Thursday, March 27, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Police: Va. Tech bloodbath lasted 9 min.

WORLD / America

Police: Va. Tech bloodbath lasted 9 min.

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-26 09:15

BLACKSBURG, Va. - The bloodbath lasted nine minutes - enough time for
Seung-Hui Cho to unleash 170 rounds from his two pistols, or about one
shot every three seconds.

A Virginia State Police officer patrols the campus of Virginia Tech as
workers continue the process of putting a fence around Norris Hall on the
campus in Blacksburg, Va., Wednesday, April 25, 2007. [AP]

During that time, Virginia Tech and city police spent three minutes
dashing across campus to the scene. Then they began the agonizing process
of breaking into the chained-shut building, which took another five
minutes.

Once inside, as they sprinted toward the sounds of gunfire inside Norris
Hall, Cho put a bullet through his head and died in a classroom alongside
his victims.

A timeline of the rampage emerged Wednesday as police provided new
details about what they uncovered in the 10 days since Cho committed the
worst mass shooting in modern US history.

The five minutes police spent breaking into the building proved to be
crucial. During that time, Cho picked off his victims with a hail of
gunfire. He killed himself after police shot through the doors and rushed
toward the carnage.

State police spokeswoman Corinne Geller praised the officers' response
time, noting that had police simply rushed into the building without a
plan, many would have likely died right along with the staff and
students. She said officers needed to assemble the proper team, clear the
area and then break through the doors.

"If you go in with your backs turned, you're never going back," Geller
said. "There's gotta be some sort of organization."

Some police and security experts question the five-minute delay, saying
authorities should have charged straight into the melee.

"You don't have time to wait," said Aaron Cohen, president of IMS
Security of Los Angeles, who has trained SWAT teams around the country
since 2003. "You don't have time to pre-plan a response. Even if you have
a few guys, you go."

Cohen said that a trained SWAT team should have been able to get inside a
locked building in less than a minute. There was no SWAT team at the
Virginia Tech scene.

Police rapid response to school violence has become an important issue in
the last decade.

After the Columbine massacre in 1999, police around the country adopted
new policies for so-called "active shooters." Police would no longer
respond to emergencies such as school shootings by surrounding a building
and waiting for the SWAT team. Instead, the first four officers rush into
the building and attempt to immediately end the threat. This system was
used to end a 2003 school hostage standoff in Spokane, Wash.

Tom Corrigan, former member of the NYPD-

FBI terrorism task force and a retired New York City detective, said five
minutes seems like a long time when gunfire is being heard, but he said
it's tough to second-guess officers in such a chaotic situation.

"I would have liked to have seen them bust down the door, smash windows,
go around to another door, do everything to get inside fast," he said.
"But it's a tough call because these officers put their lives on the line
on a daily basis and I am sure they did the best they could."

State Police Superintendent Col. W. Steven Flaherty, who is overseeing
the investigative team looking at the shootings, said police have been
unable to answer the case's most vexing questions: Why the spree began at
the West Ambler Johnston dormitory, and why 18-year-old freshman Emily
Hilscher was the first victim.

"We talk about possible motives and theories and whatnot, but we don't
have any evidence to suggest anything," Flaherty said.

Witnesses place Cho outside West Ambler Johnston shortly before 7:15
a.m., when he fired the two shots that killed Hilscher and 22-year-old
senior Ryan Clark, a resident assistant at the dorm, Flaherty said.

It is not known how Cho got in.

Police searched Hilscher's e-mails and phone records looking for a link.
While Flaherty would not discuss exactly what police found, he said
neither Cho's nor Hilscher's records have revealed a connection.

"We certainly don't have any one motive that we are pursuing at this
particular time, or that we have been able to pull together and
formulate," Flaherty said. "It's frustrating because it's so personal,
because we see the families and see the communities suffering, and we see
they want answers."

In addition to the 170 rounds Cho fired inside Norris, investigators
found unused ammunition in the building, though Flaherty was unsure how
much was left. Investigators have compiled 500 pieces of evidence from
Norris Hall alone.

Virginia Tech police chief Wendell Flinchum said Cho had a class this
semester in Norris Hall, although it was not scheduled to meet on the day
of the rampage.

Flaherty cautioned that it could be months before the case is closed. The
investigation will begin slowing down as authorities examine evidence, he
said.

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Chinese School - Student arrested over Va. Tech remarks

WORLD / America

Student arrested over Va. Tech remarks

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

BOULDER, Colo. - A University of Colorado student was arrested after
making comments that classmates deemed sympathetic toward the gunman
blamed for killing 32 students and himself at Virginia Tech, authorities
said.

During a class discussion of Monday's massacre at Virginia Tech, the
student "made comments about understanding how someone could kill 32
people," university police Cmdr. Brad Wiesley said.

Several witnesses told investigators the student said he was "angry about
all kinds of things from the fluorescent light bulbs to the unpainted
walls, and it made him angry enough to kill people," according to a
police report. Witnesses "said they were afraid of him and afraid to come
to class with him," Wiesley said.

The student, identified by police as Max Karson of Denver, was arrested
Tuesday on suspicion of interfering with staff, faculty or students of an
education institution. He had a court appearance set for Wednesday
afternoon.

His father, Michael Karson, told the Camera newspaper that the comments
may have been misinterpreted and questioned whether his son's free speech
rights had been violated.

"I would have hoped that state officials would know their First Amendment
better than they seem to," he said.

University spokesman Bronson Hilliard said privacy laws prevented him
from releasing personal information about the student.

At Oregon's Lewis & Clark College, another student was detained by campus
police Wednesday shortly before a vigil for the Virginia Tech victims
when he was spotted wearing an ammunition belt. Portland police later
determined that it was "a fashion accessory" made of spent ammunition,
and said the man did not have a weapon. The belt was confiscated.

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Chinese Mandarin - Va. Tech gunman was from S.Korea

WORLD / America

Va. Tech gunman was from S.Korea

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-17 19:11

BLACKSBURG, Va. - A Virginia Tech senior from South Korea killed at least
30 people locked inside a classroom building in the deadliest shooting
rampage in modern US history, the university and police said Tuesday.

Haiyan Cheng prays during a vigil, for the Virginia Tech shooting
victims, at the Grace Covenant Presbyterian Church in Blacksburg, Va.,
Monday, April 16, 2007. [AP]

Ballistics tests also found that one of the guns used in that attack was
also used in a shooting two hours earlier at a Virginia Tech dorm that
left two people dead, Virginia State Police said.

Police identified the classroom shooter as Cho Seung-Hui, 23, a senior
from South Korea who was in the English department and lived in another
dorm on campus. They said Cho committed suicide after the attacks, and
there was no indication Tuesday of a possible motive.

"He was a loner, and we're having difficulty finding information about
him," school spokesman Larry Hincker said.

Two law enforcement officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because
the information had not been announced, said Cho's fingerprints were
found on the guns used in both shootings. The serial numbers on the two
weapons had been filed off, the officials said.

One law enforcement official said Cho's backpack contained a receipt for
a March purchase of a Glock 9 mm pistol.

Col. Steve Flaherty, superintendent of the Virginia State Police, said it
was reasonable to assume that Cho was the shooter in both attacks but
that link was yet definitive.

"There's no evidence of any accomplice at either event, but we're
exploring the possibility," he said.

Cho was a permanent legal resident of the United States, according to a
Homeland Security Department official who spoke on condition of anonymity
because the information had not been announced.

A memorial service was planned for the victims Tuesday afternoon at the
university, and President Bush planned to attend, the White House said.
Gov. Tim Kaine was flying back to Virginia from Tokyo for the 2 p.m.
convocation.

The first deadly attack, at a dormitory around 7:15

Related readings:
  Our nation is shocked and saddened by the news of the shootings at
Virginia Tech today. Schools should be places of safety and sanctuary and
learning.

Today the university was struck with a tragedy that we consider of
monumental proportions. There were two shootings which occurred on campus.

a.m., left two people dead. But some students said they didn't get their
first warning about a danger on campus until two hours later, in an
e-mail at 9:26 a.m. By then the second attack had begun.

Two students told NBC's "Today" show they were unaware of the dorm
shooting when they walked into Norris Hall for a German class where the
gunman later opened fire.

The victims in Norris Hall were found in four different classrooms and a
stairwell, Flaherty said. Cho was found dead in one of those classrooms,
he said.

Derek O'Dell, his arm in a cast after being shot, described a shooter who
fired away in "eerily silence" with "no specific target - just taking out
anybody he could."

After the gunman left the room, students could hear him shooting other
people down the hall. O'Dell said he and other students barricaded the
door so the shooter couldn't get back in - though he later tried.

