Thursday, March 27, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Japanese PM to meet Bush in summit

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Japanese PM to meet Bush in summit

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-26 09:54

TOKYO - Less than a year ago, Japan's then-Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi swept into a summit in the United States at the height of his
popularity, even making a side trip to Graceland where he won over his
hosts with an Elvis Presley impersonation.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe delivers a speech on 22 April 2007.
[AP]

The summit this week between US President Bush and Japan's new prime
minister, Shinzo Abe, will be a much more sedate affair - for good
reasons on both sides of the Pacific.

Since taking office last September, Abe's government has gone from mishap
to mishap, with a support rating to show for it. He took office with more
than 70 percent approval, a rating which has nose-dived to about 40
percent just a few months before crucial elections in the upper house of
parliament.

The nationalist prime minister also faces criticism in the United States
over his opposition to a resolution in Congress that calls on Japan to
voice an unequivocal apology for women forced into sexual slavery by
Tokyo during World War II.

Meanwhile, the spiraling violence in Iraq has tarnished the Bush
administration and detracted from the boost Japanese leaders have
traditionally enjoyed when meeting with the leader of Tokyo's top ally.

"The times are different from Koizumi. I do not think there will be any
domestic political gains by putting on display a cozy relationship with
Bush," said Jiro Yamaguchi, political scientist at Hokkaido University.

Despite that baggage, the summit takes place during one of the warmest
periods between Tokyo and Washington since the end of World War II.

The two allies are working side-by-side on building a ballistic missile
defense system, pushing North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons
program and increasing overall military cooperation to unprecedented
levels. Japan's Cabinet on Tuesday renewed its logistical support for
troops in Afghanistan.

In October, a month after taking office, Abe broke with tradition by
making China rather than the United States his first summit stop in an
attempt to prevent a deterioration in ties with Beijing - a move that was
supported by Washington. The two leaders met for the first time in
November on the sidelines of a Pacific Rim summit in Vietnam.

The prime minister this week pointed to that as a sign that the two
allies have solid confidence in their relationship.

"The alliance between Japan and the United States is moving toward
maturity," Abe said in an interview with Japanese media. "It is no longer
an age where we need to make an immediate visit to the United States
after the establishment of a new government."

Indeed, Bush is expected to offer a warm welcome to Abe, whose country
was a vocal supporter of the Iraq invasion and sent non-combat troops to
the southern part of the country - Japan's first dispatch to a country at
war since 1945.

Abe was to visit Arlington National Cemetery and attend a dinner at the
White House on Thursday, and meet with Bush at Camp David on Friday,
before heading off on a tour of the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia.

High on the agenda in the US will be the two allies' evolving military
relationship. Abe is pushing to change the interpretation of Japan's
pacifist constitution to allow greater integration with Washington's
armed forces.

The summit, however, also comes as the US is floating the idea that Japan
should boost military spending to pay for items such as missile defense.
Tokyo currently limits defense outlays to 1 percent of gross domestic
product.

US Ambassador Thomas Schieffer pointed out to reporters at his residence
last month that the US spends 4 percent of GDP on defense.

"Part of that 4 percent allows us to provide for the defense of Japan,"
he said. "There are a lot of things that could be done out here that
might bump them up against the unofficial 1 percent cap in their defense
budget."

The comfort women issue has also sapped some of the glamour of the trip.

Abe sparked a furor in March when he said there was no evidence the
Japanese military coerced thousands of women into sexual slavery during
World War II, despite a 1993 statement by the then-government spokesman
acknowledging the practice.

Abe attempted to defuse the controversy by declaring his adherence to the
1993 apology, but he was still facing questions about it just days before
his departure for the US.

"I have already conveyed my views to President Bush over the phone. As an
individual and as the prime minister, I would like to express my sincere
sympathy for the circumstances that the comfort women were placed in at
the time," Abe said in an interview this week.

Abe's political future is also uncertain. With his popularity flagging,
his ruling Liberal Democratic Party faces the prospect of losing seats in
the upper house elections in July. Serious losses in the chamber, where
the LDP dominates only with the help of coalition partner the New Komei
Party, could damage Abe and prompt the party to look for successors.

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Learn Chinese online - Va. Tech gunman sent material to NBC

WORLD / America

Va. Tech gunman sent material to NBC

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-19 06:07

This video frame grab image taken from a video aired by NBC News on
Wednesday, April 18, 2007 shows Virginia Tech gunman Cho Seung-Hui. The
video was part of a package allegedly mailed to the network on Monday,
April 16 between Cho's first and second shootings on the Virginia Tech
campus. [AP/NBC]

BLACKSBURG, Va. - Between his first and second bursts of gunfire, the
Virginia Tech gunman mailed a package to NBC News containing pictures of
him brandishing weapons and video of him delivering a diatribe about
getting even with rich people.

Special coverage:
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"This may be a very new, critical component of this investigation. We're
in the process right now of attempting to analyze and evaluate its
worth," said Col. Steve Flaherty, superintendent of Virginia State
Police. He gave no details on the material, which NBC said it received in
Wednesday morning's mail.

NBC said that a time stamp on the package indicated the material was
mailed in the two-hour window between the first burst of gunfire in a
high-rise dormitory and the second fusillade, at a classroom building.
Thirty-three people died in the rampage, including the gunman,
23-year-old student Cho Seung-Hui, who committed suicide.

The package included a manifesto that "rants against rich people and
warns that he wants to get even," according to a law enforcement official
who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he
was not authorized to speak about the case.

MSNBC said the package included a CD-ROM on which Cho read his manifesto.

Late Wednesday, MSNBC showed a photo from the package of Cho glaring at
the camera, his arms outstretched with a gun in each hand. He wears a
khaki-colored military-style vest, fingerless gloves and a backwards,
black baseball cap. "NBC Nightly News" planned to show some of the
material Wednesday night.

NBC News President Steve Capus said the network promptly turned the
material over to the

FBI in New York.

Chinese President sends condolence:
President Hu Jintao yesterday extended his condolences to US President
George W. Bush over Monday's mass shooting at a university in the state
of Virginia.

In a message to Bush, Hu said he was shocked to learn about the tragedy.

"At this sorrowful moment, on behalf of the Chinese government and the
people, I would like to express deep sympathy and sincere consolation to
your excellency, the US government and people," Hu said in the message
made public by the Foreign Ministry.

Hu also offered condolences to families of the victims and wished the
injured a speedy recovery.

The material is "hard-to-follow ... disturbing, very disturbing very
angry, profanity-laced," he said on the MSNBC Web site. Among the
materials are digital video files showing Cho talking directly to the
camera about his hatred of the wealthy, Capus said.

It does not include any images of the shootings, but contains "vague
references," including "things like, `This didn't have to happen,'" Capus
said.

The package bore a Postal Service stamp showing that it had been received
at a Virginia post office at 9:01 a.m. Monday, about an hour and 45
minutes after Cho first opened fire, according to MSNBC.

If the package was indeed mailed between the first attack and the second,
that would help explain where Cho was and what he did during that
two-hour window.

Earlier in the day Wednesday, authorities disclosed that more than a year
before the massacre, Cho was accused of stalking two women and was taken
to a psychiatric hospital on a magistrate's orders because of fears he
might be suicidal. He was later released with orders to undergo
outpatient treatment.

The disclosure added to the rapidly growing list of warning signs that
appeared well before the student opened fire. Among other things, Cho's
twisted, violence-filled writings and sullen, vacant-eyed demeanor had
disturbed professors and students so much that he was removed from one
English class and was repeatedly urged to get counseling.

In November and December 2005, two women complained to campus police that
they had received calls and computer messages from Cho, but they
considered the messages "annoying," not threatening, and neither pressed
charges, Virginia Tech Police Chief Wendell Flinchum said.

