Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Life in North Korea: lies, potatoes and cable TV

(NORTH, THEIR, PEOPLE, STATE, REFUGEES, GENERAL)


Life in North Korea: lies, potatoes and cable TVBy Jack Kim
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Koreans who recently arrived in the South live in a world of contradictions where their upbringing instills them with reverence for Kim Jong-il but their daily struggle leads them to believe he is a brutal despot.
By all accounts, they say North Korea is gradually spiralling out of control, its economy dysfunctional while people are suspicious of one another because of a network of informants.
They also speak of a sense of normalcy in the North. Most left for the chance of a better life in the South but they are uncertain if they can find their way in the competitive capitalist state.
The following is a snapshot of life in North Korea, compiled from accounts given by refugees who recently arrived in the South. Their identities are not disclosed because they fear persecution for family and relatives back home.
"SAD TO SEE THE DEAR GENERAL SO FEEBLE"
It is a political crime to talk about the family of leader Kim Jong-il but many recently arrived refugees said the average North Korean is probably aware of foreign media reports that Kim`s youngest son Jong-un may likely take over. Most North Koreans have no idea that Kim, 67 and thought to have suffered a stroke a year ago, has three sons.
"In Pyongyang, you take it for granted that leadership will be inherited," one refugee Park said, adding she knew Kim Jong-il had two daughters and a son and his name was Jong-nam. That is the portly and oldest of Kim`s three known sons, believed to have fallen from his father`s favor years ago after being arrested for trying to enter Japan on a forged passport.
"I don`t want to say Kim Jong-il is bad," another refugee Choi said. "It`s the people who report to him who are not doing their job right. They make false reports." Choi said she knew from experience that crop production is something that gets most often falsified "so as not to make the General worry."
Most refugees still call Kim Jong-il the "General" as has been taught to them by state propaganda and have bought into, at least partially, his carefully crafted cult of personality.
Park said she knows Kim often stays up at night worried about the lives of the people. "It is true that he has sacrificed so much for the people," she said. "The general has aged a lot," she said of her impression of seeing recent pictures of Kim looking frail and perhaps debilitated by the stroke.
"SOLDIERS FOR FIGHTING? NOT HERE"
North Korea is the world`s most militarized state compared to its population with a standing army of more than 1.1 million. Service is mandatory and can be as long as 10 years. The might of the army is "invincible," according to state media but the refugees are rather cynical about the ill equipped force.
"When I look at them, the army that I`ve seen will be busy running away from a war," another refugee Kim said. "Maybe they have the real army for war kept away at some other place."
Low morale and corruption in the military are so widespread that it is the norm rather than the exception for soldiers to be extorting bribes from merchants crossing the Chinese border.
"We say something is wrong with you if you did not save enough in 10 years of service at the border to go home, get married and start a family," Kim said.  Continued...
Original article

Barak says regional peace, not settlements, paramount

(ISRAEL, BARAK, SETTLEMENTS, MITCHELL, MEETING, WOULD)


JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak was quoted as saying on Wednesday that Israel was close to an understanding with Washington on Jewish settlements, but ruled out a total freeze.
In an Israel Radio interview to be aired later in the day, Barak said Israel was insisting on completing construction projects already under way in settlements in the West Bank, the state-owned broadcaster reported on its website.
Barak held talks in New York on Tuesday with U.S. Middle East envoy George Mitchell in a bid to end a rare rift between Israel and its main ally on the settlement issue.
The radio quoted him as saying that Israel was now nearing an understanding with the United States, which has called for a complete halt to settlement activity.
Barak told reporters in New York that the meeting with Mitchell, which lasted more than four hours, was "positive" but there were still "differences."
In a joint statement issued after their talks, Barak and Mitchell said they had discussed the full range of issues related to Middle East peace and security. The statement said the discussions were constructive and would soon continue.
Asked by reporters whether Israel would declare a temporary settlement building freeze, Barak said: "I think that it`s a little bit too early to predict.
"We are considering every positive contribution Israel can make toward the taking off of a significant important peace effort," he said.
Mitchell, who posed for photographers at the start of the meeting in a New York hotel, did not take questions.
Israel`s biggest newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported on Sunday that Barak would propose a three-month halt to construction starts in settlements but allow current building work to continue.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has said U.S.-backed peace talks with Israel could not resume until it froze settlement.
Barak told reporters that a meeting between Mitchell and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was being arranged in the next one to three weeks.
The two had planned a meeting in Paris last Thursday but it was put off by Israel, which said it needed more time to prepare. Netanyahu has said he would allow some construction to continue to match population growth within existing settlements.
(Additional reporting by Daniel Bases in New York, Writing by Jeffrey Heller, Editing by Dominic Evans)
Original article

