Thursday, 7 April 2011

Egypt to announce Arab League candidate within days


DPA
Thu, 07/04/2011 - 13:05

Egypt will officially announce within days a candidate to succeed Amr Moussa as head of the Arab League when his term ends in May.

Sources told German news agency DPA that three Egyptians are nominated for the post including Mostafa al-Fiqqi, former head of Parliament's Foreign Relations Committee, economist Hazem al-Beblawy and Vice Prime Minister Yehia al-Gamal.

Qatar has nominated former Secretary General of the Gulf Cooperation Council Abdul-Rahman al-Attiyah for the post.

Egyptians have held the post since the Arab League's establishment because of the country's traditional leadership role in the region, as well as its position in the world. However, the league's charter does not require the post to be held by an Egyptian.

Amr Moussa's term will end on 15 May, and the potential presidential candidate had earlier announced that he would not seek another term.

The Arab League sent a memorandum in February to member countries asking them to nominate candidates.

Mamdouh: The Baghdad Tiger on Broadway

Slain beast commemorated in theatrical piece

Thursday, 07 April 2011
Bengal tigers such as Mamdouh at their enclosure at the Baghdad zoo (File)
Bengal tigers such as Mamdouh at their enclosure at the Baghdad zoo (File)
BAGHDAD (AFP)

The tiger whose death after the US invasion of Iraq inspired a play that is garnering roaring reviews on Broadway is still remembered at the Baghdad zoo, where he was born and raised.

Six months after the March 2003 invasion, when the big cat was shot and killed by a drunken US soldier, the news made international headlines.

Playwright Rajiv Joseph's "Bengal tiger at the Baghdad zoo," which opened last week on Broadway with Robin Williams in the lead role, is based on that incident.

"The tiger was named Mamdouh, and for us at the zoo he was special not only because he was a rare Bengal tiger and the zoo's prized possession, but also because we raised him from birth and remember him as a cub," said Adel Salman Musa, the 54-year-old director of the zoo.

He recalled that in the immediate aftermath of the US invasion hundreds of animals were killed, stolen or died of hunger and thirst in their cages.

"But Mamdouh, who was about 14 at the time, was very strong. He survived the hunger and thirst, only to die senselessly a few months later," said Musa.

"Among zoo staff there were tears in our eyes when we heard Mamdouh had died," said Abubakr Farouq, a zoo veterinarian. "Together we had endured so many things -- wars, sanctions and difficult times when the animals were starving and we had no food."

Roaring review

The New York Times called the play, a "smart, savagely funny and visionary new work of American theater."

In life, as in the play, it was a time when the popular jubilation of seeing Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein overthrown was turning into a nightmare of surging violence. The invasion had unleashed an Al-Qaeda insurgency targeting US soldiers, and every day somewhere in Iraq innocent civilians were getting caught in the crossfire and losing lives. The streets were then patrolled by young American soldiers who did not understand the language of the natives, nor their ways.

One victim of the violence was the Bengal tiger, a dwindling species that is internationally protected. He was killed during a drinking party at the zoo, when a US soldier decided to share his food with the cat. The serviceman reached inside the cage with a piece of meat, and the hungry tiger lunged forward and mauled his arm. Another soldier shot the tiger.

On stage, Mamdouh's ghost resurrects as a foul-mouthed tiger witnessing the violence of Baghdad, haunting the soldier who caused his death and pondering the existential mysteries of life.

"I am surprised and delighted that Mamdouh is still remembered, especially in this way," said Farouq, 39, when told about the play.

From the grimness of Baghdad, the bright lights of Broadway can only be imagined. The replenished, modest zoo remains one of the leisure-starved city's very few attractions

"It's nice to see people still caring about such a thing, and it is an original way of portraying the nightmare that all Iraqis lived through -- and are still enduring."

Remembered, replaced

On the Muslim weekend last Friday, cars packed with families lined up in a two-kilometre (1.2-mile) queue to get into the sprawling grounds of Baghdad's Zawra Park, a favourite family picnic spot with a zoo and rides.

Inside the zoo, Mamdouh has been replaced by Riley and Hope -- two Bengals donated by the United States, which also paid a $23,000 compensation for the dead tiger.

At frequent intervals, taxis and buses disgorged parents and kids overloaded with picnic baskets and giant-size bottles of fizzy drinks, ready to escape the daily routines of waiting in traffic at security checkpoints, scrambling for scarce food rations, or enduring daily power cuts of eight hours or more.

Watching Riley and Hope feeding on their daily ration of freshly-slaughtered donkey flesh, Akeel Mukarram pondered the lives of ordinary Iraqis like himself, as his three kids gawked excitedly at the frisky beasts.

"In Iraq, it is better to be an animal at the zoo than a human being," complained Akeel Mukarram, a civil engineer, who is in his 40s. "At least you are protected by a cage and someone feeds you every day."
Violence in Iraq has plunged since its peak in 2006 and 2007, but bomb attacks and kidnappings are still common.

In the streets, the Americans have become nearly invisible after officially ending combat operations at the start of September. The nearly 50,000 US troops remaining until a full pullout at the end of the year now rarely venture outside their bases.

Israel to Germany: drop Palestinian statehood plan

Israeli army arrests 100 women in West Bank village


Thursday, 07 April 2011
Germany, Britain and France endorse a proposal of a Palestinian state in all of West Bank, Gaza Strip and E Jerusalem
Germany, Britain and France endorse a proposal of a Palestinian state in all of West Bank, Gaza Strip and E Jerusalem
NABLUS/OCCUPIED JERUSALEM (Agencies)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will ask Germany's leader in a meeting this week to drop a proposal to endorse a Palestinian state in virtually all of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem as the end point of Mideast negotiations, Israeli officials said Wednesday.

