Saturday, August 21, 2010

1 dead in Mexico shootout on border with El Paso AP

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico A gunbattle erupted between Mexican police and gunmen near the Rio Grande on Saturday, killing one person and prompting U.S. authorities to close a highway that runs along the border in El Paso, Texas.

There were no reports of bullets crossing into the U.S. side, El Paso police Detective Mike Baranyay said.

The gunmen attacked a municipal police patrol on a boulevard in Ciudad Juarez next to the border river, said Ramon Salinas, a spokesman for Mexicos federal police.

The fighting escalated when federal police rushed to help, he said. One gunman was killed and three municipal police officers were wounded.

El Paso police closed that citys border highway for about 30 minutes because of the shooting. City police said the U.S. Border Patrol asked for the shutdown.

Doug Mosier, a spokesman for the Border Patrol, said Paisano Street was closed in the interest of public safety. He said that to his knowledge, it was the first time a street in El Paso has been shut down because of a shooting in Mexico.

Traffic was halted on a stretch running from downtown El Paso to the citys northwest, passing the University of Texas-El Paso, which overlooks the border.

The fighting occurred in the same area where a deadly shootout between gunmen and Mexican police sent seven bullets across the border and into the El Paso City Hall on June 29.

Ciudad Juarez has become one of the deadliest cities in the world amid a territorial war between the Juarez and Sinaloa drug cartels. More than 1,860 people have been killed this year in the city of 1.3 million people.

Despite concerns of spillover violence, El Paso remains one of the safest cities in the United States. The city has recorded just three homicides so far this year.

Still, the violence has at times raised tensions between the U.S. and Mexico.

After the bullets hit El Paso City Hall, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott wrote President Barack Obama to warn that the state is under constant assault from illegal activity threatening a porous border.

That same month, a 15-year-old Mexican boy was fatally shot by a U.S. Border Patrol agent who was trying to arrest illegal immigrants crossing the Rio Grande. Some witnesses said a group of people on the Mexican side threw rocks at the agents.

Obama ordered thousands of National Guard troops to the border.

Elsewhere in Mexico on Saturday, authorities said the bodies of two security guards for Mexican bottling company FEMSA were found dead a day after a shootout in Santa Catalina, a suburb of the northeastern industrial city of Monterrey.

FEMSA said in a statement that four other guards who disappeared after Fridays shooting were located unharmed.

Police says the two slain guards were found Saturday in the trunk of a car. Three other guards were wounded Friday.

The company said the guards were on standard patrols when gunmen attacked outside a school. Police have not determined a motive, but the region is one of Mexicos most violent cartel battlegrounds.

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Associated Press writers Olivia Torres reported this story from Ciudad Juarez and Alicia A. Caldwell reported from El Paso, Texas.



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Australian PM says elections too close to call AP

CANBERRA, Australia It could take more than a week to learn who will govern Australia after a cliffhanger election � the closest in nearly 50 years � and the winner may have to woo the support of a handful of independent lawmakers in order to assume power.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Australias first female prime minister who seized power in an internal Labor Party coup only two months ago, said Saturday she will remain the nations caretaker leader during the anxious days ahead as vote-counting continues.

The Australian Electoral Commission website said early Sunday that center-left Labor and the conservative Liberal Party-led coalition each had 71 seats, meaning neither could achieve the 76-seat majority.

Obviously this is too close to call, Gillard told party faithful who gathered Saturday in her hometown Melbourne in the hope of hearing a victory speech. We will continue to fight to form government in this country.

Liberal leader Tony Abbott said he would immediately begin negotiations with independents to form a government.

We stand ready to govern and we stand ready to offer the Australian people stable, predictable and competent government, Abbott told supporters at Liberal campaign headquarters in Sydney.

Pundits said Australias major foreign policy positions, including its deployment of 1,550 troops to Afghanistan, would be unaffected by whichever party wins because both hold similar views. Domestic issues vary across the large and diverse country, including hot topics such as asylum seekers, health care and climate change.

An Australian government has not relied on the support of independent lawmakers to rule since 1942, however, that may change after the extremely tight vote. The ranks of the independents in the 150-seat lower house rose from two at the last election to three, possibly four, this time around.

Two independents, Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor, said they would side with whichever party could provide the most stable government. A third independent, Bob Katter, said he would lend support to the side that pledges the best deal for his constituents. All three are former members of conservative parties.

The election results were expected to be the closest since 1961, when a Liberal government retained power with a single seat.

Analyst Norman Abjorensen, an Australian National University political scientist, said the most likely outcome would be an unstable minority government led by Abbott and supported by independents. Abjorensen and other analysts predicted the final count would give Abbotts coalition 73 seats � one more than Labor.

With 75 percent of the votes counted Sunday, Labor national secretary Karl Bitar, the partys senior executive who is not a lawmaker, conceded that it could not hope to take more than 75 seats.

The Libs are in a very, very similar position, Bitar told Nine Network television.

Meanwhile, the left-wing Greens party attracted a record number of voters, delivering it a rare seat in the House of Representatives, the lower chamber where parties form the government.

The Greens were also likely to increase Senate representation in the 76-seat upper chamber from five to nine senators, assuring the party a say on contentious legislation.

Gillard, a cheerfully charismatic and sharp-witted 48-year-old former lawyer, came to power in a June 24 internal Labor party coup during the first term of her predecessor, Kevin Rudd, and almost immediately called elections to confirm her mandate.

Abbott, a married 52-year-old former Roman Catholic seminarian, barely gained the endorsement eight months ago of his Liberal Party, which has led Australia for most of the last 60 years.

Labor swept to power at 2007 elections after 11 years in opposition with almost 53 percent of the vote. But public support dipped below 50 percent recently.

Australians have not dumped a first-term government since 1931 when a Labor administration paid the ultimate price for the Great Depression.

Gillard seized the helm of her party from Rudd after a series of poor opinion polls. The Welsh-born immigrant acknowledged before voting closed that Labor could lose its eight-seat majority in the House of Representatives.

The decision by Labor power-brokers to support Gillard � widely regarded as a better communicator than Rudd � cost the party the traditional incumbents advantage.

One of those power-brokers, Paul Howse, said the decision was correct despite the loss of Labor votes Saturday.

I think the parliamentary party made the right decision, Howse told Australian Broadcasting Corp. television. Labor would have in fact done worse under a different leadership.

Abbott � whose socially conservative views alienate many women voters, but whose supporters say he can better empathize with Australian families � is his partys third choice as leader since Prime Minister John Howard led it to defeat in 2007. Abbott beat his predecessor by a single vote last December in a party ballot.

Abbott has long been seen as a gaffe-prone fitness enthusiast who is often lampooned in the media over the many images of him clad in Lycra cycling and swimming wear.

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Associated Press writers Kristen Gelineau in Sydney and Tanalee Smith in Adelaide, Australia, contributed to this report.



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Iran starts nuclear reactor, says intent peaceful AP

BUSHEHR, Iran Trucks rumbled into Irans first reactor Saturday to begin loading tons of uranium fuel in a long-delayed startup touted by officials as both a symbol of the countrys peaceful intentions to produce nuclear energy as well as a triumph over Western pressure to rein in its nuclear ambitions.

The Russian-built Bushehr nuclear power plant will be internationally supervised, including a pledge by Russia to safeguard it against materials being diverted for any possible use in creating nuclear weapons. Irans agreement to allow the oversight was a rare compromise by the Islamic state over its atomic program.

Western powers have cautiously accepted the deal as a way to keep spent nuclear fuel from crossing over to any military use. They say it illustrates their primary struggle: to block Irans drive to create material that could be used for nuclear weapons and not its pursuit of peaceful nuclear power.

Iran has long declared it has a right like other nations to produce nuclear energy. The countrys nuclear chief described the startup as a symbol of Iranian resistance and patience.

Despite all pressure, sanctions and hardships imposed by Western nations, we are now witnessing the startup of the largest symbol of Irans peaceful nuclear activities, Ali Akbar Salehi told reporters inside the plant with its cream-colored dome overlooking the Persian Gulf in southern Iran.

In several significant ways, the Bushehr plant stands apart from the showdowns over Iranian uranium enrichment, a process that can be used both to produce nuclear energy or nuclear weapons. It also could offer a possible test run for proposals to ease the impasse.

The Russian agreement to control the supply of nuclear fuel at Bushehr eased opposition by Washington and allies. Bushehrs operations are not covered by U.N. sanctions imposed after Iran refused to stop uranium enrichment. And last week, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the Russian oversight at Bushehr is the very model offered Tehran under a U.N.-drafted plan unveiled last year.

That proposal � so far snubbed by Iran � called for Iran to halt uranium enrichment and get its supplies of reactor-ready material from abroad.

Western leaders fear Irans enrichment labs could one day churn out weapons-grade material. Iran claims it has no interest in nuclear arms, but refuses to give up the right to make its own fuel.

