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PostPosted: 10 Oct 07, 14:09 
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'Dirty war' priest sentenced to life for murder, kidnapping and torture


Former Buenos Aires' provincial police chaplain Christian Von Wernich listens as he is sentenced to life imprisonment for complicity in seven killings, 31 cases of torture and 42 abductions during Argentina's 'dirty war'

A former Roman Catholic police chaplain was sentenced to life imprisonment yesterday for collaborating in torture, kidnapping and murder during Argentina's military rule.

Christian Von Wernich, 69, was convicted of involvement in seven murders, 42 abductions and 31 cases of torture.

One of the judges described his offences during the country's 1976-1983 dictatorship as crimes against humanity.

During the trial, former prisoners said the former priest had pressured torture victims into providing information during his visits to secret detention centres.

Although Von Wernich did not testify during the three-month trial, he previously told court officials he was unaware that detainees were being tortured or held illegally.

The mothers of murdered political activists have led the push to bring to justice those involved in human rights abuses during the so-called 'dirty war'. Between 11,000 and 30,000 people died and disappeared in purges organised by the country's military rulers during this period.

"It's a historic day, a wonderful day ... it's something we mothers didn't think we'd live to see," said Tati Almeyda, of the Founding Line of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo.

"Justice has been done. The Catholic Church was an accomplice," she added.

Following the verdict, Argentina's Catholic leaders issued a statement saying the Church was saddened "by the pain of a priest's participation in these very grave crimes."

Many human rights activists accuse the Church hierarchy of supporting the military dictatorship and opting to keep silent about its brutality.

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Pakistani troops resume shelling near Afghan border




Pakistani troops resumed shelling today in North Waziristan, near the Afghan border, in fighting that has left about 250 people dead and caused thousands to flee.

An Associated Press reporter in Miran Shah, the region's main town, heard a burst of artillery or mortar fire before dawn.

Farid Ullah, a resident of nearby Mir Ali, said the shells had hit houses.

"I have not dared to go outside, so I don't know if anyone was hurt," Mr Ullah said by telephone.

An army spokesman, Major General Waheed Arshad, said there were no major incidents overnight, although artillery may have been fired.

Residents said yesterday Pakistani aircraft had bombed the nearby village of Epi, killing dozens of militants and civilians and injuring many more, including shoppers in a packed bazaar.

The army said the planes were targeting militant hideouts near Mir Ali. Local tribesmen said about 50 militants were killed.

The army has reported the deaths of up to 200 militants and 47 troops in five days of clashes, the deadliest since Pakistan threw its support behind the US-led "war on terror" in 2001.

Mr Ullah said about 10,000 people from Mir Ali and surrounding villages had abandoned their homes and, with the army blocking the roads, had walked through the mountains to safer towns.

He said 60 of his relatives were among them, but he was staying behind with his mother.

The violence comes as General Pervez Musharraf tries to secure another term as president amid fierce criticism from the opposition.

The fighting broke out on Saturday after the military was the target of repeated ambushes and roadside bombings, with several casualties.

The military is particularly incensed by the mutilation of bodies, some of which were decapitated and burned, a security official said.
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Israeli army orders confiscation of Palestinian land in West Bank

· Seizure would allow huge expansion of settlements
· Move seen as rush to make changes before US summit

The Israeli army has ordered the seizure of Palestinian land surrounding four West Bank villages apparently in order to hugely expand settlements around Jerusalem, it emerged yesterday.

The confiscation happened as Israeli and Palestinian negotiators met to prepare the ground for a meeting hosted by President George Bush in the United States aimed at reviving a diplomatic solution to the conflict.

However, critics said the confiscation of land suggested that Israel was imposing its own solution on the Palestinians through building roads, barriers and settlements that would render a Palestinian state unviable.

The land seized forms a corridor from East Jerusalem to Jericho and is intended to be used for a road that would be for Palestinians only. Analysts said the road would run on one side of the Israeli security barrier, while the existing Jerusalem-Jericho road would be reserved for Israelis.

