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Showing posts with label Report. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Report. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Report: Ex-minister says Gadhafi ordered Lockerbie (AP)

STOCKHOLM – Libya's ex-justice minister on Wednesday was quoted as telling a Swedish newspaper that Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi personally ordered the Lockerbie bombing that killed 270 people in 1988.
"I have proof that Gadhafi gave the order about Lockerbie," Mustafa Abdel-Jalil was quoted as saying in an interview with Expressen, a Stockholm-based tabloid.
Abdel-Jalil, who stepped down as justice minister to protest the clampdown on anti-government demonstrations, didn't describe the proof.
Expressen said it interviewed the ex-minister at the local parliament of a large city in Libya.
Abdel-Jalil told Expressen that Gadhafi gave the order to Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, the only man convicted in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, which killed all 259 people on board and 11 on the ground.
"To hide it, he (Gadhafi) did everything in his power to get al-Megrahi back from Scotland," Abdel-Jalil was quoted as saying.
Al-Megrahi was granted a compassionate release from a Scottish prison in August 2009 on the grounds that he was suffering from prostate cancer and would die soon. He is still alive
Expressen spokeswoman Alexandra Forslund said its reporter in Libya, Kassem Hamade, taped the interview, which was conducted in Arabic and translated to Swedish.
Gadhafi has been trying to bring his country out of isolation, announcing in 2003 that he was abandoning his program for weapons of mass destruction and renouncing terrorism.
Gadhafi also accepted Libya's responsibility for the Lockerbie bombing and paid compensation to the victims' families. But he hasn't admitted personally giving the order for the attack.
Most of the victims in the Lockerbie bombing were Americans, and al-Megrahi's release has been criticized by members of the U.S. Congress and the victims' families.
Bob Monetti, of Cherry Hill, New Jersey, whose 20-year-old son Richard was killed in the bombing, said he's glad to hear a former official say what's been clear to him all along. He said officials and the media, especially in the U.K., have been denying that.
"If you went to the trial, there was no question about who did it and why, and who ordered it," Monetti said.
Lisa Gibson, of Colorado Springs, Colorado, lost her 20-year-old brother Ken in the bombing.
"I'm not surprised for him to say that Gadhafi is responsible because ultimately we know that," Gibson said.
Al-Megrahi's trial was conducted at a special Scottish court set up in the Netherlands after years of diplomatic maneuvering.
In Britain, some Lockerbie victims' relatives have questioned his conviction. They argue that insufficient attention was paid to the possibility that the bombing was carried out not by Libyan intelligence but by Iranian-backed Palestinian terrorists.
Their case was bolstered when the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Board raised questions about evidence used to convict al-Megrahi. The former Libyan agent had been in the process of appealing his conviction when he was released.
___
Geoff Mulvihill in Haddonfield, New Jersey, contributed to this report.
View the original article here

Libya live report (AFP)

1632 GMT: Thousands of Yemeni anti-regime demonstrators have defiantly to keep protesting after regime loyalists shot dead two of them.

"The sit-in will continue until the fall of the regime," chanted the protesters encamped at Sanaa University in the capital.

1629 GMT: Newspapers in Saudi Arabia today highlight the significance of the king's return in the context of the regional turmoil.

"The king is the only pillar of stability in the region now," says the English-language Arab News.

"The king returns today at a time when the Arab world is experiencing frightening developments to what he had left not only stable... but an oasis of peace and security full of love and loyalty," says Okaz daily.

1619 GMT: King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia "must be in a state of shock" at the transformation in North Africa and the Middle East as he returns to the kingdom after a three-month absence, Middle East analyst Neil Partrick tells.

As he flew in, the king boosted social benefits for his people, in a region where a young population and unemployment have since January combined with demands for political reform to create a cocktail for political upheaval.

"The assumption that a coalition of different elites could keep systems stable has proven not to be correct anymore," London-based Partrick says, adding: Abdullah must "be in a state of shock."

1614 GMT: "I have proof that Kadhafi gave the order on Lockerbie," former justice minister Mustapha Abdeljalil told Swedish daily Expressen, the paper reports on its website.

Libyan national Abdelbaset Ali Mohmet al-Megrahi was in 2001 convicted of the bombing of Pan AM Flight 103 over the Scottish town of Lockerbie on December 21, 1988 that killed 270 people, most of them Americans.

Scottish authorities released Megrahi, 58, on compassionate grounds in August 2009 after doctors said he was suffering from terminal cancer and had three months to live. He remains alive almost a year and a half after his release.

According to Abdeljalil, who stepped down Monday to protest the ongoing violence in Libya, Kadhafi "ordered Megrahi to do it (the bombing)," and had worked hard to secure his release to ensure that his role in the plot remained secret. "To hide it, he did everything in his power to get Megrahi back from Scotland," the former minister said.

Expressen said its reporter Kassem Hamade, who is in Libya, conducted a 40-minute interview with Abdeljalil at "the local parliament in a large city."

1610 GMT: The IFHR's Souhayr Belhassen tells AFP the Benghazi death toll of 230 people includes "130 soldiers who were executed by their officers in Benghazi for refusing to fire on crowds" of protesters.

1601 GMT: Khaled Khaim, Libya's deputy foreign minister says: "There are journalists who entered illegally and we consider them as if they are collaborating with Al-Qaeda and as outlaws and we are not responsible for their security."

"They will be arrested unless they surrender to the authorities," he adds.

1558 GMT: The IFHR's Libyan death toll estimate of 640 is more than double the official Libyan government toll of 300 dead, and includes 275 dead in Tripoli and 230 dead in the protest epicentre in the eastern city of Benghazi, the IFHR's Souhayr Belhassen has told AFP.

1557 GMT: Protests have also been renewed today in the northern Iraq city of Sulaimaniyah as well as Halabja to demand an end to the dominance of two parties that have lorded over Kurdistan for decades.

In Sulaimaniyah today, around 3,000 demonstrators, some carrying pictures of people killed in previous rallies, railed against the region's leadership.

The Kurdistan Democratic Party of regional president Massud Barzani and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani have jointly ruled the region for decades.

1553 GMT: Anti-government protests in the Iraqi Kurdish town of Halabja deny a claim that they caused the death of a policeman.

The town's mayor, Goran Adhem, says: "The demonstrators shot and killed a policeman and wounded another."

But protesters, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of arrest, insist that no one at their rally was carrying weapons. They say police fired into the air and the casualties were caused when the bullets fell downwards.

1549 GMT: UK charter airline Astraeus says a plane hired by private firms -- believed to be the major oil companies working in Libya -- has left London Gatwick Airport for Tripoli.

It has on board a Foreign Office rapid deployment team, who were switched from a plane chartered by the Foreign Office that was delayed due to a minor technical problem and is due to leave later.

1549 GMT: At least 640 people have been killed in Libya in protests against the regime of Moamer Kadhafi since they started on February 14, the International Federation for Human Rights (IFHR) says.

1547 GMT: At least 640 dead in Libyan unrest: rights group

1547 GMT: Journalists who have entered Libya illegally are considered "outlaws," the country's deputy foreign minister says.

1534 GMT: Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi personally ordered the Lockerbie bombing in 1988, former justice minister Mustapha Abdeljalil told Swedish daily Expressen, it reported on its website

1531 GMT: Libya's Warfalla tribe, the country's largest, has come out against Kadhafi's regime, Al Jazeera says.

1527 GMT: Opponents of Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi are continuing to make progress and moving west towards Tripoli, Ibrahim Sharquieh of the Brookings Institute says on Al Jazeera.

1522 GMT: US stocks dropped in opening trade in the wake of falls in European and Asian markets as the turmoil in Libya kept investors on edge.

At 1500 GMT the Dow Jones Industrial Average was off 39.85 points (0.33 percent) at 12,172.94, while the broader S&P 500 lost 2.64 (0.20 percent) at 1,312.80. The Nasdaq Composite index pared 9.12 (0.33 percent) to 2,747.30.

However, blue chips remained fairly steady in early trading. "Corporate profits are acting generally as a counterweight to the unrest in North Africa and the Middle East," said Kimberly DuBord of Briefing.com.

"While the unrest continues to raise the risk of regional contagion, it is unlikely these events will destabilize the US economic recovery," said Dubord.

1519 GMT: The EU is gearing up for a potential humanitarian crisis in Libya by dispatching officials to the nation's borders with Egypt and Tunisia to assess the situation on the ground.

EU experts based in Algeria and Jordan have been ordered to the borders with Libya "to do our own assessment of the situation and the needs", Raphael Brigandi, a spokesman for humanitarian aid commissioner Kristalina Georgieva says. The EU also hopes to send an expert to Tripoli, he says.

"At the moment we are not facing a humanitarian crisis, which does not mean we are not concerned," Brigandi says. "The situation is evolving very rapidly. It's an unstable situation".

1517 GMT: A policeman died today of gunshot wounds during anti-government protests in the Kurdish town of Halabja, north Iraq, the town's mayor says.

1516 GMT: Al-Qaeda has set up an Islamic emirate in Derna, in eastern Libya, headed by a former US prisoner at Guantanamo Bay, the country's deputy foreign minister tells a meeting with EU ambassadors in Tripoli.

1514 GMT: Sucden analyst Myrto Sokou tells AFP: "Following news that a Libyan air force plane crashed near Benghazi after its crew bailed out as they refused to carry out orders to bomb the city, crude oil prices spiked and Brent surged above $110 per barrel, while WTI almost tested $98 level.

"The oil market reacted straight to the news that raised further worries and frustration about the political unrest in the MENA (Middle East North Africa)."

1512 GMT: Qaeda sets up 'Islamic emirate' in eastern Libya: minister

1510 GMT: In afternoon deals, Brent North Sea crude for delivery in April rallied as high as $110.35, touching the highest level since September 2, 2008.