Neither woman was among the victims in the massacre, police said.

1 2 

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Learn Mandarin online - China hopes to see dispute over DPRK's funds resolved

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

China hopes to see dispute over DPRK's funds resolved

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-17 19:30

BEIJING - China said Tuesday it hoped that a dispute over North Korean
funds frozen in a Macau bank could be resolved and progress made on the
dismantling of Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program.

The North missed a deadline Saturday under a February agreement to shut
down and seal its nuclear reactor, which can produce fuel for nuclear
weapons. It said Friday that it was waiting to confirm its US$25 million
(euro18.6 million) in funds had been freed before it would make any move.

"The DPRK side still needs confirmation on the relevant questions"
concerning the financial issue, said Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu
Jianchao at a regular briefing, using the official name of the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea.

Washington and Macau authorities said earlier last week the funds were
free for withdrawal, but Liu said "there are still some specifics the
relevant countries are concerned about that need to be further clarified
and confirmed."

He did not give details.

The North's Foreign Ministry had said in a statement last week that a
North Korean "financial institution concerned will confirm soon whether
the measure is valid," but did not offer a timeline for the confirmation.

Liu said, however, that the views of the parties involved in the dispute
- the US, North Korea and Macau - were "coming closer," and that Beijing
hoped it would be quickly resolved.

Liu's remarks come days after China asked the United States for patience
during the nuclear talks. US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher
Hill, the top US nuclear negotiator, said over the weekend Washington was
prepared to wait a "few more days," but urged North Korea to fulfill its
promise to shut its reactor and allow nuclear inspectors back into the
country.

In exchange Pyongyang will get economic aid and political concessions.

North Korea tested a nuclear bomb in October.

South Korean news reports Tuesday said North Korea may be preparing to
shut down its main nuclear reactor, renewing hope Pyongyang will comply
with the disarmament agreement.

Yonhap news agency said the Yongbyon reactor remained in operation
Tuesday, but there was a high possibility that movement of cars and
people at the site recorded in satellite photos could be linked to a
shutdown. Yonhap cited an unnamed intelligence official in the report.

Top World News 

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Today's Top News 

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Learn Chinese - British military personnel arrive home

WORLD / British Sailors Freed

British military personnel arrive home

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-04-05 21:00

Some of the 15 British military personnel freed by Iran are seen on the
tarmac at Heathrow airport in London April 5, 2007. The 15 British
military personnel freed by Iran after a two-week diplomatic stand-off
arrived back in England on Thursday to cheers and to questions about the
incident and its implications. [Reuters]

1 2 3 4 5 6 

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� Bombers strike at Iraqi army, civilians

� Putin firm in final union address

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Today's Top News 

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� Yang a popular choice as FM

� Hu, Lien stress cross-Straits peace

� US captures senior Al-Qaida operative

� Yang Jiechi named new FM, replacing Li Zhaoxing

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Learn mandarin - Beckham wins Sport Industry award

Sports / Soccer

Beckham wins Sport Industry award

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-03-30 09:47

Soccer player David Beckham and his wife Victoria arrive for the Sport
Industry Awards 2007 at Old Billingsgate in central London March 29,
2007. The annual industry awards celebrates commercial achievement in
British sport.[Reuters]

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

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� Gerrard rested as Liverpool eye Champions League

Today's Top News 

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� Hu, Lien stress cross-Straits peace

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� Yang Jiechi named new FM, replacing Li Zhaoxing

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Learn mandarin - Smugglers toss Africa migrants overboard

WORLD / Africa

Smugglers toss Africa migrants overboard

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-27 13:35

SAN`A, Yemen - Smugglers taking illegal migrants from Somalia to Yemen
forced hundreds of Africans overboard in stormy seas in an effort to make
a fast getaway from security forces, officials said Monday. Thirty-one
bodies have been found and nearly 90 people remained missing.

A general view shows the bay of Yemen's southern port of Aden, in 2006.
[Agencies]

Passengers who resisted the smugglers were stabbed or beaten with wooden
and steel clubs, then thrown into the water where some were attacked by
sharks, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees said, citing survivors.

"Several recovered bodies showed signs of severe mutilation," UNHCR said.
"Survivors also reported that several Ethiopian women and at least one
Somali were raped and abused by the smugglers during the voyage from
Bosaso in Somalia's Puntland region. Survivors also alleged that some
Yemeni security forces confiscated their money once they reached shore."

Yemeni officials said several boats were involved in Thursday's incident.
The dead and missing came from a single wooden boat that was carrying
around 120 people, said an official from the local government in coastal
Shabwa province.

Eight bodies were found Thursday, and another 23 were taken out of water
over the past couple of days, said the official, who spoke on condition
of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the press.

Another 450 people forced out of other boats at the same time have been
rescued, he said. The UNHCR put the number of dead at 29, with 71 missing.

It was the latest case of smuggler brutality involving boats carrying
people across the Gulf of Aden from Somalia and the Horn of Africa. It
brings the total number of dead and missing among people trying to reach
Yemen so far this year to 264.

"We are horrified by this latest tragedy," said Erika Feller, the UNHCR's
assistant high commissioner for protection.

The victims are people "who are desperate to escape persecution, violence
and poverty in the Horn of Africa," she said.

A similar incident occurred on Saturday, when smugglers forced 140 people
into the water elsewhere along the coast. All the migrants were believed
to have been rescued, Yemeni officials said. Two other boats carrying 330
Somalis and Ethiopians arrived in Yemen on Saturday, but no casualties
were reported, the UNHCR said.

Since January 2006 at least 30,000 people have fled violence and hardship
in Somalia and Ethiopia for Yemen, according to UNHCR. About 500 people
have died and at least 300 are missing and believed dead.

Out of 88,000 registered refugees in Yemen, about 84,000 are Somali,
UNHCR said.

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� Abe apologises for WW2 sex slaves

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Free Chinese Lesson - N.Korea nuke talks may take to recess

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

N.Korea nuke talks may take to recess

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-22 14:05

BEIJING - Talks on North Korea's nuclear program - which have dragged on
this week with little success - will likely take a recess, an official
close to the talks said Thursday.

US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, right, walks through a
hotel lobby with Victor Cha, the US National Security Council's director
for Asian Affairs, before heading to six-party talks on North Korea's
nuclear program, in Beijing Thursday March 22, 2007. [AP]

Special coverage:
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The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity
of the talks, said there was a "high possibility" the negotiations will
recess because some delegations have to leave Beijing.

The six-party talks were to have ended Wednesday, but were extended after
Pyongyang refused to take part for two days because of problems over the
transfer of North Korean funds in Macau bank.

South Korea's Yonhap news agency said North Korea's chief nuclear envoy
Kim Kye Gwan was likely leave Beijing later on Thursday.

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Learn Mandarin online - Senate GOP turns back Iraq pullout plan

WORLD / Middle East

Senate GOP turns back Iraq pullout plan

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-16 09:05

WASHINGTON - Democrats aggressively challenged President Bush's Iraq
policy at both ends of the Capitol on Thursday, gaining House committee
approval for a troop withdrawal deadline of Sept. 1, 2008, but suffering
defeat in the Senate on a less sweeping plan to end US participation in
the war.

Senate Republicans hold a news conference in Washington Thursday, March
15, 2007, following a series votes on Iraq. Left to right are Sen. Jon
Kyl, R-Ariz., and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. [AP]

Anti-war Democrats prevailed on a near-party line vote of 36-28 in the
House Appropriations Committee, brushing aside a week-old veto threat
from the administration and overcoming unyielding opposition from
Republicans.

"I want this war to end. I don't want to go to any more funerals," said
New York Rep. Rep. Jose Serrano , one of several liberal Democrats who
have pledged their support for the legislation despite preferring a
faster end to the war.

