"Am I therefore become your enemy,because I TELL YOU THE TRUTH...?"
(Galatians 4:16)

EU WATCH:EU nations back police mission to Kosovo

BRUSSELS, Belgium-The European Union gave the final approval Saturday for the deployment of a 1,800-member policing and administration mission in Kosovo.The decision comes just before the province's ethnic Albanian leadership is expected to declare independence from Serbia, possibly on Sunday.No EU nations objected to the mission, which will take four months to put in place, and is designed to help build a police, justice and customs system for Kosovo free of political interference.The force will include 700 police officers for patrols and who are trained in crowd and riot control. Judges, prosecutors and other legal experts would be sent to offer training and for administrative work.Although Kosovo is technically part of Serbia, the impoverished province of two million people has been administered by the United Nations since a brief war in 1999. The EU force will replace the U.N. mission now in Kosovo.Officials said earlier this week that the EU force could grow to more than 2,000 people besides 1,000 other non-EU experts from the United States and other countries.Serbia and Russia are against the EU mission, arguing it has no legal authority from the United Nations to deploy. The two also oppose independence for Kosovo, saying international borders can only be changed with the agreement of all parties involved.Cyprus lifted its threat to block the mission last week but along with other EU nations like Spain, Romania, Greece, remains opposed to recognizing the independence of Kosovo.EU Foreign ministers will hold talks on Monday to try to forge a common stance on Kosovo. Bigger states like Britain, France and Germany are expected to move quickly alongside the United States to recognize Pristina's sovereignty.In a legal text published Saturday, the EU said the mission, EU-LEX, will "assist the Kosovo institutions, judicial authorities and law enforcement agencies in their progress toward sustainability and accountability."It added that the EU's administrative tasks would help in "further developing and strengthening an independent multiethnic justice system and multiethnic police and customs service ... free from political interference."

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Suicide attack kills 37 as Pakistan vote campaign ends

PARACHINAR, Pakistan-A suicide car bomber struck a rally by slain Pakistani politician Benazir Bhutto's party Saturday, killing 37 people and increasing security fears with just two days until elections.The blast in the northwestern tribal town of Parachinar bordering Afghanistan came on the final day of campaigning for Monday's polls and was the bloodiest in a series of attacks since Bhutto's murder in December.Security concerns over the elections have combined with allegations of widespread rigging to suck the life out of electioneering, widely seen as decisive for the future of key US ally President Pervez Musharraf."It was a suicide attack, there were people outside the candidate's house and they were waiting for food when this man attacked," interior minister Hamid Nawaz told AFP."It is a very unfortunate incident. Maximum security measures are in place for the 17th and 18th (of February) and the campaign is going to end tonight,"he added.Thirty-seven people were killed and 93 wounded in the blast, interior ministry spokesman Brigadier Javed Cheema said, adding:"It was a vehicle-borne suicide attack."Security officials earlier told AFP that the suicide bomber attacked a Pakistan People's Party meeting outside the office of local candidate Riaz Shah. Shah's family said he was safe."A man with long hair drove a car into the crowd and blew himself up.There were bodies and blood everywhere,"witness Laiq Hussain told AFP.Parachinar is just across the border from Tora Bora, an Afghan mountain range where US-led forces were believed to have cornered Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden in late 2001 before he managed to escape.In a separate incident in the nearby Bajaur tribal area militants blew up a polling station with a timebomb, police said.Police in the southern city of Hyderabad meanwhile said they had arrested a suspected militant equipped with a suicide jacket and explosives who was planning an attack during the polls.And in the southwestern city of Quetta police Saturday fired tear gas and used batons to disperse a rally by the All Parties Democratic Movement, a coalition of opposition parties boycotting the elections, police said.Saturday's attack on the PPP came as politicians launched a final push for votes before the midnight (1900 GMT) deadline after which all rallies are banned until after the landmark polls.Bhutto's widower, Asif Ali Zardari, met former premier Nawaz Sharif in Lahore for new talks on possible power-sharing after the vote if the opposition wins a majority, party officials said.Opposition groups have accused Musharraf's administration of rigging the polls to head off possible impeachment if a hostile parliament is voted in.Party officials said police arrested more than 30 political activists, including 24 PPP workers, in a crackdown in North West Frontier Province on Saturday.But Musharraf was quoted as saying by the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan that he was "positive the polls would be fair"."Inshallah (God willing) we will have a stable, democratically elected government ... we will ensure a successful fight against terrorism and extremism and we will ensure sustaining the economic growth of Pakistan."Some 81,000 army and paramilitary soldiers have fanned out across the country to maintain peace and security during the election, chief military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said.Qaiser Tareen, commander of the paramilitary Punjab Rangers, said troops have been ordered to "shoot on sight" those who try to hamper the voting or disrupt peace on election day.In Washington, a senior US senator in a Congressional team travelling to monitor the polls said late Friday that the United States should "cut off aid to Pakistan, military aid" if the vote is not fair.Democratic Senator Joseph Biden, who is head of the influential Senate foreign relations committee, also forecast riots throughout Pakistan if the elections were found to be "patently rigged."A fresh row erupted over the fairness of the polls on Friday after Human Rights Watch said it had obtained a recording of Pakistan's attorney-general predicting the vote will be "massively rigged."But Malik Qayyum, a close ally of Musharraf, denied making the comment.


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Six Killed, at Least 40 Hurt in Gaza Explosion at Home of Senior Jihad Activist

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip-A blast went off in the house of a senior Islamic Jihad activist Friday, killing at least six people and wounding 40, medics and Hamas police said.Islamic Jihad said Israel targeted the house of Ayman Atallah Fayed in an airstrike, but Hamas police said the cause of the blast was not clear. Israel routinely targets top militants in airstrikes, but the Israeli military had no immediate comment.Fayed is a senior member of the Islamic Jihad military wing, and it was not clear whether he was among the dead.The blast went off Friday evening in Fayed's house in the Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza. The explosion badly damaged Fayed's home and a nearby metal workshop.Health Ministry official Moawiya Hassanain said at least three men and a woman were killed.He said 40 people were wounded, including nine who were in critical condition.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,330833,00.html


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LAND FULL of VIOLENCE:Campus shooting sprees sweep US

Kenya's bishops join boycott of Anglican meeting

NAIROBI-Kenya's Anglican bishops will join the boycott of a major church gathering this year because of a rift over gay clergy and same-sex unions, Archbishop Benjamin Nzimbi said on Friday.The announcement is another setback for the Archbishop of Canterbury, leader of the world's 77 million Anglicans, who is struggling to heal divisions between liberals and traditionalists."We are not attending the forthcoming Lambeth (Conference)," Nzimbi told local broadcaster NTV. "We are not pulling out of the Anglican communion."Bishops in neighboring Uganda said on Thursday that they would not be attending the meeting, being held in July in Canterbury, southern England.The consecration of openly gay U.S. Bishop Gene Robinson in 2003 has split the 400-year-old church and set a liberal minority against a conservative majority, mostly from Africa, Asia and Latin America.One of Australia's most powerful Anglican leaders has said bishops from Sydney will also miss the Lambeth Conference, a meeting of senior figures which is held every 10 years to discuss church governance and policy.The Anglican archbishop trying to mediate between conservative and liberal clergy said earlier this month that he believed a schism could be avoided but added that he did not expect 100 percent attendance at the Lambeth Conference.Some conservative Anglicans have announced plans to hold an alternative summit in Jerusalem in June.

