Sunday, August 22, 2010

Ex-policeman in Philippines holds tourists hostage AP

MANILA, Philippines A dismissed policeman armed with an automatic rifle seized a bus in the Philippine capital Monday with 25 passengers, most of them Hong Kong tourists, in a bid to demand his reinstatement, police said.

Six hostages, including three children, were subsequently released, and appeared to be unhurt.

Police sharpshooters took positions around the white-blue-red bus, which was parked near a downtown Manila park, and negotiations to free the remaining hostages were under way, deputy director of Manila police Alex Gutierrez said.

Two of the Hong Kong tourists, both women, were the first to be released, followed by three young children and a woman accompanying them, Manila police chief Rodolfo Magtibay said. Police had earlier reported that the tourists were from South Korea but later corrected themselves.

Hong Thai Travel Services Ltd. General Manager Susanna Lau told Hong Kongs Cable TV that the bus was carrying a Hong Kong tour guide and 20 tourists � three children and 17 adults � and a local tour guide.

She said the group left Aug. 20 for a visit to Manila and was scheduled to fly back to Hong Kong on Monday.

Magtibay said the others on the bus included three Filipinos � a driver, a guide and a photographer.

The hostage-taker, identified as former Senior Inspector Rolando Mendoza, 55, was armed with an M16 rifle. He demanded that he be given back his job on the police force a year after he was fired, Magtibay said.

Mendoza hitched a ride on the bus from the historic walled city of Intramuros and then declared he is taking the passengers hostage when the bus reached Jose Rizal Park alongside Manila Bay.

The area also includes the seaside U.S. Embassy and a number of hotels.

The curtains on the bus windows were drawn and live TV footage showed two police negotiators walking to and from the bus and communicating with Mendoza from the window near the drivers seat.

Magtibay said they were also using the drivers cell phone to talk to Mendoza. A brother of Mendoza was helping police in the negotiations, Magtibay said.

We should really resolve this quickly so that it will not have a wider effect, Tourism Secretary Alberto Lim said.

According to newspapers reports from 2008, Mendoza was among five police officers who had been charged with robbery, extortion and grave threats after a Manila hotel chef filed a complaint alleging the policemen falsely accused him of using drugs to extort money.

Mendozas younger brother, Gregorio, also a policeman, said that his brother felt that injustice was done on him.

He was disappointed that he did well in police service but was dismissed for a crime he did not do, he said.

In March 2007, not far from Mondays hostage taking, a man took a busload of children and teachers hostage from his day-care center in Manila to denounce corruption. They were freed after a 10-hour standoff.

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Associated Press writer Min Lee in Hong Kong contributed to this report.



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Ex-policeman in Philippines holds tourists hostage AP

MANILA, Philippines A dismissed policeman armed with an automatic rifle seized a bus in the Philippine capital Monday with 26 passengers aboard, most of them South Korean tourists, in a bid to demand his reinstatement, police said.

Police sharpshooters took positions around the white-blue-red bus, which was parked near a downtown Manila park, and negotiations to free the hostages were under way, said deputy director of Manila police Alex Gutierrez.

The hostage-taker was armed with an M16 rifle and demanding that he be given back his job on the police force, Gutierrez said.



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Rain batters China; 250,000 evacuated in flood AP

BEIJING Flooding forced the evacuation of more than 250,000 people in the northern China along its border with North Korea, state media said Monday.

Heavy rains over the last several days caused the Yalu river, which marks the border, to breach its banks, although the water level had started to fall late Sunday, the official Xinhua News Agency state media said Monday.

It said four people died, including a couple in their 70s and a mother and son, after their homes in Dandong were swept away by flash floods. Xinhua said 253,500 residents have been evacuated after the Yalu rose to its highest level in a decade.

An official with the Water Resources Department in Liaoning province, where Dandong is located, confirmed that four people had died though he was unable to provide details. He refused to give his name because he was not authorized to speak with the media.

North Koreas official Korean Central News Agency said torrential rain and water from the overflowing Yalu � or Amnok as it is known in Korean � swamped houses, public buildings and farmland in more than five villages near Sinuiju, the city opposite Dandong.

The report described Sinuiju and the surrounding area as having been severely affected by the flooding and said officials, the military and ordinary civilians were involved in rescue work. It said at least 5,150 people had been evacuated and residents were clambering on rooftops or taking shelter on hilltops.

Much of North Koreas trade with the world passes through the city, forming a vital lifeline for the isolated, economically struggling country. Flooding in previous years has destroyed crops and pushed North Korea deeper into poverty, increasing its dependence on international food aid.

For China, the Dandong flooding is the latest disaster in the countrys worst flood season in over a decade. Landslides caused by heavy rains have smothered communities in western China and accounted for most of the more than 2,500 people killed.

Authorities in the northwestern province of Gansu on Sunday called off rescue efforts for 330 people still missing after an Aug. 8 mudslide tore through Zhouqu county, killing 1,435 people, Xinhua said. The Zhouqu government forbade digging in the debris, fearing that recovering corpses buried for two weeks would spread disease.

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Associated Press Writer Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul, South Korea, contributed to this report.



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Next US target: The birthplace of the Taliban AP

HOWZ-E-MADAD, Afghanistan As Lt. Col. Peter N. Benchoff prepares for an assault next month into the birthplace of the Taliban, he doesnt sugarcoat the hurdles his troops face in this crucial swath of southern Afghanistan.

Security sucks. Development? Nothing substantial. Information campaign? Nobody believes us. Governance? Weve had one, hour-long visit by a government official in the last 2 1/2 months, the battalion commander says. Taliban is the home team here.

Here is 116 square miles 300 square kilometers of Zhari, a district just west of Kandahar through which the insurgents funnel fighters, drugs, explosives and stage attacks into the city.

Its also an iconic, psychologically significant spot for the Taliban. Just about two miles three kilometers south of the main U.S. base of Howz-e-Madad, Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar ran an Islamic school, founded the movement in 1994, and nearby hung a warlord from the barrel of a tank after he raped two teenagers.

Senior commanders call the fight for Zhari the next step � Phase 3 � of a wider campaign to pacify Kandahar, the countrys second largest city, and surrounding countryside. They argue success in Kandahar could lead to overall victory, given that the Talibans power base is rooted in this region.

Zhari itself remains insurgent territory despite five major NATO operations in recent years. In September 2006, a Canadian-led force launched a major operation in Zhari and nearby Panjwai district, pushing out the Taliban but at a cost of 28 coalition lives. Months later, the Taliban were back.

Militarily, Benchoff will have to seize the village of Singesar, site of Mullah Omars school now defended by fortified trenches, mortars and mines, and stop Taliban movements and ambushes along Highway 1 and a parallel dirt road dubbed Iron City. Getting the areas 10,000 inhabitants to sever their links to the Taliban may prove even harder.

With the opening salvo of the push already on the planning boards, perhaps the densest concentration of forces in Afghanistan today has been marshaled: some 1,000 U.S. and 400 Afghan troops, a superb, rarely realized ratio for counterinsurgency operations of one soldier for every 10 civilian residents.

We are now poking the bear, trying to figure out how he will react and then developing ways to set him up to our advantage, says Benchoff, who commands the 2nd Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division. We are taking our time to do it right. We dont want to charge in with shock and awe like in Marjah, and then come out scratching our heads and saying, `What happened here?

Marjah, a town in neighboring Helmand province, was captured in a highly heralded operation in February but has yet to see either solid security or effective government presence.

In Zhari, patrols are sent out daily, firefights erupt and Afghan commandos have staged some successful raids into Singesar. But Benchoff, a West Point graduate with 44 months in Afghanistan behind him, says his biggest priorities now are intensive training of a partner Afghan National Army battalion fresh out of basic training and understanding how to win over the local population via the circle of COIN, acronym for the Armys counterinsurgency doctrine.

Provide basic security to allow development. Tell the locals what you are doing for them and give them good governance, thereby ensuring more security. Spin the wheel fast enough, Benchoff says, and the Taliban wont be able to hold on.

Will it work? Im a guarded optimist. This is the last best way I know, the officer, from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, says.

This is an enemy-controlled area and people either support the Taliban actively or passively in order to survive, he says. People want security but they are not fed up enough to turn to the government. We have grandfathers, fathers, uncles who are charter-founding members of the Taliban. It is going to take a long-term, dedicated, persistent effort to win.

Development and governance-wise, the area is starting from virtually zero.

The only medical facility is a small pharmacy in the ramshackle bazaar. The one school was closed more than two years ago and may be mined. The people have no connection with even local administration just up the road, where the new district governor, Karim Jan, remains a question mark.

A former police chief inexperienced in administration, NATO officials in Kandahar say they are still uncertain whether he represents a wide spectrum of the population or just his own tribe or circle of cronies.

To start setting things right, the U.S. military has more than half a million dollars to build a new bazaar, farmers market, small dams and farm-to-market roads, with locals to be employed on the projects. To get the message out, a radio station will go on air. Help for the rural population, the plan goes, will follow right behind the front-line troops.

