Saturday, June 25, 2011

Has the Revolution Left Egypt's Workers Behind?

Employees of the transport authority rally in Cairo to demand better wages and working conditions on February 14, 2011.

Mohammed Abed / AFP / Getty Images

No one in Zagazig wants to talk about what happened last week. The hundreds of railway workers who maintain the old, trash-ridden tracks and trains in this Nile Delta town whisper hurriedly about a strike that briefly disrupted rail traffic across the country of 80 million. But the workers won't give their names or discuss it at length for fear of retribution from the soldiers and security forces that so swiftly put an end to it. And the man they point to as their labor leader says nervously that he knows nothing about a strike.

But maybe it's better that way, say some Egyptians ? particularly political leaders and the railway's managers. "We're against stopping business like this, because we're trying to get stability back," says Mansour al-Shitry, an accountant for the state-run railways. "Of course the government can't meet the demands of all the people at once, and we don't want to give the military council more of a burden than they already have." (Lightbox ? Egypt In Flux: Photographs by Thomas Dworzak)

That's the rationale echoed by many of Tahrir Square's liberal, intellectual youth, politicians and, indeed, the military leadership. It's an opinion that predominates among the educated classes in the debate over where the line should be drawn between revolution and transition. Protests for political reform are crucial, many argue, because the system of governance will define Egypt's future on all levels. Labor strikes, on the other hand, can and should be postponed: it's not the right time, they say; Egypt's floundering post-revolution economy needs all the work it can get.

But the laboring classes ? many members of whom have not received their salaries in months ? feel otherwise. Dozens of strikes and sit-ins have stalled business across the public and private sectors in recent months. And to union leaders and labor activists, the core revolutionary demands of the working classes have yet to be acknowledged. Minimum wage has been raised and promises have been made, but most have yet to see concrete change on the ground. And indeed, amid the cracks, crevices, and gaping political and ideological fault lines that have shattered the early unity of the February revolution that toppled President Hosni Mubarak, is a divide that increasingly seems to define other debates as well. It's about class.

"There is total class warfare going on in Egypt right now that I don't even think [the liberal movements] can see," says Joshua Stacher, a political scientist and Egypt expert at Kent State University. "If middle upper class, urban people in Cairo and Alexandria get some of their demands met, they could care less about minimum wage, or the fact that the healthcare system is complete crap," he says of the competing array of post-revolutionary demands. "The dominant discourse that's coming out on TV is that it's not the right time to protest for these things. Like 'You shouldn't have a living wage right now, you're being greedy.'"

Instead, political elites have prioritized political reforms. And one of the most prominent debates to grip Cairo's political scene in recent weeks centers around the question of what needs to come first on the roadmap to a prosperous and democratic Egypt: a new constitution or a new, elected parliament. The debate has largely been split along Islamist versus liberal lines. The latter, fearing an Islamist majority in parliament, wants to ensure that certain rights and laws are guaranteed first. The Islamists argue that only an elected parliament can determine the next constitution, and a national referendum passed overwhelmingly in March specified as much. "Some people are trying to take a detour around the popular decision in the referendum," says Mohamed Ezzat, a local Muslim Brotherhood official in Zagazig. "But the people have chosen a road map for what happens next in this country, and they want that to be respected." (See TIME's Exclusive Photos: Turmoil in Egypt)

For others, however, it's not about religious ideology or road maps at all. "Mostly their demands are political like 'Freedom' and the debate over what comes first ? constitution or elections," says labor activist Adel Zakaria of the urban elite, who he describes as middle class. "Workers don't care about that. They have their own problems ? mainly they need to eat."

The April 6th Youth Movement, one of the most prominent liberal groups, say it recognizes the deep economic concerns felt by most Egyptians. And last month, in an effort to mobilize Egyptians for a "Second Revolution" protest in Tahrir, the group handed out a flier that promoted economic demands first. "The people just move with us if we talk about economics only," said the group's leader Ahmed Maher at the time. "We know the constitution is more important than the economic demands because we know that the things in the street are organized after that. But the people in the street don't know that."

The disconnect has emerged in the results of popular polls as well. Liberal political leader Mohamed ElBaradei topped a Facebook poll by Egypt's ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces this week to gauge popular preferences for 18 prospective presidential candidates. To some, it suggests that the majority favors liberal, "Constitution First" politics, of which ElBaradei is an advocate. But in the streets and fields, and on the railway tracks, Egyptians suggest the poll may have more to do with who uses Facebook than with popular opinion.

A less publicized poll released the same week by the International Peace Institute offered a total reversal of rankings, listing former Arab League chief and popular icon Amr Moussa first among the contenders, followed by the country's top military general.

TIME's Complete Coverage: The Middle East in Revolt

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/time/world/~3/2kVCnMn-yiA/0,8599,2079605,00.html

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'Changes needed' after Milly case

Reaction from Milly's mother, sister and father and Det Ch Insp Maria Woodall of Surrey Police and Nigel Pilkington of the CPS

The man who oversaw the police investigation into the murder of schoolgirl Milly Dowler has called for changes to the criminal justice system.

The Chief Constable of Surrey Police, Mark Rowley, said victims and witnesses need protection during court cases.

He said he was "upset and embarrassed" by the way the family had been treated.

The director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer QC, said the case raised "fundamental questions" and he would examine how victims are treated.

Bob and Sally Dowler have criticised the way they were cross examined during the trial of Levi Bellfield, who was given a whole life tariff by a judge at the Old Bailey on Friday.