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Singing soldiers herald Kim's birthday in North Korea

MOUNT KUMGANG, North Korea-Synchronized swimmers and singing soldiers marked the birthday on Saturday of the man dubbed North Korea's "outstanding thinker" by state media, but mystery still surrounded the leader's choice of successor.The communist world's first dynastic leader, Kim Jong-il, turned 66 as the head of state in a land that treats him like a deity, although his destitute country has fallen more deeply into poverty in his years in power."Only victory and glory are in store for the army and people of the DPRK (North Korea) as long as they have Kim Jong-il," the North's official KCNA news agency said in one of several commentaries lauding Kim.Kim usually is conspicuously absent from the celebrations the North's propaganda machine calls "the most auspicious day of the nation".But that did not stop thousands from dancing in the streets of Pyongyang, acrobats from tumbling in his honor or synchronized swimmers performing a choreographed routine to the tune "Our General is Best". Kim suffers from chronic illness and although he has boasted about his fitness, attention is focused on which of his three known sons may succeed him.North Korea's founder Kim Il-sung was 62 when he tipped Kim Jong-il as his successor, giving his son decades to build trust with the country's powerful military.Dongseo University professor Brian Myers, a specialist in North Korea's political ideology, said time may be running out for Kim to anoint a successor given the years it takes to build a cult of personality fit for a leader of North Korea
To read more go to:

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Sarkozy defends Holocaust proposal amid uproar

PARIS-French President Nicolas Sarkozy, facing a tide of criticism over his call for schoolchildren to "adopt" Jewish child victims of the Holocaust, hit back on Friday saying France had to raise children "with open eyes".In a speech praising faith that also drew fire from secularists, Sarkozy told France's Jewish community on Wednesday that every 10-year-old schoolchild should be "entrusted with the memory of a French child victim of the Holocaust".
The proposal unleashed a storm of protest from teachers, psychologists and his political foes who said it would unfairly burden children with the guilt of previous generations and some could be traumatized by identifying with a Holocaust victim.
More than 11,100 French Jewish children were deported from France to Auschwitz and other Nazi death camps in eastern Europe during the German World War Two occupation."The emotional burden can have negative consequences for a child who is developing," Gilles Moindrot, general secretary of the Snuipp-FSU trade union which represents most primary school teachers, said in a statement.."One can not place on a child of 11 the responsibility for what happened back then."The EMDH children's rights group said:"No educational project should be constructed on death."But Sarkozy, speaking in Perigueux in central France, brushed off the uproar."It is ignorance that produces abominable situations. It is not knowledge," he said in a speech. "Let us make our children, children with open eyes who are not complacent." "Believe me, you will not traumatize children by giving them the gift of the memory of a country ... Any psychologist will tell you: you have to tell a child the truth," he said.With Sarkozy's popularity ratings already at a low point, the controversy could further hurt his political standing only a month before key local elections when France will deliver its first judgment on his nine months in office.
AMMUNITION FOR FOES
The clamor gave fresh ammunition to Sarkozy's political foes, who charge him with erratic behavior and say his hyperactivity masks a lack of real policies."Really this president is extraordinary! One day he is preaching God to us ... Now he has suddenly become a teacher. He is deciding what's a good and what's a bad way to go about educating young children," fumed left-wing Senator Jean-Luc Melenchon.But Sarkozy won support from opposition Socialist leader Francois Hollande and the president's conservative UMP party rallied in support.
Education Minister Xaviet Darcos assured people the project would be handled in a practical, low-profile way. "We won't be putting a policeman in each classroom," he told reporters.The storm around the Holocaust proposal coincided with publication of a new poll that suggested Sarkozy's public romancing of supermodel-turned-singer Carla Bruni was the factor that had hurt his national image most.Sarkozy and Bruni married secretly earlier this month but his critics saw the highly-publicized affair as a distraction too early in office.The OpinionWay poll, conducted on the Internet for le Figaro and news channel LCI, found 82 percent of respondents believed Sarkozy's private life fell short of that of a head of state.
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSL1511891620080215?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews&rpc=22&sp=true


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SIGN of the TIMES:'£10 licence to smoke' proposed

Smokers could be forced to pay £10 for a permit to buy tobacco if a government health advisory body gets its way.No one would be able to buy cigarettes without the permit, under the idea proposed by Health England.Its chairman, Professor Julian Le Grand, told BBC Radio 5 Live the scheme would make a big difference to the number of people giving up smoking.But smokers' rights group Forest described the idea as "outrageous", given how much tax smokers already pay.Professor Le Grand, a former adviser to ex-PM Tony Blair, said cash raised by the proposed scheme would go to the NHS.He said it was the inconvenience of getting a permit - as much as the cost - that would deter people from persisting with the smoking habit."You've got to get a form, a complex form - the government's good at complex forms; you have got to get a photograph."It's a little bit of a problem to actually do it, so you have got to make a conscious decision every year to opt in to being a smoker."
'Extra bureaucracy'
He added: "70% of smokers actually want to stop smoking."So if you just make it that little bit more difficult for them to actually re-start or even to start in the first place, yes I think it will make a big difference."But Forest said it would be "an extra form of taxation, while tobacco taxation is already at record levels".Forest spokesman Simon Clark said that when the cost of administration, extra bureaucracy and enforcement are taken into account, "the mind boggles".
He added that the people most affected by the proposals would be "the elderly and people on low incomes".Mr Clark added: "The senior government advisor putting this idea forward is not only adding to the red tape and bureaucracy we already have in this country."He is openly bragging that he wants to make the form as complex as possible to fill in."A department of health spokeswoman did not rule out such a scheme as part of the next wave of tobacco regulation.She said: "We will be consulting later this year on the next steps on tobacco control.
"Ministers are seeking input from a whole range of stakeholders."

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Putin vs.Clinton

When Hillary Clinton said, way back in New Hampshire, that Vladimir Putin "doesn't have a soul," I figured that would be the sort of thing the Russian wouldn't be pleased about.But when I called the foreign ministry the next day for comment, it was Orthodox Christmas, and I let it slide.He was asked about the remark at his press conference yesterday, however, and indeed wasn't pleased.The former KGB lieutenant colonel appeared to lash out at U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton-a leading Democratic candidate for president-when one reporter quoted her as saying that former KGB officers have no soul:"At a minimum, a head of state should have a head," Putin said. By Ben Smith http://www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/0208/Putin_vs_Clinton.html
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RCC WATCH"Pope Reportedly Snubs Condoleezza

Pope Benedict XVI refused to meet US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in August, saying he was on holiday.To watch the video go to:
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RCC WATCH:Pope to Visit White House

WASHINGTON-Pope Benedict XVI will visit the White House on April 16 during his first visit to the United States as pontiff.White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said the president and the pope would continue discussions they began during Bush's trip to the Vatican in June 2007 on the importance of faith and reason in reaching shared goals.Stanzel said the goals include advancing peace throughout the Middle East and other troubled regions, promoting interfaith understanding and strengthening human rights and freedom.The pope was also expected to address the United Nations, visit ground zero in New York and celebrate Mass in New York and Washington during his April 15-20 trip.
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8UQQOT01&show_article=1
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Rival camps rally in Lebanon

