Saturday, December 31, 2011

Australian Tourist Attacked While Hiking in Argentina

Argentine police searched Friday for the attacker of an Australian tourist who was found alive three days after disappearing on a nature trail.

Emma Kelly, 23, is recovering and out of danger now, an Argentine friend said.

She was found dehydrated and disoriented on Thursday and with obvious signs of being attacked after going hiking in the scenic "Cajon del Azul" canyon near El Bolson, a town in the southern Andean foothills.

"This is not a difficult hike; the whole trail is wide and well-marked. It's the first time something like this has happened in El Bolson. It's a popular place," said Bruno Meister, who lives in El Bolson with another Australian, a close friend of Kelly.

Kelly was flown by helicopter to a local hospital and Meister said she was recovering. "She's smiling, we're cracking jokes with her. She's trying to get over it," he said.

Police on Friday had yet to make any official announcements about the case, but Meister said they were hunting for Kelly's attacker.

"They're looking very hard for this person now," Meister said. "The whole country is informed and they're really looking for him."

Police also responded quickly to an attack on two French tourists who went missing while hiking on another Argentine nature trail, some 1,200 miles to the north, in the Salta region in July. The women were found raped and shot to death, and three suspects were detained.

Source: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/Mrke0yBH7Js/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Deadly Syria clashes claimed as Arab officials visit

Heavy clashes broke out between Syrian security forces and army defectors in the Damascus suburb of Douma on Friday, Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

Tens of thousands of anti-government protesters took to the streets in Douma after Friday prayers. They hurled stones at the security forces. At least 24 people were wounded, the Observatory said.

Activists said security forces fired on protesters in the eastern city of Deir el-Zour, the southern city of Daraa and elsewhere, killing at least five people.

Another four were reported killed in the town of Talkalakh, near the border with Lebanon, in an ambush by government troops. It was not immediately clear why they were killed as the victims were not believed to be protesting at the time, activists said.

Earlier Friday, the anti-government Free Syrian Army ordered its fighters to stop offensive operations pending a meeting with Arab League delegates monitoring President Bashar al-Assad's compliance with a peace plan, the rebels' commander said.

Colonel Riad al-Asaad said his forces had so far been unable to talk to the monitors, in the first week of their month-long mission, and he was still trying to contact them urgently.

"I issued an order to stop all operations from the day the committee entered Syria last Friday. All operations against the regime are to be stopped except in a situation of self defense," he told Reuters.

"We have tried to communicate with them and we requested a meeting with the team. So far there hasn't been any success. We haven't been given any of the (phone) numbers for the monitors, which we have requested. No one has contacted us either."

How widely Turkey-based al-Asaad's order is heeded by anti-government gunmen inside Syria is in question. A video shot by rebel fighters this week showed the ambush of a convoy of army buses in which, activists said, four soldiers were killed.

Russia: Syria situation 'reassuring'
Also Friday, Russia's Foreign Ministry said an initial assessment by the Arab League observers was "reassuring."�

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Moscow is one of Syria's few remaining allies following more than nine months of violence stemming from a massive protest movement. The United Nations says some 5,000 people have been killed in the government crackdown on dissent.

"Moscow appraises with satisfaction the real beginning of the Arab League activities in Syria," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement. The ministry noted that the Sudanese general who heads the mission visited the restive city of Homs.

"The situation there is reassuring, clashes have not been recorded," the statement said.

There is broad concern about whether Arab League member states, with some of the world's poorest human rights records, were fit for the mission to monitor compliance with a plan to end to the crackdown on political opponents by security forces loyal to President Bashar Assad.

Interactive: Young and restless: Demographics fuel Mideast protests (on this page)

The presence of Arab League monitors in Syria has re-energized the anti-government protest movement, with tens of thousands turning out this week in cities and neighborhoods where the observers are expected to visit.

The nearly 100 Arab League monitors are the first Syria has allowed in during the nine-month anti-government uprising. They are supposed to ensure the regime complies with terms of the League plan to end President Bashar Assad's crackdown on dissent.

The plan, which Syria agreed to on Dec. 19, demands that the government remove its security forces and heavy weapons from cities, start talks with the opposition and allow human rights workers and journalists into the country. It also calls for the release of all political prisoners.

State-run TV said observers have reached Idlib province, which borders Turkey; Homs and the Damascus suburbs of Harasta and Douma. Activists said the army had either withdrawn or hid tanks in the mountains in Idlib.

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45824119/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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N. Korea: No engagement with South

Kim Jong Il's final farewell
  • Pyongyang complains Seoul has refused to let citizens pay respects to Kim Jong Il
  • The North says it won't engage with the current South Korean government
  • The comments come after two days of ceremonies to honor Kim Jong Il, who died this month
  • The late dictator's son Kim Jong Un is being portrayed as the new 'supreme leader'

(CNN) -- North Korea said Friday that it remained steadfast in its refusal to engage with the current South Korean government, dismissing the prospect of a shift in relations with Seoul after a dynastic succession in Pyongyang.

"We solemnly declare with confidence that the South Korean puppets and foolish politicians around the world should not expect any change" from North Korea, the country's National Defense Commission said in a statement reported by Pyongyang's state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

The statement came after two days of elaborate ceremonies in Pyongyang that honored Kim Jong Il, who died earlier this month, and underlined the rise of his son and chosen successor, Kim Jong Un, to the position of "supreme leader" of the secretive state.

The nuclear-armed North "will have no dealings with the Lee Myung-bak group of traitors forever," the statement said in an English-language version of the KCNA report. Lee is the South Korean president.

The North criticized the South Korean government's decision to allow only a select group of private citizens to visit Pyongyang to pay their respects to Kim Jong Il.

Lee's government's "show of enmity" toward North Korea "culminated in its act of blocking south Koreans who wanted to visit Pyongyang to mourn the demise of leader Kim Jong Il," the statement said.

Seoul allowed a group of South Koreans, including a former first lady and a leading businesswoman, to travel to the North earlier this week to express condolences over Kim Jong Il's death, which was announced last week.