"After he couldn't get the door open he tried shooting it open ... but
the gunshots were blunted by the door," O'Dell said.

A federal law enforcement official said Tuesday he had been told by other
federal law enforcement officials that the two guns recovered in the
shooting had had their serial numbers scraped off. The official spoke on
condition of anonymity because the information had not been announced.

The slayings left people of this once-peaceful mountain town and the
university at its heart praying for the victims and struggling to find
order in a tragedy of such unspeakable horror it defies reason.

"For Ryan and Emily and for those whose names we do not know," one woman
pleaded in a church service Monday night.

Comments:
Submit yours hies 2007-04-17 09:35
It seems that American schools are violence-haunted schools. No matter
where the killer is from, it's in America that the blood shedding
incident is happening. It is worth the attention of managing authorities
of both schools and government,after all, body safety is the most
essential right.

Another mourner added: "For parents near and far who wonder at a time
like this, 'Is my child safe?'"

That question promises to haunt Blacksburg long after Monday's attacks.
Investigators offered no motive, and the gunman's name was not
immediately released.

The shooting began about 7:15 a.m. on the fourth floor of West Ambler
Johnston, a high-rise coed dormitory where two people died.

Police were still investigating around 9:15 a.m., when a gunman wielding
two handguns and carrying multiple clips of ammunition stormed Norris
Hall, a classroom building a half-mile away on the other side of the
2,600-acre campus.

At least 20 people were taken to hospitals after the second attack, some
seriously injured. Many found themselves trapped after someone,
apparently the shooter, chained and locked Norris Hall doors from the
inside.

Students jumped from windows, and students and faculty carried away some
of the wounded without waiting for ambulances to arrive.

SWAT team members with helmets, flak jackets and assault rifles swarmed
over the campus. A student used his cell-phone camera to record the sound
of bullets echoing through a stone building.

1 2 

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Chinese School - Dott crowned at China Open

Sports / Other Sports

Dott crowned at China Open

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-04-02 08:35

Graeme Dott won the title of the 2007 China open snooker tournament after
beating Jamie Cope 9-5 here on Sunday.

The Scot took the official world number one spot after winning the China
title.

Graeme Dott lifts his trophy for the 2007 China open snooker tournament
after beating Jamie Cope 9-5 in Beijing April 1st, 2007. [Xinhua]

Dott dominated the final as Cope looked jaded after last night's
gruelling semi-final against Barry Hawkins,

Dott won six of the eight frames in the first session for a 6-2 lead in
the best-of-17-frame final.

Dott put together breaks of 72, 60, 70 and 95 to open a four-frame
advantage and leave himself needing three more to take the title.

He took the first frame 71-46 before Cope struck back with a break of 65
to level the match.

Cope fought back after Dott had won the third frame, tying up the match
at 2-2 with a run of 97.

However, Dott won the next with breaks of 72 and 60 before taking
advantage of a mistake by his opponent to open a 4-2 lead.

The 29-year-old Dott lost momentum when the match resumed as Cope trailed
back 6-5 after runs of 91, 77 and 46.

Dott proved his superb form in the tournament after outplaying cope in
the last three breaks after snatching 124, 120 and 64 points.

This is the first time these two have met in professional competition.

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Chinese School - Beckham wins Sport Industry award

Sports / Soccer

Beckham wins Sport Industry award

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

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

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 

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� Gerrard rested as Liverpool eye Champions League

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� Yang a popular choice as FM

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Chinese Online Class - Home favourate Ding ousts Gunnell

Sports / Photo

Home favourate Ding ousts Gunnell

(worldsnooker.com)
Updated: 2007-03-27 10:00

Ding Junhui battled through his opening match to keep his fans happy at
the Honghe Industrial 2007 World Snooker China Open.

The 19-year-old snooker genius from the Jiangsu Province, sporting
reddish highlights in his hair, beat Adrian Gunnell 5-3 to reach the last
32 in Beijing.

Though he compiled breaks of 82, 97 and 130 in taking a 3-1 lead, Ding
struggled to close the match out after the interval and made several
unforced errors as Telford��s Gunnell got back to 4-3.

Chinese snooker prodigy Ding Junhui strikes during the 2007 World Snooker
China Open in the first round game against Adrian Gunnell from England
March 26 in Beijing. Ding beat Gunnell 5-3.[Xinhua]
Ding eventually sealed victory to set up a match with Barry Hawkins, but
his millions of followers in China know he must improve if he is to
repeat his heroics of 2005 when he beat Stephen Hendry in the final.

In qualifying for this event, Jimmy White saved his professional status
for next season, and he continued his run with a 5-2 defeat of Zheng Peng.

The Whirlwind was due to face Stephen Lee next but the Trowbridge
player'ss withdrawal means that White proceeds straight to the last 16 -
the first time he has reached that stage of a ranking event since the
2005 Grand Prix.

From 2-1 down, the former UK and Masters champion won four consecutive
frames with a top break of 61.

"I nicked the first frame on the colours, otherwise it could have been
different," admitted the 44-year-old Londoner, who failed to win a
knock-out match in the season's other six ranking events.

"At my age you can play well one day, then badly the next. I've got three
days now to practise at the hotel and make sure I play well on Thursday.
I still love this game and I'll keep playing as long as I enjoy it."

Liu Chuang, a 16-year-old from the Liaoning Province, set up a dream tie
with his hero Ronnie O'Sullivan by edging out Andy Hicks 5-4.

Joe Jogia lost 5-1 to Yu Delu, the 19-year-old from the Shanxi Province
compiled runs of 69 and 60.

Wins for five of the eight wild cards means that there are six Chinese
players in the last 32

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Chinese Mandarin - Artest charged with 4 misdemeanors

Sports / Basketball

Artest charged with 4 misdemeanors

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-22 09:53

Sacramento Kings forward Ron Artest faces four misdemeanor charges
stemming from a dispute with his wife at home earlier this month.

The charges were filed late Tuesday. Placer County Deputy District
Attorney Dan Quick said Artest will be arraigned Thursday on charges of
battery and corporal injury to a spouse, false imprisonment and
dissuading a witness from reporting a crime. Each carries a maximum
sentence of one year in prison.

Artest was arrested March 5 at his estate in Loomis, 25 miles northeast
of Sacramento, and was released from custody after posting a $50,000 bond.

A Placer County sheriff's report said Artest grabbed a woman and pushed
her down, then slapped her face during an argument. The report, which did
not identify the victim because it was a domestic violence incident, said
Artest took a phone from the woman the first time she tried to call 911.

When she reached 911, the woman at first complained that Artest was
taking the family Hummer from the home, according to a recording of the
call released by the sheriff's department. The woman then told a
dispatcher that her finger was cut and her leg scratched, and that she
broke the windshield of the vehicle.

Five days after his arrest, Artest said he'd stumbled as a father and
husband and apologized to his wife and family, as well as to the Kings
and his teammates. He sat out two games, but was not suspended and
continued to receive his salary.

Artest's attorney, William Portanova, said Wednesday that he had not yet
seen the charges.

"Ron's first priority remains his family, and the process will simply
have to work itself through," he said.

Portanova declined to say whether Artest has had any contact with his
family since the incident.

"The family continues to request privacy during these difficult times,"
he said.

Immediately after the arrest, the county sheriff's department obtained an
emergency protective order that prevented Artest from returning to his
home or contacting the woman until she could obtain a restraining order.
Officials with the Placer County clerk's office and sheriff's department
said Wednesday they had no record that she had sought or obtained such an
order.

Calls Wednesday to Artest's agent, Mark Stevens, were not immediately
returned. Kings spokesman Darrin May said he had no immediate comment.

It was the latest in a string of incidents that have marred Artest's
basketball career.

As a member of the Indiana Pacers, he was the central figure in the 2004
brawl with Detroit Pistons fans. He received a 73-game suspension and
lost almost $5 million in salary for jumping into the stands and throwing
punches. Artest and teammate Stephen Jackson were sentenced to one year
of probation and 60 hours of community service after pleading no contest
to misdemeanor assault charges.

Artest joined the Kings in January 2006.

Sheriff's deputies said they have responded to 911 calls from Artest's
home five other times since last August, and at least two of the calls
involved domestic disturbances.

Last month, county animal-control officers seized his Great Dane, Socks,
because it wasn't being fed. The dog has since been released to the
custody of one of Artest's lawyers.

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� Artest charged with 4 misdemeanors


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Learn Chinese online - Iran seeks UN OK to make nuclear case

WORLD / Middle East

Iran seeks UN OK to make nuclear case

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-16 08:49

UNITED NATIONS - Iran's UN Mission sent a letter Thursday requesting that
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad be allowed to speak before the Security
Council when it votes on new sanctions against Tehran for its refusal to
suspend uranium enrichment, the council president said.

Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad gestures during a visit to the 'Cuba
Libre' neighborhood in Managua, Sunday, Jan. 14, 2007. [AP]

South Africa's UN Ambassador Dumisani Kumalo said he would present Iran's
request to the 14 other council members Friday.

Special coverage:
Iran Nuke Issue 
Related readings:
Major powers closer to Iran sanctions
Key nations split over Iran sanctions
Bush presses Iran, Syria to help Iraq
US opens door to bilateral talks with Iran
Iran denies halt to uranium enrichment
FM calls for Iran, IAEA cooperation

"The Security Council will have to decide whether they accommodate this
or not," said Kumalo, whose country holds the rotating council
presidency. "The challenge right now is that we don't know when this
could be."

Kumalo said under the UN Charter and Security Council rules, if a member
state has an issue before the council and requests to appear before its
members, "this must be considered."

Richard Grenell, spokesman for the US Mission to the United Nations, said
the US has received official visa requests for an Iranian delegation.

He refused to disclose any details, but a council diplomat said Iran
asked for visas for 38 people to accompany Ahmadinejad, including Foreign
Minister Manouchehr Mottaki and Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Ali
Larijani.

The request from Iran's UN Ambassador Javad Zarif arrived as the
council's five veto-wielding members - the United States, Russia, China,
Britain and France - and Germany agreed on a modest package of new
sanctions to step up the pressure on Tehran to suspend enrichment.

Their draft resolution was presented to the 10 non-permanent members, who
were not part of the negotiations and will now send it to their capitals
to be studied.

The full council isn't expected to discuss the draft resolution until
Wednesday, Kumalo said, so the earliest possible vote would be late next
week, though the timetable could change.

Iran has rejected UN demands that it halt enrichment, insisting its
nuclear program is peaceful and aimed at producing energy. The US and its
European allies are concerned its real aim is to produce nuclear weapons.

Earlier Thursday, Ahmadinejad called the Security Council an
"illegitimate" body and said any new sanctions imposed on his country
would only stimulate it to be self-sufficient and further develop nuclear
technology.

Acting US Ambassador Alejandro Wolff, reacting to that comment and the
possibility of the Iranian president addressing the council, said: "I
find it ironic that a president who's quoted today saying that he tears
up Security Council resolutions and has no respect for what the council
does, is interested in coming and speaking to the council."

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

WORLD / Asia-Pacific North Korea vows to stop nuke program (AP) Updated: 2007-03-02 10:34 South Korean Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung, third from left, and Kim Yong Nam, third from right, chairman of the Standing Committee of the North Korean Supreme People's Assembly, stand in a photo session during their meeting in Pyongyang, North Korea March 1, 2007. [AP] SEOUL, South Korea - North Korea's No. 2 leader reiterated Thursday his country's pledge to abandon its nuclear weapons, as the country sought a resumption of aid at its first high-level talks with South Korea since conducting an atomic test. Kim Yong Nam said "the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula is the dying wish" of the country's founding president, Kim Il Sung, the father of current leader Kim Jong Il. Special coverage: North Korea agrees to stop nuke program Related readings: N.Korea ready to discuss nuke disarmament N.Korea nuclear talks resume amid optimism China retakes centre stage in nuclear talks Six-Party Talks to resume on February 8 Swift return to Six-Party Talks called for China pushes resumption of six-party talks DPRK hints at flexibility in Six-Party Talks Hill to visit China for six-party talks Rice urges DPRK to return to six-party talks Six-party format should be kept: Japan North Korea "will make efforts to realize it," he told South Korean Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung in Pyongyang. Lee pressed for North Korea to follow through on its breakthrough Feb. 13 agreement with the US and four other countries to shut down its sole operating nuclear reactor in 60 days, and to eventually dismantle all its atomic programs. "It is important to make efforts to ensure that South and North Korea cooperate and six countries each assume their responsibilities," Lee said. Kim Yong Nam also called for the two Koreas to work together to reunify the peninsula, which was divided after World War II and remains officially at war since the 1950-53 Korean War ended in a cease-fire, not a peace treaty. As talks resumed Friday, the two sides agreed to resume reunions of families split across their border. A South Korean official said on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the ongoing talks that reunions over a video link will be held this month, with face-to-face meetings set for May. The reunions are a highly emotional issue between the North and South as many of those hoping to see relatives are elderly and running out of time to see their families. Millions of Koreans were separated following the division of the Korean peninsula in 1945 and the 1950-53 Korean War. The North had been expected to agree this week to restarting the reunions, which were put on hold last year after the missile tests. South Korea has been one of the North's main aid sources since the two nations held their first and only summit in 2000. This week's meetings are the 20th Cabinet-level talks since then. But South Korea halted rice and fertilizer shipments to the North after it test-fired a barrage of missiles last July, and relations worsened following North Korea's Oct. 9 underground nuclear test. South Korea has been hesitant at this week's talks, which run through Friday, to immediately restart aid without seeing the North take real steps to dismantle its nuclear program. The North wants to resume separate discussions this month on economic cooperation that would address aid, but South Korea prefers to wait until after April 14 -- the deadline for Pyongyang to switch off its nuclear reactor, pool reports from South Korean journalists at the talks said. However, the South may offer a limited amount of fertilizer if the North agrees to other conditions, the pool reports said. The sides may also agree on conducting trial runs of trains on restored rails across the border. Earlier over dinner, the North's main negotiator at the talks, Senior Cabinet Councilor Kwon Ho Ung, said "a wide road will be opened for the drastic development of North-South relations" if certain measures are implemented. He did not specify them. Last month's six-nation nuclear agreement has raised hopes it will foster a relaxation of regional tensions, since the deal also provides for North Korea to hold talks to normalize ties with Japan and the United States, both of which are scheduled to begin next week. The nuclear pact also calls for negotiations to finally establish a peace agreement between the Koreas. South Korea's President Roh Moo-hyun urged in a speech Thursday in Seoul that the agreement "be successfully implemented so that a peace regime can be firmly established on the Korean peninsula." Amid intense diplomacy to ensure the disarmament deal goes forward, the US State Department's No. 2 diplomat, John Negroponte, arrived in Japan Thursday on the first stop of an Asian trip expected to focus on the North Korea issue. He will also visit South Korea and China. Meanwhile, South Korean Foreign Minister Song Min-soon left Thursday for Washington for talks with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on North Korea. He is also set to travel to Moscow. Top World News � Tornadoes kill 13 in Alabama; Mo. girl � Democrats want troops out if goals unmet � Cuban minister: Castro could return soon � N.Korea pledges to denuclearize in talks � US blasted for treatment of detainees Today's Top News � Paulson: US trade barriers 'a worrisome trend' � North Korea vows to stop nuke program � Dissatisfaction plagues many marriages � Tornadoes kills 18 in Alabama � Tornadoes kill 13 in Alabama; Mo. girl Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours Learn Chinese, Chinese Mandarin, Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet

Chinese language - North Korea vows to stop nuke program

Sports / Soccer Robinho joins list of discontented at Real (Reuters) Updated: 2007-02-14 08:44 MADRID, Feb 13 - Brazil forward Robinho has become the latest Real Madrid player to voice his discontent at his lack of opportunities under coach Fabio Capello. "Right now I'm not happy because I'm not playing, but I'm going to keep working to change that," Robinho told a news conference on Tuesday. "I know that he (Capello) doesn't have confidence in my football because I'm not playing and I have to make him change his mind." Asked whether he would consider leaving the club at the end of the season, he replied: "I don't know. All I know is that with Capello I've been on the bench and if things carry on like that I will have to see what's best for me." But the 22-year-old, who joined Real from Santos on a five-year contract for a fee of $30 million in Aug 2005, said his case was different from that of Brazil colleague Ronaldo who was forced to leave the club because he did not feature in Capello's plans. "Ronaldo is the best striker in the world, but he wasn't happy because the coach didn't want him to stay here. I'm younger, I've still got a lot to learn and I've got a future." ONE GOAL Robinho has been in the starting line-up for nine of Real's 22 league games this season and has found the net just once. Last week Capello backtracked on his pledge not to select David Beckham again following the midfielder's announcement that he would be joining MLS side LA Galaxy at the end of the season. Striker Antonio Cassano continues to be sidelined, however, after a run-in with Capello earlier in the season. Robinho backed team mate Fabio Cannavaro's call for the Italy international to be return to the squad. "Cassano is a great player and person," he said. "I don't like it when I see that my team mates are sad." Robinho was at the centre of controversy earlier this year when sporting director Predrag Mijatovic hinted that the Brazilian had arrived at a training session smelling of alcohol. "It wasn't true," said Robinho. "I look after myself off the pitch .... Mijatovic hasn't apologised to me or said anything. I don't like what was said, but it's in the past now." Top Sports News � QPR suspend assistant manager after China brawl � Beckham to play at Old Trafford for charity game � Chelsea heading to China in 2008 � Diamonds forever like Clijsters's decision � Robinho joins list of discontented at Real Today's Top News � Six-Party nuclear talks yield breakthrough � 100,000 officials punished in 2006 � Parents pick lucky year for "piglets" � Al-Qaida No. 2 calls Bush an alcoholic � Graft prevention body to be set up Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours

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WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Suspects questioned over Pakistan airport attack

(AFP)
Updated: 2007-02-07 10:48

ISLAMABAD - Pakistani investigators have been quizzing two suspects after
an Islamic militant was killed by his own hand grenade in a brazen attack
on Islamabad international airport, according to officials.

