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ManilaBoy45

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UN Peacekeepers Seized in Syria Arrived Safe in Amman

Posted: 10 March 2013 0419 hrs

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AMMAN: The United Nations welcomed the release on Saturday of 21 Filipino peacekeepers, who had been seized by Syrian rebels on the Golan Heights, as they crossed to freedom in Jordan after a three-day ordeal.

Philippine authorities also expressed relief at the release of the members of the UN Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF).A Jordanian military official said the peacekeepers were greeted by border guards as they crossed from Syria in the afternoon and "underwent medical examinations."

They then boarded an army bus and were given a military escort to the east Amman headquarters of the armed forces where they were "handed over to the UN representative in Jordan, Costanza Farina, in the presence of the Philippines ambassador," the official added in a statement.An AFP correspondent said the peacekeepers were also greeted by Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh, government spokesman Samih Maaytah and Chief of Staff Mashaal al-Zebn.
 

ManilaBoy45

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The Philippines: PCG Provides Assistance to Distressed Chinese Bulker

Posted on Mar 6th, 2013

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The Philippine Coast Guard announced yesterday that a Chinese-owned bulk carrier is currently dead on waters after it encountered engine trouble just southwest of Tubbataha Reef along the vicinity off Sulu Sea in Palawan.

Commodore Enrico Efren Evangelista, Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) Palawan district commander said that his office received an urgent call from officials of the New Filipino Agencies Marine Inc. saying that M/V Tan An Ha, a Panamanian-registered cargo vessel and owned by Tan Ai Shipping based in Fujian, China is currently in a distress situation after its main engine conked out while sailing southwest of the Sulu Sea (Latitude 07° – 4.7°N/ Longitude 119 ° – 40°E).

Search and rescue vessel BRP-Pampanga, which is currently assisting on the salvage operations of the USS Guardian along Tubbataha Reef was dispatched to respond and render immediate assistance to crew of the said cargo vessel. The PCG assured the public that the area where the vessel is currently located is far from the Tubbataha Reef.
 
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bd popeye

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WARREN, Ohio (AP) — A sport utility vehicle carrying eight teenagers crashed into a guardrail Sunday morning and flipped over into a swampy pond in northeast Ohio, killing five boys and a girl, while two other boys escaped, the state highway patrol said.

The Honda Passport veered off the left side of a road, hit a guardrail and overturned just south of the city of Warren, about 60 miles east of Cleveland, Lt. Anne Ralston said. Investigators say it came to rest upside down in the swamp and sank with five of the victims trapped inside. A sixth who was thrown from the SUV during the crash was found under it when the vehicle was taken out of the water.

The two survivors escaped and ran to a nearby home to call 911, the highway patrol said.

Ralston didn't know where the teens were headed when the crash happened at about 7 a.m. She didn't have any information to release on possible causes or factors in the crash, but the highway patrol planned a news conference for Sunday night.

"All I know is my baby is gone," said Derrick Ray, who came to the crash site after viewing his 15-year-old son Daylan's body at the county morgue. He said he knew that his son, a talented football player who was looking forward to playing in high school, was out with friends, but didn't know their plans.

A pile of blue, green and copper-red stuffed bears grew at a makeshift memorial at the crash site along a two-lane road tightly bordered with guardrails on either side in an industrial area. The sport utility vehicle had sheared off tall cattails along the guardrail.

There were also notes at the memorial, including a letter from Daylan Ray's 12-year-old half-sister, Mariah Bryant, who said she had learned they were related only in the past year.

"It hurts, it really does, because they are so young and, like, they could have had so much more to life," she said. "We just really started getting close, and it's hard to believe he's gone."

Two of the teens, both 15, were brought to a hospital in full cardiac arrest, St. Joseph Health Center nursing supervisor Julie Gill said, and were pronounced dead there. She said they were treated for hypothermic drowning trauma, indicating they had been submerged in cold water.

The two who survived, 18-year-old Brian Henry and 15-year-old Asher Lewis, both of Warren, were treated for bruising and other injuries and released, she said.

All those killed were ages 14 to 19, authorities said. State police identified them as 19-year-old Alexis Cayson; Andrique Bennett, 14; Brandon Murray, 17; and Kirklan Behner, Ramone White and Ray, all 15. The Highway Patrol said Alexis was the only female in the vehicle. It wasn't clear who was driving.

Rickie Bowling, 18, a friend of Behner, sobbed at the crash scene as she recalled his playfulness and reputation as a cut-up.

"He was one of a kind," she said. "Everyone knew him in the neighborhood. In school, he always made everyone laugh."

Bowling said the tragedy highlighted the importance of savoring life. "Basically, enjoy every second in life," she said. "Enjoy life while you've got it and while you're here and enjoy people that you love."

She said she would rely on her faith in the difficult days ahead. "The only way to look at it is on the bright side: he's in a better place," she said.

Jasmine McClintock, 22, a friend of a victim, visited the crash scene and said it should serve as a warning for parents to be aware of their children's activities.

"I hope it's an eye-opener for parents," she said while watching the slow ripple of the pond water littered with debris, some apparently from the crash.

McClintock said she was troubled by the question of what the victims were doing out at that hour, not knowing if they had been out all night or left home early.

"That's the part that boggles my mind. It's like on a Sunday if you're not going to church, what are you doing at 7 a.m. out driving," she asked.

All eight were from Warren. It's not believed that any of them were closely related, the highway patrol said.

Near the Pennsylvania state line, Warren is a mostly blue-collar city that was hit by the decline of U.S. steel mills; it has more than 41,000 residents in the industrial Mahoning Valley region.
 

bd popeye

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PORT SAID, Egypt/CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian protesters torched buildings in Cairo and tried unsuccessfully to disrupt international shipping on the Suez Canal, as a court ruling on a deadly soccer riot stoked rage in a country beset by worsening security.

The ruling enraged residents of Port Said, at the northern entrance of the Suez Canal, by confirming the death sentences imposed on 21 local soccer fans for their role in the riot last year, when more than 70 people were killed.

But the court also angered rival fans in Cairo by acquitting a further 28 defendants whom they wanted punished, including seven members of the police force, reviled across society for its brutality under deposed autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

Security sources said two people, a man in his 30s and a young boy, had died in Cairo from the effects of tear gas and rubber bullets. A total of 65 people were injured.

Saturday's protests and violence underlined how Islamist President Mohamed Mursi is struggling - two years after Mubarak's overthrow - to maintain law and order at a time of economic and political crisis.

Islamist groups and parties backing Mursi warned against a looming security breakdown and called on their followers to form popular protection committees to guard the streets and public property should police fail to do so.

The presidency said in a statement that the protests had not been peaceful and condemned violence against property. The cabinet issued a similar statement and called on Egyptians to unite and respect court rulings.

On Thursday, Egypt's election committee scrapped a timetable under which voting for the lower house of parliament should have begun next month, following a court ruling that threw the entire polling process into confusion.