A spokeswoman for the Israeli army said it was necessary to build a road to link Bethlehem and the Judea region with Jericho and the Jordan valley area in order to "improve the quality of life" for Palestinians.

She said the road would be nearly 10 miles long and would be built on 145 hectares (357 acres) of state land and 23 hectares of private land that had been confiscated. She added that the army had designed the route to minimise losses to private landowners.

Adam Keller of the Israeli peace group, Gush Shalom, said the confiscation of land belonging to the villages of Abu Dis, Arab al-Sawahra, Nebi Musa and Talhin Alhamar would "rob many villagers of their sole livelihood" but would also "facilitate the big annexation plan known as E-1, which is aimed at linking the settlement of Ma'aleh Adummim with Jerusalem and cutting the West Bank in two."

He said the confiscations were aimed at constructing a "Palestinian bypass road" that would "push the Palestinian traffic between Bethlehem and Ramallah deep into the desert and effectively bar them from the central part of the West Bank".

The E-1 area has been marked out on Israeli government maps for years but the state has refrained from large scale development of the area. The only building to be completed is the proposed headquarters of the Israeli police in the West Bank.

The plan for the area envisages 3,500 housing units and dozens of businesses which have yet to be started, although infrastructure such as roads and drainage is being constructed.

Jeff Halper, an Israeli geographer who specialises in Israel's development of the West Bank, said it appeared that there was a rush to carry out as much work as possible before the US-sponsored meeting between Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, and Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, in Annapolis, Maryland, in November.

"They want to push everything as far as possible before the November meeting because that will be seen as the starting point for everything," he said. "Anything done before that meeting will be set in stone. In general this has to be seen as part of a timeline in which Israel wants to get all its development of the West Bank finished before Bush leaves office."

The land confiscation orders emerged as Palestinian officials claimed that a revised route of the West Bank barrier would eat into substantially more Palestinian land than the previous route.

The negotiation affairs department of the Palestine Liberation Organisation said information released by the Israeli ministry of defence showed that the new route would annex 12% of the West Bank, compared with 9% previously.

The biggest change in the route of the barrier is in the south-east of the West Bank, adjacent to the coastline of the Dead Sea. The area is mostly uninhabited but could be useful for industry or tourism in the future.

The new route also adds in two settlements, Nili and Na'aleh, which would result in five villages close to Ramallah being almost totally surrounded by the barrier, the PLO statement said.

Israel says that the security barrier, which is in parts a high concrete wall and in other parts a steel fence with wide ditches, is vital for ensuring security in Israel.

However, the PLO statement said that the main aim of the barrier was "to consolidate Israeli control over the most critical parts of the occupied West Bank, including all of Palestinian East Jerusalem and vital land and water resources, all of which severely undercuts prospects for establishing a viable, independent Palestinian state."
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Turkey and US head for showdown over vote on Armenian 'genocide'





Turkey and the US were heading for a diplomatic showdown today over a Congressional vote on whether it should recognise as genocide the 1915 killings of Christian Armenians by Muslim Turks

Turkish politicians have warned of grave consequences if the House of Representatives endorses the bill, which is opposed by the Bush administration.

Yesterday the Turkish president, Abdullah Gul, warned of "serious troubles in the two countries' relations" if the measure is approved.

The threats come as the Turkish government seeks parliamentary approval for a cross-border military operation to pursue separatist Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq. The move, which is opposed by the US, could open a new front in the most stable part of Iraq.

Turkish MPs in Washington yesterday put their case to members of the House of Representatives' foreign affairs committee.

"I have been trying to warn the lawmakers not to make a historic mistake," said Egemen Bagis, a Turkish MP and close foreign policy adviser to the prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

"Let us not forget that 75% of all supplies to your troops in Iraq go through Turkey."

Many in the US fear for the crucial supply routes through Turkey to Iraq and Afghanistan, and the closure of Incirlik, a strategic air base in Turkey used by the US air force.

A measure of the potential fallout from the vote came in a warning to American citizens in Ankara issued by the US embassy in Ankara.