Germany, Britain and France support that position, and are expected to bring it up at a meeting of Mideast mediators next week as a way of restarting long-stalled talks. The Palestinians have said they won't resume talks with the hardline Netanyahu unless there's a clear framework and Israel halts all settlement construction in Israeli-occupied lands they want for their state.

Netanyahu argues that spelling out the end point would limit Israel's negotiating room and that endorsing Palestinian positions on borders would remove a key incentive for them to restart talks.

Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war.

Netanyahu has said he would not give up east Jerusalem, the Palestinians' hoped-for capital, and has not said how much of the West Bank he is prepared to give up. He has said Israel needs to keep West Bank areas with large Jewish settlements or those close to major Israeli population centers.

Israel withdrew from Gaza, now under the control of the Islamic militant Hamas, in 2005.

Britain's foreign secretary, William Hague, confirmed this week that Britain, France and Germany believe negotiations should be based on "1967 borders, with land swaps, a just settlement for refugees and Jerusalem as the shared capital of both states."

Officials close to Netanyahu said he would raise Germany's position with Chancellor Angela Merkel at a meeting in Berlin on Thursday. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were discussing a sensitive diplomatic matter.

Israeli fears

Israel fears the "Quartet" of Mideast peacemakers - the European Union, United Nations, Russia and United States - will endorse the European initiative when it meets in Germany later this month.

It remains unclear whether the full Quartet - especially the U.S. - supports the proposal. In Washington, a U.S. official said the administration is cool to the idea but had not ruled it out.

Two of Netanyahu's predecessors conducted talks with the Palestinians based on those guidelines, but no agreement was reached.

Merkel's spokesman, Steffen Seibert, said Thursday's talks with Netanyahu would be "politically intense," but said "the chancellor speaks to Israel explicitly as a friend."

At the same time, Palestinians are proceeding with plans to get the United Nations to endorse a Palestinian state, with or without a peace agreement, in September.

Israeli officials say the international community should not take a stand on key issues like borders while remaining vague on matters of concern to Israel. These include security arrangements and the fate of Palestinian refugees and their millions of descendants who Palestinians publicly insist must be allowed to move to Israel.

A survey published Wednesday by Israeli and Palestinian pollsters showed that a third of Palestinian respondents supported an attack last month in which five members of an Israeli family - parents and three of their children, ages 11, 4 and 3 - were stabbed to death in their home in a West Bank settlement. The March 11 attack, which Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas called "despicable, immoral and inhuman," is assumed to have been carried out by Palestinian militants.

The poll found 63 percent opposed the attack and 32 percent backed it.

The pollsters, from Hebrew University and the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research surveyed 1,270 Palestinians in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and Jerusalem. The margin of error was 3 percentage points.

Also Wednesday, the Israeli military indicted a soldier for unbecoming conduct, abuse and illegal use of a weapon, the military said. The daily Haaretz reported that military investigators discovered photos on the soldier's cell phone showing him and his comrades humiliating blindfolded Palestinian prisoners in the West Bank.

Army arrests 100 women

Israeli troops stormed a village near Nablus early Thursday, arresting more than 100 women as they hunted the killers of an Israeli family, local officials said.

Hundreds of troops entered Awarta shortly after midnight and imposed a curfew after which they began rounding up the women, local council head Tayis Awwad told AFP.

They continued to conduct house-to-house searches through the night, he said. Palestinian security sources confirmed the same information.

The army has been conducting frequent raids on the village for the past four weeks, arresting scores of villagers following last month's murders of a family living in the nearby settlement of Itamar.

But Thursday's raid marked the first time they had arrested any women, Awwad said.

Since March 11, the village, which lies just south of Nablus, has been the centre of a massive manhunt in the aftermath of the grisly stabbing of a Jewish couple and their three young children, one of them a baby, as they slept in their beds in the nearby settlement of Itamar.

Following the murders, troops entered Awarta and imposed a curfew for five straight days, conducting house-to-house searches for the killers, who are believed to be Palestinian.

Last week, they entered the village again and imposed a curfew, but so far no one has been charged, with the military refusing to comment on the operation.

Gulf states expect Yemen’s Saleh to quit: Qatari PM

Gulf states seek to broker Yemen's Saleh exit

Wednesday, 06 April 2011
According to sources the deal would hand power in Yemen to interim council
DOHA/LONDON/DUBAI (Agencies)

Gulf states leading mediation efforts to end a political crisis in Yemen hope to reach a deal by which embattled President Ali Abdullah Saleh would quit, Qatar's prime minister said on Thursday.

Members of the Gulf Cooperation Council "hope to reach a deal with the Yemeni president to step down," Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani said according to QNA state news agency.

Foreign ministers of the GCC agreed Sunday to begin contacts with the Yemeni government and the opposition "with ideas to overcome the current situation".

Brokering deal

Qatar daily Alarab said the Gulf proposal which was presented to Yemeni parties calls on Saleh to step down and pass power to an interim national council comprising tribal and key political figures.

Both sides have received invitations to hold talks in the Saudi capital Riyadh, but a date of such talks has not been disclosed.

The GCC groups Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia with Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

Gulf states are trying to broker a deal to have Yemen's president step down and hand over power, possibly to an interim council of tribal and political leaders, sources told Reuters on Wednesday.

Ali Abdullah Saleh's at times bloody response to protests, inspired by those in Egypt and Tunisia, against his 32-year rule has tried the patience of his U.S. and Saudi backers.

A variety of official sources say they are now ready to push aside a long-time ally against Yemen-based al-Qaeda in the hope of staving off a chaotic collapse of the poorest Arab state.

Though diplomats familiar with the negotiations question whether a deal is anywhere close to being struck, the proposal by the Gulf Arabs involves Saleh finally agreeing to stand down and handing his powers for a short time to a national council.

