Selasa, 24 Maret 2009

Czech parliament votes for prime minister to go

The Czech government lost a confidence vote in parliament Tuesday, forcing the prime minister and his Cabinet to resign, Czech media reported. The center-right government of Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek lost the vote 96-101, the Czech daily Mlada fronta Dnes reported. Key votes against the government were cast by a member of the prime minister's ruling Civic Democratic Party (ODS), and three other members of the ODS' ruling coalition -- a former member of the party and two former Green Party members, the Czech News Agency (CTK) reported.

ODS deputies immediately moved to expel Vlastimil Tlusty from the ODS deputies' group for his vote of no confidence, group chairman Petr Tluchor said, according to CTK. Tluchor also said the group would expel deputy Jan Schwippel, who also voted against the government but left the ODS deputies' group on his own last year.

"The deputies' group considers voting along with the Communists and Socialists for a no-confidence in the government led by the ODS incompatible with membership in the ODS and recommends that the ODS executive council take all necessary steps to expel deputies Tlusty and Schwippel from the Civic Democratic Party," Tluchor said.

The Central European country currently holds the rotating presidency of the European Union, but the vote is not expected to affect that. According to a statement from the Czech presidency on the EU Web site, Topolanek accepted the result of the vote. "I will adhere to the constitutional order," the prime minister said.The Czech constitution requires Topolanek to submit his resignation to President Vaclav Klaus, who will then appoint someone else to form a new government. But Tluchor told CTK that the ODS expects Klaus to appoint Topolanek to form the new government, adding that the ODS would not support a non-political caretaker government. source cnn.com

Saudi girl in marriage case wins appeal

An appeals court in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, has rejected and refused to certify a court ruling allowing a 47-year-old man's marriage to an 8-year-old girl, said a relative of the girl with knowledge of the proceedings.Under the Saudi legal process, what the appeals court ruling means is that the controversial marriage is still in effect, but a challenge to the marriage by the girl's mother is still alive. Rights groups hailed this week's decision because it keeps the mother's challenge going.

"I think that it happened because of the mother, because she refused to accept the [original] verdict, because she challenged the court in and took it to the appeals court, said Saudi women's rights activist Wajeha Al-Huwaider. "I really admire the mother for this." The mother is extremely relieved, the family member told CNN. She also expressed her thanks to the head of the appeals court for the attention paid the case, according to the Saudi daily newspaper Al-Riyadh on Tuesday.

The appeals court action now sends the case back to the earlier judge, who will decide whether to stand by his original decision.

There in Onaiza, the judge will have a chance to either overturn or uphold his first verdict, the girl's relative said. If the judge upholds his verdict and refuses to annul the marriage, then the case will again go to the appeals court, the family member told CNN. If the judge changes his decision, then the case is effectively over, the relative added.

Al-Huwaider, co-founder of the Society of Defending Women's Rights in Saudi Arabia, warned that while this latest development should be considered a victory for women's and children's rights, this is only a first step.

"For our women's rights group, I feel this is the first real achievement we've had since we started," she said. "We are happy for the girl and her mother but this is just the first achievement. We want a law in Saudi Arabia that protects girls from early marriages -- a law that states that girls have to be at least 17 before they can marry and boys have to be at least 18. When that happens, we will really celebrate."

The case, which has garnered much criticism from rights groups within and outside Saudi Arabia, came to light in December when the Onaiza judge refused to annul the marriage on a legal technicality. Sheikh Habib Abdallah al-Habib's dismissal of the mother's petition for annulment sparked immediate outrage.

The mother's lawyer, Abdullah al-Jutaili, said the judge found that the mother -- who is separated from the girl's father -- is not the legal guardian and therefore could not represent her daughter. The judge also requested and received a pledge from the girl's husband, who was in court, not to allow the marriage to be consummated until the girl reaches puberty, al-Jutaili said.

The lawyer said the judge ruled that when the girl reaches puberty, she will have the right to request a divorce by filing a petition with the court. Al-Jutaili said the girl's father arranged the marriage in order to settle his debts with the man, "a close friend" of his. The judge's verdict was appealed. In a statement issued shortly after the original verdict, the Society of Defending Women's Rights in Saudi Arabia said the judge's decision went against children's "basic rights."

Marrying children makes them "lose their sense of security and safety," the group said. "Also, it destroys their feeling of being loved and nurtured. It causes them a lifetime of psychological problems and severe depression."

Zuhair al-Harithi, a spokesman for the Saudi Human Rights Commission, a government-run human rights group, said that his organization was fighting child marriages. "Child marriages violate international agreements that have been signed by Saudi Arabia and should not be allowed," al-Harithi said.

Child marriage is not unusual, said Christoph Wilcke, a Saudi Arabian researcher for the international group Human Rights Watch, after the initial verdict. "We've been hearing about these types of cases once every four or five months because the Saudi public is now able to express this kind of anger, especially so when girls are traded off to older men," Wilcke told CNN. source cnn.com


One million people at risk in Darfur, U.N. says

UNITED NATIONS - More than one million people in Darfur are at risk of losing food, water and shelter in coming months, following the expulsion of international aid groups by Sudan's government, the United Nations' chief humanitarian coordinator said Tuesday. The statement by coordinator John Holmes comes after a joint U.N.-Sudanese assessment of the situation. The information was gathered from March 11-18 in hopes of stemming further troubles in Darfur after Sudan's government expelled 13 international relief organizations from the wartorn region. The announcement came on the same day that President Omar al-Bashir, now an indicted war criminal, ignored the threat of arrest by traveling abroad to Eritrea. Also Tuesday, a Sudanese staffer working for a Canadian relief group was shot dead in Darfur. A full report of the assessment will be released soon, according to the U.N., but an executive summary and recommendations were made available on Tuesday.

"While a significant effort is being made by the government, by the U.N., by the NGOs [nongovernmental organizations] which are left, to plug some of the immediate gaps in these areas, these are at the same time, 'Band-Aid' solutions, not long term solutions," Holmes said.The U.N. estimates that 1.5 million people in Darfur are dependent on healthcare support, 1.1 million need regular food aid, and another 1 million are in need of clean drinking water. source cnn.com .



Obama defends his budget as essential to recovery

President Obama presented a sober assessment of the state of the economy in his prime time news conference Tuesday, but he insisted his administration has a strategy in place to "attack this crisis on all fronts." "It took many years and many failures to lead us here. And it will take many months and many different solutions to lead us out. There are no quick fixes, and there are no silver bullets," he said. "We'll recover from this recession, but it will take time, it will take patience, and it will take an understanding that, when we all work together, when each of us looks beyond our own short-term interest to the wider set of obligations we have towards each other, that's when we succeed," he said.

The president defended his budget, which has come under criticism for its hefty price, saying the plan he proposed is "inseparable" from the overall strategy for economic recovery. Video Watch Obama say the U.S. will recover »

"We've got to make some tough budgetary choices," the president said in his second prime time news conference. "What we can't do, though, is sacrifice long-term growth, investments that are critical to the future, and that's why my budget focuses on health care, energy, education, the kinds of things that can build a foundation for long-term economic growth, as opposed to the fleeting prosperity that we've seen over the last several years."

The president brushed off skeptics of the scope of his investments, saying, "We haven't seen an alternative budget out of them." He also reiterated his pledge to cut the deficit in half over the next five years. Asked whether he would sign a budget that doesn't include a middle-class tax cut, Obama said he has "emphasized repeatedly" what his expectations are. "I haven't seen yet what provisions are in there," Obama said. "The bottom line is that I want to see health care, energy, education and serious efforts to reduce our budget deficit. And there are going to be details that still need to be worked out." Obama's appearance came on the heels of the unveiling of the Treasury Department's new bank rescue plan.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Monday announced a plan to remove troubled assets from banks' books by partnering with private investors. The goal is to buy at least $500 billion of existing assets and loans, such as subprime mortgages that are now in danger of default. After the announcement of the plan, the stock market rallied, posting the biggest gains in months.

Obama said he supports Geithner's push to seize financial institutions whose failure would pose serious risks to the U.S. financial system.

"Keep in mind that it is precisely because of the lack of this authority that the AIG situation has gotten worse," Obama said, referring to the troubled insurance giant.

It was revealed last week that AIG doled out massive bonuses to executives after receiving more than $170 billion in bailout funds.

