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PostPosted: 13 Jan 08, 13:16 
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In pictures: Fire guts Calcutta market

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President Sarkozy and supermodel lover 'marry in secret ceremony' Mail


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Ex-Officials Benefit From Corporate Cleanup washingtonpost


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Robert Fisk: Bloody reality bears no relation to the delusions of this President
As a bomb explodes in Beirut and Israel kills 19 in Gaza raids, Bush takes his Middle East peace mission to Saudi Arabia (and signs off $20bn weapons deal with repressive regime)

Twixt silken sheets – in a bedroom whose walls are also covered in silk – and in the very palace of King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, President George Bush awakes this morning to confront a Middle East which bears no relation to the policies of his administration nor the warning which he has been relaying constantly to the kings and emirs and oligarchs of the Gulf: that Iran rather than Israel is their enemy.

The President sat chummily beside the all-too-friendly monarch yesterday, enthroned in what looked suspiciously like the kind of casual blue cardigan he might wear on his own Texan ranch; he had even received a jangling gold " Order of Merit" – it looked a bit like the Lord Chancellor's chain, though it was not disclosed which particular merit earned Mr Bush this kingly reward. Could it be the hypocritical merit of supplying yet more billions worth of weapons to the Kingdom, to be used against the Saudi regime's imaginary enemies.

It was illusory, of course, like all the words that the Arabs have heard from the Americans these past seven days, ever since the fading President began his tourist jaunt around the Middle East.

You wouldn't think it though, watching this preposterous man, prancing around arm-in-arm with the King, in what was presumably meant to be a dance, wielding a massive glinting curved Saudi sword, a latter-day Saladin, who would have appalled the Kurdish leader who once destroyed the Crusaders in what is now referred to by Mr Bush as "the disputed West Bank".

Is this how lame-duck American presidents are supposed to behave? Certainly, the denizens of the Middle East, watching this outrageous performance will all be asking this question. Ever since the 1979 Iranian revolution, a Muslim Cold War has been raging within the Middle East – but is this how Mr Bush thinks one should fight for the soul of Islam?

Already by dusk last night, the US President's world was exploding in Beirut when a massive car bomb blew up next to a 4x4 vehicle carrying American embassy employees, killing four Lebanese and apparently badly wounding a US embassy driver. And while Mr Bush was relaxing in the Saudi royal ranch at Al Janadriyah, Israeli forces killed 19 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, most of them members of Hamas, one of them the son of Mahmoud Zahar, a leader of the movement. He later claimed that Israel would not have staged the attack – on the day an Israeli was also killed by a Palestinian rocket – if it had not been encouraged to do so by George Bush.

The difference between reality and the dream-world of the US government could hardly have been more savagely illustrated. After promising the Palestinians a "sovereign and contiguous state" before the end of the year, and pledging "security" to Israel – though not, Arabs noted, security for "Palestine" – Mr Bush had arrived in the Gulf to terrify the kings and oligarchs of the oil-soaked kingdoms of the danger of Iranian aggression. As usual, he came armed with the usual American offers of vast weapons sales to protect these largely undemocratic and police state regimes from potentially the most powerful nation in the " axis of evil".

It was a potent – even weird – example of the US President's perambulation of the Arab Middle East, a return to the "policy by fear" which Washington has regularly visited upon Gulf leaders. He agreed to furnish the Saudis with at least £41m of arms, a figure set to rise to more than £10bn in weaponry to the Gulf potentates under a deal announced last year – all of which is supposed to shield them from the supposed territorial ambitions of Iran's crackpot President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. As usual, Washington promised the Israelis that their "qualitative edge" in advanced weapons would be maintained, just in case the Saudis – who have never gone to war with anyone except Saddam Hussein after his 1990 invasion of Kuwait – decided to launch a suicidal attack on America's only real ally in the Middle East.

This, of course, was not how the whole shooting match was presented to the Arabs. Mr Bush could be seen ostentatiously kissing the cheeks of King Abdullah and holding hands with the autocratic monarch whose Wahhabi Muslim state had only recently showed its "mercy" to a Saudi woman who was charged with adultery after being raped seven times in the desert outside Riyadh. The Saudis, needless to say, are well aware that Mr Bush's reign is ending amid chaos in Pakistan, a disastrous guerrilla war against Western forces in Afghanistan, fierce fighting in Gaza, near civil war in Lebanon and the hell-disaster of Iraq.