The statement said: "If, despite the administration's concerted efforts against this resolution, it passes committee and makes its way to the floor of the House for debate and a possible vote, there could be a reaction in the form of demonstrations and other manifestations of anti-Americanism throughout Turkey."

The genocide label is an ultra-sensitive issue in Turkey. It has long claimed that mass killings at the time by both sides were part of the civil upheavals accompanying the collapse of the Ottoman empire.

Ankara cut military ties with Paris last year when France voted to make it a crime to deny the killings as genocide.

The bill appears to have a thin majority on the foreign affairs committee. But some supporters fear that Turkish pressure could narrow the margin further. Most Republicans are expected to vote against.

Armenians and most western historians believe the events of 1915 to have been genocide. Estimates of the dead range up to 1.5 million people. Turkey blame the deaths on civil war, disease and famine, with casualties on both sides.

Yesterday Bryan Ardouny, the executive director of the Armenian Assembly of America, sought to shore up support in letters to the committee's chairman, Democratic representative Tom Lantos of California and Republican member, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, of Florida.

"We have a unique opportunity in this Congress, while there are still survivors of the Armenian genocide living among us, to irrevocably and unequivocally reaffirm this fact of history," he wrote.

But Egemen Bagis said the resolution would make it hard for Ankara to continue close cooperation with the US and resist calls from the Turkish public to pursue Kurdish rebels over the border.

"If the Armenian genocide resolution passes, then I think that the possibility of a cross-border operation is very high," said Ihsan Dagi, a professor of international relations at Middle East Technical University in Ankara.
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Turkey Furious At US Genocide Decision

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Ethiopia's 'own Darfur' as villagers flee government-backed violence
By Steve Bloomfield in Bosasso


Early one June morning, in Kamuda, a village of 200 families in the remote Ogaden region in eastern Ethiopia, 180 soldiers announced their arrival by firing guns in the air.

The village, they said, had been providing food and shelter for the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), a separatist rebel group . As the villagers froze in horror, the soldiers plucked out seven young women, all aged between 15 and 18, and left.

The following morning the youngest girl was found. Her body, bloodied and beaten, was hanging from a tree. The next day a second girl was found hanging from the same tree. A third suffered the same fate. The others were never seen again.

Shukri Abdullahi Mohammed, 48, a mother of seven children, lived in Kamuda. As she describes the fate of the seven girls – "the most beautiful girls in the village" – she tightens her headscarf around her neck to indicate the way they were killed. "I will not forget it," she says.

Days later, a 12-year-old boy from the same village was kidnapped by soldiers and gang-raped. Every night, soldiers would knock on doors looking for women to rape. "I did not want to wait until it happened to my family," said Mrs Mohammed. They left Kamuda and made their way across the porous border with Somalia, before travelling a further 300 miles by foot to the hot and humid port town of Bosasso.

About 100 Ethiopians are now arriving here every day. Their stories reveal the brutality of Ethiopia's hidden war, a brutal counter-insurgency that some aid officials believe has parallels with Darfur. Some estimates put the number of people displaced by the violence at 200,000 already.

According to accounts from refugees, Ethiopian troops are burning villages, raping women and killing civilians as part of a systematic campaign to drive them from their homes. They reported dozens of villages destroyed and accused the Ethiopian government of forcibly starving its own people by preventing food convoys reaching villages and destroying crops and livestock.

A former Ethiopian soldier who defected from the army said how he had been ordered to burn villages and kill all their inhabitants. He said the Ethiopian air force would bomb a village before a unit of ground troops followed, firing indiscriminately at civilians. "Men, women, children – we killed them all," he said.

"We were told we were fighting guerrillas – the ONLF," he said. "But we were killing farmers – they were not ONLF."

Those who managed to escape are living in a series of ramshackle refugee camps on the edge of Bosasso. Their shelters are made from pieces of cardboard and old rags, scraps of plastic sheeting and rusting corrugated iron.