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Party celebrates China web filter delay

(BEIJING, GOVERNMENT, SOFTWARE, ABOUT, PARTY, COMPUTERS)


Party celebrates China web filter delayBy Emma Graham-Harrison
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese web users flooded to a trendy art zone cafe on Wednesday to celebrate a last-minute halt to a rollout of government-sponsored filtering software, and make a stand for freedom of expression in the Communist-run state.
Dressed in t-shirts mocking the Green Dam program, about 200 Beijing residents had arrived by mid-morning to eat a traditional Chinese breakfast, denounce censorship and prepare for a day-long party.
Originally conceived as part of an Internet boycott to mark the July 1 launch of the filter -- and to give a web-addicted generation something to do during the 24 hours of offline -- the atmosphere was festive as guests celebrated what many said was an unexpected victory against state censorship.
"This is a very rare example for the government to suddenly push back an important decision the night before it is due to be rolled out," said outspoken artist Ai Weiwei, who organised the boycott and the party.
Beijing made a surprising about-face late on Tuesday, hours before an edict that all personal computers sold in China must be preloaded with the program was due to come into force.
The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said the launch would be postponed and did not give a new deadline.
Officials had said the software was intended to stamp out Internet pornography. But it was assailed by activists, industry groups and foreign officials as politically intrusive, technically flawed and commercially unfair.
"We are very happy because we got what we wanted," said Liu Yaohua, a 27-year-old artist. "We wanted to express our attitude to Green Dam."
There was trepidation among some party-goers about attending an event that was a direct, if light-hearted, rebuke to a government wary of public challenges to its control.
"I am a little bit nervous, but I felt it was very important that I find the strength to come," said painter Zang Yi.
The plan might now drift into oblivion if Beijing decides it does not want to face a second round of pressure from overseas and at home.
At a Beijing mall which specializes in computers and software, vendors shrugged at the news of the climbdown.
"It`s a piece of software like any other. You can take it out if you don`t want it. It`s no big deal," said Zhang Bo, standing in front of a row of Chinese-made laptops.
But a lawyer who campaigned against the software warned it was premature to declare victory.
"It has not been canceled, just put back, so it`s possible that after a certain amount of time it will be pushed back out," said Liu Xiaoyuan, who wants the government to explain why a software ostensibly designed to protect a minority of users -- children and teen-agers -- must be installed on all computers.  Continued...
Original article

Ahmadinejad scraps African summit trip

(AHMADINEJAD, ELECTION, KAROUBI, RESULT, UNREST, SINCE)


Ahmadinejad scraps African summit tripBy Fredrik Dahl and Parisa Hafezi
TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran`s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called off a trip to Libya for an African Union summit on Wednesday that would have given the hardline president another chance to appear at an international forum after his disputed re-election.
Mehdi Karoubi, a reformist cleric who came last in the June 12 poll, said he still rejected the result, which set off Iran`s gravest internal unrest since the 1979 Islamic revolution.
"I don`t consider this government legitimate," he said in a statement on his website. "I will continue my fight."
A spokesman at Ahmadinejad`s office said the Libya visit had been canceled. He gave no reason. It would have been the president`s second foray abroad since the election.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hassan Qashqavi later told state television Ahmadinejad was too busy to go.
In a show of confidence, Ahmadinejad attended a regional summit in Russia four days after the vote, ignoring huge street protests by supporters of losing candidates Mirhossein Mousavi and Karoubi, who both say the election was rigged.
The Guardian Council, a supervisory body, on Monday endorsed the election result and dismissed complaints of irregularities, saying a partial recount had shown these were baseless.
Karoubi and Mousavi, a moderate former prime minister, have stuck by their demands for the vote to be annulled, in defiance of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has upheld the result and denounced dissenters. Khamenei`s word is final.
"Some visible and invisible forces blocked any change in the executive power," Karoubi complained.
Security forces have crushed street protests, and hardliners have regained the upper hand in the world`s fifth biggest oil exporter, whose nuclear programme has alarmed the West.
Karoubi, a white-bearded cleric who was close to Iran`s revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, demanded the release of "thousands" of people arrested during the unrest.
Iran`s police chief, Ismail Ahmadi-Moghaddam, put the number of detainees at 1,032 and said most had since been released.
"Those who are still in detention were referred to the public and revolutionary courts in Tehran," the semi-official Fars News Agency quoted him as telling a news conference.
Ahmadi-Moghaddam said 20 "rioters" had been killed during the unrest and more than 500 police had been injured.
"PLANNED SCENARIO"  Continued...
Original article