Norwegian press won’t touch "Mohammad" cartoons

Norway’s major newspapers have no plans to publish the controversial "Mohammad Cartoons", following the decision by Denmark's leading newspapers to reprint them today...The cartoons depict the Prophet Mohammad wearing a bomb-shaped turban, a move that irritated Muslim leaders.The Danish papers said they wanted to show their firm commitment to freedom of speech after Tuesday's arrest in Denmark of three people accused of plotting to kill the man who drew the cartoon.The drawing, by Kurt Westergaard, and 11 other cartoons depicting Mohammad, enraged Muslims two years ago when they appeared in a range of Western newspapers.A Swedish cartoonist was also apparently a target of terrorist action for having portrayed Muhammad as a dog in his work.Denmark’s Jyllands-Posten newspaper, which first published the 12 drawings on September 30, 2005, reprinted Westergaard's cartoon in its paper edition Wednesday.A total of 11 major Danish dailies, including Politiken and Berlingske Tidende, also reprinted the drawing, which shows Mohammad wearing a turban shaped like a bomb with a lit fuse."We are doing this to document what is at stake in this case, and to unambiguously back and support the freedom of speech that we as a newspaper will always defend," said the Copenhagen-based Berlingske Tidende.Tabloid Ekstra Bladet reprinted all 12 drawings."We have always been cautious about our use of text, pictures, and photos," said Norway’s Aftenposten editor-in-chief Hans Erik Matre."But we will, of course, cover the issue in a newsworthy way," he added.Shortly after the cartoons were originally printed in 2005, Norwegian Christian publication "Magazinet" also chose to publish facsimiles of the 12 Mohammad-caricatures.Vebjørn Selbekk was the editor of Magazinet at the time. He thinks it is a good thing that Danish newspapers are now re-printing the cartoons in solidarity with the threatened Westergaard.Selbekk is of the opinion that Norwegian newspapers that have not printed them previously should also print the cartoons to show solidarity with their colleagues in other lands.Today's Danish actions came in response to Tuesday's news that Danish intelligence police had arrested two Tunisians and a Danish citizen of Moroccan origin for plotting to kill Westergaard.Intelligence police chief Jakob Scharf said the Danish suspect would likely be released after questioning, but could still face charges of violating a Danish terror law.The two Tunisians are to be expelled from Denmark because they are considered threats to national security, he said.Danish Muslim leaders condemned the alleged murder plot, but also said reprinting Westergaard's cartoon was the wrong way to protest. "There could have been other ways to do it without the drawing, which I personally do not like," Abdul Wahid Petersen, a moderate imam, told The Associated Press (AP).Imam Mostafa Chendid, the leader of the Islamic Faith Community, said his group was considering staging a rally in front of Parliament.The Copenhagen-based group spearheaded protests against the cartoons."We are so unhappy about the cartoon being reprinted," Chendid told the AP. "No blood was ever shed in Denmark because of this, and no blood will be shed. We are trying to calm down people, but let's see what happens. Let's open a dialogue.Massive protests swept the Muslim world in early 2006 following the publishing of the cartoons. Angry mobs burned the Danish flag and attacked the country's embassies in Muslim countries, including Syria, Iran and Lebanon.Danish products were boycotted in several Muslim countries. http://www.aftenposten.no/english/local/article2254162.ece
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CULTURE of DEATH:Defending abortion rights in Italy

END TIMES WEATHER:Tropical cyclone Ivan

Tropical cyclone Ivan is forecast to strike Madagascar at about 06:00 GMT on 17 February. Data supplied by the US Navy and Air Force Joint Typhoon Warning Center suggest that the point of landfall will be near 16.8 S, 50.7 E. Ivan is expected to bring 1-minute maximum sustained winds to the region of around 166 km/h (103 mph). Wind gusts in the area may be considerably higher.According to the Saffir-Simpson damage scale the potential property damage and flooding from a storm of Ivan's strength (category 2) at landfall includes:
Storm surge generally 1.8-2.4 metres (6-8 feet) above normal.
Some roofing material, door, and window damage of buildings.
Considerable damage to shrubbery and trees with some trees blown down.
Considerable damage to mobile homes, poorly constructed signs, and piers.
Coastal and low-lying escape routes flood 2-4 hours before arrival of the storm center.
Small craft in unprotected anchorages break moorings. There is also the potential for flooding further inland due to heavy rain.
The information above is provided for guidance only and should not be used to make life or death decisions or decisions relating to property. Anyone in the region who is concerned for their personal safety or property should contact their official national weather agency or warning centre for advice.This alert is provided by Tropical Storm Risk (TSR) which is sponsored by Benfield, Royal & SunAlliance, Crawford & Company and University College London (UCL). TSR acknowledges the support of the UK Met Office.
Source: Tropical Storm Risk
Mark Saunders
Website: http://www.tropicalstormrisk.com/

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QUAKEWATCH:Fresh earthquake shakes quake-hit eastern Congo....

To read these news and updates go to:

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Putin threatens to aim rockets at ex-allies over missile shield

MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin on Thursday repeated his threat to aim Russian rockets at former Soviet satellite states if U.S. missile defense facilities are deployed there.Speaking about U.S. plans for interceptors in Poland and a radar system in the Czech Republic, Putin said, "Our experts consider that this system threatens our national security, and if it appears, we will be obligated to adequately react to this."He said Russia's action would be to "retarget our missiles toward a system that we aren't creating.""We are warning people ahead of time: if you take this step, then we will make this step," Putin said at his annual news conference in the Kremlin.Putin also said Russian missiles could be aimed at Ukraine-a former Soviet republic whose pro-Western leadership is pursuing NATO membership-if it were to be host to a missile-defense facility. Putin had issued the same warning in a meeting with the Ukrainian president, Viktor Yushchenko, this week.He suggested that the United States and the leaders of Poland and the Czech Republic were going ahead with plans for the missile defense system without asking for public approval, which he called undemocratic.Turning to another sore point in Moscow's relations with the West, Putin lashed out at the United States and other NATO countries over their refusal to ratify an amended version of the 1990 Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty. Putin suspended Russian participation in the pact in December.He said the restrictions Russia faced under the treaty were made unacceptable by NATO's eastward expansion after the 1991 Soviet collapse, likening them to a situation in which U.S. troop movements from California to Texas would be subject to Russian approval."We will no longer fulfill any colonial conditions," Putin said.Putin, who is stepping down this year, also said Thursday that he had no reservations about becoming prime minister under the next Russian president, saying the No. 2 post would give him sufficient power.While the president sets the main course for the country, the prime minister has control over the budget, sets economic policy and is responsible for national defense, he said."The highest executive power in the country is the government of the Russian Federation," Putin said.He is expected to yield the presidency in May to Dmitry Medvedev, a longtime, loyal associate who is all but certain to win the presidential election next month. Putin has said he is amenable to being prime minister under Medvedev."I should not cry but be happy that I have the opportunity to work in another capacity, and in another capacity to serve my country,"Putin said.He said he had full trust in Medvedev, a 42-year-old first deputy prime minister, describing him as a person to whom it was "not embarrassing or frightening" to hand over power.Putin said he had never considered following the advice of those in his inner circle who urged him not to step down at the end of his second term as required by the Russian Constitution."I was never tempted to stay for a third term. Never," he said. "From my first day of work as president I decided for myself that I would never violate the existing Constitution."Although Putin has clearly come to enjoy his position and the prominent role it allows him to play in global politics, he said he had not become "addicted" to power during his presidency."Some are addicted to cigarettes, some, God forbid, to drugs, and some become addicted to money. They say that the worst addiction is to power. I have never felt that," he said. "I have never been addicted to anything."
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/02/14/europe/putin.php
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Torture victim exposes Bangladesh abuses