Sat outside the shelters, on the grey expanse of dust and stone, voices overlap as refugees list the villages that have been destroyed. Kor u Celista, Gallaalshe, Fooldeex, Yoocaalle – places that were all once home to hundreds of families, now abandoned and empty, the huts burnt to the ground.

Abudllahi Shukri Mohammed, 30, a cattle herder from Dega Bur province tells how he was forced at gunpoint to work as a porter for a group of 300 soldiers. They took his 18 cows and made him and five other nomads carry heavy loads. After three long days marching through the Ogaden, Mr Mohammed tried to escape.

"They caught me and started beating me. They kicked me in the head and hit me with the back of their guns." With his right arm he motions the steady, repetitive smack of the guns against his body. His left arm lies limp on his lap. He has been unable to move it since the attack, his fingers fixed in an ugly formation.

"They beat me for two hours," he says, "then I fell unconscious. They thought I was dead so they left me."

Ethiopia claims it is defending itself against an insurgency launched by the ONLF in a region that has long been marginalised.

It claims villagers have been giving the fighters shelter and food. Analysts say Ethiopia has been attempting to reduce that support by emptying the countryside. Thousands have been moved to towns heavily controlled by the military. Anyone left in the villages is considered a possible ONLF supporter.

The Ethiopian military is not the only destructive force in the region. The ONLF launched its most daring assault in April. The group attacked a Chinese oil installation in Abole, killing nine Chinese and 65 Ethiopians.

It was that attack which sparked the fresh counter-insurgency – a fierce scorched-earth policy. In the Ogaden's main towns, Jijiga and Gode, the prisons are overflowing. "They are arresting anyone who they think might have a connection with the ONLF," says one human rights worker in Bosasso. "Some are being killed if the security forces don't believe they are telling the truth."

Human rights investigators are gathering evidence of widespread use of rape, with women reporting gang-rapes by up to a dozen soldiers. In some villages, men have been abducted at night, their bodies dumped in the village the next morning.

While in Darfur, aid agencies have been able to establish camps and provide humanitarian support, they have been blocked from setting up operations in the Ogaden. The International Committee of the Red Cross has been thrown out and Medicins Sans Frontieres has also been prevented from working. Journalists trying to enter have also been banned – those that have tried have been promptly arrested.

A UN team was allowed into the Ogaden last month to investigate allegations of abuse by Ethiopian troops. Its report was not made public but the team called for an independent inquiry.

But while Khartoum's counter-insurgency in Darfur has been described by the US as "genocide" and by the UN as "crimes against humanity", international condemnation of Ethiopia has, so far, been limited. Indeed, the US has given its backing to Ethiopia. America's top official on African affairs, assistant secretary of state, Jendayi Frazer, visited one town in the Ogaden last month.

On her return to Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa, she criticised the rebels and said the reports of military abuses were merely allegations. "We urge any and every government to respect human rights and to try to avoid civilian casualties but that's difficult in dealing with an insurgency," she said.

America sees Ethiopia as its principal Horn of Africa ally in the "war on terror". The US gave tacit approval for Ethiopia's Christmas invasion of Somalia which ousted the Union of Islamic Courts.

It also provided logistical and technical support for the operation and continues to help co-ordinate a response to the insurgency in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, which seeks to destabilise the transitional government, propped up by Ethiopia.

The US provides some $283m (£140m) in military and humanitarian aid to Ethiopia and has trained its military – one of the largest and strongest in Africa.

The Ogaden has become the latest flashpoint in a broader conflict in the Horn of Africa. On one side is Ethiopia and the weak transitional government of Somalia, on the other is Eritrea and two insurgent groups, the ONLF and the Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS).

From West's favourite leader to grave-digger of democracy

Sat between a beaming Tony Blair and Sir Bob Geldof, Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Meles Zenawi, could hardly have wished for a stronger endorsement. The launch of Mr Blair's Commission for Africa report in March 2005 in Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa, enhanced Mr Meles's position as the British Government's – and the West's – favourite African leader.