The Dowlers said they suffered a "mentally scarring experience on an unimaginable scale".

Writing in The Times, Mr Rowley admits the police made mistakes but he says the justice system sometimes shows a "disgraceful lack of humanity".

'Too high a price'

The family of 13-year-old Milly Dowler, who was abducted from Walton-on-Thames in 2002, have said they paid "too high a price" for the conviction of Bellfield.

Mr Dowler said the justice system was loaded unfairly in favour of the criminal.

Mr Starmer said: "We will be contributing to the review by the Ministry of Justice into all aspects of victim support."

Milly DowlerMilly Dowler's remains were found six months after she disappeared

Mrs Dowler said her daughter had been defamed in court as unhappy and depressed.

She said the trial had been a "truly awful experience".

But she said "at last the man responsible for the cruel murder of our darling daughter" had been brought to justice.

Milly's sister, Gemma Dowler said: "I can honestly say that the day my mother and father were questioned by the defence QC Mr Samuels was the worst day of my life."

Mrs Dowler collapsed after giving evidence during the trial, which had heard letters and poems written by her daughter describing herself as a "disappointment".

Levi BellfieldLevi Bellfield had denied murdering schoolgirl Milly Dowler

Following this, the prosecution decided not to call Milly's sister Gemma to give evidence.

Details of the family's private life were also revealed in court, including the fact that Milly discovered pornography magazines at the family home.

It was also revealed that Mr Dowler was initially considered a suspect in her disappearance after police found bondage material at their family home.

During the prosecution's closing speeches, Brian Altman QC accused Bellfield of putting Milly's grieving parents on trial.

Bellfield had also faced a charge of attempting to abduct Rachel Cowles, who is now 21, but the jury was discharged and there will be no retrial.

Defence lawyers cited an "avalanche of adverse publicity" following Bellfield's conviction on Thursday for murdering Milly.

Attorney General Dominic Grieve QC is to consider whether there has been any possible contempt of court.

Speaking outside court Ms Cowles said she was hurt and angry by what she called media coverage which had "robbed her of justice".

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-england-13913964

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Yemen?s Security Forces Clash With Protesters at Funeral Procession for a Popular Activist

Suhaib Salem/Reuters

Antigovernment protesters during a rally Friday to demand the ouster of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh in the capital.

SANA, Yemen ? Security forces fired at a funeral procession in the city of Aden on Friday and gunmen responded by attacking a military tank, the government and local journalists said. A total of five people were killed in the clashes.

Thousands of people gathered for the funeral of an activist in the southern separatist movement after noon prayers in Aden, a southern port city, according to witnesses. The activist, Ahmed Darwish, was tortured to death by Yemeni security forces about a year ago, according to several human rights groups.

Mr. Darwish?s family had refused to bury him until those responsible were held accountable. A former local official has now been charged in his killing.

When the security forces opened fire on the funeral procession in the Mansoura neighborhood of Aden, Jiyab al-Saadi, the son of a famous southern separatist leader, was killed, the media in Aden reported.

A short time later, fighting broke out between security forces and armed men in the same area. The Ministry of Defense said in a statement on its Web site that three soldiers were killed in the fighting when what the ministry described as ?terrorists believed to be from Al Qaeda? used a car bomb to attack a military checkpoint.

Two local journalists described the episode differently, however, saying that there had been a short gun battle and then the gunmen fired a rocket-propelled grenade at a tank. They said that the gunmen were likely to have been from the southern separatist movement and were retaliating for the killing of Mr. Saadi. A bystander was shot and killed during the clash, according to a police officer.

Mr. Darwish?s family decided to proceed with his funeral after a local court charged Aden?s former head of security, Abdullah Qairan, with ordering his killing. Many people in Aden have accused Mr. Qairan of authorizing violence against civilians.

Mr. Qairan is currently the head of security in Taiz, a city in the central highlands, where he was reassigned in March.

Mr. Darwish?s photo is posted on walls throughout the Sada district of Aden, where he grew up. He has become a symbol in the city of the security forces? brutality. Human Rights Watch has criticized the Yemeni government for using disproportionate force against people who demonstrate in support of the southern separatist movement.

The secessionist movement, known as Herak, demands the re-creation of an independent southern Yemeni state.

Yasser Alarami contributed reporting.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=29e4d02a7a6787af77bb0dadfa4316ef

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Senegal president's third term 'blocked'

Protestors confront riot police outside the national assembly in Senegal's capital, Dakar.

Protestors opposeed to President Abdoulaye Wade confront riot police outside the national assembly in Senegal's capital, Dakar. Photograph: Finbarr O'Reilly/Reuters

Anti-government protesters in Senegal vowed to intensify their campaign to block President Abdoulaye Wade from standing in next year's election after street demonstrations forced him to back down over constitutional changes.

The capital Dakar was calm on Friday after violence on Thursday prompted Wade to abandon proposed changes to election law that appeared designed to smooth his path to re-election in February 2012.

The protests, which saw more than 100 people injured, energised his vocal but mostly disorganised opponents, and may herald a turbulent run-up to the election in a country that has been spared the strife of others in west Africa.

"The battle that was won does not put an end to our fight to restore law and order ? and legitimacy," leaders of Don't Touch My Constitution!, the campaign group which led the protests, said in a statement. "One last battle remains: to make sure ? Wade does not try and impose his candidacy in 2012. This would be illegal, illegitimate, inopportune and dangerous for the stability of Senegal and the sub-region."