"The proposal is to have a governing council grouping all the various political parties and tribes for a period that would not exceed three months," one Gulf official told Reuters on Wednesday of a plan to be presented to Saleh and his opponents at talks to take place soon in Saudi Arabia. A date is not set.

"The council will set the way for elections," the Gulf official added, echoing other sources in the region and beyond.

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which groups Saudi Arabia with its small neighbors Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, made the invitations on Monday.

Saleh told GCC envoys on Tuesday that he would come to the talks in Riyadh. The ambassadors were waiting for a response from opposition leaders who they met in Yemen on Wednesday.

Suggested caretakers

"The talks in Saudi Arabia will discuss the modalities and mechanism for transition of power," another source close to the discussions told Reuters. "There are some names being circulated to head a transitional council."

These included Sheikh Hamid al-Ahmar, a leading figure among Yemen's powerful tribes, Abdulkarim al-Iryani, a U.S.-educated former prime minister and currently an adviser to Saleh, and another former premier Abdulaziz Abdul-Ghani.

It is not clear whether any of these could win a consensus among the opposition, which includes the Islamist Islah party, socialists, Arab nationalists and others. Nor is it clear they would be acceptable to Saleh, who wants a say in the matter.

Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter and key ally of Saleh, fears that its neighbor could fragment along tribal or regional lines if a way is not found out of the crisis soon -- something Saleh has warned of in recent speeches.

Washington has long seen Saleh as a pivotal ally in its fight against al-Qaeda, which has used its Yemen base to stage attacks on Saudi Arabia and the United States. In return for billions of dollars in military aid, Saleh has pledged to fight militants and allowed unpopular U.S. air strikes on their camps.

The opposition accuse him of playing fast and loose with his Washington ally, making deals with Islamists and militants at the same time as assuring the United States of his commitment.

Recent talks between Saleh and the opposition, some held in the presence of the U.S. ambassador, yielded little. Sources close to the talks in Sanaa say the United States gave Saleh an ultimatum to accept a deal and has since lost patience.

The sources said talks had most recently bogged down over Saleh's demand for assurances that he and members of his family will not face prosecution, particularly for the corruption that is a particular grievance of many of the thousands of protesters who have been camping out at Sanaa University for two months.

Opposition sources have said they would be prepared to accept Saleh's vice-president, Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, as interim head of state and to discuss removing some of Saleh's sons who have key positions once Saleh has stepped down. They want Saleh to leave the country during the transition period.

125 people killed

According to medics and witnesses, about 125 people have been killed in Yemen's crackdown on protesters, who launched nationwide demonstrations in late January to unseat Saleh, in power since 1978.

The deaths of 52 protesters on March 18, apparently at the hands of gunmen supporting Saleh, have been a turning point in the conflict, turning allies both within Yemen and abroad against the veteran head of state.

Again on Wednesday, tens of thousands of Yemenis rallied as police shot dead one demonstrator and wounded 30 others even after calls mounted for Saleh to stand down over the bloodshed.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said: "The United States strongly condemns the use of violence by Yemeni government forces against demonstrators in Sanaa, Taez and Hudaydah in the past several days".

"We call upon the government of Yemen to conduct full investigations into these events and to hold those responsible accountable for their actions," Carney added.

In a further sign of ebbing support for Saleh, the statement called on him to resolve the political deadlock so that "meaningful" political change could take place in an orderly and peaceful manner.

Washington, which has expressed fears of al-Qaeda taking advantage of a prolonged crisis, is now pressing him to negotiate a transition of power.

The veteran political survivor has seen a string of top generals, ambassadors and some tribes announce their backing for the protesters since the March 18 massacre of protesters.

Gates in Iraq as US forces near pullout

He sees major problems in Iraq if US pulls out

Thursday, 07 April 2011
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said withdrawal from Iraq will give the opportunity for Iran to exploit the situation
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said withdrawal from Iraq will give the opportunity for Iran to exploit the situation
BAGHDAD (AFP)

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates was set to meet Iraqi leaders Thursday after talks in Saudi Arabia where he sharply criticized Iran for exploiting unrest in the Gulf region and elsewhere.

Gates, who arrived in Baghdad on an unannounced visit Wednesday, will hold talks with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and President Jalal Talabani, according to officials travelling with him, and visit American troops who ended combat operations in August ahead of a scheduled withdrawal by the end of this year.

Iran and regional developments figured in discussions during his short stop in Saudi Arabia, where he held talks with King Abdullah.

The secretary will make a powerful case that it's important that we get a counterpart because we have some stuff to work out and it's in both our interests to make sure the ISF (Iraqi Security Forces) are in the right place at the end of 2011
US official

Gates's discussions with Abdullah took place against a backdrop of unrest and uprisings that have been sweeping the Arab world.

"We talked about how to prevent disruptive actions and extremist organizations trying to take advantage of the turbulences in the region," he said after the meeting.

"We already have evidence that the Iranians are trying to exploit the situation in Bahrain and we also have evidence that they're talking about what they can do to create problems elsewhere," Gates said, referring to Shiite-led protests crushed by the Sunni monarchy.

Gates was also expected to travel to northern Iraq for talks with Massud Barzani, president of the autonomous Kurdish region.

"The secretary will make a powerful case that it's important that we get a counterpart because we have some stuff to work out and it's in both our interests to make sure the ISF (Iraqi Security Forces) are in the right place at the end of 2011," an official said on condition of anonymity.

A senior US defense official said the Pentagon chief would also express support for Iraqi officials to "complete the government formation process, particularly to get security ministries dealt with."

More than a year after an indecisive general election, Iraq still has no defence, interior or national security ministers, even though Maliki stitched together a deal to form a national unity government in December.

