Global pollution

7 - IAEA finds traces of plutonium in Iran September 5, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zhuxiaotian @ 4:00 am
Tags: ,

WORLD / Middle East

IAEA finds traces of plutonium in Iran

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-15 09:01

VIENNA, Austria - New traces of plutonium and enriched uranium -
potential material for atomic warheads - have been found in a nuclear
waste facility in Iran, a revelation that came Tuesday as the Iranian
president boasted his country’s nuclear fuel program will soon be
completed.

The International Atomic Energy Agency report detailing the discovery
also faulted Tehran for not cooperating with the UN watchdog’s attempts
to investigate other suspicious aspects of Iran’s nuclear program.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, speaks with to the media during a
press conference in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2006. Ahmadinejad on
Tuesday said Iran would soon celebrate completion of its controversial
nuclear fuel program. [AP]

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in a two-hour news conference in
Tehran, asserted the world has no choice but to “live with a nuclear
Iran,” although he conceded his country was “still in the first stages”
of its uranium enrichment program.

So far, Tehran has been able to activate only two small experimental
pilot enrichment plants that U.N. officials say have frequently broken
down and have produced only small amounts of material suitable for
nuclear fuel.

But Iran has progressed enough since resuming enrichment activities in
February to provoke a U.N. Security Council demand that it freeze its
program - a call Tehran has ignored. It says it intends to move toward
large-scale uranium enrichment involving 3,000 centrifuges by late 2006,
then expand the program to 54,000 centrifuges.

Iranian nuclear officials say 54,000 centrifuges would produce enough
enriched uranium to fuel a 1,000-megawatt reactor, such as the one being
built by Russia that is near completion at the southern city of Bushehr.
Experts have estimated Iran would need only 1,500 centrifuges to produce
a nuclear weapon.

Tehran insists it is only seeking to generate low-enriched uranium for
nuclear fuel and not the highly enriched variety needed for weapons. It
also denies it is building a heavy water research reactor at Arak in
order to obtain plutonium for nuclear arms, asserting it only wants to
produce radioactive isotopes for medical research and treatment.

Still, when finished - probably early in the next decade - Arak could
produce enough plutonium for about two bombs a year.

The Arak plant, along with the discovery of a secret Iranian enrichment
program in 2003, Tehran’s refusal to cease uranium enrichment and
findings by IAEA inspectors have increased suspicions about Iran’s
program.

The IAEA board in February referred Iran to the Security Council,
suggesting it had breached the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and might
be trying to make nuclear weapons.

The U.S. and its European allies are negotiating with Russia and China
over a draft Security Council resolution that would penalize Iran for its
refusal to respect an Aug. 31 deadline to halt enrichment.

Ahmadinejad remained defiant. “I’m very hopeful that we will be able to
hold the big celebration of Iran’s full nuclearization in the current
year,” he said. Iran’s calendar year ends March 20.

But he acknowledged Iran still has a long way to go before it can produce
enough enriched uranium for the reactor at Bushehr. “We need time to
produce enough fuel for one complete nuclear power plant,” he said.

Tuesday’s IAEA report, prepared for next week’s meeting of the agency’s
35-nation board, did little to dispel concerns.

Beyond detailing the new plutonium and enriched uranium findings at a
nuclear waste facility, it also faulted Tehran for lack of cooperation.

“The agency will remain unable to make further progress in its efforts to
verify the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities in Iran”
without more cooperation from Tehran, the report said.

The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, said
Ahmadinejad’s comments and the IAEA’s latest discoveries “both
demonstrate the urgency for the Security Council to act on Iran.”

“Sanctions are obviously the only means to get Iran’s attention,” Bolton
said.

As expected, the four-page IAEA report, made available to The Associated
Press, confirmed that Iran continues uranium enrichment experiments in
defiance of the Security Council.

A senior UN official who was familiar with the report cautioned against
reading too much into the findings of traces of highly enriched uranium
and plutonium, saying Iran had explained both and they could plausibly be
classified as byproducts of peaceful nuclear activities.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to discuss the report publicly, said that while the uranium
traces were enriched to a higher level than needed to generate power,
they were below weapons-grade.

The findings, however, were likely to be cited by the US and other
nations suspicious of Tehran’s nuclear agenda as adding to circumstantial
evidence against it.

Tuesday’s summary also listed specific cases in which Tehran failed to
cooperate with agency inspectors.