Handpicked by Mr Blair to sit on the commission, Mr Meles was viewed as the man to lead the "African renaissance". He was seen as a leader committed to development and democracy.

But within two months of the commission's report being published, Mr Meles's star began to fade. Huge street protests erupted in Addis Ababa in May 2005 following a general election which both the government and opposition claimed they had won. Security forces opened fire on protesters, killing 193 people, and thousands of opposition supporters and leaders were arrested.

More than 100 opposition leaders were put on trial for treason while the police crackdown intensified. Text messages, which had been used to organise the demonstrations in 2005, were banned. The next time Mr Meles and Mr Blair found themselves sat next to each other, at a summit in South Africa, the stiff body language and the lack of eye contact between the pair underlined the deterioration in the relationship.

Britain still gives Ethiopia £130m in humanitarian aid each year – more than any other African country. Like the US, Britain has tried to retain a relatively close relationship with Ethiopia – one of its few allies in a volatile Horn of Africa.




Independent


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PostPosted: 17 Oct 07, 19:27 
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Murdoch To Times: I Will Bury You! Keller Bristles

Rupert Has Seen Future: It’s Insurgent Journal Vs. ‘Monolithic Media’
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Snow Sees First Amendment Threat from Media Practices broadcastingcable


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The bloody homecoming: bombers hit Bhutto convoy
Within hours of her return to Pakistan, Benazir Bhutto escapes assassination attempt that leaves 120 dead


Benazir Bhutto's triumphant homecoming to Pakistan turned to deadly carnage last night when two car bombs ripped through crowds surrounding the former prime minister's truck as it made its way through Karachi, killing at least 120 people and wounding hundreds more.

Ms Bhutto, who had returned after eight years of exile, escaped unharmed but there was no doubt she was the target of a carefully planned assassination attempt. A small explosion was followed by a huge blast just feet from the front of her vehicle, shattering its windows and setting a police escort on fire. Four bullets were also fired at the convoy, reports said.

Ms Bhutto could be seen in television pictures being lowered from the bottom deck of her truck. Azhar Farooqi, a police commander, said she was rushed from the area under contingency plans to return her to her Karachi residence. "She was evacuated very safely," he added.

Ghulam Mohammed Mohtaram, the provincial home secretary, said the main impact of the blast was absorbed by the police vehicle. Dozens of bodies could be seen lying motionless at the scene; other victims were writhing around in agony.

Seemi Jamali, a doctor at the nearby Jinnah Hospital, said his casualty unit had taken in 19 dead and 70 wounded. Between 20 and 25 of the injured were in a critical condition. Another medic at the Liaqat National Hospital reported 30 dead and 80 hurt, many critically.

Men were seen running away from the scene, some stretchering the wounded to hospitals as blood streamed down the white robes worn by many of them.

The perpetrators of the bombs – which police indicated might have been suicide attacks – were not immediately clear. Earlier, however, the pro-Western Mrs Bhutto had criticised Islamic militants groups whose threats had overshadowed her return to Pakistan. She has previously infuriated al-Qa'ida sympathisers by offering support to the US in its efforts to find the terror group's leader, Osama bin Laden.

In Washington, the National Security Council spokesman, Gordon Johndroe, said: "The US condemns the violent attack in Pakistan and mourns the loss of innocent life there. Extremists will not be allowed to stop Pakistanis from selecting their representatives through an open and democratic process."

Last night's atrocity cast an appalling shadow over what had seemed only hours earlier like a mass celebration for a much-loved figure who was twice elected prime minister during the 1980s and 1990s. More than 150,000 jubilant supporters surrounded the convoy carrying the former leader, shouting "long live Bhutto".

Ms Bhutto had refused to travel around Pakistan's largest city by helicopter, as officials had advised her to do for security reasons. "I am not scared. I am thinking of my mission," she told reporters en route from Dubai to Pakistan. "This is a movement for democracy because we are under threat from extremists ." Nonetheless, at least 20,000 security personnel had been deployed to provide protection, amid intelligence reports which suggested that at least three militant groups were plotting suicide attacks. Mrs Bhutto described the trip as a " wonderful" homecoming. "I counted the hours, I counted the minutes and the seconds, just to see this land, to see the grass, to see the sky," she added, clutching prayer beads and dressed in a green shalwar kameez and a white headscarf.