Pressed about why he waited three days to publicly speak out against AIG paying the bonuses, Obama told reporters, "It took us a couple of days because I like to know what I'm talking about before I speak."

While most of the news conference focused on the economy, Obama faced a handful of questions on other topics.

Obama defended his executive order repealing a Bush-era policy that limited federal tax dollars for embryonic stem cell research, saying that signing the order earlier this month "was the right thing to do and ethical thing to do."

"I am glad to see progress has been made in adult stem cells, and if the science determines that we can completely avoid a set of ethical questions or political dispute -- then that's great. I have no investment in causing controversy," Obama said, adding, "What I don't want to do is predetermine this based on a very rigid ideological approach, and that's what I think is reflected in the executive order that I signed."

Asked about the violence in Mexico and the risk of spillover to the United States, Obama vowed to invest the resources needed to address the situation.

"If the steps we have taken do not get the job done, then we will do more," he said. Earlier Tuesday, Obama's administration announced plans to send hundreds more federal agents and new crime-fighting equipment to the border as the United States struggles to roll back a tide of drug-related violence.

Asked if race has affected the way he has been perceived in any policy debates since taking office, Obama said, "The last 64 days has been dominated by me trying to figure out how we're going to fix the economy, and that affects black, brown and white." iReport: Your reaction to the news conference

"Obviously, at the inauguration, I think that there was justifiable pride on the part of the country that we had taken a step to move us beyond some of the searing legacies of racial discrimination in this country, but that lasted about a day."

Right now, he said, the American people are judging him as they should: "Are we taking the steps to improve liquidity in the financial markets, create jobs, get businesses to reopen, keep America safe? And that's what I've been spending my time thinking about."

In his more than 50-minute appearance, Obama mentioned Afghanistan and Iraq only in response to a question about trimming the Defense and Veterans Administration's budget.

There were no questions specifically about the Iraq War, which entered its sixth year last week. Osama bin Laden and terrorism also were not mentioned.

During the news conference, Obama called on three news outlets not typically called on at a prime time event: Univision, Ebony Magazine and Stars and Stripes.

Obama's news conference comes after he made the rounds on television this past week, with an appearance on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno," and an interview on CBS's "60 Minutes."

In his first prime time news conference, the president used the national platform to make the case for his economic stimulus plan, which has since been passed by Congress and signed into law. source cnn.com



Obama to beef up Mexico border policy

WASHINGTON- President Obama on Tuesday vowed to invest the resources needed to address the threat posed by drug traffickers in Mexico. "We are going to continue to monitor the situation, and if the steps we have taken do not get the job done, then we will do more," he told reporters Tuesday night. He praised the efforts of Mexican President Felipe Calderon to counter drug cartels, which "have gotten completely out of hand," but said the United States must take further steps, such as ensuring that illegal guns and cash do not flow from north of the Rio Grande to the cartels in Mexico.

"That's what makes them so dangerous," he said. Obama's remarks came hours after Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announced that the United States is sending hundreds of federal agents and crime-fighting equipment to the border. The renewed push for stronger law-enforcement presence along the border comes as the administration tries to help the Mexican government break up drug cartels blamed for killing some 6,500 people in Mexico last year, Napolitano said.

"Our role is to assist in this battle because we have our own security interests in its success," Napolitano said at the White House. In an interview with CNN later Tuesday, she said, "It's all about border safety and security and making sure that spillover violence does not erupt in our own country." The new federal plan, developed by the departments of Justice and Homeland Security, calls for doubling the number of border security task force teams and moving a significant number of other federal agents, equipment and resources to the border. It also involves greater intelligence sharing aimed at cracking down on the flow of money and weapons into Mexico that helps fuel the drug trade, senior administration officials said.

The plan commits $700 million to bolster Mexican law enforcement and crime prevention efforts. The funds will provide, among other things, five new helicopters to increase mobility for the Mexican army and air force as well as new surveillance aircraft for the Mexican navy. The funds also will support enhanced communications technology for Mexican prosecutors, law enforcement and immigration officials.

The $700 million allocation, meant to assist what administration officials described as an "anti-smuggling effort," will complement ongoing U.S. aid to Mexico under the Merida initiative: a three-year, $1.4 billion package aimed at helping Mexico fight the drug cartels with law enforcement training, military equipment and improved intelligence cooperation.

The money was allocated last year, but Tuesday's announcement brought the first details of how some of that money will be spent.

On the U.S. side of the border, more funding will support "prosecutor-led, intelligence-based task forces" that bring together the Department of Justice, the Department of Homeland Security and other agencies to dismantle drug cartels through investigation and extradition and the seizure and forfeiture of assets, Deputy Attorney General David Ogden said.

"As we've found with other large criminal groups, if you take their money and lock up their leaders, you can loosen their grip on the vast organizations that are used to carry out their criminal activities."

To help strengthen the U.S. side of the border further, the administration also plans to triple the number of Department of Homeland Security intelligence analysts dedicated to stopping Mexican-related violence.

It also will increase the number of immigration officials working in Mexico, double the number of "violent criminal alien" teams on the border, strengthen the presence of border canine units and quadruple the number of border liaison officers working with Mexican law enforcement.

It also will make an additional $59 million in federal funds available to support state, local and tribal border law enforcement operations.

At the same time, more agents from the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Explosives will be deployed to the border region. The agents will be given updated equipment and surveillance technology to help track the movement of cash, drugs and weapons.

At a congressional hearing in Washington on Tuesday, Phoenix, Arizona, Mayor Phil Gordon called the administration's initiative "a great first step," but added, "it's a drop in the bucket in terms of what is needed."

Phoenix finds itself at the center of a "perfect storm" of drug runners and human smugglers, he said. While most traditional crimes are down, crimes such as drug-related kidnappings and torturing are overwhelming Gordon's police department.

"Most nights we have over 60 Phoenix police officers (and) some federal agents rushing to rescue those on a reactive basis," Gordon said.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry has also sought additional help for his state.

Last month, Perry said he asked Napolitano for aviation assistance and "1,000 more troops that we can commit to different parts of the border."

Perry said it didn't matter to him what kind of troops came.

"As long as they are boots on the ground that are properly trained to deal with the border region, I don't care whether they are military troops, or National Guard troops or whether they are customs agents."

Last week, a Perry spokeswoman said that federal border protection had been underfunded for some time and that the 1,000 extra troops Perry requested would fill in gaps that state and local agencies have been covering.

The announcement comes shortly ahead of planned trips by three Cabinet secretaries to Mexico before President Obama visits there next month. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton goes to Mexico City this week, to be followed next week by Napolitano and Attorney General Eric Holder.

Napolitano and Deputy Secretary of State Jim Steinberg both emphasized the cooperation and "courage" of Calderon during the news conference announcing the policy changes. Calderon has been pushing back against U.S. criticism of drug cartel-related violence lately, arguing that the U.S. needs to take more responsibility for the outbreaks. In his speeches and other public remarks, Calderon repeatedly has pointed out that much of the demand for drugs and most of the weapons used by narco-traffickers comes from the United States. A prominent Washington-based gun control advocacy group released a report Tuesday backing Calderon's assertions regarding weapons trafficking. The report from the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence asserts that Mexican drug gangs have exploited weak American gun laws and corrupt gun dealers "to amass arsenals of high-powered guns that have killed thousands and pose an increasingly grave security threat to Mexico and the U.S.," according to a statement from the organization. source cnn.com

'Hillary: The Movie' gets high court attention

WASHINGTON - The star of the show did not appear -- and the film in question was not shown -- but Hillary Clinton's big-screen moment was all the talk Tuesday at the Supreme Court. The justices heard arguments in a free-speech case over a 2008 documentary, shown in theaters, that was sharply critical of the onetime presidential candidate and current secretary of state.

At issue was whether the 90-minute "Hillary: The Movie" and television ads to promote it should have been subject to strict campaign finance laws on political advocacy or should have been seen as a constitutionally protected form of commercial speech.

The high court's decision will determine whether politically charged documentaries can be regulated by the government in the same way as traditional campaign commercials.

A ruling is expect by late June.

A conservative group behind the movie wanted to promote it during the heat of the presidential primary season last year, but a federal court had blocked any ads, as well as airings on cable TV video-on-demand.