The bomb in Beirut, just before five in the evening, must still have come as a rude shock to the luxuriating President who has such close ties with the Saudi regime – despite the fact that the majority of hijackers in the crimes against humanity of 11 September 2001 came from the kingdom – that he allowed its junior princes to fly home from the United States immediately after the attacks. Two trips to Mr Bush's Texas ranch by King Abdullah was apparently enough to earn the US President a night in the Saudi king's palace-farm, surrounded by groomed lawns and grassy hills.

Heard across many miles of the Lebanese capital, the bomb devastated buildings in a narrow street in the east of the city through which the vehicle was passing, just as the US ambassador – on a different route into the city – was travelling to a central Beirut hotel reception before leaving for Washington. A State Department spokesman, however, insisted that no US citizens had been hurt. The American SUV had taken an obscure laneway close to the Karantina bridge to travel north of Beirut along the bank of the city's only river when it was struck, leading local Lebanese military officials to ask themselves if the bomber had inside knowledge of the route they were taking.

There was talk that this was a "dummy" convoy staged to distract potential bombers from the journey which Ambassador Jeffrey Feltman was taking to a reception at a downtown hotel. A carpet manufacturer's factory was smashed by the blast which tore down roofs and smashed windows more than half a mile from the scene.

For Arab leaders, Mr Bush's message to the Gulf leaders was wearily familiar. In the 1980s, when the Reagan administration was supporting Saddam Hussein's invasion of Iran, Washington spent its time warning Gulf leaders of the danger of Iranian aggression. Once Saddam invaded Kuwait, America's emphasis changed: It was now Iraq which posed the greatest danger to their kingdoms. But once the emirate was liberated, the oil-wealthy monarchs were told that – yet again – it was Iran that was their enemy.

Arabs are no more taken in by this topsy-turvy "good-versus-evil" narrative than they are by Washington's promises to help create a Palestinian state by the end of the year, scarcely a day before Israel publicly admitted to plans for yet more houses for settlers on Arab land amid Jewish colonies illegally built on Palestinian territory.

Yet to understand the nature of this extraordinary relationship with the Gulf monarchs, it is necessary to recall that ever since the President's father promised a weapons-free "oasis of peace" in the Gulf, Washington – along with Britain, France and Russia – has been pouring arms into the region.

Over the past decade, the Gulf Arabs have squandered billions of their oil dollars on American weapons. The statistics tell their own story. In 1998 and 1999 alone, Gulf Arab military spending came to £40bn. Between 1997 and 2005, the sheikhs of the United Arab Emirates – Mr Bush's hosts before he continued to Riyadh – signed arms contracts worth £9bn with Western nations. Between 1991 and 1993 – when Iraq was the "enemy" – the US Military Training Mission was administering more than £14bn in Saudi arms procurements and £12bn in new US weapons acquisitions. By this time, the Saudis already possessed 72 American F-15 fighter-bombers and 114 British Tornados.

How little has changed in the past 17 years. On 17 May 1991, for example, George Bush Snr said there were now "real reasons to be optimistic" about a peace in the Middle East. "We are going to continue to work in the [peace] process," he said then. "We are not going to abandon it."

James Baker, who was the American Secretary of State, warned on 23 May 1991 that the continued building of Jewish settlements on Palestinian land " hindered" a future Middle East peace, just as the present Secretary of State said last week. At the time, the Israelis were reassured by Dick Cheney that the US would safeguard their "security".

The West may have a short memory. The Arabs, who happen to live in the piece of real estate which we call the Middle East and who are not stupid, have not. They understand all too well what George W Bush now stands for. After advocating "democracy" in the region – a policy which gained electoral victories for Shia in Iraq, for Hamas in Gaza and a substantial gain in political power for the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt – it seems to have dawned on Washington that something might be slightly wrong with Bush's priorities. Instead of advocating a "New Middle East", Mr Bush, lying amid his silken sheets in the Saudi king's palace, is now pursuing a return to the "Old Middle East", a place of secret policemen, torture chambers – to which prisoners can be usefully " renditioned " – and dictatorial "moderate" presidents and monarchs. And which of the Gulf despots is going to object to that?
Independent


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PostPosted: 17 Jan 08, 12:45 
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Resignation of hardliners leaves Israel coalition in disarray
By Donald Macintyre in Jerusalem


Avigdor Lieberman, the leader of the most right-wing party in Israel's coalition government, yesterday resigned in protest at the decision to hold talks with Palestinian leaders on the "core issues" in the conflict.

