Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Report: NKorea proposed summit talks with SKorea AP

SEOUL, South Korea North Korea offered to hold a summit with South Korea in an apparent bid to secure economic aid, but Seoul rejected the idea citing increased tensions, a news report said Wednesday.

Seoul had told North Korea last year that it would give the North aid if Pyongyang agreed to a summit, but when the North recently asked if that offer stood it was told that circumstances had changed, according to the report in the mass-circulation Dong-a Ilbo newspaper, which cited unidentified South Korean government officials.

Unification Ministry spokesman Lee Jong-joo denied there was any current government-level dialogue between the Koreas about a summit. She said she had no knowledge of whether there may have been dialogue in the past.

In a comment published Wednesday in the Maeil Business Newspaper, Unification Minister Hyun In-taek said the time wasnt right for a summit with North Korea.

There were reports in South Korean media earlier this year that the two Koreas held a series of secret meetings in 2009 to discuss a possible summit but were wide apart over conditions for such a meeting. North Korean leader Kim Jong Il has twice held summits with South Korean presidents, in 2000 with Kim Dae-jung and in 2007 with Roh Moo-hyun.

The Norths reported proposal comes amid ongoing tension between the two Koreas following the March sinking of a South Korean warship. In May, an international team of investigators found the North responsible for the sinking that killed 46 South Korean sailors.

North Korea, which denies involvement, has recently issued a series of threats to South Korea over its joint military drills with the United States.

On Monday, South Korean and U.S. troops began annual computerized military drills involving about 56,000 South Korean soldiers and 30,000 U.S. troops in South Korea and abroad.

The U.S. and South Korea insist the drills are purely defensive, but North Korea says they are a rehearsal for invasion and has pledged to retaliate.

They follow massive joint naval drills conducted by the allies last month off the Korean peninsulas eastern coast in response to the sinking. The two countries plan to stage more drills in coming months.

The Korean peninsula technically remains in a state of war because the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty.

This version CORRECTS that Unification Ministry spokeswoman did not deny past dialogue but said she had no knowledge of it.



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HBO to Stream Shows on iPad Sans Netflix

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HBO has announced that the company is planning on offering its shows for streaming on iPad and other mobile devices, with an app to be ready in about six months. The company already offers free streaming of its popular cable shows to users online for free; to access HBO Gos streaming service. viewers must already be a subscriber to HBOs channel through cable or satellite TV packages.

The company is continuing to resist offering its content on the Netflix streaming service, citing that the it wants to increase traffic and viewership to its own channel and content. HBO is saying that if the content is valuable, customers are willing to pay a premium.

Other than HBO Go streaming service, available for free online to current subscribers of HBO, HBO also is selling content digitally through iTunes and other services.

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Venezuela bans violent photos in newspaper AP

CARACAS, Venezuela A court ordered one of Venezuelas leading newspapers on Tuesday to stop publishing photographs depicting blood, guns and other violent images and warned it could face a hefty fine for having published a photo of bodies in a morgue.

Venezuelan officials say the ruling involving El Nacional � one of Venezuelas oldest newspapers and a fierce critic of President Hugo Chavez � aims to protect children and adolescents from violent images, but opponents called the move politically motivated censorship.

In its ruling, the court said it prohibited the newspaper from publishing images, information and publicity of any type that contains blood, guns, alarming messages or physical aggression images that incorporate warfare content and messages about killings and deaths that could alter the well being of children and adolescents.

The decision came after El Nacional published a photograph on its front page depicting dead bodies in a Caracas morgue. The image accompanied a news story examining Venezuelas failure to stem widespread violent crime.

The court notified El Nacionals editor, Miguel Henrique Otero, that the tribunal received a request for a hefty fine to be levied on the newspaper. The fine could amount to the equivalent of 2 percent of the newspapers revenue, the court announced.

Otero said the order handed down by the court would effectively force all of Venezuelas newspapers to refrain from publishing any type of violent photographs, including news-related images from international armed conflicts.

If the daily violates the order, he said, it could be shut down.

They should come and put a censor here and tell us what cannot be published, Otero quipped.

Otero suggested that El Nacional might defy the court order because the newspaper does not plan to change its editorial line or refrain from publishing photographs including violent content.

This doesnt have anything to do with .... protecting children and juveniles, Otero said. Its political.

Several other opposition-sided newspapers published the same photograph this week as a show of solidarity with El Nacional.

Theres a terrible string of slayings in the country and thats the issue at hand, said Teodoro Petkoff, editor of the newspaper Tal Cual.

Violent crime is one of Venezuelas most pressing problems, and Chavez foes are raising concerns ahead of legislative elections in September.

Over 12,000 murders were reported during the first 11 months of 2009, making Venezuela one of Latin Americas most violent countries. Officials have not released complete homicide statistics this year.

This version CORRECTS that ruling affects only one newspaper



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Palestinian who attacked Turkish Embassy captured AP

TEL AVIV, Israel A Palestinian who broke into the Turkish Embassy in Israel trying to take hostages and demanding asylum was turned over to Israeli authorities late Tuesday, ending a tense standoff.

Seven hours after he forced his way into the embassy, the attacker was escorted out of the embassy and bundled into an Israeli ambulance. Wearing a light blue shirt and limping slightly from an apparent gunshot wound, he raised his arms briefly and shouted before Israeli police and paramedics subdued him.

An hour earlier, the Turkish government said it had the situation in hand.

Our embassy guards neutralized the individual as he tried to take the vice consul as hostage after shouting around for asylum, the Turkish statement said, adding he was armed with a knife, a gasoline can and a gun that turned out to be a toy.

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor identified the attacker as Nadim Injaz, a Palestinian from the West Bank town of Ramallah. Israeli police said Injaz was recently released from prison after serving time for an attack on the British Embassy four years ago, also to seek asylum.

Channel 2 TV played a recording of a phone call it said came from the attacker.

I have two hostages, he said in Hebrew. I will blow up the embassy. ... If they dont let me leave this country now I will burn down the whole building. I will burn everything. I will burn the cars, the doors I will break down the doors. I will break everything.

A lawyer who said he spoke to Injaz by phone told Israel Radio that the hostages, the consul and his wife, had escaped.

Injaz said he admired Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

I love him and I respect him, he said. The Turkish leader should give me political asylum against these murderers the Zionists, the murdering Jews, he added, linking the incident indirectly to recent tensions between Israel and Turkey.

He also condemned Palestinian leaders, saying President Mahmoud Abbas should die for stealing funds.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters, there is nothing to worry about at the embassy, everything is under control. He said the attacker was not seriously wounded.

Israel-Turkey relations have been strained over the May 31 Israeli attack on an international flotilla that was trying to bust Israels blockade of the Gaza Strip. The raid killed nine Turkish citizens who were among hundreds of pro-Palestinian activists on board boats carrying aid and many Palestinians have expressed support for Turkey in the aftermath.

Turkey withdrew its ambassador from Tel Aviv after the flotilla attack.

The Israeli Maariv newspaper said the man called the paper, identifying himself as Injaz, the Palestinian who sought asylum at the British Embassy in Tel Aviv in 2006. He said he had a flammable liquid and threatened, I will kill any Jew that enters.

In London, the British Foreign Office confirmed in a statement that the attacker was the same one involved in the 2006 British Embassy incident.

Around the time of the first attack, police said Injaz was an informer and a criminal with a record of property and drug offenses who had run into financial and legal troubles.

He told an Israeli TV station in 2006 that he feared he would be killed by Palestinian militants if he returned to the West Bank.

Lawyer Shafik Abuani told Israel Radio that he talked to the man three times by telephone, trying to calm him down. The lawyer said Injaz threatened to burn the embassy down if he is not granted asylum.

It was unclear what his relation to the hostage-taker was.

Abuani said Injaz demanded to be flown to Turkey and said he was being persecuted by the Israeli Shin-Bet security force.

The lawyer said only the Turkish consul and his wife were in the building at the time, and they escaped. I am in touch with the consul all the time by cell phone, and nothing happened to them, theyre OK, he said.

____

Lavie reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press Writer Ceren Kumova in Ankara contributed to this report.



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Jury deadlocks on all but 1 charge against Blago AP

CHICAGO A federal jury deadlocked Tuesday on all but one of 24 charges against former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, including the most explosive of all � that he tried to sell an appointment to President Barack Obamas old Senate seat. Blagojevich was convicted on a single, less serious count of lying to federal agents.

Prosecutors pledged to retry the case as soon as possible.

This jury shows you that the government threw everything but the kitchen sink at me, Blagojevich said outside court. They could not prove I did anything wrong � except for one nebulous charge from five years ago.