The film later aired in several theaters and was released on DVD, outlets that were not subject to federal regulation.

The Supreme Court justices appeared divided on how to find balance between Congress' expressed desire to control the power of well-financed private groups to spread their political messages and concerns over the First Amendment's guarantee of free speech.

"This is targeted at a specific candidate for a specific office to be shown on a channel that says 'Election '08'," said Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. "Now if that isn't an appeal to voters, I can't imagine what is."

"There's a possibility," said Justice Antonin Scalia, "that the First Amendment interest is greater when what the government is trying to stifle is not just a speaker who wants to say something, but also a listener who wants to hear what the speaker has to say," noting that viewers would have paid to see the film on cable television.

On its Web site, Citizens United promoted its film as featuring 40 interviews.as well as a "cast to end all casts." It promised, "If you want to hear about the Clinton scandals of the past and present, you have it here! 'Hillary: The Movie' is the first and last word in what the Clintons want America to forget!"

The group, a Washington-based nonprofit corporation and advocacy organization, had balked at campaign finance rules that would have required them to disclose their financial backers and would have restricted when the film could air. The film was partially financed with corporate funds.

A three-judge U.S. District Court panel last spring rejected the group's arguments that the documentary was more akin to news or information programs such as PBS' "Nova" or CBS' "60 Minutes."

During Tuesday's oral arguments, the justices seemed uneasy about arguments from both sides.

"This sounds to me like campaign advocacy," said Justice David Souter.

But attorney Theodore Olson, representing Citizens United, said the law "smothered" free speech. He said groups like General Electric (which owns NBC News), National Public Radio and progressive financier George Soros (who often privately funds his political projects) could air such films in the name of informing the American people, but not his clients because of the film's perceived negative tone.

"If it's all negative it can be prohibited, and it's a felony. Or if it's all favorable, you can go to jail. But if you did half and half, you couldn't" be convicted, said Olson, criticizing the law's "incomprehensible" regulations.

Several on the court wondered whether a 90-minute message was different than a 30-second commercial.

"It seems to me you can make the argument that 90 minutes is much more powerful in support or in opposition to a candidate," said Justice Anthony Kennedy.

"We have no choice, really, but to say this is not issue advocacy, this is express advocacy saying don't vote for this person," which is subject to regulation," Souter said. "The difference between 90 minutes and one minute is a distinction that I just can't follow."

The comprehensive 2002 McCain-Feingold law bans broadcast of "electioneering communication" by corporations, unions and advocacy groups if it would be aired close to election dates and would identify candidates by name or image. The law also requires an on-screen notice of the groups financing such ads, as well as public disclosure of all donors to the sponsoring organizations.

Lawyers representing the Federal Election Commission urged the justices to subject the ads to the disclosure law, arguing that without it, voters would be "unable to know who's funding the ads." Justice Department attorney Malcolm Stewart called it "an easy case."

Some on the bench were not sure, probing the limits of the definition of candidate advocacy.

"So if Wal-Mart airs an advertisement that says we have candidate action figures for sale, come buy them, that counts as an electioneering communication," asked Chief Justice John Roberts.

Justice Samuel Alito wondered about the differences between broadcast or cable TV, where the film could not be run, and the Internet or theaters where it could.

When Stewart implied "additional media" could also be subject to future regulation, the newest justice replied, "That's pretty incredible. You think that if a book was published, a campaign biography that was the functional equivalent of express advocacy, that could be banned?" Most book publishers are corporations subject to campaign finance restrictions, he noted.

Legal observers say Alito and Roberts' votes could be key to the case's outcome.

At the time of the movie's premiere, Clinton was locked in a tough primary fight with then-Sen. Barack Obama for the Democratic nomination for president.

Critics slammed her qualifications and character.

People say, "Well, she's flipping, she's flopping. No, she's not flipping and flopping, she's lying," Bay Buchanan, a political commentator and regular analyst for CNN, said in the film.

"We must never understate her chances of winning," warned Dick Morris, a former political adviser to President Clinton. "And we must never forget the fundamental danger that this woman poses to every value that we hold dear. You see, I know her."

Ads for the movie were available on the Internet, which is not subject to federal regulation.

"I've seen this movie," Justice Stephen Breyer wryly noted, "It's not a musical comedy."

David Bossie, head of Citizens United and producer of the "Hillary" film, was also behind several conservative documentaries, including a rebuttal to Michael Moore's anti-Bush film "Fahrenheit 9/11."

The case is Citizens United v. FEC (08-205). source cnn.com

Police eye suspect in newlywed's slaying

NEW YORK - Nicole Ganguzza was a newlywed in grad school at the University of Central Florida when she was dragged off a trail and strangled to death while jogging in a park in June. Ganguzza, 26, was close to earning her master's degree in marriage and family therapy. She was looking forward to having children of her own. She left class on June 10 at about 5:35 p.m. Ten minutes later, she called husband Brendan Ganguzza and told him she was going jogging at Jay Blanchard Park, not far from the university's campus in Orlando, Florida. Brendan Ganguzza became worried at about 7 p.m. when he couldn't reach his wife on her phone. He searched the park for two hours, calling police at about 9 p.m. Police combed the brush through the evening, and the search the next day grew to 60 people. Her body was found behind the post office, about two miles from where her Mitsubishi Eclipse was parked and just off the Econlockhatchee Trail where she'd been jogging.

Brendan Ganguzza became a widower at 30. He is working hard to keep her memory alive. "It's hard sometimes because you can feel very much in the dark about what is going on, wondering if you'll ever get answers," he told CNN. "We've started a foundation in Nicole's name to continue her dream of providing free counseling and therapy to those who can't afford it. She was studying to be a counselor," he added. Nicole Ganguzza was killed five days before toddler Caylee Anthony was reported missing. That case grabbed the headlines in Orlando -- and beyond.

Investigators wove a web of circumstantial evidence and charged the child's mother, Casey Anthony, the notorious "tot mom" whose wild party pictures became a cable news show staple. Writing recently about the charitable foundation established in Nicole Ganguzza's name, an Orlando Sentinel columnist described her as "the anti-Casey."

Police say her killer deliberately hid her body in the brush along the trail. Investigators believe the killer either is from the area or is very familiar with the park and nearby campus. The Orange County Medical Examiner characterized Ganguzza's death as a homicide by strangulation without elaborating. It is not publicly known whether she had been sexually assaulted. "We are keeping very quiet about this because this is information that only the killer would know," said Orange County sheriff's spokesman Carlos Padilla.

Last week, Ganguzza's family and friends asked anyone with information to come forward and help solve this cold case. They expressed relief that the police may have a break in the case and that an arrest could come soon. "I just hope they make an arrest soon in my wife's case, so they can get this dangerous guy off the streets," Brendan Ganguzza said.

Police executed a search warrant two weeks ago on the mobile home of a man who is considered a person of interest in the case. His home lies along the Econlockhatchee Trail. He is a former student and employee of the University of Central Florida. Police say that after reviewing tips and leads, they believe they have probable cause to investigate this individual further.

"The search warrant is sealed, and I can't say at this time what evidence was collected or what led us to this individual," said Cpl. Susan Soto, a spokeswoman for the Orange County sheriff. Police are being tight-lipped about whether Ganguzza's attacker left behind any DNA or other forensic evidence. Police are still asking for the public's help in solving this case. If anyone has any information please call Crime Line at 1-800-423-TIPS. A reward of up to $5,000 is being offered for information on the Nicole Ganguzza homicide case.

Senate Dems propose cutting Obama budget by billions

WASHINGTON - Hours before President Obama was to hold a prime time news conference -- in part to boost his $3.6 trillion budget plan -- a key Democratic senator Tuesday unveiled a scaled-down budget proposal. Sen. Kent Conrad of North Dakota said the Senate Budget Committee, which he chairs, will vote on his version Wednesday.

"We've made hundreds of billions of dollars of changes to make this work to get down to the deficit goal and at the same time maintain the president's priorities -- education and energy and health care," Conrad said as he left a closed meeting in the Capitol, where he briefed Senate Democratic colleagues on his plan.

Conrad and other centrist Democratic senators -- whose support is critical to passing the legislation -- have raised concerns about the long-term impact of the president's spending plan on the deficit.