After years in opposition, Wade came to power in 2000 and is coming to the end of his second term. His supporters say constitutional changes in 2001 mean the first term did not count, so he is eligible to stand next year'. This, and the election law ploy, angered many in a country that has enjoyed decades of peace but where basic services like water and electricity remain poor in sprawling neighbourhoods, while an elite appear to prosper.

"The people have taken back power" read a headline on Friday in the newspaper Le Populaire.

In an editorial, private newspaper Walfadjiri said the protests were an unprecedented show of anger against the president. "(Wade) can no longer count on the apathy of the armchair opponents to modify the laws of the country as he wishes," the newspaper said.

The Benno Siggil Senegal opposition coalition, which has struggled to build a united position against Wade, is to insist he does not stand next year.

Senegal has become an increasingly important regional hub for business and international organisations. It is a strategic partner for western nations in a turbulent region.

J Peter Pham, director of the Ansari Africa Centre at the Atlantic Council think tank, said Wade had disappointed after coming to power with "extraordinary promise".

"His stubbornness and rather blatant attempt to foist a dynasty on the Senegalese people may well prove the ruination of a wonderful country if he gets the third term that he himself declared unconstitutional just a few years ago," Pham said.

Aside from trying to reduce from 50% to 25% the minimum needed to win in the first round, Wade had sought to introduce the role of vice-president, which critics said might have been filled by his powerful and unpopular son, Karim.

Top donors the EU and the US issued public statements of concern this week over the planned constitutional changes, saying they needed broader public debate.

A senior international business executive said companies were watching the situation closely, in the context of uprisings in North Africa. "It is business as usual today ... But things could get nasty if (the opposition) pushes on that (Wade's candidacy)."

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jun/24/senegal-abdoulaye-wade-election

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Afghanistan Reacts to Obama: 10,000? Why So Much So Fast?

Spc. Gavin Fruge watches a rebroadcast of President Barack Obama's speech on proposed troop withdrawal with fellow soldiers at Kandahar Airfield Thursday, June 23, 2011 in Kandahar, Afghanistan.

David Goldman / AP

Many Afghans had been awaiting Barack Obama's announcement of a troop drawdown with a mixture of dread and happiness. In Kabul, the big surprise was not the announcement that U.S. forces will be leaving, but that the number of troops to be withdrawn by the end of 2011 ? 10,000 ? would be so large and that 23,000 more will leave over the course of a "fighting season" next spring and summer. Obama said the withdrawal of troops had been made possible because three objectives are now being fulfilled: a refocus on al-Qaeda instead of the Taliban; a reversal of the Taliban's momentum; and the training of Afghan National Security Forces to defend the country.

But to Afghans, it is not at all clear that the U.S. is achieving or has achieved any of these goals ? despite President Hamid Karzai praising Obama's speech. While it cannot be disputed that in places like the heavily contested Arghandab district of Kandahar province ? the scene of ferocious fighting last spring and summer ? the Taliban's momentum has indeed been slowed by a massive surge in troops, Afghans across the country do not believe their national security forces are ready, or will be ready any time soon, to take over security duties. And while the U.S. military's killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan allowed Obama to talk about a refocusing of activity away from the Taliban and towards al-Qaeda, the day-to-day fighting that continues unabated all over the country is mostly between coalition and Afghan government forces, on one side, and Taliban insurgent groups, on the other. (In Speech On Afghanistan, Obama Turns To The Battle For America's Future)

"We were expecting President Obama to make a political decision in the context of U.S. politics as he has an important election coming up in 2012. But we didn't expect it to be so many troops being pulled out and we didn't expect the withdrawal to be carried out over fighting seasons," Haron Mir, a former aid to Northern Alliance commander Ahmad Shah Masood, tells TIME. "We expected a few thousand, not 10,000."

The withdrawal of so many troops in so short a time, Mir says, will have serious repercussions for the security gains that have been made since the start of the surge. "General Petraeus and others have said that the Taliban's momentum has been broken. This announcement will certainly bolster the Taliban's morale," he says, echoing commonly-made predictions that announcements of a looming pull-out will incite Taliban insurgents to fight harder.

The Taliban, however, remain skeptical of Washington's proposed moves. Their spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid calls the withdrawal of 10,000 troops a "symbolic step" since the U.S. is "forcing its stooge regime to approve" permanent bases in Afghanistan. Mujahid tells TIME that "Obama's statement about training Afghan Police and Army holds no significance" since those forces, he claims, are made up of "drug addicts who have been forced out of their homes." He added that, "the American people, who have now understood many of the realities about the Afghan war, must take serious steps to stop this pointless bloodshed. The American taxpayers must realize that, like over the previous 10 years, their money is still being wasted on this pointless and meaningless war or is still going to the pockets of officials in the corrupt Kabul regime." Mujahid finishes by saying that only the "full withdrawal of all foreign troops immediately" would bring an end to the fighting.

Obama's Afghanistan Speech: Admitting the Limits of American Power

Afghanistan: To Carry On, or Carrion?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/time/world/~3/JtZDPYsBTyg/0,8599,2079507,00.html

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'Changes needed' after Milly case

Reaction from Milly's mother, sister and father and Det Ch Insp Maria Woodall of Surrey Police and Nigel Pilkington of the CPS

The man who oversaw the police investigation into the murder of schoolgirl Milly Dowler has called for changes to the criminal justice system.

The Chief Constable of Surrey Police, Mark Rowley, said victims and witnesses need protection during court cases.

He said he was "upset and embarrassed" by the way the family had been treated.