Fewer than 50,000 US troops are currently in Iraq, down from a peak of more than 170,000 and ahead of the planned full withdrawal in late 2011.

Asked about a possible extension of the U.S. military mission in Iraq, the defense official said Gates did not rule that out, but the request must come from Iraq.

"The ball is in their court," he said. "It would probably be in their interest to ask for it sooner rather than later because we're starting to run out of months."

General Babak Zebari, the Iraqi armed forces chief of staff, has warned that the U.S. withdrawal was premature, saying his forces would not be able to ensure full security before 2020.

Gates told the U.S. House of Representatives' Armed Services Committee in February that Baghdad would face sizeable "problems" after the withdrawal.

"There is certainly, on our part, an interest in having an additional presence" above levels set by a 2008 accord, he said.

The defense chief also predicted Iraqis will be unable to protect their own airspace, face intelligence challenges and "have problems with logistics and maintenance."

U.S. Ambassador James Jeffrey told reporters on Friday that the 2008 agreement could be renegotiated by either side, but that Iraqi leaders had made no such request and Washington was going ahead with the pullout as planned.

The troop withdrawal is expected to accelerate from late summer, the defense official said.

He said Iraq would continue to face attacks by al-Qaeda and other militant groups after this year, but that Washington did not see that as "a strategic threat to the overall stability" of the country.

Al-Qaeda's Iraq affiliate claimed responsibility for a March 29 suicide bombing in Tikrit in which 58 people died and 97 were wounded, according to SITE, a U.S. group that monitors extremist websites.

US general holds Pakistan talks amid shaky ties

US offers up to $5 mln for Pakistani linked to attacks

Thursday, 07 April 2011
US harshly criticizes Pakistan for not being able to combat Islamic insurgents after US deployment of over 147,000 forces
US harshly criticizes Pakistan for not being able to combat Islamic insurgents after US deployment of over 147,000 forces
ISLAMABAD/WASHINGTON (AFP)

U.S. military commander James Mattis met Pakistan's top brass on Thursday with shaky ties again tested by a White House report criticising Pakistan's fight against the Taliban.

General Mattis, head of U.S. Central Command overseeing the wars in Afghanistan and the Middle East, would meet Pakistan's army chief Ashfaq Kayani for a "regular, scheduled visit", the U.S. embassy in Islamabad said.

"It's not extraordinary... it's a military to military relationship," said embassy spokesman Alberto Rodriguez.

As such there remains no clear path to defeating the insurgency in Pakistan, despite the unprecedented and sustained deployment of over 147,000 forces
A semi-annual White House report

But the visit comes after a U.S. report this week criticized the Pakistani military for failing to forge a clear and sustained path to beat Islamist insurgents holed up in the lawless regions bordering Afghanistan.

The United States has long urged Pakistan to do more to combat militants in the tribal belt, which it considers a global headquarters of Al-Qaeda, saying such efforts are vital to help end the nearly decade-long war in Afghanistan.

The semi-annual White House report to Congress, released Tuesday, noted a deterioration of the situation in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, and said operations were not complemented by plans to "hold" and "build" the areas.

"As such there remains no clear path to defeating the insurgency in Pakistan, despite the unprecedented and sustained deployment of over 147,000 forces," the report said.

Mattis is the most senior US official to visit Islamabad since Pakistan released a CIA contractor who shot dead two men in Lahore in January.

The killings and Pakistan's subsequent seven-week detention of Raymond Davis sparked a major diplomatic crisis in the fragile relationship between Washington and Islamabad.

A Pakistani court eventually freed Raymond Davis following the payment of $2 million in blood money to the families of the dead men.

Pakistani-U.S. tensions remain high over an ongoing covert U.S. drone campaign in the border region, which fosters deep anti-Americanism within Pakistan.

A missile strike on March 17 that killed 39 people, civilians among them, led to rare public condemnation by Kayani of the unmanned drone campaign, which continues with the tacit consent of Islamabad.

Ransom

U.S. officials Wednesday offered a reward of up to $5 million for information on Mohammad Ilyas Kashmiri, head of a Pakistani group linked to al-Qaeda and suspected of launching a 2006 suicide attack on the U.S. consulate in Karachi.

The State Department said Kashmiri "is the commander of the terrorist organization Harakat-ul-Jihad al-Islami (HUJI), which supports Al-Qaeda" and that the group has led training camps for the launching of several attacks in India and Pakistan.

The group is believed to have ordered the March 2, 2006 suicide bombing at the U.S. consulate in Karachi that killed four people, including U.S. diplomat David Foy, and injured 48 others.

In January 2010, a U.S. federal grand jury indicted Kashmiri for terrorism-related offenses in connection with a plot to attack the Jyllands-Posten newspaper in Denmark following uproar over cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed.

Last August, Kashmiri was placed on a U.S. list as a "Specially Designated Global Terrorist" and HUJI was labeled a "Foreign Terrorist Organization."

HUJI and Kashmiri have also been added to a United Nations blacklist of individuals and entities linked to the Al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

Kashmiri was born in 1964 in Pakistan-administered Kashmir. He is approximately six feet (1.8 meters) tall and weighs about 200 pounds (90 kilos).

He has black hair and been seen with a thick beard dyed white, black, or red at various times. He has lost sight in one eye, and often wears aviator-style sunglasses. He is missing an index finger, according to the State Department.

Contact group on Libya to meet in Doha on April 13

France says Gaddafi demise inevitable


Thursday, 07 April 2011
Libyan anti-Gaddafi fighters help a wounded man
Libyan anti-Gaddafi fighters help a wounded man
LONDON/PARIS (Agencies)

Britain, the United States and allies from Middle East will hold the first meeting next week of a contact group set up to guide the international intervention in Libya, officials said Thursday.