They said Iran refused to let the IAEA increase monitoring of enrichment
facilities at Natanz, did not respond to a request for more information
on its enrichment program, denied access to suspicious equipment or
military personnel, and refused to provide information on apparent
experiments linking nuclear and ballistic missile research.

The report will be discussed by the IAEA board next week at a meeting
expected to be dominated by Iran’s nuclear program, particularly its
intention to ask the agency for technical help for its Arak reactor.

Diplomats from nations on the IAEA board say the U.S. is lobbying against
Iran’s request. Seven diplomats, who demanded anonymity in exchange for
discussing confidential information, told the AP they believed the board
would deny Iran’s request.

Top World News

� IAEA finds traces of plutonium in Iran

� Dems keep Senate leaders, split in House

� Rumsfeld faces war crime lawsuit

� Terror to top agenda as India, Pakistan resume peace talks

� US: Immigrants may be held indefinitely

Today’s Top News

� APEC leaders to talk trade, security

� Wen tells US: Protectionism hurts

� Rumsfeld faces war crime lawsuit

� Dog policy ‘not infringing owners’ rights’

� Chinese embassy office robbed

Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours

++++++++++ end ++++++++++

 

Software - ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ó¢ï¿½ï£ºï¿½ú¼¶¡¢ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ã´Ëµ September 5, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zhuxiaotian @ 3:53 am
Tags: , , ,

�����ڵ�λ�ã� > Language Tips > Survival English > Oral English

����Ӣ��ú¼¶¡¢ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ã´Ëµ
[ 2006-06-20 10:10 ]

���籭С�������е���Խ��Խ���ң��������ӵ�ȥ��Ҳ�������ʡ���ĿǰΪֹ���Ѿ��
�8֧���ӽ���ʮ��ǿ�����϶������¹���Ӣ�����������������÷¡¢°ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Í¢ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½
�������Ϊ�Լ��Ӱ������ӻ�����ͬʱ��Ҳ��������ѧѧ���ǵ�����Ӣ��������Ǿ�
������”����”��”����”������ô˵�ġ�|

1. England, Ecuador and host nation Germany have advanced to the second
round of the World Cup.

���籭����Ȧ�ĵ�һ�ֱ�����С�������ڶ��־��ǰ˷�֮һ������Ҳ����ʮ��ǿ�ı��
���”����”��Ȼ��”ǰ����advance��”����ô����ʮ��ǿ����advance to the second
round of the World Cup�ˡ�

2. A 3-0 victory against Costa Rica put Ecuador in the second round of
the World Cup for the first time.

�ⳡս�۶Զ��϶�����˵���������Ƿ�ͬС�ɡ����϶�����һ�ν������籭ʮ��ǿ���
�

����advance�����ú¼¶¡±ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ëµï¿½ï¿½put … in the second round of the World
Cup��ʲô���п��ܽ�һֻ����put in the second round of the World
Cup����Ȼ��ս���ˡ�������������ǰ��������ͨ���ǡ��ԡ�����ʤ�û¡±¡£

˳����һ�£������ȼ�սʤijֻ���顱�Ϳ���˵�� (number) - (number) victory
against …�������� - Ҫ���� to��

3. The first thing German coach Juergen Klinsmann did when his team
qualified for the second round of the World Cup was give his players a
day off.

�¹�������Ȼ��������Ա��һ��������ʮ��ǿ����Ϣ�����̾͸���Ա����һ���١�

����ʮ��ǿ�󣬾����ʸ��μ����籭����Ȧ�ڶ��ֵı����ˡ����ԣ����ú¼¶¡±ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½adv
ance to, put in ���������������˵���� qualify for��

4. A 1-0 win Thursday night against Paraguay put the Swedes in position
to move into the second round.

���������ϣ������԰�������ʤ��������ȼ���˽���ʮ��ǿ��ϣ��֮�𡣲��ý£¬¾¿¾ï¿½ï¿½
ܲ��ܽú¼¶»¹Òªï¿½Èµï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ð¡ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ë²ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½È·ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Üµï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ëµï¿½ï¿½B�����仹�Ǵ��н���ϣ���
ġ�

��������ϣ���ú¼¶¡±ï¿½Í¿ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ëµï¿½ï¿½in the position to move into the second
round�����ý£¬µ½µï¿½ï¿½Ü²ï¿½ï¿½Ü½ú¼¶£¬ï¿½Í¿ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Êµï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ë¡ï¿½

��Ӣ������Annabel�༭��

To be continued

 

Finance - IAEA finds traces of plutonium in Iran September 4, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zhuxiaotian @ 9:53 pm
Tags: , ,

WORLD / Middle East

IAEA finds traces of plutonium in Iran

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-15 09:01

VIENNA, Austria - New traces of plutonium and enriched uranium -
potential material for atomic warheads - have been found in a nuclear
waste facility in Iran, a revelation that came Tuesday as the Iranian
president boasted his country’s nuclear fuel program will soon be
completed.