The stadium riot took place last year at the end of a match in Port Said between the local side Al-Masry and Cairo's Al-Ahly team. Spectators were crushed when panicked crowds tried to escape from the stadium after a pitch invasion by Al-Masry supporters. Others fell or were thrown from terraces.

DEATH BY HANGING

Judge Sobhy Abdel Maguid, listing the names of the 21 Al-Masry fans, said the Cairo court had confirmed "the death penalty by hanging". He also sentenced five more people to life imprisonment while others out of a total of 73 defendants received shorter terms.

In Cairo, local Al-Ahly fans vented their rage at the acquittals, setting fire to a police social club, the nearby offices of the Egyptian soccer federation and a branch of a fast food chain, sending smoke rising over the capital.

A military helicopter scooped up water from the nearby Nile and dropped it on the burning buildings.

"Ultra" fans, the section of Al-Ahly supporters responsible for much of the violence, said they expected retribution for those who had planned the Port Said "massacre".

"What is happening today in Cairo is the beginning of the anger. Wait for more if the remaining elements embroiled in this massacre are not revealed," the Ultras said in a statement.

In Port Said, where the army took over security in the city center from the police on Friday, about 2,000 residents who want the local fans spared execution blockaded ferries crossing the Suez Canal. Witnesses said youths also untied moored speedboats used to supply shipping on the waterway, hoping the boats would drift into the path of passing vessels.

Military police recovered five speedboats and brought them back to shore, but two were still drifting, one witness said.

Authorities controlling the Canal, an artery for global trade and major income source for the Egyptian government, said through traffic had not been affected. "The canal ... is safe and open to all ships passing through it," Suez Canal Authority spokesman Tarek Hassanein told the MENA news agency.

ISLAMIST BACKUP

Hazem Salah Abu Ismail, a popular Salafi preacher, condemned attempts by the opposition and youth groups to "burn the country down" as a pretext to create a power vacuum and bring back military rule.

"We will face any attempts by the opposition ... to bring back military rule. We have popular blocs to protect and guard," Ismail said.

The Salafi Al-Nour Party and the Gama'a al-Islamiyya, blamed for a spate of violence in Egypt in the 1990s, made similar statements, calling on their followers to replace the police force should it pull off the streets.

General Ahmed Wasfy, who heads the army division in Port Said rejected calls for a return to military rule. The military is in charge of security in Port Said and other canal cities.

"The Egyptian armed forces is a combat institution not a security institution. No one can imagine the army replacing the interior ministry," he was quoted on MENA as saying.

In a separate security threat, the Interior Ministry ordered police in the Sinai peninsula to raise their state of alert after receiving intelligence that jihadists might attack them, MENA reported.

Officials have expressed growing worries about security in the desert region, which borders Israel and is home to a number of tourist resorts.

Last Thursday, Bedouin gunmen briefly held the head of U.S. oil major ExxonMobil in Egypt and his wife. The Britons, who had been heading for a Sinai resort, were released unharmed.

General unrest is rife as Egypt's poor suffer badly from the economic crisis. Foreign currency reserves have slid to critically low levels and are now little more than a third of what they were in the last days of Mubarak.

The Egyptian pound has lost 14 percent against the dollar since the 2011 revolution and the budget deficit is soaring to unmanageable levels due to the cost of fuel and food subsidies.

(Additional reporting by Patrick Werr, Sylvia Westall and Yasmine Saleh, Writing by David Stamp; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Stephen Powell)
 

bd popeye

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Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, 76, from Argentina was elected as the Catholic Church's new pope Wednesday night. He is taking the name Francis. Thousands of Catholics gathered under umbrellas outside St. Peter's Basilica, eagerly listening to the church's 266th pontiff, who addressed the faithful from the balcony.

"As you know, the duty of the conclave was to appoint a bishop of Rome. It seems to me that my brother cardinals have chosen one who is from far away, but here I am," said Bergoglio, who is now the first pope from Latin America. He then recited the Lord's Prayer.

The new pope replaces Benedict XVI, whose surprise resignation last month prompted the 115 Roman Catholic cardinals to initiate a conclave, a Latin phrase meaning "with a key," to pick a new leader for the world's almost 2 billion Catholics.

Bergoglio, a Jesuit, is the first pope ever elected from Latin America, a region of the world with 480 million Catholics. He won the necessary two-thirds vote after only two days of the conclave. Bergoglio was archbishop of Buenos Aires, but stepped down last year. In 2010, he said allowing gay couples to adopt is a form of discrimination against children.

Several other candidates were considered front runners, including Cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson, who would have become the first African pope in modern times.

The new church leader takes over an organization many say is in crisis, from damaging allegations of internal squabbling to the cover-up and abetting of sexual abuse, though the latter issue came to light before Benedict's papacy.

Some sources say the Catholic Church in the U.S. has paid out as much as $3 billion to settle sexual abuse claims, though others estimate a billion less. At least eight U.S. Catholic dioceses declared bankruptcy protection. Benedict said in a 1998 U.S. visit that he was ashamed of the sex abuse scandal, and assured that the church would not allow pedophiles to become priests.

The Pope Emeritus also faced criticism for his role in overseeing the church's reaction to the sexual abuse crisis, as well as revelations from the "Vatileaks" incident. The pope's butler was implicated in the leaking of documents that included what Italian media first characterized as evidence of blackmail and disarray among church leaders regarding how to address growing concerns about money laundering.

Though Benedict basically dismissed those allegations as exaggerated, he remarked that the leaks and results of the ensuing investigation he commissioned had saddened him. Church outsiders have speculated that the results of Benedict's investigation may have led to his decision to resign from the papacy, a move unprecedented in six centuries.

The new pope will also face pressure to modernize the church on issues from reforming the clergy to allowing contraception. It's unclear if the cardinals will pick a pope who will change the church or a conservative leader who will remain dedicated to its current principals.
 

SteelBird

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BEIJING — Brother Number Three is dead.

In a “surreal moment” late last year, the 87-year-old Ieng Sary, watching his trial for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes from a holding cell out of the judges’ view as he lay on a bed because of his poor health, fell asleep as “wrenching testimony” was given against him, The Globe and Mail reported. His defense lawyer, Ang Udom, asked the court for an adjournment.

Hospitalized, declared mentally unfit, dying – the leaders of the Khmer Rouge are falling away before justice can be done, critics say.

Mr. Ieng Sary co-founded the Khmer Rouge with his brother-in-law, Pol Pot, the former foreign minister. His death on Thursday came as he was on trial in Phnom Penh in Case 002, the second case of the Cambodian and United Nations tribunal that is trying former leaders and high-level officials of the Khmer Rouge, according to widespread reports citing the tribunal spokesman, Lars Olsen.

Formally, the court, which began work in 2006, is known as the Extraordinary Chambers in the Court of Cambodia.