"Nobody wants our troops out of Iraq more than I do," countered Rep. C.W.
Bill Young of Florida, who sought unsuccessfully to scuttle the timeline
for a troop withdrawal. "But we can't afford to turn over Iraq to
al-Qaida."

In the Senate, after weeks of skirmishing, Republicans easily turned back
Democratic legislation requiring a troop withdrawal to begin within 120
days. The measure set no fixed deadline for completion of the
redeployment, but set a goal of March 31, 2008. The vote was 50-48
against the measure, 12 short of the 60 needed for passage.

Senate Democrats promptly said they would try again to force a change in
Bush's policy beginning next week when they begin work on legislation
providing money for the war in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The developments coincided with the traditional St. Patrick's Day
luncheon in the Capitol, an annual social event hosted by the speaker of
the House and attended by the president. For an hour or so, while
lawmakers were debating the war, Bush and the leader of the political
opposition, Speaker Nancy Pelosi , were seated near one another in an
ornate hall not far from the Capitol Rotunda.

If they discussed the war, which has so far claimed the lives of more
than 3,200 US troops, there was no evidence of it.

The day's votes in Congress underscored the extraordinary, unpredictable
wartime clash between commander in chief and lawmakers.

In the House, only one committee Democrat, liberal Rep. Barbara Lee of
California, voted against her party's plan, saying it did not go far
enough. "I believe the American people sent a mandate to us to bring home
our men and women before the end of the year," she said.

Overall, the committee vote strongly suggested Democrats will be able to
push their troop withdrawal timetable through the full House next week.
Even so, there is little if any prospect the Senate will agree to
anything remotely similar. And even if it does, Bush's threatened veto
would force Pelosi and other war critics back to the drafting table.

It took weeks for the Senate to agree to hold a formal debate on
Democratic calls for a change in war policy, and by the time it occurred,
the result was utterly predictable. So much so that Sen. John McCain ,
the Arizona Republican who is running for the White House in 2008,
skipped the vote to campaign in Iowa.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky led the opposition
to the measure.

"This is a dangerous piece of legislation. It is constitutionally dubious
and it would authorize a scattered band of United States senators to tie
the hand" of the commander in chief, he said.

McConnell said it would be "absolutely fatal" to the mission of US troops
in Iraq.

1 2 

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - US army secretary quits in scandal

WORLD / America

US army secretary quits in scandal

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-03 08:37

WASHINGTON - Army Secretary Francis J. Harvey abruptly stepped down
Friday as the Bush administration struggled to cope with the fallout from
a scandal over substandard conditions for war-wounded soldiers at Walter
Reed Army Medical Center.

Army Secretary Francis J. Harvey gestures during a news briefing at the
Pentagon in this March 23, 2005 file photo. [AP]

Harvey's departure, announced on short notice by a visibly agitated
Defense Secretary Robert Gates, was the most dramatic move in an
escalating removal of officials with responsibilities over one of the
military's highest-profile and busiest medical facilities.

Hours earlier, President Bush ordered a comprehensive review of
conditions at the nation's network of military and veteran hospitals,
which has been overwhelmed by injured troops from the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan.

Gates said Harvey had resigned, but senior defense officials speaking on
condition of anonymity said Gates had privately demanded that Harvey
leave. Gates was displeased that the officer Harvey had chosen as interim
commander of Walter Reed - Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley, the current Army surgeon
general and a former commander of Walter Reed - has been accused by
critics of long knowing about the problems there and not improving
outpatient care.

"I am disappointed that some in the Army have not adequately appreciated
the seriousness of the situation pertaining to outpatient care at Walter
Reed," Gates said in the Pentagon briefing room. He took no questions
from reporters.

Harvey was at Fort Benning, Ga., on Friday morning when he cut short his
visit to return to Washington to meet with Gates.

On Thursday, Harvey fired the medical center's previous commander, Maj.
Gen. George Weightman, for failures linked to the outpatient treatment
controversy. Many had speculated that Weightman would be relieved of
command, but Harvey's departure was a surprise. His last day in the job
will be March 9.

Peter Geren, the undersecretary of the Army, will serve as Harvey's
temporary replacement until Bush nominates a new secretary.

As Army secretary, Harvey is the service's top civilian official. He
commands no troops. Along with the four-star general who is Army chief of
staff, the secretary has statutory responsibility for training and
equipping the Army. That includes responsibility for budgeting,
recruiting and other personnel and resource policies.

The Army announced Friday that Maj. Gen. Eric B. Schoomaker, 58, will be
the new commander of Walter Reed, which is located in Washington.

"From what I have learned, the problems at Walter Reed appear to be
problems of leadership," Gates said. "The Walter Reed doctors, nurses and
other staff are among the best and most caring in the world. They deserve
our continued deepest thanks and strongest support."

1 2 

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Chinese Mandarin - Beckham to play at Old Trafford for charity game

Sports / Soccer

Beckham to play at Old Trafford for charity game

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-02-14 08:46

David Beckham will return to Old Trafford to play a charity game between
Manchester United and a Europe team next month.

Beckham, who scored on his unexpected comeback for Real Madrid last
Saturday, has been confirmed as a member of the European All-Star team
which will play United in a jubilee match being staged to mark the 50th
anniversary of the founding of the European Common Market, the forerunner
of the European Union, and United's 50 years of European competition.

Beckham, Gerrard and Carragher have all been selected for the lineup and
the former England captain, who has been dropped by national team coach
Steve McClaren, will be returning to the ground where he had 11
successful seasons with Manchester United.

The European side will be managed by Italian World Cup winning manager
Marcello Lippi, who is expected to include several members of his squad
which lifted the trophy in Germany last summer.

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Free Chinese Lesson - Love is... a pair of really good jeans

WORLD / America

Love is... a pair of really good jeans

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-02-07 10:58

NEW YORK - For most women, the choice between sex and a new wardrobe is
simple -- they go for the clothes.

A woman walks past advertisements for designer clothes inside a shopping
mall in Beijing December 13, 2006. Women on average say they would be
willing to give up sex for 15 months for a closet full of new apparel,
with 2 percent ready to abstain from sex for three years in exchange for
new duds, according to a new survey of about 1,000 women in 10 U.S.
cities. [Reuters]

Women on average say they would be willing to give up sex for 15 months
for a closet full of new apparel, with 2 percent ready to abstain from
sex for three years in exchange for new duds, according to a new survey
of about 1,000 women in 10 U.S. cities.

Sixty-one percent of women polled said it would be worse to lose their
favorite article of clothing than give up sex for a month.

"Some people say clothes make the man, but the right clothes can even
replace him," fashion designer, stylist and TV personality Carson
Kressley from the reality TV show "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy" said
in a statement accompanying the poll.

The study also suggested that clothes often wear better than
relationships.

The average woman between 18 and 54 years of age has hung on to her
favorite article of clothing for 12 and a half years, a year longer than
she's held on to her longest relationship.

Almost three-quarters of respondents, or 70 percent, also said they
believed in love at first sight when it came to finding the perfect
article of clothing, while only 54 percent of women were as confident in
spotting the right man.

Nearly half of the women, or 48 percent, taking part in the survey by
consumer products giant Unilever said their favorite article of clothing
was more reliable than their man in giving them confidence and making
them feel sexy.

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Learn Chinese online - Tokyo, NYSE complete alliance talks

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Tokyo, NYSE complete alliance talks

(AP)
Updated: 2007-01-31 11:20

TOKYO - Negotiations for an alliance between the Tokyo and New York stock
exchanges have been completed, Japan's main bourse said Wednesday.

Traders work the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in 2006. [AFP]

An announcement of the results of the talks will be made Thursday morning
in New York, Tokyo Stock Exchange spokesman Toru Onoda said.