But one juror said the panel was deadlocked 11-1 in favor of convicting Blagojevich of trying to auction off the Senate seat.

Juror Erik Sarnello of Itasca, Ill., said one woman on the jury just didnt see what we all saw. The 21-year-old Sarnello said the counts involving the Senate seat were the most obvious.

Other jurors tried to persuade the holdout to reconsider, but at a certain point, there was no changing, he said.

Blagojevich � known for his showmanlike, over-the-top personality � showed no emotion as the verdict was read. Before jurors came in, he sat with his hands folded, looking down and picking nervously at his fingernails. He and his lawyer said they would appeal the conviction.

The verdict came on the 14th day of deliberations, ending an 11-week trial during which a foul-mouthed Blagojevich was heard on secret FBI wiretap tapes saying the power to name a senator was expletive golden and that he wasnt going to give up for expletive nothing.

The count on which Blagojevich was convicted included accusations that he lied to federal agents when he said he did not track campaign contributions. But the jury did not convict him on a related allegation that he kept a firewall between political campaigns and government work. It carries a sentence of up to five years in prison. Some of the more serious charges, such as racketeering, carried up to a 20-year penalty.

Blagojevich vowed to appeal the single conviction and declared that he was a victim of persecution by the federal government. He told reporters that he wants the people of Illinois to know that I did not lie to the FBI.

It had been clear jurors were struggling with the case. Last week, they told Zagel they had reached a unanimous decision on just two counts and had not even considered 11 others. There was no immediate explanation about whether they later disagreed.

Jurors appeared more haggard Tuesday than during the trial. As they filed into the courtroom, many appeared nervous, some looking down at the floor as Zagel read the verdict form to himself, then passed it to a bailiff. They had asked earlier Tuesday for advice on filling out their verdict forms and a copy of the oath they took before deliberating.

The jurors did not remain at the courthouse to explain their decisions.

Theyre going home, said Joel Daly, a spokesman for Zagel. A lot would like to talk to media folks, but they are plain tired.

After the verdict was read, defense attorney Sam Adam Jr. rubbed his own forehead and mouth, appearing to shake his head in disgust. The former governors wife, Patti Blagojevich, leaned over in her chair, shaking her head.

The former governors brother and co-defendant, Robert Blagojevich, said the jurys conclusion showed hes been an innocent target of the federal government all along.

I feel strong. I feel confident. I dont feel in any way deterred. Ive done nothing wrong, he told reporters at the courthouse. Ive got ultimate confidence in my acquittal.

Defense attorneys had argued that Blagojevich was a big talker, but never committed a crime. They took a huge gamble by deciding not to call any witnesses � including Blagojevich, who had repeatedly promised to take the stand.

The jury agreed that the government did not prove its case, the former governor said.

Judge James B. Zagel set a hearing for Aug. 26 to decide manner and timing of the retrial, which could unfold at the height of the fall campaign.

For most of the trial, the 53-year-old Blagojevich, a perpetual campaigner and recent reality TV star, seemed cheerful. He often glided through the courthouse smiling and chatting with passers-by.

His demeanor was in contrast to his older brother, a Nashville, Tenn. businessman, who was often subdued and walked to court alone.

By all accounts, the brothers were close growing up and Rod Blagojevich wrote fondly of Robert in his 2009 book, The Governor. But Robert Blagojevichs attorney said the two drifted apart as they got older.

U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald was in the main courtroom for the verdict for the first time since the trial began. He sat at the end of a spectators bench near a wall on the opposite side of the room from Blagojevich, his hands folded across court documents. He looked on blank-faced as the verdict was read. His team of young prosecutors reflected the same mood, also looking on impassively.

Some observers said the government will come back with a tougher case next time.

And the government has the resources to keep trying until they get a conviction � and they probably will, said Phil Turner, a former federal prosecutor. And Blagojevich is running out of resources. It is a war of attrition the government can win.

While the verdict isnt a clear victory for the defense, Turner says it is a slap in the face to Fitzgerald and his team.

Turner pointed to the U.S. attorneys statement from the day Blagojevich was arrested, when he said prosecutors had stopped a political corruption crime spree.

This is clear defeat for prosecutors, Turner said. The jurors message to Fitzgerald is � this was exaggeration and overstatement.

Turner said Fitzgeralds mistake was shutting down the covert investigation in 2008 and arresting Blagojevich � before whatever alleged schemes played out.

Had they let things proceed, this could have been an open and shut case, he said.

As he left the courthouse, Blagojevich got a huge round of applause from the courthouse crowd.

Leota Johnson, 72, of Chicago, chanted Rod is free Johnson said she supports Blago because she isnt convinced he did anything wrong and that pay-for-play is Chicago politics as usual.

During the trial, prosecutors relied heavily on the FBI wiretaps, in which Blagojevich spewed profanity, speculated about getting a Cabinet job in exchange for the Senate appointment. Several witnesses also testified that they felt pressured to donate money to Blagojevichs campaign in exchange for favorable state action.

Blagojevichs trial was another chapter in Illinois history of crooked politics. His predecessor, George Ryan, was convicted of racketeering in 2006 and is serving a 6 1/2 year-sentence.

Some had feared that the trial could harm Democrats as the party geared up for tough elections this fall.

Blagojevichs attorneys had plastered Washington and Illinois with subpoenas � including White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid � but by the end of the trial, none of them had testified, sparing Democrats any potentially embarrassing testimony.

___

Associated Press writers Karen Hawkins and Serena Dai contributed to this report.

Associated Press Writer Deanna Bellandi contributed to this report.



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Gulf surface cleaner, but questions lurk far below AP

WASHINGTON Researchers are warning that the Gulf of Mexico oil spill is a bigger mess than the government claims and that a lot of crude is lurking deep below the surface, some of it settling perhaps in a critical undersea canyon off the Florida Panhandle.

The evidence of microscopic amounts of oil mixing into the soil of the canyon was gathered by scientists at the University of South Florida, who also found poisoned plant plankton � the vital base of the ocean food web � which they blamed on a toxic brew of oil and dispersants.

Their work is preliminary, hasnt been reviewed by other scientists, requires more tests to confirm it is BPs oil they found, and is based on a 10-day research cruise that ended late Monday night. Scientists who were not involved said they were uncomfortable drawing conclusions based on such a brief look.

But those early findings follow a report on Monday from Georgia researchers that said as much as 80 percent of the oil from the spill remains in the Gulf. Both groups findings have already been incorporated into lawsuits filed against BP.

Both groups paint a darker scenario than that of federal officials, who two weeks ago announced that most of the oil had dissolved, dispersed or been removed, leaving just a bit more than a quarter of the amount that spewed from the well that exploded in April.

At the White House on Aug. 4, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration chief Jane Lubchenco said: At least 50 percent of the oil that was released is now completely gone from the system, and most of the remainder is degrading rapidly or is being removed from the beaches.

Thats not what the scientists from South Florida and Georgia found.

The oil is not gone, thats for sure, University of South Floridas David Hollander said Tuesday. There is oil and we need to deal with it.

University of Georgias Samantha Joye said: Its a tremendous amount of oil thats in the system. ... Its very difficult for me to imagine that 50 percent of it has been degraded.

Marine scientist Chuck Hopkinson, also with the University of Georgia, raised the obvious question: Where has all the oil gone? It hasnt gone anywhere. It still lurks in the deep.

NOAA spokesman Justin Kenney defended his agencys calculations, saying they are based on direct measurements whenever possible and the best available scientific estimates where direct measurements were not possible. But the vast majority of it is based on educated scientific guesses, because unless the oil was being burned or skimmed, measurements werent possible, NOAA response scientist Bill Lehr said earlier this month.

What is happening in the Gulf is the outcome of a decision made early on in the fighting of the spill: to use dispersants to keep the surface and beaches as clean as possible, at the expense of keeping oil stuck below the surface, said Monty Graham, a researcher at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama who was not part of the latest work. Oil degrades far more slowly in cooler, deeper waters than it would at the surface.

At the surface and the top 100 feet or so, it is obvious why oil is harmful, fouling marshes and hampering sea turtles, fish, birds and other life. Deep down, the effects are subtler, less direct. Oil at that depth can chip away at the base of the food web � plant plankton � and that could cause animals to go hungry. Reduced oxygen levels from natural gas and oil could also starve creatures of oxygen.

At depths of 900 to 3,300 feet, the University of South Florida researchers found problems with plant plankton. About two-fifths of the samples showed some degree of toxicity.

We found general phytoplankton health to be poor, Hollander said. By comparison, in non-oiled southern parts of the Gulf, the plant plankton were healthy, researchers said.