The director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer QC, said the case raised "fundamental questions" and he would examine how victims are treated.

Bob and Sally Dowler have criticised the way they were cross examined during the trial of Levi Bellfield, who was given a whole life tariff by a judge at the Old Bailey on Friday.

The Dowlers said they suffered a "mentally scarring experience on an unimaginable scale".

Writing in The Times, Mr Rowley admits the police made mistakes but he says the justice system sometimes shows a "disgraceful lack of humanity".

'Too high a price'

The family of 13-year-old Milly Dowler, who was abducted from Walton-on-Thames in 2002, have said they paid "too high a price" for the conviction of Bellfield.

Mr Dowler said the justice system was loaded unfairly in favour of the criminal.

Mr Starmer said: "We will be contributing to the review by the Ministry of Justice into all aspects of victim support."

Milly DowlerMilly Dowler's remains were found six months after she disappeared

Mrs Dowler said her daughter had been defamed in court as unhappy and depressed.

She said the trial had been a "truly awful experience".

But she said "at last the man responsible for the cruel murder of our darling daughter" had been brought to justice.

Milly's sister, Gemma Dowler said: "I can honestly say that the day my mother and father were questioned by the defence QC Mr Samuels was the worst day of my life."

Mrs Dowler collapsed after giving evidence during the trial, which had heard letters and poems written by her daughter describing herself as a "disappointment".

Levi BellfieldLevi Bellfield had denied murdering schoolgirl Milly Dowler

Following this, the prosecution decided not to call Milly's sister Gemma to give evidence.

Details of the family's private life were also revealed in court, including the fact that Milly discovered pornography magazines at the family home.

It was also revealed that Mr Dowler was initially considered a suspect in her disappearance after police found bondage material at their family home.

During the prosecution's closing speeches, Brian Altman QC accused Bellfield of putting Milly's grieving parents on trial.

Bellfield had also faced a charge of attempting to abduct Rachel Cowles, who is now 21, but the jury was discharged and there will be no retrial.

Defence lawyers cited an "avalanche of adverse publicity" following Bellfield's conviction on Thursday for murdering Milly.

Attorney General Dominic Grieve QC is to consider whether there has been any possible contempt of court.

Speaking outside court Ms Cowles said she was hurt and angry by what she called media coverage which had "robbed her of justice".

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-england-13913964

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John Boehner Faces High-Stakes Test That Will Determine His Political Fate

John Boehner Debt Ceiling Talks May Determine His Political Fate

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/24/john-boehner-debt-ceiling-talks-tea-party_n_884400.html

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Sarkozy defends Libya mission as House keeps funding

1 / 18

Libyan passengers on board a ship gesture and wave a flag as they dock in the rebel-held port of Juliana, in Benghazi June 24, 2011. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany

Libyan passengers on board a ship gesture and wave a flag as they dock in the rebel-held port of Juliana, in Benghazi June 24, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany

BRUSSELS/TRIPOLI | Fri Jun 24, 2011 6:42pm EDT

BRUSSELS/TRIPOLI (Reuters) - France rejected on Friday U.S. criticism of Europe's performance in the NATO operation against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi while the U.S. administration survived Congressional anger in a funding vote.

Gaddafi has managed to stay in power despite months of NATO air operations to weaken his rule and help rebels based mainly in eastern Libya who have tried to advance on the west.

Reports of civilian deaths have exacerbated the public divisions between Western governments, as they ponder the future of a military commitment with no clear end in sight.

Libyan television said on Friday that five civilians were killed in NATO attacks on targets in Brega. It gave no further details.

NATO earlier said it had taken out Gaddafi troops who had quietly occupied abandoned buildings in Brega over an unspecified period of time to create a "command and control hub to direct attacks against civilians" in Ajdabiyah and Benghazi.

However, there was no immediate comment on the Libyan report of the deaths.

Several explosions shook the Libyan capital Tripoli on Friday night, a Reuters correspondent said. Jets could be heard overhead as Libyan tracer fire arced across the dark sky.

Libyan television said the NATO-led military alliance also hit targets in the town of Zlitan, east of Tripoli.

War-fatigued lawmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives took a symbolic swipe at President Barack Obama's military intervention in Libya but in a second vote rejected an effort to bar U.S. forces from continuing to carry out air strikes.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton welcomed the vote. "We are gratified that the House has decisively rejected efforts to limit funding for the Libyan mission," she told reporters.

MUSCLE

French President Nicolas Sarkozy assailed outgoing U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates for remarks this month criticizing EU nations for lacking military muscle.

"It was particularly inappropriate for Mr. Gates to say that, and what is more, completely false, given what is going in Libya," Sarkozy told reporters at an EU summit in Brussels.

"There are certainly other moments in history when he could have said that, but not when Europeans have courageously taken the Libyan issue in hand, and when France and Britain, with their allies, for the most part, are doing the work."

While the United States has stepped back from a leading role in the strike mission NATO took over on March 31, it has continued to provide essential assets, including reconnaissance planes, air-to-air refueling planes and armed drones.

In a June 10 valedictory speech, Gates said the Libyan campaign had exposed limitations, with an air operations center designed to handle more than 300 sorties a day struggling to launch about 150.

"I think his retirement may have led him to not examine the situation in Libya very closely because, whatever people want to say, I don't have the impression that the Americans are doing the bulk of the work in Libya," Sarkozy said.

Gates is due to retire at the end of the month.