Iran has some of the worlds biggest oil reserves, but lacks refinery capacity to meet domestic demand and must repurchase fuel on international markets. Nuclear power is seen as both a goal to meet power needs and an important technological achievement for the Islamic government.

The French Foreign Ministry said the Russian deal shows Iran does not need to enrich uranium to benefit from civilian nuclear power.

This clearly shows that the sanctions do not aim to deprive Iran of its right to develop nuclear energy for peaceful uses, said the French statement.

In London, a Foreign Office junior minister, Alistair Burt, said the loading of Russian fuel at Bushehr demonstrates that Iran can have the benefits of nuclear power.

But conservative Iranian lawmaker Arsalan Faithipour struck a tone of defiance.

The startup at Bushehr proved the ineffectiveness of sanctions, he said.

After years of delays in completing the plant, Moscow now claims that the project is essential to persuading Iran to cooperate with international efforts to ensure it does not develop the bomb.

Iran has said that monitors from the U.N. nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, will have access to the fuel shipments at Bushehr, about 745 miles 1,200 kilometers south of Tehran. Spent fuel contains plutonium, which can be used to make atomic weapons.

U.N. nuclear inspectors were on hand Saturday as the first truckloads of fuel were taken from a storage site to a pool inside the reactor. Over the next two weeks, 163 fuel assemblies � equal to 80 tons of uranium fuel � will be moved inside the building and then into the reactor core.

It will be another two months before the 1,000-megawatt light-water reactor � heavily guarded by soldiers and anti-aircraft batteries � is pumping electricity to Iranian cities.

Two weeks ago, two Iranian drones were sent over Bushehr to test of air defense capability. The drones were picked up, but were grounded before forces guarding the nuclear plant could open fire, Bushehr Provincial Gov. Mohammad Hossein Jahanbakhsh told The Associated Press.

The decision had been to test the capability of the Bushehr air defense system. The reaction was appropriate and authorities were happy, he said.

The uranium fuel Russia has supplied for Bushehr is well below the more than 90 percent enrichment needed for a nuclear warhead. Iran is already producing its own uranium enriched to the Bushehr level � about 3.5 percent. It also has started a pilot program of enriching uranium to 20 percent, which officials say is needed for a medical research reactor.

Salehi said Iran will continue to enrich uranium to 20 percent, but had no intention to continuing the higher level of enrichment forever.

Iran raised more alarm in the West with its recent declaration of plans to build 10 new uranium enrichment sites inside protected mountain strongholds. It said it will begin construction on the first one in March in defiance of the U.N. sanctions.

Today is a historic day and will be remembered in history, Salehi said at a news conference alongside the head of Russias state-run nuclear corporation, Sergei Kiriyenko.

The countdown to the Bushehr nuclear power plant has started, Kiriyenko said. Congratulations.

Russia signed a $1 billion contract to build the Bushehr plant in 1995 but has dragged its feet on completing the work. Moscow had cited technical reasons for the delays, but analysts say Russia used the project to try to press Iran to ease its defiance over uranium enrichment.

Iran has announced plans to build other reactors and says designs for a second rector in southwestern Iran are taking shape.

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Associated Press writers Jennifer Quinn in London, Angela Doland in Paris and Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contributed to this report.



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Gunmen fighting Rio police invade luxury hotel AP

RIO DE JANEIRO Heavily armed drug gang members engaged in an intense firefight with police, then fled into a luxury hotel popular with foreign tourists and held about 30 people hostage for three hours Saturday before surrendering.

The upscale, beachside neighborhood of Sao Conrado where the Intercontinental Hotel sits was transformed into a war zone as upward of 50 gunmen with high-caliber rifles, pistols and even hand grenades faced off with police.

A police spokeswoman said the gunbattle began when police spotted about 10 cars and vans leaving the Vidigal slum heading toward the nearby Rocinha slum, one of Latin Americas largest.

Both shantytowns are controlled by the Amigos dos Amigos Friends of Friends drug gang, and the spokeswoman said the gang members were leaving an all-night party in Vidigal when they ran into the police patrol and began shooting.

Bullets flew for about 40 minutes, terrifying residents of Sao Conrado, which contains a road linking the two slums. Most of the gunmen fled into Rocinha, but 10 ran into the Intercontinental where they quickly grabbed hostages and holed up in the hotels kitchen.

Spent casings littered the streets around the hotel. One woman was killed, and four bystanders and three policeman were wounded.

Police said initially that the dead woman was an innocent bystander, but later said she was with the gunmen and had a warrant out for her arrest for alleged drug gang involvement.

It seemed as if I was in Iraq, neighborhood resident Jose Oliveira e Silva told the Globo television network.

Amateur video aired on Globo showed a group of black-clad police taking heavy fire and returning it from behind a garbage truck. Sanitation workers in bright orange jumpsuits also huddled behind the truck, waiting for the onslaught to end.

We are all frightened to death, another witness, Ricardo Valladares, told Globo during the fighting. No one is leaving the building because we dont know if there are more criminals nearby.

The police spokeswoman, who could not be identified because she was not authorized to discuss the matter, said authorities negotiated with the gunmen to get them to surrender.

All of the hostages are freed and 10 suspects are in custody, she said, adding that police searched the hotel for other gunmen but found none.

Other television images showed an elite military police unit entering the hotel and evacuating dozens of guests, many of whom were there for a dentists convention.

Security in Rio de Janeiro is of great concern as the city prepares to host the final of the 2014 football World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games. Officials have vowed to fight violence, and in the past year started an aggressive program of invading slums where heavily armed drug gangs hold sway, driving them out and creating police posts.

The program has managed to clear gangs from about 10 slums in Rios rich southern zone.

The Intercontinental is a favorite among foreign tourists, but the nationalities of those taken hostage was not immediately known.

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Associated Press Writer Stan Lehman in Sao Paulo contributed to this report.



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Sweden withdraws warrant for WikiLeaks founder AP

STOCKHOLM Swedish authorities revoked a short-lived arrest warrant for the founder of WikiLeaks on Saturday, saying a rape accusation against him lacked substance.

Julian Assange, who was believed to be in Sweden, remained under suspicion of a lesser crime of molestation in a separate case, prosecutors said.

The nomadic 39-year-old Australian dismissed the allegations in a statement on WikiLeaks Twitter page, saying the charges are without basis and their issue at this moment is deeply disturbing.

WikiLeaks is preparing to release of a fresh batch of classified U.S. documents from the Afghan war, despite warnings from the Pentagon that they could endanger American soldiers and their Afghan helpers.

A Stockholm prosecutor issued the arrest warrant on Friday, saying Assange was suspected of rape and molestation in two separate cases. But chief prosecutor Eva Finne withdrew the warrant within 24 hours.

I dont think there is reason to suspect that he has committed rape, Finne said in a brief statement.

Karin Rosander, a spokeswoman for the Swedish Prosecution Authority, said Assange remains suspected of molestation, a less serious charge that would not lead to an arrest warrant.

The prosecutor hasnt made a decision on that count, Rosander told The Associated Press. The investigation continues.

Molestation covers a wide of range of offenses under Swedish law, including inappropriate physical contact with another adult, and can result in fines or up to one year in prison.

Assange was in Sweden last week seeking legal protection for the whistle-blower website, which angered the Obama administration by publishing thousands of leaked documents about U.S. military activities in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The first files in Wikileaks Afghan War Diary revealed classified military documents covering the war in Afghanistan from 2004 to 2010. Assange said Wednesday that WikiLeaks plans to release a new batch of 15,000 documents from the Afghan war within weeks.

The Pentagon has demanded WikiLeaks return all leaked documents and remove them from the Internet.

Assange has no permanent address and travels frequently � jumping from one friends place to the next. He disappears from public view for months at a time, only to reappear in the full glare of the cameras at packed news conferences to discuss his sites latest disclosure.

Assange declined to talk about his background at a news conference in Stockholm a week ago. Equally secretive is the small team behind WikiLeaks, reportedly just a half-dozen people and casual volunteers who offer their services as needed.

A WikiLeaks spokesman, who says he goes by the name Daniel Schmitt in order to protect his identity, told AP in a telephone interview from Iceland that the extremely serious allegations came as a complete surprise.

Apart from the comment from Assange, WikiLeaks Twitter page had a link to an article in Swedish tabloid Expressen, which first reported the allegations.

We were warned to expect dirty tricks. Now we have the first one, it said.

On its official blog, WikiLeaks expressed full support for Assange and said it will be continuing its regular operations.

Assange was in Sweden partly to apply for a publishing certificate to make sure the website, which has servers in Sweden, can take full advantage of Swedish laws protecting whistle-blowers.

He also spoke at a seminar hosted by the Christian faction of the opposition Social Democratic party and announced he would write bimonthly columns for a left-wing Swedish newspaper.

A physics Ph.D, Assange hasnt shied from taking on both government officials and the press. Media profiles have detailed an unsettled upbringing � the Australian press has reported Assange attended dozens of schools growing up � and he still seems to live on the move, his computer traveling with him in a backpack.