North Korea's future post-Kim Jong Il

That move, along with a number of other gestures like expressing condolences to the North Korean people, suggested a slight softening in Lee's government's hardline stance toward Pyongyang.

The North, though, did not appear to be impressed by those efforts, expressing anger Friday that more South Koreans weren't permitted to visit Pyongyang and that groups were allowed this week to release leaflets near the border criticizing North Korean leaders.

It also said that the South's decision to put its military on alert after Kim Jong Il's death created "a war-like atmosphere on the ground and in the seas and air."

In one of the more vehement passages of saber-rattling rhetoric, the defense commission warned of revenge over these perceived misdeeds.

"The veritable sea of tears shed by the army and people" of North Korea "will turn into that of retaliatory fire to burn all the group of traitors to the last one and their wailing into a roar of revenge to smash the stronghold of the puppet forces," the statement said.

Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/cnn_world/~3/Wl11mFPhVlg/index.html

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Home > Video > World News > World News: 12/30/11

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Drilling Down: South African Farmers See Threat From Fracking

Liaan Pretorius for The New York Times

Chris Hayward, a South African farmer, says, "If our government lets these companies touch even a drop of our water, we're ruined."

KAROO, South Africa ? When a drought dried up their wells last year, hundreds of farmers and their families flocked to local fairgrounds here to pray for rain, and a call went out on the regional radio station imploring South Africans to donate bottled water.

Covering much of the roughly 800 miles between Johannesburg and Cape Town, this arid expanse ? its name means ?thirsty land? ? sees less rain in some parts than the Mojave Desert.

Even so, Shell and several other large energy companies hope to drill thousands of natural gas wells in the region, using a new drilling technology that can require a million gallons of water or more for each well. Companies will also have to find a way to dispose of all the toxic wastewater or sludge that each well produces, since the closest landfill or industrial-waste facility that can handle the waste is hundreds of miles away.

?Around here, the rain comes on legs,? said Chris Hayward, 51, a brawny, dust-covered farmer in Beaufort West, quoting a Karoo saying about how rare and fleeting precipitation is in the area.

With his three skinny border collies crouching dutifully at his side, Mr. Hayward explained that he had to slaughter more than 600 of his 2,000 sheep last year because there was not enough water to go around.

?If our government lets these companies touch even a drop of our water,? he said, ?we?re ruined.?

South Africa is among the growing number of countries that want to unlock previously inaccessible natural gas reserves trapped in shale deep underground. The drilling technology ? hydraulic fracturing, or ?fracking,? for short ? holds the promise of generating new revenue through taxes on the gas, creating thousands of jobs for one of the country?s poorest regions, and fueling power plants to provide electricity to roughly 10 million South Africans who live without it.

But many of the sites here and on other continents that are being considered for drilling by oil and gas companies and by governments short of cash are in fragile areas where local officials have limited resources, political leverage or experience to ensure that the drilling is done safely.

A Surge in Interest

The interest from big energy companies in South Africa and elsewhere means that shale gas may redraw the global energy map, according to many energy experts.

Michael Klare, a professor of world security studies at Hampshire College, said that the new sources of natural gas from shale may lessen the geopolitical importance of countries that historically have been the biggest producers of natural gas, including Iran, Qatar and Russia. The new drilling, which draws strong support from the United States government, represents a boon for American companies like Halliburton, Chesapeake Energy and Exxon Mobil that have greater experience with shale gas, and therefore are likely to win many lucrative contracts abroad.

More than 30 countries, including China, India and Pakistan are now considering fracking for natural gas or oil, and the surge in gas production has spurred interest in building pipelines and terminals that liquefy the fuel so it can be shipped to far-flung markets. In the United States, shale gas has increased supply, driving prices down and benefiting industrial plants that use the gas for manufacturing and consumers who depend on it for electricity, heating or cooking.

But the enthusiasm abroad, especially in less-developed regions, does carry risks, according to many energy experts.

?The big problem is that all the excitement around shale gas, most of it fostered by the U.S., has also led some countries, especially in the developing world, to take a drill-first, figure-out-regulations-later attitude,? said Professor Klare, who has written extensively about the way that energy policies affect global security. ?There is simply too much being taken on faith when it comes to company reassurances about the safety and costs of this drilling.?

The Indonesian government, for example, is considering allowing drilling for shale gas in a part of Java where, in 2006, drilling led to the eruption of a mud volcano that killed at least 13 people, and displaced more than 30,000 residents from 12 villages, according to a team of international scientists. Indonesia is a major exporter of liquefied natural gas, but it struggles to meet domestic demand, and supporters of the shale drilling project say it will help solve that problem.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=48c9164c42a00a00b40b79be55aeb16c

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North Korea names Kim Jong Un as Supreme Commander

In this photo taken Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011, new North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, center, presides over a national memorial service for his late father Kim Jong Il at Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea. Flanking him are Kim Yong Nam, president of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly, and the ceremonial head of state, right (not seen), and Ri Yong Ho, a vice marshal of the Korean People's Army.�(AP Photo)

(AP)�

PYONGYANG, North Korea - North Korea said Saturday that it has officially named Kim Jong Un as Supreme Commander, giving formal approval to his control of the country's 1.2 million-strong military and further strengthening his authority in the wake of Kim Jong Il's death.

Kim Jong Il's son and successor was given the title at a meeting Friday of the Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea, the North's official Korean Central News Agency said in a statement.

Kim Jong Un "assumed supreme commandership of the Korean People's Army" according to a will made by Kim Jong Il on Oct. 8, the statement said.

Kim has received a string of titles from the government and state media in the wake of his father's death on Dec. 17. But the title Supreme Commander is a clear signal that Kim Jong Un is fast consolidating power over North Korea.

North Korea calls Kim Jong Un "supreme leader"
N. Korea vows no change despite new leadership

The North also warned Friday that there would be no softening of its position toward South Korea's government after Kim Jong Il's death.

North Korea's powerful National Defense Commission said the country would never deal with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, a conservative who stopped a no-strings-attached aid policy toward the North in 2008.