On Friday, the Congressional Budget Office estimated Obama's plan would cost more than $9 trillion over the next 10 years.

The president will travel to Capitol Hill Wednesday to lobby Democrats in the House and Senate ahead of votes in each chamber this week. A top administration official, speaking not for attribution, said the White House might go along with Conrad's proposal because it maintains the key elements of Obama's plan.

Republicans who blasted the Obama budget proposal for spending, taxing and borrowing too much also criticized Conrad's proposal because some of the items Conrad stripped from the spending blueprint might have to be funded anyway.

For example, Conrad's budget strikes Obama's proposal to set aside $250 billion in case more money is needed for the financial sector rescue, an aide said.

Conrad's budget also curtails Obama's fix of the costly alternative minimum tax and doesn't account for increased payments for doctors who care for Medicare recipients, said Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, the top Republican on the Budget Committee.

"You can get these presidential numbers down by using a lot of gimmicks that the president didn't use. That would be a mistake. Let's be honest with the Americans," Gregg said Tuesday.

"It's certainly not a gimmick," Conrad responded. "We faced up to changes."

Republicans were also critical of Conrad's plan to calculate the budget deficit over five years instead of 10, meaning a common measure of government spending, the 10-year cost, wouldn't officially be part of the price. Gregg accused Conrad of trying to hide the true cost of the plan.

One hot-button item that will not be part of the Senate proposal is a controversial procedure called "budget reconciliation," Conrad said. Through reconciliation, Democrats would be able to pass major overhauls of health care, global warming and other key policies without the threat of a Republican-led filibuster.

While several Republicans said they were pleased Democrats would not use reconciliation, they remained skeptical, because the White House and House Democrats have expressed interest in using the procedure. source cnn.com

Flight's diversion key issue in crash inquiry, NTSB says

Of the many unanswered questions surrounding a weekend plane crash that killed the pilot and three families headed for a Montana ski vacation, the first one investigators are examining is why the pilot asked for permission to land in Butte, about 80 miles short of their planned destination, the National Transportation Safety Board said Tuesday."It's a question," Mark Rosenker, the NTSB's acting chairman, told reporters. "There's a lot of questions, but it begins with that question." Rosenker said investigators have no theories as to what caused Sunday's crash, which killed all 14 aboard the single-engine Pilatus PC-12. But the diversion to Butte is "where we're beginning to look at things," he said

The pilot, Ellison "Bud" Summerfield, did not declare any emergency, and Rosenker said Summerfield's voice betrayed no sign of stress when he asked for clearance to divert the aircraft from Bozeman to Butte, a longtime mining town in southwestern Montana. Investigators have sent a team to Salt Lake City, Utah, to retrieve air traffic control recordings that may shed some light on the decision, NTSB investigator Keith Holloway said. The plane was owned by an Oregon-based investment firm. The passengers included two daughters of the firm's president, their husbands, another couple and seven children ranging in ages from 2 to 9 from the three families.

Federal aviation regulators warned in early March about possible problems with the controls on the Swiss-built PC-12. The issue stemmed from a cable clamp linking the aircraft's controls to the cable that adjusts the elevator, which controls the plane's pitch. "This condition, if not corrected, may reduce the effectiveness of the stick-pusher and/or limit elevator control movement," a March 10 advisory from the Federal Aviation Administration states. Holloway said the NTSB already has examined that issue and determined it had nothing to do with Sunday's crash. But Rosenker said investigators have few other clues.

Private aircraft have no requirement for a cockpit voice recorder or a flight data recorder, and electronic systems aboard the planes aren't built to withstand crashes. Early speculation focused on the fact that there were 14 people aboard the 10-seat aircraft, but Rosenker said Monday that young children often travel on the laps of adult passengers, and he urged reporters not to rush to judgment.

NTSB officials flew in a PC-12 on Tuesday and followed the approach the doomed plane was taking when it went down, Rosenker said. He said investigators may have to subpoena mobile phone records of the passengers before the investigation is complete. But it's "very, very rare" that the agency can't determine the probable cause of a crash, he said.
"Nothing is off the table in this investigation," he said. "But nothing also, at the same time, is leading us to specific working theories." source cnn.com


FBI breaks up $25 million 'car cloning' ring

TAMPA, Florida - There's probably no way to describe the feeling. One moment, Guiseppe "Joe" Pirrone was on a long weekend at the beach. The next moment, he found out the pickup that he bought a year ago is stolen, and he is still on the hook for the $27,000 loan. Stories like Pirrone's are scattered across the country, and Tuesday the FBI announced that it has broken up one of the largest auto theft cases in the U.S. Capping "Operation Dual Identity," arrest warrants for 17 people were executed in Tampa and Miami, Florida; Chicago, Illinois; and in Mexico City and Guadalajara, Mexico. The suspects were accused of "cloning" vehicles, which is making stolen cars look like legal ones.

The FBI says that the ring was operating in the U.S. for more than 20 years. More than 1,000 vehicles were stolen in Florida, with more than $25 million in losses to consumers and banks. "Individuals have been victimized at every level, from the average Joe, to the banks, to big companies," said Dave Couvertier, of the FBI's Tampa field office.

Car theft rings clone vehicles by taking license plates, vehicle identification numbers (VIN), and other tags and stickers from a legal car and putting them on a stolen vehicle of similar make and model.

"This does not just affect big business. Anyone could become an unwitting victim of this particular scam. It could happen to anyone," said Couvertier. Pirrone knows how it was done because it happened to him. Last year, he bought a used 2005 F350 Super Duty turbo diesel pickup to use for his landscape business in Fort Myers, Florida. He bought it off a small used car lot and took out a $27,000 loan from a credit union.

"I had it for about nine months. It was a great truck," he told CNN. In the fall, Pirrone decided to drive across the state to spend a long weekend in Fort Lauderdale. He was lying on the beach when his father called him to tell him that a detective from the Lee County Sheriff's Office was at his house with a tow truck. Pirrone got back in his car and drove back home immediately.

"I was confused, honestly," he said. "I had to ask the detective for credentials. I didn't believe what was going on." Pirrone said the detective explained to him that he was the victim of a scam, that he was sold stolen goods. Left without a truck, Pirrone called the Suncoast Schools Federal Credit Union. He found that his $536 a month payment would live on after his truck was long gone. Pirrone said he was able to get a 30-day payment exemption, but was told that he had a signed agreement with the bank, and he was still obligated to pay the loan in full. "I am making payments on a piece of property that I don't have," Pirrone said. "They can't even repossess it. The bank doesn't have any help to offer me."

The bank is a victim in the car cloning scam as well. Lisa Brock, a spokeswoman for Suncoast Schools Federal Credit Union, told CNN that the company never discusses private information about any of its members.

"It is a police matter, and it's nothing we can make any substantial comment on," she said.

Pirrone has hired an attorney, and he is considering filing a lawsuit against the dealership to get the bank's money back. Pirrone said he was advised by his lawyer not to name the used car lot. Law enforcement hopes that this is the beginning of the end of the "car cloning" scam. The National Motor Vehicle Information system (NMVTIS) database was implemented in January. It allows state DMVs to share title and registration information.

Cloned vehicles were moved and sold to buyers in 20 states and several countries, often for less than market value, the FBI said. Many of the vehicles were exchanged for drugs, according to the bureau. The FBI says that people need to be careful when buying a car independently. "Folks should be educated enough so that they don't buy a car from a stranger, on the street, or in a back alley somewhere," said the FBI's Dave Couvertier. "And if you're getting it for too good a deal, it should be raising flags."

Like so many others, Pirrone is feeling the economic squeeze. Without a truck, he had to sell his landscaping business, which he had as a side business. He is still working his other job as a restaurant manager.

"It's not a good time for this to happen. I've had hours cut back at work, I'm not making what I used to make."

"I don't know what's real anymore," he said. source cnn.com

Possible contamination at VA facilities sparks call for inquiry

Thousands of veterans in South Florida may have been exposed to hepatitis and HIV because of contaminated equipment after getting colonoscopies at the Miami Veterans Affairs Healthcare System, officials announced Monday. Two Florida lawmakers are asking for an inspector general's inquiry. "The VA is a model of the type of health care we provide our veterans, and when mistakes like this occur, it undermines the efficacy of the entire system," said Rep. Kendrick B. Meek, D-Florida, in a news release. Meek, along with Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Florida, is requesting an official inquiry by the inspector general of the VA.