1508 GMT: Policeman killed in Iraq Kurd anti-govt protest: town mayor

1506 GMT: "Pilot Abdessalam Attiyah al-Abdali and co-pilot Ali Omar al-Kadhafi ejected with parachutes after refusing orders to bomb the city of Benghazi," a military source said, quoted by Quryna newspaper.

The Russian-made Sukhoi 22 crashed near Ajdabiya, 160 kilometres (100 miles) west of the city which has fallen to anti-regime protesters, the source was reported at saying.

1501 GMT: A Libyan fighter pilot disobeyed orders today to bomb the opposition stronghold of Benghazi and ditched his plane after ejecting, a Libyan newspaper reports on its website.

1459 GMT: A draft resolution to be discussed by the UN Human Rights Council next week will seek to "strongly condemn the... extremely grave human rights violations committed in Libya, including extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests, detention and torture of peaceful demonstrators, which if widespread and systematic, may amount to crimes against humanity," according to a text seen by AFP.

1456 GMT: London Brent oil reaches $110 per barrel for the first time since early September 2008, driven by fears about the impact of Libyan violence on global energy supplies, analysts say.

1452 GMT: Phil Sperinck, 51, from Dartford, Kent, who lives an hour from central Tripoli, tells AFP at Gatwick airport: "We've heard lots of gunfire, we've seen Chinook helicopters going across. There was lots of banging and lots of shooting. It got closer to us last night."

Jane Macefield, 52, originally from Zimbabwe, says she heard "20 blasts at least" from bombs or grenades and "the droning of planes" overhead as fighting raged in Tripoli last night.

"Last night I've never been so scared in all my life. I didn't know if I was shivering from cold or from fear."

Sperinck, who has been in Libya since april, adds: "The airport is horrendous. There are thousands of people sitting outside."

1449 GMT: "All I could hear at night was gunfire. Last night there was something... that sounded a lot more powerful than gunshots, something that sounded like mortars," a British man arriving at London's Gatwick airport from Libya tells AFP. He says most of fighting appeared to be taking place at night. "During the day the streets are relatively quiet. I think it is because they are up all night and then go to bed."

1448 GMT: Brent oil price hits $110 for first time since September 2008

1443 GMT: "Again today, the news and pictures from Libya show that Colonel Kadhafi has declared war on the Libyan people. Such a government has lost all legitimacy," says Christoph Steegmans, Chancellor Angela Merkel's deputy spokesman.

"The federal government condemns in the strongest possible terms the mindless brutality and disrespect for human dignity," he says at a news conference in Berlin.

1439 GMT: "Benghazi was attacked last Thursday. Our ambulances counted 75 bodies the first day, 200 the second then more than 500. On the third day I ran out of morphine and medications," Dr Buffet told Le Point.

"To start with the forces of repression fired at the legs and abdomen. After that at the chest and the head," he says.

1435 GMT: "From February 16 peope were in a frenzy. People were certain the army would attack. The repression forces included police and the army but also mercenaries from Chad and Niger," Buffet told Le Point.

"From Tobruk to Darna they carried out a real massacre... In total, I think there are more than 2,000 deaths. We filled two hospitals of 1,500 beds. We used the children's hospital for the less seriously injured."

1429 GMT: As many as 2,000 people may have died in the uprising in Libya, according to a French doctor interviewed by Le Point magazine.

The 60 year old, who has been anaesthetist at Benghazi medical centre for a year and a half, says "We have come from hell," according to the magazine.

1420 GMT: UK Prime Minister David Cameron says: "The situation remains greatly concerning and ... we are doing everything we can to protect British nationals and to assist them in leaving that country."

"We've been very clear with respect to Libya that what is happening there is unacceptable, that the use of violence against their own people ... is unacceptable and cannot be allowed to stand," Cameron tells a news conference in Doha.

"There will be planes and also the use of ferries and other means to get people out of Libya and we will do everything we can to make that happen," he says.

1411 GMT: Lebanon has refused a request to accept an aircraft from Libya with members of the Kadhafi family on board, a Lebanese security official tells AFP.

"Last night Beirut airport received a request to accept an aircraft belonging to the Kadhafi family with several people on board including Aline Skaff, Lebanese-born wife of Kadhafi's son Hannibal," the official said.

"Lebanon rejected this request," the official adds.

1403 GMT: Ashok Kumar, protester and education officer of the London School of Economics student union tells AFP about a dozen students are still occupying director Howard Davies' office in protest at the university's links with Khadafi's son Saif al-Islam.

"The protesters have occupied Howard Davies's office and are refusing to leave until the university meets our demands, which are as follows:

"The university must develp an ethical policy for donations.

"Secondly, LSE must return the £300,000 stolen from the Libyan people and return it to them, either in the form of scholarships for Libyan students from low-income backgrounds, or to the families of the victims of the recent crackdown.

"Thirdly, we want Saif al-Islam Kadhafi's status as an alumnus of the university to be removed."

1358 GMT: Major General Suleiman Mahmoud, commander of troops in the Libyan city of of Tobruk, says on Al Jazeera he is supporting the uprising.

"We are supporting the people. We are against any aggressions," he says.

He says there were no demonstrations in Tobruk so he did not have to carry out acts of suppression but adds that in Benghazi the military attacked demonstrators with artillery fire and air strikes.

1351 GMT: Driving west from Tobruk in the afternoon, the AFP news team has repeatedly seen the red, black and green flag of the Libyan monarch that Kadhafi overthrew in a coup d'etat in September 1969.

The 1951 independence flag has been embraced by Kadhafi's opponents as the standard of their movement, in lieu of the plain green one that represents the regime.

"Driving down the highway, people flash victory signs," one of the news team said. "They seem overjoyed. They say that are confident that Kadhafi will be toppled."

1347 GMT: Several thousand foreign migrants from Libya have crossed the Tunisian border in the first exodus to Tunisia since the Libyan turmoil began, the International Organisation for Migration says.

The agency said it was also trying to organise the evacuation of other nationals from poor nations from inside Libya, including many from Asia.

"It's a first group of migrants. Many crossed the border by car, especially with hired vehicles, and there were two buses," IOM spokesman Jean-Philippe Chauzy told AFP.

They included "4,700 Tunisians, 120 Turks and a dozen Lebanese nationals, some west Africans," he added. IOM staff on the border also reported several Syrians and three Germans had crossed the border.

"The arrival of migrants is carrying on today. We have information on hundreds of migrants but that hasn't been confirmed yet," Chauzy says.

1342 GMT: London Brent oil prices have climbed back towards $108 per barrel today, propelled once again by heightened concerns about unrest in Libya and fears of spreading turmoil in the Middle East.

Brent North Sea crude for delivery in April rallied $1.73 to $107.51 per barrel in midday London trade, one day after rocketing to $108.57 -- highest since September 2008.

New York's light sweet crude for April delivery increased by 68 cents to $96.10 a barrel. .

"This morning, crude oil prices continued their upside rally following ongoing growing concerns across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA)," said analyst Myrto Sokou at the Sucden brokerage in London.

She adds: "Prices rallied on Tuesday and hit a two-and-a-half year high, as political unrest in Libya raised serious concerns about a potential oil supply disruption."

1339 GMT: German oil firm Wintershall says it has stopped oil production in Libya due to the security situation in the violence-hit country.

The company which has 400 employees there, mostly Libyans, had earlier said its daily production of 100,000 barrels per day would be reduced, but that a small group of core workers would remain on site.

1334 GMT: Kadhafi has relied on political and tribal rivalries to rule over Libya since 1969, but traditional power structures are crumbling as a popular uprising gains momentum, analysts say.

"With urbanisation and development, tribal leaders have less influence on their tribe members," Mohamed Fadel, an independent Libyan analyst based in London, has told AFP.

"Kadhafi had managed to create a balance between all the tribes and clans, but this system had already started to erode," says Delphine Perrin, an expert on North Africa at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy.

"Today, that power structure is crumbling with some tribes turning against him," Perrin said.

1325 GMT: Here's a quick recap of today's momentous developments in Libya as Moamer Kadhafi's regime totters:

- Kadhafi's regime has lost vast swathes of Libya's east to an insurrection, as pressure mounted on the strongman to step down amid growing evidence of a "bloodbath."

- Condemnation of the brutal crackdown has grown and foreigners are fleeing the oil-rich country.

- Opponents of Kadhafi seem firmly in control of Libya's coastal east, from the Egyptian border through to the cities of Tobruk and Benghazi, with government soldiers switching sides to join the uprising.

- An AFP news team travelling into Libya saw rebels, many of them armed, all along the highway that hugs the Mediterranean coast.

- Streets of the capital Tripoli are mainly empty, barring a few dozen Kadhafi backers, despite his nationally televised call last night before for a show of popular support.

- Only Green Square, a Kadhafi stronghold since the revolt against his four decades of iron-fisted rule began on February 15, pulsed with activity as pro-regime supporters began arriving.

- Italy's foreign minister Franco Frattini says Libya's eastern province of "Cyrenaica is no longer under the control of the Libyan government and there are outbreaks of violence across the country."

- Rome fears an immigrant exodus of "biblical proportions" if Kadhafi is ousted, predicting up to 300,000 Libyans could try to flee their country, Frattini says.

- The Libyan government says 300 people, including 111 soldiers, had been killed in the protests, which erupted after the rulers of neighbouring Tunisia and Egypt were ousted in similar uprisings.

- Numerous high level Libyan officials, including ministers, diplomats and military officers, have abandoned the regime and announced their support for the rebellion.

- All Libyan ports and terminals are temporarily closed because of the deadly unrest, the CMA CGM shipping group says.