The stern message also said North Korea was uniting around Kim Jong Un, referring to him for the first time with the title Great Leader -- previously used for his father -- in a clear message of continuity. It was the latest incremental step in a burgeoning personality cult around the son following the Dec. 17 death of Kim Jong Il.

The top levels of government appear to have rallied around Kim Jong Un, who is in his late 20s, in the wake of his father's death. Still, given his inexperience and age, there are questions outside North Korea about his leadership of a nation engaged in delicate negotiations over its nuclear program and grappling with decades of economic hardship and chronic food shortages.

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsMain/~3/Os9MQ4oZC5w/

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Myanmar sets April by-elections, Suu Kyi set to run

Myanmar's pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi waves her party flag as she watches a charity music show, organized by National League for Democracy (NLD) party, at Myanmar Convention Center in Yangon December 30, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Soe Zeya Tun

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/worldNews/~3/iYAH4jgYxKw/us-myanmar-elections-idUSTRE7BU03520111231

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Nigerian Christmas bomb death toll rises to 37 (Reuters)

ABUJA (Reuters) ? The death toll from a bomb attack on a church just outside Nigeria's capital Abuja on Christmas Day has risen to 37, with 57 people wounded, a source at the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said on Friday.

The bombing at St. Theresa's Catholic church in Madalla on Abuja's outskirts during a packed Christmas mass was the deadliest of a series of Christmas attacks on Nigerian churches and other targets by the militant Islamist sect Boko Haram.

"As of just now, the latest death toll from the bombing of St. Theresa's church is at 37. Wounded, we have 57," a senior NEMA official said. The initial death toll had been 27.

The official asked not to be identified because the victims were now in the hands of hospitals and morgues.

President Goodluck Jonathan's office put out a statement late on Friday pledging that "the government will fight Boko Haram, the group of evil-minded people who want to cause anarchy, to the end."

Jonathan held talks on Friday with Mohame Bazoum, Deputy Prime Minister of Niger. Security officials suspect the countries' porous common border is a gathering point for militants, and that Boko Haram may have made contact there with al Qaeda's north African wing.

"The perpetrators pass through borders at will and we have to ensure that there are no safe havens for them in the sub-region," Jonathan said.

He had summoned his security chiefs for an emergency meeting on Thursday to discuss the growing Islamist militant threat and how to deal with it.

National Security Adviser General Owoye Andrew Azazi told Reuters that Nigerian security services were considering making contact with moderate members of Boko Haram via "back channels," even though explicit talks are officially ruled out.

EXPLOSIONS, SHOOTINGS IN NORTHEAST

This year was the second in a row that Boko Haram has attacked churches at Christmas. Its strikes are becoming deadlier and more sophisticated, and suggest that it is trying to ignite sectarian strife in a country historically prone to conflicts between a largely Muslim north and Christian south.

Three explosions struck the northeastern city of Maiduguri shortly after Muslim Friday prayers, but caused no casualties, the military said. In a separate incident, gunmen shot dead three members of a cleric's family.

Boko Haram, whose name means "Western education is sinful" in the northern Hausa language, has been blamed for a campaign of shootings and bombings against security forces and authorities in the north.

Attacks in and around the capital - including one on the U.N. headquarters in August that killed at least 24 people - suggest the group is trying to raise its profile and radiate out from its heartland in the northeast.

On Tuesday night, unidentified attackers threw a homemade bomb into an Islamic school in the southern Delta state, an apparent sectarian reprisal that wounded seven people, six of them young children.

On Wednesday night, an explosion in a local bar in the northern city of Gombe wounded one person, police said.

(Reporting by Tim Cocks)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111230/wl_nm/us_nigeria_violence

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North Korea names Kim Jong Un as Supreme Commander

In this photo taken Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011, new North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, center, presides over a national memorial service for his late father Kim Jong Il at Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea. Flanking him are Kim Yong Nam, president of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly, and the ceremonial head of state, right (not seen), and Ri Yong Ho, a vice marshal of the Korean People's Army.�(AP Photo)

(AP)�

PYONGYANG, North Korea - North Korea said Saturday that it has officially named Kim Jong Un as Supreme Commander, giving formal approval to his control of the country's 1.2 million-strong military and further strengthening his authority in the wake of Kim Jong Il's death.

Kim Jong Il's son and successor was given the title at a meeting Friday of the Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea, the North's official Korean Central News Agency said in a statement.

Kim Jong Un "assumed supreme commandership of the Korean People's Army" according to a will made by Kim Jong Il on Oct. 8, the statement said.

Kim has received a string of titles from the government and state media in the wake of his father's death on Dec. 17. But the title Supreme Commander is a clear signal that Kim Jong Un is fast consolidating power over North Korea.

North Korea calls Kim Jong Un "supreme leader"
N. Korea vows no change despite new leadership

The North also warned Friday that there would be no softening of its position toward South Korea's government after Kim Jong Il's death.

North Korea's powerful National Defense Commission said the country would never deal with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, a conservative who stopped a no-strings-attached aid policy toward the North in 2008.

The stern message also said North Korea was uniting around Kim Jong Un, referring to him for the first time with the title Great Leader -- previously used for his father -- in a clear message of continuity. It was the latest incremental step in a burgeoning personality cult around the son following the Dec. 17 death of Kim Jong Il.

The top levels of government appear to have rallied around Kim Jong Un, who is in his late 20s, in the wake of his father's death. Still, given his inexperience and age, there are questions outside North Korea about his leadership of a nation engaged in delicate negotiations over its nuclear program and grappling with decades of economic hardship and chronic food shortages.

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsMain/~3/Os9MQ4oZC5w/

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Thousands Gather in Turkey for Funerals After Botched Raid

Thousands of mourners gathered in southeast Turkey on Friday for the funerals of 35 Kurdish civilians who were killed in a botched raid by Turkish military jets that mistook the group for Kurdish rebels based in Iraq.

Turkish television footage showed people, many weeping and lamenting the dead, as they gathered after the air strikes Wednesday that killed a group of smugglers along the border, one of the deadliest episodes in the conflict between the Turkish state and Kurdish rebels who took up arms in 1984.