Discord among the Europeans over the NATO operation spilled into the public arena earlier this week when Italy called for a suspension of hostilities to allow humanitarian access and Britain, France and others loudly rejected the idea.

The Republican-led House, upset over Obama's failure to seek Congressional approval of U.S. military action in Libya, voted 123-295, largely along party lines, to reject the resolution endorsing U.S. involvement in the NATO-led mission.

But then it handed Obama a largely symbolic victory by rejecting 180-238 a Republican measure to bar the U.S. military from carrying out air strikes against Gaddafi's forces. Eighty-nine Republicans joined Democrats in opposing the bill.

Western governments are also concerned about the financial cost of the NATO operation and even its impact on world oil supplies with Libyan exports cut off.

The loss of Libyan oil output since February represented a greater disruption to global oil supply than the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, an International Energy Agency official told Reuters Insider TV. [ID:nL6E7HO1BI]

IEA Deputy head Richard Jones said the market was facing a possible shortfall of 1.8 million barrels per day for the remainder of June and 1.7 million for the next quarter.

"LIBYAN OASIS" FOR GADDAFI?

Analysts say part of the NATO strategy now appears to be directed at paving the way for a successful local uprising against Gaddafi in the capital Tripoli, where opponents run the gauntlet of tight security to stage "flash" protests.

In a defiant state television audio broadcast this week, Gaddafi said he would fight to the end, but a rebel spokesman was quoted on Friday as saying indirect negotiations were being pursued that could allow him to stay in Libya.

"We have no objection to him retreating to a Libyan oasis under international control," France's Le Figaro quoted Mahmoud Shammam, spokesman of the rebel National Transitional Council (NTC), as saying.

NTC Vice-Chairman Abdel Hafiz Ghoga confirmed to Reuters the existence of indirect talks, saying: "The NTC is not contacting Gaddafi's regime. It's the other way around.

"If the NTC believes that there is a political solution that involves the Gaddafi regime stepping down, and that includes the entire regime, to stop the bloodshed of innocent people that are being killed every day in Libya, then it may look at this political solution."

In the latest of a string of defections, 19 police and army officers were among a group of Libyan refugees who arrived in Tunisia by boat on Thursday, Tunisian news agency TAP reported.

Gaddafi allies have denounced such defections.

"Anyone who defects or refuses to take up arms is an apostate ... and this applies to all Libyans," preacher Mohamed al-Matri said in a live broadcast of the Friday sermon from Cordoba mosque in the town of Sirte.

In Benghazi, dozens of rebel supporters freed by Gaddafi arrived on a ship from Western Libya in an exchange that could mark the beginning of broader talks between the adversaries.

"These are mainly civilians ... Among them there are 51 people who were detained in Tripoli but were released by the government there so we brought them back," said Dibeh Fakhr, a spokeswoman for the International Committee of the Red Cross in Benghazi.

A rebel spokesman said the rebel authority had earlier released five Gaddafi prisoners as part of the transfer.

European leaders meeting in Brussels agreed that only an uprising in Tripoli could end the war.

(Additional reporting by David Alexander in Washington, Ahmed Tolba in Cairo, Joseph Nasr in Berlin, Souhail Karam in Rabat, Maria Golovnina in Benghazi; writing by Andrew Hammond and Mark John; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Invictuss wrote:

What job to cease Libya?s petrol???

Jun 24, 2011�1:31am EDT��--��Report as abuse
JamVee wrote:

I agree, and I see it as about time. Europe has needed to shoulder more responsibility for such things for many, many years.

The advent of the ?Euro? with it?s union of individual European nations, has given them a huge combined political, economical and military clout. They need to step up and act like a world power by taking responsibility for some of the ?bad stuff? as well as the good.

Jun 24, 2011�12:13pm EDT��--��Report as abuse

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/worldNews/~3/0LNcSkDhaVs/us-libya-idUSTRE7270JP20110624

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Attacks on Syrian protesters leave a reported 20 dead

Reporting from Beirut?

Syrian security officers opened fire on protesters Friday, leaving as many as 20 dead, as people poured into the streets across the nation in defiance of President Bashar Assad and his promise of limited reform, according to opposition activists.

Meanwhile, the European Union slapped fresh sanctions on Syria and its principal regional ally, Iran, which has been accused of collaborating in the crackdown against protesters.

Friday's anti-government marches, some tied to Friday prayers, reportedly were some of the largest in the 3-month-old protest movement that has convulsed the strategically situated Arab nation.

Large demonstrations were reported in the central cities of Homs and Hama, the suburbs of Damascus, the mainly Kurdish city of Qamishli in the north, and the eastern oil hub of Dair Alzour, according to activist accounts and amateur video footage.

Footage from Hama, one of the centers of the protest movement, showed what appeared to be tens of thousands of people in the streets shouting anti-Assad slogans.

Outside Damascus, the capital, security forces responded with gunfire and tear gas to protests in the suburbs of Barze and Midan, according to activists. A witness in Barze said uniformed and plainclothes officers were conducting "mass arrests ? taking whoever is standing in the street."

Another witness said that regime gunmen started firing at a large gathering in south Damascus, resulting in an unknown number of injuries.

The witnesses requested anonymity for fear of retribution. It is difficult to corroborate information coming from inside Syria because the regime has placed strict limits on media access.

In central Homs, loyalist shabiha militiamen were reported roaming the streets, while security forces beat protesters with sticks near a mosque in the Midan district of Damascus, according to the activist network the Local Coordination Committees in Syria. The group accused security forces of opening fire on demonstrators and put the number dead nationwide on Friday at 20, including several children.