Assange told Der Spiegel in an interview that he likes confronting the powerful. I enjoy creating systems on a grand scale, and I enjoy helping people who are vulnerable, he said. And I enjoy crushing bastards. So it is enjoyable work.

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Associated Press Writer Juergen Baetz in Berlin contributed to this report.



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Egyptian minister: Search still on for van Gogh AP

CAIRO Egypts culture minister on Saturday retracted his claim that police had recovered a van Gogh painting stolen from a Cairo museum, saying it was based on inaccurate information and that the search for the canvas continues.

The minister, Farouk Hosni, said earlier Saturday that police had confiscated the painting from an Italian couple at Cairo airport hours after it was lifted from the Mahmoud Khalil Museum in the Egyptian capital.

But Hosni later backtracked, telling a national television news program that the statement was based on information we received that was false and incorrect. He said authorities are still searching for the missing painting, which goes by two titles � Poppy Flowers and Vase with Flowers. Hosni said the piece is valued at around $50 million.

It was not clear what caused the confusion over the artworks fate, and officials could not be immediately contacted to clarify.

This is the second time this painting by the Dutch-born postimpressionist has been stolen from the Khalil museum. Thieves first made off with the canvas in 1978, before authorities recovered it two years later at an undisclosed location in Kuwait.

Officials have never fully revealed the details of that theft. When it was recovered, Egypts then-interior minister said three Egyptians involved in the heist had been arrested and informed police where the canvas was hidden. Authorities never reported whether the thieves were charged or tried.

The 12-inch-by-12-inch 30-centimer-by-30-centimeter canvas, believed to have been painted in 1887, resembles a flower scene by the French artist Adolphe Monticelli, whose work deeply affected van Gogh. The Monticelli painting also is part of the Khalil collection.

Most of the works for which van Gogh is remembered were painted in 29 months of frenzied activity before his suicide in 1890 at age 37.

The Cairo canvas is significant because it represents a turning point in van Goghs painting style, said Conor Jordan, the head of impressionist and modern art at Christies auction house in New York.

It shows him assimilating the influences of the French avant-garde after having arrived in 1886 from Amsterdam, absorbing as much as possible the current trend of French painting, Jordan told the Associated Press. He added that it was a time when van Gogh was immersed in this wonderful new world of color.

Jordan said that van Goghs work has a particular resonance with the public today, and the story of his turbulent life and career carries a powerful message that helps makes his work so coveted around the world.

Other works in the Khalil museums collection, all from the 19th-century French school, are by Paul Gauguin, Gustave Courbet, Francois Millet, Claude Monet, Edouard Manet, Auguste Renoir and Auguste Rodin.



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AP Enterprise: Spill bound BP, feds together AP

NEW ORLEANS For months, the U.S. government talked with a boot-on-the-neck toughness about BP, with the president wondering aloud about whose butt to kick.

But privately, it worked hand-in-hand with the oil giant to cap the runaway Gulf well and chose to effectively be the companys banker � allowing future drilling revenues to potentially be used as collateral for a victim compensation fund.

Now, with a new round of investigative hearings set to begin Monday on BPs home turf and the disaster largely off the front pages, theres worry BP PLC could get a slap on the wrist from its behind-the-scenes partner. That could trickle down to states hurt by the spill and hoping for large fines because they may share in the pie.

I dont think theyve been as tough as they should have been from Day 1, said Billy Nungesser, president of Lousianas hard-hit Plaquemines Parish. We were at war. You dont go to war and hope people respond.

In the past few weeks, public messages from BP and the government have been almost in lockstep. The government even released a report � criticized by academic researchers and some lawmakers as too rosy � asserting that much of the oil released into the Gulf is gone, playing into BPs message that its unprecedented response effort is working. A recent AP poll shows that BPs image, which took a beating after the oil spill, is recovering.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., said Thursday that White House support for the oil report shows the administrations pre-occupation with the public relations of the oil spill has superseded the realities on the ground.

That differs from the atmosphere early on, when BP was the recipient of some very tough talk from the government. A little more than a week after President Barack Obamas on-air comment about whose ass to kick in early June, BP executives encouraged White House officials at a meeting in Washington to back off on the rhetoric. They reminded the government that a bankrupt company pays no bills, according to a person who was briefed on the details of the meeting and spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks.

In mid-July, BP finally capped its runaway well and is now very close to sealing it from the bottom once and for all.

With the crisis shifting from response to recovery, the focus will be on whos to blame and how much they should pay. The BP-government partnership raises questions about the governments ability to be impartial in meting out punishment for the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history.

Many of those investigating the spill are not independent.

Whether the public accepts that remains to be seen, said Wayne R. Andersen, a retired federal judge and the only nongovernment member of a key spill investigative panel.

The Deepwater Horizon joint investigation team that Andersen is on will hold its fourth set of hearings beginning Monday in Houston, where BPs U.S. offices are located. The panel is charged with reaching conclusions about what happened.

Congress and the Justice Department also are investigating, and various government agencies will be determining how much BP and others should pay in fines for the April 20 explosion that killed 11 workers and spilled 206 million gallons of oil.

The amount of spilled oil alone could mean a fine of up to $21 billion if BP were found to have committed gross negligence, and criminal charges could be in order if negligence is found. The figure is important to the Gulf because Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., is pushing legislation that would require that at least 80 percent of the civil and criminal penalties charged to BP under the Clean Water Act be returned to the Gulf Coast for long-term economic and environmental recovery.

So if the government reaches a settlement with BP on fines that are significantly lower or, on the criminal side, lets them off easy, that could rub a lot of Americans the wrong way. By the same token, if the government comes down too hard on BP, that might hurt the governments interests, because BPs financial health and its ability to meet its spill obligations are tied together.

BP executives declined repeated requests for interviews for this story.

There are also other companies interests to consider: Transocean, the owner of the rig that exploded, and Anadarko Petroleum, a minority owner of the undersea well, will be looking to protect themselves by shifting blame to BP, while BP also will be looking to shift blame.

Theyre all trying to hide the football, said Daniel Becnel, a Louisiana lawyer suing BP and others over the oil spill.

The entire oil and gas industry will be watching closely to see if BPs ace in the hole � its relationship with the federal government � pays off.

The ties that bind BP and the government together started forming soon after the rig explosion.

BP and U.S. Coast Guard employees sat side-by-side in a command center in Robert, La., coordinating the spill response and fielding calls together from media from around the world. That setup later moved to a high-rise office building in downtown New Orleans.

According to a person who has worked in the command center, the response team in New Orleans occupies two floors. Coast Guard and BP leaders each have a set of offices and work areas. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement, formerly known as the Minerals Management Service, also has its own office, the person said. At the height of the spill, more than 400 people were on the two floors. Now, about 200 folks sit in those offices on any given day.

Often, the people from the BP leadership team would go into the Coast Guard offices with issues and vice versa, the person said.

BP and the government also worked together to control media access.

The Coast Guard and BP coordinated access for The Associated Press aboard the Helix Q4000 vessel in early August on the day of the so-called static kill operation, in which mud and later cement was pumped into the runaway well from the top. Accompanying the AP reporter and photographer on a BP-chartered helicopter to the vessel were six BP employees and a Coast Guard liaison. A photographer working for the White House also was aboard.

Retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the governments point man on the spill response, told the AP that the complexity of the response and technical know-how required made BP the natural partner.

That may seem a little bit at odds and maybe not well understood by the American public or even some leaders, but it is in fact how we have been managing oil spills in this country for 20 years, Allen said.

And, he said, the law dictated that the responsible party clean up the mess.

You have to be able to tell them what you want, and they have to write a check, Allen said. It would be inadvisable to do that anywhere but sitting next to each other.

When asked if independent industry experts could have been brought in to work on the response instead of BP � knowing that the government would be investigating the oil giant � Allen quipped, Replace them with who?

Allen said the government doesnt have the competence or capacity to deal with drilling a relief well and the type of technology it takes.

Would you suggest I bring in a competitor? Allen said. One of the conundrums of this response is, and one of the things that I think is causing everybody some problems, is the federal government does not own the means of production to solve this problem at the wellhead.

On the flip side, could independent investigators have been brought in to render judgment?

Andersen, the retired judge recently appointed to the joint Coast Guard-Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement investigative panel, said that when you are dealing with a highly technical and narrow area of expertise, there is going to be overlap of the knowledge of the regulators and those they are regulating.

Naturally, that needs to be out on the table, Andersen said.



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Australian PM says elections too close to call AP

CANBERRA, Australia It could take more than a week to learn who will govern Australia after a cliffhanger election � the closest in nearly 50 years � and the winner may have to woo the support of a handful of independent lawmakers in order to assume power.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Australias first female prime minister who seized power in an internal Labor Party coup only two months ago, said Saturday she will remain the nations caretaker leader during the anxious days ahead as vote-counting continues.

The Australian Electoral Commission website said early Sunday that center-left Labor and the conservative Liberal Party-led coalition each had 71 seats, meaning neither could achieve the 76-seat majority.