In a letter to retired Gen. Eric Shinseki, the secretary of Veterans Affairs, Nelson said he is also concerned about possible contaminated equipment at facilities in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and Augusta, Georgia. "I am requesting that the VA Office of Inspector General begin an investigation into the potential problems of contamination; whether any patient has contracted an infection from unsterilized equipment; and, most importantly, how we can prevent such problems from happening again," Nelson wrote.

"Finally, I urge the VA to commit to providing ongoing medical care in cases where it is responsible for exposing someone to a disease."

On Monday, the VA sent letters to 3,260 people who may have had colonoscopies between May 2004 and March 12, 2009. Hospital officials said a review of safety procedures found that tubing used in endoscope procedures was rinsed but not disinfected. In the first 24 hours after the letters were released, the Miami VA got more than 2,600 calls and checked out more than 350 patients. Nearly 600 more are scheduled for examinations over the next two weeks, officials at the facility said.

Officials say the risk of infection is minimal.

"What happened should not have happened. We are taking steps to change it right now," said John Vara, the Miami VA's chief of staff.

The problem at the Miami VA facility comes on the heels of similar problems with endoscopies at the VA clinic in Murfreesboro. In December 2008, an investigation found that clinic workers were not following manufacturer's directions and switched out parts they weren't supposed to switch out, according to investigators. About 6,000 people who underwent colonoscopies at the clinic were notified and offered free testing for infections.

The Charlie Norwood VA Medica Center in Augusta, Georgia, also said it had "recently notified 1,200 veterans they may have been exposed to infection when undergoing ear, nose and throat (ENT) procedures between January and November of 2008."

In Miami, the VA has opened "special care clinics" to test veterans who received the notice and to provide information.

"Screening is strictly precautionary and does not indicate that any patients have contracted a virus," Mary D. Berrocal, director of the Miami VA, said in a statement on the VA's Web site. The special care clinics opened Tuesday morning, and officials say response from patients has been good. "They are being proactive, and we are glad. We want them to get tested," said Susan Warren, a spokeswoman for the Miami VA facility. source cnn.com


Schneider: Obama gives tough answer to CNN

President Obama gave a pretty tough answer to CNN's Ed Henry when asked why he waited days to express outrage on the AIG bonuses."It took us a couple of days because I like to know what I'm talking about before I speak," he said. It seemed to imply the question was impertinent. "After Ed Henry, he looked like he wanted to go home," conservative talk radio host and CNN Contributor Bill Bennett said. source cnn.com



Report: Few states responding to teen dating violence

LOS ANGELES, California (CNN) -- Only a few states have laws that adequately equip teen victims of dating violence with tools for protection and safety, according to a new report from a watchdog group. The report by Los Angeles, California-based Break the Cycle includes state-by-state report cards that measure how each state treats teen victims of dating violence in comparison with the treatment of adult domestic violence victims. Only five states -- California, Illinois, Minnesota, New Hampshire and Oklahoma -- received As, while nine states received B's. Twenty-three states received sub-par grades, including 11 getting Fs.

"I think what the state report cards are telling us is that states have a long way to go before they are protecting minors in abusive relationships," Marjorie Gilberg, Break the Cycle's executive director, told CNN Radio. The report focuses on how easy it is for a teen to obtain a protective order in the event of abuse, including whether state law allows a minor to take out an order, if adult permission is required and whether an order can be issued against another minor.

New Hampshire, which got an A, is the only state where the law specifically allows minors to apply for a protection order, according to the report. Missouri, which got an F, makes such orders available only to adults.

Nine states allow minors to obtain protective orders without adult approval if they meet certain criteria, such as being a minimum age, often 16, or having a specific relationship with the abuser, such as having a child together.

"What we hope to achieve with this is to call out the states that are not doing a good job protecting minors and help people in those states call on their legislators to make change," Gilberg said.

One in five teens who have been in a "serious relationship" report being hit, slapped or pushed by a partner, according to the National Teen Dating Abuse Helpline. One in three girls who have been in such a relationship say they've been concerned about being physically hurt by their partner.

Gilberg said that since the 2008 report cards came out, several states worked to change their laws to address the rights of minor victims in domestic violence statutes, though some were more successful than others. This year's report noted that eight states improved their grades.


Among them, Florida jumped from a D to a B for making protective orders "relatively accessible" to teen victims without an adult's approval if they are dating the abuser. The process was described as "extremely difficult" the previous year because state law did not specify whether a minor could petition for one alone.
"Even when you have an A grade," Gilberg said, "you still can do things to make the law more protective of minors who are in teen dating violence relationships."source cnn.com

Spector defense: Actress could have committed suicide

LOS ANGELES, California- It's impossible to rule out the possibility that an actress committed suicide in music producer Phil Spector's home, and that he is being unjustly accused in her death, Spector's defense attorney told jurors in closing arguments Tuesday.

"This is a circumstantial-evidence case ... no one can tell you, 'This is what happened,'" Doron Weinberg told the jury of six men and six women. But, he said, Spector "did not kill Lana Clarkson, that's what the evidence shows."

Spector, 69, is charged with second-degree murder in Clarkson's death. The 40-year-old actress was found dead of a gunshot wound through the roof of her mouth in February 2003 at Spector's Alhambra, California, home.

A mistrial was declared in Spector's first trial in September 2007. After deliberating for a total of 15 days, jurors were unable to reach a verdict, telling Superior Court Judge Larry Paul Fidler they were split 10-2. An unnamed court official told CNN at the time that a majority of jurors voted for conviction on the second-degree murder charge, and jurors said two holdouts believed the defense's assertion that Clarkson's death could have been a suicide.

Prosecutors told jurors in closing arguments Monday that Spector was "a very dangerous man." deputy district attorney Truc Do told jurors Spector "has a history of playing Russian roulette with women -- six women. Lana just happened to be the sixth."

But Weinberg said everything prosecutors have done since 2003 is aimed at proving Spector killed Clarkson, and there was no "independent investigation" of the evidence. The prosecution, he said, was "so focused on making this a homicide" that everything they've done was an effort toward making that appear true.

The real question, Weinberg said, was whether prosecutors "unquestionably and clearly" excluded the possibility that Clarkson committed suicide. "On the basis of the evidence, you cannot say that has been excluded," he said.

Weinberg said he believes Spector is innocent, but even so, the only issue for jurors is whether "the government has proven their case beyond a reasonable doubt."

The case, he said, hinges on science. "The prosecution has a story. We are telling you about the facts."

In the 2007 trial, Spector's attorneys argued that Clarkson, who starred in 1985's "Barbarian Queen" and the 1987 spoof "Amazon Women on the Moon," was depressed over a recent breakup and grabbed a .38-caliber pistol to kill herself. Several people identifying themselves as Clarkson's friends testified for the defense, portraying her as a suicidal has-been despondent over her failing career. Spector was working as a VIP hostess at Hollywood's House of Blues at the time of her death.

But prosecution witnesses painted Spector as a gun-toting menace. Five women took the stand to tell harrowing stories of Spector threatening them with firearms. Spector's driver testified he heard a loud noise and saw the producer leave the home, pistol in hand, saying, "I think I killed somebody."

Spector arrived at court Tuesday with his wife, Rachelle, on his arm. The courtroom was packed, with many disappointed spectators waiting in the hall for someone to give up their seat.

Spector's second trial began in October. Superior Court Judge Larry Paul Fidler ruled on Friday that jurors can consider the lesser charge of involuntary manslaughter against Spector.

If convicted of second-degree murder, Spector could face a prison sentence of 15 years to life, according to the Los Angeles County district attorney's office. A conviction on involuntary manslaughter could bring a prison sentence of up to four years.

Spector has won two Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989, but he stayed out of the public eye for two decades before his 2003 arrest in Clarkson's death.