Those in Taliban-controlled areas, it is hoped, will see the benefits reaped by people within the security bubble and begin to distance themselves from the insurgents, who already restrict their movements, impose taxes, provide no education and commandeer family compounds for attack positions.

Will we get all this done in a year? Probably not, says Benchoff. He notes while U.S. troops may begin pulling out of Afghanistan in July, they will remain in Zhari for at least 1 1/2 years with a replacement for his unit already alerted. But I think we can do enough here to take the pressure off Kandahar and hope that the ANA can then continue to hold it.

Repeatedly, Benchoff and his officers point to the Afghan army as the linchpin for success � or failure.

We are deeply embedded with them. `Shonna ba shonna, shoulder to shoulder, says the commander who has paired off every U.S. soldier with an Afghan counterpart for both training and combat.

There are what Capt. David Yu, a company commander, calls friction points when two widely different cultures come together, and the U.S. Armys highly sophisticated systems and procedures try to mesh with troops who are often illiterate. But Yu, from Newport News, Virginia, concedes the Afghan soldiers are a tremendous asset.

They are essential. Before they came, we got nothing out of the locals. People wouldnt talk to us. Now were starting to get tips, information, he says. Maybe not a waterfall, but a steady trickle.

The big test will come when the big push occurs and they start to take casualties, Benchoff says. Will they have the skill and the will to fight?

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US troops unlikely to resume combat duties in Iraq AP

WASHINGTON It would take a complete failure of the Iraqi security forces for the U.S. to resume combat operations there, the top American commander in Iraq said as the final U.S. fighting forces prepared to leave the country.

With a major military milestone in sight, Gen. Ray Odierno said in interviews broadcast Sunday that any resumption of combat duties by American forces is unlikely.

We dont see that happening, Odierno said. The Iraqi security forces have been doing so well for so long now that we really believe were beyond that point.

President Barack Obama plans a major speech on Iraq after his return to Washington, according to a senior administration official who spoke on condition of anonymity Sunday because details were being finalized. The speech will come shortly after Obama returns to the White House on Aug. 29 from his Marthas Vineyard vacation.

About 50,000 U.S. troops will remain in the country until the end of 2011 to serve as a training and assistance force, a dramatic drawdown from the peak of more than 170,000 during the surge of American forces in 2007.

Obama will face a delicate balancing act in his speech between welcoming signs of progress and bringing an end to the 7-year-old war without prematurely declaring the mission accomplished, as former President George W. Bush once did.

U.S. involvement in Iraq beyond the end of 2011, Odierno said, probably would involve assisting the Iraqis secure their airspace and borders.

While Iraq forces can handle internal security and protect Iraqis, Odierno said he believes military commanders want to have the U.S. involved beyond 2011 to help Iraqis acquire the required equipment, training and technical capabilities.

He said Iraqs security forces have matured to the point where they will be ready to shoulder enough of the burden to permit the remaining 50,000 soldiers to go home at the end of next year.

If the Iraqis asked that American troops remain in the country after 2011, Odierno said U.S. officials would consider it, but that would be a policy decision made by the president and his national security advisers.

Odiernos assessment, while optimistic, also acknowledges the difficult road ahead for the Iraqis as they take control of their own security, even as political divisions threaten the formation of the fledgling democracy.

South Carolina GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham, whos on the Senate Armed Services Committee, told CBS Face the Nation that he hopes we will have an enduring relationship of having some military presence in Iraq. I think that would be smart not to let things unwind over the next three or five years.

On Thursday, the 4th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division began crossing the border from Iraq into Kuwait, becoming the last combat brigade to leave Iraq. Its exodus, along with that of the approximately 2,000 remaining U.S. combat forces destined to leave in the coming days, fulfills Obamas pledge to end combat operations in Iraq by Aug. 31.

In interviews with CBS Face the Nation and CNNs State of the Union, Odierno said it may take several years before America can determine if the war was a success.

A strong democratic Iraq will bring stability to the Middle East, and if we see Iraq thats moving toward that, two, three, five years from now, I think we can call our operations a success, he said.

Much of that may hinge on whether Iraqs political leaders can overcome ethnic divisions and work toward a more unified government, while also enabling security forces to tamp down a simmering insurgency.

Iraqs political parties have been bickering for more than five months since the March parliamentary elections failed to produce a clear winner. They have yet to reach agreements on how to share power or whether to replace embattled Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, and amid the political instability, other economic and governmental problems fester.

Fueling that instability is neighboring Iran which, Odierno said, continues to fund and train Shiite extremist groups.

They dont want to see Iraq turn into a strong democratic country. Theyd rather see it become a weak governmental institution, said Odierno.

He added that he is not worried that Iraq will fall back into a military dictatorship, as it was under the reign of Saddam Hussein.

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Associated Press writer Erica Werner in Edgartown, Mass., contributed to this report.

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Online:

U.S. forces in Iraq: http://ping.fm/dwTGY

Defense Department: http://ping.fm/WVrsb



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Joy in Chile: 33 miners trapped 17 days are alive AP

SANTIAGO, Chile Chiles president euphorically waved the note, written deep inside a collapsed mine, that his country waited 17 agonizing days to see: All 33 of us are fine in the shelter, one of the trapped miners wrote in red letters.

Authorities and relatives of the miners hugged, climbed a nearby hill, planted 33 flags and sang the national anthem Sunday after a probe sent some 2,257 feet 688 meters deep into the mine came back with the note. Today all of Chile is crying with excitement and joy, President Sebastian Pinera said.

The miners ordeal may have just begun: Rescuers say it could take four months � until around Christmas � to get them out.

The men already have been trapped underground longer than all but a few miners rescued in recent history. Last year, three miners survived 25 days trapped in a flooded mine in southern China, and two miners in northeast China were rescued after 23 days in 1983. Few other rescues have taken more than two weeks.

For the moment, however, news that the men even survived a tunnel collapse on Aug. 5 outshines all other details.

A video camera lowered down the probe shaft showed some of the miners, stripped to the waist in the underground heat, waving happily. But they werent able to establish audio contact, Pinera told reporters at the scene.

I saw eight or nine of them. They were waving their hands. They got close to the camera and we could see their eyes, their joy, Pinera said.

Word of the miners survival was a rush of good news in a country still rebuilding from a magnitude-8.8 earthquake Feb. 27 and its resulting tsunami, which together killed at least 521 people and left 200,000 homeless.

I am OK thanks to God. I hope to get out soon, wrote one of the trapped miners, Mario Gomez. Patience and faith. God is great and the help of my God is going to make it possible to leave this mine alive.

Gomez, 63, appeared to be aware that it will take a long time for rescuers to reach him and his fellow miners. Even if we have to wait months to communicate. ... I want to tell everyone that Im good and well surely come out OK, he said.

Mine officials and relatives of the workers had hoped the men reached a shelter inside the mine when the tunnel collapsed deep in the San Jose gold and copper mine about 530 miles 850 kilometers north of the capital, Santiago. But they had said air and food supplies would only last 48 hours.

Rescuers drilled repeatedly in an effort to reach the shelter, but failed seven times; they blamed the errors on the mining companys maps. According to Gomezs note, at least some of those probes were close enough that the trapped miners heard them.

Rescuers hopes rose after the eighth attempt early Sunday when they heard hammering sounds. They sent down a probe, then pulled it up and found two notes the trapped miners had placed inside, including the short one Pinera read. Gomez wrote the other note to his wife, confirming the miners location underground and saying he loved her.

Liliana Ramirez couldnt believe it when Chiles mining minister said her husband had sent a note to his Dearest Lila.

I know my husband is strong, and at 63, is the most experienced miner who could lead his co-workers, she said. But no more mining for him.

Gomez wrote that the miners used vehicles for light and a backhoe to dig a canal to retrieve underground water.

The opening that rescuers dug to the miners is not wide enough to haul them out. Rescue equipment brought from outside the country was being assembled Sunday to dig a tunnel 27 inches 68 centimeters in diameter through which the miners will eventually be brought to the surface.

The hole already drilled will be used to send down small capsules containing food, water and oxygen if necessary, and sound and video equipment so the miners can communicate better with loved ones and rescuers.

This spring 115 Chinese miners were rescued after being trapped for more than a week when workers digging tunnels broke into a water-filled abandoned shaft. The accident killed 38 miners.

Chiles drama months after the earthquake shares some parallels with the 2002 Quecreek Mine accident, in which nine Pennsylvania miners were trapped in a flooded tunnel about 15 miles from where one of the planes hijacked on Sept. 11 crashed some 10 months earlier. Americans cheered as all nine miners were rescued three days later.

Hundreds of workers are using equipment from the United States and Australia in the Chilean rescue.

Both the company that owns the Chilean mine, San Esteban, and the National Mining and Geology Service have been criticized for allegedly failing to comply with regulations. In 2007, an explosion at the San Jose mine killed three workers.

Chile is the worlds top copper producer and a leading gold producer.



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Calif. GOP hopes statewide slate lifts others, too AP

SAN DIEGO For the first time in memory, California Republicans have a diverse statewide slate of candidates to field this fall, a lineup their state party chairman calls an inspirational ticket. Coupled with national momentum for conservatives, the California GOP is hoping this might be their breakthrough year.