1322 GMT: Kadhafi's regime will collapse in coming days, the country's former envoy to the Arab League says, while predicting "massacres" in the run-up to Kadhafi's downfall.

"I think it is a matter of days, not more," Abdel Moneim al-Honi, who quit his position on Sunday, told the pan-Arab daily Al Hayat.

"But unfortunately I also think that this is going to cost Libya and the Libyans dearly," he added, while ruling out civil war. "I think horrible massacres will take place."

1319 GMT: The Red Crescent says it fears a "catastrophic" exodus of Libyans into Tunisia. "Some 5,700 Tunisians and Libyans fleeing Libya crossed the border between the two countries at Ras Jedir Monday and Tuesday. They keep arriving," Hadi Nadri, a Red Crescent official for Tunisia's Ben Guerdane region, has told AFP.

"After what (Libyan leader Moamer) Kadhafi said yesterday, we fear a massive, catastrophic exodus. We expect thousands of Libyan refugees to pour into Tunisia. We are bracing for the worst," he says.

1316 GMT: The BBC reports that students at the London School of Economics are staging a sit-in in protest at the university's association with the Libyan regime.

They have taken over the offices of LSE director, Sir Howard Davies.

The students are demanding the university pays back the 300,000 pounds it from a charity wing of the regime.

The students also want the university to revoke the LSE alumni status of Libyan leader Col Gaddafi's second son Saif al-Islam, who studied at the university from 2003 to 2008, gaining both a Master of Science degree and a doctorate, the BBC says in a report on its website.

1313 GMT: At the Abu Dhabi defence fair, the United Arab Emirates has announced 11.68 billion dirhams (3.09 billion dollars/2.249 billion euros) in defence deals in three days, the official WAM news agency reports.

Major General Obaid al-Ketbi announced 3.68 billion dirhams (about $1 billion) today, according to WAM.

"With the 8 billion dirhams worth of defence deals... on the second and third day of the event, today's announcements brought to 11.680 billion dirhams the total value of contracts" announced at a defence expo in Abu Dhabi, WAM said.

Among other contracts announced today, the "Abu Dhabi Ship Building Company was awarded an 800.5 million dirham ($218.1 million) contract for purchase of RAM missiles," Ketbi said.

1305 GMT: At Sallum, on the Libya-Egypt border, terrified Egyptian migrant workers are pouring over the border in their thousands, an AFP correspondent reports from the scene.

Clutching their few belongings as they passed beneath the white concrete gateway that marks the frontier, they told of shooting in the eastern towns where they worked and the protection given them by protesters.

One man, who gave his name as Amr, tells AFP he has seen "lots of gunfire... They definitely want us out," and while his family depends on his income in Libya, he intends never to return.

Another expatriate, Mohammed, who worked in Tobruk, the last major Libyan city on the highway that runs along the Mediterranean to Egypt, said protesters who have seized control there went out of the way to protect foreigners.

"Before the Libyans wanted to exploit us," he said, alluding to the 1.5 million Egyptians -- among many other nationals from the developing world -- on whom the oil-rich Libyan economy depends. "Now they wanted to help us."

Many of the Egyptians who spoke with AFP at dawn Wednesday came from southern Egypt, where jobs are few, poverty widespread and families dependent on the remittances sent from abroad.

One such worker, Mahmud Aguni, in his 40s, said he did not get involved in the mass protests in Egypt that saw the downfall of longtime president Hosni Mubarak and inspired the Libyan uprising.

"But now we have nothing," he said, worrying about how he would feed his family without work in Libya. "Someone has to find a solution before we have to start eating each other."

The Egyptian army, which beefed up its presence at the border on Tuesday, chartered minibuses in large numbers to transport the migrant workers, and their luggage piled high on the roofs, closer to their hometowns.

Over the border gates -- bearing the words "Salloum Land Port" in English -- a big Egyptian flag flaps in the southerly breeze, the AFP correspondent reports.

To the side is parked an Egyptian battle tank, as rifle-toting soldiers in camouflage fatigues fade from view among the endless stream of compatriots lugging dusty suitcases and, occasionally, wearing blankets on their shoulders.

1257 GMT: An AFP news team entering Libya from Egypt says opponents of Moamer Kadafhi's regime appear firmly in control of the coastal east of Libya, with government soldiers switching sides to join the uprising.

The AFP team has seen rebels -- many of them armed -- all along the highway that hugs close to the Mediterranean from the Egyptian border to Tobruk city.

Local residents said that in Bayda city, militia men loyal to Kadhafi have been executed -- a measure of the violence that has gripped the oil-producing east of the country.

Residents also told AFP that the anti-Kadhafi movement is in firm control from the Egyptian border through Tobruk and Libya's second city Benghazi until Ajdabiya, further west along the coast.

Soldiers in the east are declaring their support for the uprising, the residents said, but the regime asserted it was still in control via a text message sent on the Libyan national mobile telephone network.

"God give victory to our leader and the people," the text message said, promising a credit in cellphone time if it was forwarded to other mobile telephone users.

1254 GMT: Governments around the world are struggling to evacuate nationals from violence-hit Libya, with Asian countries facing a "mammoth" task of rescuing more than 150,000 low-paid workers.

Fears of a full-scale civil war in the North African state have spurred countries from Canada to China to charter ferries and planes to secure their citizens' safety despite poor communication links and growing violence.

The majority of Asian expatriates are low-paid contract workers, with 60,000 Bangladeshis, 30,000 Filipinos, 23,000 Thais and 18,000 Indians among those living under the tottering regime of Moamer Kadhafi.

"This is going to be quite a mammoth operation," India's foreign secretary Nirupama Rao has told reporters.

1253 GMT: 'Catastrophic' exodus of Libyans into Tunisia feared: Red Crescent

1251 GMT: In Aden, Yemen's main southern port city, Renewed clashes have broken out today between police and separatist demonstrators who have gathered in front of a police station.

Thousands of anti-government demonstrators protested overnight in the city calling for the fall of the regime, chanting "the people want to topple the regime" and "no work, no teaching until the fall of the president."

Thousands more are maintaining a sit-in in the Al-Mansura neighbourhood of Aden, chanting: "No talking, no dialogue until the system falls."

Protests have also surfaced in north Yemen, where tens of thousands demonstrated in the Huthi stronghold of Saada to demand the president step down, AFP correspondents say.

1249 GMT: In Yemen, thousands of anti-regime demonstrators are chanting defiantly after government loyalists shot two of them dead, and eight ruling party MPs have resigned over the suppression of protests.

"Enough! Enough! The criminal attacks during the night!," chanted the mostly young demonstrators encamped at Sanaa University in the capital, after gunmen attacked them during the night, killing two of them and wounding 23, according to witnesses and medics.

"I presented my resignation with seven others to protest the methods used by the General People's Congress to quell protests in the country," MP Abdu Bishr said, after two others had done so earlier in the week.

He added that "59 over party members are getting together to present a collective resignation."

1241 GMT: Ratings agency Moody's says it has today placed Bahrain on credit watch over the political unrest in the tiny Gulf state, warning that it will consider downgrading its sovereign debt rating.

1239 GMT: Paris to freeze Mubarak clan's French assets: ministry

1239 GMT: Spain condemns Kadhafi's use of force to quell a popular uprising as "absolutely unacceptable" and says he has lost the right to lead the country.

"A political leader who has decided to bomb his own citizens has lost all legitimacy to continue to lead his country," Foreign Minister Trinidad Jimenez says.

"The situation we are witnessing in Libya is absolutely unacceptable from every point of view," she tells reporters.

1234 GMT: In the Tripoli neighbourhood of Tajura, streets have been blocked by residents who used chopped down palm trees to build barricades, disregarding Kadhafi's message to remove roadblocks.

Army and police forces are absent today in the main avenue of Gargares, a residential neighbourhood where witnesses told AFP yesterday that they saw tanks patrolling.

1229 GMT: The AFP correspondent says the capital got off to a quiet start with people queuing up in front of bakeries and cars lined up at petrol stations as usual.

Later in Green Square the government supporters began arriving. Men and children poured out of minibuses while some Kadhafi supporters perched on the roofs of vehicles.

Two or three police cars patrolled the area while police and a few men in civilian clothes armed with Kalashnikovs were deployed at the square.

1225 GMT: All is quiet in Tripoli's Green Square at midday amid pouring rain, an AFP journalist reports.

A few dozen cars are driving round blasting their horns while pro-government demonstrators wave flags and pictures of Kadhafi, the journalist says.

1217 GMT: More tweets from The Guardian's Martyn Chulov: Seen anti aircraft shell casings on streets in Benghazi... Damage on nearby buildings shows they were widely used... Everything closed. Feels abandoned. Comms down. Hospitals still full. No sign of ghaddafi's people.

1215 GMT: German Chancellor Angela Merkel describes Kadhafi's televised address last night as "very scary".

"We are calling on the Libyan authorities to stop the violence against their own people," Merkel says.

"If the violence does not stop ... we will consider sanctions," she adds.

1213 GMT: European equities have fallen again, as traders keep a watchful eye on simmering Middle East tensions, after an overnight Wall Street slump that was sparked by violent unrest in Libya.

"Stocks are lower again during the European session as investors continue to fret about the prospect of an escalation in Middle East tensions," says analyst Kathleen Brooks at Forex.com

1207 GMT: More about the closure of Libya's ports: The CMA CGM shipping group says: "Due to a general insurrection in some Libyan cities since last week, all ports and terminals are temporarily closed."

A spokeswoman for the group has told AFP Wednesday she has no information on when the ports might reopen.

The group said it is represented in Libya by its agent, OSCL, whose office in Tripoli remains open with a skeleton staff. Its offices in Misurata, Khoms and Benghazi are all temporarily closed, the statement says.