Ms Bhutto, who some accuse of corruption during her premiership, returned with the agreement of General Pervez Musharraf – himself a highly controversial figure – who last month secured a new term as president, though this has yet to be ratified.

Ms Bhutto became the first female head of a Muslim state when she was sworn in as prime minister in 1988. She was deposed 20 months later under President Ghulam Ishaq amid claims that she laundered state money through Swiss bank accounts. She was re-elected in 1993 but again sacked by the president in 1996 on similar charges. Three years later, she moved to Dubai in exile and, until yesterday, she had not returned.

Last night, the Pakistani ambassador to the US, Mahmud Ali Durrani, confirmed that Ms Bhutto had survived the attempt on her life. "We are... sad about the loss of life but the good news is that Benazir is safe," he said.

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Bhutto: I was warned that a suicide squad would try to kill me Mail


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California wildfires trigger state of emergency



Fire surrounds the main road at Stevenson Ranch, southern California
Wildfire surrounds the main road at Stevenson Ranch, southern California. Photograph: J Emilio Flores/Getty Images


Hundreds of thousands of people in California have fled their homes as fierce brush fires burn out of control and were predicted to worsen today.

The California governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, declared a state of emergency and said it was a "tragic time" for the state.

At least 300,000 people had been told to leave San Diego county, where hundreds of homes have been destroyed.

The state of emergency opens the way for federal government assistance.

The US president, George Bush, today authorised the Federal Emergency Management Agency - the body heavily criticised for its response to Hurricane Katrina - to coordinate disaster relief in the seven worst affected counties.

One firefighter described the scene as looking like a "nuclear winter". Conditions were expected to get worse, with temperatures of up to 38C expected in parts of southern California and desert winds of up to 70mph fanning the flames across the tinder-dry region.

At least 1,000 homes have so far been destroyed and thousands more are under threat from the 14 major fires burning across the state.

Neighbouring states including Nevada and Arizona are contributing crews and equipment, and the Pentagon is sending six water-dropping planes to help with the effort.

At least one person has been killed in the fires. He was named by the Associated Press news agency as Thomas Varshock, 52, of Tecate, a town on the Mexican border south-east of San Diego.

"Lifesaving is our priority. Getting people out from in front of the fire - those have been our priorities," Captain Don Camp, from the California department of forestry and fire protection, said.

A pair of wildfires consumed 128 homes in the mountain resort area of Lake Arrowhead, in the San Bernardino national forest east of Los Angeles.

"We're stretched very thin and we can't get any planes up," John Miller, a forest spokesman, said. State officials called in the National Guard.

Air quality plummeted as winds of up to 90mph deposited ash and soot across the area. Low brown clouds darkened the skies on what would have been a clear, sunny day.

Power lines brought down by the high winds were thought to be responsible for sparking the fires at the weekend, although fire officials blamed arsonists for some of the fiercest blazes, in Orange county, south of Los Angeles.

Local television stations turned their schedules over to cover the fires, with helicopter shots showing lines of fire snaking across the canyons that reach inland from the Pacific Ocean.

The flames stretched from the Mexican border to Santa Barbara county, almost 200 miles to the north. Some 16,200 hectares (40,000 acres) had been burned by yesterday morning, forcing the evacuation of thousands of residents and the closure of schools in several areas.

In Malibu, where 1,500 residents were evacuated, a church was destroyed by fire - as was a mock turreted "Scottish" castle, an ornate local landmark that was on the market for $17m (£8.3m).

The building's owner, Lilly Lawrence, the daughter of a former Iranian oil minister, took mementoes, including Elvis Presley's army fatigues, to safety.

"My parents taught me not to allow my possessions to possess me," she told local TV. "So, that's the story. The house is a house."