The International Atomic Energy Agency report detailing the discovery
also faulted Tehran for not cooperating with the UN watchdog’s attempts
to investigate other suspicious aspects of Iran’s nuclear program.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, speaks with to the media during a
press conference in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2006. Ahmadinejad on
Tuesday said Iran would soon celebrate completion of its controversial
nuclear fuel program. [AP]

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in a two-hour news conference in
Tehran, asserted the world has no choice but to “live with a nuclear
Iran,” although he conceded his country was “still in the first stages”
of its uranium enrichment program.

So far, Tehran has been able to activate only two small experimental
pilot enrichment plants that U.N. officials say have frequently broken
down and have produced only small amounts of material suitable for
nuclear fuel.

But Iran has progressed enough since resuming enrichment activities in
February to provoke a U.N. Security Council demand that it freeze its
program - a call Tehran has ignored. It says it intends to move toward
large-scale uranium enrichment involving 3,000 centrifuges by late 2006,
then expand the program to 54,000 centrifuges.

Iranian nuclear officials say 54,000 centrifuges would produce enough
enriched uranium to fuel a 1,000-megawatt reactor, such as the one being
built by Russia that is near completion at the southern city of Bushehr.
Experts have estimated Iran would need only 1,500 centrifuges to produce
a nuclear weapon.

Tehran insists it is only seeking to generate low-enriched uranium for
nuclear fuel and not the highly enriched variety needed for weapons. It
also denies it is building a heavy water research reactor at Arak in
order to obtain plutonium for nuclear arms, asserting it only wants to
produce radioactive isotopes for medical research and treatment.

Still, when finished - probably early in the next decade - Arak could
produce enough plutonium for about two bombs a year.

The Arak plant, along with the discovery of a secret Iranian enrichment
program in 2003, Tehran’s refusal to cease uranium enrichment and
findings by IAEA inspectors have increased suspicions about Iran’s
program.

The IAEA board in February referred Iran to the Security Council,
suggesting it had breached the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and might
be trying to make nuclear weapons.

The U.S. and its European allies are negotiating with Russia and China
over a draft Security Council resolution that would penalize Iran for its
refusal to respect an Aug. 31 deadline to halt enrichment.

Ahmadinejad remained defiant. “I’m very hopeful that we will be able to
hold the big celebration of Iran’s full nuclearization in the current
year,” he said. Iran’s calendar year ends March 20.

But he acknowledged Iran still has a long way to go before it can produce
enough enriched uranium for the reactor at Bushehr. “We need time to
produce enough fuel for one complete nuclear power plant,” he said.

Tuesday’s IAEA report, prepared for next week’s meeting of the agency’s
35-nation board, did little to dispel concerns.

Beyond detailing the new plutonium and enriched uranium findings at a
nuclear waste facility, it also faulted Tehran for lack of cooperation.

“The agency will remain unable to make further progress in its efforts to
verify the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities in Iran”
without more cooperation from Tehran, the report said.

The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, said
Ahmadinejad’s comments and the IAEA’s latest discoveries “both
demonstrate the urgency for the Security Council to act on Iran.”

“Sanctions are obviously the only means to get Iran’s attention,” Bolton
said.

As expected, the four-page IAEA report, made available to The Associated
Press, confirmed that Iran continues uranium enrichment experiments in
defiance of the Security Council.

A senior UN official who was familiar with the report cautioned against
reading too much into the findings of traces of highly enriched uranium
and plutonium, saying Iran had explained both and they could plausibly be
classified as byproducts of peaceful nuclear activities.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to discuss the report publicly, said that while the uranium
traces were enriched to a higher level than needed to generate power,
they were below weapons-grade.

The findings, however, were likely to be cited by the US and other
nations suspicious of Tehran’s nuclear agenda as adding to circumstantial
evidence against it.

Tuesday’s summary also listed specific cases in which Tehran failed to
cooperate with agency inspectors.