Pending the ports' reopening, the group is using storage capacity in Malta "which is only 12 hours away from Libyan ports," it says.

1204 GMT: Cameron, shown on Sky News, says: "We should send a very clear warning to Kadhafi and the Libyan armed forces that what they are doing is wrong."

The best way of doing this would be through an UN Security Council resolution, he told students.

1200 GMT: "We should send a clear warning to Kadhafi," UK Prime Minister David Cameron says as he answers questions from students at Qatar University, BBC TV reports.

1158 GMT: 'Horrible' Libya crimes must be punished: EU president

1150 GMT: Israeli President Shimon Peres has condemned violence by Libyan forces against civilians, saying Libyans "will not forgive" Moamer Kadhafi for the killing of hundreds of people.

"The fact that he used arms and brutally killed hundreds of people, people will not forgive him because the right to demonstrate is a human right," Peres told a conference in Madrid.

"He has been the most brutal person in response to the demonstrations (sweeping the Arab world). Kadhafi makes a joke out of all of us. People take him in a humouristic way, but it is not a laughing matter, it is serious."

1148 GMT: All Libyan ports and terminals are temporarily closed because of the revolt by opponents of Kadhafi's regime, the CMA CGM shipping group says in a statement on its website.

1145 GMT: Asian stock markets have mostly extended losses and oil remains after Kadhafi warned he would fight "to the last drop of my blood".

Despite the sell-off, Macquarie Private Wealth division director Martin Lakos in Sydney says heavier falls are unlikely.

"Most Asian equity markets have already seen a lot of de-risking because of the Libyan crisis, while Wall Street has played catch-up after the US holiday" on Monday, he said.

1141 GMT: All Libyan ports temporarily closed: shipping group

1140 GMT: More from Italy's Foreign Minister Franco Frattini, who says Kadhafi has lost control of the eastern province of Cyrenaica.

Speaking at a meeting organised by the Community of Sant'Egidio, a Christian organisation, Frattini says there have been recent proclamations in Cyrenaica that it is now an Islamic emirate and calls to break with the West.

"It is a worrying development if radical Islam is only a few hundred kilometres away from the European Union's front door, but nothing can justify the violent death of hundreds of innocent civilians," Frattini added.

1 137 GMT: In Cairo, former Egyptian police officers protesting outside the interior ministry set fire to an adjacent administration building, a security official as told AFP.

The police officers -- demanding reinstatement into the police force -- hurled firebombs at the smaller building, which is also used by the ministry. Several cars outside were also set alight.

Soldiers who remain deployed in the heart of the capital in the wake of the 18-day uprising against president Hosni Mubarak put the fire out, and there were no reported casualties, the official said

1135 GMT: EU says ready to evacuate 10,000 citizens from Libya, including by sea

1132 GMT: CNN says correspondent Ben Wedeman and a crew found no-one in charge when they entered Libya from Egypt.

As Wedeman and his crew were entering the country, a young man at the border in civilian clothing and toting an AK-47 asked them for their passports. "For what?" responded Wedeman's driver. "There is no government. What is the point?" They then drove in, the TV network said.

On the Libyan side, there were "no officials, no passport control, no customs," Wedeman reports.

1127 GMT: CNN cites a woman in Tripoli as saying several more checkpoints have been set up, especially near the city centre, restricting residents' movements.

The food shortage is getting worse, she says. When her family members went to get bread this morning, the shops were closed, CNN quotes the woman as saying.

1121 GMT: Spain's government says it has sent a plane to Libya to evacuate its citizens, and also plans new economic measures to cope with a hike in oil prices due to the escalating unrest in the country.

The foreign ministry says between 60 and 90 Spaniards still want to leave the country, following the departure of about 50 people.

The government also plans on Friday to discuss whether to pass a new energy law if the tension in Libya, from which it imports 13 percent of its oil, leads to a new hike in the price of oil.

1116 GMT: Some 15,000 Chinese nationals trapped in Libya's insurrection against strongman Moamer Kadhafi will be evacuated by four ferries chartered from Greece, a Greek government source says.

The four vessels -- the Venizelos, Express Santorini, Hellenic Spirit and Olympic Champion -- should reach the Libyan coast by Wednesday night, the official tells AFP.

1114 GMT: Sources tells AFP the charter plane hired by Britain's Foreign Office is still waiting for an answer from the Libyan authorities as to whether they can fly to Tripoli to rescue British nationals.

1100 GMT: The Guardian's Martin Chulov is filing by Twitter from Benghazi. Here are some of his tweets today:

Mass defection of the military here. Beyond a critical mass.... Air force major tells me of witnessing 4k african mercenaries arriving from feb 14 'that's why we turned against them'... Looted weapons still arriving... 3 african mercenaries being held prisoner upstairs... Amazing scenes in yard of ransacked police hq in benghazi... Massive armoury looted from barracks by defecting troops... Camp site set up at benghazi... Large anti-ghadaffi demo here... Effigies of him hanging from looted govt buildings...

1052 GMT: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad expresses outrage at what he says is "unimaginable" repression in Libya, urging world leaders to listen to their people.

"It is unimaginable that someone is killing his citizens, bombarding his citizens," Ahmadinejad says on state television when asked about the situation in Libya.

"How can officers be ordered to use bullets from machine guns, tanks and guns against their own citizens?"

1048 GMT: Jordan's Islamists and other parties say Friday's planned demonstration will also seek "to denounce violence," in which eight people were hurt last week when a mob wielding batons waded into a pro-reform march in Amman.

"Our protest will be a response to the thugs who attacked the protesters and to pressure the government to implement promised reforms," IAF's Bani Rsheid says.

"If the government or its supporters commit acts similar to last Friday's, we will demand the downfall of the government."

Supporters of leftist parties told AFP that they plan to spend the night on Thursday outside Al-Husseini Mosque, in the city centre where they were attacked last Friday.

1044 GMT: Saudi King Abdullah has boosted social benefits for civil servants, students and others ahead of his return to Riyadh after three months of absence, the Saudi Press Agency says.

The king ordered the implementation of a 15 percent pay rise for state employees as well as an increase in the cash available for Saudi housing loans, according to SPA, the official news agency.

The 86-year-old monarch also granted pardon to some prisoners indicted in financial crimes and announced plans to tackle unemployment.

Abdullah is heading home from Morocco, where he had been recuperating after back surgery in the United States, returning to a Middle East rocked by anti-regime uprisings.

1042 GMT: Jordan's powerful Islamist opposition says it plans to stage a "day of anger" demonstration with other parties on Friday to demand reforms, in what they hope will be the largest protest since January.

"Around 10,000 members of the Islamist movement as well as supporters of 19 political parties will take part in the march to call for reforms," Zaki Bani Rsheid of the Islamic Action Front (IAF) executive committee announced.

1037 GMT: Reports today that large parts of Libya are no longer under Kadhafi's control contradict claims overnight by the president of the country's parliament that the army have re-established their positions.

Calm "has been restored in most of the large cities" in Libya, Mohamed Zwei, president of the General People's Congress, said late last night, adding that "security forces and the army have re-established their positions."

Zwei also told a press conference that a commission of enquiry has been set up to investigate the eight-day revolt against Kadhafi.

At the same time, he said "current conditions do not permit holding a meeting of parliament to discuss the reforms" announced earlier this week by Seif al-Islam.

Meanwhile, Jebril el-Kadiki, deputy air force chief of staff, said that arms and ammunitions depots had been bombed in Rajma, near the eastern city of Al-Baida; in Ajdabia and Al-Gueriet in the south and near Zenten and Mezda in the southwest.

Kadiki said all of the facilities are located in desert areas, away from any inhabitation.

1032 GMT: Kadhafi's son Saif al-Islam is expected to hold a news conference today.

1030 GMT: The Financial Times reports that the strongman's family is feuding over the vast business empire his regime has built up since coming to power in 1969. It cites communications between US officials obtained by the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

Another British daily, The Times, says it has footage of severely wounded and dead protesters in a hospital in the eastern city of Benghazi proving heavy weapons were being used to crush the revolt.

1026 GMT: China's State Council has "decided to immediately deploy chartered civil aircraft, COSCO cargo ships in nearby waters, and Chinese fishing vessels carrying needed living and medical supplies", the foreign ministry says.

China will also look to hire "large-scale passenger cruise ships and buses" to get Chinese works out of Libya, it adds.

1024 GMT: Asian nations are preparing "mammoth" evacuation plans for more than 100,000 migrants trapped in Libya, many of them low-paid labourers toiling on construction sites.

Arrangements to use passenger ships, planes and land routes to Egypt are being considered as governments try to secure their citizens' safety despite poor communication links and growing violence.

The majority of expatriates are contract workers, with 60,000 Bangladeshis, 30,000 Filipinos, 23,000 Thais and 18,000 Indians among those living under Khadafi's tottering regime.

"This is going to be quite a mammoth operation," India's foreign secretary Nirupama Rao tells reporters. "We will have to not only put in place arrangements for aircraft or ships, but also obtain permission from Libyan authorities for our aircraft to land there."

1021 GMT: French President Nicolas Sarkozy has called for the EU to adopt "swift and concrete sanctions" and suspend economic and financial relations with Libya.

"I call on the foreign ministry to propose to our European Union partners the swift adoption of concrete sanctions so that all those involved in the ongoing violence know that they must assume the consequences of their actions," Sarkozy told a cabinet meeting.

"These measures concern notably the possibility of bringing them to face justice, barring them from the Union's territory and surveillance of financial movements," Sarkozy said, according to a text published by his office.

"I would also like to be examined the suspension until further notice of economic, commercial and financial relations with Libya," he adds.

1017 GMT: AFP's Sylvie Lanteaume has looked up the London School of Economics thesis written by Khadhafi's son Saif al-Islam. It's title is: "THE ROLE OF CIVIL SOCIETY IN THE DEMOCRATISATION OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE INSTITUTIONS"

As Sylvie says: "You couldn't make it up."