Mr Lieberman fulfilled his promise to pull the 11 Knesset members of his party, Yisrael Beiteinu, out of Ehud Olmert's coalition if Israel were to begin talks with the West Bank-based emergency Palestinian Authority on borders, refugees and the future status of Jerusalem, which it did on Monday.

The move came amid continued violence in Gaza during which a 13-year-old Palestinian boy, his father and his uncle were killed in an air strike that the Israeli military said had "unintentionally" had hit their vehicle.

The Moldovan-born leader, whose main base is among the million immigrants from the former Soviet Union, and who has frequently been accused of anti-Arab racism by his critics, said that he was against the concept of "land for peace". He added: "If we pull back to the 1967 borders, everyone should ask himself, what will happen the following day? Will the terror stop? Nothing will change."

Mr Olmert, the Prime Minister, has in fact made it clear that he is seeking a deal significantly modifying the 1967 borders, under which the largest West Bank settlements will remain in Israel. Mr Lieberman's move will reduce Mr Olmert's majority from 18 to a more fragile one of seven in the 120-seat Knesset, and may put pressure on the religious party Shas to follow suit. Shas has said that it will leave the government if the division of Jerusalem – a bedrock requirement of the Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas – is on the table.

The most ardent peace campaigners would prefer a centre-left coalition augmented by bringing in Meretz. But Mr Olmert, the leader of the Kadima party, has reportedly been courting another religious party, United Torah Judaism, in an effort to shore up his right flank and give Shas better cover for remaining in the coalition.

The Lieberman departure, while widely welcomed on the left, also complicates Mr Olmert's task in surviving publication of the final – and potentially highly critical – Winograd report on his handling of the Lebanon war in 2006, expected on 30 January.

The Israel Defence Forces said yesterday they were opening an investigation into the air strike that destroyed the Yazagi family's pick-up, which came the day after 19 Palestinians – mostly militants – were killed in operations against the launch of Qassam rockets and mortars into Israel.

The military said that it had been targeting a Palestinian rocket-launching team and the militant Popular Resistance committees told Associated Press that the attack appeared to have been aimed at its chief rocket maker, who was driving in the area at the time. Instead the strike killed Amir Yazagi, his father, Mohammed, and his uncle Amr.

Meanwhile, Gaza militants launched 29 Qassam rockets in the wake of Tuesday's deaths in Gaza and the killing of a top Islamic Jihad commander by Israeli forces yesterday in a pre-dawn raid on the village of Qabatiya south of Jenin, in the West Bank.

Meanwhile, it emerged yesterday that EU members states, including Britain, are stepping up pressure on Israel to ease humanitarian suffering in Gaza and abate the collapse of Gaza's economy by reopening the Karni cargo crossing, which has been closed since June. "It is simply not acceptable in humanitarian terms," said a senior Western diplomat. The diplomat welcomed the recent calls by Salam Fayyad, the Ramallah-based Palestinian Prime Minister for the crossing to be opened.

Major Avital Leibovich, an IDF spokesman, said that civilians were regrettably hurt when militants operated in civilian environments. "It is important to me to stress that we have no intention whatsoever to hit or hurt uninvolved civilians," she said. The military says the air force has reduced the proportion of civilians killed in an air strike from 50 per cent in 2002-03 to 2-3 per cent in 2007.
Independent


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PostPosted: 17 Jan 08, 12:46 
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Police fight Kenyan protesters for second day

Kenyan police and opposition backers clashed today in a second day of protests against President Mwai Kibaki's disputed re-election in which police have already killed three.

Riot police fired teargas at hundreds of supporters of opposition challenger Raila Odinga and his Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) coalition, blocking a road near Nairobi's Mathare slum, witnesses said.

Reuters photographer Antony Njuguna said about 40 police officers were facing off with hundreds of demonstrators near Mathare, one of the flashpoints during nearly three weeks of violence that has convulsed the east African nation.

"There's a massive crowd trying to block the road. Police are shooting teargas at them," he said from the scene.

In the western opposition stronghold of Kisumu, riot police shot in the air and struck at least one man as they battled youths who set up blazing roadblocks and gathered to protest.

"My father was shot as he stood in front of our house. The police were shooting indiscriminately, targeting anyone on sight. My father was shot in the stomach," witness Alphonse Otieno said by phone from Kisumu's Kondele slum.