Britain's Foreign Office said the group would meet in Qatar on Wednesday and include both member nations and some international organizations.

The ministry could not confirm precisely who has been invited to attend. British government officials said the U.S. would be represented, and that the Arab League is also expected to be at the talks.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said last week that he planned to travel to the talks alongside about a dozen other Arab, European and international officials.

The group was established during a summit in London last week to act as the political guide to the NATO-led military operation and humanitarian assistance mission in Libya.

Hague told Britain's Parliament last week that the panel would "maintain international unity and bring together a wide range of nations in support of a better future for Libya."

Libya's leader Muammar Gaddafi has been widely excluded from international efforts to broker a peace plan, with rebels insisting that his four-decade rule must end.

France

France said Thursday that it was now only a question of how Gaddafi’s regime meets its downfall rather than whether the veteran Libyan ruler can survive in power.

"The question today is to know under what conditions Gadadfi goes, not how he's going to be able to hold on to power," Foreign Minister Alian Juppe told lawmakers.

"Besides protecting civilians, especially in (rebel bastion) Benghazi, we have already destabilized Gaddafi," he said as an international coalition continued to bombard Gaddafi’s forces to prevent them attacking civilians.

Juppe however admitted that were differences of opinion among European Union members as to how to get Gaddafi to step down after four decades in power.

"Some of our partners feel that sanctions are sufficient. There is disagreement on this point."

Juppe noted that in U.N. Security Council resolutions authorizing military intervention in Libya "it is not written in black and white that we want to get rid of Gaddafi."

But his departure is apparently now an inevitable outcome of the crisis for Britain, France and the United States, which have been at the vanguard of military operations in Libya, Juppe said.

Military prosecution summons Zamalek Football Club officials


Wed, 06/04/2011 - 21:31

<p>Military police rushing towards pitch to stop unexpected violence which erupted few minutes before end of Zamalek-African Tunisian game, Cairo International Stadium, April 2, 2011. The game saw acts of violence and clashes as Zamalek fans swarmed into pitch. Most recently, Egypt Armed Forces Supreme Council decreed a suspension of Egypt soccer premier league.</p>
Photographed by Amr Abdalla

The Military Prosecution on Wednesday summoned Galal Ibrahim, president of Zamalek Football Club, Hossam Hassan, the team’s coach, and Football Director Ibrahim Hassan, for investigation with regards to the clashes that erupted last week during a match with Tunisia’s Club Africain.

Ibrahim Hassan is accused of inciting the fans to protest.

Qadhafi asks Obama to end air strikes in a letter


AP
Wed, 06/04/2011 - 23:40

<p>Libyan president Moamer Gadhafi.</p>
Photographed by AFP

Washington -- Libyan leader Muammar Qadhafi appealed directly to President Barack Obama on Wednesday to end what Qadhafi called "an unjust war," and he wished Obama good luck in his bid for re-election next year.

"You are a man who has enough courage to annul a wrong and mistaken action," Gadhafi wrote in a rambling, three-page letter to Obama obtained by The Associated Press on Wednesday. "I am sure that you are able to shoulder the responsibility for that."

The White House confirmed the letter, but top officials shrugged it off.

"I don't think there is any mystery about what is expected from Mr. Qadhafi at this time," Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said, repeating US and allied demands that Qadhafi's forces pull back and cease attacks.

Rebels and pro-government forces waged nearly stalemate battles in Libya, while a former US lawmaker made an unendorsed private trip to Tripoli to try to convince Qadhafi to step down. An Obama administration envoy continued meeting with Libyan opposition figures in the rebel-held city of Benghazi, with no decision on whether to increase US help for the rebels seeking Qadhafi's ouster.

The letter was sent to the State Department and forwarded immediately to the White House.

Qadhafi implored Obama to stop the NATO-led air campaign, which he called an "unjust war against a small people of a developing country."

"To serving world peace...Friendship between our peoples...and for the sake of economic, and security cooperation against terror, you are in a position to keep Nato (NATO) off the Libyan affair for good," Qadhafi wrote in the letter.

"I am sure that you are able to shoulder the responsibility for that."

Neither White House press secretary Jay Carney nor State Department spokesman Mark Toner would discuss the details of the letter.

Qadhafi told Obama that a democratic society could not be built through the use of missiles and aircraft. He also repeated his claim that the rebels seeking his ouster are members of the Al-Qaeda terrorist network.

Addressing Obama as "our son" and "excellency," Qadhafi said that his country had been hurt more "morally" than "physically" by the NATO campaign.

The letter, composed in formal but stilted English, includes numerous spelling and grammatical errors.

"Our dear son, Excellency, Baraka Hussein Abu oumama, your intervention is the name of the USA is a must, so that Nato (NATO) would withdraw finally from the Libyan affair," Qadhafi wrote. "Libya should be left to Libyans within the African union frame."

Qadhafi said his country had already been unfairly subjected to "a direct military armed aggression" ordered by then-President Ronald Reagan, who famously called the leader the "Mad Dog of the Middle East," in 1986, as well as earlier rounds of US and international sanctions.

Although he listed a litany of complaints, Qadhafi said he bears no ill will toward Obama in the letter, which was dated 5 April 2011 in Tripoli and is signed by "Mu'aumer Qaddaffi, Leader of the Revolution."

"We have been hurt more morally (than) physically because of what had happened against us in both deeds and words by you," he wrote. "Despite all this, you will always remain our son whatever happened. We still pray that you continue to be president of the USA. We Endeavour and hope that you will gain victory in the new election campaigne."

Meanwhile, former congressman Curt Weldon, a Pennsylvania Republican who has visited Libya twice before, arrived in Tripoli on Wednesday at Qadhafi's invitation. Weldon said he is on a private mission to urge the Libyan leader to step down.