1013 GMT: Saudi king boosts social benefits for citizens: news agency

1007 GMT: In Manama's Pearl Square one woman shouts:"We shall never be humiliated," evoking a traditional Shiite slogan that blares out of megaphones across the square, now renamed "Martyrs' Roundabout" by demonstrators to honour those killed in a deadly police raid.

1004 GMT: In Bahrain, protesters are vowing not to budge from Pearl Square, epicentre of anti-regime demonstrations, despite the release of leading Shiite opposition activists and renewed calls by the king for talks.

One day after a mass demonstration clogged the main roads of Manama, Shiite protesters have again crowded Pearl Square, chanting: "We are brothers, Sunnis and Shiites. We shall not abandon this country."

1000 GMT: Italy's Frattini says: "Cyrenaica is no longer under the control of the Libya government and there are outbreaks of violence across the country."

The Italian government is calling for an immediate end to "this horrible bloodbath" that "the Kadhafi government has announced and is continuing to carry out," Frattini added.

0957 GMT: Oil company BP tells AFP that all families and dependants of its Libya-based expatriate employees have arrived safely at various European locations.

The remainder of the company?s employees in Libya will leave the country in due course and in accordance with enforced curfews, a spokeswoman says.

0952 GMT: Libya's eastern province of Cyrenaica is no longer under the control of Moamer Kadhafi, Italy's Foreign Minister Franco Frattini announces.

0951 GMT: Sarkozy calls for EU sanctions against Libya

0947 GMT: Alessandro Marra, an official at the UN human rights office, tells AFP: "We received the request for a special session this morning, filed by the European Union."

"Forty seven states are supporting the request, not all of them are members of the human rights council," he says. The meeting and debate is due to begin at 10.00 am (0900 GMT) in Geneva on Friday.

0945 GMT: UN rights council to hold special session on Libya on Friday: official

0943 GMT: Libya's eastern Cyrenaica province no longer under Kadhafi control: Italy

0940 GMT: "We have started to suspend some of our production capacity in Libya," a Total spokesman tells AFP, asking not to be named and without providing further details.

Total produced an average of 55,000 barrels per day from its Libyan wells in 2010 or 2.3 percent of the giant's production.

0936 GMT: French energy giant Total says it is "starting to suspend" part of its oil production in Libya where protests against Moamer Kadhafi's rule have killed hundreds.

Follow this live report for a minute-by-minute update of events as they happen in Libya, North Africa and the Middle East. We'll bring you events as they develop after Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi's dramatic call for his supporters to confront the protesters today.

Here's a reminder of some of Kadhafi's statements yesterday:

"If I were a president I would have resigned but I have no position to resign from."

"I will die a martyr in the land of my ancestors" and "I will fight to the last drop of my blood."

"The Libyan people are with me. Capture the rats. Go out of your homes and storm them" wherever they are.

"Do you want Libya to be like Somalia? It will lead to civil war if you do not apprehend them."

"Libyan oil should be distributed to all the people. You can take it and do whatever you want to do."

"A small group of people are circulating money and drugs to young people and trying to push them" to rebel.

"We have fought the might of America and Britain and all the nuclear countries. We have fought the might of NATO. We will not surrender."


View the original article here

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Libya live report (AFP)

1057 GMT: The UN Security Council and Arab League have both scheduled meetings for today to discuss the bloody crackdown by Libyan authorities.

1053 GMT: Residents of two districts in Tripoli tell AFP by telephone that there was "a massacre" last night, with gunmen "firing indiscriminately" in Tajura district.

Another in Fashlum says helicopters landed with what he called African mercenaries who opened fire on anyone in the street, killing many people.

A Latin American expatriate living in Tripoli's upscale Gargaresh suburb reports seeing several burnt tyres and a torched truck and car during a brief outing yesterday.

"We passed a barricade manned by men armed with Kalashnikovs. I was very scared, they had arrested a couple of Africans," he tells AFP.

1050 GMT: Libya's state-run Al-Jamahiriya Two television network is continuing to deny reports that the air force strafed protesters last night.

"They say there are massacres in several cities, towns and neighbourhoods of Libya. We must fight against these rumours and lies which are part of psychological warfare," says a red ticker on the bottom of television screens.

This information "aims to destroy your morale, your stability and your riches," it adds.

1044 GMT: The BBC cites a doctor in Benghazi as saying local people have taken control and have formed committee to run the eastern Libyan city.

"No presence of the state there. No police, no army and no public figures," the BBC quotes Dr Ahmad Bin Tahir as saying.

1040 GMT: Oil prices strike $108 as Libyan production is hit by violent protests and concerns grow over spreading unrest in the strategic crude-producing Middle East and North Africa region.

Brent North Sea crude for delivery in April surges to $108.57 per barrel, highest since September 4, 2008

1038 GMT: Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh says Iraq supports the rights of Arabs to demonstrate and calls on regional countries to refrain from using "unjustified bloody confrontation" in suppressing dissent.

1036 GMT: Turkish PM warns Libya against 'mistake' of disregarding people's demands

1035 GMT: Russia risks losing up to $10 billion (7.4 billion euros) in arms sales from the wave of unrest currently sweeping north Africa and the Middle East, a weapons industry official tells Interfax newsagency.

1028 GMT: In Yemen, President Ali Abdullah Saleh's supporters armed with daggers and batons clashed heavily with students in the capital Sanaa today, wounding five before police intervened, an AFP reporter says.

About 1,000 students spent a second night camped at a square, which they have dubbed Al-Huriya (Liberty) Square, near Sanaa university demanding Saleh resign.

The crowd swelled to about 4,000 and as the protesters moved from the square close to where Saleh's loyalists are bunkered down, the group attacked them with daggers and batons, our reporter says.

1027 GMT: Greece says it is preparing to airlift its nationals from Libya. Deputy foreign minister Dimitris Dollis says Athens was seeking permission to access airports at Benghazi, Tripoli, Sebha and Sirte and evacuate an unspecified number of Greeks out of some 300 present in the country.

1022 GMT: In case you missed it earlier, here are details of Kadhafi's appearance on Libyan state television overnight:

Kadhafi, 68, made a brief appearance on state television to scotch "malicious rumours" that he has abandoned the oil-rich North African nation he has ruled for more than four decades.

"Were it not for the rain, I would have addressed the young people at Green Square and spent the night with them to prove I am still in Tripoli and not in Venezuela," said Libya's strongman.

The television said it was a live broadcast from outside his home.

"It's just to prove that I am in Tripoli and not in Venezuela and to deny television reports, those dogs," Kadhafi said as he stood under a silver umbrella while about to step into a car.

Rain lashed Tripoli on Monday evening.

1021 GMT: Several districts of Tripoli are calm today, including Tajoura, scene of violent clashes yesterday, witnesses tell AFP by telephone.

1018 GMT: In Iran, security forces have raided the homes of opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi and his two sons and arrested his son Ali, the cleric's website reports.

1015 GMT: Dozens of protesters storm the Libyan consulate in Dubai, burning portraits of Moamer Kadhafi and demanding the North African state's leader step down.

1013 GMT: More than 1,000 Chinese construction workers in Libya have been forced to flee after gun-wielding robbers stormed their compound, stealing computers and luggage, the company and Chinese media say.

The looters raided Huafeng Company's compound in the eastern city of Ajdabiyah, the Beijing News said, citing the Chinese embassy in Tripoli and a friend of one of the employees.

1010 GMT: UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay says the Libyan authorities "should immediately cease illegal acts of violence against demonstrators. Widespread and systematic attacks against the civilian population may amount to crimes against humanity."

1007 GMT: Italy is to send a C-130 air force plane to Libyatoday to evacuate Italian nationals, a foreign ministry official tells AFP. Defence Minister Ignazio La Russa says the plane is headed to Benghazi.

1003 GMT: The UN's human rights chief warns Libyan authorities that systematic and widespread attacks against the civilian population could be "crimes against humanity."

Follow this live report for a minute-by-minute update of events as they happen in Libya, North Africa and the Middle East.


View the original article here

Nasdaq, ICE eye tie-up to bid on NYSE: report (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Nasdaq OMX and IntercontinentalExchange are in talks to team up on a possible bid for NYSE Euronext, in an attempt to break up the Big Board's deal with Deutsche Boerse, the New York Times' Dealbook reported on Friday.

If such a bid were to materialize, Nasdaq could buy NYSE Euronext's cash equities trading business, while ICE would take the derivatives business, the Times reported, citing an unnamed source.

An offer is not imminent, the paper said, adding that the chances of such a bid emerging were low.

An ICE spokeswoman declined to comment. Nasdaq officials were not immediately available for comment.

(Reporting by Paritosh Bansal and Ann Saphir; Editing by Richard Chang)


View the original article here

Summary Box: Manufacturing report lifts stocks (AP)

BIG JUMP: The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia said its index of manufacturing in the mid-Atlantic region nearly doubled between January and February, helping to push the broad stock market higher.

JOBS SLUMP: The Labor Department said that applications for unemployment benefits rose 25,000 from the previous week, a bigger bump than economists had expected.

THE INDEXES: The Dow Jones industrial average rose 30 points to 12,318.The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 4 to 1,340. The Nasdaq composite rose 6 to 2,831.


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SEC probing mutual funds' muni pricing: report (Reuters)

(Reuters) – U.S. securities regulators are probing whether some mutual funds have overstated the value of thinly traded risky municipal bonds at a time when investors were withdrawing money from muni-bond funds, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

The probe by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is part of the regulator's broader effort to investigate possible abuses in the municipal bond market, the Journal said.