Pakistani security officials whisk away a suspect who alledgely drove a
suicide bomber into the Islamabad International Airport, in Islamabad.
[AFP]

The attack late Tuesday was the fifth in less than two weeks in Pakistan,
raising fears that Taliban militants fighting Pakistani troops near the
Afghan border are trying to embarrass President Pervez Musharraf.

The two suspects were in a car which drove the attacker to the airport
car park, where he exchanged gunfire with security forces after they
stopped him at a security checkpost, injuring three police. He then died
in the blast.

"We are interrogating two people - one of them is a driver and the other
one was also said to be travelling in the same car," a senior security
official told AFP.

Officials hoped they could provide leads to the group behind the attack
amid fears the militants are "desperate" to send a message to military
ruler Musharraf's government.

Interior Minister Aftab Sherpao confirmed there were three men in the car
but gave no further details.

He however said the incident was no longer being considered as a suicide
attack because "when we searched the body we did not find any explosive
belt on him."

"The circumstantial evidence does not suggest that it was a suicide
attack. He might have come for a hit and run attack," Brigadier Javed
Cheema, head of the interior ministry's national crisis management cell,
told AFP.

"When police tried to check the car he pulled a mask on his face and
started firing. He ran towards the car park and threw a grenade which did
not explode. Three bullets hit him in the chest and one grenade was found
on his body."

The bearded bomber's bloodstained body, with the legs mangled by the
blast, was shown to journalists after the explosion. Several cars were
also damaged in the blast and the exchange of fire.

The airport was briefly closed and several flights were delayed or
diverted.

Cheema said security had been further beefed up at other airports.

Musharraf flew in to nearby Chaklala Airbase hours after the attack
following a trip to Iran and Turkey.

The president angered Islamic hardliners by abandoning Pakistan's support
for the Taliban regime after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United
States and launching a crackdown on militants.

He has escaped two assassination attempts blamed on Al-Qaeda in 2003.

This is a message to the government that they can strike at the most
sensitive areas," a top intelligence official told AFP on condition of
anonymity.

1 2 

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Learn mandarin - Asians in the house as curling takes off

Sports / Photo

Asians in the house as curling takes off

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-01-31 09:27

Fengchun Wang of the Chinese men's Curling team launches the stone down
the ice against Japan at the Asian Winter Games in Changchun, China's
northeastern Jilin province January 30, 2007. It might seem an unlikely
scenario but there are some at the Asian Winter Games this week who think
the continent could soon be providing medal winners at major
international curling tournaments.[Reuters]

1 2 

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Monday, March 24, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Second Republican opposes Bush Iraq plan

WORLD / America

Second Republican opposes Bush Iraq plan

(AP)
Updated: 2007-01-18 08:36

WASHINGTON - A second Republican signed onto a Senate resolution on
Wednesday opposing President Bush's 21,500-troop buildup in Iraq, setting
a marker for a major clash between the White House and Congress over the
unpopular war.

US Democratic Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton from New York holds a press
conference on Iraq on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. Clinton, fresh from
a tour of Iraq, blasted US President George W. Bush's plan, saying it
would not stem the raging sectarian violence. [AFP]

Sen. Olympia Snowe, a moderate from Maine, said she would support a
nonbinding resolution that would put the Senate on record as saying the
US commitment in Iraq can be sustained only with support from the
American public and Congress.

Snowe's decision to join the effort came as the White House and GOP
leaders struggled to keep Republicans from endorsing the resolution, and
raised questions about how many more defections there might be.

"Now is time for the Congress to make its voice heard on a policy that
has such significant implications for the nation, the Middle East and the
world," Snowe said in a written statement.

Earlier, Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Nebraska Republican and potential 2008
presidential candidate, joined Democrats at a news conference announcing
the resolution.

"I will do everything I can to stop the president's policy as he outlined
it Wednesday night," Hagel said. "I think it is dangerously
irresponsible."

Even as skeptical Republicans were summoned to private meetings with Bush
and national security adviser Stephen Hadley at the White House, Bush's
aides made clear that the Capitol Hill challenge would be met
aggressively by the administration.

Presidential spokesman Tony Snow said resolutions passed by Congress will
not affect Bush's decision-making.

"The president has obligations as a commander in chief," he said. "And he
will go ahead and execute them."

Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, D-Mich., a chief
author of the Senate resolution, said it says "we do not support
increased troops, deeper military involvement" and calls for shifting the
mission of US troops from combat to training, counterterrorism and
protecting Iraq's territorial integrity.

He said it also calls for "the greater engagement of other countries in
the region in the stabilization and reconstruction of Iraq."

The resolution does not call for a withdrawal of troops or threaten
funding of military operations, as many Democrats have suggested.
Instead, the legislation says the US should transfer responsibility to
the Iraqis "under an appropriately expedited timeline," though it is not
specific.

Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, told reporters that she is considering
supporting the resolution and said she believed it heads in the right
direction.

"I want to make sure it's something I can support," said Snowe, who has
been adamantly opposed to the increase in troops.

The group planned to introduce the resolution Wednesday, with a review by
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Jan. 24, one day after Bush
delivers his State of the Union address.

Hagel's agreement to help Democrats champion the resolution amounts to a
setback to the administration and to Bush, who has argued vehemently that
some 21,500 additional US troops are needed to help the Iraqi government
calm sectarian violence in Baghdad and Anbar province.

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Sports / China

Romance in sports - Good or bad for athletes?

By Coldness Kwan (Chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-01-09 16:05

Sports, if linked with romance in one way or another, is widely open to
public conversation. It is becoming increasingly hard to tell if an
athlete becomes famous for his or her skills or because of his or her
personal life.

Romances among teammates are nothing new, but a coach and athlete couple
is rare. China's top tennis player Li Na, and her tennis-playing husband
cum coach have created a precedent in China.

Jiang's official appointment by the China Tennis Association (CTA),
China's tennis sport administrator, was in an effort to bolster Li's
"weak mentality" to boost the nation's hope of singles gold in 2008.

Li Na and Jiang Shan

But public opinion on the appointment is divided. .

A tennis expert said family links between tennis coaches and athletes
benefits the athletes as it is easy for them to communicate with their
coaches both during training and in normal life. Russian tennis star
Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters, Venus and Serena are coached by
their fathers.

Others argue that a husband and wife partnership may form a tight circle
that excludes the other team members, making it difficult for them to
function as a solid whole.

Whether the controversial appointment will pay off or not is not yet
known. But romantic associations have already had different ramifications
in Chinese sports.

There have been many couples on the national badminton team, but the team
has never lost their dominant position on the world stage. The team
produced retired champions Sun Jun and Ge Fei, already married and
serving champions Lin Dan and Xie Xingfan with Lin and Xie as the reining
world No.1 and No.2.

Lin Dan and Xie Xingfang

"If romance can motivate our top athletes but does not negatively impact
their normal lives and training, or on their taking home gold, as their
coach, I can't find any reason to oppose these couples," said Li Yongbo,
chief team coach.

Compared with the romance-friendly badminton team, the table tennis team,
another gold medal team, is not that tolerant. Two women members were
sent back to their provincial team for having relationships with top men
players in 2004 so the men could concentrate on preparing for the 2004
Olympics.

Liu Guoliang, chief coach of the men's team and former World and Olympic
champion and his then-girlfriend Wang Jin, also a player, were separated
when Wang was taken off the national team in 1995. The couple married ten
years later in 2005.

Both the tennis and badminton team have similar aims, to help their
athletes play their best in 2008, even though they both have different
methods of dealing with athletes' romance.

Unlike individual sports, playing in pairs provides an atmosphere where
it is easy for romance to bloom. In pair figure skating, the skater's
dance is suggestive of a romance between the two.