On Friday, more than 8,000 people from the villages and cities of Saqba, Hamouria and Jisreen, all near Damascus, were reported to be protesting in joint rallies, calling for the toppling of the regime.

Videos said to have been filmed at a protest in the largely Kurdish Amouda showed two young boys carrying a banner with the slogan "Bashar is no longer my president and the government doesn't represent me!" as crowds behind them hoisted a huge Syrian flag and chanted: "The people want the downfall of the regime."

Another clip, filmed in the village of Kobani in the province of Aleppo, showed demonstrators holding banners reading "Friday of the fall of legitimacy."

The government's official Syrian Arab News Agency reported that a security officer was "martyred" outside Damascus, while "gunmen opened fire" on police and others in Barze, killing three citizens and injuring an unspecified number of law enforcement personnel.

The government said "saboteurs" attacked shops in Homs, while security forces and "armed groups" exchanged fire outside the city and unidentified gunmen "kidnapped an ambulance carrying injured people" in the countryside.

The protests came only a few days after Assad offered vague promises of reform in a speech and Foreign Minister Walid Moallem blamed the West for inciting violence in the Arab nation.

Friday's marches also coincided with the European Union slapping new sanctions on four Syrians, four Syrian businesses, and three Iranian officials for Syria's crackdown on protesters. The Europeans charge that Tehran, a close ally of the Assad government, is supporting the regime's brutal measures.

The EU had already placed sanctions on 23 Syrians, including Assad himself and several of his closest aides.

Mashallah Shamsulvaezin, an analyst close to Iran's moderate camp, told the Times the sanctions constituted a symbolic action, but he doubted the practical effect.

Sandels is a special correspondent. Special correspondent Ramim Mostaghim in Tehran, Times staff writer Patrick J. McDonnell in Beirut and a special correspondent in Damascus contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-syria-protests-20110625,0,3605804.story?track=rss

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Senegal president's third term 'blocked'

Protestors confront riot police outside the national assembly in Senegal's capital, Dakar.

Protestors opposeed to President Abdoulaye Wade confront riot police outside the national assembly in Senegal's capital, Dakar. Photograph: Finbarr O'Reilly/Reuters

Anti-government protesters in Senegal vowed to intensify their campaign to block President Abdoulaye Wade from standing in next year's election after street demonstrations forced him to back down over constitutional changes.

The capital Dakar was calm on Friday after violence on Thursday prompted Wade to abandon proposed changes to election law that appeared designed to smooth his path to re-election in February 2012.

The protests, which saw more than 100 people injured, energised his vocal but mostly disorganised opponents, and may herald a turbulent run-up to the election in a country that has been spared the strife of others in west Africa.

"The battle that was won does not put an end to our fight to restore law and order ? and legitimacy," leaders of Don't Touch My Constitution!, the campaign group which led the protests, said in a statement. "One last battle remains: to make sure ? Wade does not try and impose his candidacy in 2012. This would be illegal, illegitimate, inopportune and dangerous for the stability of Senegal and the sub-region."

After years in opposition, Wade came to power in 2000 and is coming to the end of his second term. His supporters say constitutional changes in 2001 mean the first term did not count, so he is eligible to stand next year'. This, and the election law ploy, angered many in a country that has enjoyed decades of peace but where basic services like water and electricity remain poor in sprawling neighbourhoods, while an elite appear to prosper.

"The people have taken back power" read a headline on Friday in the newspaper Le Populaire.

In an editorial, private newspaper Walfadjiri said the protests were an unprecedented show of anger against the president. "(Wade) can no longer count on the apathy of the armchair opponents to modify the laws of the country as he wishes," the newspaper said.

The Benno Siggil Senegal opposition coalition, which has struggled to build a united position against Wade, is to insist he does not stand next year.

Senegal has become an increasingly important regional hub for business and international organisations. It is a strategic partner for western nations in a turbulent region.

J Peter Pham, director of the Ansari Africa Centre at the Atlantic Council think tank, said Wade had disappointed after coming to power with "extraordinary promise".

"His stubbornness and rather blatant attempt to foist a dynasty on the Senegalese people may well prove the ruination of a wonderful country if he gets the third term that he himself declared unconstitutional just a few years ago," Pham said.

Aside from trying to reduce from 50% to 25% the minimum needed to win in the first round, Wade had sought to introduce the role of vice-president, which critics said might have been filled by his powerful and unpopular son, Karim.

Top donors the EU and the US issued public statements of concern this week over the planned constitutional changes, saying they needed broader public debate.

A senior international business executive said companies were watching the situation closely, in the context of uprisings in North Africa. "It is business as usual today ... But things could get nasty if (the opposition) pushes on that (Wade's candidacy)."

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jun/24/senegal-abdoulaye-wade-election

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Deadly Explosion Rocks Yemen During Protests

SANAA, Yemen -- A large explosion shook the southern Yemeni port city of Aden on Friday, killing three security personnel, as anti-government demonstrators there and in other cities demanded the ouster of the country's autocratic leader of nearly 33 years.

The blast, in Aden's free-trade zone, was heard throughout the city, but its cause was unknown. It blew out the glass facade of a four-story building. Besides the three killed, three others were injured, said a medical and a security official who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to journalists.

Residents of Aden say military forces loyal to embattled President Ali Abdullah Saleh recently removed checkpoints at the city's entrances and withdrew, raising fears that Islamic militants who seized two nearby towns after government forces carried out a similar pullback could attempt a takeover of the strategic port city.