The SEC is concerned that investors in high-yield muni-bond mutual funds could be misled about the true value of their investment, the paper said.

The SEC move was prompted by weak conditions in the muni bond market, as investors have been withdrawing their money from muni funds for several weeks, the Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

A spokesman for the SEC declined to comment to the Journal. The SEC could not immediately be reached by Reuters outside regular U.S. business hours.

U.S. municipal bond funds reported $974 million of net outflows in the week ended February 16, compared with the previous week's outflows of $1.16 billion, LipperFMI reported on Thursday.

It was the 14th consecutive week of sizable net outflows since the funds, popular with individual investors, reported $42 million of net inflows in the week ended November 10.

(Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Vinu Pilakkott)


View the original article here

Libya live report (AFP)

1028 GMT: In Yemen, President Ali Abdullah Saleh's supporters armed with daggers and batons clashed heavily with students in the capital Sanaa today, wounding five before police intervened, an AFP reporter says.

About 1,000 students spent a second night camped at a square, which they have dubbed Al-Huriya (Liberty) Square, near Sanaa university demanding Saleh resign.

The crowd swelled to about 4,000 and as the protesters moved from the square close to where Saleh's loyalists are bunkered down, the group attacked them with daggers and batons, our reporter says.

1027 GMT: Greece says it is preparing to airlift its nationals from Libya. Deputy foreign minister Dimitris Dollis says Athens was seeking permission to access airports at Benghazi, Tripoli, Sebha and Sirte and evacuate an unspecified number of Greeks out of some 300 present in the country.

1022 GMT: In case you missed it earlier, here are details of Kadhafi's appearance on Libyan state television overnight:

Kadhafi, 68, made a brief appearance on state television to scotch "malicious rumours" that he has abandoned the oil-rich North African nation he has ruled for more than four decades.

"Were it not for the rain, I would have addressed the young people at Green Square and spent the night with them to prove I am still in Tripoli and not in Venezuela," said Libya's strongman.

The television said it was a live broadcast from outside his home.

"It's just to prove that I am in Tripoli and not in Venezuela and to deny television reports, those dogs," Kadhafi said as he stood under a silver umbrella while about to step into a car.

Rain lashed Tripoli on Monday evening.

1021 GMT: Several districts of Tripoli are calm today, including Tajoura, scene of violent clashes yesterday, witnesses tell AFP by telephone.

1018 GMT: In Iran, security forces have raided the homes of opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi and his two sons and arrested his son Ali, the cleric's website reports.

1015 GMT: Dozens of protesters storm the Libyan consulate in Dubai, burning portraits of Moamer Kadhafi and demanding the North African state's leader step down.

1013 GMT: More than 1,000 Chinese construction workers in Libya have been forced to flee after gun-wielding robbers stormed their compound, stealing computers and luggage, the company and Chinese media say.

The looters raided Huafeng Company's compound in the eastern city of Ajdabiyah, the Beijing News said, citing the Chinese embassy in Tripoli and a friend of one of the employees.

1010 GMT: UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay says the Libyan authorities "should immediately cease illegal acts of violence against demonstrators. Widespread and systematic attacks against the civilian population may amount to crimes against humanity."

1007 GMT: Italy is to send a C-130 air force plane to Libyatoday to evacuate Italian nationals, a foreign ministry official tells AFP. Defence Minister Ignazio La Russa says the plane is headed to Benghazi.

1003 GMT: The UN's human rights chief warns Libyan authorities that systematic and widespread attacks against the civilian population could be "crimes against humanity."

Follow this live report for a minute-by-minute update of events as they happen in Libya, North Africa and the Middle East.


View the original article here

Libya live report (AFP)

1027 GMT: Greece says it is preparing to airlift its nationals from Libya. Deputy foreign minister Dimitris Dollis says Athens was seeking permission to access airports at Benghazi, Tripoli, Sebha and Sirte and evacuate an unspecified number of Greeks out of some 300 present in the country.

1022 GMT: In case you missed it earlier, here are details of Kadhafi's appearance on Libyan state television overnight:

Kadhafi, 68, made a brief appearance on state television to scotch "malicious rumours" that he has abandoned the oil-rich North African nation he has ruled for more than four decades.

"Were it not for the rain, I would have addressed the young people at Green Square and spent the night with them to prove I am still in Tripoli and not in Venezuela," said Libya's strongman.

The television said it was a live broadcast from outside his home.

"It's just to prove that I am in Tripoli and not in Venezuela and to deny television reports, those dogs," Kadhafi said as he stood under a silver umbrella while about to step into a car.

Rain lashed Tripoli on Monday evening.

1021 GMT: Several districts of Tripoli are calm today, including Tajoura, scene of violent clashes yesterday, witnesses tell AFP by telephone.

1018 GMT: In Iran, security forces have raided the homes of opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi and his two sons and arrested his son Ali, the cleric's website reports.

1015 GMT: Dozens of protesters storm the Libyan consulate in Dubai, burning portraits of Moamer Kadhafi and demanding the North African state's leader step down.

1013 GMT: More than 1,000 Chinese construction workers in Libya have been forced to flee after gun-wielding robbers stormed their compound, stealing computers and luggage, the company and Chinese media say.

The looters raided Huafeng Company's compound in the eastern city of Ajdabiyah, the Beijing News said, citing the Chinese embassy in Tripoli and a friend of one of the employees.

1010 GMT: UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay says the Libyan authorities "should immediately cease illegal acts of violence against demonstrators. Widespread and systematic attacks against the civilian population may amount to crimes against humanity."

1007 GMT: Italy is to send a C-130 air force plane to Libyatoday to evacuate Italian nationals, a foreign ministry official tells AFP. Defence Minister Ignazio La Russa says the plane is headed to Benghazi.

1003 GMT: The UN's human rights chief warns Libyan authorities that systematic and widespread attacks against the civilian population could be "crimes against humanity."

Follow this live report for a minute-by-minute update of events as they happen in Libya, North Africa and the Middle East.


View the original article here

Special Report: Is Wen's "new socialist countryside" working? (Reuters)

ZHAOYUAN, China (Reuters) – When Chinese premier Wen Jiabao visited Zhao Mengleng's village, she hoped to show him the cracks threatening her mud-brick home, a reminder that the country's embryonic prosperity has not reached everybody in the vast rural heartland.

The 68-year-old prime minister, who has cultivated an image as a man of the people and is popularly known as "Grandpa Wen, visited Zhaoyuan village in eastern Anhui province during the Chinese New Year holidays.

He came to support his pledge to narrow the rich-poor gap and channel more wealth to China's 720 million villagers and rural migrant workers, a population more than double the size of the United States.

Zhaoyuan and nearby villages in the impoverished Dabie Mountains have shown signs of rising incomes, which largely depend on a job-making machine that sends rural migrants out to work in factories, mines and building sites.

If that machine sputters, many more Chinese villagers will struggle to escape the hardship Zhao described from the stoop of her home.

"I'm glad he came to see how we live, but I also wanted him to stay longer and see more," said Zhao of Wen's visit of about 40 minutes, which did not include her house. In front of her sat a pile of bricks that she hoped one day her family could afford to build into a new home. "I'm sick, the home is falling down, and the kids' costs are too much," said the woman with a papery voice and constant cough. Her husband was a migrant laborer, but struggled to find decent work because of illness and illiteracy, she said.

The kitchen inside her house was spare and cold at a time of year when many rural families celebrate the Lunar New Year holidays with meat and liquor.

"The leaders say they want to help poor people, but down here we don't know where the money ends up," Zhao said.

NEW SOCIALIST COUNTRYSIDE

China's government believes raising the incomes and welfare of rural residents is crucial to long-term growth and to protect the ruling Communist Party from discontent that could fester into threats to its rule.

Since Wen and President Hu Jintao came to office in 2003, they have vowed to create a "new socialist countryside," an effort that will form a cornerstone of their legacy. They are expected to leave office in 2012.

Residents in Zhaoyuan said their lives have indeed improved. New two-story, concrete-and-tile homes poked above the trees and bamboo, some with decorative columns out front and big color televisions blaring inside. Better-off families have been buying cars, unheard of a few years ago.

"Life has been getting better. It all depends on the young people going out to work. If they didn't work, we'd be as poor as before," said Zheng Wangong, a 55-year-old farmer, sitting in front of a semi-finished brick house, with strings of half-cured pork and home-made sausages hanging from the rafters.

Wen and other Beijing policymakers want to wean the economy off low-margin manufacturing and exports and find new industries for more balanced growth -- many in the interior. But any serious downturn in the factories employing 150 million migrant workers could drag down rural living standards.

Those rising standards were readily evident: Migrant laborers who had returned to Zhaoyuan and nearby villages for the Lunar New Year break could be seen lugging televisions and other trophies of their rising incomes.

"There have been big changes in rural living conditions, but that has not really depended on how good the government's policies have been but on how much rural migrant workers have been bringing back with better wages," said Li Changping, a former rural official who came to fame in 2000 for writing to then premier Zhu Rongji about the suffering of farmers.

"So there's positive change, but the negative risk is: what happens when growth slows,?" said Li, who now works in Beijing as a researcher on rural policy.

BOOSTING CONSUMPTION

Ye Changrun, who works in a bed factory in southern China's huge industrial zone, said his income has doubled to about 2,000 yuan ($300) a month from 1,000 three years ago.

"Working in a factory is hard and it's lonely. But wages are getting better and I think they'll keep going up," Ye said.

"I come home to see my family but I won't come home to work on the land," he added, gesturing at the rice paddies below his home. "There's no money in that."

Nationwide, rural incomes in China rose 10.9 percent in 2010, outpacing the 7.8 percent rise in urban incomes, underpinning efforts to boost consumption in the world's most-populous nation. It was the first time since 1983 that rural incomes had grown faster than those in cities.