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Iranian authority offers talks with election losers

Khmer Rouge torture survivor saw "hell on earth"

(ROUGE, PRISON, TORTURER, CRIMES, TRIBUNAL, ANOTHER)


By Ek Madra
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - One of the few survivors of the Khmer Rouge`s notorious Tuol Sleng prison gave chilling testimony of "hell on earth" when he faced his former torturer at a U.N.-backed war crimes tribunal on Wednesday.
Like another survivor who testified at the joint United Nations-Cambodian tribunal, Bou Meng said he was alive only because he was an artist and Duch, the torturer, liked his drawings of Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot.
Meng was accused of spying for the United States in 1977 and was taken along with his wife to the S-21 interrogation center, once a school and now a museum to the horror of the Khmer Rouge regime.
He was one of only seven people to survive the prison, where more than 14,000 men, women and children died during Pol Pot`s 1975-1979 "killing fields" reign of terror.
"I saw about 20 men with long hair, looking very sick and emaciated. The cell was like hell on earth," Meng told the court.
The prisoners were kept in chains with empty bullet boxes and plastic bottles to use as toilets.
"I saw a lizard and hoped it would drop on me so I could catch it and eat it," Meng said. "They kept whipping me and asked me when I joined the CIA."
For the first time in three decades, Meng had the chance to question Duch, the first of five Pol Pot cadres indicted by the tribunal.
He never saw his wife again after they entered S-21 and he asked his torturer what had happened to her.
"I expect she was killed by my subordinates," Duch replied.
With no death penalty in Cambodia, Duch, whose real name is Kaing Guek Eav, faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted on charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity, torture and homicide.
He has admitted his part in the deaths but maintains he was only following orders.
On Monday another artiste Vann Nath said his life was spared only because Duch liked his paintings of Pol Pot.
WAITING TO DIE
Another S-21 survivor, Chum Mey, 79, told the judges on Tuesday his toenails were torn off and that he, too, was held in a dark cell, his legs shackled. He received hardly any food and expected to die at any moment.  Continued...
Original article

African Union lifts sanctions on Mauritania

(AFRICAN, UNION, SANCTIONS, MAURITANIA, JUNTA, ELECTION)


ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - The African Union has dropped sanctions on Mauritania and lifted a suspension from the body because of steps it is taking to restore democracy this month, the Union said in a statement on Wednesday.
The African Union suspended Mauritania after the army overthrew the elected president in August last year and froze assets and imposed visa and travel bans on members of the junta and its supporters.
But an election is due on July 18 under a transition administration agreed on by the junta and the civilian opposition in the iron ore-producing northwest African country of 3 million.
The African Union`s Peace and Security Council said the decision to lift the measures against Mauritania was taken at a meeting on Monday.
"(The Council) looks forward to the presidential election ... and requests that all efforts be deployed for the election to take place in the required conditions of transparency, fairness and freedom," it said.
It said it would keep watching the situation in Mauritania to make sure it stayed on track and in case other measures needed to be taken, potentially including the re-imposition of sanctions.
Under an agreement that took effect last month, a transition government was set up to allow a presidential election on July 18 in which junta leader Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz and the opposition will take part.
Mauritania`s neighbors were concerned the military takeover could set a precedent in a region that had begun to shed its reputation for coups.
AU sanctions imposed in February this year included travel restrictions and the freezing of assets belonging to individuals whose activities maintained what it called the "unconstitutional status quo".
The European Union has suspended non-humanitarian aid.
The African Union also imposed sanctions on Guinea after the military took over following the death of the veteran president last December. African countries are concerned Guinea`s junta may not keep plans to hold free elections this year.
Original article

