trousers, Abdulmutallab sat with hanging shoulders, looking at the floor, giving a defeated impression, according to news reports. He spoke so softly that the judge had to ask him to speak more loudly.

That image contradicted one given by a spokesman for the court, Rod Hansen, who said Abdulmutallab was calm and showed no emotions as he spelled his name and recited details of his schooling. The terrorist suspect was under the influence of pain killers related to his injuries when the explosive caught fire.

A quick-thinking passenger on the plane raced to the seat when flames appeared, wrestled the explosive from Abdulmutallab and put out the fire with the help of cabin crew.

Abdulmutallab had ignited the explosive as the plane was making its approach to the airport.

He faces life in prison. It could take months until the trial begins, but experts expect a relatively short process since he was caught in the act of trying to blow up the plane, with a plane full of witnesses.

His lawyers did not contest his being held in prison until a trial.

Abdulmutallab could still change his not-guilty plea, in the hopes of getting a lesser sentence, as the case progresses.

An initial inquiry commissioned by President Barack Obama found that the intelligence community had "sufficient information" to stop the attack.

Abdulmutallab's father, a wealthy former Nigerian cabinet member and banker, even warned US security authorities that he was worried his son was planning an attack.

Obama has sharply criticized the intelligence community for the "systemic failure" and outlined a series of measures to strengthen intelligence gathering and analysis. He also detailed increased airport security measures, including plans for more full-body scanners, baggage searches and flight marshals.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302899,report-20-more-terrorists-trained-in-yemen-for-attacks.html.

Two suspected ETA terrorists arrested in France

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Madrid - Two suspected members of the militant Basque separatist group ETA were arrested in France, the Spanish Interior Ministry said early Sunday. The man and woman who were arrested were among the most wanted members of ETA, the ministry indicated. The arrests took place near Clermont-Ferrand in central France.

Both were armed at the time of their arrest, according to the newspaper El Mundo, which cited sources in the counter-terrorism branch.

The two were arrested in a mountainous region as they were approaching a weapons stash. Explosives were found in the stash. The Spanish Guardia Civil had discovered the stash some days before and held it under observation.

The Spanish government in late 2009 warned of new terrorist actions from ETA. Since a series of bomb attacks in August on the vacation island of Mallorca, the separatist organization has kept a low profile.

"The ETA has been pushed into a corner, it is socially isolated, and has been put under pressure at the international level especially from France. The organization is split internally," Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba said. "In this situation, it is apparent that ETA must show that it still exists."

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302900,two-suspected-eta-terrorists-arrested-in-france.html.

Hunting for readers: how to draw people to your website

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Hamburg - It's never been easier or cheaper to set up a website. But getting people to check that site out? That can be an infinitely more difficult task. One approach is to make use of social networks. Using the short-message service Twitter is a simple way to draw attention to one's own site with comments about other websites. The same applies to fora or blogs.

"That's a way for you to show your skills as an author, but it can take a while," says Mario Fischer, a professor teaching business technology at a university in southern Germany.

The use of social bookmark services can help. It works like this: users set up bookmarks while surfing and register them with other sites like Mister Wong or del.icio.us so others can also take a look. There's no rule that one can't share a link to one's own site this way.

These services often offer previews of websites that users can integrate into their own sites as a button, making it easier for yet more readers to add that link to their own personal bookmarks.

But none of those methods are guaranteed to bring in more traffic. If they don't work, the next step is to try to give your site a search engine optimization. Search engines are supposed to be able to sort through sites for their pros and cons so they can put it as close to the top of a list when a site corresponds to a particular search.

"Google weighs in on about 200 signals," says Kay Oberbeck, a spokeswoman for Google's German operations. Google divides these criteria into three categories: composition, quality and technical implementation. Links from other sites play a key role in setting a website's popularity and are used to provide a page rank, a key measure of popularity.

But how to get links? One way is to post comments in well-visited blogs or fora, leaving behind a link while doing so. But this only works if those posts are serious and have some value. There's also little point in simply leaving a series of links on the pages of friends and co-workers. "Those link networks are recognized by search engines," says Fischer.

Search engines often have problems with dynamic content and Flash animation. If you don't want to do without them, you need to provide a sitemap for those engines. People with a Google mail account can use its Webmastertool to construct a sitemap.

Also pay attention to the source code, the website's programming. Metatags in the code's header provide clues to its content. Experienced web designers swear by the metatag "Keyword," convinced they can get better results with Google and other search engines by putting something relevant there.

Fischer disagrees. "They are not even read by search engines."