Human Rights Watch on Thursday issued a first-person account of the incarceration and torture in Bangladesh of one of its consultants-an outspoken human rights advocate, journalist and blogger."The Torture of Tasneem Khalil: How the Bangladesh Military Abuses Its Power Under the State of Emergency," recounts Khalil's 22-hour incarceration last May in the southern Asian country.Khalil was blindfolded and taken at gunpoint from his home in front of his wife and infant child, according to the account. He was beaten and threatened during the ordeal, retold in the 39-page report.Human Rights Watch says the report "highlights abuses under the country's state of emergency and the interim government's failure to restrain the security forces.""I have a moral responsibility to tell this story," said Khalil, who has done free-lance reporting for news organizations including CNN."I'm going to tell my story again and again and again," Khalil told CNN. "It's not only my story."Khalil is one of tens of thousands of people, the report says, who have been detained by security forces after a government with a "reform agenda" came to power in January 2007.It says Khalil was punished for criticizing "the security forces' role in extrajudicial killings, torture, arbitrary arrests, and other abuses."He described being taken to a small room that resembled a "torture cell" and being severely beaten. Then his interrogators took off his blindfold to have him write a "confession" of his crimes."I was sitting in front of a table and three batons were on the table along with some stationery.One was a wooden baton, about a meter long. The other two were covered with black plastic. Poking out of the end of these two were metal wires," Khalil recounted."I'm not sure if they used electricity on me. The pain often came like shocks, but they were hitting me so hard that I'm not sure whether it was just the force that hurt like this or if it was electricity."Khalil is now a consultant for Human Rights Watch in Sweden, which gave him and his family asylum after the ordeal."Rampant illegal detention and torture are clear evidence of Bangladesh's security forces running amok," said Brad Adams, the Asia director of Human Rights Watch who was quoted in a news release about the report."Tasneem Khalil's prominence as a critical journalist may have prompted his arrest, but it also may have saved his life. Ordinary Bangladeshis held by the security forces under the emergency rules have no such protections."Khalil was freed "after tremendous international and national pressure," the group said.Human Rights Watch is calling for the government in Bangladesh "to make the protection of human rights as much of a priority as its fight against corruption.""While few would dispute that corruption, organized crime, politicization of the bureaucracy and political violence had to be addressed in Bangladesh, the interim government must realize that reform cannot be built on midnight knocks on the door and torture," said Adams. "A peaceful democratic society requires respect for basic rights."Adams said there have been "no serious attempts" to hold people accountable for torture and arbitrary detentions. It urged the international community to persuade the government to deal with these matters."The security forces have been arbitrarily detaining and torturing people, but there have been no serious attempts at holding those responsible for these criminal acts to account," said Adams. "Why hasn't the government made the protection of Bangladeshis from this scourge a priority? Are they reformers, or do they just say they are reformers?"Bangladesh government officials could not immediately be reached for comment.Khalil, contacted in Sweden by CNN, said he wants justice for himself and the many others who have gone through the same ordeal."I absolutely want to see the people responsible for my torture and for my detention tried in a court of law in a transparent way. I want justice," he said.At the same time, he said, "I am fully aware this is not going to happen" at this time, given the mindset of the government.

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PERSECUTION WATCH:Archbishop's plan would advance 'Islamization';Persecution expert says where sharia is introduced, it takes over

To read these news and more about the persecuted church worldwide go to:
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Iran postpones Iraq security talks with U.S.

BAGHDAD-Iran has postponed a fourth round of talks with the United States in Baghdad on improving security in Iraq, prompting U.S. officials on Thursday to question Tehran's commitment to the dialogue.Iran's ambassador to Baghdad blamed "technical issues" for the last-minute delay to discussions that were to be held on Friday, but did not elaborate.The U.S.-Iranian security talks are one of the few forums in which officials from the two bitter foes have direct contact.Diplomatic ties between Washington and Tehran have been frozen for almost three decades.Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari called the Iranian postponement "unfortunate.""Yesterday we were informed that the Iranians want to postpone this for some time.This is the fourth time that we agreed on a date and they don't show up," Zebari told Reuters.Iraq later said Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad would visit Baghdad on March 2 for talks with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and other senior officials in what would be the first visit by a president of the Islamic Republic.U.S. and Iranian officials met three times last year to seek common ground on stabilizing Iraq in talks arranged by the Baghdad government. The last time was in August.Washington has used the talks to urge Iran to stop giving weapons and training to Shi'ite militias in Iraq, including armor-piercing bombs known as explosively formed penetrators (EFPs) that have killed hundreds of U.S. troops.Tehran denies the charges and blames the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 for violence in its neighbor. Both sides are also embroiled in a row over Iran's nuclear ambitions. Hassan Kazemi-Qomi, Iran's ambassador to Iraq, said Tehran still wanted to hold the talks."This was supposed to take place on this week's Friday, but based on latest evaluation and because of technical issues, these negotiations have been postponed," he told the official Iranian news agency IRNA.
U.S. SAYS IT'S READY
U.S. embassy spokeswoman Mirembe Nantongo said it appeared Iranian officials were unwilling to meet their U.S. counterparts."We have been ready for weeks. We are happy to sit down for the talks but it's increasingly clear Iran is not," she said.Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh told Reuters Tehran had requested a postponement of a "few more days."Zebari said all sides saw value in the dialogue, adding Iran had been helping stem violence in Iraq, partly by stopping some weapons coming across the border.He also said Iran had been influential in reining in the activities of the Mehdi Army militia of Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.The anti-American cleric declared a ceasefire last August that has been credited with helping cut violence. "The number and amount of weapons and EFP technology, less is coming across the border, according to the Americans and to our intelligence. So on these two accounts they have been helpful," Zebari said."It doesn't mean they are not interfering and not intervening.This is a friendly government to Iran and it would be contradictory for them on the one hand to support the government and on the other hand to support the militias."Iran and Iraq fought an eight-year war in the 1980s in which hundreds of thousands were killed, but ties have improved since Saddam Hussein was ousted in the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and a Shi'ite Islamist-led government came to power.Dabbagh said Ahmadinejad would visit Iraq for two days at the invitation of President Jalal Talabani."It's significant in the sense that Iraq wants to have good relations with Iran (but) there should be no interference in Iraq's internal affairs," Dabbagh said of the visit.White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said the U.S. government wanted the two countries to have good relations."The fastest way for that to happen is for Iran to stop supporting extremists in Iraq who kill innocent Iraqis and Americans,"he said in a statement.

As in the days of Noah....

Barack Obama's candidacy leaves some Muslims wanting more

Muslim Americans and political observers heralded the 2006 elections as a sort of debutante's ball for the Muslim voter, when anger and organizational heft pushed unprecedented numbers of Muslim citizens to vote and get involved with U.S. politics.The 2008 election cycle, however, isn't quite working out that way.Many Muslim Americans sense that presidential candidates have, at worst,conflated their faith with terrorism,and,at best,treated them as a liability to be kept at arm's length. They're especially disappointed that Sen. Barack Obama, in denying claims that he is a closeted Muslim, left it at that.They say he could have at least defended Muslims,or knocked down the notion that being a Muslim is somehow a negative."I think he knows Islam isn't a violent religion, but he certainly has some sort of hesitancy to talk about his experience with it because of a fear that this will damage his campaign," said Qasim Rashid, 25, who covered the issue on his weekly Muslim-themed online radio show.It's almost as if Muslims are asking for an Obama version of the famous "we're-not-gay" denial from "Seinfeld": "Not that there's anything wrong with that."Many Muslims say the dust-up over Obama's Muslim rumors reflects their continued persona non grata status in U.S. politics ever since 9/11. In fact, some Muslims aren't surprised at all."I wish Barack had been more vocal about the fact that there is nothing wrong with being a Muslim," said Pamela Taylor, a Muslim American activist in Indianapolis, but added, "Clearly no one wants to be deemed a 'Muzzie-lover.'"Candidates have been keeping Muslims at a distance since even before 9/11.In her 2000 race for the Senate in New York, Hillary Clinton returned $50,000 in contributions from the American Muslim Alliance after her Republican opponent alleged, wrongly, that the group had terrorist links.The Obama controversy stems from a 2007 article from the conservative Insight Magazine, which alleged that Obama, whose middle name is Hussein, attended a radical Islamic school as a young boy in Indonesia.A recent flurry of e-mails suggest that Obama's Kenyan stepfather was a radical Muslim, and say Obama took his oath of office on a Quran instead of a Bible.They also suggest that Obama refuses to say the Pledge of Allegiance and that his church membership is a charade to conceal his Muslim identity.John Green, a senior fellow at the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life in Washington, said "general antipathy" toward Muslims helps give the rumors staying power."Some issues like this are very difficult to dispel," Green said,"because they have a face validity to them. Hussein is a Muslim name, and to many Americans, Obama sounds very Arabic."Numerous news outlets have proved the rumors baseless.Obama's biological father, from Kenya, was a secular Muslim who divorced Obama's mother when he was 2.She then married an Indonesian Muslim and, while living in Jakarta, sent her son to both a Catholic school and a public school that was also attended by Muslims.The lawmaker who was sworn in on a Quran was not Obama, but Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn.,who actually is a Muslim.Despite the outlandishness of the allegations, many Americans have fallen for them, something observers attribute to Americans' lack of religious literacy-especially when it comes to Islam."There's a certain amount of gullibility in American life," said Alan Wolfe, a religion and politics expert at Boston College.He added that the allegations could hurt Obama's presidential bid."It's going to matter some, especially in a close election."While Obama's campaign has generated some buzz on Muslim Web sites-including a Muslims for Obama site-some Muslims resent what they see as Obama's cold shoulder."You could have simply said, 'While I am a Christian, I resent the implications in being branded a terrorist-sympathizer merely by association with Muslims.'...Instead, your campaign sought to play the defensive card," wrote Manan Ahmed, a Chicago-based blogger at the Muslim-themed Web site www.chapatimystery.com, in an open letter to Obama.Some of that may be changing, however slowly. Speaking in Boise, Idaho, on the eve of the Super Tuesday primaries, Obama referred to the e-mails and the closeted-Muslim rumors."Don't try to just insult not just me but people of the Islamic faith by playing on people's fears,"Obama said. "I know who I am." And, in a recent interview with Christianity Today, he said, "I am respectful of the religion, but it's not my own."Still, some Muslims-even Obama supporters-seem resigned to their status in American political life."Frankly, as a Muslim, I'd rather stay away from publicly supporting Obama," said Ani Zonneveld, a Muslim activist in California. "Believe me, this will be held against him."
By OMAR SACIRBEY
As in the days of Noah....