That makes sense because past research has shown that when oil when gets into the cell membranes of plankton, it causes all sorts of problems, said Paul Falkowski, a marine scientist at Rutgers University who was not part of the research. However, he said plant plankton dont live long anyway. They have about a weeks lifespan, he said, and in a few months this insult to the base of the food web could be history.

Still, the brew that is poisoning the plankton may linger and no one knows for how long, Hollander said.

The Florida researchers used ultraviolet light to illuminate micro-droplets of oil deep underwater. When they did that, it looked like a constellation of stars, Hollander said.

He also found the oil deposited in the sea bottom near the edges of the significant DeSoto Canyon, about 40 miles southwest of Panama City, Fla., suggesting oil may have settled into that canyon. The canyon is an important mixing area for cold, nutrient-laden water and warmer surface water. It is also key for currents and an important fisheries area.

Clearly the oil down in the abyss, theres nothing we can do about it, said Ed Overton of Louisiana State University. He said the environment at the surface or down to 100 feet or so is rapidly going back to normal, with shrimpers starting their harvest. But oil below 1,000 feet degrades much more slowly, he said.

Joye has measured how fast natural gas, which also spewed from the BP well, can degrade in water, and it may take as much as 500 days for large pools to disappear at 3,000 feet below the sea. That natural gas starves oxygen from the water, she said.

Youre talking about a best-case situation of a years turnover time, Joye said.

___

AP legal affairs reporter Curt Anderson in Miami contributed to this report.

___

Online:

University of Georgias oil spill page: http://oilspill.uga.edu



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Helicoid An Upcoming Game From the Developer of Lilt Line

In May of last year we first took a look at DifferentCloths Lilt Line [$2.99], a well received rhythm game with a great soundtrack. Lilt Line was a little on the simple side, but the overall experience of the game was really cool as the tilt and tap based gameplay was paired really well with the music. Earlier today Helicoid was announced, which looks to be a somewhat similar music-based game only this time its based on tilting your phone around to advance through a spiral.

Its hard to make out how much fun the game will be from the video alone, but I expect it to be a bit like Lilt Line in that it wont really make sense until youve got the game in your hands. Helicoid was submitted to the App Store yesterday, and DifferentCloth expects it to be released sometime next week. For more details, check out the thread in our forums or the Helicoid web site.



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AP Exclusive: Terrorist interrogation tapes found AP

WASHINGTON The CIA has videotapes, after all, of interrogations in a secret overseas prison of admitted 9/11 plotter Ramzi Binalshibh.

Discovered in a box under a desk at the CIA, the tapes could reveal how foreign governments aided the United States in holding and interrogating suspects. And they could complicate U.S. efforts to prosecute Binalshibh, who has been described as one of the key plot facilitators in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Apparently the tapes do not show harsh treatment � unlike videos the agency destroyed of the questioning of other suspected terrorists.

The two videotapes and one audiotape are believed to be the only existing recordings made within the clandestine prison system and could offer a revealing glimpse into a four-year global odyssey that ranged from Pakistan to Romania to Guantanamo Bay.

The tapes depict Binalshibhs interrogation sessions in 2002 at a Moroccan-run facility the CIA used near Rabat, several current and former U.S. officials told The Associated Press. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because the videos remain a closely guarded secret.

When the CIA destroyed its cache of 92 videos of two other al-Qaida operatives, Abu Zubaydah and Abd al-Nashiri, being waterboarded in 2005, officials believed they had wiped away all of the agencys interrogation footage. But in 2007, a staff member discovered a box tucked under a desk in the CIAs Counterterrorism Center and pulled out the Binalshibh tapes.

If the tapes surfaced at Binalshibhs trial, they could highlight Moroccos role in a counterterrorism program known as Greystone, which authorized the CIA to hold terrorists in secret prisons and shuttle them to other countries.

The American Civil Liberties Union has asked the government to provide more information about the tapes as part of a long-running lawsuit involving the treatment of detainees.

Todays report is a stark reminder of how much information the government is still withholding about the Bush administrations interrogation policies, said Alexander Abdo, staff attorney with the ACLU National Security Project.

More significantly to the 38-year-old terror suspects defense, the tapes also could provide evidence of Binalshibhs mental state within the first months of his capture. In court documents, defense lawyers have been asking for medical records to see whether his years in CIA custody made him mentally unstable. He is being treated for schizophrenia with a potent cocktail of anti-psychotic medications.

With military trial commissions on hold while the Obama administration figures out what to do with a number of terror suspects, Binalshibh has never had a hearing on whether he is mentally fit to stand trial.

If those tapes exist, they would be extremely relevant, said Thomas A. Durkin, Binalshibhs civilian lawyer.

A Justice Department prosecutor who is already investigating whether destroying the Zubaydah and al-Nashiri tapes was illegal is now also looking into why the Binalshibh tapes were not disclosed.

The CIA first publicly hinted at the existence of the tapes in 2007 in a letter to U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema in Virginia. The government twice denied having such tapes, recanting once they were discovered. But the government blacked out Binalshibhs name from a public copy of the letter.

At the time, the CIA played down the significance of the videos, saying they were not taken as part of the agencys detention program and did not show CIA interrogations.

But that case can be made only because of the unusual nature of the Moroccan prison, which was largely financed by the CIA but run by Moroccans, the former officials said. The CIA could move detainees in and out, and oversee the interrogations, but officially Morocco had control.

Moroccan government officials did not respond to queries seeking comment on Binalshibh and his time in Morocco. The country has never acknowledged the existence of the detention center.

Morocco has a history of prison abuse and human rights violations. A Moroccan-created commission identified decades of torture, forced disappearances, poor prison conditions and sexual violence. This years U.S. State Department report on Morocco notes continued accusations of torture by security forces.

Still, current and former officials say no harsh interrogation methods, like the simulated drowning tactic called waterboarding, were used in Morocco. In the CIAs secret network of undisclosed black prisons, Morocco was described as a way station to hold detainees for a few months at a time.

The tapes record a guy sitting in a room just answering questions, according to a U.S. official familiar with the program. They dont show any harsh treatment.

That would make them quite different from the 92 interrogation videos of Zubaydah and al-Nashiri being subjected to waterboarding and other harsh interrogation tactics.

The tapes provide just a snapshot of Binalshibhs journey through CIA black prisons. He was bounced from one undisclosed facility to the next and his story, if it ever comes out at trial, could reveal new details about the CIA prison network. Defense attorneys have described this journey as a blot on this nations character.

Intelligence officials maintain the tough tactics saved many lives.

CIA spokesman George Little said: While we continue to cooperate with inquiries into past counterterrorism practices, the CIAs focus now is exactly where it should be: protecting the American people now and into the future.

Binalshibh belonged to the al-Qaida cell in Hamburg, Germany, that hatched the 9/11 plot. He roomed with Mohammed Atta, who piloted American Airlines Flight 11 into the World Trade Center. Binalshibh tried repeatedly to get a U.S. visa but never succeeded.

The CIA swept him up exactly one year later in Karachi, Pakistan. He was captured with other members of al-Qaida and the young sons of 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who one former official said had been placed in Binalshibhs care.

Almost immediately, two former CIA officials said, Binalshibh exhibited traces of mental instability that would worsen over time. But others suggest his prolonged detention contributed to that deterioration.

Binalshibhs first stop after his capture was Afghanistan. Shackled and hooded, he was flown on a military plane with a joint CIA-FBI team from Karachi to Bagram. At a spartan CIA facility not far from Bagram, he was manacled to the ceiling and subjected to blaring hard rock music around the clock, according to FBI documents.

When FBI agents finally had a chance to interview Binalshibh, they found him lethargic but physically unharmed. He projected an attitude suggesting he was unconcerned he had been caught.

Before the FBI made any real headway, the CIA flew Binalshibh on Sept. 17, 2002, to Morocco on a Gulfstream jet, according to flight records and interviews.

Current and former officials said this was the period when Binalshibh was taped. His revelations remain classified but the recordings, the officials said, made no mention of the 9/11 plot. Its unclear who made the tapes or how they got to the agencys Langley, Va., headquarters.

In March 2003, Binalshibh was moved to a Polish facility code-named Quartz soon after his mentor, Mohammed, was nabbed in Pakistan. The CIA intentionally paraded Binalshibh past Mohammed. With the two in the same facility, interrogators could quickly check out their stories.

Considered uncooperative by his captors, Binalshibh was put on a liquid diet and subjected to a series of enhanced interrogation techniques, former CIA officials said.

The CIA officials discussed waterboarding him but decided against it. Mohammed endured the harsh technique scores of times.

Binalshibhs interviews became the foundation for parts of the 9/11 commission report, and he provided intelligence about a plot to crash aircraft into Londons Heathrow Airport and Canary Wharf, the citys financial center, an official said. The commission report described him and two other men as key plot facilitators.