Zhao Hongbo and Shen Xue

China's top pair Shen Xue, 28 and Zhao Hongbo, 33, two-time world
champions and Turin bronze medalists and rising stars Tong Jian and Pang
Qing, 2006 World champions have announced their relationships off the ice.

Youngsters Zhang Hao, 21 and Zhang Dan, 20, Turin silver medalists gave
an excuse of still being small when asked if they are romantically linked.

Do they truly have emotions towards each other? At least they have to
foster attachments and compacts in order to be a skating pair.

Athletes are humans, and they need romance just like the rest of us. But
they are not quite ordinary people, so maybe their romances need to be
unusual as well, romances that motivate them to defend the nation's honor.

To contact the writer of this story:
Guan Xiaomeng in Beijing at guanxm@chinadaily.com.cn

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Chinese School - Romance in sports - Good or bad for athletes?

WORLD / Middle East

New shooting ends Gaza cease-fire

(AP)
Updated: 2006-12-18 13:45

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Palestinian gunmen waged a street battle outside
the residence of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas around dawn Monday,
dashing hopes that an overnight truce would bring quiet to the Gaza Strip.

Palestinian gunmen from the Fatah Movement carry their weapons as they
march in support of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the Jebaliya
refugee camp, northern Gaza Strip, Sunday, Dec. 17, 2006. [AP]

The rival factions Hamas and Fatah are fighting for control over the
Palestinian government, and the volatile coastal territory was buffeted
by violence all day Sunday. Three people were killed in Sunday's
fighting, in which gunmen shot up the Palestinian foreign minister's
convoy and militants launched mortar shells at Abbas' office.

Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh has accused Abbas of inflaming the
political crisis by calling for early elections and said his Hamas group
would boycott the poll. Abbas, a moderate from Fatah, called for new
elections to resolve the political deadlock that has paralyzed the
Palestinian government since the hardline Hamas militants won January
parliamentary elections.

Hamas' electoral victory split the Palestinian government, with Abbas
seeking peace with Israel and Hamas refusing to even recognize the Jewish
state's existence. The political tensions have repeatedly turned violent
and the chaos has spiraled out of control since unknown gunmen killed the
three young sons of a Fatah-allied security chief last week.

Foreign Minister Mahmoud Zahar's motorcade came under fire Sunday as it
drove near the Foreign Ministry in Gaza City. Zahar was unharmed, but the
attack unleashed a ferocious gunbattle that raged for more than an hour,
the worst fighting since unity government talks broke down late last
month. Medical officials said a 19-year-old woman was killed in the
crossfire.

Zahar said top Fatah leaders were "fully responsible" for the attack on
him "and what will happen."

In a separate attack blamed on Hamas, dozens of gunmen raided a training
camp of Abbas' Presidential Guard near the president's residence, killing
a member of the elite force.

Hamas gunmen also opened fire at a demonstration of tens of thousands of
Fatah supporters in northern Gaza, wounding at least one person, and
unknown militants fired at least two mortars at Abbas' office in Gaza
City. Hours later, they launched another mortar shell.

Five pro-Fatah security men and a 45-year-old woman were wounded,
officials said. Abbas was in the West Bank at the time.

Elsewhere, the bullet-riddled body of a top security officer affiliated
with Fatah, Col. Adnan Rahmi, was discovered in northern Gaza several
hours after he disappeared, Palestinian medical officials and his family
said. No group took responsibility, but Rahmi's family blamed Hamas for
the killing.

The violence persisted throughout the night, with Hamas and Fatah gunmen
waging battles in the northern Gaza town of Jebaliya, near the home of a
Fatah strongman in Gaza, and outside the Gaza parliament building. Hamas
militants also clashed with Abbas' bodyguard unit outside his Gaza home.

A French reporter, 46-year-old Didier Francois of the newspaper
Liberation, was shot in the leg during the day's violence, according to
his newspaper.

Egyptian mediators and small Palestinian factions worked all day to
broker an agreement between the two sides, and a truce was announced at a
press conference in Gaza City after midnight.

But representatives of Fatah and Hamas did not appear at the press
conference, leaving the announcement to Rabbah Muhanna, a senior official
in the small Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. "Both sides
are serious about the agreement," Muhanna assured reporters.

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Chinese Online Class - New shooting ends Gaza cease-fire

Sunday, March 23, 2008

WORLD / Middle East

Bush: Iraq progress too slow

(AP)
Updated: 2006-12-05 08:47

WASHINGTON - President Bush told a Shi'ite political leader on Monday the
United States is not happy with progress in Iraq and sought the cleric's
help to curb extremists and terrorists trying to undermine the struggling
new democracy.

President Bush, right, talks to reporters during his meeting with Sayyed
Aziz Al-Hakim, an Iraqi Shiite leader, in the Oval Office of the White
House in Washington, Dec. 4, 2006. [AP]

Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim said US troops need to stay in Iraq to help deal with
escalating violence. He also told Bush that Iraq welcomes help from other
nations, including those in the Middle East, so long as they do not
bypass Iraq's political process.

Special coverage:
Escalating Violence in Iraq  
Related readings:
Annan: Iraq in grip of civil war Al-Maliki faces revolt within government 

"Iraq should be in a position to solve Iraqi problems," al-Hakim told
Bush after they met in the Oval Office for more than an hour.

Some consider al-Hakim, who lived in exile in Iran for years, a more
powerful political figure than Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
Al-Hakim leads the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq,
the largest Shi'ite bloc in Iraq's parliament. His party also is backed
by the Badr Brigade militia blamed for sectarian killings.

The meeting was evidence that Bush, under pressure to find a new
blueprint for his war strategy, was getting more personally involved in
the political infighting among Shi'ites, Sunnis and Kurds.

"I told him that we're not satisfied with the pace of progress in Iraq,
and that we want to continue to work with the sovereign government of
Iraq," Bush said. He said the young Iraqi government needs to be given
more capability as quickly as possible to secure the country from
extremists and murderers.

Bush is meeting on Thursday with British Prime Minister Tony Blair - a
day after the bipartisan Iraq Study Group issues its long-awaited
recommendations. Bush also plans to meet next month with Iraq's Sunni
Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi. Last week, he met in Jordan with
al-Maliki.

Before al-Hakim's visit to the United States, two al-Maliki aides and a
third person close to al-Hakim said the cleric was expected to try to
persuade Bush to enlist Iran's help in quelling violence in Iraq.

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Learn mandarin - Bush: Iraq progress too slow

WORLD / America

Bush to go overseas again for key talks

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-27 09:28

WASHINGTON - President Bush reaches out to allies this week for help in
quelling violence in Iraq and Afghanistan, in a burst of diplomacy from a
Baltic summit of NATO partners to Mideast talks with Iraq's prime
minister.

President Bush and first lady Laura Bush wave as they arrive on the South
Lawn of the White House in Washington, Saturday, Nov. 25, 2006. [AP]

Just back from an eight-day trip to Asia, Bush was leaving on Monday on
another overseas trip as pressure builds at home for a change in his
administration's Iraq strategy amid deepening tensions and violence in
that country.

The president stops first in Estonia en route to a NATO summit in
neighboring Latvia where a debate over peacekeeping operations in
Afghanistan is expected to dominate.

Estonia and Latvia have sent troops to both Iraq and Afghanistan and the
US considers the two former Soviet republics important allies.

From Latvia, the president heads to Amman, Jordan, for two days of talks
with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Jordan was deemed a less
dangerous setting for the meeting than Baghdad.

White House aides said the meeting, a late addition to Bush's itinerary,
was part of the president's process of sounding out various parties as he
ponders how to proceed in Iraq.

Iran and Syria are trying to assert influence in stabilizing Iraq without
American involvement, and tensions in the region increased further last
week with the assassination of a Cabinet member in the US-backed
democratic government of Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora - a killing
some have blamed on Syria. Also, sectarian attacks in Iraq have surged in
recent days.

Special coverage:
Iraq After War 
Related readings:
Bush keeps plans to meet with Iraqi PM 

Jordan's King Abdullah said Sunday that tensions in the Middle East go
beyond the war in Iraq and that much of the region soon could become
engulfed in violence unless the central issues are addressed quickly.

"We could possibly imagine going into 2007 and having three civil wars on
our hands," he said on ABC's "This Week," citing conflicts in Iraq,
Lebanon and the decades-long strife between the Palestinians and Israelis.

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Learn Mandarin online - Bush to go overseas again for key talks

WORLD / Middle East

Most hostages in Iraqi mass kidnap said freed

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-15 15:03

BAGHDAD - Most of the dozens of hostages seized at a Higher Education
Ministry building on Tuesday have been freed, the government said on
Wednesday.