News pictures showed some of the rich and famous of Malibu, including the film producer Jeffrey Katzenberg, dousing their homes with fire retardant.

The fierce winds, which calmed overnight on Sunday but picked up yesterday morning, carried burning embers across the Pacific Coast highway towards the exclusive beachfront properties.

"We're at the mercy of the wind," Malibu's mayor, Pamela Conley Ulich, told reporters on Sunday night. Firefighters yesterday estimated that the blaze was only 10% contained.

The brush fires, fuelled by the Santa Ana desert winds, are an annual event in southern California.

The Santa Anas carry warm air from the desert to the coast, drying out the land as they pass and spreading the fires. Despite recent rains, southern California, like all the western US, is experiencing a severe drought.

"This was a conflagration that we knew was coming at some point," the Los Angeles county supervisor, Zev Yaroslavsky, told reporters.
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Chinese police clash with monks over Dalai Lama award


Framed by the Tibetan flag, the Dalai Lama speaks to members of the Tibetan Community in New York.



Chinese police and soldiers have clashed with Buddhist monks in several towns in Tibet during a crackdown on celebrations to mark the award of a US congressional gold medal to the Dalai Lama last week.

According to Tibetan activist groups and Hong Kong media, the security forces have attempted to suppress monasteries that tried to mark the prize-giving with special prayers or decorations.

Despite government efforts to remove satellite dishes, halt sales of celebratory fireworks and block websites such as YouTube, news has spread quickly about the accolade and the meeting last week between the Tibetan spiritual leader and US president George Bush.

Beijing is furious about the award for the Dalai Lama, who it accuses of being a 'splittist' intent upon challenging the territorial integrity of China. The Dalai Lama says he is not seeking independence, but wants autonomy for Tibetans inside China.

The Free Tibet campaign says clashes and crackdowns have been reported in the capital Lhasa, as well as in the Tibetan communities of Qinghai and Gansu.

Citing sources in Dharamsala - the Indian home of Tibetan exiles - it says there are unconfirmed rumours that one or two monks have been killed in Lhasa.

The confrontation is said to have begun on 17 October after celebrating monks repainted the walls of the Dalai Lama's residence in Drepung Monastery and held a special prayer meeting.

The Ming Pao newspaper said 3,000 armed police surrounded the monastery and refused to allow the 1,000 or so monks to leave.

Details of the crackdown are hard to ascertain because the Chinese authorities keep a tight lock on Tibet. In recent days the YouTube website has been difficult to access in Beijing, prompting speculation that it has been blocked to prevent people on the mainland from seeing video of the Dalai Lama receiving the congressional award.
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Sudan to announce Darfur ceasefire





Sudan will announce another ceasefire in its four-and-a-half year conflict with rebel groups in Darfur at the weekend, it emerged today.

The announcement will come at the opening of Darfur peace talks, which are to take place in the Libyan city of Sitre, the hometown of the Libyan leader, Muammar Gadafy.

Abdelmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamed, the Sudanese ambassador to the UN, said the move was designed to promote the success of the long-awaited meeting.


"On that day ... we will declare a ceasefire so that we can give the negotiators a chance to get out with an agreement on cessation of hostilities ... in the first round of the talks," Mr Mohamed said. He described the move as "a confidence-building measure".

There have been ceasefire agreements in Darfur before, notably in 2004 and in May last year, but they were openly flouted.

Earlier this month, Jan Eliasson, the UN special envoy to Darfur, called on the Sudanese government and rebel factions to begin the peace talks with a ceasefire agreement. He urged both sides to make concessions during the negotiations.

Yesterday, Amnesty International claimed the Sudanese government was obstructing the deployment of a 26,000-strong joint UN and African Union peacekeeping force to Darfur.

The force is due to take over from the overstretched African Union Mission in Sudan by the end of December.

"The peacekeeping deployment process continues to move slowly," Amnesty's Africa programme director, Erwin van der Borght, said. "This is unconscionable. How many more Darfuris must die before the international community responds with the urgency this crisis demands?"