They said Iran refused to let the IAEA increase monitoring of enrichment
facilities at Natanz, did not respond to a request for more information
on its enrichment program, denied access to suspicious equipment or
military personnel, and refused to provide information on apparent
experiments linking nuclear and ballistic missile research.

The report will be discussed by the IAEA board next week at a meeting
expected to be dominated by Iran’s nuclear program, particularly its
intention to ask the agency for technical help for its Arak reactor.

Diplomats from nations on the IAEA board say the U.S. is lobbying against
Iran’s request. Seven diplomats, who demanded anonymity in exchange for
discussing confidential information, told the AP they believed the board
would deny Iran’s request.

Top World News

� IAEA finds traces of plutonium in Iran

� Dems keep Senate leaders, split in House

� Rumsfeld faces war crime lawsuit

� Terror to top agenda as India, Pakistan resume peace talks

� US: Immigrants may be held indefinitely

Today’s Top News

� APEC leaders to talk trade, security

� Wen tells US: Protectionism hurts

� Rumsfeld faces war crime lawsuit

� Dog policy ‘not infringing owners’ rights’

� Chinese embassy office robbed

Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours

To be continued

 

School - ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ó¢ï¿½ï£ºï¿½ú¼¶¡¢ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ã´Ëµ September 4, 2008

�����ڵ�λ�ã� > Language Tips > Survival English > Oral English

����Ӣ��ú¼¶¡¢ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ã´Ëµ
[ 2006-06-20 10:10 ]

���籭С�������е���Խ��Խ���ң��������ӵ�ȥ��Ҳ�������ʡ���ĿǰΪֹ���Ѿ��
�8֧���ӽ���ʮ��ǿ�����϶������¹���Ӣ�����������������÷¡¢°ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Í¢ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½
�������Ϊ�Լ��Ӱ������ӻ�����ͬʱ��Ҳ��������ѧѧ���ǵ�����Ӣ��������Ǿ�
������”����”��”����”������ô˵�ġ�|

1. England, Ecuador and host nation Germany have advanced to the second
round of the World Cup.

���籭����Ȧ�ĵ�һ�ֱ�����С�������ڶ��־��ǰ˷�֮һ������Ҳ����ʮ��ǿ�ı��
���”����”��Ȼ��”ǰ����advance��”����ô����ʮ��ǿ����advance to the second
round of the World Cup�ˡ�

2. A 3-0 victory against Costa Rica put Ecuador in the second round of
the World Cup for the first time.

�ⳡս�۶Զ��϶�����˵���������Ƿ�ͬС�ɡ����϶�����һ�ν������籭ʮ��ǿ���
�

����advance�����ú¼¶¡±ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ëµï¿½ï¿½put … in the second round of the World
Cup��ʲô���п��ܽ�һֻ����put in the second round of the World
Cup����Ȼ��ս���ˡ�������������ǰ��������ͨ���ǡ��ԡ�����ʤ�û¡±¡£

˳����һ�£������ȼ�սʤijֻ���顱�Ϳ���˵�� (number) - (number) victory
against …�������� - Ҫ���� to��

3. The first thing German coach Juergen Klinsmann did when his team
qualified for the second round of the World Cup was give his players a
day off.

�¹�������Ȼ��������Ա��һ��������ʮ��ǿ����Ϣ�����̾͸���Ա����һ���١�

����ʮ��ǿ�󣬾����ʸ��μ����籭����Ȧ�ڶ��ֵı����ˡ����ԣ����ú¼¶¡±ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½adv
ance to, put in ���������������˵���� qualify for��

4. A 1-0 win Thursday night against Paraguay put the Swedes in position
to move into the second round.

���������ϣ������԰�������ʤ��������ȼ���˽���ʮ��ǿ��ϣ��֮�𡣲��ý£¬¾¿¾ï¿½ï¿½
ܲ��ܽú¼¶»¹Òªï¿½Èµï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ð¡ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ë²ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½È·ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Üµï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ëµï¿½ï¿½B�����仹�Ǵ��н���ϣ���
ġ�

��������ϣ���ú¼¶¡±ï¿½Í¿ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ëµï¿½ï¿½in the position to move into the second
round�����ý£¬µ½µï¿½ï¿½Ü²ï¿½ï¿½Ü½ú¼¶£¬ï¿½Í¿ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Êµï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½Ë¡ï¿½

��Ӣ������Annabel�༭��

>> I will continue the story on my next post, happy reading!