Obviously this is too close to call, Gillard told party faithful who gathered Saturday in her hometown Melbourne in the hope of hearing a victory speech. We will continue to fight to form government in this country.

Liberal leader Tony Abbott said he would immediately begin negotiations with independents to form a government.

We stand ready to govern and we stand ready to offer the Australian people stable, predictable and competent government, Abbott told supporters at Liberal campaign headquarters in Sydney.

Pundits said Australias major foreign policy positions, including its deployment of 1,550 troops to Afghanistan, would be unaffected by whichever party wins because both hold similar views. Domestic issues vary across the large and diverse country, including hot topics such as asylum seekers, health care and climate change.

An Australian government has not relied on the support of independent lawmakers to rule since 1942, however, that may change after the extremely tight vote. The ranks of the independents in the 150-seat lower house rose from two at the last election to three, possibly four, this time around.

Two independents, Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor, said they would side with whichever party could provide the most stable government. A third independent, Bob Katter, said he would lend support to the side that pledges the best deal for his constituents. All three are former members of conservative parties.

The election results were expected to be the closest since 1961, when a Liberal government retained power with a single seat.

Analyst Norman Abjorensen, an Australian National University political scientist, said the most likely outcome would be an unstable minority government led by Abbott and supported by independents. Abjorensen and other analysts predicted the final count would give Abbotts coalition 73 seats � one more than Labor.

With 75 percent of the votes counted Sunday, Labor national secretary Karl Bitar, the partys senior executive who is not a lawmaker, conceded that it could not hope to take more than 75 seats.

The Libs are in a very, very similar position, Bitar told Nine Network television.

Meanwhile, the left-wing Greens party attracted a record number of voters, delivering it a rare seat in the House of Representatives, the lower chamber where parties form the government.

The Greens were also likely to increase Senate representation in the 76-seat upper chamber from five to nine senators, assuring the party a say on contentious legislation.

Gillard, a cheerfully charismatic and sharp-witted 48-year-old former lawyer, came to power in a June 24 internal Labor party coup during the first term of her predecessor, Kevin Rudd, and almost immediately called elections to confirm her mandate.

Abbott, a married 52-year-old former Roman Catholic seminarian, barely gained the endorsement eight months ago of his Liberal Party, which has led Australia for most of the last 60 years.

Labor swept to power at 2007 elections after 11 years in opposition with almost 53 percent of the vote. But public support dipped below 50 percent recently.

Australians have not dumped a first-term government since 1931 when a Labor administration paid the ultimate price for the Great Depression.

Gillard seized the helm of her party from Rudd after a series of poor opinion polls. The Welsh-born immigrant acknowledged before voting closed that Labor could lose its eight-seat majority in the House of Representatives.

The decision by Labor power-brokers to support Gillard � widely regarded as a better communicator than Rudd � cost the party the traditional incumbents advantage.

One of those power-brokers, Paul Howse, said the decision was correct despite the loss of Labor votes Saturday.

I think the parliamentary party made the right decision, Howse told Australian Broadcasting Corp. television. Labor would have in fact done worse under a different leadership.

Abbott � whose socially conservative views alienate many women voters, but whose supporters say he can better empathize with Australian families � is his partys third choice as leader since Prime Minister John Howard led it to defeat in 2007. Abbott beat his predecessor by a single vote last December in a party ballot.

Abbott has long been seen as a gaffe-prone fitness enthusiast who is often lampooned in the media over the many images of him clad in Lycra cycling and swimming wear.

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Associated Press writers Kristen Gelineau in Sydney and Tanalee Smith in Adelaide, Australia, contributed to this report.



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Gunmen fighting Rio police invade luxury hotel AP

RIO DE JANEIRO Heavily armed drug gang members engaged in an intense firefight with police, then fled into a luxury hotel popular with foreign tourists and held about 30 people hostage for three hours Saturday before surrendering.

The upscale, beachside neighborhood of Sao Conrado where the Intercontinental Hotel sits was transformed into a war zone as upward of 50 gunmen with high-caliber rifles, pistols and even hand grenades faced off with police.

A police spokeswoman said the gunbattle began when police spotted about 10 cars and vans leaving the Vidigal slum heading toward the nearby Rocinha slum, one of Latin Americas largest.

Both shantytowns are controlled by the Amigos dos Amigos Friends of Friends drug gang, and the spokeswoman said the gang members were leaving an all-night party in Vidigal when they ran into the police patrol and began shooting.

Bullets flew for about 40 minutes, terrifying residents of Sao Conrado, which contains a road linking the two slums. Most of the gunmen fled into Rocinha, but 10 ran into the Intercontinental where they quickly grabbed hostages and holed up in the hotels kitchen.

Spent casings littered the streets around the hotel. One woman was killed, and four bystanders and three policeman were wounded.

Police said initially that the dead woman was an innocent bystander, but later said she was with the gunmen and had a warrant out for her arrest for alleged drug gang involvement.

It seemed as if I was in Iraq, neighborhood resident Jose Oliveira e Silva told the Globo television network.

Amateur video aired on Globo showed a group of black-clad police taking heavy fire and returning it from behind a garbage truck. Sanitation workers in bright orange jumpsuits also huddled behind the truck, waiting for the onslaught to end.

We are all frightened to death, another witness, Ricardo Valladares, told Globo during the fighting. No one is leaving the building because we dont know if there are more criminals nearby.

The police spokeswoman, who could not be identified because she was not authorized to discuss the matter, said authorities negotiated with the gunmen to get them to surrender.

All of the hostages are freed and 10 suspects are in custody, she said, adding that police searched the hotel for other gunmen but found none.

Other television images showed an elite military police unit entering the hotel and evacuating dozens of guests, many of whom were there for a dentists convention.

Security in Rio de Janeiro is of great concern as the city prepares to host the final of the 2014 football World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games. Officials have vowed to fight violence, and in the past year started an aggressive program of invading slums where heavily armed drug gangs hold sway, driving them out and creating police posts.

The program has managed to clear gangs from about 10 slums in Rios rich southern zone.

The Intercontinental is a favorite among foreign tourists, but the nationalities of those taken hostage was not immediately known.

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Associated Press Writer Stan Lehman in Sao Paulo contributed to this report.



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Analysis: Talks to test Netanyahus will for peace AP

JERUSALEM Hawkish Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has the security credentials and the political strength to pull off a peace deal with Palestinians now that the U.S. has brokered a new start to direct talks.

The big questions is: Does he have the will?

Netanyahu heads to Washington on Sept. 1 for the launch of the first direct negotiations in nearly two years with the Palestinians. The White House hopes to forge a deal that has eluded its predecessors within a year � a formidable challenge.

Though Netanyahu has built his political career in part as an outspoken critic of peace moves by past Israeli leaders, he has shown surprising pragmatism in dealing with the moderate Palestinian leadership of the West Bank.

Netanyahu has made a series of concessions under heavy U.S. pressure � an indication that he is both pragmatic and susceptible to arm-twisting from Israels closest and most important ally.

Shortly after his re-election a year ago, the prime minister removed dozens of military checkpoints in the West Bank. The lifting of the travel restrictions, which Israel said were a security measure during a previous decade of violence, helped breathe life into what has become a miniature economic boom in the Palestinian territory.

Last year, Netanyahu endorsed the concept of a Palestinian state, and later imposed a 10-month slowdown on construction of new homes in West Bank Jewish settlements. Earlier this year, he informally imposed a similar, albeit undeclared, freeze on new Jewish housing developments in east Jerusalem. Such moves would have been unthinkable for him a few years ago.

Still there are enormous obstacles to overcome before any deal can be reached.

Netanyahu says he will not give up east Jerusalem and has not talked about the possibility of a broad withdrawal from the West Bank, where more than 200,000 Jewish settlers live among about 2.4 million Palestinians and Israel maintains military control. Palestinians claim all the West Bank and east Jerusalem as well as Gaza � areas captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war � for their future state. The international community backs the Palestinian demand.

This has made the Palestinians extremely leery about speaking to the Israeli leader.

Another problem is the roughly 4 million Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza are deeply divided. They have different governments. And Netanyahus partner for talks, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, is weak and only represents about half the Palestinians in the territories.

Nevertheless, there is some reason for hope that President Barack Obamas initiative will fare better than the doomed attempts of past American leaders.

In dealing with the Israeli public, Netanyahus credibility as a security hawk and secure political standing could enable him to follow in the footsteps of former Prime Ministers Menachem Begin and Ariel Sharon, two other right-wing icons who ultimately made sweeping gestures for peace.

Begin reached the 1979 historic peace accord with Egypt, requiring a full withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula, while Sharon withdrew all Israeli troops and settlements from the Gaza Strip five years ago.

Netanyahus actions have not always matched his tough-talking rhetoric. In his previous term as prime minister in the 1990s, he withdrew Israeli forces from Hebron and handed over additional control of the West Bank to Palestinians.

