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Monday, March 22, 2010

Xinjiang users' e-mail restored

E-mail services have resumed and the restriction on the number of text messages one can send was lifted in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region on Saturday, about eight months after a riot last year in Urumqi, the regional capital.

Xiao Yong, a local resident, found he could now send and receive e-mails as before and there were no longer restrictions in surfing 32 Websites.

The restriction on text messages has also been lifted, according to a spokesman for the regional government. Communication services would open further step by step, the spokesman said yesterday.

The regional government began to control communications after the riot on July 5, which was orchestrated via the Internet, text messages and long-distance phone calls.

The access for Xinjiang residents to two Websites, Xinhuanet.com and people.com.cn, was restored on December 28, followed by access to sina.com.cn and sohu.com on January 10.

Other services have also been gradually resumed, including international long-distance calls by some departments and text messages from banks, securities dealers and weather forecast departments.

Internet connections, international phone calls and text message services were cut in some areas after the riot, in a move to crack down on the violence and prevent it from happening again.

"These restrictions played an important role in maintaining the stabilization of the region, but also brought inconvenience to the residents. However, people of various ethnic groups in Xinjiang have shown understanding of and fully supported these measures," said Yang Maofa, director of the communications administration bureau.

Source: Shanghai Daily

Source: East Day.
Link: http://english.eastday.com/e/100322/u1a5100453.html.

Islamic nations raise $850 mn to help Darfur

Mon Mar 22, 2010

An international conference organized by the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) has raised $850 million to help people in Sudan's Darfur.

The Sunday one-day conference co-chaired by Egypt and Turkey in Cairo planned to raise $2 billion to help the war-ravaged Darfur region.

"Stability and development in Darfur is the only guarantee that will lead to the voluntary return of refugees and displaced Sudanese back to their homes," Press TV correspondent in Cairo quoted the Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul-Gheit as saying.

"I hope this is a turning point that will help Darfur overcome its crisis once and for all," the Egyptian top diplomat added.

In addition to Muslim nations representatives from, European states, UN agencies and aid groups as well as the US were present in the conference.

Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa who participated at the conference urged international support for the reconstruction of Darfur.

"The reconstruction of Darfur is our obligation. It is essential at this time to create an atmosphere of stability and peace in Sudan before the presidential election, which will take place next month in addition to the referendum that will determine whether Sudan will be divided into north and south or will be united as one state," Moussa added.

According to the United Nations' figures, clashes that erupted in Sudan in early 2003 have claimed up to 300,000 lives and drove more than two million people from their homes.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/121388.html.

Maghreb Andalusian Music Festival opens in Algeria

2010-03-21

Algeria will launch the first Maghreb Andalusian Music Festival in Kolea on Monday (March 22nd), Liberte reported. "We have invited leaders of festivals in Tunisia and Morocco to exchange experiences and initiate collaborations," event commissioner Abdelhamid Benblida said at an Algiers press conference on Saturday. Musical troupes and artists such as Syrine Benmoussa and Testour Set from Tunisia, Libya's Hassen Laribi and Shabab El Andalous from Rabat will perform at the event.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://magharebia.com/en_GB/articles/awi/newsbriefs/general/2010/03/21/newsbrief-06.

UN Western Sahara envoy visits Sahrawi camps

2010-03-21

UN Special Envoy for Western Sahara Christopher Ross on Saturday (March 20th) visited the Sahrawi refugee camps to meet with official negotiators, Saharawi news agency SPS reported. Ross' 9-day tour of the Tindouf camps, Algeria, Morocco and Mauritania aims to revive direct talks between parties to the Western Sahara issue.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://magharebia.com/en_GB/articles/awi/newsbriefs/general/2010/03/21/newsbrief-01.

Tunisian anti-smoking law takes effect

2010-03-21

Tunisia's strict new anti-smoking came into force on Friday (March 19th), ANSA reported. The law bans smoking in spaces such as public gardens, train and bus stations, airports and municipal offices. Under the new legislation, restaurants and bars face closure if they fail to provide designated non-smoking areas.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://magharebia.com/en_GB/articles/awi/newsbriefs/general/2010/03/21/newsbrief-02.

Morocco swarms with street vendors

For many of Morocco's poor or unemployed, selling goods on the street provides a way to earn a meager living.

By Siham Ali for Magharebia in Rabat – 21/03/10

Street vendors can be found all over Morocco, from working-class districts in outlying towns to the city centers in Rabat and Casablanca. For these unofficial traders, selling their fish, vegetables, fruit, clothes and other wares on the ground or from handcarts, life is far from easy.