Nishimuro and NYSE Group Inc.'s chief executive, John Thain, have met
several times during the past week about forging greater cooperation
between the two exchanges.

Nishimuro first brought up the idea of an alliance last year, when the
NYSE announced it would acquire Paris-based stock exchange operator
Euronext NV.

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� Bush warns Iran against action in Iraq

Today's Top News 

� Farmers' protests decline 20 percent last year

� Bush defends US-China trade

� CNOOC predicts flat oil output

� US senators warn against war with Iran

� Strategic oil reserve begins operation in China

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Monday, March 24, 2008

Learn mandarin - Israeli leaders under heat to quit

WORLD / Middle East

Israeli leaders under heat to quit

(AP)
Updated: 2007-01-18 09:07

Israel's Prime Minister Ehud Olmert attends a session in the Knesset, the
Israeli parliament, in Jerusalem January 17, 2007. The resignation of
Israel's armed forces chief over failure to win last summer's Lebanon war
dealt a fresh blow on Wednesday to Olmert, already weakened by political
scandal. [AP]

JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Defense Minister Amir Peretz
faced new calls to resign Wednesday after Israel's army chief stepped
down, succumbing to widespread outrage over the handling of last summer's
inconclusive war in Lebanon.

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Israeli army chief admits war failures

Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz became the first Israeli chief of staff to resign
since the 1973 war, but the government's political troubles may not end
with his departure. With a government probe into the war looming, and a
criminal investigation into Olmert's role in a banking deal, the prime
minister's troubles appear likely to grow.

The Israeli public has largely blamed Halutz - along with Olmert and
Peretz - for failing to crush Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon and halt
Katyusha rocket attacks against civilians.

"Halutz's resignation is a positive and unavoidable move," said Ophir
Pines-Paz, a member of Peretz's Labor Party. "But the political
leadership also has to take responsibility."

Israel launched the war hours after Hezbollah guerrillas killed three
Israeli soldiers and captured two others in a July 12 cross-border raid.

Critics say Olmert moved too hastily with a campaign that ended without
achieving its declared aims - including the recovery of the two captured
soldiers. Soldiers returning from the battlefield said they were poorly
trained, lacked basic ammunition and food supplies, and received
conflicting orders.

The prime minister, who is supported by a solid majority in parliament,
is not expected to resign soon. But the uproar over the alleged
mishandling of the war against Hezbollah could harm his chances to remain
in office in the long term.

"It is not clear whether the prime minister will be able to survive the
resignation of chief of staff Halutz and his own political problems,"
said Ephraim Inbar, a political scientist at Bar-Ilan University near Tel
Aviv. "We may see pressure in his own party to replace him. This
resignation is definitely the beginning of political turmoil in Israel."

Nearly 160 Israelis and more than 1,000 Lebanese died in the fighting,
according to tallies by government agencies, humanitarian groups and The
Associated Press.

The count includes 250 Hezbollah fighters that the group's leaders now
say died during Israel's intense air, ground and sea bombardments in
Lebanon. Israel has estimated its forces have killed 600 Hezbollah
fighters.

Many Israelis criticized the army's inability to stop Hezbollah from
firing nearly 4,000 rockets into northern Israel. Analysts say that
failure has dealt a major blow to the army's prestige in the Arab world
and its ability to deter attacks.

In Lebanon, Hezbollah legislator Hussein Haj Hassan called Halutz's
resignation "the result of the defeat of the Israeli enemy in Lebanon."
Demonstrators in Beirut, at their nightly anti-government protest,
celebrated with fireworks when Halutz's resignation was announced.

In his first public comment since Halutz resigned, Peretz warned Israel's
enemies, "Do not misinterpret the army chief's decision to resign as a
sign of weakness." Speaking Wednesday evening in Haifa at a graduation
ceremony for naval commanders, Peretz said Halutz's decision was
"premature. I am sorry he won't be with us to complete the task" of
restoring the army after the summer's war in Lebanon.

Peretz insisted that he would continue to guide the reforms - instead of
resigning. Olmert and Peretz hoped to pick a new army chief within days.

Halutz stepped down after internal army inquiries found widespread
problems in the military's performance. Halutz, a decorated former combat
pilot, had previously defended the army's performance and rejected calls
to resign.

Critics quickly clamored for the heads of the other wartime leaders,
Olmert and Peretz.

"I believe the chief of staff took the right decision after the inquiries
in the army. I think that now the question is about his superiors, the
defense minister and prime minister," said Yossi Beilin, leader of the
opposition Yahad party. "It will be very difficult for both of them to
stay in power."

Olmert did not comment publicly about the resignation calls. "It's
business as usual in the prime minister's office," said his spokeswoman,
Miri Eisin.

But pressure on Olmert and Peretz could increase ahead of the release of
a wide-ranging government probe into the war. The investigative panel,
focusing on the performance of military and political leaders, is
expected to announce its conclusions in the coming weeks.

Voicing popular sentiment, Uri Guralcky, 30 of Jerusalem, said Peretz and
Olmert must accept responsibility for the war's failures. "They must go
together with Halutz," he said.

A poll broadcast on Channel 10 TV backed that up. Asked whether Olmert
should resign, 69 percent agreed. Eighty-five percent said Peretz should
quit. The Smith Research poll, conducted by telephone, questioned 425
Israelis and had a margin of error of 4.8 percentage points.

Olmert's troubles were compounded by the announcement that police were
opening a criminal probe into his role in the government's 2005 sale of a
controlling stake in a bank. Olmert, then finance minister, is suspected
of trying to rig the bidding.

An opinion poll published last week showed Olmert's approval rating at
just 14 percent, and said his Kadima Party would lose if new elections
were held. Peretz's public standing is equally dismal. The former union
leader won the defense portfolio under a coalition deal despite his scant
military experience. The war's flaws only cemented doubts about his
fitness to serve as defense minister, and he now faces multiple
challenges to his leadership within the Labor Party.

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Chinese Mandarin - Helicopters strafe al-Qaida in Somalia

WORLD / Africa

Helicopters strafe al-Qaida in Somalia

(AP)
Updated: 2007-01-10 06:33

MOGADISHU, Somalia - Attack helicopters strafed suspected al-Qaida
fighters in southern Somalia on Tuesday, witnesses said, following two
days of airstrikes by US forces - the first US offensives in the African
country since 18 American soldiers were killed here in 1993.

A civilian, center, walks past two Ethiopian soldiers, left, and Somali
government forces on a truck with a mounted gun outside Villa Somalia
housing President Abdullahi Yusuf, in the Somali capital, Mogadishu
Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2007. [AP]

In Washington, a US intelligence official said American forces killed
five to 10 people in an attack on one target in southern Somalia believed
to be associated with al-Qaida. The official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity because of the operation's sensitivity, said a small number of
others present, perhaps four or five, were wounded.

A Somali lawmaker said 31 civilians, including a newlywed couple, died in
Tuesday's assault by two helicopters near Afmadow, a town in a forested
area close to the Kenyan border. The report could not be independently
verified.

A Somali Defense Ministry official described the helicopters as American,
but witnesses told The Associated Press they could not make out
identification markings on the craft. Washington officials had no comment
on the helicopter strike.

The US is hunting down Islamic extremists, said the Somali defense
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to talk to reporters.

Earlier, Somalia's president said that the US was pursuing suspects in
the 1998 bombings of two US embassies in East Africa, and that the effort
has his support.

Somali troops and their Ethiopian allies were attacked in the capital
late Tuesday by gunmen riding in two pickup trucks who fired two rocket
propelled grenades, witnesses said.

The rocket attack was followed by several minutes of rifle fire. One
Somali soldier was killed and two other soldiers and a bystander were
wounded, said minibus driver Harun Ahmed, who took the injured to a
hospital.