The death of Mr. Ieng Sary, who was hospitalized 10 days ago, according to media reports, highlighted the difficulties facing the court, which many said has moved too slowly amid very complicated politics, as this tweet suggested:
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
15 March 2013 Last updated at 05:10 ET
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North Korea says US 'behind hack attack'
North Korea has accused the US and its allies of attacks on its internet servers, amid tension on the peninsula.
KCNA news agency said the "intensive and persistent" attacks coincided with US-South Korea military drills.
Official sites such as KCNA, Air Koryo and Rodong Sinmun, the party newspaper, are reported to have been inaccessible on some occasions in recent days.
Tension has escalated in the wake of North Korea's third nuclear test last month.
The test led to fresh UN sanctions being imposed on Pyongyang, which has responded with strong rhetoric - both to the UN move and the annual joint drills, which it bitterly opposes.
It says it has scrapped the Korean War armistice and ended non-aggression pacts with Seoul. It has also cut off a hotline that connects the two countries.
The two Koreas remain technically at war because the 1950-53 conflict ended in an armistice, not a treaty. South Korea says North Korea cannot unilaterally dissolve the armistice and has called on Pyongyang to tone down its language.
North Korea called the cyber attack a "cowardly and despicable act".
"It is nobody's secret that the US and South Korean puppet regime are massively bolstering up cyber forces in a bid to intensify the subversive activities and sabotages against the DPRK [North Korea]," KCNA said.
Accusations of cyber attacks on the peninsula usually flow in the opposite direction, says the BBC's Lucy Williamson in Seoul.
South Korean intelligence sources say North Korea routinely attempts to access the network here, and Pyongyang is believed to have broken into Defence Ministry data at least once in the past few years, our correspondent adds.
The cause of the disruption remains unclear.
Current internet access in North Korea is extremely limited for locals, with most people only having access to a small number of state-run pages. The wider internet is available only to the government and the military.
* Whistles Dixie*
15 March 2013 Last updated at 05:58 ET
China confirms Li Keqiang as premier
China's leaders have named Li Keqiang premier, placing him at the helm of the world's second-largest economy.
Mr Li, who already holds the number two spot in the Communist Party, takes over from Wen Jiabao.
Mr Li was elected for a five-year term but, like his predecessor, would be expected to spend a decade in office.
On Thursday, Xi Jinping was confirmed by legislators as the new president, completing the transition of power from Hu Jintao.
Li Keqiang's widely-signalled elevation was confirmed by 3,000 legislators at the National People's Congress, the annual parliament session, in Beijing. He received 2,940 votes to three, with six abstentions.
As premier, he will oversee a large portfolio of domestic affairs, managing economic challenges, environmental woes and China's urbanisation drive.
The appointments seal the shift from one generation of leaders to the next. A raft of vice-premiers and state councillors will be named on Saturday, before the NPC closes on Sunday.
Mr Li, 57, who is seen as close to outgoing leader Hu Jintao, speaks fluent English and has a PhD in economics.
He has called for a more streamlined government, eliminating some ministries while boosting the size of others.
The son of a local official in Anhui province, he became China's youngest provincial governor when he was tasked to run Henan.
But his time there was marked by a scandal involving the spread of HIV through contaminated blood.
Mr Li is expected to end the NPC with a press conference on Sunday, given by Wen Jiabao in the past.
US envoys
On Thursday, Xi Jinping's move was approved by 2,952 votes to one, with three abstentions.
Hours later, US President Barack Obama called both to congratulate him and raise concerns over ongoing issues, including cyber hacking and North Korea.
"Both leaders agreed on the value of regular high-level engagement to expand co-operation and co-ordination," a White House statement said.
Mr Obama is sending both Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew and Secretary of State John Kerry to Beijing in coming days, in an apparent bid to reach out to the new administration.
In an editorial, state-run Global Times said Mr Xi and his colleagues needed to show powerful leadership to unite society.
"China cannot stop developing or fighting corruption. Social unity is the key to how China can stand against complex international affairs," it said.
Activist beaten
Meanwhile, prominent dissident Hu Jia said he was detained and beaten by police on Thursday after he criticised the election of Mr Xi.
"I criticised Xi and Li a lot during the party sessions on the fake election and they weren't happy with me," the well-known HIV/Aids activist told the BBC.
He said authorities were also angry because he had arranged meetings with Liu Xia, wife of jailed Chinese Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, who is under house arrest.
"Two state security members threw me into the air and I landed on my head," he said. "I was wearing a hat so the wound wasn't big but there was blood on my head."
He said they also turned him upside down on a chair, causing him to sprain his mid-section, but said police refused him treatment for his injuries.

March 15, 2013 NYT
China’s New Prime Minister Faces Test in Bolstering Economy
By CHRIS BUCKLEY
HONG KONG — China’s new prime minister, Li Keqiang, entered the job on Friday inheriting a wobbling economy that could distract his government from its bold vows to clean up pollution and harness expanding towns and cities as an engine for growth.

Mr. Li is the latest Communist Party leader whose promotion to a top government post was confirmed by the National People’s Congress, the party-run Parliament, which is finalizing a transfer of elite power started at a party meeting in November. He succeeds Wen Jiabao in a position that entails steering the economy and government operations through the State Council, or cabinet.

On Thursday, the nearly 3,000 compliant Parliament delegates installed the party chief Xi Jinping as president, succeeding Hu Jintao, and on Saturday they will appoint deputy prime ministers, ministers and other senior officials.

Mr. Li, 57, has already laid out a vision of economic uplift driven by urbanization. He gained a doctorate in economics from the Peking University, where he wrote about narrowing the urban-rural gulf. In the months leading up to his elevation as prime minister he has said that faster and sounder expansion of towns and cities will be a priority, and he told Parliament delegates that absorbing rural migrants into urban areas would require more spending.

“Meshing together urban and rural development means we must speed up social improvements, with a focus on welfare and livelihood needs,” Mr. Li said last week, according to the Xinhua news agency. “Government work and fiscal outlays must continue to be tilted towards livelihood needs,” he said, naming education, health care and housing as among those spending priorities.

Yet Mr. Li inherits economic hazards that could preoccupy his government and deter bold policy gambits. The hazards include an overheated property market that has defied government measures intended to tame price increases and make housing more affordable, worries about debts run up by local governments, and cautious lower-income consumers who remain reluctant to spend at the level many economists say is needed for healthy growth over the long term.

“I do think that there are some signs that, first of all, they recognize this is a new world, and the market economy or liberalization has given great successes but also great vulnerabilities,” said Yukon Huang, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, D.C., who studies the Chinese economy.

Mr. Li and his cohort believe China “needs a growth-driver in the next 5, 10, 15 years, because it can’t rely upon exports again and can’t rely on investment expansion for the sake of investment expansion,” said Mr. Huang, previously a World Bank country director for China.

Last year, China’s economy grew by 7.8 percent compared with a year earlier, the slowest pace since 1999. The property market has been a driver of that growth, but a recent sharp rise in prices has kindled jitters about a potential housing bubble. On March 1, Mr. Wen’s State Council took a parting jab at the sector, demanding that local governments enforce an earlier rule imposing a 20 percent tax on profits when people sell secondary homes.