With his intelligence value plumbed, Binalshibh was moved with al-Nashiri back to Rabat on June 6, 2003. In September 2003, Binalshibh and at least three other high-value terrorists were secretly flown to the Guantanamo Bay detention camp to prepare for a possible military trial. But they were all taken back to Morocco that spring before the U.S. Supreme Court could grant them access to lawyers.

Back in Rabat, one former official said, Binalshibh put on weight eating the countrys carbohydrate-heavy cuisine of couscous and chicken tagine.

From there it was on to Bucharest, Romania, in fall 2004. The facility consisted of six cells, each with a clock and arrow pointing to Mecca. Five other detainees were also housed there, including Mohammed and al-Nashiri.

Binalshibh didnt surface publicly until September 2006, when President George W. Bush announced that he and 13 other top terrorist detainees were being transferred to Guantanamo. The move came after the last remaining secret sites in Romania and Lithuania were closed.

Since his move to Guantanamo, Binalshibh has appeared increasingly erratic. Court records say he has broken cameras in his cell and smeared them with feces.

He has experienced delusions, complaining the CIA was intentionally shaking his bed and cell, according to court records and interviews. He imagined tingling sensations, suspecting things were crawling all over him, and developed a nervous tic, obsessively scratching himself.

Nine years after his capture, there is no indication when Binalshibh and other admitted 9/11 terrorists will face military or civilian trials.

While the tapes could have a bearing on any trial in the future, Binalshibh and other accused 9/11 conspirators have openly admitted their roles, praising the attacks.

Binalshibh and the others have asked to plead guilty, a move that would head off any trial and almost certainly guarantee the videotapes never get played in any court.



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Sony Updates PS3 Consoles With Bigger Drives, Netflix Streaming

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Sony announced its Playstation PS3 update at the Gamescom expo to bring larger capacity drives to the popular gaming console as well as disc-less Netflix streaming yay.

The PS3 now is available in 160 GB and 320 GB capacities, up from the older 120 GB and 250 GB capacities. The 160 Gb model is already shipping, and will cost the same as the one it replaces at $299. In the U.S., the consoles will only be available in black, though Japanese customers also have a white option. The 320 GB PS3 will be part of the Playstation Move bundle that packs in a motion sensor, Playstation Eye web camera, and will cost $50 higher due to the bundle at the $399 mark.

These new PS3s will be among the first to support the disc-less Netflix streaming service. Prior editions of Playstation required a disc to stream Netflix movie rentals. Its unclear if the PS3s will ship with this feature enabled or if the feature will be enabled via a future firmware update, which will also be available for older systems.

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Groups warn oil spill may be worse than claimed AP

WASHINGTON Researchers are warning that the Gulf of Mexico oil spill is a bigger mess than the government claims and that a lot of crude is lurking deep below the surface, some of it settling perhaps in a critical undersea canyon off the Florida Panhandle.

The evidence of microscopic amounts of oil mixing into the soil of the canyon was gathered by scientists at the University of South Florida, who also found poisoned plant plankton � the vital base of the ocean food web � which they blamed on a toxic brew of oil and dispersants.

Their work is preliminary, hasnt been reviewed by other scientists, requires more tests to confirm it is BPs oil they found, and is based on a 10-day research cruise that ended late Monday night. Scientists who were not involved said they were uncomfortable drawing conclusions based on such a brief look.

But those early findings follow a report on Monday from Georgia researchers that said as much as 80 percent of the oil from the spill remains in the Gulf. Both groups findings have already been incorporated into lawsuits filed against BP.

Both groups paint a darker scenario than that of federal officials, who two weeks ago announced that most of the oil had dissolved, dispersed or been removed, leaving just a bit more than a quarter of the amount that spewed from the well that exploded in April.

At the White House on Aug. 4, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration chief Jane Lubchenco said: At least 50 percent of the oil that was released is now completely gone from the system, and most of the remainder is degrading rapidly or is being removed from the beaches.

Thats not what the scientists from South Florida and Georgia found.

The oil is not gone, thats for sure, University of South Floridas David Hollander said Tuesday. There is oil and we need to deal with it.

University of Georgias Samantha Joye said: Its a tremendous amount of oil thats in the system. ... Its very difficult for me to imagine that 50 percent of it has been degraded.

Marine scientist Chuck Hopkinson, also with the University of Georgia, raised the obvious question: Where has all the oil gone? It hasnt gone anywhere. It still lurks in the deep.

NOAA spokesman Justin Kenney defended his agencys calculations, saying they are based on direct measurements whenever possible and the best available scientific estimates where direct measurements were not possible. But the vast majority of it is based on educated scientific guesses, because unless the oil was being burned or skimmed, measurements werent possible, NOAA response scientist Bill Lehr said earlier this month.

What is happening in the Gulf is the outcome of a decision made early on in the fighting of the spill: to use dispersants to keep the surface and beaches as clean as possible, at the expense of keeping oil stuck below the surface, said Monty Graham, a researcher at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama who was not part of the latest work. Oil degrades far more slowly in cooler, deeper waters than it would at the surface.

At the surface and the top 100 feet or so, it is obvious why oil is harmful, fouling marshes and hampering sea turtles, fish, birds and other life. Deep down, the effects are subtler, less direct. Oil at that depth can chip away at the base of the food web � plant plankton � and that could cause animals to go hungry. Reduced oxygen levels from natural gas and oil could also starve creatures of oxygen.

At depths of 900 to 3,300 feet, the University of South Florida researchers found problems with plant plankton. About two-fifths of the samples showed some degree of toxicity.

We found general phytoplankton health to be poor, Hollander said. By comparison, in non-oiled southern parts of the Gulf, the plant plankton were healthy, researchers said.

That makes sense because past research has shown that when oil when gets into the cell membranes of plankton, it causes all sorts of problems, said Paul Falkowski, a marine scientist at Rutgers University who was not part of the research. However, he said plant plankton dont live long anyway. They have about a weeks lifespan, he said, and in a few months this insult to the base of the food web could be history.

Still, the brew that is poisoning the plankton may linger and no one knows for how long, Hollander said.

The Florida researchers used ultraviolet light to illuminate micro-droplets of oil deep underwater. When they did that, it looked like a constellation of stars, Hollander said.

He also found the oil deposited in the sea bottom near the edges of the significant DeSoto Canyon, about 40 miles southwest of Panama City, Fla., suggesting oil may have settled into that canyon. The canyon is an important mixing area for cold, nutrient-laden water and warmer surface water. It is also key for currents and an important fisheries area.

Clearly the oil down in the abyss, theres nothing we can do about it, said Ed Overton of Louisiana State University. He said the environment at the surface or down to 100 feet or so is rapidly going back to normal, with shrimpers starting their harvest. But oil below 1,000 feet degrades much more slowly, he said.

Joye has measured how fast natural gas, which also spewed from the BP well, can degrade in water, and it may take as much as 500 days for large pools to disappear at 3,000 feet below the sea. That natural gas starves oxygen from the water, she said.

Youre talking about a best-case situation of a years turnover time, Joye said.

___

AP legal affairs reporter Curt Anderson in Miami contributed to this report.

___

Online:

University of Georgias oil spill page: http://oilspill.uga.edu



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Digital Summer Giveaway: Acer Aspire TimelineX Laptop, Courtesy of Intel

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On August 25th, Ubergizmo will host Digital Summer�photos, an event that brings together the most international, professional, and glamorous crowd in San Francisco to celebrate photography, fashion, art, and technology. Among the unique features of this one-of-a-kind event is a live runway fashion show RSVP here. To start celebrating now, weve joined forces with Intel, Digital Summers Gold sponsor, to give away an Acer Aspire TimelineX Laptop worth about $850. Here is the description of the Timeline X, in Intels own words then read the rules in the full post:

A smaller, lighter and more stylish laptop, the Acer Aspire TimelineX provides a balance of mobility and portability at 5+ pounds. Powered by the Intel� CoreTM i5 processer, it provides �smart� performance. This means that when you need it, it provides the power required for multi-taking and processor-intensive applications like video and when you dont, it powers down to provide longer battery life and improved energy efficiency. Intel is a world leader in computing innovation, designing and building the essential technologies that serve as the foundation for the worlds computing devices. Additional information about Intel is available at intel.com/pressroom and blogs.intel.com.