Yet its far from clear whether voters in California, where Democrats have a nearly 15-point voter registration advantage, will see the same glitter the GOP faithful perceive.

Their candidates have been pushing for smaller government, fewer regulations on businesses and lower taxes. Democrats have countered that the Republican Party is just promoting what it always has � a pro-business agenda that punishes the middle class and working class.

Despite their registration edge, the top Democratic candidates are working hard to retain the middle-of-the-road voters who have helped the party dominate statewide elections over the past two decades.

Republicans were buoyed at their weekend meeting in San Diego by appearances from their top candidates, gubernatorial nominee Meg Whitman, the former chief executive of eBay, and former Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, who is challenging Sen. Barbara Boxer, a liberal stalwart reviled by conservatives.

Now that their candidates are through contentious primaries, some delegates are hoping they can successfully sway those centrist voters who will be key to a November win.

Both of them are going to have to reach out to the Latinos, independents and the decline-to-states because we need those votes, said Alice Anderson, of Dana Point. Were hoping those people will think as we do and realize what a good team we have right now.

Republicans account for less than 31 percent of registered voters in California, compared with the Democrats 44.5 percent. Independents are one-fifth of the electorate.

Both sides are touting polls that show the governors race and U.S. Senate contest in dead heats; both say they show momentum is on their side.

But the GOP is hoping to catch a national tail wind that appears to be trending in favor of Republicans in the midst of a gloomy economy and falling approval ratings for President Barack Obama.

Republican Sam Blakeslee this week beat out a Democrat who promoted his endorsement from Obama in a special election for a state Senate seat along the Californias central coast. Democrats have a slight registration advantage there.

We repeatedly hear and see objective data that Democratic voters are not enthusiastic about turning out this year, said GOP chairman Ron Nehring. The Democrats are going to have to spend a lot of money turning voters out that we dont have to spend because we know from research that our voters are fired up.

The party also faces no pressure to spend in the governors race, where billionaire Whitman has already contributed $104 million of her own money to what is expected to become the most expensive statewide campaign in history.

Since the June primary, she has also assiduously courted Hispanic voters, opening an office in Hispanic East Los Angeles and airing radio and TV spots in Spanish.

But Democrats who traditionally dominate this demographic are unlikely to cede those voters or other moderates. Their party, with its strong union support, is generally known for skillful voter-turnout efforts, and this year will be no different, said Democratic Party spokesman Tenoch Flores.

Our greatest advantage is our network of grassroots activists across the state who are ready and eager to get to work and turn Democrats out to vote, he said.

Whitmans rival, state Attorney General Jerry Brown, also has long-standing ties to Latino groups and is getting millions in financial backing from unions this year.

Kam Kuwata, a longtime Democratic strategist who is promoting a new website on the corporate records of Whitman and Fiorina, said the leading candidates are doing well, considering the spending by their opponents this year.

I am one that believes summertime polls are a little overrated and I think once the campaign begins and it gets to gel and people know the real records of Carly Fiorina and Meg Whitman, theyll reject them, he said.



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33 trapped Chile miners found alive after 17 days AP

SANTIAGO, Chile All 33 miners trapped deep underground for 17 days were reached alive Sunday, Chiles president confirmed.

A probe sent early Sunday near the site of a shelter came back with a handwritten note: All 33 of us are fine in the shelter.

We are overjoyed at the news, said President Sebastian Pinera, who euphorically waved the message written in red letters at the rescue site.

Rescuers sent a probe early Sunday 2,257 feet 688 meters deep into the collapsed gold and copper mine and became optimistic when they heard hammering noises.

Mine officials and family had hoped the workers were able to escape to the shelter when the walls collapsed Aug. 5 but had said air and food supplies there were limited.

Rescuers sent eight probes into the mine before reaching the shelter. They said it could take up to four months to get the miners out.



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33 trapped Chile miners found alive after 17 days AP

SANTIAGO, Chile All 33 miners trapped deep underground for 17 days were reached alive Sunday, Chiles president confirmed.

A probe sent early Sunday near the site of a shelter came back with a handwritten note: All 33 of us are fine in the shelter.

We are overjoyed at the news, said President Sebastian Pinera, who euphorically waved the message written in red letters at the rescue site.

Rescuers sent a probe early Sunday 2,257 feet 688 meters deep into the collapsed gold and copper mine and became optimistic when they heard hammering noises.

Mine officials and family had hoped the workers were able to escape to the shelter when the walls collapsed Aug. 5 but had said air and food supplies there were limited.

Rescuers sent eight probes into the mine before reaching the shelter. They said it could take up to four months to get the miners out.



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Rallies over mosque near ground zero get heated AP

NEW YORK The proposed mosque near ground zero drew hundreds of fever-pitch demonstrators Sunday, with opponents carrying signs associating Islam with blood, supporters shouting, Say no to racist fear and American flags waving on both sides.

Police separated the two groups but there were some nose-to-nose confrontations, including a man and a woman screaming at each other across a barricade under a steady rain.

Opponents of the plan to build a $100 million, 13-story Islamic center and mosque two blocks from the World Trade Center site appeared to outnumber supporters. Bruce Springsteens Born in the USA blared over loudspeakers as mosque opponents chanted, No mosque, no way

Signs hoisted by hundreds of protesters standing behind police barricades read SHARIA � using dripping, blood-red letters to describe Islams Shariah law. Around the corner, NYPD officers guarded a cordoned-off stretch of Park Place occupied by the old building that is to become the Islamic center.

Steve Ayling, a 40-year-old Brooklyn plumber who took his SHARIA sign to a dry spot by an office building, said the people behind the mosque project are the same people who took down the twin towers.

Opponents demand that the mosque be moved farther from the site where nearly 3,000 people were killed on Sept. 11, 2001. Ayling said, They should put it in the Middle East, and added that he still vividly remembers watching television on 9/11 and seeing people jumping from the towers, and ashes falling on my house.

On a nearby sidewalk, police chased away a group that unfurled a banner with images of beating, stoning and other torture they said was committed by those who followed Islamic law.

The mosque project is being led by Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf and his wife, Daisy Khan, who insist the center will promote moderate Islam. The dispute has sparked a national debate on religious freedom and American values and is becoming an issue on the campaign trail ahead of the midterm elections. Republicans have been critical of President Barack Obamas stance: He has said the Muslims have the right to build the center at the site but has not commented on whether he thinks they should.

At a pro-mosque rally staged a block away from opponents demonstration, several hundred people chanted, Muslims are welcome here We say no to racist fear

Dr. Ali Akram, a Brooklyn physician, came with his three sons and an 11-year-old nephew waving an American flag in his hand. He noted that scores of Muslims were among those who died in the towers, and he called those who oppose the mosque un-American.

They teach their children about the freedom of religion in America � but they dont practice what they preach, Akram said.

Gila Barzvi, whose son, Guy Barzvi, was killed in the towers, stood with mosque opponents, clutching a large photo of her son with both hands.

This is sacred ground and its where my son was buried, the native Israeli from Queens said. She said the mosque would be like a knife in our hearts.

She was joined by a close friend, Kobi Mor, who flew from San Francisco to participate in the rally.

If the mosque gets built, we will bombard it, Mor said. He would not elaborate but added that he believes the project will never happen.

The Sunday rallies coincided with an annual motorcycle ride by a group that raises money for Sept. 11 first responders.

Bikers rolled in from the two other Sept. 11 attack sites, Washington and Shanksville, Pa.

The imam behind the project is in the middle of a Mideast trip funded by the U.S. State Department that is intended to promote religious tolerance. He has discussed efforts to combat extremism, but has avoided any comments on the rancor over the planned Islamic center.

Rauf told the Al Wasat newspaper in Bahrain that the freedoms enshrined by the U.S. Constitution also reflect true Muslim values. A portion of the interview � to be published Monday � was seen Sunday by The Associated Press.



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Iranian president offers friendship to the US AP

CAIRO Irans president is quoted by an Arabic satellite channel as saying he offers friendship to the U.S.

However, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also taunted Washington by saying he does not fear an attack by the U.S. because it could not even defeat a small army in Iraq, according to Al Jazeera television.

The station aired an interview with Ahmadinejad Sunday in Arabic translation from the original Farsi.



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Faulty alarms blamed for van Gogh theft in Egypt AP

CAIRO None of the alarms and only seven out of 43 surveillance cameras were working at a Cairo museum where a Vincent van Gogh painting was stolen, Egypts top prosecutor said Sunday. Thieves made off with the canvas, known by the titles of Poppy Flowers and Vase with Flowers, on Saturday from the Mahmoud Khalil Museum in the Egyptian capital.

Prosecutor general Abdel-Meguid Mahmoud told Egypts state news agency Sunday that the thieves used a box cutter to remove the painting from its frame. He blamed the heist on the museums lax security measures, calling them for the most part feeble and superficial.

The museum guards daily rounds at closing time were inadequate and did not meet minimum security requirements to protect internationally renowned works of art, he said.