Another prominent economic decision-maker in the new government will be the incoming deputy prime minister Wang Yang, a former party secretary of Guangdong Province in southern China who cast himself as a reformer willing to challenge entrenched privilege.

Lou Jiwei, the chairman and chief executive officer of the China Investment Corporation, a sovereign wealth fund, appears likely to become finance minister, according to several sources and news reports. He will oversee thorny issues like revamping taxation and dealing with debt-saddled local governments that complain of too many spending burdens.

The likely retention of Zhou Xiaochuan as head of the People’s Bank of China, or central bank, however, reflects the anxieties weighing on the new leadership, according to analysts. Mr. Zhou was dropped from the Party’s Central Committee — a council of senior officials — in November, and is 65 years old, an age when retirement becomes likely for officials of his rank. But he appears likely to keep his job for now, according to several sources who confirmed reports from Reuters and the South China Morning Post.

“I think that is an indication that they haven’t built up any successor,” said Joerg Wuttke, a former president of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China. “They don’t trust anybody else, maybe, to deal with a potential financial crisis.”

“They need an experienced old hand, and they can’t let him go,” he said.

Mr. Li grew up in rural Anhui Province and worked for years on one of the impoverished farm communes that Mao Zedong believed could deliver the communist equality and bountiful harvests. In late 1977, he won a place in prestigious Peking University, where he studied law before moving onto economics, and he retains a bookish demeanor and confident grasp of English. Like his mentor, Mr. Hu, he made his start up the leadership ladder in the Communist Party’s Youth League.

Mr. Wen left office dogged by unwelcome attention on his family, which was the subject of a New York Times report into its wealth, and lamenting that he “fell short in some tasks” to improve people’s lives. Mr. Li and his colleagues appear keen to avoid being tainted with the same accusations of frustrated promises, said Damien Ma, a researcher at the Paulson Institute, a center in Chicago focused on China-United States relations.

“They’ve got to show that they’re willing to act,” Mr. Ma said. “Before they felt that they could defer reforms, and they did.”

Mr. Li is scheduled to give his first news conference as prime minister on Sunday, after the end of the annual parliamentary session.

March 14, 2013
Seeking to Aid Rebels in Syria, France Urges End to Arms Embargo
By STEVEN ERLANGER
BRUSSELS — France, joining Britain, is urging its European Union partners to meet this month and end an arms embargo on Syria, to allow weapons to be sent to the opposition there.

“We want Europeans to lift the arms embargo,” President François Hollande of France told reporters as he arrived in Brussels for a European Union summit meeting.

Echoing earlier comments by his foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, Mr. Hollande said: “We are ready to support the rebellion, so we are ready to go this far. We must take our responsibilities.”

Mr. Hollande said that Britain and France were in agreement. “We cannot allow a people to be massacred by a regime that for now does not want a political transition,” he said.

The European Union pact on the embargo and on sanctions against Syria must be renewed every three months. France is moving for the next review to be held this month, rather than in May. “We have to go very fast,” Mr. Fabius said, urging that the union try to shift the balance of forces in Syria in favor of the opposition before many thousands more people die.

The rebels are clamoring for antiaircraft and antitank weapons. A European supply line could alter the dynamics of the two-year Syrian civil war, which is believed to have cost the lives of 70,000 people, without ending the Assad family’s decades of rule.

French and British officials have said that only once the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, understands that he is losing the battle will he agree to negotiate a political resolution with the opposition. And there is a sense that the Syrian Army is beginning to erode, offering a greater opportunity for change.

In February, the embargo was renewed despite British concerns, with Germany and Sweden especially arguing against escalating the civil war. But Britain did win agreement to relax the embargo to allow nonlethal but quasi-military aid, like armored vehicles. The issue is likely to come up in Brussels at the two-day meeting of European Union leaders, but their focus will be on the economy.

Mr. Hollande met separately with Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain before the summit meeting to discuss the Syria embargo, British officials said. The arms embargo is backfiring, one of the officials said. “It doesn’t stop those aiding Assad; it does stop E.U. countries and others helping those against whom Assad is waging a brutal and terrorizing war,” the official said.

Mr. Fabius warned that France and Britain might act unilaterally if their European partners disagreed. Asked on France Info radio whether the two would arm the opposition if there was no agreement, Mr. Fabius said only that France was “a sovereign state” and that the two countries would jointly act “to lift the embargo.”

“We cannot accept that this current lack of balance, with on one side Iran and Russia delivering arms to Bashar, and on the other rebels who cannot defend themselves,” Mr. Fabius said. “Lifting the embargo is one of the only ways that remain to change the situation politically.”

On Tuesday, Mr. Cameron said his nation would continue to adhere to the embargo for now, but that it might reconsider if its partners did not agree to lift the embargo. “It is not impossible that we’ll proceed the way we see fit,” he said.

Britain and France pushed for intervention in Libya, and France recently intervened in Mali without European Union agreement. But they seem to be lobbying their European Union colleagues rather than declaring independence of European Union consensus.

The French public has been shaken by the bloody, vicious and seemingly stalemated civil war in Syria, with which France has historical ties, and there are new concerns about the stability of Lebanon, as thousands of refugees continue to pour out of Syria.

The Syrian government threatened Thursday to launch attacks on Lebanese territory to stop Lebanese anti-Assad militants from entering Syria, demonstrating how difficult it has become for Lebanon to stay out of the war consuming its larger, closely connected neighbor. The threat — the most pointed warning yet to the Lebanese government, which is divided on the Syrian conflict — was delivered in a diplomatic note that Syria’s ambassador to Lebanon, Ali Abdul Karim Ali, presented to Lebanese authorities, Syria’s state news agency, SANA, reported.

At the same time, concerns are growing that the Lebanon-based militia Hezbollah, with Iran’s backing, is increasing its efforts to bolster the Assad forces. In a speech to a security gathering on Thursday, Israel’s chief of military intelligence asserted that Hezbollah was training a popular army in Syria that numbered 50,000 men, which Iran and Hezbollah could use to protect their Syrian interests if Mr. Assad fell.

“Iran and Hezbollah are both doing all in their power to assist Assad’s regime,” the intelligence chief, Maj. Gen. Aviv Kochavi, said at the annual Herzliya Conference in Israel. “They support Assad operationally on the ground, with strategic consultation, intelligence, weapons.” He added that the plan was to double the size of the popular army. Such numbers are impossible to confirm.

In a statement on Thursday, the British Foreign Office said that the international effort for a political solution in Syria “has little chance of gathering momentum unless the regime feels compelled to come to the negotiating table,” and added, “They need to feel that the balance on the ground has shifted against them.”

Referring to the arms embargo, the statement said, “We are not prepared to rule out any options to bring an end to the suffering of millions of innocent Syrians.”

British and French officials say they also sense that Washington’s strict opposition to helping the Syrian rebels militarily may be shifting in President Obama’s second term.