Kisumu saw the worst violence on Wednesday, the first of three days of nationwide demonstrations called by the opposition.

Police have banned the rallies called by Odinga, who says Kibaki stole the 27 December election. The government in turn accuses his side of rigging votes and of protesting instead of using legal options to challenge the result.

Kenya's sudden descent into crisis has tarnished its democratic credentials, horrified world powers, scared off tourists and hurt one of Africa's most promising economies.

Police have met the latest unrest with tear gas and live ammunition as they did in earlier protests which ground the east African nation to a halt, delaying school openings and shutting businesses.

On Wednesday, police shot dead three in Kisumu - which erupted in a spree of looting and rioting immediately after Kibaki was sworn in on 30 December.

ODM spokesman Salim Lone condemned one killing, captured on television, as a "cold-blooded execution."

In footage shown by local broadcaster KTN, a Kisumu policeman was seen firing his assault rifle at a young man who fell down, and then was kicked by the officer.

KTN, which said four people were feared killed on Wednesday, said the youth later died. Police spokesman Eric Kiraithe told media those shot in Kisumu had attacked officers first.

Also on Wednesday, TV footage showed police tear-gassing opposition leaders at two hotels, and then chasing them down Nairobi's main Kenyatta Avenue. Odinga was near but stayed in his four-wheel drive truck, the footage showed.

Human Rights Watch said police have been heavy-handed and have killed at least 47 people during the post-election turmoil.

Around 620 have been killed nationwide in attacks on tribes and people suspected of having supported Kibaki, and by police.

A quarter of a million people, many of them members of Kibaki's Kikuyu ethnic group, have been forced from their homes.

International observers have said the vote fell short of democratic standards and both sides accuse the other of rigging.

The United States and former colonial power Britain have called on Kibaki's government to let peaceful protests go ahead.

They and 11 other nations have threatened to cut aid if the government's commitment to "good governance, democracy, the rule of law and human rights weakens".

But those are likely empty threats because Kenya gets less than 5 percent of its budget from donors.

The Nation newspaper urged both sides to "isolate dangerous demagogues" in their midst to forge a compromise to save Kenya.

"When two bulls fight ... it is the grass that suffers. The grass here is the ordinary people of Kenya who have been reduced to expendable cannon fodder as the rich and powerful duel for political supremacy," the paper said in an editorial.

Since being sworn in, Kibaki, 76, has entrenched his position by naming most of a new cabinet, including figures the ODM says are hardliners, and calling parliament to meet.

Former UN boss Kofi Annan had been due in Kenya this week to lead a team of "Eminent Africans" in a push for peace, but he fell ill. His office gave no date for his arrival.
Independent


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PostPosted: 17 Jan 08, 13:33 
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White House reused e-mail tapes
Recycling raises possibility that some electronic messages are gone.
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PostPosted: 21 Jan 08, 12:09 
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German historian likens Cruise speech to Goebbels



· Footage of actor 'recalls notorious speech'
· Critics say Scientology is anti-constitutional

Jess Smee in Berlin - The Guardian



The long-standing antagonism between Germany and the Church of Scientology escalated over the weekend when a high-profile historian compared Tom Cruise's performance in a Scientology video with the style of the Nazi propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels.

Guido Knopp, who has written a number of books on Hitler and his inner circle, said the video, which surfaced on YouTube last week, "inevitably" recalled Goebbels' speech in a Berlin sports stadium when he asked "Do you want total war?" and the crowd thundered "Yes!"


The Scientology footage shows Cruise, wearing a large medallion and speaking from a podium. "So what do you say, we gonna clean this place up?" he asks. He is greeted by zealous cheers.

"It may be the case that Cruise's delivery style is not uncommon in certain religious movements in the US," Knopp told Bild am Sonntag in an interview. "But for Germans with an interest in history, that scene where he asks whether the Scientologists should clean up the world and everyone shouts 'yes' is inevitably reminiscent of Goebbels' notorious speech."

Parallels with the Third Reich remain highly sensitive here. But Scientology has generated a visceral opposition in Germany - last month security ministers tried to ban it, saying it contravened the constitution - and Knopp's remarks found few critics yesterday.

Thomas Gandow, of the German Protestant church, who has previously compared Cruise to Goebbels, said the video revealed the actor's high standing in the organisation: "He is not your average sect member but rather a propaganda minister ... I still believe it: Tom Cruise is the Goebbels of Scientology."