Col. Shino Moalin Nur, a Somali military commander, told the AP by
telephone late Tuesday that at least one US AC-130 gunship attacked a
suspected al-Qaida training camp Sunday on a remote island at the
southern tip of Somalia next to Kenya.

Somali officials said they had reports of many deaths.

On Monday, witnesses and Nur said, more US airstrikes were launched
against Islamic extremists in Hayi, 30 miles from Afmadow. Nur said
attacks continued Tuesday.

"Nobody can exactly explain what is going on inside these forested
areas," the Somali commander said. "However, we are receiving reports
that most of the Islamist fighters have died and the rest would be
captured soon."

In Washington on Tuesday, Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman
spoke of one strike in southern Somalia, but would not confirm any of the
details or say whether any al-Qaida militants were killed.

The assault was based on intelligence "that led us to believe we had
principal al-Qaida leaders in an area where we could identify them and
take action against them," Whitman said.

1 2 

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Free Chinese Lesson - Gates: Failure in Iraq will haunt US

WORLD / Middle East

Gates: Failure in Iraq will haunt US

(AP)
Updated: 2006-12-19 08:37

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates smiles moments before speaking after a
swearing-in ceremony as President Bush claps, at the Pentagon, December
18, 2006. [Reuters]

WASHINGTON - On his first day as defense secretary, Robert Gates warned
Monday that failure in Iraq would be a "calamity" that would haunt the
United States for years.

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Robert Gates, a cautious player

Underscoring eroding security there, a Pentagon report said the number of
insurgent and sectarian attacks had risen to the highest level in years.

Sworn into office as the Bush administration moves toward revamping its
strategy in Iraq, Gates sketched out an agenda of reversing the downward
spiral in Iraq, attending to resurgent violence in Afghanistan and
pushing for the military modernization that was a priority of his
predecessor, Donald H. Rumsfeld.

Gates said he intends to travel soon to Iraq to hear commanders'
assessments of the situation on the ground and to gain their advice -
"unvarnished and straight from the shoulder" - on how to adjust US war
strategy. He said he would give President Bush honest advice and listen
to military commanders - a contrast to critics' complaints that Rumsfeld
was an ideologue who paid scant heed to top officers.

"All of us want to find a way to bring America's sons and daughters home
again," Gates told a few hundred people in a Pentagon auditorium,
including Bush, Cabinet secretaries, members of Congress, the Joint
Chiefs of Staff and Gates' wife and mother. Rumsfeld, who handed off his
authority earlier Monday in a private event, did not attend the ceremony.

"As the president has made clear," Gates said, "we simply cannot afford
to fail in the Middle East. Failure in Iraq at this juncture would be a
calamity that would haunt our nation, impair our credibility and endanger
Americans for decades to come."

Gates has not tipped his hand on the kinds of changes in Iraq strategy he
thinks may be needed. He said that since his Senate confirmation in early
December he has held in-depth discussions with Bush on Iraq policy.

More broadly, Gates has said he will keep an open mind about other issues
at the Pentagon, including proposals by the heads of the Army and Marine
Corps to increase the size of their services to cope with the strains of
war. Last week, Gen. Peter Schoomaker, the Army's top commander, warned
that his force "will break" without thousands more active duty troops and
greater use of the reserves.

Retired Army Brig. Gen. Kevin Ryan, a senior fellow at the Belfer Center
for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University, said in an
interview Monday that he feels certain Gates will have the latitude
within the administration to push for a bigger Army and Marine Corps.
"The question is going to be how high" to go, Ryan said.

At the Pentagon ceremony, Bush said he is confident Gates, 63, will bring
a fresh perspective to the Iraq problem.

"He knows the stakes in the war on terror," Bush said. "He recognizes
this is a long struggle against an enemy unlike any our nation has fought
before. He understands that defeating the terrorists and the radicals and
the extremists in Iraq and the Middle East is essential to leading toward
peace."

1 2 

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Sunday, March 23, 2008

Learn Chinese - John Bolton quits UN post

WORLD / America

John Bolton quits UN post

(AP)
Updated: 2006-12-05 08:55

WASHINGTON: Unable to win Senate confirmation, UN Ambassador John Bolton
will step down when his temporary appointment expires within weeks, the
White House said Monday.

US Ambassador to the UN John Bolton speaks after the UN Security Council
voted to require Iran to stop its nuclear program, at the United Nations
in New York in this July 31, 2006 file photo. Facing opposition from key
senators, US Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton will leave
office in a matter of days, the White House announced on December 4,
2006. [Reuters]

Bolton's nomination has languished in the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee for more than a year, blocked by Democrats and several
Republicans. Sen. Lincoln Chafee, a moderate Republican who lost in the
elections Nov. 7 that swept Democrats to power in both houses of
Congress, was adamantly opposed to Bolton.

Critics have questioned Bolton's brusque style and whether he could be an
effective public servant who could help bring reform to the UN.

President George W.Bush posed for pictures with Bolton and commented
curtly on his departure. "I received the resignation of Ambassador John
Bolton. I accepted. I'm not happy about it. I think he deserved to be
confirmed."

"They chose to obstruct his confirmation, even though he enjoys majority
support in the Senate, and even though their tactics will disrupt our
diplomatic work at a sensitive and important time," Bush said earlier in
a written statement. "This stubborn obstructionism ill serves our
country, and discourages men and women of talent from serving their
nation."

Sen. John Kerry, a Democrat who lost to Bush in the 2004 presidential
election, said Bolton's departure could be a turning point for the
administration.

"With the Middle East on the verge of chaos and the nuclear threats from
Iran and North Korea increasing, we need a United Nations ambassador who
has the full support of Congress and can help rally the international
community to tackle the serious threats we face," Kerry said. He said it
was an opportunity for Bush to nominate an ambassador "who enjoys the
support necessary to unite our country and the world and who can put
results ahead of ideology."

Bush gave Bolton the job temporarily in August 2005, while Congress was
in recess. Under that process, the appointment expires when Congress
formally adjourns, no later than early January.

The White House resubmitted Bolton's nomination last month. But with
Democrats capturing control of the next Congress, his chances of winning
confirmation appeared slight. The incoming chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, Democratic Sen. Joe Biden, said he saw "no point in
considering Mr. Bolton's nomination again."

While Bush could not give Bolton another recess appointment, the White
House was believed to be exploring other ways of keeping him in the job,
perhaps by giving him a title other than ambassador. But Bolton informed
the White House he intended to leave when his current appointment
expires, White House deputy press secretary Dana Perino said.

Bush said he accepted Bolton's decision with deep regret.

"He served his country with extraordinary dedication and skill,
assembling coalitions that addressed some of the most consequential
issues facing the international community," the president said. "During
his tenure, he articulately advocated the positions and values of the
United States and advanced the expansion of democracy and liberty.

Bolton, who pushed strongly for UN reform, has had strained relations
with many in the UN Secretariat, led by Secretary-General Kofi Annan, and
has repeatedly called for all top UN officials to leave when Annan steps
down as UN chief on Dec. 31 and is replaced by Ban Ki-moon.

"I think Ambassador Bolton did the job he was expected to do," Annan said
Monday when asked about Bolton's resignation. "He came at a time when we
had lots of tough issues from reform to issues on Iran and North Korea. I
think as a representative of the US, government, he pressed ahead with
the instructions he had been given and tried to work as effectively as he
could."

Highlights of John Bolton's career.

- Appointed by President George W. Bush as US Ambassador to the United
Nations on August 1, 2005, bypassing the normal process of congressional
approval after it was blocked by senators unhappy with Bolton's record.

- Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security
from May 2001 to May 2005, where he worked on nuclear proliferation
issues.