They spend their days hoping to turn a decent profit and fearing that their goods will be confiscated by the Auxiliary Forces. Illiterates, graduates, young and old people, women and men – they all devote themselves to a profession that enables them to earn a fistful of dirhams a day.

In Rabat's city center, 36-year-old Mohammed sells socks and sunglasses. He hopes to one day have a proper shop so that he can offer his family a stable life. As an informal vendor, he said, he earns between 30-50 dirhams a day.

A law graduate, Mohammed has been seeking a steady public-sector job for over a decade.

"No private company will recruit university graduates, so I've sat several competitive exams, but I've never been lucky enough to pass," he said. "I'm not ashamed of being a street vendor, despite my level of education, even though deep down I really hope for a better life for my children."

This hope is shared by many vendors who would like to see their source of income become more stable. They include women who do everything they can to overcome the hardships inherent in their profession.

One such woman is 44-year-old Rehma, a widow with four daughters aged 8-19. She sells smuggled goods such as shampoo, soap and pajamas. "I spend all my time on the move buying my goods and selling them to my customers in several cities," she said.

"I would have liked to have a store of my own, but I can't afford it," Rehma said, adding that the authorities ought to take measures to help street vendors instead of driving them away from major roads.

Many people would like the authorities to build shopping centers at strategic locations and rent them at reasonable prices, so as to legalize this kind of informal business activity.

Sociologist Mohamed Kamal told Magharebia that despite the criticisms made regarding the existence of street vendors, the sector does help to maintain a certain socio-economic balance. He says that Morocco should draw inspiration from the experiences of countries that have successfully established legal venues for street vendors.

The government is working to bring more people into the formal economy. On January 19th, Trade and Industry Minister Ahmed Reda Chami told Parliament that an effective way of organizing the sector was overdue.

In the past, he explained to legislators, the approach centered on town planning. Premises were built for street vendors in special locations.

The ministry has begun exploring the issue in partnership with local councils and chambers of commerce in order to find a lasting and effective solution, Chami said.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/features/2010/03/21/feature-01.

US House passes healthcare overhaul

The US House of Representatives has narrowly approved President Barack Obama's top domestic priority, the healthcare reform bill.

The bill cleared the House on a 219-212 vote Sunday night. Republicans were unanimous in opposition, joined by 34 dissident Democrats.

The vote sends the bill, already approved by the Senate, to Obama to sign into law.

The legislation will extend health coverage to 32 millions of uninsured Americans, bringing to 95 percent the proportion of under-65 US citizens with private insurance.

Republicans say the $940 billion bill was a heavy-handed intrusion in the healthcare sector that will drive up costs, increase the budget deficit and reduce patients' choices.

The healthcare overhaul would usher in the biggest changes in the $2.5 trillion US healthcare system since the 1965 creation of the government-run Medicare health program for the elderly and disabled.

It would require most Americans to have health coverage, gives subsidies to help lower-income workers pay for coverage and creates state-based exchanges where the uninsured can compare and shop for plans.

Major provisions such as the exchanges and subsidies would not kick in until 2014, but many of the insurance reforms like barring companies from dropping coverage for the sick will begin in the first year.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=121385§ionid=3510203.

Lebanon's neglected liquid treasure just trickles away

Many people forced to buy water due to lack of supply network
By Agence France Presse (AFP)

Rita Daou
Agence France Presse

AMSHEET: Rose Hatem’s home overlooks the Mediterranean and is just a short distance from one of Lebanon’s longest rivers. But twice a week the 60-year-old has to buy water for her daily needs.

“I have been buying water since I moved here 14 years ago,” Hatem told AFP in the picturesque village of Amsheet, north of the Lebanese capital Beirut. “In the summer, when demand is high, I’m often left without a drop.”

Hers is a story repeated across Lebanon, one of the rare countries in the Middle East considered relatively rich in water. But many people still have to buy it because of a lack of a proper supply network and effective conservation.

Experts warn that unless Lebanon takes proper measures to protect its precious water resources, little will be left for future generations as the population, which currently stands at 4 million, increases.

Fadi Comair, who heads hydraulic and electrical resources at the Energy and Water Ministry, said that unless the problem is addressed – and quickly – Lebanon could even run dry within four years.

“There is no miracle solution,” he said. “We need to build dams, artificial lakes, a new network and work hand in hand with the private sector.

“If you take into account population increase and climate change, we have enough water to last us another four years, until 2015,” Comair said.

It is a warning that hits home hard where it hurts the most.