In a second day of civil unrest, stone-throwing demonstrators clashed with police who fired tear gas and water cannon in several cities in the mostly Kurdish southeast. Firat, a pro-Kurdish news agency, said 30 people were arrested in Diyarbakir, the region's biggest city. One person was injured and six arrested in Van city, according to the state-run Anadolu news agency.

Trade unionists and other groups planned a protest in Istanbul later Friday. About 500 Iraqi Kurds denounced the airstrikes in a rally in the city of Irbil in the Kurdish-controlled region of northern Iraq.

Noncombatants have often been caught in the crossfire of Turkey's war, but one of the highest civilian tolls in a single day further soured relations between the government and ethnic Kurds who have long faced discrimination. A government campaign to reconcile with Kurds by granting them more rights has stalled amid a surge in fighting this year.

Dogan news agency video showed people digging graves on a hill near the southeast village of Gulyazi, home of some of the slain smugglers, and the funeral rites quickly took on a political tone. Thousands of people walked along a mountain path with coffins draped in red, yellow and green, the colors associated with Kurdish identity and the rebel group PKK.

In the crowd footage, one poster showed an image of Abdullah Ocalan, the jailed chief of the PKK, whose Kurdish acronym stands for Kurdistan Workers' Party. The government, which along with the West says the rebels are a terrorist group, has had secretive contact with Ocalan at his island prison as part of its effort to make peace with Kurdish opponents.

Families at the funerals urged rebels to take revenge and they accused Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of being a "murderer," according to Firat, a pro-Kurdish news agency.

A somber Erdogan described the attack near the border village of Ortasu in Sirnak province as "unfortunate" and "saddening," noting half the dead were under 20 years old. He said two F-16 planes bombed the area after images provided by drones showed a 40-person group approaching the border from the Iraqi side.

"It was revealed later that they were part of a group smuggling cigarettes, diesel fuel and such," he said.

Usually, according to Erdogan, such smuggling is done by groups of just three to five people. He said at least two recent deadly attacks on military outposts near the Iraq-Turkey border were carried out by guerrillas who smuggled guns across the border on mules.

Four hours of official video footage of the raid will be examined, he said.

The prime minister criticized Turkey's Taraf newspaper, which has published reports of alleged military schemes and misconduct in the past, for a headline that read: "The state bombed its own people."

"No state would intentionally bomb its people," he said. "In the past, such things may have occurred but it is not possible for such a thing to occur during our administration."

The remarks touched on the complex power dynamics in modern Turkey, where Erdogan, a devout Muslim with a strong electoral mandate, has undercut the political clout of the military, a traditional guardian of secular ideals.

In an email statement, the PKK did not distinguish between the civilian government and the armed forces in its blame for what it called a "massacre," and referred to "technical and intelligence support" provided by the United States.

The United States recently deployed four Predator drones to Turkey from Iraq following the American troops' withdrawal from the country to assist Turkey in its fight against the rebels.

The Kurdish conflict is a drag on Turkey's efforts to burnish its image as a regional model and advocate for democratic change in neighboring countries such as Syria, where thousands have died since an uprising began in March.

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, a chief architect of Turkey's rising profile, said the airstrikes would be thoroughly investigated and should not be exploited for political gain. Another top official, Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc, said the inquiry would not be a whitewash.

"If there is any negligence, any fault or any intention, those who are responsible will be found and will endure the consequences," Arinc said.

The military issued a message of condolence that was carried on Anadolu news agency. There was no apology, but such a public outreach is highly unusual in the Turkish armed forces, which are traditionally tightlipped about operations.

"We wish God's mercy and grace to those who lost their lives in the cross-border incident of Dec. 28, 2011, and extend our condolences to their family and friends," the statement said. Last week, the military reported the deaths of 48 suspected rebels in offensives backed by air power.

Kurds make up around 20 percent of Turkey's 74 million people. While many have assimilated and are not politically active, a significant number feel marginalized and want autonomy in Kurdish-dominated southeast Turkey. The rebels have long used northern Iraq as a springboard for hit-and-run attacks on Turkish targets.

The government has taken conciliatory steps, allowing Kurdish-language institutes and private Kurdish courses as well as Kurdish television broadcasts. But Kurdish activists say far more needs to be done to heal scars dating from a time when the Kurdish language was banned, and cite police roundups of Kurdish politicians, journalists and others suspected of rebel links as a sign of intolerance for the minority.

Source: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/xYEA9YzP34o/

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Crack Dens In Rio Take A Hit



By Taylor Barnes and Jimmy Chalk, GlobalPost

A shirtless 10-year-old boy walks among the dozens of crack users gathered along the trashed rocky decline between train tracks and a retaining wall.

He taps the hole on his makeshift crack pipe, a hazy plastic water cup covered with punctured aluminum foil, silent as older users yell for him to leave.

"If you like it the first time, it's a bottomless hole," said an adult man with blistered lips crouched among them. "It's a drug that gets you addicted so quickly that once you realize it...you're already gone."

This is one of Brazil's growing number of cracolandias, congregations of crack addicts that have raised alarm among officials. Experts say an epidemic has taken root here that is comparable to the crisis the drug created in the United States more than two decades ago.

Brazil now has at least 1.2 million crack users -- this in a nation of just under 200 million -- according to the Parliamentary Front to Combat Crack, a committee of government officials that says that kids first use the drug at the average age of 13.

Combating the problem has become a high-profile issue for public officials, given the growing number of cracolandias in public view and crime associated with the drug, as Rio de Janeiro takes on several public-security programs to improve the city?s image before the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympics.

President Dilma Rousseff announced in December a 4 billion reais ($2.1 billion) national plan to combat crack in the years leading up to the World Cup. Her health minister, Alexandre Padilha, defended a proposal to extend forced rehab to adults and children throughout the country.

"Crack has inaugurated a new phase of traffic in Brazil," says Luis Flavio Sapori, a former public security secretary in the state of Minas Gerais who has written a book on the problem.