But net disposable income is still three times larger in urban areas than in the countryside, and the trend over the past decade shows that gap has widened considerably.

In Jinzhai county and other parts of China where farmers grow cash crops or have more land, incomes from agriculture are higher. But in Zhaoyuan and other mountainous villages, the fragmented patches of fields are not enough to make farming lucrative, even with higher food prices.

"Food prices have gone up, but because we have such small fields, most farmers don't feel they gain much," said Zhu Wenbin, a villager from near Zhaoyuan.

Few villagers had more than a third of an acre of farmland, and many said they had less. "As well, farmers are paying more for food and animal feed and fertiliser," Zhu added. "The (farm) subsidies help, but unless you have migrant workers in a family, you're still poor."

A survey in 2008 of Lu'an, the area in Anhui that encompasses Zhaoyuan Village, found that out of a rural working-age population of 2.9 million, 56 percent worked as migrant laborers. Three quarters of those worked in the coastal export industrial zones of eastern and southern China.

Rural villages are often home only to older people and children migrant workers leave in the care of grandparents. Rising rural consumption is evident in purchases of cars and electric appliances and in house building, "which caught steel firms by surprise as it was significant in 2010," said Stephen Green, head of Greater China research for Standard Chartered Bank, who has closely followed rural development.

Premier Wen has said migrant workers' wages would keep rising steadily.

An economic shock that halts or even reverses the trend could cause serious social and political fallout, said Lu Yilong, a social scientist at Renmin University in Beijing.

"The income for rural growth comes from factories and big cities, so if they fall, the countryside could also face a crisis," said Lu, who grew up in rural Anhui and regularly returns there.

FARMERS SAY "MORE PLEASE"

The government has been trying to avoid such shocks by strengthening the rural social safety net with increased spending on healthcare and basic education, hoping the added security would encourage more consumer spending by poor farmers. Wen's government in 2006 abolished unpopular agricultural taxes and introduced subsidies for farmers.

Those steps have reduced strains in the countryside, according to surveys in 2002 and 2010 by Ethan Michelson, a sociologist at Indiana University, and a team of Chinese researchers.

In a 2010 survey of 2,280 Chinese villagers, 69 percent said their family economic conditions had "improved some" in the previous five years, and 16 percent said conditions had "improved a lot." The remainder reported no change or worse conditions.

For all these gains, villagers feel an enormous gap with most urban residents, whose prosperity they can see close up when they work in cities. Even with recent rural income gains, the gap with urban incomes is stubbornly large.

"I see in Shanghai how big the difference is between city and rural lives," said Zhao Kongxuan, a 49-year-old native of the village who has worked in Shanghai for 15 years. Many residents of Zhaoyuan belong to an extended clan with the surname Zhao.

"It's not an average difference. It's huge," he said, turning to his friends to describe the luxury cars and shopping malls to be seen in China's financial capital.

Farmers are often disdainful of local officials they see as members of a parasite elite that siphon off funds meant for villagers and take their farmland for too little compensation.

Many residents of Zhaoyuan keep pictures of Mao Zedong, the revolutionary who won power vowing to liberate the peasantry, in honored spots above mantles. Despite deadly famine and hardships under Mao, he has survived across much of the rural heartland as a symbol of what is seen as a cleaner, more equal era.

"Wen Jiabao is a good man, but down here at the grassroots...," said Zhang Menglin, a stocky middle-aged farmer who said his mother met Premier Wen on his visit to the village.

"All the money that should go to us should go into our own pockets, not other people's."

(Editing by Bill Tarrant)


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Saturday, February 19, 2011

Many Kids Who Drink Get Liquor From Home: Report (HealthDay)

THURSDAY, Feb. 17 (HealthDay News) -- Some 709,000 youngsters aged 12 to 14 in the United States are drinking beer, liquor and other alcoholic beverages, a new federal study found.

And the surprise is that many of these underage drinkers aren't just getting a friend to buy a six pack for them or smuggling alcohol out of the family liquor cabinet. Some are getting the alcohol directly from a parent, guardian or another adult relative.

In the past month alone, more than 200,000 kids were given alcohol by a parent or other adult family member, according to a report from the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).

That's not counting the youngsters who are drinking on the sly.

"About 5.9 percent of 12- to 14-year-olds have used alcohol in the past month," said Peter Delany, director of SAMHSA's Center for Behavioral Health Statistics and Quality. "That's a pretty large number."

"And almost all of these kids got that alcohol for free," he said.

In fact, about 45 percent got alcohol from a parent or other family member or they took it from their home without permission, Delany added.

About 15 percent of these kids just took the liquor, but 15.7 percent got it directly from that parent or guardian and another 14 percent got it from another relative, he said.

Why parents are giving their kids alcohol isn't clear, Delany said. "Anecdotally, parents say, 'Well, at least they are drinking at home and not on the street, or at least they are not smoking marijuana' -- all kind of silly things," he said.

"If you want to have a big impact on preventing problems with youth alcohol use, it starts at home," he said. "This is a wholly preventable behavior."

Delany suggests locking up all the liquor at home and never giving any to young children.

Although some parents may not realize it, being a regular drinker as a teen can have serious consequences in adulthood, Delany said.

"If you drink alcohol before the age of 15 you are about five times more likely to experience a serious problem with alcohol or other drug use at or after the age of 21," he explained. "That's why so many prevention programs are trying to delay kids from using alcohol, because the older you are [when you start drinking], the more judgment you have, and the less likely you are to develop problems later in life."

According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, approximately 5,000 youngsters and teens under the age of 21 die each year as a result of underage drinking, including deaths from falls, burns and drowning. Frequent binge drinkers who are underage are also more likely to get D's and F's in school and to engage in risky sexual and drug-taking behavior.

"We have to start talking to our kids about this issue. Talk to them all the time -- it's not a onetime discussion," Delany added.

Delany noted the data on very young drinkers came from the 2006 to 2009 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health, which involved responses from more than 44,000 respondents aged 12 to 14. The sample was from across the country and included families from a variety of socioeconomic groups.

Dr. Gwen Wurm, an assistant professor of clinical pediatrics at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, said, "This is something we have known: kids do get their alcohol at home."

"As parents we need to guide our children into the kind of appropriate choices they can be making," she said.

Being open and honest about what alcohol is and its dangers to the developing brain should be an important part of the discussion, Wurm said. In addition, she said, parents need to include alcohol as part of the discussion about drugs and sex.

Another expert, David Jernigan, an associate professor at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University, places much of the blame for making drinking "cool" to kids on the liquor industry.

"Youth exposure to alcohol advertising on television increased 71 percent between 2001 and 2009," he said. Kids are seeing about one advertisement for alcohol a day. "That's a great thing [if the ads are about] vitamins, but not so great for alcohol."

Jernigan thinks alcohol advertising should be restricted to venues where 12- to 20-year-olds make up only a small percentage of the viewing audience.

Parents need to play a lead role in preventing their kids from drinking, "but frankly, they could use a little more help from the alcohol industry," he said.

More information

For more information on underage drinking, visit the U.S. National Library of Medicine.


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Thursday, February 17, 2011

Canada hit by cyberattack from China computers: report (Reuters)

OTTAWA (Reuters) – The Canadian government was hit by an unprecedented cyber attack from Chinese-based computers last month that penetrated two key economic ministries, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp reported on Wednesday.

The CBC cited sources as saying the hackers broke into computer systems at the Finance Department and Treasury Board. Once the attack was detected, Internet access in both ministries was cut off.

The Finance Department is preparing the federal budget, which will be delivered next month.

The CBC said the hackers had apparently managed to take control of computers in the offices of senior government executives as part of a scheme to steal the passwords that unlock entire government data systems.

A spokesman for Treasury Board Minister Stockwell Day said officials had detected an unauthorized attempt to access the ministry's computer networks.

"There are no indications that any data relating to Canadians was compromised," he said in an e-mail. He did not say whether the attacks had been traced back to Chinese servers, as the CBC reported.

No one from the office of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty responded to a request for comment.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu denied there was a China link to the hacking.

"What you mentioned is purely fictitious and has an ulterior motive," he told a regular news briefing in Beijing when asked about the accusations.

"China attaches great importance to computer security and consistently opposes and cracks down on hacking activities according to relative laws and regulations," Ma added. "Hacking is an international problem and China is affected also."

Canada's spy service complains regularly about what it says is industrial espionage by China and other states.

U.S. cables released by WikiLeaks show diplomats blaming China for hacking into Google systems that prompted the Internet giant to pull back from mainland China.

In 2009, The Wall Street Journal said cyber spies who appeared to be based in China had breached the Pentagon's Joint Strike Fighter project.

The CBC story comes at an awkward time for Canada's minority Conservative government, which has markedly toned down its criticism of China's human rights record as it tries to boost bilateral trade ties. (Reporting by David Ljunggren; Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard and Sabrina Mao in Beijing; Editing by Alex Richardson)


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Canada hit by cyberattack from China computers: report (Reuters)

OTTAWA (Reuters) – The Canadian government was hit by an unprecedented cyber attack from Chinese-based computers last month that penetrated two key economic ministries, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp reported on Wednesday.

The CBC cited sources as saying the hackers broke into computer systems at the Finance Department and Treasury Board. Once the attack was detected, Internet access in both ministries was cut off.

The Finance Department is preparing the federal budget, which will be delivered next month.

The CBC said the hackers had apparently managed to take control of computers in the offices of senior government executives as part of a scheme to steal the passwords that unlock entire government data systems.

A spokesman for Treasury Board Minister Stockwell Day said officials had detected an unauthorized attempt to access the ministry's computer networks.

"There are no indications that any data relating to Canadians was compromised," he said in an e-mail. He did not say whether the attacks had been traced back to Chinese servers, as the CBC reported.