Weldon was in Tripoli as US envoy Chris Stevens was meeting rebels in their de facto capital, Benghazi, to gauge their intentions and capabilities.

Qadhafi has been widely excluded from international efforts to broker a peace plan, with rebels insisting that his four-decade rule must end. Weldon would be one of the few high-profile Westerners to meet with Qadhafi since the rebellion began in February.

However, the State Department dismissed the significance of Weldon's visit, saying he had been warned of the dangers of traveling to Libya, was not traveling on behalf of the administration and not carrying any message to Qadhafi from Washington.

"I don't know if it is helpful or unhelpful," Toner said of the trip. "He is not representing the US government."

Stevens, the US envoy to the opposition, held a second day of talks with opposition figures in Benghazi aimed at determining exactly how the administration could assist them.

"We hope that he will come away with a clear picture of the opposition so we can make decisions going forward," Toner said. The US is considering giving the opposition financial assistance and non-lethal aid but has yet to make a decision on whether to recognize their transitional council as the legitimate government of Libya, something that US allies France and Italy, along with Qatar, have already done.

The subject of aid to and recognition of the opposition was expected to be high on the agenda of a meeting between Clinton and Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini later Wednesday in Washington.

The rebels, aided by UN-authorized airstrikes intended to protect civilians from Qadhafi's forces, have maintained control of much of the eastern half of Libya since early in the uprising, while Qadhafi has clung to much of the west. Qadhafi has been putting out feelers for a cease-fire, but he refuses to step down.

Neither government forces nor the rebels have made any serious gains in recent days and the conflict has shifted to smaller objectives on both sides such as control of the key oil port of Brega, where fighting has flared on the outskirts.

On Wednesday, rebel forces gathered outside Brega but made no clear move to advance. Many posed for photos for the gaggle of foreign photographers. One young rebel dropped a grenade on the road as his pickup truck sped by and then sheepishly got out and picked it up as the crowd looked on in concern.

Rebel leaders have complained that NATO airstrikes are coming too slow to give them a clear battlefield edge. But NATO and US commanders acknowledge that pro-Qadhafi units have frustrated the air campaign by moving into civilian areas and new NATO tactics are needed.

"When there's a tank with dozens of people around about it, of innocent civilians, the best thing in that stage is to not to drop a bomb on the tank," said British Rear Adm. Russell Harding, deputy commander of the NATO operation, at a press conference in Naples, Italy. "So there's a limit, a physical limit, because we're not allowed boots on the ground."

Harding said NATO had flown more than 850 missions in five days -- including a steady rise in daily sorties since Monday -- but suggested that it was not NATO's job to satisfy rebel demands.

For the moment, it appears Qadhafi forces are concentrating on Misrata, 200km southeast of Tripoli and the only major rebel-held city outside their eastern enclave.

A rebel spokesman said Misrata civilians have fled to several areas along the coast that are farthest from the fighting.

Former Libyan military officers who have joined the opposition were trying to keep untrained fighters from advancing from the eastern gateway city of Ajdabiya toward Brega. But that was causing tensions within the rebel ranks.

Travel ban lifted for leaders of Islamic groups‏


Thu, 07/04/2011 - 12:08

<p>Egypt Air plane</p>
Photographed by other
Archived

Leaders of various Islamic groups, including the Muslim Brotherhood, are no longer banned from traveling abroad after the Interior Ministry removed their names from travel ban and watch lists, sources said.

Sources told Al-Masry Al-Youm that Muslim Brotherhood General Guide Mohamed Badie and all of the group’s Guidance Bureau leaders and delegates and several members of the group’s Shura Council were removed from the lists, including several Brotherhood leaders who live abroad.

Others who had recieved court verdicts against them were not removed from the lists, but efforts are being made to annul the rulings or retry their cases.

The travel ban lists had also included leaders of Jama’a al-Islamiya such as Sheikh Karam Zuhdi and Dr. Najah Ibrahim, the group’s most prominent leaders among those who resigned two weeks ago.

The sources did not recall whether the ban was lifted for leaders of Islamic Jihad, and indicated that watch lists still some members who are living abroad. Among those still banned from travel are Ayman al-Zawahiri and leaders of the armed group living in Afghanistan, Pakistan and a number of European nations where they have political asylum or foreign citizenship.

Rebels say Qadhafi halts oil, Libya blames Britain


Thu, 07/04/2011 - 12:08

Photographed by AFP
Archived

Tripoli -- Libya accused Britain of damaging an oil pipeline in an air strike, hours after rebels said government attacks had halted production of oil they hope to sell to finance their uprising.