- Assistant Secretary of State for International Organizations from 1989
to 1993 under President George H.W. Bush, and frequently visited the
United Nations before and after Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

- Assistant Attorney General, US Department of Justice, 1985 to 1989, He
had previously held posts at the US Agency for International Development
and worked as an attorney at law firms in Washington as well as serving
as vice president of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.

- Born in Baltimore on November 20, 1948, Bolton graduated summa cum
laude from Yale University and later received his law degree from Yale.

- He is married to the former Gretchen Smith, a financial consultant, and
has one daughter.

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Learn mandarin - Euro's surge poses risks

WORLD / Wall Street Journal Exclusive

Euro's surge poses risks

By MARCUS WALKER (WSJ)
Updated: 2006-11-27 15:19

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB116459211707233191-1rHAX5GJ05NkyXZCU
rvopZoyjgE_20061204.html?mod=regionallinks

BERLIN -- The euro's sudden sprint to near its all-time high against the
dollar could herald more gains against the US currency, harming European
growth and exports, especially if signs of a US economic slowdown gather.
But how -- and if -- the European Central Bank responds to the currency's
rise could greatly influence how deeply the pain is felt.

The euro's surge to $1.3097 Friday happened amid low trading volumes
following the US Thanksgiving holiday. Even if the euro tide recedes in
coming days, the diverging paths of the US and European economies could
drive the euro to record levels in the months ahead, according to many
forecasters.

"It could be the start of something big," says Ken Wattret, chief
euro-zone economist at BNP Paribas in London. The euro's all-time high is
$1.36, touched in December 2004.

Exchange rates are shaped by the currency market's view of whether
central banks will raise interest rates, reflecting strong growth and
inflation, or cut them to cushion an economic slowdown. Rising interest
rates attract more investors to that currency.

Recent data on the US economy have shown weakness in manufacturing and
retail sales, as well as a bigger-than-expected fall in housing starts
last month. That is fuelling concerns that the housing slowdown will hold
back consumption and overall growth. Many financial-market participants
expect the US Federal Reserve to cut interest rates early next year.

In contrast, economic data in Europe have been robust. "It looks
increasingly like Europe hasn't caught cold from the US sneezing," says
Neville Hill, an economist at Credit Suisse in London.

Against that background, the ECB is widely expected to raise its key
interest rate another quarter point, to 3.5%, at its Dec. 7 meeting. But
markets are waiting to see whether ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet
drops a hint about another rate increase in early 2007 and what comments
he makes about the euro.

"If the ECB says 'the exchange rate is no problem, we're still very
confident about the growth outlook and worried about inflation,' the euro
could go higher," says Mr. Wattret of BNP Paribas. But if the ECB
expresses concern about a fast-rising euro, he says, that would limit the
euro's rise. Markets would take that as a signal the ECB could pause from
boosting rates in early 2007 as it monitors how the currency and the
economy are faring.

Amid fears that a stronger euro could hurt European exports, which are
vital to the region's growth prospects, European stocks fell Friday. The
pan-European Dow Jones Stoxx 600 fell 0.76% to finish at 355.98.

A strong and lasting rise in the euro has undercut an economic upturn in
Europe before: In 2003 and 2004, signs of life in Europe's
long-struggling economy were snuffed out as the euro soared to its high
mark from 87 US cents. Since then, many European businesses have grown
used to a stronger euro, and the region's economy has launched a recovery
during the past year underpinned by rising exports.

Some caution against reading too much into the euro's latest gains. Light
volumes helped make the currency market volatile on Thursday and Friday,
compared with recent years, which have seen currencies move in narrow
ranges.

"There doesn't appear to have been any clear driver behind the moves,
which makes these moves questionable as a guide going forward," said Ken
Dickson, who heads the currency team at fund managers Standard Life
Investments of Edinburgh.

On its own, the euro's rise to just over $1.30 -- after hovering between
$1.25 and $1.28 for the past six months -- won't greatly affect growth or
inflation in Europe. But many economists are worried that trends during
the year ahead could drive the euro up to around $1.40.

In addition to signs of economic slowdown in the US, which are weighing
on the dollar, various central banks in East Asia and the Middle East are
thought to be undertaking, or considering, a shift in their currency
reserves, buying more euros to diversify away from dollars.

A sustained rise in the euro to around $1.40 from around $1.28 would
knock roughly half a percentage point off economic growth in the euro
zone next year, according to BNP Paribas. Many economists predict a
cocktail of German tax increases, slower global growth and a stronger
euro would cut euro-zone growth to below 2% next year, from more than
2.5% this year.

A persistently stronger euro would hurt exporters across the euro zone,
but some countries would suffer more than others. German exporters,
having made big efforts to boost efficiency in recent years, are
considered the best equipped to cope with a high exchange rate. Also,
Germany specializes in high-end products such as specialized machine
tools and luxury cars. Those are less price sensitive than mass-market
consumer products that compete directly with Chinese goods.

But even German exporters would widely feel an impact on sales from a
euro valued at $1.35, according to a survey last month by the
Munich-based Ifo economics institute.

In Italy, currently the weakest of Europe's major economies, the pain
would be greatest. Many exporters in Italy's large shoe, clothing and
furniture sectors compete with low-cost Asian rivals, and the country has
struggled to cope with the euro even at lower levels.

Spanish and French exporters have also lost global market share in recent
years and suffer when the euro rises. But unlike the Italian economy,
Spain and France are growing anyway, thanks to strong consumer spending
and continuing housing booms.

A saving grace for many European exporters is that their increasingly
global investments reduce their costs in euro terms. At Italian eyewear
maker Luxottica Group SpA, for example, a large US store network means
that about 65% of its costs are in dollars, giving it a natural hedge
against a rising euro.

"The most important thing for us is that the economy in the US stays
healthy," says Luxottica spokesman Luca Biondolillo.

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Chinese Online Class - Bush doesn't fear attack on Iran - Israeli envoy

WORLD / Middle East

Bush doesn't fear attack on Iran - Israeli envoy

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-15 16:59

JERUSALEM - US President George W. Bush will not hesitate to use military
force against Iran if other options fail, Israel's outgoing ambassador to
the United States said in an interview published on Wednesday.

"I know President Bush well ... From his standpoint, a nuclear Iran,
ayatollahs with a bomb, is unacceptable," Danny Ayalon told Israel's
Ma'ariv newspaper.

"I have been privileged to know him well, he will not hesitate to go all
the way if there is no choice."

Concern over Iran's atomic ambitions figured prominently in talks in
Washington this week between Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.

The US and allies including Israel have accused Iran of pursuing nuclear
weapons under the guise of a civilian energy programme. Iran denies the
accusation.

Ayalon, who has spent the past 4-1/2 years in Washington, said Bush would
continue to pursue diplomatic efforts for now, and failing that would
chose to try to isolate Iran via sanctions.

But if that tactic also failed to stem Iran's nuclear plans, Ayalon said
Bush would likely use air power combined with limited ground forces to
attack Iran.

"Anyone who knows President Bush knows that he is very determined. He is
convinced of the moral supremacy of democracies over dictatorships ... If
the sanctions succeed, all the better. Otherwise, he will act by all
means possible, including military action," he said.

In public, Bush has said he backs a diplomatic solution with Iran but has
refused to rule out a military strike.

The Islamic republic has said it is willing to talk to the US, but that
Washington must first "change its attitude".

Asked if the United States would be capable of taking military action
against Iran, given that it is already engaged in a debilitating conflict
in Iraq, Ayalon said:

"This is not an operation on the same scale. There is no intention of
employing large ground forces. That is not the model. This is more a case
of employing air power combined with limited ground forces."

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Free Chinese Lesson - US army monitors soldiers' blogs

WORLD / America

US army monitors soldiers' blogs

(AP)
Updated: 2006-10-30 09:30

RICHMOND, Va. - From the front lines of Iraq and Afghanistan to here at
home, soldiers blogging about military life are under the watchful eye of
some of their own.