The new secretary of state, John Kerry, made his first overseas tour recently, with Syria as a prime topic, and his stops included Britain and France. After the visit, French officials said they found him sympathetic to their views. While Mr. Kerry repeated that the United States would not arm the rebels, the country has sent medical and humanitarian aid, and the C.I.A. has been covertly training rebel groups in Jordan since last year, according to American officials.

The United States has opposed sending ground-to-air and antitank missiles, even from other nations like Qatar and Saudi Arabia, out of concern that those weapons will fall into the hands of more radical Islamist fighters and could be used against other American allies, like Israel and Jordan.

On Thursday, Germany’s foreign minister, Guido Westerwelle, said in a statement that his nation was ready to discuss the issue. “If important partners in the European Union now think the situation has changed, and they think this makes it necessary to change the decisions on sanctions, we are, of course, prepared to discuss this in the E.U. immediately,” he said.

Isabel Kershner contributed reporting from Jerusalem, and Anne Barnard from Beirut, Lebanon.
I consider this From The Far Side
March 12, 2013 NYT
Venezuela: Panel Will Investigate Roots of Cancer That Killed Chávez
By WILLIAM NEUMAN
Venezuela will create a scientific panel to investigate the illness of Hugo Chávez, after an accusation by the interim president last week that the former president’s cancer was mysteriously caused by his enemies. “We have this intuition that our Commander Chávez was poisoned by dark forces that wanted to get rid of him to destroy the Bolivarian revolution and strike at Latin America and the Caribbean,” Nicolás Maduro, the interim president, said Monday night. Mr. Chávez, a charismatic leftist, died last week after 14 years in office. The government has refused to say what type of cancer Mr. Chávez had, but Mr. Maduro said that it had behaved in a very unusual way. Mr. Maduro said that the United States and other countries had developed programs in the 1940s and 1950s to experiment with intentionally causing cancer, but he added, “I’m not accusing the United States at this moment.” He did not say when the scientific panel would be created or who would be on it.

March 14, 2013 NYT
Party-Line Vote in Senate Panel for Ban on Assault Weapons
By JENNIFER STEINHAUER
WASHINGTON — The Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday approved a measure to reinstate a ban on assault weapons in the first major Congressional test of the issue since the law expired in 2004. But the ban remains unlikely to clear the full Senate.

Still, the committee’s passage of the bill, along with three other measures that previously cleared the panel, demonstrated momentum by lawmakers who have sought new gun regulations after the school shooting in Newtown, Conn.

Taken together, the votes show a willingness by lawmakers to confront the pro-gun lobby, which has stifled new gun limits for years. As recently as last year, it would have been unthinkable for these bills to have even been considered in a Senate committee.

But those measures — which include a ban on high-capacity magazines and enhanced background checks for gun buyers — will now be considered by the full Senate, where gun rights sentiments run far deeper than in the committee, to say nothing of the House, where members are even less avid to take up new gun curbs.

The renewal of the assault weapons ban, an earlier version of which was rejected by the full Congress in 2004, even with the tacit support of President George W. Bush, is almost certain to fail in the Senate, should Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, even allow it on the floor.

“The road is uphill. I fully understand that,” Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, the author of the bill, said after its passage by the committee. “My passion comes from what I’ve seen on the streets,” she said, adding, “I cannot get out of my mind trying to find the pulse in someone and putting my fingers in a bullet hole.”

Mr. Reid said on Thursday that he had talked with Senator Patrick J. Leahy, the Vermont Democrat who leads the committee, and had promised a vote on some type of bill that considers the committee’s actions, probably by mid-April.

While the plan has not been formulated, it will probably include a limited gun safety bill focused on stemming gun trafficking and enhancing background checks to compel states to better comply with laws on reporting records regarding criminals and mentally ill people. But even those measures will not have broad support, and 60 votes will be needed to cut off debate and move to a vote. Lawmakers will probably work with a measure passed by the committee last week that would make the already illegal practice of buying a gun for someone who is legally barred from having one — known as a straw purchase — a felony and increase penalties for the crime.

This week, the panel passed a measure that would expand the background checks to private gun sales, and another measure to renew a grant program to help schools improve security.

The background check bill is expected to be substituted or amended by its sponsor, Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, to attract the support of more Republicans. In theory, it is a measure that both parties can support, but it is ensnared over a debate over record-keeping that may undermine it on the floor.

The committee vote on Thursday to approve the assault weapons ban was 10 to 8, along party lines.

Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, offered amendments to the bill that would have created exemptions from the ban for female victims of violent crimes, those who had received a protection order, and residents near the Southwest border and in rural areas. Those amendments all failed.

In debating the bills, the committee laid bare the essence and emotions of the debate over how to prevent gun violence and the meaning of the Second Amendment, a fight that is likely to continue on the Senate floor.

The most testy exchange occurred between Ms. Feinstein and Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, who challenged Ms. Feinstein on her constitutional knowledge, asking her if she would apply regulations to the First and Fourth Amendments similar to those she was seeking on firearms ownership.

Ms. Feinstein, whose career has been shaded with episodes of gun violence, would not brook it. “I’m not a sixth grader,” she said. “I’m not a lawyer, but after 20 years I’ve been up close and personal with the Constitution. I have great respect for it.”

If the Senate passes even modest measures next month, they will face a steep climb in the House. “I’ve made it perfectly clear if the Senate passes a bill, we will be happy to review it,” Speaker John A. Boehner, Republican of Ohio, said in an interview on Thursday. “In the meantime, our committees are continuing to have hearings on this issue, continuing to look at our violent society and the causes of it and what we can do to reduce the incidents of violence in our society.”

President Obama has made an emphatic call for new gun regulations, but he so far has not spent extensive political capital on the effort. In visits to Capitol Hill to meet with lawmakers this week, the issue barely came up. “The Senate has now advanced legislation addressing three of the most important elements of my proposal to help reduce the epidemic of gun violence in this country,” he said in a statement.

Jonathan Weisman contributed reporting.
 

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The Last Jedi
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JOHANNESBURG March 15, 2013 (AP)




South African authorities say 24 people died when a bus veered off a road and rolled over.
The accident happened Friday morning near De Doorns, a town in a grape-growing region near Cape Town.
Keri Davids, a spokeswoman for the health department of the Western Cape provincial government, says the dead include 22 females and two males.
South African media say the passenger bus was heading to Cape Town when the driver lost control.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
AOL defence
WASHINGTON: Eric Harroun, an American Army veteran who reportedly joined al Nusra, an al Qaeda affiliate, may have been killed in Syria.

[BREAKING: We've just received a Facebook message from Harroun -- or at least someone claiming to be him and with access to his account -- saying that he is alive and that he is fighting for the (mostly secular) Free Syrian Army, not the jihadist al Nusra. We're investigating whether this is real or not: check back here for further updates as we learn more. We've changed our headline from his joining an al Qaeda affiliate to his joining the Syrian opposition, which would seem to be more broadly accurate given the claim that he is a member of the FSA.]