He urged the Sudanese government to allow the force freedom of movement and to immediately provide it with land to establish bases.

The current conflict started in 2003, when rebels attacked government installations. In response, the Janjaweed militia attacked, burnt and looted villages in Darfur. The Sudanese government is accused of sponsoring the Janjaweed.

Abdel Wahid, the exiled leader of one of the main rebel groups, the Sudanese Liberation Army, said the peace talks should only take place after deployment of the new peacekeeping force. "This is completely the wrong approach and will only prolong the suffering of the people," he told the Los Angeles Times.

International experts estimate that around 200,000 people have died and 2.5 million have been driven from their homes during the Darfur fighting.
guardian


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PostPosted: 01 Nov 07, 15:39 
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Man charged with killing neighbour for watering his lawn

Thursday November 1, 2007

A man has been killed in a fight over watering his lawn in drought-stricken Australia in an apparent case of water rage.

Retired lorry driver Ken Proctor, 66, was using a hose on the front lawn of his house in Sylvania, Sydney, when a man walked past and challenged him about wasting water. The two men began to argue and Mr Proctor turned the hose on the man, soaking him.

A fight broke out and the pensioner was knocked to the ground and punched and kicked before other passers-by, including an off-duty police officer, intervened.

As his distraught wife looked on, Mr Proctor was treated at the scene by ambulance officers but died of cardiac arrest after being taken to hospital.

Police later charged 36-year-old Todd Munter, who lives nearby, with the pensioner's murder.

Australia is in its sixth year of severe drought and most towns and cities have restrictions on water use. Garden sprinklers are banned, it is illegal to wash cars with hosepipes and gardens may only be watered on set days. People caught breaching the regulations are fined.

There are special telephone lines to report transgressors and there have been violent incidents in the past because of so-called "water vigilantes" informing on their neighbours. However, this is the first time an argument over water has led to a fatality.

A spokesman for Sydney Water revealed that Mr Proctor had not in fact been in breach of water restrictions because he was watering his lawn on his allocated day, had been using a hand-held hose and was carrying out the task within approved hours.

As Mr Proctor's shocked family gathered at his house today, neighbour Bruce Buscombe described the dead man as "a very likeable sort of fellow, a real knockabout sort of bloke."

"I can't believe it. It could've been me hosing my lawn. I would have said the same thing if somebody told me off," he told the Sydney Morning Herald.

Mr Proctor, who drove a truck for his local council's civil works and parks department and who retired five years ago, had recently become a grandfather when his daughter gave birth to a girl last month.

Appearing in court today, Mr Munter looked upset and close to tears as members of his family, including his elderly parents, looked on from the public gallery.

His lawyer Danny Saad told the court that his client had been on medication for a chronic back problem for several years and may need an operation soon. He did not apply for bail on his client's behalf and Mr Munter was remanded in custody until November 15.


guardian


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PostPosted: 03 Nov 07, 15:53 
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Musharraf imposes emergency rule


Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf has declared emergency rule, state-run TV has said, amid reports that police have surrounded the Supreme Court.

Troops have been deployed inside state-run TV and radio stations, while independent channels have gone off air.

Gen Musharraf is awaiting a Supreme Court ruling on whether he was eligible to run for re-election last month while remaining army chief.

Pakistan has been engulfed in political upheaval in recent months.

The security forces have suffered a series of blows from pro-Taleban militants opposed to Gen Musharraf's support for the US-led "war on terror".

The BBC's Barbara Plett reports from Islamabad that fears have been growing in the government that the Supreme Court ruling could go against Gen Musharraf.

Private channels Geo News and Dawn News earlier quoted unnamed sources as saying the government had made up its mind to declare emergency rule. Shortly afterwards they came off air.

A special cabinet meeting is expected shortly.

One TV channel reported that emergency rule may involve the suspension of the constitution.

Parliamentary elections are due in January.

Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, who recently returned to the country after years of self-exile to lead her party in the elections, is currently in Dubai on a personal visit.
BBC


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