Equally significant, his coalition government, a grouping dominated by a mix of nationalistic and hard-line religious parties, has remained solidly intact despite unhappiness with some of Netanyahus moves.

Without any serious opposition, Netanyahu has great freedom in conducting negotiations. And if any hard-line coalition partners were to break away, Netanyahu could turn to the moderate opposition to remain in power.

For now, it remains unclear whether Netanyahu is ready to make bold steps toward peace.

One reason for skepticism is his endorsement of Palestinian independence last year included so many caveats that the Palestinians said it was insincere. Likewise, the limited settlement freeze included several loopholes that allowed construction of thousands of apartments to proceed.

A former army commando and the son of a renowned hawkish Zionist historian who still wields heavy influence over him, Netanyahu has led the fight against previous peace initiatives over the past two decades. His opposition has been rooted in both security grounds and an ideology stressing the Jewish peoples connection to the Holy Land.

Since winning election last year, Netanyahu has given few signs that he is willing to make the tough concessions demanded by the Palestinians and the international community: a withdrawal from occupied lands claimed by the Palestinians, shared sovereignty of the holy city of Jerusalem and a solution for the millions of Palestinians who became refugees as a result of Israels creation in 1948. The Palestinians view him with deep suspicion.

To lure Netanyahu to the negotiating table, the White House had to agree to his demands that there be no preconditions and that he not be bound to pledges made by more dovish Israeli leaders in the past. In accepting the White Houses invitation, Netanyahu said protecting Israels security interests would be his foremost concern.

The Palestinians joined the talks only after the international Quartet of Mideast mediators issued an accompanying statement Friday calling for an agreement that ends the occupation which began in 1967.

A senior Palestinian official said the Palestinians had received assurances from the U.S. that it will remain heavily involved and push for a solution based on the 1967 borders. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was discussing sensitive diplomatic contacts with Washington.

Abbas, already weakened by the Hamas militant groups takeover of Gaza three years ago, fears a failed peace process could further damage his standing in his West Bank headquarters. The rival Hamas, which immediately condemned the new peace talks, is a major impediment to any future peace deal.

These negotiations will not succeed and have no chance of succeeding, warned Hani Masri, a prominent Palestinian political analyst. What they will do is weaken the Palestinian leadership and its popularity and deepen the inner Palestinian conflict.

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Jerusalem News Editor Josef Federman has covered the Israeli-Palestinian conflict since 2003.



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Gunmen invade luxury hotel in Rio de Janeiro AP

RIO DE JANEIRO Gunmen engaged in a shootout with police took 30 people hostage Saturday at a luxury hotel popular with foreign tourists but within hours freed the captives and surrendered to police.

The upscale, beachside neighborhood where the Intercontinental Hotel is located was transformed into a virtual war zone as the 10 suspects � armed with high-caliber rifles, grenades and pistols � exchanged fire with police in a shootout that killed a bystander as she was getting out of a taxi.

Dozens of other suspects fled into a nearby slum where the shootout began. Spent casings from high-caliber weapons littered the pavement in front of the hotel and residents of the neighborhood said they were awakened by the shooting.

It seemed as if I was in Iraq, Jose Oliveira e Silva, a resident of the Sao Conrado neighborhood, told the Globo television network.

Amateur video aired on Globo showed a group of black-clad police taking heavy fire and returning it as they took cover behind a garbage truck. Sanitation workers in bright orange jumpsuits huddled behind the truck, waiting for the onslaught to end.

Globo also broadcast images of the shooting victims body, which lay on the street partially covered by black plastic sheeting.

Another witness, Ricardo Valladares, told Globo: We are all frightened to death. No one is leaving the building because we dont know if there are more criminals nearby.

The police spokeswoman, who could not be identified because she was not authorized to discuss the matter, said that the gunmen held hostages in the hotels kitchen but we negotiated with them.

All of the hostages are freed and 10 suspects are in custody, she said, adding that police searched the hotel for other gunmen but found none hiding inside.

Other television images showed an elite unit of Brazils military police entering the hotel and evacuating approximately 400 guests, many of whom were staying there for a dentists convention.

Security in Rio de Janeiro is of great concern as the city prepares to host the final of the 2014 football World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games. Officials have vowed to fight violence, and in the past year started an aggressive program of invading slums where heavily armed drug gangs hold sway, driving them out and creating police posts in those poor communities.

The program has managed to clear drug gangs from about 10 slums located in Rios rich southern zone.

The Intercontinental is a favorite among foreign tourists, but the nationalities of those taken hostage was not immediately known.



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Iran starts nuclear reactor, says intent peaceful AP

BUSHEHR, Iran Trucks rumbled into Irans first reactor Saturday to begin loading tons of uranium fuel in a long-delayed startup touted by officials as both a symbol of the countrys peaceful intentions to produce nuclear energy as well as a triumph over Western pressure to rein in its nuclear ambitions.

The Russian-built Bushehr nuclear power plant will be internationally supervised, including a pledge by Russia to safeguard it against materials being diverted for any possible use in creating nuclear weapons. Irans agreement to allow the oversight was a rare compromise by the Islamic state over its atomic program.

Western powers have cautiously accepted the deal as a way to keep spent nuclear fuel from crossing over to any military use. They say it illustrates their primary struggle: to block Irans drive to create material that could be used for nuclear weapons and not its pursuit of peaceful nuclear power.

Iran has long declared it has a right like other nations to produce nuclear energy. The countrys nuclear chief described the startup as a symbol of Iranian resistance and patience.

Despite all pressure, sanctions and hardships imposed by Western nations, we are now witnessing the startup of the largest symbol of Irans peaceful nuclear activities, Ali Akbar Salehi told reporters inside the plant with its cream-colored dome overlooking the Persian Gulf in southern Iran.

In several significant ways, the Bushehr plant stands apart from the showdowns over Iranian uranium enrichment, a process that can be used both to produce nuclear energy or nuclear weapons. It also could offer a possible test run for proposals to ease the impasse.

The Russian agreement to control the supply of nuclear fuel at Bushehr eased opposition by Washington and allies. Bushehrs operations are not covered by U.N. sanctions imposed after Iran refused to stop uranium enrichment. And last week, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the Russian oversight at Bushehr is the very model offered Tehran under a U.N.-drafted plan unveiled last year.

That proposal � so far snubbed by Iran � called for Iran to halt uranium enrichment and get its supplies of reactor-ready material from abroad.

Western leaders fear Irans enrichment labs could one day churn out weapons-grade material. Iran claims it has no interest in nuclear arms, but refuses to give up the right to make its own fuel.

Iran has some of the worlds biggest oil reserves, but lacks refinery capacity to meet domestic demand and must repurchase fuel on international markets. Nuclear power is seen as both a goal to meet power needs and an important technological achievement for the Islamic government.

The French Foreign Ministry said the Russian deal shows Iran does not need to enrich uranium to benefit from civilian nuclear power.

This clearly shows that the sanctions do not aim to deprive Iran of its right to develop nuclear energy for peaceful uses, said the French statement.

In London, a Foreign Office junior minister, Alistair Burt, said the loading of Russian fuel at Bushehr demonstrates that Iran can have the benefits of nuclear power.

But conservative Iranian lawmaker Arsalan Faithipour struck a tone of defiance.

The startup at Bushehr proved the ineffectiveness of sanctions, he said.

After years of delays in completing the plant, Moscow now claims that the project is essential to persuading Iran to cooperate with international efforts to ensure it does not develop the bomb.

Iran has said that monitors from the U.N. nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, will have access to the fuel shipments at Bushehr, about 745 miles 1,200 kilometers south of Tehran. Spent fuel contains plutonium, which can be used to make atomic weapons.

U.N. nuclear inspectors were on hand Saturday as the first truckloads of fuel were taken from a storage site to a pool inside the reactor. Over the next two weeks, 163 fuel assemblies � equal to 80 tons of uranium fuel � will be moved inside the building and then into the reactor core.

It will be another two months before the 1,000-megawatt light-water reactor � heavily guarded by soldiers and anti-aircraft batteries � is pumping electricity to Iranian cities.

Two weeks ago, two Iranian drones were sent over Bushehr to test of air defense capability. The drones were picked up, but were grounded before forces guarding the nuclear plant could open fire, Bushehr Provincial Gov. Mohammad Hossein Jahanbakhsh told The Associated Press.

The decision had been to test the capability of the Bushehr air defense system. The reaction was appropriate and authorities were happy, he said.

The uranium fuel Russia has supplied for Bushehr is well below the more than 90 percent enrichment needed for a nuclear warhead. Iran is already producing its own uranium enriched to the Bushehr level � about 3.5 percent. It also has started a pilot program of enriching uranium to 20 percent, which officials say is needed for a medical research reactor.

Salehi said Iran will continue to enrich uranium to 20 percent, but had no intention to continuing the higher level of enrichment forever.