In the 1960s, he became famous as the man behind the "Wall of Sound," an instrumentally dense swirl of melody and percussion underlying such tunes as the Ronettes' "Be My Baby," the Righteous Brothers' "You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling" and Ike and Tina Turner's "River Deep, Mountain High." He later produced the Beatles' "Let It Be" album, John Lennon's "Imagine" and the Ramones' "End of the Century." source cnn.com

Prosecutors to Caylee's mom: Show us the money

NEW YORK - Prosecutors in the Casey Anthony murder case are having their own "show me the money" moment, demanding that Anthony show how she's paying for an expensive team of lawyers and expert witnesses. A court hearing is set for Wednesday morning to determine whether Anthony will have to say where she's getting the money for her defense. She's charged with first-degree murder in the death of her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee, and has an October trial date. In a motion filed in Circuit Court in Orange County, Florida, prosecutors wrote: "... the defendant's seeming conversion from pauper to princess did not come from the sale of some tangible asset available to her prior to her initial arrest on charges related to this case.''

The document cites a bond hearing in July at which it was revealed that her parents, George and Cindy Anthony, had ''little, if any, net worth,'' and Casey Anthony had none. Casey Anthony's only tangible asset, according to prosecutors, is her story ''or otherwise valueless items, such as photographs or video tapes, which have value only because of her story.''

Since Anthony, 23, is behind bars, prosecutors argue, she could not arrange to sell the photos or videos herself. They say only her attorney, Jose Baez, is in a position to make such deals. Prosecutors say this could present a conflict of interest and possibly shape the way Baez handles the case to make the story more valuable. The defense, in its filed objection, called for an end to "speculation" about how Anthony would pay her legal fees. Baez's retainer agreement ''does not contain any clauses allowing him financial gain based on selling the rights to Ms. Casey Anthony's ''story'', the document stated. Prosecutors also expressed concern that Anthony could later use the conflict of interest claim to say she did not get a fair trial. Prosecutors are asking for a waiver to prevent Anthony from making those claims down the road.

In a sworn affidavit, Anthony says her retainer agreement does not contain any clauses entitling Baez to sell her story or Caylee's. In handwriting at the bottom of the affidavit, Anthony accuses one prosecutor, Jeff Ashton, of being vengeful. "I believe that Mr. Ashton is angry because I have refused to take a plea agreement for a crime that I did not commit.'' Anthony was arrested on July 16, while Caylee was still missing. The little girl's remains were found in December, wrapped in a plastic trash bag left in the woods near the Orlando home of her grandparents. Police documents say the skull was wrapped in duct tape.Anthony is expected to attend the hearing Wednesday, set to begin at 10:30 a.m. ET. source cnn.com

Senin, 23 Maret 2009

Top AIG bosses 'to repay bonuses'


Nine of the 10 executives who received top bonuses from US insurance giant AIG have agreed to return them, New York's attorney general says.
Andrew Cuomo said he hoped to recoup $80m (£55m) of bonus payments - which amounts to about half of the $165 million paid by AIG on 15 March. The US rescued AIG with bail-out funds totalling $170bn since September 2008. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is due to testify on Tuesday on the need to reform the US financial system. He said on Monday that the banking crisis showed the country's financial regulatory system had failed and needed to be replaced by a stronger system with a better regulations.

"Our system basically failed its most fundamental test," he said in remarks before he was due to appear before the House of Representatives Financial Services Committee on Tuesday. "It was too fragile."

Bonus tax?

AIG's decision to pay bonuses despite being bailed out by the government had sparked widespread outrage in the US. Ranked the 18th biggest company in the world by Forbes at the start of 2008, it suffered massive losses related to the problems afflicting the housing and credit markets. AIG played a key role in insuring risk for financial institutions around the world.

The troubled insurer reported a loss of $61.7bn for the last three months of 2008, the biggest quarterly loss in corporate history. The bonus debacle had prompted the approval of a bill by the US House of Representatives to impose a 90% tax on bonuses awarded by companies bailed out by the US government.

But President Barack Obama said such a measure would be unconstitutional. The announcement that much of that money is now being returned seems likely to ensure that the bill never reaches his desk, says the BBC's Richard Lister in Washington.

Mr Cuomo said 15 of AIG's top 20 bonus recipients had agreed to return their payments, which he estimated to total around $30m.

"A number of them have risen to the occasion and I applaud them," Mr Cuomo - who is investigating AIG as well as several other financial institutions - said of the executives who had offered to give up their bonuses. He added that he expected to recoup all of the bonuses paid to American citizens working for AIG, which accounts for around half the $165m the company paid out. Mr Cuomo said he did not plan to release the names of the employees who have agreed to return the bonuses, suggesting there was no implied threat that if an employee refused to return their bonus, their name would be disclosed.

Bonuses ranging from $1,000 to more than $6m were paid to some 400 staff in the division handling the mortgage-backed assets at the heart of the financial crisis. Seven senior employees were paid more than $3 million, while 73 members of staff received bonuses of more than $1m. source cnn.com

Rwandan found guilty of murders

A court in the Netherlands has found a Rwandan Hutu, Joseph Mpambara, guilty of torture during the Rwandan genocide in 1994 but not of war crimes.
He was given 20 years in prison for, the judges said, robbing "two women and at least four children of their most valuable possession: their lives". He had ordered them pulled out of an ambulance, and were hacked to death. But he was acquitted of the murder of Tutsis sheltering at a church, due to inconsistencies in the testimonies.

Complex judgement
Mpambara was also found guilty on a second torture charge: threatening the lives of a German doctor, his Tutsi wife and their two-month-old son after detaining them at a roadblock as they tried to flee the Rwanda.

In a complex judgment the judges cleared Mpambara of war crimes because he was not part of the Rwandan government army fighting Tutsis. Some 800,000 minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus slaughtered by Hutu militias in just 100 days in 1994. Mpambara's case came to the attention of Dutch authorities after his 1998 application for asylum was turned down. Dutch law allows the prosecution of war crimes committed overseas. The UN-backed International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) was set up in 1997 to try the most high-profile genocide cases. source cnn.com



Mexico offers $2m for drug lords

A reward of $2m (£1.37m) each will be paid to informers who help arrest Mexico's 24 most-wanted drug gang chiefs, the attorney general has said. Correspondents say the most-wanted list is a public challenge to the cartels. Some 8,000 people have died in the past two years, as drug gangs fight for territory amid government crackdowns. US and Mexican agencies are increasing their co-operation as the gang violence spills over the border, where kidnaps and killings are on the rise. The reward offer comes two days before a trip to Mexico by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and a month before President Barack Obama is due to visit.

'Cartels splintering'

Washington is expected to confirm in the next few days that it will be deploying more federal agents along its border with Mexico - to tackle the increase in drug trafficking and related violence.

The BBC's Stephen Gibbs in Mexico City says that with some evidence that drug violence is crossing the border, both governments are under pressure to find a more coordinated policy to undermine the immensely powerful Mexican cartels. The drug gangs have splintered into six main cartels, under pressure from law enforcement action on both sides of the border, according to the attorney general's office in Mexico. For example, one gang once affiliated with the Sinaloa group under the Pacific cartel alliance was now listed as its own cartel, the office said, as was La Familia, which operates in central Mexico and was once considered a gang that answered to the Gulf cartel. Among the men on the most-wanted list are the alleged head of the powerful Sinaloa cartel, Joaquin "el Chapo" Guzman, who gained recent additional notoriety after being named by Forbes magazine as one of the world's billionaires. Others on the most wanted list are the suspected heads of the La Familia and Los Zetas criminal groups.

Some of the men, such as Guzman and Ismael Zamabada, allegedly of the Pacific cartel, are also targeted by separate $5m (£3.43m) bounties from the US government. The Mexican announcement offers "up to 30m pesos ($2m) to whomever provides information that is useful, true and leads to the location and arrest" of the listed traffickers. While Mexico has offered rewards for the capture of drug lords in the past, this is the first concerted offer for all the most-wanted cartel members at once. source bbc.com



Global trade 'will shrink by 9%'

Global trade flows are set to shrink by 9% during 2009, according to a forecast by the World Trade Organization (WTO).

Hardest hit will be developed nations, where trade is set to fall 10%. Poorer countries will see exports fall 2-3%. The WTO blames the deepening recession for the downturn, but says trade could be "a potent tool" for recovery. It would be the biggest drop in trade since World War II, said WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy, who called on global leaders to fight protectionism.
Trade is one of the top issues on the agenda when the heads of state and government of the world's leading economic powers meet at the G20 summit in London on 2 April.