ISLAMIC CRAZE:Biblical hero Joseph 'was really a Muslim'

In the wake of an attempt by Palestinians to burn down Joseph's Tomb-Judaism's third holiest site-Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah faction issued a statement denying it will help restore the shrine, referring to both the shrine and the biblical patriarch as "Muslim.""Pay no attention to the rumors that we will work with Israel to restore the burial site of the holy Muslim Joseph," said the statement, issued from Nablus, the biblical city of Shechem. "We are going to guard this holy Muslim site."Joseph's Tomb(picture left 2000) is the believed burial place of the son of Jacob who was sold by his brothers into slavery and later became viceroy of Egypt.Palestinian security officials in Nablus said Monday they were called to the tomb to find 16 burning tires inside the sacred structure.A Palestinian police official who inspected the site told WND there was some fire damage to the tomb.He said the Palestinian Authority, fearing embarrassment, immediately formed a joint committee from the PA's Force 17, Preventative Security Services and Palestinian intelligence, to find out who was behind the fire.The move comes after Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announced last week he would ask Israel's Defense Ministry to work with the PA to reconstruct and restore the tomb, parts of which were destroyed in 2000 by Palestinians, including known PA security officers.Under the 1993 Oslo Accords, which granted nearby strategic territory to the Palestinians, Joseph's Tomb was supposed to be accessible to Jews and Christians.But following repeated attacks against Jewish worshippers at the holy site by gunmen associated with then-Palestinian Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat's militias, then-Prime Minister Ehud Barak in October 2000 ordered an Israeli unilateral retreat from the area.Within less than an hour of the Israeli retreat, Palestinian rioters overtook Joseph's Tomb and reportedly began to ransack the site.Palestinian mobs reportedly tore apart books, destroying prayer stands and grinding out stone carvings in the Tomb's interior.A Muslim flag was hoisted over the tomb.Israel first gained control of Nablus and the neighboring site of Joseph's Tomb in the 1967 Six-Day War.The Oslo Accords signed by Arafat and Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin called for the area surrounding the tomb site to be placed under Palestinian jurisdiction but allowed for continued Jewish visits to the site and the construction of an Israeli military outpost at the tomb to ensure secure Jewish access.Following the transfer of control of Nablus and the general area encompassing the tomb to the Palestinians in the early 1990s, there were a series of outbreaks of violence in which Arab rioters and gunmen from Arafat's Fatah militias shot at Jewish worshipers and the tomb's military outpost.Six Israeli soldiers were killed, and many others, including yeshiva students, were wounded in September 1996 when Palestinian rioters and Fatah gunmen attempted to over take the tomb. Eventually, Israeli soldiers regained control of the site.The Palestinians continued to attack Joseph's Tomb with regular shootings and the lobbing of firebombs and Molotov cocktails. Security for Jews at the site increasingly became more difficult to maintain. Rumors circulated in 2000 that Barak would evacuate the Israeli military outpost and give the tomb to Arafat as a "peacemaking gesture."In early 2000, the Israeli army began denying Jewish visits to the tomb on certain days due to prospects of Arab violence. Following U.S.-mediated peace talks at Camp David in September 2000, Arafat returned to the West Bank and initiated his intifada. During one bloody week in October 2000, Fatah gunmen attacked the tomb repeatedly, killing two and injuring dozens, prompting Barak to order a complete evacuation of Judaism's third holiest site Oct. 6.

As in the days of Noah....

ENVIRO WATCH:Oceans Eyed As New Energy Source

DANIA BEACH,Fla.-Just 15 miles off Florida's coast, the world's most powerful sustained ocean current-the mighty Gulf Stream-rushes by at nearly 8.5 billion gallons per second.And it never stops.To scientists, it represents a tantalizing possibility: a new, plentiful and uninterrupted source of clean energy.Florida Atlantic University researchers say the current could someday be used to drive thousands of underwater turbines, produce as much energy as perhaps 10 nuclear plants and supply one-third of Florida's electricity. A small test turbine is expected to be installed within months. "We can produce power 24/7," said Frederick Driscoll, director of the university's Center of Excellence in Ocean Energy Technology.Using a $5 million research grant from the state, the university is working to develop the technology in hopes that big energy and engineering companies will eventually build huge underwater arrays of turbines.From Oregon to Maine,Europe to Australia and beyond, researchers are looking to the sea-currents, tides and waves-for its infinite energy.So far, there are no commercial-scale projects in the U.S. delivering electricity to the grid.Because the technology is still taking shape, it is too soon to say how much it might cost.But researchers hope to make it as cost- effective as fossil fuels.While the initial investment may be higher,the currents that drive the machinery are free.There are still many unknowns and risks.One fear is the "Cuisinart effect":The spinning underwater blades could chop up fish and other creatures.Researchers said the underwater turbines would pose little risk to passing ships.The equipment would be moored to the ocean floor, with the tops of the blades spinning 30 to 40 feet below the surface,because that's where the Gulf Stream flows fastest.But standard navigation equipment on ocean vessels could easily guide them around the turbine fields if their hulls reached that deep,researchers said.And unlike offshore wind turbines,which have run into opposition from environmentalists worried that the technology would spoil the ocean view,the machinery would be invisible from the surface,with only a few buoys marking the fields.David White of the Ocean Conservancy said much of the technology is largely untested in the outdoors, so it is too soon to say what the environmental effects might be."We understand that there are environmental trade-offs, and we need to start looking to alternative energy and everything should be on the table,"he said."But what are the environmental consequences?We just don't know that yet."The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has issued 47 preliminary permits for ocean,wave and tidal energy projects, said spokeswoman Celeste Miller.Most such permits grant rights just to study an area's energy-producing potential, not to build anything. The field has been dealt some setbacks.An ocean test last year ended in disaster when its $2 million buoy off Oregon's coast sank to the sea floor.Similarly, a small test project using turbines powered by tidal currents in New York City's East River ran into trouble last year after turbine blades broke.The Gulf Stream is about 30 miles wide and shifts only slightly in its course, passing closer to Florida than to any other major land mass."It's the best location in the world to harness ocean current power,"Driscoll said.Researchers on the West Coast, where the currents are not as powerful, are looking instead to waves to generate power.Canada-based Finavera Renewables has received a FERC license to test a wave energy project in Washington state.It will eventually include four buoys in a bay and generate enough power for up to 700 homes.The 35-ton buoys rise above the water about 6 feet and extend some 60 feet down.Inside each buoy, a piston rises and falls with the waves.The company hopes later to be the first in the U.S. to operate a commercial-scale "wave farm," situated off Northern California.The project with Pacific Gas and Electric calls for Finavera to produce enough electricity to power up to 600 homes by 2012.Finavera eventually wants to supply 30,000 households.Roger Bedard of the Electric Power Research Institute said an analysis by his organization found that wave-and tide-generated energy could supply only about 6.5 percent of today's electricity needs.Finavera spokesman Myke Clark acknowledged that wave energy is "definitely not the only answer" to the nation's power needs and is never going to be as cheap as coal.But it could be "part of the energy mix," and could be used to great advantage off the coasts of Third World countries, where entire towns have no connection to electrical grids, he said.Nick Furman, executive director of the Oregon Dungeness Crab Commission, said he fears the wave technology could crowd out his industry, which last year brought in 50 million pounds of crab and contributed $150 million to the state's economy."We've got a limited amount of flat sandy bottom on the Oregon Coast where we can put out pots and where we can fish, and the wave energy folks are telling us they need the same flat, sandy bottom," Furman said."It's not the 10-buoy wave park that has the industry concerned.It's that if it's successful, then that park turns into a 200- or 400-buoy park and it just keeps growing."
On the Net:
Electric Power Research Institute: http://www.epri.com
Finavera Renewables: http://www.finavera.com
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission: http://www.ferc.gov
Center of Excellence in Ocean Energy Technology: http://coet.fau.edu
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8UQ9R5O0&show_article=1
As in the days of Noah....