A graphic video depicting someone who resembles Eric Harroun, a convert to Sunni Islam who boasted of his Syrian exploits on his Facebook page, was posted on YouTube earlier today with the headline: "Terrorists, including American Extremist 'Eric Harroun', Have Been Terminated." [We are not linking to the video because it is so graphic.] The video bears the imprimatur of Syria Tube, a pro-government site.

UPDATE [March 15 10:40 a.m.]: The plot thickened when, after sending a Friend request to Harroun's Facebook page, I got a personal message from him claiming that he is not a member of Al Nusra, but a member of the mainline opposition group, the Free Syrian Army.

Here's what the person with access to his account said:

"Lol I was reported Dead! Show me the link. I never joined Al Nusra !!! I am FSA get it right."

The language used is similar to other postings on Harroun's Facebook page, but I can't claim to know whether it's him or not. The reasonable assumption is that it is him, given the very American usage, but we'll see.

The Pentagon could not confirm Harroun's death -- if it occurred. I contacted the State Department but the situation in Syria is so chaotic I don't expect a speedy response either for confirmation of his death or debunking it. We have tried to contact Harroun's father using several different means, including a Facebook message, but have not been successful yet.

The Pentagon confirmed that an "Eric Glenn Harroun served in the Army from October 2000 to May 2003." He rose to "Private First Class (PFC) before his discharge from the Army in May 2003. Due to Army policy we do not comment on the character of a Soldier's service (i.e.: honorable, dishonorable)," spokesman Air Force Lt. Col. Jack Miller said in an email.

Harroun repaired construction equipment as a member of the 568th Engineer Company (Combat Support Equipment) at Fort Riley, Kansas. "He did not have any overseas deployments. His awards include: National Defense Service Medal and Army Service Ribbon," Miller wrote. Those details are consistent with information on Harroun's Facebook page, which features photos of him cradling weapons.

The British Daily Mail ran a story two days ago about Harroun, saying he joined al Nusra and that he was discharged from the Army with full disability pay:

"He was injured while riding in a pickup truck that hit a tree and he now has a steel plate in his head," his father Darryl Harroun told Fox. 'Now he has mood swings and what-not,' he said. 'He was already suffering from depression before that, and the accident just kind of multiplied it[.]' [T]he elder Mr Harroun said he frequently talks to his son by phone. He said he doesn't agree with what Eric is doing but can't get him to stop."

Harroun joins the select group of Americans who have joined al Qaeda or its offshoots, with the most famous perhaps being al Awlaki. Most of them are dead or in jail. Brian Jenkins, the Rand Corp.'s respected expert on global terrorism wrote recently that "between 9/11 and the end of 2011, there were 96 cases involving 192 persons" involving Americans who joined Al Qaeda and its affiliates.

"The small numbers suggest that al Qaeda's ideology has gained little traction in America's Muslim communities," Jenkins wrote in an op-ed last year. "The cases offer no evidence of an organized jihadist underground, with the exception of a local effort to recruit young Somali men in Minneapolis. Decisions to join jihad are individual, not community driven."

Jenkins is probably right, but that can be little comfort to Harroun's family or to however many Army buddies his son might have had.

Breaking News Life Imitates Hollywood.
18 March 2013 Last updated at 09:32 ET
Canada prisoners in daring helicopter escape
Two inmates have made a daring escape from a prison in Canada by climbing up a rope into a hovering helicopter.
Officials at the St-Jerome prison, near Montreal, said the inmates fled at about 14:20 (18:20 GMT) on Sunday, triggering a massive manhunt.
Police later said they arrested one of the prisoners and two other men. The second escapee was detained several hours later.
The helicopter was also found, and the pilot is now being questioned.
The two inmates were identified as Benjamin Hudon-Barbeau, 36, and Danny Provencal, 33.
'Ready to die'
Both were reportedly injured during the escape from the prison, about 60km (40 miles) north-west of Montreal.
Before Hudon-Barbeau was re-arrested, he reportedly called local media outlets saying he was "ready to die".
"I don't want to hurt anyone. I just don't want to stay in prison, and I'm ready to die," a French-language Montreal radio station quoted him as saying.
Hudon-Barbeau was arrested in November on two firearms-related charges as part of an investigation into a double murder in Quebec, the Canadian Press agency cites a provincial police report as saying.
Public broadcaster Radio Canada said he had ties to the Hell's Angels motorcycle gang, which police have said is involved in alleged criminal and drug activities and organised crime.
Police said much of the action took place in the town of Chertsey.
Several hours later the second inmate surrendered peacefully after being tracked down by police.
Christa McGregor from the Correctional Service of Canada said Provencal was serving a sentence of more than seven years for various offences, CNN reports.
The helicopter - which was found some 85km away from the prison - was reportedly hijacked from a tour company.
Yves Galarneau, who oversees the St-Jerome jail, said he had never seen anything like the dramatic escape in more than three decades on the job.
"As far as I know, it's a first in Quebec,'' he told reporters at the scene. "It's exceptional."
The 480-prisoner St-Jerome facility was the scene of a small riot last month. Police had to use pepper spray to quell inmates.
CTV, a private television station, reports that such facilities in Quebec province are often overwhelmed at weekends when prisoners arrive to serve short sentences, which can lead to some overcrowding.

TE big man on Campus....
Explosives found at Orlando university campus
Authorities in the US state of Florida have evacuated hundreds of university students after finding explosives at the scene of an apparent suicide.
Police said they found improvised explosive devices and an assault weapon at a dorm in the University of Central Florida campus in Orlando.
They were called there after a fire alarm, and found a dead man with an apparently self-inflicted gun wound.
Some 500 students were evacuated, local media reported.
The university said in a statement on its website that all classes would be cancelled until midday on Monday as a precaution.
Spokesman Grant Heston said they did not believe there was any imminent threat to the campus.

March 18, 2013 NYT
Cyprus Delays Vote on Bailout Plan
By LIZ ALDERMAN and DAVID JOLLY
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Cyprus’s Parliament on Monday delayed an emergency vote on a bailout plan for the second time in as many days as President Nicos Anastasiades faced trouble rounding up support among lawmakers.

A vote was scheduled for Tuesday at 4 p.m. local time, the Parliament announced, although there was the possibility it could be delayed until Friday.

As global stock markets faltered and the euro fell against major currencies, the government said it would also keep Cypriot banks shuttered until at least Friday, well beyond a bank holiday that was supposed to end Monday. The move was aimed at staving off a possible bank run.

The main euro zone blue-chip stock index fell 1.5 percent in afternoon trading, less than the declines earlier in Asia, and Wall Street stocks opened down about 0.6 percent.

Mr. Anastasiades warned Sunday that a failure to pass the €10 billion, or $13 billion, deal could lead to a major shock, including “a complete collapse of the banking sector” and the possibility that the divided island nation would have to leave the euro altogether.