The drug has been in Brazil for two decades. But in the past 10 years the country saw an "explosion" of use, Sapori said. Particularly in the past few years, traffickers abandoned their ban on selling the drug in Rio de Janeiro and other cities, likely because they recognized the burgeoning demand for a cheap, highly addictive drug that's easily produced.

"Crack is a fast sale. ...The customer is very compulsive. He spends a lot, but he also becomes very indebted," Sapori said.

As the drug became more widespread, users began gathering to smoke the drug publicly in cracolandias.

Rio has responded to the rising crack use with a controversial policy of rounding up users in police operations, forcing the underage to stay for months in state-run shelters. Adults are offered optional sheltering, but have to go to transit homes to recover belongings confiscated in raids.

Most don't stay, but at least temporarily, the police get what they want: broken-up cracolandias.

The city government has sent more than 100 underage users to shelters since beginning the program in May. Critics have called the move illegal, saying the state has no right to imprison children. They also worry that users will only be driven underground.

"It's violence that they're carrying out," local magistrate Siro Darlan told the news magazine Veja. "In the condominiums of the [wealthy neighborhood] Barra da Tijuca there are people using drugs. Why not go and remove them?"

But supporters say that Rio is a laboratory for a policy that could spread to the rest of the country.

"We think that our role as the state is to watch over their lives," said Rodrigo Bethlem, Rio's social assistance secretary, of the young crack users.

He added, "Just by the fact that you have an area called a 'cracolandia' where you use the drug openly, you stimulate the growth of users."

In interviews permitted by shelter staff nearby, the children often say they're happy in the homes, though many describe going in and out of shelters multiple times. The staff offer counseling and prescribe them a series of sedatives, anti-depressants and anti-anxiety drugs.

Those who stay want to do so. They boys are "always" able to flee when they try, said Luiz Maia, a psychologist at a shelter in the leafy tropical outskirts of the city.

"If they jump here, there's a river," he said, indicating the small wall around the sports court.

He claims that boys brought by their families have a high rate of recovery. But of those forced here by the recent round of police operations, only 10 to 20 percent stay in the house. The shelter doesn't try to hold the boys against their will, Maia adds. "This isn't a prison."

Daniel, a 15-year-old ex-user who's been in Maia's shelter for a month, says he saw a police team coming toward crack users -- and then he ran to the officers.

"I saw lots of people running to not be caught and I thought, 'This is not for me,'" said Daniel, who said that he routinely spent 300 reais (170 USD) as he'd smoke 20 crack rocks in a day. "I know if I leave this month, I will fall again."

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/30/crack-dens-in-rio-take-a-_n_1176613.html

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Car Bomb at Politician's Home Kills 9 in Pakistan

Published December 30, 2011

| Associated Press

Police say a car bomb has exploded outside the home of a local politician in southwest Pakistan, killing at least nine people.

Police officer Nazir Ahmed Kurd says Friday's blast in an upscale neighborhood in Quetta also wounded 21 people. It was unclear if the politician, Shafique Mengal, was home at the time.

Mengal is the son of Naseer Mengal, a prominent politician who had served as oil minister during the tenure of former President Pervez Musharraf.

The surrounding province of Baluchistan has experienced a violent insurgency for decades by nationalists who demand more autonomy and a greater share of the province's natural resources.

Source: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/sfas1TMWE-c/

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Exclusive: U.S. mulls transfer of senior Taliban prisoner (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The Obama administration is considering transferring to Afghan custody a senior Taliban official suspected of major human rights abuses as part of a long-shot bid to improve the prospects of a peace deal in Afghanistan, Reuters has learned.

The potential hand-over of Mohammed Fazl, a 'high-risk detainee' held at the Guantanamo Bay military prison since early 2002, has set off alarms on Capitol Hill and among some U.S. intelligence officials.

As a senior commander of the Taliban army, Fazl is alleged to be responsible for the killing of thousands of Afghanistan's minority Shi'ite Muslims between 1998 and 2001.

According to U.S. military documents made public by WikiLeaks, he was also on the scene of a November 2001 prison riot that killed CIA operative Johnny Micheal Spann, the first American who died in combat in the Afghan war. There is no evidence, however, that Fazl played any direct role in Spann's death.

Senior U.S. officials have said their 10-month-long effort to set up substantive negotiations between the weak government of Afghan President Hamid Karzai and the Taliban has reached a make-or-break moment. Reuters reported earlier this month that they are proposing an exchange of "confidence-building measures," including the transfer of five detainees from Guantanamo and the establishment of a Taliban office outside of Afghanistan.

Now Reuters has learned from U.S. government sources the identity of one of the five detainees in question.

The detainees, the officials emphasized, would not be set free, but remain in some sort of further custody. It is unclear precisely what conditions they would be held under.

In response to inquiries by Reuters, a senior administration official said that the release of Fazl and four other Taliban members had been requested by the Afghan government and Taliban representatives as far back as 2005.

The debate surrounding the White House's consideration of high-profile prisoners such as Fazl illustrates the delicate course it must tread both at home and abroad as it seeks to move the nascent peace process ahead.

One U.S. intelligence official said there had been intense bipartisan opposition in Congress to the proposed transfer.

"I can tell you that the hair on the back of my neck went up when they walked in with this a month ago, and there's been very, very strong letters fired off to the administration," the official said on condition of anonymity.

The senior administration official confirmed that the White House has received letters from lawmakers on the issue. "We will not characterize classified Congressional correspondence, but what is clear is the President's order to us to continue to discuss these important matters with Congress," the official said.

Even supporters of a controversial deal with the Taliban - a fundamentalist group that refers to Americans as infidels and which is still killing U.S., NATO and Afghan soldiers on the battlefield - say the odds of striking an accord are slim.

Critics of Obama's peace initiative remain deeply skeptical of the Taliban's willingness to negotiate, given that the West's intent to pull out most troops after 2014 could give insurgents a chance to reclaim lost territory or push the weak Kabul government toward collapse.

The politically charged nature of the initiative was on display this month when the Karzai government angrily recalled its ambassador from Doha and complained Kabul was being cut out of U.S.-led efforts to establish a Taliban office in Qatar.