More important is the metatag "Title." Its contents are shown by the browser in the page title and are read by the search engine: for example, "Kitty cats - a blog for cat lovers." Fischer advises using five to seven keywords. Designers can also use the tag "Description" to give a short idea of the page's contents, which Google then passes on its search results.

But budding designers need to realize that there is no way to make a website popular overnight. "You have to give yourself a little time," says Fischer. "The first results will come in two to four months."

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302903,hunting-for-readers-how-to-draw-people-to-your-website.html.

Somalia: Fourth Day Fighting Continues, Death Tall Rises in Beledweyn Town

13 January 2010

The fourth day fighting between the Islamist forces of Hizbul Islam and Ahlu Sunna Waljama'a is continuing in Beledweyn town in Hiran region, just as the casualties rose, witnesses and officials told Shabelle radio on Wednesday.

More than 75 people were wounded in the fourth day fighting and the latest reports say that both sides were amassing reinforcement forces to restart the war.

Most of the injured people were civilians and were rushed to the main hospital of the town.

Locals said that the fighting was heavily started and continuing at around the neighborhoods between Bundoweyn and Liq-Liqato bridge in Beledweyn town as both the allied forces of Harakat Al-shabab Mijahideen with Hizbul Islam and Ahlu Sunna clerics were exchanging heavy weapons during the fourth day war.

Several mortar shells had landed into several business centers and neighborhoods in Beledweyn town that caused most of the people to flee from their houses.

More other were reported dead according to the people.

Yusuf Ahmed Hagar known as (Dabaged), one of Ahlu Sunna Waljama'a clerics and a former governor of Hiran region, who is involved in the fighting, told Shabelle radio that they had the upper hand of the fighting adding that they entered some of the neighborhoods of Beledweyn town.

Shuriye Farah Sabriye, the chairman of Hizbul Islam administration for Hiran region said that the situation of the town was tense before the fighting started on Wednesday morning adding that they would end the clashes in the town.

The real casualties of the two warring sides are unclear so far.

Residents told Shabelle radio that most of the people had displaced from the town as they could not tolerate the heavy gun battle that the fighters were exchanging.

Source: allAfrica.
Link: http://allafrica.com/stories/201001130851.html.

China Nearly Doubles Security Budget for Xinjiang

By EDWARD WONG

BEIJING — The government of the vast western region of Xinjiang, which last July was rocked by China’s deadliest ethnic violence in decades, is almost doubling its security budget this year compared with 2009, according to a report on Wednesday in China Daily, an official English-language newspaper.

The move is an indication of how deeply worried Chinese officials are that members of the Uighur and Han ethnic groups could clash again in the cities and desert oasis towns of the oil-rich region, and of the extraordinary measures the officials are taking to clamp down on the area.

The Uighurs are a Turkic-speaking, primarily Muslim people who often say the ethnic Han, who make up the majority of China’s population, discriminate against them. The Uighurs are the largest ethnic group in Xinjiang but are concerned by the displacement of their culture as growing numbers of Han migrants settle in the area.

At least 197 people were killed and more than 1,700 injured, most of them Han, when Uighurs rampaged through parts of the regional capital of Urumqi on July 5, Chinese officials say. Han vigilantes sought revenge over the next few days. The Uighurs had rioted partly in reaction to government handling of an earlier ethnic brawl in southeast China.

This year, the regional government will spend $423 million on public security, up 88 percent over last year, China Daily reported, citing a budget proposal released Tuesday during an annual official conference.

“The government decided to increase the spending on public security this year to enhance social stability in Xinjiang,” said Wan Haichuan, director of the region’s finance department.

Speaking at the conference, Nur Bekri, chairman of the regional government, repeated the official assertion that the “three forces” of terrorism, separatism and religious extremism were responsible for the rioting. He added that the authorities foiled other “organized plots” after the July 5 violence in Urumqi, China Daily reported.

In the aftermath of the rioting, the Chinese government sent units of the People’s Armed Police, a paramilitary force, into cities and towns across Xinjiang and bolstered the presence of regular uniformed police officers. But the rioting had deeply shaken the faith of many Chinese in the abilities of the security forces. Han residents of Urumqi in particular criticized the police for not reacting quickly and forcefully to the outbreak of violence, and later called for the resignation of Wang Lequan, the senior Communist Party official in Xinjiang.

The announcement this week of the expanded security budget could help restore confidence among Han residents but could also raise fears among some Uighurs. Uighur families in Urumqi have said that security forces detained hundreds of Uighur men in the days and weeks after the rioting, and nearly two dozen prisoners have received death sentences, some of which have been suspended.