Months of political turmoil in Yemen have raised fears, perhaps most acutely in the U.S., that Yemen's Al Qaeda franchise could end up with more room to operate freely and plot attacks on the West from its redoubts in the country's remote and mountainous hinterlands.

The U.S. says Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is now the terror network's most active branch. It has been linked to several nearly successful attacks on U.S. targets, including the plot to bomb a Detroit-bound airliner in December 2009 with a bomb sewn into the underwear of a would-be suicide attacker. The group also put sophisticated bombs into U.S.-addressed parcels that made it onto cargo flights last year but were caught before they exploded.

Yemen's political crisis began in February with protests by largely peaceful crowds calling for Saleh to end his rule over the impoverished country on the southern edge of Arabia. A government crackdown on unarmed protesters has killed at least 167 people, according to Human Rights Watch.

The president is clinging to power despite the daily protests and an attack on his palace this month that badly wounded him and forced him to fly to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment.

Over the past weeks, Islamic militants, some of whom are Al Qaeda-linked, have taken advantage of the strife to overrun the southern towns of Jaar and Zinjibar, which are not far from Aden. This week, nearly 60 Al Qaeda suspects broke out of a prison in Yemen.

On Friday, residents of Aden spoke of worries that militants could reach their city after the sudden disappearance of tank and artillery units from the entrances of the city. Police are also absent, they say.

In the earlier takeovers of Jaar and Zinjibar, smaller towns to the east of Aden, security forces also disappeared, raising accusations that President Saleh allowed the militant takeover to bolster his claims that without him in power, Al Qaeda would seize control of the country.

Saleh's opponents have dismissed his warnings as overblown. Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula has an estimated 300 hard-core members, and is not seen as capable of seizing control on a wide scale.

The United States, with the agreement of Saleh loyalists, has carried out expanded strikes against Al Qaeda targets in Yemen with armed drones and warplanes in recent weeks.

Adeeb Salam, a resident of Aden, said the city's entrances are not protected. "There were three checkpoints with guards on tanks, but now we see none," he said.

Residents in some districts have started to form popular committees to try to fill the security vacuum, according to Shaher Mohammed Said, an activist and city resident.

"We have been hearing that militants have made it through to Aden, which makes us worried about our city," he said.

The only visible security forces in Aden on Friday were those confronting tens of thousand of anti-government protesters who took the streets during a funeral procession for a young man beaten to death in police custody.

Forces backed by tanks fired to disperse the crowds, killing at least one person, a medical official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media.

The man who was buried, 25-year-old Ahmed Darwish, was arrested in a mass roundup by security forces last year, before the start of this year's political crisis, which spun off from the other uprisings sweeping the Arab world.

A forensics report published by rights groups found that Darwish was tortured to death in June of last year, and his family had refused to bury him until an investigation was concluded. A court ruling on Sunday found three policemen guilty in his killing and determined that Darwish died of beatings with metal objects, said his brother, Anwar. The policemen have not been sentenced.

To the north of the capital on Friday, Republican Guard forces fired missiles at the town of Arhab, killing one resident and injuring 13 others, said resident Mohammed Ghaylan. Three homes were destroyed, he said.

Residents there have supported the anti-government protesters.

Source: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/UafnHO9Dt3Y/

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Venezuelans speculate on Chavez's absence

Reporting from Caracas, Venezuela, and Bogota,?

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez' hospitalization and subsequent disappearance from public view while visiting Cuba has stirred rumors about the seriousness of his medical condition and controversy over whether he should delegate power temporarily.

Chavez, 56, has not been seen in public since June 8, when he arrived in Havana on a Latin American tour. Two days later, he underwent surgery for a "pelvic abscess," and the Venezuelan government has offered little detail on his condition.

There has been no direct public communication from Chavez since June 12, when he spoke via telephone to a state-run TV station in the Venezuelan capital, Caracas. On June 17, the Cuban government released a photo of Chavez being visited in his hospital room by Fidel and Raul Castro.

On Venezuelan Defense Minister Carlos Mata Figueroa said Thursday that he talks to Chavez every day, and that the leader is convalescing well and is "stronger than ever."

Later in the day, the first messages in more than a week were sent from Chavez's Twitter account, but they did not mention his health and there was no way to verify that he was the author of the tweets.

Critics such as opposition lawmaker Americo de Grazia have demanded that the government issue a daily medical bulletin on Chavez's condition. De Grazia also said Chavez's ongoing treatment in Cuba was an affront to Venezuelan doctors who are "characterized by professionalism."

"No to secrecy on this issue. No to a photograph," De Grazia told reporters last week. "Authoritarian governments send photos. In a democracy, there is information. The country wants information, not photos."

De Grazia and others have called on Chavez to temporarily delegate powers to Vice President Elias Jaua, citing an article of the Constitution that requires presidents to transfer power in case of a "temporary absence."

Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro has countered that Congress' approval for Chavez's trip, which included stops in Brazil and Ecuador before Cuba, is all the authorization Chavez needs to continue governing from abroad.

During the June 12 telephone call to state-controlled VTV, Chavez said he couldn't say with "mathematical certainty" when he would return to Venezuela. "If I felt in any way my governing faculties were reduced, I'd be the first to make a decision," he said.

The opposition news media is full of speculation on whether Chavez has a life-threatening disease such as cancer, and even whether he is alive. Cynthia Arnson of the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington said the unsettled situation is a result of Chavez's "unwillingness to share information."