NAZI REVIVAL WATCH:Anti-Semitic note attacks Tenn.lawmaker

MEMPHIS, Tenn.-Steve Cohen, a white congressman representing a mostly black district, is no stranger to political attacks tinged with race.A new political flier circulating in the district is forcing him to confront anti-Semitism, too.The flier, which showed up in mailboxes this week, aims to rally black Christians to oppose Cohen because he's Jewish.[[["Memphis Congressman Steve Cohen and the Jews hate Jesus,"]]] the flier reads in bold letters.The origin of the flier was unclear, but Cohen said he worried it was a sign of more nastiness to come during the campaign. It urges voters to unite behind "one black Christian to represent Memphis in the United States Congress in 2008.""It was very bizarre," said Cohen, a first-term Democrat.Cohen is the first white congressman from Memphis in more than three decades.[[[Nikki Tinker, a black lawyer expected to be Cohen's chief opponent for re-election in the Democratic primary in August, said she was incensed by the anti-Semitic attack."My faith teaches me to love, not hate," said Tinker, who is Christian.]]][[[[The Anti-Defamation League issued a statement from Atlanta describing the flier as an attempt "to incite tension between the Memphis African-American and Jewish communities." The flier, which was also sent by mail to the Memphis Jewish Federation, included a contact name, the Rev. George Brooks, and a phone number in Murfreesboro, a town near Nashville and some 200 miles outside Cohen's district.A woman who would only identify herself as a friend of Brooks answered a call to the number and said he was out of town. Repeated subsequent calls went unanswered and messages were unreturned.]]]]Cohen easily won the 2006 general election in the heavily Democratic district, but he took a crowded primary with just barely 30 percent of the vote.Four black candidates split almost 60 percent of the vote.[[Cohen's most vocal opposition has come from critics arguing that the Memphis district, which is 60 percent black and 34 percent white, should have a black representative in Washington.]]sigh.....[[[[Cohen was challenged last year at a meeting of the Memphis Baptist Ministerial Association as being unable to represent the 9th District because of his race."He's not black, and he can't represent me.That's the bottom line,"one pastor told the local newspaper as the raucous meeting broke up.]]]]{{{{{{The Rev. O.C. Collins, a member of the ministerial association, later invited Cohen to speak at his church as a way to apologize for the group's "impoliteness."Collins said he wondered why a preacher from another part of Tennessee would care about the Memphis election or launch such a distasteful attack.But he said the anti-Semitic flier is unlikely to sway Memphis voters and the racial arguments will have limited success."It stinks. It really, really stinks," he said."But I think the people Congressman Cohen represents are a whole lot smarter than some people are giving us credit for."}}}}}}

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080214/ap_on_re_us/campaign_anti_semitism;_ylt=Auxwebh72SFMEzcFyol7EpxI2ocA
PS:So....could we talk about some BLACKS being RACISTS again ANYBODY ELSE that is NOT BLACK...????Yes I think we could...The sad part is that this so called Rev.George Brooks(conveniently "out of town")calls himself a CHRISTIAN....
He has no clue what Christ and Christianity is all about....
Sad part...there are thousands calling themselves "christians" that preach in the pulpit and are not different to any other heathen out there...full of hatred...yeah...Mr.Brooks is surely an example of christian love.....!!!sigh....What a foolishness!!!!!!

As in the days of Noah.....

Troops hunt rebels in East Timor hills

DILI,East Timor-Foreign troops sealed off a mountain village outside the capital of tiny East Timor on Thursday in search of rebels implicated in attacks on the country's top two leaders. Two militants, meanwhile, were buried as heroes by more than a thousand supporters.A procession of family and followers of slain rebel commander Alfredo Reinado wove through a poor seaside neighborhood in the capital of Dili ahead of his burial in his front yard. Throngs of people applauded, held joint Roman Catholic prayers and chanted, "Viva! Viva!"Reinado and his bodyguard, who was buried alongside him, were shot dead Monday by a guard during an apparent assassination attempt against President Jose Ramos-Horta.The president is recovering in a hospital in Australia after being shot twice outside his home and evacuated from East Timor in critical condition.East Timor, a tiny former Portuguese colony of less than a million people, remained in a state of emergency Thursday after the latest violent crisis since it broke from Indonesia in 1999. In 2006, fighting between rival security forces and widespread civil unrest killed dozens.Reinado was wanted on murder charges for his role in the bloodshed that toppled the government.Stability was restored by thousands of United Nations police and foreign soldiers who now oversee national security.Just south of Dili, Australian forces set up check points Thursday with armored personnel carriers around a village where several rebels involved in Monday's attacks are believed to be hiding. Soldiers stopped everyone entering or leaving the area.U.N. police were standing by to identify potential suspects for arrest.The foreign forces were criticized Thursday by Ramos-Horta's brother, Arsenio Ramos-Horta, who said the United Nations failed to protect the country's leader."They should have been more careful, had better protection. I believe the United Nations security apparatus failed completely on that side," he told reporters outside the Royal Darwin Hospital in Australia, where many members of Ramos-Horta's family have gathered.He said U.N. forces set up a roadblock about half a mile away when the gunfight started, rather than assisting."Some of them are just cowards," Arsenio Ramos-Horta told Australian Broadcasting Corp. in a separate interview.The United Nations has said President Ramos-Horta didn't want foreign security and had asked to be protected by Timor's army.Doctors said the president would likely come out of an induced coma in the next few days after undergoing several rounds of surgery."At the moment the president is progressing along the expected clinical course in the intensive care unit," said Dianne Stephens, director of the ICU."There have been no complications and we are very pleased with his progress to this point."Reinado has gained folk hero status among some disenchanted youth and people from the west of the country who complain the central government discriminates against them.They flocked to his grave Thursday to light candles and lay flowers."Alfredo was a man of peace who struggled for truth, justice and equality," said Teresinha Soares, 29, a housewife. "He wanted everyone to have equal access to jobs and opportunities."Ramos-Horta-who won the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize for his nonviolent resistance to the Indonesian occupation-has proudly called himself a man of the people who never wanted or needed a heavy security detail.During the 24 years of Jakarta rule, Ramos-Horta was East Timor's voice to the world, taking its struggle for independence to the United Nations and becoming its first foreign minister after it formally proclaimed independence in 2002.In 2006, the firing of nearly 600 mutinous soldiers who said they were being discriminated against-including Reinado and his men-led to gunbattles between police and army forces that left 37 dead and drove 155,000 from their homes. Tens of thousands still live in dirty camps.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080214/ap_on_re_as/east_timor;_ylt=AjAEyBU701lAGQzADt8vbk9I2ocA
As in the days of Noah....