The government also blocked access to the wider Internet and text messaging for most residents of Xinjiang and set up internal Web sites heavy on political propaganda. The government began relaxing the blocks late last month, but residents still cannot freely access the Internet.

Source: New York Times.
Link: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/14/world/asia/14xinjiang.html.

Parliament divided over Uighur situation

There are continuing divisions this morning in parliament over whether Switzerland should take in two Guantanamo detainees, minority Uighurs from China.

Two parliamentary committees have issued opposing appeals to influence the cabinet on the matter.

Members of parliament’s committee on human rights published a letter earlier this week, urging the federal cabinet to stick to their decision to house the two men. They also criticize China for what they describe as a ‘campaign to denigrate’ the Guantanamo detainees.

But yesterday, following the publication of the letter, the country’s political institutions committee called on the cabinet to reject the Uighurs, saying they would pose a threat to national security and relations with China.

Anne Seydoux is a Christian Democrat MP and a member of the human rights committee. She says she hopes the cabinet will stay the course and honor its commitment to the U.S. government.

Whatever the divisions in parliament, the final decision rests with the Cabinet.

— Catherine Allen, World Radio Switzerland

Source: World Radio Switzerland.
Link: http://worldradio.ch/wrs/news/wrsnews/parliament-divided-over-guantanamo-detainees.shtml?17462.

Arthur and the astronauts: New PC games for January

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Berlin - Clanking armor and clashing swords are standard elements of computer and video games. Two new releases in January are taking a different path, though. Vancouver 2010 offers the chance to rake in the gold medals in various Winter Olympics disciplines, even before the real Games get started. Airport Tower Simulator puts players into a flight controller's shoes. Yet there's still plenty of clanking and clashing, including in the strategic role-playing mix King Arthur. A sequel to the successful space adventure game Mass Effect is also expected.

Mass Effect 2 seems likely to be among the most important titles at the start of the new year. After all, gamemaker Bioware has traditionally been considered among the best developers in the role-playing game genre. It most recently re-established its pedigree this past autumn with Dragon Age: Origins.

Like its predecessor, Mass Effect 2 draws its inspiration from sources beyond the medieval fancy of most role-playing games. The plot takes place in space, with a variety of dialogues, a well-developed story and plenty of action. The storyline picks up two years after the events of the previous installment.

As might be expected in a game of this type, the protagonist Commander Shepard has to save not just the planet, but the entire universe from a new threat. He's not alone on his quest. Various astronauts and other space travelers join him and his ship as they travel through the vacuum. Veterans can import their characters and statuses from the first part to continue the story directly. Mass Effect 2 is expected on January 28 from Electronic Arts for around 55 dollars.

King Arthur is a familiar figure in books and films. He's popular in games too, with Ubisoft's new Kind Arthur due in stores in January. The gamer slips into the role of king and must unite the provinces of Britain. At first glance the basic structure resembles that of the Total War titles: a 3D map is used to plan actions, while fights and skirmishes are then conducted in a real-time mode.

The similarities end there, though. King Arthur is intended as more of a mix of a strategy and a role-playing game. The king's decisions impact his standing among the people - which in turn impacts how the game unfolds. King Arthur is expected in January for around 50 dollars.

Sega's Vancouver 2010 brings with it an entirely different kind of competition. Players can try their hand at a series of Winter Olympics disciplines, with 14 different gold medals up for grabs. That includes the giant slalom, downhill, bob and snowboard cross. Vancouver 2010 will hit the stores in January, well before the torch hits Vancouver, and is expected to cost around 45 dollars.

Rondomedia is hoping that 2010 brings a continuation of one of the most unusual success stories in recent computer gaming history: a plethora of simulations that also found a plethora of buyers. Previous games tackled subjects ranging from farming equipment to bus simulators, and beyond. This time the developers opted for a lofty perch, namely the air traffic controller's seat.

The task in ATC - Airport Tower Simulator is guiding incoming airplanes to a safe landing. It sounds easy, but things can get harried in a hurry, especially at higher degrees of difficulty. Airplanes don't usually have the airspace all to themselves. At times up to a half-dozen jets may be flying in at once.

Fuel supplies must be tracked, as must the flight speed and spacing between the machines. The air traffic controller can work with any of twelve airports for international metropolises - including Berlin, London and New York. It's ultimately the exact opposite of most video games: the 20 dollar game encourages you to try your best to keep anything from clanking and clashing.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302905,arthur-and-the-astronauts-new-pc-games-for-january.html.