Iran raised more alarm in the West with its recent declaration of plans to build 10 new uranium enrichment sites inside protected mountain strongholds. It said it will begin construction on the first one in March in defiance of the U.N. sanctions.

Today is a historic day and will be remembered in history, Salehi said at a news conference alongside the head of Russias state-run nuclear corporation, Sergei Kiriyenko.

The countdown to the Bushehr nuclear power plant has started, Kiriyenko said. Congratulations.

Russia signed a $1 billion contract to build the Bushehr plant in 1995 but has dragged its feet on completing the work. Moscow had cited technical reasons for the delays, but analysts say Russia used the project to try to press Iran to ease its defiance over uranium enrichment.

Iran has announced plans to build other reactors and says designs for a second rector in southwestern Iran are taking shape.

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Associated Press writers Jennifer Quinn in London, Angela Doland in Paris and Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contributed to this report.



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Thieves steal Van Gogh painting from Cairo museum AP

CAIRO Thieves broke into a museum in central Cairo and made off with a painting by Vincent van Gogh valued at $50 million, officials said Saturday.

Egypts minister of culture, Farouk Hosni, said police have launched an investigation into the theft from the Mahmoud Khalil Museum and authorities at all the countrys airports and seaports have been notified and are on alert.

The artwork goes by two titles, Poppy Flowers as well as Vase with Flowers, the museums director, Reem Bahir said.

This is the second time the painting by the Dutch-born postimpressionist has been stolen from the Cairo museum. Thieves made off with the canvas in 1978, before authorities recovered it two years later at an undisclosed location in Kuwait.

But authorities have never fully revealed the details of the first theft of the painting. When it was recovered, Egypts then-interior minister said three Egyptians involved in the heist had been arrested and informed police where the canvas was hidden. Authorities never reported whether the thieves were charged or tried.

The one-foot-by-one-foot painting resembles a flower scene painted by the French artist Adolphe Monticelli, whose work deeply affected the young van Gogh. The Monticelli painting also is part of the Khalil collection.

Most of the canvasses for which van Gogh is remembered were painted in 29 months of frenzied activity before his suicide in 1890 at age 37.

Experts have said they believed the Cairo canvas was painted around 1887.

Other works in the Khalil collection, all from the 19th-century French school, are by Paul Gauguin, Gustave Courbet, Francois Millet, Claude Monet, Edouard Manet, Auguste Renoir and Auguste Rodin.



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Dubai camel dairy hopes to milk health food market AP

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates The camels know the drill by heart.

Just after dawn, they file on their own � always in groups of 12 � into metal stalls for milking. Workers attach automated pumps. The milk flows into a system of chilled pipes that empty into a sealed metal vat.

The next stop someday could be markets in Europe, and possibly beyond, under ambitious plans backed by Dubais ruler to expand the reach of the playfully eccentric brand name Camelicious.

European Union health regulators in July cleared the United Arab Emirates to become the first major exporter of camel milk products to the 27-nation bloc. If onsite inspections and other EU tests pass muster, the first batches of powdered camel milk could be heading to European shelves next year � and at some point possibly to Asia and America.

We know this isnt what youd call a mainstream product in the West, said David Wernery, legal adviser for the Camelicious brand, whose parent company goes by the more staid name of Emirates Industry for Camel Milk & Products. Were thinking about health food stores and alternative markets. Its probably going to be a niche thing at first.

It would be something of a coming-out party for the small but passionate community that describes camel milk in awed tones.

It has at least three times more vitamin C than cows milk and is considered an alternative for the lactose-intolerant. Researchers have studied possible roles for camel milk in fighting bacteria, tumors and diabetes, as well as traditional uses such as a treatment for liver disease across the range from central Asia to North Africa.

For Dubais ruler, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, a Camelicious foothold in Europe would mark a pet project growing up.

Wernerys veterinarian father, Ulrich, made a pitch about a camel dairy to Sheik Mohammed a decade ago.

I told him, `You race camels. Why not milk them? said the elder Wernery, who first became enamored with camels while working in Somalia in the 1970s.

The sheik didnt give an immediate answer. So Wernery went ahead and created a small pilot dairy in 2000 with about a dozen camels outside his research and animal care clinic in Dubai. Three years later, Sheik Mohammed called. He was ready to fund the dairy.

At the time, Dubais growth was starting to swallow up the desert in huge bites. Sheik Mohammed has always liked the bold stroke. Being patron to the regions first modern camel farm fit nicely as a sideline venture.

David Wernery and his mother cooked up the name Camelicious. Their initial worry: That the normal customer might find camel milk, well, disgusting.

Hopefully this was negated by the reference to delicious, he said.

The company, which began operations in 2006, quickly stood out on the dairy shelves with its logo: a bug-eyed cartoon camel with violet-hued sunglasses. And new flavors were added � now up to chocolate, saffron, date, strawberry. Its official corporate image, a camel silhouette under a sliver moon, is on its other products, including camel milk chocolates and laban, a traditional yogurt drink.

Were still doing market surveys in Europe, said David Wernery. We really like the cartoon camel logo, but we wonder if thats the right image for a health food product. Were still working on it.

Then theres the taste. The milk from camels eating the desert brush can have a slightly salty flavor. The Camelicious herd gets hay and treats of carrots and dates � which all serve to soften the taste for more Western palates.

They eat anything, said David Wernery. They are very, very easygoing. And smart, too.

Really? The lumbering ships of the desert are not as cloddish as they seem?

Not according to the elder Wernery, who is a walking encyclopedia of all things camel after decades of research and observation. His view: Camel society has a quiet dignity and order. At least for the ladies.

Shhh, said Ulrich Wernery one morning as he watched the female camels stride in for milking. They really dont like sudden movements or loud noises.

The camels pick their own leader and always follow the alpha camel into the milking pens. They also always file in the same order.

The average camel produces about 2.6 gallons 10 liters of milk a day � lower than the cows from major Western diaries that can give five or more gallons nearly 19 liters. The imported Saudi and Sudanese camels, however, are typically better at milk production. The Gulf camels have been bred for speed for racing instead of milking over the ages.

The 700 camels being milked at the Camelicious dairy on Dubais outskirts give about 1,320 gallons 5,000 liters a day. Some is bottled for local markets, and smaller amounts are freeze-dried into a just-add-water powder for chocolate production. This is also how Camelicious plans to ship to the European market.

Sure, weve given some thought to maybe one day having a camel dairy in Europe � a place like southern Spain perhaps, said David Wernery.

But that is far down the road. Right now, were just concentrating on our plans to get a foothold in the export market. That also requires more camels.

Buyers for the dairy often turn up in camel markets across the Middle East and North Africa. They try to keep a low profile, however. Its hard to bargain for a good price once its known they have the backing of Dubais Sheik Mohammed. A second, rival camel dairy in the Emirates has no current plans for export.

We just want to spread the news about camel milk, said the younger Wernery, whose office is around the corner from two skeletons of the one-humped local camel and its two-hump cousin in central Asia. We think people will be pleasantly surprised.

They already have an ally in America.

From North Carolina, a natural medicine practitioner, Millie Hinkle, has carved out a role as a leading advocate for camel dairy farming. The latest step for her Camel Milk USA was to help win federal approval for test kits to test camels for diseases such as tuberculosis.

Hinkle estimates there are more than a dozen small camel dairies across the United States, with interest even being shown by traditional Amish farmers. She knows well that camel milk is truly the fringe of the fringe for American consumers. But so was sushi and kiwi fruit at one time.

We are still so in kindergarten with camels, she said. Give it time.



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Somalia rebels looking increasingly like Taliban AP

MOGADISHU, Somalia Men are forced to grow beards. Women cant leave home without a male relative. Music, movies and watching sports on TV are banned. Limbs are chopped off as punishment, and executions by stoning have become a public spectacle.

Somalia is looking more and more like Afghanistan under the Taliban � two rugged countries 2,000 miles apart, each lacking a central government, each with a hard-line Islamist militia that cows the public into submission.

Al-Shabab in Somalia and the Taliban in Afghanistan � their tactics increasingly mirror each other. Those tactics worked for the Taliban until the U.S. invasion overthrew it in 2001, and now they are making a comeback. Meanwhile, al-Shabab has gained control over large swaths of this arid Horn of Africa country.

In the latest adoption of tactics long used by the Afghan militants, al-Shabab is ordering households in southern Somalia to contribute a boy to the militants ranks. Childless families have to pay al-Shabab $50 a month. Thats Somalias per capita income.

An al-Shabab commander attributed the shared tactics and ideology to the fact that both groups follow a strict form of Islam.

One more thing we deeply share is the hatred of infidels, the commander, Abu Dayib, told The Associated Press.

Some experts say the similarities are no accident.

Al-Shabab is copying exactly whatever the Taliban was doing in the late 1990s, because they think the strategies the Taliban employed in Afghanistan were successful, said Vahid Mujdeh, the Afghan author of a book on the Taliban. There is no doubt that the Taliban are like heroes for al-Shabab.