 

Went to park of Korean September 4, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zhuxiaotian @ 1:59 am
Tags:

Interesting trip. But 2 friends love to eat dog. Terrible!

 

8 - Rumsfeld faces war crime lawsuit September 4, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zhuxiaotian @ 1:45 am
Tags: ,

WORLD / America

Rumsfeld faces war crime lawsuit

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-15 06:51

BERLIN - Lawyers for inmates of Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison and Guantanamo
Bay asked German prosecutors Tuesday to open a war crimes investigation
of outgoing US Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and other US
officials for their alleged roles in abuse at the detention centers.

Although the lawyers who filed the lawsuit acknowledged while there was
little chance of seeing Rumsfeld in a German jail, the point was simply
to increase the pressure on top brass they say are culpable. German
federal prosecutors said they would examine the case.

US President George W. Bush with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld after
Bush announced Rumsfeld’s replacement on November 8, 2006. Civil rights
groups filed a suit with German prosecutors on Tuesday seeking war crimes
charges against Rumsfeld for alleged abuse of detainees at Abu Ghraib and
Guantanamo prisons. [Reuters]

“We are not expecting that Rumsfeld will appear in a court, but we are
hoping investigators will begin looking into the case,” said Wolfgang
Kaleck, a German lawyer involved in the suit.

Special coverage:
Iraq after War
Related readings:
“Rumsfeld replacement is agent of change”
Bush taps Gates to replace Rumsfeld
, ex-CIA chief Gates in
Rumsfeld tells war critics to ‘back off’

The 220-page lawsuit, which also names 13 other US officials, was sent to
federal prosecutors under a German law that allows the prosecution of war
crimes regardless of where they were committed. It alleges that Rumsfeld
personally ordered and condoned torture.

Bryan Whitman, a Pentagon spokesman, said US officials had not seen the
complaint, but said media reports suggested it was “frivolous.”

“Abu Ghraib is something that the US government has investigated very
thoroughly,” Whitman said, noting more than a dozen probes as well as
congressional hearings. “The appropriate individuals have been held
accountable.”

Former US Army Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski, the one-time commander of all
US military prisons in Iraq, said she would testify against her superiors
because only a handful of low-ranking soldiers have been convicted in the
abuse at Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib prison.

Karpinski, who was relieved of her command and demoted to colonel last
year, said she wanted to “be a voice for my soldiers.”

“They were tried and convicted in the world court before they ever set
foot in any courtroom … while people who are far more culpable and
responsible have walked away blameless,” Karpinski said during a
presentation of the case in Berlin.

There have been 11 convictions and about a dozen courts-martial in the
United States related to Abu Ghraib.

The suit is brought on behalf of 12 alleged torture victims - 11 Iraqis
held at Abu Ghraib and Mohamad al-Qahtani, a Saudi being held at the US
military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, who has been identified by the
US as a would-be participant in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Captured in December 2001 along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border,
al-Qahtani would not crack under normal questioning, so Rumsfeld approved
harsher methods, according to the testimony before Congress.

After FBI agents raised concerns, military investigators began reviewing
the case and in July 2005 said they confirmed abusive and degrading
treatment that included forcing al-Qahtani to wear a bra, dance with
another man, stand naked in front of women, and behave like a dog. Still,
the Pentagon determined “no torture occurred.”

German prosecutors already declined to investigate a more limited lawsuit
in 2005, arguing that it was up to the US to hold any inquiry and that
there were no indications US authorities or courts would refrain from
doing so.

Since then, there have been “no efforts in the United States to go up the
chain of command - they’ve basically been given impunity from any
investigation or prosecution,” said Michael Ratner, president of New
York’s Center for Constitutional Rights, which is behind the litigation.

The attorneys think they have a better case this time, armed with
documents from 2005 congressional hearings on the al-Qahtani case. They
argue that Rumsfeld’s resignation last week means prosecutors may be
under less political pressure to avoid the case.

In addition to Rumsfeld, the suit names Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales, former CIA director George Tenet, former commander of all US
forces in Iraq Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez and eight others, alleging they
either ordered, aided, or failed to prevent war crimes.

The lawyers said the case could not be brought with the International
Criminal Court, because the United States is not a member, and could not
be pursued through the UN because the US has veto power.

Kaleck said the suit’s backers would appeal if prosecutors refuse to take
up the case, and raised the prospect of further attempts in other
European countries.