Computer and internet briefs 10 January 2010

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Washington - New tabs in Internet Explorer take you to a blank, useless page by default. You can change that behavior, though, by opening the Tools menu and clicking Options. From the Options dialog box, click the Settings button in the Tab section. Finally, from the "When a new tab is opened" drop-down list box, select the type of page that should be displayed when you open a new tab.

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Washington - You can pay a lot of money for image browsing and cataloging applications. Or you can download the free IrfanView (http://www.irfanview.com). This tool, now at version 4.25, has been around for years and has garnered a solid reputation among photo enthusiasts. Among its many features are multiple thumbnail and preview options, support for RAW camera formats, as well as email and batch conversion options.

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Washington - Firefox users have an advantage when it comes to reading webpages in foreign languages, thanks to the BabelFish plugin (https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/add-on/7004). BabelFish provides instant access to two translation services, enabling users to get almost instantaneous translations of webpages in languages they do not know. The plugin is free.

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Washington - Want control over open Windows applications with your keyboard? The Alt-Spacebar key combination is one of the least used but handiest ways to access a program's control menu, from which you can minimize, maximize, resize, close, or move an application without ever touching the mouse. Get used to this shortcut and you'll find that it's far faster than performing the same actions with the desktop rodent.

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Washington - What's the difference between a directory and a folder in Windows? Nothing! Both terms are used synonymously to describe a location on your hard drive in which files are stored. In the old days of the command-line DOS, the term "directory" was used exclusively. When Windows came along, the word "folder" was introduced, with the idea that the concept of a file folder as a place where documents was stored was easier for new computer users to grasp.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302906,computer-and-internet-briefs-10-january-2010.html.

Detroit prepares for annual auto extravaganza

Sun, 10 Jan 2010

Washington - The US car industry was putting the finishing touches Sunday on the continent's premier annual auto show, hoping to put behind it a rough 2009 and promising smaller, greener and competitive models for the coming year. More than 5,000 journalists were headed to Detroit for the two-day press preview, starting Monday, of the North American International Auto Show. Global carmakers will present 700 models they hope will tempt US consumers back into the market after a deep, two-year economic recession that brought the industry to its knees.

About 700,000 visitors are expected from January 16-24, when the Detroit auto show opens to the public, but attracting new buyers in 2010 will still be a hard sell.

The "Detroit Three" of General Motors, Chrysler and Ford are racing to adjust to the harsh reality of a shrinking and transforming market. All three will be touting some smaller cars more in keeping with the lean economic times.

GM brand Chevrolet will unveil new versions of its Cruze and Aveo, while Ford will highlight its popular European model Fiesta, which will go on sale in the United States over the summer. It is also releasing a new Taurus.

Asian makers like Toyota, Honda and Nissan shifted to smaller models earlier, and now rival the US giants for sales on their home turf.

But Toyota, the world's largest carmaker, is also hoping for a rebound in 2010 after posting its first annual loss in history in 2008 and suffering a similar fate in 2009. The company that has cornered the hybrid market with its Prius will launch a new hybrid concept car at the Detroit show.

Like last year, the auto show will be scaled back from its traditional extravagance amid the still-sputtering US economy. There will be fewer glitzy unveilings - no fashion shows like those held during Detroit's prime.

The US car market was in the doldrums for most of 2009. Vehicle sales dropped more than 20 per cent to about 10 million as the country battled through its worst recession in generations. Sales averaged about 16 million vehicles for the rest of the decade.

GM and Chrysler went through bankruptcies in 2009 and emerged with the help of billions of dollars in emergency government loans.

GM left bankruptcy majority-owned by President Barack Obama's government. Its exhibit at the auto show will be without some major brands that have been shed over the last year: Pontiac, Hummer, Saturn and Sweden's Saab.

GM is refocusing on four core brands: Chevrolet, Cadillac, GMC and Buick. Chief executive Ed Whitacre, who took on the job in December, said this week he believes the company can become profitable in 2010.

GM's smaller rival, Chrysler, emerged from bankruptcy largely controlled by Italian maker Fiat. Its new CEO Sergio Marchionne will also be highlighting smaller models like the Fiat 500 that he plans to sell on the US market in coming years, as well as an electric car.

Unlike GM and Chrysler, Ford avoided government bail-outs in 2009 and has already started to see a turnaround. The company saw sales jump more than 30 per cent in December compared to the same month in 2008.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302909,detroit-prepares-for-annual-auto-extravaganza.html.