“As we celebrate World Water Day on Monday we must reflect on the fact that Lebanon should be exporting this resource rather than sitting by and watching it slowly diminish,” said Antoine Issa, head of the local council in Amsheet.

“This is a blessing and we have no idea how to preserve it.”

The tiny country bordering Syria and Israel has no fewer than 40 major streams, 2,000 springs and numerous waterfalls that form each year with the melting snow.

But the 1975-90 Civil War and years of political unrest have relegated the water issue to the backburner. Water rights are also a constant source of dispute between Lebanon and Israel, where the resource is even more scarce.

Comair said Lebanon annually has an average 2.1 billion cubic meters of renewable hydraulic resources.

“We use about a billion of that as drinking water or for irrigation and industrial purposes,” Comair said. “The rest – meaning more than half – is dumped in the Mediterranean.”

The fact that much of the country’s sewage is channeled into the sea rather than being recycled compounds Lebanon’s water problem, he said.

“Not only are we polluting the Mediterranean but this water is very valuable economically and could be used for irrigation or other purposes,” Comair said.

“Instead we end up using fresh water for irrigation, and that’s catastrophic.”

Experts also say that many rivers, including Nahr al-Kabeer and Orontes shared by Lebanon and Syria, and the Wazzani and Hasbani shared with Israel, are not exploited, partly because of their location.

“Water is a sensitive political issue and it’s true that any attempt by the state to exploit its rivers in the south would meet with a reaction from Israel,” said Nadim Farajalla, professor of hydrology and water at the American University of Beirut.

“But if we don’t do anything then there will come a point where the international community will tell us that we have lost our rights to exploit this water,” he added.

“We lack a global vision [regarding] water and badly manage this resource.”

A sad example of waste is the northern Akkar region, one of the country’s poorest, where a mere 54 percent of homes are connected to the public water grid despite the area being rich in underground water.

“Even those connected don’t always have water because the infrastructure is so outdated and there are huge leaks,” said Aisha Mushref, who works with Mada, a non-governmental organization that carried out a study on the issue titled “Forgotten Akkar.”

“People in this region still have to go and fetch water from the river.”

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=1&article_id=112983.

India test fires BrahMos supersonic cruise missile

New Delhi- India successfully tested Sunday a "maneuverable" version of the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile which it has jointly developed with Russia, news reports said.

The vertical-launch version of the 290-kilometer range BrahMos was tested from a warship in the Bay of Bengal off India's eastern coast, the PTI news agency reported.

"The vertical-launch version of missile was launched at 11:30 (0600 GMT) hours today from Indian Navy ship INS Ranvir and it maneuvered successfully hitting the target ship. It was a perfect hit and a perfect mission," BrahMos aerospace chief A Sivathanu Pillai was quoted as saying.

"After today's test, India has become the first and only country in the world to have a maneuverable supersonic cruise missile in its inventory," Pillai said.

Named after India's Brahmaputra and Russia's Moskva rivers, the BrahMos can carry a 200-kilogram conventional warhead.

Variants of the missile fitted with inclined launchers are already in service with the Indian Navy, NDTV news channel quoted defence sources as saying.

Sunday's firing was part of pre-induction tests for the vertical launcher variant, the sources said.

The BrahMos has also been inducted into the India Army and preparations are on to develop air-launched and the submarine- launched versions, the sources said.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/315099,india-test-fires-brahmos-supersonic-cruise-missile.html.

Final Iraqi elections results 'to be announced Friday'

Baghdad - Final results from Iraq's March 7 parliamentary elections will be announced Friday, the country's electoral commission announced Sunday, amid mounting calls for a recount.

The Iraqi parliamentary race looked set to go down to the wire after early results announced over the weekend showed former prime minister Ayad Allawi's Iraqi List eking out a narrow lead over al-Maliki's State of Law coalition.

In separate statements, al-Maliki and President Jalal al-Talabani on Sunday called on the Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) to conduct a manual recount of the national vote, given allegations of fraud.

This would "preserve political stability ... and avoid a return to violence," al-Maliki said in a statement.

The IHEC has stood by its results, and has said that it is thoroughly investigating claims of fraud, in at least five cases discarding ballots cast at polling stations because of irregularities.

Candidates have three days after the release of final results to launch formal challenges.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/315109,extra-final-iraqi-elections-results-to-be-announced-friday.html.

Obama invites Netanyahu to White House meeting

Jerusalem - US Middle East envoy George Mitchell gave Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu Sunday a formal invitation to meet with President Barack Obama in Washington, a spokesman for the Israeli premier said.