What to do: Rules Highlights

  • Dont enter the giveaway more than once we check
  • Post a comment. Any comment will do, but you might as well tell us why you want one and what you would do with it
  • The deadline to post a comment is August 25th at 23:59pm PT
  • This is open to legal U.S residents 50 states, 18 and older sorry, its a legal requirement
  • One winner/commenter will be chosen randomly. He or she will receive one 1 Acer Aspire TimelineX Estimated retail price - USD$850.00
  • Go read and agree to all the rules in this page. Good luck
  • Not part of the rules, but now would be a good time to become an Ubergizmo Fan on Facebook
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GOP calls Obama insensitive over stand on mosque AP

WASHINGTON Republican candidates around the country seized on President Barack Obamas support for the right of Muslims to build a mosque near ground zero, assailing him as an elitist who is insensitive to the families of the Sept. 11 victims.

From statehouses to state fairs on Tuesday, Republican incumbents and challengers unleashed an almost unified line of criticism against the president days after he forcefully defended the construction of a $100 million Islamic center two blocks from the site of the 2001 terror attacks.

Recalling the emotion of that deadly day, Republicans said that while they respect religious freedom, the presidents position was cold and academic, lacking compassion and empathy for the victims families.

He is thinking like a lawyer and not like an American, making declarations without Americas best interest in mind, said Andrew Harris, a Republican running for Congress in Maryland against first-term Democratic Rep. Frank Kratovil.

That line � emerging as a boilerplate attack � forced the endangered Democrat to respond.

I mean, it seems to me those are issues related to local zoning laws and so forth, and thats a decision that theyre going to have to make, but I dont see the federal government having any role in that, Kratovil said.

In Ohio, where the president was headed Wednesday as part of a three-state political swing, Republican congressional candidate Jim Renacci took issue with Obamas position and challenged his opponent, first-term Democrat John Boccieri, to do likewise.

Just because we may have the right to do something, doesnt necessarily make it right to do it, Renacci said.

The Boccieri campaign said the candidate was unavailable for comment Tuesday.

Republicans who werent on the ballot this year � but possibly looking ahead to challenging Obama in 2012 � sought to make it a political issue.

Well I think its another example of him playing the role of law professor. ... We can have a great debate about the legal arguments. But its not about that, Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty said in an interview Monday on Fox News.

Obama, a graduate of Harvard Law School, was a professor at the University of Chicago law school from 1992 to 2004.

Democrats face an unforgiving political landscape 11 weeks before midterm elections, with high unemployment, ethics charges against two senior House Democrats and Obamas low approval ratings taking a toll. The president injected another issue to the mix when he said last Friday that Muslims have the same right to practice their religion as everyone else in this country and that included building the Islamic center in lower Manhattan.

A day later, Obama told reporters that wasnt an endorsement of the specifics of the mosque plan.

Republicans called it the 9/11 Mosque and the Ground Zero Mosque, falsely describing it as if a place of worship were being built in the crater left behind when the Twin Towers crumbled. Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott started running a TV ad in Florida that said: Mr. President, ground zero is the wrong place for a mosque.

With a steady drumbeat, Republicans forced Democrats into difficult positions of either standing with the president or bucking him.

Democrats in Washington advised candidates to do what was best for their campaigns, reminding them of state demographics and poll results. Democrats sought to keep the conversation focused on job creation � their main message as economically struggling voters look to unleash their fury on the party in power.

In the end, senior Democrats told candidates, it wasnt as though the president of the United States or the White House needed their defense.

This wasnt something that the president viewed through a political lens, White House deputy press secretary Bill Burton told reporters aboard Air Force One as Obama flew to an appearance in Seattle. This is something that he saw as his obligation to address.

But it has been Democratic candidates who have had to address the issue of the mosque.

In Illinois, Rep. Mark Kirk, the Republican running for Obamas former Senate seat, said he respects religious freedom but suggested the Islamic center be built at a less controversial site.

His challenger, Illinois Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias, defended the decision to build the facility.

This is about every single religion and remembering what this country was founded on, Giannoulias said as he visited the state fair in Springfield. You cant just say things when theyre nice and flowery. You have to say them when its the right thing to do.

His remarks came one day after the Senates top Democrat, Harry Reid of Nevada, came out against plans to build a mosque near the World Trade Center site.

___

Associated Press writers Brian Witte in Annapolis, Md., Thomas J. Sheeran in Cleveland, Christopher Wills in Springfield, Ill., and White House Correspondent Ben Feller aboard Air Force One contributed to this report.



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Mexico City mayor demands cardinal apologize AP

MEXICO CITY Mexico Citys leftist mayor said Tuesday he will take legal action if a Roman Catholic cardinal doesnt apologize for suggesting he bribed the Supreme Court to uphold a city law allowing adoptions by same-sex couples.

Mayor Marcelo Ebrard says that if Cardinal Juan Sandoval Iniguez does not apologize by midnight, he is going to file a slander complaint.

The church opposes the Mexico City law, but the Supreme Court has ruled it constitutional.

Over the weekend, the cardinal suggested the justices may have been paid to uphold the law, using a slang word for corruption that refers to giving feed to livestock.

The court has denied and condemned the accusation.

In a statement, the Mexican Council of Bishops expressed its solidarity and regards for Sandoval Iniguez.

The council also stressed its continuing opposition to the adoption law and said we regret that when these opinions are expressed, there are those who rebuke them and threaten to sound the alarm about intolerance.

We spoke out, as part of the freedom of expression guaranteed by our democratic system, in opposition to the Supreme Court ruling, without implying any disrespect for the institutions of the Mexican government.



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Is the Nokia Box about the C6 ?

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Last week we posted about the #Nokia Box and looks like we might know that is inside the box finally. It looks like a Nokia C6 is inside the box in a photo posted by WOMWorldWill it be the originally announced C6� or the new leaked C6-01 with a 8MP Camera?

We should find out soon.

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NY gov. aims to meet with NYC mosque developers AP

ALBANY, N.Y. Gov. David Paterson, who last week suggested a proposed Islamic center and mosque near ground zero might want to relocate elsewhere, will meet soon with the projects developers, a spokesman said Tuesday.

Patersons office declined to say what the meeting would be about, but Rep. Peter King told The Associated Press that the governor wants to discuss possible alternate locations for the Park51 Islamic cultural center and mosque. King said he spoke with the governor Tuesday.

Representatives of the project said no meeting had been scheduled yet.

Paterson last week offered his help and the possibility that state land could be provided as an alternate site for the center. The project has ignited nationwide debate over freedom of religion and anger over the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

The planned $100 million center would be built two blocks from the World Trade Center site, where nearly 2,800 people died when Islamic extremists flew jets into the twin towers. The project is headed by Imam Faisal Abdul Rauf, a Muslim cleric who has worked to improve relations between Islam and the West.

Morgan Hook, a Paterson spokesman, said talks were under way between the governors office and representatives of Park51 to set up a meeting between Paterson and the projects leaders.

We are working with the developers on a staff level but there have not been any formal discussions between the governor and imam or developer, Hook said. We expect to have a meeting scheduled in the near future.

Mosque spokesman Oz Sultan released a statement Tuesday saying he did not believe a meeting had been scheduled yet.

We appreciate the governors interest as we continue to have conversations with many officials, Sultan said.

The Washington Post first reported the talks were under way.

King, the ranking minority leader of the Homeland Security Committee, said that he had spoken to Paterson on Tuesday and that the governor expected the meeting to take place within days.

He said he is meeting in the next day or so with the developers and the leaders of the mosque to discuss his proposal to move it to state land. My understanding was the imam is going to be there, King told the AP.

Rauf was scheduled to leave this week on a two-week trip to the Middle East as part of a religious outreach effort by the State Department.

___

Fouhy reported from New York.



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Blagojevich jurors ask for advice on verdict form AP

CHICAGO Jurors deliberating the corruption case against former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich asked the judge on Tuesday for advice on filling out their verdict forms, suggesting they are nearing the end of deliberations.

The jurors asked Judge James B. Zagel how they should mark the verdict form if they cant reach a decision on a count. In the first part of the note, they also asked for a copy of the oath they took before deliberating.

Zagel said in his response that they shouldnt mark the form if they havent been able to reach an agreement on a count but should write a statement saying they couldnt agree. Zagel told them they should not indicate how many were for or against conviction on the charge.

He also said he would provide a copy of the oath, which says: Do each of you solemnly swear that you will well and truly try, and a true deliverance make, in the case now on trial and render a true verdict according to the law and the evidence, so help you God?

Tuesday was the 14th day of deliberations � and the fourth note in as many days of deliberations. The succession of notes appears to signal at least some disagreement in the jury of six men and six women.

Zagel said the tenor of the note indicates there is at least a possibility a verdict may be returned this week.

In light of that, he ordered Blagojevich and his co-defendant brother Robert Blagojevich to be no more than a half hour away from the courthouse. Hed said previously that they could be as much as an hour away.