Kenyan rivals to write new constitution

NAIROBI,Kenya-Kenya's political rivals agreed Thursday to write a new constitution within a year as part of a deal to end postelection violence that already has killed more than 1,000 people, a government negotiator said.In Washington, President Bush said he will dispatch Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to Kenya to demand an immediate halt to violence that broke out after the disputed Dec. 27 presidential election.Former U.N. chief Kofi Annan, who is mediating in the Kenya crisis, has hammered out a deal between the rival camps, a spokesman said earlier Thursday.But the full details have not yet been released."The two parties agreed to write a new constitution," government negotiator Mutula Kilonzo told The Associated Press after two days of secret talks were adjourned until Monday.Kenya's current constitution was crafted in the lead-up to independence from Britain in 1963 and has been revised repeatedly, giving the president sweeping powers. Kenyans have repeatedly said they want a constitution that would reform how their country is run following decades of abuses by successive governments.Kilonzo did not give details of any other aspects of the agreement, which is likely to be just a first step in negotiations. He spoke just hours after a spokesman for Annan announced the sides had signed a deal but gave no details.Annan and the negotiators have been holed up in an undisclosed location for two days to try to hammer out agreements following a dispute over who won the election.Opposition leader Raila Odinga accuses President Mwai Kibaki of stealing the vote, and domestic and international observers have said it was deeply flawed. The election unleashed weeks of violence, killing more than 1,000 people and forcing 600,000 to flee their homes.The conflict has drawn international condemnation, with several countries threatening to cut aid, impose travel bans or freeze the assets of anyone suspected of inciting violence.Rice and Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer plan to travel on Monday to Nairobi, where they will meet Kibaki, Odinga and civic leaders.Bush said Rice will deliver a message directly to Kenya's leaders and people: "There must be an immediate halt to violence, there must be justice for the victims of abuse and there must be a full return to democracy."He made the announcement during a speech previewing his six-day trip to Africa. Bush's schedule does not include a stop in Kenya.

As in the days of Noah....

US intel links Iran with nuke bomb bid

VIENNA, Austria-The U.S. has recently shared new intelligence with the International Atomic Energy Agency on key aspects of Iran's nuclear program that Washington says shows Tehran was directly engaged in trying to make a bomb, diplomats said Thursday.One of the diplomats said Washington also gave the IAEA permission to confront Iran with at least some of the evidence in an attempt to pry details out of the Islamic republic, as part of the U.N. nuclear watchdog's attempts to investigate Iran's suspicious nuclear past.The diplomats suggested that such moves by the U.S. administration would be a reflection of Washington's' drive to pressure Iran into acknowledging that it had focused part of its nuclear efforts toward developing a weapons program.The U.S. is leading the push for a third set of U.N. sanctions against Iran. Tehran insists its program is intended only to produce energy and has refused U.N. demands that it suspend its uranium enrichment program-technology that can produce both fuel for nuclear reactors and the fissile material for a bomb.A recent U.S. intelligence assessment that Iran had a clandestine weapons program but stopped working on it four years ago has hurt Washington's attempts to have the U.N. Security Council impose a third set of sanctions.While the Americans have previously declassified and then forwarded intelligence to the IAEA to help its investigations, they do so on a selective basis.Following Israel's bombing of a Syrian site late last year, and media reports citing unidentified U.S. officials as saying the target was a nuclear installation, IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei turned in vain to the U.S. in asking for details on what was struck, said a diplomat who-like others-spoke on condition of anonymity in exchange for divulging confidential information.Over the past two years, the U.S. already has shared material on a laptop computer reportedly smuggled out of Iran. In 2005, U.S. intelligence assessed that information as indicating that Tehran had been working on details of nuclear weapons, including missile trajectories and ideal altitudes for exploding warheads.After declassification, U.S. intelligence also was forwarded on two other issues: the "Green Salt Project"-a plan the U.S. alleges links diverse components of a nuclear weapons program, including uranium enrichment, high explosives testing and a missile re-entry vehicle-and material in Iran's possession showing how to mold uranium metal into warhead form.Two of the diplomats said the material forwarded to the IAEA over the past two weeks expanded on the previous information from the Americans, but had no additional details.Iran is already under two sets of U.N. Security Council sanctions for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment, which it started developing during nearly two decades of covert nuclear activity built on illicit purchases and revealed only five years ago.Since then, IAEA experts have uncovered activities, experiments, and blueprints and materials that point to possible efforts by Iran to create nuclear weapons, even though Tehran insists its nuclear project is peaceful and aimed only at creating a large-scale enrichment facility to make reactor fuel.Its leaders consistently dismiss allegations that they are interested in enrichment for its other use-creating fissile material suitable for arming warheads.Instead of heeding Security Council demands to freeze enrichment,Iran has expanded its program.On Wednesday, diplomats told the AP that Iran's new generation of advanced centrifuges have begun processing small quantities of the gas that can be used to make the fissile core of nuclear warheads.

As in the days of Noah....

SIGN of the TIMES:CDC Warns of 'Choking Game' After 82 Youths Die

At least 82 youths have died from the so-called "choking game," according to the first government count of fatalities from the tragic fad. In the game, children use dog leashes, bungee cords wrapped around their necks or other means to temporarily cut blood flow to their head. The goal is a dreamlike, floating-in-space feeling when blood rushes back into the brain.As many as 20 percent of teens and preteens play the game, sometimes in groups, according to some estimates based on a few local studies. But nearly all the deaths were youths who played alone, according to the count complied by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.The CDC started the research after receiving a letter last year from a Tacoma, Wash., physician who said her 13-year-old son died from playing the game in 2005."At the time I had never heard of this," said Dr. Patricia Russell, whose son was found hanging in his closet, but later learned he had talked to a friend about it.The CDC counted reports from media and advocacy organizations in the years 1995 through 2007, totaling 82 fatalities of children ages 6 to 19. They did not include deaths in which it was unclear if the death was from the choking game or if it was a suicide. They also did not include deaths that involved autoerotic asphyxiation, which is self-strangulation during masturbation and is said to be mainly done by adult males.The 82 deaths were spread across the country. Nearly 90 percent were boys, at an average age of about 13, the CDC found.The report is being published this week in a CDC publication, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.CDC officials urged parents to be aware the fad exists, and to watch for possible warning signs like bloodshot eyes, marks on the neck, frequent and severe headaches, disorientation after spending time alone, and ropes, scarves or belts tied to bedroom furniture or doorknobs or found knotted on the floor.The authors acknowledged that 82 is probably an undercount. They could not rely on death certificates, which do not differentiate choking-game deaths from other unintentional strangulation deaths. Instead, they relied mainly on a news database that is large but doesn't include all media outlets.It's likely that there are about 100 U.S. choking game deaths each year, said Dr. Tom Andrew, New Hampshire's chief medical examiner, who has been studying the phenomenon for several years.Andrew said many coroners and medical examiners likely label the deaths as suicides because they don't have the time or resources to interview a victim's friends and look for alternate explanations.Many of the children who died form the choking game were described as bright, athletic students who apparently were intrigued by a method of getting high that doesn't involve drugs or alcohol, he said.Signs that a child may be engaging in the choking game include:
— Discussion of the game — including other terms used for it, such as "pass-out game’" or "space monkey"
— Bloodshot eyes
— Marks on the neck
— Severe headaches
— Disorientation after spending time alone
— Ropes, scarves and belts tied to bedroom furniture or doorknobs or found knotted on the floor — Unexplained presence of items such as dog leashes, choke collars and bungee cords
Click here for more injury prevention information from the CDC

As in the days of Noah.....