Top World News

� IAEA finds traces of plutonium in Iran

� Dems keep Senate leaders, split in House

� Rumsfeld faces war crime lawsuit

� Terror to top agenda as India, Pakistan resume peace talks

� US: Immigrants may be held indefinitely

Today’s Top News

� APEC leaders to talk trade, security

� Wen tells US: Protectionism hurts

� Rumsfeld faces war crime lawsuit

� Dog policy ‘not infringing owners’ rights’

� Chinese embassy office robbed

Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours

**** ****

 

Russia - Rumsfeld faces war crime lawsuit September 3, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zhuxiaotian @ 8:58 pm
Tags: , ,

WORLD / America

Rumsfeld faces war crime lawsuit

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-15 06:51

BERLIN - Lawyers for inmates of Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison and Guantanamo
Bay asked German prosecutors Tuesday to open a war crimes investigation
of outgoing US Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and other US
officials for their alleged roles in abuse at the detention centers.

Although the lawyers who filed the lawsuit acknowledged while there was
little chance of seeing Rumsfeld in a German jail, the point was simply
to increase the pressure on top brass they say are culpable. German
federal prosecutors said they would examine the case.

US President George W. Bush with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld after
Bush announced Rumsfeld’s replacement on November 8, 2006. Civil rights
groups filed a suit with German prosecutors on Tuesday seeking war crimes
charges against Rumsfeld for alleged abuse of detainees at Abu Ghraib and
Guantanamo prisons. [Reuters]

“We are not expecting that Rumsfeld will appear in a court, but we are
hoping investigators will begin looking into the case,” said Wolfgang
Kaleck, a German lawyer involved in the suit.

Special coverage:
Iraq after War
Related readings:
“Rumsfeld replacement is agent of change”
Bush taps Gates to replace Rumsfeld
, ex-CIA chief Gates in
Rumsfeld tells war critics to ‘back off’

The 220-page lawsuit, which also names 13 other US officials, was sent to
federal prosecutors under a German law that allows the prosecution of war
crimes regardless of where they were committed. It alleges that Rumsfeld
personally ordered and condoned torture.

Bryan Whitman, a Pentagon spokesman, said US officials had not seen the
complaint, but said media reports suggested it was “frivolous.”

“Abu Ghraib is something that the US government has investigated very
thoroughly,” Whitman said, noting more than a dozen probes as well as
congressional hearings. “The appropriate individuals have been held
accountable.”

Former US Army Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski, the one-time commander of all
US military prisons in Iraq, said she would testify against her superiors
because only a handful of low-ranking soldiers have been convicted in the
abuse at Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib prison.

Karpinski, who was relieved of her command and demoted to colonel last
year, said she wanted to “be a voice for my soldiers.”

“They were tried and convicted in the world court before they ever set
foot in any courtroom … while people who are far more culpable and
responsible have walked away blameless,” Karpinski said during a
presentation of the case in Berlin.

There have been 11 convictions and about a dozen courts-martial in the
United States related to Abu Ghraib.

The suit is brought on behalf of 12 alleged torture victims - 11 Iraqis
held at Abu Ghraib and Mohamad al-Qahtani, a Saudi being held at the US
military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, who has been identified by the
US as a would-be participant in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Captured in December 2001 along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border,
al-Qahtani would not crack under normal questioning, so Rumsfeld approved
harsher methods, according to the testimony before Congress.

After FBI agents raised concerns, military investigators began reviewing
the case and in July 2005 said they confirmed abusive and degrading
treatment that included forcing al-Qahtani to wear a bra, dance with
another man, stand naked in front of women, and behave like a dog. Still,
the Pentagon determined “no torture occurred.”

German prosecutors already declined to investigate a more limited lawsuit
in 2005, arguing that it was up to the US to hold any inquiry and that
there were no indications US authorities or courts would refrain from
doing so.

Since then, there have been “no efforts in the United States to go up the
chain of command - they’ve basically been given impunity from any
investigation or prosecution,” said Michael Ratner, president of New
York’s Center for Constitutional Rights, which is behind the litigation.

The attorneys think they have a better case this time, armed with
documents from 2005 congressional hearings on the al-Qahtani case. They
argue that Rumsfeld’s resignation last week means prosecutors may be
under less political pressure to avoid the case.

In addition to Rumsfeld, the suit names Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales, former CIA director George Tenet, former commander of all US
forces in Iraq Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez and eight others, alleging they
either ordered, aided, or failed to prevent war crimes.