Mahmoud added that his office had warned Egypts museums to implement stricter security controls after nine paintings were stolen last year from another Cairo institute, the Mohammed Ali Museum. Similar security lapses were to blame in that theft.

Fifteen Egyptian officials, including the director of the Khalil museum, Reem Bahir, and the head of the fine arts department at the Ministry of Culture, have been barred from leaving Egypt until the investigation into the paintings theft is complete, Mahmoud said. He did elaborate.

Bahir refused to comment on the prosecutor generals statements, saying only that the investigation was still under way.

On Saturday, Egypts minister of culture, Farouk Hosni, said that police had confiscated the painting from an Italian couple at Cairo airport hours after it was stolen.

But Hosni later backtracked, saying his announcement was based on false and incorrect information. He said authorities were still searching for the missing painting, which he said is worth an estimated $50 million.

It was not clear what caused the confusion over the artworks fate.

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.

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.



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Faulty alarms blamed for van Gogh theft in Egypt AP

CAIRO None of the alarms and only seven out of 43 surveillance cameras were working at a Cairo museum where a Vincent van Gogh painting was stolen, Egypts top prosecutor said Sunday.

Thieves made off with the canvas, known by the titles of Poppy Flowers and Vase with Flowers, on Saturday from the Mahmoud Khalil Museum in the Egyptian capital.

Prosecutor general Abdel-Meguid Mahmoud told Egypts state news agency Sunday that the thieves used a box cutter to remove the painting from its frame. He blamed the heist on the museums lax security measures, calling them for the most part feeble and superficial.

The museum guards daily rounds at closing time were inadequate and did not meet minimum security requirements to protect internationally renowned works of art, he said.

Mahmoud added that his office had warned Egypts museums to implement stricter security controls after nine paintings were stolen last year from another Cairo institute, the Mohammed Ali Museum. Similar security lapses were to blame in that theft.

Fifteen Egyptian officials, including the director of the Khalil museum, Reem Bahir, and the head of the fine arts department at the Ministry of Culture, have been barred from leaving Egypt until the investigation into the paintings theft is complete, Mahmoud said. He did elaborate.

Bahir refused to comment on the prosecutor generals statements, saying only that the investigation was still under way.

On Saturday, Egypts minister of culture, Farouk Hosni, said that police had confiscated the painting from an Italian couple at Cairo airport hours after it was stolen.

But Hosni later backtracked, saying his announcement was based on false and incorrect information. He said authorities were still searching for the missing painting, which he said is worth an estimated $50 million.

It was not clear what caused the confusion over the artworks fate.

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.

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.



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Afghan pres defends move to disband security firms AP

KABUL, Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai on Sunday defended his decision to disband private security firms, saying they were undermining Afghanistans police and army and contributing to corruption.

Last Monday Karzai ordered Afghan and international security companies to disband by the end of the year, despite U.S. concerns the short deadline may endanger American development projects that private guards protect.

NATO uses private security to guard supply convoys bringing food, water, ammunition and other supplies to military bases throughout the country. Critics have said Afghanistans own security forces are not ready to assume the burden.

But Karzai told ABC News This Week with Christiane Amanpour the companies undermine the governments effort to recruit more police and soldiers because it cant compete with the private firms in salaries. He also repeated allegations that many companies are contributing to corruption by shaking down transport firms for money, some of which goes to warlords and the Taliban for protection.

Even before Karzais order last week, U.S. congressional investigators had been looking into allegations that Afghan security firms were extorting as much as $4 million a week from contractors paid with U.S. tax dollars and then funneling the money to warlords and the Taliban to avoid attacks against convoys. Allegations of widespread corruption have also been levied at the Afghan police.

I am appealing to the U.S. taxpayer not allow their hard-earned money to be wasted on groups that are not only providing lots of inconveniences to the Afghan people, but actually are, God knows, in contact with Mafia-like groups and perhaps also funding militants and insurgents and terrorists through those firms, Karzai said.

The Afghan Interior Ministry has licensed 52 security firms, but some older contracts are still being completed by unlicensed firms, according to the U.S. military. About half of the companies are Afghan-owned.

About 37 companies are working with the U.S. government, totaling about 26,000 armed security contractors. The majority of those work for the military, though some are employed by the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development, according to the military.

Karzai said security companies were running a parallel security structure to the Afghan government as well as harassing Afghan civilians.

They are wasting billions of dollars of resources and they are definitely an obstruction, an impediment in a most serious matter to the growth of Afghanistans security institutions, the police and the army, he said.

During the interview, Karzai also promised the two anti-corruption task forces � the Major Crimes Task Force and the Sensitive Investigative Unit � would be allowed to conduct corruption probes of high-level government officials regardless of their political connections.

Karzai demanded more control over the work of the two teams, which are mentored by U.S. and British law enforcement officials, after the recent arrest of a top presidential adviser, Mohammad Zia Salehi, for allegedly accepting a car in exchange for help in exerting pressure on Afghan officials to ease off in another corruption case.

The Obama administration sees Salehis arrest as a litmus test of Karzais willingness to fight corruption.

Karzai confirmed during the interview he intervened very, very strongly because Salehis civil rights were violated during his arrest.

This man was taken out of his house in the middle of the night by 30 Kalashnikov-toting masked men in the name of Afghan law enforcement. he said. This is exactly reminiscent of the days of the Soviet Union where people were taken away from their homes by armed people in the name of the state and thrown into obscure prisons in some sort of Kangaroo courts.

Nevertheless, Karzai said the case against Salehi would be allowed to proceed according to Afghan law.

Corruption should be handled most effectively ... and with a lot of pressure, but it has to be across the board and apolitical and without vested foreign interests, he said.

Karzai also said he was willing to talk peace with Taliban figures who break with al-Qaida and other terrorist groups � a key U.S. condition � and accept the Afghan constitution. He said there had already been individual contacts with some Taliban elements but not formal negotiations.

The president acknowledged fears among Afghan womens groups and ethnic minorities that their political, economic and social gains might be eroded under a future peace agreement with the Taliban, which banned women from most jobs and education during their years in power.

Those concerns were heightened last week when Taliban militants in northern Afghanistan stoned a young couple to death for adultery in the first confirmed use of the punishment here since the hard-line Islamist regime was ousted in the U.S.-led invasion of 2001.

Karzai said he was in deep, deep shock over the stoning and would ensure that womens representation in peace talks would be solid and meaningful.

He said the Afghan people must make sure the gains made by women in political, social and economic walks of life since the fall of the Taliban were not only protected but are promoted and advanced further.



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Israeli PM: Peace difficult but possible AP

JERUSALEM Israels prime minister spelled out his opening position for the new round of Mideast peace talks set to begin next week, insisting Sunday on key security conditions and saying an agreement would be difficult but possible.

Benjamin Netanyahu said a future Palestinian state would have to be demilitarized, recognize Israel as the homeland of the Jewish people and respect Israels vital security interests. Some of his demands have already been rejected by the Palestinians.

We come to the talks with a genuine desire to reach a peace agreement between the two peoples, while protecting Israels national interests, chiefly security, Netanyahu told his Cabinet.

His comments were his first since U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced Friday that the sides would resume direct talks at a summit in Washington next week.

Achieving a peace agreement between us and the Palestinian Authority is difficult but possible, he said.

We are talking about a peace agreement between Israel and a demilitarized Palestinian state, and this state, if it is established at the end of the process ... is meant to end the conflict and not to be a foundation for its continuation by other means, Netanyahu said.

He did not elaborate on any additional security demands, but in the past he has said that Israel would have to maintain a presence along the West Banks border with Jordan to prevent arms smuggling. The Palestinians, who claim all of the West Bank as part of their future state, reject any Israeli presence.

In addition, he said, the Palestinians must recognize Israel as the state of the Jewish people just as Israel would recognize the Palestinian state as that of the Palestinian people.

The Palestinians recognize Israels right to exist, but refuse to take a stand on the nature of the country. They say that recognizing Israel as the Jewish state could prejudice the rights of Israels Arab minority and compromise the right of Palestinian refugees to return to homes vacated in the fighting around Israels establishment in 1948.

Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said Netanyahus comments were dictation, not negotiation.

If he wants negotiations, he knows that these conditions wont stand, Erekat said.

The comments indicated just how much work lies ahead for President Barack Obama, who hopes to resolve one of the worlds most intractable conflicts within a year.

The Western-backed Palestinian government in the West Bank, wary of engaging with Netanyahus hard-line government, has resisted entering direct peace talks, which they fear wont be productive. Fridays announcement came after months of American diplomatic efforts to get the sides talking again.

The Palestinians want a commitment from Netanyahu that he will allow them to form a state that includes virtually all of the West Bank and east Jerusalem, areas captured in the 1967 Mideast war.

Netanyahu has refused to signal whether he is prepared for a broad withdrawal from the West Bank, and has said that east Jerusalem must remain Israeli.

The new talks could also sharpen the differences in Netanyahus fractious ruling coalition. Some analysts have suggested they could potentially force the prime minister to change its makeup to exclude some of the more hard-line members in favor of moderates like his rivals from the opposition Kadima party.