"In London G20 leaders will have a unique opportunity to unite in moving from pledges to action and refrain from any further protectionist measure which will render global recovery efforts less effective," said Mr Lamy in the organisation's annual assessment of world trade. He warned that the use of protectionist measures was on the rise, with dangerous consequences: "Many thousands of trade related jobs are being lost. Governments must avoid making this bad situation worse by reverting to protectionist measures which in reality protect no nation and threaten the loss of more jobs." The WTO report was released while Mr Lamy was in Washington to meet key officials in the Obama administration ahead of the G20 summit.

Positive signs

While global trade grew 2% during 2008, WTO data suggest that the downturn started last summer, with trade slowing during the second half of the year. In 2007, when the credit crunch started, world trade had still managed to grow 6%. Unusually, global trade was now falling simultaneously around the world, the WTO said. Some "commentators" had assumed "that a 'decoupling' effect would have made developing countries less vulnerable to economic turmoil in developed countries," but the WTO experts noted that "this has not turned out to be the case".

The WTO also warned that it was difficult to predict the depth of the global recession. "If the drop in world trade is deeper than expected or if recovery happens more quickly, then the growth forecast will need updating."

However, the WTO also reported some positive signs, with exports from China, Singapore, Taiwan and Vietnam growing again during February for the first time in months.

UN says Burma detention 'illegal'

The UN has said the detention of the Burmese leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, violates both international legislation and the laws of Burma itself.
The UN working group on arbitrary detentions called for Ms Suu Kyi's immediate release. Ms Suu Kyi has spent 13 of the last 19 years under house arrest, and many of her democratic allies have been jailed. Analysts said it is unusual for a UN body to accuse a member state of violating its own laws. The panel said that under Burmese law only people who pose a security risk can be detained without charge. It also called for Ms Suu Kyi's immediate release, without any condition in a ruling issued in November but made public only this week.

'Illegal'

"The latest renewal (2008) of the order to place Ms Suu Kyi under house arrest not solely violates international law but also national domestic laws of Myanmar," said a legal opinion by the UN working group. The working group, an arm of the UN Human Rights Council, said Ms Suu Kyi was being held under Burma's 1975 State Protection Law, which only allows renewable arrest orders for a maximum of five years. This five-year period ended at the end of May 2008.
The opinion also questioned whether Suu Kyi represented a threat to the "security of the State or public peace and tranquility," the provision of the 1975 law authorities have pointed to as the reason for her continued detention. It quoted the country's police chief saying in 2006 that Burma would be calm if she walked free. The latest decision was the fifth time since 1992 that Ms Suu Kyi's detention was declared arbitrary and illegal under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, but marks the first time her detention is noted as illegal under Burma's own laws.

No illusions

Jared Genser, the Washington-based legal counsel to Ms Suu Kyi admitted that the junta was unlikely to bow to UN advice on its own laws. "I'm under no illusion that Aung San Suu Kyi will be immediately released because of this judgment. But at the same time I do think it is an important small step forward," he said. "I do think that it will have an important impact on the United Nations' ability to press particularly China, Russia and others who have been more protective of the junta," he said.

Mr Genser said the panel should be seen as independent as it is comprised of five experts -- from Chile, Pakistan, Russia, Senegal and Spain. Activist groups are trying to collect 888,888 signatures on a petition to call for Ms Suu Kyi's release and that of 2,100 other prisoners.Last week a United Nations human rights investigator, Tomas Ojea Quintana, urged Burma to release more than 2,000 political prisoners and called for an urgent review of the detention of Aung San Suu Kyi.

Burma has been under military rule since 1962. source bbc.com


Death penalty 'closer to demise'

The world is moving nearer to ending the use of capital punishment, Amnesty International says, despite its latest report revealing a mixed picture.

In its annual survey the group says 2,390 people were put to death in 2008, up from 1,252 in 2007. And 8,864 were sentenced to death, up from 3,347. Of 25 nations using the death penalty in 2008, China was the most prolific. But Amnesty said it was encouraging that just 59 nations retained the death penalty and so few actually used it. The group's secretary general, Irene Khan, said such punishments as beheading, stoning and electrocution "have no place in the 21st Century". Despite the rise in executions during 2008, she said there were reasons to be optimistic. "The good news is that executions are only carried out by a small number of countries, which shows that we are moving closer to a death-penalty free world," she said.

'Worrying instances'

The group highlighted decisions by Argentina and Uzbekistan to abolish the death penalty in 2008. And the fact that Belarus was the only European nation to carry out executions was also interpreted positively. But Ms Khan said the "bad news" in the report, entitled Death Sentences and Executions in 2008, was that hundreds of people continued to suffer. The report said China used lethal injection and shooting to execute at least 1,718 people. But Beijing does not publish data on the death penalty.

Of the top-six countries in Amnesty's list, only the US (37) publishes statistics on the penalty's use. The figures for the others are estimates based on what Amnesty has verified through media reports, rights groups and official statements. Other groups frequently give much higher figures.
The other worst-offending nations on the list are Iran (346), Saudi Arabia (102), Pakistan (36) and Iraq (34). Amnesty also highlighted "worrying instances" of some nations bucking a long-term trend away from the death penalty. St Kitts and Nevis carried out the first execution in the Caribbean for five years, the group's report said. And Liberia introduced capital punishment for robbery, terrorism and hijacking. source bbc.com


Kamis, 05 Maret 2009

S Korea diverts jets over threats

Two airlines in South Korea are to re-route flights after North Korea said it could no longer guarantee their safety.

The North's threat follows its warnings that a US-South Korean military exercise due to take place next week, could trigger a military clash. North Korea has long described such exercises as provocative but tensions between the two Koreas are now high. About 30 international flights a day usually pass through North Korean airspace to and from the South. This year North Korea raised objections to the annual exercises at a rare meeting between its generals and the US-led United Nations command in the South. Tensions are also high in the region amid speculation that the North is planning to test-fire a long-range missile from a base in Hwadae.

Build-up

The BBC's John Sudworth in Seoul says passenger jets normally leave Seoul for the eastern United States by swinging north over the Sea of Japan to follow the Korean coastline towards Russia and North Alaska. With those flights by Korean Air and Asiana now re-routed to avoid North Korean airspace, the government has demanded that North Korea retract the implied threat. "The government urges North Korea immediately to withdraw military threats against civilian air flights," the ministry said in a statement.

"A military threat to the normal operations of civil airplanes not only violates international rules but is also an inhumane act that can never be justified," the statement said. The heightened threats are part of a build-up in rhetoric from the North, after South Korean President Lee Myung-bak came to power just over a year ago. Mr Lee has ended his predecessors' so-called "sunshine policy" in which the South gave unconditional aid to the North. Pyongyang has scrapped a series of peace agreements with Seoul over its decision to link bilateral aid to progress on denuclearisation.

In the latest of a series of statements on Thursday, a North Korean committee warned that "security cannot be guaranteed for South Korean civil airplanes" during the forthcoming military exercises. It said no-one knew what "military conflicts will be touched off by the reckless war exercises". The annual US-South Korean drill, which involves tens of thousands of troops, starts on Monday and continues for 12 days.America's top envoy on North Korea, Stephen Bosworth, is currently visiting China, Japan and South Korea in a bid to breathe life into the stalled nuclear disarmament talks and reduce regional tensions

Colombia warlord extradited to US

Colombia has extradited a right-wing militia leader to the US on drug charges, despite an outcry from victims' groups and rights activists. Ever Veloza had co-operated freely with prosecutors, leading them to unmarked graves and admitting dozens of murders. His testimony had revealed high-level collusion between paramilitaries, politicians and the security forces. Rights groups say his extradition should have been delayed and could leave dozens of cases unsolved.

Knew too much?

US officials have promised to give Colombian prosecutors unfettered access to Veloza. But Ivan Cepeda, of the National Movement of Victims of Crimes of the State, said there was no reason for the extradition to go ahead so quickly. "We didn't ask that he not be extradited, just that it be delayed until he could confess to everything." Prosecutor Nubia Chavez told the Associated Press news agency that Veloza had acknowledged 480 murders by fighters under his command, but she said hundreds of others remain unsolved.
"I think he was able to confess to about 50% of his crimes," she said. The BBC's Jeremy McDermott in Colombia says victims' groups believe he was extradited because he knew too much about senior figures who were involved with the paramilitaries.