The bailout plan, worked out early Saturday in Brussels, brought a sharp backlash among Cypriots over a critical break with recent European tradition: For the first time since the onset of the euro zone sovereign debt crisis and the bailouts of Greece, Portugal and Ireland, ordinary depositors — including those with insured accounts — are being called on to bear part of the cost, €5.8 billion, through one-time levies on their savings.

The previous bailouts have been financed by taxpayers, and the new direction has raised fears that depositors in Spain or Italy, two countries that have struggled economically of late, might also take fright.

A crowd of protesters gathered in front of the presidential palace Monday, shouting angrily at Mr. Anastasiades and inveighing against Germany and European leaders as he entered the building to meet with his cabinet. “Merkel, U stole our life savings,” read one banner tied to a bus stop. “EU, who is next, Spain or Italy?” read another.

Cypriot political leaders were discussing revisions to the deal to make the levy more palatable to citizens and get the bailout through Parliament, including reducing the percentage to be paid by those with deposits of less than €100,000. Under the current plan, a one-time tax of 9.9 percent is to be levied on bank deposits of more than €100,000, with a 6.75 percent tax applied to smaller accounts.

The group of finance ministers from the 17 countries using the euro were on standby Monday for a possible teleconference later in the day to assess the outcome of discussions among party leaders in Cyprus.

Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the president of the group, had declined Saturday to rule out taxes on depositors in countries beyond Cyprus, although he said such a measure was not currently being considered.

A key question for the finance ministers was expected to be whether any revised formula could still deliver the €5.8 billion from depositors agreed to in the bailout deal. The plan, a so-called bail-in, also includes junior bondholders in Cypriot banks, and that component of the deal still was expected to bring in about €1.4 billion.

Russia’s support of the plan was also essential, because of the large amount of Russian funds held by Cypriot banks. But President Vladimir Putin on Monday described the bailout plan as “unfair, unprofessional and dangerous,” the Interfax news agency quoted a Kremlin spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, as saying.

Foreign deposits were €26.8 billion out of a total of €64.8 billion, as of December, €15.4 billion of which were deposits from Russians in Cyprus, according to the Regional Banking Association of Russia.

In Berlin, the German finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, sought to deflect criticism for the damage to depositors, saying the “levy on deposits below €100,000 was not the creation of the German government,” according to Reuters. “If one reached another solution, we would not have the slightest problem.”

Many analysts and economists insisted that Cyprus’s problems were unique and said they expected the fallout from the trauma there to be limited. They noted that Cyprus’s banks, whose assets dwarf the island’s gross domestic product, are holding tens of billions of euros in Russian deposits. That, in turn, raised fears in other euro zone nations that non-Cypriot taxpayers would be bailing out wealthy Russians, something that has not been a concern with other euro nations in distress.

Goldman Sachs analysts said that, assuming Parliament approved a deal, “the direct ramifications from Cyprus will likely be contained,” thanks partly to the European Central Bank’s commitment to back up euro zone banks.

“Unfortunately, the issue is not as simple as whether the Cypriot government supports the bailout,” analysts at DBS in Singapore wrote in a research note on Monday.

The financial markets, they added, are worried that the plans to force ordinary depositors to share the cost of the bailout “may send the wrong message on the safety of bank deposits in other E.U. nations, just when light appeared to be emerging at the end of the long tunnel for the peripheral nations.”

More broadly, analysts at Société Générale noted that the approach adopted over the Cyprus bailout also highlighted that there is still “no standard approach of tackling the euro debt crisis.”

In afternoon trading in Europe, the Euro Stoxx 50, a benchmark for euro zone blue chips, was down 1.5 percent. In London, the FTSE 100 index dropped 0.6 percent. Yields on Spanish and Italian government bonds rose, as investors sought the perceived safety of German and other bonds.

The euro fell against the dollar, dropping to $1.2951 from a close of $1.3074 on Friday. The decline took the currency to its weakest level since late last year. Cyprus’s markets were closed for a bank holiday, and officials have suggested they might extend the holiday for a second day Tuesday.

In Asian trading, the Nikkei 225-stock average tumbled 2.7 percent in Tokyo, while the Sydney benchmark Australia, the S.&P./ASX 200 index, closed 2.1 percent lower. The Hang Seng index in Hong Kong fell 2 percent.

David Jolly reported from Paris. James Kanter in Brussels, Bettina Wassener in Hong Kong and Andreas Riris in Nicosia contributed reporting.

March 17, 2013
Terror Haven in Mali Feared After French Leave
By ERIC SCHMITT
NEMA, Mauritania — With France planning to start withdrawing its troops from Mali next month, Western and African officials are increasingly concerned that the African soldiers who will be relied on to continue the campaign against militants linked to Al Qaeda there do not have the training or equipment for the job.

The heaviest fighting so far, which has driven the militants out of the towns and cities of northeastern Mali, has been borne by French and Chadian forces, more or less alone. Those forces are now mostly conducting patrols in the north, while troops sent by Mali’s other regional allies, including Nigeria and Senegal, have been slow to arrive and have focused on peacekeeping rather than combat, prompting grumbles from Chad’s president, Idriss Déby Itno.

The outcome of the fighting in Mali carries major implications not only for France, but also for the Obama administration, which is worried that Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and other militant groups could retain a smaller but enduring haven in remote mountain redoubts in the Malian desert.

To help the French, the United States began flying unarmed surveillance drones over the region last month from a new base in Niger. And the administration has spent more than $550 million over the past four years to help train and equip West African armies to fight militants so that the Pentagon would not have to. But critics contend that the United States seems to have little to show for that effort.

Turning Mali’s own fractured army into a cohesive and effective force would entail “a huge amount of work,” according to Brig. Gen. Francois Lecointre of France, who is leading the effort to retrain Mali’s Army. As if to underscore the point, a group of Malian troops briefly abandoned their posts recently and fired shots in the air to demand a deployment bonus.

Here in the southeastern corner of Mauritania, about 100 miles from the border with Mali, an exercise conducted this month by the United States military to train African armies to foil ambushes, raid militant hide-outs and win over local populations offered the administration more reasons for worry, as well as some encouraging signs.

The exercise offered a rare glimpse into the strengths and weaknesses of several of the African armies that are poised to help take over the mission in Mali. In a few weeks, the United Nations Security Council is expected to decide whether to authorize a peacekeeping force for Mali and how to compose it.

“It’s possible these troops would go to Mali,” said Lt. Col. M. Dieye of Senegal, commander of a platoon of special forces soldiers who took part. His nation, like Chad, Niger, Burkina Faso and Nigeria, joined the exercise and have also sent troops to Mali. “Now we’ve worked together with other African troops, like we would in Mali,” he said.

The French-led operation in Mali has killed scores of militants and destroyed many weapons caches, and France has said it will not withdraw until the threat from the militants is vastly diminished. Even so, some Western officials say the African troops in Mali will be up against guerrilla fighters with far more experience in desert warfare than they have.