No one from the office of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty responded to a request for comment.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu denied there was a China link to the hacking.

"What you mentioned is purely fictitious and has an ulterior motive," he told a regular news briefing in Beijing when asked about the accusations.

"China attaches great importance to computer security and consistently opposes and cracks down on hacking activities according to relative laws and regulations," Ma added. "Hacking is an international problem and China is affected also."

Canada's spy service complains regularly about what it says is industrial espionage by China and other states.

U.S. cables released by WikiLeaks show diplomats blaming China for hacking into Google systems that prompted the Internet giant to pull back from mainland China.

In 2009, The Wall Street Journal said cyber spies who appeared to be based in China had breached the Pentagon's Joint Strike Fighter project.

The CBC story comes at an awkward time for Canada's minority Conservative government, which has markedly toned down its criticism of China's human rights record as it tries to boost bilateral trade ties. (Reporting by David Ljunggren; Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard and Sabrina Mao in Beijing; Editing by Alex Richardson)


View the original article here

Canada hit by cyberattack from China computers: report (Reuters)

OTTAWA (Reuters) – The Canadian government was hit by an unprecedented cyber attack from Chinese-based computers last month that penetrated two key economic ministries, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp reported on Wednesday.

The CBC cited sources as saying the hackers broke into computer systems at the Finance Department and Treasury Board. Once the attack was detected, Internet access in both ministries was cut off.

The Finance Department is preparing the federal budget, which will be delivered next month.

The CBC said the hackers had apparently managed to take control of computers in the offices of senior government executives as part of a scheme to steal the passwords that unlock entire government data systems.

A spokesman for Treasury Board Minister Stockwell Day said officials had detected an unauthorized attempt to access the ministry's computer networks.

"There are no indications that any data relating to Canadians was compromised," he said in an e-mail. He did not say whether the attacks had been traced back to Chinese servers, as the CBC reported.

No one from the office of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty responded to a request for comment.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu denied there was a China link to the hacking.

"What you mentioned is purely fictitious and has an ulterior motive," he told a regular news briefing in Beijing when asked about the accusations.

"China attaches great importance to computer security and consistently opposes and cracks down on hacking activities according to relative laws and regulations," Ma added. "Hacking is an international problem and China is affected also."

Canada's spy service complains regularly about what it says is industrial espionage by China and other states.

U.S. cables released by WikiLeaks show diplomats blaming China for hacking into Google systems that prompted the Internet giant to pull back from mainland China.

In 2009, The Wall Street Journal said cyber spies who appeared to be based in China had breached the Pentagon's Joint Strike Fighter project.

The CBC story comes at an awkward time for Canada's minority Conservative government, which has markedly toned down its criticism of China's human rights record as it tries to boost bilateral trade ties. (Reporting by David Ljunggren; Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard and Sabrina Mao in Beijing; Editing by Alex Richardson)


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Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Report: Is Marriage in America Obsolete? Many Americans Think So (Time.com)

Wedding cake visual metaphor with figurine cake toppers Royalty-Free Stock Photography by Rubberball

As the U.S. greeting card industry enjoys another successful day of getting folks to celebrate or stress out about their relationship status, it appears that the other 364 days of the year, fewer and fewer Americans are sold on the institution of marriage.

The U.S. Census Bureau reports that the number of married Americans has dropped to around 54% in 2010 from 72% in 1970. A new CBS poll backs up that data: 70% of respondents said they thought the institution of marriage is weaker today that it was 20 years ago.

(More on TIME.com: See TIME's cover story about marriage in America.)

So why get hitched? Studies find that happily married people are some of the happiest — and healthiest —among us. But the demographic closest on their heels are single women who have never been married and who are 50 and over — presumably at a juncture in their lives that they don't sweat whatever cultural baggage their non-married status can carry.

But the satisfaction of these women and other long-time singles probably has a lot to do with the fact they have never had to endure a divorce — as do half the people who choose to get married in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Happy Valentine's Day! (via CBS)

World's Top Canines Compete At Westminster Dog Show

Hickory, winner of the hound group, beat out the six other group winners to claim the silver cup. Read More

Mexican soldiers stand guard on a street in Guadalajara City, Mexico July 29, 2010

The statement delivered by a U.S. Embassy spokesperson in Mexico City was dramatic but terse. Read More


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Madoff says banks had to know of Ponzi scheme: report (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A frail Bernard Madoff, facing the rest of his life in prison, said a variety of banks and hedge funds were complicit in and "had to know" about his epic Ponzi scheme before it was uncovered, The New York Times reported.

In his first interview for publication since his December 2008 arrest, Madoff said banks and hedge funds who dealt with his investment advisory firm demonstrated a "willful blindness" toward his activities, and failed to examine discrepancies between his regulatory filings and other information.

"They had to know," Madoff, described as noticeably thinner and dressed in khaki prison clothing, said in a visiting room in the federal prison in Butner, North Carolina. "But the attitude was sort of, 'If you're doing something wrong, we don't want to know.'"

Madoff, 72, is serving a 150-year prison sentence for what prosecutors called his $65 billion Ponzi scheme, which was uncovered in December 2008.

Irving Picard, a court-appointed trustee seeking money for Madoff victims, has filed lawsuits seeking tens of billions of dollars from companies and individuals he believes benefited from or aided in Madoff's Ponzi scheme.

NO EXCUSES

Among the defendants in these cases is JPMorgan Chase & Co, long Madoff's principal banker and described by Picard as "thoroughly complicit" in the Ponzi scheme.

Other defendants include HSBC Holdings Plc, UBS AG, various "feeder funds" that steered money to Madoff, and the owners of the New York Mets baseball team.

A spokesman for Picard did not immediately return a request for comment. Picard declined to comment to the newspaper. He has recovered about $10 billion for victims so far.

Stephen Cutler, JPMorgan's general counsel, at a presentation on Tuesday said Picard "overreached" in his $6.4 billion lawsuit against the bank, and that JPMorgan "did not know about or in any way participate in the fraud."

In the Times interview, conducted in conjunction with a forthcoming book, Madoff acknowledged his guilt and said nothing could excuse his crimes.

He did not assert that any specific bank or hedge fund knew about or was an accomplice in his Ponzi scheme, which Picard said cost investors more than $20 billion.

METS EXECUTIVES DIDN'T KNOW, MADOFF SAYS

But in a December 19 email cited in the Times article, Madoff said he had been providing Picard with "information I knew would be instrumental in recovering assets from those people complicit in the mess I put myself into."

Then, 10 days later, he said "the banks and funds were complicit in one form or another and my information to Picard when he was here established this."

As to Mets principals Fred Wilpon and his brother-in-law Saul Katz, Madoff said: "They knew nothing. They knew nothing."

In the December 19 email, Madoff also said he had not shared his information with federal prosecutors working on criminal cases related to the fraud.

Eight people have been criminally charged. Madoff, his right hand man Frank DiPascali, and an outside accountant have pleaded guilty. Five, all of whom used to work for Madoff, have pleaded not guilty.

Madoff also told the Times he never thought the collapse of his Ponzi scheme would cause the kind of fallout that has befallen his family.

Picard has filed lawsuits against Madoff's wife, Ruth, that could bankrupt her, while Madoff's son Mark committed suicide on December 11, 2010, two years after the Ponzi scheme was revealed.

Madoff said prison officials would not let him attend his son's funeral, saying it could pose a "public safety issue." He later said it would be "cruel" to put his family through what could be a "media circus" were he to attend.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by Clare Baldwin; Editing by Gary Hill)


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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Report: Apple retail stores to nix boxed software

stshank: Stephen Elop's blistering memo: Nokia is years behind competition. Expect radical overhaul announcement Friday. http://cnet.co/eY2HgV
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Report: iPad 2 already in production

A mock iPad 2 seen at this year's CES.
(Credit: Engadget)
Apple has the next generation of its iPad in production, according to a Wall Street Journal report that appears to confirm many of the rumors that have been circulating for the past couple of months.
The new tablet will feature a faster processor and a built-in camera for videoconferencing, but it will have the same display resolution as the first model, according to the report, which cited people familiar with the matter. The new model will reportedly be sold through current partners AT&T and Verizon Wireless--suggesting it might be dual mode for both GSM and CDMA networks. However, the report did not indicate when the new iPad might be hitting store shelves or what the pricing might be.
An Apple representative declined to comment.
Apple has sold 14 million iPads since its release last April, 7.33 million units alone during the holiday quarter, and Piper Jaffray expects Apple to sell 27 million iPads in 2011. All of that fervor has helped fuel rumors of specs, sightings, and even a claimed component acquisition.
Tech site 9to5Mac claimed earlier this month that it had acquired what it believed to be an iPad 2 LCD, "fresh out of China." The news site found the display to be lighter, thinner, and of higher quality than the current iPad's display, but it could see no evidence that it offered higher resolution than the existing model.
Though a number of sites have reported finding higher resolution graphics in recent builds of Apple's iOS, an analyst cited by Apple Insider in January said the iPad 2 would not have a high-resolution Retina display, corroborating an earlier CNET report.
Earlier this month, a Reuters "eyewitness" claimed to have seen an iPad 2 prototype at the press unveiling of News Corp.'s The Daily. However, that alleged sighting did nothing to confirm or dispel rumors that the new device will sport a USB port.
Component makers in Taiwan said in December that Foxconn--a key maker of iPhones and iPads--had been notified that it should be ready to ship 400,000 to 600,000 units of the new device by the end of February. That aligns nicely with another rumor that has pegged February 14 as the release date for Apple's iOS 4.3, the newest update for iPhones, iPads, and iPod Touches. Might an iPad 2 announcement be included in a press event announcing iOS 4.3? Stay tuned.
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