U.S. officials appear to have smoothed things over with Karzai since then. Karzai's High Peace Council is signaling it would accept a liaison office for the Taliban office in Qatar - but also warning foreign powers that they cannot keep the Afghan government on the margins.

The detainee transfer may be even more politically explosive for the White House. In discussing the proposal, U.S. officials have stressed the move would be a 'national decision' made in consultation with the U.S. Congress.

Obama is expected to soon sign into law a defense authorization bill whose provisions would broaden the military's power over terrorist detainees and require the Pentagon to certify in most cases that certain security conditions will be met before Guantanamo prisoners can be sent home.

The mere idea of such a transfer is already raising hackles on Capitol Hill, where one key senator last week cautioned the administration against negotiating with "terrorists."

Senator Saxby Chambliss, the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said such detainees would "likely continue to pose a threat to the United States" even once they were transferred.

POTENTIAL MAELSTROM

In February, the Afghan High Peace Council named a half-dozen it wanted released as a goodwill gesture. The list included Fazl; senior Taliban military commander Noorullah Noori; former deputy intelligence minister Abdul Haq Wasiq; and Khairullah Khairkhwa, a former interior minister.

All but Khairkhwa were sent to Guantanamo on January 11, 2002, according to the military documents, meaning they were among the first prisoners sent there.

Bruce Riedel, a former CIA and White House official, said Fazl was alleged to have been involved in 'very ugly' violence against Shi'ites, including members of the Hazara ethnic minority, beginning in the late 1990s, and the deaths of Iranian diplomats and journalists at the Iranian consulate in the northern Afghan city of Mazar-i-Sharif in 1998.

Michael Semple, a former UN official with more than two decades of experience in Afghanistan, said Fazl commanded thousands of Taliban soldiers at a time when its army carried out massacres of Shi'ites. "If you're head of an army that carries out a massacre, even if you're not actually there, you are implicated by virtue of command and control responsibility," he said.

He added: "However it does not serve the interests of justice selectively to hold Taliban to account, while so many other figures accused of past crimes are happily reintegrated in Kabul."

Some U.S. military documents - select documents have been released, others were leaked - indicate that Fazl denied being a senior Taliban official and says he only commanded 50 or 60 men. But the overall picture of his role is unclear from the documents which have become public.

Richard Kammen is an Indiana lawyer who has nominally represented Fazl; the detainee did not want an attorney.

"Based upon the public information with which I'm familiar, it would appear his role in things back in 2001 has been significantly exaggerated by the government," Kammen said.

According to the documents, Fazl and Noori surrendered to Abdul Rashid Dostum, now Afghanistan's army chief of staff but at the time a powerful warlord battling against the Taliban, in northern Afghanistan in November 2001.

While the men were being held at the historic Qala-i-Jani fortress in Mazar-i-Sharif, Taliban prisoners revolted against their captors from the Northern Alliance, the anti-Taliban coalition.

"Dostum brought (Fazl and Noori) to the bunker to ask the prisoners to surrender; detainee and (Noori) refused," the detainee assessment from a 2008 document read.

Spann, a one-time Marine captain who was sent to Afghanistan as a CIA operative in the fall of 2001, was trying to locate al Qaeda operatives at the Mazar fortress among a large group of Taliban soldiers who had surrendered, according to the CIA and media reports at the time. When the Taliban prisoners began to riot - many of them were apparently armed - Spann was surrounded and killed. After a bloody, multi-day battle his body was later found booby-trapped.

Even a loose association between Fazl and Spann's death - despite the fact there is nothing to suggest he was directly involved - is likely to increase the temperature of the debate in Washington.

What could be problematic for some Afghans is Fazl's identification with the killing of civilians in central and northern Afghanistan.

"The composition and timing of any release has got to pay attention to Northern Alliance concerns," Semple said.

Buy-in from supporters of that alliance - and from those wary of a resurgent Taliban - will be key in making a peace deal stick, if one can be had.

Despite the congressional concerns that released Taliban will return to the battlefield, Semple said it was unlikely even prisoners like Fazl - who truly was a significant military figure for the Taliban - would alter that equation.

"These people are not going to make a real contribution to the Taliban war effort even if they are able to go over to Quetta and rejoin the fight. It's not risky in battlefield terms; it's only risky in U.S. political terms."

(Additional reporting by Tabassum Zakaria, Patrick Worsnip and Jane Sutton; editing by Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111230/wl_nm/us_usa_afghanistan_detainees

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Arab League observers fail to deter crackdown on Syria protesters

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Egypt raids foreign organizations' offices in crackdown

Reporting from Cairo and Washington?

Egyptian security forces on Thursday raided the offices of 17 nongovernmental organizations, including three U.S.-based agencies, as part of a crackdown on foreign assistance that has drawn criticism from the West and threatened human rights groups and pro-democracy movements.

The move appeared to be part of a strategy to intimidate international organizations. The ruling military council has repeatedly blamed "foreign hands" for exploiting Egypt's political and economic turmoil. But activists said the army was using the ruse of foreign intervention to stoke nationalism and deflect criticism of abuses.

The military's actions angered Washington at a time the White House is pressuring Egypt to respect civil liberties. But the Egyptian military has been increasingly agitated by democracy advocates and protests that have gripped the nation. Clashes last week between demonstrators and soldiers ended in the deaths of at least 15 people.

"This action is inconsistent with the bilateral cooperation we have had over many years," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said at a news briefing after the raids. "We call on the Egyptian government to immediately end the harassment of NGO staff, return all property and resolve this issue immediately."

Egyptian soldiers and black-clad police officers swept into offices, interrogated workers and seized computers across the country. Those targeted included U.S. groups the National Democratic Institute, the International Republican Institute and Freedom House, which are funded by Congress to monitor elections and promote democracy overseas.

"The public prosecutor has searched 17 civil society organizations, local and foreign, as part of the foreign funding investigation," the official news agency MENA cited the prosecutor's office as saying. "The search is based on evidence showing violations of Egyptian laws, including not having permits."

Freedom House, which said it had filed papers to officially register three days earlier, condemned the actions as a sign that Egypt's government has become more repressive since last winter's revolution overthrew President Hosni Mubarak.