The invite, handed over when Mitchell met Netanyahu in Jerusalem, comes as the US and Israel are embroiled in a row over new Israeli construction in an East Jerusalem neighborhood built on West Bank land.

The Obama Administration is demanding that Israel freeze all construction in East Jerusalem and in West Bank settlements, something Netanyahu refuses to do.

Netanyahu was scheduled to leave for Washington Sunday night, to address the conference of the pro-Israel lobby, the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and will likely meet the president on Tuesday.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/315107,extra-obama-invites-netanyahu-to-white-house-meeting.html.

Poland's ruling party holds TV duel for presidential candidates

Warsaw - Poland's ruling Civic Platform party on Sunday held a television debate between the foreign minister and the speaker of parliament in the final phase of their search for a presidential candidate.

Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said that his presidency would be "courageous and ambitious" whilst that of his opponent Speaker of Parliament Bronislaw Komorovski would be "worthy and conservative."

The head of state should "have experience and be measured and reliable," countered Komorovski, who is the foreign minister's senior by 10 years.

Around 46,000 members of Prime Minister Donald Tusk's party have until March 25 to cast their vote on who should be the party's presidential candidate.

The vote was organized after Tusk unexpectedly declined to offer his candidature.

It is not yet known if current incumbent Lech Kaczynski intends to put himself forward.

The election is due to take place between September 19 and October 3.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/315111,polands-ruling-party-holds-tv-duel-for-presidential-candidates.html.

Namibia celebrates 20th anniversary of independence

Windhoek (Earth Times) - Namibian President Hifikepunye Pohamba was sworn in for a second five-year term Sunday - on the 20th anniversary of the south-west African country's independence from apartheid South Africa.

Pohamba took the oath of office in Independence Stadium in the capital Windhoek, nearly four months after presidential and parliamentary elections that he and his party, the South West African People's Organization (SWAPO), easily won.

The opposition had contested the poll outcome, claiming there were irregularities in the vote, but their application for a complete recount was thrown out of court in February.

South African President Jacob Zuma, President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, Democratic Republic of Congo's President Joseph Kabila and the presidents of Botswana, Tanzania, Mozambique and Zambia attended Sunday's independence celebrations.

Nobel Peace Prize-winning, former United Nations special envoy to Namibia Martti Ahtissari of Finland was also present.

Pohamba called on his government to ensure that all Namibians enjoyed the fruits of independence.

"We must consolidate peace and democracy for our children and children's children," he said.

He also reached out to his political opponents, which include some former senior members of SWAPO who broke away from the party and formed the opposition Rally for Democracy and Progress.

"Now we must stand together united. A community wastes valuable time if entangled in squabbles," he said.

Namibia gained independence from South Africa on 21 March 1990 after a 22-year guerrilla war between 1966 and 1988 led by SWAPO.

The former liberation movement has governed the impoverished country of 2 million people ever since, being returned to office through five straight general elections.

While the party has maintained stability, the country is battling high rates of corruption and unemployment. One in two Namibians of working age are out of a job.

Arab channels to air anti-Israel Turkish series

ANKARA: Two Arab channels have decided to air a Turkish television series on the plight of Palestinians that angered Israel, an official from the production company told AFP.

The 13-episode show “Separation: Palestine in Love and In War” has been sold to Saudi-run pan-Arabic news and also to entertainment channel MBC and to a Dubai channel, said Zafer Kaya Okay, art director at the Istanbul-based Cagla Productions.

MBC planned to begin the series Saturday, he said, while the Dubai channel would follow suit in the near future.

The series was first broadcast by Turkey’s state television in October, infuriating Israel, which said that the program incited “hatred against Israel” and was “not worthy of being broadcast even in an enemy state.”

The first episode showed Israeli forces as shooting innocent Palestinian civilians. Israeli soldiers were shown killing a new born baby girl and an elderly man on his way to pilgrimage in Mecca.

Turkey, whose population is mostly Muslim, has been a military ally of Israel since 1996 but relations between the two have been tense since Israel’s war on Gaza in early 2009, which Turkey has openly and vehemently criticized.

In January this year, bilateral ties became tense again over another television series depicting the adventures of a Turkish secret agent which Israel said depicted Jews as “baby-snatchers and “war criminals.”

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=4&article_id=112976.

Google serves US intelligence agencies: Chinese media

Chinese state media have accused Internet giant Google of being a tool in the hands of US intelligence agencies in the country.

A commentary published by the Xinhua News Agency accuses Google of providing the US government with a record of its search engine results, the BBC reported.