Highly sensitive

Veloza was a commander with the United Self Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC) - one of several right-wing paramilitary groups formed in the 1980s. They were backed by drug traffickers and wealthy ranchers, who paid them to fight off left-wing guerrillas - particularly the Farc, who were the AUC's fiercest ennemies.

The militias evolved into private armies and are thought to killed thousands of people.

Unlike most of his comrades, Veloza gave his full co-operation to prosecutors - and his evidence proved to be highly sensitive. Among those he accused of collusion was a retired army officer - Gen Rito Alejo del Rio - who was a close associate of President Alvaro Uribe and is now facing murder charges. Mr Uribe's government has extradited more than 800 suspects to the US since he came to power in 2002 - most of them on drug-trafficking charges.



Kenya rights activist shot dead

A prominent human rights activist has been shot dead as he drove his car in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.
Oscar Kamau Kingara - an outspoken critic of the government's alleged practice of extra-judicial killings - was murdered along with a colleague. There are reports of student clashes with police near where he was killed. A UN report last week called for Kenya's top policeman and the attorney general to resign for failing to address police impunity.

Mr Kingara was shot dead near State House, the official residence of the Kenyan president. Two cars blocked Mr Kingara's car and then "two men emerged from the two cars and sprayed the vehicle with bullets", eyewitness Jackson Oyelo told AFP news agency. University students clashed with riot police, with students refusing to release the blood-spattered car and the two bodies to police, according to a report on the Associated Press.

'Abuses'

Mr Kingara's Oscar Foundation Free Legal Aid Clinic published a report last year, which said that 8,040 young Kenyans have been executed or tortured to death since 2002 in a police crackdown on a gang known as the Mungiki. Earlier on Thursday, a government spokesman had accused the Oscar Foundation of raising money for the Mungiki. Also on Thursday, members of the gang had led protests against police violence in the capital Nairobi and other towns.

Last week, the UN published a report which said that police abuses in Kenya were both systematic and widespread. The author, Philip Alston, described the Kenyan police as a law unto themselves and said they often killed with impunity. Mr Alston said police commissioner Major General Hussein Ali should be sacked and urged Attorney General Amos Wako to stand down. source bbc




Williams cancels tour for surgery

Comedian Robin Williams is to have heart surgery and has postponed the remaining shows of his one-man stand-up tour, a spokeswoman has said. Williams, 57, had already called off four shows in Florida earlier this week after experiencing shortness of breath. He will undergo surgery for an aortic valve replacement and hopes to restart the tour in the autumn. In a statement on his website, Williams said he had been "touched by everyone's support and well wishes".

"This tour has been amazing fun and I can't wait to get back out on the road after a little tune-up," he said. William's has been on tour with his 80-date sell-out Weapons of Self-Destruction show since September last year. The veteran comedian is best known for his role in classic TV sitcom Mork and Mindy and for his Oscar-winning performance in Good Will Hunting.

He will be seen in cinemas later this year reprising his role as President Teddy Roosevelt in Battle of the Smithsonian, the sequel to Night at the Museum. source bbc

Middle age 'key for exercising'

Increasing activity levels in middle age can prolong life as much as giving up smoking, a study suggests. Swedish researchers from Uppsala University monitored over 2,200 men from the age of 50. They found those who increased activity levels from 50 to 60 ended up living as long as those who were already exercising regularly by middle age. Public health experts said the findings showed it was never too late to start exercising. The team asked the men about their activity levels at the start of the study in the early 1970s, when they were aged 50.The men were put into three groups - high levels of activity, moderate levels and sedentary.

High levels was classed as those who did at least three hours of sports or heavy gardening each week. Moderate was said to be the equivalent of several hours of walking or cycling, while people who were classed as sedentary spent most of their free time watching TV.

Their exercise habits were then reassessed at the age of 60.

The team found that those who were doing high levels of activity at the age of 50 lived 2.3 years longer than sedentary men and 1.1 years longer than those who reported medium levels of activity - once a range of factors such as weight, alcohol intake and smoking was taken into account. But interestingly the researchers found that those who increased their activity level to high - whether they were in the moderate or low group - from the age of 50 to 60 also lived the longest.It was not clear what effect reducing activity levels during this period had, the British Medical Journal report said.

Impact

Lead researcher Karl Michaelsson said the study showed it was essential to encourage men to become active, although he said more research would be needed to see if the effect was replicated in women.He said the impact on lifespan was the same as for someone who gave up smoking during this period."Efforts for promotion of physical activity, even among middle aged and older men are important." Professor Alan Maryon-Davis, president of the Faculty of Public Health, said: "These results are very interesting.

"It shows that it is never too late to start exercising. I think this period is very important for men and what is probably happening here is that the exercise during these years is strengthening their cardiovascular system.

"But, of course, other factors such as diet will play an important role."

Cathy Ross, cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation, said: "The study adds support to what we already know, which is that people who are physically active are half as likely to get cardiovascular disease as those that are inactive.

"Being active at any age helps control your weight, reduce blood pressure and cholesterol and will provide long term benefits for your heart health and general health." source bbc


Selasa, 03 Maret 2009

Castro: 'Honey of power' led top Cuban officials to 'unworthy role'

HAVANA, Cuba (CNN) -- A day after a wholesale shake-up in the Cabinet of President Raul Castro, brother Fidel said Tuesday that two of the leaders were ousted after they became seduced by the "honey of power," which led them to an "unworthy role."

The elder Castro said in a posting on a state-run Web site that he was consulted about the appointments, though that had not been necessary "since I gave up the prerogatives of power quite a while ago."

In an article headlined "Reflections of comrade Fidel, healthy changes in the Cabinet," Castro said he did not propose most of the replacements. "Almost without exception, they arrived at their jobs proposed by other colleagues from the address of the party or the state," he wrote. "I never dedicated myself to that job."

The ailing former Cuban president, who handed power to his brother a year ago, referred to two of the ousted leaders cited in news reports. "None of the two mentioned by the wire services as most affected spoke a word to express non-conformity," he said. "The reason was another. The honey of the power for which they had known no sacrifice awoke in them ambitions that led them to an unworthy role."

Though Castro neither elaborated nor identified who he was referring to, news reports have cited the removal of Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque and Vice President Carlos Lage from their Cabinet posts. No mention was made of removing Lage from his other post as vice president of the Council of State.

Though a number of other long-time leaders had their jobs changed, as well, Fidel Castro rejected "rumors" that the changes represented the substitution of "Raul's men" for "Fidel's men." source cnn.com

Dem: Obama can't make us cut earmarks

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- President Obama on Tuesday overturned a last-minute Bush administration regulation that many environmentalists claim weakened the Endangered Species Act.The regulation, issued a few weeks before George W. Bush left office, made it easier for federal agencies to skip consultations with government scientists before launching projects that could affect endangered wildlife.

By overturning the regulation, Obama said during an enthusiastic reception at the Interior Department, he had restored "the scientific process to its rightful place at the heart of the Endangered Species Act, a process undermined by past administrations."Under the Bush administration rule, there was no need for a federal agency to consult with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service or the National Marine Fisheries Services if that agency determined that no harm would come to an endangered species as a result of its project.

But the determination of what "no harm" meant rested with agency bureaucrats instead of scientists. Obama issued a memorandum that effectively suspends the regulation while ordering a review to determine whether it promotes "the purposes of the [Endangered Species Act]."
"The work of scientists and experts in my administration, including right here in the Interior Department, will be respected," Obama said. "For more than three decades, the Endangered Species Act has successfully protected our nation's most threatened wildlife, and we should be looking for ways to improve it, not weaken it."

Environmental groups were quick to praise Obama's action.

"President Obama's announcement will allow [the Endangered Species Act] to do what it was intended: protect our nation's endangered plants and animals," said Andrew Wetzler, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's Endangered Species Program. "Reversing the Bush administration's midnight action will restore protections for our last wild places and species."

Obama also helped celebrate the 160th anniversary of the Interior Department on Tuesday.
"Throughout our history, there's been a tension between those who've sought to conserve our natural resources for the benefit of future generations and those who have sought to profit from these resources," he told department employees.

"But I'm here to tell you this is a false choice. With smart, sustainable policies, we can grow our economy today and preserve the environment for ourselves, our children and our grandchildren."