The raids were part of "an intensive campaign by the Egyptian government to dismantle civil society through a politically motivated legal campaign aimed at preventing 'illegal foreign funding' of civil society operations in Egypt," said Freedom House President David J. Kramer, who was a senior State Department official in the administration of then-President George W. Bush.

"It is the clearest indication yet that the [ruling] Supreme Council of the Armed Forces ? has no intention of permitting the establishment of genuine democracy and is attempting to scapegoat civil society for its own abysmal failure to manage Egypt's transition effectively," he said.

Tarek Awadi, a human rights activist, said he witnessed the raid at the Future House for Legal Studies in Cairo. He said a police official in the search held up an Arabic-Hebrew dictionary, saying it was evidence the organization was engaged in sabotage and hidden agendas.

"I think authorities have carefully chosen a number of organizations, some of whom are Egyptian or American or European, to defame all NGOs in the eyes of Egyptians," Awadi said.

Relations between the ruling generals and the United States, which provides $1.3 billion in aid a year to the Egyptian military, have been strained in recent months even as Egypt conducts staggered rounds of parliamentary elections. The military's recent crackdown on protests drew a rebuke from Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Egypt's campaign to discredit nongovernmental organizations as treasonous, a strategy once used by Mubarak, began this summer. Military leaders accused activist groups of relying on foreign expertise and funding to undermine the Egyptian state. This tactic resonated in the provinces as the military sought to blame outside intervention for the country's mounting economic and social problems.

"Human rights organizations are the guardians of the nascent freedom," Mohamed ElBaradei, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate and possible presidential candidate, wrote on Twitter. "Efforts to suffocate them will be a major setback and will surely backfire."

The National Democratic Institute said it was particularly disturbed that authorities had targeted local groups involved in observing and otherwise supporting the parliamentary elections.

"Cracking down on organizations whose sole purpose is to support the democratic process during Egypt's historic transition sends a disturbing signal," Ken Wollack, the group's president, said in a statement.

The raids came the same day an Egyptian court cleared five policemen of charges of killing five demonstrators during the rebellion that led to Mubarak's ouster Feb. 11. The court ruled that none of the defendants were at the scene when the slayings occurred.

That decision is also likely to further anger activists. More than 800 protesters were killed during last winter's uprising and authorities have been slow in bringing police and security officers to justice. Mubarak's trial on charges that he was complicit in the deaths of protesters resumed this week after a three-month adjournment.

jeffrey.fleishman@latimes.com

paul.richter@latimes.com

Fleishman reported from Cairo and Richter from Washington. News assistant Amro Hassan of The Times' Cairo bureau contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-egypt-ngo-raids-20111230,0,420905.story?track=rss

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11 killed as Cyclone Thane hits southeast India

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Except as otherwise disclosed in this Privacy Policy, we will use the information you provide us only for the purpose of responding to your inquiry or in connection with the service for which you provided such information. We may forward your contact information and inquiry to our affiliates and other divisions of our company that we feel can best address your inquiry or provide you with the requested service. We may also use the information you provide in aggregate form for internal business purposes, such as generating statistics and developing marketing plans. We may share or transfer such non-personally identifiable information with or to our affiliates, licensees, agents and partners.

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North Korea Vows No Engagement With South?s President

SEOUL, South Korea ? North Korea announced on Friday that there would be no change in its policy under its new leader, Kim Jong-un, striking a characteristically hostile posture with a threat to punish President Lee Myung-bak of South Korea for ?unforgivable sins.?

The statement from the National Defense Commission, North Korea?s highest decision-making body, marked the country?s first official pronouncement to the outside world since the regime upheld Mr. Kim as its supreme leader on Thursday. His elevation came a day after the state funeral of his father, the long-time dictator Kim Jong-il.

?We declare solemnly and confidently that the foolish politicians around the world, including the puppet group in South Korea, should not expect any change from us,? said the statement. ?We will never deal with the traitor group of Lee Myung-bak.?

The commission said it was ?entrusted by the party, state and military? to issue the ?principled stance.? The statement was carried by the Korean Central News Agency, the regime?s official mouthpiece to the outside world.

It directed its wrath at President Lee, whose government refused to express official condolences to North Korea and allowed only two private delegations to visit Pyongyang during ?the great funeral of the nation.? It also criticized South Korea?s move to place its military on heightened vigilance and conservative South Korean activists? launching of balloons that carried leaflets into the North.

By returning swiftly to its more typical bellicose form after two weeks of mourning, North Korea appeared to demonstrate a confidence that the transition of power in Pyongyang was going smoothly. But the strident rhetoric was also a sign that the regime, as it often has, was using perceived tensions with the outside world to rally its military and people behind the new leader during a sensitive transition.

?By taking a confrontational stance with the external world, North Korea seeks to solidify its internal cohesion as it tries to establish Kim Jong-un as leader,? said Kim Yong-hyun, a North Korea expert at Dongguk University in Seoul. ?At the same time, it is pressuring the South to change its policy.?

?Don?t expect change from me!? was a ubiquitous slogan during the last dynastic transfer of power in the North, following the death of Mr. Kim?s grandfather, the country?s founding president, Kim Il-sung, in 1994. Attributed to Kim Jong-il, the slogan ensured continuity by promising no change in policy from father to son and exhorting North Koreans to remain faithful to the dynastic rule.

The North Korean statement on Friday said: ?The world will witness how millions of North Korean people, who transformed sadness to courage and tears to strength under the pillar of the great leader Kim Jong-un, will achieve final victory.?

Little is known about the leadership style and world views of Mr. Kim, who is believed to be in his late 20s and was unveiled as successor only in September last year. Educated in Switzerland as a teenager, the young heir did not carry some of the baggage of his father and grandfather, who had been often vilified in the rest of the world as brutal dictators and terrorists. But he also inherits a vast network of prison gulags, a widespread food crisis and an international dispute over its nuclear and long-range missile programs, which have brought trade embargoes.