In a key test, an Israeli slowdown on settlement construction in the West Bank is set to expire next month, and some of the coalitions hawkish members have said the governments stability will be threatened if Israeli construction in the West Bank does not resume in full.

If you start negotiations, unconditional negotiations, one cannot accept a condition that the freeze should continue, Cabinet Minister Uzi Landau of the hard-line Yisrael Beitenu said Sunday.

Erekat, the Palestinian negotiator, said that if the slowdown ends, Israel will have closed the door to negotiation.

In the West Bank, papers greeted the new talks with pessimism. Direct talks destined for failure before being launched because of Israeli hardening on continuation of settlement building, read a headline Sunday in the daily Al-Ayam, which is closely linked to the Palestinian government.

In Israel, the news of the renewal of peace talks was greeted with scant interest. One leading daily paper, Maariv, mentioned it Sunday only on page 10.

One commentator, Nahum Barnea of the daily Yediot Ahronot, wrote that after 17 years of peace talks interspersed with violence Israelis had little optimism left.

Weve seen that movie. Weve seen it again and again and again. It is hard to believe that this time it is going to have a happy end, he wrote.



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Wyclef Jean: Im not giving up my bid for prez yet AP

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti Hip-hop singer Wyclef Jean says he is not abandoning his presidential bid just yet and will send a lawyer to a Haitian court to appeal a decision rejecting his candidacy.

Speaking to The Associated Press from his home in Croix des Bouquets, Jean says lawyers will go to a Haitian court Monday to appeal with the national electoral dispute office.

Jean told the AP on Sunday that he has a document which shows everything is correct and that he and his aides feel that what is going on here has everything to do with Haitian politics.

Jeans candidacy was rejected by the countrys elections board Friday night, presumably because he did not meet residency requirements.



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Thousands stay in Pakistan floods to protect homes AP

HAMDANI LEGARI, Pakistan The old man stepped carefully through his village, dodging craters as deep as graves where they had been mining soil for embankments to hold back the floodwaters. Already, nearly half this village of tenant farmers had been destroyed. The crops wiped out.

But Mohammed Ayoub and his neighbors werent leaving, not unless all the mud houses collapsed. It wasnt about pride, or a farmers love for his village or the land he sows. It was a straightforward financial equation: They couldnt afford to lose what little they had left.

If, to an outsider, their belongings might look inconsequential � some goats, a couple buffalos, cheap metal cooking pots and transistor radios � it was everything to them. And with no way to take their possessions with them, they were not going to leave them for the looters.

Across the Pakistan flood zone, thousands � perhaps hundreds of thousands � of people have decided to stay in their homes, often sleeping on rooftops because of the high water. Stranded on tiny islands a few inches above the water line and refusing offers of rescue, they are reflections of Pakistan today: its widespread poverty, the collapse of the traditional bonds between landlords and tenants, and the lack of confidence in authorities willingness to protect them.

The women were scared before we sent them away, and were scared now, said Ayoub, a thin, courtly man with a white mustache wearing a dirt-stained shalwar kameez, the baggy shirt and pants ubiquitous across rural Pakistan.

He was one of about 30 men who remained as guardians and to build up the embankments in case of more flooding. About 400 villagers have already fled. How can we all leave? he asked. We have to stay here if we want to protect what we own.

Another farmer, a young man, spoke up: Were not scared of dying, Ghulam Raza said loudly. Were scared of losing everything we have.

In reality, death is not much of a worry now in this part of Sindh province. The worst of the danger passed when the floods swept through more than a week ago, and even then no one here died. Life, though, is desperately miserable: There is little food, no electricity, the well is filled with brown flood water and theres nothing to do but dig more holes to shore up the embankments.

While doctors say cases of malaria and gastrointestinal diseases are spiking across the flooded areas, and there have been sporadic cases of cholera, there are enough fishing boats in this part of Sindh so people can flee to the shoreline if they want.

So in the twisted logic of Pakistans floods, the people of Hamdani Legari could have done far worse.

Pakistans troubles began in late July, when annual monsoon rains turned savage, and downpours began pounding the northwest. Within a few days, as much rain fell as the country normally receives in a year. About 1,500 people have died.

But that was only the beginning. The rain that had fallen in the mountainous northwest began flowing southward through the plains: swelling rivers, breaking through embankments, flooding an area the size of Italy and wreaking havoc across the agricultural heartland.

Millions of people were left homeless. On Sunday, flood levels had stabilized in central Sindh, where Hamdani Legari is located, but were surging further south in the province, closer to the Arabian Sea.

The village is in the flood plains of the Indus, a river that has fed societies in this part of the world for millennia and where villagers are long accustomed to monsoon flooding.

But on the morning of Aug. 14, a few hours before sunrise, they awoke to something strange and terrifying.

Past floods had risen a few inches centimeters a day, and normally stopped long before they devastated the crops. This one rose 6 feet 1.8 meters in less than 24 hours, they say here, cutting off the village and swamping buildings.

In the island villages, the devastation is everywhere.

Take 40-year-old Nazir Ahmed, a deeply exhausted man who lived with his wife and six children in a two-room home on the edge of Hamdani Legari. He tried, in the first days after the floods, to build embankments against the water. But his land was just too low. Now he points toward the water to show where he raised his family, indicating a 10-foot 3-meter mud pillar and a jumble of metal rods. That is my house, he said.

It is how many people describe their flooded villages, using the present tense to talk about what used to exist.

There is one house, and there is another, said Nazzar Mohammad, gesturing into the murky water just outside the nearby village of Izzat Khan Boghia. There is our school, he said, pointing at ragged sheets of woven thatch sticking above the waterline.

Hamdani Legari, like most villages here, can seem a place from another century, with its houses and grain bins made of mud and its scarcity of store-bought goods.

Its a place where women are kept from public view, where few people earn more than a few hundred dollars per year, and where for generations the families of tenant farmers have been tied to the families of their landlords � the zamindars � working their fields in exchange for half the harvest.

A couple generations ago, the zamindar would have been a fiercer overlord � a man effectively free to treat his tenants however he saw fit � but he also would have been required by tradition to care for them during a calamity.

But after these floods, the zamindar of Hamdani Legari loaded his household goods into a metal trailer. Then using the villages only tractor, he slowly towed everything he owned to the shoreline.

No one was surprised he left. Ahmed, the man whose own home has already collapsed but who stayed on to help his neighbors, summed it up simply, He did nothing for us.

These are people at the fringes of Pakistani society. They have no power, no influence, little money.

Here, people see the authorities simply as bribe-demanding bureaucrats. They are relieved the army brought boats to take away villagers who wanted to leave, but laughed when asked whether the police could protect their belongings if they also left for the shore.

The police do not turn up even when blood is shed, when a man is murdered, said Ahmed. There is no chance that they would protect the villages homes.

He shrugged when asked how he would support his family with his house and crops destroyed. Perhaps he could hire himself out as a day laborer, he said, earning a dollar or two a day working on farms or construction sites.

For now, he said, his concern was keeping the village dry.

And as he spoke, the current of warm brown floodwaters roiled past in ugly twists, its movement guided by roads and footpaths and fields of crops now hidden below the surface.



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Thousands stay in Pakistan floods to protect homes AP

HAMDANI LEGARI, Pakistan The old man stepped carefully through his village, dodging craters as deep as graves where they had been mining soil for embankments to hold back the floodwaters. Already, nearly half this village of tenant farmers had been destroyed. The crops wiped out.

But Mohammed Ayoub and his neighbors werent leaving, not unless all the mud houses collapsed. It wasnt about pride, or a farmers love for his village or the land he sows. It was a straightforward financial equation: They couldnt afford to lose what little they had left.

If, to an outsider, their belongings might look inconsequential � some goats, a couple buffalos, cheap metal cooking pots and transistor radios � it was everything to them. And with no way to take their possessions with them, they were not going to leave them for the looters.

Across the Pakistan flood zone, thousands � perhaps hundreds of thousands � of people have decided to stay in their homes, often sleeping on rooftops because of the high water. Stranded on tiny islands a few inches above the water line and refusing offers of rescue, they are reflections of Pakistan today: its widespread poverty, the collapse of the traditional bonds between landlords and tenants, and the lack of confidence in authorities willingness to protect them.

The women were scared before we sent them away, and were scared now, said Ayoub, a thin, courtly man with a white mustache wearing a dirt-stained shalwar kameez, the baggy shirt and pants ubiquitous across rural Pakistan.

He was one of about 30 men who remained as guardians and to build up the embankments in case of more flooding. About 400 villagers have already fled. How can we all leave? he asked. We have to stay here if we want to protect what we own.

Another farmer, a young man, spoke up: Were not scared of dying, Ghulam Raza said loudly. Were scared of losing everything we have.

In reality, death is not much of a worry now in this part of Sindh province. The worst of the danger passed when the floods swept through more than a week ago, and even then no one here died. Life, though, is desperately miserable: There is little food, no electricity, the well is filled with brown flood water and theres nothing to do but dig more holes to shore up the embankments.