U.S. and other security officials worry about another common thread: Both the Taliban and al-Shabab have links to al-Qaida.

Until their overthrow, the Taliban gave Osama bin Laden and his group safe haven in Afghanistan. Many analysts believe al-Shabab is now controlled by al-Qaida-linked foreign fighters who honed their skills in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Last month Al-Shabab claimed its first international attack � twin bombings in Uganda that killed 76 people watching the World Cup final on TV. Uganda said at least one of the confessed participants belonged to al-Qaida. Simultaneous attacks are an al-Qaida hallmark.

Both the Taliban and al-Shabab moved into a power vacuum left by inconclusive civil war, and were initially welcomed by publics desperate for some form of law and order. What they got was an extremely harsh penal code.

Now the Taliban is gaining ground despite NATO forces efforts to push them back, and brazenly advertised its clout this month by stoning a young couple stoned to death in front of a crowd, allegedly for committing adultery.

In Somalia, two months ago, al-Shabab accused Ahmed Ali Shuke, a 27-year-old laborer, of being a government spy and slashed his tongue.

Both groups derive support from followers of their strict interpretations of Shariah Muslim law. Both groups also derive support by terrorizing the population, said Letta Tayler, a counterterrorism specialist at Human Rights Watch. The people of Somalia, as in Afghanistan, have learned the hard way that if they speak out against these groups practices, they will get killed.

Both the Taliban and al-Shabab win some sympathy by positioning themselves as defenders against invading infidels. Foreign forces � African Union troops in Somalia, U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan � feed into that narrative when they kill civilians during raids, Tayler said.

Even many Somalis who dont like the Shababs ideology are immensely thankful for the drop in crime in many areas under the groups control. Their daughters are not raped. Their crops are not stolen en route to market, she said.

But Human Rights Watch said in an April report that the stability was achieved by unrelenting repression and brutality.

Several women told Human Rights Watch that they had been flogged or jailed for selling tea to support their families because the work brought them into contact with men.

Somalia has had no functioning government since 1991, and militants with guns have been filling the void ever since. Al-Shabab, which the U.S. branded a terror group in 2008, is believed to have several thousand members.

Hundreds of its fighters have died in battle, forcing al-Shabab to increase recruiting among young men and boys, said Ali Mohammed, a retired Somali colonel.

They are losing the hearts and minds of the ordinary people, he said.

In turn, families in militant-controlled areas of Somalia who can afford it to send their sons away, several parents told the AP.

I have lost one of my sons in a battle he was forced to join in central Somalia three months ago. He was only 15, said Asha Mohamed Amin, who lives in a rebel-controlled area of Mogadishu, the capital. Again they say contribute the other son to a senseless death. Is that acceptable?

Amin said she sent her other son to Hargeisa in northern Somalia to live with friends.

A 26-year-old woman named Ubah felt al-Shababs brutality firsthand.

She was visiting a moneychanger in the southern town of Kismayo with a male cousin when two young militants accused them of engaging in an illicit relationship after they couldnt show proof they were related. Hours later the militants whipped Ubah and her cousin � 80 lashes for the man and 50 for Ubah.

I was crying and I thought they would never release me, Ubah told AP, asking that her last name not be used for fear of militant reprisals. I couldnt move because there were men with guns.

She said the militants warned that if the two were seen together again they would be stoned to death.

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Straziuso, who was APs chief correspondent in Afghanistan from 2006 to 2009, reported from Nairobi, Kenya. Rahim Faiez contributed from Kabul, Afghanistan.



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Officials: US drones kill 6 in northwest Pakistan AP

MIR ALI, Pakistan Suspected U.S. missiles fired from an unmanned drone killed six militants Saturday in a Pakistani tribal region near the Afghan border, officials said.

Missiles struck two vehicles in Anghar Kala village near Miran Shah in North Waziristan � the second such attack since massive floods hit Pakistan in late July. The officials said some of the dead militants may be foreigners.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information to the media.

The tribal region is a haven for various Islamist militant groups. The main organization operating there is the Haqqani network, which focuses on attacking U.S. and NATO troops across border in Afghanistan.

Pakistans leadership has raised concerns the insurgents might exploit instability and chaos caused by the massive flooding, the countrys worst-ever natural disaster. The U.S. has tried to improve its public image in Pakistan by sending significant flood aid, though Saturdays airstrike shows it is not willing to abandon the widely unpopular drone attacks.

The U.S. rarely discusses the covert, CIA-run missile campaign, but officials have said in the past it has proven a valuable tool in the battle against al-Qaida and Taliban fighters sheltering in Pakistans tribal areas. Pakistani officials publicly condemn the airstrikes, but it is believed they have given tacit approval.

Separately, a bomb exploded at a checkpoint jointly manned by pro-government tribesmen and police in northwestern Pakistan on Saturday, killing six people, government official Javed Khan said.

The attack happened in Mohmand, a tribal region 45 miles 75 kilometers northwest of the main city of Peshawar. The dead included a policeman, a passer-by and four members of a peace committee set up to check militant movements, he said.

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Associated Press writer Riaz Khan in Peshawar contributed to this report.



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Wikileaks rape warrant cancelled

Sweden has cancelled an arrest warrant for Wikileaks founder Julian Assange on accusations of rape and molestation.

The Swedish Prosecution Authority website said the chief prosecutor had come to the decision that Mr Assange was not suspected of rape but did not give any further explanation.

The warrant was issued late on Friday.

Wikileaks, which has been criticised for leaking Afghan war documents, had quoted Mr Assange as saying the charges were without basis.

That message, which appeared on Twitter and was attributed directly to Mr Assange, said the appearance of the allegations at this moment is deeply disturbing.

In a series of other messages posted on the Wikileaks Twitter feed, the whistle-blowing website said: No-one here has been contacted by Swedish police, and that it had been warned to expect dirty tricks.

In its official blog on Saturday before the warrant was cancelled, Wikileaks said it was deeply concerned about the seriousness of these allegations. We the people behind Wikileaks think highly of Julian and and he has our full support.

The current whereabouts of Mr Assange, a 39-year-old Australian, are unclear.

More documents

The Swedish Prosecution Authority website said chief prosecutor Eva Finne had come to the decision that Julian Assange was not subject to arrest.

In a brief statement Eva Finne said: I dont think there is reason to suspect that he has committed rape.

The website said there would be no further immediate comment.

Earlier, Karin Rosander, communications head at Swedens prosecutors office, said there were two separate allegations against Mr Assange, one of rape and the other of molestation. She gave no details of the accusations. She said that as far as she knew they related to alleged incidents that took place in Sweden.

Media reports say Mr Assange was in Sweden last week to talk about his work and defend the decision by Wikileaks to publish the Afghan war logs.

Last month, Wikileaks published more than 75,000 secret US military documents on the war in Afghanistan.

US authorities criticised the leak, saying it could put the lives of coalition soldiers and Afghans, especially informers, at risk.

Mr Assange has said that Wikileaks is intending to release a further 15,000 documents in the coming weeks.



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Pakistan floods leave ally reeling AP

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan The floods tearing through Pakistans breadbasket have further weakened this already unstable country, inflicting more economic pain on its people and threatening a key pillar of the U.S.-led war against Islamist militants � who stand to gain from the misery. For now attention is focused on meeting the immediate needs of the millions of people affected by the still-spreading disaster.

Yet the floods � described as Pakistans worst-ever natural calamity � are already complicating U.S. goals of defeating al-Qaida and the Taliban and stabilizing neighboring Afghanistan.

With international aid still not coming in fast enough, public anger at the government is likely to swell as millions face months or even years of destitution, risking turmoil just as Washington and the region needs stability in the nuclear-armed state.

The stakes are very, very high, said Sen. John Kerry, who visited this week. We are particularly anxious, all of us, to see the country get back on track.

The floods began in the northwest, hitting the Swat Valley and areas close to the main city of Peshawar, before moving down the country by way of the mighty River Indus, devastating millions of acres hectares of crops in the countrys breadbasket in Punjab and the Sindh.

About one-fifth of the country � a chunk of land about the size of Italy � has been affected.

At least 8 million people are in need of water, shelter or other emergency assistance, making the disaster larger than Pakistans last two humanitarian crises, the exodus from Swat last year amid an army offensive against the Taliban and the 2005 Kashmir earthquake.

The country was already blighted by soaring food inflation, chronic unemployment, crumbling schools and hospitals and rolling power cuts across the country. About 60 percent of its 170 million get by on less than $2 a day. Last year, the economy was kept afloat by a $7.6 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund.

The floods are predicted to shave at least 1 percent of Pakistans gross national product this year, in large part because of their effect on the countrys agricultural sector, which accounts for about 20 percent of the economy. The countrys textile industry is also expected to suffer because of damage to cotton crops.

Already, the prices of vegetables, meat and dairy products have risen sharply across the country.

No country is set up to deal with this scale of potential loss in its agricultural sector, said Anthony Cordesman from the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Looking after the victims is a huge task that would strain even the best government and international agencies. Authorities must also start thinking ahead to rebuilding homes and infrastructure such as roads and bridges, and getting people � most of them poor farmers � back to work.