"Google's high-level officials have intricate ties with the US government. It is also an open secret that some security experts in the Pentagon are from Google", the commentary read.

The commentary signed by three Xinhua writers also accuses Google of infiltrating the local culture.

"It is unfair for Google to impose its own value and yardsticks on Internet regulation to China, which has its own time-honored tradition, culture and value."

Google announced in January that it would no longer comply with China's internet censorship laws. The search engine giant has denied that it was influenced by the US government.

Google is the second-largest search site in China. Baidu Inc, China's domestic search engine, has benefited from the dispute since Google's announcement that it could pull out of China. Baidu's shares have surged more than 44 percent since then.

Relations between Beijing and Washington have been deteriorating over a number of issues.

Recently, China reduced its military cooperation with Washington after the United States sold USD 6.4 billion worth of arms to Taiwan.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=121378§ionid=351020404.

AIPAC policy meeting begins amid US-Israeli tension

The top pro-Israeli lobby in the US, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, commonly known as AIPAC, has opened its annual three-day conference in Washington DC.

The event is held at a time when a row over Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem (al-Quds) has left scars in US-Israeli relations.

The annual conference attracts thousands of lobbyists and protesters who oppose Israeli policies in the Palestinian territories.

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is scheduled to be a plenary speaker on the closing day of AIPAC's March 21-23 conference.

Meanwhile, US President Barack Obama is scheduled to be in Indonesia and will not address the event.

Other speakers at the conference, with more than 7,000 attendees, include Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Kadima Party leader Tzipi Livni.

The conference is expected to focus on stressing the close US-Israel relations and urging the Obama administration to move past recent tensions with Israel over its plans to build another 1,600 settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories.

Further plans to lobby for enhanced sanctions against Iran over its nuclear enrichment program are also on the agenda of the conference.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=121377§ionid=3510203.

Nader attacks Israel for eluding NPT

Veteran liberal, citizens' rights campaigner and former US presidential candidate, Ralph Nader, has criticized Israel for possessing nuclear weapons and refusing to join the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

"Israel has 250 nuclear bombs and they don't belong to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, so they aren't even part of international law," Nader told Press TV during an anti-war demonstration in Washington DC on Saturday.

Tel Aviv, which is widely believed to be the only nuclear-armed power in the Middle East, refuses access to its nuclear sites by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

According to May 2008 comments by former US President Jimmy Carter, Israel has 150 nuclear weapons in its arsenal.

Nader further pointed to the contrast between the treatment Israel is receiving from its Western allies over its nuclear program and the pressure Iran is under for its civilian atomic activities.

"Israel has invaded its neighbors repeatedly. Iran hasn't invaded anybody in 250 years," he said.

Despite Tel Aviv's refusal to renounce nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction, Israel and its Western allies accuse Iran of seeking to develop nuclear weapons under the guise of a civilian program - a charge strongly denied by Tehran.

Under pressure from the US, Israel's closest ally, the UN Security Council has passed several rounds of sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program.

This is while Tehran's is a signatory of the NPT and its nuclear activities are under the constant supervision of the IAEA.

IAEA inspectors have conducted more inspections in Iran than in any other NPT signatory state, and have confirmed that there has been no diversion of nuclear material from civilian to military applications.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=121375§ionid=351020202.

Sarkozy's party loses big in French elections

French President Nicolas Sarkozy's ruling center-right bloc has suffered a comprehensive defeat in regional elections that comes as the last major national test before the country's 2012 presidential vote.

As polling stations closed on Sunday, initial estimates gave the Socialist Party and its Green allies some 54 percent of the vote at a national level, while Sarkozy's Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) won only 36 percent.

According to exit polls, the far-right National Front won just under nine percent of the vote nationwide.

The vote, which saw record low turn-out, will give the left control over at least 20 of the 22 regions on the mainland, leaving only Alsace for Sarkozy's UMP.

The local vote was held to select regional councils, which run local transport and maintain local infrastructure such as school buildings and hospitals.

While French Prime Minister Francois Fillon, a member of the UMP, acknowledged that the poll was "a disappointment," he said that national policy cannot be determined by regional elections.

In the last round of regional elections held in 2004, the UMP won just Alsace and Corsica but the Socialists' comprehensive win did not prevent Sarkozy from being elected president in 2007.

The French president has come under criticism from his own camp over his policies with analysts saying that the feeble economy and growing unemployment rate is taking its toll on the government.

Meanwhile, President Sarkozy said the poll had only "regional ramifications" and was not a protest against his government.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=121371§ionid=351020603.