While doctors say cases of malaria and gastrointestinal diseases are spiking across the flooded areas, and there have been sporadic cases of cholera, there are enough fishing boats in this part of Sindh so people can flee to the shoreline if they want.

So in the twisted logic of Pakistans floods, the people of Hamdani Legari could have done far worse.

Pakistans troubles began in late July, when annual monsoon rains turned savage, and downpours began pounding the northwest. Within a few days, as much rain fell as the country normally receives in a year. About 1,500 people have died.

But that was only the beginning. The rain that had fallen in the mountainous northwest began flowing southward through the plains: swelling rivers, breaking through embankments, flooding an area the size of Italy and wreaking havoc across the agricultural heartland.

Millions of people were left homeless. On Sunday, flood levels had stabilized in central Sindh, where Hamdani Legari is located, but were surging further south in the province, closer to the Arabian Sea.

The village is in the flood plains of the Indus, a river that has fed societies in this part of the world for millennia and where villagers are long accustomed to monsoon flooding.

But on the morning of Aug. 14, a few hours before sunrise, they awoke to something strange and terrifying.

Past floods had risen a few inches centimeters a day, and normally stopped long before they devastated the crops. This one rose 6 feet 1.8 meters in less than 24 hours, they say here, cutting off the village and swamping buildings.

In the island villages, the devastation is everywhere.

Take 40-year-old Nazir Ahmed, a deeply exhausted man who lived with his wife and six children in a two-room home on the edge of Hamdani Legari. He tried, in the first days after the floods, to build embankments against the water. But his land was just too low. Now he points toward the water to show where he raised his family, indicating a 10-foot 3-meter mud pillar and a jumble of metal rods. That is my house, he said.

It is how many people describe their flooded villages, using the present tense to talk about what used to exist.

There is one house, and there is another, said Nazzar Mohammad, gesturing into the murky water just outside the nearby village of Izzat Khan Boghia. There is our school, he said, pointing at ragged sheets of woven thatch sticking above the waterline.

Hamdani Legari, like most villages here, can seem a place from another century, with its houses and grain bins made of mud and its scarcity of store-bought goods.

Its a place where women are kept from public view, where few people earn more than a few hundred dollars per year, and where for generations the families of tenant farmers have been tied to the families of their landlords � the zamindars � working their fields in exchange for half the harvest.

A couple generations ago, the zamindar would have been a fiercer overlord � a man effectively free to treat his tenants however he saw fit � but he also would have been required by tradition to care for them during a calamity.

But after these floods, the zamindar of Hamdani Legari loaded his household goods into a metal trailer. Then using the villages only tractor, he slowly towed everything he owned to the shoreline.

No one was surprised he left. Ahmed, the man whose own home has already collapsed but who stayed on to help his neighbors, summed it up simply, He did nothing for us.

These are people at the fringes of Pakistani society. They have no power, no influence, little money.

Here, people see the authorities simply as bribe-demanding bureaucrats. They are relieved the army brought boats to take away villagers who wanted to leave, but laughed when asked whether the police could protect their belongings if they also left for the shore.

The police do not turn up even when blood is shed, when a man is murdered, said Ahmed. There is no chance that they would protect the villages homes.

He shrugged when asked how he would support his family with his house and crops destroyed. Perhaps he could hire himself out as a day laborer, he said, earning a dollar or two a day working on farms or construction sites.

For now, he said, his concern was keeping the village dry.

And as he spoke, the current of warm brown floodwaters roiled past in ugly twists, its movement guided by roads and footpaths and fields of crops now hidden below the surface.



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US troops to return only if Iraqi forces fail AP

WASHINGTON It would take a complete failure of the Iraqi security forces for the U.S. to resume combat operations there, the top American commander in Iraq said as the final U.S. fighting forces prepared to leave the country.

With a major military milestone in sight, Gen. Ray Odierno said in interviews broadcast Sunday that any resumption of combat duties by American forces is unlikely.

We dont see that happening, Odierno said. The Iraqi security forces have been doing so well for so long now that we really believe were beyond that point.

President Barack Obama plans a major speech on Iraq after his return to Washington, according to a senior administration official who spoke on condition of anonymity Sunday because details were being finalized. The speech will come shortly after Obama returns to the White House on Aug. 29 from his Marthas Vineyard vacation.

About 50,000 U.S. troops will remain in the country until the end of 2011 to serve as a training and assistance force, a dramatic drawdown from the peak of more than 170,000 during the surge of American forces in 2007.

Obama will face a delicate balancing act in his speech between welcoming signs of progress and concluding to the 7-year-old war without prematurely declaring the mission accomplished, as his former President George W. Bush once did.

U.S. involvement in Iraq beyond the end of 2011, Odierno said, probably would involve assisting the Iraqis secure their airspace and borders.

While Iraq forces can handle internal security and protect Iraqis, Odierno said he believes military commanders want to have the U.S. involved beyond 2011 to help Iraqis acquire the required equipment, training and technical capabilities.

He said Iraqs security forces have matured to the point where they will be ready to shoulder enough of the burden to permit the remaining 50,000 soldiers to go home at the end of next year.

If the Iraqis asked that American troops remain in the country after 2011, Odierno said U.S. officials would consider it, but that would be a policy decision made by the president and his national security advisers.

Odiernos assessment, while optimistic, also acknowledges the difficult road ahead for the Iraqis as they take control of their own security, even as political divisions threaten the formation of the fledgling democracy.

On Thursday, the 4th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division began crossing the border from Iraq into Kuwait, becoming the last combat brigade to leave Iraq. Its exodus, along with that of the approximately 2,000 remaining U.S. combat forces destined to leave in the coming days, fulfills Obamas pledge to end combat operations in Iraq by Aug. 31.

In interviews with CBS Face the Nation and CNNs State of the Union, Odierno said it may take several years before America can determine if the war was a success.

A strong democratic Iraq will bring stability to the Middle East, and if we see Iraq thats moving toward that, two, three, five years from now, I think we can call our operations a success, he said.

Much of that may hinge on whether Iraqs political leaders can overcome ethnic divisions and work toward a more unified government, while also enabling security forces to tamp down a simmering insurgency.

Iraqs political parties have been bickering for more than five months since the March parliamentary elections failed to produce a clear winner. They have yet to reach agreements on how to share power or whether to replace embattled Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, and amid the political instability, other economic and governmental problems fester.

Fueling that instability is neighboring Iran which, Odierno said, continues to fund and train Shiite extremist groups.

They dont want to see Iraq turn into a strong democratic country. Theyd rather see it become a weak governmental institution, said Odierno.

He added that he is not worried that Iraq will fall back into a military dictatorship, as it was under the reign of Saddam Hussein.

___

Associated Press writer Erica Werner in Edgartown, Mass., contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Defense Department: http://ping.fm/mIawY



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2 US troops killed in eastern Afghanistan AP

KABUL, Afghanistan Two U.S. troops were killed by insurgents in eastern Afghanistan on Sunday, and a former guerrilla leader who battled Soviet invaders decades ago was killed by a roadside bomb in the countrys north.

NATO gave no other further details about the U.S. casualties, which bring the number of international forces killed in Afghanistan this month to 40, including 26 Americans, according to a count by The Associated Press.

Using a bomb detonated by remote control, insurgents destroyed the vehicle in which Salaam Pahlawan was traveling as he made his way Saturday to government offices in Faryab provinces Al Mar district, said provincial police commander Khalil Andarbi.

The attack also killed two of Pahlawans sons, ages 5 and 10, and two bodyguards, Andarbi said.

He said Pahlawan had been commander of anti-Soviet forces in the district but had lately been serving in an advisory role as a tribal elder. Many surviving veterans of the 1979-1989 Soviet invasion have been targeted by the Taliban for allying themselves with the government in Kabul.

In western Afghanistans Herat province, insurgents Saturday ambushed a convoy carrying a provincial council member running for a seat in next months elections for the national parliament, killing the mans brother, said Raouf Ahmedi, police spokesman for western Afghanistan.

Abdul Hadi Jamshadis bodyguards returned fire, but Ahmedi said it wasnt known whether any militants were killed.

The attack appeared to be part of a campaign of terror and intimidation being waged by the Taliban in hopes of sabotaging the Sept. 18 elections.

Fighting around the country on Saturday and Sunday killed five Afghan soldiers and at least 17 militants, according to the defense and interior ministries. Five of the insurgents were killed when roadside bombs they were trying to plant exploded, while a joint NATO-Afghan operation in the southern province of Zabul resulted in the death of a senior Taliban commander, Sandar Yar, according to a provincial government statement.

Insurgents in Kandahar province, one of Afghanistans most violent, killed the head of a private security company on Saturday, while one civilian was killed and five wounded by a land mine in Herats Anjil district.

President Hamid Karzai has ordered such companies to cease operating in Afghanistan within four months, posing a challenge to the U.S. and its allies who rely heavily on contractors to guard supply convoys, installations and development projects.

Complaints have mounted that the firms are poorly regulated, reckless and effectively operate outside local law, and the order to disband them is part of the presidents moves to assert his authority.