The Blagojevich brothers were not required to be in court for the reading of Tuesdays note � but the judge indicated they were on a phone line when he discussed the note in chambers with attorneys right before the hearing.

Prosecutors asked the judge to include in his note an additional instruction that jurors should make every effort to make a unanimous verdict. Zagel declined � possibly hinting that he may be willing to accept a partial verdict and let jurors remain hung on some counts.

At least some observers say the request for guidance on filling out the verdict card suggests jurors may be near to announcing a decision.

Because of the way the form is � I think they are struggling with how to mark it with a hung verdict, said Joe Rice, the head of the California-based Jury Research Institute.

He added that the request for the oath was unusual � something hes never heard of a jury asking for before. He says it suggests theres at least one dissenter on the panel.

It is obvious they want to use the oath to sway someone in the minority on the jury and challenge them about whether they are honoring elements of the oath, Rice said.

An attorney for Robert Blagojevich agreed.

Someone is going to be read that card and accused of not following their oath, Michael Ettinger, attorney for Robert Blagojevich, told reporters after the hearing. Why else would they ask for that card?

He added that he believes jurors have gone as far as they can go.

In a note sent to the judge last Thursday, jurors said they had managed to agree on just two counts, couldnt reach a decision on 11, and hadnt even deliberated on 11 wire fraud counts.

Zagel sent a note back saying jurors should deliberate on the wire fraud counts. But he didnt say what action he might take if jurors werent able to reach a consensus.

His options include accepting a partial verdict, then declaring the jury to be hung on the undecided charges. That could result in prosecutors retrying Blagojevich on counts jurors couldnt agree on.

On Monday, jurors had asked for transcripts of the testimony from former deputy governor Bradley Tusk and Zagel agreed to hand that over.

Tusk had testified that Blagojevich planned to hold up a $2 million grant to a school in then-U.S. Rep. Rahm Emanuels district until his Hollywood-agent brother, Ari, held a fundraiser. Tusk said he ignored a Blagojevich directive to deliver the message to Emanuel, saying he thought the plan was illegal and unethical.

Some trial observers saw the request for that testimony as a more hopeful sign for prosecutors. Notes toward the end of last week, though, seemed to offer the defense reason for optimism.

Blagojevich, 53, has pleaded not guilty to all 24 counts, including charges he tried to sell or trade Obamas old Senate seat for a high-paying job or campaign cash. His 54-year-old brother, Robert Blagojevich, a Nashville, Tenn., businessman, faces four counts and also pleaded not guilty.



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Sen Kerry: Karzai must fight graft or lose support AP

KABUL, Afghanistan U.S. Sen. John Kerry told the president of Afghanistan on Tuesday that his efforts to battle corruption were crucial if he wants to retain the support of U.S. taxpayers at a time when more American troops are dying in the war.

Kerrys two meetings with President Hamid Karzai came at a time when U.S. lawmakers are increasingly doubtful that the military effort can succeed without a serious campaign against bribery and graft that have eroded the Afghan peoples trust in their government.

I think that in the next days, the government of Afghanistans response to anti-corruption efforts are a key test of its ability to regain the confidence of the people and provide the kind of governance that the American people are prepared to support with hard-earned tax dollars and with most importantly, with the treasure of our country � the lives of young American men and women, Kerry told reporters.

If we have knowledge of things that we know are happening and the Afghan government doesnt respond to it, its going to be very, very difficult for us to look American families in the eye and say, `Hey, thats something worth dying for.

Last October when Kerry was in Kabul, he played an instrumental role in persuading Karzai to accept a run-off vote after a fraud-plagued presidential election. This trip comes just days after the arrest of one of Karzais top advisers, Mohammad Zia Salehi, for allegedly accepting a car in exchange for his help in exerting pressure on Afghan officials to ease off in another corruption case.

U.S. officials see Salehis arrest as a test case of Karzais willingness to fight corruption and are waiting to see if the president will impose restraints on corruption probes being conducted by the Major Crimes Task Force and the Sensitive Investigative Unit, which are mentored by U.S. and British law enforcement officials.

Im not going to stand up and defend for one instant a policy that is based on supporting a corrupt government � if thats what it wound up being, Kerry said. But thats the test right now, thats why Im here. I think President Karzai and his government need to understand that there is no patience for endless support for something that doesnt meet higher standards with respect to governance.

Kerry said he believes Karzai knows the American public is tiring of the nearly 9-year-old war that has claimed the lives of more than 1,200 U.S. service men and women. He knows that Republicans and Democrats alike are anxious about what is happening and not happening in Afghanistan, Kerry said.

At a recent hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which Kerry chairs, the panels ranking Republican, Richard Lugar of Indiana, said there was a lack of clarity about U.S. war goals. And Richard Holbrooke, the Obama administrations special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, said that while there were significant elements of movement forward in many areas, he does not yet see a definitive turning point in either direction.

At his first meeting with Karzai on Tuesday, Kerry said the Afghan president noted issues he wants the U.S. to address, including reducing the American footprint in the nation and refraining from setting up programs or institutions that should be handled by Afghan government. More urgently, Karzai expressed concern about Pakistans involvement in Afghanistan, Kerry said.

A statement released by the Afghans said Karzai recently sent a letter to President Barack Obama saying the war strategy needed to be reviewed. Without mentioning neighboring Pakistan, Karzai wrote that there needs to be more focus on the roots and sanctuaries of terrorism outside Afghanistan instead of only fighting the war in Afghan homes and villages.

Kerry said the U.S. shared Karzais concerns about insurgents who direct attacks from across the border in Pakistan.

Look, we are still dismantling and/or fighting threats, or thwarting them, that have come from the same people that attacked us in 2001, Kerry said. And we still know that theyre out there � some of them here, most of them in western Pakistan, to the best of our knowledge, some in the Arabian Peninsula and in Africa � and they continue to threaten. And you just cant take that lightly. So thats where we are.

Karzai has become increasingly vigorous in exerting its authority in affairs of his nation.

Just as Kerry was arriving, the Afghan government surprised the U.S. by ordering tens of thousands of private security contractors to cease operations in Afghanistan by the end of the year. The U.S. and its allies rely heavily on security companies to guard supply convoys, installations and development projects.

But complaints have mounted that the firms are poorly regulated, reckless and effectively operate outside local law.

Kerry said he agreed that it was important to reduce the role of security contractors but experts would have to decide whether a four-month timetable was appropriate in a nation where violence is on the rise.

Hours after the decree was issued, the U.S. Embassy expressed concern about unintended consequences about the timetable, saying it could delay U.S. reconstruction and development assistance efforts.



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Flood victims mob relief trucks in Pakistan AP

SHIKARPUR, Pakistan Victims of Pakistans deadly floods mobbed relief trucks carrying food Tuesday and authorities in the northwest warned of famine unless the regions farmers got immediate help with planting new crops.

The floods began three weeks ago, but there is little sign conditions are improving for some 20 million people � or one in nine Pakistanis � who are affected. Tens of thousands of villages remain under water, and officials feared that more flooding could be on the way.

The already shaky and unpopular government has been sorely tested by the disaster, which is complicating the U.S.-backed campaign against Islamist militants. The international community is rushing water, medicine, shelter and aid workers to the country, but aid groups and the British government have complained that the response has been too slow and not generous enough.

President Asif Ali Zardaris reputation sank to new lows after he chose to visit Europe on a state visit as the crisis unfolded. In a meeting with local aid groups, Zardari acknowledged Tuesday that the disaster response had not been very good.

Yes, the situation could have been better. Yes, the arrangements could have been made better. Yes, everything could have been better, he said. We have to move forward despite whatever criticism we get.

The U.N. appealed last week for $459 million for immediate relief efforts and has received 40 percent of that so far, said U.N. spokesman Maurizio Giuliano. Another $43 million has been pledged.

We would like our pledges to turn into checks as soon as possible because the situation is getting very bad, Giuliano said.

The World Bank said it will redirect $900 million of its existing loans to Pakistan for use in flood recovery.

For now, people displaced by high water are living in makeshift camps alongside their livestock or in flooded towns and villages.

The vast geographical extent of the floods and affected populations meant that many people have yet to be reached with the assistance they desperately need, the U.N. said. It also said the number of children and breast-feeding mothers affected and rising diarrhea cases point toward a clear risk of malnutrition among the affected population.

The floods have killed about 1,500 people and inundated 1.7 million acres 700,000 hectares of wheat, sugar cane and rice. Food prices have risen sharply.

Its all been destroyed. Ill get nothing this year, said wheat farmer Zubair Ahmed in hard-hit Sindh province. Nobody cares in the government. Were stranded, and they dont even pay attention to us.

Aid distribution in Sindh was chaotic and patchy.