Italy asks who to blame for deadly train inferno

(VIAREGGIO, ITALIAN, EXPLOSION, TRAIN, WHILE, CORRIERE)


Italy asks who to blame for deadly train infernoBy Antonella Cinelli
VIAREGGIO, Italy (Reuters) - Pressure was building on Italian authorities Wednesday to determine who was to blame for an explosion of a passing freight train that set fire to nearby homes and burned families alive while they slept.
The death toll from Monday night`s explosion in the seaside town of Viareggio rose to 16 after a girl aged three and a boy of two died from their burns at hospitals in Rome and Florence. Twenty seven people were injured, many of them seriously.
Italian newspapers demanded to know who was to blame, with La Repubblica asking "Who`s Guilty?" and Corriere della Sera warning "No Alibis." Some papers dedicated the first dozen pages or more to the disaster, one of Italy`s worst in living memory.
"The Inferno of the Innocent," was the headline of the Rome daily Il Messaggero.
"All of us were afraid. We just didn`t understand what was happening, we thought it was a terrorist attack," said Mirko Angelini, a resident of Viareggio, north of Rome.
Infrastructure Minister Altero Matteoli told parliament "checks are underway" into reports the axle on a rail car carrying liquefied petroleum gas appeared to have buckled, causing the derailment and subsequent explosion.
La Repubblica warned in an editorial there were "no small fry" among those possibly responsible.
The train was driven by an employee of Italian state railways, which says it is the country`s largest company, while the railcar whose axle may have given way was owned by a subsidiary of U.S.-based GATX Corp.
The conductor of the train, Roberto Fochesato, told Corriere della Sera "we didn`t make any mistakes. We found ourselves in an inferno, but it wasn`t my fault."
The GATX unit said the railcars were new and issued a statement saying "so far we do not see any connection between the cause of the accident and our wagons."
Rescuers Wednesday suspended the search for missing victims in the rubble of collapsed homes. One person was still unaccounted for but was presumed to be among the unidentified dead, a rescuer said.
Heart-wrenching stories about the victims dominated the airwaves and newsprint. Corriere told of a mother who rushed out of her home with her five-year-old son Luca, putting him in her car for safety while she ran back inside for her other two children.
The car caught fire while she was gone, and Luca died.
Cable news stations read aloud stories of families killed or in intensive care for severe burns at local hospitals.
"Ilaria and Michela, sisters and friends. The fireball burned them together," was a headline in La Repubblica.  Continued...
Original article

N.Korean ship tracked by U.S. Navy reverses course

(NORTH, KOREAN, KOREA, WEAPONS, OFFICIAL, NUCLEAR)


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A North Korean ship suspected of carrying weapons has reversed course after being tracked by the U.S. Navy under a new U.N. monitoring program, a U.S. official said on Tuesday.
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed the Kang Nam was heading back in the direction of North Korea after turning around within the last few days.
"We`ve no idea where it`s going," the official said. "The U.S. didn`t do anything to make it turn around."
"It`s pretty much on a reciprocal track," the official added.
South Korean media reports have said the ship, a known North Korean weapons trader, was probably heading for Myanmar, while other media outlets have named Singapore as a possible destination. Singapore`s government has said it will take action if the ship tries to dock with a cargo of weapons.
North Korea has defied the international community with a series of nuclear and missile tests, raising fears of a spread of nuclear weapons to countries such as Iran.
U.S. officials have not said why the Navy is monitoring the Kang Nam but the New York Times reported on Tuesday some senior members of the Obama administration are wondering whether they are being manipulated by North Korean leader Kim Jong-il.
"The whole thing just doesn`t add up," the newspaper quoted one senior administration official as saying.
"My worry is that we make a big demand about seeing the cargo, and then there`s a tense standoff, and when it`s all over we discover that old man Kim set us up to look like George Bush searching for nonexistent (weapons of mass destruction)."
The Kang Nam is the first North Korean ship monitored under a U.N. security resolution that bars Pyongyang from exporting weapons including missile parts and nuclear materials.
The ship, which left North Korea in mid-June, has been tracked by several U.S. Navy vessels over the course of its journey and now was being monitored by a U.S. Navy destroyer, the official said.
Speaking before news of the ship`s reversal, the chief of U.S. Naval Operations, Admiral Gary Roughead, said he thought the U.N. resolution had increased pressure on Pyongyang and was proving to be an effective tool against proliferation.
"It gets pretty lonely out there when you have only so much water and only so much gas," Roughead said, referring to a ship with no safe harbor.
(Additional reporting by Andrew Gray and Andrea Shalal-Esa; Writing by Joanne Allen; Editing by John O`Callaghan)
Original article