German Brigadier Gen. Josef Blotz, spokesman for the International Security Assistance Force overseeing foreign troops in Afghanistan, said ISAF supported Karzais order and would work with his government on plans to carry it out.

However, Blotz said an interim solution may have to be found that addresses the need for some contractors to continue to operate.

Separate solutions needed to be found to provide protection for diplomats, development projects, and convoys, as well as ensure security around forward operating bases manned by foreign and Afghan troops, Blotz said.

It is a very complex thing, he said.

Karzai has also ordered the removal of some of the capitals ubiquitous security barriers to free up snarled traffic.

Work crews outside a police recruiting center in eastern Kabul on Sunday attached steel cables to iron hoops embedded in the concrete blast walls and used cranes to move them away slab by giant slab. Some were loaded aboard trucks and removed, while others were simply shifted back from the street closer to the walls of the actual center.

___

Associated Press reporter Mirwais Khan in Kandahar contributed to this report.



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2 US troops killed in eastern Afghanistan AP

KABUL, Afghanistan Two U.S. troops were killed by insurgents in eastern Afghanistan on Sunday, and a former guerrilla leader who battled Soviet invaders decades ago was killed by a roadside bomb in the countrys north.

NATO gave no other further details about the U.S. casualties, which bring the number of international forces killed in Afghanistan this month to 40, including 26 Americans, according to a count by The Associated Press.

Using a bomb detonated by remote control, insurgents destroyed the vehicle in which Salaam Pahlawan was traveling as he made his way Saturday to government offices in Faryab provinces Al Mar district, said provincial police commander Khalil Andarbi.

The attack also killed two of Pahlawans sons, ages 5 and 10, and two bodyguards, Andarbi said.

He said Pahlawan had been commander of anti-Soviet forces in the district but had lately been serving in an advisory role as a tribal elder. Many surviving veterans of the 1979-1989 Soviet invasion have been targeted by the Taliban for allying themselves with the government in Kabul.

In western Afghanistans Herat province, insurgents Saturday ambushed a convoy carrying a provincial council member running for a seat in next months elections for the national parliament, killing the mans brother, said Raouf Ahmedi, police spokesman for western Afghanistan.

Abdul Hadi Jamshadis bodyguards returned fire, but Ahmedi said it wasnt known whether any militants were killed.

The attack appeared to be part of a campaign of terror and intimidation being waged by the Taliban in hopes of sabotaging the Sept. 18 elections.

Fighting around the country on Saturday and Sunday killed five Afghan soldiers and at least 17 militants, according to the defense and interior ministries. Five of the insurgents were killed when roadside bombs they were trying to plant exploded, while a joint NATO-Afghan operation in the southern province of Zabul resulted in the death of a senior Taliban commander, Sandar Yar, according to a provincial government statement.

Insurgents in Kandahar province, one of Afghanistans most violent, killed the head of a private security company on Saturday, while one civilian was killed and five wounded by a land mine in Herats Anjil district.

President Hamid Karzai has ordered such companies to cease operating in Afghanistan within four months, posing a challenge to the U.S. and its allies who rely heavily on contractors to guard supply convoys, installations and development projects.

Complaints have mounted that the firms are poorly regulated, reckless and effectively operate outside local law, and the order to disband them is part of the presidents moves to assert his authority.

German Brigadier Gen. Josef Blotz, spokesman for the International Security Assistance Force overseeing foreign troops in Afghanistan, said ISAF supported Karzais order and would work with his government on plans to carry it out.

However, Blotz said an interim solution may have to be found that addresses the need for some contractors to continue to operate.

Separate solutions needed to be found to provide protection for diplomats, development projects, and convoys, as well as ensure security around forward operating bases manned by foreign and Afghan troops, Blotz said.

It is a very complex thing, he said.

Karzai has also ordered the removal of some of the capitals ubiquitous security barriers to free up snarled traffic.

Work crews outside a police recruiting center in eastern Kabul on Sunday attached steel cables to iron hoops embedded in the concrete blast walls and used cranes to move them away slab by giant slab. Some were loaded aboard trucks and removed, while others were simply shifted back from the street closer to the walls of the actual center.

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Associated Press reporter Mirwais Khan in Kandahar contributed to this report.



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Australian parties seek backing of independents AP

CANBERRA, Australia The leaders of Australias two major political parties began negotiating power deals with independent lawmakers Sunday after the nations closest election in decades failed to deliver a clear mandate to govern.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who remains caretaker leader, said it was clear that no party had won a majority of parliamentary seats in Saturdays poll that delivered an extraordinary voter backlash against her center-left Labor Party after a single three-year term.

Market analysts predicted the uncertainty would push the Australian dollar and stock market lower when trading resumed Monday.

Labor hemorrhaged votes to the environment-focused Greens party as the government was punished for shelving plans to charge major polluting industries for every ton of carbon gas that they emit.

Gillard and Tony Abbott, leader of the conservative Liberal Party, said they had initiated talks with three independents in the House of Representatives as well as the Greens party in a bid to secure their votes in the House of Representatives. Neither revealed what they were prepared to offer in the confidential negotiations.

Both Labor and the Liberal-led coalition have conceded that neither is likely to hold the 76 seats needed to form a government in the 150-seat lower chamber.

Its my intention to negotiate in good faith an effective agreement to form government, Gillard told reporters.

She suggested that Labor would be better able to get its legislative agenda through the Senate, where major parties rarely hold majorities. The Greens record support in the polls increased the partys Senate seats from five to nine, giving them the leverage to become kingmaker in deciding which major party controls that chamber.

So the question before all of us is this: Which party is better able to form a stable and effective government in the national interest? Gillard said.

But Abbott, who doubts the science behind climate change and rules out ever taxing polluters for their greenhouse gas emissions, said Labor had proved unstable even with a clear majority.

Bitter recriminations within Labor over the election result have begun, with at least one lawmaker who lost her seat blaming her colleagues dumping of former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd for Gillard. Some lawmakers have blamed the result on a series of damaging media leaks against Gillard during the election campaign which are suspected to be the work of disgruntled Rudd loyalists.

Its certain that any Labor government emerging from yesterday will be chronically divided and dysfunctional, Abbott said.

The prospect of no party controlling Parliament added to concerns already shaking markets about the economy, AMP Capital Investors chief economist Shane Oliver said.

Uncertainty over who will govern, fears of a possible drift toward less business-friendly policies reflecting the increased power of the Greens, worries about less decisive policy making, and a likely absence of longer-term reforms under a minority government will all likely add to jitters in the Australian share market and in the Australian dollar, he said.

Independent Tony Windsor said he planned to talk with fellow independents Bob Katter and Rob Oakeshott on Sunday to decide whether to negotiate a power deal with the major parties as a group or individually.

They were the only independents in the last Parliament and are former members of the Nationals party, which is a coalition partner of the Liberals. But all have said they are open to supporting a Labor minority government.

Whichever side it is, we need to have some stability and maintenance of stability so that the government can actually work, Windsor told Australian Broadcasting Corp. television.

We might end up back at the polls, he added, referring to the possibility of another election if a support pact cannot be negotiated.

All three independents have made a key issue of boosting the poor telecommunications services in rural Australia. Labor had gone to the polls promising a 43 billion Australian dollar $38 billion high-speed optical fiber national broadband network. The Liberals had promised a smaller, slower AU$6 billion network using a range of technologies including optical fiber, wireless and DSL.

Greens party leader Bob Brown said no agreement had been reached after a cordial conversation with Gillard, who was seeking the support of newly elected Greens lawmaker Adam Brandt, who previously stated his preference for a Labor government.

Former Greens member Andrew Wilkie, an independent candidate contacted by Gillard, said Sunday he would not talk about which party he might support until his own seat was certain.

No Australian government has had to rely on the support of independent lawmakers to rule since 1943. Two independents changed the government in the preceding three-year term by switching their allegiance from the conservatives to Labor.

The election results were expected to be the closest since 1961, when a Liberal government retained power with a single seat, and might not be known for a week.

With more than 78 percent of the vote counted, the Australian Electoral Commission said Labor had won 70 seats and the Liberal coalition 72. Most analysts agree that the coalition is likely to finish with 73, one seat ahead of Labor.

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 three independents.



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WikiLeaks founder rejects sex abuse accusations AP

STOCKHOLM WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has dismissed sexual abuse allegations, telling a Swedish newspaper hes never had sex that wasnt consensual.

Swedish authorities issued an arrest warrant for Assange on rape suspicions this weekend but quickly withdrew it. The Australian remains under suspicion of a lesser crime of molestation.

Aftonbladet quoted Assange as saying he hasnt had sex with anyone in a way that wasnt consensual.

He said the allegations had damaged the whistleblower site because WikiLeaks enemies will keep trumpeting things even after they have been denied.

Assange said he doesnt know whats behind the accusations but we have been warned that for example the Pentagon plans to use dirty tricks to spoil things for us.



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Israeli PM: Peace difficult but possible AP

JERUSALEM Israels leader says new talks with the Palestinians will lead to a peace deal only if Israels vital interests are protected.