We have never dealt with a calamity of this magnitude, said Faisal Edhi, who works for Pakistans largest private welfare organization, the Edhi Foundation. Were trying to make it, but I dont think weve been able to help 20 percent of the people we want to.

In the town of Shikarpur, about 100 people mobbed two trucks that were dropping off food. People climbed the side of the truck to grab supplies, forcing relief workers to whip them with lengths of rope to keep them away.

Mir Hassan, an elderly flood victim, held out his empty hands after the trucks went through.

I got nothing, he said, complaining that people who were unaffected by the floods were taking the aid.

In the northwest, where the floods began, provincial Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain said the irrigation system needed to be rebuilt urgently to revive the farming sector.

If immediate steps are not taken, we fear a famine, he said. The farmers have lost everything: their crops, their machines, their houses, their seeds.

U.S. Ambassador Anne Patterson said Washington had committed at least $87 million in aid and is expected to give more in the coming days. More U.S. helicopters were likely to join the 19 already dispatched to help ferry stranded Pakistanis and deliver food and other items, U.S. officials said.

Patterson said it was too soon to understand what impact the disaster would have on the Taliban and al-Qaida-led insurgency on Pakistani soil. But she played down concerns that Islamist militants were winning flood victims support through their own relief activities.

To be blunt, I think these stories about extremist organizations being the only players out there are greatly exaggerated, Patterson told a news conference in Islamabad.

In a reminder of the militant threat, police said they had arrested two suicide bombers on the outskirts of the main northwestern city of Peshawar. They were wearing jackets of explosives and were intending to attack targets in the city, said police officer Meera Jan.

___

Associated Press writer Nahal Toosi in Islamabad contributed to this report.



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Veteran Italian politician Cossiga dies AP

ROME Veteran politician Francesco Cossiga, who led Italys fight against domestic terrorism in the 1970s and 1980s but resigned after failing to save the life of a politician kidnapped by the Red Brigades, died on Tuesday. He was 82.

Cossiga had been hospitalized for over a week with heart and respiratory problems. His health took a drastic turn for the worse Monday night, and early Tuesday he was put back on life support, Romes Gemelli Polyclinic said.

Cossiga declared himself politically dead in 1978 after the Red Brigades leftist terrorist group assassinated his mentor and friend Aldo Moro, the leader of the Christian Democrats and a former premier, two months after kidnapping him.

But Cossiga went on to lead a vigorous political life for several more years, including as prime minister and president of the republic, Italys highest office.

As president in the mid-1980s, he used the largely ceremonial, head-of-state role to publicly lambast parliament and the judiciary in what some saw as an effort to spur reform in an increasingly inefficient, moribund postwar system of revolving door coalition governments.

Often accused of harboring political secrets, Cossiga, a staunch U.S. supporter, eventually admitted involvement in a shady Cold War-era, anti-Communist network known as Gladio.

In another murky, never resolved Italian case, Cossiga was premier in 1980 when an Italian domestic jetliner exploded in flight and crashed near the island of Ustica. Among theories for the jets demise was a bomb planted by domestic terrorists, or an errant U.S. or French missile allegedly fired at a Libyan MiG streaking over the Mediterranean.

Various nicknames marked the stages of Cossigas political career.

In the 1970s, the years of lead marked by a surge of domestic terrorism, leftists scrawled Killer Kossiga graffiti on walls. During his presidential years of outspoken � many said out-of-control � criticism, he was dubbed the picconatore � literally somebody wielding a pickax and roughly meaning a wrecker.

A constitutional law professor, Cossiga, silver-haired in his latter decades, likened himself to Don Quixote and held a post endowed with largely ceremonial duties in Italys postwar constitution to the limits.

Many, even his Communist foes, remembered him as a civil servant who always put the good of the state before his own. A deeply saddened Pope Benedict XVI prayed for him, Vatican Radio said.

He bade his farewell in four letters addressed to top Italian officials, saying he was always faithful to the republic. God protect Italy wrote Cossiga, a Catholic.

Cossiga was born on July 26, 1928 in Sardinia. He was the cousin of Enrico Berlinguer, the late longtime leader of the Italian Communist Party.

After receiving his law degree, Cossiga soon entered the local Christian Democratic party and rose in its ranks, entering parliament in 1958 and holding his first position in government as defense undersecretary in 1966.

The turning point of his career came a decade later, when he was made interior minister by then-Premier Moro. As the official in charge of state police forces, he was at the helm of the states fight against the left-wing and right-wing terror that was bloodying Italy with shootings and bombings. He oversaw a reform of public security forces and organized anti-terror departments.

In 1978, Cossiga played a key role during one of the most dramatic moments in Italys recent history when the Red Brigades kidnapped Moro and held the statesman in hideouts.

Often sleeping at his office, for 54 days Cossiga led feverish but futile efforts to pinpoint where the terrorists were holding Moro.

When Moros bullet-ridden body was found in the trunk of a car parked in downtown Rome � symbolically left in a street equidistant from the headquarters of the Christian Democrats and those of the Communists � Cossiga resigned.

Im politically dead, he was quoted as saying.

But he defended the governments refusal to negotiate the exchange of prisoners demanded by the Red Brigades, even as he knew then that by doing so he was signing Moros death sentence.

After a brief stint as premier between 1979 and 1980, Cossiga was elected by parliament as president of the republic in 1985, and once again faced tempestuous times.

The political system that had emerged in Italy after World War II, crippled by corruption and perennial compromise among coalition partners, was struggling to survive. It would soon collapse under the Clean Hands kickback scandals of the early 1990s, which swept the Christian Democrats from power and led to the rise of new political forces, including media mogul Silvio Berlusconis populist movement and the antiestablishment Northern League party.

Cossiga assailed the old system with a vehemence and directness that was unprecedented for an Italian head of state. Supporters said he wanted to spur reform; opponents thought he was overstepping the boundaries of his mandate.

Many thought he had simply gone crazy.

I am not mad, Cossiga said at the time. I am the fake madman who speaks the truth.

Calls for his resignation increased after disclosures about Gladio, a guerrilla network coordinated by NATO across Europe to organize resistance in the event of a Warsaw Pact invasion. In Italy, there was speculation of Gladios links to a series of unsolved right-wing terrorist attacks in the 1960s and 1970s.

Cossiga denounced his critics as traitors. To foes in the former Communist Party, which at that point had changed its name, he sent a more pointed message: chunks of the Berlin Wall.

Eventually, he did step down as president, leaving his post in April 1992 with two months to go before the end of his seven-year term. The kickback scandals were beginning to unfold.

In a dramatic televised speech, Cossiga said he was alone and a very weak man.

As a senator for life, an honor granted all former presidents, Cossiga remained vocal for years, even as his clout gradually diminished.

He is survived by a daughter, Anna Maria, and a son, Giuseppe, who is a deputy in Berlusconis conservative coalition. A private funeral will be held in Sardinia, reports said, as he asked in his letters that no state representatives attend the ceremony.



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Experts: Russia heat, smog trigger health problems AP

MOSCOW Russian health experts warned Tuesday that unprecedented heat and suffocating smog from wildfires will lead to more suicides, higher rates of alcohol abuse and other problems, and they accused the government of failing to address the long-term health dangers.

The hottest summer since records began 130 years ago has sparked thousands of fires in Russia, mostly in the western part of the country, and smoke from wildfires around Moscow again clouded some parts of the Russian capital, even though firefighters have scored successes in containing the blazes.

The number of deaths recorded in Moscow had doubled to an average of 700 per day during the worst of the scorching heat and smog, city officials said.

Boris Revich, a medical expert at the Moscow-based Institute for Economic Forecasts, said 5,840 more people had died in Moscow in July than during the same month last year. He said the report came from the city registry office, but it did not list ages or causes of death.

The main reasons seem to be heart and respiratory diseases, Revich said at a news conference Tuesday.

Even though the heat wave was expected to break later in the week, he said long-term health risks remained.

This heat has affected all organs, including respiratory and endocrine systems, and we should expect more cases of diabetes, suicides, alcohol-related nervous breakdowns, Revich said.

Official data on the number of suicides and medical conditions related to the heat wave are not available yet, he said.

Another expert deplored what he called the lack of long-term emergency planning in health care.

We never care to work with a future perspective in mind, Alexei Skripkov of the Federal Medical and Biological Agency said. Its a big systemic mistake.

He said that European nations such as Germany and France were quick to upgrade their health care policies after the unprecedented heat wave in 2003. Russian officials have failed to take similar measures, even though peat bog and forest fires have burned around Moscow in the past.

Russias Emergency Situations Ministry said that its teams have cut the area covered by fires around Moscow by more than a quarter over the past 24 hours, but 14 forest and peat bog fires are still burning east and southeast of the city.