Author Matthew Currier Burden stands at the Pritzker Military Library
with a copy of his book containing a collection of entries from bloggers
who served in the war called , 'The Blog Of War,' in Chicago, Ill., in
this Oct. 26, 2006 file photo. [AP]
A Virginia-based operation, the Army Web Risk Assessment Cell, monitors
official and unofficial blogs and other Web sites for anything that may
compromise security. The team scans for official documents, personal
contact information and pictures of weapons or entrances to camps.

In some cases, that information can be detrimental, said Lt. Col. Stephen
Warnock, team leader and battalion commander of a Manassas-based Virginia
National Guard unit working on the operation.

In one incident, a blogger was describing his duties as a guard,
providing pictures of his post and discussing how to exploit its
vulnerabilities. Other soldiers posted photos of an Army weapons system
that was damaged by enemy attack, and another showed personal information
that could have endangered his family.

"We are a nation at war," Warnock said by e-mail. "The less the enemy
knows, the better it is for our soldiers."

In the early years of operations in the Middle East, no official
oversight governed Web sites that sprung up to keep the families of those
deployed informed about their daily lives.

The oversight mission, made up of active-duty soldiers and contractors,
as well as Guard and Reserve members from Maryland, Texas and Washington
state, began in 2002 and was expanded in August 2005 to include sites in
the public domain, including blogs.

The Army will not disclose the methods or tools being used to find and
monitor the sites. Nor will it reveal the size of the operation or the
contractors involved. The Defense Department has a similar program, the
Joint Web Risk Assessment Cell, but the Army program is apparently the
only operation that monitors nonmilitary sites.

Now soldiers wishing to blog while deployed are required to register
their sites with their commanding officers, who monitor the sites
quarterly, according to a four-page document of guidelines published in
April 2005 by Multi-National Corps-Iraq.

Spc. Jean-Paul Borda, who has indexed thousands of military blogs for a
site called Milblogging.com, said in an e-mail interview that the
military still is adapting to changing technology.

"This is a new media - Blogging. Podcasting. Online videos," wrote Borda,
32, of Dallas, who kept a blog while he was deployed in Afghanistan with
the Virginia National Guard. "The military is doing what it feels
necessary to ensure the safety of the troops."

Warnock said the Web risk assessment team has reviewed hundreds of
thousands of sites every month, sometimes e-mailing or calling soldiers
asking them to take material down. If the blogger doesn't comply with the
request, the team can work with the soldier's commanders to fix the
problem - that is, if the blogger doesn't post anonymously.

"We are not a law enforcement or intelligence agency. Nor are we
political correctness enforcers," Warnock said. "We are simply trying to
identify harmful Internet content and make the authors aware of the
possible misuse of the information by groups who may want to damage
United States interests."

Some bloggers say the guidelines are too ambiguous - a sentiment that has
led others to pre-emptively shut down or alter their blogs.

"It's impossible to determine when something crosses the line from not a
violation to a violation. It's like trying to define what pornography is
or bad taste in music," said Spc. Jason Hartley, 32, who says he was
demoted from sergeant and fined for reposting a blog he created while
deployed to Iraq with the New York Army National Guard.

According to Hartley, the Army had forced him to stop the blog even
before the oversight operation existed, citing pictures he had posted of
Iraqi detainees and discussions of how he loaded a weapon and the route
his unit took to get to Iraq.

Warnock contended that soldiers should not be discouraged from blogging
altogether.

Military bloggers "are simply expressing themselves in a wide open forum
and want to share their life-changing experiences with the rest of the
world," Warnock said. "Giving soldiers an outlet for free expression is
good. American soldiers are not shy about giving their opinions and
nothing the Web Risk Cell does dampens that trait."

Matthew Currier Burden, 39, a former intelligence officer who wrote "The
Blog of War," a collection of entries from bloggers who served in the
war, said soldiers' Web sites can go a long way toward portraying
positive aspects of the war and other "stories that need to get told."

But he said it's legitimate to fear that some information could be used
the wrong way.

"The enemy knows the value of the blogs," Burden said. "The biggest thing
that we fear is battle damage assessment from the enemy. We want to deny
them that."

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Saturday, March 22, 2008

Chinese language - Saddam sentenced to hang

WORLD / Photo

Saddam sentenced to hang

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-05 17:12

Former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein reacts as the verdict is delivered
during his trial held under tight security in Baghdad's heavily fortified
Green Zone, Sunday Nov. 5, 2006. Iraq's High Tribunal on Sunday found
Saddam Hussein guilty of crimes against humanity and sentence him to die
by hanging. [AP]

1 2 3 4 

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Learn mandarin - Ex-Enron CEO gets 24 years in jail

WORLD / Newsmaker

Ex-Enron CEO gets 24 years in jail

(AP)
Updated: 2006-10-24 07:50

HOUSTON - Former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling was ordered Monday to serve
24 years and four months in prison, the harshest punishment by far in
Enron's scandalous collapse and one that capped a string of tough
sentences for top executives in corruption cases.

US District Judge Sim Lake denied Skilling's request for bond and ordered
him to home confinement, wearing an ankle monitor. Lake, who told the
U.S. Bureau of Prisons to recommend when Skilling should report to
prison, suggested the 52-year-old be sent to the federal facility in
Butner, N.C., for his role in a case that came to symbolize corporate
fraud in America.

Former Enron CEO Jeff Skilling, left, and his attorney Daniel Petrocelli,
right leave the federal courthouse after Skilling was sentenced to 292
months in federal prison Monday, Oct. 23, 2006 in Houston. Skilling was
convicted in May of 19 counts of fraud, conspiracy, insider trading and
lying to auditors. [AP]

"His crimes have imposed on hundreds if not thousands a life sentence of
poverty," Lake said.

The former chief executive officer will be eligible to shave up to 54
days a year off his sentence for good behavior in prison. Lake also
ordered Skilling to undergo alcohol and mental-health counseling. A
successful completion of that treatment would take a year off his
sentence.

Skilling, insisting he was innocent yet remorseful in a two-hour hearing,
was the last top former official to be punished for the accounting tricks
and shady business deals that led to the loss of thousands of jobs, more
than $60 billion in Enron stock and more than $2 billion in employee
pension plans after the company imploded in 2001.

His remaining assets, about $60 million, will be liquidated, according to
an agreement among lawyers for Enron employees, the company's savings and
stock ownership plans, prosecutors and Skilling's legal team.

About $45 million will be put in a restitution fund for victims. The
remaining $15 million will go to Skilling's legal fees, said Lynn Sark,
attorney for the Enron Corp. Savings Plan and Stock Ownership Plan. The
Justice Department allowed Skilling to set aside $23 million for his
defense when he was indicted; he still owed his lawyers $30 million as of
Monday.

Outside the courthouse, Skilling vowed to appeal his sentence and also
asked that his restitution money go straight to victims, instead of being
seized first by the federal government. His attorney, Daniel Petrocelli,
said the restitution will be held until all of Skilling's appeals are
exhausted.

Skilling had stood with his hands clasped below his waist, with
Petrocelli at his side while being sentenced. He gave no visible
reaction. After court adjourned, Skilling hugged Petrocelli.

Skilling's term is the longest received by any Enron defendant; former
Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow was given a six-year term after
cooperating with prosecutors and helping them secure Skilling's
conviction.

It falls just shy of the sentence imposed on WorldCom CEO Bernard Ebbers,
who received 25 years for his role in the $11 billion accounting fraud
that toppled the company he built from a tiny telecommunications firm to
an industry giant. Another CEO, Dennis Kozlowski of Tyco International
Ltd., received a sentence of eight and one-third to 25 years in prison in
another fraud case.