Benjamin Netanyahus comments Sunday were his first since U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced the resumption of direct peace talks on Friday.

Netanyahu says Israels security must be guaranteed and that the Palestinians must recognize Israel as the state of the Jewish people.

He also says any agreement must mark the end of the conflict. He says an agreement will be difficult but possible.

The U.S. announcement came after months of diplomatic efforts. The Palestinians have been wary of talking to Netanyahus hard-line government.

The last round of peace talks ended in late 2008.



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Iowa farms in egg recall have close ties AP

WASHINGTON Two Iowa farms that together recalled more than half a billion potentially tainted eggs this month share close ties, including suppliers of chickens and feed.

Both farms are linked to businessman Austin Jack DeCoster, who has been cited for numerous health, safety and employment violations over the years. DeCoster owns Wright County Egg, the original farm that recalled 380 million eggs Aug. 13 after they were linked to more than 1,000 reported cases of salmonella poisoning.

Another of his companies, Quality Egg, supplies young chickens and feed to both Wright County Egg and Hillandale Farms, the second farm that recalled another 170 million eggs a week later.

Jewanna Porter, a spokeswoman for the egg industry, said the two companies share other suppliers as well, but she did not name them.

The cause of the outbreaks is so far unknown, as Food and Drug Administration investigators are still on the ground at the farms trying to figure it out. The federal Centers for Disease Control has said the number of illnesses, estimated as high as 1,300, would likely grow.

DeCoster is no stranger to controversy in his food and farm operations:

� In 1997, DeCoster Egg Farms agreed to pay $2 million in fines to settle citations brought in 1996 for health and safety violations at DeCosters farm in Turner, Maine. Then-Labor Secretary Robert Reich said conditions were as dangerous and oppressive as any sweatshop. He cited unguarded machinery, electrical hazards, exposure to harmful bacteria and other unsanitary conditions.

� In 2000, Iowa designated DeCoster a habitual violator of environmental regulations for problems that included hog manure runoff into waterways. The label made him subject to increased penalties and prohibited him from building new farms.

� In 2002, the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced a more than $1.5 million settlement of an employment discrimination lawsuit against DeCoster Farms on behalf of Mexican women who reported they were subjected to sexual harassment, including rape, abuse and retaliation by some supervisory workers at DeCosters Wright County plants.

� In 2007, 51 workers were arrested during an immigration raid at six DeCoster egg farms. The farm had been the subject of at least three previous raids.

� In June 2010, Maine Contract Farming � the successor company to DeCoster Egg Farms � agreed in state court to pay $25,000 in penalties and to make a one-time payment of $100,000 to the Maine Department of Agriculture over animal cruelty allegations that were spurred by a hidden-camera investigation by an animal welfare organization.

It is unclear what role DeCosters company played in the current salmonella outbreak. The FDA investigation could take months, and sources of contamination are often difficult to find. The current recall goes back to April, and many of the eggs have already been consumed.

Still, DeCosters Wright County Egg is already facing at least two lawsuits related to the egg recall. One is from food distributor Dutch Farms, which says the company used unauthorized cartons to package and sell eggs under its brand without its knowledge.

The other is from a person who said they became ill after eating tainted eggs in a salad at a restaurant in Kenosha, Wis.

The CDC said investigations by 10 states since April have identified 26 cases where more than one person became ill. Preliminary information showed that Wright was the supplier in at least 15 of those.

Almost 2,000 illnesses from the strain of salmonella linked to both recalls were reported between May and July, nearly 1,300 more than usual, the CDC said. No deaths have been reported.

The most common symptoms of salmonella are diarrhea, abdominal cramps and fever within eight hours to 72 hours of eating a contaminated product. The disease can be life-threatening, especially to those with weakened immune systems.

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Associated Press Writer Jeff Baenen in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

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Online:

Food and Drug Administration: http://tinyurl.com/25ot6ss

Centers for Disease Control: http://tinyurl.com/27lla8y

Egg Safety Center recall information: http://ping.fm/65Gkf



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In new posters, Egypts son for president? AP

CAIRO Posters have sprouted up around Egypt promoting the son of President Hosni Mubarak as the countrys next leader, in the most overt campaign yet for a controversial father-son succession in this key U.S. Arab ally.

For the last decade, it has been believed that Gamal Mubarak is being groomed to succeed his 82-year-old father, who has ruled Egypt for nearly 30 years. But the idea of father-son succession has raised deep opposition among many Egyptians.

Even some within the ruling party are thought to be unconvinced, and Gamal � a 46-year-old investment banker turned politician � has little popular base.

The posters suggest Gamals supporters within the party are making a push to shore up his position with the most public campaign to date in support of his candidacy. The signs � some touting the business suit-wearing Gamal as the dream of the poor � appeared around Cairo and other cities over the past few weeks. Campaign leaders are also collecting signatures for a Yes to Gamal petition.

While the ruling National Democratic Party strongly denied any connection between the party and the pro-Gamal campaign, a party official privately told AP that these posters were meant to be a trial balloon for Gamals popularity in the street, he said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.

The question of who will lead Egypt after Mubarak has taken on increased urgency amid concerns about the aging presidents health following surgery in Germany earlier this year. The elder Mubarak has not said whether he would run for a sixth term in presidential elections scheduled for next year, though he has vowed to stay in office until his last breath.

Mubarak has never appointed a vice president, and there is no political figure of comparable stature who stands out as an election possibility.

Who succeeds him likely depends largely on the decision by Mubarak himself along with top figures within the ruling party, the military and the security forces. Ruling party candidates are virtually assured of victory in elections, which are usually plagued by widespread vote fraud. Presidential elections will be in fall 2011.

Safwat el-Sherif, the secretary general of the ruling party and a member of the its old guard, said the posters and signature campaign for Gamal were political naivete.

Observers, however, have noted that security forces have allowed the posters to stand, though the rules say campaigning cannot begin until shortly before the elections themselves, which are not until next year.

The whole thing is meant to look like a spontaneous grassroots movement, but the NDP stamp is hard to miss, Salama Ahmed Salama, a veteran columnist wrote in the Thursday in the English language Al-Ahram Weekly.

The presidential silence can only be interpreted as a sign of consent and support, he added.

The sudden appearance of the posters could be a window into a battle taking place within the ruling party, said Amr el-Shobaki, a political analyst at Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies.

He said the posters are likely from pro-Gamal party members trying to drum up support from others in the party. It is a sign that the issue has not yet been settled internally, he said.

The posters suggesting theres a popular clamor for his candidacy is done for appearances sake, he said. Party officials know that Gamal wont come to office through free elections but through internal arrangements.

Gamal Mubarak is the deputy head of the party and leads its influential Policies Committee, directing Egypts economic liberalization program. His core support comes from wealthy businessmen.

Gamal himself has subtly changed his tone about whether he intends to run for the presidency.

I have not nominated myself, he said earlier this month, responding to a question by a young NDP member at a public forum � leaving open the possibility of accepting if others push for his nomination.

Its the latest in a nuanced evolution by the younger Mubarak. Only a few years ago, he would answer such questions by saying he was not interested in seeking an executive position. Later he started saying his main concern was just to revitalize and reform the party.

The posters are a startlingly overt campaign foray. Officially they have been put up by a number of pro-Gamal organizations unaffiliated to the ruling party and actually headed by former members of the opposition. NDP spokesman Ali Eddin Helal says the campaigns are not being run by party members.

But the organizations are widely believed to be NDP fronts. They give the ruling party a measure of plausible deniability, said Manal Lasheen, an opposition journalist who has covered parliament and the NDP for 20 years.

If the campaigns fail it wont be counted as a failure for Gamal, she said.

Posters showing the younger Mubarak and proclaiming, Gamal is the dream of the poor and Gamal for all Egyptians were put up by one group called the Popular Coalition to Support Gamal Mubarak, headed by Magdy el-Kurdi, a former member of the leftist opposition Tagammu party.

The campaign is urging the elder Mubarak to give his son a chance to run in the upcoming election, el-Kurdi told The Associated Press on Thursday.

He said he has amassed 8,000 volunteers and spent about $9,000 gathered from personal donations.

Gamal enjoys very high popularity, he said, adding that his group tours the country by car to try to drum up support.

But Gamal Mubarak has an uphill struggle in building a popular following. His main stumbling block could be the same factor that gives him the most influence: He is Mubaraks son.

Many in Egypt complain that the government is ignoring the needs of its poorest citizens. More than 40 percent of the population lives on around $2 per day, social services are lacking, food prices are climbing, electricity blackouts are near daily occurrences, corruption is endemic, nepotism rife, jobs are hard to find and adequate compensation for them even harder.

A recent poll carried out by the NDP in May revealed strikingly low popularity figures for the presidents son, said a party official, who refused to give details.

The poll was never made public.

The independent daily, Al-Shorouk obtained a leaked copy of a similar study carried out by the NDP six months earlier. That survey had intended to poll thousands in eight different provinces, but it was cut short after surveying three provinces because only nine percent of the 4,000 people polled up to that point expressed support for Gamal, the paper reported.



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