“No amount of exercise or training in the next couple weeks or months can, in itself, prepare African forces for their new role in Mali,” said Benjamin P. Nickels, a counterterrorism specialist at the National Defense University’s Africa Center for Strategic Studies in Washington. “An ongoing commitment will be required.”

France has already delayed its withdrawal by at least a month, amid fierce fighting against a major militant stronghold. The French had some 1,200 soldiers in that battle; along with 800 troops from Chad, they have been focusing their efforts on a 15-mile zone in the Adrar des Ifoghas, the rocky, barren mountains near Mali’s border with Algeria.

The French are likely to maintain a small counterterrorism force in Mali after withdrawing most of their 4,000 troops from the country, diplomats say. The bulk of the peacekeeping duties will shift to African troops, with the growing likelihood that they will operate under a United Nations mandate.

But in a sign that Western officials are worried about whether the Africans will be up to the task, some diplomats are suggesting that the United Nations approve a heavily armed rapid-response force of up to 10,000 troops to ward off any resurgent Islamist threat in Mali. Chad, which has 2,200 soldiers in Mali and decades of experience in desert warfare, would probably supply the core of any peacekeeping mission.

The United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, is expected to submit his peacekeeping recommendations to the Security Council by the end of March, and diplomats anticipate a vote as early as mid-April.

Mali’s own army, which toppled the country’s civilian government early last year, is “very much underequipped,” said General Lecointre, who is leading the European Union mission to retrain the Malian troops beginning April 2. “It is the army of a very poor country.”

When the militants took advantage of the chaos caused by the coup to seize the northern half of the country, some Malian soldiers defected to the rebels and others fled rather than confront them. Malian soldiers who joined with French troops in January to reclaim three main northern cities from the militants have been accused in recent weeks of committing atrocities, including summary executions of suspected insurgents.

Against this backdrop, the American-led training exercise that concluded here on March 9 took on greater significance, even though it was not specifically designed to address the conflict in Mali. Annual exercises that the Pentagon calls Flintlock have been staged in northwest Africa since 2006; last year’s installment was scheduled to be held in Mali, but it was but was canceled because of the coup.

This year, more than 600 African troops and 400 Western trainers and support personnel, including about 250 Americans, trained at this dusty crossroads town, as well as in two other major towns in southern Mauritania, Kiffa and Ayoun.

For three weeks in temperatures soaring well above 100 degrees, African soldiers in groups of a dozen to two dozen teamed up with advisers from the United States or NATO allies like Spain, Italy, France or the Netherlands to practice marksmanship, patrol harsh desert terrain and resupply those patrols with airdrops.

“You have to able to shoot, you have to able to move, you have to be able to communicate, but most importantly, you have to be able to think,” said Col. George Bristol of the Marine Corps, the senior American Special Operations officer on the ground during the exercise.

If the daily training honed the Africans’ tactical skills, it also revealed weaknesses that insurgents could exploit, Western advisers said. Most African armies are small, with little money to buy modern gear, to train regularly or to set up systems to provide spare parts when equipment breaks down.

The African troops here learned to improvise with materials at hand. During one airdrop, for instance, Mauritanian soldiers used a large plastic tarpaulin as a makeshift parachute to successfully deliver supplies from a small propeller-driven airplane.

“We don’t need them to be as good as us, just better than the bad guys,” said one American officer who, under the ground rules for the exercise, would not be identified.

The training scenarios emphasized teamwork. In clear, searing weather one late afternoon, about two dozen troops in khaki camouflage uniforms, members of Mauritania’s presidential security platoon, gathered near some trees at one end of a small windswept valley. Suddenly, half the Mauritanians raced forward across open ground, firing their AK-47 rifles, while the others stayed back to provide covering fire. Then the roles reversed. Their objective was a mock militant encampment a few hundred yards down the valley, designated by several paper targets.

From a ridge above, Senegalese special forces soldiers also opened fire on the enemy camp, which in an actual raid would be intended to draw the militants’ attention away from the Mauritanians.

“Good sustained, controlled fire,” Colonel Bristol said after watching the maneuvers from a rocky hilltop.

For Mauritania, a vast, parched nation of about three million people at the western end of the Sahara that straddles the divide between largely Arab North Africa and black West Africa, playing host to this year’s exercise underscored its commitment to combat Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, diplomats and commanders said.

Since 2005, Qaeda fighters have kidnapped and murdered Western tourists, aid workers and Mauritanian soldiers in the country, and have attacked foreign diplomatic missions in Nouakchott, Mauritania’s oceanside capital.

The Mauritanian military, which has staged two coups since 2005, says it is vying with militants for the trust of the country’s civilian population. “Their main strength is their ability to lock in with local populations, spread out, and make it very hard to be pinpointed,” said Col. Mohamed Cheikh Ould Boyde, the senior Mauritanian officer during the exercise, who has trained in France, Tunisia and the United States.

“One of our biggest challenges,” the colonel added, “is separating the corn from the husk, so you can target the right people.”

March 18, 2013
Pakistani Militants Kill 4 in Attack on Court Complex
By DECLAN WALSH
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Militants stormed a court complex in northwestern Pakistan on Monday, killing 4 people and injuring at least 30 people, including a judge, in the latest assault on government authority in the region.

The attack at the court complex in Peshawar, the regional capital, triggered a fierce gun battle with the security forces during which the militants briefly held hostages, according to the provincial information minister, Mian Iftikhar Hussain.

The militants may have been seeking to free fellow extremists who were being held on the court complex, Mr. Hussain said.

The police shot dead one suicide bomber at the court gates before he could detonate his vest, said Jawed Marwat, a senior city official.

But a second bomber managed to enter a courtroom and set off his explosives, killing at least two court officials. The female presiding judge, Kulsoom Afridi, was in her chambers at the time of the attack, but also sustained serious injuries.

Television footage showed terrified people fleeing the court complex during the attack. Judges, court officials and members of the public took refuge in the court basement, locking the doors from the inside, said one court official.

Afterward, police investigators collected body parts and forensic evidence from the destroyed courtroom.

No group claimed responsibility for the attack. Peshawar has suffered numerous attacks by militants in recent years, both from the Pakistani Taliban and associated extremist groups who hold sway in the nearby tribal belt.

Some security officials disagreed with the theory that the attackers were seeking to free prisoners. “There was no court hearing of any terror suspect, so it is difficult to imagine the terrorists would have come to target either a judge or to rescue their colleagues,” said one investigator, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The attack came two days after Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf dissolved Parliament to make way for elections due to take by place by mid-May. The Pakistani Taliban has vowed to disrupt the poll by targeting secular and liberal parties.

Last December a Taliban suicide bomber killed Bashir Ahmed Bilour, a senior politician with the Awami National Party, a Pashtun nationalist party that controls Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Hundreds of party activists and supporters have been killed in Taliban attacks since it assumed power in 2008.

Ismail Khan contributed reporting from Peshawar, Pakistan.
 
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