A policeman stands guard outside the compound of the Higher Education
Ministry in Baghdad, November 14, 2006. [Reuters]

An official at the Prime Minister's media office said around 40 hostages
had been in the hands of the kidnappers by Tuesday evening and "most of
them have been released." He did not give exact numbers or say how they
were freed.

Special coverage:
Iraq After War
Middle East Conflict 
Related readings:

Mass kidnapping forces Iraqi universities to close 

There were different reports on exactly how many men were seized from the
Higher Education Ministry building in central Baghdad in a brazen
daylight raid by gunmen in police uniforms. Around 20 were released
within hours on Tuesday.

A spokesman for the Higher Education Ministry reiterated on Wednesday his
minister's estimate on Tuesday that at least 100 had been taken,
including male employees and visitors.

"They beat us and insulted us and after that they freed us," the
spokesman quoted the assistant manager of the building, Yaha Alwan, as
saying after he was released on Tuesday afternoon.

Amid new suspicions of police complicity in the latest and biggest mass
kidnapping, the interior minister hauled in police chiefs to explain how
dozens of gunmen swept into the Higher Education Ministry annex, rounded
up those inside, and drove them off in broad daylight toward a Shi'ite
militia stronghold.

Al Furat, a TV station controlled by a major Shi'ite political group,
said early on Wednesday that 25 hostages were still missing.

Some of those released earlier in the day said they were driven to Sadr
City, a Shi'ite militia stronghold in eastern Baghdad, Higher Education
Minister Abd Dhiab said.

1 2 

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Chinese language - Most hostages in Iraqi mass kidnap said freed

Chinese language - Iran to pursue atomic work despite pressure

WORLD / Middle East

Iran to pursue atomic work despite pressure

(AP)
Updated: 2006-10-16 11:43

Iran's president said Tehran would keep up its nuclear activities despite
Western countries' mounting threats and pressures, the student news
agency ISNA reported on Sunday.

Barring a change of heart by Iran, the European Union's 25 foreign
ministers want to agree at a meeting on Tuesday to ask the U.N. Security
Council to impose sanctions, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter
Steinmeier said on Saturday.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad listens to Supreme Leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei speaking during Friday prayers in Tehran October 13, 2006.
Iran's president said Tehran would keep up its nuclear activities despite
Western countries' mounting threats and pressures, the student news
agency ISNA reported on Sunday. [Reuters]

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was defiant at a meeting with a
group of conservative officials on Saturday, saying Iran was determined
to press on with its nuclear work.

"The threats and pressures against Iran's nuclear activities will not
tarnish the will of the Iranian nation to continue its way (of achieving
nuclear technology)," Ahmadinejad said.

"The nation will not be intimidated by the threats and will continue on
its path vigorously," ISNA quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.

Iran's case has been sent back to the Security Council after it failed to
halt uranium enrichment, a process the West fears Iran is using to
develop atomic bombs despite Tehran's denials.

Iran has shrugged off the threat of sanctions in the past. Analysts say
the world's fourth largest oil exporter, which is enjoying an oil revenue
windfall, may feel it can cope with the modest penalties likely to be
imposed initially.

Ahmadinejad said the request by Western countries for Iran to suspend
uranium enrichment was illegal.

"If they succeed in imposing their illegal demand on us they will
increase the pressure to impose extra demands," Ahmadinejad said. "By
God's grace they will not be able to stand against the Iranian nation,"
he said.

Iran has proposed forming a consortium for uranium enrichment with other
countries, saying it would be a way for them to monitor its atomic work
to prove it was peaceful.

Iran has said it opposes atomic weapons and, in previous statements, has
called for nuclear disarmament by all countries.

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Saturday, March 22, 2008

WORLD / Middle East

Saddam sentenced to hang for Shiite killings

(Agencies)
Updated: 2006-11-05 16:56

In this photo, former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein is seen as he is
questioned by Chief Investigative Judge Raid Juhi, not seen, Aug. 23,
2005 at an unknown location. Saddam was sentenced to hang on Sunday. [AP]

BAGHDAD - Iraq's High Tribunal on Sunday found Saddam Hussein guilty of
crimes against humanity and sentenced him to hang, as the visibly shaken
former leader shouted "God is great!"

His half brother and former intelligence chief Barzan Ibrahim, and Awad
Hamed al-Bandar, head of the former Revolutionary Court, were sentenced
to join Saddam on the gallows.

After the verdict was read, a trembling Saddam yelled out, "Life for the
glorious nation, and death to its enemies!"

Special coverage:
Iraq after War and Saddam on trial

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Bush pledges support for Iraq PM
US death toll in Iraq worst in a year

He initially refused Chief Judge Raouf Adbul-Rahman's order to rise. Two
bailiffs lifted Saddam to his feet and he remained standing through the
sentencing.

As the proceedings finished, clashes broke out between police and gunmen
in north Baghdad's Azamiyah district, which is dominated by hardliners
from among Saddam's fellow Sunni sect. In contrast, celebratory gunfire
rang out in many other parts of the city.

The verdict was immediately condemned by the head of the second largest
Sunni bloc in parliament, who predicted it would spark even greater
bloodshed between Sunnis and the country's majority Shiites, who were
heavily persecuted under Saddam's more-than two decades of authoritarian
rule but now largely control the government and security forces.

"It was not wise and the government, not the court, has gone to the
extreme with issuing this sentence, even in advance," Salih al-Mutlaq
told the al-Arabiya satellite television station.

"This government will be responsible for the consequences, with the
deaths of hundreds, thousands or even hundreds of thousands, whose blood
will be shed," al-Mutlaq said.

Saddam and his seven co-defendants had been tried by the Iraqi High
Tribunal over a wave of revenge killings carried out in the city of
Dujail following a 1982 assassination attempt on the former dictator.

Saddam faces additional charges in a separate case over an alleged
massacre of Kurdish civilians. It wasn't clear when a verdict would be
announced in that other case, or when Saddam's sentence would be carried
out.

Before the trial began, one of Saddam's lawyers, former US Attorney
General Ramsey Clark, was ejected from the courtroom after handing the
judge a memorandum in which he called the Saddam trial a travesty.

Judge Raouf Abdul-Rahman pointed to Clark and said in English, "Get out."

Guarding against violence, Baghdad was placed under a total curfew, with
shops shuttered and pedestrians and vehicles almost completely absent
from the streets of the city of six million people. Iraqi security forces
and US troops mounted additional patrols, but no major incidents had been
reported.

"There is close cooperation between Iraqi and coalition forces in
maintaining the curfew," said police Maj. Mahir Hamad Mousa of the
al-Khansa station in Baghdad's Jadeeda district ."We have fully prepared
for this duty," he said.

The guilty verdict for Saddam is expected to enrage hard-liners among
Saddam's fellow Sunnis, who made up the bulk of the former ruling class.
The country's majority Shiites, who were persecuted under the former
leader but now largely control the government, will likely view the
outcome as a cause of celebration.

Even with the verdict imminent, Saddam's lawyers and some Sunni
politicians had called for the court proceedings to be suspended.

"It has become clear to the Iraqi people and the whole world that this
court is politicized 100 percent," Salih al-Mutlaq, head of the second
largest Sunni parliamentarian block, told the Doha-based al-Jazeera
satellite channel.

Al-Mutlaq accused the US and Iraqi governments of interfering with the
work of the court and said a verdict would further polarize Iraqi
society, already traumatized by sectarian violence between Shiites and
Sunnis.

"This verdict will be the last nail in the coffin of the national
reconciliation plan and the political process," al-Mutlaq said. "I call
upon Arab leaders and ... to interfere for the sake of Iraq's unity."

The head of another prominent Sunni group, Harith al-Dhari, said any
verdict should be delayed until after the departure of US forces, who
toppled Saddam following their March 2003 invasion of the country.

"If this court issues the verdict, I would consider it to be illegal,
illegitimate and political," al-Dhari told al-Arabiya, a satellite
television channel viewed throughout the Arab world.

Echoing those sentiments, the Association of Muslim Scholars, a hard-line
Sunni clerical group, demanded that Saddam's trial be postponed until
"the occupation leaves".

"I do believe that this process is politically motivated and not a
judicial one," Harith al-Dhari, the association's leader, told the Pan
Arab al-Arabiya satellite channel.

One of Saddam's lawyers, Najeeb al-Nu'aimi, said Saddam and his
co-defendants had not been given sufficient time to present their cases.

"The court is not neutral. It lacks legitimacy," said al-Nu-aimi, a
former justice minister of the gulf state of Qatar.