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Yemeni plane crashes off Comoros, girl found alive

(AIRBUS, YEMEN, FRENCH, CRASHED, COMOROS, PLANE)


Yemeni plane crashes off Comoros, girl found aliveBy Ahmed Ali Amir
MORONI (Reuters) - An Airbus A310-300 from Yemen with 153 people on board, including 66 French nationals, crashed into the sea off the Indian Ocean archipelago of Comoros as it approached in bad weather early on Tuesday, officials said.
A 14-year-old girl was found alive in the sea, Comoros Communications Minister Abdourahim Said Bakar said. Earlier reports had said the rescued child was five.
The Paris airports authority said 66 French nationals were aboard the plane, which was flying the final leg of a trip from Paris and Marseille to Comoros via Yemen.
A Yemeni aviation official said there were also nationals from Canada, Comoros, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Morocco, the Palestinian territories, the Philippines and Yemen on the plane.
It is the second Airbus to plunge into the sea this month. An Air France Airbus A330-200 crashed into the Atlantic Ocean killing 228 people on board on June 1. A preliminary report on that crash is due on Thursday.
The Paris-Marseille-Yemen leg of the Yemenia flight was flown by an Airbus A330. In Sanaa, those passengers who were flying on to the Comoros changed onto a second Yemenia plane, the A310 that crashed.
FAULTS DETECTED
French Transport Minister Dominique Bussereau said faults had been detected during inspections in France in 2007 on the Yemenia A310, and that it had not flown to France since.
"The A310 in question was inspected in 2007 by the DGAC (French transport authorities) and they noticed a certain number of faults," he told the I-tele television channel.
"The company was not on the black list but was subject to stricter checks on our part, and was due to be interviewed shortly by the European Union`s safety committee."
"The question we are asking ... is whether you can collect people in a normal way on French territory and then put them in a plane that does not ensure their security. We do not want this to happen again," he said.
Yemen`s transport minister said the plane was thoroughly checked in May under Airbus supervision.
"It was a comprehensive inspection carried out in Yemen ... with experts from Airbus," Khaled Ibrahim al-Wazeer told Reuters from Sanaa. "It was in line with international standards."
The EU suspended permission for Yemenia to maintain EU-registered planes in February after it failed a set of audit inspections, the EU`s aviation safety agency told Reuters in Brussels.
The move would not have affected the doomed Airbus A310 plane since it was registered in Yemen. But it provides further evidence of European concerns over the airline`s operations after the EU Commission said the plane which crashed had sparked an EU inquiry two years ago.  Continued...
Original article

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Bomb kills 32 in Iraq as U.S. troops leave

(BAGHDAD, SECURITY, KIRKUK, PEOPLE, IRAQIS, MILITARY)


Bomb kills 32 in Iraq as U.S. troops leaveBy Tim Cocks and Muhanad Mohammed
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Hours after U.S. troops handed over control of Iraq`s cities to its domestic security forces, a car bomb in the northern city of Kirkuk killed at least 32 people and wounded more than 100 on Tuesday, police said.
The blast tore through a busy market in a largely Kurdish part of the city, which is regarded as a potential flashpoint between ethnic Kurds, Arabs and Turkmen.
The U.S. pullback to rural bases from towns and cities is the first step toward a full U.S. withdrawal by 2012 agreed under a bilateral security pact.
Some Iraqis fear it leaves them open to attack by insurgent groups but many Iraqis celebrated what the government named "National Sovereignty Day," more than six years after the U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein.
Citizens and Iraqi soldiers drove around the streets of the capital in vehicles draped in flowers and Iraqi flags. Signs were draped on Baghdad`s many concrete blast walls reading "Iraq: my nation, my glory, my honor."
"This day, which we consider a national celebration, is an achievement made by all Iraqis," Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said in a televised address.
"Our incomplete sovereignty and the presence of foreign troops is the most serious legacy we have inherited (from Saddam). Those who think that Iraqis are unable to defend their country are committing a fatal mistake."
The day`s festivities included a parade in Baghdad`s heavily fortified Green Zone government and diplomatic district, viewed by Iraqis as the ultimate symbol of the foreign military presence until local forces took control of it in January.
In a display of the military muscle Iraq will use to combat a stubborn insurgency, thousands of soldiers and police paraded on foot or in U.S.-donated Humvees, armored cars and tanks in a compound where Saddam`s forces once staged elaborate displays.
U.S. and local officials said the pullback of U.S. troops showed how far the country had come since it was almost torn apart by tit-for-tat sectarian killing in 2006/2007.
But the Kirkuk bomb underscored the fragility of the security gains. Iraq is less violent that it has been for years, but militants still stage frequent attacks.
In Washington, U.S. President Barack Obama lauded the U.S. troop withdrawal as an important milestone but warned of "difficult days" ahead.
Frantic relatives of those who had been in the area dug through the rubble in Kirkuk, searching for missing loved ones.
"I went to the market to get some bread and there was a huge explosion," said Taseen Azad, 21, who was lightly wounded. "I saw people falling on the ground, shops burning and dead people. Then someone took me to the hospital."
The U.S. military said four U.S. soldiers based in Baghdad had died of combat-related injuries on Monday.  Continued...
Original article