On Tuesday, large sections of the capital were again cloaked by smog, although the concentration of pollutants remained far below their peak levels earlier this month when smog hung over the city for a week.

Alexei Popikov of the Mosecomonitoring watchdog agency said carbon monoxide levels in the air remained within their maximum safe limit Tuesday, but the amount of hydrocarbons is twice the permissible level. The situation improved with a wind change later in the day.

More than 50 people have died directly in the wildfires across Russia, and more than 2,000 homes have been destroyed.

The Emergency Situations Ministry said Tuesday that more than 166,000 people and 62 firefighting aircraft are battling wildfires across the country. It said the amount of land on fire nationwide has been halved since Monday.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin met with foreign pilots on Tuesday to thank them for their help and hand out awards. Italy, France and Turkey joined former Soviet republics Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine in sending aircraft and crews, he said, while other countries contributed firefighters and equipment.

It was particularly nice to see that when misfortune came to our house, we did not have to ask anyone for help or support, he said. Practically all of our partners responded immediately, showing their solidarity with Russia.

Drought has cost Russia a third of its wheat crop, prompting the government to ban wheat exports through the end of the year in a move that further spiked already soaring world grain prices. The government has promised subsidies to farmers and pledged to protect domestic consumers from unjustified price hikes.

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Associated Press writer Vladimir Isachenkov contributed to this report.



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Russias grain ban showcases Egypts love of bread AP

CAIRO Russias temporary ban on grain exports is stirring both political and economic anxiety in Egypt, the worlds largest wheat importer where half of the 80 million residents rely on subsidized bread to survive.

Russia, which supplies more than 50 percent of Egypts wheat imports, had announced a temporary ban on grain exports earlier this month because of a drought. In addition, Ukraine on Tuesday said it plans to halve grain exports for the rest of the year.

The Russian move predictably sent global grain prices higher. But for Egypt, it carried serious political and economic implications, and came at a delicate time for a government already accused of corruption and ignoring the needs of the poor.

Protests over rising food prices have been rife ahead of upcoming parliamentary elections this year and presidential elections next year, giving rise to concerns about who will steer a nation that has known one ruler for almost 30 years.

On Monday, a 24-year-old man known to suffer a heart condition died while waiting in a chaotic bread line outside a bakery in southern Egypt. Authorities said he died after a two-hour wait in the line on a particularly hot day.

The media called him the first victim of bread lines in the holy month of Ramadan, when consumption of bread and baked sweets are at an all time high.

Subsidized bread is the most important thing the government gives to the people, said Egyptian economist Mohammed Abu Pasha of investment house EFG-Hermes. It is a very basic and sensitive issue and the government had to act quickly to reassure people. It is not about elections, its about possible social unrest.

Even the language here conveys how essential bread is. Egyptians alone in the Arab world call it aish, Arabic for life. Its one of the few affordable staples in the country � costing the equivalent of $0.01 per round loaf.

Its subsidization, for decades, was one of the many unwritten understandings between the government and the countrys poor majority, even though food subsidies cost the country $3 billion per year � or roughly 65 percent of what it made in fiscal 2009 from the Suez Canal, one of its key foreign currency revenue sources.

Along with education and health care, the governments tacit pledge to help shoulder the costs of key goods was integral to its ability to appease a nation where officials are widely seen as corrupt, favoring wealthy business interests at the expense of the nearly 50 percent of Egyptians who live on less than $2 per day.

The government has been burned by bread before.

When it attempted to lift subsidies in 1977, deadly riots erupted. Authorities backed down and called in the army to maintain order in major cities.

The lesson from those bloody days in January, 33 years ago, resonate to this day.

Reminders have since emerged.

In 2008, at least seven people died in fights in bread lines that formed because of shortages.

The shortages were so acute that President Hosni Mubarak, Egypts ruler for the past 28 years, ordered army and police-run bakeries to step up production of the subsidized loaves to meet demand.

Small � though seemingly daily � protests over the past few months over rising prices are getting increasing media attention, and authorities would face serious challenges in keeping them from spreading.

The Russian ban also puts Egypt in a possible financial squeeze.

Trade Minister Rachid Mohamed Rachid said it would cost the country up to 4 billion Egyptian pounds $700 million in additional subsidies this current fiscal year to keep the price of bread unchanged. Officials had already planned on trying to trim the budget deficit, in part by targeting subsidies.

The bans timing, albeit coincidental, forced the government to act with uncharacteristic swiftness to alleviate concerns.

The holy month of Ramadan was about to start, and with it came a customary surge in food prices and consumption.

Egypt reached out to other suppliers to make up the shortfall and assured residents that it had a five-month stockpile. Prices would stay unchanged, officials promised.

Egyptian media have picked up on the issue, using the ban to revive old debates. Should Egypt, once a major regional agricultural center, grow more of what it needs? How viable is it to maintain the expensive, but politically sensitive bread subsidies? What can be done to reduce waste and fight bread-related corruption.

Poet-turned-political commentator Farouq Gweidah wrote in Al-Shorouk daily Sunday that the crisis over the Russian grain ban exposed the countrys failure in achieving food self-sufficiency and there should be state policy on growing certain strategic crops.

Who could believe that Egypt, the gift of the Nile and the land of agriculture, is no longer able to ensure that its people have bread to eat? he wrote in an opinion piece.



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Spain investigates Google wi-fi

Spain has become the latest country to launch an investigation into the collection of sensitive wi-fi data by Google.

Google has admitted that its Street View cars had accidentally collected data from unsecured wi-fi networks in more than 30 countries.

A Google representative has now been summoned to appear before a judge in Madrid on 4 October.

It is in response to a complaint by a privacy watchdog called Apedanica.

The Google representative has been summoned to explain what data was collected, how it was obtained and the number of people affected.

We are working with the authorities in Spain to answer any questions they have, said a spokesperson for Google.

Our ultimate objective is to delete the data consistent with our legal obligations and in consultation with the appropriate authorities.

Investigations are ongoing in France, Germany and Australia.

In the US, Google faces a class action lawsuit over the data harvesting, as well as a large scale investigation backed by 38 states.

In the UK, the Information Commissioner ICO recently cleared the company after it found that it had not collected significant personal details.

However, the firm is still under investigation by the Metropolitan police.

All of the probes were prompted by Googles admission that its Street View cars accidentally collected data from unsecured wi-fi networks over a period of four years.

The error has been blamed on a chunk of unsanctioned rogue code used in the cars.

It came to light following a request by data protection authorities in Hamburg, Germany, for more information about the operation of the service.



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Israel: Attacker holding hostages at Turk Embassy AP

TEL AVIV, Israel A man has taken hostages in the Turkish Embassy in Tel Aviv Tuesday after shots were fired outside, Israeli police and a Foreign Ministry official said.

Turkeys news agency said embassy security guards captured the attacker. The report quoted anonymous officials from the embassy.

A newspaper identified the attacker as a Palestinian who tried to seek asylum at another embassy four years earlier.

This is a hostage situation, Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor told The Associated Press.

Channel 2 TV played a recording of a phone call it said came from the attacker. I have two hostages, he said. I will blow up the embassy.

A lawyer told Israel Radio, however, that the hostages, the consul and his wife, had escaped.

Israel Radio reported from the scene that rescue workers with stretchers tried to enter the seaside embassy compound but left without bringing out any wounded.

The radio report said Turkish officials were not allowing Israeli police or rescue workers to enter the embassy.

We know of one lightly injured person, Eli Binn of the Israeli rescue service told Channel 10 TV.

The Israeli Maariv newspaper said the man called the paper, identifying himself as Nadim Injaz, a Palestinian who sought asylum at the British Embassy in Tel Aviv in 2006. He said he had a flammable liquid and threatened, I will kill any Jew that enters.

The Turkish Anatolia news agency reported that security guards at the embassy captured the attacker, and the situation was under control.

Lawyer Shafik Abuani told Israel Radio that he talked to the man three times by telephone, trying to calm him down. The lawyer said Injaz threatened to burn the embassy down if he is not granted asylum.

It was unclear what his relation to the hostage-taker was.

Abuani said Injaz demanded to be flown to Turkey and said he was being persecuted by the Israeli Shin-Bet security force.

The lawyer said only the Turkish consul and his wife were in the building at the time, and they escaped. I am in touch with the consul all the time by cell phone, and nothing happened to them, theyre OK, he said.

Turkey withdrew its ambassador from Tel Aviv in the wake of the Israeli attack on a Turkish flotilla heading for Gaza on May 31, when nine pro-Palestinian activists were killed.

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Associated Press Writer Ceren Kumova in Ankara contributed to this report.



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