The curfew, which also covers two provinces neighboring Baghdad where
Sunni insurgents are battling US troops and the Iraqi government, was
only lightly observed in Baghdad's sprawling Shiite slum of Sadr City, a
stronghold of the Mahdi Army militia led by radical anti-American cleric
Muqtada al-Sadr.

Local police commander Col. Hassan Challoub said quick reaction teams
made up of the Iraqi police, army and the Interior Ministry commandos
units were patrolling the area.

"No incident and nothing abnormal is reported so far," Challoub said.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki called on Saturday Iraqis to accept
the verdict Saddam without violence, but in the next breath declared that
the former dictator must get "what he deserves" with the decision that
could send him to the gallows.

A Shiite who was forced into years of exile during Saddam's
Sunni-dominated rule, al-Maliki had called for Saddam to be sentenced to
death.

Saddam and the other seven defendants had been accused of accused of
arresting hundreds of people in the Dujail crackdown, including women and
children, and of torturing some to death, with 148 people killed in all.
Al-Maliki's Islamic Dawa party has claimed responsibility for organizing
the assassination attempt.

In the US, President George W. Bush's chief spokesman underscored on
Saturday that Saddam's trial was being conducted by an independent Iraqi
judiciary, what he called an important component of the country's
development.

"These are things that are absolutely vital to building a democracy that
will not only sustain itself, but have the faith and support of the
populace," said Tony Snow.

In advance of the verdict, vacationing soldiers were recalled to duty in
one of the heaviest security crackdowns in Baghdad since the bombing of
an important shrine in the city of Samarra in February that unleashed
rampant sectarian violence.

New checkpoints popped up on major roads, including within the heavily
fortified Green Zone that houses Iraqi government offices and the US and
British embassies. A heavy police presence and larger than normal numbers
of US troops patrolled the streets.

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Learn mandarin - Saddam sentenced to hang for Shiite killings

WORLD / Wall Street Journal Exclusive

Italy downplays concerns about debt ratings

By GABRIEL KAHN and LUCA DI LEO (WSJ)
Updated: 2006-10-23 17:07

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB116157004693700582-LhLXQPZwGasjHEn20
uOEqTrSsuk_20061030.html?mod=regionallinks

ROME -- Despite international concerns about the Italian economy, Finance
Minister Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa brushed off recent downgrades of the
country's debt and said the coming budget bill would do much to fix
Italy's twin ills of slow growth and bloated public spending.

In an interview, Mr. Padoa-Schioppa said downgrades to Italy's sovereign
credit rating -- to A+ from Standard & Poor's and AA- from Fitch Ratings
last week -- were both based on out-of-date assessments. Ratings agencies
are limited in their ability to accurately understand Italy's situation
because few analysts who work at the companies speak Italian, said Mr.
Padoa-Schioppa, a former European central banker.

"I don't welcome these [downgrades], but I would not say it makes my job
more difficult because they were widely discounted by the market and
myself."

Standard and Poor's downgraded Italy's debt to A+ with stable outlook
from AA-. Fitch downgraded to AA- with stable outlook from AA.

Instead, the minister said the budget bill he drafted, which must be
approved by Parliament by the end of the year, marks a crucial step
toward improving the economy and getting credit ratings back up. "With
this budget, we have eliminated the risk of being left behind," Mr.
Padoa-Schioppa said, noting, however, that "more time and more measures
are needed to reach the front of the group of runners."

The European Union has a lot riding on Mr. Padoa-Schioppa's ability to
turn around Italy's finances. Italy, the seventh-largest economy in the
world and the third-largest in the euro zone, has been among the worst
performers in the EU over the past 10 years, dragging down overall growth
on the continent. At the same time, its debt -- now at 108% of gross
domestic product -- is highest among the 12-nation euro zone and is
rising again after shrinking for a decade.

Italy's debt has made it the weak link in the monetary union. Coupled
with its slow growth rate, the country is increasingly out of whack with
the euro zone, meaning that it is straining more than others under the
common monetary policy set by the European Central Bank. That has begun
to hurt broader confidence in the monetary union.

Criticism of the budget bill has risen since the draft was approved by
the government at the end of last month. The budget aims to raise ��5
billion ($44.17 billion) through revenue-generating measures and spending
cuts.

Rating agencies, business groups and Italy's central bank have criticized
the bill for relying too heavily on new tax revenue to bring the deficit
in line with EU budget rules and for being too timid in tackling waste in
Italy's public spending, which accounts for about 50% of all economic
activity.

"Criticisms of the budget are not based on an accurate reading of the
facts," Mr. Padoa-Schioppa said. He said only �� billion in this budget
comes from new taxes, while more than �� billion will be generated from
measures to improve tax collection and fight tax evasion.

Rating agencies say his prediction of recouping money from tax evasion --
a problem that has bedeviled Italian governments for decades -- is
unrealistic.

Though he acknowledged that increased revenue-generating measures in his
budget could slow Italy's growth rate next year slightly, he said the
long-term benefits of bringing public finances under control would
greatly improve the overall economy. Most importantly, he said, the
budget would put Italy's deficit, expected to total 4.8% of gross
domestic product this year, on track to return within the 3% ceiling set
by the monetary union by 2007.

The EU has been the only authoritative voice to speak in favor,
provisionally, of the Italian budget so far.

As Mr. Padoa-Schioppa spoke, Finance Ministry employees gathered in the
ministry's courtyard and protested -- with whistles, horns and flags -- a
measure in the budget that is aimed at reducing the number of Finance
Ministry offices. "I know much better now how hard it is to reduce
spending than I did five months ago," he said.

Public protests against the budget and other economic measures passed by
Prime Minister Romano Prodi's center-left government, which took office
in May and holds a razor-thin majority in Parliament, are increasing.
Thousands of self-employed workers took to the streets last week, and
bigger demonstrations against the budget are slated for later this month.

Though criticism of the budget is straining relations within Mr. Prodi's
fractious eight-party coalition, Mr. Padoa-Schioppa said he was confident
the budget would be approved by Parliament without significant changes.

Once the budget is approved, Mr. Padoa-Schioppa said his main objective
would be to reach an agreement with the country's labor unions early next
year on getting Italians to work longer. Italy's aging population and
generous state pension system have contributed to making it the most
indebted country in the euro zone.

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Learn Chinese - Italy downplays concerns about debt ratings

WORLD / Wall Street Journal Exclusive

EU strengthens landmark chemical bill

By MARY JACOBY (WSJ)
Updated: 2006-10-11 11:13

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB116047945834187978-Hb0jtGMHH6xvaQkl3
I_6eyxidxQ_20061017.html?mod=regionallinks

BRUSSELS -- In a setback for global industry, a European Parliament panel
strengthened a landmark bill that would more tightly regulate chemicals
in the European Union before sending it toward final passage.

The petrochemical industry had been trying to reduce the estimated $6.3
billion cost of complying with the new law over the next decade by asking
the EU to accept chemical-safety and environmental data already submitted
to other regulatory bodies. That would have reduced the number of
expensive new tests.

The EU Parliament's environmental committee rejected an amendment from a
conservative Dutch lawmaker that would have required the EU to accept
data prepared for the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development, of Paris, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and other
chemical regulators.

The text of the law -- dubbed Reach for "registration, evaluation and
authorization of chemicals" -- already encourages the EU to make use of
OECD data. The National Petrochemical Refiners Association, based in
Washington, had lobbied in Brussels to remove any ambiguity about whether
such data would meet EU standards.

Nineteen of the 25 EU countries already participate in a detailed
chemical-evaluation program run by the OECD. "We don't think it's
necessary to reinvent the wheel" and require the submission of more data,
said Alexander Lambsdorff, a German parliamentarian who backed the
unsuccessful measure.

Justin Wilkes, an analyst for WWF (formerly known as the World Wildlife
Fund), an environmental organization that is lobbying hard for the
proposed law, said the parliamentary amendment would have gutted it.
"What the OECD requires is not enough information," he said. "It
undermines a key tenet of Reach, which is supposed to put the burden on
companies to produce higher-quality information."

On one of the most hard-fought points, the environmental panel also voted
to require companies to substitute safer chemicals whenever possible in
manufacturing processes. "It is an incentive [for companies] to look at
more possible substitutes and ecofriendly alternatives," said Guido
Sacconi, the Italian Socialist shepherding the legislation through
Parliament.

While the panel's actions aren't final, they will be tough for industry
to reverse at this stage. After three years of debate, final details of
the chemical legislation will likely be hammered out in negotiations
between Parliament and individual EU governments before coming back to
the full EU Parliament for a final vote. Finland's government, which
holds the rotating EU presidency, has said it would like to pass a final
version before its term expires at the end of this year.