"British warplanes have attacked, have carried out an air strike against the Sarir oilfield which killed three oilfield guards and other employees at the field were also injured," Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kaim told reporters.
There was no immediate comment from Britain's Ministry of Defense or from NATO, which is coordinating air strikes to protect civilians in Libya from Muammar Qadhafi's forces.
Kaim said the strike damaged a pipeline connecting the oilfields to the Marsa al-Hariga port. "There is no doubt this aggression...is against international law and is not covered by the UN resolution," he said.
Any damage to a pipeline leading to Marsa al-Hariga is likely to cause more harm to the rebels than to Qadhafi.
The Liberian-registered tanker Equator sailed from the port, near Tobruk, on Wednesday, apparently with the first cargo of crude sold by rebels since their uprising began in February.
A rebel spokesman had said Qadhafi artillery hit rebel-held oilfields in Misla and the Waha area on Tuesday and Wednesday, halting production.
No one on the rebel side was immediately available for comment on the latest allegations from Tripoli, which insisted the oil fields were under its control.
The rebels regained ground around the oil port of Brega on Wednesday but repeated accusations NATO was not doing enough to help them as Qadhafi's forces unleashed yet more mortar rounds, tank fire and artillery shells on the western city of Misrata.
A French minister said NATO air strikes in Libya risked getting "bogged down" and a top US official warned US lawmakers Libyan agents could be inside the United States and might try to launch retaliatory attacks.
"We want to make certain that we've identified these individuals to ensure no harm comes from them, knowing they may well have been associated with the Qadhafi regime," FBI Director Robert Mueller said.
Qadhafi himself appealed for a halt in the air campaign in a rambling three-page letter to US President Barack Obama bluntly dismissed by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
"Mr. Qadhafi knows what he must do," Clinton told a news conference with Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini, reiterating calls for a ceasefire, the withdrawal of his forces from cities they have stormed and his departure from Libya.
Misrata, Libya's third city, rose up with other towns against Muammar Qadhafi's rule in mid-February, and is now under siege by government troops after a violent crackdown put an end to most protests elsewhere in the west of the country.
Rebels who control eastern Libya are angry at what they perceive to be a scaling back of operations since NATO took over an air campaign, after an early onslaught led by the United States, France and Britain tilted the war in their favor.
French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said Qadhafi forces were making it harder for alliance pilots to distinguish them from civilians by hunkering down in populated areas. "The situation is unclear. There is a risk of getting bogged down," he said.
Juppe told France Info radio he would address the issue of tactics shortly with the head of NATO, adding Misrata's ordeal "cannot go of." NATO has accused Qadhafi of using human shields to make targeting harder for its warplanes.
Civil war in the vast North African desert oil producer ignited in February when Qadhafi tried to crush pro-democracy rallies against his 41-year rule inspired by uprisings that have toppled or endangered other autocrats across the Arab World.
The head of Libya's rebel army has condemned NATO for its slowness in ordering air strikes to protect civilians, saying the alliance was "letting the people of Misrata die every day."
Juppe said: "We've formally requested that there be no collateral damage for the civilian population...That obviously makes operations more difficult."
But General Abdel Fattah Younes was adamant that Qadhafi was conducting massacres. "Day by day people are dying. Hundreds of families are being wiped off the face of the earth. Patience has its limits," he said.
Asked whether he found NATO's argument that it is trying to prevent civilian casualties convincing he said:
"No, it's not convincing at all. NATO has other means. I requested there be combat helicopters like Apaches and Tigers. These damage tanks and armored vehicles with exact precision without harming civilians."
NATO ON THE DEFENSIVE
Libyan officials deny attacking civilians in Misrata, saying they are fighting armed gangs linked to Al-Qaeda. Accounts from Misrata cannot be independently verified as Libyan authorities are not allowing journalists to report freely from there.
Rebel criticism has put the Western military alliance on the defensive, particularly over Misrata. Spokeswoman Carmen Romero said that "the pace of our operations continues unabated. The ambition and the position of our strikes has not changed."
NATO air strikes are targeting Qadhafi's military infrastructure but only to protect civilians, not to provide close air support for rebels, much to their dismay, as part of a no-fly zone mandated by the UN Security Council.
Relieving the siege of Misrata was a NATO priority but alliance officials conceded that Qadhafi's army was proving a resourceful and elusive target.
"The situation on the ground is constantly evolving. Qadhafi's forces are changing tactics, using civilian vehicles, hiding tanks in cities such as Misrata and using human shields to hide behind," Romero told reporters in Brussels.
Misrata on Wednesday faced another heavy bombardment.
"There was firing on three fronts today, the port in the east, the center around Tripoli street and the west of the city. Mortars, tank fire, and artillery were used to shell those areas," rebel Abdelsalam said by telephone.
"NATO needs to either launch a serious operation to take out all the heavy armored vehicles, including tanks...If they don't want to do this, they should provide us with weapons to do it ourselves."
Meanwhile, living conditions in Misrata worsened.
"People are panicking, especially women, children and old people. Most people left their homes for safer areas and found refuge with other families," Abdelsalam said, adding:
"No fruit and vegetables have been available in Misrata for over 25 days, bread is also difficult to find. People are scared to go out because of the snipers and the indiscriminate shelling. The upper-hand is still with Qadhafi's forces."

Taliban claims deadly Afghan raid



Co-ordinated suicide blast and gun assault in Kandahar province leave six security officers dead.
Last Modified: 07 Apr 2011 10:43


Suicide bombers and armed men have stormed an Afghan police compound in Kandahar, setting off explosions and firing assault rifles in a co-ordinated attack, killing six members of the country's security forces.

Thursday's attack began when four suicide bombers stormed the police complex, Zulmi Ayubi, a spokesman for the provincial governor, told the Associated Press news agency.

Three of the bombers blew themselves up, Ayubi said, while the fourth man exchanged fire with Afghan troops.

However, a police official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said several attackers were armed with assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades.

Zalmai Ayoubi, a spokesman for the Kandahar governor's office, said three attackers were killed in the standoff. The complex is also used as an army and police recruitment centre.

US Black Hawk helicopters and at least eight US armoured vehicles rushed to support dozens of Afghan troops battling the assailants at the three-building police complex.

Major Randy Taylor, a spokesman for the US-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), told the AFP news agency that the attackers failed to gain access to the complex, despite trying to smuggle in a car bomb in a vehicle disguised as an ambulance.

"I heard a blast and after that continuous fighting with rocket launchers," Ashrafullah Agha, Kandahar provincial policeman, told AP.

After a third large explosion, Agha cut off the interview.

Khan Mohammad Mujahid, Kandahar's police chief, said that four intelligence officers were killed in the fighting, along with an Afghan soldier and a police officer. He said 12 police were wounded.

Taliban claim

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the assault.