Javier Corrales, an Amherst College political scientist who specializes in Venezuela, said the real issue is the "nonchalance" of Chavez's party, known as the PSUV.

"It's natural for the country to feel uneasy about this inexplicable absence," Corrales said. "The ruling party is either hiding something major, or is instead revealing something embarrassing: the extent to which it has become the mere appendage of one man."

Chavez has had some health problems recently, notably a bad knee that forced him to suspend a visit to Brazil in May to meet with President Dilma Rousseff.

But the government has not commented on Chavez's current situation since Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro announced June 10 that Chavez had undergone surgery and that in a "few days the president would be in condition to return" to Venezuela.

Ariel C. Armony, director of University of Miami's Center for Latin American Studies, said the level of speculation about Chavez's health reveals the dominance of Chavez in Venezuela's "everyday political life."

"Venezuelans are not the only ones who have grown used to hearing from Chavez every single day," Armony said. "Like it or not, he is not only a global personage but a virtuoso of the media."

Special correspondents Mogollon reported from Caracas and Kraul from Bogota.

Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-chavez-absence-20110625,0,903813.story?track=rss

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Yemenis pray for end to deadlock as blast rocks Aden

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Anti-government protesters shout slogans during a demonstration to demand the ouster of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh in the southern city of Taiz June 23, 2011. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah

Anti-government protesters shout slogans during a demonstration to demand the ouster of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh in the southern city of Taiz June 23, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Khaled Abdullah

SANAA | Fri Jun 24, 2011 9:51am EDT

SANAA (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of opposition Yemenis packed central Sanaa in what they called the "Friday of the Revolutionary Will" -- a signal of their determination to continue protests to get the wounded president to stand down.

Yemen has been stuck in a political impasse over the fate of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, recovering in Saudi Arabia from injuries sustained in an attack on his palace earlier this month.

The 69-year-old Saleh had defied months of protests by hundreds of thousands of Yemenis and pressure from the United States and his Gulf Arab neighbors, refusing to transfer power to his deputy under a plan aimed at preventing the country from sliding to civil war.

Friday's opposition supporters packed central Sanaa's Street Sixty to show they still wanted him to quit.

The number of demonstrators who had camped out in city squares all over Yemen since February dwindled after Saleh was flown to Riyadh for treatment after the June 3 attack.

"We will escalate our struggle and revolution to bring down the remaining pillars of the regime and force them to leave," said Abdel-Jabbar al-Dubhani, an activist as he hurried for the traditional Friday prayers on Sixty Street.

The demonstrators, who packed the broad street at prayer time, raised placards demanding that an interim council be established to prepare for elections. They want it to include revolutionary youths who have kept up protests since February.

"We demand a transitional council," one sign said.

Addressing Western powers, the preacher said: "Isn't freedom and choosing our own rulers, as you do in your own countries, our right?."

Similar protests were reported in other cities, including Ta'iz, Ibb and Hudaida on the Red Sea.

Demonstrators had hoped Saleh's departure to Riyadh would mark the beginning of the end of his 33 years in power but he has held on.

A team of United Nations human rights investigators will travel to Yemen next week to assess the situation after months of unrest, a U.N. spokeswoman said on Friday.

SALEH, SAUDI KING ABDULLAH POSTERS

A smaller number of Saleh supporters prayed on Friday at another mosque in Sanaa, displaying posters of the president and his Saudi host, King Abdullah, before they dispersed peacefully.

"Thank you, king of the Arabs," one poster read, referring to the Saudi monarch. Another said: "The people want Ali Abdullah Saleh."

In Aden, witnesses said that security forces shot dead one demonstrator and wounded six others when they opened fire on thousands of people at the funeral of a local resident who died in a prison a year ago.

Witnesses said the demonstrators had been displaying a large flag of former south Yemen, which merged with north Yemen in 1990.

The United States has called for an immediate and peaceful transition of power to Saleh's deputy, Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who is now acting president in Saleh's absence, under a Gulf Arab proposal to resolve the crisis that have pushed the country to the verge of civil war.

(Additional reporting by Mohammed Ghobari and Mohammed Mukhashaf in Aden, Writing by Sami Aboudi)

(Edited by Richard Meares)


Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/worldNews/~3/MrIw-dO8EvI/us-yemen-idUSTRE73L1PP20110624

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Friday, June 24, 2011

Peter Falk, TV's "Columbo," is dead at 83

Peter Falk

(Credit: CBS/Getty)

(CBS) A family spokesman confirmed to CBS News that actor Peter Falk died in Los Angeles Thursday night. He was 83.

The "Columbo" star won four Emmy Awards for his portrayal of the cigar-chomping detective who always looked as if he'd just rolled out of bed. Falk played Columbo on television regularly from 1971 to 1978 and then sporadically from 1989 until 2003. He won his first Emmy in 1962 for outstanding single performance by an actor in a leading role for an episode of "The Dick Powell Theatre" (1961).

Falk also had starring roles in his friend John Cassavetes' films "Husbands" and "A Woman Under the Influence" and starred with Cassavetes in Elaine May's 1976 film "Mikey and Nicky." He was nominated twice for the best supporting actor Oscar, for "Murder, Inc." and "Pocketful of Miracles."

In recent years, Falk suffered from Alzheimer's disease. In 2009, he was placed in a conservatorship. He is survived by his wife, Shera, of 34 years, and two daughters from a previous marriage.


Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsMain/~3/hHHT0HRXZy0/8301-31749_162-20074112-10391698.html

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