The government now has to tackle two things at the same time, the macroeconomic stability and the reconstruction effort, said Juan Miranda, the Asian Development Banks director general for Central and West Asia. I dont think any of us can envy the task ahead of them.

Historical precedents are hard to find for a disaster on this scale, but Pakistan has proved resilient in the past when faced with crisis. With committed government and the full support of the international community, some of the worst-case scenarios may not play out.

The real issue is whether this flooding takes us into an entirely new realm for a country that a lot of people have said is near failure, or whether this is just an added burden, said Daniel Markey, a South Asia expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, in a posting on the organizations website. That really is still up in the air.

The government � already unpopular before the floods struck � faces anger if it fails to help the victims in the coming weeks and months. Many are sleeping by the side of the road under makeshift shelters along with their salvaged possessions.

There have been sporadic protests, some violent, in or close to flood-affected areas.

There is no electricity, no water, no sanitation, no food. The only thing there are in numbers is mosquitoes, said Mahboob Ali, who blocked a road Friday in protest at conditions in his relief camp in the northwest. We cannot bear the screams of our children. They are hungry.

President Asif Ali Zardari, who heads the ruling party, has been the target of most of the criticism, especially since he traveled to Europe just as the disaster unfolded. The army has seen its reputation rise because of its high-profile role in the relief effort, but experts think the prospect of a military coup unlikely.

For now, the opposition has been largely quiet in its criticism of the handling of the relief effort and it is not whipping up anti-government sentiment. But that could change if the rebuilding effort is badly handled or allegations of corruption surface.

The floods contribute to endemic instability, said a British government official who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of his job. The inability of the central government to deal with it could diminish its authority, which is cause for concern. This further complicates things.

Some of the worst-hit areas of the country are strongholds of al-Qaida, the Taliban and associated groups. As well as the northwest, the floods have devastated much of south Punjab, which extremist groups have long used as a recruiting ground, helped by the regions poverty.

As they have done in previous crises, Islamist charities, some with alleged links to militants, were the first on the scene, cooking food and giving shelter to the displaced. Their presence contrasted with the absence of help from the government.

U.S. and Pakistani officials have cautioned the extremists could get recruits and legitimacy by their actions in the flood zone and have used this argument to call for more international aid. Washington has been the most generous donor and deployed military helicopters to ferry aid and pick up the stranded.

If the Pakistan government and the international community dont help these people, you will get the classic conditions that allow for insurgent groups to step into the role of providing what the government has not, said Adam Holloway, a Conservative lawmaker who sits on Britains Defense Select Committee.

If youre an insurgent group, youll want to show people you care more about them than the government.

With the army taking the lead in flood relief, there has been less pressure on militants and a decreased willingness for any new campaigns against militants in the northwest. Major operations would mean a fresh influx of internally displaced people.

The U.S. needs Pakistan to keep pressure on militants in the northwest to stop Afghan insurgents using it as a base for regrouping and rearming. American officials have said sustained Pakistani action there is key to success in Afghanistan.

In particular, the flood appears to have dashed for now U.S. hopes for a sustained military effort in the tribal region of North Waziristan, from where a network of insurgents blamed for much of the violence in Afghanistan is believed to be based, analysts said.

The militant organizations must be finding this situation a gift from God, said Dr Riffat Hussain, professor of Defense Studies at Quaid-e-Azam University.

___

Associated Press writer Paisley Dodds in London contributed to this report.



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Australian PM says election to close to call AP

CANBERRA, Australia Australians chose Saturday between giving their first female prime minister her own election mandate and returning to a conservative government after just three years. With more than 75 percent of the votes counted, the results were too close to call.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard said she will remain the caretaker leader and hoped to form the next government.

Obviously this is too close to call. There are many seats where the result is undecided and where it will take a number of days of counting to determine the result, she said.

She acknowledged her opponent, conservative Liberal Party leader Tony Abbott, was a formidable advocate for his side of politics.

A record number of votes cast for independents and Australian Greens party candidates could decide the outcome, with the possibility growing that the mainstream parties will need to strike a deal with fringe groups to form a government. Such a coalition would be the first in almost 70 years.

Analyst Norman Abjorensen, an Australian National University political scientist, said the most likely outcome was an unstable minority government led by Abbott and supported by independents.

The results were the closest since 1961, when a Liberal government retained power with a single seat.

Gillard, a cheerfully charismatic and sharp-witted 48-year-old former lawyer, came to power in a June 24 internal coup in her center-left Labor party during the first term of her predecessor, and almost immediately called elections to confirm her mandate.

Abbott, a married 52-year-old former Roman Catholic seminarian with three daughters, barely gained the endorsement eight months ago of his Liberal Party, which has led Australia for most of the last 60 years.

Australians have not dumped a first-term government since 1931 when a Labor administration paid the ultimate price for the Great Depression. However, this years elections are colored by Gillards surprise seizure of the helm of her party from former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd after a series of poor opinion polls.

Gillard, a Welsh-born immigrant who has a common-law hairdresser spouse, had acknowledged before polls closed that Labor could lose its entire eight-seat majority in the 150-seat House of Representatives. Labor won 83 seats in the last elections in 2007.

Issues vary across the large and diverse country, but asylum seekers, health care and climate change are hot topics nationwide. Another issue brought to the forefront Saturday was the presence of the Australian military in Afghanistan, where two soldiers were killed the day before. The government and opposition both support Australias military commitment to Afghanistan, where 20 Australian troops have now died.

Gillard and Abbott both sent their condolences to the families and praised the sacrifice of the soldiers.

The decision by Labor power-brokers to support Gillard � widely regarded as a better communicator than Rudd � cost the party the traditional incumbents advantage.

One of those power-brokers, Paul Howse, said the decision was correct despite the loss of Labor votes Saturday.

I think the parliamentary party made the right decision, Howse told Australian Broadcasting Corp. television. Labor would have in fact done worse under a different leadership.

Abbott, whose socially conservative views alienate many women voters but whose supporters say he can better empathize with Australian families, is his partys third choice as leader since Prime Minister John Howard led it to defeat in 2007. Abbott beat his predecessor by a single vote last December in a party ballot.

Abbott has long been seen as a gaffe-prone fitness enthusiast who is often lampooned in the media over the many images of him clad in Lycra cycling and swimming wear.

___

Associated Press writers Kristen Gelineau in Sydney and Tanalee Smith in Adelaide, Australia, contributed to this report.



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Afghan official: 6 policemen found dead in Helmand AP

KABUL, Afghanistan An official says six Afghan policemen have been found dead in their station house in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan.

Provincial spokesman Dawood Ahmadi says the bodies of the victims, who were shot, were found Saturday in Greskh district. It wasnt immediately clear who shot them.

On Friday, three other Afghan policemen were killed by friendly fire in the north.

NATO says Afghan security forces who were under fire from insurgents called for air support in Darzab district of Jowzjan province.

The coalition says two helicopters fired a missile and 30-millimeter rounds. It says an investigation found that three members of the Afghan National Police were accidentally killed and several more were wounded by the air weapons team.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. APs earlier story is below.

KABUL, Afghanistan AP � Three Afghan policemen were killed by friendly fire and a woman and two children were killed accidentally in fighting in separate incidents in Afghanistan, NATO said Saturday.

The coalition also reported that two U.S. service members died Saturday and another was killed Friday in insurgent attacks in southern Afghanistan. A fourth member of the international coalition, whose nationality was not released, died Saturday following an insurgent attack in the south. NATO did not disclose details about their deaths.

Thirty-eight members of the international coalition, including 24 Americans, have been killed so far this month, according to a count by The Associated Press.

In the north, Afghan security forces, who were under fire from an unknown number of insurgents, called for air support Friday in Darzab district of Jowzjan province, NATO said. Two helicopters responded and fired a hellfire missile and 30 millimeter rounds, it said. An investigation of the site later showed that three members of the Afghan National Police were accidentally killed and several more were wounded by the air weapons team, the coalition said.

NATO said it was sending a team to the area to determine what happened.

Also in the north, five civilians were killed and two others were wounded when a bomb exploded Saturday, the coalition reported.

In the west, a woman and two children were accidentally killed Friday in fighting that erupted as Afghan and international forces pursued a Taliban militant known to smuggle foreign fighters and weapons from Iran, NATO said.

Six insurgents were killed as they got out of a vehicle and several other suspected militants were detained during the operation in the Pusht Rod district of Farah province, the coalition said.

An air weapons team then fired on the vehicle, which subsequently exploded. The joint force, which later found the three civilians dead at the scene, believed the vehicle might have been loaded with homemade explosives, NATO said.

We deeply regret what occurred on yesterdays operation, U.S. Army Col. Rafael Torres, a spokesman for NATO, said in expressing condolences to relatives. We are taking a step-by-step approach in investigating what went wrong.



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