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Zelaya vows return to Honduras despite arrest threat

(PRESIDENT, ZELAYA, HONDURAS, WOULD, GOVERNMENT, AFTER)


Zelaya vows return to Honduras despite arrest threatBy Patrick Markey and Mica Rosenberg
TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) - Ousted President Manuel Zelaya vowed on Tuesday to return to Honduras flanked by foreign leaders to serve the rest of his term, defying a warning from a hostile interim leadership that he will be immediately arrested.
Zelaya gathered further international support as he addressed the United Nations and Organization of American States. He said the Argentine and Ecuadorean presidents and the U.N. General Assembly and OAS chiefs would accompany him on a trip back to Honduras on Thursday.
Upping the ante in what is already Central America`s biggest political crisis in decades, the interim government set up after Sunday`s military coup said Zelaya would be captured if he returned.
The coup against Zelaya -- a timber magnate toppled in a dispute over his push to allow presidential re-election beyond a single four-year term -- has been greeted by a tide of condemnation from President Barack Obama to Zelaya`s leftist allies in Latin America. But he remains a divisive figure in Honduras, an impoverished coffee, textile and banana-exporter of some 7 million people.
Several thousand demonstrators rallied in favor of his ouster in the capital Tegucigalpa on Tuesday, after two days of rowdy anti-Zelaya protests near the presidential palace.
But in a development that could offer an opening for talks on ending the stand-off, the interim government said it would send a delegation of politicians, business leaders and lawyers to Washington on Wednesday for talks on the crisis.
Roberto Micheletti, sworn in as caretaker president by Congress soon after Sunday`s coup, announced the mission after Zelaya traveled to New York and Washington to address the United Nations and Organization of American States on Tuesday.
U.S. officials said Zelaya would likely meet State Department officials while in Washington.
Zelaya insisted he will return to complete his mandate, which ends in early 2010, and said he did not intend to run for president again.
"I am going back to Honduras on Thursday, I`m going to return as president," Zelaya said after the U.N. General Assembly urged member states to recognize only his government.
CHAVEZ ALLY
In office since 2006, Zelaya had upset conservative elites with his growing alliance with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, a left-wing firebrand who is championing an old-style revolutionary brand of socialism across Latin America.
Central America`s first military coup since the Cold War came after Zelaya angered Congress, courts and the army with a push for constitutional changes to allow presidential
re-election.
Enrique Ortez, the interim government`s foreign minister, told CNN`s Spanish-language channel that Zelaya had charges pending against him for violating the constitution, drug trafficking and organized crime.  Continued...
Original article

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Barak: Too early to declare Israel settlement freeze

(ISRAEL, BARAK, TALKS, MITCHELL, MEETING, PEACE)