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Chinese language - EU strengthens landmark chemical bill

Friday, March 21, 2008

WORLD / Europe

Vatican tries to calm Pope row as militants vow war
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-09-18 20:14

VATICAN CITY - Al Qaeda militants in Iraq vowed war on "worshippers of
the cross" and protesters burned a papal effigy on Monday over Pope
Benedict's comments on Islam, while Western churchmen and statesmen tried
to calm passions.

The statement by an umbrella group led by Iraq's branch of al Qaeda came
after the Pontiff said on Sunday he was deeply sorry Muslims had been
offended by his use of a medieval quotation on Islam and holy war.

Pope Benedict gestures to the faithful during his Sunday Angelus prayer
from his summer residence in Castel Gandolfo, outside Rome, September 17,
2006. [Reuters]

"We tell the worshipper of the cross (the Pope) that you and the West
will be defeated, as is the case in Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya," said a
Web statement by the Mujahideen Shura Council.

"We shall break the cross and spill the wine ... God will (help) Muslims
to conquer Rome ... (May) God enable us to slit their throats, and make
their money and descendants the bounty of the mujahideen," said the
statement, posted on Sunday on an Internet site often used by al Qaeda
and other militant groups.

In Iraq's southern city of Basra, up to 150 demonstrators chanted slogans
and burned a white effigy of the Pope.

"No to aggression!," "We gagged the Pope!," they chanted in front of the
governor's office in the Shi'ite city. The protesters also burned German,
US, and Israeli flags.

A speech by Pope Benedict last Tuesday was seen as portraying Islam as a
religion tainted by violence, causing dismay among Muslim states where
some religious leaders called it the start of a new Christian crusade
against Islam.

The Vatican has instructed its envoys in Muslim countries to explain Pope
Benedict's words on Islam.

Benedict's new Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, said the
Holy See's nuncios (ambassadors) in Muslim countries would be visiting
government and religious leaders.

French President Jacques Chirac refused on Monday to criticize the
79-year-old Pontiff, but called for a more diplomatic use of language.

"It is not my role or my intention to comment on the Pope's statements. I
simply want to say, on a general level ... that we must avoid anything
that excites tensions between peoples or between religions," Chirac said
on Europe 1 radio.

"We must avoid making any link between Islam, which is a great, respected
and respectable religion, and radical Islamism, which is a totally
different activity and one of a political nature," Chirac added.

ARCHBISHOP DEFENDS POPE

The head of the world's Anglican church, Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan
Williams, defended Benedict.

"The Pope has already issued an apology and I think his views on this
need to be judged against his entire record, where he has spoken very
positively about dialogue," said Williams, the spiritual leader of 77
million Anglicans worldwide.

Williams told the BBC that all faiths could be distorted, and the Pope
was simply giving an example of that.

"There are elements in Islam that can be used to justify violence, just
as there are in Christianity and Judaism."

In Iran, a government spokesman said on Monday Pope Benedict's regret was
a "good gesture" but not enough.

The Pope had referred to criticism of the Prophet Mohammad by 14th
century Byzantine Emperor Manuel II Palaeologus, who said everything the
Prophet brought was evil "such as his command to spread by the sword the
faith he preached."

Questions had been raised on whether a papal visit to Turkey in November
could go ahead, but the government, while calling his remarks "ugly,"
said there were no plans to call it off.

The Pope, head of the world's 1.1 billion Roman Catholics, said the
quotation did not represent his personal views, but failed to satisfy
some Islamic groups seeking a full apology.

In Somalia, an Italian nun was killed on Sunday in an attack one Islamist
source said could be linked to the dispute. A Vatican spokesman hoped the
killing was "an isolated event."

A senior Chinese Muslim expressed anger over the Pope's comments, Xinhua
news agency said on Monday. This was in contrast to Chinese reticence
over last year's publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad in a
Danish paper that sparked violent Muslim protests elsewhere in the world.

"In his speech, Benedict insulted both Islam and the Prophet Mohammad.
This has gravely hurt the feelings of the Muslims across the world,
including those from China," Xinhua quoted Chen Guangyuan, president of
the Islamic Association of China, as saying.

About 100 Indonesian Muslims protested peacefully over the Pope's remarks
outside the Vatican embassy in Jakarta on Monday.

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Learn Chinese online - Vatican tries to calm Pope row as militants vow war

WORLD / Europe

Vatican tries to calm Pope row as militants vow war
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-09-18 20:14

VATICAN CITY - Al Qaeda militants in Iraq vowed war on "worshippers of
the cross" and protesters burned a papal effigy on Monday over Pope
Benedict's comments on Islam, while Western churchmen and statesmen tried
to calm passions.

The statement by an umbrella group led by Iraq's branch of al Qaeda came
after the Pontiff said on Sunday he was deeply sorry Muslims had been
offended by his use of a medieval quotation on Islam and holy war.

Pope Benedict gestures to the faithful during his Sunday Angelus prayer
from his summer residence in Castel Gandolfo, outside Rome, September 17,
2006. [Reuters]

"We tell the worshipper of the cross (the Pope) that you and the West
will be defeated, as is the case in Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya," said a
Web statement by the Mujahideen Shura Council.

"We shall break the cross and spill the wine ... God will (help) Muslims
to conquer Rome ... (May) God enable us to slit their throats, and make
their money and descendants the bounty of the mujahideen," said the
statement, posted on Sunday on an Internet site often used by al Qaeda
and other militant groups.

In Iraq's southern city of Basra, up to 150 demonstrators chanted slogans
and burned a white effigy of the Pope.

"No to aggression!," "We gagged the Pope!," they chanted in front of the
governor's office in the Shi'ite city. The protesters also burned German,
US, and Israeli flags.

A speech by Pope Benedict last Tuesday was seen as portraying Islam as a
religion tainted by violence, causing dismay among Muslim states where
some religious leaders called it the start of a new Christian crusade
against Islam.

The Vatican has instructed its envoys in Muslim countries to explain Pope
Benedict's words on Islam.

Benedict's new Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, said the
Holy See's nuncios (ambassadors) in Muslim countries would be visiting
government and religious leaders.

French President Jacques Chirac refused on Monday to criticize the
79-year-old Pontiff, but called for a more diplomatic use of language.

"It is not my role or my intention to comment on the Pope's statements. I
simply want to say, on a general level ... that we must avoid anything
that excites tensions between peoples or between religions," Chirac said
on Europe 1 radio.

"We must avoid making any link between Islam, which is a great, respected
and respectable religion, and radical Islamism, which is a totally
different activity and one of a political nature," Chirac added.

ARCHBISHOP DEFENDS POPE

The head of the world's Anglican church, Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan
Williams, defended Benedict.

"The Pope has already issued an apology and I think his views on this
need to be judged against his entire record, where he has spoken very
positively about dialogue," said Williams, the spiritual leader of 77
million Anglicans worldwide.

Williams told the BBC that all faiths could be distorted, and the Pope
was simply giving an example of that.

"There are elements in Islam that can be used to justify violence, just
as there are in Christianity and Judaism."

In Iran, a government spokesman said on Monday Pope Benedict's regret was
a "good gesture" but not enough.

The Pope had referred to criticism of the Prophet Mohammad by 14th
century Byzantine Emperor Manuel II Palaeologus, who said everything the
Prophet brought was evil "such as his command to spread by the sword the
faith he preached."

Questions had been raised on whether a papal visit to Turkey in November
could go ahead, but the government, while calling his remarks "ugly,"
said there were no plans to call it off.

The Pope, head of the world's 1.1 billion Roman Catholics, said the
quotation did not represent his personal views, but failed to satisfy
some Islamic groups seeking a full apology.

In Somalia, an Italian nun was killed on Sunday in an attack one Islamist
source said could be linked to the dispute. A Vatican spokesman hoped the
killing was "an isolated event."

A senior Chinese Muslim expressed anger over the Pope's comments, Xinhua
news agency said on Monday. This was in contrast to Chinese reticence
over last year's publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad in a
Danish paper that sparked violent Muslim protests elsewhere in the world.

"In his speech, Benedict insulted both Islam and the Prophet Mohammad.
This has gravely hurt the feelings of the Muslims across the world,
including those from China," Xinhua quoted Chen Guangyuan, president of
the Islamic Association of China, as saying.

About 100 Indonesian Muslims protested peacefully over the Pope's remarks
outside the Vatican embassy in Jakarta on Monday.

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� Vatican tries to calm Pope row as militants vow war

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� US military deaths in Iraq hit 2,681

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pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

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Learn Chinese online - Vatican tries to calm Pope row as militants vow war