Pentagon Plans to Shoot Down Failing Satellite

WASHINGTON-U.S. officials say the Pentagon is planning to shoot down a broken spy satellite expected to hit the Earth in early March.The AP has learned that the option preferred by the Bush administration will be to fire a missile from a U.S. Navy cruiser, and shoot down the satellite before it enters Earth's atmosphere.The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the options will not be publicly discussed until a Pentagon briefing later Thursday.It is not known where on Earth the satellite will hit.But officials familiar with the situation said last week that about half of the 5,000-pound spacecraft is expected to survive its blazing descent through the atmosphere and will scatter debris-some of it potentially hazardous-over several hundred miles.The satellite is outfitted with thrusters, small engines used to position it in space, that contain the toxic rocket fuel hydrazine.Hydrazine can cause harm to anyone who contacts it.The satellite, known by its military designation US 193, was launched in December 2006. It lost power and its central computer failed almost immediately afterward, leaving it uncontrollable.It carried a sophisticated and secret imaging sensor.U.S. officials do not want this equipment to fall into the wrong hands."The Chinese and the Russians spend an enormous amount of time trying to steal American technology,"said John Pike, a defense and intelligence expert."To have our most sophisticated radar intelligence satellite-have big pieces of it fall into their hands-would not be our preferred outcome."Where it lands will be difficult to predict until the satellite descends to about 59 miles above the Earth and enters the atmosphere.It will then begin to burn up, with flares visible from the ground, said Ted Molczan, a Canadian satellite tracker. From that point on, he said, it will take about 30 minutes to fall.In the past 50 years,about 17,000 man-made objects have re-entered the Earth's atmosphere.The largest uncontrolled re-entry by a NASA spacecraft was Skylab,the 78-ton abandoned space station that fell from orbit in 1979.Its debris dropped harmlessly into the Indian Ocean and across a remote section of western Australia.In 2000, NASA engineers successfully directed a safe de-orbit of the 17-ton Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, using rockets aboard the satellite to bring it down in a remote part of the Pacific Ocean.In 2002, officials believe debris from a 7,000-pound science satellite smacked into the Earth's atmosphere and rained down over the Persian Gulf, a few thousand miles from where they first predicted it would plummet.Short-term exposure to hydrazine could cause coughing, irritated throat and lungs, convulsions, tremors or seizures, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Long-term exposure could damage the liver, kidney and reproductive organs.

As in the days of Noah....

Iran Bans 5 Web Sites for News Comments

TEHRAN,Iran-Iranian authorities banned five Web sites that comment on current events for "poisoning" public opinion ahead of the crucial mid-March parliamentary elections, the state radio reported on Thursday.The move came two days after Iran's hard-line constitutional watchdog reinstated more than 280 candidates, including 70 reformists, for the polls. Reformists have complained the reversal was insufficient to ensure a fair election.In the past, the authorities have occasionally closed down some of the hundreds of private Web sites that comment on Iranian news and politics.But this was the first time they closed down five at once-a reflection of growing tension ahead of the March vote.Even though the sites closed are thought to be either hardline or conservative, the move could also reflect an eagerness by the authorities to silence disparate voices to push through as critique- less a polling as possible.The radio said Tehran General Prosecutor, Saeed Mortazavi, ordered the ban because the Web sites were "poisoning the electoral sphere."It did not name any of the sites, but a report by Web site of state broadcasting company identified one of them as Nosazi, which in Farsi means Reconstruction. The site is considered hard-line and reflective of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's stance.Earlier in February, Nosazi criticized Hassan Khomeini, a grandson of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran, for his opposition to barring pro-democracy candidates from the election.Khomeini's name is revered across Iran and political factions or other groups rarely openly challenge members of his family, most of whom have stayed out of politics after his death in 1989. To say that the younger Khomeini was wrong can almost be considered taboo. Calls placed to Iranian officials related to the Web shutdown were not immediately returned on Thursday, due to the start of the Muslim weekend in Iran.The radio also said that two cultural advisers to Ahmadinejad denied any ties to Nosazi."Some accuse the government of having links with some Web sites. Any report on direct or indirect tie between the government and the Web sites is baseless," the advisers, Mahdi Kalhor and Ali Akbar Javanfekr, said in a statement.Last month, the Interior Ministry, run by hard-liners close to Ahmadinejad, disqualified more than 2,000 prospective candidates-most of them reformers-from running in the March elections. Tuesday's reinstating of hopefuls, including some reformists, for the parliament race, came after the Guardian Council, the country's top body in charge of the elections, run by hard-liners close to Ahmadinejad, reversed the interior ministry ban. Out of the initial 7,200 prospective candidates registered, some 5,300 now remain in the running, including those reinstated, according to ministry figures.The reinstating came amid growing criticism by both reformists and conservatives that a wide ban on eligible candidates would risk a low election turnout and undermine the polling.The disqualification was reminiscent of 2004, when the Council barred thousands of reformists from running in that year's parliament elections, allowing hard-liners to regain control of the 290-seat legislature.Reformists denounced the elections as a "historic fiasco."Key members of the council are hand-picked by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on all state matters.
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8UQ784G0&show_article=1
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PMO issues global terror warning

Following the assassination of Hizbullah arch-terrorist Imad Mughniyeh, the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) on Thursday issued a global terror warning to all Israeli citizens abroad.Earlier, in a recorded speech projected to participants in Mughniyeh's funeral, Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah warned that his organization would exact revenge against Israelis anywhere in the world for the death of its terror chief.According to the PMO warning, Israelis should avoid as much as possible being in large concentrations together overseas.Furthermore,the announcement reiterated existing warnings of possible international kidnapping plots against Israeli businessmen, particularly those engaged in business dealings with Arabs or Muslims.The PMO advised Israelis abroad to remain alert and to keep an eye open for anything unusual.Also on Thursday, the security establishment instructed Israeli embassies and Jewish institutions around the world to go on alert and the IDF raised its preparedness on its border with Lebanon, Gaza, and the West Bank.Mughniyeh was killed by a bomb that blew up his SUV late Tuesday night in Damascus.Many in the Arab world blamed Israel for the attack, but Israel has denied responsibility.

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Rice attacks ‘reprehensible’ Putin warnings

Condoleezza Rice, US secretary of state, on Wednesday highlighted the tense relations between Moscow and Washington when she hit out at Russia’s “reprehensible” rhetoric and said she would appoint a special energy co-ordinator for central Asia, a region dominated to date by Russian energy interests.Appearing at the Senate’s foreign relations committee, Ms Rice responded fiercely to questions about recent Russian behaviour, including President Vladimir Putin’s suggestion this week that Ukraine could be targeted with nuclear missiles and his warning of a new arms race with the west.“The unhelpful and, really, I will use a different word, reprehensible rhetoric that is coming out of Moscow is unacceptable,” Ms Rice said.Relations between Moscow and Washington have hardened in the wake of disputes over Russia’s objections to proposed US missile defence bases in Poland and the Czech Republic, as well as US concerns about what it sees as Mr Putin’s use of intimidation at home and abroad.But the US secretary of state emphasised that she believed the principal areas of difficulty related to the post-cold war map of Europe-on issues such as North Korea and Iran, the two countries co-operated much more closely.“The Soviet Union . . . is gone forever, and I hope that Russia understands that,” she said. “We are absolutely devoted to the independence and sovereignty of Ukraine and of other states that were once a part of the Soviet Union.”Ms Rice was prodded by Richard Lugar, the committee’s ranking Republican, to respond to Russian initiatives with countries such as Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Serbia and Bulgaria that seem to have cemented Moscow’s position as gas supplier to the rest of Europe.“I do intend to appoint, and we are looking for, a special energy co-ordinator who could especially spend time on the central Asian and Caspian region,”she replied.“It is a really important part of diplomacy.In fact,I think I would go so far as to say that some of the politics of energy is warping diplomacy in certain parts of the world.”Privately, many US officials complain that the European Union has not made a more effective attempt to build relations with the central Asian countries that provide Russia with an increasingly important part of its gas supply, or to forge a common policy on Russia.In other comments, Ms Rice said that the US and Nato’s development and counter-insurgency effort in Afghanistan, which has been widely criticised in recent weeks, was “not as good as it needs to be”. She emphasised the US’s call for other Nato countries to step up, both in providing troops and forging a more coherent development strategy.Joseph Biden, committee chairman, praised Ms Rice’s promise that an agreement to be negotiated with Iraq would contain no security guarantees.He had previously said that it could “bind” the next administration into a large troop presence in the country.

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