Barak: Too early to declare Israel settlement freezeBy Daniel Bases
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said on Tuesday after talks with the U.S. Middle East envoy that it was too soon to say whether Israel would freeze West Bank settlements as demanded by President Barack Obama.
Barak said the talks with envoy George Mitchell, which lasted over four hours, were "positive" but that there are still "differences."
In a joint statement issued after their meeting, Barak and Mitchell said they had discussed the full range of issues related to Middle East peace and security. The statement said the discussions were constructive and would soon continue.
In a rare rift between Israel and the United States, Obama is pushing for a building freeze in a bid to spur the resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.
Asked whether Israel would declare a temporary settlement building freeze, Barak said: "I think that it`s a little bit too early to predict.
"We are considering every positive contribution Israel can make toward the taking off of a significant important peace effort," he said.
Barak said a meeting between Mitchell and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was being arranged in the next one to three weeks. The two had planned a meeting in Paris last Thursday but it was put off by Israel, which said it needed more time to prepare.
Israel`s biggest newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported on Sunday that Barak would propose a three-month halt to construction starts in settlements but allow current building work to continue.
Barak said the talks were not mired down by the settlements issue. "I don`t think we are stuck, I don`t think we are stuck now. We are continuing talks on a wide variety of subjects, to clarify things and reach understandings," he said.
"The talks were positive and in a good atmosphere, even though there are still differences," he added.
Barak said the talks with Mitchell covered a wide range of issues, including a U.S.-led regional peace initiative which "we will support full-heartedly."
PROTRACTED PROCESS
One Israeli official with knowledge of Monday`s meeting told Reuters Israel was not giving details of the talks, but added: "I can say that this meeting was definitely positive and that an agreement (over differences) could be within reach."
"This is a protracted process and each side is learning to appreciate the other`s point of view," the official said.
In their joint statement, Mitchell and Barak said their discussions covered "a wide range of measures needed to create a climate conducive to peace," including measures on security and incitement by the Palestinians; steps by Arab states toward normalization with Israel; and actions from Israel on access and movement in the West Bank and on settlement activity.  Continued...
Original article

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U.S. envoy assures Israel of strong alliance

Barak: Too early to declare Israel settlement freeze

(ISRAEL, BARAK, TALKS, MITCHELL, MEETING, PEACE)


Barak: Too early to declare Israel settlement freezeBy Daniel Bases
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said on Tuesday after talks with the U.S. Middle East envoy that it was too soon to say whether Israel would freeze West Bank settlements as demanded by President Barack Obama.
Barak said the talks with envoy George Mitchell, which lasted over four hours, were "positive" but that there are still "differences."
In a joint statement issued after their meeting, Barak and Mitchell said they had discussed the full range of issues related to Middle East peace and security. The statement said the discussions were constructive and would soon continue.
In a rare rift between Israel and the United States, Obama is pushing for a building freeze in a bid to spur the resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.
Asked whether Israel would declare a temporary settlement building freeze, Barak said: "I think that it`s a little bit too early to predict.
"We are considering every positive contribution Israel can make toward the taking off of a significant important peace effort," he said.
Barak said a meeting between Mitchell and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was being arranged in the next one to three weeks. The two had planned a meeting in Paris last Thursday but it was put off by Israel, which said it needed more time to prepare.
Israel`s biggest newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported on Sunday that Barak would propose a three-month halt to construction starts in settlements but allow current building work to continue.
Barak said the talks were not mired down by the settlements issue. "I don`t think we are stuck, I don`t think we are stuck now. We are continuing talks on a wide variety of subjects, to clarify things and reach understandings," he said.
"The talks were positive and in a good atmosphere, even though there are still differences," he added.
Barak said the talks with Mitchell covered a wide range of issues, including a U.S.-led regional peace initiative which "we will support full-heartedly."
PROTRACTED PROCESS
One Israeli official with knowledge of Monday`s meeting told Reuters Israel was not giving details of the talks, but added: "I can say that this meeting was definitely positive and that an agreement (over differences) could be within reach."
"This is a protracted process and each side is learning to appreciate the other`s point of view," the official said.
In their joint statement, Mitchell and Barak said their discussions covered "a wide range of measures needed to create a climate conducive to peace," including measures on security and incitement by the Palestinians; steps by Arab states toward normalization with Israel; and actions from Israel on access and movement in the West Bank and on settlement activity.  Continued...
Original article

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Indonesia`s regional leaders attract investors

(INDONESIA, OTHER, LEADERS, THEIR, WIDODO, ELECTION)