Skilling's co-defendant, Enron founder Kenneth Lay, died from heart
disease on July 5. Lay's convictions on 10 counts of fraud, conspiracy
and lying to banks in two separate cases were wiped out with his death.

1 2 

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Learn mandarin - North Korea celebrates party's anniversary

WORLD / North Korea Nuclear Crisis

North Korea celebrates party's anniversary

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-10-11 15:31

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Learn Chinese - Iran pledges not to retreat "one inch" on nuke program

WORLD / Top News

Iran pledges not to retreat "one inch" on nuke program

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-10-05 08:41

TEHRAN -- Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad pledged on Wednesday that
his country would not retreat "one inch" on its disputed nuclear program
despite rising Western demands that Tehran should halt uranium enrichment
activities.

"The Islamic Republic will not retreat one inch from its legal rights,
and with glory, Iran will continue along its path," Ahmadinejad said in a
speech in Nazarabad, a city outside capital Tehran.

"The Iranian people are the dearest people in the whole world, and they
are also the most powerful people in the world," the president added.

During another speech in a nearby city of Hashtgerd on Wednesday, the
Iranian president accused the West of launching a war of propaganda
against Iran.

"They (the West) want us to stop our (nuclear) machines just for a day to
launch a war of propaganda against Iran. But if we stop our machines
there will be nothing left to negotiate," he was quoted by state
television.

"They do not want Iran to become a model, they are hostile to our
progress and they are afraid that if we develop we will become the
greatest world power," said the president.

"They cannot get from negotiations what they cannot obtain from
pressure," he stressed.

In less than 10 days, Ahmadinejad has reiterated many times that Iran
would not step back on its legal nuclear rights, warning the West not to
imagine that the country would suspend uranium enrichment for even one
day.

The UN Security Council adopted a resolution in late July, urging Tehran
to suspend by Aug. 31 all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities,
including research and development, or face prospect of sanctions.

Despite Tehran's failure to meet the UN demand, EU foreign ministers
decided in September to maintain serious talks with Tehran in efforts to
solve Iran's nuclear issue through diplomacy.

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Friday, March 21, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - US war prisons legal vacuum for 14,000

WORLD / America

US war prisons legal vacuum for 14,000
(AP)
Updated: 2006-09-18 20:44

BAGHDAD, Iraq - In the few short years since the first shackled Afghan
shuffled off to Guantanamo, the US military has created a global network
of overseas prisons, its islands of high security keeping 14,000
detainees beyond the reach of established law.

Disclosures of torture and long-term arbitrary detentions have won rebuke
from leading voices including the UN secretary-general and the US Supreme
Court. But the bitterest words come from inside the system, the size of
several major US penitentiaries.

In this Jan. 11, 2002 file photo released by the US Navy, detainees in
orange jump suits sit in a holding area under the watchful eyes of
military police at Camp X-Ray at Naval Base Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, during
in-processing to the temporary detention facility. In the few short years
since the first shackled Afghan shuffled off to Guantanamo, the US
military has created a global network of overseas prisons, its islands of
high security keeping 14,000 detainees beyond the reach of established
law. [AP]

"It was hard to believe I'd get out," Baghdad shopkeeper Amjad Qassim
al-Aliyawi told The Associated Press after his release - without charge -
last month. "I lived with the Americans for one year and eight months as
if I was living in hell."

Captured on battlefields, pulled from beds at midnight, grabbed off
streets as suspected insurgents, tens of thousands now have passed
through US detention, the vast majority in Iraq.

Many say they were caught up in US military sweeps, often interrogated
around the clock, then released months or years later without apology,
compensation or any word on why they were taken. Seventy to 90 percent of
the Iraq detentions in 2003 were "mistakes," US officers once told the
international Red Cross.

Defenders of the system, which has only grown since soldiers' photos of
abuse at Abu Ghraib shocked the world, say it's an unfortunate necessity
in the battles to pacify Iraq and Afghanistan, and to keep suspected
terrorists out of action.

Every US detainee in Iraq "is detained because he poses a security threat
to the government of Iraq, the people of Iraq or coalition forces," said
US Army Lt. Col. Keir-Kevin Curry, a spokesman for US-led military
detainee operations in Iraq.

But dozens of ex-detainees, government ministers, lawmakers, human rights
activists, lawyers and scholars in Iraq, Afghanistan and the United
States said the detention system often is unjust and hurts the war on
terror by inflaming anti-Americanism in Iraq and elsewhere.

Building for the Long Term

Reports of extreme physical and mental abuse, symbolized by the notorious
Abu Ghraib prison photos of 2004, have abated as the Pentagon has
rejected torture-like treatment of the inmates. Most recently, on Sept.
6, the Pentagon issued a new interrogation manual banning forced
nakedness, hooding, stress positions and other abusive techniques.

The same day, President Bush said the CIA's secret outposts in the prison
network had been emptied, and 14 terror suspects from them sent to
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to face trial in military tribunals. The US Supreme
Court has struck down the tribunal system, however, and the White House
and Congress are now wrestling over the legal structure of such trials.

Living conditions for detainees may be improving as well. The US military
cites the toilets of Bagram, Afghanistan: In a cavernous old building at
that air base, hundreds of detainees in their communal cages now have
indoor plumbing and privacy screens, instead of exposed chamber pots.

Whatever the progress, small or significant, grim realities persist.

Human rights groups count dozens of detainee deaths for which no one has
been punished or that were never explained. The secret prisons - unknown
in number and location - remain available for future detainees. The new
manual banning torture doesn't cover CIA interrogators. And thousands of
people still languish in a limbo, deprived of one of common law's oldest
rights, habeas corpus, the right to know why you are imprisoned.

1 2 3 

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Free Chinese Lesson - China fails to advance to quarterfinals

Sports/Olympics / China

China fails to advance to quarterfinals
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-08-27 21:16

SAITAMA, Japan - Greece overcame a terrible first quarter with an
impressive third period Sunday and advanced to the quarterfinals of the
basketball world championship with a 95-64 victory over China.

China's Yao Ming sits on the bench during their match against Greece at
the world basketball championships in Saitama August 27, 2006. [Reuters]

Greece (6-0) remained one of four unbeaten teams left in the tournament
by outscoring China 26-6 in the third quarter to take a 67-42 lead. That
10-minute performance was a far cry from the opening period when Greece
missed 16 of its first 19 shots in falling behind 18-11.

On Wednesday, Greece will make its fourth quarterfinal appearance in the
last five world championships, facing France (4-2), which beat Angola
68-62 in the second round.

Theodoros Papaloukas had 19 points for Greece, which committed just three
turnovers while forcing China (2-4) into 24.

Yao Ming, the 2.26-meter (7-foot-5) center who plays for the Houston
Rockets, had 10 points and eight rebounds for China. He was 3-for-5 from
the field and 4-for-4 from the free throw line.

Yao, who entered the game as the tournament's leading scorer with a 28.4
average, was unable to get the ball down low because his teammates
usually turned it over before they had a chance to even try to get it to
him. He had eight rebounds.

Greece followed its 3-for-19 start from the field by making 14 of its
next 17 shots in taking a 41-36 halftime lead.

Then as Greece started to play offensively the way it did in finishing
undefeated in group play as did the United States, Spain and Argentina,
China fell apart.

China had six points and nine turnovers in the third quarter. Yao's dunk
on an inbounds pass with 6:51 left in the third quarter were his final
points of the game and brought China within 46-40. Greece closed the
period with a 21-2 run with most of the points coming on breakaway layups
after turnovers.

Greece finished sixth in 1990 and fourth in 1994 and 1998. It did not
qualify for the 2002 worlds.

China, which lost its first three games in this tournament before winning
its last two to advance to the second round, was trying for its second
quarterfinal appearance. China was eighth in 1994 and 12th in 2002.

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