Ursula Caberta, who leads a Hamburg-based research group into the Church of Scientology, said the latest video was "hard evidence" that the group was anti-constitutional.

There was no immediate comment from the Church of Scientology in Berlin, however the organisation's US headquarters issued a statement in defence of Cruise. "Bild am Sonntag is grossly irresponsible for publishing horrendous and disgraceful claims about Mr Cruise," it said. "Unlike Bild am Sonn tag and other German anti-religionists, he does not discriminate against any other religion, race or colour."

The organisation has said the footage came from a meeting four years ago. It was posted on several websites last week, but some took it down after the church claimed copyright. Other footage shows the Oscar-nominated actor speaking above the "Mission: Impossible" theme music. He presents himself and fellow Scientologists as "authorities on the mind".

"We're the authorities on getting people off drugs. We're the authorities on the mind. We're the authorities on improving conditions ... We can rehabilitate criminals. Way to happiness. We can bring peace and unite cultures," Cruise tells his audience.

But such claims are treated with suspicion in Germany, where there is decades-long scepticism about anything regarded as an ideological movement.

Germany has taken a very distinct stance among European countries towards Scientology, considering it not as a religion but as a commercial organisation.

The Church of Scientology, which is thought to have about 6,000 adherents in Germany, is closely monitored by Germany's Office for the Protection of the Constitution, which also tracks the activities of neo-Nazis, leftwing extremists and Islamist terrorists. Such scrutiny has prompted criticism from the US state department.

Cruise found himself at the sharp end of German hostility last summer when the defence ministry sought to obstruct the filming of Valkyrie, starring Cruise as the German resistance hero Claus von Stauffenberg.

Although the ban on using military sites was eventually scrapped, ministers criticised the project, citing Cruise's affiliation with Scientology. Even Berthold Graf von Stauffenberg, the count's son, joined in, dubbing Scientology a "totalitarian ideology".
guardian


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Gaza plunged into darkness as Israeli fuel blockade takes effect


· Blackouts as only power plant is forced to shut
· Policy directly linked to rocket attacks, says Israel

Rory McCarthy in Jerusalem

Palestinian people holding candles during a protest in Gaza City against the power cuts
Palestinian people holding candles during a protest in Gaza City against the power cuts. Photograph: Mohammed Saber/EPA


Parts of Gaza were pitched into darkness last night after its only power plant was shut down following a move by Israel to halt fuel shipments under its new closure of the small, overcrowded strip of land.

As fuel supplies ran out, the plant was shut down. Earlier, queues formed on the streets and at petrol stations and warehouses selling cooking gas as the shortages began to take effect. Blackouts have stretched to 12 hours a day in recent weeks.

The closure came after a week of the most intense conflict between Israel and Palestinians in Gaza for more than a year. Nearly 40 Palestinians have been killed in the past week, at least 10 of them civilians.

From Damascus, Khaled Mashaal, the exiled leader of Hamas, appealed to Arab leaders and his rival, Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, to forget their differences and help the Gazans: "All Arab leaders, exercise real pressure to stop this Zionist crime ... Take up your role and responsibility. We are not asking you to wage a military war against Israel ... but just stand with us in pride and honour."

Mashaal said he had been in contact with some Arab countries, including Egypt and Saudi Arabia, to see if they would pressure Israel. He had asked Egypt to provide fuel for the Gaza plant.

Over the weekend Palestinian militants drastically reduced the number of makeshift rockets they fired into Israel. Israeli officials accused Palestinians of exaggerating the fuel crisis and said the blame lay with the militants.

There was swift condemnation of Israel yesterday from Israeli and western human rights groups and from the UN agency for Palestinian refugees.

Rafik Maliha, the director of the power plant, said the last fuel shipment had arrived on Thursday. The plant was built to provide 140 megawatts of electricity but has never operated at that level. At best, officials at the plant say it could produce 80MW. But early last week, before the closure was imposed, it was down to 45MW, enough to provide less than a fifth of the demand from Gaza's 1.5 million people. The rest of the electricity is bought from Israel and Egypt.

Israeli officials said the policy was directly linked to the rocket attacks. "If they stop the rockets today, everything would go back to normal," said Arye Mekel, a foreign ministry spokesman.
guardian


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PostPosted: 21 Jan 08, 12:12 
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Kosovo is key as hardliner wins first leg of Serb poll



An extreme nationalist won the first leg of Serbia's presidential election last night, raising the prospect of international isolation and increasing the chances of more Balkan conflict over the looming declaration of independence by Kosovo.