Indonesia`s regional leaders attract investorsBy Sunanda Creagh
SOLO, Indonesia (Reuters) - A quiet revolution is under way in Solo, Central Java, and in other parts of Indonesia where local leaders are learning that one way to get re-elected is to take voters and their needs seriously.
Joko Widodo, a former furniture salesman, was elected mayor of this royal city four years ago. Like a handful of other local leaders, he has made a name for himself by taking on bureaucracy, graft and infrastructure in Solo, a microcosm of the problems that afflict Southeast Asia`s biggest economy.
He and some of his peers, typically men in their forties or fifties with a background in business, are already regarded as potential candidates for much bigger jobs on the national stage, the governors and ministers of the future, because their "can-do" approach helps to attract investment.
"I am not a genius. I just ask the people what they want. You want, I give," said Widodo, 48, in an interview with Reuters.
"In other cities, they have the top-down approach. I don`t want this. I want bottom up. It`s better for me if there is participatory planning."
Across Indonesia, which embraced democracy after autocratic president Suharto was forced to quit in 1998 and holds its second direct election for president next week, voters are punishing leaders who don`t listen, regardless of party affiliation or campaign budgets, says election observer Kevin Evans.
"This is definitely a pattern," Evans said.
"In the legislative elections (in April), we saw incumbent candidates with lots of money being chucked out and some minor parties get a massive burst of votes in areas where they have a good candidate."
INVESTOR-FRIENDLY
Following decentralization, provinces and districts are now being ranked on the basis of their investor-friendliness. Widodo, who sold locally-produced furniture overseas before he became mayor, has already attracted "rave reviews" said Kevin O`Rourke, Jakarta-based political risk analyst.
"He`s up and coming and could be governor of Central Java one day," said O`Rourke. In Solo, he has been tipped as a future tourism minister after establishing cultural fairs, building a new airport and launching plans for an inter-city highway.
Indonesia`s Tempo Magazine late last year named him one of 10 leaders to watch.
"They created innovations and breakthroughs," said Tempo, adding that among these "few good men" were "a number of promising future leaders."
Some built parks and clean open spaces to improve the quality of life, or encouraged breakthrough agricultural practices. Others cut the stifling bureaucracy and corruption that accompanies some of the most basic public services in Indonesia.
Untung Wiyono, regent of Sragen near Solo, connected all his villages to the internet, while Andi Hatta Marakarma, regent of Luwu Timur, South Sulawesi, built new villages and roads, helping to cut the cost of transporting rice by over two-thirds.  Continued...
Original article

Barak: Too early to declare Israel settlement freeze

(ISRAEL, BARAK, TALKS, MITCHELL, SETTLEMENTS, BUILDING)


Barak: Too early to declare Israel settlement freezeBy Daniel Bases
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said Tuesday after talks with U.S. Middle East envoy George Mitchell it was too early to say whether Israel might declare a temporary freeze on settlements in the West Bank.
Barak said the talks with Mitchell, which lasted over four hours, were "positive" but that there are still "differences."
Asked whether Israel would declare a temporary settlement building freeze, he said: "I think that it`s a little bit too early to predict. We are considering every positive contribution Israel can make toward the taking off of a significant important peace effort."
U.S. President Barack Obama, in a rare rift between Israel and the United States, is pushing for a building freeze in a bid to spur the resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.
Earlier this week Israel`s biggest newspaper, Yedioth Ahronoth, reported that Barak would propose a three-month halt to construction starts in settlements but allow current building work to continue.
Barak said the talks were not mired down by the settlements issue. "I don`t think we are stuck, I don`t think we are stuck now. We are continuing talks on a wide variety of subjects, to clarify things and reach understandings," Barak said.
"The talks were positive and in a good atmosphere, even though there are still differences," he added.
Barak said the talks with Mitchell covered a wide range of issues, including a U.S.-led regional peace initiative which "we will support full-heartedly."
A joint statement from the two nations was expected later Tuesday.
Mitchell, who posed for photographers at the start of the meeting in a New York hotel, did not take questions.
Barak said a meeting between Mitchell and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was being arranged in the next one to three weeks, Barak said.
Monday Israel approved construction of 50 new homes at a West Bank settlement as part of a larger development, an expansion that would defy the U.S. call for a building freeze.
Netanyahu has said he would allow some construction to continue to match population growth within existing settlements.
(Additional reporting by Ari Rabinovitch in Jerusalem; Reporting by David Storey)
Original article

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