Yousuf Ahmadi, a Taliban spokesman, told the AFP news agency that four of their fighters had entered the police centre, saying it was "currently on fire and there is a lot of smoke from the compound".

The police complex sits near the main highway between Kandahar and the capital of Kabul, 148 miles to the north. A weapons training school and police literacy centre are located inside the complex.

Kandahar is a Taliban stronghold that has seen some of the most intense fighting of the 'war on terror'.

The attack is the latest to target Afghanistan's roughly 120,000-strong police, who will play a growing role in the country's security as international troops start a limited withdrawal from seven more peaceful areas in July.

Also on Thursday, NATO announced that it had concluded what it described as a "significant operation" in mountainous eastern Kunar province, near the border with Pakistan.

More than 80 fighters were killed after joint Afghan and international forces cleared four villages, NATO said.

"The combined security force moved into the mountainous area near the Pakistan border in order to disrupt insurgent activities in the region," NATO said in a statement.

"Insurgents had been using the area to move supplies and men into Kunar province and to stage attacks on Afghan and coalition forces."

Afghanistan's defence ministry said late on Wednesday that more than 130 fighters had been killed in the area over the past two weeks.

Few details havebeen released, but at least six US soldiers were killed in the area last week.


Source:
Agencies

Spring brings flood threat to North America



As spring warms the northern hemisphere, some people are nervously watching the river levels.
Last Modified: 07 Apr 2011 09:54

Canada's rivers are expecting a large influx of water as the snow melts

As spring brings its warming glow to the northern hemisphere, some parts are nervously watching the river levels.

The breadbasket of North America, including Manitoba, the Dakotas and Minnesota have seen the snowiest winters on record, and for many the thick snow is still lying on the ground. Some parts even reported a fifty percent increase in the autumn and winter precipitation, compared to average.

The problems are not helped by the state of the land when winter took hold. Towards the end of last year, when the land froze, the ground was already saturated. So, when the thaw comes, the ground will still be waterlogged and this means that the melting snow won’t be able to soak into it.

A late start to spring

The thaw has come late this year. The region is a key-growing area and this would normally be time to plant crops, but as the snow is still lying on the ground, this is proving impossible.

Farmers are saying that it the wettest that the fields have been at this time of year since the 1970s.

As you might expect, one of the first places to flood is usually along the banks of the rivers. One of the major rivers in the area is the Red River that, slightly unusually, flows northwards.

It originates in the US, forming the boundary between North Dakota and Minnesota, then up through Winnipeg in Canada.

A thawing river

The southern parts of the Red River thaw first, and the northwards flow of the river carries blocks of ice towards the still-frozen section of the river in the north.

This ice can then block the river, causing it to flood. Winnipeg has a huge artificial waterway which can divert excess water when necessary, but other places simply have to endure the flooding.

The region doesn’t see floods every year, but it’s certainly not unusual. Just two years ago, in 2009, thousands were forced out of their homes as the Red River Valley turned into a vast lake. This year, the warnings are equally depressing.

The US National Weather Service has warned that the Red River could even peak at a new record high.


Source:
Al Jazeera

Explosion still a risk at Japan nuclear plant



Workers inject nitrogen gas to reduce chances of blow-up but are running out of space to store radioactive water.
Last Modified: 07 Apr 2011 02:42

Previous hydrogen explosions at the plant blew the roofs off of some reactor buildings [EPA]

After stopping the leak of highly radioactive water from a crippled nuclear plant north of Tokyo, Japanese authorities have begun injecting nitrogen into part of the facility in order to prevent a hydrogen explosion.

Workers at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant began pumping nitrogen gas into the area surrounding the No. 1 reactor around 1:30 am (1630 GMT) on Thursday, said Makoto Watanabe, a spokesman for the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.

The nitrogen injection was the latest in a series of efforts to prevent another nuclear catastrophe in Japan, which has already been hit by a 9.0-magnitude earthquake and a devastating tsunami on March 11 that left tens of thousands dead and severely damaged the Fukushima Daiichi, causing a radioactive leak that forced the government to evacuate citizens 20 kilometers away from the plant.

A March 26 internal report from the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission warned of the possibility of explosions at the plant, where superheated fuel rods that the government is desperately trying to cool are pulling hydrogen from the water and causing the gas to mix with oxygen seeping in through cracks in the plant.

The large explosions that rocked the Fukushima Daiichi in the early days of the crisis were caused by the buildup of hydrogen gas around the reactors.

Radioactive particles have settled in the area around the plant, contaminating water, vegetables, dairy products and other food. More explosions could spread the poisonous material farther.

But the nitrogen injection itself carries risk, since it could disperse radioactive vapour into the environment.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano told reporters on Wednesday that the government was still trying to come up with a "clear safety standard" and might expand the evacuation zone around the plant, which lies roughly 220 kilometers northeast of Tokyo.

Workers on Wednesday succeeded in halting the flow of highly radioactive water into the ocean near the plant by injecting a mixture of liquid glass and a hardening agent into the cracked storage pit beneath the reactor.

But the stoppage creates its own problem: finding more space to store 60,000 tonnes of radioactive water.

Workers will need to continue to pour seawater over the reactors to cool them, and authorities have said they will need to pump 11,500 tonnes of low-radiation water back into the sea.

The salt from the seawater that has been used to cool the plant is probably blocking circulation pathways, particularly in the No. 1 reactor, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission report said.

As the reactors' structures fill with more and more water, the increasing pressure on their walls makes it likelier they could break in the case of an aftershock, the report said.

The radioactive water being pumped out of the plant could spread to nearby fishing communities and lead to a government ban on sales from the areas, effectively wiping out incomes.

The Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), which owns the plant, has begun funding local governments to pay those who have been forced to evacuate due to the radiation crisis.

The company will also face an enormous compensation bill.


Source:
Agencies