The lawyers said the case could not be brought with the International
Criminal Court, because the United States is not a member, and could not
be pursued through the UN because the US has veto power.

Kaleck said the suit’s backers would appeal if prosecutors refuse to take
up the case, and raised the prospect of further attempts in other
European countries.

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Today’s Top News

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**** ****

 

6 - US: Castro’s health is deteriorating September 3, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zhuxiaotian @ 3:36 pm
Tags: ,

WORLD / America

US: Castro’s health is deteriorating

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-12 19:26

WASHINGTON - The US government believes Fidel Castro’s health is
deteriorating and that the Cuban leader is unlikely to live through 2007.

In this photograph provided by Cuba’s Juventud Rebelde newspaper Sunday,
Oct. 29, 2006, Cuban leader Fidel Castro speaks on the telephone
Saturday, Oct. 28, 2006.. Castro’s health is believed by U. S. officials
to be deteriorating and the 79-year-old Cuban leader, who may have
terminal cancer, is not expected to live through 2007. [AP]

That dire view was reinforced last week when Cuba’s foreign minister
backed away from his prediction the ailing Castro would return to power
by early December. “It’s a subject on which I don’t want to speculate,”
Felipe Perez Roque told The Associated Press in Havana.

US government officials say there is still some mystery about Castro’s
diagnosis, his treatment and how he is responding. But these officials
believe the 80-year-old leader has cancer of the stomach, colon or
pancreas.

He was seen weakened and thinner in official state photos released late
last month, and it is considered unlikely that he will return to power or
survive through the end of next year, said the US government and defense
officials. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to speak publicly about the politically sensitive topic.

With chemotherapy, Castro may live up to 18 months, said the defense
official. Without it, expected survival would drop to three months to
eight months.

American officials will not talk publicly about how they glean clues to
Castro’s health. But US spy agencies include physicians who study
pictures, video, public statements and other information coming out of
Cuba.

A planned celebration of Castro’s 80th birthday next month is expected to
draw international attention. The Cuban leader had planned to attend the
public event, which already had been postponed once from his Aug. 13
birthday.

Top World News

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� McCain to launch exploratory panel

� Elections may shift US Iraq war policy

Today’s Top News

� ICBC makes modest gains after world-record listing

� Bomber kills 33 at police centre

� ‘Single sticks’ search for light

� “selling of official posts” denounced

� Gunmen kill 10 Shiites, abduct 50

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……….

 

6 - Bomber kills 33 at police centre September 3, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zhuxiaotian @ 6:18 am
Tags: , ,

WORLD / Middle East

Bomber kills 33 at police centre

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-12 16:38

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A suicide bomber blew himself up outside a police
recruiting center in Baghdad early Sunday, killing at least 33 people and
wounding 56, police said.

One of the casualties is rushed for medical help in Baghdad, Iraq,
Sunday, Nov. 12, 2006. A suicide bomber blew himself up outside a police
recruiting center in Baghdad early Sunday, killing at least 33 people and
wounding about 50, police said. [AP]

Crowds of recruits were gathering outside the center in western Baghdad’s
Nissur Square when the bomber detonated explosives strapped to his body,
police Lt. Maitham Abdul-Razaq said.

He said the death toll was expected to rise because many of the injuries
were extremely serious.

The attack was one of several on Sunday in the capital, where sectarian
violence kills scores each week. Just south of the city, police were
searching for gunmen who killed 10 Shiite travelers and kidnapped about
50 others Saturday night along a notoriously dangerous stretch of highway.

Earlier Sunday, a pair of roadside bombings targeting police patrols in
Baghdad killed at least six civilians and wounded six others, said police
Cap. Mohammed Abdul-Ghani.

A car bomb outside a market in Baghdad’s primarily Shiite downtown
Karradah killed at least one person and wounded five others, while a
similar bomb killed two people and injured 13 in the mainly Sunni
neighborhood of Radhwaniyah, Police 1st. Lt. Thaer Mahoud said.

Unknown gunmen also shot and killed police Brig. Abdul-Mutalib Hassan as
he was leaving his Karradah home for work. Hassan had been head of a
police unit in charge of registering vehicles that is widely seen as a
source of corruption.

Five people were killed in drive by shootings in different parts of
Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad. The victims included a teacher,
taxi driver, laborer, truck driver and phone company worker, provincial
police said.