North Korea has remained confrontational toward South Korea ever since Mr. Lee came to power in early 2008. Mr. Lee, a conservative, reversed his liberal predecessors? policy of providing large amounts of aid and investment to the North as a way of building political reconciliation. He first wanted the North to abandon its nuclear weapons program.

North Korea had previously called Mr. Lee a ?traitor? and said it would not deal with him until he reinstated the old policy. It shelled a South Korean island in November 2010 and also was blamed for the sinking of a South Korean warship earlier that year.

While focusing its hostility on South Korea, the North may hurry to improve ties with Washington, Mr. Kim, the North Korea expert, said. Before Kim Jong-il?s death, Washington and Pyongyang had been discussing a large shipment of humanitarian aid and a possible freeze on its uranium-enrichment program.

?The following one year will be a crucial time for Kim Jong-un to settle into power,? he said. ?Making people feel economically better is an important task for him.?

Indeed, the North, while criticizing the South?s leader, said it wanted to improve ties with the South, provided that South Korea follows through with its earlier agreements to provide aid and economic exchanges.

A North Korea in the throes of transition is creating thorny policy questions for Washington and Seoul.

When Kim Il-sung died in 1994, President Bill Clinton offered ?sincere condolences.? But South Korea offered none; instead, it arrested people who expressed condolences. That led to years of chill between the two Koreas.

Washington and Pyongyang moved quickly to strike a deal on freezing North Korea?s nuclear weapons program in return for fuel aid. (The deal later soured under Kim Jong-il.) But Pyongyang persistently sidelined Seoul in the nuclear talks, noting, among other things, its failure to express condolences for Kim Il-sung?s death.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=eb0040db75b16564a9f1c208e4a3aa00

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North Korea Vows No Engagement With South?s President

SEOUL, South Korea ? North Korea announced on Friday that there would be no change in its policy under its new leader, Kim Jong-un, striking a characteristically hostile posture with a threat to punish President Lee Myung-bak of South Korea for ?unforgivable sins.?

The statement from the National Defense Commission, North Korea?s highest decision-making body, marked the country?s first official pronouncement to the outside world since the regime upheld Mr. Kim as its supreme leader on Thursday. His elevation came a day after the state funeral of his father, the long-time dictator Kim Jong-il.

?We declare solemnly and confidently that the foolish politicians around the world, including the puppet group in South Korea, should not expect any change from us,? said the statement. ?We will never deal with the traitor group of Lee Myung-bak.?

The commission said it was ?entrusted by the party, state and military? to issue the ?principled stance.? The statement was carried by the Korean Central News Agency, the regime?s official mouthpiece to the outside world.

It directed its wrath at President Lee, whose government refused to express official condolences to North Korea and allowed only two private delegations to visit Pyongyang during ?the great funeral of the nation.? It also criticized South Korea?s move to place its military on heightened vigilance and conservative South Korean activists? launching of balloons that carried leaflets into the North.

By returning swiftly to its more typical bellicose form after two weeks of mourning, North Korea appeared to demonstrate a confidence that the transition of power in Pyongyang was going smoothly. But the strident rhetoric was also a sign that the regime, as it often has, was using perceived tensions with the outside world to rally its military and people behind the new leader during a sensitive transition.

?By taking a confrontational stance with the external world, North Korea seeks to solidify its internal cohesion as it tries to establish Kim Jong-un as leader,? said Kim Yong-hyun, a North Korea expert at Dongguk University in Seoul. ?At the same time, it is pressuring the South to change its policy.?

?Don?t expect change from me!? was a ubiquitous slogan during the last dynastic transfer of power in the North, following the death of Mr. Kim?s grandfather, the country?s founding president, Kim Il-sung, in 1994. Attributed to Kim Jong-il, the slogan ensured continuity by promising no change in policy from father to son and exhorting North Koreans to remain faithful to the dynastic rule.

The North Korean statement on Friday said: ?The world will witness how millions of North Korean people, who transformed sadness to courage and tears to strength under the pillar of the great leader Kim Jong-un, will achieve final victory.?

Little is known about the leadership style and world views of Mr. Kim, who is believed to be in his late 20s and was unveiled as successor only in September last year. Educated in Switzerland as a teenager, the young heir did not carry some of the baggage of his father and grandfather, who had been often vilified in the rest of the world as brutal dictators and terrorists. But he also inherits a vast network of prison gulags, a widespread food crisis and an international dispute over its nuclear and long-range missile programs, which have brought trade embargoes.

North Korea has remained confrontational toward South Korea ever since Mr. Lee came to power in early 2008. Mr. Lee, a conservative, reversed his liberal predecessors? policy of providing large amounts of aid and investment to the North as a way of building political reconciliation. He first wanted the North to abandon its nuclear weapons program.

North Korea had previously called Mr. Lee a ?traitor? and said it would not deal with him until he reinstated the old policy. It shelled a South Korean island in November 2010 and also was blamed for the sinking of a South Korean warship earlier that year.

While focusing its hostility on South Korea, the North may hurry to improve ties with Washington, Mr. Kim, the North Korea expert, said. Before Kim Jong-il?s death, Washington and Pyongyang had been discussing a large shipment of humanitarian aid and a possible freeze on its uranium-enrichment program.

?The following one year will be a crucial time for Kim Jong-un to settle into power,? he said. ?Making people feel economically better is an important task for him.?

Indeed, the North, while criticizing the South?s leader, said it wanted to improve ties with the South, provided that South Korea follows through with its earlier agreements to provide aid and economic exchanges.

A North Korea in the throes of transition is creating thorny policy questions for Washington and Seoul.

When Kim Il-sung died in 1994, President Bill Clinton offered ?sincere condolences.? But South Korea offered none; instead, it arrested people who expressed condolences. That led to years of chill between the two Koreas.

Washington and Pyongyang moved quickly to strike a deal on freezing North Korea?s nuclear weapons program in return for fuel aid. (The deal later soured under Kim Jong-il.) But Pyongyang persistently sidelined Seoul in the nuclear talks, noting, among other things, its failure to express condolences for Kim Il-sung?s death.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=eb0040db75b16564a9f1c208e4a3aa00

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