With the Albanian leadership of the breakaway southern province due to declare independence within weeks, the loss of the region that Serbian nationalists view as sacrosanct territory appeared to help Tomislav Nikolic, of the extremist Serbian Radical party, to a four-point victory over the incumbent, the pro-western moderate, President Boris Tadic.


According to exit polls and early results last night in Belgrade, Nikolic took more than 39% of the vote to Tadic's 35% in a crucial ballot that could determine whether Serbia turns east, into Russia's offered embrace, or west, towards European integration.

Neither contender, however, scored an outright victory, requiring an absolute majority of the vote. The other seven candidates were eliminated from the race, leaving Nikolic and Tadic to contest a run-off on February 3. Nikolic, an extreme nationalist who fought as a paramilitary in the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s and served under the late president Slobodan Milosevic, could yet be beaten, since many of the votes last night, on a high turnout of more than 60%, were cast for pro-western democrats.

His support, however, is more easily mobilised and he could well secure victory in two weeks. A win for Nikolic and the Radicals, whose party leader, Vojislav Seselj, is currently being tried for war crimes at the tribunal in The Hague, would be viewed as a disaster in western Europe and a severe setback to EU policy in the Balkans.

In an attempt to boost Tadic's chances, Brussels announced last week that it was opening talks on visa-free travel to Europe for Serbs. Several EU countries also want to sign a pre-membership deal with Belgrade before the end of the month in order to help Tadic to a second-round victory. But some EU states are strongly opposed to this, demanding that key Serbian war crimes suspects be arrested and extradited to The Hague as a condition for the EU deal.

David Miliband, the foreign secretary, met his counterparts from France, Germany and Italy at the weekend in Slovenia to work out how and when to recognise Kosovo's independence. The Kosovan prime minister, Hashem Thaci, is due in Brussels this week to coordinate his policies with the EU. Thaci has been leaned on to delay an independence declaration until after the Serbian election. The declaration is expected within six weeks.

Serbia's key ally, Russia's Vladimir Putin, went to the Balkans last Friday to announce that any unilateral declaration of independence would be "illegal and immoral".

The outcome of Serbia's presidential run-off could hinge on how the Serbian prime minister, Vojislav Kostunica, advises his supporters to vote. Kostunica is fiercely nationalistic, engaged in a permanent power struggle with Tadic, and unbending on the Kosovo dispute. Tadic could need the votes of the prime minister's supporters to defeat Nikolic.
guardian


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PostPosted: 21 Jan 08, 12:13 
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Tales of student prostitutes shock France


Angelique Chrisafis in Paris

France's education minister has vowed to improve student financial support after a series of accounts by undergraduates working as prostitutes.

A memoir by a 19-year-old language student and a book of interviews with undergraduate sex workers has shocked France, lifting the lid on a practice which appears to be increasingly common. A new study showed a large online market for student prostitutes, describing how male clients, who are often rich, married executives, advertise online for young, undergraduate "escorts" whom they prefer to street prostitutes. These clients pay on average €400 (£300) for a two hour meeting with a student, including sex and "time to talk".


One student union estimated that 40,000 students are working as prostitutes. Others dispute that number, but the minister for higher education, Valérie Pécresse, acknowledged that the "phenomenon" was hard to quantify because of the taboo surrounding it. She said the government had not done enough to "concentrate efforts" on helping poor students juggle conventional part-time jobs.

Laura D, a 19-year-old student of Spanish and Italian, details in her memoir, Mes Chères Etudes, how she began working as a prostitute aged 18 when she could not afford her rent, books, or food, despite a part-time telesales job. Her parents - a nurse and a labourer earning just above the minimum wage - could not support her, but their jobs meant she did not qualify for aid.

Once, she asked a client for a laptop computer as payment. He brought one to their hotel meeting, but subjected her to violent sadism without her consent.

Eva Clouet, author of the book of interviews with student sex workers and clients, said those who had spoken out wanted a review of student aid, an increase in purpose-built student housing and the ability to combine normal part-time jobs with a university workload.
guardian


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Debunking the Reagan Myth NYT


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Death toll hits 25 in previously peaceful Kenya town Mail


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Property tycoon Nicholas van Hoogstraten under arrest in Harare in porn and currency probe Mail


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'Mummy I've done nothing wrong,' sobbed Rogue trader before being arrested over £3.6bn fraud Mail


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