Patrols were looking for the Sunni gunmen who ambushed a convoy of
minibuses at a fake checkpoint near the volatile town of Latifiyah, about
20 miles south of Baghdad in the so-called Triangle of Death.

The gunmen murdered 10 Shiite passengers before taking their captives to
an unknown location, said the spokesman, who asked that his name not be
used because he wasn’t authorized to speak to media.

A leading Shiite politician warned that local tribes had armed themselves
and were headed to the area to join in the search, a move likely to set
off even greater bloodshed.

In an address to parliament, Abdul-Karim al-Anzi said the kidnappers had
worn Iraqi army uniforms. He complained that security forces were doing
little to capture the hostages.

“We demand that the government take quick action to send troops there in
order to know the fate of those kidnapped,” al-Anzi said.

Along with those killed, five bodies �� all blindfolded and bound at the
wrists and ankles �� had also been recovered in various parts of eastern
Baghdad early Sunday, police said. All had been mutilated by torture,
marking them as victims of death squads that regularly kidnap rivals from
Iraq’s Muslim Sunni and Shiite sects.

Three more bodies were pulled from the Tigris River in Suwayrah, 25 miles
south of Baghdad, morgue official Maamoun al-Ajili said.

U.S. forces, meanwhile, said they detained 10 people suspected of having
links to al-Qaida in a raid in Baghdad early Saturday.

The military said no one was killed or wounded in the raid, and that
those detained were “associated with terrorists who are involved in the
housing, movement and enabling of foreign fighters, to include the
organization of suicide operations within Baghdad.”

Top World News

� Iraq gunmen kill 10 Shiites, abduct 50

� Typhoon slams into northeastern Philippines

� Official: Britain tracks terrorist plots

� McCain to launch exploratory panel

� Elections may shift US Iraq war policy

Today’s Top News

� ICBC makes modest gains after world-record listing

� Bomber kills 33 at police centre

� ‘Single sticks’ search for light

� “selling of official posts” denounced

� Gunmen kill 10 Shiites, abduct 50

Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours

++++++++++ end ++++++++++

 

HSK - Elections may shift US Iraq war policy September 3, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zhuxiaotian @ 12:59 am
Tags: ,

WORLD / America

Elections may shift US Iraq war policy

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-10 16:45

WASHINGTON - Democratic control of Congress, public dislike for the Iraq
war and the departure of Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld could open
the door for a policy shift in the conflict, but early maneuvering for
the 2008 presidential election could slam the door shut.

President Bush speaks in the Oval Office of the White House in
Washington, Thursday, Nov. 9, 2006, during a meeting with Democratic
House Leader Rep. Nancy Pelosi of Calif., and House Minority Whip Steny
Hoyer, not shown. [AP]

What happens will depend largely on how the White House, leaders of both
parties and the candidates to replace President Bush in two years
interpret the results of this week’s voting and seek political footing
for the 2008 race, analysts said.

Although both parties want to salvage political and military success in
Iraq for its own sake, the war’s prominence as a political issue
complicates bipartisan cooperation.

That may be especially true for Democrats if they conclude that anything
shy of a demand for fast withdrawal of US troops looks wishy-washy, or
that the modest course changes possible by cooperating with Republicans
would be jumping onto a sinking ship.

Cooperation is possible if both parties see it in their interest to lower
the political temperature on Iraq, making it less of a rallying cry for
the next campaign, said James Carafano, senior fellow at the conservative
Heritage Foundation. He argued that both parties and the country would
benefit.

“There is a remarkable opportunity to change the politics, for Democrats
and the president to take the Iraq issue off the table as an issue to
play political pingpong with,” said Carafano, who studies politics and
military issues.

More than half of voters said they disapproved of the war in Iraq, wanted
troops to start coming home and didn’t think the war has improved
security in the United States, according to exit polls conducted Tuesday
for The Associated Press and the television networks. Those most unhappy
with the war helped put Democrats in control of Congress.

Democrats say the first step to repairing the situation in Iraq is
putting substantial pressure on its government to take more
responsibility. The best way to do this, they say, is by pulling out some
troops right away to signal the U.S. commitment is finite.

Democrats also have called on Bush to convene an international conference
on Iraq and say the military mission should begin to switch from a
leading role to a supportive one.

Other proposals the administration may be asked to consider include a
regional dialogue with US adversaries Iran and Syria, or remaking the
Iraq political federation into three largely autonomous sectarian states.

1 2

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++++++++++ end ++++++++++